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        <p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
        <pb facs="00096894_0001" />
        <p>INSIDE TODAY*roblenfs_ ollutton Is Posing A Threat To Livelihood ^ Commercial Fishermen In Carteret County .i ^  Story  on  A-6</p>
        <p>INSIDE TODAYPeace</p>
        <p>&amp;gt;W:&amp;amp;Christians Listened Worldwide To A Was f ft For Peace Issued By Pope John Paul II. Story on A-7</p>
        <p>*-</p>
        <p>aiaiiiwiiffliiii</p>
        <p>SPORTS TODAY</p>
        <p>Lyle WinsTHE DAILY REFLECTOR</p>
        <p>Greenville, N.C.</p>
        <p>Monday Afternoon, April 4,1988</p>
        <p>25&amp;lt;t</p>
        <p>General</p>
        <p>Shultz's</p>
        <p>By NICOLAS B.TATRO Associated Press Writer JERUSALEM (AP) - Palestinians mounted a general strike today to protest the visit of Secretary of State George P. Shultz, who was trying to persuade Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir to accept an international peacetonference.</p>
        <p>Hospital officials said an 18-year-old Palestinian was shot to death and another 18-year-old was wounded during West Bank unrest that accompanied the general strike.</p>
        <p>The fatality brought to 137 the number of Arabs who have died in four months of anti-Israeli protests. One Israeli soldier has been killed.</p>
        <p>After meeting with Shamir and Foreign Minister Simon Peres,</p>
        <p>Strike Protests Peace Mission</p>
        <p>Shultz told reporters his talks focused on the content of prospective Arab-Israeli talks rather than the procedure of arranging a meeting.</p>
        <p>The encouraging part about it to me was that we nave now engaged in this initiative on the important aspects of its content, namely the direct face-to-face negotitions, said Shultz.</p>
        <p>Streets in the towns of the occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip were nearly deserted today and shops shuttered after an underground PLO leaflet called for a general strike and three days of protests to coincide with Shultzs visit.</p>
        <p>Hospital officials said Mohammed Abed Maadi A1 Zaidan was shot in the chest and died during a demonstra</p>
        <p>tion in Bani Naim, a West Bank village near Hebron.</p>
        <p>In Nablus, hospital officials said an 18-year-old Palestinian was wounded in the thigh by army gunfire during a protest at the Balata refugee camp. The army said a border policeman opened fire during the protest, wounding an Arab in me 1^, after being attacked with an ax. 'The camp was placed under curfew.</p>
        <p>About 600 police were deployed in Jerusalems Old Walled City to prevent clashes between Moslems and a militant Jewish group that tried to enter and pray in the A1 Aqsa mosque complex.</p>
        <p>The mosque, one of Islams holiest</p>
        <p>(See STRIKE, A-IO)</p>
        <p>GAZAN ARRESTED  Israeli soldiers prepare to drive away with a blindfolded Palestinian youth just arrested today in Rafah, occupied Gaza Strip, where three</p>
        <p>Palestinians were killed Sunday during violent clashes. (APLaserphoto)</p>
        <p>U.S. Ambassador's Car Chased By Panamanians</p>
        <p>Shooting Outside Funeral Leaves 3 Dead, 3 Injured</p>
        <p>By PAUL NOWELL Associated Press Writer EDNEYVILLE, N.C. (AP) - A Fletcher man was charged with three counts of murder after allegedly opening fire on his ex-wife, former in-laws and other mourners gathering for an Easter funeral, authorities said.</p>
        <p>The funeral was just getting ready to start, said Lester Justice, who was attending the funeral of his aunt, Effie Collins Justice, when he heard shots outside the Mountain Home Baptist Church. They had just closed the coffin. The family had</p>
        <p>just arrived and had gotten out of the car when I heard several shots fired.</p>
        <p>We began to hear more gunfire, a shotgun and pistol both. Someone said a man was out there shooting the family. I didnt know whettier he would come inside if he was after anybody else or not.</p>
        <p>Michael Leslie Rainey, 41, was charged Sunday with three counts of first-degree murder in the deaths of his former in-laws, Wilford Owensby, 61, and Ponnelle Owensby, 60; and in the dead) of Scott Bowles, 24. It was not known if Bowles was related to Rainey, authorities said.</p>
        <p>Rainey also was charged with three counts of assault with a deadly weapon with intent to kill in the wounding of three people, including his ex-\ime, Andrea Rainey, 40, of Kennesaw, Ga., authorities said.</p>
        <p>Barefooted and wearing a green jumpsuit, Rainey appeal^ before Henderson County District Court Judge Zoro Guice at 10:30 a.m. today. Guice ordered Rainey held without bond until an April 12 probable cause hearing.</p>
        <p>District Attorney Alan Leonard told the judge he would be seeking the death penalty in the case.</p>
        <p>Rainey, who was not handcuffed, looked down at the table in front of (See THREE, A-IO)</p>
        <p>PCC Fund Drive Off To Good Start</p>
        <p>By JOSEPH B. FRAZIER Associated Press Writer PANAMA CITY, Panama (AP)  A Panamanian government official suggested the United States might have staged a chase of its ambassadors car to justify an eventual military evasion.</p>
        <p>The U.S. Embassy said Ambassador Arthur Davis was pursued for two miles in Panama City on Sunday by a government military vehicle with its siren blaring. It called the incident serious.</p>
        <p>Sundays communique signed by Justice Minister Rodolfo Cniari de Leon said the incident b^an when a police sergeant saw civilians in three vehicles following the ambassadors car with an exaggerated display of automatic arms.</p>
        <p>We do not want to think that they are fabricating false accusations against our armed forces to justify an announced invasion of Panama, and we reiterate the intent of the Panamanian government to protect the life and property of residents and foreigners, including North Americans, the communique said.</p>
        <p>There was no immediate U.S. Embassy reaction to the statement.</p>
        <p>The United States is sending 1,300 ad^tional troops to Panama on</p>
        <p>Tuesday. Troops were loading weapons and supplies into helic^rs today in the United States inprqiaration.</p>
        <p>American officials have said the forces are intended to protect U.S. bases and American citizens. Washing has declared it will not use military finve to oust Gen. Manuel Antonio Noriega, whose leadership has been the focus of a national pohtical and eoMHMnic crisis.</p>
        <p>^mdays edition ci the government-run newspaper La Rraublica quoted pn^ovemment labor leaders as urging Panamanians to prepare for an American invasion when the additioiial troops begin arriving.</p>
        <p>There are 10,000 troops stationed at the U.S. Southern Command in Panama. Pentagon officials said</p>
        <p>(See VEHICLE, A-lf)</p>
        <p>The Pitt Community College Foundation has collected approximately $50,000 in pledges and contributions in the first phase of its 1988 fund drive, and will continue with a second day of fundraising, according to Susan Nobles, PCC director of marketing.</p>
        <p>Our first day of the fund drive last Thursday was so successful that the phase one committee has agreed to continue its efforts with a second full day of fundraising on Tuesday, April 5,Ms. Nobles said.</p>
        <p>Dr. Charles Russell, PCp president, said that foundation board members who are community leaders have assisted in the first phase of the foundations fund drive.</p>
        <p>We are pleased and honored to have Booger Scales lead our foundations first fund drive, Dr. Russell said.</p>
        <p>His 30 years of experience in successful fund raising for so many important causes in Greenville has been very valuable as we began this new endeavor. With his leadership, I am confident that we will be able to receive the money we need to begin the foundation and to fund the scholarships, equipment and staff development needed at Pitt Community College,he said.</p>
        <p>I think that Pitt Community College plays as an important role in this community as East Carolina University, Scales said. Because the college is so important to the community, and because of some very special people who have supported the college, I am happy to be chairman of this fund drive.</p>
        <p>For further information about the PCC Foundation, call 756-3130.</p>
        <p>Forecast</p>
        <p>The</p>
        <p>mmm  Chance  of  showers  tonight,</p>
        <p>followed by clearing. Low in 50s. W If uUltSl  SunnyTuesday,hiiinmid80B.</p>
        <p>Accu Weather* forecast for Tuesday Da^lme Conditions and High Temps</p>
        <p>Looking Ahead,</p>
        <p>Chance of showers Wednesday through Friday. Hi) Wednesday, Thursday in 70s, km SOs. Cooler Friday, high in 60s.</p>
        <p>Inside Today</p>
        <p>A'2~ Local news A-4-Editorials A-6-State news A-10-Obituaries B-1Sports B4-unssword</p>
        <p>No Problems</p>
        <p>The Easter switch to daylight savings time apparently had litUa^ffect on Greenville area residents other than provide them a longer afternoon, according to local officials and ministers surveyed today.</p>
        <p>Randy Nichols of the Greenville police said, Dayli^ savings doesnt affect us any at all, except that the p^le who wwked through the ni^t worked a seven-hour shift instead of an ei^t. We used to use the dayli^t savings changeover to change fnnn 4-12 to 3-11 scheduling, but now even that stays the same.</p>
        <p>No difference in scheduli^ is made by WNCT-TV, Ed Adams, program director, said. Everything just goes on as always. he said. Carolina Today starts at 6 a.m. standard time and 6 a.m. daylight savings time. Its the same for all the other programming 24 hours a day.</p>
        <p>John Ferren, assistant general manager of Greenville Utilities, said the switchover to daylight savings makes no difference whatsoever in the operations of Greenville Utilities. We do have a couple of crews who choose this time to change from 8-hour to 10-hour days, he said. Other than that, its not noted at all here.</p>
        <p>The fact the changeover occurred on Easter apparently had no effect on attendance at area churches either. The Rev. Sam Loy, associate pastor of St. James United Methodist Church said his churchs attendance may have peaked.</p>
        <p>Loy said about 800 people attended the churchs 11 a.m. service and attendance at its sunrise service was also excellent. I didnt hear of anybody getting confused about the time change, he said.</p>
        <p>The Rev. Graham Nahouse, pastor of Our Redeemer Lutheran Church, said daylight savings had no ill effect on his churchs Easter attendance. We just moved our meeting time up from 7 a.m. to 8 a.m. and everything was fine, he said.</p>
        <p>Convictions Upheld</p>
        <p>RICHMOND, Va. (AP) - A federal appeals court today upheld the espionage and theft of government property convictions of a former in-telhgence analyst who gave spy</p>
        <p>HUMAN BRIDGE  People from the main island of Honshu, Japan, right, and those from Shikoku Isiand join hands to form a human bridge Sunday on the Seto Great Bridge at Okayama, Japan, ceiebrating the reaiization of a long dream to link the mainland with the southern Japanese island. About 100,000 people walked on the new 7.6-mlle bridge over the Seto Inland Sea. (AP Laserplioto)</p>
        <p>ish military journal.</p>
        <p>Samuel Loring Morison, grandson of the late Pulitzer Prize-winning naval historian Samuel Eliot Morison, was convicted in October 1985 of giving U.S. satellite photographs of a Soviet nuclear aircraft carrier pnder construction to Janes Defence Weekly.</p>
        <p>A unanimous three-judge panel of the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals rejected arguments by Morison, who worked for the Navy, that the statutes under which he was found guilty were unconstitutionally vagiK and were intended to cover classic spying for a foreign government rather than leaks to the press.</p>
        <p>The defense al^ said the espioi^e prosecution violated Morison s right to free speech and would intimidate low-level |(overnment employees from leaking information which would embarrass their superiors.</p>
        <p>The mere fact that one has stolen a document in order that be may delivmr it to the press, whether for money m' other personal gain, will not immunize him from responsibili</p>
        <p>ty for his criminal act, the judges said. To use the First Amendment for such a purpose would be to convert the F^ust Amendment into a warrant for thievery.</p>
        <p>Morison remains free on a $100,000 appeal bond, his attorney, Mark Lynch, said today from his Washinidon, D.C., office. Lynch said he has not seen the 4th Circuits opinion and has not decided whether to seek a rehearing before the full court or a review by the U.S. Supreme Comrt.</p>
        <p>Because Morisons prosecution raised questions about tm Constitutions free speech and freedom of the press guarantees, several newt organizations - including The New York Times, The Washington Post, The Wall Street Journal and the nations three major television networks - filed briefs in the case.</p>
        <p>The photos were published by Janes on Aua. 11,1984, and later other publications and news organizations.</p>
        <p>Morison, a civilian employee &amp;lt;i the Naval Intelligence Support Center in Suitland, also was convicted of the theft of the photos and aovenunent documents that described a Iky 19|4 explosion at Severomorsk, the inain</p>
        <p>(See CONVICTIONS, A-W)</p>
        <pb facs="00096894_0002" />
        <p>In The Area</p>
        <p>Meeting Set</p>
        <p>Area members of the North Carolina Victim Assistance Network will attend the second annual N.C. Victim Assistance Network Conference in Hendersonville May 10-13.</p>
        <p>Judge Ralph Adam Fine, a Wisccmsin circuit judge who is author of Escape of the Guilty: A Trial Judge Speaks Out Against Crime, will speak, as will Dr. Shelley Neiderbach, founding president of Crime Victims Counseling Services in New York City.</p>
        <p>For information, call Linda J. Kelder, victim counselor. Rocky Mount Police Dept., P.O. Drawer 1180, Rocky Mount, N.C. 27802; phone, 972-1442.</p>
        <p>Fire Meeting</p>
        <p>The annual meeting of the Winter-ville Community Rural Fire Association, Inc. will tie held at the Winter-ville Fire Department Tuesday at 7:30p.m.</p>
        <p>meeting agenda includes the annual election of officers and board of directors.</p>
        <p>The meeting is open to owners of in the Winterville Rural</p>
        <p>property</p>
        <p>FireDist</p>
        <p>MISSILE PROTEST  Andrew Lawrence, 28, a peace activist and member of Plowshares, is wrestled to the deck by a sailor aboard the USS Iowa after Lawrence splashed blood and sledge-hammered the tomahawk</p>
        <p>missile carrier Sunday at Norfolk, Va. Lawrence and four others, who boarded the ship during open house at the Norfolk Navy Base, were protesting the carrying and use of missiles on the USS Iowa. (AP Laserphoto)</p>
        <p>District.</p>
        <p>Boys Ciub</p>
        <p>The Boys Club of Pitt County will kick off its Coupons for Kids fundraising campaign in Greenville area supermarkets Sunday.</p>
        <p>Area supermarkets have invited the Boys Club to distribute coi^n books during National Boys Gub Week April 10-16.</p>
        <p>The books, which sell for $1, contain coupons worth $11 in savings. Money generated from the coupon book sales will be used for club programs. For information, contact Lucky Harris, director of services of the Boys Gub of Pitt County, 355-^2345.</p>
        <p>The Boys Gub is a United Way agency.</p>
        <p>Fieid Trip</p>
        <p>Second and third graders at Falkland Elementary School recently visited Sunshine Garden Center. Their visit culminated a science unit of study on plants. In addition, students toured the Pitt-Greenville Airport for community and career awareness.</p>
        <p>Scholarship</p>
        <p>Christoi^er Marks, a senior at the North Carolina School of Science and MaUiematics and a former J.H. Rose High School student, recently won the Bess Woodard Scholarship of $200 in the Young Artist Auditions piano competition held by the Raleigh Piano Teachers Association. He also</p>
        <p>Four Peace Activists Arrested</p>
        <p>NORFOLK, Va. (AP)  Four peace activists were charged with destroying government property after allegedly throwing blood on cruise missie housings aboard the battleship Iowa.</p>
        <p>The protesters, part of a group touring the ship, were arrested Sunday and held without bond at Virginia Beach Gty Jail. They were to be arraigned this morning in U.S. District Court in Norfolk, the FBI said.</p>
        <p>The group included veteran activist Phillip Berrigan and Gregory Boertje, a federal fugitive for more ^n four months.</p>
        <p>The group picked the battleship as the target of the protest because they see the Iowa as a symbol... of super-state madness, said Max Obuszewski, a spwesman for Plowshares, a peace group founded by Berrigan eight years ago.</p>
        <p>Capt. Archie Galloway, a Navy spokesman, said the incident occurred about 3:50 p.m. as a group of 10 to 15 people was being led on a topside tour of the Iowa, which was docked at Norfolk Naval Base.</p>
        <p>The four wandered away from the rest of the group and threw what they claimed to be blood on two of the ships armored box launchers, which house the Tomahawk missiles, Galloway said.</p>
        <p>The protesters were immediately apprehended by Iowa crew members, he said. There was no apparent damage to the launchers.</p>
        <p>In addition to Berrigan and Boertje, those arrested were Andrew Lawrence and Sister Margaret McKenna. Berrigan, Boertje and Lawrence are from Baltimore, and Sister McKenna is from Fox Chase, Pa., a Philadelphia suburb.</p>
        <p>Boertje, 32, has been wanted by the FBI since he failed to show at his Nov. 17,1987, sentencing for his part in damaging military aircraft at Willow Grove Naval Air Station outside Philadelphia.</p>
        <p>Boertje was among four Plowshares members convicted of entering the military base Jan. 6, 1987, and smashing a P-3 Orion anti-submarine plane and two helicopters with sledgehammers. The government fixed damage at $165,602.</p>
        <p>Berrigan, 64, is a former Josephite priest. In 1980, Berrigan, his brother, Daniel Berrigan, and six associates entered the (Jeneral Electric plant in King of Prussia, Pa., and hammered at Mark 12-A nuclear warheads.</p>
        <p>'The Tomahawk missile, which can carry either a conventional or nuclear warhead, is launched from surface ships, submarines and aircraft.</p>
        <p>won a second-place cash award of $60 in the Level IV Concerto Division of the auditions.</p>
        <p>Awards were given in the ei^th annual honors recital held in Carswell Recital Hall at Meredith College. Marks is the son of Dick and Lynne Marks of Greenville and is a former student of Annemarie Lalik. He currently studies piano with John Ruggero of Raleigh.</p>
        <p>Free Check-Up</p>
        <p>A free blood pressure check-up will be held at the Washington Square Mall April 16 from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. This service is provided by the Family Practice Center Interest Group of the East Carolina University School of Medicine.</p>
        <p>Farm Scne</p>
        <p>Seven Charged</p>
        <p>BySAMUZZELL</p>
        <p>Pitt County Agricultural Extension Agent</p>
        <p>While spring cleaning is getting under way, containers of old pesticides of various origins may be found around the home. Many of the containers may have in them pesticides that once were in common use, but now the uses of them have been banned. In other cases, the pesticide is not usable because of rust accumulation or other contamina-tioh. Still others may not be wanted around the farm or home anymore. It is a good idea to dispose of these materials, but it is very important to do this in proper way.</p>
        <p>In the cases of materials such as DDT, silvex, chlordane and several others, the uses have been banned by the Environmental Protection Agency. It is not against the law to possess these chemicals, but it is against the law to apply them. These materials should be wrapped in newspaper, placed in a plastic bag, sealed with tape, labelea in a readable fashion and delivered to the A^cultural Extension Service to be msposed of properly. They will be taken to a licensed hazardous waste disposal company.</p>
        <p>when pesticides are used and the container is emptied, it should be rinsed three times and the rinse water used in the spray solution. This is true in the case of farm sprays as</p>
        <p>well as in the case of the homeowner who sprays his lawn with a broadleaf weed Killer. The container can then be disposed of properly. With farm chemicals, proper disposal includes crushing the container after rinsing three times, puncturing the can, and taking it to me Pitt County landfill. Containers will be accepted without</p>
        <p>ired.</p>
        <p>When using any pesticide, observe all the labeled instructions. Apply the correct rate, and be sure that all disposal, cleaning and other precautions are understood. Eveiyone who reads the paper is aware of how farm chemicals are under scrutiny. It is also important to know that pesticides are used annually on two million farms, seventy five million households, and forty thousand commercial farms. Therefore, it is the responsibility of each pesticide user to know the proper way to use pesticides safely. We all have a responsibility to do our part in protecting the environment.</p>
        <p>By understanding the information on the pesticide label, and using the pesticide according to the labeled instructions, hazards and be greatly reduced. Tlie label is the best source of information concerning the use of a pesticide. For further information on pesticide use, contact your Agricultural Extension office.</p>
        <p>Greenville police arrested seven people Saturday in connection with theft cases.</p>
        <p>Officer J.W. Corbett said Donald Gray Silverthome, 21, of Route 6, Greenville, Was charged with shoplifting in connection with the theft of four watches from Nichols Discount City about 7:29 p.m.</p>
        <p>(jorbett said Tony Brian Silverthome, 27, of Route 1, Grimesland, was arrested on charges of aiding and abetting in shoplifting in connection with the same incident.</p>
        <p>Officer R. J. Brewington said Devie Lavoris Hill, 24, of Wuliamston, was arrested on credit card fraud charges in connection with the purchase of a pair of tennis shoes ffom Athletic World at Carolina East Mall about 8:37 p.m. Saturday.</p>
        <p>Brewington said the credit card involved in the incident was in a purse reported stolen from Sears Roebuck and Co. earlier in the day.</p>
        <p>Officer J.W. Isenhour said Tony Ray Ore, 21, of Route 2, Williamston was charged with aiding and abetting credit card fraud in connection wim the same incident.</p>
        <p>The officers said the purse and</p>
        <p>other items it contained, were recovered after Hill and Ore were taken into custody.</p>
        <p>Officer L.C. Overby said Deborah Allen Dunn, 31, of Ayden, was arrested on larceny charges in connection with the theft of a quantity of meat from the Farm Fresh store on Greenville Boulevard about 8:25 p.m.</p>
        <p>Overby said Ms. Dunn was also charged with assault and resisting arrest.</p>
        <p>Officer R.L. Smith said a 13-year-old juvenile was turned over to his parents and the case reffered to the departments Juvenile division following the theft of $13 worth of auto parts from Roses at the Stanton Square Shopping Center about 9:19 p.m.</p>
        <p>Officer M.E. Hayes said Clark Pittman Meadows, 26, of 2617 Jeffe*3on Drive, was arrested on possession of stolen property charges about 10:15 p.m. after police found a stolen license plate in his possession when the vehicle Meadows was driving was stopped at the intersection of Forest Hills Drive and Greenville Boulevard.</p>
        <p>SiiiM 1979</p>
        <p>TBttka 9nc.</p>
        <p>Th* UnlqtM Tmv*l Snfk9...Wlth A ^*nonat Touch</p>
        <p>Mrs. Ra Brantley P.O. Box 3602. Wilson, N.C. 27893 Phono: 291-9882</p>
        <p>My 0-t! Sprlng's-o-Glow at Longwood Gordan*. Amith Dinner S Tours May ao-aii Chattonoogo Choo Choo Weekand. Guided four and dinner May 20-20: Florida, Disneyworld and Epcot June 10&amp;gt;12t Oollywood Park, Pigeon Forge, Townsend, Possion Play.</p>
        <p>July 0-9: Statler Irothers celebration at home in Staunton, Virginia.</p>
        <p>July O-IOt Niagara Falls, Canada, Amish Dinner, Lancoster, Pa. Hershey Chocolate World.</p>
        <p>Auf. 1-4: New York, Niagara Falls, Conoda t Washington, D.C. fours and dinners</p>
        <p>Aufuet 12-14: Dollywood Pork with top name country entertainers plus great summer fun.</p>
        <p>Auf uet 19-24: Alaska, CrulM, Fly, Cooch and Domed Roll. Meals.</p>
        <p>ft</p>
        <p>Views On Dental Health</p>
        <p>Kenneth T. Perkins, D.D.S.,P.A. Family &amp;amp; General Dentistry</p>
        <p>FLUORIDE IN TOOTHPASTE</p>
        <p>The mer presence of fluoride In a toothpaste does not necessarily give it therapeutic qualities. Fluoride alone is no guarantee of effectiveness. What is important is that the toothpaste contain fluoride in an effective combination with other ingredients.</p>
        <p>There are a number of these on the market. They definitely possess therapeutic value and have accordingly been recommended by the Council on Dental Therapeutics of the American Dental Association in those now familiar words, "...has been</p>
        <p>shown to be an effective decay-preventive dentifrice that can be of significant value when used in a conscientiously applied program of oral hygiene and regular professional care.</p>
        <p>This endorsement has real meaning. Scientific test studies have proven beyond doubt the effectiveness of the recommended toothpastes In reducing the Incidence of tooth decay.</p>
        <p>Note:</p>
        <p>We wtlcomt new palenle, both children and adults.</p>
        <p>Prapartd m a public larvlca to prometa battar danlal haalth. From tha olfica ol Kannath T Partdna, O.D. S., P.A., Evans St., Family and Qanaral Dantlatry.</p>
        <p>Greenville 752-SI 26</p>
        <p>W.H. Robinson</p>
        <p>Several students of the Triad Enrichment Program (TEP) at W.H. Robinson School recently visited the Chemistry Department of East Carolina University. Dr. Carol Ayers and Dr. Jim Hix gave the students a tour of the department laboratories and explained the work of chemists. The tnp was arranged by second-grade student Phil Dixon.</p>
        <p>Robinson puppeteers presented two puppet snows to their classes. The students in first and second grades have participated in a jpuppet workshop in TEP. Marilyn Zamba has been a parent volunteer Hrith the project in which children wrote their</p>
        <p>Susan Lambert and Mahssa Allen of the dietary department at Pitt Memorial Hospital discussed the four basic food groups and provided food items to taste. Ms. Ferrell also has taught a unit on letter writing. The class toured the Winterville Post Office and mailed their classmates letters there.</p>
        <p>Math Winners</p>
        <p>The D.H. Conley Math Team recently participated in the East Carolina University Math Contest. Jeff Denton won first place in the algebra II contest, and Denton, David Damico and Jonathan Prescott, the algebra II team, won first place in the algebra II division. Conley received third place in the</p>
        <p>overall 3-A school competition.</p>
        <p>Denton will advance to regional competition April 26 in Rocky Mount.</p>
        <p>Reception Heid</p>
        <p>Hie D.H. Conley faculty recently hmiored student teachers with a reception in the schools library as part of its teacher recmitment efforts. Conley has 18 student teachers this spring. Carolyn Garris, Chris Waters and Joan Manning are Conleys teacher recmiters. Future plans for this year include a Teacher Appreciation Week in May.</p>
        <p>Participant</p>
        <p>Patricia Hiss of Greenville, a teacher at E.B. Aycock Junior High School, participted in a seminar, North Carolina Contemporary Novelists and the Art of Expression Through Personal Experience, at the North Carolina Center for the Advancement of Teaching in Cullowhee.</p>
        <p>Ms. Hiss has a bachelors degree from St. Olaf College in Northfield, Minn., and a masters degree from the University of Illinois.</p>
        <p>Meeting Cancelied</p>
        <p>The Citizens Advisory Committee on Cable Television meeting scheduled for Tuesday has been cancelled.</p>
        <p>(SeeIN,A-3)</p>
        <p>Wells, Septic Tanks Reported Prevalent</p>
        <p>Better Breathers</p>
        <p>The Better Breathers Club will meet at 2 p.m. Friday in conference room B, Gaskins-Leslie Building. Jim Worden, Department of Pharmacy, Pitt County Memorial Hospital will be guest speaker.</p>
        <p>The meeting is open to the public.</p>
        <p>A large majority of rural residents and many living in small towns in eastern North Carolina still rely on individual wells for their water, while an even larger number are served by individual septic tanks in the treatment and disposal of sewage, according to a recent survey.</p>
        <p>The survey on water and sewer services in eastern North Carolina was conducted by the Division of Facilities and Services of the Department of Community Development of the Eastern North Carolina Chamber of Commerce.</p>
        <p>According to George M. Harris, Jr., executive director of the Northampton County Economic Development Commission at Jackson, 33 of the regions 43 counties completed the survey while 101 of 239 municipalitif responded.</p>
        <p>Hams, who also serves as vice chairman of community development for public facilities and services for the Eastern Cumber, said 16 of the 33 counties which responded operate county-wide water systems while only two of those counties owrate sewer services.</p>
        <p>Seventy-six of the 101 municipalities reporting operate water systems while only 62 have sewage treatment services.</p>
        <p>Harris said 10 of the 16 counties with water systems reported their systems have now reached capacity. Forty-eight of the 76 municipalities with water systems reported to have presently reached treatment capacity. Thirty seven of the municipalities with sewer systems reported that they have reached treatment capacity.</p>
        <p>While it will cost hundreds of millions of dollars to provide water and sewer systems in those counties and municipalities that currently do not have such systems, those counties and municipalities that do operate these systems also have great needs, Harris observed.</p>
        <p>Harris said counties with water systems listed their enlargement needs at $51 million. The two counties with sewer systems reported enlargement needs of $100,000.</p>
        <p>Meanwhile, the municipalities operating water and sewer systems reported their water enlargement needs at almost $96 million, and sewer enlargement needs at more than $187 million.</p>
        <p>Harris said the data gathered in the study indicates several needed</p>
        <p>should be an effort to encourage counties and municipalities that do not have water systems to work to acquire such systems.</p>
        <p>Efforts should be made to encourage those counties and municipalities that need sewer services most to develop them.</p>
        <p>Some outside assistance needs to be delivered to those counties and municipalities that operate water and sewer systems to help them upgrade their systems to meet current requirements both in level of Quality of services and in the service memselves.</p>
        <p>Harris said the Eastern Giamber will attempt to assist the counties and municipalities to communicate their needs to the North Carolina General Assembly and to Congress, with the hope that funding can be matched with local funds to meet theseneeds.</p>
        <p>The Daily Reflector</p>
        <p>Incorporated 209 Cotanche Street Greenville, N.C. 27834 (919) 752-6166</p>
        <p>107th Year No. 80</p>
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        <p>Your Social Security Disability Benefits</p>
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        <p>Have you been denied benefits under Social Securitys disability benefits programs? Do not be discouraged. That happens to most people who apply the first time.</p>
        <p>Have you asked for reconsideration of your disability claim and been turned down a second time? Again, dont be discouraged or ^ve up. Thats the way the disability system works today.</p>
        <p>Appeal your case further to the Office of Hearings and Appeals for a hearing before an Administrative Law Judge and a review by a Member of the Appeals Council. The Judge will</p>
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        <pb facs="00096894_0003" />
        <p>In The Area</p>
        <p>(Continued from A-2)Lecture Set</p>
        <p>Professor William Stephenson of East Carolina University will present a slide/lecture at 8 p.m. Tuesday in</p>
        <p>In his present position, Warner is in charge of Free Will Baptist missionary ministries, missionary conference planning and missionary' sut   </p>
        <p>toe Pender Room of E^ecoihbe 0.1110 event</p>
        <p>Uj^rt development.</p>
        <p>Trie church is located at 2725 E.</p>
        <p>County Library, Tarboro.__________</p>
        <p>is sponsored by the Friends of the Edgecombe County Library.</p>
        <p>Stephensons topic will be based on his book, Sallie Southall Cotten - A Womans Life in North Carolina. The book was winner of the 1987 Marguertie Schumann Literary Award.</p>
        <p>The lecture is open to the public.</p>
        <p>14th St., extension. Services are at 7:30 p.m. today through Saturday itll    </p>
        <p>and at 11 a.m. and 7 p.m. Sunday.Guest Speaker</p>
        <p>Fred Warner, director of Church Ministries for Free Will Baptist Foreign Missions, Nashville, Tenn., will be the revival speaker at the Unity Free Will Baptist Church today through Sunday.</p>
        <p>Warner, a native of North Carolina, has conducted more than 250 revivals since 1960. He attended Free Will Baptist College and has pastored churches in Tennessee, Georgia and Arkansas. As an Arkansas State Home missionary, he founded the Eastgate Free Will Baptist Church in SiToam Springs, Ark. He also served Arkansas Free Will Baptists as promotional director for five years.</p>
        <p>day at toe Mewbom Primitive Baptist Church near Jason in Greene County. The church is located on Highway 903 between LaGrange and SnowHUl.</p>
        <p>Lunch is at 1 p.m. and the annual meeting will be m the sanctuary at 2 p.m.</p>
        <p>The reunion this year will honor Lemuel Hardy Mewbom, bom 1803, and his wife, Louisa Kilpatrick.</p>
        <p>Guest speiaker will be Martha Sue Mewbom Marble of Washington, D.C., a native of Lenoir County. TTie reunion is open to all Mewbon descendants and friends.</p>
        <p>front and take the ferry at Cedar Island. After the lift over Pamlico Sound toe tour will include Ocracoke Island. Participants will return the following day to Morehead City.</p>
        <p>19 is the deadline for the receipt of entries. For more information, call toe MS office in Raleigh at 872-1706.Thefts Reported</p>
        <p>Investigators said seven thefts were reported to Greenville police over the weekend..Sunder Selected</p>
        <p>Permit Granted</p>
        <p>Greenville police i^ued a solicita</p>
        <p>tion permit to the Pitt County Medi-Society Auxiliary to raise funds</p>
        <p>cal</p>
        <p>for toe PCMSA Halth Education Foundation on April 16 from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. at 403 Queen Annes Road.Ua</p>
        <p>FRED WARNER</p>
        <p>Pedal-N-SpokeFamily Reunion</p>
        <p>The Mewbom family will hold its 35th annual family reunion on Sun</p>
        <p>The third annual Pedal-N-Spoke To Ocracoke for victims of Multiple Sclerosis will be held April 30 throu^ May 1. The grand prize for toe 90-mile ride is a four-day and three-night trip to San Francisco.</p>
        <p>Dr. Theodore R. Sunder of Greenville is one of 21 physicians selected nationally to attend a fellowship program on epilepsy sponsored by Bowman Gray School of Medicine of Wake Forest University in Winston-Salem.</p>
        <p>During the week-long program, the participants heard lectures on the treatment of seizures and ways the patients and their families can be supported. Dr. J. Kiffin Penry, establisher of the epilepsy program at the National Institutes of Health, now a Bonunan Gray professor, supervised toe fellowship program.</p>
        <p>Dr. Sunder is a pediatric neurologist associated with the East Carolina University School of Medicine Departipent of Pediatric Medicine.</p>
        <p>Officer L.C. Overby said a bicycle was taken from 212 S. Pitt St. in an incident reported at 5:30 p.m. Saturday and said $9.58 worth of beer was taken from the Fresh Way Food Store on Airport Road in an incident reported at 6:53 p.m. Officer R.C. Allsbrook said  watch valued at $250 was taken from an apartment at 200 Rollins Drive in a break-in reported at 8:25 p.m.</p>
        <p>Officer C.S. Candler said a car was taken from a lot at the intersection of Fourth and Cotanche streets in an in</p>
        <p>cident reported at 4:16 a.m. Sunday, while Officer F.G. Pruitt said more than $900 worth of property  including two pairs of sunglasses, 50 cassette tapes, a pair of leather gloves and a laundry bag containing 10 shirts and 10 pairs of pants  was taken from a vehicle parked at 134 Fletcher Place in an incident reported at 9:36 a.m. and a bicycle taken from a storage building at 427 W. Fourth St. in an incident reported at 12:54 p.m.</p>
        <p>According to Officer C.A. Elks, a radar detector was taken from a car parked at 1207 Woodside Drive in an incident reported at 1:52 p.m. Sunday.</p>
        <p>Migrant Worker Killed</p>
        <p>Cyclists will begin at Morehead Q-ty, ride through the Beaufort water</p>
        <p>American naval hero John Paul Jones was bom in 1747.</p>
        <p>Fernando Martinez, 30, died Satur-. day after being hit by a train at 10:57 p.m. a short distance east of Grimesland, according to the Pitt County Sheriffs Office.</p>
        <p>Martinez, a migrant worker from Mexico, was a laborer on the Grimes Plantation Farm owned by Vernon White. His identification was verified. by Ralph Bright, superintendent of the farm.</p>
        <p>According to Chief Deputy Brooks Oakley, Jimmy E. Boles, brakeman, and H.E. Rosser, conductor of the</p>
        <p>train, contacted Deputv Mack Mann-train nit an object</p>
        <p>ing after the train reportedly lying on the tracks.</p>
        <p>Oakley said Martinez was declared dead at the scene by Dr. Stan Harris; regional medical examiner.</p>
        <p>An unidentified migrant worker who lives on the Grimes Plantation Farm told Manning that he and Martinez had been in Grimesland but he had left Martinez in Grimesland at an earlier hour, returning to the farm alone.</p>
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        <pb facs="00096894_0004" />
        <p>Opinion</p>
        <p>The Daily ReflectorEstablished 1882</p>
        <p>David Julian Whichard, Chairman of the Board David J. Whichard II, Editor &amp;amp; Co-Publisher  John  S.  Whichard, Co Pubbsher</p>
        <p>D. Jordan Whichard Hi, General Manager  Ah/in  B.  Taylor, Managing Editor</p>
        <p>Mary C Schulken, Editorial Page Editor</p>
        <p>*Truth In Preference To Fiction*Windfall Should Address Needs</p>
        <p>Good news for North Carolina. The state government has a windfall of $45 million.</p>
        <p>The unexpected money came from RJR Nabisco Inc., which paid the amount in taxes to the state based on profits from its sale of Heublein Inc.</p>
        <p>Now ^me the suggestions of how to spend the money/^^viously $45 million, large amount as it is, will substantially affect the states $18.4 billion biennial budget. Nevertheless, this is unexpected ley and it is certain that both politicians and state offijCials will have lots of ideas on how to spend it.</p>
        <p>Since it is a non-recurring source of revenue, it immediately becomes obvious it should not be used for salary increase or to establish programs which will require future funding to sustain them. That almost certainly means the funds should be used for capital improvements, and for the highest priority capital improvements which were not funded in the current budget.</p>
        <p>Certainly North Carolina has needs in education, public parks and prisons. Even now planners are grappling with ideas on how to finance public school construction. The 1987 school construction bill only addresses a portion of these inadequacies, and new needs arise even as funds from this legislation are spent on facilities.</p>
        <p>Higher education building needs are well documented. The states university system, a leader in the nation, need facilities to adequate house growing resources.</p>
        <p>In addition, the state is at the bottom in spending on state parks. North Carolinas parks system represents an investment in the states natural heritage, and money is needed to adequately protect these resources.</p>
        <p>And, while most citizens had rather not think of prisons, they are overflowing and the state is threatened with turning out prisoners early to ease overcrowding. The public expects convicted criminals to be sent to jail, but the jails must be there, and that means new construction. That is an issue which must receive attention when funds are being divided.</p>
        <p>The needs are evident in North Carolina. If the state has a windfall of $45 million let it be applied to the most critical needs. The Legislature should make certain this windfall addresses the benefit of all citizens.Dole May Play Continued Role</p>
        <p>With the withdrawal of Sen. Bob Dole from the Republican presidential nomination race there is no question as to who the nominee will be. Vice President George Bush will receive his partys nomination almost certainly oh the first ballot.</p>
        <p>Sen. Dole was reluctant to withdraw but he saw that Bushs delegate count was becoming insurmountable. The senator had said sbme harsh things about his opponent. In the end, however, he promised to work for Bush and do what is best for the Republican party.</p>
        <p>Even as he did so, however. Sen. Dole must have been thinking about some of the points he had made when he campaigned against Bush. The vice president still has questions to answer about the Iran-Contra arms shipment affair. While he has stonewalled it thus far, Bush faces the possibility of a Watergate kind of disaster.</p>
        <p>As a loyal Republican, Dole would want his party to win in November, even if he is not to lead the ticket. That haunting fear has to be there, nevertheless, that everything has not been revealed about Iran-Contra  and if there is more to be revealed how close can it come to the vice president who will soon be the partys presidential nominee.</p>
        <p>There are other problems wracking the Reagan administration as it completes its final year. With Bush so closely aligning himself with the president, how many of these problems can spill over to become incessant questions in the upcoming campaign. These are things that Sen. Dole seemed to be warning about as he campaigned against Bush.</p>
        <p>There will be no more talk about Bush deficiencies from Dole for he will certainly assume the role of a loyal party leader who rallies around once party infighting has ended. Nevertheless there are major potential pitfalls in a George Bush presidential candidacy. While he now has the support of Sen. Bob Dole there is no doubt Dole privately will continue to have concerns about negative developments in the uncoming campaign.</p>
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        <p>Noriega: Staying Put In Panama</p>
        <p>PANAMA CITY - Gen. Manuel Nonega has a message for America: Hell leave Panama when he feels like it, and not at the whim of Washington.</p>
        <p>Dres^ in a gr^n camouflage uniform, sitting in his office at military headquarters with his pretty ghrUriend listening nearby, Noriega has the look of a caged tiger. And last Tuesday, in his first interview with an American newspaper since the Panama crisis erupted, Noriega spoke bitterly about the American campaign to topple him. His comments suggest that in Panama, the worst may lie ahead.</p>
        <p>When will he leave power? I am leaving, he says. Tve got to go. But when? He rises from his chair and snaps; At what time? At what minute? Please! This is a Panamanian problem, not an American problem ... The State Department wants to create a Vietnam in Panama, to have U.S. troops confront the Panamanians. Its not Reagan - its the State Department. If that happens, American mothers are going to see their sons fighting in a nation without necessity.</p>
        <p>Noriega may be right in warning that the Panama crisis is heading toward a military confrontation. Some senior U.S. ^licymakers are saying the same thing, and they appear to favor the use of force against Noriega. In a dramatic show of force Friday, the Reagan administration announced it will sent 1,300 more troops to Panama to reinforce the American garrison already there.</p>
        <p>'Uncertain of the future, many Panamanians are leaving the country, valuables in hand. Meanwhile, the Panamanian left appears to be gaining strength with each passing day.'</p>
        <p>One senior administration official who has helped design Panama policy bluntly describes two options: "To do enough small things to encourage the PDF (the Panama Defense Forces) to kill him, or to go get him with American troops.</p>
        <p>The American pressure campaign, thus far, may be hurting Panama more than Noriega. The U.S. economic sanctions, for example, have left the Noriega r^ime short of funds  but they have also left the Panamanian banking system in shambles, hurt the formerly prosperous middle class, banlunpted businesses and left many woncers witlHMit pay. Uncertain of the future, many Panamanians are leaving the country, valuables in hand. Meanwhile, the Panamanian left appears to be gaining strength with each passing day.</p>
        <p>Noriega is a creation of the CIA, says Fernando Boyd, a disspirited leader of the opposition movement known as the Civic Crusade, referring to charges that Noriega was until recently on the CIA payroll. His unspdcen message is: You created him, now get rid of him.</p>
        <p>But Noriega isnt going, and hes thinking these days mainly of himself. Sitting at a table with one of</p>
        <p>his cabinet ministers, a top military aide and a visiting reporter, he rin a gold bell and orders tea only for himself. In addition to drinking tea, he paces around the room, appearing unable or unwilling to concentrate or to sit still. Only a few months ago, Noriega had seemed like a different man  relaxed and in charge, boasting of his friendship with the United States.</p>
        <p>Noriega dismisses the recent general str^e organized to show opposition to his continuing rule, which shut down 98 percent of the businesses in Panama. He insists that his entire problem originated with the U.S. State Department policies of freezing the economic funds that belong to the people of Panama and to the private enterprise of Panama.</p>
        <p>He sweeps aside as a technicality the U.S. argument that Panamanian accounts should be under the control of the person recognized by the State Department as Panamas representative  Ambassador Juan Sosa, who has taken the side of President Arturo DelValle against Noriega.</p>
        <p>Noriega even sees an American hand behind the demonstrations in the streets here. He claims that American Ambassador Arthur Davis and his deputy, John Meisto, are the</p>
        <p>ones giving political orders and deciding strategies for the Crusade people. And he displays for a reporter hundreds of dollars in cash, which he claims the U.S. embassy paid last week as bail for Crusade members who had been arrested. (Meisto responds: Noriega lies about the role of the U.S. and the role of the embassy.)</p>
        <p>Noriega still has some bombshells he can hurl at the Reagan administration. He was on the CIA payroll until a few months ago, according to one senior U.S. official. Asked what services he performed for the United States, Noriega says he helped with professional coordination, in the fight against drugs when no one was helping, and in military coordination for the (Panama Canal) treaties. He also helped the U.S. capture gangster Meyer Lansky when he was on the run in Israel and in Argentina.</p>
        <p>It is ironic to remember that only a few years ago, Noriega had argued to a former U.S. secretary of state and a prominent politician that the United States should invade Nicaragua and overthrow the Sandinistas. When the Mlitician protested that then we would be behaving like the colossus of the North, Noriega retorted: You are the colossus of the North. Behave like it!</p>
        <p>Lally Weymouth writes regularly about foreign affairs for The Washington Post.</p>
        <p> Glenn Frankel</p>
        <p>Restrictions Part Of Israeli Strategy</p>
        <p>JERUSALEM - With eight terse sentences in a press release, the Israeli army this past week took a major step toward restoring the border between Israel proper and the occupied territories that this country had been slowly but steadily erasing for the past 21 years.</p>
        <p>The sweeping three-day restrictions on travel and press coverage announced in the statement were the toughest imposed yet by authorities groping for some formula to smother a nearly 4-month-old Palestinian uprising. They sealed off the Gaza Strip and West Bank, confining Arab residents to their homes or villages, preventing outsiders from entering and arresting hundreds.</p>
        <p>Invisible lines suddenly reappeared. Roads, on which traffic once moved freely in and out of Israel across the Green Line into the West Bank, were blocked off by soldiers checking identity cards and license plates and turning back Israelis as well as journalists. Motorists whose Israeli-made maps have not shown the border for the past decade wandered in confusion, not knowing if or when they were crossing the line and breaking the law.</p>
        <p>For many Israelis and Arabs, the measures were a harbinger of things to come: more repression, but also increased separation between Arabs and Jews, more barbed wire - both physical and mental  and a retreat from Israels long attempt to find an effective means of ruling the disaffected and rebellious 1.6 million</p>
        <p>Arabs of the occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip.</p>
        <p>It was a very symbolic action by a defense establishment that really was expecting the worst this week, said defense commentator Hirsh Goodman. What they ended up doing was making a de facto admission for the first time in 20 years that you cant Uve with the territories.</p>
        <p>While civil libertarians and liberals generaUy condemned the crackdown and hawks supported it, there were also less predictable reactions that suggested many here understood the deeper significance of the restrictions. Several Palestinian activists actually welcomed the measures as .a further step toward the reseparation of Israel and the territories.</p>
        <p>For the same reason, many leaders of the Jewish settler community in the West Bank opposed the restrictions and some even defied the ban by smuggling journalists into the area, risking five years in prison. Settlers themselves were exempt from the travel ban.</p>
        <p>It looks to me like this was a very big flexing of muscles in order to separate Judea and Samaria from the rest of Israel and to isolate us from our fellow Israelis, said Eliakym Haetzni, one of the main philosophers of . the settler movement, using the biblical term fw the Wrat Bank. Its a make-believe performance of mighty efforts so that later on they can say they couldnt succeed and we 11 simply have to get rid of the land.</p>
        <p>The politician whom Haetzni most admires, former Defense Minister Ariel Sharon, also criticized the restrictions, saying they were unnecessary and potentially dangerous. Sharon attempted to force a vote in Israels policymaking Inner Cabinet on his own proposals for restoring order in the territories but was blocked by the leader of his own hawkish pc&amp;gt; litical party. Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir.</p>
        <p>Sharon and Haetzni offer a simple solution to suppressing the uprising, in which at least 118 Palestinians have been shot dead. They would expel dozens,, perhaps hundreds, of alleged activists and their families; slam shut the doors of evei7 Arab building society, trade union, professional group or student organization ad</p>
        <p>vocating a Palestinian state; and bulldoze tens, perhaps hundreds, of houses in retaliation against stone and gasoline-bomb throwers. Such measures, Sharon claims, would end the violence within a few days or weeks.</p>
        <p>Israels defense establishment appears to be moving  albeit slowly - in Sharons direction. More than 4,000 alleged activists are in jail, about 500 of them in administrative detention in which they can be held indefinitely without charge or trial. The Shebibah youth movement has been banned, and the Palestine Press Service, an information conduit to journalists, closed for six months. Houses have been bulldozed, and numerous economic sanctions imposed.</p>
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        <pb facs="00096894_0005" />
        <p> Thomas B. RosenstielThe Jackson Appeal: Liberalism Plus An Offer Of Hope</p>
        <p>CUDAHY, Wis.  The Rev. Jesse Jackson does many things in his campaign speech to confront racism. The most effective is the Sesame Street bit at the end.</p>
        <p>All children 12 and under come to the front, he says. Children 12 and under. Come on up.</p>
        <p>It sounds strange at a political rally, but the children begin filing toward the front until they fill the stage.</p>
        <p>Now repeat after me, Jackson says, standing in a circle of tiny faces: lam.</p>
        <p>I am, chimes the diminutive chorus in a motley soprano. Somebody!</p>
        <p>Somebody!</p>
        <p>Savejobs.</p>
        <p>Save jobs.</p>
        <p>.Secure farms.</p>
        <p>Secure farms.</p>
        <p>The grownups in the audience invariably laugh and coo.</p>
        <p>It is a silent syllogism about race, subliminal, emotional: The children,</p>
        <p>unconcerned with his color, accept</p>
        <p>irds</p>
        <p>Jackson so easily, even if the wo mean little to them.</p>
        <p>If the children embrace him, why not the adults?</p>
        <p>In the words of the candidate himself, it is pure Jackson action. Against the odds, Jesse Jackson has won more popular votes than any other Democrat in the presidential race, thanks in part to a split vote</p>
        <p>among white canddates and a nearly .........  black</p>
        <p>total control by Jacteon of the electorate. But in selected states he also has won more than 20 percent of the white vote, and lately that number appears to be growing. Local polls suggest that he is an even bet to win Wisconsin on Tuesday, a state in which just 3 percent of the voting age population is black.</p>
        <p>What is the essence of Jacksons appeal? </p>
        <p>Part of it is that Jackson, say analysts, is embracing the progressive platform that others in the party had seemed determined to abandon.</p>
        <p>Even now, when Democrats hear that old-time Democratic fudamen-talism, they laugh and cry and speak in tongues, said Times political consultant William Schneider, a political scientist at the American Enterprise' Institute.</p>
        <p>Part of it, too, is that no other Democrat is offering a compelling message at a moment when the party is weak and in a period of transition. No one nas expressed an alternative vision, Schneider said.</p>
        <p>^ Yet others this year, such as Missouri Rep. Richard A. Gephardt, have tried populism. Illinois Sen.</p>
        <p>Paul Simon has tried unapologetic liberalism.</p>
        <p>To these, Jackson adds not only charisma, but also promises so improbably wonderful, rhetoric so soar-ingly optimistic, and an approach so emotional rather than intellectual that believing him becomes a renewing act of faith for blacks and whites alike.</p>
        <p>When it came down to it, he is the only one who is offering hope for my kids, said Roger Rapaport, a 37-year-old white attorney from Lansing, Mich., and a father of two small children.</p>
        <p>Im 24 and mine is the generation of apathy, said Kathleen Krause, a college student from Lansing. Half the kids I know from high school arent even registered to vote.</p>
        <p>After seeing Jackson wow teenagers at a Lansing high school, Krause said she thought, Maybe, just maybe he can get us out of this apathy.</p>
        <p>Often the most poignant moment in Jacksons stump speech is when he mockingly poses the question of many political strategists, What does Jesse want?</p>
        <p>His answer is breathtaking: I want to stop drugs. What do I want? I want to wipe out malnutrition... end ghettos... save jobs... secure farms ... invest in people... raise minimum wage ..i comparable worth for women... build affordable housing... make America better... then let the sun shine on everybody! </p>
        <p>It is a list so impossible one cannot help wonder sometimes whether</p>
        <p>Jackson is naive or just insincere. Yet it is a list so full of hope and</p>
        <p>wonder that it brings crowds to their feet.</p>
        <p>Jackson talks a lot about faith: Faith has been renewed. Hope has been revived.</p>
        <p>And faith, as a minister must know, involves the abandonment of rationalism in favor of spiritualism.</p>
        <p>Everything starts here, in the gut, Jackson said, one night recently on his campaign bus in a rare moment when his guard was lowered. Not here, pointing to his head.</p>
        <p>People go from feeling to action, and they use their heads to rationalize their actions.</p>
        <p>People begin to see, touch, feel and they begin to believe.</p>
        <p>Jackson does not talk about explaining his position. He talks about the affection level between himself and his audiences.</p>
        <p>I love you, he will tell audiences, white and black.</p>
        <p>In some ways, Jackson is at his most intimate from a distance of 30 feet or more  at the podium, before</p>
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        <p>Analysis</p>
        <p>ty, Bring me your tired, your poor</p>
        <p>a group. From there he reveals more of himself, and gives more of himself. Up closer, he can be patronizing, dictatorial, uncomfortable  though at times, such as when he is talking about the civil rights movement, or music, he can relax.</p>
        <p>Jacksons delivery differs dependas</p>
        <p>ding on his crowds. Working-class blacks in churches hear the revival-meeting style. Upper-class blacks hear a far more tempered discussion of the predicament. Working-class whites hear another tone. College students another. And legislators still another. And Jackson talks candidly about reading the cultural nuances of a crowd before or while he speaks. Some people are listening, looking to reject, some are listening looking to rejoice. Some are there to convert. Some are just curious.</p>
        <p>Sometimes Jackson avoids the question of color, relying instead on his use of children. Sometimes Jackson uses his race as not onlv an issue but as the most compelling issue.</p>
        <p>To many black audiences, for instance, Jackson says his election means there are no more impossible dreams.... If I can make it you can make it.</p>
        <p>To better-educated, more liberal white audiences, a group among which Jackson has had strong appeal, he also addresses race:</p>
        <p>You may have missed the March</p>
        <p>on Selma, Ala., 23 years ago to win for blacks the right to vote. But dont you miss March 26, he told a largely white audience in Grand Rapids, Mich.</p>
        <p>Vote for Medgar Evers. Vote for Dr. Martin Luther King, he tells a half-white audience of students at Western Michigan University. Vote ' for your self-respect. Dont let their dying be in vain. Vote with a passion.</p>
        <p>Norman Ornstein, a political scientist at the American Enterprise In-situte, calls it laying a heavy civil rights guilt trip on white liberals.</p>
        <p>Not surprisingly, Jackson delegate coordinator Steve Cobble sees it more optimistically: Casting your vote for Jackson really does embody an embrace of the civil rights movement, and a time, he says, when people were proud of what they were doing politically, and more optimistic about the nations future.</p>
        <p>Jacksons'rhetoric embodies even more ancient calls of American nobility, too. Speeches are laced with references to We the People, and the epigram from the Statue of Liber-</p>
        <p>in a sense, his message is as simplisth; as the Little Engine that Could. Hej^id he could win, andon the force m his own personality and a split oppositionhe has.</p>
        <p>And by draping his own election in the larger cause of civil rights and liberal optimism, a vote for Jackson becomes a vote of significance.</p>
        <p>Maybe in America, anyone can grow up to be president. It is not difficult, in the moment of passion during a Jackson speech, to wonder: Maybe we really can end malnutrition and stop drugs.</p>
        <p>He doesnt seem like the kind of person who would let them go, said Kathe Cassidy, a white marketing director of a regional shopping mall in Lansing.</p>
        <p>ma</p>
        <p>to accomplish evei campaign, Cassidy said.</p>
        <p>And congressional checks and balances, Cassidy said, will sand the rough edges off Jacksons policies.</p>
        <p>At least he has a wish list, says campaign press secretary Del Marie Cobb.</p>
        <p>Jacksons essentially emotional, non-intellectual approach on the stump is one of the ways he deals with the issue of race. He picks up</p>
        <p>white children and piev respond tb IS fai</p>
        <p>him. He embraces farmers. He makes people feel powerful and positive.</p>
        <p>Nor, apparently, is it difficult to shed rational concerns about elec-tability and budget deficits, and give oneself over to hope.</p>
        <p>Robersons Nursery</p>
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        <p>Across the years, Jackson tells an integrated group at the Union Baptist Church in Hartford, Conn., I have never seen hope fail as a force of change.</p>
        <p>Supporters seem unconcerned that Jacksons platform has the ring of the fantastic:</p>
        <p>No presidential candidate is able</p>
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        <p>Pollution Adds To Woes Of Carteret Fishermen</p>
        <p>BEAUFORT, N.C. (AP) -Carteret County, with more commercial fishermen than any other county and the states leader in fish landings, may be facing a severe threat to the water that provides that livelihood.</p>
        <p>The outbreak of toxic red tide that hit Carteret County in late October drew most of the headlines, but pollution has also been at work, closing almost 50 percent of the countys shellfishing acreage since 1980.</p>
        <p>County fishermen in 1986 landed 32 million pounds of fish worth $23 million  more than a third of the value of the total state catch for the year, but manv residents fear that could be drastically reduced if pollution from developments on Bogue Banks and elsewhere outstrip efforts to protect the water.</p>
        <p>Those sort of things are causing</p>
        <p>peq)le to have a lot of concern about water quality, state Rep. Bruce Ethridge, D-Onslow, a member of the legislative panel who lives in Beaufort, told The News and Observer of Ralei^. The red tide stimulated a lot of interest. R made a lot of people realize how important it is to have a clean environment. </p>
        <p>Bo^e Banks, a 25-mile long island forming the countys southern shoreline, is one of the most intensely developed stretches on the North Carolina coast, containing the resort areas of Atlantic Beach, Pine Knoll Shores, Salter Path, Indian Beach and Emerald Isle. Many retirees, tourist and second-home owners are attracted to the area because of the abundance of nearby water for sport fishing, boating and swimming.</p>
        <p>Its all dependent on the water -clean water, said William Smith, a</p>
        <p>commercial fisherman and seafood dealer who is chairman of the Carteret County Board of Commissioners.</p>
        <p>One of two proposals has raised fears in local residents. It calls for a marina and housing complex near B^d Creek, which flows into the waters of western Bogue Sound. Residents fear the marina would pollute nearby waters and force the state to ban shellfishing in one of the states most productive waters for clams and scallops.</p>
        <p>We beheve that we are slowly losing the battle to protect the estuaries</p>
        <p>that our coastal fishermen are dependent upon, said Allyn Powell, president of the environmental group Carteret County Crossroads.</p>
        <p>Even developers, usually at odds with environmentalists about regulations to protect the environment, agree that local economy depends on the purity of local waters.</p>
        <p>Developers recognize that a healthy environment is the key to attracting citizens to the coast, said Ronnie Watson, an Emerald Isle developer and member of the state Coastal Resources Commission. We</p>
        <p>cannot kill the goose that laid the golden egg.</p>
        <p>Yet Watson and other developers say unbridled enthusiasm for proteo tii the environment could shran^e economic mwth. And they say its not fair to blame development for all the water pollution problems.</p>
        <p>Recently, residents were dismayed when the N.C. Environmental Management Commission denied a request by several groups to designate two outstanding resource waters in Carteret County. One area was the western part of Bogue</p>
        <p>Sound adjacent to the proposed Broad Reach marina, and the other was the southern part of Core Sound.</p>
        <p>Environmentalists and fishermen say they suspect the EMC denied the</p>
        <p>s. Commission members said they (xmld reconsider their decision, ba^ on studies by their staff. But some wonder what will happen to those areas in the meantime.</p>
        <p>While youre waiting, couldnt it be harmed in such a way that it would no longer Qualify for that designation? Ethriage asked.</p>
        <p>Hospitals Seek Specialty Staffers</p>
        <p>m THE STATE</p>
        <p>By The Associated Press On top of the much publicized shortage of nurses, hospitals in North</p>
        <p>Easter Egg Fight</p>
        <p>FALLSTON, N.C. (AP) - At Sugar Hill on Easter morning, you dont hide eggs, you fight with them.</p>
        <p>For more than 100 years, people from this fanning commumty in northeastern Qeveland County nave gathered early on Easter to break eggs and renew community bonds.</p>
        <p>Donald Lingerfelt of Hickory started this years fight at 7tlO a.m. in the middle of Sugar Hill Road.</p>
        <p>A young girl stepped shyly forward with an egg clutched in one fist, the eggs light green tip exposed. Lmgerfelt, holding an egg in his finger tips, tapped her egg twice.</p>
        <p>Tlie green egg yielded with a crunch. The girl reversed her egg to expose the unbroken blunt end. Lingerfelt tapped again and the</p>
        <p>^TfngerfeU claimed the^broken egg and the child produced a new egg for a second fight. The match continued until Lingerfelt won four eggs, the girl two.</p>
        <p>Within an hour, 150 people were fighting eggs along a 50-yard stretch of the road. Thousands of broken eggs, the spoils of the victors, filled kets, baskets and the back of one ttered pickup.</p>
        <p>King Anniversary</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP) - The 20-year anniversary of Martin Luther King Jr.s death gave many North Carolinians time to reflect on how the civil rights leader affected their lives.</p>
        <p>At 31, Thomas Johnson, a youth development worker. Baptist minister and member of the Reidsville City Council, comes between those who were teens or adults during Kings life and those who have known about him all their lives.</p>
        <p>One of three children supported by a mother who worked at menial cleaning jobs, his college tuition was paid for by federal assistance pro-^ grams created in response to the federal civil rights movement.</p>
        <p>I would never have been able to go to college if it hadnt been for Martin Luther Kings dream, Johnson said.</p>
        <p>Carolyn Burgman, 44, of Greensboro, was playing with her infant daughter in 1968 whf&amp;gt;n she learn-</p>
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        <p>ed King was shot to death as he stood on the balcony of a Memphis, Tenn., motel.</p>
        <p>I was outraged, she recalled in an interview. I sat there sobbing, thinking this cannot be.</p>
        <p>8 Die On Highways</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP) - Eight people were killed in traffic accidents in North Carolina during the Easter weekend, including a 7-year-old Randolph County boy who rode his bicycle into the path of a car, the state Highway Patrol said today.</p>
        <p>Stephen Wade Singleton of Asheboro died around 1 p.m. Friday when he rolled into the path of a car nearRamseur.</p>
        <p>Christy Diana Franklin, 17, of Moravian Falls was killed at 10 a.m. Friday when she drove her car into the path of another vehicle on N.C. 16 just north of Taylorsville, the patrol said.</p>
        <p>Robert Alan Lisle, 26, died at 9 p.m. Friday when his motorcycle hit a car on U.S. 158 north of Greensboro. Susan Evans Cahoon, 32, also was killed Friday evening when her car was struck by two vehicles after she reportedly ran a stop sign on U.S. 17 south of Vanceboro, according to the patrol.</p>
        <p>George Fenton Helms, 48, of Charlotte was killed Thursday evening when the car he was driving collided with two vehicles on U.S. 29 and overturned, troopers reported.</p>
        <p>Mildred ^ms Sorrells, 53, of Canton, was killed Saturday morning when the car she was driving hit a culvert and overturned near Canton.</p>
        <p>Phillip Alexander Jukoski, 33, of Apex, di</p>
        <p>when he ran in front of a car on U.S.</p>
        <p>led at 5:15 a.m. Saturday</p>
        <p>64 west of C!ary, the patrol said.</p>
        <p>Jeny Wayne Reel, 41, of Marion, was killed late Saturday night when the car he was driving hit an embankment off U.S. 70 near Marion and overturned.</p>
        <p>The death toll for 1988 stands at 292 compared with 333 at the same time last year. The Easter holiday traffic watch beun Thursday at 6 p.m. and concluded at midnight Sunday.</p>
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        <p>Recently, weve been discussing the miracle" of the new staln-reslftant carpet youve been seeing and hearing so much about on TV. In fact, this new technologys advantages are so outstanding that advertisers and salespersons often get a bit carried away!</p>
        <p>You can hardly blame them, since for years, theyve had to hang their heads when a recent customer called for help the first time some chic dinner guest spilled a glass of red wine on the newly installed carpet. And thats, not to mention the problems created by all the dye In the kids punch or fruit juice!</p>
        <p>Wonderful stain-resist carpet is!...</p>
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        <p>N.C. Farmers Optimistic</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP) - Better prices and increased demand have farmers across North Carolina heading into their fields with renewed hope. TTiey anticipate a good season  possibly their best in mree years.</p>
        <p>We have three crops looking up... in terms of profitability, said W.K. Collins, a specialist in charge of crop science for the North Carolina Agricultural Extension Service. Peanuts, cotton and tobacco.</p>
        <p>Collins and other experts said demand for all three was increasing worldwide.</p>
        <p>Theres more optimism out in tobacco land than there has been in years, said Larry Barbour, a Clayton farmer and the chairman of the board for Tobacco Associates Inc., a farmers cooperative. Farmers are raring to get up and go at it. While cigarette use in the U.S. is falling annually at a rate of about 2 percent, use in foreign nations is growing and exports now account for about 53 percent total flue-cured leaf sales.</p>
        <p>The planting season is just days away and North Carolinas leaf growerswho produce 66 percent of Uie nations flue-cured tobacco  have had their hopes boosted by increased foreign demand for U.S. cigarettes, better market prices, and reforms that have been working since 1986.</p>
        <p>The tobacco program is working and its working ... at minimum cost, said Jim Graham, state agriculture commissioner. In past years, assessments to run the governments leaf program  shared by growers and buyers - reached the 25-centsi they are Government quotas creased, allowing farmers to grow more, and the assessments have dropped. Years-old surpluses are falling. When they were high, prices stayed depressed.</p>
        <p>Last year, that changed. Tobacco sales brought an average price of $158.75 per hundred pounds, up $6.10 from 1986.</p>
        <p>Our crop last year averaged about 15 cents above the support prices, Collins told The News and Observer of Raleigh. He and other experts, including Gerald H. Long, chairman of R.J. Reynolds Tobacco USA, predict the trend will continue.</p>
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        <p>By: Glenn Corey STAIN-RESIST LIMITATIONS</p>
        <p>Next Monday Staln-Reaiatant Carpet. Does It ever get soiled?</p>
        <p>Carolina are finding it increasingly difficult to fill dozens of other specialty positions  many needed as the number of elderly people grows, officials say.</p>
        <p>One example is in the field of physical therapy. The aging population, the rise in sports memcine and health programs, and new federal reimbursement raws encouraging home health care over hospital stays are increasing demand. And schools arent keeping up.</p>
        <p>The marketplace is just expanding more rapimy than has the anility of the educational institutions to prepare people for entry into physical therapy, said Robert Bartlett, chairman of the department of physical therapy at Duke Medical School.</p>
        <p>There are also shortages of medical technologists, who perform laboratory tests to help in the diagnoses of disease, and respirator therapists, who treat breathing disorders.</p>
        <p>Im not sure that people are aware that there are going to be generalized shortages; theres so much smoke and flame about the shortage of nurses, said W.E. Pete Roye, the director of management services for the N.C. Hospital Association. I have the impression that this one is kind of slipping up on us.</p>
        <p>Bob Wildermann, assistant director for hospital laboratories at Duke University Medical Center, told The News and Observer of Raleigh that last year was the first time there werent enough students available to fiU the staff.</p>
        <p>The medical center has 23 vacancies among 214 positions for medical technologists. Though a 10 percent vacancy rate sounds minor, he said, if youre part of the 90 percent thats left working overtime all the time, its bad.</p>
        <p>The Area Health Education Centers Program at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill recently issued a survey of job vacancy rates taken in the fall of 1986 that indicated serious vacancies in the three fields.</p>
        <p>Kate McDonald, an associate director of the program, said there were indications the shortages had grown since the survey. For example, the survey showed that vacan-cies among radiological technologists had increased only slightly from 1981 to 1986, rising from 6.7 percent to 8.0 percent. But we have had many people say in horror, Oh no, we know there s a lot of</p>
        <p>vacancies; we have several at our get out into these general health</p>
        <p>areas, said Roye.</p>
        <p>Another problem in some fields is</p>
        <p>hospital,she said. Man\</p>
        <p>ly causes are similar to those for the nursing shortage: traditionally female-dominated fields are losing women to higher-paying jobs elsewhere; many avoid the field out of fear of contracting AIDS; salaries start fairly low, n-om $20,000 to $25,000, and grow slowly ; and alternative health-care programs such as private clinics lure workers away from hospitals with higher pay, better hours and greater satisfaction.</p>
        <p>National demographic trends afe another headache.</p>
        <p>There just arent that many high school graduates coming out with the necessary math and science skills to</p>
        <p>that declimng enrollments are closing schools or programs, although demand for new graduates is likely to increase.</p>
        <p>In 1970 there were 118 accredited cytotechnology programs in the United States, said Nancy Gardner, branch head of the cancer cytology laboratory of the state Division of Health, which tests cell samples from Pap smears and other exams. In 1988 there are 47 accredited programs, but only 39 are active.</p>
        <p>The number of medical technology schools has been dropping, too.</p>
        <p>UmtedVI^</p>
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        <p>WET CONNECTION  Sheri Murphy, who lives in suburban Metairie, La., makes a telephone call for help after her car got caught in a flooded New Orleans street. Nine inches of rain soaked south Louisiana Saturday, and more fell later, causing flooding that was blamed for at least one death. (AP Laserphoto)</p>
        <p>Twisters Pop Mich.; Louisiana Mops Up</p>
        <p>By The Associated Press</p>
        <p>[ns spav</p>
        <p>four tornadoes in Michigan, causing</p>
        <p>By</p>
        <p>Thundei</p>
        <p>irstorms spawned at least</p>
        <p>00 injuries but damaging dozens of hmnes and disrupting electrical service, while Louisiana residents cleaned up from a weekend twister and flooding.</p>
        <p>Much of the damage in Michigan sht</p>
        <p>was confined to Washtenaw County southwest of Detroit, where a funnel chnid touched down four times Sunday afternoon along a 13-mile path, said Dan Harsh, the county emergency management director.</p>
        <p>The National Weather Service confirmed three other tornadoes in southeast Michigan, meteorologist Tom Fendon said.</p>
        <p>More than two dozen homes and several bams were damaged by the four twisters, along with trees and utility poles, officials said.</p>
        <p>A funnel cloud and golfball-size hail were reported late Sunday afternoon in the Washtenaw County community of Manchester, but the twister apparently did not touch down, Fendon said.</p>
        <p>Hie storm system also produced severe thunderstorms elsewhere in the states Lower Peninsula. Traverse City, Houghton Lake and Grand Rapids each received about 1 inch of rain, while wind gusts reached 63 mph near Ann Arbor, the weather service said.</p>
        <p>About 9,000 customers lost electrical service during the storm, utility officials said.</p>
        <p>In Louisiana, partly cloudy skies and SO^egree weather permitted a continued cleanup Sunday by victims of a tornado and floods that accompanied a torrential weekend rain.</p>
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        <p>Pope Issues Easter Plea For Peace</p>
        <p>Southeast Louisiana was waterlogged by more than a foot of precipitation. Rain-swollen rivers and streams continued to crest above flood stage, but officials said the flooding would be confined mostly to rural areas.</p>
        <p>Hardest hit by flooding were the suburban subdivisions in Marrero, across from New Orleans on the west bank of the Mississippi River.  '</p>
        <p>But Tony Rodi, coordinator for emergency management in Jeffer</p>
        <p>son Parish, said streets hip-deep in ry by Sun-</p>
        <p>water on Saturday were dry by day, and power was restored to nearly all the houses.</p>
        <p>ByJEFFDONN Associated Press Writer Christians braved Israeli-Palesti-nian tensions in the Holy Land, prayed in England for an end to Northern Irelands religious bloodshed and listened worldmdb to Pope John Paul IIs Easter plea for peace.</p>
        <p>Elsewhere on Sunday, traditional passion plaw took place in Brazil and chaplains delivers services aboard U.S. warships in the Persian Gulf.</p>
        <p>In Hungary, men prepared for todays more frivolous dousing of women with perfume during the traditional sprinkling spree.</p>
        <p>In Vatican City, 100,000 people ithered in St. Peter Square on Sun-y to hear the popes Easter message, which had a broadcast audience of millions.</p>
        <p>Pray for peace in the world, for</p>
        <p>joined in services Sunday at the site where most Christians believe Jesus rose from the dead.</p>
        <p>But only about half as many people came as last year to the services at</p>
        <p>the 12th centi^ Church of the Holy</p>
        <p>lid.</p>
        <p>justice, pray for the rights of man, especially for religious freedom,</p>
        <p>the Roman Catholic leader said.</p>
        <p>In Jerusalem, about 1,000 faithful</p>
        <p>Sepulcher, church officials sai Many had been deterred by four months of Palestinian protests and Israeli crackdowns in me occupied territories that have left more than 135 Arabs dead.</p>
        <p>In Canterbury, England, Anglican Archbishop Robert Runcie compared the March 19 slaying of two British soldiers at an Irisn Republican Army funeral in Northern Ireland to Christs crucifixion.</p>
        <p>The two soldiers were shot to death in a predominantly Roman Catholic distnct of west Belfast after they were beaten by mourners heading to the burial of an IRA guerrilla.</p>
        <p>Runcie said in his Easter sermon that Christs death was a dark death, as dark in the cruelty and</p>
        <p>hatred which attended it as were the deaths of those two young soldiers in Belfast a fortnight ago.</p>
        <p>But he said the joyous memory of Christs resurrection should give hope for an end to Northern Irelands sectarian violence.</p>
        <p>In Belfast, thousands marched peacefully to mark the 1916 Easter uprising against British rule in what is now the neighboring Republic of Ireland.</p>
        <p>In Hungary, men were stocking up on eau de cologne for todays sprinkling spree when they rove in groups perfuming girls and women. The custom is believed to stem partly from ancient fertility rites.</p>
        <p>At St. Stanislaw Kostka church in northern Warsaw, where the slain pro-Solidarity priest Jerzy Popieluszko is burieo, a Christ figure was draped in a banner in the red lettering of the outlawed trade federation.</p>
        <p>It read: We will rise again.</p>
        <p>In the Czechoslovak capital of Prague, 2,000 believers attended an</p>
        <p>Easter Mass at St. Vitus Cathedral over a week after riot police Ke up a peaceful demonstration for religious freedom in Bratislava.</p>
        <p>In the Persian Gulf, where Iran</p>
        <p>and Iraq are at war, skippers of 16 U.S. Navy ships marked Easter with</p>
        <p>messages to their crews. Religious services were held aboard several vessels.</p>
        <p>More than 10,000 people took part Sunday in peace marches in West Germanys major cities and at several U.S. military installations there.' The traditional Easter weekend marches are held for world peace and the destruction of nuclear weapons.</p>
        <p>Brazil, the worlds most populous Catholic nation, celebrated Easter with traditional passion plays recounting Christs crucifixion. In Rio de Janeiro, many of the main roles, including that of Jesus, were for the first time played by blacks in keeping with the churchs :]uality campaign.</p>
        <p>About 90 percent of Brazi</p>
        <p>s 135</p>
        <p>million people are Roman Catholic.</p>
        <p>Heckler Yells At Swaggart</p>
        <p>MOUNDSVILLE, W.Va. (AP) -State police today expanded into Ohio and Pennsylvania a manhunt for three convicted murderers who escaped from the maximum-security West Virginia Penitentiary.</p>
        <p>The three inmates were serving life sentences without possibility for parole and were housed separately in cells in the same prison wing, said Jerrie Clutter, secretary to Warden Jerry Hedrick.</p>
        <p>Few details of how the inmates escaped from the high security prison were available, Clutter said.</p>
        <p>BATON ROUGE, La. (AP) - A teen-age heckler called Jimmy Swaggart a hypocrite after the fallen TV evangelist spoke at a church service, but the youth was drowned out</p>
        <p>ting on the hurch stage at the time with   </p>
        <p>by a hastily summoned mass prayer.</p>
        <p>hypocri-</p>
        <p>Brother Swaggart, your hypocrisy is scornful ofthe government of God, the young man, about 16 years old, yelled during a brief lull in the service Sunday at Swaggarts Family Worship Center.</p>
        <p>Swaggart, who has not been preaching since tearfully confessing to an unspecified sin Feb. 21, was sit-</p>
        <p>his wife, Frances. He did not visibly react to the heckler.</p>
        <p>The Rev. Jim Rentz, who has taken over Swaggarts role, watched the youth for a moment and then told the 3,000 worshipers, Lets stand folks and lets just praise the Lord.</p>
        <p>Rentz and the coi^egation drowned out the youth until he was escorted from the sanctuary by ushers. During his brief outburst, the youth also referred to immoral sins and money.</p>
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        <pb facs="00096894_0008" />
        <p>The Dally Reflector, Greenville, N.C.</p>
        <p>Monday, April 4,1988</p>
        <p>Candidates Resume Front-Runner Battle</p>
        <p>By LAURA KING Associated Press Writer</p>
        <p>The Democratic presidential contenders plunged toaay into back-to-back battles in Colorado and Wisconsin, with Michael Dukakis and Jesse Jackson fighting it out for the front-runners spot.</p>
        <p>Forty-five Democratic delegates are at stake in todays Colorado caucuses. Tuesdays Wisconsin primary offers an even richer prize  81 Democratic delegates, plus a boost heading into a round of big-state contests in coming weeks.</p>
        <p>All four of the Democrats were campaigning today in Wisconsin. A day earlier, the presidential candidates spent Easter Sunday courting church congregations.</p>
        <p>Pat Robertson, his Republican bid all but crushed by Vice President Geoi|e Bush, claimed a divine mandate for his presidential candidacy.</p>
        <p>We are laying the foundation for a great victory for this nation. It mav</p>
        <p>not be m 1988.... but I am not going to quit, said the former television evangelist. That is His plan for me and this nation.</p>
        <p>Jackson preached Easter sermons to huge crowds in Colorado, telling them: Hope has been unleashed. He commemorated the assassination of Martin Luther King 20 years ago today, drawing a parallel with the crucifixion.</p>
        <p>Dr. King and Jesus: ... Government set the climates for their killings, Jackson said. Dr. King got in trouble with our government for ending apartheid.</p>
        <p>Jackson also said he is awaiting a report from a representative he dispatched to Panama, but that he has not offered to mediate the dispute over Panamanian strongman Manuel Antonio Noriegas continued rule.</p>
        <p>Jackson chalked up another win over the weekend in the Virgin Islands Democratic caucus, picking</p>
        <p>up 634 votes to Dukakis 37. The contest netted Jackson (Hily three delegates, but he drew closer to the Massachusetts governor in their seesaw battle for supremacy in the delegate race.</p>
        <p>The latest AP tally gave Dukakis 653.55, Jackson 646.55, with the uncommitted tally at 468.6. Tennessee Sen. Albert Gore had 381.8 and Sen. Paul Simon of Illinois, 169.5.</p>
        <p>Dukakis visited a shelter for the homeless in Denver over the weekend, saying he is a doer and not just a talker.</p>
        <p>Dukakis campaign spokesman Bob Johnson predicted Democrats would begin to focus on one Democrat to beat Bush  and that Democrat will be Dukakis.</p>
        <p>Colorado has been considered important from the beginning, he said. We dont take anything for ranted. We expect to be competitive ! and have a good showing. *</p>
        <p>CLOWNING AROUND. Vice President George Bush is greeted by Ringling Brothers-Barnum and Baily Circus clowns prior to a performance Bush and his grand</p>
        <p>children attended Sunday Laserphoto)</p>
        <p>in Washington. D.C. (AP</p>
        <p>Zaccaro Drug Trial Begins</p>
        <p>By DANICA KIRKA Associated Press Writer</p>
        <p>MONTPELIER, Vt. (AP) - John Zaccaro Jr. faces trial today on a charge of selling cocaine to an undercover agent after his attorneys failed in their bid to have the case overturned.</p>
        <p>'The son of former vice presidential candidate Geraldine Ferraro pleaded innocent to the 1986 charge, which carries a five-year prison term. The trial was scheduled to start today in Vermont District Court in Rutland.</p>
        <p>The case has progressed slowly because of appeals to the Vermont Supreme Court, including a claim that Zaccaro was singled out for prosecution because of his famous mother.</p>
        <p>Two weeks ago, one of the challenges paid off, when Vermont District Judge Francis McCaffrey dismissed one of the two original charges against Zaccaro.</p>
        <p>But Zaccaros attorneys, Charles Tetzlaff and Thomas Sherrer, lost their bid to have the case thrown out altogether; the Vermont Supreme Court refill to dismiss the charges last year.</p>
        <p>Zaccaro, 24, was a senior at Mid-dlebury CoU^e when he was arrested Feb. 20, 1986, outside a Mid-dlebury restaurant where he worked.</p>
        <p>The prosecution alleges the undercover agent, Laura Manning, bought one-quarter gram of cocaine from Zaccaro at his off-campus apartment earlier that day.</p>
        <p>Police searched Zaccaros car and said they found eight grams of cocaine, $1,600 in cash and cheeks, and</p>
        <p>documents described as records of drug transactions.</p>
        <p>The arrest came in the wake of rumors that Zaccaro allegedly was selling drugs on campus and had earned the nickname the pharmacist, Middlebury Police Sgt. David Wemette said at the time.</p>
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        <p>Gore and Simn are both badly in need of a win in Wisconsin. Gore has not had a victory since Super Tuesday; Sim&amp;lt;Hi has only won in his home state of Illinois.</p>
        <p>Simon searched for votes as children hunted eg^t an Easter egg hunt in MaclS^ He said he</p>
        <p>lieve Jackson was automatically entitled to the nominati(Hi if he led in popular vote and delegate totals at the end of the primary season.</p>
        <p>I (mly believe hes entitled to the nomination if we succeed in producing the appropriate number of dele-</p>
        <p>_ _    _  gates,  Brown  said.</p>
        <p>shares Jacksons passion for the  Jackson himself downplayed  the</p>
        <p>less fortunate, adding: I offer not possibility of a convention fight, only passion, but the experience to do Were certainly going to stand for something about it.  fairness,  but I hope it wont come to a</p>
        <p>Simon also said his credentials are better than those of Dukakis.</p>
        <p>I have the experience with national issues that, frankly, Mike doesnt have, he said.</p>
        <p>A poll in the Milwaukee JcHimal, conducted Wednesday and Thursday, gave Dukakis a narrow lead over Jackson in Wisconsin, 43 to 35 percent. Gore had 15 percent and Simon 5 percent, according to the poll, which had a margin of error of plus or minus 5 percentage points.</p>
        <p>Although its survey suggested Gore was behind, the newspaper endorsed him, calling the Tennessee senator the best qualified to serve as president. The Journal praised Jackson for shaking up the political process but said his lack of experience in government was a weak point.</p>
        <p>Gore has been hitting at Jacksons lack of government experience and questioniim his electability. Dukakis, however, smed away from predicting how Jackson would do against Bush.</p>
        <p>I dont think there is any way of knowing, he told reporters outside a Milwaukee church on Sunday. But, he added: I think George Bush is beatable. Id like to be able to run against him.</p>
        <p>Democratic Party Chairman Paul Kirk also sidestepped questions about Jacksons electability.</p>
        <p>The Democratic Party will do its best to nominate, I hope;' the mpst electable candidate in order to win in November, Kirk said Sunday on ABC-TVs This Week With David Brinkley.</p>
        <p>A poll published in this weeks editions of U.S. News &amp;amp; World rep(irt said if Jackson became Dukakis running mate, the Democrats could defeat the Republican ticket, regardless of who became Bushs running mate. A Dukakis-Jackson ticket was supported by 47 percent of the 1,004 people contacted last week by telej^one for the poll, while a hy-pthetical GOP ticket of Bush and Illinois Gov. Jim Thompson would win 42 percent, the survey said. '</p>
        <p>The poll, conducted by the Roper Organization, had a margin of error of plus or minus 4 percentage points.</p>
        <p>Another poll, published in this weeks editions of Newsweek magazine, said two-thirds of Democrats and voters leaning toward the party say Jackson shoiud get the nomination if he leads in popular vote and delegates at the time of the convention  even if he doesnt have the 2,082 delegates needed to nominate. Jacksons campaign chairman,</p>
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        <p>Zaccaro also was charged with possession of cocaine with intent to sell, the charge thrown out because it hinged on the evidence in Zaccaros car.</p>
        <p>In 1986, McCaffrey said there was insufficient evidence for the search warrant used to obtain the items. In throwing out the charge two weeks ago, he rejected the contention of Addison County States Attorney John Quinn that the charge could be proven based solely on Mannings observations.</p>
        <p>No more motions or requests were expected before or at the start of the trial, Quinn said Friday. Tetzlaff declined to comment.</p>
        <p>The case will be followed closely by students at the liberal arts college, even though Zaccaro dropped out in the fall of 1986, said Sharon Harper, the editor of the college newspaper, The Middlebury Campus.</p>
        <p>The case of John Zaccaro opened up the administration to drug problems in Middlebury, Harper said. I think its important that people see how this case follows through so they know that theres (a penalty) for drug abuse.</p>
        <p>California Assembly Speaker Willie Brown, raised the possibility of a floor fight at the convention this summer if the Jackson forces believed the delegate race had not played out fairly.</p>
        <p>I think if the rules need to be challenged we will do so, said Brown, also interviewed on the ABC program.</p>
        <p>However, Brown said he did not be-</p>
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        <p>Lifestyle</p>
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        <p>By JAN LARSEN Joliet Herald News</p>
        <p>PLAINFIELD TOWNSHIP, 111. (AP)  Jim Aylesworth is spinning a  yam  and hes ensnared his pint-sized audience at Crystal Lawns Elementary School.</p>
        <p>All eyes are on him as he paces the gym Hoor, sits, leaps to his feet, gestures, folds a piece of paper, and then scribbles on it.</p>
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        <p>He is also a source of inspiration for these students, who will soon be writing stories for a Young Authors competition.</p>
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        <p>Carolina Chapter, meets at The Memorial ch.</p>
        <p>Baptist Churcli 7 :.30 p.m.  Pitt County Board of Education meets in third floor conference room, Pitt County Office Building.</p>
        <p>7:30 p.m.  Gamblers Anonymous meets at St. Peters Catholic Church.</p>
        <p>7:30 p.m.  Greenville Barber Sb^</p>
        <p>Chorus meets at Jaycee Park ministrative Building 8:00 p.m.  The Adult Children of Alco</p>
        <p>holics Support Group meets at Saint "jthodii   --  -</p>
        <p>James Methodist Church, Sixth Street.</p>
        <p>8:00 p.m.  Overeaters Anonymous step</p>
        <p>meeting at FHrst Presbyterian Church, Str</p>
        <p>Harvey-Webb room, Elm Street</p>
        <p>8:00 p.m.  Lodge No. 885 Loyal Order   Mo</p>
        <p>of the Moose 8:00 p.m.  Alcoholics Anonymous closed discussion, AA Building, Farmville Highway  -  .</p>
        <p>8:00 p.m.  Narcotics Anonymous open discussion meeting, St. Pauls Episcopal Church, 401E. Fourth St.</p>
        <p>TUESDAY 7:00 a.m.  Greenville Breakfast Lion Club meets at Three Steers 10:00 a.m.  Kiwanis Golden K Club meets at Masonic Hall 6:30 p.m.  Greenville Kiwanis Club meets at Cypress Glen Retin^ment Center, 100 Hickory k.  ^</p>
        <p>7:30 p.m.  Cherry Oaks Home and    &amp;gt;clur-</p>
        <p>Garden Club meets at clubhouse 8:00 p.m.  Eastern Regional AIDS Support and Education Group (ERASE) meets in First Presbyterian Church.</p>
        <p>leets in First Presbyterian Church.</p>
        <p>8:00 p.m.  Pitt Co. Alcoholics Anony-lous meets at AA Building, Farmville</p>
        <p>mous Highway</p>
        <p>8:00 p.m.  Pitt County Al-Anon/am^ ly support</p>
        <p>group meets at St. Pauls Episcopal Church.</p>
        <p>group meets at St. James United Mei ist Church. Call 758-1491 or 825-1982</p>
        <p>8:00 p.m.  Nar-Anon family support</p>
        <p>8:00 p.m.  Narcotics Anonymous open discussion meeting at St. Paul Episcopal Church</p>
        <p>WEDNESDAY 9:30 a.m.  Duplicate bridge meets at -Senior Center 9:30 a.m.  Joy of Living, an interdenominational womens Bible study, meets in Greenville Bible Church.</p>
        <p>10:00 a.m.  Pitt Golden K Kiwanis Club meets at Greenville Country Club Noon  Narcotics Anonymous meets at St. Pauls Episcopal Churcn.</p>
        <p>Noon  Overeaters Anonymous meets at Walter B. Jones Rehabilitation Center</p>
        <p>1:30 p.m.  Duplicate bridge meets at</p>
        <p>Ce</p>
        <p>Senior Center</p>
        <p>CHECKS CASHED</p>
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        <p>SOUTHERN GUN &amp;amp; PAWN, INC.</p>
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        <p>500 NORTH GREENE ;:,I uRE t NVII. IE</p>
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        <p>QrMnvllla Buyer* Martiel</p>
        <p>Phone 359-2973</p>
        <p>^^bODLAND</p>
        <p>TUESDAY LUNCHEON SPECIAL</p>
        <p>Chicken Pastry</p>
        <p>*2.75</p>
        <p>SpMlal MTvad nWi I Iraali agalaMM  rol</p>
        <p>10% off Senior Citizen Plete.</p>
        <p>We Have Homemade Cakes And A Freah Salad Bar. We Have Lowered Over 1,000 Already Low Pricea</p>
        <p>He drawls as he reads about barnyard animals settling down for a nap in his first book, Hush Up! He speaks slowly and thoughtfully as he tells the students that writing and rewriting is a lot of work. And it makes your fingers hurt, he says.</p>
        <p>Writing, he notes, can be painful -when the words wont come out right, when a {Hiblisher rejects you.</p>
        <p>There are other problems, like when Im writing in the basement and my wife calk me to help with supper and I know I have to put aside what Im doing,he said.</p>
        <p>fles. I like all these books, but for erent reasons.</p>
        <p>Do vou pay them to books? asks another</p>
        <p>the</p>
        <p>It.</p>
        <p>Three more are in (lifferent stages of publication.</p>
        <p>He has taught first grade in the Chicago suburb of Oak Park for 16 years and has won several teaching awards. He teaches childrens literature at three Chicago-area colleges and is given time off from school to lecture to students at schools and libraries and at teachers conferences.</p>
        <p>His mission, it seems, is to infect audiences with enthusiasm.</p>
        <p>He loves words - the rhythm, the feel and the sound of them.</p>
        <p>He sings the words of One Crow, a Counting Rhyme, soon to be published.</p>
        <p>Aylesworth opens a battered suitcase he has brought with him and holds up a thick sheaf of papers. These are the letters of rejection, he says.</p>
        <p>There are a lot of hurt feelings here, he says, hefting the papers. Butldidntquit.</p>
        <p>He has just finished book No. 11, and is now starting to think about bodiNo. 12.</p>
        <p>Go for it,, his audience chants. Go for it.</p>
        <p>When its time for questions, a dozen hands wave furiously in the air.</p>
        <p>and fairy tales and says the key to ritinfifoi.........</p>
        <p>Ill pick some of the best kids here to ask me questions, he says.</p>
        <p>More hands shoot up.</p>
        <p>Whats your favorite book? asks one student.</p>
        <p>Thats kind of like asking a father which is his favorite child, he</p>
        <p>writing for children is to know your audience. A lot of people dont. A childs book is not about childhood. Its for children. Theres a big difference.</p>
        <p>He says he became a teacher because Im trying to make a better world. I want to matter. And thats why he has stayed in teaching.</p>
        <p>He admits a male first-grade teacher is a rare breed. There are maybe 20 of us in the state, he said.</p>
        <p>Its sex-role stereotyping in our culture, he said. Its been traditional that females take care of small children. But children definitely need male and female role models.</p>
        <p>He and his wife, Donna, an interior designer, live in Hinsdale and have two sons, ages 18 and 21.</p>
        <p>Hotel Serves As A</p>
        <p>Temporary Haven</p>
        <p>pl</p>
        <p>Sa</p>
        <p>By SUZANNE CASSIDY The Lancaster New Era</p>
        <p>LANCASTER, Pa. (AP) - The ilace looks like any other hotel, me front desk. Same cash register. Same red-carpeted lobby.</p>
        <p>But Harb-Adult, housed in the former King Douelas hotel, is not the kind of place where people spend their hohdays. Its not a place to escape reality.</p>
        <p>At Harb-Adult, reality is a permanent guest.</p>
        <p>Harb-Adult, which stands for harboring of adults, is a hotel for low-income people. It opened in June 1987, with the help of volunteer labor, low-interest loans and donations from individuals, churches and civic groups. With more than 50 rooms now renovated, the non-profit hotel runs consistently at full capacity.</p>
        <p>Its mission, said Richard H. Maurer, chairman of the Harb-Adult board, is to serve as a way station, a temporary haven for rehabilitated people on the move up and out of poverty.</p>
        <p>Its too soon to tell whether Harb-Adult will fulfill its mission. Harb-Adult manager Jay Kiralfy is taking thin^ one day at a time.</p>
        <p>Kiralfy, 38, was a hotel administrator in Las Vegas for 13 years before returning to his native Lancaster County to manage Harb-Adult. He has no social work experience but hes a down-to-earth guy eager to do some good.</p>
        <p>users who lack the motivation, fami-,ly support, training and money management skills they need to get and keep jobs and make their own way.</p>
        <p>The people who are here obviously have some kind of problem or else they wouldnt be here, Kiralfy said.</p>
        <p>^ that he and Harb-Adult can hope to accomplish, he said, is to help the people who can be helped.</p>
        <p>Historic Homes Tour Planned</p>
        <p>Some of his guests, he says, are 9le simply down on</p>
        <p>hard-workii]</p>
        <p>their luck. Those people come to Harb-Adult lodiing for a cheap place</p>
        <p>to live so that they can put together tofini'</p>
        <p>The tour commences with the Forbes House (ca. 1760-70), and continues through Federal, Greek Revival and Victorian styles to the Anderson-Sprenger House built in 1920.</p>
        <p>Along the route of the Historic Homes and Gardens Tour, more than a dozen special events will be offered. Refreshments, crafts demonstrations, and musical programs are included at many of the tour sites.</p>
        <p>Homes tour tickets also include a</p>
        <p>enough money to find a real home.</p>
        <p>Others, he says, are people with mental health problems who have done the whole route, moving from a residential rehabilitation center to shelters to rescue missions. Harb-Adult is just one more stop on the route.</p>
        <p>Still others are drug and alcohol</p>
        <p>horticultural workshop on Spring</p>
        <p>1T]i\tirAinrt DlllKo* 1A n m AawmI a</p>
        <p>Flowering Bulbs at 10 a.m. April 9   inPa......</p>
        <p>in Tryon Palace Auditorium.</p>
        <p>For ticket information write Homes Tour, Box 207, New Bern, N.C. 28560.</p>
        <p>The palace complex hours are 9:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. Mondays through Saturdays, and Sunday, 1:30 p.m. to 4 p.m.</p>
        <p>WE DO</p>
        <p>WINDOWS...</p>
        <p>Drapery and Upholstery Fabrics at Mill Prices!</p>
        <p>HOME FAIKlCj</p>
        <p>(Across from the Moose Lodge, Adjacent to Buyers Market) Division Of THE CLOTH BARN Of GOLDSBORO</p>
        <p>Goldsboro 735-3641  Greenville 756-8111</p>
        <p>Uniforms Belong On The Players</p>
        <p>Aylesworth smiles a big smile. They pay me. He pauses. Imagine.</p>
        <p>Afterward, in an interview, Aylesworth says quite a few of his bodes havent been accepted by publishers.</p>
        <p>His favorite authors of childrens book are Dr. Seuss and Beatrix Potter.</p>
        <p>He began writing, he said, because boiAs meant so much to him and he wanted to be a part of that world.</p>
        <p>He is particularly fond of folklore</p>
        <p>Dear Abby</p>
        <p>Abigail Van Buren</p>
        <p>DEAR ABBY: I agree with Barbara in Ohio. In what other major</p>
        <p>rin America besides baseball the coach/managing staff dress in the team uniform?</p>
        <p>Wouldnt it lo(A rather strange to have K.C. Jones of the Boston Celtii^ or Pat Riley of the Los Angeles Lakers at courtside in basketball shorts, a tank top and high-top sneakers? Or Mike Ditka of the Chicago Bears on the sidelines in a football jersey, pads and all, with headset and cupboard in hand?</p>
        <p>Baseball would do well to follow the example of other smrt team leaders by wearing more mgnified apparel. If not a business suit, perhaps some type of identified leisure wear. But, please, lose the tight pants and stretch over-socks!  SANDRA DAY, BLOOMINGTON, ILL.</p>
        <p>DEAR ABBY: My daughter, 21, is pr^nant by a boy shes been going with for five years. (Hes also 21.) They both work and go to school, but dont have much money. My daughter has decided not to get married right now. Shes keeping the baby.</p>
        <p>My parents came over last night and went into a two-hour harangue, telling me I should force my daughter to get married right away! They said they were embarrassed about what their friends and neighbors would say. They told me that I was a lousy mother and had no morals. They also said if the boys parents were decent people, they would force their son to mai^ the girl.</p>
        <p>What do you think? - MOTHER IN THE MIDDLE</p>
        <p>Engagement</p>
        <p>Announced</p>
        <p>DEAR ABBY: Where does that Ohio woman get off criticizing baseball coaches and managers for wearing the team uniforms with their potbellies hanging out?</p>
        <p>Look at Don Zimmer of the Chicago Cubs, Whitey Herzog of the St. Louis Cardinals, Tommy Lasorda of the L.A. Dodgers and Roger Craig of the San Francisco Giants in their new form-fittiM uniforms. They manage with their brains - not their bellies! - MARTIN SHONK, ANNAPOLIS, ILL.</p>
        <p>DEAR MOTHER: You dont say whether your daughter and the babys father plan to marry eventually, but its apparent that your daughter is in no rush to get married. Your parents have no right to call you a lousy mother and denigrate your morals. While I agree, it would make a prettier picture for friends and neighbors if your expectant daughter were married, you cannot force a 21-year-old to do anything.</p>
        <p>CYNTHIA LYNN EDWARDS - is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Delma W. Edwards of Route 3, Ahoskie, who announce her engagement to Louis M. Fletcher, son of Gloria Fletcher of Greenville. The wedding will take place May 14.</p>
        <p>Eastern Electrolysis</p>
        <p>205 COMMERCE ST. GREENVILLE, NC PHONE 756-4034 PERMANENT HAIR REMOVAL CERTIFIED THERMOLOGIST</p>
        <p>DEAR ABBY: Why shouldnt baseball managers wear the team uniform? Cant you just picture Billy Martin kickingsand at the umpire in a $600 Hickey-I^man suit?  ART DELMAN, ROCHESTER, N.Y.</p>
        <p>. DEAR ABBY: I dont know why baseball managers and coaches wear unifmms, and if their potbellies hang out, who cares? Most of those guys are over 50 and like their beer.</p>
        <p>Wouldnt football and hockey managers and coaches look silly if they were suited up in uniforms, helmets and all that gear? And how about basketball managers and coach^ in shorts? Heaven help us! - SPORTS NUT IN ATLANTA</p>
        <p>100% WOOL . CARPET</p>
        <p>Heavy Berber Style</p>
        <p>Only</p>
        <p>$1 Q95</p>
        <p>/arrys rpetlanci</p>
        <p>ONE</p>
        <p>20 YEARS OF SERVICE TO EASTERN N.C. 3010 E. 10th ST. GREENVILLE 758-2300</p>
        <p>NEW BERN - The Historic Homf and Gardens Tour will be held April 8-9. Twelve privately restored homes, churches and the gardens of Tryon Palace will be included.</p>
        <p>The 16th annual Tryon Palace Gardeners Sunday April 10 follows the homes tour event. The gardens and grounds of Tryon Palace will be open to the public 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.</p>
        <p>Dieting has become big business in our society. It is also very serious business. While it is important to lose weight, it is also important to go about it in a sensible manner...both In terms of healthjind economics.</p>
        <p>HOW DOES YOUR DIET COMPARE?</p>
        <p>Can you average a weight loss of 3V^ to 5 pounds each week?</p>
        <p>Does it cost more than $35 per week...total cost...no hidden fees?</p>
        <p>Are the counselors educationally trained to help you?</p>
        <p>OR</p>
        <p>Are yo required to buy products on a regular basis? How much will this cost?</p>
        <p>At DIET CENTER we do not feel that injections or special products are necessary. We feel it is more important to learn to control your weight with regular foods that you will continue to eat for the rest of your life.</p>
        <p>We offer our exclusive DIET SUPPLEMENT. This supplement is GIVEN to you at NO additional charge.</p>
        <p>If the diet is guaranteed, what does the guarantee say? How much money will you get back if you are not satisfied? At DIET CENTER we feel it is impossible to guarantee weight loss, but should you decide to pay in advance for our proaram we will refund any unused portion of your money if for any reason you decide not to continue our program.</p>
        <p>Are you discouraged from exercising? If so, take another look at the program, common sense tells us a safe diet and exercise program is the only sensible approach to good health and weight loss.</p>
        <p>Gimmicks dont work. If they did, wed all be thin and stay thin. Weed out the gimmicks. Call DIET CENTER today. We will explain our program, answer your questions, but we will apply no pressure. The decision is yours. Our consultations are FREE.</p>
        <p>Registration Fee........  $25</p>
        <p>Weekiv Fee......................................................$35</p>
        <p>.---</p>
        <p>rBiE-fS</p>
        <p>.center)</p>
        <p>102 Oakmont Professional Plaza</p>
        <p>Telephone:</p>
        <p>756-8545</p>
        <p>Carolina C. Worthington B.S. (Foods St Nutrition)</p>
        <p>Linda Lynn Tripp, B.S., B.A., M.A. Ed. (Counaallng)</p>
        <pb facs="00096894_0010" />
        <p>Stock And Market Reports</p>
        <p>Strike Mounted To Protest Shultz's Mission</p>
        <p>By The Associated Press</p>
        <p>HOGS: No trend at North Carolina buying stations. Kinston, Spiveys Comer, Murfreesboro, Siler Citv and Roberstmville  no quote; Cbnton, Fayetteville, Dunn, Pink Hill, Pine Level, Chadboum, Ayden, Laurin-burg and Benson 41.25; Wilson  closed. Sows: (500 pounds up) Fayetteville 35.00; Wallace 36.00; Spiveys Comer 37.00; Rowland 36.00.</p>
        <p>N.C. BROILER-FRYERS: The North Carolina fob dock quoted price on broilers for this weebs trading was 44.75 cents, based on full tmck load lots of ice pack USDA Grade A sized IVz to 3 pounds birds. 52 percent of the loads offered have been confirmed with a final weimted average of 46.16 cents. The mmet is hij^er and the live supply is adequate for a light to mostly moderate demand. Average weights desirable. Estimated slaughter of broilers and fryers in North Carolina on Monday was 1,175,000, compared to 1,878,000 last Monday.</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (AP) - The stock market turned downward today, faced with rising interest rates and renewed uncertainties about stronger-than-expected economic statistics.</p>
        <p>The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials dropped 2.65 to 1,985.41 in the first half hour of trading.</p>
        <p>Losers outnumbered gainers by nearly 3 to 1 in the overall tally of New York Stock Exchange-listed issues.</p>
        <p>Volume on the Big Board came to 59.88 million shares as of 10 a.m. on WaU Street.</p>
        <p>Among actively traded blue chips. General Electric gained ^ to 40&amp;gt;/^ ; International Business Machines was unchanged at 107%, and Ford Motor</p>
        <p>T%to42V4.</p>
        <p>I NYSEs composite index of all its listed common stocks lost .49 to 146.11. At the American Stock Exchange, the market value index was down 1.02 at 295.41.</p>
        <p>On Thursday, before the long weekend, the Dow Jones industrial average rose 9.94 to 1,988.06, finishing the week with a gain of 9.11 points.</p>
        <p>Advancing issues outnumbered declines by about 6 to 5 on the NYSE, with 807 up, 676 down and 485 unchanged. Big Board volume totaled 139.87 million shares, against 151.81 million in the previous session.</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (AP) AMR^Cwg^</p>
        <p>GenCorp</p>
        <p>_____</p>
        <p>(jcnMills Gen Motors GnMotr E GenuPart GaPacif Goodrich Goodyear GraceCo GtNorNek Greyhound Herculesinc HoneyweU HCA ITT</p>
        <p>53</p>
        <p>40%</p>
        <p>47</p>
        <p>72</p>
        <p>39%</p>
        <p>38</p>
        <p>IntlPaper</p>
        <p>InURe^</p>
        <p>JamesRivr</p>
        <p>K mart</p>
        <p>Kaisertech</p>
        <p>Krogtf</p>
        <p>Lociheed</p>
        <p>(Continued from A-1) shrines, is Luilt atop the site of the ancient Jewish Temple destroyed by Romans in 70 A.D.</p>
        <p>The Temple Mount, the national symbol of our people, (is) in the hands of our enemies, read a banner carried by 50 members of the Jewish gn^, known as the Temple Mount Faithful. They were turned back at the entrance ramp by 30 police officers.</p>
        <p>Anwar Khatib, deputy head of the 30-member Islamic Supreme Council, which administers the Moslem shrines, said if the Jewish group entered the complex Moslems would be forced to defend themselves.</p>
        <p>A Hebrew-language leaflet circulating in the West Bank town of Nablus called on Israeli soldiers to desert.</p>
        <p>Between Jerusalem and the twin cities of Ramallah and El Bireh, there was virtually no traffic on the roads and the only open store was a bakery. Bakeries were exempted from the general strike call.</p>
        <p>In the Gaza Strip, cars also stayed</p>
        <p>off the road today except for U.N. vehicles and Israeli army trucks and jeeps. Outlawed Palestinian flags flew from many rooftops and utility poles.</p>
        <p>Rashad A1 Shawwa, the deposed mayor of Gaza City, said the city had</p>
        <p>Three Are Murdered</p>
        <p>AmBrands</p>
        <p>AmCyan</p>
        <p>Ameritech</p>
        <p>AmlntGip</p>
        <p>AmSUnd</p>
        <p>Amer TAT</p>
        <p>Amoco</p>
        <p>BellAUan</p>
        <p>BellSouth</p>
        <p>Beth Steel</p>
        <p>BoiseCpfC</p>
        <p>Borden</p>
        <p>CSXCp</p>
        <p>CaroPwU</p>
        <p>Champ Int</p>
        <p>Chevron</p>
        <p>Chrysler</p>
        <p>Cocacola</p>
        <p>ColgPalm</p>
        <p>ComwEdis</p>
        <p>DeltiiAirl</p>
        <p>DowChem</p>
        <p>duPont</p>
        <p>DukePow</p>
        <p>EstKodak</p>
        <p>EatMiCp</p>
        <p>Exxons</p>
        <p>FPL Grp</p>
        <p>Firestone</p>
        <p>FstWachov</p>
        <p>FlaProgress</p>
        <p>FordMw</p>
        <p>Corp</p>
        <p>-Midday stocks:</p>
        <p>T</p>
        <p>Low</p>
        <p>42%</p>
        <p>Last</p>
        <p>43%</p>
        <p>46%</p>
        <p>46%</p>
        <p>46%</p>
        <p>1%</p>
        <p>1%</p>
        <p>1%</p>
        <p>44</p>
        <p>43%</p>
        <p>44</p>
        <p>44%</p>
        <p>44</p>
        <p>44%</p>
        <p>52V,</p>
        <p>50%</p>
        <p>52%</p>
        <p>86%</p>
        <p>86</p>
        <p>86%</p>
        <p>53&amp;gt;/4</p>
        <p>52%</p>
        <p>52%</p>
        <p>76%</p>
        <p>76%</p>
        <p>76%</p>
        <p>27%</p>
        <p>26%</p>
        <p>27</p>
        <p>73%</p>
        <p>73</p>
        <p>73V4</p>
        <p>66%</p>
        <p>65%</p>
        <p>66%</p>
        <p>38%</p>
        <p>38%</p>
        <p>38%</p>
        <p>20%</p>
        <p>20%</p>
        <p>20%</p>
        <p>46%</p>
        <p>46</p>
        <p>46%</p>
        <p>44%</p>
        <p>43%</p>
        <p>44%</p>
        <p>55%</p>
        <p>55%</p>
        <p>55%</p>
        <p>52%</p>
        <p>51%</p>
        <p>52V</p>
        <p>30%</p>
        <p>30</p>
        <p>30%</p>
        <p>34%</p>
        <p>33%</p>
        <p>34%</p>
        <p>33%</p>
        <p>33%</p>
        <p>33%</p>
        <p>46%</p>
        <p>45%</p>
        <p>46</p>
        <p>23%</p>
        <p>23V,</p>
        <p>23%</p>
        <p>38</p>
        <p>37%</p>
        <p>38</p>
        <p>42%</p>
        <p>42%</p>
        <p>42%</p>
        <p>27</p>
        <p>26%</p>
        <p>26%</p>
        <p>25%</p>
        <p>25%</p>
        <p>25%</p>
        <p>52%</p>
        <p>50%</p>
        <p>51%</p>
        <p>81%</p>
        <p>81%</p>
        <p>81%</p>
        <p>81%</p>
        <p>80</p>
        <p>81V,</p>
        <p>44%</p>
        <p>44</p>
        <p>44</p>
        <p>40%</p>
        <p>40%</p>
        <p>40%</p>
        <p>82%</p>
        <p>82%</p>
        <p>82V</p>
        <p>42%</p>
        <p>41%</p>
        <p>42</p>
        <p>29</p>
        <p>28%</p>
        <p>28%</p>
        <p>78%</p>
        <p>78%</p>
        <p>78%</p>
        <p>38%</p>
        <p>38%</p>
        <p>38*4</p>
        <p>33%</p>
        <p>33V4</p>
        <p>33%</p>
        <p>42%</p>
        <p>42</p>
        <p>42%</p>
        <p>29%</p>
        <p>29V4</p>
        <p>29%</p>
        <p>36</p>
        <p>35%</p>
        <p>35%</p>
        <p>18% 18%</p>
        <p>52%  53</p>
        <p>40V4  40%</p>
        <p>46%  46%</p>
        <p>71%  71%</p>
        <p>38%  39</p>
        <p>37%  37%</p>
        <p>39  38%  39</p>
        <p>48  47V4  48</p>
        <p>63%  63&amp;gt;/4  63%</p>
        <p>25V4  24%  25&amp;gt;/4</p>
        <p>40%  40%  40%</p>
        <p>29%  29%  29%</p>
        <p>49%  49%  49%</p>
        <p>64%  63%  64%</p>
        <p>31  30%  31</p>
        <p>45%  44%  45%</p>
        <p>38%  38%  38%</p>
        <p>109  106%  108%</p>
        <p>41%  40%  40%</p>
        <p>8  7%  7%</p>
        <p>25%  25%  25%</p>
        <p>33%  33V4  33%</p>
        <p>12% 12% 12%</p>
        <p>33%  32%  33%</p>
        <p>-  ^  44%  43%  44%</p>
        <p>UlWsCp,  71%  70%  70%</p>
        <p>McDermInt  19%  19%  19%</p>
        <p>McKessn  32  31%  31%</p>
        <p>MeadCp  37  36%  37</p>
        <p>MercantSt  43%  42%  43%</p>
        <p>MinnMng  57%  56%  57%</p>
        <p>Mobil  44%  44%  44%</p>
        <p>Ncra^  1^ mi 19%  (Continued from A-1)  authorities transferred her and two</p>
        <p>NSSStor  first-degree  murder  other wounded women from the</p>
        <p>Norfiksou  27%  27  27%  charges Were read by Leonard.  blood-stained car to ambulances.</p>
        <p>0  -  50% M% 50%  statement came in  Hatchett said police spotted the car</p>
        <p>pSSIE^jc  ^  response  to Guices inquiry about  traveling at a high rate of speed at</p>
        <p>pepsitio  34%  S%  S%  whether he wanted a court-appointed  the intersection of U.S. 64 and In-</p>
        <p>pISipM^  89%  ^  w%  attorney.  terstate 26, stopped the vehicle and</p>
        <p>    ^^^  minutes  had the wounded victims taken to</p>
        <p>Primerica  29%  29%  29%  ago. I oont Want 000, Rainey Said.  Pardee Hospital in Hendersonville.</p>
        <p>SStooTt  %  46%  %  Id like to think about it awhile.  Ms. Rainey, who is also the grand-</p>
        <p>71 w 70?^  Rainey  told the judge he intended  daughter offe. Justice, was listed</p>
        <p>Rockwei  19%  19%  19%  to hire Ws own attorney to represent  in good condition with bullet wounds</p>
        <p>3^ 36% 36%  in her neck, said hospital</p>
        <p>stouS*^  m    ^y spokeswoman Mary Ann Morris.</p>
        <p>gvUnecp  14%  M%  M%  YOU will need the services of an at-  Sheila Johnston, 30, of Fletcher,</p>
        <p>sSib^co  a%  2%  ffl%  torney very badly, Guice aid.  wounded in the chest, was taken to</p>
        <p>iSiSSV  Ths charges are as serious as  Memorial Mission Hospital  in</p>
        <p>TRW Inc  49 *  48%  49  they Can get.  Asheville, where she was in critical</p>
        <p>TtSffi  31% M%  Henderson County Sheriffs Capt. condition, said nursing supervisor</p>
        <p>ulx^  Tom Hatchett said the shootings ap-  Evelyn Woody. Mrs. Johnstons</p>
        <p>Un^mp  33%  33%  33%  parently stemmed from a family  daupter, Wendy, 11, was wounded in</p>
        <p>us^  i%  i*  argument over real estate held in  the leg and was in good condition,</p>
        <p>wiilwirt '  Edneyville, an unincorporated town  Ms. Woody said,</p>
        <p>wstptpm  32%  32  32  about 20 mUes souflieast of Ashoville.  Hatchett said Rainey was arrested</p>
        <p>wffi  M% 38%  There seems to be some sort of without incident a short distance</p>
        <p>wriSw  domestic thing, over conflict over  from the parking lot. Authorities  re-</p>
        <p>wrigejwi  37  37  37  some land, Hatchett said, adding  covered a handgun and a shotgun in</p>
        <p>Xerox cp  52%  52%  52%  that Rainey owned land near the  the parking lot, Hatchett said.</p>
        <p>church which is adjacent to property</p>
        <p>belonging to Mrs. Raineys family.  Curtis and Ethel Justice, distant</p>
        <p>FAiiAwino  Witnesses Said the suspect walked relatives of Effie Justice who lived</p>
        <p>quotations as  ^  chuTch,  Said they had</p>
        <p>Ashland b.......................................63%  Mrs.  Justice, and then walked out-  planned to attend the funeral but</p>
        <p>yw..................................side. Mourners in the church then  changed their minds when it began to</p>
        <p>Fieldcrest Mills.................................21V4  hfiard oimchntc  foiti</p>
        <p>Flowers inds...................................20%  *waragunsnois.  ram.</p>
        <p>Hatteras Inc. Securities.....................17%  I  understand they were having  We heard the shots from down</p>
        <p>...........................visitation when  he came to  the  here, but 1 couldnt imagine what it</p>
        <p>John Deere ................" 2% chuTch. He apparently had weapons meant, Ethel Justice said. There</p>
        <p>Lowes  in a vehicle outside the church. He  were about 10 or 12 shots. Some of</p>
        <p>wtoSf ^  ............................went outside and got them out of the  them went like bombs. We wondered</p>
        <p>Southmart Coi^ration^^^^^^^^^^^^  Started shooting, what in the world it could be, what</p>
        <p>United Teiecomn3unicatins.'...........'.'.V Hatchett said.  with it being Sunday and a funeral</p>
        <p>..........................Witnesses said Mrs. Rainey drove going on.</p>
        <p>o^TOECOUNTCR...................... ^'v^y from the  church after  the  Im so thankful I wasnt up there.</p>
        <p>Branch Bank.....................................14%  shooting in her Ford sedan, which I could shout. I probably would have</p>
        <p>  riddled with bullet holes, had a heart attack. This is the ter-</p>
        <p>iEot. "  Witnesses said Mrs. Rainey reached  riblest thing thats ever happened up</p>
        <p>Southern Na'tionai  the Hendersonville city limits before  here, Mrs. Justice said.</p>
        <p>Peoples Bank....................................13%</p>
        <p>North Carolina Natural Gas................16%</p>
        <p>Cooper LaserSonics.............................1%</p>
        <p>Farm Fresh......................................11%</p>
        <p>Burroughs..................................8V4to8%  \ g I  I    I</p>
        <p> Vehicle Is Chased</p>
        <p>joined the strike and said Israeli soldiers had closed gasoline stations and bakeries and may have turned off electricity.</p>
        <p>Electricity has been cut off from the town altogether. We dont know if this is another punishment, A1 Shawwa said in a telephone interview. The closing of bakeries will definitely lead to a (food) shortage. Shultz, in an interview Sunday night with Israeli journalists, said he intended to reassure Shamir that he would not allow an international conference to impose terms of a settlement on Israel.</p>
        <p>We are going to do things together, Shultz said. The conference would have no authority to impose a solution, and would have no auUiority to veto an agreement reached by the parties.</p>
        <p>The PLO rejected the .S. proposal</p>
        <p>that calls for talks on some Palestinian self-rule to start on May 1 and on the overall settlement in December. In a statement issued in Tunis, the PLO demanded a role in peace talks.</p>
        <p>The PLO-affiliated underground leadership called in a leaflet last week for a general strike today to protest the Shultz visit.</p>
        <p>Nobody from the Arab world can say, yes, if the PLO says, no, said Faiz Abu Rahmeh, a moderate lawyer from Gaza whose name has been raised in the past as a potential non-PLO negotiator.</p>
        <p>Three Arabs died Sunday, including one electrocuted when soldiers ordered him to climb a utility pole and take down a Palestinian flag, the army said. A spdieswoman said military police had started an investigation into the death of Khalil JaberHamzawy, 18.</p>
        <p>Obituaries</p>
        <p>Bryan</p>
        <p>Mr. Julian P. (Jack) Bryan, 60, died Sunday in Pitt County Memorial Hospital.</p>
        <p>His funeral will be conducted at 3:30 p.m. Tuesday in the Wilkerson Funeral Chapel by the Rev. Max 0. Flynn. Burial will be in Pinewood Memorial Park.</p>
        <p>A native of Pitt County, Mr. Bryan spent most of his life in Greenville and the last eight years in the Eastern Pines community. A veteran of the U.S. Marine Corps, he worked with the Salvation Army from 1966 until 1972. He was a member of Foursquare Christian Center.</p>
        <p>Surviving are his wife, Melvarine McGowan Bryan; a daughter, Frances Kay Parrish of Greenville; a son, Benjamin W. Bryant of Stokes; a sister, Sybil Edmondson of Bethel; and five grandchildren.</p>
        <p>The family will receive friends at the Wilkerson Funeral Home from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. today.</p>
        <p>Davis</p>
        <p>LA GRANGE - Mrs. Celester Williams Davis, 76, of 313 W. Queen St., La Grange, died in Lenoir Memorial Hospital in Kinston Saturday. Arrangements will be announced by Mitchells Funeral Home in Winter-ville.</p>
        <p>Gurganus</p>
        <p>Mr. James Henry Gurganus, 77, of Route 1, Box 262, Oriental, died Saturday in Onslow General Hospital in Jacksonville. Arrangements will be announced by the Norcott and (Company Funeral Home of Ayden.</p>
        <p>May</p>
        <p>A funeral for Mr. David W. May, 77, of Route 3, Winterville, was to be</p>
        <p>conducted at 2:30 p.m. today in the Wilkerson Funeral Home cluipel by the Revs. David Langley and C.L. Patrick. Burial was to be in the Winterville Cemetery.</p>
        <p>Mr. May was a native and lifelong resident of the Winterville community. A veteran of World War II who served in the U.S. Army in the European theatre, he was a retired farmer.</p>
        <p>Surviving are his wife, Adell Avery May, and two sisters, Mamie Ruth RoMr of Greenville and Sarah Wall of Arapahoe.</p>
        <p>Moore</p>
        <p>BETHEL  Mrs. Lena Atkinson Moore died Sunday at her home. Route 1, Box 390-A, Bethel. Funeral services will be announced by Phillips Brothers Mortuary.</p>
        <p>Thomas</p>
        <p>Mr. Benjamin E. Thomas Sr., 87, of Route Greenville, died Monday in Greenville Villa Nursing Home.</p>
        <p>His funeral will be conducted at 2 p^.m. Tuesday in the Wilkerson nmeral Chapel by the Rev. Jeiw Johnson and Ron Roach. Burial will be in the Mount Pleasant Church Cemetery.</p>
        <p>A Greene County native, Mr. Thomas had been a resident of Pitt County for the past 31 years. He was a retired farmer and a member of Mount Pleasant Christian Church.</p>
        <p>Surviving are his wife, Hennrietta Murphrey Thomas; a son, Benjamin E. Thomas Jr. of Greenville, and three grandchildren, six greatgrandchildren and two great-great grandchildren.</p>
        <p>The family will receive friends at the funeral home from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. today.</p>
        <p>Proclamation</p>
        <p>In recognition of the efforts of small business men and women in the citys economy, Greenville Mayor Ed Carter has proclaimed the week of May 8 through May 14 as Small Business Week in the city.</p>
        <p>Tlie small business men and women of Greenville work hard to retain that independence and are rewarded with success and pride in ownership. It is their dedication and their efforts in the marketplace which provide us with a healthy, vital economy, free of excessive government intervention.</p>
        <p>(Continued from A-1) more troops may be sent if they are needed.</p>
        <p>The chase on Sunday ended an otherwise calm Easter holiday and ushered in a week of uncertainty for Panamanians. A Roman Catholic Church offer to mediate an end to the countrys political crisis was set to expire at midnight tonight.</p>
        <p>Embassy spokesman Terence Kneebone said Davis was leaving the home of Vatican Ambassador Jose Sebastian Laboa when the Panamanian vehicle began following immediately, picking them up right outside the gate. He said it tried to stop the chauffer-driven car wiUi its lights and sirens.</p>
        <p>The ambassadors driver, in accordance with instructions, did not stop. The ambassador was driven to</p>
        <p>his residence, and the other vehicle followed all the way, Kneebone said. The residences are about two miles apart.</p>
        <p>We consider this serious, Kneebone said. He declined to comment on what security provisions Davis had but said they were normal under the circumstances. No weapons were displayed in the chase, he said.</p>
        <p>Embassy vehicles are clearly marked with special license plates.</p>
        <p>Eric Arturo Delvalle, in hiding since he was ousted from the presidency after he tried to fire strongman Noriega Feb. 25, has called for the United States to intervene militarily and remove the general. Noriega is under indictment</p>
        <p>Richard L. Cannon, III</p>
        <p>Attorney At Law</p>
        <p>is pleased to announce the relocation of his office to</p>
        <p>209 South Evans Street</p>
        <p>Greenville, North Carolina</p>
        <p>April 4,1988</p>
        <p>(919)758-2010</p>
        <p>Convictions Upheld</p>
        <p>(Continued from A-1) ammunition depot for the Soviet Unions northern fleet.</p>
        <p>Morison was sentenced to two years in prison by U.S. District Judge Joseph H. Young of Baltimore.</p>
        <p>Prosecutors said Morisons actiims endangered national security because the photographs revealed to the Soviets now a U.S. spy satellite worked. They also said Morison leaked the photos to get a full-time job with Janes after ooing part-time</p>
        <p>Jump Is Fatal</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP) - A Durham man was killed Saturday after he apparently forgot to put on a parachute before jumping from a plane in Franklin County, authorities said.</p>
        <p>Ivan Lester McGuire, 35, was planning to videotape two other</p>
        <p>said Franklin C(mty Shenffs &amp;amp;pt. Ralfrfi Brown. A witness on Uie ground watched McGuires fall and saw that no parachute opened. Brown said.</p>
        <p>I think he just got tied up in the moment, he said. Everything was going so weU and he just forgot to put on a parachute.</p>
        <p> McGuire was an experienced parachutist who filmed other iwpers as a hobby, said Paul Fayard, owmr of the mnklin County Sport Parachute Center. McGuire had made about 800 jumps, Fayard said.  '</p>
        <p>The fatal jump, from 10,500 feet, was McGuires third of the day, Fayard said.</p>
        <p>work for the publication while employed by the Navy.</p>
        <p>Defense attorneys contended their client was trying to educate the public about a Soviet naval buildup and that the photographs showed Uk Soviets nothing they had not learned already from a former CIA officials 1978 sale of the spy satellites operations manual to a Soviet agent.</p>
        <p>Judge J. Harvie Wilkinson 111 agred that First Amendment interests in the case were significant, but said the way in which the photographs were released threatened an equally important public interest, the security of sensitive government operations.</p>
        <p>To reverse Morisons conviction on the general ground that it chills press access would be tantamount to a ju^cial declaration that the government may never use criminal penalties to secure the confidentiality of intelligence information, Wilkinson wrote.</p>
        <p>The juc^e added that the prosecution of Morison was not an attempt to apply the espionage statute to the press for either the receipt or publication of classified materials.</p>
        <p>JiKlge J. Dickson Phillips Jr. said the espionage statutes as now broadly drawn are unwieldy and imprecise instruments for prosecuting government 'leakers to the press as q^wsed to government moles in the service of other countries.</p>
        <p>However, Phillips said, the limiting juty Instruction in Morisons case, requiring proof that the leaked information was either potentially damaging to the United.States or might be useful to an enemy, was a sumcient remedy.</p>
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        <pb facs="00096894_0011" />
        <p>THE DAILY</p>
        <p>REFLECTOR</p>
        <p>Greenville, N.C.  Monday, Apr! 14,1988</p>
        <p>Sports</p>
        <p>Comics ^</p>
        <p>Entertainment</p>
        <p>Classified</p>
        <p>BFinal Game A Big 8 Showdown</p>
        <p>KANSAS CITY, Mo. (^) - Final</p>
        <p>thats the equation that ^11% used to crown college basketballs national champion tonight.</p>
        <p>Not only will the championship be decided for the first time between two Bie Eight teams, but it will be decided in the same building, Kemper Arena, where the Big Eight  tournament is held each year.</p>
        <p>Aside from sharing the same conference, however. No. 4 Oklahoma and unranked Kansas have little in conunon on the basketball court.</p>
        <p>The Sooners raced through a 35-3 season, averaging 104 points per ^me and gaining a seamy reputation for embarrassing opponents by running up the score. The Sooners like to run wild, and they use a fullcourt press throughout the game.</p>
        <p>We lovif'to knock people out, Sooners forward Harvey Grant said. If they could knock us out, they would.</p>
        <p>The Jayhawks, meanwhile, have a record of 26-11. If they win the national title, they would do so withSet For Final</p>
        <p>Kansas coach Larry Brown, shown here during NCAA Semi-final action from Saturday, leads his Kansas Jayhawks into the National</p>
        <p>Championship game tonight against Bi Eight Conference rival Oklahoma. (AP Laserphoto)</p>
        <p>more losses than any other champion in NCAA histoiy. Both Villanova, in 1985, and North Carolina SCate, in 1963, were beaten 10 times. The Jayhawks lost two of their starters early in the season - Archie Marshall to injury and Marvin Branch to academics  and rely heavily on two-time All-American 1 mg.</p>
        <p>This year, weve gone through so much, Kansas forward Chris Piper during a Sunday news con</p>
        <p>ference. Adversity has brought us together. We werent expectedto do anything.</p>
        <p>Maiming, who leads the team in scoring and also creates scoring opportunities for his teammates with his inside play, said his game changed when the two starters were lost.</p>
        <p>I matured a lot, he said. I learned how to accept a lot more responsibility.</p>
        <p>Manning said the key to success against Oklahoma would be to limit the Sooners number of possessions.</p>
        <p>It can be a real rat-race with them, Manning said. The more possessions they have, the better they are.</p>
        <p>Not since l%7 has a Big Eight team even made the title game. That year, Kansas lost to North Carolina 54-53 in triple overtime. Although Kansas is the traditional power, with eight Final Four appearances and a national title in 1952, and has a homecourt advantage with its campus only 35 miles away at Lawrence, Kan., Oklahoma was an early eight-pmnt favorite.</p>
        <p>I dont care whos the favorite, Oklahoma Coach Billy Tubbs said. That doesnt do you any good when the ball is going up and down the floor. If youil notice, last night the favixrites didnt win.</p>
        <p>Secmid-ranked Arizona was slightly favored to beat Oklahoma, but the Sooners won that semifinal Saturday night, 86-78. Kansas upset fifth-rank-edDuke66-59.</p>
        <p>Kansas ^ had an up-and-down season, but th^re on a roll now,</p>
        <p>Tubbs said. Its kind of ironic, you know, that we would wind up in the NCAA championships and it would be at the same place we won the Big Eight tournament against primarily the same teams.</p>
        <p>Oklahoma beat Kansas twice during the regular season, but the two teams did not meet in the conference tournament because Kansas was</p>
        <p>(See Final, B-3)</p>
        <p>Teams wito mwe toan one champmnstMp</p>
        <p>(H lA</p>
        <p>OklAmM</p>
        <p>Sm</p>
        <p>Ftanoso)</p>
        <p>Teams that have won at least once</p>
        <p>CaUofiM</p>
        <p>01</p>
        <p>CtMY</p>
        <p>09on</p>
        <p>OeoigeioMi</p>
        <p>Siaolofd</p>
        <p>Nol|f Cfoss</p>
        <p>1eK Wesiem</p>
        <p>laa&amp;amp;as</p>
        <p>maa</p>
        <p>la Sale</p>
        <p>VSanova</p>
        <p>loyola</p>
        <p>Wfeoonsn</p>
        <p>MAiamm*</p>
        <p>VWoMig</p>
        <p>MdHgaaSi</p>
        <p>AP</p>
        <p>Green's Miscue Aids Lyle's Win</p>
        <p>GREENSBORO, N.C. (AP) -Sandy Lyle has an unprecedented position among British golfers, a new title and an improved chance to win the Masters.</p>
        <p>Ken Green, meanwhile, has a week off.</p>
        <p>It all came about because Green missed a two-foot par putt on the 72nd hole of the Greater Greensboro Open Golf Tournament on Sunday.</p>
        <p>That little putt would have given Green the tiUe and a place in the Masters field this week.</p>
        <p>I had given up, really, Lyle said Sunday. I thought I was doomed. I didnt fancy he would miss it. </p>
        <p>But he did.</p>
        <p>I just gorked it to the right, Green said after the little lapse had spoiled what had been a great comeback and gave Lyle a second life in a playoff.</p>
        <p>When you give a guy a second chance, it almost always comes back to haunt you, Green said.</p>
        <p>It did.</p>
        <p>The burly Scot won his second title of the young season with a 10-foot birdie putt on the first extra hole, and became the first British player ever to lead the American money-winning list.</p>
        <p>The victory, Lyles fourth in three years (Hi the American circuit, was worth $180,000 from the total purse of $1 million. It pushed his earnings for the year to $408,021, the leading figure going into the Masters at AugMsta, Ga., the first of the yearll Big Four titles.</p>
        <p>Sports Calendar</p>
        <p>SdHot* Note; SdwdiOm are aigy ptiadfyaebooJaormmotuuageoi^</p>
        <p>Mod U  6  cAuu^  vriOuat</p>
        <p>notice.</p>
        <p>UimfoSfom</p>
        <p>BwMl</p>
        <p>m Couoty Toimuuottit At Cooley</p>
        <p>JAOMivUle TournAHMint</p>
        <p>North PiU t SoutfaWeet E(kiecombe Toumment</p>
        <p>SoltheB</p>
        <p>Cool^ at NorOwrn Naah Tounut-meat</p>
        <p>ladear Saeeer ReeLoofum \gmJ4</p>
        <p>That does a lot for my confidence going to Augusta, Lyle said. If I can play atxHit half as well there as I did here, I think Id have a good chance.</p>
        <p>Lyle, a former British Open champion, held a three-stroke lead over the field and five over Green starting the final round. At the turn, he led Green by four.</p>
        <p>But Green made up the difference in four holes. He birmed three times and Lyle bogeyed from a bunker.</p>
        <p>After both birdied the 16th  Lyle with a 60-foot putt  Green went ahead with a 27-foot birdie putt on the 17th, his fifth birdie in eight holes.</p>
        <p>When Lyles chip for birdie bounced out of the cup. Green needed only a two-putt par to win. He lagged to about two feet only to miss, setting up a playoff that was almost an anticlimax.</p>
        <p>Its going to take a little while for me to get over it. Its pretty difficult to hancUe, to play so well for so many holes, then throw it away, said Green, whose closing 67 was the best round of the drizzly final round. Green and Lyle finished regulation play tied at 271,17 under par on the Forest Oaks Country Club course. Lyle matched par 72 over the final round.</p>
        <p>Jeff Sluman, in second place when the days play started, haa a share of the lead after six holes but finished with a 71 and missed the playoff by two shots at 273.</p>
        <p>Scott Hoch was next at 278 after a 72. Gil Morgan had a 72 for 279.</p>
        <p>Baseball Ready To Open Season</p>
        <p>GGO Winner</p>
        <p>Sandy Lyle, from Surrey, England, reacts after making a birdie putt on the 16th green during Sundays final round action from the Greater Greensboro Open at the Forest Oaks Country Club. Lyle defeated Ken Green on the first playoff hole to take the win. (AP Laserphoto)</p>
        <p>By BEN WALKER APBasebaU Writer</p>
        <p>Rick Mahler hopes to duplicate his opening day magic wmle Dave Stowart, Rick SutcHffe and the Minnesota Twins want to repeat last years success starting today when the 1968 baseball season begins.</p>
        <p>Kirk Gibson, Dave Parker, Jack Clark, Phil Bradley, Brett Butler and Floyd Bannister lead an array of familiar faces in new places. A half-dozen managers, including Billy Martin, start this season fr^h with their teams, fiill of the April optimism that springs eternal.</p>
        <p>Im excited. Theres anticipation, Kansas City Manager John Wathan said. You get butterflies in your stomach. There is butterflies in the players, the coaches, the manager, the people in the front office. Irs always there until the first pitch and then it ^oes away and its baseball.</p>
        <p>Roger Clemens, trying to become the nrst to win three straight Cy Young awards, was to throw the frst pitch of the season this afternoon when Detroit played at Boston. Later, St. Louis was at Cincinnati in the traditional National League opener.</p>
        <p>Nine games were scheduled today, including aeveland at Texas and Seattle at Oakland tonight.</p>
        <p>Tuesdays openers are Minnesota at New York, Pittsburgh at Philadelphia, San Diego at Houston and the (^cago Cubs at Atlanta.</p>
        <p>Stewart, a 20-game winner, and Mark Langston, a 19-game winner with Seattle, toeet when the Mariners play at Oakland.</p>
        <p>A sellout crowd of 47,000 is ex</p>
        <p>pected to watch the As, who have added Parker to Mark McGwire and Joee Canseco in a modern-day Murderers Row.</p>
        <p>Youve got to like that lineup, Stewart said. Weve got a power lineup</p>
        <p>The Twins are trying to become the first team to win consecutive World Series championsliipB since the 1978 Yankees.</p>
        <p>I think thats the most hated word around here - repeat,  Minnesotas Tom Brunansky said. Everyone wants to know if we can r^t.</p>
        <p>FYank Viola, the World Series Most ValuaUe Player, will start against New Yorks Rick Rhoden. Viola does not have to face Clark, the Yankees free agent who begins the season in a familiar placethe disabled list.</p>
        <p>At Atlanta, Mahler and Sutcliffe are the starters Tuesday night.</p>
        <p>Mahler has pitcheci 34 straight 'Scoreless innings on opening days, giving up just 13 hits, and three consecutive shutouts. Chris Short and Rip Sewell are the only otiters with three shutouts on opening day.</p>
        <p>Sutcliffe, 18-10 last year, and the other Cubs starters might have to work overtime this season since relief ace Lee Smith was traded to Boston.</p>
        <p>At Kansas City, college basketball is the big story as Oklahoma and Kansas play tonight for the NCAA championsmp. There was a good matchup in town this afternoon -ToronUrs Jimmy Key, the American League earned-run average leader, against Kansas City s Bret Saberhagen.</p>
        <p>Godin's Key Bunt Lifts Bucs To Win</p>
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        <p>By WOODY PEELE Reflector Simrts Editor</p>
        <p>Steve Godin laid down the Mrfect bunt to score Johif Thomas in the bottom of the 11th inning Sunday afternoon as East Carolinas Pirates nipped William &amp;amp; Mary, 7-6, in a Colonial Athletic Association baseball game.</p>
        <p>The win gave the Pirates a sweep of the two-wy three-game series between the two schools. ECTJ t(x^ the Saturday doubleheader from the Indians, 54) and 13-2.</p>
        <p>But Sundays final game proved to be no pushover for the Pirates, who were outhit by the Tribe, 14-9. East Carolina had to struggle throughout ttie afternoon as the Indians battled back and fmally tied it up at 641 in the t(^ (rf the ninth, forcing extra innings.</p>
        <p>And William &amp;amp; Mary went hard for  the win, bringing on ace Bill Prezioso, an alT-conference hurler, who had taken the loss in the 54) game Saturday evening.</p>
        <p>Its a real trilHite to &amp;lt;nir players to have beaten him twice in one weekend, Pirate coach Gary Over</p>
        <p>ton said. He's one of the class</p>
        <p>The run again him was unearned as Thomas had reached on an error with one away moved up on a walk to Jay McGraw, and reached third on an infield out.</p>
        <p>But then, Godin laid down the perfect bunt along the third base line and before Prezioso could reach it, Thomas crossed home sliding on his stomach as Godin reached first.</p>
        <p>And while Overton was quite pleased to escape with the win, he wasnt happy about the wasted opportunities the Pirates had.</p>
        <p>We lust left too many men on base, ne said, referring to the 11 ECU left standing. We mdnt score when we had the easy cmportunity. However, we did score when we had to, and thats a credit to us. Really, I thought it (the missed opportunities) would come back to haunt us. William k Mary left a few standing themselves, 12, and had five extra base hits - four doubles and a triple - and got (Hily two runs out of those</p>
        <p>(See ECU, B-3)</p>
        <p>Double On The Play</p>
        <p>William and Marys Gary Crocco (18) slides into second base after recording a double to right field during second-inning action against East Carolina Sunday. Pirate short</p>
        <p>stop David Ritchie (9) attempts to make the tag on Crocco, but to no avaii. (Reflector Photo by Cliff Hollis)</p>
        <pb facs="00096894_0012" />
        <p>Sports Notes</p>
        <p>North Pitt, FarmvMIe Tied For Points Race</p>
        <p>North Pitt and Farmville Central are tied for the lead in the Wachovia Trophy standings for the 2-A Eastern Plains Conference at the end of the winter sports season while Chocowinity and Plymoutti lead ieir conferences, the Tobacco Belt and Northeastern, respectively.</p>
        <p>North Pitt earned 123/4 points in the winter, paced by a first-place fini^ by the girls in basketball. Farmville Central earned ISVi points as its boys won the basketball title.</p>
        <p>That brought both teams to a total of 263/4 points for the fall and winter seasons.</p>
        <p>Ayden-Grifton is in third place with 23V4 points while Greene Central is fcirth at 20;^. C.B. Aycock has 18, South Lenoir 12V4 and Pamlico 8i/^.</p>
        <p>Points are awarded on a plan devised by each conference participating in the program across the state, usually involving the order of finish in each sport. The school with the most points at the conclusion of the spring sports season will receive the Wachovia Trophy, presented annually by Wachovia Bank and Trust Co.</p>
        <p>Plymouth earned 42&amp;gt;/^ points during the winter season as it won the 2-A Northeastern Conference wrestling title and tied for first in girls basketball. That brought the Vikings total of 68&amp;gt;/^ for the year thus far.</p>
        <p>Edenton is second with 67M: points followed by Northampton East with 66. Roanoke Rapids is next at 56M, followed by Roanoke with 53, Ahoskie with 49^ and Williamston with 47.</p>
        <p>: Ghocowinity earned 95 points during the winter season, led by the girls basketball team, which won the 1-A Tobacco Belt Conference title. Chocowinity has earned 187 total points on the year.</p>
        <p>- Jiorth Edgecombe is second with 165 followed by Columbia and Bath, tied for third with 97Ms. Belhaven is fifth with 90, followed by Aurora with 80, Bear Grass with 60, Jamesville with 52&amp;gt;/i and Creswell with 50.</p>
        <p>. Standings for the 3-A Coastal Conference and the 4-A Big East Conference have not yet been announced.</p>
        <p>%</p>
        <p>*</p>
        <p>JMenton Rolls Past Redskins, 15-1</p>
        <p> ;Stan White and Tommy Nixon collected three hits apiece to lead Edenton to a 15-1 romp over Roanoke in a baseball played Friday.</p>
        <p> -Edenton pushed across five runs in the first inning and neier looked back.</p>
        <p>, Stacy Whitfield had two hits for Roanoke.</p>
        <p> .Erie Downing got the win for the Aces and also hit a solo homer run in the second inning.</p>
        <p>: Roanoke falls to 2-3 overall and 0-1 in the Northeastern Conference.</p>
        <p>Edenton.......................510 ISIS 15 0</p>
        <p>Roanoke..........................010  00-1  7 5</p>
        <p>Downing and Spivey; James, Carlisle (1), Nicholson (3), Harris (5) and Raynor</p>
        <p>i</p>
        <p>Kansas Gives Bus Driver His Own Free Ride</p>
        <p>KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) - Meet Jimmy Dunlap  Detroit bus driver, Kansas Jayhawkgood-luck charm.  /</p>
        <p>When the Jayhawk basketball team captured the Midwest Regional a week ago at the Silverdome in Pontiac, Mich., it was Dunlap who drove the team bus.</p>
        <p>Kansas Coach Larry Brown liked Dunlap so much, he arranged to get him on a plane for Kansas City, site of the Final Four and tonights national championship game between the Jayhawks and Oklahoma.</p>
        <p>Hes a great person and is very caring.... You can see the way he treats 1 ur players, Brown said Sunday. You can tell he really cares about one of them.</p>
        <p>10  vot Avu vcaii ouv tiJC WCIJf llv itCaldl</p>
        <p>our players, Brown said Sunday. You can tell he really cares about every ne of them.</p>
        <p>Jimmy can always drive for me. Hes the best.</p>
        <p>Dunlap thought the whole thing was a joke.</p>
        <p>When I was loading the plane at the Pontiac Airport last Sunday I heard the players wanted me to go on the plane and, after I gave them all a high five, they said coach wanted me to come with them to Kansas City, Dunlap said.</p>
        <p>I took that with a grain of salt. Ive never heard of a Ims driver flown nowhere.</p>
        <p>Monday morning I got a call from my Detroit office, and I still couldnt believe it. But here 1 am, and were in the final.</p>
        <p>Virtually overnight, Dunlap has become a star, signing autographs as he'^ carts the Kansas team about.</p>
        <p>Im no celebrity. Im just the driver, but Im hounded for autographs, said Dunlap, 46, decked in T-shirts, hats and everything else with Jayhawk emblems.</p>
        <p>And I dont think Im any lucky charm, said Dunlap, who was raised in North Carolina but moved to Detroit 22 years ago. But I think this team is on amission.</p>
        <p>The University of Kansas paid Dunlaps plane fare and gave him a ticket to the Final Four.</p>
        <p>I was offered $2,000 for my ticket, but I wouldnt sell it, Dunlap said. That would be a breach of their trust, and, besides. Im now a Jayhawk fan. Theyre my adopted college, but Im still a Tar Heel at heart.</p>
        <p>Kansas All-American Danny Manning said he likes Dunlap.</p>
        <p>Hes a great guy, Manning said. We joke around a lot. Besides, Im a little superstitious, too.</p>
        <p>If we go all the way, well hire him next season, added junior forward Milt Newton.</p>
        <p>As far as tonight, Dunlap wouldnt hesitate on a prediction.</p>
        <p>Kansas by three, he said.</p>
        <p>Bocker's Win Eclipses $3 Million Mark</p>
        <p>DALLAS (AP) - With his championship in the WCTT Finals, Boris Becker became only the ninth professional tennis player to pass the $3 million mark.</p>
        <p>Becker defeated Swedens Stefan Edberg 6-4,1-6,7-5,6-2 in Saturdays title match at Reunion Arena to capture the $200,000 first prize and raise his career earnings to $3,044,927.</p>
        <p>It was the first title in Dallas for the 20-year-old Becker.</p>
        <p>The 22-year-old Edberg settled for Uie $100,000 second prize, which gives him career winnings of $3,780,182.</p>
        <p>The win marked a return of form for Becker, who won the Wimbledon championship in 1965 and 1986, but faded to seventh in the world last year. His comeback has pushed him up Uie ladder to fourth.</p>
        <p>Thats bad news for Denmark, which Becker will battle this week in the quarterfinals of the Davis Cup in West Germany.</p>
        <p>Ive been working very, very hard, he said. I guess you can say Ive gone back to the office. I work my tail off in practices. I sort of got away from working after my Wimbledon successes.</p>
        <p>Becker served 19 aces against Edberg.</p>
        <p>I cant remember when I served that many aces, said Becker.</p>
        <p>Its the best Ive played in a long time, he said. Im tr^^ng to become a better player and this is a most encouraging step. Ive very confident in my game.</p>
        <p>Tennis is fun again, said Becker. Im healthy and Im winning and thats what it is all about.</p>
        <p>Becker said his resurgence can be traced back to his disappointment in last years Wimbledon.</p>
        <p>: Losing in the second round at Wimbledon hurt me last year, Becker said. My conndence went down. I had injuries and was losing a lot of key points. It just aU happened so quick.</p>
        <p>But Becker said it served as good inspiration.</p>
        <p>Now Im glad it happened, he saia. I can appreciate my good moments now. Becker has been working out under the stern discipline of Harry Hoffman of Australia.</p>
        <p>, Hiis is proof that my training and my practice is right, Becker said. I liad been going easy on myself. Now, Im working hard.</p>
        <p>Becker was seeded second, one spot behind Edberg, going into the tournament.</p>
        <p>But Becker served a total of 43 aces in his matches, more than the combined total of any other player.</p>
        <p>KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) -Somewhere it must be written that this all was to happen. It just cant be an accident.</p>
        <p>Kansas, which at one time appeared to have no hope of even getting into the NCAA Tournament, will play for the national championship of college basketball tonight, in an arena thats practically in the Jayhawks backyard, in the final college game for the schools leading scorer of all time.</p>
        <p>And who would the opponent be in this clash for destinys darlings? Why, none other than Kansas own Big Eight Conference rival,big, bad Oklahoma.</p>
        <p>Kansas enters the game having won 14 of its last 17. One of those losses was to Kansas State, the team the Jayhawks defeated in the Midwest Regional championship. Another was to Duke, which Kansas sidelined 66-59 in Saturdays semifinals.</p>
        <p>And the third team? Why Oklahoma, of course.</p>
        <p>And just for fun, guess where Kansas starting point guard hails from. Hint: It begins with 0, ends with an A and has K-L-A-H-O-M in between. Improbable, but all true.</p>
        <p>Naturally, Kansas is the underdog  Oklahoma is favored by eight points  but that doesnt faze the Jayhawks. They act like they belong in tonights game at Kemper Arena, which is only 35 miles from the KU campus. And whats more, the Jayhawks think they can win.</p>
        <p>I dont know if its all a complete s^rise, said forward Danny Manning, a two-tmie All-American who has score4' more points than any player in Kansas history.</p>
        <p>When you get in the tournament, you want to win. You dont want to just be here. Thats the attitude weve taken all along. We wanted to win six games.</p>
        <p>Manning said he can tell the Jayhawks are committed to their cause simply be comparing the attitude now with how the team felt heading into the 1986 Final Four, when Kansas lost to Duke in the semifinals.</p>
        <p>Making it to the Final Four is a great accomplishment, but it seemed we were more excited the first time when we went to Dallas, he said. Weve come to this Final Four with a more businesslike approach.</p>
        <p>Our goal was to come in here and win two games. We still have an opportunity to do that.</p>
        <p>None of this talk would have seem-edi)ossible two months ago.</p>
        <p>()n Feb. 3, the Jayhawks lost to Oklahoma 73-65 - their fourth straight loss and fifth in six games. They were 12-8 and on the verge of a complete collapse.</p>
        <p>But Coach Larry Brown kept juggling his lineup until he found the npt combination and Kansas took off on a</p>
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        <p>Alcott Gets Win/ Takes The Plunge</p>
        <p>Wild, Wet And Wonderful</p>
        <p>LPGA golfer Amy Alcott, right, gets a hug from her caddy Bill Kurre after they jumped hand in hand in'the lake at the 18th green at Mission Hills Country Club in Rancho Mirage. Alcott had just sank her final putt to win the Nabisco Dinah Shore LPGA Tournament Sunday with a 1-under par 274. (AP Laser-photo)</p>
        <p>Kansas Following The Script Closely</p>
        <p>five-game winning streak that started the ball rolling toward an NCAA bid.</p>
        <p>When we lost four in a ro#, he (Brown) started getting easier on us, forward Chris Piper said. He didnt want us to lose our confidence. He didnt start getting tough with us until we started winning again.</p>
        <p>We didnt change any of our offensive philosophv, we didnt change our defensive pMosophy. We tried to find a team that would work together and develop some chemistry. Obviously, we did.-</p>
        <p>Once in the tournament, the Jayhawks benefitted from some more storybook happenings.</p>
        <p>Seeded sixth, Kansas opened with an 85-72 victory over Xavier, Ohio. Third-seeded North Carolina State, a team that had caught fire late in the season, should have been Uie next opponent, but the Wolfpack was upset by Murray State in the first round.</p>
        <p>The Jayhawks got by Murray State 61-58 and then should nave faced second-seeded Pittsburgh. But Pitt was upset by Vanderbilt so Kansas drew the Commodores and won 77-64.</p>
        <p>That should have sent Browns troops against Purdue, the top seed in Uie Midwest. But Purdue had been ambushed by Kansas State in the regional finals, setting up an all-Big Eight regional championship game.</p>
        <p>Kansas State had hammered the Jayhawks 69-54 in the Big Eight tournament, but Kansas prevailed this time, 71-58. Then came Duke, which had beaten the Jayhawks 74-70 at Lawrence on Feb. 12. Less than five minutes into the game, Kansas led 14^) and Uie Jayhawks were on their way to Uie finals.</p>
        <p>All this has Brown enjoying himself more than ever.</p>
        <p>No matter what happens, I have never really enjoyed much, he said. I never allowed myself to enjoy experiences at the moment, rnaybie not unUl afterward.</p>
        <p>But since the middle of Jam when we lost to Kansas State to bi. our winning streak (at home), its been the first time in my life where I really enjoyed what was going on.</p>
        <p>A key factor in the Kansas resurgence has been the shift of sophomore Kevin Pritchard from off guard to Uie point. Pritchard, from Tulsa, Okla., was recruited by Oklahoma Coach Billy Tubbs, and will be responsible for getting Uie ball upcourt against the Oners oppressive full-court pressure.</p>
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        <p>RANCHO MIRAGE, Calif. (AP) -Amy Alcott stood on the 18Ui green at Mission Hills Country Club and weighed a tough decision - to plunge or not to plunge.</p>
        <p>FinaUy, talbig Uie advice of her caddy, BUI Kurre, Alcott leaped into the lake that surrounds the green.</p>
        <p>BUI told me, Kid, you may never get a chance to do this again here in your Ufetime, Alcott said Sunday after she celebrated her victory in the $500,000 Dinah Shore Tcnunament by going fora brief dip.</p>
        <p>1 didnt know how deep it was; wondered if Id break a leg. But then I said, What the heck, its worth it.</p>
        <p>Alcott was elated with the victory, her second in the Dinah Shore, for many reasons.</p>
        <p>For one, she had said she wanted to win for a friend, 25-year-old Ann Paulson, who is suffering from cancer.</p>
        <p>The win also ended the longest winless streak of Alcotts career and made her only the Uiird player in LPGA history to hit the ^ million plateau in career earnings.</p>
        <p>Im glad I went over $2 mUlion in the Dinah Shore, said the 32-year-old Alcott. The Dinah Shore reaUy put womens golf on the map. </p>
        <p>Alcotts coolihg swim also came after runnerup GoUeen Walker had put the heat on the leader during the final round.</p>
        <p>Alcott had a closing 1-under-par 71 for a 14-under-par 274 total, a tournament record. But she finished just two shots in front of Walker, who had a final-round 69 after trailing Alcott by four strokes when the day began.</p>
        <p>It got a little tight, but I just had to play my game, said Alcott, who buUt her lead to two shots with a birdie on No. 14, then didnt let WaUcer any closer.</p>
        <p>Ifyoustartthinking, Whatiflhit fold shot? What if I bogey here?</p>
        <p>Walker, who has won just one tournament since joining the LPGA Tour in 1982, said the pressure was on Alcott.</p>
        <p>She had a litUe tension on her back, Walker said/ But Amys a heck of a commUtor... Shes playing extremely well, with a lot of confidence.</p>
        <p>Alcott, in her 14th year on Uie Tour, collected $80,000 for the victory, running her career total to $2,050,831. Only Pat Bradley and JoAnne Garner preceded her to the $2 million mark.</p>
        <p>Alcott also moved nearer to Uie LPGAs Hall of Fame. The victory was the 27th of Alcotts career, leaving her just three shy of the 30 needed foreMUity.</p>
        <p>Rosie Jones, with a 71, finished third, five shots behind Alcott.</p>
        <p>Aniateur Caroline Keggi, a senior at the University of New Mexico, finished an impressive fourth with a closing 69 to wind up at 281.</p>
        <p>That would have earned her a $26,500 paycheck, but, since Keggis an amateur, she setUed for a trophy.</p>
        <p>Nancy Lopez shot a 69 to finish tiedo for fifth with Marta Figueras-Dotti at 282. Figueras-DotU, from Spain, had a 73.</p>
        <p>Alcotts victory ended her longest victory drou^t since she joined the LPGA Tour m 1975. She had won at least once a year until 1987, when she was shut out. Her last previous win was in August. 1986.</p>
        <p>Her 14-under-par total at Mission Hills bettered by one shot the tournament record set by Donna Caponi in 1980, when Alcott finished second; and matched in 1985 by Alice Miller.</p>
        <p>Radwick Helps Plymouth To Win</p>
        <p>JAMESVILLE  Danny Radwick went 2-4 wiUi a triple to lead Plymouth to a 16-0 romp over Bear Grass in the opening round of Uie Jamesville Invitational Easter Baseball Tournament Saturday.</p>
        <p>Plymouth jumped on top early, scoring one run in Uie first and three apiece in both the second and third to move out to a 7-0 lead.</p>
        <p>Nickv Alexander also had two hits, boUi of Uiem doubles for PlymouUi, which advances to play Washington today at 5 p.m. Bear Grass played Columbia at 12 p.m. today in tm consolation round.</p>
        <p>In other first round action, Washington defeated Columbia, 9-1; Williamston defeated Bath, ll-O and Roanoke topped Jamesville, 6-5.</p>
        <p>PlymottUi.....................133 271C 13 0</p>
        <p>Bear Grass......................OOC CO-0 3 4</p>
        <p>Riddick and Woolard; Wynne, Peaks (4) and Rawls</p>
        <p> 9</p>
        <p> 1</p>
        <p>JAMESVILLE  Franz Holscher went  3-4  wiUi  a  double  to  lead</p>
        <p>Washington to a  9-1 win  over  Colum</p>
        <p>bia Saturday.</p>
        <p>Holscher had an RBI single and Derrick Curtis had a two run double that keyed a four-run sixth inning that put Uie game out of reach.</p>
        <p>Washington advances to play PlymouUi while (folumbia takes on Bear Grass.</p>
        <p>Washinaton.</p>
        <p>Columbia....</p>
        <p>Columbia..................000  001 01 1 3</p>
        <p>Washington.............102  204  x-0  13  2</p>
        <p>Creef, D. Spencer (5) and Kirkman; Leggett and Holscher</p>
        <p>Williamston............11</p>
        <p>Bath.......................0</p>
        <p>JAMESVILLE  Guy Spruill went 2-3 with a home run in tm tMrd to drive in two runs an help Williamston hand Bath an 11-0 defeat Saturday.</p>
        <p>Williamston broke a scoreless tie in the third by pushing across five runs to take control of the game.</p>
        <p>Williamston advances to play Roanbke at 7:30 tonight while Bath takes on Jamesville at 2:30 in consolation play.</p>
        <p>Bath.......................000 00-0 1 3</p>
        <p>Williamston 005 6x11 9 1</p>
        <p>Tuten and Cartwright; Rogers and Manseau</p>
        <p>Roanoke..................6</p>
        <p>Jamesville...............5</p>
        <p>JAMESVILLE - Roanoke held off a late charge by Jamesville to take a 6-5 win and advance to the second round of the Jamesville Easter Baseball Tournament Saturday.</p>
        <p>Roanoke built up a 6-3 lead after five innings before Jamesville rallied for two runs in the bottom of the seventh, but it wasnt enough as the Redskins held on for the win.</p>
        <p>Roonoke was led by Darren Staton who #ent 3-3 with one RBI and a triple.</p>
        <p>Jeff Phelps went 1-3 to lead the Bullets.</p>
        <p>Roanoke takes on Williamston tonight at 7:30 p.m. in second round action while Jamesville takes on Bath at 2:30 p.m. in consolation action.</p>
        <p>Roanoke....................Oil  130  o-  9  3</p>
        <p>Jamesville................030  000  25  1  2</p>
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        <pb facs="00096894_0013" />
        <p>The Dally Reftector. Greenville, N.C.</p>
        <p>Monday, April 4,1968</p>
        <p>(Continued From B-1)</p>
        <p>knocked out in the second round by Kansas State.</p>
        <p>That seems like a long time ago, Tubbs said of the two previous Kansas games, It does, however, remove any doubt about your capability of winning.</p>
        <p>While Tubbs had not taken a team to the Final Four before this year, Kan^ Coach Larry Brown already ha^one twice - in 1980 with UCLA and in 1986 with the Jayhawks. Two years ago. Brown brought a powerhouse Kansas team to Dallas but lost in the semifinals to Duke. This year, his Kansas team is being compared to the surprising Villanova and N.C. State teams.</p>
        <p>I can only speak for our team, Brown said when asked of the comparisons. Once we got into the tournament, all I said to our kids was, Lets not be satisfied to win just one game.</p>
        <p>I do see some parallels, but theyre with my UCLA team. We were, I think, 17-9 coming into the tournament, but we were playing our best at the end of the season, and we came within a layup of winning it aU.</p>
        <p>Public Notices</p>
        <p>ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIO PROPOSAL</p>
        <p>SMied proposals will be received by the Purchasing Departntent of Pitt County Memorial Hsopital until and publicly opened at:</p>
        <p>TIME: 3:00PM DATE: April 14,1988 LOCATION: Purchasing Department at Pitt County Memorial Hospi tal. Greenville, North Carolina, to furnish and deliver One (1) Motorized X ray Film Viewer. Specifications and bid proposal forms are on file in the office of the Purchasing Department, pm County AAemorlBl Hospital, and may be obtained upon request between the hours of 8:30 a.m. and 5:00 p.m., Monday through Friday.</p>
        <p>Pitt county Memorial Hospital reserves the right to reject any or all bids, waive formalities and take such actions as is In the best interest of the hospital. JackW. Richardson President April 4,1988</p>
        <p>ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIO PROPOSAL Sealed proposals will be re ceived by the Purchasing Department of Pitt County AAe-morlal Hsopital until and public enedat:</p>
        <p>Williamson, Herrin, Barnnill 8i Savage</p>
        <p>Attorneys at Law P.O. Box 552 Greenville, NC 37835 March 31,28, April 4 8i 11,1988 NOTICE TO CREDITORS AND DEBTORS OF</p>
        <p>BOBBY CHARLES WHITE</p>
        <p>All persons, firms and cor atlons having claims against Charles White, deceased, are notified to exhibit them to Mertle W. Dudley as Administratrix of the decedent's estate on or before October 4, 1988, at the otfice of White 8. Allen, P.A., Post Office Box 8188, Greenville, North Carolina 37835 8188, or be barred from their recovery. Debtors of the decedent are asked to make Immediate payment to the above-named Administratrix. MeHleW. Dudley Administratrix of the Estate of Bobby Charles White OF COUNSEL:</p>
        <p>Charles L. McLawhorn, Jr. WHITE 8i ALLEN, P.A.</p>
        <p>Post Office Box 8188 Greenville, North Carolina 37835-8188</p>
        <p>Aprils, 11, 18,25,1988.</p>
        <p>fiSTicT</p>
        <p>ly opei</p>
        <p>TIME: 3:00 PM DATE: April 14,1988 LOCATION: Purchasing Department at Pitt County AAemorlal Hospi tal, Greenville, North Carolina, to furnish, deliver, and Install One 0) Motorized X Ray Film Viewing System.</p>
        <p>Specifications and bid proposal forms are on file in the office of</p>
        <p>the Purchasing Department, Pitt County Memorial Hospital, and may be obtained upon re</p>
        <p>quest between the hours of 8:30 a.m. and 5:00 p.m., AAonday through Friday.</p>
        <p>Pitt county Memorial Hospital reserves the right to reject any or all bids, waive formalities and take such actions as Is In the best Interest of the hospital. JackW. Richardson President Aprils, 1988</p>
        <p>-5TC1-</p>
        <p>NORTH CAROLINA PITT COUNTY</p>
        <p>The undersigned having qualified as Executor of the estate of Howard C. Fleming, deceased, this Is to notify all rati gainst i state to present them to the undersigned or his attorneys Williamson, Herrin, Barnhill A Savage on or before September 31, im or this Notice will be pleaded In bar of its recovery. All persons Indebted to said state will please make Im mediate payment to the undersigned.</p>
        <p>This the 16th day of March, 1988.</p>
        <p>James R. Fleming Executor of the Estate of Howard C. Fleming 304 Templeton Drive Grewtvllle, NC 37834 Mickey A. Herrin</p>
        <p>WIC, The Special Nutrition Program for women. Infants, and Children Is available at the Pitt County Health Department.</p>
        <p>Thr wIC Program provides supplemental foods and nutri tion education to pregnant, breastfeeding, and postpartum women. Infants and children up to their flHh birthday.</p>
        <p>In order to be eligible tor the WIC Program, the applicant must be:</p>
        <p>1. A pregnant, breastfeeding, or postpartum woman, an infant or a child under live years of age.</p>
        <p>2. Reside In Pitt County.</p>
        <p>3. Meet the PIH County WIC Program financial llglbliltv guidelines.</p>
        <p>4. Pound to be at nutritional risk by a qualified health profeulonal.</p>
        <p>The Pitt County Health Depart ment WIC Program Is par ticularly Interestod In participa tIon of women and Infants.</p>
        <p>If you think you are eligible for the WIC Program, contact the Pitt County Health Department</p>
        <p>persons, firms, and corporations having claims against said</p>
        <p>at 1825 West Sixth Street or call 753-4141 between the hours of 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., /Monday FrI day.</p>
        <p>Standards for participation In the WIC Program are the same for everyone regardless of race, color, and national origin, political beliefs, sex or handicap. April 4,1988.</p>
        <p> HSTTCI-</p>
        <p>Having qualified as Executor of the estate of Pearl R An draws late of Pitt County, North Carolina, this Is to notify all pw' sons having claims against the state of said deceased to pres nt them to the undersigned Ex cutor on or before October 4, 1988 or this notice or ume will be pleaded In bar of their recovery. All persons Indebted to said</p>
        <p>eluded In the PIH County Trans portatlon Development Plan, Update, dated April, 1986.</p>
        <p>Writlen comments on the proposed project should be submitted to Ihe following of ficlals within 30 days of notice publication:</p>
        <p>Director of Public Transportation</p>
        <p>North Carolina Department of</p>
        <p>Transportation</p>
        <p>P.O^x 25301</p>
        <p>Raleigh, N.C. 37611</p>
        <p>And</p>
        <p>Chalasen of PATS 1500 AHy Street Greenville, NC 37834 Further detallsmay be obtained by contacting Nancy Harr inglon. Chairperson, PATS, ISOO Beatty Street, Greenville, NC 37834.</p>
        <p>April 4,1988</p>
        <p>Jordan Delivers Winning Message</p>
        <p>Leading Bull</p>
        <p>Chicago Bull Michael Jordan dunks the ball in the third period against the Detroit Pistons at the Pontiac Silverdome Sunday. Jordan scored 59 points during the game to lead the Bulls to a 112-110 victory. (AP Laserphoto)</p>
        <p>Final Game ...</p>
        <p>By The Associated Press Michael Jordan wanted to deliver a message. The Detroit Pistons heard him loud and clear.</p>
        <p>They had a 4-1 record against us, the Chicago Bulls guard said of the Pistops. And we had to establish</p>
        <p>we can beat Jordan scored a season points, including two free with four seconds left in the game, to snap a tie and give the Bulls a 112-110 victoi7 over Detroit Sunday at the Pontiac Silverdome. It was Ucagos third consecutive victory and the Bulls 12th in their last 16 games, and pulled Chicago to within 3',^ games of first-place Detroit in the Central Division race.</p>
        <p>The Piston have lost four straight and five of their last six. They now lead Atlanta, 102-100 winners over Indiana, by just one game.</p>
        <p>This is a game that could do a lot for our confidence down the stretch,</p>
        <p>Jordan said. This game showed us that if we meet Detroit any time in the playoffs, we can beat them. Were coming on strong.</p>
        <p>The NBAs leading scorer, Jordan now owns the top five scoring performances in the history of the Bulls franchise. It also was the 10th time in his career he has scored 50 or more</p>
        <p>Jordan helped set up his game-winning free throws when he and Brad Sellers teamed to steal the ball near midcourt and Jordan was fouled byBillLaimbeer.</p>
        <p>The play began as Isiah Thomas passed the ball to Laimbeer, who in turn tried to pass the ball when it was slapped away.</p>
        <p>Celtics 110, Mavericks 101 Larry Bird sank seven 3-point shots, scoring 32 points to lead Boston over Dallas. Bird fell one short of the league record of eight 3-pointers in a game set by Rick Barry on Feb. 9,</p>
        <p>1980, and tied by John Roche on Jan. 9,1982.</p>
        <p>The strategy helped forward Kevin McHale get a career-high 10 assists. The Celtics had 36.</p>
        <p>Hawks 102, Pacers 100 o Cliff Levingston stole the ball and fed Dominique Wilkins for a layup with 49 seconds to go to lead Atlanta over Indiana.</p>
        <p>Wilkins finished with 35 points as the Hawks won their fifth straight game.</p>
        <p>Bullets 105, Nets 103 Moses Malone scored 15 of his 31 points in the fourth quarter and Frank Johnson made a defensive ;em at the buzzer as Washington landed New Jersey its sixth straight loss. The victory was Washingtons fourth in its last five starts and kept alive the Bullets playoff hopes.</p>
        <p>Roy Hinson led the Nets with 25 points and 13 rebounds.</p>
        <p>Trail Blazers 110, Spurs 107 Kevin Duckworth scored 24 points,</p>
        <p>including two key baskets in the final minutes, to lead Portland to a come-from-behind victory over San Antonio. Duckworth also had 12 rebounds.</p>
        <p>He put the Blazers ahead 103-102 with 3:04 left before a foul shot by the Spurs Greg Anderson tied the game at 105 with 1:42 remaining. A tip-in by Duckworth with 1:23 left gave Portland the lead for good at 107-105.</p>
        <p>Lakers 108, Kings 104</p>
        <p>James Worthy scored 24 points and Byron Scott added 23 points as Los Angeles posted its 34th consecutive home victory over the Kings.</p>
        <p>The defending NBA champions, playing their fourth consecutive game without Magic Johnson and Michael Cooper, also got 19 points from Kareem Abdul-Jabbar en route to their 28th victory in their last 29 meetings with Sacramento.</p>
        <p>KU's Brown Reportedly Is Top UCLA Candidate</p>
        <p>UCLA lost 59-54 to Louisville in 1980.</p>
        <p>While Oklahoma was the No. 1 seed in the Southeast and won ie region in overpowering fashion, Kansas came out of the Midwest as the sixth seed and got some help to make the Final Four.</p>
        <p>In the second round of the tournament, Kansas could have faced N.C. State, but the Wolfpack was upset by Murray State. Kansas opponent in the third round could have been Big East regular-season champion Pittsburgh, but the Panthers were beaten by Vanderbilt. And Kansas was all set to meet the regions top seed. Big Ten champion Purdue, in the Midwest final until the Boilermakers lost to Kansas State.</p>
        <p>Obviously, you have to have some luck, some breaks, and win a game maybe that you werent supposed to, Brown said.</p>
        <p>Grant and Stacey King give Oklahoma a strong, quick front court, while guard Mookie Blaylock led the nation with 141 steals during regular season. Oklahomas press is designed to create turnovers.</p>
        <p>LOS ANGELES (AP) - Larry Brown, who took UCIA to the NCAA championship game in I960 and now finds himself there with Kansas, has emerged as a leading candidate for UCLAs vacant coaching job.</p>
        <p>North Carolina States Jim Valvano removed himself from consideration Saturday and, on Sunday, Dukes Mike Krzyzewski ended speculation that he would be the one to replace the fired Walt Hazzard.</p>
        <p>According to published reports, sources close to UCLA say Brown is interested in returning to the Pacific-10 school.</p>
        <p>Browns Kansas Jayhawks play Oklahoma tonight in Kansas uty. Mo., for the NCAA tiUe.</p>
        <p>Brown, coincidentally, will be in Los Angeles Wednesday, accompanying Kansas All-America forward Danny Manning to the John Wooden Award luncheon. The Wooden Award goes to the countrys best college basketball player.</p>
        <p>Wooden guided UCLA to 10 NCAA crowns in 12 seasons. Hazzard was</p>
        <p>the Bruins fifth coach since Wooden retired after the 1974-75 season.</p>
        <p>I realize my name is going to come up because of the connection that I had, Brown said Sunday. I love the school and Ive always said that and I care about what happens.</p>
        <p>But this is a time of my life when I havent been thinking of anything but Kansas and our team, and I dont want to focus on anything else.</p>
        <p>Its uncomfortable when your name is speculated all the time, Brown continued. Its something I dkHit seek. I wish people would focus their energies on our program and these kids and what an opportunity we have.</p>
        <p>Brown emphasized that he made a mistake in leaving UCLA.</p>
        <p>I was dumb to leave, he said Sunday. I say that every year. I made a mistake. That was my first collie job. My athletic director (J.D. Morgan) died and there were a lot of factors involved, but I was stupid. If I could change that I would, but I cant.</p>
        <p>ECU Gets Win ...</p>
        <p>(Continued From B-1)</p>
        <p>they</p>
        <p>one</p>
        <p>estate pieaw make Immediate payment.</p>
        <p>This 31st day of /March, 1988. W.H. Dawson, Jr.</p>
        <p>P.O. Box 53</p>
        <p>M/ashlngton, North Carolina 27889</p>
        <p>E xecutor of the estate of Pearl R. Andrews, deceased April 4,11,18,25,1988</p>
        <p>PUBLIC NOTICE TRANSPORTATION FOR THE ELDERLY AND HANDICAPPED This is to inform fhe public that on Tuesday, April 26,1988 @ 3:00 pm in the Commissioner^ Auditorium on the second floor of fhe PIH County Office Build Ing, 1717 West FlHh Street, Greenville, North Carolina, the PIH Area Transit System, Inc. will hold a public hearing on the proposed ^tlon 16(B)(2) Ap plication to submitted to the North Carolina Department of Transportation.</p>
        <p>DESCRIPTION OF PROJECT</p>
        <p>(1) The PIH Area Transit System, Inc. (PATS) will pro vide transportation to the el derly and handicapped residents otPfH County.</p>
        <p>(2) One 36-passenger bus, one conversion and two 15-passenger vans will be purchas d.</p>
        <p>(3) The total cost of fhe project Is estimated to be S81,0M A re quest for 80 percent of this cost (864,800) will be made to the Ur ban Mass Transportation Ad ministration. A request for 10 percent of this cost (88,100) will be made to the North Carolina Department of Transportation. PATS will be responsible lor tl nancing the remaining 10 per cent (88,100).</p>
        <p>(4) The purchase and use of this/these vehlcle(s) and equipment Is subject to the terms of financial assistance contracts between Ihe North Carolina Department of Trans portatlon and the United States Department of Transportation and between PATS and Ihe North Carolina Department of Transportation.</p>
        <p>COMPREHENSIVE PLAN NING</p>
        <p>This project will be carried out In conformance with the ongoing transportation planning efforts In Pitt County. It Is In</p>
        <p>hits. Seven of the runners stranded were in scoring poe Nine Pirates were left either at second or third.</p>
        <p>We played hard and intense, but not that well, Overton said.</p>
        <p>The Pirates, after dodging bullets in the first two innings, took the lead in the bottom of the second, scoring twice. In each of the first two frames, the Indians put runners in scoring position with doubles, but failed to move them around.</p>
        <p>William &amp;amp; Ma^ came up with its first run in the third. Adam Geyer led off with a triple to deep right center and scored on Bobby Knox bunt to first. Knox reached when no covered the bag in time.</p>
        <p>The Indians then took the lead in the fourth with two more runs, chasing starting pitcher Brian Berckman. Steve Gatti opened with a double -the fourth extra base hit off Berckman in the first four frames. Gary Grocco added a single to center, and that brought on Jonathan Jenkins, whose wid pitch allowed Gatti to score the tying run. Crocco, who had stolen second, moved to third on the play and scored on a sacrifice fly by Pat Ansaldi, giving the Indians a 3-2 lead.</p>
        <p>Jay McGraw put the Pirates back into the lead in tne fifth with his sixth home run of ttie season. Thomas had walked just prior to the blast which made it 4-3. The Pirates added another run before the frame ended as Godin, who had reached on a fielders choice, scored on a throwing error.</p>
        <p>The Pirates added a sixth run in the sixth. Chris Cauble singled and courtesy runner Tommy Boswell stole second. He moved up on an out and scored on Browns hit to right.</p>
        <p>But the Indians struggled back after that, scoring single runs in the seventh, eighth and ninth innings.</p>
        <p>In the seventh, Campi led off with a single and Tim Walshs hit put him on third. He scored on Jim McCandless sacrifice fly.</p>
        <p>Dave Ryan led off the ei^th with a hit and stole up. He scored (ni a double by Knox.</p>
        <p>Finally, in the ninth, the Indians pushed over the tying run. Gatti led off with a single and was sacrificed to</p>
        <p>second. He took third on an out and scored on Ansaldis single to center.</p>
        <p>But Gary Smith, who had come on in relief m the fifth, didnt allow another runner past first base after that, giving the nrates their chance totMllitout.</p>
        <p>And, in the 11th, thats what they did.</p>
        <p>I thought Smith threw a good game for us, Overton said. He threw maybe his best game of the year despite giving up a few nins. He has his best stuff today.</p>
        <p>Brown and Godin led the hitting for the Pirates, each collecting two hits.</p>
        <p>Gatti led the Indians with three while Knox, Champi and Geyer each had two.</p>
        <p>The Indians fall to 11-16 overall and to 2-3 in CAA play.</p>
        <p>East Carolina boosts its record to 20-9 and is now 4-4 in the conference.</p>
        <p>East Carolina returns to action on Wednesday, hosting Liberty University in a 3 p.m. game. They then take to the road for an exhibition game on Thursday at 7 p.m. with the Kinston Indians in Kinston. Following that, Uiey return to CAA action with a Saturday-Sunday three-game stint at George!</p>
        <p>WBM</p>
        <p>Knox,2b</p>
        <p>Chunpi.Sb</p>
        <p>Walsli.rf</p>
        <p>GetU,cf</p>
        <p>Crocco,lb</p>
        <p>McC*lero,ia</p>
        <p>AiMl(U,db</p>
        <p>Mooi.c</p>
        <p>Ryan,^</p>
        <p>Marino,c</p>
        <p>Geyer,U</p>
        <p>TeUli</p>
        <p>ab r b rb E.Carelina</p>
        <p>5 0 2 2 Ritchie,ss</p>
        <p>6 12 0 Thomas,cf</p>
        <p>0 1 0 McGraw,l{</p>
        <p>2 3 0 Brown,lb</p>
        <p>1 2 0 Godin,rf 0 0 I Adams,2b 0 I 2 Whitley,dh 0 0 0 Yar'ouidi,dh</p>
        <p>1110 Rigm,3b 1 0 0 0 Cauble,c 4 12 0 Baswell,cr 43 8 14 8 ToUb</p>
        <p>ab r h rb</p>
        <p>0 1 2 0 1 1 0 2 2 2 1 I 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 0 7 8 5</p>
        <p>WUUaniaMary..................881  288 111 -8</p>
        <p>Eaat CareUna.....................828  318 888 8i- 7</p>
        <p>Two out when winning run scored.</p>
        <p>Game Winni RBI-Godin.</p>
        <p>E-Crocco, Champi 2, Adams, Mooea 2, Riggs, Knox; DP-WUliam k Mary 2; LOB-CWM 12, ECU 11; 2BChamp, Crocco, Adams, Gatti, Knox; 3B-Geyer; HR-McGraw (6); SB-Godin 2, Riggs, crocco, Champi, Adams, Geyer, Yar-boroi3i, Ryan; S-Whitley, Ritchie, Oocco, Knox; SF-Ansaldl, McCandim.</p>
        <p>PHcblng</p>
        <p>WimaBaaMary</p>
        <p>Shingledecker................</p>
        <p>Haley.............................</p>
        <p>Cofran  ..............</p>
        <p>Piwiiaao &amp;lt;L,5&amp;lt;I)..............</p>
        <p>East Carolina</p>
        <p>Berckman  .............</p>
        <p>Jenkins..........................</p>
        <p>Smith (W,5-l).................</p>
        <p>Ip b r er bb so</p>
        <p> 4 6 5 4 4 1</p>
        <p>...14!i 1112 0 ,.2W 1 0 0 2 1 ...2% 110 10</p>
        <p> 3  6  3  3  0  4</p>
        <p>..m  0  0  0  2  2</p>
        <p>...m  8  3  3  2  8</p>
        <p>Berckman pitched to two batters in the 4th in-; Shinglededur pitched to 3 batters in the SUi</p>
        <p>WP-ShingMecker 2, Jenkins; PB-Mooaa.</p>
        <p>LtUS</p>
        <p>AMaze you...</p>
        <p>witli cxpeniCNCC,</p>
        <p>Quality, aNO scRvlce.</p>
        <p>t:ij PcRfoiiMaNCc PnlNtens</p>
        <p>PI MwraSE^i 2901 8. EVANS  QREENVILL^</p>
        <p>In his first season at UCLA, Brown led the Bruins into the 1980 Final Four, where'they lost in the title game to Louisville. He left after the 1960-81 season to coach the NBAs New Jersey Nets, and is in his fifth season at Kansas.</p>
        <p>Krzyzewskis Blue Devils lost to J Kansas in one of Saturdays national semifinals.</p>
        <p>I was contacted by them (UCLA), and I appreciate them expressing interest, but I have no interest in them, Knyzewski said Sunday.</p>
        <p>Valvano, who arrived in Los Angeles with his wife on Friday to discuss the job with UCLA officials, said he was not offered the position, as had been reported.</p>
        <p>He withdrew from consideration Saturday, saying it was in his familys best interests.</p>
        <p>UCLA Athletic Director Peter Dalis did not name any other candidates. He could not be contacted during the weekend.</p>
        <p>Dalis praised Valvano as a coach.</p>
        <p>Jim is one of the best and first available coaches with whom we have had discussions about the head coaching position, Dalis said, and we will continue to discuss the job with other candidates.</p>
        <p>In withdrawing, Valvano, 42, said he had meaningful and productive discussions with UCLA oificials but I want to stress that nothing was ever reduced to a final proposal.</p>
        <p>It is a great job and the people I met with were wonderful, but I feel it is in my familys best interests to stay at North Carolina State. My oldest daughter is a freshman at N.C. State and my middle daughter is a sophomore in high school and I think it best for them that we stay where we are at this time, Valvano said.</p>
        <p>Hazzard, a starter at guard on UCLAs first NCAA championship team in 1964, was fired on Wednesday, less than three weeks after completing his fourth season as the Bruins coach.</p>
        <p>For more than a generation, thousands of lovely lawns have been established annually with Centi-Seed, the original and dependable Centipede grass seed. New Centi-Seed is treated for fungus and bacteria protection and with a natural growth stimulant for quicker, surer results. Centipede develops and grows slower than other grasses but unlike quicker starters" it produces a dense, weed-free, lifetime turf. Ask your neighbor who has used it and insist on Centi-Seed for planting your new lawn or converting your old lawn.</p>
        <p>LIFETIME LAWN</p>
        <p>Bril Repair Seruire</p>
        <p>Small Engine Repair For Most Popular Chain Saws &amp;amp; Lawn Mowers</p>
        <p>40 N Gr*n Si</p>
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        <p>iOOOsqunfiit iff</p>
        <p>rmmmsimmesm.</p>
        <p>Cenii Seed is i Reglitered tradpark used eicluslvely lor premium quIHy ^Ipade grass seed oroen and packed by</p>
        <p>PATTEN SEED CO.. LAKELAND. QA 31635</p>
        <p>COMPARE cost per pound with all other brands. * Centi-Seed* is 98% pure seed.</p>
        <p>Available At;</p>
        <p>SPRING IS HERE!!! BOATHM BKIUf ANDtAriTYCOIIBM</p>
        <p>TAR RIVER UNIT U.S. POWER SQUADRON WHEN;TUESDAY EVENINQ 7-9 PM APRIL STH THROUGH MAY 24TH</p>
        <p>WHERE: 8T. PETERS SCHOOL 2700 EAST FOURTH STREET QREENVILLE. NC</p>
        <p>oar aiADV roa a tAn and iNJOVAiLe twMm ONTMWATtai</p>
        <p>GREENVILLE Creslive Gardens Inc.</p>
        <p>Hwy 11 S. Greenville True Value Hdwe. 703 E Greenville Blvd Littles Nursery US 13, 267 Farmville Hwy. Plant a See Nursery Inc. Evans St Ext. Southern States Cooperslivt Corner of Chestnut &amp;amp; Line Sunshine Garden Center Evans St Ext.</p>
        <p>Sutton Mobile Home Supply Hwy. 43 S.</p>
        <p>Vans Hardware 1300 N Green St. WINTERVIILE A. W.AngeaCo.</p>
        <p>Main St</p>
        <p>Like a good neighbor, StateEaarm is there</p>
        <p>See me for car, home, life and health insurance.</p>
        <p>Bill McDonald</p>
        <p>East Ttnth 8trtt Ext GrddnvHld. N.C.</p>
        <p>752-6680</p>
        <p>State Farm tnaurance Companies  Home Qttrces BloorninQton liimors</p>
        <pb facs="00096894_0014" />
        <p>The Dally Reflector, Greenville, N.C-</p>
        <p>Monday. April 4,1988</p>
        <p>SCOREBOARD</p>
        <p>TANK DPNANARA*</p>
        <p>by Jeff Millar &amp;amp; Bill Hinds</p>
        <p>NHL Standings</p>
        <p>Seittle at Lot Angeles Lakers, 10;p.m. San Antonio at ^den SUte, 10:30 p.m. Los Aogcta Clippers at Portland, 10:30</p>
        <p>&amp;amp;</p>
        <p>BvneAsiedalciPtcH WALESCONFERENCE Patrick DivisiM</p>
        <p>W L T PU GF GA Ulanders39 31 10 80 306 267 y-WuUniton  36  33  9  85  281  249</p>
        <p>y-Phiialphia  38  33  9  85  2  293</p>
        <p>Jersey  38  36  6  82  293  296</p>
        <p>Sg Rangen  36  34  lO  82  300  285</p>
        <p>Pittabair  36  35  9  81  319  316</p>
        <p>AdaasDlviiiMi x-Montreal  45  22  13  103  296  238</p>
        <p>44  30  6  94  300  251</p>
        <p>37  32  11  85  285  306</p>
        <p>35  36  7  77  249  267</p>
        <p>32  43  5  69  271  306</p>
        <p>CAMPBEU CONFERENCE</p>
        <p>NarrisDiviik</p>
        <p>W  L  T  Pts  GF  GA</p>
        <p>41  28  11  93  322  269</p>
        <p>34  38  8  76  278  294</p>
        <p>30  41  9  69  284  328</p>
        <p>21  49  10  52  273  345</p>
        <p>19  48  13  51  242  349</p>
        <p>SeytbeDlvUee</p>
        <p>48  23  9  105  397  306</p>
        <p>44  25  11  99  363  288</p>
        <p>33  36  11  77  292  310</p>
        <p>30  42  8  68  318  359</p>
        <p>25  46  9  59  272  320</p>
        <p>x-WQQdmaiao title y-m playoff berth</p>
        <p>Satarday'tGamcf New Jersey 5, New York Islanders 2 Hartford 4, Boston 2 PhUadelpiiia7,Quebec4</p>
        <p>pm.</p>
        <p>NBA Boxes</p>
        <p>By Ike Asiecialed Press</p>
        <p>AtBsstsn</p>
        <p>DALLAS non Aguirre 9-26 2-2 20, Tarpley 10-13 2-2 22,</p>
        <p>10.Totais 464711423110.</p>
        <p>Su Aatsnie  28 33 22 26-117</p>
        <p>PorOaWI  35 24 19 38-119</p>
        <p>34*omt goab-Wilson, Porter. Fouled out-BrickowsU. Rebounds-San Anton 52 (G.Anderson 13), Portland 54 (Ouckw^ U). Assists-San Antonio 25 (SundvoM9). Portland 31 (Porter 12). Total fouls-San Antonio 22, Portland 25. A-12,668.</p>
        <p>Texas 12, ChicafCubB9</p>
        <p>1^4,9 inn., rain</p>
        <p>Cindnnai^ Clevelands ~ Toronto 11,</p>
        <p>CalifomiafcLosAngdesl</p>
        <p>Oak^5,^mn^3</p>
        <p>San Diego 8, Las Vegas (AAA) 3</p>
        <p>At</p>
        <p>Caur.</p>
        <p>(194)</p>
        <p>Golf Scores</p>
        <p>BOSTON (119)</p>
        <p>McHale 6-13 8-9 20, Bird 11-19 3-3 32,</p>
        <p>Tlwrae 7-15 7-6 21, TVler 871-2 7, KMne</p>
        <p>1244fl6,PiWBlN6-i7(i......</p>
        <p>0010, Pinckney 8138</p>
        <p>812</p>
        <p>r8i784l3,K.anith68</p>
        <p>Parisb 47 00 8, Johnson 811OO18, Ainge</p>
        <p> ------  oool.</p>
        <p>.._________-38924,  Neleyl-l  002,</p>
        <p>Hmry 04 2-2 2, Jadaon 47 80 9. Totals 48 8428281</p>
        <p>RANCHO MIRAGE, Calif. (AP) - Final scorn and priu monw Sunday from the 9500,000 LPGA Dinab Shore Tournament,</p>
        <p>x-Detroit y-SL Lmda</p>
        <p>innnfsdta</p>
        <p>8112-217, Acres 83 00 4, Paxson 30 006, Roberts -1 84 5, Minniefield 80 80 0, GilmofcOOOOO.Totalse711818110.</p>
        <p>Dallas  23  23  29 26-191</p>
        <p>Bsstsa  28  31  31 29-119</p>
        <p>8Poinl goals-Bird 7, Ainge 3. Fouled out-Tarpley. Rebouods-Dallas 52</p>
        <p>(Tarpley 16), Boston 29 (McHale 7). Awdsts- Dallas 22 (Blackman 6), Boston 36</p>
        <p>(McHale 10). Total foub-Dallas 15,Boston 18. Tedmicals-Dallas, illegal ddense. A-14,890.</p>
        <p>AtPsmiM,Mick. CHICAGO (112)</p>
        <p>-1104 L.A: lakers (198)</p>
        <p>^tt 11-23 1-3 23, Green 48 1-2 9,</p>
        <p>Sacramcale  27  23  29  25-194</p>
        <p>LA. Lakcn  31  29  26  28-198</p>
        <p>8Point goab-Pressley, Jackson. Fouled out-None. Rebounds-Sacramento 55 (Thotiw 16), Los Angeles 44 (M.numpsoo 7). Assists-Sacramento 25 (PressleyTL Los Angeles 37 (Matthews 10). Total foub-Sacramento 16, Los Ang^ 20. A-17605.</p>
        <p>lev):</p>
        <p>Missioo a-denotes ama-</p>
        <p>Roaie Jones, 2.0 a-CaioBne keg Nancy Lopes,</p>
        <p>71-660871-274</p>
        <p>78050809-276</p>
        <p>78070871-279</p>
        <p>78710608-281</p>
        <p>74087009-282</p>
        <p>S'</p>
        <p>TorontoS,i)eMt3 t  _  Sunday'sGasMS</p>
        <p>t ^ fnm^5,St.Louis4,OT - Ca^MinnesoUl , ( Boa!on3,^YorkIslanders2</p>
        <p>i-</p>
        <p>3060 8018,</p>
        <p>son 2-4 Ob 4,9 2. Totals 42-802835112. DETROIT (119) DanU^ 4131812 II  816 80 18,</p>
        <p>Spring Baseball</p>
        <p>Blabom 85 84 8, rs 7-16 45 18,</p>
        <p>By ne Associated Press AU Times EDT Ualcss Noted AMERICAN LEAGUE</p>
        <p>Marta Figurs-Dtt, 18,000 78087873-282 Dottie Modvie, 14,431  7871-7007-284</p>
        <p>Jane Geddes, 14,431  78780870-284</p>
        <p>Dawn Coe, 14,430  77-07-7878-284</p>
        <p>Debbie Massey, 10,643  72-687872-285</p>
        <p>Jan Stephenson, 10,643  6872-7874-285</p>
        <p>JuU talBlwrBtl 74787009-286 JoAnne Camer 7,911  7872-7209-286</p>
        <p>Muffin Ipncr-Dvin, 7,911 687872-70-286 M Betb ZSmmrmn, 7,910 7407-7471-286</p>
        <p>&amp;amp;*s*6r</p>
        <p>Sheni Turner, 6,338  5660 5,859</p>
        <p>UFOt^ rl9ToRlCAL OKTA,  UfOkJ</p>
        <p>CXRPMOOTlAt PfK&amp;gt;JecnOM&amp;amp;</p>
        <p>KvBRfK o </p>
        <p>R COMMON</p>
        <p>NO WAY e^OUUV Nil</p>
        <p>CTIHirl^NOTID SAV 1HAT K)ONO(%...</p>
        <p>I2jtl0</p>
        <p>Humas 11-24 2-4 24, SaUnr 2-3 80 4, Johnson 41180 8, Edwards 2-3 OO 4, Rodman 20 44 isOOO ----------</p>
        <p>8,LewisO</p>
        <p>ssar</p>
        <p>OOOO.Totals 4499 22-29110.</p>
        <p>39 33 39 19-112 33 33 26 18-119 Fouled out-None. Rebounds-Chicago 53 (Conine 12), Detroit 54 (Rodman 9). Assists-Chicago 23 (Vincent 13), Detroit 29 (Dumars 9). Total fouls-^cago 27, Detroit 27. A-23,712.</p>
        <p>New York</p>
        <p>Toronto</p>
        <p>Cleveland</p>
        <p>Kansas City</p>
        <p>California</p>
        <p>Texas</p>
        <p>Boston</p>
        <p>Seattle</p>
        <p>Milwaukee</p>
        <p>Oakland</p>
        <p>NBA Standings</p>
        <p>By lie Asssdated Press ABHmesEDT EASTERN CONFERENCE AUaatteDivlsisn W L 52 21 32 39</p>
        <p>32 39</p>
        <p>York  32  40</p>
        <p>New Jmey ' 18 54 CeatralDivWsn x-Detrait  46  25</p>
        <p>S  if</p>
        <p>33 38</p>
        <p>WESTERN CONFERENCE MMwestDivisisn W L</p>
        <p>x-Dallas  46  25</p>
        <p>x-Denver  46  26</p>
        <p>x-Houatao  41  29</p>
        <p>x-Utah  40  31</p>
        <p>San Antonio  27  44</p>
        <p>Sacramento  20  52</p>
        <p>PadlicDivisian x-LA. Laken  54  17</p>
        <p>x-Portland  44  26</p>
        <p>x-SeatUe  38  33</p>
        <p>Php^  23  47</p>
        <p>Goldn State  17  53</p>
        <p>L.A. CUraers  16  55</p>
        <p>x-cltadwd^yoff berth y-cUnehedSvbkinUe</p>
        <p>Satardays Games ' Cleveland 106, Indiana 94 New York 104, Houston 98 Milwaieel25,New Jersey 111 Denver 123, Golden Statein Utah 108, Loa Angeles Lakers 92 LoaAi^'^ --</p>
        <p>'Smtaay'sGanMS</p>
        <p>1110, Dallas 101 &amp;gt;112, Detroit 110</p>
        <p>Pet. GB</p>
        <p>.712 -.451 19 .451 19 .444 19(5 .250 33(5</p>
        <p>.634 1 .597 3(5 .557 6(5 .472 12(5 465 13</p>
        <p>AtlndiaMBsUs ATLANTA (192)</p>
        <p>Wilkins 1830 7-10 35, Willis 88 5-611, Lev-ingston898010, Rivers 810 8419, Wittman i7(M) 2, Carr 810 2-414, Hastings 2-2 80 5, Battle 83 80 0, Webb 2-i 2-3 6. Totals 4879 1827102.</p>
        <p>INDIANA (199)</p>
        <p> Hsdale 1817 80 26. Williams 811 82 8, Stipaoovich 1815 80 20, Fkining 87 6412,</p>
        <p> 1-111, Per8on7-172-217,Millerl-'i</p>
        <p>71-1 (10 2, Wheeler 81800, Soles 889100.</p>
        <p>29 29 39 14-192</p>
        <p>39 25 29 25-199 8Point exds-Wilkins 2, Hastings, Person. FoidM out-None. Rebounds-Atlanta 46 (Willis 9), Indiana 45 (Tisdale 9). Assists-Atlanta 19 (Rivers 11), Indiana 18 (Floniim 5). Total fouls-Atlaota 16, In-^nae-^'^hnical-Atlanta illegal</p>
        <p>ga</p>
        <p>Minnesota</p>
        <p>Baltimore</p>
        <p>Loqg811l-l ^ 80LGiw1-1IM)2,\ 1-2802.1^48889</p>
        <p>Los Angeles</p>
        <p>Newm</p>
        <p>Cincinnati</p>
        <p>Montreal</p>
        <p>^Francisco</p>
        <p>NATIONAL LEAGUE W</p>
        <p>Pet.</p>
        <p>.643</p>
        <p>.581</p>
        <p>.567</p>
        <p>.517</p>
        <p>.517</p>
        <p>.516</p>
        <p>.500</p>
        <p>Uura Davies, Martha Nause, Robin Walton,</p>
        <p>Barb Thomas, 4;353 J^^Brita,4^.</p>
        <p>Lauer,</p>
        <p>. 4,353</p>
        <p>nwtvn-m</p>
        <p>78787809-287</p>
        <p>780807-72-287</p>
        <p>770871-71-288</p>
        <p>75087871-288</p>
        <p>78750870-289</p>
        <p>760872-70-289</p>
        <p>78780872-289</p>
        <p>750872-73-289</p>
        <p>78787308-290</p>
        <p>72-767509-290</p>
        <p>76787870-290</p>
        <p>7671-72-73-290</p>
        <p>74087676-290</p>
        <p>GREENSBORO, N.C. (AP) - Final</p>
        <p>HKS</p>
        <p>Ken</p>
        <p>Jeff Sumai Scott Hoch, Gil Morgan, Tom Purtaer, Chip Beck, k</p>
        <p>66030872-271</p>
        <p>66070607-271</p>
        <p>66687871-273</p>
        <p>6707-72-72-278</p>
        <p>660871-72-279</p>
        <p>74087209-281</p>
        <p>78787209-281</p>
        <p>71-787876-281</p>
        <p>7871-7873-290 71-787872-290</p>
        <p>71-787876-290 74087878-291 7871-7676-291 78767673-291 68767878-292 690877-78-292 78787676-292 7871-7873-292</p>
        <p>78787673-292 687871-77-298</p>
        <p>72-787876-298 74087874-293</p>
        <p>78787674-293 .    370  68767879-294</p>
        <p>$1^  72-72-7678-294</p>
        <p>BiU  Rogen, llJJO  6872-7102-294</p>
        <p>Bob  Eu^ 11,670  74087874-294</p>
        <p>FidtonAUem, $1810  780877-73-296</p>
        <p>A.X  Dl^ IIAIO  7871-77-74-296</p>
        <p>Nick Faldo, $1,760  78787877-296</p>
        <p>Andrew ,</p>
        <p>a-"**</p>
        <p>F^|I,j60</p>
        <p>SecaaditomM At Atlanta y, March 19 107, AunnnO? Louiiville97,ftr^Y(yig76</p>
        <p>Saaday, March 29</p>
        <p>Kentucky 90, Maryland 81 Villanova66,Illinois63 SemifiBab At Mrmtagkam, Ala. Tlnraday, March 24 Villanova80,Kennicky74 e98</p>
        <p>Iowa 104, Nevada-LasVcgtt86 SemMnali At Seattle Friday, March 25 NorthCaroIinaTlMichiganOO Ariaona99,Iowa79</p>
        <p>Chamaisashta AtSrottie</p>
        <p>Saaday. March 27 Arizoitt 70, North Carolina 52</p>
        <p>At BirmiBghaiB, Ala. Satarday, March 26 Oklahoma 78, Villaoova 59</p>
        <p>Hamnind, $32,375 6707-7874-281 Joey Sindetar, 3,000  7872-7808-282</p>
        <p>Keith Clearwatr, $23,000 68787109-282</p>
        <p>NCAA Playoffs</p>
        <p>Riz, . ..</p>
        <p>Jane Crafter, 3,650 Judy Dickinson, 3.649</p>
        <p>--(jdgnn, 3.650 7871-7676-291 3,680  787871-72-291</p>
        <p>rahia San Dieg) S. Loub Atlanta</p>
        <p>76787872-291</p>
        <p>79087873-291</p>
        <p>T.C. Chen,</p>
        <p>Bobby Clai ,</p>
        <p>Mark Wiebe: $23,600 Jim Carter, $l7,IMi Ronnie Black, &amp;lt;w,</p>
        <p>k, $19,000 Steve Pate, $17,0M</p>
        <p>Rarick, 2,801</p>
        <p>Tammie^&amp;amp;een^2,801</p>
        <p>Deb</p>
        <p>Alke Ritzman, 2,153 Denise Strebig, 2,1S --------r  2,152</p>
        <p>Nancy Brown,</p>
        <p>76787673-291 2,801 72-77-7409-292 887872-70-292 71-72-77-72-292 78786873-292 78787876-292 77-7871-76-292 71-7871-74-292 78087676-292 787872-75-292 770877-70-293 77-71-7872-293 7871-71-75-293</p>
        <p> .8 XWA*</p>
        <p>Lanny Wadkins, $11,333 Mark Lye, $11,333 Joe Inman, $7400</p>
        <p>W^TO Levi, $7,;</p>
        <p>NOTE:  games  count  in  stan-</p>
        <p>Marci</p>
        <p>diogs,tiesf</p>
        <p>GB</p>
        <p>.639  (4</p>
        <p>.566 4(1 .563 6 .380 19 .278 m</p>
        <p>.761 -.629 m .535 16 .329 30(1 .243 36(1 .225 38</p>
        <p>AtEastRatherfsrd,NJI.</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (166)</p>
        <p>Jones 81 1-2 1, J.Williams 812 2-2 12, M.Malone 11-22 811 31, Colter 89 2-2 12, JMalone 7-15 8317, King 1-3 50 7, Bogues 1-5 60 2, Bd 1-1 60  082 4.</p>
        <p>Johnson 69 3411, Alarie 84 80 6. Totab 48842832106.</p>
        <p>NEW JERSEY (193)</p>
        <p>.,1^ 1819 50 25, B. Williams 8118715, McCormick 815 8016, Bagby 8111-212,</p>
        <p>814</p>
        <p>Du.Wi</p>
        <p>ComiiO</p>
        <p>Wmttglsa</p>
        <p>Dw</p>
        <p>OOO.Totais</p>
        <p>016. Bagby 81</p>
        <p>loioTEngbrr----</p>
        <p>htabM!618</p>
        <p>1-360 2, 6181IB.</p>
        <p>33 n M 29-116 New Jersey  22 39 39 2i-i9t</p>
        <p>8Point goal-Bagby. Foubd ota-None. Rebounds^asfrii^ 52 (M.Mabne 9), New Jersey 44(Hinson 13). Assbts-Waahington 17 (J Mahme, J.Williams 4), l)^ Jmq 26 (Bagby li). Total foub-Washington IS, New Jersey 22. Technicar-New Jersey ilbgal dense. A-8,558.</p>
        <p>Satardays Games Pitbburgh 4, Baltimore 1 Rbhmond (AA) 4, Atlanta 1 CbvdandS,ChbuoWhiteSox6 Houston (ss)6,n3adelphia2 Detroit7,Bostons New York Mets 11, Houston (ss) 5 Montreal 5, New VorkYankees4 CincinnaU8,St.Loub6</p>
        <p>Minnesota 8, Toranto2 SanFrancisco7,OaUand6 Texas 11, CU^CubsS</p>
        <p>Saaday's Games</p>
        <p>Atlanta at Greenvilb (AA),ccd., rain Philad^2, Houaton2,e, II inn. DetierBoston2,SinB.,curfew NewYoriYaieeB4,Mootieal3 NewYortMetsl6.Baltimore7</p>
        <p>Mindy Moore, 1,665 ^Benz,l,60</p>
        <p>Barb B^iskyM,605</p>
        <p>Lon Garbacz, l,$04 Janet ted^, 1,664 Laune Rinka, 1,664 a-Kathben Scrivner, Deedee Lasker, i,044 Dot Germain, 1,044 Jill Bribs, 1,044</p>
        <p>7872-7871-294</p>
        <p>787672-72-294</p>
        <p>787672-72-294</p>
        <p>78767872-294</p>
        <p>72-787872-294</p>
        <p>71-787872-294</p>
        <p>7872-71-73-294</p>
        <p>78767876-294</p>
        <p>7672-7674-294</p>
        <p>787872-78-294</p>
        <p>76787672-296</p>
        <p>77-71-7874-296</p>
        <p>7872-7876-295</p>
        <p> Wrenn, $7,400</p>
        <p>Craig Stadbr, $6,075 Dan Halldorson, --Fred Coupbs, '</p>
        <p>Roger Mara?</p>
        <p>Steve Jones,</p>
        <p>Tim S'</p>
        <p>Blaine _______</p>
        <p>T&amp;amp;.'a,</p>
        <p>John Huston, $4,507 Scott Verplank, $4,507 Peter Jacobsen, $4,507 FYed Wadsworth, $4,507</p>
        <p>Morrb Hatabb, $3,045 Bill Glasson, $3,045</p>
        <p>Ed</p>
        <p>Lba Wallers, 1,044 Martha Foyer, 1,044 Penny Hammel, 1,043</p>
        <p>gsLia?</p>
        <p>Sbelby n'"iin 681</p>
        <p>Allbon Finney, 621 Heather Farr, 621 Cathy Reynolds. 574</p>
        <p>76787875-295 7872-6876-295 787671-77-296 86687878-296 7872-72-74-296 7671-7878-296 71-787877-298 78787872-297 78767873-297 76787878-298 78787875-298</p>
        <p>76787876-298 787877-72-299</p>
        <p>Kenny Knox, Steve Low^,</p>
        <p>,000  6871-7876-282</p>
        <p>$23,000 767667-71-282 68716873-282 7872-72-W-283 78787876-283 78787876-283 78766871-284 78716871-284 6872-72-72-284</p>
        <p>68787872-284 726871-72-284 68687675-284 6871-7874-284 71-706875-284 73687875-284</p>
        <p>71-7872-72-285</p>
        <p>72-72-71-76-285 78726875-285 7871-7872-286</p>
        <p>68787873-286 7871-72-73-286</p>
        <p>7871-72-73-286 7671-71-76-286</p>
        <p>7872-71-73-286 $4,507 6871-7673-287</p>
        <p>68787873-287 78726878-287 6871-7874-287 746872-72-287 68767874-287 72-72-7876-287 71-71-7873-288 787672-288 78787671-288 787871-72-288 71-7671-72-288 71687876-288 71-72-7876-288 7871-7877-288</p>
        <p>By The Associated Press All Times EOT EAST REGIONAL First Rsaad</p>
        <p>AtCh^HULN.C.</p>
        <p>Syn^69, NorthCarolina AAT55 SotahernMethodbt83, NotreDameTS Die8S,BostonU.60</p>
        <p>At Hartfmd. Cou.</p>
        <p>Friday, March 18 Georgia Tech 90, Wa State 78 Richmood 72, Indiana 69</p>
        <p>MIDWEST REGIONAL</p>
        <p>Kansasate66,l6SaUe53 DePaul83,WichitaState62 At Lincaki. Neb.</p>
        <p>Vlmt^80^]tab^l^'* l^yStete78, North Carolina StateTS Kansas 85, Xavbr.OUo 72 Secead Rsaad At Saath Bead, lad.</p>
        <p>THE FINAL FOUR At Kaasas Cite, Me. SemMiab Satarday. April 2 Kaioas66,Duke59 Oklahoma SO^Arizona 78</p>
        <p>Msaday, Aprife</p>
        <p>Kansas, 2811, vs. p.m.</p>
        <p>383, 9:12</p>
        <p>Transactions</p>
        <p>By The Asssciated Press tmBUL AflMfku</p>
        <p>BALTIMORE ORHHiS-Amigned Jose  . Rochester of the Interna-</p>
        <p>Tempb87,Lehigh73</p>
        <p>Georgelown6UoubianaState63</p>
        <p>At Uacali. Neb. SHday, Maick 29 VaoderbiR80,Pifisb^74,OT Kaosas61,MumyState58 Semillaab At Panttac. Mteh. Friday, March 25 Kansas77.VandRbUt64 Kansas State 73, Purdue 70 Chamrisaship At PeatiMrMbh. Saaday, March 23 Kansas 71, KansasState58</p>
        <p>Rhode lslMdw!s5r</p>
        <p>N.C.</p>
        <p>Koooe island 97, Syracusm Duke94,SoutbernMethodbt79 At Hartford, Cena. Saaday. March 20 Tempb 74. Georgetown 53 Riclimoodf59, Gen^ Tech 55</p>
        <p>i,Gwn^Tecl SemBtaab At East Ratkerfsrd, N J. Thanday, March 24 Duke73. Rhode Ishmd 72 Temide 69, Richmond 47</p>
        <p>CALffG^ ANGELS-Assimed Joe Johnson, Bryan Harvey and JackXazorko, michers, and Chico Walker, outfielder, to Edmonton of the Pacific toast League. Returned Mike Knapp, catcher, tolbeir minor b^ camp,</p>
        <p>DETROlTTIGERS-,</p>
        <p>j^t^. to Tobdo</p>
        <p>Eric!</p>
        <p>  Purchased the contracts of Billy</p>
        <p>Beane, outfirider.and Jim Wabwander. in-</p>
        <p>fiekb'. tojgeA Don Schulze, pitcher, "olSS) ATHLETICS-Placed Matt</p>
        <p>Natbaal League</p>
        <p>LOS ANGELES DOD(SeRS-A</p>
        <p>Champbaskip At East Ra&amp;amp;erfarS, N J.</p>
        <p>WEST REGIONAL First Rsaad At Satt Lake Ctty Thanday, March 17 ^Ca^ 83, North Texas State65</p>
        <p>  Assimied</p>
        <p>William Brennan, Shawn Hilbgas amliim OrcOT, Pitchm,. to ^bu^mr^of the</p>
        <p>Pacific Coast League Trevino, catcher, and Tito Landrum, out</p>
        <p>Alex</p>
        <p>PHILADELPHIA PHILLJES-Assigned</p>
        <p>satarday.</p>
        <p>Duke63,TempbS</p>
        <p>Satarday, March 26</p>
        <p>i,Calif.Ji9,\^o^ll5</p>
        <p>Russ Cochran, $3,045 Mark Cakavecchi, $2,3536872-7876-: Bud^ Gardner, $2,353  68787876-289</p>
        <p>Bob Lote, $2,353  72-7871-74-289</p>
        <p>Aki Ohmacte, $2,353  7871-7872-289</p>
        <p>Clarence Rose, $2,353  7671-7872-289</p>
        <p>Steve EUdogtoo,12,353  72-7872-72-289</p>
        <p>Nick Price, $2,210  68787875-290</p>
        <p>Chris Perry, $2,210  7871-7874-290</p>
        <p>Dave Ebiiribergr, $2,210  71-787673-290</p>
        <p>S0U1HLAST REGIONAL FirslRouad At Atlanta lharsday, March 17</p>
        <p>Auburn 90, Bradim 86 Oklahoma 94, Tn.-Chattanooga 66 Brigham Yoimg 98, N.C. Charlotte 92, OT Lotted 70, OrkonState61 AtClactaBaU Friday. March 18 Viltanova82,Artunsas74 Dlinob 81, Texas-San Antonio 32</p>
        <p>,^63, Boise 162, . Johns 59 AtLas Aagebs Friday, March 18 Arizona 90, Corneh 50 SetonHall80,Texas-EIPaso64</p>
        <p>Bill Dawlw, pitcher, to Maine of the Internal^ League. Sjgned Gro|J|an^</p>
        <p>to a minor-bague</p>
        <p>SAN DIEGO PADRES-Assigned 9iane Mack, outfielder, to Las V^ of the Pa^K Coast League. Placed ^e Leiper, pitcher, on the 15^y dbabbd UsI, retioac-</p>
        <p>56</p>
        <p>Iowa 102, Florida StateOe Nevada-Las Vegas 54, SW Mbsouri State</p>
        <p>SecsadRaaad At SaR Lake Cky</p>
        <p>pitcher, on the 15 Uvetolbrch27.</p>
        <p>SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS-Placed Jeffrey Leonard, outfielder, and Francbco M(Wbz,firsti</p>
        <p>Satarday, March 106,Fb^8</p>
        <p>Manbix(92,Cal-Santa Barbara 82 Kenbickyor </p>
        <p>123, Loyola, CaUf. 97 At Las Aagebs</p>
        <p>Moendez, first baseman, on the I8dav db-abbd Ibt. Purchased the contract of /essie Rrid, outfielder, from Phoenix of the Pacific Coast L^.</p>
        <p>BASKETBALL Natbaal BasketbaU Assaciatba</p>
        <p>y96. Southern U. 84</p>
        <p>Saaday. March 29</p>
        <p>,SetonaU5</p>
        <p>Arizona 84, Seton Hall 55</p>
        <p>PHOENIX SUNS-Placed James BaUey, ....... ledJf</p>
        <p>forward, on the inpired Ibt. Activated... Cook, center-forward, from the injured Ibt</p>
        <p>Los Angdes Lakers 108, Sacramento 104</p>
        <p>sdSdSSd*""</p>
        <p>TlMsday'sGaaMS</p>
        <p>DetroitatNewJersey,7:30p.m.</p>
        <p>New York at Philadriphb, ^30 p.m. Milwaukee at Albnta,7:30p.m.</p>
        <p>AtPrttaad.OTC.</p>
        <p>SAN ANTONIO (167)</p>
        <p>Brickowski 810 81019, Mitchell 11-19 66 22, G. Anderson 8171-418 Robertson 81066 8 SundvoM 815 8319, ^enbeigen l-l 66 89ealy82 84 3,</p>
        <p>No</p>
        <p>8 Nimpluus 66 66 6, hbaly 82 84 3, Gud-mundsson 64 85II, Wibon 16 84 6. Totab</p>
        <p>426422-30107 PORTLAND (119)</p>
        <p>Tech Avoids Crumble To Claim NCAA Title</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED.</p>
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        <p>TACOMA, Wash. (AP)  For the second year in a row, a Louisiana Tech pratfall in the championship game of the NCAA womens basketball tournament seemed a distinct possibility.</p>
        <p>We were flat on our backs, no doubt about it, Lady Techsters Coach Leon Barmoresaid.</p>
        <p>But the team from Rustin, La., used a tough defense, strong rebounding and clutch shooting down the stretch Sunday to rally from a 14-point deficit and beat Auburn 56-54.</p>
        <p>The Lady Techsters, 32-2, won the title for the second time in the tournaments seven-year history. They also captured the first championship in 1982.</p>
        <p>A year ago, Louisiana Tech was blown out by Tennessee 67-44 in the title game, and the Techsters had made no secret of their desire to make amends.</p>
        <p>I was embarrassed last year, Barmore said. I was embarrassed for the game of basketball. I was embarrassed because it was on national TV. I was embarrassed because I didnt think Id done a good job. I just felt Id let a lot of people down.</p>
        <p>I dont think I let anybody down this year.</p>
        <p>I think we all thought about last years game quite a bit, Louisiana Tech playmaker Teresa Weatherspoon said. We felt we let the university down, too.</p>
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        <p>When we were down by so many points, we just kept telling outselves we cant let that happen again, so lets  &amp;gt;</p>
        <p>The fiery, 5-foot-8 senior led that fight. Alter giving up 16 points to Auburns half, Weatherspoon held her scoreless after inter-</p>
        <p>Ruthie Bolton in the first mission.</p>
        <p>Weatherspoon, meanwhile, had seven assists and only one turnover in the final 20 minutes while helping force Bolton into six turnovers.</p>
        <p>I dont single out a lot of players, Barmore said, but itll be a long time before you see a player like Teresa Weatherspoon. Teresa Weatherspoon has been one of the best ttieres ever been.</p>
        <p>Auburn, 32-3 and ranked third in the fmal poll of the season, led the fifth-ranked Lady Techsters 31-19 at halftime and scored the first basket of the second half to build the margin to 14.</p>
        <p>Barmore benched 6-foot-4 Venus Lacy in favor of a quicker lineup, and the ralty began.</p>
        <p>The Techsters finally caught the Lady Tigers at 51-51 on Angela Lawsons 15-footer with 3:02 remaining.</p>
        <p>Erica Westbrooks, who tied her career high with 25 points and was named the Final Fours most valuable player, followed with a steal and layup to give Tech a 53-51 lead.</p>
        <p>Vickie Orr, who scored 11 points despite being bothered by sore knees, sank a 10-foot jumper to tie the game at 53-53 with ^ seconds to play. But Lawson put Tech ahead for good at 55-53 on a 16-footer with 39 seconds remaining.</p>
        <p>Ever since I signed with Louisiana Tech, I always dreamed of making the winning basket, Lawson said.</p>
        <p>It just seemed like it was my time to come forward, she said. I wanted to be the one to take it. I was just nappy that my teammates got me the ball when I was open.</p>
        <p>After Techs Nora Lewis made one of two free throws with 25 seconds to go. Auburn had a chance to regain the lead. But Westbrooks blocked Diann McNeils shot on a baseline drive and, on the ensuing jump ball, Tech was awarded the ball.</p>
        <p>BANKRUPTCY - A Ton Year Miataka</p>
        <p>Bankruptcy does NOT wipe your Credit Siate ciean and give you a "Fresh Start.</p>
        <p>Bankruptcy stays on your cradit report for 10 Years.</p>
        <p>Youii have trouble getting credit. Creditors seidom grant credit to someone who has fiied a Wage Earner Pian Chapter 13 or Chapter 7.</p>
        <p>Youii have probiems getting ANY type of consumer loan -car, home, credit cards, education, personal needs, etc. If you doubt this  contact a creditor.</p>
        <p>Ten years of bad news, if you dont think so, ask those who have filed bankruptcy. Dont rely only on the advice of those who will make money off your bankruptcy and encourage you to go bankrupt.</p>
        <p>There are options to bankruptcy: If you are having financial problems, contact your creditors first  remember, they want to see you solve your financial problems just as much as you do.</p>
        <p>So before you make a Bankruptcy decision, THINK, consider the options and dont lock yourself into BANKRUPTCY  A Tan Year Mistake.</p>
        <p>I kept thinking, Dont foul now, because shell probably make the free throws,^ Westbrooks said.</p>
        <p>Auburn Coach Joe Ciampi said he had no criticism of McNeils shot.</p>
        <p>The ^ng I like about Diann, and I told her this in the locker room, is she</p>
        <p>Down Comet The Net</p>
        <p>Louisiana Tech player Teresa Weatherspoon (11) brings down the net after her team defeated Auburn, 56-54, to win the Womens NCAA Championship Sunday. (AP Laserphoto)</p>
        <p>wasnt afraid to go in and try to win the basketball game, he said. Weatherspoon made a free throw with three seconds to play to complete the</p>
        <p>scoring.</p>
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        <p>WIKT</p>
        <p>AK</p>
        <p>MONDAY EVENIN</p>
        <p>n</p>
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        <p>7:00</p>
        <p>7:30</p>
        <p>8:00</p>
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        <p>9:00 9:30</p>
        <p>10:00 10:30</p>
        <p>O</p>
        <p>Remington Steele</p>
        <p>Father Murphy</p>
        <p>700 Chib</p>
        <p>Straight Talk B. Winkelman</p>
        <p>O</p>
        <p>Business Rpt.</p>
        <p>N.C. People</p>
        <p>Discoveries Underwater</p>
        <p>Japan</p>
        <p>Martin Luther King</p>
        <p>o</p>
        <p>CBS News</p>
        <p>Win Lose</p>
        <p>Kate&amp;amp;Allie</p>
        <p>D. Women</p>
        <p>NCAA Basketball Championship; Final Game</p>
        <p>d)</p>
        <p>Family Ties</p>
        <p>Movie: The River"</p>
        <p>kAiie</p>
        <p>o</p>
        <p>Jeflersons</p>
        <p>Benson</p>
        <p>Movie; "The Fortunate Pilgrim"</p>
        <p>o</p>
        <p>Good Times</p>
        <p>Lose Or Draw</p>
        <p>Kate&amp;amp;Allie</p>
        <p>0. Women</p>
        <p>NCAA Basketball Championship: Final Game</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>Wheel .</p>
        <p>Jeopardy!</p>
        <p>MacGyver</p>
        <p>Movie: Best Friends</p>
        <p>DIS</p>
        <p>Movie</p>
        <p>Mouselerpie.</p>
        <p>Wilderness Bound</p>
        <p>Movie: Samson And Delilah</p>
        <p>ESPN</p>
        <p>SportsCenter</p>
        <p>Final 4</p>
        <p>College Baseball: Arizona at Arizona State</p>
        <p>HBO</p>
        <p>Movie: Clockwise"</p>
        <p>Movie: Short Circuit</p>
        <p>The Boy Who Could Ry"</p>
        <p>UFE</p>
        <p>MacGruder&amp;amp;Loud</p>
        <p>Cagney &amp;amp; Lacey</p>
        <p>Movie: The Brady Girls Get Married</p>
        <p>MAX</p>
        <p>Movie; "King"</p>
        <p>Crazy About The Movies</p>
        <p>Movie: Topper</p>
        <p>SHOW</p>
        <p>Michael Jackson</p>
        <p>Movie: Out Of Africa</p>
        <p>Movie: "fix."</p>
        <p>Movie: Come Back, Uttle Sheba"</p>
        <p>USA</p>
        <p>Airwotf</p>
        <p>Riptide</p>
        <p>WWF Prime Time Wrestling</p>
        <p>WTBS</p>
        <p>Andy Griffith</p>
        <p>Sanford</p>
        <p>Movie: RedSonja"</p>
        <p>Movie: The Sentinel'</p>
        <p>For comploto TV programming information, consult your wookly TV SHOWTIME from Sunday's Daily Rofloctor.</p>
        <p>Cartoonist Milton Caniff Dies At Home Of Cancer</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (AP) - Milton A. Caniff, who for half a century took Americans on daring adventures through the comic pages with Terry and the Pirates and Steve Canyon, has died of lung cancer. He was 81.</p>
        <p>Caniff, who had entered Beth Israel Hospital on Feb. 29, died Sunday at his home, according to a spokesman for King Features, which syndicated the strips.</p>
        <p>Caniff set a standard for realistic drawing and quickly enthralled Depression-era readers with tales of danger in the Far East in Terry and the Pirates, which debuted in 1934 in the Dailv News.</p>
        <p>He left the pa^r to join Marshall Field and the Chicago Sun Syndicate in 1946 with a new hero, Steve Canyon, a fictional Air Force colonel who proved so popular he was even</p>
        <p>tually given his own file at the Pentagon.</p>
        <p>Always attuned to what sells newspapers, Caniff liked to quote his high school art teacher in Dayton, Ohio: Unless a piece of art inspired the viewer to ^rt with cash money to acquire it, then the drawing was not worth a hoot.</p>
        <p>But his technique was among the very best, and he was honored as the Rembrandt of comic strips at an exhibition at the Museum of Cartoon Art in 1985. He said he belonged to the every wrinkle must show school of art.</p>
        <p>At the Dayton Daily News, Pulitzer Prize-winning cartoonist Mike Pqters d^cribed Caniff as the grndaddy of cartoonists.</p>
        <p>He was in the inner circle with Rube Goldberg, A1 Capp, Walt Kelly and those euys, Peters said. He was revered by all of us. He had some</p>
        <p>CANIFF AND FRIEND  Cartoonist Milton Caniff poses with his most famous creation, Steve Canyon, at Steve Canyon Day at the 1964 Worlds Fair in New York. Caniff died Sunday at age 81 in New York. (AP Laserphoto)</p>
        <p>Conservationist Elliott</p>
        <p>Barker Dead At 101</p>
        <p>SANTA FE, N.M. (AP) - Conservationist and author Elliott S. Barker, who helped make Smokey the Bear part of American lore, has died. He was 101.</p>
        <p>Barker died Sundav at a Santa Fe nursing home where he had lived for more than a year.</p>
        <p>Barker, a founding member of the National Wildlife Federation, was named a hero of our time in July 1987 by Newsweek magazine.</p>
        <p>In 1950, he sent a bear cub rescued from a fire in the Lincoln National Forest to Washington to represent the National Forest Service. Smokey the Bear became a fixture in the National Zoo where he was a living symbol for forest fire prevention.</p>
        <p>Barker, who was born in 1886 in Moran, Texas, moved with his family to New Mexico in a covered wagon . when he was 3 years old.</p>
        <p>He worked for the U.S. Forest Service in New Mexico for 10 years as a ranger and a supervisor. In 1931, he was named the states first game warden and stayed on Uie job until retiring 22 years later.</p>
        <p>Barker joined a group of New Mexicans who lobbied Tor the states first laws to protect game and fish. The state Legislature adopted a law in 1930.</p>
        <p>During his tenure the state acquired 75,000 acres of land for recreation and wildlife refuges, established fish hatcheries and began the</p>
        <p>reintroduction of several species of animal into New Mexico.</p>
        <p>After retiring in 1953, Baiiier began to write full-time. He wrote seven books and in 1972 received the Golden 3pur Award from the Western Writers of America for his book, Western Life and Adventures, 1889-1970.</p>
        <p>He is survived by his wife, Ethel; three children, Roy Barker and Florence Giers, both of Santa Fe, and Dorothy Elmore of El Paso, Texas; and a sister, Grace Wilson of Aztec.</p>
        <p>Services will be held at St. Johns United Methodist Church in Santa Fe.</p>
        <p>CUFFS</p>
        <p>Box Office Success Doesn't Always Guarantee Oscars</p>
        <p>of the best drafted strips ever done. Ted Hannah, a spokesman for King Features, said Caniff continued to work until very near his death, with his longtime assistant, Shel Dorf of California. Hannah said a decision on the future of Steve Canyon would be made this week.</p>
        <p>Caniffs cartooning career began with Dickie Dare and The Gay Thirties for The Associated Press.</p>
        <p>He was soon approached by Capt. Joseph M. Patterson, publisher of the News, who asked for an adventure strip packed with comedy, romance and adventure and set in the Orient, which Patterson regarded as the last outpost of adventure.</p>
        <p>By 1946, Terry and the Pirates was in more than 300 newspapers and Caniff was making $75,000 per year. But he wanted to own a cartoon, and he developed Steve Canyon, for which he was paid $2,000 a week and owned the rights.</p>
        <p>Despite occasional complaints about violence, Steve Canyon kept flying and fighting, and early this year it was in more than 500 newspapers around the world, according to king Features.</p>
        <p>Caniff was awarded the Air Force Exceptional Service Award, its highest civilian honor.</p>
        <p>Caniff was a meticulous researcher, and some of the plots in Terry and the Pirates anticipated actual events in World War II, such as the Japanese attack on the United States. One of his memorable creations was the Dragon Lady, who was inspired by Joan Crawford.</p>
        <p>When a Terry character named Raven Sherman was killed in 1941, Caniff received thousands of cards, letters and flowers, and he recalled that an elevator operator called him a murderer.</p>
        <p>Terry and the Pirates was continued by George Wunder until the strip ended in 1973. Wunder died last December.</p>
        <p>Caniff was born Feb. 28, 1907, in Hillsboro, Ohio, and by kindergarten was drawing recognizable human figures on scrap paper brought home by his father, a printer.</p>
        <p>His first job was drawing cartoons for the Boy Scout page in the Dayton Journal Herald when he was 13. He also worked for the Columbus Dispatch while at Ohio State University, where he earned a fine arts degree.</p>
        <p>Phlebitis prevented Caniff from joining the military.</p>
        <p>It was something I always wanted to do. It was like a small boy who dreams of catching the game-winning touchdown or rescuing the heroine from the villain. Fortunately, the strips have allowed me to have a close association with the military, Caniff once said.</p>
        <p>Many of his strips had touches of autobiographv and his Ohio boyhood, and friends often were prototypes for characters in the strip. Recently Caniff drew several weeks of strips based on his courtship of his future wife. Ester Parsons, at Stivers High School. 'They were married in 1930.</p>
        <p>He donated most of his original material to Ohio States Milton Caniff Library for Communications and Graphic Arts,</p>
        <p>Caniff received at least three honorary doctorates, including one from the University of Dayton, and numerous other awards.</p>
        <p>By BOB THOMAS Associated Press Writer HOLLYWOOD (AP) - If the Academy Awards were based on box-office popularity, Fatal Attraction would eliminate its four opponents and win as best picture with ease.</p>
        <p>If Oscars were based on media acclaim, Broadcast News no doubt would be the winner. The funny, incisive look at how network journalists do their jobs under constant pressure captivated most critics, yet Broadcast News has been a disappointment at the box office.</p>
        <p>Despite mediocre attendance and^, mixed notices, the home-stretch* favorite for best picture of 1987 is the The Last Emperor, a mammoth epic centering on the life of Pu Yi, boy emperor of China and later puppet ruler of Manchuria for the Japanese. Bernardo Bertolucci was nominated for director and co-writer, but the actors were overlooked.</p>
        <p>The thriller Fatal Attraction was by far the biggest moneymaker of the year, its combination of adultery and terror selling $150 million worth of tickets in the United States and Canada.</p>
        <p>Fatal Attraction also picked up nominations for Michael Douglas, Glenn Close and Anne Archer, as well as director Adrian Lyne and writer James Dearden.</p>
        <p>Lyne, a graduate of British TV commercials, admits that he was sold on Fatal Attraction from the time he read the script.</p>
        <p>It was a page-tumer, he said. It was sent to me when I was in France.</p>
        <p>I sat down on some steps, and two hours later I was still &amp;lt;m the steps, finishii^ it off. It was something I couldnt put down. I thought if I could provide me visual equipment and not screw it up, that it had a fitting chance of being as interesting a movie.</p>
        <p>Lyne signed on with producers Stanley Jaffe and Sherry Lansir^ and worked with Dearden mi the script. The director carries a tape recorder while preparing a film, and he made notes of matters he could use, such as his own sons attempt to demonstrate card tricks.</p>
        <p>The three leading actors of Broadcast News  William Hurt, Holly Hunter and Albert Brooks  also were nominated for awards. James L. Brooks was named as writer and producer but, astounding-ly, did not receive a nomination as director.</p>
        <p>I wanted to do a romantic comedy, Brooks said. Just through a series of circumstances I wound up being around a number of netwon newspeople.</p>
        <p>BroK^, who once worked as a news writer for CBS News, spent months hanging around in studios of Washington and New Ymk for his research. The result is a verisimilitude that has attracted the praise of many network news people, including the curmudgeonly Andy Rooney.</p>
        <p>Bertolucci amazed the film world by winning permission to film a movie with political overtones within China. More amazingly, he was able to shoot inside the fabled Forbidden City, tlK shrine of Chinese histoi7.</p>
        <p>'The fact that this movie exists is, another proof that China is cl ing, the Italian director said.  ei^t years ago it was inconceivable for the Chinese to let a Western filmmaker do a scene about the Red Guards, as at the end of the movie when you see the Cultural Revolution.</p>
        <p>Nominee Hope and Glo^ is John Boormans valentine to his boyhood during the Battle of Britain. The writer-director-producer won triple nominations, but his actors received none. The movies box-office performance has been less than impressive.</p>
        <p>Despite the background of German</p>
        <p>bombings, the film is primarily comedic.</p>
        <p>For me as a child, the experience of the war was largely one of exhilaration, joy and fun, Boorman said. 'This is what the film is; its great entertainment, its very funny. There were moments of horror, when were killed. As a child, you t this very quickly.</p>
        <p>) up for best film of the year is Moonstruck, a romantic comedy about an excitable Italian family in Brooklyn. Cher, Vincent Gardenia and Olympia Dukakis are acting nominees, as well as director Norman Jewison and writer John Patrick Shanley.</p>
        <p>Moonstruck has been a major success at the box office, doing more than $50 million in business so far.</p>
        <p>After a pair of heavy dramas, A Soldiers Story and Agnes of G&amp;lt;)d, Jewison was in the mood for a romantic comedy. His first choice to play Loretta, the widow tom between two lovers, was Cher.</p>
        <p>For me, there has always been something streety about Cher, a lacking in pretension, the Canadian director said. Shes a very honest person  in-person and m the screen. She looks Italian, although</p>
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        <p>Yet directors dont always get their first choice for lead perfcnrmers, as was the case with Fatal Attraction. As right as Glenn Gose might seem for Uie role of the jilted Alix, director Lyne said Isabelle Adjani was actuaUy his first choice, since she had played a similar role iii a French film.</p>
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        <p>7:1M:1S</p>
        <p>The Seventh Sign*</p>
        <p>5:10-7:15-9:00</p>
        <p>Johnny Be Good</p>
        <p>" -PO-13</p>
        <p>1:00-3:05-5:10-7:15-9:20</p>
        <p>The Name In Laug|htc FiromTlic Hereafter</p>
        <p>BEFtIE</p>
        <p>|PQ1</p>
        <p>'Seafood House and Oyster Bar</p>
        <p>Washington Highway (N.C. 33 Ext.) Graanvllla, North Carolina Phona 752-3172</p>
        <pb facs="00096894_0016" />
        <p>Crossword By EUGENE SHEFFER The Family Circus</p>
        <p>ByBMKeame HorOSCOpC.</p>
        <p>From The Carroll Rioter Imtihitc</p>
        <p>ACROSS</p>
        <p>1  and clear 5I </p>
        <p>Ideas</p>
        <p>8 Civil law degrees</p>
        <p>12 Kind of code</p>
        <p>13 Wood sorrel</p>
        <p>14 Buckeye State</p>
        <p>18 Brick-making mixture</p>
        <p>16 Tasty roast</p>
        <p>18 Meadow sounds</p>
        <p>20 Prevention units?</p>
        <p>21 Bribes</p>
        <p>23 Youth org.</p>
        <p>24 Flowering pond plant</p>
        <p>28 Coarse file</p>
        <p>31 Witness box words</p>
        <p>32 Makers of silk  fabrics</p>
        <p>34   Are My Sunshine"</p>
        <p>36 Chuck Barriss instrument?</p>
        <p>37 Marx Brothers romp</p>
        <p>39 SUcky stuff</p>
        <p>41 Eleventh century Roman</p>
        <p>42 Classroom peed</p>
        <p>45 Hyirm of praise</p>
        <p>49 Bowling game</p>
        <p>51 European shark</p>
        <p>52 Grafted. Her.</p>
        <p>63 Dance step</p>
        <p>54 Port or canal</p>
        <p>55 Tweety Pies place</p>
        <p>56 In a pigs </p>
        <p>57 Billiards frame</p>
        <p>DOWN</p>
        <p>1 Maiys pet</p>
        <p>2 Kind of test</p>
        <p>3 African river</p>
        <p>4 Reversible</p>
        <p>. fabric</p>
        <p>6 Wish for a voyager</p>
        <p>6 Old French coin</p>
        <p>7 Mexican treat</p>
        <p>8 Hungarian playwright</p>
        <p>9 City in Peru</p>
        <p>10 It might be dotted</p>
        <p>11 Soaks</p>
        <p>17 Siamese</p>
        <p>measure</p>
        <p>Solution time:^ rains.</p>
        <p>scanoi^</p>
        <p>QQCiasa [asaciBB</p>
        <p>BBQ iinoiH mmm</p>
        <p>SBQQ mnas dBD uara EjnEH araa hsbb BciaH</p>
        <p>EKSaaSB QSQBBD</p>
        <p>Saturday's answer</p>
        <p>19 Pulls a water skier</p>
        <p>22 Truth follower</p>
        <p>24 Understand?</p>
        <p>25 Japanese v^table</p>
        <p>26 Popular lenses</p>
        <p>27 Lowered in social status</p>
        <p>29 Old French coin</p>
        <p>30 Young seal</p>
        <p>33 Outer covering</p>
        <p>36 Leak-proofing device</p>
        <p>38 Domestic aide</p>
        <p>40 DC. figure</p>
        <p>42 Paradise</p>
        <p>43 Old Norse poem</p>
        <p>44 Ready to eat</p>
        <p>46 Lively dance</p>
        <p>47 Heroic in</p>
        <p>48 Biblical inheritor</p>
        <p>50 Negative vote</p>
        <p>4-4  CRYPTOQUIP</p>
        <p>FBY AENQY DXFFX W</p>
        <p>ZWACYQ NZ JEXD JXEDYE</p>
        <p>TXA WPM WTF; BPT CPZWFPM."</p>
        <p>Saturdays Cryptoquip: SAID ACERBIC MAN, DURING EIGHTH MARRIAGE; MUCH I-DO ABOUT NOTHING.</p>
        <p>Todays Cryptoquip clue: M equals L</p>
        <p>FORECAST FOR TUESDAY April 5</p>
        <p>ARIES (March 21 to April 19): Dont try to rely on ywir intuition where a filien the advice of a succesaul expert is easily</p>
        <p>nancial matter is concerned, when the advice obtainable.</p>
        <p>\</p>
        <p>CopyriQni 1988 Cowl SyKlicai inc</p>
        <p>Chicken eggs are dull compared to Easter bunny eggs.</p>
        <p>TAURUS (April 20 to May 20): Any new ideas you have concemi^ your work need careful study before you attempt to implement them. This is a bad time to take any risks.</p>
        <p>GEMINI (May 21 to June 21): You have made a promise which may be difficult to keep at this time, so if at all possible, put it aside for the time being.</p>
        <p>MOON CHILDREN (June 22 to July 21): A dynamic associate can give you the help you need to takcle a formidable project. Work side-by-side with this person.</p>
        <p>LEO (July 22 to August 21): Remember the old adage: If it isnt bn^en, dont fix it. Handle your work efficiently, and avoid the criticism of your co-workers</p>
        <p>VIRGO (August 22 to September 22): You can accomplish much today, whether in personal or business affairs, so take the bull by the horns. Get plenty of rest this evening.</p>
        <p>LIBRA (September 23 to October 22): Avoid hurrying from one place to another today. Instead, take your time and enjoy the scenery. Do some entertaining at home tonight.</p>
        <p>SCORPIO (October 23 to November 21): If your work gets you a bit exhausted toady, dont hesitate to take a breather and r^in your energy. Visit your good friends tonight.</p>
        <p>SAGITTARIUS (November 22 to December 21): Dont feel guilty if you let a secret slip out; it was meant to see the li^t of day anyway. Listen carefully to the advice of a friend.</p>
        <p>CAPRICORN (December 22 to January 20): A good friend may not be capable of giving you the suport you had expected, so dont hold a grudge against this person for no reason.</p>
        <p>AQUARIUS (January 21 to February 19): Be wary of accepting suggestions from a pessimistic acquaintance. Accompany your mate to an enjoyable social affair tonight.</p>
        <p>PISCES (February 20 to March 20): Dont get involved in an argument which is none of your concern. Stay around good friends who understand your point of view tonight.</p>
        <p>(c)1988, The McNaught Syndicate Inc.</p>
        <p>Bridge</p>
        <p>By CHARLES GORE\ AND OMAR SHARIF</p>
        <p>ANSWERS TO WEEKLY BRIDGE QUIZ</p>
        <p>Q.lBoth vulnerable, as South you hold;</p>
        <p> QJ10985  972  0KJ6 493</p>
        <p>The bidding has proceeded:</p>
        <p>North  East  South  West</p>
        <p>10  19  19  3 9</p>
        <p>3 9  4 9  ?</p>
        <p>What action do you take A.We certainly dont like your hand for defense, and hate that doubleton heart for offensive purposes. Despite the fact that partner opened the bidding, we think this hand belongs to the opponents, so we would bid four spades as a potential sacrifice. At worst well be down two; if the gods are kind, we could even make it.</p>
        <p>Q.2Neither vulnerable, as South you hold;</p>
        <p>910962  97  0AKQ63 9Q87</p>
        <p>The bidding has proceeded;</p>
        <p>North  East  South  West</p>
        <p>1 9  Pass  1 0  Pass</p>
        <p>1 9  Pass  ?</p>
        <p>What do you bid now?</p>
        <p>A.Theres no question that you want to make a forward-going move. However, you should not be the one to declare no trump for your sideyou have no tenaces that need protecting. Despite the shabby quality of the suit, we suggest you bid one spade to see how partner reacts.</p>
        <p>Q.3Neither vulnerable, as South you hold;</p>
        <p>9A6 9AQ1072 0AQ983 96 The bidding has proceeded;</p>
        <p>North East South  West</p>
        <p>1 9 Pass ?</p>
        <p>What do you respond?</p>
        <p>A.Had your two suits each been four cards long, the correct way to show them would be to bid up-the-line, i.e, one diamond. With five-card suits, however, you must bid the higher-ranking suit first, so here the right action is one heart.</p>
        <p>Q.4Neither vulnerable, as South you hold;</p>
        <p>9A6 9AQI072 OAQ983 96 The bidding has proceeded;</p>
        <p>North  East  South  West</p>
        <p>1 9  Pass  1 9  Pass</p>
        <p>1 9  Pass  ?</p>
        <p>What do you bid now?</p>
        <p>A.You have enough strength for a jump shift, but the likely misfit should make you cautiousa jump to three diamonds could propel you beyond three no trump, which might be your only playable spot. For the moment, a rebid of two diamonds, which is forcing, is adequate-even if you play fourth-suit forcing. Your next action will depend on your methods and partners next bid.</p>
        <p>Q.5As South, vulnerable, you hold;</p>
        <p>9AJ  9KQ76  093  9AKJ42</p>
        <p>The bidding has proceeded;</p>
        <p>South  West  North  East</p>
        <p>1 9  Pass  1 9  Pass</p>
        <p>What do you bid now?</p>
        <p>A.You have a borderline hand, because your jack of spades is of doubtful value. The choices are between a slightly conservative three hearts and an aggressive four hearts. At this vulnerability it pays to be bold, so we opt for four hearts.</p>
        <p>Q.6As South, vulnerable, you hold;</p>
        <p>99643  982 OA9J6 9K102</p>
        <p>The bidding has proceeded;</p>
        <p>West  North East  South</p>
        <p>1 9  DM  Pass  ?</p>
        <p>What do you bid now?</p>
        <p>A.There is a standard way to show a hand of 10-12 points in response to a takeout doublejump in your best suit. So unless you intend postulating new bidding concepts, do your duty and jump to three diamonds.</p>
        <p>For information about Charles Gorens newsletter for bridge players, write Goren Bridge Letter, P.O. Box 4426, Orlando, Fla. 32802-4426.</p>
        <p>PUNKY WINKUBIAN</p>
        <p>rVHAT$TMgPlFl=fe^C6</p>
        <p>AHOAefSATKieSf?</p>
        <p>ITS A eoOP fCiSS WHgH * ir MA&amp;lt;g5 T066TiN&amp;lt;&amp;amp;L&amp;amp;.</p>
        <p>A N</p>
        <p>'</p>
        <p>AMP A eRBAT &amp;lt;i$6 Wfl6N YOUfZ CATCH PN RRe,</p>
        <pb facs="00096894_0017" />
        <p>The Dally Reflector, QreenvHle. N.C.</p>
        <p>Monday, ApriU, 1988  B-7</p>
        <p>V-rJust A Call Sells It All!The Daily Reflector Classified Ads752-7117</p>
        <p>fi</p>
        <p>people read classified</p>
        <p>Public</p>
        <p>Notices</p>
        <p>state OF NORTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF PITT ,.^,MOTICEOFSALE UNDER AND BY VIRTUE of  power of sale contained In fhef certain deed of trust executed ^ Freddie C. Fuller and wife, Elizabeth R. Fuller, daM December 8,1983, and recorded in Book L52, at Paye 647, In the off Ice of the Reflister of Deeds of Pitt County; and under and by virtue of the authority vested in the undersigned as Substituted Trustee by that certain instrument dated January JO, 1988, and recorded In Book 163, at Page 391, in the office of the Register of Deeds of Pitt County; and under and by virtue of that certain Authorization, Findings and Order entered by the Clerk of Superior Court of Pitt County on March 11, 1988 and of record in File 88-SP-33, default having been made in the payment of the Indebtedness secured by said deed of trust and the said deed of trust being by its terms subject to foreclosure, and the h&amp;lt;Nder of indebtedness thereby secured having demanded the foreclosure thereof tor the purpose of satisfying said indebtedness, and due notice having been given to those entltiM to same, the undersigned Substituted Trustee, will otter for sale at public auction, to the highest bidder, for cash, at the Courthouse door In Greenville, Pitt County, North Carolina, at 12:00 o'clock noon on April 18, 1988, the land con veyed in said deed of trust, the same being owned of record by Freddie C. Fuller and wife, Elizabeth R. Fuller and being more particularly deKribed as follows:</p>
        <p>Generally described as the house and lot located at 304 Luther Circle, Town of Ayden, County of Pitt, State of North Carolina, and more particularly described as follows:</p>
        <p>All that certain lot or parcel of land, lying and being situate in the Town of Ayden, Pitt County, North Carolina, and more particularly described as being all of Lot No. 40, in Block "C", Ken nedy Estates Subdivision, Section No. 3, as shown on map</p>
        <p>tNreof made by McDavId Associates, dated July 28, 1970, and recorded in Map Book 20, at</p>
        <p>Page 102, reference to which is hereby made.</p>
        <p>Togetner with all additions and Improvements thereto. Including buildings and fixtures thereon, and all other real estate as may hereafter be acquired and used or held for use in con nection with the business of the party of the first part; and the party of the first part hereby waives notice of any application by the party of the second part or party of the third part for the apMintment of a receiver upon default of any of the conveyances and covenants herein contained.</p>
        <p>The aforesaid sale will be made subject to all encumbrances existing prior to recording of the above-referenced deed of trust and also will be subject to all taxes and special assessments outstanding against the proper-</p>
        <p>Viie successful bidder at sale will be required to make an immediate cash deposit of ten per cent (10%) of the amount bid up to and Including One Thousand Dollars (81,000) plus five per cent (S%) of any excess over One Thousand Dollars (81.000). This 11th day of AAarch, 1988. Philip W. Steiner Substituted Trustee I01S-B Kings Way New Bern, North Carolina 28560 March 28; April 4,1988.</p>
        <p>UESdT</p>
        <p>FILEN0.88E-144 FILM NO</p>
        <p>IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE</p>
        <p>SUPERIOR COURT DIVISION NORTH CAROLINA PITT COUNTY IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF ROBERTC. WATERS, JR. Deceased</p>
        <p>NOTICE TOCREDITORS AND DEBTORS Having qualified as Administratrix CTA of the Estate of ROBERT C. WATERS, JR., late of Pitt County, North Carolina, this Is to notify all per sons, firms and corrratlons having claims against ROBERT C. WATERS, JR.. Deceased, to present them to the undersigned or her Attorney on or before the Iftii day of September, 1988, or this Notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons, firms or corporations indebted to the Decedent or his estate are requested to make immediate payment to the undersigned Aimlnistratrix CTA or her At-</p>
        <p>day of March. 1988.</p>
        <p>MRS. TERESA L. WATERS Administratrix CTA of the Estate of</p>
        <p>ROBERTC. WATERS, JR.</p>
        <p>Rt. 2, Box 97 Wintervllle, NC 28590</p>
        <p>AMchaelC. Sigmon HORNE ANDSMITH, P.A. Attorneys at Law</p>
        <p>P.O. Drawer 755 Greenville, NC 27835 (919) 758 4333</p>
        <p>March28: Aprll4,11,18,1988</p>
        <p>Reflector</p>
        <p>Classified</p>
        <p>002 Personals</p>
        <p>ESCORT Service. Lonely people find your dream mate. 1-778-3579 enytlme.</p>
        <p>166iL RESlbENT Needs ride to Bethel to work. Willing to pay, fee negotiable. Call 355^. PROMOTIONS UNLIMIT Video dating.</p>
        <p>756-6163</p>
        <p>007 Special Notices</p>
        <p>(Eveready) for all makes of watches! Floyd G. Robinson Jewelers, Downtown Evans Mall, Greenville, 758 2452</p>
        <p>010</p>
        <p>Automotive</p>
        <p>WE BUY CLEAN, LATE MODEL GMCARS.</p>
        <p>Call us for details.</p>
        <p>BROWN &amp;amp; WOOD</p>
        <p>355 6080</p>
        <p>Oil Autos For Sale</p>
        <p>TO BUY!" EASTGATE MOTORS,INC</p>
        <p>1M East Greenville Blvd. Greenville, 355-2193</p>
        <p>I98 MORCURY Grand Aar q^S. 4 door, loaded. 85750 1984 Cougar, loaded 84750 Regional AwtaPart, Inc. Call 756 111</p>
        <p>m M iatarl Van. P19 aqutaped, 18.000 miles, blue. OllBf^S Wood 355 6010.</p>
        <p>013</p>
        <p>Buick</p>
        <p>tile lUiCk iRTUOVlidi^</p>
        <p>automatic, air, 48,000 miles, very good condition, 84,900 firm. Call 7U 0 p after 6:00 p.m.</p>
        <p>013 Buick</p>
        <p>IWluiC^igACLMfL^</p>
        <p>ed. Brand new paint, runs and looks like new. 82650. 756-2616 days, 756-2752 nights. Ask tor Doug. Can be seen in front of Greenville TV &amp;amp; Appliances.</p>
        <p>SmLUClS^n^Mte^ owner, most options, rear drive, 88500.757-1626.</p>
        <p>015 Chevrolet</p>
        <p>1984 CHEVROLET SIO Truck. Automatic, air, stereo, V-6, 38,000 miles. Call Jim Smith Chevrolet at 753-3122 or 1-800-523 7008.</p>
        <p>1987 CHEVROLET Beaville Van. Fully equipped, 12,000 miles, blue. Call Brown &amp;amp; Wood 355-6000.</p>
        <p>1987 CHEVROLET Caprice Sta tion W^. Gray, loaded, 17,000 miles. Brown 8, Wood 355-6080.</p>
        <p>017</p>
        <p>Dodge</p>
        <p>DODGE MONACO station-wagon, 1978. Air, power steering, AM/FM, good condition, 756-8729.</p>
        <p>1983 DODGE COLT, 2 door, air, power brakes, automatic transmission, new tires, 39,000 miles, 83,800.830-1097.</p>
        <p>018</p>
        <p>Ford</p>
        <p>TAKE OVER PAYMENTS-1987 Escort Statlonwagon. 8234.62 month. Financed 4 years, only 3 left. 638 8101 between 8 to 5, ask torJodl, New Bern.</p>
        <p>1966 GT MUSTANG. 746-3995.</p>
        <p>1977 PINTO, rebuilt, 8375. Call 746^948.</p>
        <p>1981 FORD, automatic, air, power steering/brakes, runs good, clean, good tires, must see to appreciate. 81700.757-3153.</p>
        <p>1987 COUGAR- Excellent condi tion. 302 motor, loaded. 811,000. Call 746-4586.</p>
        <p>1987 FORD ESCORT station wagon, cruise, air, luggage rack, AAA/FM stereo cassette, blue. Assume payments, 8205.57 per month. 946-3154 after 6:00.</p>
        <p>019</p>
        <p>Lincoln</p>
        <p>LINCOLN CONTINENTAL,</p>
        <p>Silver, 1983, like new, reduced for quick sale. Contact Azalea Mobile Homes, 756-7815.</p>
        <p>021 Oldsmobile</p>
        <p>WMoLSsMOBIL^CutiaM Supreme. Automatic, air, stereo. Call Jim Smith Chevrolet at753 3122or I 800-523 7008.</p>
        <p>1987 OLDS DELTA 88</p>
        <p>Brougham. Like new, leather interior, digital dash, power windows and seats. 813,500 firm. Call 752 0884 before 5 p.m. and 752 7150 after 7 p.m.</p>
        <p>023</p>
        <p>Pontiac</p>
        <p>1981 PONTIAC Bonneville Sedan. Excellent condition. 355-7746 after 5, weekends anytime.</p>
        <p>1985 PONTIAC Bonneville, 4-door, white, V-6 engine, cruise, tilt, power locks and windows, I8K miles, excellent condition, 87,950. Call 756-0729.</p>
        <p>024 Foreign Cars</p>
        <p>BMW 32M, 1982, black, sunroof, AM/FM cassette stereo, 5-speed, excellent condition. Call 1 946-8924.</p>
        <p>BMW 32M, 1981, gray, sunroof, 5 speed, excellent condition, service records, 87800. 752 9989 or 758-3315 after 5 and weekends.</p>
        <p>OATSUN 240Z Air, good condi tion. runs good. Call weekends 752^737.</p>
        <p>MERCEDES, 1986 300E, 4 door, 45K miles, black/grey Interior, fxcellent condition. 829,500. Call -5:30p.m. 756-0496.</p>
        <p>MUST SELL- 83 Nissan Pulsar NX. 22,000 miles, 85 engine, rebuilt transmission and carbu retor, new C.V. Joint. 84300 or bestotfer. Call 758-4486.</p>
        <p>VW GOLF, 1987, 18,000 miles, loaded. Call 752^859 or 757-1955. 1971 OATSUN 240Z Good condi tion, rebuilt transmission, suspension, 81900.355 5396.</p>
        <p>1979 SILVER HONbA Accord, 4-door, automatic. In excellent condition. 82000 or make rea sonable offer. Call 758 5531 after 6:00 p.m.</p>
        <p>1979 TOYOTA COROLLA- 5-speed, AM FM, 78,063 miles. 81000. Call 756-2204 after 5 p.m</p>
        <p>1988 MAZDA 6M, great shape,</p>
        <p>air, automatic, AM/FM, gold metallic, 82100.355-6434.</p>
        <p>1980 SUBARU Station wagon. Excellent engine and transmission. Good running car. 8900 or bestotfer. Call 758-4486</p>
        <p>1983 HONDA ACCORD LX,</p>
        <p>automatic, power steering, good condition, 8^. Call 756-9136.</p>
        <p>1985 JETTA OL/44,000 miles. Air, AM/FM, 4 door, excellent condition. Call 756-9392.</p>
        <p>1986 HONDA ACCOkD LXI, 4</p>
        <p>door, automatic, loaded, 42K miles, 810,995. Call 756 0239.</p>
        <p>029</p>
        <p>Auto Parts &amp;amp; Service</p>
        <p>ChIvRoS?350 Short block. New crank shaft, new cam and lifters, timing chain, and oil pump, and chrome molly rings. Call 756-7468 after 6 p.m.</p>
        <p>032 Boats &amp;amp; Motors</p>
        <p>B&amp;amp;KMARINE</p>
        <p>Don't wait til the season's rush -Do your pre-season service now.</p>
        <p>Evinrude, Omc, Mariner and MerCrulser service center; PLUS 1987 Evinrude and Mariner motors end Cox trailers at clearanceprlcesi</p>
        <p>1205 [Jlcklnson Avenue, Greenville. 752 2882.</p>
        <p>FAT AND DlFlNbAkLt Service to all outboard motors and boat trailers. Long galvanized boat trailers at wholesale prices. Billy's (Marine liRapeIr 355-2793</p>
        <p>POR AlI- 1986 16' Privateer</p>
        <p>bay boat. 75 HP Mercury motor with power tilt and trim. Loaded (automatic bilge pump, radio, depth finder, Evinrwle trolling motor, custom casting deck). 85200.756-3326 after 6 pm.</p>
        <p>RilNVILLi NiAklNE ANDSPORTS</p>
        <p>Pitt County's oldMt marine dealership. We sell everything at wholasalo prices year round. 264 Bypau N.E., Greenville 758^5938</p>
        <p>VENTUAe 21 With swing keel and trailer. 4.5 Mercury out board, cuddy cabin sloops two, three sails. 84300 negotiable. Call 756-4731 after 6 p.m</p>
        <p>14' AlklKGLAii'TiiHING boat and galvanized trailer. Call 753 4434</p>
        <p>16* biNkikkUiLT toRF out board motor and trailer. Excellent condition. 355-7746 after 5; weekends anytime</p>
        <p>19* NAfHCLL ReAify ^ fishing. All extras. Call 7fi-3135</p>
        <p>034 Camping Equipmant</p>
        <p>ers and Fifth Wheels. Built by Amlsh Craftsman. RV camping parts, service and truck covers Umptown RV, 603 West Green villa Boulevard, Groanvlllo, NC 3516493</p>
        <p>19 86 TA V 6 F F-T</p>
        <p>Retrlgorator, closet, sleeps 6 Clean, 83800.7464168/746-3303.</p>
        <p>034 Cycitt For Salt</p>
        <p>746 3995</p>
        <p>034 Cycles For Sale</p>
        <p>1984 XV1080 Yamaha Virago. Excellent mechanical condition, new tires. 82200.758-0315 after 6.</p>
        <p>1985 KAWASAKI Excellent condition, low miles. Take over payments. 355-6614 after 5:30.</p>
        <p>040</p>
        <p>Jeeps A Vans</p>
        <p>mo^oS^Thatea^lub Wagon. Loaded. Call Jim Smith Chevrolet at 753-3122 or 1-800-523-7008.</p>
        <p>1984 CJ7 JEEP, red, 5-speed, hard top, excellent condition. C:all Charlie at 8304M10.</p>
        <p>1985 JEEP GRAND Wagoneer. Excellent condition, low mlle-age. Call 756-9376atter 7 p.m.</p>
        <p>041 Trucks</p>
        <p>Derrick Trucks for sale. (Tall 919-946-8164.</p>
        <p>NEW 1988 Silverado. Loaded, complete warranty, wholesale price, silver/blue. 355-7222.</p>
        <p>S-10 SHORT BED, 25,000 miles, tool box, good condition. With good credit, take over payments of 8136 a month. 746-6814.</p>
        <p>1980 INTERNATIONAL 4070B Sleeper, air ride suspension, air ride seats, cassette, 80% rubber, 290cummings, 10 speed. 810,500. Call days 795-4488; 946-9116 nights.</p>
        <p>1985 CHEVROLET Silverado Truck. Blue/silver, loaded, local 1 owner. Call Jim Smith Chevrolet at 753-3122 or 1-800-523-7008.</p>
        <p>1985 CHEVROLET Blazer Silverado, 4x4. 1 owner, 29,000 miles with all options, biue over white. Days 752^008; nights 757 3176.</p>
        <p>1985 DODGE RAM 050, AWFM and tape deck, 4-speed transmission, camper shell, air, 84295 or best offer. Call after 5:00 weekdays, anytime weekend, 746-2083</p>
        <p>1985 SUBARU Brat. Air condi tioning, AM/FM stereo, camper cover, excellent condition. Call 758-5559.</p>
        <p>1986 ISUZU TRUCK 4 speed, stereo, low miles, excellent condition. 84100.752 5330.</p>
        <p>1987 BRONCO 2. 4x4, loaded, 5,000 miles. Assume loan. Phone 757-3415 after 6 p.m.</p>
        <p>044</p>
        <p>Child Care</p>
        <p>BABYSITTER NEEDED to</p>
        <p>care tor 3 month old in my home, beginning mid (May; 7:30 a.m.-5:30 p.m., approximately 3 days per week. Non-smoker, references required. 756-6441.</p>
        <p>NEW DAYCARE OPENING</p>
        <p>April 4. Wanted: Youngsters who desire to learn and have fun. Extra special attention and prices. A full schedule of activities dally. Call for an appoint ment 752-3098.</p>
        <p>WOULD LIKE TO KEEP Child In my home: located on D.H</p>
        <p>Con</p>
        <p>756-71</p>
        <p>,toj6Hlgh</p>
        <p>School road. Call</p>
        <p>32 YEAR OLD Mother, college graduate will babysit In my home evenings and weekends. 355 5650.</p>
        <p>050  Pets</p>
        <p>Male and female. 8150 each. Sire and dam on premises. Born February 29 and March 1. Call 752 5874.</p>
        <p>AKC BLACK UB Pups. 8175. Call 746 2849.</p>
        <p>AKC DOBERMAN Puppies. Big bone. Call 758-0732</p>
        <p>AKC GOLDEN RETRIEVERS</p>
        <p>Champion blood lines, ready to go, 3-31 88. Call 758 5018.</p>
        <p>AKC GOLDEN RETRIEVER Puppies. Ready to go, 9 weeks old, all shots. 756-5966 evenings.</p>
        <p>AKC REGISTERED 1 male mini dachshund 8150. 2 male miniature poodles, 1 solid black, 1 party poodle, 8200 each. Call 926-1151, between 8-9 p.m.</p>
        <p>DOBERMAN PUPPIES For sale. 6 weeks old. Call 746-6269.</p>
        <p>FOR SALE- AKC registered Chinese Pug puppies. Fawn with black mask. First series of shots. Call 355 2596.</p>
        <p>LOIS'S PAMPERED PETS.</p>
        <p>Small dog grooming, 812.00. Call 3555754.</p>
        <p>058</p>
        <p>Help Wanted Clerical</p>
        <p>ed at Brody's. Excellent part-tlnte hours: Monday- Friday, 9-3. (Mature Individual responsible for telephone communication to vendors and various detailed paper work. Apply at Brody's, Carolina East (Mall, (Monday-Wednesday, 2-4 p.m</p>
        <p>ASSISTANT CONTROLLER. A promotion has prompted the need for a motivated, well organized individual to assist in the business office of WCTI TV. Ap plicant should possess an associate degree In business, administration or accounting and have experience In the areas of payroll, billing, accounts payable and receivable, all within a computer environment. Applicant must have ability to get along with others, good communication skills, and the desire to be a part of a professional organization. Excellent salary and fringe benefits. Send resume to: Dan Paduk, WCTI TV, PO Box 2325, New Bern;i8C 28561. EOE.  ^</p>
        <p>LERK/kECEPTIONIST</p>
        <p>needed tor Greenville, NC job site. Accurate typing, telephone skills and payroll experience necessary. Immediate need. Call 830-0141 for Interview. If no answer call 481-Ol, extension 33. EOE</p>
        <p>LAL/kOINAL LEt</p>
        <p>Coordinator. Responsible for auisting local/regional account executives. Broadcast and computer experience preferred. Ability to work well under pressure Is required. Must be highly motivated and well organizad. Applicants must have the ability to get along with others,</p>
        <p>Ci communication skills, and dnire to be a part of a professional organization. Excellent salary and fringe benetits. Sand resume to: Sandra Woodliet, WCTI TV, PO Box 2325, New Barn, NC S61. EOE.</p>
        <p>*iCPtlNISYwANTkO,full time, 1:00-9:00 p.m., Tuesday-Saturday. Apply at Georges Hair Designers, The Plaza.</p>
        <p>ildftlfAKf ior estAETlshed Greenville law firm. All inquiries confidential. Send resume to DR 1003, C/0 Daily Reflector, PO Box 1967, Greenville, North Carolina 27835.</p>
        <p>il*ITAffV Nitoib to</p>
        <p>work with project management team on Greenville, NC job site. Multimate and Lotus 123 experience required. Immediate Need. Call 8380141 for Interview. If no answer call 481-0133, extension 33. EOE</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>058</p>
        <p>Help Wanted Clerical</p>
        <p>PERMANENT, Part-time sec retary. monday-Frlday, hours 1-5. (Must possen good typing and filing abilities, pleasant personality and knowledge of general office duties, send resume' to: Secretaiy, P.O. Box 298, Greenville, NC 2naM)398.</p>
        <p>PUT EXECUTIVE secretarial skills to work. Learn Greenville market and earn bonuses. Call Manpower, 757-3300.</p>
        <p>059</p>
        <p>Halp Wanted Medical</p>
        <p>cr?^||d^SI|6^^</p>
        <p>TANT. All shifts available. Am-ly In person at Greenville Villa Nursing Home, 127 Mo^ Blvd. or call 758-4121.</p>
        <p>EDUCATION CONSULTANT-</p>
        <p>North Carolina Board of Nursing. Applicant must be a registered nurse licensed, or eligible for licensure, in North CaroTlna; have been actively engaged In nursing practice and nursing education for a minimum of five consecutive years prior to appointment- additional experience in nursing is preferred; have a strong experiemental background In curriculum and program evaluation; and have had teaching experience in at least two types of nursing programs. A master's degree In nursing is required; doctorate preferred.</p>
        <p>Applicant must have a knowledge of laws governing nursing and other health professions, of legal and voluntary standards of approval/accreditation of nursing programs; and of related state and federal statutes. Full-NCo^ltion;  Raleigh,</p>
        <p>Deadline for applications: April 25, 1988. Send letter of ap^ca tion and resume to: Dr. Carol A. Osman, Executive Director, N.C. Board of Nursing, P.O. Box 2129, Raleigh, NC 27^.</p>
        <p>LPN HEALTH CLINIC Facility. Excellent working conditions and hours. 756-2611.</p>
        <p>LPN OR MOA for urgent care facility. 12 hour work day, 8 a.m.- 8 p.m., 3 days per week and eve^ other weekend. Competitive salary, life and health Insurance and 1 week paid vacation. Send resume to (Med Center 1,507 E. 14th Street, Greenville, North Carolina 27858.</p>
        <p>NURSES 8500 SIGN-ON BONUS We are looking for the best Pediatrics and Neo-natal nurses. We provide the highest quality of nursing care to children at home. Be speclall Call collect 615-321 4038.</p>
        <p>RN OR LPN NEEDED tor 11 to</p>
        <p>7shlft.(1) No rotation. (2) Very competitive salary. (3) Shift Dlfteiential. (4) Very Liberal benefits. Call Mrs. Lilley at 793 2100 for an appointment. (Plumblee Nursing Center, Plymouth N.C.)</p>
        <p>WANTED; Insurance Examiner NURSE or TECHNICIAN In Greenville and vicinity to com plete reports including vital signs, medical history, and venipuncture. Write P.D.S., Box 5864, Winston-Salem, NC 27103 or call 919-761-0416.</p>
        <p>X-RAY TECH tor urgent care facility. 12 hour work day, 8 a.m.- 8 p.m., 3 days per week and every other weekend. Competitive salary, life and health insurance and 1 week paid vacation. Send resume to Med Center 1,507 E. 14th Street, Greenville, North Carolina 27858.</p>
        <p>060</p>
        <p>Help Wanted Miscellaneous</p>
        <p>DELIVERY PERSON for local appliance store. Salary plus commission. Excellent benetits. Send resume to TO Box 712, Greenville, N.C. 27835.</p>
        <p>DENTAL HYGIENIST Needed tor comprehensive family practice. Experience in preventive care for Periodontal patients desired. Would like someone 2 days per week. Please call office coflact, 522-3707 for an Interview. James A Privette, D.D.S.</p>
        <p>DEPENDABLE PERSON Needed to do house work 1 day a week. References and own transportation needed. 756-1892.</p>
        <p>DIETARY MANAGER for nursing home. Must have supervisory experience. Prefer C.D.M. Excellent benefit package. Call 523-0776 during working hours or 577-7683 after 6 p.m. for appointment.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>MAKE MONEY AND LOSE WEIGHT</p>
        <p>In your spare time work a revolutionary program without exercise or starvation diet. No investment except your spare time. Unlimited potential income. Call for details 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.</p>
        <p>756-3919</p>
        <p>FUSSY BOSS</p>
        <p>Needs full-time secretary. 40 hour week. Average pay, picky, picky details. No typing. One girl office. Call Mr. Brown, Monday thru Wednesday, 10:00 a.m. to 4 p.m.</p>
        <p>7584075</p>
        <p>Rent A</p>
        <p>NEW CAR</p>
        <p>At Low As</p>
        <p>$18.00</p>
        <p>Per Day Sharpest Fleet In Town</p>
        <p>RENT WAY AUTO RENT Brown &amp;amp; Wood</p>
        <p>Downtown</p>
        <p>752-2882</p>
        <p>060 Help Wanted MlBCGllanaous</p>
        <p>^^Wlo!^^^ss^</p>
        <p>Health facility In Plymouth, North Carolina has 1 position available for an RN or LPN. Call for an inpolntmant to diKuss a bettor future for you. D.O.N. 793-2100,9-4, Monday-Frlday.</p>
        <p>A PRDFESSIONALJob winning resumo. 89 td i. C.R. Writing Sorvlces,3S5-iD9(r</p>
        <p>##</p>
        <p>AAA EMPLOYMENT</p>
        <p>MAINTENANCE ENGINEER</p>
        <p>to 8400+. HVAC, oloctrlcat? Vory stable company starts</p>
        <p>LGAL SECRETARY to 8300-1-. Top-notch In tklllt and professionalism? Hurry In to meet your now employer I MANAGER TRAINEE 8250 up. Top pay attar you're trained. Bonus and commiuion I OFFICE CLERK 8160 up.</p>
        <p>Computer skills? Great hours I SALES REP 8225 base plus commission. Top of the line products sell themselves! ATTENDANT 8140. Friendly, rewonsible? Start today I MARKIN6 RDDM Unpack marchandise and put tickets onl</p>
        <p>LABDR Several great positions. Hurry I</p>
        <p>101W. 14th Street Suite 203 7581393 Low Fee Personnel Service</p>
        <p>ACCEPTING APPLICaTIDNS</p>
        <p>tor route delivery. Home every night, class A license, tractor trailer OMwrlence, heavy lifting and bonding required. Excellent company benetits, profit sharing, insurance, paid vacations, holidays, average pay 8240 per week. Call 756-6412, 1:00 p.m 5:00p.m., Joyce Foods</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>ASSISTANT MANAGER</p>
        <p>Trainee. 40-1- hours weekly, will include evenings, 3 closings and day shift. Retail experience helpful. Must have solid work history and references. Full benetits includes profit sharing. AMly Short-Stop Food Mart, 14th Street, Greenville. No phone calls please.</p>
        <p>ASSISTANT MANAGER Need</p>
        <p>ed tor phone room. Experience In rtsort promotions helpful, but not necessary. Call 355-7147 after 5:30 p.m.</p>
        <p>ATTENTIGN (Male or Female! Local company expanding operation. Will hire 5 sharp peo-pTt Immediately. Earn 8400-8600 per week. No experience necessary, will train. Must be able to go to work immediately. Must have good transportation. Call Dan 919-355-5679.</p>
        <p>AVON CAN EARN You that summer vacation money I Earn up to 50%. Call 756-6396.</p>
        <p>CARPENTER'S HELPERS Needed. Must own have own tools and transportation. Call Relger Construction Company 752 2853.</p>
        <p>CHIEF ENGINEER- Expert ence required in all phases of maintenance, heating, air conditioning, refrigeration, plumbing, arectrical and general. Salary commensurate with experience. Apply In person. Holiday Inn, Graenvllle. EOE AA/F/V/H.</p>
        <p>DiiHWASHER WANTED:</p>
        <p>must be dependable, lunch or dinner hours, (kpply at the Beef Barn, (Monday - Friday.</p>
        <p>00 YOU LIKE TO TALK On the Phone? If so, then this is the job for you! We need enthusiastic people to schedule tours part-time, evening positions avail able. Great job for students and housewives. All training provided. Call 355-7147 attar S:M^p.m.</p>
        <p>ELDERLY COUPLE Seeks lady to share home. Some health care, light cooking. Must drive. Salary. References required. Call 758-3094.</p>
        <p>060</p>
        <p>Help Wanted MiKGilaneous</p>
        <p>DRIVERS WANTED. RTC Transportation looking tor long haul drivers and Irainaas. Tralnaas must havt 3 months OTR tractor trailer exparlenca and good driving rtcord. Expe-rlancod drivors must have 12 months OTR. All applicants must be 33 years of ago. Ex-cpllont pay and banetils offered. Call Jim Anderson, 919-660-3367 or 1-IOO-S4S4W1S or apply at 7700 Boeing Drive, (ireensboro, NC.</p>
        <p>DklVERS NEEDED for moving furnituro. Out-of-town occasionally, overnight. Driving ex-preiance required. Call 752-4500 for appointment.</p>
        <p>DklVERS: ATS of NC hiring experiencod OTR tiatbod/van tractor traitor drivers. Excellent pay and benefits package. Earnings including incentives 24.5 per mile. Call 1-000-451 -0313 or 919-563-4360.</p>
        <p>FLORIST OESIONER Noedid Immodlatety tor part-time work. Must require a smito, and be experienced, ^ly in person to Donald Barber, Snop-Eza Foodland, Buyer's (Market.</p>
        <p>FULL AND PARt-TKME lerks for vidso store opening. Applications given out Tuesday, t^w 5, noon hour and 6 p.m.-7 p.m. Location: Orange fop building on Hwy 11 north beside Honda of Greenvilto.</p>
        <p>FULL AND PART TIME help wanted. Experience helpful but wt are willing to train motivated individuals. Competitive pay with benefits for full time. Apply In person to Daughtrldge 0(1 Company, 2102 Dickinson Avenue, Tuesday, April 5,10-3.</p>
        <p>HARVEY'S</p>
        <p>RESTAURANT</p>
        <p>Positions Available:</p>
        <p>COOK</p>
        <p>BACK-UP COOK WAITRESSES</p>
        <p>All shifts available. Benefits available. To schedule a personal Interview, call 758-1084 on Monday or Tuesday between 3:00 to 5:00 p.m., ask for Mr. Folsom. If you prefer, come by between the same hours at:</p>
        <p>023 (Memorial Drive.</p>
        <p>HOUSEKEEPER NEEDEO-Prefer mature, middle-aged woman. Private quarters provided. Call 025 7627 or 524 5124.</p>
        <p>JOB PLACEMENT Specialist. Responsible for Implementing job placement/development prooram in vocational training facnity. Involves counseling on job seeking skills, job retention and employer contacts. Ra-quires dtgree In human services plus one year experience with handlcappMi preferred. Submit resume by 4/0/88. Eastern Carolina vocational Center, Staton Blvd., Box 613, Green-villa, NC 27835.</p>
        <p>LICENSED HAIR Dresser wanted at Georoe's Hair Designers, The Plaza. Apply Tuasday-Frlday, 10-5:30.</p>
        <p>LIFEOUARDSNEEDED-Apply now, Grtenvllle Athletic Club.Intervtows establlshod from applications.</p>
        <p>LOUD CRUDE and aggraulve lead singer wants to form a heavy metal band. Contact Michael at 792-6296.</p>
        <p>OPENINGS FOR Hair Stylist at Graanvilto's newest salon. Great working conditions, super location. Call 757-1941.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>parT-time telephone</p>
        <p>Survty. Hourly wages plus bonuses. 355 2605, Lisa Pennell, Sunday-Thursday, 6-10 p.m. PART-TIME GUEST SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE</p>
        <p>For luxury budget motel. 16 hours per week, Saturday and Sunday work. Must enjoy working with the public and havt great parsonallty. Front desk work. 84.00 per hour. Apply: Cricket Inn (Motel.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>FULL TIME POSITION</p>
        <p>In Sales And Framing</p>
        <p>To assist customers in seiection of coiors and styies of framing. Experienced desired, but wiil train. Exceiient working conditions. Submit applications to:</p>
        <p>Clark Gallery</p>
        <p>646 Arlington Blvd. Greenville, NC 27834</p>
        <p>Pin COUNTY GOVERNMENT EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY NUTRITIONIST I Hiring Ranga  $16,384 -18,018</p>
        <p>Provide evaluation, certification, and nutrition counseling and follow up for participants. Prescribe and document original food package and any significant subsequent changes for participants. Provide feedback regarding counseling and patients progress to other health care professionals. Prefer experience in WIC/public health. Must have a valid NC drivers license; must have proof of rubella Immunity. Graduation from a four year college or university with a bachelor's degree In foods and nutrition, dietetics, or public health nutrition.</p>
        <p>Apply: Emptoyment Security Commleelon 3101 Bismarck Drive Greenville. NC 27834 Deadline tor applications Is Friday, April B, 1 BBS.</p>
        <p>TAX CLERK III Hiring RingG  $10,S56-11.822</p>
        <p>Performs responsible clerical and technical work In the receipt of taxes and fees and In the preparation and maintenance of fiscal or related records; does related work as required. Provides assistance to public In regards to tax records. Operates typewriter, calculator, and other standard office equipment. Collects, procaases and balances tax receipts, license fees, etc. on dally basis. Ability to deal ef-factivaly and courteously with the public and co-workera. Must be a hjgh school graduate with some typing experience supplemented by experience in general clerical work involving contact with public.</p>
        <p>Apply: Emptoyment Security Cemmlsslon 3101 Bismarck Drive Greenville, NC27B34</p>
        <p>Deedllne tor applications Is Friday, April B, 1B8B AN AFFMMATIVE ACTIONIEDUAL OPPOflTUNITY EMPLOYEN</p>
        <p>13000.00</p>
        <p>VINYL SIDING CUSTOMERS</p>
        <p>$3000.00</p>
        <p>Your Thinking Powor It Mwg Importent than Your Intollogonoo Powor. Strotch Your Thinking ind Stimulate Your Sovlngt.</p>
        <p>You dont havo to pay Arkaniot and Chicago pricos for local tiding.</p>
        <p>ACC BUILDERS GREENVILLE/KINSTON</p>
        <p>Vinyl Siding Exparts</p>
        <p>33000</p>
        <p>Call Colloct 8274099  Sava Big Think Big Savings  You Havt Big jtatringt</p>
        <p>$3000.00</p>
        <p>060 Halp Wanted Misctllanaous</p>
        <p> AAPLdYMNT^ OPPORTUNITi^</p>
        <p>PRODUCTION PLANNER: Industrial xperlacna In plan-nln^xpedltlng production.</p>
        <p>SET-UP MECHANIC: machino shop-grlndera-mlllirM machina background. 87.69 an hour.</p>
        <p>DYE SHARPENER: tool making axportonca. 86.99-8S.8S par hour</p>
        <p>legal SECRETARY; S12-S15K EXECUTIVE SECRETARY to vIcajMviidont. S12-S13K. RECEPTIONIST/ Bookkatp er/pattont cara. Madlcal offlca. S7.00 per hour.</p>
        <p>MANAGER TRAINEE: finance company. Salary nagotlabla. ASSIctANT (MANAOER: retail salat. 8350-8400 par weak. Foe paid by company. ASSISTANTMANAOER: rttall satot. Local ttora. Salary nego-tlabto.</p>
        <p>ROUTE SALES; beverage company. Excellent salary and beneflH.</p>
        <p>CREDIT REPRESENTATIVE: finance company.</p>
        <p>JEWELRY RETAILER/</p>
        <p>Whotosator: start part-time, to too paid by company. PERSONNEL/SALES</p>
        <p>Recruiter: jewelry company. Start part-time, to toe paid by company.</p>
        <p>CASHIER: orocary store, full time and (Mrf-tlma.</p>
        <p>LUBE TECHNICIAN:  will</p>
        <p>train.</p>
        <p>MAINTENANCE/ Delivery parion. Monday-Frlday, 9: 6:00.</p>
        <p>"tflANTICPESONNEL</p>
        <p>SERVICES</p>
        <p>209 Commarct Street</p>
        <p>355-7931</p>
        <p>EXOTIC DANCERS- S7.00 per hour plus tips. Havelock, NC. Call 447-5055 or 447-1528.</p>
        <p>XPERIENCEO Full time sales person, for local TV B Appliance store. 355-7061.</p>
        <p>fYPESETTER - Full time. Ra-quirts good typing skills plus knowtoc^ of computers and typesetting equipmant. Paste up exparlenca helpful, but we will train. Please sand letter or resume to Typesetters, The Daily Reflector, P.O. Box 1967, Greenville, NC 27835.</p>
        <p>TYPESETTER - Part tlnw, 25-hour week. (&amp;gt;ood typing skills and flexible schedule (Including Saturday nights) raquirao. Paste-up exparlenca htlpful, but we will train. Please sand letter or resume to Typesetters, The Daily Reflector, P.O. Box 1967, Greenville, NC 27835</p>
        <p>WAITRESS NEDEO part time, and full time, waakands. No phone calls. Apply at Szechaun Garden, 909 S. Evans Street between 3 and 5.</p>
        <p>WAITRESS AND CASHIER Wanted. Experienced prafarred.</p>
        <p>Apply In person at Peking Pal ace, Greenville Square Shopping Center, Greenvine. No phone</p>
        <p>calls please.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>060 Halp WantMi Misctiteiwous</p>
        <p>TtkiNNltMPS. , we're the pros."</p>
        <p>PROFfflOI^ RESUMT</p>
        <p>Connoiltlon.'Atlantic Personnel, 37931.</p>
        <p>R8tTAU$ANt Opening soon. Margmix's, 706 sT Evens St. (iraanvllle. All positions avail able. Experienced. Apply in parson.</p>
        <p>kESTAURANt MANAGER Opening soon In Greenville. Dining room operations, supervision, scheduling. Send resume and salary raquiramants to; DR1007, c/o Dally Reflector, P.O. Box 1967, Greenville, NC 2783S.</p>
        <p>YT'' PamlTy steak House, 3437 S. (Mamorlel Or. is seeking qyallty employaes to work In (rroenville's best steak house. Apply In parson between 2-4.</p>
        <p>lALli</p>
        <p>INDUSTRIAL EQUIPMENT</p>
        <p>Distributor seeking person to sale to contractors and industries. Excellent benefits Including profit sharing and health Insurance. Pay commensurate with experience. Send resume to P.O. Box I808, Elizabeth City, NC 27909.</p>
        <p>SHEET MEVaL Mechanic helpers wanted. No experience necessary. A^ly S o m. to 9 a.m. only. Larmar (Mechanical.</p>
        <p>SIMALL SAND And gravel com pany has Immadlate opening for rosponalbleporson to run sand dredge. $4.00 par hour. 758-0165.</p>
        <p>SHELLING * SNELLINO spaclallzts In sales, management tralnaa, accounting and darlcal positions. Call 758^541.</p>
        <p>SPORTS WRITER For Pied mont NC dally seeking energetic dedicated applicant. Entuslastlc prep football, racing area. Will consider recent collage grad. Experience a plus. Sand resume and clips to: General Manager, P.O. Box 147, Kannapolis, NC 28002.</p>
        <p>tRACTOk TRAILER DRIVERS</p>
        <p>* Come join the Industry leader</p>
        <p>* Professionalxirlvars needed to run nationwide * Competative pay package * Safety, Production B fuol bonusos * (Modlcal and dental Insurance * Retirement Plan * Credit Union At-fllletlon</p>
        <p>Minimum age 23 * ) year verifiable OTR experience</p>
        <p>* Good driving record</p>
        <p>Cell Bill Holland collect 919 064-9639, WIngate/Taylor-Maid Transportation, A Burlington Northern (Motor Carrier. E.O.E.</p>
        <p>TkUCK DRIVERS: Poole Truck Line otters 33* per mile to start to OTR drivers with one year verifiable employment with one employer. Yearly Increases and benefits package. Drivers with less than one year experience may apply as a Pool# Driver Trainee or tor the Pode Driver Training School. Apply In person. Poole Truck Line, Denning Road Exit, Dunn, NC (919-092-0123) or 501 Auman Road, SfMrtanburg, SC (803-576-4554)) 800^225 5W0. E.O.E.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>060 Hlp Wanted Miscellaneous</p>
        <p>WANIed Experienced In sfallar for storm windows and storm doors. Good work record Must be wiiiing to travel. Con tact Bill Barnes, Monday FrI day, 8 til 5,757 1300</p>
        <p>WANTED: LIVE IN FEMALE companion for elderly woman, everV other weekend off. Call 752-6471 or 3H 029.</p>
        <p>WOkKERS NEEDED To load and unload trucks. Call 752 4500 for appointment.</p>
        <p>061</p>
        <p>Help Wanted Sales</p>
        <p>ATTENTION: LICENSED REAL ESTATE AGENTSOne of Greenville's most aggressive firms seeks full time, motivated, ambitious sales agents. We provide extensive training programs, excellent working conditions with a pro fesslonal atmosphere tall CENTURY 21 JANET BOWSER AND ASSOCIATES lor your confidential Interview. 355 7800.</p>
        <p>ATTENTIONI Due to expansion In our new and used sales vol uma we are in need of a</p>
        <p>salesperson. If you enjoy com munlcating with the public and have the aoility to follow direc</p>
        <p>tions, this could be an excellent opportunity to Join a winning team. Excellent training pro gram, guaranteed salary and benafits Including paid vacation, hospitalization Insurance and demo program. No experience naadad. Quick advancement for the right Individual. Contact Jeff Shirley or Joe Welch at Joe Pecheles Volkswagen. Apply In person only I Greenville Boule vard, Greenville, NC.</p>
        <p>CAREER</p>
        <p>OPPORTUNITY</p>
        <p>Outstanding sales opportunity In</p>
        <p>local area for the right person. Starting Income 818 826,000 first year with a minimum of 20% in crease second year.</p>
        <p>Unlimited advancement oppor tunlty.</p>
        <p>Call for personal appointment and interview, 830 54U or 355 34)0, Monday and Tuesday, 10:00a,m.-4:00p.m.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>TAX</p>
        <p>REFUNDS</p>
        <p>Take advantage of early tax refunds. Come see me, MARK MCDONALD for special savings on a used car.</p>
        <p>BROWN &amp;amp; WOOD</p>
        <p>(Downtown)</p>
        <p>1205 Dickinson Avtnue</p>
        <p>752-2882</p>
        <p>INDUSTRIAL EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES IN EASTERN NORTH CAROLINA</p>
        <p>Manufacturing Englnaaring Manager. Experience and technical degree required. 34-40K Manufacturing Enginaar. EE or ME. 28-36K.</p>
        <p>Ragtonal Salaa Application Enginaar. BS in Engineering. Sales experience helplul. Salary negotiable.</p>
        <p>Quality Atauranca Enginaar. Technical degree and experience required. Salary negotiable Tool and Fixture Datlgnart. 20-28K. Design/develop manufacturing tooling fixtures.</p>
        <p>Production Supatvlaor. Supervisory experience In production required. Salary negotiable Dye Lab Technician. Experience in dyeing and color blending. Up to 30K.</p>
        <p>Engincir. Valves or strainers experience. Salary negotiable.</p>
        <p>En^naer. Teflon experience. Salary negotiable.</p>
        <p>Quality Control Manager. Experience required. Salary nagotlabla.</p>
        <p>Enginaar. Experience with design/drafting production layout. Salary negotiable.</p>
        <p>Production Foraman. Experience with production machinery. Salary negotiable.</p>
        <p>Keypunch Opatator. Experience required. Salary negotiable.</p>
        <p>ALL P08ITI0N8 FEE PAID BY COMPANIES.</p>
        <p>Apply in person or send resume to:</p>
        <p>ATLANTIC PERSONNEL SERVICES &amp;gt;</p>
        <p>209 Commerce Street, Suite B Greenville, North Carolina 27858 355-7931</p>
        <p>TYPESETTERS</p>
        <p>Immediate Full Time and Part Time Positions Available</p>
        <p>FULL TIME' Requires good typing skills plus knowledge of computers and typesetting equipment. Paste-up experience helpful, but we will train.</p>
        <p>PART TIME - 25 hours per week; Good typing skills and flexible schedule (including Saturday nights) required. Paste-up experience helpful, but we will train.</p>
        <p>For immediate consideration, please send letter or resume to:</p>
        <p>TYPESETTERS THE DAILY REFLECTOR P.O. Box 1967, Greenville, NC 27835</p>
        <p>tobaiMld on Tuasday April 5,198$ Call for an Intarviaw 12</p>
        <pb facs="00096894_0018" />
        <p>I tie uaiiy Hetiector, (ireen&amp;lt;^te, n.l&amp;gt;.</p>
        <p>Monoay, Apni 4, i9b8</p>
        <p>041</p>
        <p>Help Wanted Sales</p>
        <p>AUTOAWTIVE</p>
        <p>$40,000/$50,000 CAREER OPPORTUNITY</p>
        <p>Brown Wood it seeking honest, hard working and sincere Individuals to train and become professional representatives.</p>
        <p>Brown Wood Pontiac Cadi I lac-Isuzu offers</p>
        <p>Complefe training Unlimited earning</p>
        <p>potential Retirement pk Hospitalization</p>
        <p>Paid vacation and holidays Bonuses We will pay you to learn from the best. Come and join our fam ily of professionals where oppor tunlty for advancement is not i^ust a saying. See Tom Brown or Sonny Lea in person between 10:00 a.m. and Noon, Monday thru Friday.</p>
        <p>Busing Is booming at</p>
        <p>BROWN WOOD PONTIAC-CADILLAC-ISUZU 329 Greenville Boulevard, Greenville</p>
        <p>UNLIMITED INCOME OPPORTUNITY Sales person for restaurant and</p>
        <p>food service equipnumt, urgent ly needed for many areas of NC. Guaranteed salary 11800 per month plus travel allowance and commission. No overnights required, training is provided. To schedule interview, call 9 00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m., Monday Wednesday only, 919-638-5001.</p>
        <p>WANT EXPERIENCED HVAC sales representative to call on established and prospective new accounts In eastern NC area. Name brand products, well established comapny. Excellent benefits and opportunity. Reply to P.O. Box 1967, 118007, Greenville, NC 27835, for prompt in tervlew.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>041 Help Wanted Sales</p>
        <p>DESIRE A NEW CAREER in</p>
        <p>the insurance field? Guaranteed salary of 825,000 to start plus all company benefits. Must be licensed. Call 830-5414 or 355-3410.</p>
        <p>LICENSED REAL ESTATE Agent wanted for on-site sales of single family homes. Experi ence helpful, but will train. Call 756-8485 between 1:00 p.m. and 6 p.m.,Monday-Friday.</p>
        <p>REAL ESTATE AGENTS wanted. For your confidential Interview, call Jean Hopper at University Realty, 355-5866. An Equal Op^tunity Employer.</p>
        <p>WANTED Mature person to work jewelry department in Greenville area mall. Prefer someone with experience or strong interest in jewelry sales. A representative will be in the area very soon. Call now for an appointment, collect 0-839 0004 ask for Mr. Brisson.</p>
        <p>042</p>
        <p>Help Wanted Teachers</p>
        <p>DAY CARE TEACHERS Need ed for infants and 3 years old. Apply at Tammy's Nursery, 2501 East 10th Street.</p>
        <p>FULL TIME TEACHER Need ed. Apply in person 1026 Red-banks Road.</p>
        <p>TEACHER- Christian school. 1988-89 School year, K-1 and 1st grade. Write to: P.O. Box 1967, 18317, Greenville, NC 27835.</p>
        <p>043 Help Wanted Technical &amp;amp; Trades</p>
        <p>CARPENTER FOREMAN</p>
        <p>needed for Greenville, NC job site. Send resume to McDevitt &amp;amp; Street Company, POvBox 8306, Greenville, NC 27835. No phone calls please. EOE.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>AUTOMOBILE SALES</p>
        <p>Immediate opening for automobile sales professional. This position offers excellent earning potential as well as an outstanding company benefits program including insurance and company demo. For consideration please apply in person at</p>
        <p>Toyota East Dave Sigmon, Sr.</p>
        <p>109 Trade St., Greenville, N.C.</p>
        <p>No phone calls.</p>
        <p>reosxm</p>
        <p>Tone</p>
        <p>AUTOMOTIVE TUNE-UP Technician</p>
        <p>Precision Tune, In Greenville, has opening for Individuals interested in building a career with the fastest growing tune-up franchise in America. Must have strong mechanical aptitude and love to work on cars. Experience preferred. Salary and bonus, paid holidays, vacation, hospital insurance and uniforms furnished.</p>
        <p>Apply at 124 SE Graenville Boulevard. Saa John.</p>
        <p>CAREER OPPORTUNITY</p>
        <p>AUTO SALES  Excellent starting position with locai new car and truck dealership. Requirements are: good positive attitude, abiiity to communicate with public and desire to excel. Past sales experience helpful. Contact Frank Calfee East Carolina Lincoln-Mercury-Merkur-GMC Truck 756-4267</p>
        <p>American Truck Rental</p>
        <p>Highwoy 11 South  Wintervllle</p>
        <p>(2 miles from Carolina East Mall)</p>
        <p>14 .16',18' and 22' Van Bodies 24' Refrigerated Body</p>
        <p>Daily  Weekly  Monthly</p>
        <p>Subsidiary of</p>
        <p>MIERICAN</p>
        <p>TRUCK&amp;amp;AUTO</p>
        <p>SALESLEASINGSERVICE</p>
        <p>P.O. Box 8367  Graenville, N.C. 1-800-682-2216</p>
        <p>919-756-3635</p>
        <p>043 Help Wanted Technical &amp;amp; Trades</p>
        <p>CHIEF ENGINEER- Expwi-ence required in ail phases of maintenance, heating, air conditioning, refrigeration, plumbing, electrical and general. Sal</p>
        <p>ary commensurate with experience. Apply in person. Holiday Inn, Greenville. EOE M/F/V/H.</p>
        <p>CREATIVE SERVICES</p>
        <p>Copywriter/producer. Requires a creative individual with strorig writing and production skills. Must have a knowledge of ibi% to work well with others unbder</p>
        <p>advertising and the abill</p>
        <p>deadline pressures. Video tape editing skills a plus. Contact: Fred Anderson, WITN TV, P.O</p>
        <p>Box 468, Washington, NC 27889.</p>
        <p>DRAFTING/GRAPHIC ARTS.</p>
        <p>Prepare exhibits from supply data. Assist developing maps and brochure layouts. Computer experience helpful. Reply to: Box 8026, Greenville, NC 27835.</p>
        <p>ELECTRONIC SERVICE</p>
        <p>Technician. Some musical abilities, pleasant personality for customer relations, some travel. Good benefits. Send resume to: Technician, PO Box 1385, Rocky Mount, NC 27802.</p>
        <p>EXPERIENCED MECHANIC wanted immediately for growing Import service department, excellent benefits package, salary commensurate with experience, strong background in General Motors preferred. Contact Jett Culiver at 756-8885 for appointment.</p>
        <p>HEATING AND AIR Condition ing service person needed. Experience required. Good pay. Good benefits. Catl 8-9, Atonday thru Friday, 355-7582.</p>
        <p>e Openings For Industrial Positions</p>
        <p>Heavy lifting, material han dling, machine operators and related positions immediately available. Must have industrial experience, phone and transpor taflon. A better opportunity with excellent benefits. Apply in person at...</p>
        <p>ANNE'S</p>
        <p>TEMPORARIES</p>
        <p>758-10</p>
        <p>F lowers Office Complex 1410 South Ewans Street (Use Evans Street Entrance)</p>
        <p>MACHINIST WANTED: open ing on 2nd shift for eimerienced individual to operate CNC lathe. Contact Larry DeHart at AAaro Precision, 977-6764.</p>
        <p>PART-TIME WORK for II</p>
        <p>lustrator-GraphIc Design, Williams &amp;amp; Simpson, Inc., 756-8617.</p>
        <p>WANTED: Top notch mechanic At least 5 years experience. Top</p>
        <p>pay tor the right man. Apply in person to Holid^ Shell, 724 South Memorial Drive, Green vine, NC.</p>
        <p>044 Work Wanted</p>
        <p>BOOKKEEPING SERVICE 20 years experience. Call 757-3438. BROWN'S PAINTING, Mildew and moisture control, vents Installed, minor repairs. 758-4136.</p>
        <p>CALVIN'S CARPET Cleaning. We use the Von Schrader Dry Foam Abstractor. No water soaking. Call 927 3745, Pinetown for a tree estimate.</p>
        <p>CAROLINA TREE Service. All Wpes done. Stump removal. Free estimates. Fully insured. 752-6420 or 757-0117.</p>
        <p>CARPENTRY AND custom cab Inet making. Competitive rates. Call 756 8200 for a tree estimate.</p>
        <p>CARPENTRY Remodeling, sundecks, porches, fences, and utilities buildings. Guarantee professional quality. Reason able rates. Phone 758 0189.</p>
        <p>CLARKS LAWNMOWER REPAIR SERVICE</p>
        <p>Do you need your lawnmower serviced for the 1988 season? Pick up and delivery. 746-4019 after 6:30, Sunday anytime.</p>
        <p>CONCRETE DRIVES, WALKS, patios, treated decks. 758 5799, nights 757 0444.</p>
        <p>CUSTOM HOMES, remodeling, decks, additions. 30 years of top quality work. Free estimates, JF Edwards Builders 830 5478.</p>
        <p>EDWARD'S CONSTRUCTION</p>
        <p>Room additions, sun deck, home repair. 746 2384.</p>
        <p>EXPERT LAWN CARE</p>
        <p>AND LANDSCAPING Call 756 8200.</p>
        <p>EXPERT FLOOR refinishing Old and new wood. Yes, we pickle. 756-8335.</p>
        <p>FOR ALL OF YOUR Planting and landscaping needs plus lawn maintenance for '88 season, call 757-1590.</p>
        <p>FOR COMPLETE LAWN Care; Mowing, edging and trimming call John's lawn Service, 752-2029.</p>
        <p>FOR QUALITY LAWN WORK,</p>
        <p>business or residential. Call after 4 p.m. Darrell Harris, 752 5518 or mornings 756 2525 and ask tor Barbara.</p>
        <p>HARRELL'S COMPLETE</p>
        <p>Maintenance Painting and Wallpapering, grass cutting and lawn malntenacne Call 830 1850 tor free estimate day or night.</p>
        <p>NEED YEAR ROUND Lawn Care or lust a spring cleaning? Help an ECU student! Call Sam or Carole Harvill 355 5819 (own equipment).'</p>
        <p>PAINT, PAPER Your home. 45 years of customer satisfaction. Honest, satisfaction is my goal. Free estimates. 524 3396.</p>
        <p>PAINTING AND Wallcovering, competitive rates, call 756 8200 for free estimate.</p>
        <p>PAINTING, Reasonable rates, quality work, references. Call 756-9472.</p>
        <p>PAINTING INTERIOR/ EXTERIOR. Carpentry repair. Callafter6,758 4285.</p>
        <p>PAPERING, INTERIOR Paint Ing and paper removal. All wall papering guaranteed in writing. Insured for your protection. Call Don English, 756 7010.</p>
        <p>PLUMBING AND CERAMIC</p>
        <p>Tile work. New and repair Licensed. 355-7409 after 6.</p>
        <p>PERFECTION ROOFING</p>
        <p>Company and General Contrae tor. No jobs too small. Call anytime 355 3738</p>
        <p>ROOF LEAKS FIXED and</p>
        <p>minor repairs. 18 years experience. Work guaranteed. After 6 p.m. call 752 5906.</p>
        <p>SILVERTHORNE HAULING</p>
        <p>Small loads of top soil, fill sand. &amp;gt;ine bark and small clean up obs. Mowing, planting shrub wry. 758-3296.</p>
        <p>STONE AND CONCRETE Houses, fireplaces, driveways, walks, patios. Free estimate. 752 7242.</p>
        <p>WILL CARE FOR The elderly Also clean house and cook. Ex perlenced. Call 830-4904.</p>
        <p>Real Estate Corner</p>
        <p>U.S. GOVERNMENT WANTS TO LEASE SPACE IN AREA OF GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA</p>
        <p>LOCATION: Space should be located in the greater Greenville area. AMOUNT: The Government has a requirement for approximately 30,545 gross square feet of contiguous office and storage space for occupancy by 350th Mash reserve unit. Additional requirements are for approximately 2958 gross square feet for a maintenance shop and approximately 86,500 square feet of parking. An additional 2 acres of land is needed.</p>
        <p>REQUIRED: All services, supplies, utilities, partitioning, tenant alterations and fencing are to be provided as part of the rental consideration. Alternate offers for unserviced lease (exclusive of services, supplies, and utilities) would be considered.</p>
        <p>TERM: Space is required approximately August 1,1988. Lease will be on a year to year basis.</p>
        <p>Owners and Agents: To submit a location of an existing building or a build-to-Buit proposal, contact Paul Allen of this office by April 16,1988.</p>
        <p>U.S. Army Corps of Engineers</p>
        <p>ATTN: Paul Allan P.O. Box 99 Cary, NC 27512-0099 (912)460-0067 </p>
        <p>049</p>
        <p>Auctions</p>
        <p>FARM MACHINERY AUCTION SALE Tuesday, April 5, 1988 at 10 AM. 75-100 tractors, 300 implements. We buy and sell used julpment dally.</p>
        <p>Wayne Implement Auction Corp P.O. Box 233, Highway 117 S.</p>
        <p>Goldsboro, NC 27533. NCAL 8188. Phone 919 734-4236.</p>
        <p>080 Fuel, Wood, Coal</p>
        <p>HARDWOOD READY Now. We deliver. Call 746-3147 days or 756-5730 nights.__</p>
        <p>100% OAK- $75 cord. V/t cords $100. Free delivery. 1-823-6837.</p>
        <p>081</p>
        <p>Furniture</p>
        <p>FURNITURE STRIPPING-</p>
        <p>Palnt and varnish removed from wood or metal. All items returned within 7 days. Reflnishing available. Free pick-up and delivery. Call for estimate. Tar Road Antiques, 1 mile S. of Sunshine Gardens, Wintervllle. 355-6003.</p>
        <p>084 Farm Equipment</p>
        <p>B ALLIS CHAMBER 1 row trac tor with cultivators and fertilizer attachment. $1750.746-3907.</p>
        <p>JOHN DEERE 71 Flex planter, 4-row with fiberglass hoppers, row markers, excellent condition. $1100.752 5643.</p>
        <p>3600 FORD DIESEL fully equip led, like new, 1 owner, 725 lOurs. $6250. Call 746 3520 and leave message anytime.</p>
        <p>092 Livestock</p>
        <p>AILANTHUS ACRE FARM Now</p>
        <p>boarding horses. Worthington X-Road area. Full board $125. Pasture $65. Call 756-7196.</p>
        <p>HORSEBACK RIDING. Jarman Stables, 752 5237.</p>
        <p>099 Miscellaneous</p>
        <p>ALUMINUM MOBILE HOME</p>
        <p>Coating (5 Gallon) $19.75. Mobile home skirting, $3.69. Builders Bargain Center, 758-7061.</p>
        <p>CALL CHARLES TICE, 758</p>
        <p>3013, for small loads sand, top-soil, stone, pine bark. Also backhoe and driveway work.</p>
        <p>DARK RANCH Mink jacket for sale. Casual style, size 12, ap praisat $3000, sale price $1400. Call 355-4637.</p>
        <p>FOR YOUR child's next birthday party call Sportsworld (we doitalDI 756 6000.</p>
        <p>GUNS</p>
        <p>LOANS ON BUY, SELL and trade. Southern Gun &amp;amp; Pawn Inc., 752-2464.</p>
        <p>INSTANTCASH</p>
        <p>LOANS ON a BUYING Guns, TV's, gold and silver jewelry, coins, most anything of value. Southern Gun a Pawn Inc., 752-2464.</p>
        <p>LADIES ROLEX. Under war ranty. Silver. Valued at $1400; asking $1,000. 757 1367, ask for Brent.</p>
        <p>LAWN MOWER REPAIR-</p>
        <p>Plckup and delivery available. Call One Source Services 756-8200.</p>
        <p>NEW SLATE POOL TABLES.</p>
        <p>Over 200 in stock. $895 and up. Game World-Leisure Time Equipment, 919-821 3488. _</p>
        <p>PRESSURE TREATED</p>
        <p>Lumber and timber, sold at '/s price. Seconds good for farmers and do-it-yourselfers. Make a deal with John at Down East Lumber Company, Dover, N.C., Highway 70.522 2400.</p>
        <p>SHAMPOO YOUR RUG! Rent shampooers and vacuums at Rental Tool Company._</p>
        <p>SHINGLES- $10.95 square and up. Reject plywood H" $6.25; %" $6.95. 8" X 16' hardboard siding $2.49 Builder's Bargain Center, Greenville. 758 7061.</p>
        <p>SWIMMING POOL $988 ORDER NOW PAY LATER Huge 31' oval pool with deck, fence, and (liter. Installation and financing available. Call 1 800-722 5843.</p>
        <p>TW01917 DIRT BIKES for sale. In excellent condition. Call 753-4412 after 5 00 or weekend.</p>
        <p>WASHERS, DRYERS,</p>
        <p>refrigerators, freezers, stoves $100 up Guaranteed. 746-6929.</p>
        <p>IS'CHEST FREEIER,</p>
        <p>excellent condition, $150. Call 355 5294 atter6:00p.m.</p>
        <p>1930 WATERFALL Edition 3</p>
        <p>Riece antique living room suite, lice. $1000 or best offer. Call 758 4486.</p>
        <p>6X10 ENCLOSED TRAILER.</p>
        <p>$550. Call 752 5362</p>
        <p>102</p>
        <p>AAobile Homes F)&amp;gt;r Sale</p>
        <p>ASSUME LOAN No down pay ment. 3 bedroom, fully carpeted and equipped. Call 758-7819.</p>
        <p>BEAUTIFY YOUR Doublewide with brick underpinning. Turn key job. 752-7017.</p>
        <p>BRAND NEW 28x80 Destiny 4 bedrooms. 3 baths, greatroom, large utility room, storm window and door, Queen Anne fur niture package, 2128 square feet of living area. Call Lawrence Manning Homes, Inc. 946-0017.</p>
        <p>FACTORY OUTLET</p>
        <p>Custom order your Horton or Mansion home. (Colors, carpets, wall boards etc) Save Thou sands. For free literature and Information call toll tree 1 800 346-4847.</p>
        <p>NEWANDPREOWNEDHOMES</p>
        <p>Monthly payments as low as $133 No application refused.</p>
        <p>Call Greg Carefree Housing, 355 7893.</p>
        <p>ONLY2 LEFT</p>
        <p>1988 Doublewides starting at $16,995</p>
        <p>We are selling all our models.</p>
        <p>At Tremendous Mvlngs. Call (ireg Carefree Housing, 355 7893.</p>
        <p>VERY NICE 12x70,3 bedrooms, 2 baths International. Will ti nance for 10% down. $145 month. Insurance included. Call Lawrence Manning Homes, Inc. 946 0017.</p>
        <p>14x70 MOBILE HOME; new carpet, new appliances. Call 355 7661 or 756 0050.</p>
        <p>1973 PARKWAY Ooublewlde, 24x60, 4 bedrooms, 2 full baths Call 753 2476.</p>
        <p>1974 12x40, 2 bedrooms, 1&amp;lt;/5 baths, air, washer/dryer, assume loan 746 6889/746 6948</p>
        <p>1987 MOBILE HOME, air</p>
        <p>washer/dryer, 2 bedrooms, baths, located in nice mobile home park $400 and assume loan. 757 1748 alter 6 p.m.</p>
        <p>19M DESTINY 14x64. 2 or 3 bedroom, 1'/? bath, masonite siding, storm doors and win dows, cathedral ceiling, steel link, garden tub. Free set up and delivery. 10% down. $147 month. Call Lawrence Ahanning Homes, Inc. 946 0017.</p>
        <p>1918 FLEETWOOD 14x70. 2 or 3 bedroom, 2 bath, sheetrock walls, storm windows and doors, cathedral ceiling, garden tub. Irost-free refrigerator, fully furnished. Free set up and delivery. 10% down. $178 month. Call Lawrence Manning Homes, Inc. 946 0017.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>THAVtL AGI NT TOUR GUIDL AIRLINC RtSERVATlONIST</p>
        <p>Stall locally, lull time! part lime, train on llvo airline computers. Home study end resident training. Financial eld avalF able. Job plaeemeni aelslanca. National Headquarters  Llghl-houae Point, FL.</p>
        <p>AjC.T. TIUWIL I</p>
        <p>1-800-327-7728</p>
        <p>iU-J</p>
        <p>102</p>
        <p>Mobile Homes For Sale</p>
        <p>19M REDMAN 14x52 mobile home set up In nice park with many extras. $7775. Call 757-1715 anytime.</p>
        <p>1986 GUARDIAN Trailer, 14 x 56, $1000 down, payments $168 a month. Call 752-2853.</p>
        <p>191814 WIDE, payments as low as $141.86. Greenville volume dealer. Thomas' Mobile Home Sales. Across from.Alrport. 752-6068.</p>
        <p>105Musical Instruments</p>
        <p>HAEGSTROM Electric guitar, D'Aquisto design. Excellent condition. $500. Call 355-4637.</p>
        <p>i LOWREY ORGANS Trade in sale. Half price from $595. Free lessons. Piano 8, Organ Distributors, 355-6002.</p>
        <p>114 Instruction</p>
        <p>EXPERIENCED Electric keyboard player to teach basics of Yamaha PSR^300 to willing student. Call 756-6386 or pager 1757-8847 tor negotiation of fee.</p>
        <p>115 Lost &amp;amp; Found</p>
        <p>LOST MALE DOG Black/grey Keeshond (Like Husky), blue collar, on March 25; Bells Fork area. Reward. 756-4943.</p>
        <p>118 Business Services</p>
        <p>ATTENTION Local Retailers And Service Businesses!</p>
        <p>Are you losing thousands of dollars by not knowing who your customers are?!? Let os customized your business to</p>
        <p>Generate new profits. Call askmasters today, 830-0105.</p>
        <p>CERAMIC TILE, Parquet, lino leum, carpet, installation. Free estimates. Creative Tile Design. 975-6754.</p>
        <p>PRIVATE SCHOOL Of Elec trolysis. 20 years experience. Call 823 4646, Tarboro or 830 0962, Greenville.</p>
        <p>122</p>
        <p>Business</p>
        <p>Opportunities</p>
        <p>A BUSINESS? Buy or sell your business with C.J. Harris 8i Co., Inc. Financial 8, AAarketing Con-sultants. Serving the Southeastern United States. Greenville, N.C. 355-7799, nights 756-8444.</p>
        <p>BE YOUR OWN BOSS</p>
        <p>Exciting health business tor sale in Greenville. Stauffer exercise tables. 455-4076 or 756-6566.</p>
        <p>INTERNATIONAL SERVICE COMPANY</p>
        <p>Listed in the November 1987 Venture Magazine as one of the most profitable companies in the United States. High income potential. Over 900 locations in operation now. Training and management assistance. Exclusive territory.</p>
        <p>Call Randy /Martin at 1 800 624-7613 or collect at 817-756-2122.</p>
        <p>124 Professional</p>
        <p>CHIMNEY SWEEPING. Gid Holloman. North Carolina's original chimney sweep, 30 years experience working with chimneys and fireplaces. Fireplace repair, chimney caps installed, screens tor chimney tops. Call day or night, 753-3503, Farmville. NC._________</p>
        <p>132</p>
        <p>Commercial</p>
        <p>Property</p>
        <p>FARMVILLE WAREHOUSE-</p>
        <p>Sell or lease. 6,000 square feet with offices, floor rruckbiidy high, truck scales, 1.6 acres, available 4-1-88.1-522 5171.</p>
        <p>FOR RENT- Commercial prop erty on old Highway 264 West, 40x90 metal building, 3 bays and office space. Large lot, avail able now. Call 758 5505.</p>
        <p>RENT 201 and 203 E. 5th Street; store or office. Approximately 1000 square feet each. 756 0640</p>
        <p>144 Houses For Sale</p>
        <p>A "HEALTH WALK" away from shopping centers, this handsome brick home in Club Pines. 3 bedrooms, 2 car garage and huge den. Oelightfut living for $82,500. Please call Anita Worthington, GRI, at Aldridge &amp;amp; Southerland, 756-3500; evenings 355-6661. We re a houseSOLO word.</p>
        <p>Souther</p>
        <p>756-3500; evenings</p>
        <p>ATTENTION FIRST-TIME</p>
        <p>Buyers! This brick home offers the features you're looking tor! There's 3 bedrooms, eat in kitchen, living room and family room with fireplace. The large fenced-ln backyard with storage building will delight you. Sitting in one of Ayden's finest neighborhoods and only $49,900. Contact Janet Bowser, CENTURY 21 JANET BOWSER &amp;amp; ASSO CIATES, 355-7800 or 756 8580</p>
        <p>BAYWOOD-PRICE Reduced. Is tennis your game? This magnificent home overlooks the Baywood Racquet Club. 4 bedrooms plus a complete guest house, gourmet kitchen, master suite, dressing room, two wet bars. $220,000. Call Annette Butler at 355 7009 or CENTURY 21 Tipton, 355 7002.</p>
        <p>BELVEDERE; LOW ON cash? Seller will pay up to $1,000 toward closing cost. Very desirable neighborhood. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, large den with fireplace, carport. $65,000. Call CENTURY 21 Tipton 8, Associates 355 7002; nights, Barbara Tipton 756-2421.</p>
        <p>BRITTANY RIDGE; Don't sell yourself short. Take a look at this one. Features 3 bedrooms, 2'/? baths. Farmhouse with wrap-around porch. Large greatroom with deck and screened porch on large corner lot. $90,000. Call CENTURY 21 Tipton &amp;amp; Associates 355-7002: nights, Corlnne Whitehurst 825 1937.</p>
        <p>CAMELOT-THIS LOVELY home has to be the best kept secret in town. Excellent floor plan, only one year old. 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, office, detached workshop. A super buy at $78,900. Call Century 21 Tipton 8&amp;gt; Associates, 355 7002, nights. Rod Tugwell 355-7224.</p>
        <p>CANTERBURY: NEW con</p>
        <p>structlon. An atmosphere of hospitality awaits you in this decorator perfect brick Ranch. Features large greatroom with fireplace, dining room, 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths. $83,700. Call CENTURY 21 Tipton 8. Associates, 355 7002</p>
        <p>EXCITING 2 MASTER</p>
        <p>Bedroom, 2 bath home. /Many amenities and all appliances furnished. You'll be aole to en joy the pool In (hose warm days ahead. This home is completed and waiting for you to select your own decor. Superbly located near shopping and the hospital. Beautiful model on display. Prices start at $57,500. /Model open /Monday Saturday, 1:00 6:00; Sunday, 2.00 6:00. Phone 355 2000 or 756-4511 alter noons or 756 1997 nights.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>TRAIN TO BE A PROFESSIONAL SiCilTARY SIC./RfaPTIONIST EXICUTIVE SECRETARY Stert locally, full time/part time. Learn word procasiing and related sacrataiial skills. Home Study and Resident Training Nat'l. Headquarters. L H P., FL.</p>
        <p>niuMcul 10 avaiuiu xw ruuMun assisTANa</p>
        <p>144 Houses For Sale</p>
        <p>CLUB PINES- New listing. This sophisticated three bedroom home has a distinctive design that brings the beautiful out ihti</p>
        <p>doors right Into the living areas. Formal areas with hardwood floors, tastefully decorated-$105,000. For a private showing please call Anita Worthington, 3RI, at Aldridge 8, Southerland, 756 3500; evenings 355 6661. We're a houseSOLD word.</p>
        <p>FAIRFIELD: SERENITY buys this 3 bedroom rancher on a large country lot near PCC. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, with garw-$56,500. Call CENTURY 21 Tip ton, 355-7002; nights. Rod Tugwell 355-7224._</p>
        <p>ORIMESLAND-Possible Farm ers Home Loan assumption available on this 3 bedroom brick Ranch. Large wooded lot all for $45,000. Call CENTURY 21 Tipton, 355 7002, Ed AAeyer, 830-lim.</p>
        <p>IF YOU OWN A LOT, vre can</p>
        <p>build you a house. No money down. Call for free book and details, 1-800-843-7164 or collect 919 758 3171.</p>
        <p>INVESTMENT PROPERTY</p>
        <p>Older home with duplex conversion possibilities. Great loca tion. Offered In the low $20's with owner financing. Call CENTURY 21 Tipton, 355-7002, Ed Meyer, 830-1036.</p>
        <p>LAKEWOOD PINES- Feel like the old woman who lived in a shoe? Then spread out in this lovely older home featuring five bedrooms, 3&amp;lt;/5 baths and all formal areas. Numerous ameni ties such as; two fireplaces, one of them marble, a glassed-in back porch, full basement with workshop, extra large lot with camellias galore. A quality home worth seeing I Aftordably priced at $129,900. Call /Mable Savage, CENTURY 21, JANET BOWSER 8. ASSOCIATES 355-7800 or 756 3098.</p>
        <p>LYNNDALE: NEW Construe tion-just In time to pick out colors. Outstanding 4 bedroom, brick, traditional. Exceptional</p>
        <p>floor plan offers all formal areas la</p>
        <p>arage.</p>
        <p>RYfl Tipton, 355-7002.</p>
        <p>with large den. Finish playroom over garage. $163,500. Call</p>
        <p>LYNNDALE: Stately traditional under construction. You'll love this well appointed, 4 bedroom, Vn bath. Bowser Built Home, built just as you'd expect with formal areas, office/playroom over double car garage. Built of exceptional craftsmanship. $184,900. Contact Janet Bowser, CENTURY 21 JANET BOWSER 8, ASSOCI ATES, 355-7800 or 756 8580.</p>
        <p>NEAR WINDSOR in Rosewood. Beautiful 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, with car porch, excellent FHA Loan, nice lot. $65,900. Speioht Realty 752-2136; nights 756-4156.</p>
        <p>New Listings</p>
        <p>JUST PUT on the market this three story townhouse with two bedrooms, I'/i baths, living room, eat-in kitchen, and full basement for hobbies, storage or whatever! Priced to sell for only $44,900. Call Teresa for details.</p>
        <p>CHERRY OAKS, almost new three bedroom story and a half, with two full baths, greatroom with old brick fireplace, pretty dining room leading to the deck, large eat in kitchen with bay window in the breakfast nook. Outside storage building, wood ed lot and priced to sell at only $94,500.</p>
        <p>PARIS AVENUE boasts this brick home with three bedrooms, living room, kitchen, dining room, and oil heat! Excellent location near downtown. Priced at only $53,500. Call Len to see!</p>
        <p>Hignite Realtors 757-1969 Anytime</p>
        <p>NO DOWN PAYMENT If quail tied under FMHA Guideline. Features 3 bedrooms, living room, carpet and kitchen eat-in area. Lot is very spacious and no city taxes. $42,900. Steve Evans Realty, 355-2727.</p>
        <p>"NON QUALIFIED" Means no credit check or income clearance tor home buyers or in vestors. You can assume mortage at 13% fixed rate on this 3 bedroom brick home on corner lot or we can arrange a VA or FHA finance on a qualified basis as low as 9%. $43,900. Call Steve Evans Realty, 355-2727.</p>
        <p>NOTICE THE UNUSUAL Atten tIon to detail in this beautiful Windy Ridge one story townhome. End location tor privacy with 1500 square feet of spacious care free living. $74,900. Please call Anita Wor</p>
        <p>thington, GRI, at Aldridge 8, Southerland, 756-3500; evenings 355-6661. We're a houseSOLD word.</p>
        <p>OVERSIZED LOT- Genuine character is expressed throughout every Inch of this 2350 square toot new home situated in lovely Westhaven VII. Formal dining room, great room with fireplace, ultra kitchen, three "privacy tilled" bedrooms, finished room over the double car garage can be 4th bedroom. Beautiful corner lot. Quality constructed. $160's.</p>
        <p>Call Janet Bowser, CENTURY 21 BOWSER &amp;amp; ASSOCIATES, 355-7800 or 756 8580.</p>
        <p>REDUCED TO $54,900. I Prom Ise you'll see the value in this enduring older home on a quiet street near ECU, witn 3 bedrooms and hardwood floors, spacious carport doubles as a rainy day play area. Please call Anita Worthington, GRI, at Aldridge &amp;amp; Southerland, 756 3500; evenings 355-6661. We're a houseSOLD word.</p>
        <p>SEDGEFIELD TOWNES</p>
        <p>Desirable traditional home. $46,500. Celebrate life In this 2 story. Central air, carpeting, bay windows, patio, 2 bedroom, t'/ii baths. See now! Duffus Real ty, inc., 756-5395.</p>
        <p>SIMPSON, MILLBROOK Area, no qualifying assumable 9% 830-1</p>
        <p>SPRING FEVER For the family with kids who would like a swimming pool with fenced in backyard. Features 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, living room, den-kltchen combination, dining room, carport. $59,000. Call Steve Evans Realty, 355 2727.</p>
        <p>TUCKER ESTATES: MORE (or</p>
        <p>your money in this 2 story tradi (lonal with 3/4 bedrooms, 2V4 baths, large den with fireplace opening onto 14x16' wood deck Wired workshop with air condl tionlng. Double carport all for only $108,900. Call CENTURY 21 Tipton &amp;amp; Associates 355 7002 or Joan Crane 756 5408.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>144 Houses For Sale</p>
        <p>UNIVERSITY AREA: An ex cellent setting makes this picture-perfect saltfoox a good buy at $78,000. 3/4 bedroomt, and over 1800 square feet. Detached oarage, den with firmlace. Call CENTURY 21 -npton 8. Associates 355-7002 or Annette Butler 355-7009.</p>
        <p>UNIVERSITY AREA: DON'T</p>
        <p>miss out on this 3 bedroom home convenient to campus. Living room with fireplace, dining room, porch. Large workshop, fenced back yard. $55,000. Call CENTURY 21 Tipton 8. Associates 355 7002; nights, Barbara Tipton 756-2421.</p>
        <p>WESTHAVEN-Owner has lowered price from $83,900-$84,900; this becomes one of Westhaven values today. Featuring a 1 year home warranty, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, living room, dining room, den with fireplace, kitchen with eat-ln</p>
        <p>porch for those summer cookouts. $83,900. Call Steve Evans Realty, 355-2727.</p>
        <p>#ESTMONT-Two new homes under construction. Great tor first lime home buyers. Bath have super floor plans and feature quality construction. Call CENTURY 21 7002.</p>
        <p>Tipton, 355-</p>
        <p>2 BEDROOM House and 2 lots, ready for mobile homes. All for $39,500.355-2312 or 756-5100.</p>
        <p>2 STORY COLONIAL. Bring our hammer, nails, paint rush, maybe your broom and do some repairs and paint the color you desire on this 4 bedroom home sold as Is. $19,900. Call Steve Evans Realty, 355 2727.</p>
        <p>2402 UMSTEAD: 3 bedrooms, 1'/5 baths, 1260 square feet heated. Gas Pax furnace, carport, priced to sell. $54,500. Bill Williams Real Estate, 752-2615.</p>
        <p>150 Land For Sale</p>
        <p>FOR SALE: Approximately 3.78 acres on the Pamlico River In Beaufort County. This property will be sold at public auction on April 8,1988 at 12:00 noon on the steps at the Beaufort County Courthouse. For more information contact Sid Hassell, Jr., at 112 S. Respess St., Washington, NC 27889,919/946-1941.</p>
        <p>LOOKING FOR commercial and farm tracts tor sale for Investment group. Call and leave message. 355-4663.  _</p>
        <p>107 ACRES, SR 1782, 10 acres cropland, 97 acres woods, $55,000, owner financing, one perk test tor homesite, 746-2778.</p>
        <p>25 ACRES Cut over woods land at frog level. Call 946-0017 daytime, 756-4015 nights.</p>
        <p>152 Lots For Sale</p>
        <p>EXCLUSIVE WOODED 1 acre home sites near Holly Hills in Wintergreen school district. 756 7923 or 756-2664.</p>
        <p>FARMETTE acre, 288 feet road frontage, Wintervllle. $22,000. Call 1 729 0381.</p>
        <p>LARGE DOUBLE OR SINGLE</p>
        <p>Wide mobile home lots. 100% owner financing includes lot, 200 amp service, paved streets and drive, community water connec tion and septic tank; in PiH 4 miles to Washington</p>
        <p>County 4</p>
        <p>ngti</p>
        <p>/Mall. 756 9400; 758-6218</p>
        <p>LOT AT PAMLICO Plantation: Lovely wooded lot for $25,000. Call Alls Irwin, CENTURY 21 JANET BOWSER &amp;amp; ASSOCIATES, 355 7800 or 355-7744.</p>
        <p>LOT FOR SALE - BY OWNER</p>
        <p>Windsor Subdivision, back half wooded. $18,000. Days 355-5588; nights 752-7001.</p>
        <p>LOTS FOR SALE with septic</p>
        <p>n ai ing</p>
        <p>ment. Call 758-5103</p>
        <p>iptic</p>
        <p>system and water. Guaranteed financing with no down pay-</p>
        <p>SHELLY'S BRANCH Subdivi Sion on Stantonsburg Road, approximately 7 miles from Greenville. 753-4804.</p>
        <p>TWO WOODED LOTS, size and price negotiable, 2 miles North of Farmville, 15 minutes from Greenville. Call 753 2920.</p>
        <p>WOULD YOU LIKE A quiet location In the country on almost 2acresot land? 752 4793.</p>
        <p>1-F- ACRE LOT: Dogwoods, hollies, pines and oaks galore. Heavily wooded lot in a beautiful area. Restrictive covenants. $34,700. Call AAable Savage at CENTURY 21 JANET BOWSER 8. ASSOCIATES, 355-7800 or 756-3098.</p>
        <p>2--F ACRES: Beautiful heavily wooded lot. Restrictive covenants. Lake fishing available. $58,600. Call Mable Savage at CENTURY 21 JANET BOWSER 8, ASSOCIATES, 355 7800 OR 756-3098.</p>
        <p>5 ACRE LOTS For sale with sep tic system and water; just minutes from Greenville. Financing available. Call 758-5103.</p>
        <p>155 Resort Property For Sale</p>
        <p>IT'S BEAUTIFULI Waterfront and wooded. It's large! lOO'xSOO'. It's convenient! Camp Leach Estates. Phone 758-8160 atter5:00p.m.</p>
        <p>157</p>
        <p>Townhouses For Sale</p>
        <p>ROWNETREE WOODS The best deal In town. New 3 bedroom, 2'A bath townhouse convenient to hospital area. Living room with fireplace. Seller will pay most closing cost. $58,900. Call CENTURY 21 Tip ton 8, Associates, 355-7002: nights, Ed/Meyer 830-1038</p>
        <p>UPTON COURT: A VERY special place. Features greatroom with fireplace, vaulted ceiling, private patio. Seller will pay $1,000 toward closing cost. $51,900. Call CENTURY 21 Tipton 8i Associates, 355 7002, nights, Barbara Tip ton, 756-2621.</p>
        <p>YORKTOWN SQUARE-Yes, you can have it all In this maintenance free 3 bedroom townhouse located In a quiet, secure, and secludKl area, some of the features Include formal</p>
        <p>living and dining room, la fenced in back patio. $51,( Call CENTURY Jl Tipton, 355-</p>
        <p>7002, Ed Meyer, 830 1038.</p>
        <p>141</p>
        <p>Apartments For Rent</p>
        <p>A QUIEt PLACE Ideal for pr&amp;lt;h fesslonal. 2 bodrooms, 1Mi bath townhouse. Appliances plus many extras. Sorry, no children or pets. $375. 756-7480.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>141</p>
        <p>Apartments For Rent</p>
        <p>^^BEAUTIFuRMLAC^ro</p>
        <p>LIVE</p>
        <p>ALL NEW2 BEDROOMS* AND READY TO RENT*</p>
        <p>UNIVERSITY</p>
        <p>APARTMENTS</p>
        <p>2899 E. 5th Street Located Near ECU Naar IMaior Shopping Canters Across From Highway Patrol Station</p>
        <p>Limitad Offr-$2SS a month Contact J.T. or Tommy Williams 756-7815 or 830-1937 Oftlceopen-Apt.8,12:00-5:30 p.m.</p>
        <p>AZALEAGARDENS*</p>
        <p>CLEAN AND QUIET one bedroom furnished apartments, energy efficient, free water and</p>
        <p>sewer, optional washers, dryers, cable TV. ly.sman-/MOBILE HOME RENTALS</p>
        <p>. Couples or singles on-montn. 6 monthleas</p>
        <p>Couples or singles. Apartments and mobile homes in Azalea Gardens near Brook Valley Country Club.  </p>
        <p>Contact J.T. or Tommy Williams 756-7815</p>
        <p>A SINGLE Bedroom apartment. 426 W. 5th Street. Carpeted, air conditioned, $220 per month. 756-7285.</p>
        <p>AA STUDENTSI Homelocstors can arrange your fall accomodations now. Don't wait. 752 1375 HOME LOCATORS Fee.</p>
        <p>ATTENTION STUDENTS- 2 bedrooms, walk, ride bike or ECU bus to campus. A housing village nestled In the woods. Cot-lege View Apartments. No kids.</p>
        <p>J.L. Harris &amp;amp; Sons, Realtors. 758-4711.</p>
        <p>AVAILABLE (IMMEDIATELY</p>
        <p>at Yorktown Square. 2 bedroom, 2/5 bath approximately 1450 square feet. All appliances included, fireplace. $450 per month. One year lease and deposit required. No pets. Call Clark-Branch Realtors, 355-2000.</p>
        <p>AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY</p>
        <p>behind the Putt Putt, 2 bedrooms, V/i baths, stove refrigerator, dishwasher, water and sewar furnished. $310 per month. One year lease and deposit required. Call Connally or Lorelle at Clark-Branch Realtors, 355-2000.</p>
        <p>AVAILABLE lAAMEDIATELY 1 and 2 bedroom apartments, located approximately 1 mile from hospital. Washer/dryer hook ups, water, sewer and r-bage pick up included. No pets. 1 year iMse. 756-1454.</p>
        <p>AVAILABLE APRIL 1. Lease fell through, call again. One room efficiency, utilities furnished. 756-4364 after 7 p.m., ask for Donnie.</p>
        <p>AVAILABLE NOW, 1 block from campus. Efficiency apartments for rent. Call 756-6336, leave message on an-swering machine.</p>
        <p>AVAILABLE Brand new 1</p>
        <p>bedroom. 4 miles west of hospital on Stantonsburg Road. Call 7S6-5780or 756 4587.</p>
        <p>BRANCH APARTMENTS 1</p>
        <p>bedroom, furnished or unfurnished, near university. Heat, air, and water furnished. Short term lease available. No pets. Call 758 3781 or 756-0889.</p>
        <p>BR(X)KSIDE</p>
        <p>APARTMENTS</p>
        <p>1 bedroom- fully carpeted, cable available, washer-dryer hookups, water furnished. $230 per month. 752-4295.</p>
        <p>CARRIAGE HOUSE Apartments, Highway 43 South, just past The Plaza. 2 bedroom townhouses, all electric, fully carpeted, pool and laundry room. No pets. Call 756-3450 after 5 p.m.__</p>
        <p>Cherry Court</p>
        <p>Spacious 2 beoroom townhouse with t'/y baths. Also 1 bedroom apartments available. All are carpeted, with modern kitchen appliances Including compactor and dishwasher. Central heat and air. Free basic cable TV, water and sewer. Washer/dryer hook-ups plus laundry room, pool, sauna, tennis court, club house. 752-1557</p>
        <p>CINDY COURT Students Now renting for summer and fall. 2 bedroom, heat and water furnished, 2 people. No pets. $295 per month. Call 756-3563 after 4.</p>
        <p>CYPRESS GARDENS</p>
        <p>1 bedroom apartments  355-6803-anytlme_</p>
        <p>DELUX I bedroom near campus $200 or 2 bedroom duplex $^. 752-1375 HOMELOCATORS Fee.</p>
        <p>$200 or 2 bedroom duplex</p>
        <p>DUPLEX, 2 BEDROOMS, 5</p>
        <p>miles from hospital on Stantonsburg Road, one child, no pets. Call after 4:30,355 6960. DUPLEX FOR RENT 1925 White Hollow, $400. 756-0060.</p>
        <p>EASTBROOK AND VILLAGE GREEN APARTMENTS</p>
        <p>One, two and three bedroom apartments, featuring cable TV, modern appliances, clean laundry facllliias, swimming pools, fully carpeted.</p>
        <p>Office: 204 Eastbrook Drive</p>
        <p>752-5100</p>
        <p>GREEN MILL RUN APARTMENTS (CLEAN&amp;amp;QUIET)</p>
        <p>Corner of nth &amp;amp; Lawrence. Spacious garden I 8, 2 bedroom apartments. Energy efficient. Fully carpeted, excellent condition, private patios, pool and laundry facllltlea, watar/sewer, basic cable and drapes Included. 24 hours maintenance and onsite management. One block from ECU. Anytime 758 2628.</p>
        <p>MMTbRECmor5lnle.2 bedrooms, air conditioning, near collaga, water/sawer furnished, $270. Call Joe 752 3937.</p>
        <p>MEDICAL OAKS</p>
        <p>APARTMENTS. YOU CAN LIVE WITH THIS! SPECIAL LIMITED TIME OFFER TO NEW TENANTS ONE AAONTH FREE RENT WITH ONE YEAR LEASE..2 Bedroom, super Insulate, brick with water furnlshed..Neer hi^ltal and Naw Showing Center. CALL DAVIS REALTY 752 3000, 756 2904,355 25740T 752 9072.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>141 Apartimnts For Rent</p>
        <p>GreeneWay</p>
        <p>Large 2 bedroom garden apartments, all with 7 closets, carpeting, kitchen appliances Including dishwasher, central heat and air. Frae basic cable TV, water and sewer. Laundry rooms, spacious grounds, playgroumf and pool, abundant parking. Pots allowed. Adjacent to Greenville Counti7 Club. ($300). 756-6869.</p>
        <p>HUSIN6 FOR THE PROFESSIONAL</p>
        <p>WILLIAMSBURG MANOR.</p>
        <p>Two bedroom townhomes available. 1V4 baths, frost-free refrigerator, range, antf dishwasher. Attic and ourtslde storage. Professional neighborhood. SPECIAL! NOW OFFERING 1/2/MONTH FREE RENT.</p>
        <p>WILLOUGHBY PARK. Throe bedroom mrtmants available. NOW OFFERING FIRST AAONTH 1/2 PRICE ON ALL ONE YEAR LEASES. Two full baths, frost-frea refrigerator with Icemaker, dishwasher, end</p>
        <p>range. Fireplace, celling tan, ami washer/dryer hook-ups. Water, sewer, and basic cable</p>
        <p>Included. POOL and tennis court. Short-term lease available.</p>
        <p>BROOKHILL. Three bedroom townhomes available April. 2V5 baths, frost-free refrigerator, range, and dishwasher. Outside storage with private patio. Washer/dryer hook-ups. Shortterm leases available. Shenandoah Village. POOL and tennis court.</p>
        <p>WINDY RIDGE. Three bedroom townhome available. SPECIALI NOW OFFERING 1ST AAONTH V5 PRICE ON ONE YEAR LEASE. Range, dishwasher, frost-free refrigerator, and trash compactor. 7n baths, outside storage with patio. Washer/dryer hook-ups and attic storage. POOL and tennis court. Short term lease available.</p>
        <p>119-H SEDGEFIELD. Three bedroom townhome available April. Range, frost -free refrigerator, and dishwashtr.</p>
        <p>storage with nice patio. Pets conditional. Professional area near the Beef Barn.</p>
        <p>106-A SHILOH DRIVE. Shenandoah Village. 2 bedroom townhouse available, Vh baths, range, frost-free refrigerator and dishwasher, outside storage. AFFORDABLE!</p>
        <p>WEST HILLS. 2 bedroom townhome available April. 2W baths, range, dishwasher and refrigerator. Washer/dryer iKKricups and outside storage with private patio. Close to hospital</p>
        <p>REMCOEASIINC.</p>
        <p>(919) 758-6061</p>
        <p>Ask for JoAnn</p>
        <p>IDEAL-1 bedroom, appliances $150 or 2 bedroom near ECU $200 752 1375 HOMELOCATORS Fae.</p>
        <p>IN AYDEN, two bedroom, central heat and air, carpet, $260. 746-6394,752 5167.</p>
        <p>KINGS ARMS</p>
        <p>3 AAONTHS SUMMER RENTALS AVAILABLE</p>
        <p>Large 1 bedroom apartments. Carpeted, modern kitchen appliances, heat pump for energy efficient heating and cooling. Laundry facilities. 1209 Charles Boulevard, Office Apartment 104. Furnished Apartments Available. Also Renting For Fall.</p>
        <p>752-8915</p>
        <p>LOVE TREES?</p>
        <p>Experience the unique In apartment living with nature outside your door.</p>
        <p>COURTNEY SQUARE APARTMENTS</p>
        <p>Quality construction, fireplaces, heat pumps (heating costs 50 percent less than comparable units), dishwasher, washer-dryer hook-ups, cable TV, wall-to-wall carpet, thermopane windows, extra insulation.</p>
        <p>Off ice Open 9-5 Weekdays</p>
        <p>9-5 Saturday  l-S  Sunday</p>
        <p>756</p>
        <p>HArlingt(</p>
        <p>-5067</p>
        <p>STUDENT HOUSING</p>
        <p>CAPTAINS QUARTERS.</p>
        <p>Spacious one bedroom apartments near ECU. Dishwashtr. range, and frost-fraa refrigerator. Water and sewer Included. Washer hook-up. Pets.</p>
        <p>LANGSTON PARK. NOW</p>
        <p>UNDER NEW OWNERSHIP. SPECIAL FIRST MONTH FREE I Two bedroom spacious apartments on the river close to ECU. Range, frost-free refrigerator, and dishwasher. Washer/dryer hook ups. Water, sewer, and basic cable included.</p>
        <p>PIRATES LANDING. NOW</p>
        <p>OFFERING '/d AAONTH FREE ON ALL ONE YEAR LEASES. Private furnished rooms for rent. AAore comfortable than dormitory housing!I Share bathroom and kitchen areas. Two blocks from ECU. All utilities Included. Laundry facilities on site. AAald service provided In suite areas. We also offer semester leases.</p>
        <p>REGENCY HOUSE. SPECIAL */!i AAONTH FREE RENTI Two bedroom spacious apartments available. Furnished or unfurnished. Stove, and refrigerator furnished. Laundry facilities on site. Hot/cold water and sawar Included. Walk acrow street to Corner of Fifth and</p>
        <p>campus.</p>
        <p>Raade.</p>
        <p>RIVER OAK. One bedroom eHi-clency available. Stove and rtfrlgarator. Hot/cold watar and sawer Included. Laundry room on site. 206 North Summit Street, six blocks from ECU.</p>
        <p>JOHNSTON STREET. Spacious one bedroom apartments available. Range, dishwasher, end refrigerator, water and sower Included. 2 blocks from ECU.</p>
        <p>REMCOEASIINC. (919) 758-6061</p>
        <p>AskforPeHl</p>
        <p>CUSSIFIED DISPUY</p>
        <p>Dait^Speeiais</p>
        <p>1987 Chevrolet S-10 Blazer</p>
        <p>Charcoal gray and silver, V-6, automatic, fully equipped.</p>
        <p>AMERICAN</p>
        <p>TRUCK&amp;amp;AinO</p>
        <p>SALESLEASING  SERVICE</p>
        <p>1986 Chevrolet Corvette</p>
        <p>Black, black leather Interior, automatic, t-tops, fully equipped.</p>
        <p>Many more to choose from!</p>
        <p>Hwy. 11 South, GreenvHle, N.C.</p>
        <p>(Winterville, N.C.)</p>
        <p>756-3635</p>
        <p>1-800-682-2216</p>
        <p>T</p>
        <pb facs="00096894_0019" />
        <p>mm</p>
        <p>mmm</p>
        <p>161 Apartments For Rent</p>
        <p>161 Apartments For Rent</p>
        <p>new 1 BEDROOM apartments. Washer/dryer, cable TV, carpet, electric heat, air conditioning, appliances. 754-3342.</p>
        <p>1 bedroom near ECU $220 or 2 bedroom ditplex kids $250 752-1375 HOMELcSovrORSF^</p>
        <p>' room ECU 3235 2 bedroom, appliances $265 752-1375 HOMEL&amp;lt;^TORS F*S*</p>
        <p>nice, QUIET CONDO 2</p>
        <p>bedrooms, V/t baths, patio, 40 Colindale Court. Rent with option to buy. 754-2471/758-9100.</p>
        <p>KIN60LD TOWERS</p>
        <p>Ettlclencles, one bedroom and 2 apartments for rent. Also taking leases now for Fall semester. 752-2845.</p>
        <p>OAKMONT SQUARE APARTMENTS</p>
        <p>Two bedroom townhouse apartments. Fully equipped kitchen, pool, community room, lennis courts, cable TV. 24 hour emergency maintenance. Very convenient to Pitt Plaza and University. Now leasing summer and fall semester.</p>
        <p>Office hours 9-5:30, AAonday Friday, 1212 Redbanks Road.</p>
        <p>756-4151 Call us about our March Special!</p>
        <p>SUPER NICE 1 bedroom apartment In quiet area, avail-</p>
        <p>SwaHerT*</p>
        <p>TREYBROOKE</p>
        <p>APARTMENTS</p>
        <p>Now pre-leasing elegant new t and 2 bedroom apartments for those with discriminating taste. Four interior color Mslgns, fireplaces, bay windows, vaulted ceilings and washer/ dryer hook-ups. Ideal location on Hwy. 43 North adjacent to hospital and Med School. Call 756-8702 for Information.</p>
        <p>ONE AND TWO bedroom apartments for rent. Smith Insurance and Realty, 752 2754. ONE AND TWO BEDROOM apartments available now. Call 752 3311.</p>
        <p>triplex-2 bedrooms, I'/i baths, very nice, half month's rent free. $310 per month. 752-4220or 830-5217. i</p>
        <p>TWO BEOROM Duplex near university. /Marrleds preferred, $325 per month. Call 355-7799 or 756-8444.</p>
        <p>STRATFORD ARMS APARTMENTS</p>
        <p>Spacious 1,2 and 3 Bedroom Apartments One Month's Rent Free On All 2 Bedroom Units $200 Security Deposit Required CABLE TV.TENNISCURT POOL Convenient to Shopping and ECU</p>
        <p>Office hours 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday</p>
        <p>Call us 24 hours a day at</p>
        <p>756-4800</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOM apartment. $300. 802, 804,806 Willow Street. 75T)545 or 758-0635.</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOM, Duplex, central heat and air, cartel. Colonial Village. J.L. Harris &amp;amp; Sons, Realtors. 758-4711.</p>
        <p>WEDGEWOODARMS</p>
        <p>4 AAonth Leases .2 bedroom, 1 Vh bath townhouses. Excellent location. Carrier heat pumps. Whirlpool kitchen, washer-dryer hookups, pool, tennis court, draperies. 355-4302.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>161 Apartments For Rent</p>
        <p>170 Condominiums For Rent</p>
        <p>WILSON ACkES APARTMENTS CLOSE TO CAMPUS 2 and 3 bedroom townhouses, 1 Ml baths, fully carpeted, central heat and air, washer/dryer hepk-upt, dishwasher, stove, refrlgertor. Oraperlet Included.</p>
        <p>AVAILABLE APRIL 1 at</p>
        <p>Wiltouby Park 3 bedrooms, 2 bath flat, with 1280 square feet. All appliances furnished, fireplace with gas logs, pool and tennis court. $495 per month, 1 year's lease and deposit required. Call Clark-Branch Raal-tors at 355-2000.</p>
        <p>CONVENIENTLY LOCATED 3</p>
        <p>WOOD'S EDGE</p>
        <p>Brand new spacious two bedroom duplexes located in a quiet residential community in Heritage Village featuring: Greatroom with cattiedral caTl-inp. fireplace, fully equipped kitchen, washer and dryer con-</p>
        <p>month. 1 year lease. 756-1454.</p>
        <p>WESTHILL CONDO Near hospital, 2 bedrooms, 2Vk baths, professional neighbors; no pets, $340.3554002 or 754-7541.</p>
        <p>173 Houses For Rent</p>
        <p>mctlons, energy efficient, outside storage room, private enclosed patios.</p>
        <p>756-4151</p>
        <p>AA STUDENTSI Homelocators can arrange your fall accomodations nowl Don't wait. 752-1375HOMELOCATORS Fee.</p>
        <p>YOUR CHOICE 1 bedroom comfort $230 2 bedroom duplex $250 752-1375 HOMELOCATRS Fee.</p>
        <p>AVAILABLE APRIL 1 oH lOHi Street. 3 bedrooms, 2 bath brick home with approximately 1100 square feet. All appliances furnished, woodstove Included. $450 per month. One year lease and deposit requlite. Call Clark Branch Realtors, 355-2000.</p>
        <p>1 BEDROOM Apartment available for sublease. Call 750 5583.</p>
        <p>1 BEDROOM APARTMENT,</p>
        <p>Paul Circle, $210. Call 754-7282 or 754-3934.</p>
        <p>BRICK 3 BEDROOM, 2 bath, greatroom, dining room, closed garage, fireplace, heat pump, fully carpeted, near Carolina East Mall. $450 month. 746-4102. COUNTRY LIVING near Bel voir. 3 bedroom, 1&amp;lt;/i bath, central heat and air with carport. $425. J.L. Harris 8. Sons, Realtors. 758-4711.</p>
        <p>2 BEDROOM apartment. Central air, heat; carpet. Stove and refrigerator furnished. Nice ^ulet neighborhood. Close to University. 756-5050 or 758-3181.</p>
        <p>2 BEDROOM, Upstairs apartment, near college, 2307 E. 4th St. Leave message at 752-4409.</p>
        <p>2 BEDROOM Townhomes near hospital. Call 752-7101.</p>
        <p>2 LARGE BEDROOMS 2 baths, loft, available nowl Includes all kitchen appliances. Rent $525 or option to purchase; $525 deposit. Call Mary, days, 756-4511, 355-2000, nights 754-1997.</p>
        <p>3 BEDROOM Duplex available May 1 to family or adult business person. Smith Insurance &amp;amp; Realty, 752-2754.</p>
        <p>163 Business Rentals</p>
        <p>3 BEDROOM BRICK HOME</p>
        <p>just minutes - from hospital. Large lot, deposit required, rents for $450 per month. Call AAavIs Butts Realty, 3S5;7453 or AAaviS Butts, 752-70h.</p>
        <p>RENTAL STORAGE SPACE-Centrally located downtown, dock height. $225 per month. Call 355-5947 after 6 p.m.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>173 Houses For Rent</p>
        <p>173 Houses For Rent </p>
        <p>COUNTAy 2 bedroom $125 Huge 3 bedroom, kldsjiels OK $300. 7SM375 HOMELOCATORS Fie.</p>
        <p>1 BEDROOM Brick house to small family or adult business person. Call Smith Insuranca A Raalty7S2-2754.</p>
        <p>FIRST MONTHS RENT FREEI Available Immediately, 3 bedrooms, 2'/t baths, TIreplace. Call Jeannette Cox Agency, 754-1322.</p>
        <p>3 BEDROOM With yard for kids $325 or huge 4 bedroom $375. 752-1375 HOMELOCATORS Fee.</p>
        <p>415 OAK StREET, NICE. 2 baths, 3 bedrooms, central haat/air, carpet. $475.752-2347.</p>
        <p>FOR RENt 3 bedrooms, m baths, appliances, carpet, SR1128 near PCC. 752-3993 nights.</p>
        <p>174 Townhouses For Rent</p>
        <p>FOUR BEDROOMS, 2V$ baths, range and refrigerator, washer-dryer hookups, large lot, fenced backyard. Hafdae Acres. $415.4 month lease. J.L. Harris &amp;amp; Sons, Realtors. 758-4711.</p>
        <p>AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY</p>
        <p>at Brookhlll, 3 bedrooms, 2V9 baths, 1400 square feet, stove, refrigerator, dishwasher, pool and tennis court. $500 per month. 1 years lease and deposit required. Call Clark Branch Realtors at 355-2000.</p>
        <p>NICE QUIET 2 bedrooms, m baths, patio, plush carpet, dishwasher, 754-2471 or 759t00.</p>
        <p>ONE BEDROOM HOUSE on</p>
        <p>11th St. Small, cozy and efficient. $200. J.L. Harris &amp;amp; Sons, Realtors. 758-4711.</p>
        <p>AVAILABLE MARCH 1 at</p>
        <p>Brookhlll. 3 bedroom, 2Vi bath townhouse with fireplace, end unit with approximately 1470 square feet,, appliances turnlsh-M, pool and tennis courts. $500 per month. One year lease and di^lt. Call Clark-Branch Realtors 355-2000.</p>
        <p>PINERIDOE NEAR PCMH- 3</p>
        <p>bedroom, 2 full bath homt. Nlce-call us lor details. J.L. Harris &amp;amp; Sons, Realtors. 758-4711.</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOM two bath flat</p>
        <p>with loft, with over 1300 square feet, Immaculatd) fireplace, private patio. Located off 244 Bypass In Rollinwood. Available immediately. $525 per month. Lease term negotiable. Call Clark Branch Realtors, 355-2000.</p>
        <p>AVAILABLE MAY 1 at Windy Ridge. 3 bedrooms, 2/i bath townhouse with fireplace and all appliances. 1475 square feet, $500 per month, one year's lease and deposit required. Call Clark-Branch Realtors at 355-2000.</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOM, Shady Knoll, Lot 104. Call 744-3840 day or night.</p>
        <p>AVAILABLE April, 2 bedroom townhouse, 5 miles west of hospital on Stanlonsburg Road. Call 754-4587.</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOM HOUSE near University, 750-4333 days, 754-5077 after 4:00 and weekends. TWO BEDROOM BRICK home, completely renovated, fireplace, new heat pump, 403 Hlllcrest. Call 1-800-237-73M or 744-3532.</p>
        <p>CONVENIENT TO hospital and mall,\2 bedroom brick townhouie, $335. 754 4744. No pets, undergraduates.</p>
        <p>EXTREMELY NICE 2</p>
        <p>bedrooms, 1V$ bath townhouse. Available immediately. $400 a month plus security deposit. Contact CENTURY 21 JANET BOWSER &amp;amp; ASSOCIATES 355-7800.</p>
        <p>WONDERFUL 2 bedroom fire place $250. Huge 4 bedroom $300 752-1375 HOMEIOCATORS Fee.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>4,t.'</p>
        <p>I ne uaiiy Henecior, ureenvme,</p>
        <p>laOO B*9</p>
        <p>For Rent</p>
        <p>For Rent</p>
        <p>LkiNOTON SQUARE- 2 bedrooms, m baths, air conditioning. J.L. Harris A Sons, Realtors. 75A4711.</p>
        <p>1 BEDROOMS MILE HOME for rent, $150 plus deposit. Call 752-1423 or 758-0779.</p>
        <p>2 BEDROOM Furnished kids OK $170 or 3 bedroom comfort $195. 752-1375HOMELOCATORS Fee.</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOMS, V/i bath lownhome available immediately. Call Colllce Moore A Associates, 750-4050.</p>
        <p>2 BOkOOMS, burnished, washer/dryer; Hollybrook. $1S5 plus deposit. 758-0174.</p>
        <p>2 BOROOM Townhouse for rent. All major appliances. First month free with long-term lease. 355-5704 days; 754-7719 nights.</p>
        <p>180 Mobile Homes Lots For Rent</p>
        <p>2 BE6ROOMS, 1'/^ baths, appliances, dishwasher, microwave, many tras, quiet area, Idaal for professional. $375.754-7480.</p>
        <p>LARGE TRAILER SPACE Eastern Pine Community, Call 355-2432 after 5 p.m.</p>
        <p>YOU CAN SAVE money by shopping for bargains In the Claulfled Ads.</p>
        <p>LARG WOODED Single and doublewlde lots Deer Run Estates. 752te43.</p>
        <p>SINGLE OR DOUBLE Lots available. Trash pickOp, cable TV, water/sewer furnished. All this for $45 per month. Call 944 0017 daytime, 754-4015 nights. -</p>
        <p>175 Uts For Rent</p>
        <p>VERY CLEAN PARK, paved streets with parking pads, city water, very convenient. 752-2134.</p>
        <p>179 AAobile Homes For Rent</p>
        <p>181 OHice Space For Rent</p>
        <p>A FURNISHED 2 bedroom $150. Big 3 bedroom kldsjwts $175. 752-1375HOMELOCATORS Fee.</p>
        <p>AVAILABLE NOW 3 room office unit. Completely reconditioned. 3022 East 10th Street. Call J.T. Williams 754-7015 or 830 1937.</p>
        <p>BELVOIR HIGHWAY Private lot, nice 2 bedrooms, 2 baths, city water, very clean. $210. 754 4154.</p>
        <p>DOWNTOWN ON 4th STREET,</p>
        <p>near Cox Florist. Very nice of flee building, recently reno vated. (kwd highway exposure, 1400 square feet. U7S. Speight Realty, 1752-2134; nights 754 4154.</p>
        <p>NICE, 2 BEDROOMS, Washer/ dryer, air, furnished, clean, no pets, no children; Front lot, stedj^Knoll. Call after 5 p.m.,</p>
        <p>OFFICE SPACE FOR RENT 500 square feet and 1000 square feet Parliament Place.. Call 758-4333days; 754 5077 nights.</p>
        <p>SPACE AVAILABLE for rent corner of 244 and Memorial Drive. 1,000 square feel. $300 month. 753-5007 for more details</p>
        <p>2 BEDROOMS- Furnished, good location. Available April 1st. 754-2702 or 830-0202 after 4 p.m.</p>
        <p>PICK UP A liHle extra money by selling used items in the classified section of this newspaper. Call 752 7117.</p>
        <p>1000 SQUARE FOOT OFFICE or retail space, 3004 E 10th Street. Call 750-2300 days.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>181</p>
        <p>Office Space For Rent</p>
        <p>Smll-Largt-fieasab. Call Joaat752 3n7.</p>
        <p>^PICE SPACE avallabla, one</p>
        <p>to five-room tultes, ample parking, itorage alto available. (919) 3^7443. Event Street Center &amp;amp;</p>
        <p>Public Storage, ISM S. Evans Street.</p>
        <p>184 Resort Property For Rent</p>
        <p>emralP'IlS?</p>
        <p>Real Ettate Co. Salat and rental. l aOO J72 2M4.</p>
        <p>MYRtLE EACH DAYS Ocean front condos: 1, 2, 3, bedrooms. 6 pools, [acuzrl. twalth spas and tennis. $37 a night up. 1-$00-I72M34 Smith Realty.</p>
        <p>185 Rooms For Rent</p>
        <p>PIRATES LANDING</p>
        <p>200W. Eighth Street -</p>
        <p>Private furnished rooms for rent. Utilities Included. Share bath and kitchen. REMCO EAST, 758 041.</p>
        <p>192 Roommate Wanted</p>
        <p>UmaCFIoOMATE Waili^ $150 per month. Very near cam put. Call 752-2998 anytime.</p>
        <p>MALE OR FEMALE Roomate wanted. 3 bedroom condo. Swim, tennis. Call 756 495, ask for Sandra or Bob or leave message.</p>
        <p>194 Wanted To Buy</p>
        <p>WANT TO BUY pine and hard wood timber. Pamlico Timber Company, Inc. 75-815, nights</p>
        <p>WANTED TO BUY Silver colnsT Will pay top dollar. Call 744 3550 after 4 p.m.</p>
        <p>CUSSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>^1,000 Down Cash Or Trade</p>
        <p>Open Easter Monday 9 a.m. - 9 p.m.</p>
        <p>Sale storts Friday, April 1 at 5 p.m. &amp;amp; ends Tuesday, April 5 at 9 p.m.</p>
        <p>per month &amp;amp; LESS1988 Jeep Comanche3 to choose from!249</p>
        <p>per month &amp;amp; LESS1988 Volvo 244 Sedans &amp;amp; 245 Wagons11 Volvos to choose from!$299per month &amp;amp; LESS</p>
        <p>1988 Volvo 740*744 Turbos *745 Wogons10 to Choose from!349per month &amp;amp; LESS</p>
        <p>1988 Jeep Cherokees Pioneers*Laredos*Uiirite&amp;lt;ls</p>
        <p>10 to choose from!</p>
        <p>BMW 325s</p>
        <p>3 to choose from I</p>
        <p>per month &amp;amp; LESS1988 BMW 325C Convertible3 to choose from!$499</p>
        <p>per month &amp;amp; LESS1988 BMW 528e4 to choose from!799per month &amp;amp; LESS</p>
        <p>Drive The Ultimate.BMW 735i</p>
        <p>A</p>
        <p>or</p>
        <pb facs="00096894_0020" />
        <p>B-10 The Dally Reflectoi, Greenvllle, N.C.</p>
        <p>Morwiw.ApriU, 1988IRA Snubs Cease-Fire; Protestants Begin Marching</p>
        <p>By EDITH M.LEDERER Associated Press Writer BELFAST, Northern Ireland (AP)  The Irish Reiwblican Army dashed any hopes of a cease-fire by vowing to renew guerrilla attacks on British security forces until it saps the political will of the British government.</p>
        <p>The IRA statement was read aloud Sunday as thousands of Roman Catholics attended a dozen marches commemorating the 1916 Easter Rising against British rule in what is now the Republic of Ireland.</p>
        <p>Protestants launch their marching season today when the fiercely pro-British Apprentice Boys commemorate iPtotestant resistance to the 1689 siege of Londonderry ordered by Catholic King James II.</p>
        <p>Austin Currie, a prominent leader of the Social Democratic and Labor Party, expressed hope Sunday that ^talk**  his  moderate Catholic</p>
        <p>party and Sinn Fein, the legal political wit^ of the outlawed IRA, would lead to a permanent end of military and violent activity.</p>
        <p>In an Irish Radio interview, Currie said draft documents were exchanged at the March 23 Sinn Fein-Social Democratic and Labor Party meeting which could lead to a roundtable conference that would also include Protestant parties and the Irish government.</p>
        <p>' But Martin McGuinness, vice president of Sinn Fein, told a 5,000-strong crowd at Milltown Cemetery in Belfast that cease-fires werent even discussed at the talks.</p>
        <p>The IRA position on cease-fires has been on record for a long time: No more cease-fires, he said, talk (can) take place but the war will go on.</p>
        <p>Sinn Fein leader Gerry Adams told 1,500 people at a march in Lon-</p>
        <p>Jailed Soldiers Reported Missing</p>
        <p>By ROBERT H. REID Associated Press Writer</p>
        <p>MANILA, Philippines (AP) -Four more soldiers jailed in plots against President Corazon Aquino were missing following the weekend escape of the leader of an August coup attempt, the military said to-da</p>
        <p>Chief military spokesman Col. Oscar Florendo also denied that troops had raided a vacation home of opposition Sen. Juan Ponce Enrile in connection with the nationwide search for former Lt. Col. Gregorio Gringo Honasan.</p>
        <p>Honasan, 39, leader of the Aug. 28 coup attempt, and 14 guards fled a prison ship in Manila Bay before dawn Saturday aboard two rubber dinghies. He had been confined there since his arrest Dec. 9 for the attempted coup that left at least 53 people dead and hundreds wounded.</p>
        <p>Florendo said three officers and one enlisted man jailed in connection with the August attempt and another in January 1987 were missing from the detention center at Villamor Air Base.</p>
        <p>Florendo claimed, however, the four apparently fled because of family problems and their escape was not related to the Honasan incident.</p>
        <p>An earlier report by a Manila newspaper, citing an unidentified air force officer, put the figure at nine soldiers who had escaped.</p>
        <p>Military officials said earlier that troops Sunday raided Emiles vacation house in Batangas province, southwest of Manila, as ^rt of a search of a seaside vacation resort. But Florendo denied Enriles house had been raided.</p>
        <p>Enrile told a radio station today he had heard of the raid and charged the government was acting illegally by entering homes without search warrants.</p>
        <p>Honasan served as chief of security at the Ministry of National Defense when Enrile was defense chief. Enrile was fired in November 1986, after an alleged coup attempt by his followers.</p>
        <p>Manila newspapers have reported that leaflets were circulating in military camps calling for the overthrow of the government. The leaflets allegedly were from Honasans Reform the Armed Forces Movement, the papers said.</p>
        <p>Florendo said a nationwide search was under way for Honasan but that raids so far had failed because either we were too late or perhaps the information was not so accurate.</p>
        <p>Defense Secretary Fidel Ramos today told reporters the military was investigating all angles of the incident, including alleged foreign intervention in the escape of Honasan. Ramos did not elaborate.</p>
        <p>Leftist Rep. Venancio Garduce has charged that Americans may have helped Honasan escape to pressure the government as it begins talks with the United States this week on the status of U.S. military bases in the Philippines.</p>
        <p>Presidential sources, speaking on condition of anonymity, said Mrs. Aquino had demanded a full-scale investigation into the Honasan escape because she did not believe it was sMy a result of negligence.</p>
        <p>Tne skipper of the prison ship was arrested ^turday, but the sources said Mrs. Aquino believed others in the chain of command should be punished.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Aquino told a student group on Sunday that her government was stable enough to withstand any new coup attempt and that Honasans escape does not in any way discourage us in what we set out to do.</p>
        <p>The government has survived about six major coup attempts and conspiracies since Mrs. Aquino took office on Feb. 25,1966.</p>
        <p>Investigators said Honasan and the others fled the prison ship aboard rubber din^ies and came ashore near the Folk Arts Center, a few hundred yards from the headquarters of the Philippine navy, tiiey then boarded seven cars which had been waiting for them, investigators said.</p>
        <p>Officials said Honasan left behind a note when he fled the ship saying he was escaping because the struggle for a better AFP (Armed Forces of the Philippines) must go on. Honasan played a key role in the Feb. 22,1986, civilian-military uprising that toppled President Ferdinand Marcos and brought Mrs. Aquino to power.</p>
        <p>donderry, the provinces second largest city, that the talks with the Social Democratic and Labor Party are about exploring whether there can be an agreement in principle to an overall strategy for justice and peace.</p>
        <p>However, he said the two parties were far apart in the talks.</p>
        <p>Adams and McGuinness said they strongly opposed any solution to the nearly 20 years of sectarian strife in Northern Ireland based on self-'ovemment for the province. The on-y solution, they insisted, is for Britain to pull out of the province where Protestants outnmber Catholics by 3-to-2.</p>
        <p>Let the British give us a declaration of intent to withdraw and the fighting will stop, McGuinness said.</p>
        <p>If Bntain refuses to leave, the IRA statement said, it will have a price to pay... a price so overwhelming as to force them to withdraw and leave us in peace... We have a message for the British government, the IRA said.</p>
        <p>We will demoralize you. We will make your six counties (of Northern Ireland) into a millstone which will strangle you.</p>
        <p>We will eventually defeat^ you. Our strategv is clear. It is to sap the political will of the British government and British people to remain in Ireland. The means are by limited iiuerrilla warfare against' crown orces.</p>
        <p>In the Creggan area of Lon-, donderry, security forces on Sunday defused a bomb that the IRA said in a statement to Belfast media it planted but decided not to detonate when an army patrol passed because children were in the area.</p>
        <p>There was a heavy police and army presence at all the marches as security forces abandoned their shortlived policy of staying away from events attended by IRA sympathizers.</p>
        <p>The Sinn Fein march through west Belfast was led and tailed by ar</p>
        <p>mored police Land Rovers with soldiers riding shotgun, their rifles cocked. Police followed the marchers into Milltown Cemetery and encircled them, with a number of soldiers hiding behind tombstones.</p>
        <p>The Milltown ceremony took place 25 yards from the spot where a Pro</p>
        <p>testant extremist killed three people at an unpoliced IRA funeral on March 16.</p>
        <p>The no-policing policy ended after two British soldiers who drove into an IRA funeral on March 19 were dragged from their car and killed by the IRA.</p>
        <p>SjjiF</p>
        <p>ORDINARY QUARRELERS - Prince Charles and Princess Diana have ordinary marital quarrels, but then have to pretend in public that all is going well, Dianas father, Earl Spencer, was quoted as saying Sun</p>
        <p>day. In an interview with Womans Own, a London magazine, the earl was also quoted as saying Diana, who has ' two sons, William, 5, and Harry, 3, wants a larger family perhaps five children. (AP Laserphoto)</p>
        <p>NowNCNB's</p>
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        <p>LineQne Equiqr Advantage&amp;amp;</p>
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        <p>NCNB National Bank. Member FDIC. (at Equal Housing Lender.</p>
        <pb facs="00096894_0021" />
        <pb facs="00096894_0022" />
        <p>^9lyW99lY</p>
        <p>Brands</p>
        <p>pfwdueh</p>
        <p>hfiSaMaciim Oi (ftm ClmiMj ietuuht</p>
        <p>1.1 9oll</p>
        <p>^igglv V\/iggiy</p>
        <p>BATHROOM</p>
        <p>TISSUE</p>
        <p>69^</p>
        <p>32 Oz.</p>
        <p>i^iggly Wlggly</p>
        <p>TOMATO X AA KETCHUP Oy V</p>
        <p>64 Oz.  Piggly Wiggly</p>
        <p>APPLE</p>
        <p>JUICE</p>
        <p>89</p>
        <pb facs="00096894_0023" />
        <pb facs="00096894_0024" />
        <p>9SlyWi99ly</p>
        <p>Whole Smoked</p>
        <p>PICNIC HAMS</p>
        <p>69</p>
        <p>l.b.</p>
        <p>Lundy'S Quarter Loin</p>
        <p>PORK CHOPS</p>
        <p>Lb.</p>
        <p>Lundy's</p>
        <p>BACON</p>
        <p>1 Lb Pkg.</p>
        <pb facs="00096894_0025" />
        <p>U.S.D.A. SELECTED WESTERN BEEF</p>
        <p>9-12 Lb. Average</p>
        <p>WHOLE Rl BEYES</p>
        <p>U.S.D.A. Selected</p>
        <p>RIBEYE</p>
        <p>STEAKS</p>
        <p>yiM'i O'tujind Sufe/i %ci/ihdi^</p>
        <p>Bucket Pork</p>
        <p>CHIHERLINGS</p>
        <p>Pail</p>
        <p>LARD25L........</p>
        <p>10 Lb.</p>
        <p>/</p>
        <p>10 Lb</p>
        <p>Lundy's Bucket</p>
        <p>SAUSAGE</p>
        <p>Old Hickory</p>
        <p>BARBEQUE ub Cup</p>
        <p>Alphin Brothers</p>
        <p>BEEF PAHIES</p>
        <p>5 Lb. Box</p>
        <p>$750</p>
        <p>$&amp;lt;| 79</p>
        <p>$399</p>
        <p>Lundy'S Hot Or Mild</p>
        <p>SAUSAGE</p>
        <p>ILbPkg.</p>
        <p>Frosty Morn</p>
        <p>MEAT</p>
        <p>FRANKS</p>
        <p>89</p>
        <p>120z.PkQ.</p>
        <p>lun^eon</p>
        <p> s|9</p>
        <p>Frosty Morrr Meat Or</p>
        <p>BEEF</p>
        <p>BOLOGNA</p>
        <p>39</p>
        <p>1 Lb. Pkg.</p>
        <p>FAMILY</p>
        <p>PACK</p>
        <p>Lundy's Fresh Pork</p>
        <p>NECKBONES or PIG FEET</p>
        <p>Lb.</p>
        <p>^'0</p>
        <p>Frosty Morn</p>
        <p>BACON</p>
        <p>99l</p>
        <p>1202 Pkg</p>
        <pb facs="00096894_0026" />
        <p>99lyffi99ly</p>
        <p>Dairy &amp;amp; Frozen</p>
        <p>12 02. Piggly Wiggly</p>
        <p>SINGLES</p>
        <p>CHEESE</p>
        <p>$^19</p>
        <p>1 Lb.</p>
        <p>IMPERIAL</p>
        <p>MARGARINE</p>
        <p>2 Lb, Golden Best Crinkle Cut</p>
        <p>FRENCH</p>
        <p>FRIES</p>
        <p>2 FOR 00</p>
        <p>1 Lb. Piggly Wiggly</p>
        <p>GOLDEN</p>
        <p>MARGARINE</p>
        <p>64 Oz. Kraft</p>
        <p>ORANGE</p>
        <p>JUICE</p>
        <p>$429</p>
        <p>8 Oz. Piggly Wiggly</p>
        <p>CREAM</p>
        <p>98^</p>
        <p>^2 Gal. Piggly Wiggly Or Velvet</p>
        <p>ICE</p>
        <p>CREAM</p>
        <p>4 Ears Piggly Wiggly</p>
        <p>CORN On The COB</p>
        <p>16 Oz. Piggly Wiggly</p>
        <p>SLICED</p>
        <p>STRAWBERRIES</p>
        <p>09</p>
        <p>4 Pack Piggly Wiggly</p>
        <p>BUHERMILK</p>
        <p>BISCUITS</p>
        <p>3 Lb. Shedds Spread COUNTRY CROCK MARGARINE</p>
        <p>24 02. Piggly Wiggly</p>
        <p>LOAF</p>
        <p>BREAD</p>
        <p>2 FOR</p>
        <p>89</p>
        <p>16 Oz. Breakstone</p>
        <p>SOUR CREAM</p>
        <p>8 Oz. Breakstone</p>
        <p>DIPS</p>
        <p>Bacon &amp;amp; Onion, Clam, Or Jalapeno Cheddar</p>
        <p>79^</p>
        <p>8 Oz. Piggly Wiggly</p>
        <p>WHIPPED</p>
        <p>TOPPING</p>
        <p>16 Oz. Piggly Wiggly CUT Or WHOLE OKRA</p>
        <p>999</p>
        <pb facs="00096894_0027" />
        <p>c^ohnson wax TOTALLY MINNIE OOLL OFFER</p>
        <p>5. Submit a check or money order lor S&amp;gt; 95 (including Si 00 postage and handling made payable to Johnson Wax Totolly Minnie Ooli Offer</p>
        <p>2. Circle the purchase prices on your original dated cash register receipKs) Fleceipl(s) must be dated between 1/11 /88 and 6/20/88</p>
        <p>6 Please print your complete name ano address (including zip code on the order to'm below</p>
        <p>3. Write the UPC number' (rom each item purchased next to the corresponding circled price</p>
        <p>7. Mail the completed order form, correct prools o( purchase and check or money orde' to. Johnson Wax Tolally Minnie Doi' Offer PO Box 7745</p>
        <p>Ml Prospect. Illinois 60056-7745</p>
        <p>'UPC Number</p>
        <p>4. In addition, for Future, dampen and remove UPC symbol from front label and (or Glaoe H cu( out proof of purchase seal from cardboard package and submit as proof of purchase</p>
        <p>NMI  __  '  ^</p>
        <p>f rmt* am r#d *0  j*.  ,</p>
        <p>16 Oz. Brite</p>
        <p>FLOOR</p>
        <p>16 Oz. Shout Aerosol</p>
        <p>14 Oz. Pledge</p>
        <p>$4 49 furniture**, stain</p>
        <p>I POIISH *2 REMOVER</p>
        <p>22 Oz.* Shout Liquid</p>
        <p>7 Oz. Glade</p>
        <p>27 Oz. Future</p>
        <p>FLOOR</p>
        <p>WAX...</p>
        <p>79 ^I^OSOL</p>
        <p>24 Oz. Kellogg's</p>
        <p>CORN FLAKES</p>
        <p>$^89</p>
        <p>$039  $4  69  SOLID</p>
        <p>REMOVER /I</p>
        <p>DEODORIZER</p>
        <p>lOz. Glade II</p>
        <p>999</p>
        <p>DEODORIZER</p>
        <p>7 Oz. MItchum</p>
        <p>POTATO CHfPS</p>
        <p>IV ONE, GI.ONE</p>
        <p>Reg. Or Chewy Cfh</p>
        <p>hips Ahoy!</p>
        <p>COOKIES</p>
        <p>160z. Rifz</p>
        <p>CRACKERS</p>
        <p>Nabisco All Flavors</p>
        <p>NEWTONS</p>
        <pb facs="00096894_0028" />
        <p>20 Lb.</p>
        <p>WHITE</p>
        <p>POTATOES</p>
        <p>$^89</p>
        <p>Bag</p>
        <p>Ripe</p>
        <p>JUICY</p>
        <p>CANTALOUPE</p>
        <p>99</p>
        <p>Vine Ripe</p>
        <p>RED</p>
        <p>TOMATOES</p>
        <p>599</p>
        <p>Lb.</p>
        <p>Waxed</p>
        <p>RUTABAGAS</p>
        <p>4forH</p>
        <p>Fresh</p>
        <p>GREEN</p>
        <p>COLLARDS</p>
        <p>3lb^H</p>
        <p>Washington State Extra Fancy Red Delicious</p>
        <p>AFfUS</p>
        <p>$^29</p>
        <p>3 Lb. Bag</p>
        <p>Juicy</p>
        <p>RED OR WHITE GRAPES</p>
        <p>999</p>
        <p>Lb.</p>
        <p>All Flavors</p>
        <p>BIG HUG DRINKS</p>
        <p>5forH</p>
        <p>16 Oz.</p>
        <p>Jl</p>
      </div>
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</TEI>