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        <p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
        <pb facs="00096518_0001" />
        <p>THE DAILY</p>
        <p>REFLECTOR</p>
        <p>Greenville, N.C. Sunday, January 18,1987</p>
        <p>Accent</p>
        <p>Weddings Engagements Arts/Entertainment</p>
        <p>NOVELTY SWEATERS - Patsy Denson, left, and Joanna Huggins discuss several sweater designs created by Ms. Huggins. Mrs. Denson teaches crocheting</p>
        <p>and Ms. Huggins teaches knitting through Greenville Recreation and Parks.</p>
        <p>PLANT HEALTH  Sam Uzzell, agriculture extension agent, advises evaluating plants and yards now to determine needs for the upcoming spring and summer months.</p>
        <p>Start New Year With Projects</p>
        <p>The beginning of a new year brings new resolutions and ideas for new projects.</p>
        <p>The Library of Congress Center for the Book has designated 1987 as The Year of the Reader.</p>
        <p>The theme celebrated reading and calls attention to the efforts of many organizations that are combating illiteracy and aliteracy, and encouraging the reading habit. The</p>
        <p>center is hoping that the act of reading will be restored to a place of preeminence in our personal lives and in tbe life of our nation, said Julie Hicks, a librarian at Sheppard Memorial Library.</p>
        <p>A good New Years resolution might be to expand and broaden your knowledge by reading some of literatures classics or maybe a biography or two. Beyond pure enjoyment and</p>
        <p>fun, books can assist you in tackling that household repair job or renovation project, she said.</p>
        <p>If you are thinking about starting or reviving a hobby, January is National Hobby Month. Books are plentiful on the subjects of painting, ceramics, doll collecting model-building, sewing, knitting, crocheting, weaving and more, Mrs. Hicks said.</p>
        <p>NATIONAL HOBBY MONTH - January is National Hobby Month. Julie Hicks, left, and Meredith Foltz, librarians at Sheppard Memorial Library, show books</p>
        <p>suitable for a variety of hobbies or projects for the new year.</p>
        <p>January is also National Diet Month.</p>
        <p>Writing everybody we would like to see - renewing contacts with old friends is something to consider for the new year. said Sam Uzzell, agriculture extension agent.</p>
        <p>Find out whats necessary for better health and resolve to improve health habits," he said.</p>
        <p>Evaluate plant health in your yard. Take soil samples and Hnd out what lime and fertilizer are needed. You can plant or transplant shrubbery during January ami February. Plan now for spring and summer flower plant beds or plan for a better vegetable gardening experience, he said.</p>
        <p>Close foundation vents around your house during January and February, but remember to reopen them in March. Another good maintenance habit is check crawl space in your house for termites, excess moisture or wood decay. For those with wood stoves, check for cresote build-up and clean your flue if needed," Uzzell said.</p>
        <p>Etsil Mason, director of volunteer services at Pitt County Memorial Hospital, is planning future activities.</p>
        <p>As the hospital grows, so do the number of volunteers and the scope of their services. 1987 holds much promise for continued growth and expanded services. A few of our plans still in the development stage including a telephone call service for latchkey children. Since a growing majority of families in our community are th(e with both parents at work, we feel that this service is especially needed. It will offer security to the children and comfort for their parents. she said.</p>
        <p>Another service on the horizon is aimed at the terminal patient. We would like to offer those patients an opportunity to leave a special memory for their loved ones via a special tape or still photograph. This woidd be done by professionals and at no cost to the patient. Ms. Mason said</p>
        <p>Plans for another exciting project is to offer mini courses in painting.</p>
        <p>Text And Photos By Rosalie Trotman</p>
        <p>crafts and other subjects to our patients via our in-house TV Station, Channel 6. The courses would be taught by professionals. There would be free except for certain supplies that would be made available at cost, she said.</p>
        <p>We, of course, will continue our many other services such as toiletry kits for the needy, car seat rentals, art shows, weekly televised games, TV guide books and free patient library. The need for new volunteers is ever present. We hope to recruit more of our older citizens for service as their lifetime of skills and experiences is invaluable in a hospital setting, she said.</p>
        <p>The citizens of Pitt County and surrounding counties will have the pleasure of attending EXPO 87 in April at the New Greenville Warehouse. The show will promote the businesses of Greenville and Pitt County." said Ed Walker, president of the Pitt-Greenville Chamber of Commerce.</p>
        <p>The chamber is in the process of planning a brochure of Things To Do and See in Greenville It will promote River Park North, the upcoming planetarium, the Village of Yesterday, Greenville Mu.seum of Art and others. Career Day has been scheduled for February at the Willis Building with approximately 20 occupations being presented to the seventh and eighth grades throughout the county.</p>
        <p>RECAST (Regional Eastern Carolina Affirmative Student Training) a school club for minorities and females with interest in science and math is underway. Programs in engineering and computers are scheduled for this month The RECAST Conference will tx? held in Roanoke Rapids in March</p>
        <p>The Town and Country ,S&amp;lt;*nior Citizens Club has just finished a busy</p>
        <p>1986 by wrapping gifts at Carolina East Mall, our seventh year with that activitiy. Now we start 1987 and we try to keep involved in several projects, said Sarah Ashton, president of the group.</p>
        <p>K group ot as membm tpenl two hours of volunteer work on Wednesday at the East Carolina University Medical School with students. Several times throughout the year, members will be simulated patients at the medical school.</p>
        <p>The March of Dimes is one of our favorite projects. We help them in a variety of ways from holding bake sales to serving on their board. Trips will be planned for the spring. Ript now we are talking of a several days trip to the Amish Country and Her-shey. Pa. Day trips will be planned as well, said Mrs. Ashton.</p>
        <p>We try to help on community projects when requested. Occasionally the Council on Aging asks for our help. On some community projects, we work as a group, while on others, we work individually. Along with volunteer work and practicing for Senior Games, we are busy working on arts and crafts for our silent auction, she said.</p>
        <p>Greenville City Manager Gail B. Meeks said. The beginning of a new year is an excellent opportunity to reflect upon the pst and plan for the future, consider the new year a beginning and like many others I go through the process of deciding what I want to improve upon in the upcoming year</p>
        <p>With my busy work schedule, it is easy to lose sight of the truly important things in life such as family and friends So, in 1987, I plan to spend more time with my husband, my family and friends and to be more thoughtful and considerate of them. I</p>
        <p>(Please turn to Page C-4)</p>
        <p>Understanding The Fear Of People</p>
        <p>By SANDY ROVNER</p>
        <p>L.A. Times-Washington Post News Services</p>
        <p>He was alwavs shy, especially with women. When he asked a woman out, it was only after mustering all his courage. Once he took a woman to a restaurant and choked on a piece of food. Because he gave the incident vastly more weight than it deserved, his humiliation was complete. As far as he was concerned, the relationship ended then and there.</p>
        <p>After that, when he went out on a date he would go to the movies, to a concert, but never to a restaurant. He might invite the date to his apartment and cook dinner for her. lilis allowed him to stick to foods he felt more comfortable with - mashed potatoes, vegetables or fish stews.</p>
        <p>In the end, he became so preoc-cupied with this he could only eat baby foods. Painfully and reluctantly, he remained alone.</p>
        <p>This man, says Dr. Thomas W. Uhde of the National Institute of</p>
        <p>Mental Health (NIMH), is a classic example of an individual suffering from social phobia. Its not that these people dont like to be around people, Uhde says. Theyre not reclusive or schizoid; on the contrary, they really want to be around people. But whenever they are they become very anxious  with an underlying fear that they will do something or say something that will be embarrassing or humiliating.</p>
        <p>On t(^ of that, says Uhde, these patients tend to overestimate the extent to which they have embarrassed themselves or attracted attention to themselves.</p>
        <p>The typical social phobic is afraid mainly of a single thing, such as eating in public, speaking or performing in ^blic, using a public rest room or writing a check in public (for fear their hand will tremble). The fear can be so irrational and uncontrollable that it can rule or ruin ones life  as with the man who ate only baby food.</p>
        <p>"Yet, says Uhde, these people arenormal thinking, functioning individuals, except in these discrete areas of anxiety.</p>
        <p>Uhde, who established and still heads the NIMH unit on anxiety and affwtive (mood) disorders, said social phobias have been ignored for years by American psychiatrists. They were considered a psychologically derived problem... best treated with psychological interventions or behavioral therapy, rarely seeing a psychiatrist, often not treated at all.</p>
        <p>Meanwhile, findings over the past decade that many panic disorders had large biological components led to new psychiatric interest in those disorders.</p>
        <p>However, Uhde and his colleagues noticed that some patients who presented themselves for treatment of panic disorders did not fit the classic panic mode.</p>
        <p>Patients came in "complaining of panic attacks, but their phobias were</p>
        <p>not the typical fears of tunnels, bridges, stores, driving-situations where escape is not immediately available. On the contrary, this smaller group of patients tended to be uncomfortable in situations where scrutiny of any type elicited tremendous anxiety.</p>
        <p>Most typical panic-disorder patients love to meet in groups and talk with others, Uhde said. You could throw a bunch of panic patients into a group and leave the therapist out and still most would benefit significantly. Such settings enhance their self-image because they can feel, Im not alone; Im not crazy; heres a bunch of other people I like ^nd enjoy who have the same problems  That can be tremendously helpful.</p>
        <p>But occasionally wed find a patient who would avoid that like the plague.</p>
        <p>Careful scrutiny of these patients indicated that they were having )anic attacks all right, but these may lave occurred only in social situa</p>
        <p>tions. The psychiatrists l)egan to realize that here was a subgroup of panic-disorder patients who were also social phobics.</p>
        <p>All this pointed to the theory that, in some cases at least, social phobia may be a form of panic disorder, and may have biological or genetic roots.</p>
        <p>The researchers have found that social phobics are a particularly heterogeneous group. .Some respond to medications extraordinarily well, Uhde said, and others do fx*t-ter with social skills or behavioral approaches. At NIMH, volunteer patients are being treated with various approaches to see which are most ef fective and to seek ways in which the patients may differ. Uhde believes nis trials are the first to compare behavioral, psychological and cognitive therapies to drug therapies</p>
        <p>Because there has been so little attention paid to the problem, there are no good estimates of how many people may be alflicted But he adds,</p>
        <p>Theres an awful lot of people out there suffering with this problem. More men than women suffer from social phobias, although panic disorders in general affect more women.</p>
        <p>Uhde and his colleagues are also continuing research on panic disorder itself, pursuing some new findings that tend to underscore the biological elements of the illness.</p>
        <p>Ongoing studies continue to confirm a relationship between panic disorders and caffeine. Panic attacks, for example, can be induced by caffeine intoxication.</p>
        <p>Even newer studies have shown that at least 75 percent of patients with panic disorders may experience nocturnal panic attacks. These will often cau.se the victim to wake up with heart pounding and the all-to-familiar feelings of panic flooding their consciousness. Yet these have</p>
        <p>Please turn to Page C-5</p>
        <pb facs="00096518_0002" />
        <p>Candlelight Vows Performed Milan Fashions For</p>
        <p>Vanessa Ann Smith and Michael Ray Dixon were united in marriage Saturday at 3:30 p.m. in the Hopewell Pentecostal Holiness Church near Blackjack.</p>
        <p>The candlelight, double ring ceremony was performed by the Rev. Lottis Joyner of Aulander. A program of wedding music was performed by Timmy Smith, trumpeter, and Nancy Lancaster, pianist.</p>
        <p>James Williams and Jeanette Williams sang Through the Eyes of Love and To Me. Ms. Williams also sang The Wedding Song.</p>
        <p>The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jimmy Leo Smith Sr. of Grimesland, and the bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Kelly Crozer Dixon of Winterville.</p>
        <p>Given in marriage by her parents and escorted by her father, the bride wore a formal gown of white chan-tilly-type lace with a sweetheart neckline featuring Venise lace appliques, sequins and simulated pearl trim. The sheer puff sleeves featured chantilly-type lace, and the full skirt bordered with ruffles and lace, extended to form the chapel length train. She wore a walking length veil and blusher attached to a bridal tiara accented with venise lace and simulated pearls. She carried a cascade bouquet of white carnations, white miniature rosebuds, white daisies, miniature ivy with white ribbon and lace streamers.</p>
        <p>Michelle Shannon of Winterville, cousin of the bride, was maid of honor. She wore a formal gown of daphne rose polyester organza fashioned with a V-neckline. An inset cummerbund encircled the empire waist and skirt ended in a wide flounce. The gown featured a bustle</p>
        <p>that attached at the waist with a self-fabric rosebud. She carried a bouquet of pink roses, white carnations, pink and white daisies, and pink and white babys breath with pink ribbon and white lace streamers.</p>
        <p>Wendy Abbott of Kinston, cousin of the bride, and Cara Smith of Greenville, sister-in-law of the bride, were bridesmaids. Rachel Smith of Greenville, cousin of the bride, was junior bridesmaid. All wore identical gowns and carried similar bouquets to that of the maid of honor.</p>
        <p>The father of the bridegroom was best man, and ushers were Jimmy Leo Smith Jr. of Greenville, brother of the bride, and Kenneth Bland of Belvoir. Jeffrey Smith of Grimesland, brother of the bride, was the junior usher.</p>
        <p>The mother of the bride wore a mauve formal gown, and the mother of the bridegroom wore a royal blue formal gown. Each wore a corsage of white roses.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Bert Mercer and Mrs. Ross Johnson, grandmothers of the bride, and Mrs. Ollie Bullock, grandmother of the bridegroom, also were remembered with corsages of white roses.</p>
        <p>Millie Drake of Greenville directed the wedding, and Tammy Mercer, cousin of the bride, presided at the guest register. Programs were distributed by Ben Smith of Greenville, cousin of bride.</p>
        <p>A reception was given by the parents of the bride in the church fellowship hall. It was directed by Delores Davenport of Winterville and Janice Smith of Greenville, aunts of the bride. Aunts of the bridegroom, Barbara Williams and Peggy</p>
        <p>Men Have High Prices</p>
        <p>MRS. DIXON</p>
        <p>McPherson served cake and poured punch, respectively.</p>
        <p>Rice bags were distributed by Jay Davenport, cousin of the bride, and Joy Davis, niece of the bridegroom.</p>
        <p>Rehearsal refreshments were given by the parents of the bridegroom.</p>
        <p>The couple will live near Greenville.</p>
        <p>By RALPH DiGENNARO</p>
        <p>L.A. Times-Washington Post News Service</p>
        <p>MILAN - Snow has fallen so consistently in this city every January that it has become a regular part of the scene here, much like the shearling coats and rugged American hiking boots stylish Milanese wear to help brave the fluffy stuff.</p>
        <p>But even as nearly four inches blanketed the Italian fashion capital, the menswear showings that ended this week, previews of fall-winter 87, went on with nary a nod to the weather. They take their fashion seriously here, whether mens or womens, and considering the prices Italian mens clothes for next fall will fetch, American retailers have no recourse but to take it seriously as well.</p>
        <p>Kicking off the four days of showings was Valentinos new Oliver collection, ostensibly a lower-priced line. Unfortunately, the clothes  reportedly designed by Guido Pellegrini, a maverick free-lancer who already produces a collection under his own name  were more p^estrian than the prices, which are still high, with sport coats $350 and</p>
        <p>up.</p>
        <p>Immediately after the Oliver presentation, which was attended by Bianca Jagger in a black Valentino velvet bustier dress, Gianni Versace debuted hs couture collection of</p>
        <p>menswear that, according to the designer, is priced about 20 percent higher than his regular menswear.</p>
        <p>Considering that Versaces mens clothes command as much as $ 1,000 for a suit, $250 for certain shirts and $2,000-plus for leather coats, one can only guess how many mortgage payments the designers couture line will set a man back. All of which prompted one mens fashion director for a major New York department store to observ.e: The idea of a couture collection is ludicrous considering the prices of the regular line now. Who can possibly afford it?</p>
        <p>For those who can, Versaces couture look focuses on simple raglan-sleeve, broad-shouldered cashmere coats, both single- and double-breasted, and superbly cut four, six and even eight-button double-breasted suits in very English patterns such as widely spaced chalk stripes. Prince of Wales plaids, shepherds checks and nails head, all in wool, silk and cashmere flannel, worsted and sharkskin.</p>
        <p>Colors remained dark and monochromatic black, charcoal, oxford and pearl gray, indigo and taupe. And while Versace showed a few dress shirts and ties with these decidedly dressy if not sober ensembles, he preferred the surprising addition of a black or gray cashmere polo instead.</p>
        <p>Apart from his foray into mens</p>
        <p>Welcome Mat Shouldn't Be Out For Mother-in-Law</p>
        <p>Births</p>
        <p>DEAR ABBY: I just read your answer to "Getting Ulcers whose mother-in-law had moved in with one of her daughters for just a few months and stayed for eight years. And now she wants to visit her son for a few months. You said to let her come for a specified length of time, but it should be clearly understood by the mother-in-law that her stay will not be indefinite.</p>
        <p>Abby, please hurry to your telephone and call Getting Ulcers long distance AT MY EXPENSE and advise her to tell her mother-in-law that since thev have no guest room, they will be glad to rent her a room in a nearby motel, but under no circumstances should she let her move into their home for even one night!</p>
        <p>Surely, an able-bodied 65-year-old woman with no money problems can find some way to fill her time without moving in on her married children. Introduce her to a church group, urge her to do some kind of volunteer work, or join a senior citizens club. Invite her for dinner and take her out occasionally, but move in with you  never!</p>
        <p>Its a whole lot easier to refuse to let someone put his foot in your door than to get him out once hes in. -NO ULCERS IN GEORGIA</p>
        <p>DEAR NO ULCERS: My mail is running UNMo-l against my suggestion that mother-in-law come to visit only if its made clear in advance how long her stay would be. So. your "no fool in the door" advice was better than my foot-in-mouth suggestion.</p>
        <p>DEAR ABBY: I have to agree with you on one point regarding "recycled gifts. It IS the thought that counts. However, the gift-giver may be thinking. "How can 1 get by cheaply, and get rid of something I don't want*' (Such "thoughts  1 don't need.)</p>
        <p>Abby. you said. Don't look a gift horse in the mouth. 1 beg to differ with you there. One would be wise to look a gift horse in the mouth. An old horse costs a lot more to feed and care for. and mav not be worth keeping. - JANET IN DULUTH</p>
        <p>DEAR JANET: Mavbe so. But its</p>
        <p>Dear Abby</p>
        <p>By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN</p>
        <p>a lot easier to get rid of a white elephant than an old horse.</p>
        <p>DEAR ABBY: Something happened in our town recently, and I will not be able to sleep until I write this letter.</p>
        <p>Abby, please warn all women never to get into their cars at night without first walking all the way around the car and looking through the windows to be sure nobody is hiding inside.</p>
        <p>A woman had just left a restaurant alone and got into her car to drive home. One man had been hiding on the floor of her car in the back seat, and another man was hiding on the floor in the front seat on the passenger side. They forced her to get into the back seat, then drove her to a secluded area where they both raped her. Then they emptied her purse of all her cash, threw her out and drove away. (Her car w-as later found abandoned.)</p>
        <p>It a woman should suspect that someone is hiding in her car. she should get to the nearest phone and call the police. Robbery is bad enough, but rape is a horror no woman should ever experience.  STILL TREMBLING</p>
        <p>DE.AR STILL: Thank you for caring enough to write. Men should take this advice, too. Also, it need not be nighttime  such incidents have occurred in broad daylight. Locking ones car does not always ensure safety. Experienced thieves can get into locked cars easily  even in a parking lot or an indoor multilevel parking facility. Also, carry a flashlight and look underneath your car. Criminals have been known to hide there. Readers, take heed, and have a safer 1987!</p>
        <p>CONFIDENTIAL TO D.L. IN IOWA CITY: You speak so much of being good. Please define goodness. As G.K. Chesterton said: "The word 'good has many mean</p>
        <p>ings. For example, if a man were to shoot his grandmother at a range of 500 yards, I should call him a good shot, but not necessarily a good man.</p>
        <p>(To get Abbys booklet. "How to Write Letters for All Occasions. send a check or money order for $2.50 and a long, stamped (39 cents), self-addressed envelope to: Dear Abby, Letter Booklet, P.O. Box 447, Mount Morris, 111.61054.)</p>
        <p>School Offers Study Variety</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (AP) - Public officials, Broadway stars, scholars, media figures and experts in various fields will serve as instructors and guest lecturers at The New School's continuing education program this spring.</p>
        <p>Courses ranging from a festival of the films of Alfred Hitchcock to a weekend seminar on Albert Einstein are among the more than 2,(X)0 scheduled for the semester beginning inFebruarv.</p>
        <p>In North Carolina, 110 of every 1,C|00 teenage girls between the ages of 15 and 19 will get pregnant in 1987. Some 57.5 will give birth and 37.5 will have an abortion.</p>
        <p>Cox</p>
        <p>Born to Mr. and Mrs. Edward Allen Cox Sr., Winterville, a daughter, Lisa Jennifer, on Jan. 3,1987, in Pitt County Memorial Hospital.</p>
        <p>.McLawhorn</p>
        <p>Born to Mr. and Mrs. Robert Alton McLawhorn III, Route 1, Greenville, a daughter, Robyn Ann, on Jan. 4, 1987, in Pitt County Memorial Hospital.</p>
        <p>Rose</p>
        <p>Born to Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Timothy Rose, Route 3, Beechwood Estates, a son, Stephen Timothy, on Jan. 5,1987, in Pitt County Memorial Hospital.</p>
        <p>Freuler</p>
        <p>Bom to Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Thomas Freuler, Tarboro, a daughter, Elizabeth Danielle, on Jan. 5, 1987, in Pitt County Memorial Hospital.</p>
        <p>Shepherd</p>
        <p>Born to Mr. and Mrs. Ollie Van Shepherd. Robersonville, a son, Richard Earl, on Jan. 5,1987, in Pitt County Memorial Hospital.</p>
        <p>Nelson</p>
        <p>Born to Mr. and Mrs. Walter Roger Nelson, Stokes, a dau^ter, Kath^n Anne, on Jan. 5,1987, in Pitt County Memorial Hospital,</p>
        <p>McCray</p>
        <p>Born to Mr. and Mrs. David Shun McCray, 1700 S. Evans St., Apartment 2. a son. David Shun Jr., on Jan. 5.1987, in Pitt County Memorial Hospital.</p>
        <p>Sides</p>
        <p>Born to Mr. and Mrs. James William Sides, 107 Guinevere Lane, a daughter. Gale MacKenzie, on Jan. 6, 1987, in Pitt County Memorial Hospital.</p>
        <p>McKnight Born to Mr. and Mrs. Tommy Douglas McKnight, Roanoke Rapids, a son, Matthew Taylor, on Jan. 6, 1987, in Pitt County Memorial Hospital.</p>
        <p>couture, Versace also designed the costumes for the opera Sal()me, which opened last Sunday evening at Milans La Scala. In the small group the designer invited to opening night was Valentino, who sat next to Versace. An unusual scene, considering the fierce competition among Italian designers.</p>
        <p>A question on may American and European reporters minds early in the week was: Who is Cecilia Metheny? Since no one had herd of her and the name was obviously not Italian, her second showing in Milan  she debuted a collection for this spring here in July - Tuesday afternoon was well attended by the fashion press, who remained curious.</p>
        <p>Metheny - Kentucky-born and reared - designs menswear out of New York, including loungewear, sportswear, a small group of tailored jackets and trousers and accessories, all made in Italy of Italian fabrics. The line focused on softly constructed cashmere and baby alpaca blazers and shirting-weight suede jackets and luxurious printed-silk twill robes that would look right at home in Windsor Castle. Certainly unusual for an American to show in Milan, but fashion is always full of surprises.</p>
        <p>Public and private parking areas throughout the citv have designated spaces for handicapped citizens. Special dashboard permits and license plates may be purchased at the state license agency, 718 Dickinson Ave. Call 758-1193 for information.</p>
        <p>lU^ </p>
        <p>y TWICE IS NICEI ^</p>
        <p>SliM 0-12</p>
        <p>1716-2SW.SlhSL</p>
        <p>752-1722</p>
        <p>Mon.-Fri. 9:30-5:30 Sat. 10-5</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>I  "Nearly Net Children'* And</p>
        <p>L  Adult* Clothing. Shoe*. Fnmlture. J</p>
        <p>ifn Maternity. Toy*, on Con*igiunent.</p>
        <p> rln</p>
        <p>Annual Winter Sale</p>
        <p>40% Off</p>
        <p> All Fall and Winter Clothing</p>
        <p> Selected Jewelry and Accessories</p>
        <p> Some Spring and Summer Merchandise</p>
        <p>919 A Red Banks Rd.. 756-1058</p>
        <p>Open Mon.-Sat. 10 to 6. Thurs. 10 to 9</p>
        <p>I1ic.\iiicrfeiin (cin ol'thc</p>
        <p>I liked SCiitcs aiid (^iiuda</p>
        <p>Takes plea.sure in announcing the reappointment for lOiT of</p>
        <p>Charles S. Brown Jollys North Hills Of</p>
        <p>GreenviHe 325 Arlington Blvd. Greenville. N.C.</p>
        <p>as Certified Gemologist American (iem Society</p>
        <p>CHARLES S BROWN CERTIFIED &amp;lt;1?. GEMOLOGIST</p>
        <p>Tlii.s profcs.sional title Ls axxiirded to sekvt jeueler.s who have compleicd a formal gemological educ.ition, have successliilly p.Lssed rigorous examinations, and h.i\ e proxen that dieir business etliics are above reproach An AGS title ts an annual appointment and must be rewon by ye.irly examination.</p>
        <p>INTRODUCES THE 1987</p>
        <p>QUICK</p>
        <p>m</p>
        <p>PROGRAM.</p>
        <p>TfflS IS THE YEAR YOURE REALLY GOING TO DO IT!</p>
        <p>Don't just change your weight, change your life!</p>
        <p>With the healthy new 1987 Quick Start Plus Program, you'll lose more than pounds. Vbu'll lose the bad habits that kept the pounds there, year after year And you II gam more than good looks You II gam new confidence and self-respect Start with delicious menus and food choices, all nutritionally sound Add a new optional exercise plan Tailor It all to your own lifestyle.</p>
        <p>And top It off with the emotional support we all need</p>
        <p>Then, bye bye caterpillar, hello butterfly'</p>
        <p>CcJl</p>
        <p>Toll Free 1-800-662-7944</p>
        <p>WEIGHT WATCHERS anil QUICK START ar* r*Qist*r*d lr*d*m*rti of W*iyH1 W*tcH*f</p>
        <p>lnt*fTwl&amp;gt;on*l. Inc C IMTWwgMWi lm*m*tion*i. Inc All ngM* r***n*&amp;lt;</p>
        <pb facs="00096518_0003" />
        <p>Couple Marries Friday Evening</p>
        <p>CASA de CAMPO, Dominican Kepublic - Emily Rutledge Whitehurst and William Thomas Lewis, both of Greenville, N.C. were united in marriage Friday at 8 p m</p>
        <p>The bride is the daughter of Mr</p>
        <p> and Mrs. Charles McLawhorn Whitehurst of Ayden and Mr and Mrs. William Warren Bishop of Goldsboro. She is a graduate of</p>
        <p> Ayden-Grifton High School and is attending Pitt Community College.</p>
        <p>The bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Willie Ray Lewis of Winter-ville. He attended J.H. Rose High School and Pitt Community College He is part owner of Southeastern Exteriors.</p>
        <p>The bride, given in marriage by her parents, wore a white taffeta tea length gown with an illusion neckline trimmed with Venise lace and English netting. The fitted princess bodice was adorned with lace medallion trim. The shoulder cap and deep basque waistline were accented with beaded pearl fringe. The skirt was edged with lace medallion trim. She wore an Alfred Angelo headpiece of sheer illusion veiling with sed pearls and sequins. She carried a cascade bouquet of white and red roses with greenery and babys breath.</p>
        <p>Attendants were Conrad McLawhorn and Mary McLawhorn, bothofWinterville.</p>
        <p>A reception was held in the Resort Ballroom of Casa de Campo after the ceremony. A reception was to be given by the brides parents after the couples return.</p>
        <p>MRS. LEWIS</p>
        <p>Meeting Place</p>
        <p>MOND.W</p>
        <p>9:30 a.m.  Overeaters .'Vnonvmous meets at South Greenville Recreation Center</p>
        <p>12 noon  Alcoholics Anonymous meets at St. Pauls Episcopal Church 12 noon  Greenville Rotar\ Club meets at Rotary Building 12:30 p m.  Kiwanis of Greenville University Club meets at Holidav Inn 5:30 p m. - Greenville TOPS Club mt&amp;gt;ets at Planters Bank 6:;10 p.m.  Rotary Club meets 6:30 p.m.  Host Lion ciub meets at Holiday Inn 6:30 p.m.  Optimist (!lub meets at Three Steers 7:30 p.m - Woodmen of the World. Simpson Lodge, meets at Communitv Building</p>
        <p>7:00 p.m  Sweet Adelines. Eastern Carolina Chapter, meets at The Memorial Baptist Church 7:30 p m.  Greenville Barber Shop Chorus meets at Jaycee Park A(f ministrative Building 8:00 p m.  Overeaters .Anonymous step meeting at First Presbyterian Church. Harvey-Webb room. Elm Street 8:00 p m.  Lodge No. 88.S l.oyal Order of the Moose 8:00 p m. ^ Alcoholics Anonvmous closed discussion. AA Building, Farmville Highway</p>
        <p>8:01.1 p m.  Freedom Group of Narcotics .Anonymous open spt*aker meeting, Saine Pauls Episcopal Church. 401 E Fourth St</p>
        <p>TIESDW</p>
        <p>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 Claims Association meet at Three Steers 6:30 p.m.  Gre.nville Kiwanis Club meets at Riverside Steak Bar 7:00 pm - Post No :J9 ot American Legion meets at Post Home 7:30 p m - Toughlove Parents Support Group meets at Si Paul s Episcopal Church</p>
        <p>8:00 p m - Pitt Co Alcoholics Anonv mous mecis at A.A Building, Farmville Highway</p>
        <p>8:00 p.m. - Pitt Co. Al-Anon family group meets at St. James United Method ist Church. Call 758-1491 or 825-1982 8:00 p.m.  Surrender to Win Group of Narcotics Anonymous has open discussion at St. Pauls Episcopal Church</p>
        <p>WEDNESDAY</p>
        <p>9:30 a.m.  Duplicate bridge meets at Senior Center 10:00 a.m. - Pitt Golden K Kiwanis Club meets at Greenville Country Club 12 Noon  Overeaters Anonymous meets at Walter B Jones Rehabilitation Center</p>
        <p>1:30 p.m.  Duplicate bridge meets at Senior Center 6:30 p.m.  REAL Crisis Intervention Center meets 7:00 p.m  Greenville/Pitt County Youth Council meets at the Greenville Recreation and Parks Department, Cedar Lane.</p>
        <p>7:30 p m.  Winterville Jaycees meet at Jaycee Hut 8:00 p.m.  Narcotics Anonymous mid-week open meeting meets at St Pauls Episcopal Church 8 p.m,  New Beginning Womens Alcoholic Anonymous meets at Saint Pauls Episcopal Church.</p>
        <p>THURSDAY</p>
        <p>6 30 p m.  Javcees meet at Rotary Building</p>
        <p>6:30pm.  Exchange Club meets 7:00 p.m  Greenville Civitan Club meets at Three Steers 7:30 pm  Overeaters Anonymous meets at First Presbyterian Church 7:30 p.m.  Duplicate bridge meets at Senior Center 8 00 p.m.  Chapter 1308 of the Women of the Moose meets 8:00 p m. - VFW Auxiliary meets at Post Home 7-30 p.m.  Epilep.sy Association of North Carolina, Coastal Plains Chapter meets at Pitt County Mental Health Center</p>
        <p>8:00 p m - Aiateen, a meeting for children of alcoholics will meet in room 32 of First Presbyterian Church 8:00 pm Alcoholics Anonymous closed meeting at First Presbyterian Church</p>
        <p>The Estate Shop</p>
        <p>is</p>
        <p>BUYING</p>
        <p>ANTIQUE FURNITURE</p>
        <p>No upholstered please</p>
        <p>ANTIQUE GLASSWARE</p>
        <p>Cut glass, some pressed, etc</p>
        <p>ANTIQUE SILVER PLATE</p>
        <p>Trays. Services. Candle Sets, etc</p>
        <p>ANTIQUE ACCESSORIES</p>
        <p>Pictures. Mirrors, Figurines, Vases, etc</p>
        <p>ANTIQUE JEWELRY</p>
        <p>Rings, Bracelets. Pendants, etc</p>
        <p>MANY PATTERNS OF CHINA &amp;amp; CRYSTAL</p>
        <p>WINTAGE CLOTHING" must be in good</p>
        <p>condition from the 30s. 40s and 50s or older</p>
        <p>BEADED SWEATERS, BLOUSES, DRESSES, etc</p>
        <p>Please call for a personal, professional and CONFIDENTIAL appointment!</p>
        <p>HE ESTATE SHOP</p>
        <p>Cum it King Man Corner 4tfi 6, Evan S'reet Phun,</p>
        <p>KpdQctor, GteenvIHe, N.C.  Sunday, January 16,1987  Q.3</p>
        <p>Brody's "Must Go" Clearance</p>
        <p>The buyers are about to drive the rest of us at Brody's crazy. They say everything must go. We implore you to take advantage of the clearance frenzy. As panicky as they are, you can imagine the prices they're putting on things. Don't miss Brody's "Must Go" Clearance. You must come.</p>
        <p>Group Of Juni</p>
        <p>Fall And Holiday Blouses</p>
        <p>Holiday Groups Ot</p>
        <p>Esprit Sport And Santa Ciuz</p>
        <p>Luiye Giot'i Of Junior</p>
        <p>Fall And Holiday Tops</p>
        <p>Group 0*</p>
        <p>Fall Smart Parts Pants</p>
        <p>Up To</p>
        <p>60% off 30% off u 70% off 17.99 4*21.99</p>
        <p>^r.|', fit.,.,,. ,iih) fii.nt'.</p>
        <p>'r..K ,)';U M\.ri..-  I.</p>
        <p>Group Of Junior</p>
        <p>Fall And Holiday Sweaters</p>
        <p>Gioups 01 Junior foil</p>
        <p>Pants</p>
        <p>Up Tu</p>
        <p>60% off 50% off</p>
        <p>livJ ll'l</p>
        <p>Just recuced ojai'ii Glit;, tiot.dov sfvlus u",! fall</p>
        <p>Jur lOr</p>
        <p>Bengali Skirts</p>
        <p>ns.oo</p>
        <p>Key J6 00</p>
        <p>Group Ot Misbos</p>
        <p>Fall Cooidinates</p>
        <p>. 80% off</p>
        <p>kt 'tf Count., ji tuiiliirc 00 pi.. Cvi .iniK Pn .dhijI Duor.ff or\I</p>
        <p>Up To</p>
        <p>Groups Of Misses</p>
        <p>Fall And Holiday Sweaters</p>
        <p>50% off</p>
        <p>Oreupb 01 Mlbbi',</p>
        <p>Fall And Holiday, Blouses</p>
        <p>up lo</p>
        <p>40% off</p>
        <p>Gmup Of Misses</p>
        <p>Corduroy Skirts</p>
        <p>*15</p>
        <p>Key i'.B TKl</p>
        <p>. (douu Of Misses</p>
        <p>Bengali Skirts</p>
        <p>*21.99</p>
        <p>f-ey $36 00</p>
        <p>Gioup Of Misses</p>
        <p>up To</p>
        <p>Fall Pants</p>
        <p>40% off</p>
        <p>Lu ye Uioups si*</p>
        <p>Petite Foil And Holiday Sportswear</p>
        <p>li. CIoiIk) r I C.uile L if tie lie</p>
        <p>Up !c</p>
        <p>80% off</p>
        <p>Up</p>
        <p>Bettei Sportswear</p>
        <p>50% off</p>
        <p>Designer Glamour Dressing</p>
        <p>50% off</p>
        <p>Group Of</p>
        <p>Better Blouses</p>
        <p>Gru.'p at</p>
        <p>Bettei Sweaiei*^</p>
        <p>(.. I )i</p>
        <p>Foil Activewt.ji</p>
        <p>Coats And Pantcoats</p>
        <p>33V3% 50% off 50% off 33V3% off 33y3% 70% off</p>
        <p>Every Fall Suit</p>
        <p>L'V if. ' r'.,(j At .j I t.tr t .A.yr '</p>
        <p>All Weatlier Coats</p>
        <p>Rabbit Jackets</p>
        <p>All Fall D(esses</p>
        <p>50%-70% off 33V3% off 33V3% off 50% off</p>
        <p>T A-: r. f .0 p f\- s*,'"*,  ' V</p>
        <p>irq  s  s</p>
        <p>Warm Robes And Loungewear</p>
        <p>Sleepwear Clearance</p>
        <p>January Foundation Sale</p>
        <p>33y3%-50% off 25%-50% off 20%-25% off</p>
        <p>taryi' Od/pp O)</p>
        <p>Fashion Jewelry</p>
        <p>50% off</p>
        <p>t.jijo(J- d lou'</p>
        <p>J p.</p>
        <p>G'cup G Cole/</p>
        <p>Earrings</p>
        <p>Gropp or Napier Fashion jewelry</p>
        <p>.[ A</p>
        <p>Designer Fashion Earrings</p>
        <p>.up ''jl</p>
        <p>30%.50% off 50% off 50% off</p>
        <p>Fall And Holiday Belts</p>
        <p>25%-50% off</p>
        <p>h &amp;lt;';'j''/&amp;gt; 'ul  O*</p>
        <p>Children's Health Tex Children's OshKosh</p>
        <p>1 r t,'i ,f.,f . 01</p>
        <p>Girls' Esprit</p>
        <p>Fashion Pins</p>
        <p>25%-50% off 33% off 33% off 30%-50% off</p>
        <p>preteen</p>
        <p>Shaker Knit Sweaters</p>
        <p>krfi'e S'oc* 01 . Ctrildren's Svyeaters/Vests</p>
        <p>Girls'</p>
        <p>Skimps</p>
        <p>50% oH 30% off 30% oft</p>
        <p>5prit, /yriotb Wtiut. Cur dreb</p>
        <p>Juniors'</p>
        <p>Shoes</p>
        <p>*12.00.*18.00</p>
        <p>Peg J29 00-39 00</p>
        <p>Boots  . Handbogs</p>
        <p>25%-50% off 50% off</p>
        <p>Shop 10-9, Sunday 1-5:30</p>
        <p>i, *J-.  AV.r a'ra</p>
        <p>Group Ot Cnildren's</p>
        <p>Dress And Casual Shoes</p>
        <p>50% oft</p>
        <p>5, Ir  g  jat  ,</p>
        <p>  -X_</p>
        <p>Cr-'J-e'</p>
        <p>Peaks Aerobic Shoes</p>
        <p>*24.90</p>
        <p>Pe'i $31 r/j</p>
        <p>Carolina East Mall  The Pla/a</p>
        <pb facs="00096518_0004" />
        <p>Brides-Elect Plan Upcoming Wedding Dates</p>
        <p>HKKNDA I). HKDMOM) - is the daufihler of .Mamie liohinson of ffaltiinore. Md.. who announce her eiifiajiemenl to Jerr&amp;gt; I. Maniels. son of Mr. and Mrs. ( harlie Daniels Sr. of (ireenville. The hride-elecl is also the dauwhler of the late .fames Karl Kedinond. An April IH weddinti is be-in; planned.</p>
        <p>JKNMFKR JOH.VSON JONES -is the daughter of Dr. Donnie H. Jones Jr. of Route 2. Princeton, who announce her engagement to Robert Sterling Rippy, son of Dr. and .Mrs. William Dennis Rippy of Elon College. The bride-elect is also the daughter of the late .Mabel Johnson Jones. A March 7 wedding date is planned.</p>
        <p>EARI.IE MAE WASHINGTON -is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Elliot Powell of Rocky Mount, who announce her engagement to .Matthew .Morris Barnes, son of Dottie Lanier of Belhaven. A Feb. 14 wedding is planned.</p>
        <p>JANET BETH LLOYD - is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Earl Lloyd of Roanoke Rapids, who announce her engagement to Bobby Lane W est. son of Mable West of Havelock. The wedding is being planned for March 28.</p>
        <p>CINDY KAY BOYD - is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Dalmon Edison Boyd of Route 1, Bath, who announce her engagement to Steven Murray Warren, son of .Mr. and Mrs. Billy .N. W arren of Farmville. A June 6 w edding is being planned.</p>
        <p>Finishing School Has Different Curriculum</p>
        <p>EDITOR'S NOTE - Finishing school conjures up the image'd delicate young ladies in frilly dresses serving lea and gliding llirougli ballrooms. Hut at one such school in Switzerland, daughters of the well-to-do learn that running a househidd also requires a little elbow grease.</p>
        <p>By BRENDA W \TSO\ Associated Press W riter (LION, .Switzerland &amp;lt;APi High ill the .Swiss alps, in a turn of the century villa with a breathtaking view of Fake Geneva. Viviane .\eri is teaching young ladies how to funclion inliigti.siM.iety But unlike finishing school.s ol tf)'* f&amp;gt;ast, her curriculum in''lai o structions on such thing.-, a.-^ 'ito clean a toilet and run a c.icuum cleaner</p>
        <p>It helps keep them 'rom fa ium ing snobs," says Mrs N'eri, wiio has run the Villa Pierreleii Fiiu.slm'e .SchiMil since Ii72 ".Anyway you cant tram a servant to dosomettiing</p>
        <p>you</p>
        <p>U.</p>
        <p>yourself</p>
        <p>Mrs. Nen s eh'gani villa, m Hiis .small town above Montieu.x, is one of a handful ot finishing sctiool.-. in .Switzeriand</p>
        <p>In the earl&amp;gt; pari nl I tie ( 'enlurv Switzerland, wilh ils mans piiwiie schools for &amp;gt;oiiiig laduv , w..s the" place for the well-to do m Euro[ie and the United .Slat* s to send their daugh ters to learn European culture and I'lench</p>
        <p>But as tmistiing" has gone out nt</p>
        <p>fashion, many of those schools have introduced courses in typing, business and hotel management as well.</p>
        <p>.Mrs. Neri s school is considered the most traditional, offering only a rigorous finishing program, and is the most expensive, at $.30,000 for a one-year stay. Others average about $18,IKK).</p>
        <p>Students come from around the world, she says, because there really isnt another school like this." .Some scho)ls in England come close, she adds, liut they dont require fluency in French.</p>
        <p>Eini.'vhing schools were among Switzerlands many private schools ..111 universities that successfully loiif.;lil a proposed law this summer ih t would have sharply limited the &amp;gt;ta.  ' gu siiidcnts in the coun</p>
        <p>try</p>
        <p>The V ; ,1 Pierrefeu has room for 34 students and is full every year. This year s group includes primarily West Europeans and Latin Americans, with one American, several Australians and one Japanese.</p>
        <p>(our.ses include protocol, etiquette and savoir-vivre, or how to be at case m any situation, as well as French and English</p>
        <p>And its not the b(*d of roses some might think.</p>
        <p>"i iK'vei tel! tH'ople at home that I'm going to a finishing school Iwcause they think Im just going to lay oft in some jxish school and not do anything," says Rebecca, 18. from</p>
        <p>Starting New...</p>
        <p>also plan to s[)cnd mon* turn' domg activities that! enjoy Midi as reading and traveling Being mvolvtd in community work always loaves me with a sense of aecomphshmeni 1 hojH* ttiis year will atlurd me the op ^Mirtunity to be a better citi/cn ol Greenville by volunteermg lor more communityactivitie.s, .slu said</p>
        <p>Knitting novellv vests is out' of Joanna Huggins .laiiuaiy aelivities "The designs are geometne '^ueh as sijuares, diamonds, eircle'-. stripes or seasonal Most of uu designs aie bright, cheertiil itiiiicaii lie knitted in \V(M)I, aervlic, cotPm or mnellv yarns, she .said</p>
        <p>Mrs. Iluggms draws a design and knits it onto the tront and b.ick ol .i V neck sweater vest These sweaters make terrific gifts lui children, giaiuichildren, friends nr yourself any time ot Ihi' yivir. " slie .said</p>
        <p>She is teaching a cl.iss in knitting the sweaters through Illt tomimini ty College and Greenville Heereation and Parks</p>
        <p>(( oiiliioicd tiaiiu Paget - I)</p>
        <p>"The new y ear is here, bring wilh it cold tem|Matures what lK*tter tune to euii up in tront ol a tire with your latest crochet, knitting or needlework projeet Until recently crocheters took a hack seat to knitters who had an overwhelming iiiimtw'r ot stylish patterns from which to chose TiMlay, however, yarn manufactures and designers are answering the demand tor fashionable. classic, trendy looks with seasonal yarns,  said Patsy Denson, arts aiui crafts teacher with the Greenville Recreation and Parks Department</p>
        <p>^T^ancE /</p>
        <p>'/''i 1</p>
        <p>iti'i U*iv uli'iM</p>
        <p>,. On ' &amp;gt; .I'-./ f.</p>
        <p>. /. .n: n/'.in,</p>
        <p>(.'1 t&amp;gt; -h-l .,.1-1 .Ifut .It</p>
        <p>,( '-T.</p>
        <p>tuut l.t'l -&amp;gt;  Oi.O</p>
        <p> ytitw L</p>
        <p>I'lUU</p>
        <p>Lull</p>
        <p>74 ' ^</p>
        <p>INVENTORY REDUCTION SALE</p>
        <p>ALL</p>
        <p>MERCHANDISE</p>
        <p>STOREWIDE</p>
        <p>DISCOUNTED</p>
        <p>50%</p>
        <p>(Excluding Wired Lamps &amp;amp; Bases)</p>
        <p>MANDARIN ANTIQUes, LTD.</p>
        <p>81? Wesi Hin* Sltti. 8o 428. F*rmvili. N C 2W8 919-753-3324 Weievie 4 ReUT LocJieO 22 miies usi Highway 1-95 9 00-5 30 Mon -Sat</p>
        <p>Wichita, Kan Rs quite the opposite. We have to do everything."</p>
        <p>Students who were interviewed declined to give their last names to protect their privacy.</p>
        <p>Students at Villa Pierrefeu have 38 hours of classes a week. They make their own beds, clean their bathrooms and iron their own clothes. They prepare and serve meals for each other, with varying degrees of success.</p>
        <p>Cooking is not my forte," said Joline, 24, from Queensland, Australia, explaining that she had to remake a batch of flaky pastry because she mistakenly added 1'^ tablespoons, rather than teaspoons, of salt.</p>
        <p>A class on table decoration" one day found a group of young women studying what looked like a complicated civil engineering blueprint but was actually a diagram of how to fold a dinner napkin.</p>
        <p>At final exam time, the young ladies must prepare and host a banquet for two dozen people. -</p>
        <p>Mrs Neri does not find it surprising that parents pay large sums for their children to learn something they could probably learn at home.</p>
        <p>You dont always listen to your mother because shes been nagging you all your life," she says. You listen to your teacher because she has authority."</p>
        <p>Students say the school is worthwhile because of the emphasis on learning French, on mingling with other cultures, and on running an organized household. Many hope to eventually have high-powered jobs which will require a touch of worldliness.</p>
        <p>The young women are not dimwit-ted socialites, as mast people think," Mrs. Neri says.</p>
        <p>We had girls who went on to be journalists, bank managers, art dealers, restorers of antique books, and one even went to work in a field hospital in Colombia. Of course, some do just want to get married."</p>
        <p>Their parents are mobtly lawyers, doctors, executives.</p>
        <p>One girl's parents were</p>
        <p>farmers," Mrs. Neri says. "Okay, it was a very big farm, but still, they were farmers."</p>
        <p>The young women look and dress like young women an\-Mhere. with several exceptions. No blue jeans, no jogging suits, no ski pants and no contour-hugging knit " eggings" are permitted at Mrs. Neris school.</p>
        <p>The hours are strict - in by 7 p.m. weekdays. 9 p.m. Fridays and Sundays and 11 p.m. on Saturdays.</p>
        <p>The school has its share of discipline problems and one or two young women are expelled each year. But Mrs. Neri said there are very few" drug problems.</p>
        <p>While many outsiders think finishing schools are an anachronism, Mrs. Neri says Villa Pierrefeu has evolved to meet todays needs.</p>
        <p>We have a more realistic approach to social graces, one might almost say a more bourgeois approach," she says. You do talk about money management and about the cost of things, which just wasnt done before.</p>
        <p>It also teaches young women how to do things that have been done for them all their lives.</p>
        <p>One European girl didnt realize before she came here that a vacuum cleaner had to be plugged into a wall socket in order to function," Mrs. Neri says.</p>
        <p>Yearly Report Given Chapter</p>
        <p>Elizabeth Betts of Grifton, president of the Dr. Robert Williams chapter, CAR, reported on the chapters yearly activities at the Saturday meeting of the Major Benjamin May chapter, DAR.</p>
        <p>Highlights of the CAR accomplishments were sponsoring the state conference in Greenville, a June cookout when a study of Pitt County Indians was made, the fall cookout with a program by Mrs. Carl Betts on Heritage Skills" and the December meeting at the home of Mrs. R.T. Williams.</p>
        <p>Three members are state officers, Kelly Heizer, president; Elizabeth Betts, historian; and Jorja Heizer, librarian-curator.</p>
        <p>The following delegates were elected to the state conference to be held in Pinehurst March 9-11, Juanita Williams; Nancy Lewis; Rosalind Britt; Hazel Bass; Pat Carr, and Elizabeth Lang. Alternates are Joyce Williams; Ann Holland; Mary Irma Moore; Nancy Bradham; Inga Flake and Lottie Lewis. Juanita Williams and Neta Lee Riley were selected as delegates to the Continental Congress in April.</p>
        <p>Meeting hostesses were Mrs. Jack Spain; Mary Henry; Mrs. E.J. Carter, and Mrs. R L. Hellwig.</p>
        <p>Winter Clearance</p>
        <p>All Gowns and Robes</p>
        <p>25% off</p>
        <p>Sale DayS'Jan. 19th-23rd</p>
        <p>LorVs aS</p>
        <p>Carolina East Centre Hrs. M-Thurs &amp;amp; Sat 10-6 Fri 10-9</p>
        <p>iiigpMliWiPi</p>
        <p>Have a house you think will be hard to sell? Let US have a stab at it!</p>
        <p>We guarantee well get it sold!</p>
        <p>Call</p>
        <p>Bass Realty</p>
        <p>756-6666  2424 S. Charles Street</p>
        <p>CAPTURE CLEAN CARPETS</p>
        <p>For nia.xinuim life aiul por-lorniancc. the daily grinu ilc-positcd in your tarpots should be removed on a regular basis. Vacuuming and spot cleaning arc the firsl-line delenses against carpet harming embedded dirt and grit.</p>
        <p>To keep yoiir carpet tresb. bright and in good condition, periodic deep cleanings are necessary.  When vacuuming</p>
        <p>is not restoring the luster and gootl looks to your carpet, its time for Capture'eleaning.</p>
        <p>Capture* is a non toxic, dry absorbent themical tliat is vile and easy tor home use. When you use Capture.* there's no need to call in costly cleaning services or rent expensive appliances.  At Milliken Place</p>
        <p>we can proside you with economical  (apture* supplies</p>
        <p>and instructions.</p>
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        <pb facs="00096518_0005" />
        <p>Usage Of Own Blood</p>
        <p>The Dally Reflector, Greenville, N.C.</p>
        <p>Sunday. January 18,1987  C-5</p>
        <p>Is Gaining Acceptance</p>
        <p>Engagement Announced</p>
        <p>By SALLY SQUIRES</p>
        <p>L.A. Times-Washington Post Newsservice</p>
        <p>President Reagan donated a pint Of blood before having prostate surgery last week, he joined the growing number of Americans who set aside ineir own blow for use during an operation rather than</p>
        <p>Ainc I-  contracting hepatitis,</p>
        <p>AIDS or other diseases from contaminated blood donated by strangers.</p>
        <p>Known as autologous blood transfusions - from the Greek meamng related to self - the practice is increasing.</p>
        <p>Although autologous transfusions account for only about 1 percent of the estimated 14 million pints of blood transfused annually in the United States, the number of Wood banks offering patients the option of self-donated blood has more than doubled since 1980.</p>
        <p>And where autologous transfusions were once considered uniKual and unnecessary by the official medical commumty, today the American Red Cross, the Ameri-can Medical Association and the American Association of Blood Banks advocate the practice.</p>
        <p>Soine hospitals are actively promoting these selftransfusions as the safest way to receive blood, par-ticidarly in the face of the AIDS epidemic. The AABB predicts that use of self-blood transfusions will quintuple in the next few years.</p>
        <p>In addition, the more controversial practice of directed blood transfusions is also increasing. Directed donations are pints of blood drawn from a patients relatives, frienp, colleagues or neighbors and specifically designated for use by that particular patient.</p>
        <p>Proponents of directed donations believe that they are safer than blood from the general population because the donors are known to the patient. In fact, health officials caution, some studies show that directed donations may be no safer than blood donated from strangers.</p>
        <p>An absolutely safe blood supply is currently an unat-teinable goal, says Dr. Joseph Bove, chairman of the American Association of Blood Banks committee on transfusion-transmitted diseases.</p>
        <p>All blood used in the United States is now tested for the virus that causes AIDS, known as HTLV-3 or HIV. But studies show that current blood tests fail to detect one in 100,000 contaminated donors in the earliest months of infection. The tests fail because these infected people have not yet developed AIDS antibodies, which are identified by the blood tests.</p>
        <p>As a result, contaminated blood from about 80 to 120 donors (out of a total 8 million donors in the United States) slips into the blood supply. Since pints of blood are divided between two or three recipients, about 120 to 160 people a year may receive the contaminated blood.</p>
        <p>As a result, a National Institutes of Health panel last summer concluded that there is still room for improvement in screening the blood supply.</p>
        <p>The risk of AIDS, though frightening, is still less than even the slight risk of dying from general anesthesia or of being killed in a car accident.</p>
        <p>A much more common risk is contracting hepatitis from donated blood.</p>
        <p>No reliable tests exist today to detect 100 percent of the blood infected with different forms of the hepatitis virus. Each year, between 5 to 10 percent of blood recipients contract hepatitis from a transfusion.</p>
        <p>Autologous blood is the safest blood transfusion a patient can receive, said Dr. Panayiota Athanasiadou, chief of the blood bank at D.C. General Hospital here. They dont have to worry about transmission of infectious diseases, such as hepatitis, syphilis, CMV (cytomegalovirus, a member of the herpes virus family) or AIDS. Theres no risk of transfusion reaction and no</p>
        <p>risk of graft versus host reaction, a sometimes severe reaction between the blood of the donor and the recipient.</p>
        <p>Drawing autologous blood also stimulates blood production by the body, a response doctors consider beneficial for someone about to undergo surgery. And when a patient goes to the trouble of giving blood before</p>
        <p>surgery, doctors are inclined to use just that much blood and no more, said D.C. Generals Athanasiadou.</p>
        <p>As these new forms of transfusions have become more common, concern has grown that the increasing use of autologous and directed blood transfusions may diminish the blood supply in the United States.</p>
        <p>At this point, most experts say that should not be a problem. In fact, the practice may have a beneficial effect since autologous donations draw a new type of blood</p>
        <p>donor into the svstem. Many ill people who would otherwise be unsuitable donors for the general population are acceptable donors for themselves.</p>
        <p>If a patient has surgery and uses four units of his own blood, theres been absolutely no drain on the rest of the supply, said Dr. David Wilkinson, director of the division of clinical pathology at George Washington University Hospital.</p>
        <p>Good candidates include people facing such varied operations as clearing heart vessels, replacing heart valves, implanting hips or plastic surgery.</p>
        <p>Most autologous donations are drawn beginning about a month before surgery. One to four pints can be stockpiled for about 35 to 42 days. As much as one pint a week may be drawn up to 72 hours before surgery.</p>
        <p>In unusual cases, blood can also be frozen for up to three years, a practice used by some people with rare blood types. Other candidates for freezing blood are pregnant women with a history of past cesarean sections or with placenta previa - a condition where the placenta grows in the lower rather than the upper part of the womb. Expectant mothers are allowed to donate only in the second trimester, and must do so under careful medical supervision.</p>
        <p>All autologous transfusions and directed donations are typed and tested for AIDS and hepatitis. If the blood is not used by the autologous donor, as was the case with Presi-</p>
        <p>DEIDRE BETH DAVENPORT --is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William R. Davenport of Grifton, who announce her engagement to Jeffrey Wayne Fowler, son of Mr. and Mrs. Myron D. Crook of Charlotte. An April 11 wedding is being planned.</p>
        <p>MARILYN KAY BARFIELD - is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Owen Barfield of Greenville, who announce her engagement to John Darlowe Gray, son of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Gray of Chesapeake, Va. The wedding is planned for March 7.</p>
        <p>Understanding...</p>
        <p>dent Reagan, it could be placed in the general donor pool,</p>
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        <p>provided that it meets all the criteria for safe blood. Leftover blood from cancer patients may not, for example, be used for other people.</p>
        <p>Many hospitals and blood banks set aside a special area for storing autologous blood and directed donations, which can be costly. Others rely on the Red Cross to draw and store the blood, then must arrange for transportation</p>
        <p>(Continued from Page C-1)</p>
        <p>no relationship to nightmares or dreams.</p>
        <p>Sleep studies at NIMH have determined that these night attacks do not occur, as one might have luessed, during the sleep stage mown for dreaming - REM sleep.</p>
        <p>That, says Uhde, is a good indicator that these anxiety episodes have biological roots and are not associated with the stress and strains of the day because the imagery of those kinds of problems occur during dreaming.</p>
        <p>The nighttime attacks also support the biological explanation of panic attacks, Uhde says, by permitting</p>
        <p>of bias, because theyre not even dreaming.</p>
        <p>People interested in ongoing clinical trials for social phobias may phone Cheryl Shea at the National Institute of Mental Health, (301) 496-6657; for trials on panic disorders, phone (301) 4%-6825. Or write Dr. Thomas W. Uhde, Anxiety and Affec-tive Disorders Unit. NIMH, Bethesda, Md. 20892.</p>
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        <p>The price of autologous transfusions varies. In general a pint of blood in the Washington area costs $60 to $110. Giving autologous blood at the Washington Hospital Center, which has its own blood-drawing facility, saves patients $46.50 a pint. Other facilities, like George Washington University Medical Center, which relies on the Red Cross to draw blood, charge about 50 percent more per autologous pint. Freezing blood triples the cost. Directed donations are less widely accepted. Only half of the nations Red Cross Blood Centers will allow directed donations, and policies vary locally as well.</p>
        <p>Howard University here, for example, doesnt allow directed donations.</p>
        <p>torected donations. Its not a good practice, said Dr. Pongrac Jilly, director of clinical laboratories and the blood bank at Howard.</p>
        <p>In general, I think the blood donors are more reliable than family members, Jilly said. Relatives may be the last to know about another family members clandestine activities.</p>
        <p>outside influences.</p>
        <p>One of the controversies has been that because these are anxious people, there is an expectancy bias when you give challenges such as caffeine, even when these are done in scientifically controlled experiments. (Critics say that) anything that reproduces any disturbance of a physiological system could cause an overreaction in these patients simply because they are anxious to begin with.</p>
        <p>What is nifty about the nocturnal panic attacks, Uhde said, is that at night you eliminate that whole notion</p>
        <p>Other institutions, such as Childrens Hospital National Medical Center, the Washington Hospital (Jenter, Sibley</p>
        <p>Hospital and Suburban Hospital, advocate the practice.</p>
        <p>Ceramic tile can be installed by the do-it-yourselfer, but only over an absolutely smooth surface.</p>
        <p>Hamster Husband Out Of Time Sync</p>
        <p>At Wits ^End</p>
        <p>By ERMA BOMBECK</p>
        <p>post office and the shopping centers.</p>
        <p>of a life without</p>
        <p>All of us are born with body clocks.</p>
        <p>Those of us who are normal have alarms that go off at around 7 in the morning. We shower, breakfast, go to work and come home. We have dinner around 6 or 7, watch a little TV and are in bed by 11.</p>
        <p>There are some who were born with clocks that are out of sync. When their alarm goes off, they smash it against the wall and snarl, Dont tell me what to do, buddy, and disappear under the blankets. They shave and put clothes on only what shows, drag through the day and sleep during dinner and early evening. Around 11 they come to life and remain in this frenzied state of animation until 2 or 3 in the morning.</p>
        <p>Hamsters are like this. I am married to a hamster.</p>
        <p>It is something I would like to change in the name of compatibility, I take no pride in knowing my husband is on the same time cycle as our</p>
        <p>Where is the quality' shopping?</p>
        <p>He contends these places are boring and deserve to close.</p>
        <p>We have nothing to talk about. He has never seen Steve Bell give the news. I have never seen David Let-terman. He has never seen the man who delivers our morning paper. I have never seen the kitchen without lights. I have never known who won an election before I went to bed. If our children had not been born in the middle of the night, he would never know their sex today.</p>
        <p>Since I started to talk about the problem, I find there are a lot of couples who pass one another in the night. They are people who basically sit around watching one another sleep. How do we stay married so long? Well, theres only about 15 minutes out of the day when we are on the same time. By the time I tell my husband hes moving to a bigger house and he informs me the porch light bulb is burnt out and I tell him how the kids have grown and he tells</p>
        <p>me who had a big party in the neighborhood that lasted until 3 a.m.... it goes in a hurry. You have to hang around to see if it gets better.</p>
        <p>(c) 1987, Los Angeles Times Syndicate</p>
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        <p>I keep telling him he is a part of a</p>
        <p>limited world at night. The banks are cl(ed. So are his dentists office, the</p>
        <p>I must admit there are advantages and disadvantages of being married to someone who is nocturnal. Since we are a democratic family who make important decisions together, I make them at 7 in the morning when he is barely conscious. I decide we are going to move to a bigger house, buy a two-seater for a second car and go on a vacation cruise where the men have to dress for dinner every night.</p>
        <p>The disadvantage is driving around on a vacation with three kids in the back seat at 10 oclock at night and the hamster wants to go another 200 miles because hes fresh as a daisy.</p>
        <p>COUNTRY</p>
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        <pb facs="00096518_0006" />
        <p>C-6 The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.</p>
        <p>Sunday, January 18,1987</p>
        <p>A Happy Ending</p>
        <p>JOURNEYS EM)  Eight-year-old Carol Farmer of Savannah, Ga., hugs her dog Minnie after more than a years separation. (AP Laserphoto)</p>
        <p>Stress Positive For Siblings</p>
        <p>Prenatal educators have long recognized the importance of preparing older children for the birth of a new brother or sister. Much of a childs reaction to the new arrival depends on how parents have prepared him or her to become an older brother or sister.</p>
        <p>Rosemary Diulio, director of Parent Education at the Maternity Center Association in New York encourages parents to:</p>
        <p>Tell a pre-schooler what to expect about two to three months before birth. An observant child who notices mom putting on a few pounds may need to know sooner. Tie the due date to an event that the child is familiar with, such as "after Christmas. Expc'ct questions from your child about whats going on inside, but dont b(' concerned if questions arent asked. For many child, the new baby isnt real until it appears.</p>
        <p>Stress the positive and give your</p>
        <p>Patient Circle Has Founder's Day</p>
        <p>The Patient Circle of the Kings Daughters and Sons celebrated its Flounders Day at a meeting held last week. The international organization was started January. 13,188().</p>
        <p>Dr. Mary Lois Staton gave the report on student ministry. Emmanuel Vargas, a student at East Carolina University, will present the Bible Study at the February meeting which will be held at the home of Clara MoyeShackell.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Ralph (. Tucker, president, called for a report concerning the sitting room for Cypress Glen Retirement Home which will be furnished by the Patient Circle. The room will be furnished in a Williamsburg motif and will be the setting for the spring ribbon-cutting.</p>
        <p>Homemakers</p>
        <p>Haven</p>
        <p>By EVELYN SPANGLER</p>
        <p>child status by saying, Youre going to be a big brother or big sister.   Expose your child to other infants. Let him or her see a nursing mother, so it wont seem strange if you breastfeed.</p>
        <p>Allow your firstborn to help discuss the new babys name. Refer to the new arrival as ours. and let your child feel the baby kicking.</p>
        <p>An article in the May/June 1986 issue of The American Journal of Maternal/Child Nursing highlights a small-scale study done with 30 expectant mothers who were at least three days past their delivery date. Many of the mothers interviewed felt that the days between their anaticipated duedate and the actual delivery were an unbearable time. They felt the stress during this period had influenced their birthing experience as well as their feelings toward their babies. Many mothers wished that their health professionals had been more supportive during this time.</p>
        <p>Parents may not realize that only a very small number of women deliver on the exact day expected. About 40 percent will deliver within five days of expected date, two-thirds w ithin 10 days of the due date, and only four percent on the exact day designated.</p>
        <p>Parents-to-be should seek support</p>
        <p>from their health professionals. Fifty percent of the women interviewed found that professional intervention eased their concerns. Some of the methods that helped were to:</p>
        <p>discuss feelings.</p>
        <p>discuss time range of expected birth.</p>
        <p>do ultrasound or nonstress test.</p>
        <p>let mother listen to fetal heartbeat.</p>
        <p>discuss inducement of labor.</p>
        <p>According to those interviewed, the most helpful intervention was letting the mother listen to the fetal heartbeat. Analysis of the results showed that all interventions discussed were rated useful by at least half the mothers.</p>
        <p>Christian Women To Meet Tuesday</p>
        <p>A "fresh start luncheon will be held Tuesday by the Greenville Christian Womens Club at the Greenville Country Club.</p>
        <p>Kathy Roberson of Rocky Mount will speak on A New Beginning. A special feature will be given on cosmetics. Cordelia Deans of Farm-ville will present the music.</p>
        <p>For luncheon or nursery reservations call 752-5248 or 756-9158.</p>
        <p>The luncheon will start at 11:30 a.m.</p>
        <p>Museum Offers Glimpses Of Life In Another Era</p>
        <p>By DAVID BEARD Associated Press Writer</p>
        <p>LEXINGTON, Miss. (AP) - The cast-iron bell that once summoned Fannye Booker to the cotton fields stands at the entrance to the Booker-Thomas Museum, her personal tribute to those who toiled beside her and eventually fled the South.</p>
        <p>When everybody else went away, that left me here, says Mrs. Booker, a thin woman of 80 who established the unusual museum beside her home.</p>
        <p>Her collection of snuff bottles, sausage squeezers, muskets and other household items stands in contrast to the elegant trappings of life in the white mans mansions of the Old South.</p>
        <p>As she strolled through her museum early one recent morning, her gentle commentary connected the possessions with their former owners.</p>
        <p>Stopping at an iron walking stick, she explains, Thats a whiskey stick. The man that owned that was an old man and everybody thought he used it as a cane, but he was in business.</p>
        <p>She pulled off a cork top to show the canes hollow interior. He kept a shot glass in his pocket. He had the stick filled up with whiskey and sold it to people on the street.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Booker, a former teacher and owner of a Lexington boarding home for the elderly, started the museum in 1980 after a lifetime of collecting. More than 3,000 people have toured the one-floor building, excluding schoolchildren, she says.</p>
        <p>When I tell people I dont charge them, that I just do it for the enjoyment of it, they always go and fetch me something, she says.</p>
        <p>She got the idea for the museum when family members began moving out of Mississippi, to places like California, Colorado, Illinois and Ohio.</p>
        <p>I am from a large family and my husband was from a large family, says Mrs. Booker, whose maiden name was Fannye Thomas. When the big migration came, they left us their things. I couldnt just get rid of it.</p>
        <p>Her family was among the millions who left the South in search of jobs as increasing mechanization drove many from the farms. Census figures show nearly 3 million blacks left the South from 1940 to 1960.</p>
        <p>Births</p>
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        <p>One way of life ended and another began, says Ron Bailey, director of Afro-Amencan studies at the University of Mississippi.</p>
        <p>The stories told by Mrs. Bookers grandmother, who raised her, gave her a sense of history. Mrs. Booker said her grandmother was a slave until age 12, when news of freedom came as she was churning butter on the porch.</p>
        <p>She asked her mother what that meant, Mrs. Booker said. Her mother said, Keep churning.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Booker did plenty of churning herself.</p>
        <p>Id go to sleep churning many times, bwause you have to churn it until it turns into butter.</p>
        <p>In her musuem, subdivided like a home, she walked past a railroad lantern, a gold parasol handle, a Thomas A. Edison phonograph, a wine press used to squeeze the juice from muscadines, an eggbeater from the turn of the century, an iron stove, a 1920s Hotpoint oven and a bread bucket.</p>
        <p>That was important, she said, looking at the bread bucket. If anybody got hungry, as long as there were biscuits in the bread bucket it was fine.</p>
        <p>Each object has a story.</p>
        <p>The quilt that covers the brass bed was made by her grandmother. The bed belonged to the grandmother of a Holmes County man named Arthur Montgomery, and you know it goes back because hes 97 years old. </p>
        <p>Mrs. Booker has held a variety of</p>
        <p>jobs over the years: cashier in a general store, doctors secretary, farmhand on the first integrated cooperative farm in the 1940s, teacher in Tallahatchie County schools. She worked for the Head Start program from 1964 to 1979 and volunteered for the county Department of Aging Services.</p>
        <p>Although many whites attacked the integrated cooperative before the civil rights era, Mrs. Booker never thought of leaving her native Mississippi.</p>
        <p>If 1 had been doing something wrong, then I would have had a right to run, she says. But I wasnt and I didnt.</p>
        <p>So many people went bitter so quick. People said, this is a white folks thing. But I have a voice to speak. You dont peddle hate no more.</p>
        <p>So she organizes senior citizens gatherings, remains active in politics and walks among her museum pieces, reliving the past.</p>
        <p>Im just as happy with my snuff bottles and my boxes, Mrs. Booker says. Now, if I had a couple of thousand dollars, all I would do is spend it. At least here I can do something to make Holmes County better.</p>
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        <p>Van Schoor Born to Mr. and Mrs. Jon Charles Van Schoor, Wilson, a daughter, Marjorie Elizabeth, on Jan. 6,1987, in Pitt County Memorial Hospital.</p>
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        <p>  Expiree  Saturdey,  January  24,  1987  </p>
        <p>-------</p>
        <p>! t</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>!  ($60.00  Value)</p>
        <p>:  Reg.  $39.50</p>
        <p>Lustra Curl</p>
        <p>with Coupon Only.</p>
        <p>Expiras Saturday, January 24, 1987</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>Now *32.50! </p>
        <p>I I</p>
        <p>All services performed exclusively by students. No appointment necessary. Nexxus  Nationally accredited. Long hair slightly higher.</p>
        <p>Monday a to S:M Tuaa.-frl., 10 to t Saturday  to 4:10</p>
        <p>HAIR STYLING</p>
        <p>426 Ariington Blvd</p>
        <p>756-3050</p>
        <p>f^aTLING /  I</p>
        <p>(^caden^</p>
        <pb facs="00096518_0007" />
        <p>Ttie Dally Reflector. Greenville. N.C.</p>
        <p>a    V3IOCIIVIIIC,  iN.o._Sunday,  January  18,1987 Q.J</p>
        <p>Museum Director Finds Fossils In Downtown Lobbies</p>
        <p>By BOB MARSHALL The New Orleans Times-Picavune NEW ORLEANS (AP) - The business people hesitate behind open elevator doors, eyeing the man on the floor. Hands tighten on purses and umbrellas as they leave, heads turning to keep this guy in full view.</p>
        <p>Bob Thomas doesnt notice. He is</p>
        <p>on his hands and knees, his face inches from the floor, scrutinizing the pir^ marble wall.</p>
        <p>I thought 1 remembered a cephalopod here the last time! he says, exasperatedly moving another few inches.</p>
        <p>Wait! Here, look at this. Its a really neat fan coral.</p>
        <p>A GENTLE RIDE  A single leaf from a sweet gum tree is rocked gently back and forth in shallow water at the edge of the Neuse River in Bridgeton. Eventually, the leaf will be washed ashpre or sink to the rivers bottom. (Reflector Photo by Jerry Raynor)</p>
        <p>Adopt-A-Pet</p>
        <p>The Pitt County Humane Society Pet of the Week is this 5-month-old spayed feniale black and white short-haired terrier named Punkin. She has house-training started, has shots and is on heartworm prevention. To adopt her. call the Humane Society, 756-1268.</p>
        <p>Also being sought homes are the following:</p>
        <p>A long-haired black male kitten about 12 weeks old. Has shots, wormed, litter-trained. 756-2027 or 757-2694.</p>
        <p>Six 5-week-old kittens - a black and white male, a silver tabby male, two silver tabby females, a brown and black female, and an orange male. 752-7509.</p>
        <p>Seven 6-week-old part-golden retriever puppies and a 4-month-old calico kitten and a white adult female cat. 825-0425.</p>
        <p>A 5-month-old male black cat, shots started and dewormed. Will be neutered. 756-1268.</p>
        <p>Eight black Lab-shepherd puppies, five mixed Lab puppies; two mixed collie puppies; and one huskey-terrier puppy; two 5-month-old mixed retreiever, one male, one female; a 6-month-old female German sheperd huskey; a 1-year-old spayed female tan mixed hound; a 1-year-old male black and white male birddog; a 3-year-old male beagle - pet only. All have shots started and are on heartworm prevention. Humane Society, 756-1268.</p>
        <p>Found on Bethel Highway - a male bassett hound. 752-1152.</p>
        <p>Lost on 14th and Farmville Boulevard - a female tan black mixed shepherd and a male tan and black mixed hound. May be traveling together, Humane Society, 756-1268.</p>
        <p>Found in Industrial Park area - a female black small dog. 7,56-6926.</p>
        <p>Lost in the Windy Ridge area  a 4-year-old solid white cat. 756-5392.</p>
        <p>The Adopt a Pet column is published free of charge each Sunday. Call Elizabeth Savage, 756-4867; Patsy Hunt, 758-1,397; Janet Uhlman, 756-3251; Bobbie Parsons, 756-1268; or Carol Tyer, 752-6166.</p>
        <p>Humane Society hours are 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday, Sunday and Monday and the remainder of week, by appointment, 756-1268. To request a Humane Society investigation, call Barbara Haddock. 7,52-9922. To request assistance for wild animak and birds, call 753-2393. To become a member, call 756-1268, Donations to the Humane Society may be sent to P.O. Box 8121, Greenville, 27835.</p>
        <p>Editors note: The new deadline for entries in each Sundays colupin is Thursday at 4 p.m.</p>
        <p>Memorial Baptist Church Nursery School and Kindergarten</p>
        <p>1987-88 Registration</p>
        <p>When:  January  25th  -  2:30  to  4:00</p>
        <p>Where:  1510  Greenville  Blvd.*Church  fellowship  hall</p>
        <p>Programs for 2, 3, and 4 year olds, plus a five year old kindergarten.  ^</p>
        <p>Marcia Pleasants Director 752-6503</p>
        <p>Inside the marble, a circle of white shows through the pink gloss. It appears to be floating free, a ghost of time. Thomas runs his fingers across it.</p>
        <p>Thats magnificent, he whispers. Youre talking at least 200 millions years ago, the Jurassic Period, height of the age of dinosaurs.</p>
        <p>Suddenly, hes back on his feet, pulling his 6-foot-4 frame to its full height and loping toward the exit, followed by the eyes of a very puzzled security guard. Theres a great ammonoid down the street.</p>
        <p>With that, the director of the Louisiana Nature and Science Center is off down Loyola Avenue, hooking a right on Common, heading for the canyons of the central business district.</p>
        <p>For the next hour, he inspects the walls of marble and granite, inside and out, with a paleontologists practiced eye. Staring back are plants and animals frozen in seabeos 200 million, 300 million, even 500 million</p>
        <p>years ago, resurrected by masons who polished the marble that now hangs in 20th century office buildings.</p>
        <p>There are crinoids, and bryozoans, cephalopo^ and ammonoids  historys calling cards from the time before dinosaurs, before fish, before life on earth was more than one cell looking for another.</p>
        <p>And they are all there in the lobbies and hallways of New Orleans, free for anyone who knows what they are or wants to find out by taking a geology walk with the Louisiana Nature and Science Center.</p>
        <p>Youve got fossils on the walls of most buildings in this city that would be the centerpiece of exhibits in many museums, Thomas said.</p>
        <p>Thats the great thing about doing this type of tour. It gives people access to these real treasures who normally wouldnt get a chance to see them without going to a museum where they may, or may not, be on display.</p>
        <p>Thomas got the idea of a fossil hunt in the central business district from</p>
        <p>the American Museum of Natural History, which gives a fossil tour of New York. He was looking at buildings and identifying fossils when he stumbled across Ned Slagel, a paleontologist with the U.S. Geological Survey who already was working on a booWet on the very same subject.</p>
        <p>Slagels A Tour Guide to the Building Stones of New Orleans is the source of Thomas tour. But Thomas makes it come to life.</p>
        <p>In the Louisiana Supreme Court lobby, he waves at walls of white marble crowded with black zebra streaks.</p>
        <p>This is one of the most incredible lobbies anywhere, he said. Do you know what that is? Well, the black is fossilized algae I</p>
        <p>Thomas moves closer and traces the fossils with his hand. You can almost feel the texture, he said. This is from the pre-Cambrian period - 500 million years ago. There were no vertebrates then, just algae and sunshine.</p>
        <p>Back on the street, Thomas is</p>
        <p>American Operates Leech Farm</p>
        <p>By LARRY THORSON Associated Press Writer SWANSEA, Wales (AP) - The leech is making a comeback in medicine, and an American scientist has set up in Wales to capitalize on new interest in the blood-sucking animals medicinal properties.</p>
        <p>Roy T. Sawyer, a biologist and native of South Carolina, is certain that he runs the worlds only leech farm - a growing array of tanks and tubs in an old warehouse that is currently home to about 30,000 leeches.</p>
        <p>His 2-year-old his company, Biopharm (U.K.) Ltd., ships live leeches to customers in the United States, Europe and elsewhere, but feels its major role will be to develop biochemicals from leech saliva for use in medicine.</p>
        <p>One leech-derived substance, the anti-coagulant hirudin, has been known since 1884, but the use of live leeches - a raging mania in Western Europe in the first half of the 19th century  has only recently been reintroduced to solve some postoperative problems in microsurgery.</p>
        <p>Its quite orthodox medicine today, Sawyer said, stressing that he regarded it as the only legitimate use of live leeches in medicine.</p>
        <p>The parasites are used to help restore circulation in patches of skin implanted during plastic surgery or in parts of the b^y, such as fingers or ears, that have been cut off in accidents. Surgeons are often able to reattach arteries but not veins, so blood can flow into the skin or digit but notout.</p>
        <p>A leech, attached to an area engorged with blood, will drain it and give the body time to restore normal circulation.</p>
        <p>Sawyer said this use of leeches was first reported about 10 years ago by a French doctor and it has been growing fast in the past three years, coinciding with the establishment of his company, which reports demand growing 300percent a year.</p>
        <p>A wall chart shows that 10,000 leeches have been ordered this year, while only 5,000 newborn have crept out of their cocoons in beds of moss in the breeding room. Biopharm is expanding 10-fold to meet the demand for live leeches and to have the parasites saliva for processing into potential drugs. Sawyer said.</p>
        <p>A typical order from a hospital, he said, would be for 30 leeches, at $3,55</p>
        <p>WANtlD TO MNT</p>
        <p>Designer, female, seel&amp;lt;s heated studio/room/space, preferably unfurnished, with good natural lighting. Daytime use only.</p>
        <p>Telephone 752-5287</p>
        <p>NEW LOOK.</p>
        <p>Aqua Glass desiqner doors let you take the easy way out when you remodel your bathroom. They're simple to install and easy to afford. Available in many sizes, colors, and patterns. Choose smoke gray glass with silver trim or bronze-colored glass with gold trim. Horizontal, pin-stripes, or border pattern. Available now.</p>
        <p>FERGUSON</p>
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        <p>)er leech; a patient would have three eeches applied each day. The parasites are supplied unfed. At Biopharm, they are fed once a month with beef blood from a slaughterhouse.</p>
        <p>One success story in Sawyers files is a Boston boy who had an ear torn off by a dog last year. The ear was reattached by microsurgery but became congested with blood. The call went out to Biopharm to supply leeches after other measures failed to restore circulation.</p>
        <p>It was so urgent that my wife actually drove the shipment to London airport, Sawyer said, adding that he was delighted to see newspaper photos several weeks later showing the boy with a healthy ear.</p>
        <p>, Sawyer, 44, said he became interested in leeches while growing up around Charleston, S.C.</p>
        <p>I found them interesting animals from a pure zoologists point of view. Some got interested in butterflies or frogs. I found leeches interesting as an animal to study, to understand bi-oloe^y.</p>
        <p>The boyhood interest grew into a career that has taken him to the Amazon in Brazil to collect leeches and to Wales to study under an authority on the subject. Oxford University Press recently published his three-volume work Leech Biology And Behavior, which in 1,100 pages covers what is known about the blood-sucking animal.</p>
        <p>Over a period of 12 years writing the book, it was gradually revealed that the biochemistry of the leech salivary gland is very rich in phar</p>
        <p>macological activity. And these substances are not concerned with digestion at all. They are concerned purely with interaction with the mammalian host, Sawyer said.</p>
        <p>The leech secretes a local anesthetic so that its bite is painless, a dilator to increase the flow of blood, an anti-coagulant to keep the blood liquid in its gut - and thats just the European medicinal leech, nirudo medic-inalis, he said, adding that there are 650 species of the parasite.</p>
        <p>In 1977, while working at the University of California at Berkeley, Sawyer and colleagues isolated hementin, a substance that can dissolve blood clots, from the saliva of a leech they collected in the Amazon Basin. That species of leech also is bred at Biopharm with the aim of getting hementin into production as a drug.</p>
        <p>Records show the leech was used medicinally 4,000 years ago in India, as well as in ancient Greece and Rome. Sawyer hypothesized that someone in ancient times had something wrong with his foot, a leech accidentally got on it, and there was some beneficial effect.</p>
        <p>The use of leeches bas persisted in traditional medicine to the present day, especially in Eastern Europe, but its peak was about 200 years ago when it was thought that leeches could drain bad blood and leave good blood behind.</p>
        <p>Leches really were the aspirin of the day, Sawyer said. If you had anything wrong with you they ju.st thought of the leech.</p>
        <p>hustling past other pedestrians when he comes to a back-snapping halt next to a building covered with stucco-like white paint. Oh God! he shouts, his voice fraught with horror and disgust. Theyve painted over the black!</p>
        <p>Behind this ... this stuff, is beautiful black marble, Thomas said. It was really neat because it had been bleached white by the sun. There were some great fossils here.</p>
        <p>I dont understand why people do things like this to such great marble. If they only knew what they were covering up.</p>
        <p>He wheels and points across the street. Its like that building, he said. There used to be an incredible ammonid there  a nautilus-type shell. It was gorgeous. Probably 500 million years old. Something a museum would love to have.</p>
        <p>Well, they did some remodeling. Apparently the marble was torn down and just thrown out.</p>
        <p>I wish those people would call the Nature Center before they throw any marble away in this town.</p>
        <p>In the building with the fan coral, he looks at the art hung in the lobby. Its modern stuff  lines, circles and squares in neat frames. Small s^tlights focus attention on each piece, throwing the marble behind it into shadow.</p>
        <p>The people who own this building would be better off putting frames around these fossils and spotlighting them, Thomas said. Those are the real treasures.</p>
        <p>Formal</p>
        <p>Rentals</p>
        <p>Choose from over 40 tuxedo styles and colors including the New Miami Vice and Dynasty Collections.</p>
        <p>from *34*</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>$tenbecfe*</p>
        <p>MEN'S SHOP</p>
        <p>642 Arlington Blvd.  3S5-S926 Carolina East Mall  756-6286</p>
        <p>piece goods shop</p>
        <p>Your Complete Store For Fabrics-Notions  Crafts</p>
        <p>where a SALE is a SALE!</p>
        <p>PPE-</p>
        <p>PRING</p>
        <p>FaJtitSpeda</p>
        <p>ENTIRE STOCK</p>
        <p>LINENSvw</p>
        <p>20'</p>
        <p>Crai6peei'\ oiio/tSpet</p>
        <p>off</p>
        <p>VALUE</p>
        <p>43C</p>
        <p>EACH</p>
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        <p>Embroidery Floss</p>
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        <p>ENTIRE STOCK</p>
        <p>Shoulder Pads</p>
        <p>3108 S. Memorial Drivt GrMnvllla. N.C.</p>
        <p>756-6101</p>
        <p>Sunday thru Saturday</p>
        <p>SRUNVILU so. K-MRTCIMT[R</p>
        <p>Arlington A Smnvilli BlvA</p>
        <p>OPEN DAILY 10 to 9 SUNDAY 1 to 6</p>
        <pb facs="00096518_0008" />
        <p>U.S. Students In Spain Study The Old Basque Culture</p>
        <p>SHOWING ITS AGE  This old log barn near Apex looks ready to collapse from age and lack of being used.</p>
        <p>Late afternoon sun gives stark contrasts on the wood of Herald)</p>
        <p>the barn and its shelter. The barn is located in a Wake County pasture. (AP Laserphoto/Durham .Morning</p>
        <p>The Quiz</p>
        <p>Answers on C-9</p>
        <p>THI QUIZ IS MRT Of THIS NCWSRARER S NEWSRARCR IN EDUCATION PROGRAM</p>
        <p>worMscope</p>
        <p>(10 polnis lor Mch quosllon nnrorod corrtcHy)</p>
        <p>1 These and other Afghan guerrillas have been fighting against Soviet troops for seven years. Soviet official recently announced that they would soon (CHOOSE ONE; increase, decrease) their forces in Afghanistan. The Soviets currently have more than 100,000 soldiers in Afghanistan.</p>
        <p>Sandstorms and the element of surprise apparently helped Chadian forces score unenpected victories in recent battles with soldiers from libya, Chads (CHOOSE ONE: northern, eastern) neighbor.</p>
        <p>Official sources say the United States hat given Iran and its enemy (CHOOSE ONE: Iraq, Libya) false intelligence information and distorted data in recent years.</p>
        <p>A new report ranks American (CHOOSE ONE: primary and high school, college and university) students among the lowest of those in any industrialized country in mathematical ability.</p>
        <p>A report by a group of prominent political analysis says the Constitutions (CHOOSE ONE: separation of powers. Bill of Rights) has often produced confrontation, indecision and deadlock" in the federal government.</p>
        <p>Matchwords</p>
        <p>(2 points lor oach corroci match)</p>
        <p>1-reduce</p>
        <p>a-help</p>
        <p>2-repel</p>
        <p>b-decrease</p>
        <p>3-amend</p>
        <p>c -give</p>
        <p>4-assist</p>
        <p>d-change</p>
        <p>e-resist</p>
        <p>Newsname</p>
        <p>(IS polntt if you can Idanllly this parson In the nows)</p>
        <p>I am Chairman of the Senate Committee on Labor and Human Resources. I recently called for a return to more liberal ideak of awirting the needy and reducing unemploy-</p>
        <p>5-supply</p>
        <p>Peopiewatch/Sporiiiglii</p>
        <p>(5 points lor tach corrtcl answer)</p>
        <p>1 Author Theodore Seuss Geisel, better known as recently celebrated the 30th anniversary of one of his best known characters, The Cat in the Hat.</p>
        <p>2 Papa Dont Preach, by (CHOOSE ONE: Tina Turner, Madonna), was recently named the worlds favorite music video at the World Music Video Awards.</p>
        <p>3 Some eiperts claim that 12 recently discovered stories by mystery writer ..?.. are in fact old stories that have been on display since 1971 at the University of Teias. The author is well known for the book The Thin Man.</p>
        <p>4 The Denver Broncos will face the New York Giants at the Super Bowl. The Giants halve not played in a league championship since (CHOOSE ONE: 1%3,1974).</p>
        <p>'5 At its recent convention, the NCAA passed rules banning biMMlers from recruiting activities. The NCAA also (CHOOSE ONE: cut. lengthened) the football and basketball recruiting</p>
        <p>menL Who am If  seasons.</p>
        <p>YOUR SCORE: SI to 100 poMs -TOP SCORE:</p>
        <p>01 to SO polnis - EicsNsnL 71 to 00 polntt - Good. 01-70 polntt - Fair.</p>
        <p> KnowWdgt UnNmlttd. Inc. 119-B7_</p>
        <p>Maritime Events</p>
        <p>BEAUFORT - Three events are on the calendar at the North Carolina Maritime Museum in Beaufort during the coming week.</p>
        <p>All are free. Where reservation is listed as required, call the museum at 728-7317 to make a reservation.</p>
        <p>The events are:</p>
        <p> Wednesday  Video program, The Last Sailor, Part II, The Coastal Waters, 7:30 p.m.</p>
        <p> Thursday - Video program, repeat of We^esday program at 12 noon.</p>
        <p> Friday - Trip to the Top, program on the museum observation deck. Reservations required, 12 noon.</p>
        <p>ECU Art Classes For Children</p>
        <p>The East Carolina University School of Art invites children in the fourth, fifth and sixth grades to register for Spring 1987 art classes.</p>
        <p>For more information on the classes, and to register, call the art school office, 757-6665, between 10 a.m. and 2 p.m. weekdays.</p>
        <p>Classes will be held on Mondays and Wednesday, to meet from 4 to 5 p.m., and the classes are scheduled to begin January 19 and run through April 27.</p>
        <p>TePaske Lecture</p>
        <p>ECU News Bureau Dr. John J. TePaske, Latin American historian from Duke University, will deliver a lecture on Fidel Castro in Historical Perspective at East Carolina University on Jan. 28.</p>
        <p>His lecture, sponsored by the ECU Latin American Area Studies Committee, wilt be free and open to the public. The lecture will begin at 8 p.m. and will be held in C-103 Brewster Building on the ECU campus.</p>
        <p>Quilt Show Set</p>
        <p>For the first time since George Washington was president, an Atlantic salmon has migrated 255 miles from Long Island to historic spawning grounds in Vermonts White River. According to International Wildlife magazine, the salmon disappeared from New England rivers in the 1800s as a result of pollution, overfishing and dams</p>
        <p>The worlds most complex public works scheme is the Delta Project, built to protect the Netherlands from North Sea storms.</p>
        <p>By SUSAN LINNEE Associated Press Writer</p>
        <p>SAN SEBASTIAN, Spain (AP) -Stephanie Yanci remembers the night 11 years ago when she and her parents were singing Basque songs in her uncles bar near here and two Spanish Civil Guards burst in.</p>
        <p>My dad kept right on speaking Basque, but my uncle told him to switch to Spanish, she said. I was really scared. It was the summer before Franco died, and you weren't supposed to sp^k Basque in Spain."</p>
        <p>After the incident her parents moved to the United States and settled in Elko, Nev.</p>
        <p>Ms. Yanci, now a 21-year-old business student at Boise State University in Idaho, is back in Spain this year to learn more about her Basque heritage and its Spanish cultural context. She is enrolled in a Basque studies program sponsored by the University of Nevada in conjunction with the University of the Basque Country in San Sebastian.</p>
        <p>Carmelo Urza, program coordinator and head of the Basque Studies Program at the University of Nevada-Reno, said although the program had existed informally since 1970, regular courses began four years ago in San Sebastian and in the city of Pau, over the border in French Basque country.</p>
        <p>During the Franco era we would deal with the political aspects of the Basque question in the French Basque country across the Pyrenees, then come to Spain for the cultural side, he explained.</p>
        <p>Gen. Francisco Franco died in 1975 after having ruled Spain since 1939. During his time, regional languages were suppressed in the name of Spanish national unity.</p>
        <p>The Basques, one of Europes oldest peoples whose language is still a mystery to philologists, were singled out for repression, in part because they had sided with the Second Republic during the 1936-39 civil war won by Francos forces.</p>
        <p>Urza, the son of Basque emigrants, was born in Guernica, the spiritual center of the three-province northern Spanish Basque country, and moved as a child to Idaho where his father</p>
        <p>worked in a sheep cainp.</p>
        <p>Most Spanish and mnch Basque</p>
        <p>KINSTON - Contemporary quilting, an exhibition of monoprints and mixed media work by Alice Stallings, is currently on view at the Community Council for the Arts in Kinston.</p>
        <p>The show, under the auspices of the New Horizon Quitters, will be on view through Jan. 28. The arts councils museum is located at 111 East Caswell Street in Kinston.</p>
        <p>Government, wholesale/retail and manufacuturine each account for 25 percent pi total employment in Pitt County.</p>
        <p>immigrants to the United States settled in Nevada, Idaho and northern California, often as contract sheep herders.</p>
        <p>There is nothing Basque about Kendall Swinford, but the 20-year-old political science major at the University of California at Berkeley says he is fascinated by the relationship between the Basque autonomous administration and the Spanish cen-' tral government in Madria.</p>
        <p>Although there are some similarities between the autonomous Basque region and the lander in West Germany or states in the U.S., he said, the relationship the Basques have with Madrid really seems to be unique because of the historical and cultural context.</p>
        <p>The 1978 constitution which restored representative government in Spain established 17 autonomous regions in the country. Of the three historically and culturally distinct regional - the Basque country, Catalonia and Galicia  the Basque region has the greatest degree of autonomy and is the only one that levies and collects its own taxes.</p>
        <p>Until the late 19th century, the Basques enjoyed many rights not granted to the rest of Spain, and since the 13th century, Spanish monarchs had taken oatte at the sacred oak tree in Guernica to uphold these rights.</p>
        <p>Ms. Yanci, Swinford and the 20 other students participating in the San Sebastian program know some Basques feel the present autonomy doesnt go far enough and that they seek the withdrawl of Spanish securi-ty forces and complete independence.</p>
        <p>Urza said the course includes a discussion of the Basque separatist group, ETA, which has taken responsibility for nearly 600 deaths of</p>
        <p>Spanish police, civil guards and military officers since its founding in 1959.</p>
        <p>So far this year ETA has claimed responsibility for the deaths of 40</p>
        <p>^^^%ien most people in the United States think about the Basque country. they immediately associate it with violence and terrorism, Urza said. "I don't deny that ETA is a problem. but it does not characterize the Basque people.</p>
        <p>He feels the teaching and use of Euskera. the Basque language, will become paramount in the retention of Basque cultural identity. At pres</p>
        <p>ent an estimated 11 percent of the regions 2.2 million people speak it.</p>
        <p>In the late 19th century when the Basque country was becoming the most heavilv industrialized region of Spain  an(i one of the wealthiest and most dynamic  speaking Euskera was considered part of a rural heritage not really necessary to prove one s Basqueness, Urza said.</p>
        <p>Today, particularly among the more raclical groups, teaching the language in ikastolas or Basque-language schools is one of the cornerstones of Basque nationalism.</p>
        <p>Sale</p>
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        <p>355-5080</p>
        <p>Paralegals, Law Enforcement Officers &amp;amp; Correctiens Personnel And Others Who Are Interested In An Exciting Career In These Fields.</p>
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        <p>An Equal Opportunity/Affirmaliva Action Institution i</p>
        <p>Building America's Future</p>
        <p>Announcing</p>
        <p>Gary E. Michels, D.D.S., P.A.</p>
        <p>Has Moved His Dental Office To 24^ Stantonsburg Rd., Suite F Greenville, N.C.</p>
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        <p>Emergencies &amp;amp; General Dentistry Also Weic(ne Now</p>
        <p>752-1600</p>
        <p>ACROSS FROM THE HOSPITAL</p>
        <pb facs="00096518_0009" />
        <p>The Dally Reflector, Greenville. N.C.</p>
        <p>^  ^  A Reflector Review</p>
        <p>Memories Of Forty Women Show The Hell Of War</p>
        <p>Sunday, January 16.1967  Q.9</p>
        <p>WOMEN AGAINST WAR. Compiled by the Womens Division of Soka Gakkai. Tokyo, Japan. Kodansha International Limited, distributed in the U.S. by Harper and Row, Publishers, New York. 1986, Hardback, 247 pp. illustrated. $17.95.</p>
        <p>The compilers of this book selected</p>
        <p>testimonials from 40 Japanese women who lived through World War II. These testimonials are taken from a larger work of 12 volumes. One purpose of the book is to focus attention of all people on the horrors of war as witnessed by women who actually experienced it. Soka Gakkai, which complied the book, is a Japa-</p>
        <p>Paddlewheel Recalls Heyday Of Riverboats</p>
        <p>ByRONHARRIST Associated Press Writer VICKSBURG, Miss. (AP) - Big Mama, a once-proud Titan of pad-dlewheelers whose exploits linger in Mississippi River folklore, is gone but not forgotten by the towns where she was bom and where she died.</p>
        <p>Theres a special love for that boat, said Steve Golding, a barge company official and leader in efforts to have surviving parts of the Spraeue placed in a new riverside parknere.</p>
        <p>I watched the Sprague die in a fire and I think we owe it to future gener</p>
        <p>ations to pick up the pieces and make ' mat we have left.</p>
        <p>something of wf The Sprague, set afloat in Dubuque, Iowa, in 1902, was a legend among riverboats at a time when the giant paddlewheelers were disappearing from the nations rivers.</p>
        <p>It was quite a vessel, in fact it was the worlds lareest sternwheel towboat, said Robert Osbome, curator at the Woodward Riverboat Museum in Dubuque.</p>
        <p>Measuring almost as long as a football field and half as wide, the 20,000-ton workhorse set the worlds record for the largest tow. In 1927, she hauled 56 barges and four coal boats loaded with more than 67,000 tons of coal from Louisville, Ky., to New Orleans.</p>
        <p>In the great flood of 1927, the Sprague pushed empty barges to the failing levees at Greenville to help rescue thousands of people from the flooded Mississippi Delta.</p>
        <p>The vessel was sold to the City of Vicksburg for $1 by Standard Oil Co. in 1948 and for years served as a floating river museum and home for a colonul Vicksburg Little Theater melodrama, Gold In The Hills.</p>
        <p>The Sprague burned at its mooring in 1974 and its giant hull was later ripped apart during salvage operations on the Yazoo River diversion canal. All that remains is mostly large pieces of the once-proud vessel, :luding the smokestacks, boilers.</p>
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        <p>survived the fire and the botched salvage operation and we would like to see maybe one of the warehouses down by the river be used as a river heritage museum.</p>
        <p>nese peace organization dedicated to bringing an end to all war.</p>
        <p>The average age of the women in 1942 was 20, and they not only endured World War II, but had also lived through the horrors of the war between Japan and China in the 1930s. The book tells of women fleeing from the Russian army in Manchuria, from the Allied air raids on Japan, from the natives in the Philippines, from Chinese bandits, and from the atom bomb falling on Hiroshima.</p>
        <p>The 40 women who tell their stories come from all walks of life. During the world war and its aftermath, they were teachers, nurses, housewives, children still in school, mothers, farm workers, children of mixed blood, all of them enduring terrible hardships because of the war.</p>
        <p>ostracized by all people, of children /bor </p>
        <p>the stories relate how</p>
        <p>orphaned by I Some of t</p>
        <p>9mbing raids.</p>
        <p>women were reduced to thievery and prostitution; of people dying for want of medical attention and the bare necessities of life; of people horribly burned and disfigured by falling bombs; of {^ple developing cancer from radiation, and of children Iwrn with physical and mental defects; of women widowed by war, and of families torn apart.</p>
        <p>Perhaps the most devastating experience is related by a Japansese woman fleeing from the Russians</p>
        <p>bandits, where a babys cry might bring a hail of bullets, the women actually smothered babies to keep them</p>
        <p>a met. Later, on board small boats,</p>
        <p>M</p>
        <p>liese women threw the old, the sick, and the young to the sharks in a desperate attempt to prevent the sharks from capsizing the boats.</p>
        <p>The testimonials of these 40 Japanese women, each unique but alike, drive home to the reader, with devastating impact, the absolute hell of war.</p>
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        <p>through the trackless mountains of cnuri</p>
        <p>Osborne said efforts by the Dubuque museum to secure additional artifacts were pretty much up in the air right now.</p>
        <p>There are stories of city people rushing about the countryside in a food; of</p>
        <p>desperate search for food; of Japanese soldiers torturing Chinese, and Russian soldiers torturing Japanese; of children with Japanese mothers and black American fathers.</p>
        <p>Manchuria with five small children, on foot, with no food nor warm clotiiing. The children ranged in age from ten months to six years. The story of how all five of the children died in their mad flights numbs the mind.</p>
        <p>Another stoi7, so terrible as to be almost unbelievable, is that of 30 women and children trying to get back to Japan from Manchuria. Menaced by Russian soldiers and</p>
        <p>ADJUSTING TO DIVORCE</p>
        <p>A Seminar For Separated/Divorced Men And Women</p>
        <p>Topics: coping with probiems and emotions, reiating to ex-spouse, children of divorce, how to begin again.</p>
        <p>MARILYN HUBER, RN, MA</p>
        <p>Counseior for maritai, sexuai &amp;amp; divorce adjustment</p>
        <p>Beginning: Tuesday, Jan. 27 7:00-9:00 p.m.</p>
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        <p>Will The Season Never End? Superbowl-Pro-Bowl TIDY Bowl...</p>
        <p>engines and the paddlewheel, which is 40 feet in diameter and weighs 150 tons.</p>
        <p>Were not the only ones interested in the Sprague, said Vicksburg City Alderman Melvin Redmond. The city of Dubuque people want everything we dont want and they are more than willing to take anything off our hands well give them.</p>
        <p>Golding said plans now called for construction of a small rark near the riverfront where the Sprague was moored for years prior to the fire. He said the paddlewheel, engines and other artifacts would be restored at city shops and placed in the park.</p>
        <p>At one time, hopes were bright to actually restore the vessel, with officials in 1975 seeking $1.34 million from the American Revolution Bicentennial Administration. They had hoped to use part of the money for an outdoor drama-amphitheater.</p>
        <p>However, the only funds made available to Vicksburg for such work were earmarked instead to restore the citys aging auditorium, said Golding. The park project developed after a small group of us went to the mayor and he agreed to set aside enough dollars to create a display park and use city manpower to restore the artifacts.</p>
        <p>Golding said a number of items not suitable for display at the park had</p>
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        <pb facs="00096518_0010" />
        <p>. C-10 The Daily Reflector, Grenville, N.C.</p>
        <p>Sunday. January 18,1987Feb. 28 Deadline For N.C. Rhotojournalist Competition</p>
        <p>Febrary 28 is the deadline for North Carolina photographers to enter the first Photojournalist Competition being sponsored by the N.C. wess Club, the state affiliate of the National Federation of Press Women, which celebrates its 50th an-nivesary in 1987.</p>
        <p>The club will award $1,200 in eight categories, including a $500 best of competition prize.</p>
        <p>Juror for the competition is Gene Thornton, photography critic for The New York Times,</p>
        <p>In addition to the competition, entries will be displayed March 6-17 in the Morehead Planetarium on the University of North Carolina campus. Chapel Hill.</p>
        <p>The exhibition will open with a</p>
        <p>public reception Friday, March 6 from 7 to 9 p.m. Then, entries may be viewed during regular gallery hours, Sundays-Fridays, 12:30 to 5 p.m. and 6:30 to 9:30 p.m., and on Saturday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. and 6:30 to 9:30p.m.</p>
        <p>The competition is open to any North Carolina resident who has had a photograph published during the 1986 calendar year. The photograph may have appeared, for example, in a newspaper, magazine in-house )ublication, on a calendar or in a</p>
        <p>KK)k.</p>
        <p>A tearsheet or other proof of publication showing the photograph and the date it was published must be submitted with framed entries. Only</p>
        <p>PLASTIC ART - A set of stacked lawn chairs, protected from winter wear by being enveloped in plastic, gives the impression of a small-scale Christo wrapped art work. The site is a yard along N.C. 43 a short distance north of Vanceboro. (Reflector Photo by Jerry Raynor)</p>
        <p>Slide Lecture On Craft At GMA This Afternoon</p>
        <p>A slide lecture titled North Carolina Crafts; A Womans Movement, will be presented by Linda Darty at 2 p.m. today at the Greenville Museum of Art, 802 South Evans Street.</p>
        <p>The lecture is free and open to the public.</p>
        <p>North Carolina is recognized nationally as a leader in the contemporary crafts movement. Darty will trace the evolution of crafts in North Carolina which grew from the dream of Miss Lucy Morgan who began the Penland School of Crafts in the early 1900s.</p>
        <p>Dartys talk will include slides from the N.C. archives of life in the mountains in the early 1900s as well as contemporary slides of crafts</p>
        <p>from N.C. artists in a variety of media including glassblowing - a craft especially strong in North Carolina.</p>
        <p>On Wednesday, at 10:30 a.m. at the museum, Darty will give a follow-up slide talk with more in-depth coverage of crafts in general including work from artists throughout the country. This presentation will cover information about various craft techniques.</p>
        <p>During the coming week only there is to be a smalt exhibit of contemporary craft works at GMA as well as some crafts produced by women at Penland in the early 1900s.</p>
        <p>Darty is the author of an article about Penland School crafts that was published in American Craft magazine.</p>
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        <p>framed entries will be accepted and cannot exceed 20 by 24 inches. Clip frames or braquettes will not be accepted.</p>
        <p>Photographers may ship entries by United Parcel Service (UPS) only to Charles Horton, The Chapel Hill Newspaper, 505 West Franklin Street, Chapel Hill, N.C., 27561. Entries must be shipped prepaid in sturdy, reusable containers.</p>
        <p>Entries should be scheduled to arrive Feb. 23-27 and also may be</p>
        <p>delivered in person to The Morehead Planetarium on Franklin Street, Chapel Hill on Saturday, Feb. 28 to be accepted from 10 a.m. to 5p.m.</p>
        <p>Prizes of $100 each will oe made in seven categories  sports; general news; spot news; portraits and personalities; storytelling; food, and photo essay. A $500 prize will be for the best in competition.</p>
        <p>Entry fees for members of the N.C. Press Club and for students is $10 for one or two entries; $12.50 for three</p>
        <p>entries, and $2.50 for each additional entry. Fees for non-club members is $15 for one or two entries; $20 for three entries, and $5 for each additional entry. There is no limit on entries, but each entry must be clearly marked to show the category the photographer is entering.</p>
        <p>For more details, contact Jim Wise at the Durham Morning Herald or Susan Broili at The Durham Sun. Both can be reached tollfree at 1-800^72-0061.</p>
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        <pb facs="00096518_0011" />
        <p>Tradition, Climate Keep Hats On Top In Bolivia</p>
        <p>EDITORS NOTE - As civilized man has become more and more protected from the elements, the hat has slipped from favor. But not in Bolivia. The hat in a myriad of styles remains on top in that mountainous South American country, partly because of the climate and partly as a means of identification.</p>
        <p>By PETER McFARREN Associated Press Writer JATAMAYU, Bolivia (AP) -</p>
        <p>When Severino Vela got married recently, he wore a montera, a black leather hat patterned after the 16th century helmets of Bolivias Spanish conquerors.</p>
        <p>The bride also wore a hat. It had a flat, black cloth brim, two raised points on top, embroidery of green, red and black threads, and an assortment of silver beads and shingles.</p>
        <p>Adult wedding guests appeared at the church in leather or felt headwear of different styles favored by the Quechua Indians who live around here. Children under 18 wore knitted wool hats.</p>
        <p>Hats are so common and varied in Bolivia that Vela, a 37-year-old Quechua farmer, finds it good business to make them on the side. He often trades a new hat for a sheep.</p>
        <p>I learned from a master craftsman who died several years ago, Vela told a visitor as he fashioned his wedding hat from leather, which had been dyed with fermented corn juice and rusted iron.</p>
        <p>Elsewhere in Bolivia, people cover their heads with tin, plaster, rabbit hair, feathers, straw, alpaca and tortora reeds. South Americas poorest country is rich in hat styles  more than 100 for a population of 6.4 million.</p>
        <p>Bolivians have popularized a derby for women. They also make a Stetson known locally as a J.R. Dallas, because it resembles what J.R. Ewing wears on the universally popular television series Dallas.</p>
        <p>I dont know of another region in the world that has such a variety of hats, says Gunnar Mendoza, director of the National Archives in Sucre, the colonial capital. Aside from its use as part of an outfit, the hat serves as a way for people to identify themselves.</p>
        <p>While urbanization and the covered automobile have put hats out of fashion in many other places, the demand for them in Bolivia remains steady. As a result, hatmaking is a thriving business, from Severino Velas busy shop at home to the industry-leading Charcas Glorieta factory in Sucre.</p>
        <p>One reason is Bolivias high altitude in the Andes, where the suns rays are more intense and few shade trees grow, making hats a necessity for many. Another is that the open-backed truck remains a popular means of transportation. A third factor is the survival of traditional costumes, hats and all, among Bolivias Indian majority.</p>
        <p>President Victor Paz Estenssoro, like other members of the countrys European-descended elite, generally shun hats. But during his election campaign last year, he wore a variety of colorful hats on trips to Indian farming villages and won most of the rural vote.</p>
        <p>The feature of Aymara Indian women that most strikes visitors in La Paz, the Bolivian capital, is their</p>
        <p>derby.</p>
        <p>In English, the derby is referred to</p>
        <p>Most of the steam-powered machines at Charcas Glorieta date to its founding. Manned by 160 employees, they turn Bolivian, Uruguayan and Argentine wool into 35 different hat forms, some based on U.S. and European designs.</p>
        <p>Spare parts and molds must be made by hand because the factory that built the machinery no longer exists, says Mario Nosiglia Biella, who has managed the plant since</p>
        <p>immigrating from Italy in 1948.</p>
        <p>In my hometown of Sagliano-Micca there used to be nine hat factories, he says. Now there is only one. Twenty years ago everybody in Europe wore a hat, but with the evolution of the automobile the use of hats has dropped considerably. Hat factories throughout the world are closing.</p>
        <p>Yet, Charcas Glorieta is unable to keep up with demand in Bolivia. So it</p>
        <p>has just purchased the Italian hat company Panizzas entire factory with a $2 million credit, $600,000 of it from the U.S. Agency for International Development.</p>
        <p>Nosiglia says the expansion will double the factorys output to 1 million felt hats per year while enabling it to make 60,000 rabbit-hair hats. He says 20,000 rabbit-hair hats will be exported to Italy for Panizzas former clients.</p>
        <p>The enlarged factory will benefit farmers, who will supply the hair of at least 50,000 rabbits a year and wool from 10,000 sheep, according to company plans. The economic impact will be extraordinary, Nosiglia says.</p>
        <p>Charcas Glorieta already makes thousands of J.R. Dallas nats that sell here for $15 apiece, as well as traditional hats for nearly every region of Bolivia.</p>
        <p>For example, residents of Tarija, near the Argentine border, wear hats patterned after those worn by their colonial ancestors from Andaluca, Spain. People here in Jatamayu, in the central highlands around Sucre, prefer the helmet-like hats such as Velas.</p>
        <p>In Cochabamba, a city of 300,000 between here and La Paz, Quechua Indian women wear white hats made from felt and plaster of Paris.</p>
        <p>here as a bowler, the name of the English manufacturer that introduced them to neighboring Argentina in the 19th century. But Bolivians call thehatabombin.</p>
        <p>Aymara women, who dominate the citys retail trade, wear black, brown or gray bombins while selling fruits, vegetables, home computers and compact discs. In other countries, it is a mans hat, but men here wear other styles.</p>
        <p>According to one story, a shipment of felt bowlers arrived in Bolivia by mistake and an enterprising salesman convinced Aymara women that wearing them would guarantee fertility.</p>
        <p>As the idea caught on, a model made of rabbit hair by the Borsalini factory in Italy became a status symbol among wealthier Aymara women.</p>
        <p>One store, which has been importing Borsalini bombin for 30 years^ now sells four to six a day. for S75 each, according to Sonia Barriga, the store manager.</p>
        <p>But the Borsalini factory, which manufactured hats exclusively for the Bolivian market, recently closed and much of the demand is now expected to be filled by Charcas Glorieta, a Bolivian hatmaking company with a history as colorful as some of its hats.</p>
        <p>The factory in Sucre was founded in 1929 by Princess Clotilde Urioste de Argandona. a Bolivian philanthropist who was given her title by Pope Leo XIll in the late 19th century when her husband was ambassador to the Vatican.</p>
        <p>With inherited wealth, she built a castle in Sucre, surrounded by Vene-tian-style canals, gardens and a small zoo, and started the hat factory to provide jobs for the people.</p>
        <p>Today the factory produces 500,000 hats or unfinished felt hat casings a year, supplying about half the Bolivian market. At least 2.000 hat-makers in Bolivia, Peru and Chile buy the casings and mold them into finished bombins that sell for $10 to $20 apiece.</p>
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        <pb facs="00096518_0012" />
        <p>C-12 The Dally Reflector, Greenville, N.C.</p>
        <p>Sunday, January 18,1987</p>
        <p>Free N.C. Events Calendar</p>
        <p>AN ILLUSTRATION  Backcountry Harvest Day, Schiele Museum of Natural History and Planetarium in Gastonia, is one of four color photos by Bill Russ illustrating the free publication, North Caroina 1987 Calendar of Events.</p>
        <p>RALEIGH  For people who travel a lot in North Carolina to attend festive events of many kinds in all areas of the state, there is an invaluable guide available  without charge.</p>
        <p>The North Carolina Division of Travel and Tourism has published a comprehensive 56-page paper booklet which contains more than 1,200 events scheduled in North Carolina during 1987.</p>
        <p>The events listed range across every comer of the state and encompass a variety of planned activities all the way from one-day fourth of July celebrations in many towns to month-long activities such as the East Carolina University Summer Theater series and the performance dates and places ot the states several outdoor dramas.</p>
        <p>Addresses, telephone numbers and often the names of persons to contact are contained in the compact listings which are arranged choronlogicaUy by date and alphabetically by town from January through December.</p>
        <p>Four outer and inner cover page photos in color by Bill Russ, in adm-tion to a selection (rf full-page black and white photographs add l^uty to this practical guide.</p>
        <p>Its small - six by nine inches -format makes it convenient for carrying.</p>
        <p>Persons wanting a copy of this useful North Carolina guide, The Calendar of Events, can request one by writing to: North Carolina Division of Travel and Tourism, 430 North Salisbury Street, Raleigh, N.C., 27611, or by calling 733-4171.</p>
        <p>Show By Three Photographers To Open Tuesday At Arlington Hall</p>
        <p>PHOTOGRAPIIV SHOW  An exhibition of photography by Muriel Flanagan, Jerry Raynor and Catherine Walker-Bailey will go on view Tuesday at Arlington Hall, with a reception, free and open to the public, from 7 to 9 p.m. Shown here is a color photo by Raynor, Shadows On A Wall, Saigon.</p>
        <p>An exhibition of photography, titled Approaches to Photography will go on view at Arlington Hall, 327 Arlington Blvd. on Tuesday. A reception, free and open to the public, will be held from 7 to 9 p.m. that date.</p>
        <p>Three local area photographers  Muriel Flanagan, Jerry Raynor and Catherine Walker-Bailey will be represented in the show.</p>
        <p>They will show photographs in color, in black and white, and gum prints. The photographs will encompass scenes and people of North Carolina, Italy, Japan, Viet Nam, Mexico and other locales.</p>
        <p>The exhibition will be up at Arlington Hall through March 6. Gallery hours are 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Mondays through Fridays and from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. on Saturdays.</p>
        <p>For more details, call 355-2426.</p>
        <p>Half of the Netherlands would be inundated twice daily were it not for the dunes and dikes along its shores, says National Geographic.</p>
        <p>Yellow Poplar, A Useful Wood</p>
        <p>From WOOD A Meredith Magazine Onondaga Indians of New York called it Ko-yen-ta-ka-ah-gas, the white tree, for the woods pale color. Further south, tribes found the trees size perfect for long canoes and its soft wood easily worked with their tools.</p>
        <p>Colonists came and feasted on the strongly flavored honey made by bees from the abundant nectar in the white trees flowers. The new settlers worked the wood into furniture, interior trim, baskets and boxes. According to Wood magazine, they named the welcome tree vellow poplar, for the woods resemblance to wood they had known in the old world.</p>
        <p>Yellow poplar, or tulip tree, has a magnolia heritage but a pedigree shared by no other species in the U.S. Liriodendron tulipifera grows only in the eastern part of this nation, yet its origins trace back to geological remains in Europe and Asia.</p>
        <p>Today, yellow poplar rates as the most valuable hardwood in the eastern United States. In variety of uses, no other tree can match it. Yellow poplar can be found in construction lumber, moldings, ply-wood cores.</p>
        <p>actions in pianos and organs, matches, food containers, paper, woodenware, caskets and even pool tables. Its versatility makes it a favorite among home woodworkers.</p>
        <p>Yellow poplar can be found growing singly among other hardwoods and pines from the Mississippi River to the Atlantic ocean. The northern limits are central New York; the southern terminus in northern Florida. Rich soils in the Ohio River Valley and the southern Appalachians produce the largest trees, with many yellow poplar attaining 150 feet in height and girths to 10 feet. Often on these specimens no branches grow for the first 80 feet.</p>
        <p>Mature trees have thick, light orange-brown bark with many fissures, and frequent burls. Youngsters have bark thats thin and smooth. Wider than they are long, the leaves resemble saddles.</p>
        <p>When you see yellow poplar sap-wood. youll understand why Indians named it for its lack of color. Only a slight creamy tone makes it a bit less white than holly. Heartwood, on the other hand, may be nearly a canary yellow with tinges of green - hence yellow poplar. Occasionally,</p>
        <p>heartwood has dramatic streaks of gray, blue and dark purple.</p>
        <p>Yellow poplar has sufficient strength for most shop projects, and outranks many hardwoods in stability, stiffness and resistance to wear. It works easily with hand tools and has excellent gluing, nailing and sanding qualities.</p>
        <p>Because of its lackluster appearance, yellow poplar doesnt lend itself to clear finishes or stain. It does, however, accept paint readily.</p>
        <p>The straight grain and softness suit carvers. Woodturners find yellow poplar makes wonderful bowls that impart no taste and have no odor.</p>
        <p>Abundant on the East Coast, yellow poplar becomes less available farther west. Where the wood is sold, veneer as well as lumber is available for home projects.</p>
        <p>A meteorite explosion large enough to affect the global climate occurs in the earths atmosphere about once every 100,000 years, reports International Wildlife magazine. Should a meteorite larger than 1/3 of a mile in diameter hit the earth, it would send up a great cloud of debris that would alter the climate.</p>
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        <pb facs="00096518_0013" />
        <p>J</p>
        <p>The Pally Reflector, Greenville, N.C.</p>
        <p>Sunday, January 18,1987  C-13</p>
        <p>TOURIST ATTRACTION  An unidentified woman holds a towel while standing on a beach in front of a hotel in Varadero, Cuba. Cuba is short of dollars these days and is looking increasingly to this strip of Eden with shining sands and multi-toned waters for an economic shot in the arm. There are six hotels now and 10 more on the drawing board with a 1990 target date for completion. (APLaserphoto)</p>
        <p>Life Is Grim Today In Ancient Baghdad</p>
        <p>By SAMIR F.GHATTAS Associated Press Writer BAGHDAD, Iraq (AP) - Eight centuries ago, a Mongol invasion from the east reduced Baghdad to ruins.</p>
        <p>Legend has it that the heirs of Ghengis Khan so ravaged the civilized capital of the Arabs great Ab-basid empire that the Tigris River ran red with the blood of Baghdads men, then blue with the ink of its books.</p>
        <p>A few ornate mosques and monuments from that earlier age remain today in a modern city of 5 million people, who are fighting yet again : against an enemy from the east  Iran.</p>
        <p>Sixteen Iranian missiles have slammed into Baghdad in the last year, killing scores of civilians and wrecking apartment blocks.</p>
        <p>Since Aue.l2, six missiles have hit the capital, bringing the conflict closer to what Iraqi officials used to call the city of peace.</p>
        <p>Baghdad today is a sprawling city and home for one-third of Iraqs population. But restrictions brought on by the 6-year-old war with Iran make life grim.</p>
        <p>But Iraqis stilffind Baghdad a haven. It has restaurants serving the sought-after masgouf fish from the Tigris; a half-dozen nightclubs operate, albeit without the European and Asian dancers they used to have.</p>
        <p>The city founded 1,224 years ago is an amalgam of old traditions and new fashions, wide highways and narrow alleys, modern department stores and medieval bazaars.</p>
        <p>The river Iraqis call the eternal Tigris slices the city into two main districts, the Karkh and Rusafa.</p>
        <p>The small wooden boats that ferry poor Iraqis across the river are motorized versions of those that plied the Tigris centuries ago.</p>
        <p>Today the boats operate in the shadows of some of the 11 concrete and steel suspension bridges busy with people, cars and red double-decker buses like Londons.</p>
        <p>What the Nile is to Egypt, the Tigris and its sister, the Euphrates, 24 miles west of Baghdad, are to IrM.</p>
        <p>Their water created a fertile, crescent-shaped swath through the sweltering desert and gave ancient Iraq its name: Mesopotamia, Greek for the land between the two rivers.</p>
        <p>While much of the Middle East is starved for water, Baghdad uses it without reservation to wash down its streets.</p>
        <p>In a city where summer temperatures go as high as 120</p>
        <p>door cafes along Saadun St., the main thoroughfare. Tlieir airy Arab robes and headdress predominate over Western clothes less suited to Arabias summer.</p>
        <p>Across tables sticky from spilled sugar, men sip small cups of sweet tea or coffee as the swirling Arabic music blares at deafening volumes from loudspeakers.</p>
        <p>Others play backgammon or suck on Turkish water pipes, bubble bubbles, as they chat and watch the world go by.</p>
        <p>Highrise apartment buildings and government offices loom over the earthen-brick houses of the old sections.</p>
        <p>Merchants selling kerosene honk or ring bells as they ride mule-drawn carts through residential neighborhoods.</p>
        <p>Just off the straight thoroughfares of downtown Baghdad is another world  the narrow, stone-paved alleyways of the old souk, or market.</p>
        <p>In this labyrinthine warren, partly roofed and partly open, the air is filled with the shouts of merchants selling cloth and the hammering of copper craftsmen making trays, pots and jugs.</p>
        <p>Everywhere in the streets and markets, women in elegant Euro-pean-style dress mingle with those in the traditional head-to-toe black robes.</p>
        <p>Some compromise between the two worlds, wearing robes over bright-colored dresses.</p>
        <p>In old squares and new traffic circles, modern statues commemorate the Arab past.</p>
        <p>A statue of a winged man, Abbas ibn Furnas, decorates the airport highway. He was a medieval scientist who was killed trying to fly with man-made wings.</p>
        <p>On Abu Niwas St., named after a famous medieval poet, is a statue of Scheherazade of the Arabian Nights tale.</p>
        <p>Old names have found their way into modern slang as well. Thieves are widely known as Ali Babas, from Arabian Nights 40 thieves.</p>
        <p>Policemen are called Abu Ismail, said to have been the name of the first Iraqi policeman under British rule between the two world</p>
        <p>wars.</p>
        <p>Baghdad is a young city by the standards of a region often called the cradle of civilization.</p>
        <p>It was founded in 762 A.D., when the center of Islamic power was</p>
        <p>moved from Damascus, now the capital of Syria, by the Abbasid caliph.</p>
        <p>AbuJaafaral-Mansur.</p>
        <p>His capital flourished and became</p>
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        <p>As the days heat subsides and the horde of horn-honking drivers thins, men, but not women, throng the out-</p>
        <p>politi-</p>
        <p>cally stable government of the Arab Baath Socialist Party brought prosperity to Iraq and Baghdad.</p>
        <p>But now the war with Iran, that b^an in 1980, has drawn Baghdad into another troubled cycle.Have You Missed Your Daily Reflector?First Call Your Indopondont Carrier.</p>
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        <pb facs="00096518_0014" />
        <p>Japanese TV Personality Has Turned To 'Fun Show' Format</p>
        <p>By MARGARET SCIIERF Associated Press Writer</p>
        <p>TOKYO (AP)  Kyosen Ohashi, a popular Japanese entertainer, is sticking to light-hearted fare these days after years of threats from right-wing people prompted him to abandon discussions of controversial issues on his television shows.</p>
        <p>Qhashi now hosts a talk-quiz show called How Much* on which celebrity guests discuss, often in a joking manner, various phenomena filmed by crews stationea around the world.</p>
        <p>At a recent taping, an actor, a comedian, an actress, an editor and an American teacher tried to guess how much former Philippines leader Ferdinand E. Marcos and his wife are worth, the price of a ton of paprika and how much a California sculptress was asking for her latest work.</p>
        <p>Ohashi, who spends eight weeks every winter in Hawaii, says he derived the idea from watching such American TV shows as 60 Minutes. Thats Incredible and Real People.</p>
        <p>ye also hosts a quiz show, patterned on a horse race, in which viewers bet money on how well five celebrities, handicapped by the host, can answer his questions.</p>
        <p>But for many years, Ohashi served up more controversial fare.</p>
        <p>As host of the popular 11.p.m. show, he often led discussions of such fbuchy subjects as sex education in Japan, relations with mainland</p>
        <p>China and Korean affairs. But, he said in a recent interview, his critics expressed their disapproval in frightening way^.</p>
        <p>Two or three times, the Japanese police station headquarters sent me two or three secret service people and kept those guys with me for a week because threatening from right-wing people was so severe, he said.</p>
        <p>They came to my studio, my office, and there was a lot of mail with razors in it, he said. My wife was scared. And Im not a politician.</p>
        <p>So, he recounted, I said to my wife, dont get scared. Im through with these controversial things. I go with a fun show from now on, no more political things. I myself am not scared, but they come to your family.</p>
        <p>But, though he says he really wants to retire, Im very much tempted ' by a recent offer from a television network to host a show that would deal with some serious issues. I dont know if I will accept it or not, but the whole concept is very gwid, he said.</p>
        <p>When he was hosting 11 p.m. in the late 1960s and early 70s, there was no problem. 1 could do anything, any controversial thing or whatever, he said. And then after,</p>
        <p>I should say, the middle 70s, I felt some pressure, especially from right-wing people.</p>
        <p>He said that since about 1970, Japan has been turning right.</p>
        <p>INSTEAD Concert At 8:15 Tonight</p>
        <p>The East Carolina University School of Music is presenting a concert by INSTEAD at 8:15 p.m. tonight in the A.J. Fletcher Recital Hall.</p>
        <p>ECU faculy member Donna Coleman is INSTEADs director. The program, titled Twentieth Century Piano Sounds" will feature guest artist Randall Love, a music faculty member at Duke University.</p>
        <p>The concert is free and open to the public on a first-come, first-seated basis.</p>
        <p>Three students in the ECU School of Music majoring in piano are also to be featured as soloists in the concert.</p>
        <p>Compositions by five 20th century composers have been chosen for the concert. These are:</p>
        <p> Aeolian Harp and The Tides of Manuanuan by Henry Cowell, Soo-chan Lim, pianist.</p>
        <p> Music for Marcel Duchamp for prepared piano, by John Cage, Dennis Daniel, pianist.</p>
        <p> Suite for Piano, opus 96 by Alan Hovhannes, in three movements, Jessica Johnson, pianist.  1</p>
        <p>Coleman and Love will together play two selections:</p>
        <p> Bronze Music by Gerald Levinson; and</p>
        <p> Piano Phase, by Steve Reich.</p>
        <p>Guest artist Love holds degrees in music pt*rformance from (tberlin College and the New England (onservatory, as well as a soloist diploma from the Sweelinck Conservatory in Amsterdam, the Netherlands. He has taught at Duke University since 1982.</p>
        <p>Although his primary interest is in the performance of 18th and 19th century keyboard music on historical instruments from that period, he has appeared in concerts of the repertory of earlier centuries as well as that of the 20th century throughout the United States and abroad</p>
        <p>TAKING A ( ll ANCE  Liiaii MIo. loft and his brother Bhim Mlo, two of 201 Montragnard rofiigoos who resettled in North ('arolina in November, play Monopoly to practice English and arithmetic. (.VP Laserphoto by Chuck Burton )</p>
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        <p>Maybe Japanese are born to be a little on the conservative side, because Japan has been so protected by the big ocean, and isolated.</p>
        <p>When he decicled two years ago to discontinue the Monday night version of the show, which was known for its political arguments, he said, he got ^many, many letters urging him to continue. "But I said. Im sorry. I did it. I did it for 2 years and thats enough."</p>
        <p>So I dont w^ant to be stabbed or whatever.</p>
        <p>Despite the heat hes taken in the past, Ohashi, .52, remains a man of immense popularity. Every political party except the communists has asked him to be a candidate, he said. But he does not consider himself a politician.</p>
        <p>Ohashi started out in show business as a jazz critic, following an interest aw'akened w'hen his uncle, drafted in 1942, left about a dozen jazz records with the 8-year-old boy.</p>
        <p>Those days, if you had jazz records, or any American records, you had to give it to the government'officials, or demolish it. he recalled.</p>
        <p>He promised his uncle he would keep the jazz collection hidden. One day, he went into a closet, wound up the gramophone and listened to the forbidden sound - his first jazz music.</p>
        <p>One was Benny Goodman playing Dont Be That Way. One was Im Getting Sentimental Over You by Tommy Dorsey. And one was Shine by the Mills Brothers or Bing Crosby.</p>
        <p>Listening to that music, the young boy said to himself, Oh boy, its beautiful.</p>
        <p>After World War II ended, he played the records again. Oh, I will never forget that day. he recalled.</p>
        <p>V</p>
        <p>That music was so good. And oh, everything was so nice and new. Boy, this is going to be my music, I thought.</p>
        <p>He roamed Tokyo, buying whatever jazz records he could find, listened to such radio programs as the Lucky Strike Hit Parade and w'ent to English school.</p>
        <p>As a freshman at Waseda University, he began writing about jazz. In</p>
        <p>the mid he started a 15-minute jazz show on Japanese television, translating lyrics into Japanese, and also translated the Perry Como show.</p>
        <p>Then a TV director friend went to America and was impressed by Johnny Carsons late-night talk show. Ohashi became one of the writers for a similar show in Japan.</p>
        <p>The original host was a little too</p>
        <p>square, Ohashi said, so he was asked to host. He did so for 20 years.</p>
        <p>Now Ohashi says he works only three days a week, plays a lot of golf, breeds horses, parties with such friends as retired baseball player Joe DiMaggio, movie actor Robert Stack and singer Vic Damone.</p>
        <p>He describes himself as very rare among the workaholic Japanese. 1 hate to work.</p>
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        <p>THURSDAY, JANUARY 29, 1987 8:15 p.iii.  Wright Auditorium For ticket information, call 757-6611</p>
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        <pb facs="00096518_0015" />
        <p>The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.</p>
        <p>Sunday, January 18,1987  C-15</p>
        <p>'Burnt Offering' First 1987 Playwright Fund Production</p>
        <p>The Playwrights Fund of North Carolina will present its first production of 1987, Burnt Offering, by Jack Bonham on Wednesday in two staged reading performances.</p>
        <p>Bonhams one act drama takes</p>
        <p>MASTER BRONZES</p>
        <p>CRIME AND PUNISHMENT  Russian director Yuri Lyubimov, center, talks with actors Beverly Brigham Bowman, left, and Randy Mell while preparing for a Washington theatrical company to perform the Russian classic Crime and Punishment. Lyubimov, banished</p>
        <p>from the Soviet Union for his outspoken views on theater and politics, has visions of a Russia radically different from the one he left behind three years ago. (.AP Laser-photol|)y Ira Schwarz)</p>
        <p>LOS ANGELES (AP) - A selection of 75 Italian and northern Euro-pean bronzes from.the Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna are on view at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art through March 1.</p>
        <p>Dating from the 15th to the early 17th centuries, Renaissance Master Bronzes highlights a medium in which major masters of Western sculpture have worked for centuries in important artistic centers such as Florence, Padua, Venice and Nuremberg.</p>
        <p>The collection of Renaissance statuettes and reliefs began as the Royal Collection of the House of Austria. Many of the bronzes in the exhibition had never left the museum or imperial collections since their acquisition.</p>
        <p>place in a 1957 Buick as John and Grace and their son. Buddy, make the long drive from California to West Virginia for a family funeral. As the night brightens with the glow of a forest fire they must either drive through or turn back from, John and Buddy find inspiration and expression for the love they have shared but never communicated so well before.</p>
        <p>The Burnt Offering cast includes Heidi Lane as Grace, Tony Schreiber as John, and Anthony DiStefano as their son. Buddy. Steve Myott is director.</p>
        <p>Playwright Bonham lives in Dallas, Texas, has studied at the University of Florida and Southern Methodist University, has both stage management and acting credits. Burnt Offering is his first play.</p>
        <p>The Best Lunch Theater Ever performance will be at noon at the Greenville Museum of Art, 8th and Evans Street. An encore performance will be given at 8 p.m. at the Downtown, Downstairs playwright area in the Humber House, 5th and Washington Streets. The performances are free to members of the Playwrights Fund, and a $2 tax-deductible donation to the Playwright Fund is suggested for nonmembers.</p>
        <p>The Playwrights Fund is a nonprofit corporation supported by grants from the Theater Arts Section of the North Carolina Arts Council, foundation contributions, corporate and individual memberships. For membership and other information, call 758-3628.</p>
        <p>NEED CASH</p>
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        <p>Emilio Estevez Fills Multiple Roles</p>
        <p>SOUTHERN GUN &amp;amp; PAWN INC.</p>
        <p>TCO OL  500  North  Greene  St.</p>
        <p>Greenville</p>
        <p>By BOB THOMAS Associated Press Writer LOS ANGELES (AP) - When Emilio Estevez began seeking an acting career, agents and managers urged him to change his last name to Sheen, as his father, Martin, had done before him.</p>
        <p>No, its not right, Estevez replied. Emilio Sheen is not me. If I cant make it as Emilio Estevez, then I dont want to. It wouldnt be honest. Id feel that I was riding on my fathers coattails.</p>
        <p>The young actors instincts proved correct. Within a few years, the No. 1 son of Martin Sheen, whose real name is Ramon Estevez, has racked up these movie credits: Tex, The Outsiders, Repo Man, Nightmares, The Breakfast Club, St. Elmos Fire and Maximum Overdrive.</p>
        <p>In addition, Estevez wrote the script and starred in That Was Then ... This Is Now. He wrote and directed his new movie, the 20th Cen-tury-Fox release, Wisdom. It co-stars his current love interest, Demi Moore.</p>
        <p>Estevez is 24. He resembles his father: slight build, intense, faintly Latin eyes (Martin is half-Spanish), serious demeanor. Estevez drove in from his Malibu condo for an interview in his production office at the Lions Gate studio in West Los Angeles.</p>
        <p>Ive been making 8mm films since I was 10 years old, he said. Id make surfing movies with the neighborhood kids, or dramatic films for which Id be the cinematographer, the director, the actor, then I cut the film myself.</p>
        <p>Ive always had a love for film. I still do. I love touching it, I love being involved in movies. I see everything out: bad movies, great movies, old films, foreign films. I wasnt content with just being an actor. I felt I need to express myself further.</p>
        <p>Estevez began in the business before he was old enough to vote. He took an option on the S.E. Hinton novel, That Was Then ... This Is Now, wrote a script and after four years managed to get it produced. The movie was one of the lesser achievements of 1985, but it inspired the actor to write three more scripts. Wisdom was taken on by David Begelmans company. Gladden Entertainment.</p>
        <p>Estevez plays John Wisdom, whose criminal record from a youthful joy ride in a stolen car made him unemployable. So he robs banks. But hes a bank robber with a mission: hes a modern-day Robin Hood.</p>
        <p>I think we have a responsibility as filmmakers not to just make films for thepsake of entertainment, Estevez said. If we can educate through entertainment, then I think the value of the film increases.</p>
        <p>This film deals with the plight of he fa</p>
        <p>the homeless, the plight of the farmers, the trauma theyre going through. I wanted to touch on that and express my feelings on that.</p>
        <p>Estevez was born in New York City in 1962, when his father was starting out as an actor. The boy was 6 when the family moved to California, and he grew up in the surfing life of Malibu.</p>
        <p>As a family weve always been</p>
        <p>supportive of each other, said Estevez, whose younger brother, Charlie, is currently starring in Platoon.</p>
        <p>We always cheered each other on. When my father went on location, he always took the family. So we always knew what it was about. ... We always slapped each other on the back when one was doing well, or sympathize when another member of the family wasnt doing well. Though they wouldnt want to admit it, Estevez and Demi Moore are considered bona fide members of Hollywood's brat pack, having both appeared in The Breakfast Club and St. Elmo's Fire. However,</p>
        <p>both are far too serious to be so categorized.</p>
        <p>About their work together in Wisdom, Estevez said: I think that what I had to offer her was a greater understanding of the film-making process. She was there from square one. She was very involved in the development of her character. She would even go out on location scouts with us (the film was shot in Sacramento). She was very much a part of the production team.</p>
        <p>He admitted that he and Miss Moore had plenty of give-and-take during filming, but their romance wasnt damaged.</p>
        <p>Weve been engaged for a year and a half, he said. Were just looking for that window of time to schedule the wedding. Right now our schedules dont allow for that. Im content to be just engaged for now. Were a very happy couple.</p>
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        <p>Isle Of Jersey Honors Schooners</p>
        <p>The island of Jerseys first stamp for 1987 honors the racing schooner Westward, considered to be one of the most famous racing yachts of all time. Westward had a career extending from 1910 until 1947, when she was scuttled in the English Channel close to where her great rival. King George Vs Britannia had been laid to rest.</p>
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        <p>There are four stamps in the set. The 10-pence depicts the Westward at full sail. The 14-p shows T.B. Davis steering the Westward. The 31-p illustrates the Westward overhauling the Britannia in a race. The 34-p features the Westward fitting out at St. Helier in Jersey. Each stamp also bears a vignette profile of Queen Elizabeth II.</p>
        <p>Philatelists interested in knowing more about the stamps of Jersey may write to the Club of Channel Island Collectors, Box 579, New York, NY 10028.</p>
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        <p>STAR, WRITER. DIRECTOR  Emilio Estevez stars with his fiancee Demi Moore in the new 20th Century Fox release Wisdom." Estevez, at age 24, also wrote and directed the film. (AP Laserphoto)</p>
        <p>Ken Richter presents- E E MY SWITZERLAND</p>
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        <pb facs="00096518_0016" />
        <p>Carolina Today Calendar Thoughts Froitt Coitiposer Joh Hartford</p>
        <p>During the coming week, Carolina Today will feature guests in the fields of tourism, museums, the Jaycees, tax laws and theater, among other topics. The early morning TV show airs weekdays from 6 to 8 a.m. over WNCT-TV, Channel 9, Greenville. Co-hosts are Slim Short and Jill Ortman.</p>
        <p>The weeks calendar is;</p>
        <p> Monday - 6:40 a.m., Ann Blanchard, business and commercial property magazine; 7:15 a.m., Doug Little, N.C. Bureau of Tourism; 7:25 a.m., pet of thw week; 7; 40 a.m.. Buck Roebuck, help for the hopeless, the last resort.</p>
        <p> Tuesday - 6:40 a.m., healthbreak; 7; 15 a.m., Eloise Howard, N.C. Museum of Natural History; 7:25 a.m., Lisa Pool, ECU Biology Club; 7:40 a.m., Richard Cannon, Jeff Allen, national Jaycee Week.</p>
        <p> Wednesday  6:40 a.m., education spotlight, Melissa Rosebrook, West Craven High School FFA; 7:15 a.m., Roy Everett, a new outlet for products made by the blind; 7:25 a.m.. Hazel Stapleton, Playwrights Fund of North Carolina; 7:40 a.m., Winford Barr, Internal Revenue Service, new tax laws and forms.</p>
        <p>. Thursday - 6:40 a.m., Jill &amp;amp; Slim go duck hunting; 7:15 a.m., Anita Anderson, update on ECU conference play: 7:25 a.m., ECU Theater Art Series ; 7:40 a m all around the house</p>
        <p> Friday - 6:40 a.m., Louis Tyndall, Jim Goes, administrative management society; 7:15 a.m., ski lesson from from Wintergreen Ski Resort; 7:25 a.m.. Camp Lejeune report , 7:40 a m, Eddie Harrington, plant doctor.</p>
        <p>Top Movies Of 1986</p>
        <p>ByBOBTHOM.AS Associated Press Writer</p>
        <p>HOLLYWOOD (AP) - George Lucas produced a ruptured duck and Steven Spielberg brought forth a mouse.</p>
        <p>However, other filmmakers provided enough worthwhile and diverse movies to make picking the 10 best movies of 1986 a greater pleasure than in recent years.</p>
        <p>The film industry fortunately heeded the publics apathy toward teen comedy and released a wider variety of entertainment. There were movies to argue about (Blue Velvet), movies to applaud (Stand By Me) and movies that made us cry (Night Mother).</p>
        <p>The two filmmakers who have been responsible for eight of the 12 all-time moneymaking movies were relatively quiet in 1986. George Lucas sponsored Howard the Duck, the $40 million egg that was adored by no one but punsters. Steven Spielberg stumbled into The Money Pit but found better success late in the year with his Don Bluth animated collaboration, An American Tail, about an immigrant mouse.</p>
        <p>The year produced promising new directors, notably Randa Haines (Children of a Lesser God), and Oliver Stone (El Salvador, Platoon). Le.ss promising was the directorial debut of Prince (Under the Cherry Moon).</p>
        <p>Whoopi Goldberg, who made her movie debut in the drama, The Color Purple, returned to comedy with Jumpin Jack Flash. Eddie Murphy (Beverly Hills Cop) switched to special effects in The Golden Child. Neither succeeded with the critics, but their loyal fans turned out.</p>
        <p>Here is this reviewers list of the top 10 English-language movies released in 1986:</p>
        <p>1. Hannah and Her Sisters. What a pleasure to find Woody Allen at the peak of his form, observing the absurdities of the 80s through his thick glasses. Unlike some director-stars, he allows his fellow actors to shine, and they do, especially Mia Farrow, Michael Caine, Dianne Wiest, Barbara Hershey, the late Lloyd Nolan and Maureen OSullivan.</p>
        <p>2. Room With a View. James Ivory created a perfect jewel of a movie from the gently incisive E M. Forster novel. Florence never looked more beautiful, the music contributes immensely and the performances are sublime  notably Maggie Smith, Denholm Elliott and Daniel Day Lewis.</p>
        <p>3. Round Midnight. It took a Frenchman, Bertand Tavernier, to make the best movie yet about American jazz. The director sensibly chose a real-life jazz great, Dexter Gordon, as the burnt-out sax man in Paris and let Gordon and others make their music on-camera, not to a playback.</p>
        <p>4. The Color of Money. A generation and a half apart, Paul Newman and Tom (Yuise prove their star status in a splendid followup to The Hustler. The plot sometimes wavers, but Martin Scorsese still</p>
        <p>manages to convey high drama from the lowly game of pool.</p>
        <p>5. Children oi</p>
        <p>a Lesser God.</p>
        <p>Seldom have hit plays been so happily converted to the screen. Credit goes to the sensitive direction of flanda Haines, and two high-voltage performances by William Hurt and Marlee Matlin.</p>
        <p>6. Peggy Sue Got Married. Francis Ford Coppola seems to be having fun with this fantasy-comedy about a time warp back to the 60s, and he conveys that feeling to the audience. Kathleen Turner is ideally cast as the spurned heroine, Nicholas Cage less so as her sweet-heart-husband.</p>
        <p>7. Crimes of the Heart. The Broadway play doesnt transmit to the screen with its quirky humor intact, but its a treat to watch three Oscar holders performing their star turns together: Jessica Lange; Sissy Spacek; Diane Keaton.</p>
        <p>8. Mona Lisa. A mixed-up Pygmalion story in the London underworld, the film offers a dynamite performance by Bob Hoskins as the hapless ex-con who falls for a street-smart hooker. Cathy Tyson matches him scene for scene.</p>
        <p>9. Aliens. At last, the thinking persons space adventure. James Cameron (The Terminator) manages to put style as well as horror into the traditional genre. Sigourney Weaver is terrific as an outer-space Rambo.</p>
        <p>10. Malcolm. This little-noticed import from Australia provides delight and surprise in its amoral tale of a shy inventor who robs banks with robots. Colin Friels, John Hargreaves and Linda Davis make a rousing trio of co-conspirators.</p>
        <p>UNORTHODOX MUSICIAN  Singer, composer and one-man-showman John Hartford, who dances on a piece of amplified plywood during his performances, is best known for writing the song Gentle On My Mind. The song, now almost 20 years old, has been recorded by over 400 artists. (AP Laserphoto by Mark Humphrey)</p>
        <p>Lecture, Concert By Drake At ACC</p>
        <p>WILSON - Barry Drake, songwriter and performer, will appear in concert and will lecture on the campus of Atlantic Christian College on Tuesday and Wednesday.</p>
        <p>His lecture, The Roots of Rock n Rolls, will be presented at 8 p.m. Tuesday in Hardy Alumni Hall. His concert will be at 9 p.m. Wednesday in the Hamlin Student Center dining hall.</p>
        <p>Fellowships Being Offered</p>
        <p>RALEIGH - Professional North Carolina poets or fiction writers, and professional North Carolina artists who have made career commitments to their art, may apply for $5,000 fellowships from the N.C. Arts Council.</p>
        <p>The deadline for making applications is Feb. 1.</p>
        <p>Jean McLaughlin, literature/visual arts director for the council, explained the fellowships are intended to allow writers and artists to set aside time to write or pursue their art, to purchase equipment, to achieve specific career goals, and other needs allowing them to devote full attention to their art form.</p>
        <p>The field of visual arts applicable to the program includes painters, sculptors, printmakers, photographers, film and videomakers and craftspeople.</p>
        <p>Applicants will be evaluated on artistic excellence, importance of the fellowship to the writers or artists career at the time of application, and past contributions to tW art form. Fellowship funds must be spent between July 1,1987 and June 30,1988.</p>
        <p>For more information or to request an application, contact Ms.</p>
        <p>McLaughlin at the N.C. Arts Council, Department of Cultural Resources, Raleigh, N.C., 27611 or call 733-2111.</p>
        <p>GRANTSANNOUNCED</p>
        <p>LOS ANGELES (AP)  Three grants were announced recently by the Los Angeles County Museum of Art.</p>
        <p>It said it had received a permanent endowment grant of $300,000 from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation for the support of scholarly publications on its collections. The museum says its on-going program of documentation of its collections is designed to make the holdings available to scholars, curators, collectors and students as well as the general public.</p>
        <p>A donation of $250,000, to be paid over five years, by American Medical International Inc. will be used for the museums corporate membership program for general operating funds.</p>
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        <p>PIAZA SHOPPPNG CENTR</p>
        <p>ALL  MATINEES</p>
        <p>SEATS  SAT. &amp;amp; SUN.</p>
        <p> _ Priil  JHE  r'</p>
        <p>SHOWS TODAY AT 2:00-4:45-8:00 WEEKDAYS AT 8:00 P.M. ONLY</p>
        <p>He is entering her world to track down the killer she is desperate to be free of. Murder brought them together.</p>
        <p>Passion keeps them there.</p>
        <p>RICHARD GERE KIM BASINGER</p>
        <p>4 TMI STAH ASF</p>
        <p>SHOWS TODAY AT 2:00-4:00-7:00-9:00 WEEKDAYS AT 7:00-9:00</p>
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        <p>WEEKDAYS AT 7:00-9:10</p>
        <p>SOMEWHERE ON EARTH...</p>
        <p>2iAKTneK.</p>
        <p>IL</p>
        <p>TH VOYAG6 HOM</p>
        <p>* PAHAMOUNT PICTURf</p>
        <p>EI]</p>
        <p>ALL SEATS -|50</p>
        <p>TOM CRUISE ^ KELLY McOILUS</p>
        <p>SHOWS TODAY 2:004:10-7:00-9:10 WEEKDAYS AT 7:00-9:10</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>By JOE EDWARDS Associated Press Writer NASHVILLE, Term. (AP) - Composer John Hartford vows hell never allow his popular song, Gentle on My Mind, to be played in a television commercial as so many other former hit tunes are used.</p>
        <p>It seems to me that when a song gets identified with a product, it loses credibility, Hartford said. Ive never authorized it for a parody or commercials and I think possibly it may have had something to do with its staying power.</p>
        <p>The sentimental 1%7 song has been rworded by more than 400 people, with Glen Campbells version the best known. Its been performed at least 4.4 million times, making it the second most performed song licensed by Broadcast Music, Inc., one of the two major performing rights organizations. Paul McCartneys Yesterday is No. 1.</p>
        <p>Its just a love song, said Hartford. Its what it means to you. Once a song is done, its unto itself and means different things to different people.</p>
        <p>I just wrote it. I didnt ever intend to record it. It was like a stream of consciousness.</p>
        <p>Hartford, whose own recorded version of the tune also was a hit, wrote the song in a back room of his mobile home in 20 minutes after seeing the movie Dr. Zhivago.</p>
        <p>The lonesome feeling (in the movie) triggered a lot of things, the 49-year-old Hartford recalled in an interview. It conjured up a lot of scenes in my memory. Thats what came out.</p>
        <p>I was writing two or three songs a day as hard as I could, aw)ut everything and anything. If someone lit a candle or the phone rang, I wrote a song about it. I had no idea of the impact. I even tried to change the word gentle. It seemed too sweet, too soft.</p>
        <p>I sang it for some people and noticed the reaction it got.</p>
        <p>Hartford has just used his writing talents in another direction: He composed a poem for a new coffeetable book, Steamboat in a Cornfield. Its about the steamboat, Virginia, which ran aground in the Ohio River in 1910 in Willow Grove, W.Va.</p>
        <p>A new album, Annual Waltz, has just been released, many of it songs featuring 12 fiddles in three-part harmony.</p>
        <p>He also does one-man band concerts, playing the banjo, fiddle and guitar while wearing a trademark</p>
        <p>black derby. He spices his show by dancing on an amplified piece of plywocJd.</p>
        <p>Im not sure what it is. Irish step dancing is probably as close to being, accurate as you can get, he said. It just came to me. Im not a legitimate, dancer doing a legitimate, recognized style. Somebody told me it was a version of shuffle off to Buffalo.</p>
        <p>In the summer, he spends an average of two days a week at the one thing that rivals music as his passion: riverboating. For the past several summers hes been piloting the Julia Belle Swain between Peoria, 111., and Utica, 111. This summer the sternwheeler will run between Galena, 111., and Le Claire, Iowa.</p>
        <p>And topping off a five-year project, hes just finished designing a banjo, for commercial sale, with a wood tone ring instead of the traditional; metal.</p>
        <p>This gives it a fuller sound, the-lanky Hartford said in his home overlooking the Cumberland River.</p>
        <p>Hartford, who won two Grammy awards for Gentle on My Mind and another for his album Mark Twang, was born in New York City where his father was a medical intern. The family moved to St. Louis shortly after his birth.</p>
        <p>I was born on the road and have spent my whole life traveling, he said. Thats natural.</p>
        <p>Growing up in St. Louis, he taught himself to play the five-string banjo and learned the guitar and fiddle.</p>
        <p>He moved to Nashville in the mid-1960s, hit it big with Gentle on My Mind and was a regular for two years on televisions Glen Campbell Goodtime Hour later in the decade Ive worked pretty hard, he said, reflecting on his career. Im probably not as natural a musician as others. I try to make maximum use of a minimum amount of talent.</p>
        <p>He saw Dr. Zhivago again last year, but it inspired no new songs.</p>
        <p>I wasnt so ucky.</p>
        <p>CAROLINA ORILL</p>
        <p>Since 1900</p>
        <p>Sausage and Egg Sandwich Tea or Coffee</p>
        <p>$1</p>
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        <p>Take-Outs Welcome 907 Dickinson Ave. 752-1188</p>
        <p>THEATRE</p>
        <p>GUIDE</p>
        <p>NOW</p>
        <p>SHOWING ONLV</p>
        <p>STEVEN SPIELBERG presents</p>
        <p>An American</p>
        <p>Walt Disneys Classic</p>
        <p>Tail</p>
        <p>WEEKNIQHTS 6:00-7:45 (6:00 $2.75 ALL SEATS) SUN. 1:00-2:45</p>
        <p>futir</p>
        <p>and</p>
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        <p>THE MORNING AFTER ,</p>
        <p>LOWMAR motion pictures</p>
        <p>WEEKNIQHTS 7:15-9:45</p>
        <p>SUN. 2:004:15-7:15-9:45</p>
        <p>WEEKNIQHTS (6:00 ONLY $2.75 ALL SEATS) SUN. 1:15-2:45</p>
        <p>HEARTBREAK</p>
        <p>RIDGE</p>
        <p>CLINT</p>
        <p>EASTWOOD</p>
        <p>FROM WARNER BROS   1)</p>
        <p>WEEKNIQHTS 7:00-9:30 SUN. 1:454:30-7:00-9:30</p>
        <p>BRONSON</p>
        <p>A eC A CCI Al ATI/\M</p>
        <p>WEEKNIQHTS 7:30-9:15 SUN. 4:30-7:30-9:15</p>
        <p>His Wife... His Mistress... His Career... A Deadly Trap</p>
        <p>ROYSCHEIDER ANN-MARGRET</p>
        <p>C.N.ON R.I.i.ing Co'D  ISJ</p>
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        <p>WEEKNIQHTS 9:30 ONLY , SUN. 4:45-7:15-9:30</p>
        <pb facs="00096518_0017" />
        <p>BBiTSupporting Performance By The North Carolina Dance Theater</p>
        <p>A dance pause  Hikers in a mountain meadow Jan. 26 in Hendrix Theater on the East Carolina Universi-above Grindelwald in Switzerland pause to perform an ty campus. The film is one of the Travel Ad\enture Film open-air folk dance. The scene is from Kenneth Richters Series of the 1986-87 season, travel film, My Switzerland, to be shown at 8 p.m. on</p>
        <p>Swiss Travel Film On Jan. 26</p>
        <p>Both a land of physical beauty and historical importance, Switzerland has long been a favorite land of tour-sits the world over.</p>
        <p>Switzerland, filmmaker Kenneth Richter captures the array of mountain, lake, valley, village, city and meadow glories that make up the landscape of this small European country, along with the culture of the Swiss people themselves.</p>
        <p>The theme of Richters film is the survival of the worlds oldest democracy, which in five years will be 700 years old. Its survival has been the result of the art of compromise. Switzerland has made itself indispensable to the rest of the world as a bridge between opposed cultures in peacetime, and a contact point during wars.</p>
        <p>One important aspect about Swiss civilization is that every Swiss male is, for 30 years, a member of a well-trained army of 650,000 men. A representative group of this force is seen in the film on military maneuvers. The Swiss have not fought a war for nearly 500 years, and are determined they will not have to.</p>
        <p>An Academy Award winner, Richter consistently uses the travel film medium to bring to audiences worldwide the landscape, history and cultures of many lands. ^Tickets for My Switzerland are available from the Central Ticket Office in Mendenhall Student Center Mon-days-Fridav from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. Tickets are priced at $3.50, in advance or at the door, and are $3 each when purchased for groups of 20 or more. For more information and ticket reservation, call 757-6611.</p>
        <p>WINSTON-SALEM - Branch Banking and Trust Company is sup-wrting the presentation of a full-ength performance of the ballet, Coppelia, to be performed by the North Carolina Dance Theater.</p>
        <p>Announcement of a gift of $25,000 to underwrite the ballets performance has been made by Vincent Lowe, president of BB&amp;amp;T and Mrs. Walter S. Lineberger, president of the dance theater.</p>
        <p>This is the largest corporate contribution to date specifically for the purpose of presenting a new work by the North Carolina Dance Theater. The gift continues a long history of</p>
        <p>Remember</p>
        <p>TOP TUNES 50 YEARS AGO Your HU Parade January 9,1937</p>
        <p>1. Pennies From Heaven</p>
        <p>2. Its De-Lovely</p>
        <p>3. In The Chapel In The Moonlight</p>
        <p>4. Ive Got You Under My Skind</p>
        <p>5. The Night Is Young And Youre So Beautiful</p>
        <p>6. I'm In A Dancing Mood</p>
        <p>7. Easy To Love</p>
        <p>The North Carolina Dance Theater was founded in 1970 by Robert Lin-dgren and is a professional affiliate of the North Carolina School of the Arts. The ensemble of 16 dancers tours nationally and internationally for 20 to 30 weeks each season. \ BB&amp;amp;T, based in Wilson, is the states oldest bank and now has 164 offices in 96 cities across the state.</p>
        <p>support by BB&amp;amp;T for various artistic endeavors in North Carolina.</p>
        <p>Performances of Coppelia are planned in Charlotte, Winston-Salem, Hickory and Wilmington.</p>
        <p>A story of two young lovers who are each taken in by a life-like doll created by an eccentric toymaker. Dr. Coppelius, the three-act ballet is set to music by Leo Delibes.</p>
        <p>Country Junction</p>
        <p>TODAY!</p>
        <p>Super Sunday Jam</p>
        <p>3 High Energy Country Rock Bands</p>
        <p>Super Grit Cowboy Band Dalton Brothers Band R.O. Fogg Band</p>
        <p>Doors Open At 3 Music Begins At 4  $5  Cover  Charge</p>
        <p>2% miles out on Ram Horn Road  752-1351</p>
        <p>UNC-TV Weekly List</p>
        <p>CHAPEL HILL - Programs of special interest to be shown over the University of North Carolina Center for Public Television are listed below. Locally, the programs will air over WUNK-TV, channel 25, Greenville (channel 4 on cable network). The programs are:</p>
        <p> Today - 5 p.m.. Out of the Fiery Furnace, Into the Machine Age. A look at the American Industrial Revolution and how it affected daily life, part 5 of 7; 7 p.m.. Profiles of Nature, Woodpeckers, Joe Milners film study of that bird; 8 p.m.. Nature, elephants. How Africas population growth threatens the elephants natural habitats; 9 p.m.. Masterpiece Theater, "Goodbye Mr. Chips, part 3 of 3.</p>
        <p> Monday - 8 p.m.. The Planet Earth, The Living Machine. The theory of plate tectonics, part 1 of 7; 9 p.m., American Playhouse, All My Sons, Arthur Millers play with James Whitemore and Michael Learned.</p>
        <p> Tuesday  7:30 p.m. Bodywatch, secrets of Longevity; 8 p.m. Nova, Countdown to the Invisible Universe, an examination of the IRAS satellite, capable of seeing infrared spectrum invisible to the human eyes; 9 p.m., The (Conservatives, interviews with Ronald Reagan, Barry Goldwater, c^rs in a combinaiton of film and eyewitness testimony to create a TV histcnry of American conservatism; 10:30 p.fn.. East of Occidental. Archival photograiriis, period music and reminiscences illustrate Asian immigration to Americas Northwest.</p>
        <p> Wednesday  8 p.m.. An Evening of Championship Skating, featuring skaters Brian Boitano, Elizabeth Manley and others; 9 p.m.. Eyes on the , Prize: Americas Civil Rights Years, 1954-1965, part 1 of 6; 10 p.m.. Fair Game, a look into college sports including payoffs, gambling, drug use and the failure of colleges to educate sports superstars.</p>
        <p> Thursday - 7:30 p.m.. The Woodwrights Shop, House Framing Doggie Style; 8 p.m.. Spaceflight, One Giant Leap, the Apollo program, walk on the moon, two tragic Soviet missions, etc.</p>
        <p> Friday  9 p.m.. Great Performances, Otello, Herbert Von Karajan and the Berlin Philharmonic in Verdis opera, with Jon Vickers and Mirellai Freni.  f</p>
        <p> Saturday - 6 p.m.. All Creatures Great and Small; 7 p.m.. Wild America, King of snakes, the king snake; 8 p.m., WonderWorks, The Wild Pony, a boys love for a pony about to be shot; 10 p.m., Austin City Limits, Steve Mariner sings his hits; 11:30 p.m.. The Classic Western, insights into making four classic Western films.</p>
        <p>NEEDLEWORK EXHIBITION</p>
        <p>LOS ANGELES (AP) ~ About 160 outstanding 17th to early 20th century examples of needlework are on view in the exhibition With Needle and Thread at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art through April 5.</p>
        <p>The pieces on display include a fine white cotton, about 1820</p>
        <p>In Concert</p>
        <p>GMA 1985 Male Vocalist Of The Year</p>
        <p>Steve Green</p>
        <p>Wright Auditorium ECU Campus Friday, January 23 - 7:30 p.m.</p>
        <p>Tickets on sale at the Christian Book Stores, Mendenhall Student Center,</p>
        <p>WBZQ, Greenville and WGHB, Farmvllle.</p>
        <p>sponsored By BuslnMS Pfolesslonals 01 Pitt County For Youth</p>
        <p>All Seats $2.25 Everyday Til 5:30</p>
        <p>BUCCANEER MOVIES</p>
        <p>1:00-3:00-5:00</p>
        <p>7:00-9:00</p>
        <p>CRITICAL</p>
        <p>CONDITION</p>
        <p>-R-</p>
        <p>1:00-3:05-5:10 7:15-9:20 CRIMES OF THE HEART4,q.i3.</p>
        <p>1:15-3:15 5:15-7:15-9:15 GOLDEN CHILD</p>
        <p>-PQ-13-</p>
        <p>New Yorks Pennsylvania Station opened Nov. 27,1910. At that time, it was the worlds largest railway terminal.</p>
        <p>The worlds busiest si Plesetsk, a military facility among forests, lakes and peat bogs 500 miles north of Moscow.</p>
        <p>spaceport is facility set</p>
        <p>RSOassicl</p>
        <p>down east ballet, Jazz, Tap,</p>
        <p>dance Modem</p>
        <p>(lasvcN aiaildblr  1 Or up</p>
        <p>Ht-ginninq  Inlrrtm-dial*  Wam&amp;lt;fl</p>
        <p>^UMHfrnlK(M4l  lt ii(  V*  ttrrn  X iMiO h&amp;gt;7 1*4I</p>
        <p>X 11H\% 7SAHI4B</p>
        <p>noinf ol 4(lan(M Damr Ikralrr</p>
        <p>1:00-3:00-5:00-7:00-9:00</p>
        <p>ON WED., JAN. 2tST AND THURS., JAN. 22ND THE BLOOD MOBILE WILL BE AT ECU. GO BY</p>
        <p>AND SUPPORT American^ liTfBrcr A 10H DISCOUNT Rgd CtOSS T AT WESTERN</p>
        <p>STEER FAMILY STEAK HOUSE. THEN GET $2.00 OFF YOUR ADMISSION PRICE AT BUCCANEER MOVIES. (EVENINGS ONLY-GOOD JAN. 21-JAN. 29,1987 -CRITICAL CONDITION-</p>
        <p>Guess whos playing doctor?</p>
        <p>f STARTS</p>
        <p>...A GREAT AMERICAN ^</p>
        <p>FRIDAY</p>
        <p>MOVIE - ONE COMES OUT</p>
        <p>FEB.6TH</p>
        <p>EXCITED YET SHAKEN</p>
        <p>^ PLATOON,</p>
        <p>L "R"</p>
        <p>AND CLOSE TO TEARS...;,</p>
        <p>/*'..........t::- . _ _ _</p>
        <p>6th BIG WEEK!!</p>
        <p>Richard Pryor</p>
        <p>is in</p>
        <p>WRQH</p>
        <p>PRESENTS</p>
        <p>M</p>
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        <p>$1.94</p>
        <p>EDDIE MURPHY IS BACK IN ACTION.</p>
        <p>GOLDEN</p>
        <p>CHILD</p>
        <p>Acomedy of epidemic proportions.</p>
        <p>PABAMOUNT PICTURES PRESET A TED FIELD RDBERT OORT PRODUCTION CRITICAL CONDITION V^^BOBLARSON DENISHAMELLyJOHNHAMILL.:ALANSWYER DENIS HAMILL ^ JOHN HAME "1 TED FIELDl.ROBERT CORT MICHAEL APTED A PARAMOUNT PICTURE</p>
        <p>1:00-3:05-5:10-7:15-9:20</p>
        <p>Meg jusl Icfl out.</p>
        <p>Ltnny iitvcr had (iiit. ISahc just shot one.</p>
        <p>' he Maijralh sisters sure liave a was vtith men!</p>
        <p>niAM</p>
        <p>KFMON</p>
        <p>JESSICA</p>
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        <p>(BHSEimiil 'S?</p>
        <p>an,SAMSIIi:PAR)a.n.'</p>
        <p>t IklAI M.yillS LVIhHI MSMI M CHOI Hms/ &amp;gt; /i/n,s 4 \lHHHHh HUJISHI HI SI &amp;lt;,\HM\\</p>
        <p>i.Hims 01 flit. m.AH!  /7.SS hahuh  /&amp;gt;ii ii&amp;gt; i \hi'i \iih III HI) iimiHj) ^j,toHohsimitii ^T^hivii sri\orii 'ZZ HI HI SI (,miA.\ .4-.AWh 001 HS.M 1) 'tSA/ \ \n\ \i</p>
        <p> *</p>
        <p>^^^l-HH)l)ll HHJ)S  HHIU HI HISIOHI)</p>
        <p>I  RtlJ/%1</p>
        <p>m DPMMiirr.</p>
        <pb facs="00096518_0018" />
        <p>'The Rainmakers' To Be Performed On January 29</p>
        <p>N. Richard Nashs romantic comedy, The Rainmaker, will be presented in the Wright Auditoriu at 8:15 p.m. Jan. 29. The play is part of the Theater Arts Series of East Carolina University and is a production of Floridas Asolo State Theater.</p>
        <p>Tickets for the production are priced at $10 for the public. Tickets can be purchased at the Central Ticket Office, Mendenhall Student Center or reserved by calling 757-6611. If any are left at the time of performance, they will also be available at the door. A 50 cents charge will be made on all Mastercard of Visa telephone orders, and on all mail orders.</p>
        <p>The Rainmaker was first produced on Broadway in 1953 with Darren McGavin and Geraldine Page in the lead roles. It then had a London production followed by a film verson with Katherine Hepburn and Burt Lancaster.</p>
        <p>In 1963, a musical version of the play, 110 in The Shade, ran for 331 performances. A television version of the play featured Tuesday Weld.</p>
        <p>The setting for The Rainmaker is a ranch house in the Southwest during a severe drought. The family worries about a lack of rain and a lack of suitors for the daughter, Lizzie. Efforts of the father and brothers to draw in suitors fail, including those of sending her away from home hoping shell attract an eligible young man.</p>
        <p>Then comes a rainmaker who promises rain for a one hundred dollar fee - and he dazzles half the</p>
        <p>family into paying for it. He not only sets his magic on the clouds, but</p>
        <p>begins to court Lizzie who blossoms into a self-confident and appealing young woman.</p>
        <p>In the Asolo production, the lead roles are perfbrmed by Michael</p>
        <p>Dragon Tale</p>
        <p>Guido as Starbuck and Gretchen Lord as Lizzie. Asolo Theater, Floridas state theater since 1965, has toured extensively for the past 20 years.</p>
        <p>This tour is sponsored by the Asolo State Theater. It is supported in part by the state of Florida; the National Endowment for the Arts; The Southern Arts Federation; the Selby Foundation, and the State Theater Board of Florida.</p>
        <p>Includes Roundtrip non-stop jet service on Braniff from Raleigh/Durtiafn to Freeport Grand Bahama Island.</p>
        <p>Deluxe accommodations. Transfers, nus.</p>
        <p>VALUE BONUS COUPONS</p>
        <p>Includes admission to Casino Show. $5 gaming chip, discounts and more.</p>
        <p>iidiisiers, nus...</p>
        <p>rPRINCECflJINCi</p>
        <p>rO*WINNtRJ ONin</p>
        <p>SEE YOUR TRAVEL AGENT ORCALL1-800-54S-1300</p>
        <p>Per perioii. double octuouny U5 riot miude U S jnd Bet.ar.d:. departure tanes, hotel taxch and gratuibes Wertne5,ldy and b..ridav departures See oui bnTrure foi luntrart terrii buLjea in cTuniji Hepnaerted by Pnixeis Noten, irternabona. Inc Nat.-. e**ef!./e .nt Apn: 19.1987</p>
        <p>For Youths</p>
        <p>IN RAINIVI.AKER ROLES  Michael Guido and Gret- Auditorium on the ECU campus at 8:15 p.m. on Jan. 29. chen Lord are the lead performers in N. Richard Nashs (Photograph by Gary W. Sweetman) comedy, "The Rainmaker to be presented at Wright</p>
        <p>On Friday</p>
        <p>SUNDAY lUNCHEON SKOALS</p>
        <p>Seems Like Old Times For</p>
        <p>Musician Smokey Robinson</p>
        <p>By MARY C AMPBELL Associated Press Writer NEW YORK  AP) - Its like good old times for Smokey Robinson When he was 17, he met Motown chief Berry Gordy, who was then an independent producer, and they began making hit records together. Thirty years later, theyve reunited to make Robinsons next album.</p>
        <p>Hes more involved m this particular project than he has l)een in anything in a long, long time, Robinson said Do&amp;lt;'S that pressure him"' No, no, no, no, no. It is really great. Its like the old days for me. because we used to work that way all the time. For him to be this involved in what Im doing is really great for me. Im enjoying it very much.</p>
        <p>Motown will release the album. Keep Me, in March.</p>
        <p>Smoke Signals, his latest LP, wasnt what he had hoped it wouhl be. Youd probably have to go back to 1981 for the last big album 1 did, Being With You, he said.</p>
        <p>Its harder to get hit albums now. Since Thriller, where evmy song on there was a hit, thats the criteria for all albums now. People are trying to make albums like that have five or six hits on the same album if possible.</p>
        <p>The way we used to cut albums was to have thn'e or four dynamite things and say, This is a good album tune. People dont look at it like that any more People sav. Is this a hit? ,</p>
        <p>Robinson started out in 19,)5 when he formed the Detroit high school vocal group which became the Miracles. After they met Gordy in 1957, they collaborated on Got a Job. released by End Records, and Bad Girl, released by Chess Gordy signed the Miracles to his new Tanila Records and thev had then-</p>
        <p>first hit with Shop Around, co-written by Robinson and Gordy.</p>
        <p>After a series of farewell concerts in 1971, Robinson split from the Miracles and began both a solo music career and a position as vice president of Motown Records.</p>
        <p>Theres no question about Robinsons place in American pop music. The 1986 Harmony Illustrated Encyclopedia of Ruck says: Writer of over 60 hit songs, possessor of one of pops great voices, consistently successful for more than a quarter of a century, Smokey Robinson is a key figure of modern music. He recently gave a Christmas week concert at Broadways Mark Hellinger Theater. Dressed in a blue silk moire jacket and black leather pants, he presented a warmly engaging but dynamic show.</p>
        <p>He hadnt worked during the Christmas and New Years holidays for 20 years because he wanted to be with his children. However, they are grown (Berry is 18, and Tamla is 16) and spent the holidays in Hawaii with their mother, Claudette Rogers of the Miracles</p>
        <p>Robinsons first Broadway stint was in 1985. It was so successful that he was bixiked into another theater.</p>
        <p>In 1986, Robinson worked live about 90 days. Performing in 1987 will have a lot to do with whether Keep Me hits No. 1, as Berry Gordy hopes. If it does, he knows that audiences will keep him busy.</p>
        <p>'I'he year also holds the singer songwriters induction into both the RocknRoll Hall of Fame, in January, and the Songwriters Hall of Fame, in March.</p>
        <p>Its unbelievable to me, he said I never dared dream a Hall of Fame. I still cant grasp it. Its wonderful. Im going to lie there but Ive never been in a Hall of Fame. I dont know what you do.</p>
        <p>Thou^ still a Motown vice president, his duties are no longer pressing. Originally, my job was designed for the induction of new talent.</p>
        <p>The East Carolina Youth Playhouse will present Dragon Tale, a medieval musical for young audiences at 7:15 p.m. on Friday in the McGinnis Theater on the East Carolina University campus.</p>
        <p>In the age of chivalry when life was simple, the only real problem in the daily lives of people in one town was if the dragon would turn everything in his path to French toast. Lurking</p>
        <p>Roast Turkey, Dressing, Cranberry Sauce, Creamed Potatoes, Green Beans____</p>
        <p>Includes Banana Pudding For Dessert</p>
        <p>*3.50</p>
        <p>Baked Ham. With Raisin Sauce, Stewed Appies &amp;amp; Green Beans.........</p>
        <p>Includes Banana Pudding For Dessert</p>
        <p>*3.50</p>
        <p>just teyond the city gates of Wantly shado</p>
        <p>Lately Ive been in the studio mvself</p>
        <p>have</p>
        <p>and hack on the road again. We_____</p>
        <p>so many people whore listening to talent. People send me tapes all the time. I listen to as many as I can. </p>
        <p>He never has had to tell artists that theyre dropped from the label, though he has been in executive meetings where the roster has been cut.</p>
        <p>Im very thankful for that, he said. I always have a double viewpoint. I can view it as an executive. And I know, as an artist, it takes perseverance, struggle and someone having belief in you that eventually youre going to make it.</p>
        <p>Robinson is constantly writing songs. His most recent is You Are My Hero for Dionne Warwick. It ended up as a duet between Robinson and Miss Warwick and will be on her next album.</p>
        <p>Basically, I still continue to write about the ups and downs and perils and happinesses of love, he said. I dont write too much about political things or 1957 Chevrolets. Those things become passe but love never becomes passe. Theres always an interest in it. Its always changing, always happening. And I hope it always does.</p>
        <p>Wood, he is overshadowing the happiness of the good towns people, so the king offers his daughters hand in marriage to the first person who can</p>
        <p>oKffdiViUf</p>
        <p>VviLSt'N</p>
        <p>stop the dragon. Enter Sir Hue</p>
        <p>Inter Sir Hugh, handsome and full of bravado, to try to save the day. Will he save the day? Will happiness be restored? Will the dragon French toast the town?</p>
        <p>Seats are still available for the 7:15 p.m. Friday performance; however, the three matinee performances are already sold out.</p>
        <p>Tickets are $2 and may be purchased at the McGinnis Theater Box Office, corner of Fifth and Eastern Streets in Greenville. The box office is open from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday through Friday. For reservations and more details, call 757-6390.</p>
        <p>Family Restaurants</p>
        <p>A WHALE OF)) MEAL</p>
        <p>Banquet Faciliiie Available V  758-0327</p>
        <p>Open Daily Sunday thru Thursday 11 A.M. to 9 P.M. Friday and Saturday 11 A .M. to 10 P.M</p>
        <p>\u5n^</p>
        <p>Auditions Set</p>
        <p>PAINTING .ACQUIRED TORONTO, Ontario (AP) - The Art Gallery of Ontario says it recently purchased The Pillow of Satin -by the Surrealist painter Yves Tanguy.</p>
        <p>The painting is being presented for the first time to the public in the context of the exhibition</p>
        <p>RICHMOND, Va.  King Dominions Entertainment Department will hold auditions for new live shows performers in seven cities beginning Tuesday. A total of 150 positions are open for performers, instrumentalists and technicians in 1987.</p>
        <p>The audition site nearest Greenville is at Virginia Beach. This will be held Tuesday at the Pavilion Convention Center theater. The schedule is for singers from 1 to 3 p.m., dancers from 4 to 5 p.m., instrumentalists, speciality acts and technicians, 1 to 5 p.m.</p>
        <p>Other auditions sites will be in three other Virginia cities, at two sites in Maryland and in Washington, D.C.</p>
        <p>For more information, call 804/ 876-5141.</p>
        <p>. CHICKEN WALNUT CROISSANT</p>
        <p>' STEAK &amp;amp; SHRIMP</p>
        <p>  -.........</p>
        <p>STEAKSOUP .quesadillas</p>
        <p>ff</p>
        <p>A "FIRST FOR</p>
        <p>'Greenville</p>
        <p>All this week, from Sunday, January 18 thru Saturday, January 24, Annabelle's is celebrating a very special occasionour First Anniversary in Greenville. And you're invited to join the fun!</p>
        <p>Come enjoy our usual great American tastes plus these exciting Anniversary specials:</p>
        <p> Complimentary Anniversary Cake for everyone 51C Highballs all week long  Nightly 'Dinner for Two' Giveaways</p>
        <p> TIJUANA SALAD</p>
        <p> broiled POLYNESlITcLKr''' R-BROILED chicken &amp;amp;</p>
        <p>. hot SICILIAN GRILL    CHOCOl^rf  CHIP  cn</p>
        <p>.DEEP-DISH FUDGE PIE  '*^'fTOR</p>
        <p>Grand Prize Drawing for a spectacular 'Color TV' on Saturday, the 24th, 10pm</p>
        <p>No purchase necessary.</p>
        <p>Need not be present to win ^  Come  feel  the  excitement.  Help  us  cele</p>
        <p>brate our First Anniversary. Annabelle's-style</p>
        <p>Famous Chicken n Biscuits</p>
        <p>Kinston, Greenville. Havelock Goldsboro, New Bern and Morehead City</p>
        <p>^ * Annabelles</p>
        <p>m  I  V  RKTAIIRANT  A  PUR</p>
        <p>JO</p>
        <p>Hours Mon Sat from 11:30a m.</p>
        <p>Sun from 12 noon</p>
        <p>The Plaza  ^</p>
        <p>Greenville Blvd.</p>
        <p>,.    CHICKEN-WALNUT  SALAD  *  PORK  BACK  RIBS</p>
        <p>.ap?'</p>
        <p>.CAJD</p>
        <p>otUo^</p>
        <p>Available only at Hio ono ond only Darryl's. Rosorvotions and major credit cards always welcome.</p>
        <p>Across from East Carolina University  752-1907</p>
        <p>MI</p>
        <pb facs="00096518_0019" />
        <p>Crossword By eucene sheffer</p>
        <p>ACROSS</p>
        <p>1 Terrible movie 5 Tater</p>
        <p>9 Intimidate</p>
        <p>12 Satanic</p>
        <p>13 In  veritas#</p>
        <p>14 Fife</p>
        <p>15 Slangy farewell</p>
        <p>16 Sweeping</p>
        <p>17 Vigor</p>
        <p>18 Actor Guinness</p>
        <p>19 Allow</p>
        <p>20 Red coin?</p>
        <p>21 Krazy -</p>
        <p>23 Bat wood</p>
        <p>25 Fit for</p>
        <p>plowing</p>
        <p>28 Artists milieu</p>
        <p>32 Jury</p>
        <p>33 Corrosive agents</p>
        <p>34 Snare</p>
        <p>36 As  not</p>
        <p>37 Letter after pi</p>
        <p>38 Planet</p>
        <p>39 Bringing Up-</p>
        <p>42 Smidgin</p>
        <p>44 The Red</p>
        <p>48 Period</p>
        <p>49 Building part</p>
        <p>50  avis</p>
        <p>51 Gimlet base</p>
        <p>52 Sharpen</p>
        <p>53 Mounties org.</p>
        <p>54 Down in the dumps</p>
        <p>55 Unique fellow</p>
        <p>56 Some votes</p>
        <p>DOWN 1 Letter after alpha</p>
        <p>2 Track</p>
        <p>3 Wee bit</p>
        <p>4 Jam ingredient</p>
        <p>5 Willowy</p>
        <p>6 Meerschaum</p>
        <p>7 Footballer Johnny</p>
        <p>8 One Dwarf</p>
        <p>9 May or Ann</p>
        <p>10 Yoked team</p>
        <p>11 Blubbered</p>
        <p>20Good Golly" singer</p>
        <p>Solution time: 23 min.</p>
        <p>Q1 HSeI Ih</p>
        <p>Yesterdays answer 1-17</p>
        <p>22 Moslem deity</p>
        <p>24 Syllable with way or well</p>
        <p>25 Simian</p>
        <p>26 Campaigned</p>
        <p>27 Hill dweller</p>
        <p>29 Game piece</p>
        <p>30 Actress Lupino</p>
        <p>31 CIAs predecessor</p>
        <p>35 Magic elixir</p>
        <p>36 Boarding house tenant</p>
        <p>39 Pleads</p>
        <p>40 La Scala song</p>
        <p>41 Combo</p>
        <p>43 Boleyn,</p>
        <p>for</p>
        <p>one</p>
        <p>45 Relay</p>
        <p>46 La Douce</p>
        <p>47 Toppers</p>
        <p>49 Reporters question</p>
        <p>CRYPTOQUIP</p>
        <p>1-17</p>
        <p>QFSGC, QZM DRMWVYFCWMRQ</p>
        <p>FTTUBM UI EMGBZMS LC</p>
        <p>Ugi QFUY-TEMM QMYMVZFRM</p>
        <p>R D W L M E .</p>
        <p>Yesterdays Cryptoquip: WHEN TWO EGOTISTS GET TOGETHER, ITS OFTEN AN I FOR AN I."</p>
        <p>Todays Cryptoquip clue; Q equals T</p>
        <p>The Cryptoquip is a simple substitution cipher in which each letter used stands for another. If you think that X equals 0, it will equal 0 throughout the puzzle.</p>
        <p>Horoscope ___________</p>
        <p>FORECAST FOR SUNDAY Jan. 18</p>
        <p>GE&amp;gt;ffiRAL TENDENCIES: The morning gives you the chance to start the week right by getting into all the details of ttie most important and potentially successful project you have going.</p>
        <p>ARIES (March 21 to April 19): Plan how'to gain more in your dialy endeavors but dont take any risks. Go about your own business.</p>
        <p>TAURUS (April 20 to May 20): Plan just how to have greater success in a new project. Dont get into extravagant pleasures.</p>
        <p>GEMINI (May 21 to June 21): Do whatever will make your family happy for some time to come. Postpone home entertainment.</p>
        <p>MOON CHILDREN (June 22 to July 21): Get the aid of a clever friend when making plans for the future and get better results.</p>
        <p>LEO (July 22 to August 21): Talk over any important affairs with kin. Dont listen to the advice of one who has too beg an ego.</p>
        <p>VIRGO (August 22 to September 22): Listen to what those who are cognizant of your wishes are suggesting. Later, get your appearance improved.</p>
        <p>LIBRA (July 22 to August 21): Plan how to add materially to your present abundance. Handle tasks that need to be done.</p>
        <p>SCORPIO (October 23 to November 21): If you contact an expert you know you can add scope to your ambitions before you get to work on them.</p>
        <p>SAGITTARIUS (November 22 to December 21): Advice given to you confidentially by a bigwig could prove dangerous, so be careful.</p>
        <p>CAPRICORN (December 22 to January 20): You can gain advanced ideas, but later study the details connected with them. Think things out clearly.</p>
        <p>AQUARIUS (January 21 to February 19): Discuss your obligations with an exprt and get good advice on how best to handle them.</p>
        <p>PISCES (February 20 to March 20): Your allies can be of help to you if you contact them early in the day. Gain the added prestige you desire.</p>
        <p>IF YOUR CHILD IS BORN TODAY... he or she will devise a wise plan for the future and will caryy through with it until it becomes a great success. A fine education will add to the many talents here, even though many hard knocks will be encountered on the road of life. Sports are a must here.</p>
        <p>The Stars impel; they do not compel. What you make of your life is largely up to you!</p>
        <p>(c)1986, The McNaught Syndicate Inc.</p>
        <p>From The Carroll Righter Institute</p>
        <p> ____FORECAST FOR MONDAY Jan. 19</p>
        <p>GENERAL TE^ENCIES: You are able to really get your best efforts in effect today. Tonight you should attend to the specific conditions in a new manner of a modem nature.</p>
        <p>^lES (March 21 to April 19): Anything you have in mind for improving daily routines is wise. Show more affection for your mate.</p>
        <p>TAURUS (April 20 to May 20): Find a new method of improving your appearance that will be successful. Enjoy some social event tonight.</p>
        <p>GEMINI (May 21 to June 21): Tone up your home in some way that you have long wanted to do. The evening can be very rewarding.</p>
        <p>MOON CHILDREN (June 22 to July 21): If you want to make visits, make sure you see those who are successful. Avoid tricky persons.</p>
        <p>LEO (July 22 to August 21): Look about you and see what direly needs repair. Add appreciably to your property. Periodicals give fine suggestions.</p>
        <p>VIRGO (August 22 to September 22): Influential people can give you suggestions that are most helpful in gaining your personal aims.</p>
        <p>LIBRA (September 23 to October 22): Go after the data you need and make greater headway. Adopt a new attitude that can please your loved one.</p>
        <p>SCORPIO (October 23 to November 21): A kind and discriminating friend can give you good ideas for gaining your cherished aims.</p>
        <p>SAGITTARIUS (November 22 to December 21): You are inspired to get your vocational work into a more current outlet. Enjoy a greater abundance.</p>
        <p>CAPRICORN (December 22 to January 20): Gam the data you need from persons whose background is different to your own. Plan a trip now.</p>
        <p>A()UARIUS (January 21 to February 19): You can advance your business affairs now. Sit down with your mate and work out a plan.</p>
        <p>PISCES (February 20 to March 20): Know what it is that outside allies expect of you and try to please them. Be careful in motion today.</p>
        <p>^ YOUR CHILD IS BORN TODAY... he or she will be able to make plans and carry tlurough with them in a sensible and thoughtful way with attention paid to details. There is a tendency here to run off on tangents, so teach the folly of this since much can be lost in the continuity of advancement.</p>
        <p>^ The Stare impel; they do not compel. What you make of your life is large-</p>
        <p>(c)1986, The McNaught Syndicate Inc.</p>
        <p>Bridge</p>
        <p>By CHARLES GOREN AND OMAR SHARIF</p>
        <p>THE SAFE HANDS ON LEAD</p>
        <p>Both vulnerable. South deals. NORTH 486 &amp;lt;7X96 0AQ1096  AJ9 WEST  EAST</p>
        <p>4AQ743  4J1095</p>
        <p>9QJ108  97543</p>
        <p>054  0KJ32</p>
        <p>472  45</p>
        <p>SOUTH 4K2 9A2 087</p>
        <p>4KQ 10 8643</p>
        <p>The bidding:</p>
        <p>South West 14  14</p>
        <p>3 4  Pass</p>
        <p>Pass Pass</p>
        <p>Opening lead: Queen of 9</p>
        <p>North East 2 0  2 4</p>
        <p>5 4  Pass</p>
        <p>If you know which hand represents the danger, you can often</p>
        <p>find a way to neutralize any threat. This hand is based on a play made at the table by one of our favorite players, the great Helen Sobel Smith.</p>
        <p>Neither North nor Souths bidding finds favor with this department. South might have ventured two no trump at her second turn, and .North should certainly have tried three hearts rather than bypass a possible no trump game. Fortunately, South possessed the skill to make the most of her as.sets</p>
        <p>We.st led the queen of hearts, and it was obvious to declarer that the contract was safe if either West held the king of diamonds or East the ace of spades. But what if West held the ace and East the king?</p>
        <p>Obviously, East was the hand that had to be kept off lead, to prevent a possibly devastating lead through the king of spades. Declar</p>
        <p>er found a cla.ssic solution to her problemshe ducked the opening lead in both dummv and her hand!</p>
        <p>It is true that West could have made life difficult for declarer by shifting to either a diamorjd or a trump, which would have removed a key entry to the table before declarer could put it to good tise But would you have done that?'</p>
        <p>West made the natural play of continuing with a heart, and that was that Declarer won the ace, crossed to the ace of diamonds and discarded a diamond on the king of hearts. What followed then was a diamond ruff, trump to the nine, a diamond ruff high, trump to the</p>
        <p>jack and another diamond ruff. The l.)th diamond was now established and it provided a parking spot for on of declarers spades. She lost only a heart trick and a spade</p>
        <p>Have you been running into double trouble? Let Charles Goren help you find your way through the maze of DOUBLES for penalties and for takeout. For a copy of his DOUBLES" booklet, send $1.85 to Goren-Doubles, care of this newspaper, P.O. Box 4426 Orlando, Fla. 32802 4426. Make checks payable to Newspaperbooks.</p>
        <p>NVant Xo Buy A Home? Kind It Kast In Classified</p>
        <p>raNKYWINKEKBMN</p>
        <pb facs="00096518_0020" />
        <p>C.20 The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C._Sunday,  January  18,1987</p>
        <p>HOW LONG HAS IT BEEN SINCE YOU PAID LESS THAN $1.00 LB. FOR THESE CUTS OF U.S.D.A. CHOICE BEEF?</p>
        <p>: .</p>
        <p>BONANZA</p>
        <p>GAS DISCOUNT 20^ MILE WITH PURCHASET-BONE, NEW YORK STRIPS, SIRLOINS, KC STRIPS, FILET MIGNONS, RIB EYES, DEL MONICOS, CLUB STEAK, OVEN &amp;amp; POT ROAST, GROUND BEEF AND STEW.</p>
        <p>f/'</p>
        <p>''^41</p>
        <p>v-.vV-^0</p>
        <p>. 'T, yn&amp;gt;r^ ^ ^SPECIAL  '  74  Per  Lb.NO. 1  Per  WeekUSDA  For  13 WeeksCHOICE  LOIN  &amp;amp; RIB</p>
        <p>CONSISTS OF:</p>
        <p>Sirloin Steaks Strip Steaks  16o  ibs. loin</p>
        <p>Porterhouse Steaks Rib Eye Steaks ^jb, plates &amp;amp; T-Bone Steaks Sirloin Tip Steaks flanks at 74* Club Steaks Standing Rib Roast ' lb gq^gj Filets English Cut Roast  $118.40 plus79 Per Lb. SPECIAL NO. 2 HIND QUARTER 58-51 Per Week PLUS PLATES "O'" ^ 3 Weeks &amp;amp; FLANKS</p>
        <p>SPECIAL NO. 3 $7.34 Per Week For 13 Weeks69 Per Lb. ; " o xi t For 13 ^A/eeks QUARTER PLATES &amp;amp; FLANKS</p>
        <p>Bar-B-Q Ribs Ground Beef  Free  Bonus</p>
        <p>and more</p>
        <p>EXAMPLES</p>
        <p>160 lb. USDA Choice Beef at 74* lb. $118.40 Plus 100 lb. Bonus Pack ABSOLUTELY NO CHARGE. Weighs 100 Ibs. - 600 1C, IB, 3Es, 3Fs, 3Gs.</p>
        <p>USDA CHOICE CONSISTS OF: T-Bone Steaks Strip Steaks Sirloin Tip Steak Filet Mignon Porterhouse Steaks</p>
        <p>USDA CHOICE CONSISTS OF:</p>
        <p>Round Steak Top Round Steak Sirloin Tip Roast Ground Beef &amp;amp; MorePLUS 100 Ibs. FREE BONUS PACK</p>
        <p>EXAMPLES:</p>
        <p>140 Lbs. USDA CHOICE hindquarters at 79* lb. $110.60 plus 35 lb. Bonus absolutely no charge. Weighs 100 Ibs. up to 600 Ibs. 1 A, 1B, 3Es, 3Fs, 3Gs.</p>
        <p>Club Steaks Rib Steaks Rib Roast Short Ribs Bar-B-Q Steak</p>
        <p>Chuck Steak Swiss Steak Chuck Roast Pot Roast Ground Beef &amp;amp; More</p>
        <p>Absolutely No Charge 100 Ibs. bonus with USDA  Choice Special No. 1</p>
        <p>30 Ibs. - B-RIBS 30.lbs.-GRADE A CHICKENS 10 Ibs.-LEAN PORK CHOPS 10 Ibs.-SLICED BACON 10 Ibs.-SAUSAGE 10 Ibs.-PICNIC HAMPLUS THIS 35 LB. BONUS</p>
        <p>No Money Needed 'Til June</p>
        <p>20 Ibs. Chicken 5 Ibs. Spare Ribs 5 Ibs. Sausage 5 Ibs. Picnic Ham</p>
        <p>Bonus No. 2 No Charge With Special No. 2</p>
        <p>EXAMPLES:</p>
        <p>140 Lbs. USDA CHOICE FOREQUARTER at 69* Lb. $96.60 plus 25 lb. Bonus absolutely no charge. Weighs 100 Ibs. up to 600 Ibs. 1D, 1C, 3Es, 3Fs, 3Gs.PLUS THIS 25 LB. BONUS</p>
        <p>Eat Now...Pay Later</p>
        <p>12 Ibs. Chicken 5 Ibs. Bacon 5 Ibs. Hot Dogs 3 Ibs. Pork Chops</p>
        <p>Bonus No 3 No Charge With Special No. 3</p>
        <p>01lB.t </p>
        <p>r</p>
        <p>GREENVILLE</p>
        <p>Cu'</p>
        <p>t</p>
        <p>Uolmonico</p>
        <p>Stoaks</p>
        <p>oi-*' I</p>
        <p>B</p>
        <p>Filtit Strlotn Pod.houi r Bon</p>
        <p>Cub* Sit.* li Round Sittk RumpRo.ivl</p>
        <p>\ r - - - -7____I</p>
        <p>m  ^  ^    GfOuod</p>
        <p>COUNTRY MCA1S</p>
        <p>Bhsket</p>
        <p>BaftlSHank</p>
        <p>I ^ I</p>
        <p>ShoMMib* ^  ,  Hound</p>
        <p>MUiBl , UioundBtti</p>
        <p>2107 Dickinson Avenue Greenville 756-5005</p>
      </div>
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