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        <p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0001" />
        <p>THEDAILYREFLECrOR</p>
        <p>GRra&amp;lt;VaL&amp;amp;N.C</p>
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        <p>BYTOM SEUGSON</p>
        <p>INSIDE: How Your Immune System Protects You... By Earl Ubell</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0002" />
        <p>WALTER SCOTTSVersomlity Varade</p>
        <p>W*nt tht hdt? Opinion? Truth? Write Walter Seott, 140 N. Hamilton Dr., Beverly Hilli, Calif. 90210, or phone (2131651-3375. Full name will be used unleat otherwiie requeated. Volume of mail makeo peraonal repliea impostible.</p>
        <p>P</p>
        <p>QIs it possible that if George Bush is elected  President in 1988, his first move will be to pull a Gerald Ford and pardon ex-P resident Ronald Reagan for any of the crimes he may have committed in office?J.B., National City, Calif.</p>
        <p>A Possible is an adjective that offers virtually  endless hypotheses. The move you suggest is highly improbable. Ronald Reagan is no Richard Nixon, and George Bush is no Gerald Ford.</p>
        <p>The Lloyds during 1985 reunion: Theyve parted again</p>
        <p>Q After seven years, is the marriage of tennis  star Chrissie Evert to John Lloyd over? If it is, whom will she wind up with: singer Adam Faith, actor Malcolm McDowell or actor Warren Beatty? Maybellene Smith, Indianapolis, Ind.</p>
        <p>A At this writing, Chris Evert Lloyd and her  husband, the British tennis pro John Lloyd, are said to have agreed to a trial separation. Obviously, their marriage is rocky. They previously went their separate ways for about six months in 1984, during which Chrissie and Adam Faith, a British show-biz entrepreneur and singer, dated in various cities around the world. Faith, however, is happily reconciled to his wife, and Chrissiewho reportedly has dated actor Judd Nelson and others since her fling with Faithis seemingly too intelligent to marry on the rebound. It may well be that she will remain married to her tennis until someone or something more exciting comes along.</p>
        <p>Q</p>
        <p>When I was in Paris i last summer, every</p>
        <p>one was raving about the performance as a grandfather given by Yves Montand in the film Jean de Florette.  At the same time, it was being said of Montand, who had been married for years to the late Simone Signoret, that politically he had crossed from the left to the right and was planning to run as a possible candidate for president of the French Republic. How old is Montand? Does he intend to quit acting for politics? Has he really moved from</p>
        <p>Actor Yves Montand</p>
        <p>the far left to the far right?A.F., New Paltz, N. Y.</p>
        <p>A</p>
        <p>Italian-born Yves Montand, 65, is not aban- doning the notable career he has fashioned</p>
        <p>in France as an actor and singer. He has, however, altered what once were considered his pro-Soviet leanings for a more conservative political stance. He says he has no intention of trying to succeed Francois Mitterrand, current president of France, but he would like his political voice to be heard.</p>
        <p>QThe world of fashion seethes with the rumor  that Nancy Reagan has dropped her longtime favorite, Jimmy Galanos, for gowns designed by Valentino. True?Susan G., New York, N.Y.</p>
        <p>A</p>
        <p>The word in New York fashion circles is that  Mrs. Reagan is not dropping Jimmy Galanos</p>
        <p>but rather including in her wardrobe the creations of Valentino and other designers.</p>
        <p>In the 1950s, there was a beautiful bru-I nette at 20th Century-Fox named Debra Paget. Whats happened to her?Eloise McManus, Denver, Colo.</p>
        <p>Paget at peak in 1950s</p>
        <p>Ain 1962, Debra Pa- get married L.C. Kung, a Houston oilman of Chinese descent, and retired from the screen at 29. They later divorced.</p>
        <p>QBig John Connallyformer governor ofTex- as and Treasury Secretary under Richard Nixon, who wanted him to succeed to the Presidencyis supposed to be broke and down on his luck. I thought he was close to being a billionaire and was financially one of the sharpest men in the U.S. Whats the story?F.D., New Orleans, La.</p>
        <p>A Connally and former Lt. Gov. Ben Barnes  of Texas are real-estate partners, reportedly $170 million in debt. Connally, also chairman of Chapman Energy in Dallas, has explained: Its a difficult time for anybody whos in the oil business, the real-estate business or agriculture, and Im in all three. Connally is a brainy, resourceful man of 69 who may be foundering financially at this writing, but no one should count him out.</p>
        <p>Priscilla Presley with her daughter and hoyfriend (I*t)</p>
        <p>Q Priscilla Presley recently announced that  she was pregnant by her Brazilian boyfriend, Marco Garibaldi, who is 10 years younger than she is and with whom she has been living. Is Elvis' onetime wife married to Garibaldi, or is she not? And how does Lisa Marie, Priscillas 18-year-old daughter, feel about her mother's pregnancy?Jane M., Knoxville, Tenn.</p>
        <p>A Priscilla Presley, 41, is not married to Marco  Garibaldi as we go to press, but she may be shortly. Lisa Marie, who was on hand for her mothers announcement of her out-of-wedlock pregnancy, says, Im very excited and happy for both my mother and Marco.  cwujerscomw</p>
        <p>PARADE</p>
        <p>THE SUNDAY NEWSPAPER MAGAZINE</p>
        <p>JANUARY 18,  1987</p>
        <p>Address tdKorisI contributions to; Articles, Perade, 750 Third Ave., New Vorh, N.Y. 10017. AHhoufh reasonable care will be taken, Parade is not responsible for unsolicited material.</p>
        <p>PUBUSMER,CartoVtttorini EDiTOR, Waller Anderson PRESIDENT, Frank McNulty SENIOR VICE PRESIDENT, MIKon Lieberman MANAGING EDITOR, Lany Sntth DIRECTOR OF DESIGN, Ira YoNe EDITOR AT lARGE, Lloyd Shearer</p>
        <p>SENIOR EDITORS, Sara Bnowsky, David Canter, Herbert Nupferberg, Gael McCarthy SENIOR COPY EOITOR, Martin Timins SPECIAL CORRESPONDENT, Eddie Adams ARHCLES EDITOR, Fran Carpentinr PHOTO EDITOR, Brent Petersen</p>
        <p>CONTRIBUTING EDITORS, Diane Ackerman, Cleveland Amoiy, Stuart Berger, Lisa Bimbach, James Brady, Jane Ciabattari, Haskell Cohen, Bob Colacello, Ovid Demaris, David Nalbeistam, Lany L King, EHnor Klein, Pater Maas, Norman Mailer, Lynn Minton, Willie Morris, Michael OShea, Dotson Rader, Michael Ryan,</p>
        <p>Cart Sagan, Al Santoli, Marvin Scott, Tom Seligson, Gail Sheehy, Tad Stale, Michael VerMenlen, Lally Weymouth LIFESTYLE EDITOR, Elixabeth Gaynor</p>
        <p>SENIOR DESIGN ASSOCIATES. Ann Cammett, Arieno Pneschol ART ASSOCIATES, Joseph DiBlasi, Al Troiani</p>
        <p>EDITORIAL ASSISTANTS, Theresa Barssch, Jacqeeline Bums, Anita Goss, Gida Ingrsssia, Bennie St. Clair, Deris Schorbnan</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON, Jack Anderson, beraau chief; Opal Ginn, Michael SalchoH CONSULTING EDITORS, Say Chassler, John Frook SPORTS EDITOR, Dkk Schaap FOOD EDITORS, SkeHa Leklns and Jelee Rosso HEALTH EDITOR. Eari Ubeil CARTOON EOITOR. BHI Hoest PUBUSHER EUKRITUS, Warren J. Reynolds</p>
        <p>1U7, rmti riMtniM, he, 7t0 TkM an, nw Vwt, n.v. lOOir. as &amp;gt;%&amp;gt; rmnive. emraeMllM l* Mt *r W pwl aw wild* </p>
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        <p>PAGE 2  JANUARY 18,1987  PARADE MAGAZINE</p>
        <p>la</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0003" />
        <p>shown ;lcmal .n/e of appnixlmaicly 5-1/4"high</p>
        <p>"Guess what. I slipped on the ice and fell Me. How am I going to live it down? And you know who saw me? Michelle Emblem.</p>
        <p>She's a famous artist, and she did this portrait of me."</p>
        <p>'Then, they put me in porcelain! (so I'd be 'immortalized').</p>
        <p>Oh, its all too embarrassing. But do me a favor-please try not to laugh too much "</p>
        <p>Whoops! by Michelle Emblem will be meticulously crafted in fine porcelain and hand-painted to capture the bright contrast that makes this little fellow so distinctive. Sleek black wings and snow-white fur. The orange and black bill. And the look of pure astonishment carefully re-created in his yellow penguin eyes.</p>
        <p>Your sculpture comes with a Certificate of Authenticity attesting that this Slippery Penguin is an original work of an by Michelle Emblem, crafted in fine imported porcelain and hand-painted.</p>
        <p>But Whoops! is available only from The Franklin Mint, and will not be sold in any stores or galleries. To acquire it, just mail the accompanying reservation by February 20th.</p>
        <p>Crafted in fine porcelain. $60</p>
        <p>RE.SERVATION FORM</p>
        <p>Whoops! BY MICHELLE EMBLEM</p>
        <p>Please mail by February 20, 987  Limit of one sculpture per person</p>
        <p>The Franklin Mint</p>
        <p>Franklin Center, Pennsylvania 19091</p>
        <p>Please accept my reservation for Whoops! by Michelle Emblem, an original sculpture to be crafted in fine porcelain and hand-painted expressly for me. I need send no  money now. I  will be billed in four</p>
        <p>equal monthly installments of $15  *  each, the  first payment due in</p>
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        <pb facs="00096520_0004" />
        <p>^1  How  shes  memaiged  to  succeedSophia loren has a secretWhen Sophia Loren was only 26, she</p>
        <p>played a mother in Two Women. She was childless at the time, and to flesh out her performance, for which she was to win an Academy Award, she drew on her experiences as a child in war-torn Italy. What she remembered most vividly was her mothers valiant efforts to protect her. Twenty-six years later, now that she herself is the mother of two teenage boys, she appreciates her mother even more. Now I understand what she went through, the actress said. And the worries that she had. I have it now. The fear of whats going to happen when a child leaves home and goes into the world.</p>
        <p>One of Sophia Lorens worries is about her sons becoming involved with drugs. Its a problem that every mother should be concerned about, she said. Because its not an exception nowadays to have a son who is a drug addict. And it does not only apply to children who have a famous mother or father. Its all over the world, in every kind of society. This was not so when I was a kid, because there were no drugs or alcohol at hand. My mother never had this kind of problem with me or my sister.</p>
        <p>Its this maternal concern that inspired Sophia Loren to make her recent TV movie. Courage, which was based on the true story of a New York City mother who became an undercover operative to help bust a cocaine ring. Whats special about this story is the woman, she explained. When they asked her, Why do you do this? Is it for the money? she said, No, its for my son. Because of these people, because of their drugs, he has become a vegetable. And thats what struck me. Her obligation, her love as a mother. 1 could relate to that.</p>
        <p>Of course, in real life it would be virtually impossible for Sophia Loren to go undercover. For more than 30 years, she has been one of the most admired and recognized women in the world. And at the age of 52, she remains as stunning in person as on the screen. I met her in Miami, on the last day of shooting Courage. Though shed been working 12 hours a day for five weeks, the strain did not show. Her distinctive high cheeks were unlined, and those huge hazel eyes were bright and warm. What surprised me, however, was how, when we first talked in her trailer, her eyes kept darting away. Sophia Loren actually seemed shy.</p>
        <p>I have always been shy, she confided. When I first meet somebody, 1 dont feel very at ease. Its always difficult for me.. You know, journalists always ask me how I can be so calm and sure of myself in front of the camera. They dont know what I have to go through to appear like that. Its only because 1 know people think of me as sure of myself that Im reassured enough to actually feel that way.</p>
        <p>It was because of her shyness that, as a child, she never thoujght of becoming an actress. 1 was also not very beautiful, as I thought an actress should be, she said. I was very skinny. My nickname was Toothpick. I knew I wanted to do something in life. I didnt want to be anonymous. But it was my mother who decided</p>
        <p>I should be an actress. She gave me the strength and energy I needed. If it hadnt been for her, I dont think I could have made it all by myself.</p>
        <p>Her mother, RomildaVillani, who lived in Pozzuoli, a town near Naples, had wanted to be an actress herself. She even won a Greta Garbo look-alike contest at 17. The prize was a screen test and a first-class ticket to Hollywood. However, Sophias grandmother wouldnt let her go, and in rebellion she ran off to Rome, where she met the manRiccardo Scicolone who became Sophias father. Scicolone, who didnt meet Sophia until she was 5, never married Romilda, leaving his daughter with the stigma of illegitimacy.</p>
        <p>I always felt I had no father, Sophia recalled evenly, the hurt she had suffered long since healed. Even when youre young, you get accustomed to the</p>
        <p>negative things in life. You say to yourself, Maybe it has to be like this. But at the same time, you dont consider yourself like the other children, because they have a father and a mother. I dont talk like this about my father because I have a feeling of hatred. Hatred is something I dont know of. Besides, 1 had a lot of love around me. My grandmother and grandfatherthey loved my sister and me very much. Sophias sister, Maria, is four years younger. She too was the illegitimate daughter of Scicolone. However, while Sophia at least was legally recognized arid given his last name, Scicolone refused to make this concession for Maria. It was not until Sophia began making money as an actress and could afford to meet what amounted to her fathers demands for blackmail that she was able to buy her sister her name. She hadBY TOM SELIGSON</p>
        <p>COVEK PHOTOGRAPH BT DEBORAH FEI\GOU)</p>
        <p>PAGE 4  JANUARY 18,1987  PARADE MAGAZINE</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0005" />
        <p>suffered so much that she didnt want to go to school anymore, Sophia explained.</p>
        <p>Its this same kind of loyalty that she now tries to instill in her sons, who are themselves four years apart: Carlo, 18, and Edoardo, 14. I always tell Edoardo, You should love your brother, she said. 1 say the same thing to Carlo, because I like it when. brothers are really close to each other. For after all, what else do we have in life but family? When you leave home and go out... God! She shook her head, looking very much the worried mother.</p>
        <p>There was a knock on the door. Sophia was needed on the set. They were filming at a Spanish-style mansion on Star Island, a privately guarded bayfront community where A1 Capone once spent his winters.</p>
        <p>I watched as she headed into the house.</p>
        <p>Trim and erect, dressed in a brown suit and orange ruffled blouse, she moved with the kind of serene dignity one normally associates with royalty. It was easy to see that the other cast members and crew treated her with utmost respect.</p>
        <p>Yet she is no demanding, self-centered star. Shooting a scene that required countless takes, she remained patient and composed.</p>
        <p>During a break, we sat on the porch.</p>
        <p>She seemed more relaxed and comfortable than before. Commenting on her congenial nature on the set, I asked i she ever gets angry.</p>
        <p>I do, but I dont really show it, she said. I try to swallow as muchaslcanand ^ try to kid about things. If you see \ me laugh and joke' a lot, it means Im veiy angry. I turn things around completely.</p>
        <p>So if you slug me, thats a compliment? I asked.</p>
        <p>Yes, as a matter of fact, I with my-sister, she replied, smiling.</p>
        <p>But you never can tell. Im a very easy person to know, as you see.</p>
        <p>While Sophia kept an eye on the two daughters of a friend who were visiting the set, we talked about her career. Though her original ambition was to be a schoolteacher, her plans changed at the age of 15. Learning that an American film company was scouting extras for Quo Vadis, her mother bundled her off to Rome, intent on helping her daughter achieve what she herself had been denied. It was quite scary, Sophia recalled, starting in this business. But my mother was very supportive. She was always there with me.</p>
        <p>Sophia was still only 15, and competing in a Rome beauty contest, when she met Carlo Ponti, a producer 22 years older, who has been a fixture in her life ever since. I asked what she thought Ponti had seen in her, both as a budding actress and a woman.</p>
        <p>I dont think that a man, when he sees a girl for the first time, really knows who she is, she said. I don t think that he felt anything special in me. She paused, reconsidering. Maybe because I didnt look like a banal girl 15 years old. Maybe I had a sadness in my look that struck him. I dont know.</p>
        <p>Whatever it was POnti saw in her was not shared by the many cameramen to whom he brought Sophia for</p>
        <p>I keep my fears to myself. I think you have to give children confidence in life, people, society</p>
        <p>After all, says Sophia, what else do we have in life but family? Left to right: With mother, Romilda Viilani, in 1982; with younger son, Edoardo, 1984; with Carlo Ponti, at their wedding luncheon in Paris, 1966.</p>
        <p>screen tests. They invariably complained about her unusual features and suggested she get her prominent nose fixed, a proposition she steadfastly turned down. I was not about to change my nose because some cameraman didnt like the way the light falls on my face, she recalled. "I realized that if I looked different from others, that was a wonderful thing. I dont have a pretty face. I have a particular face.</p>
        <p>They just had to learn how to photograph me, she added. And 1 had to learn how to get made up and adjust my hair so my nose would look a little shorter. It was all part of establishing myself as an actress. You see, though it had been my mothers dream for me, I started to have a kind of appetite for it. I liked the people and the creative side of it, and 1 began to fall in love with this profession.</p>
        <p>During the 1950s and 60s, Sophia worked nonstop, making 10 films in one year alone. Over the years, she has developed a range of screen identities, but it was</p>
        <p>her voluptuous sexuality that was often emphasized early in her career, as in Boy on a Dolphin. I asked if she was comfortable being thought of as a sex symbol.</p>
        <p>1 liked it because I was doing it in a joking kind of way, she said directly. And I knew that it was a preparation for what 1 would do later on. Its impossible to be a sex symbol all your life. You have to be terribly young, and then your career is very short. So at a certain point, you have to choose roles that you can go further with. Thats what I did when I made Two Women. I really established myself as an actress with that, and since then Ive had wonderful roles. j. Besides Two Women, for which she I became the only Italian actress to win I an Oscar for an Italian movieher fa-5 vorite films are A Special Day and I Marriage Italian Style. Her co-star in the last two was Marcello Mastroianni, with whom she has been paired so often that some filmgoers actually thought they were married. We complete each other very well, she said, explaining their unusual screen  chemistry. Its like a marriage. Sophias own marriage to Carlo Ponti could itselfbe the subject of a film. Though theyve been together for 36 years, Pbnti was married when they met; and since Italy didnt recognize divorce, it required a Mexican divorce and a marriage by proxy in 1957 for them to be legally bound. In her autobiography, Sophia referred to that day as the grandest, happiest moment of my life. However, the Catholic Church didnt recognize his divorce, and she and Ponti were branded public sinners and threatened with arrest for bigamy. They didnt visit Italy as a couple for several years. It wasnt until 1966, when Ponti became a French citizen and got a French divorce, that their marriage was legally resolved. Perhaps because of their age differ-</p>
        <p>_ ence, or because they spend a lot of</p>
        <p>time apart, journalists have for years hinted at problems between them. I asked Sophia if she resented the effort to pry her marriage apart.</p>
        <p>No, she said matter-of-factly. But I dont even like to talk about it. Because it seems to me so natural to be married and to stay married. I think if you find the right person to be with, you have to stick to it, even though sometimes you may have moments of depression and unhappiness. But that all passes. What stays is the affection that you have. I think you have to try to swallow sometimes the bitter things.</p>
        <p>She is similarly philosophical about the way she has been treated by her home country. Returning to Italy in 1982 to see her mother, she was forced to spend 17 days in prison because of an old tax-evasion charge. When something like that hurts me, she confided, at the moment, I may suffer very much. But then I forgive. Sometimes. Most of the time 1 dont forget, but I do forgive. I am quite a fatalist. I am Neapolitan, and I look at life with a kind of optimistic eye.</p>
        <p>Nowhere was this optimism more evident than in her effort to become a mother. After suffering twocontinued</p>
        <p>PARADE MAGAZINE  JANUARY 18,1987  PAGE 5</p>
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        <p>miscarriages, she received little hope from her doctors about her chances. Everybody said, You will never have children, she recalled. But I was convinced that it was not true. Because 1 believe that if I really put my energies into something, it happens. When she became pregnant again, both times she spent the entire nine-month term in bed. Maybe thats my strength, she said. I really go all the way. She smiled more broadly than she had all day. And now I have two wonderful boys.</p>
        <p>Sophia is devoted to her children. Its because she likes to spend so much time with them that in recent years she has curtailed making films, concentrating much of her energy on promoting a line of eyeglasses, a perfume and a Florida luxury development called Williams Island, where she maintains an apartment overlooking the Intracoastal Waterway. Her other homes include a 40-acre ranch outside Los Angeles and a home in Geneva, where her sons are in school.</p>
        <p>As a mother, I feel very vulnerable, she said softly. We live in a dangerous world. But I try to keep my fears to myself. I never show them to my children, because thats not the right attitude. 1 think you have to give your children confidence in life, in people, society, and in the world of today.</p>
        <p>1 asked her if, having been such a glamorous lady for so long, she is bothered by getting older.</p>
        <p>No, absolutely not, she said. Aging is very relative. I try to keep myself in shape as much as I can, but getting older is wonderful. You mature. You experience so many things. Joy. Sorrow sometimes. But Ive had a wonderful life. I have a wonderful life, and I will have a wonderful life. My life has been almost completely fulfilled.</p>
        <p>So theres very little youd do differently?</p>
        <p>She laughed. I said almost. But 1 have no regrets. Im proud of what Ive done with myself. And Im very proud of my children.</p>
        <p>Sophia was being called back to work. But before she left, she wished to share the credit for all that she is. Theres no question that I took from my mother a kind of strength and dignity in looking at life, she said. Now ever&amp;gt;^ng sounds very easy. Like Ive done evqything with a magic stick. But there were lots of sacrifices and risks that we went through. I never thought, and she never thought, that I was going to be as suc-cessfol as I am. When I go to see her in Rome, we talk about whats happening and whats going to happen, and she tells me, My God, it still works. This dream never ends.</p>
        <p>I dont know if I deserve what I have, she added. Its much more than I ever expected. But what makes me especially happy is that my mother has fulfilled all her dreams. Winking, she got up to go. She is the real Sophia Loren. Not me.  </p>
        <p>nttt 6  JAHUWW18,1987  PWWOe MA6AZ1NC</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0007" />
        <p>JANUARY 18,  1987</p>
        <p>On Varade</p>
        <p>WHATS Up THIS Week</p>
        <p>BY LYNN MINTON</p>
        <p>TELEVISIONSHIRLEY MACLAINE Goes Out on a Limb</p>
        <p>Shirley Maclaine and John Heard in Peruvian market in Art on a Umb</p>
        <p>How you feel about Out on a Limb, Shirley MacLaines autobiographical story of her spiritual adventures (starring MacLaine), will depend greatly on what you think of reincarnation, out-of-body experiences, trance channelers and extraterrestrialsthe subjects, along with MacLaines peripatetic romanceDirector Makes H Big With Nanrfe AM Sequel</p>
        <p>A box-office take of $110 million for The Karate Kid II made an especially sweet sound for the director, John Avildsen, who also made The Karate Kidand Rocky. Avildsen said last spring that he regretted having turned down the chance to direct the big-bucks Rocky sequel. Life rarely offers the opportunity to replay ones mistakes, but Avildsen had a chance of sorts with KK Hand grabbed it. His smash-hit sequelin which the teenage boy, Daniel (Ralph Macchio), and his mentor, Miyagi (Noriyuki Pat Morita), take on bad guys in Okinawais available diis month on videocassette.</p>
        <p>with a married British politician, of this two-part movie. Shirley playing Shirley in London, Stockholm, Hawaii, California and Peru does get to seem a bit much, but she is a believer who wants passionately to share her vision of lifes possibilities. Take a look and make up your own mind. Tonight, 8-11 p.m. EST, and tomorrow, 9-11, on ABC.Civil Rights Makes A Prize Documentary</p>
        <p>Eyes on the Prize, a six-part documentary of the civil rights movement from 1954 to 1965, is threaded with scenes of simple courage and deepened by new interviews with people whose young faces we see in the newsreel footage. For those, black and white, who werent yet bom or dont remember well this turbulent decade of marches, sit-ins and confrontations, these programsresonating with the music of the struggle^are must viewing. Beginning Wednesday, 9-10 p.m. EST on PBS. (Check local listings.) A companion volume is being published by Viking.</p>
        <p>MOVIES</p>
        <p>Genu Hackmau fivM a strong, touching pertonuMCo as a down-aniM high school baskothaR coach desperate to moM a bunch of losers hrto a winning team in NoosMfi. From Orion.</p>
        <p>MRAOC MAfiAZME  JANUARY U, 1987  PAGE 7</p>
        <p>Fashion Earrings 100 Each</p>
        <p>(Atlanta, GA)</p>
        <p>FC&amp;amp;A, a nearby Peachtree City, Georgia retailer of sterling silver flatware and high fashion jewelry is "giving away" 100 fashion pierced earrings from the M. Servier Collection for only 100 each in a campaign to increase its customer list</p>
        <p>These 100 earrings are guaranteed to be available only to those people who write to the address below before midnight, February 15,1987.</p>
        <p>In order to be eligible for your sets of fashion earrings, you must cut out and return this publicity notice with your order. Copies will not be accepted!</p>
        <p>Fashion Colors And Shapes</p>
        <p>Each set of 1(X) earrings contains a variety of sizes, styles and colors personally selected by M. Servier on his latest international buying trip.</p>
        <p>This unbeatable jewelry package contains assorted glamorous earrings in a wide scope of colors, sizes and shapes. -</p>
        <p>Your set is individually hand assembled so all the pairs of earrings are unique. Because each set is personally hand )acked, the variety of pieces may )e slightly different frem set to set.</p>
        <p>The colors range from brilliant reds, purples and blues to more muted whites, yellows and greens. There arc dazzling gold and silver-tone balls, and different shapes like flowers, hearts, moons, crosses, butterflies and circles. These sets arc so versatile that they can be worn with all of the latest fashion styles.</p>
        <p>The 1(X) fashion earrings all have surgical steel posts with regular butterfly backs plus six extra hypoallergenic "bullet style" backs for comfortable fitting.</p>
        <p>Free With Order Before Midnight, Feb. 15,1987</p>
        <p>If you order before the expiration date, we'll send you</p>
        <p>absolutely free a lovely jewelry box that can be used for gift-giving or display. Each petite sculptured jewelry box is made of sparkling clear acrylic with a velvet tray. You can admire your collection without even having to open the lid.</p>
        <p>Unconditional Lifetime Money-Back Guarantee</p>
        <p>Each set of 1(X) glamour earrings comes with an unconditional lifetime money-back guarantee. If for some reason you are not satisfied with your collection, simply return it to us for a full refund. But keep your free jewelry box.</p>
        <p>Sorry, Only Two 100 Earring Sets Per Customer</p>
        <p>Because there is limited availability in this publicity campaign, and because of our desire to obtain additional names for our customer list, we must limit each customer to only two sets of 1(X) earrings (50 pair). Absolutely no exceptions will be made. Checks for more than two sets will be returned to the customer.</p>
        <p>Not Sold In Jewelry Stores</p>
        <p>This offer will not be made in jewelry stores. So order now! Tear out this publicity notice and return it to the address below before midnight, February 15, 1987.</p>
        <p>Don't Wait! Offer Expires Midnight, Feb. 15,1987</p>
        <p>Don't wait! Order now before the expiration date! Send this publicity notice with your name and address and a check for $10.00 plus $2.00 shipping and handling for each 100 earrings (50 pair) to our following address:  FC&amp;amp;A, Dept. UPR-</p>
        <p>1, 103 Clover Green, Peachtree City,GA 30269.</p>
        <p>Remember, satisfaction is guaranteed or your money back!</p>
        <p>1987 FC&amp;amp;A</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0008" />
        <p>This simple AUst^</p>
        <p>cKoosinglw</p>
        <p>Check those boxes which describe you best:</p>
        <p>H You like the idea of getting a lot of life insurance at an affordable cost.</p>
        <p>I] Traditional term insurance (with pre-set terms f 10,25, or 30 years) doesnt exactly fit your needs.</p>
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        <p>H Youre saving to buy a vacation home, and someday would need to insure another mortgage.</p>
        <p> Youd like to keep a large coverage amount until the kids finish college, then lower it.</p>
        <p>D You plan to have more children and want a plan to grow with your family.</p>
        <p>Zl You may move to a different house, with a new mortgage.</p>
        <p> Youve just taken out a home equity loan to finance some major improvements.</p>
        <p>If you checked any of the boxes above,you may w^t affordable flexible protection; Introducing NewAllstate Universal Term*.</p>
        <p>Heres a brand new kind of term insurance from the Good Hands People of Allstate.</p>
        <p>Its a new kind of term insurance designed to adapt to your particular needs and lifestyle.</p>
        <p>With Allstate Universal Term, you have the option of choosing the term length and premium payment plan that suits you best! And nearly any coverage amount! Plus, the policy is flexible, so it can change with your needs.</p>
        <p>It all makes for a better insurance /fr-so youre not paying for more coverage than you want, or settling for less than you need.</p>
        <p>And, if sometime before you tm 65 you decide you can afford to build a cash-savings fund, you can easily convert your policy to the popular Allstate Universal Life plan.</p>
        <p>So see a local Allstate agent. Find out how Allstate Universal Term can meet your protection needs todayand tomorrow. And just for stopping by, youll receive a certificate for a free family portrait!</p>
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        <p>Just drop by the Allstate booth at Sears, or any nearby neighborhood Allstate office, and get your certificate for a beautiful 8 x 10 color portrait of your family (regularly $15) from the Sears Portrait StudioABSOLUTELY FREE! (No obligation, nothing to buy, but hurry - offer ends March 15,1987. Must be redeemed by April 30,1987.)</p>
        <p>You must be 18 or over to receive a certificate.</p>
        <p>One portrait per family please.</p>
        <p>Universal Term coverage increases are subject to underwriting qualifications.</p>
        <p>Coverage decreases allowable within limits.</p>
        <p>*The Universal Term plan described is the Indeterminate Premium Adjustable Term to Age 85 policy and is currently available in most states. Not available in New York.</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0009" />
        <p>chedlst can make insurance easier.</p>
        <p> You like the idea of earning good, currently competitive interest (tax-defeired) from your life insurance.</p>
        <p>Zl You like the idea of putting a few dollars aside now while youll hardly miss it, to help assure a financially comfortable retirement.</p>
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        <p>Zl A single life insurance plan that can be adapted to your changing insurance needs makes more sense than having four or five various policies.</p>
        <p> You like knowing you may be able to skip premium payments later on,</p>
        <p>' if you need to.</p>
        <p>H You might need to borrow someday from the cash value youve  accumulated.</p>
        <p> It would be great if todays premium dollars could help pay for your kidscollege later on.</p>
        <p> Down the road, youd like to reduce your coverage amount-without the hassle and expense of cancelling, and buying a new life insurance policy.</p>
        <p>If you checked any of the boxes above.you may want flexible permanent insurance that helps you build big cash values:</p>
        <p>Heres Allstate Universal Life.</p>
        <p>Even if saving isnt your strong suit, smart financial planning can be a reality. Because we offer a way to help provide plenty of solid family insurance protection while you build a big cash accumulation for the future. Cash that earns interest (tax-deferred) at currently competitive rates!</p>
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        <p>Allstate Universal Term or Allstate Universal Life. Both good, flexible solutions to todays-and tomorrows insurance needs.</p>
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        <p>In New York: Allstate Life Insurance Company of New York. Huntington Station, NY Elsewhere: Allstate Life Insurance Company. Northbrrxjk, IL</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0010" />
        <p>How one school straightens outSniDENTSWHOAcrUP</p>
        <p>B BROWNING spent a day at Wilson Junior High School in Hamilton, Ohio, some time ago. That in itself is unremarkable: Browning, after all, is president of the citys board of education. As he moved from class to class, taking his seat at student desks and quietly sitting through each period, some of the teachers got nervous. They had no reason to, Browning says, but it was understandable. Yet the most uncomfortable person in any of those classes was Brownings son, Sam, an eighth-grader, because Bob Browning wasnt in class in his official capacity. He was there in a more important role, as Sams father, and he was taking part in a program that subjects kids who break school rules to an ingeniousand devilishly effectivedeterrent: bringing Mom or Dad to school.</p>
        <p>I got the idea accidentally, remembers John Lazares, Wilsons 37-year-old principal. A kid came into my office whom I had seen a number of times for minor discipline problemstalking in class, being late, not bringing materials, driving the teachers crazy. 1 Just got fed up and said. The next time I see you, were going to have your mother come in and see what we have to put up with all day. The reaction 1 got from him was, Do anything you want, but dont have my mother come in. Id never had this reaction from a kid beforeand weve had kids arrested for drugs, suspended and expelled. He begged me not to have his mother come in. Something lit up in my head.</p>
        <p>Situated in an industrial city midway between Cincinnati and Dayton, Wilson has a student body that reflects the citys racial, economic and ethnic diversity and divisions. Until nine years ago, when a controversial new school superintendent began a city wide disciplinary crackdown, Hamiltons schools were scarred by violence, tension and drug use. By the time Lazares became principal last January, the school had a functioning code of conduct and an improving reputation. But up to 60 of Wilsons 860 students were still being expelled every semester, and dozens more were</p>
        <p>When one boy said, Vo anything,</p>
        <p>but chmt have</p>
        <p>my mother come in, something iit up in my head,</p>
        <p>recals the princbiai</p>
        <p>Bob Browning sits beside his son, Sam, in eighth-grade classroom.</p>
        <p>being suspended for everything from tardiness to fighting in school.</p>
        <p>One of the worst things that can happen to a child is to be suspended from school, says Lazares. Its a waste. He spends three days at home for some little misdemeanor, and it makes him happy to be out of class. 1 decided to tell parents, Okay, if youll come in and spend one day in class with that kid, Ill take the suspension away.</p>
        <p>So far, about 60 parents have put ip their time at Wilson. I thought it was great that I could come down and eliminate a little trouble for my son, Bob Browning says gamely. Sam was in trouble for missing detention. I enjoyed it, says Ella Neal. It helped me a lot to understand what the teachers had to go through and to understand my child much better. Her son, Jafes, had been disrupting his seventh-grade class. Kids seem to improve dramatically when their parents come to Wilson. After-school</p>
        <p>detentions are down from 20 a day to zero on some days; expulsions have dropped to 11 since the program began. Only a handful of parents have refused to join what Lazares calls his Parent Involvement Program; many are eager to come. For a lot of them, its their first time in a school building since they graduated, he says.</p>
        <p>On a recent morning, a few veterans discussed the program. I was embarrassed, said Sam Browning. One kid cried all day, said Shane Isaacs. Shane cleaned up his act when his parents simply met with the principal and threatened to go to class with him. This is a tool for preventive discipline, says Lazares. Kids who have seen other kids parents in school stop causing problems, because they dont want their own parents to sit with them all day.</p>
        <p>Punishment is only one aspect of the Wilson program. In education, were only as effective as the parents, says Lazares, and now we have parents who call us once a week to check up on their kids progress. If a child has been a discipline problem and goes for a while without causing trouble, I call them up and say, Youre doing something right.  Each teacher now makes five phone callspositive or negativeto students homes every week. Lazares personally calls the parents of every child who makes the honor roll; 2(K) phone calls one week. I want to notice those kids who do a good job, he says.</p>
        <p>The grandson of Greek immigrants, Lazares brings his energetic approach to extracurricular activities as well. Not long ago, he took a few days off from his work to attend a Hellenic convention in Boston. At a party there, a young woman had just told him that she worked for the citys largest department store when a friend came to give her a ride home. He never got her name, but the next morning, Lazares took a taxi to the store and combed through it until he found her working in the advertising department. Within weeks, they were engaged. Last June, John Lazares and Patricia Patsios were married.</p>
        <p>Not many adolescent miscreants are the equal of a principal with that kind of determination.  S</p>
        <p>B</p>
        <p>M I</p>
        <p>H</p>
        <p>N</p>
        <p>PAGE 10  MNUMIY 18,1967  PMMOE MMAZM</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0011" />
        <p>What were all about</p>
        <p>Meat and potatoes. Milk and bread.</p>
        <p>100% pure American beef, at least 77.5% lean. U.S. Russett Butbank potatoes. Real milk in eveiy dairy product Who esome bread from local bakeries. .</p>
        <p>Good, basic, nutritious food.</p>
        <p>Food thats been the foundation of well-balanced diets for generations. And will be for generations to come. TTiats what weve built our menu on.</p>
        <p>Thats what were all about.</p>
        <p>For more information about all our menu items, ask your McDonaldls*</p>
        <p>Restaurant Manager or turn thepagp.</p>
        <p>ITS A GOOD TIME FOR THE GREAT TASTE</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0012" />
        <p>How Noah Webster helped shape the nation</p>
        <p>IN THIS SMALL HOUSE, THE vocabulary of a nation was bom. The words traveled over the plains, down the rivers, through the tall grass of the prairies and across the flat turmoil of the deserts to the Pacific. We think of pioneers pushing Westward to open the wilderness, but our words blazed trails far more important. People settled the land, but the words we chose settled who we were and what we wanted to become. A mishmash of immigrants breaking free from tyranny, we spoke dozens of  languages, had our own Pidgin En-' glish, could rarely read and spelled|| according to whim. But, as Noahs Webster knew, Americas conscience spoke a single dialect, and that was u| the one he wanted for his monumental dictionary.</p>
        <p>Webster was an ardent nationalist, and it jarred him to think of our sounding chaotic and confused. How could we present a divided sound to the world? Anyway, Europe was old news. Why speak a language littered with European customs and names when Americans were minting new words each day for their fresh country, habits and predicaments? The last vestige of authority England held over America was its language. Control the words a people use, and you control the people. In post-Revolution America, language would have to change, and those who changed it would soar in influence and even shape the nation. Vain, ambitious and always on the make, Noah Webster decided early on to be one of those shapers.</p>
        <p>Webster yearned to create a national language that would unite all the melting-pot differences in the 13 Colonies. America must be as independent in literature as she is in politics, he wrote, as famous for arts as for arms. So he began at the beginning, with children learning to smII. His 15-cent Blue-Back Speller may be the most famous American schoolbook. Seventeen million copies were printed in his lifetime, and eventually up to 100 million appeared. It did teach children to spell and read, but it specialized in moralistic fables about honesty, thrift, patriotism and hard work. In a sense, it was the Chairman Maos Little Red Book of its day. It not only regularized spelling, grammar and usage but also gave American children a shared ethic and heritage. Through it, Webster became the schoolmaster to a nation.</p>
        <p>In his long lifetime (he died in 1843 at age 84), Webster published many other textbooks and wrote about history, economics, geography, politics, linguistics and medicine. He edited two newspapers. HeWhen You Visit</p>
        <p>The Noah Webster House, sttuated at 227 S. Main St. in West Hartford, Conn., is open daily, except Wednesdays; hours vary. For information, call (2031521-5362.</p>
        <p>fathered the copyright laws. He helped to found Amherst College. He mastered 20 languages. He practiced law. But his greatest achievement, the one that wears his name, is the diction^ he spent 20 years compiling. There have been eight editions (the most recent with 470,000 words) in a series dating back to 1828, each one attended by enormous controversy, since new words may appear that seem trendy to some, while older words suddenly disappear like great uncles or aunts we rarely saw but were fond of.</p>
        <p>Websters original dictionary contained 70,000 entries, all carefully defined in his own hand. It introduced thousands of new words^Americanisms missing from English dictionaries. It stressed the vitality of a living language. Selling only 2500 copies in its first year, it standardized pronunciation and simplified spelling. Webster was the one who removed the u from words like errour and colour, changed plough to plow and reversed the final letters in words like theatre. He was a terrible prude and a religious fanatic, and both qualities show up in his</p>
        <p>continuedBY DIANE ACKERMAN</p>
        <p>PAGE 12  JANUARY 18,1987  PARADE MAGAZINE</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0013" />
        <p>More about what were all about and McDonald^ good fixxl</p>
        <p>At McDonalds, we serve you beef thats leaner than the kind of ground beef most people buy in the supermarket. No fillers.</p>
        <p>No additives. 100% pure American beef.</p>
        <p>U.S. Russet Buibank potatoes that are the pick of the crop for our W\ Famous Fries?'</p>
        <p>Prime white fish from the icy waters of the North Atlantic.</p>
        <p>Buns from top-quality enriched American wheatbaked locally.</p>
        <p>Grade A milk in our milk shakes, sundaes and cones.</p>
        <p>V(fe believe you cant turn out the best meals unless you have good, nutritious food to start with. So thats where we start.</p>
        <p>Only the best</p>
        <p>Like you, we take pride in preparing our meals in quantities small enough to ensure your food is hot, in spotless kitchens, and using lots of care.</p>
        <p>Our hot things are served hot, our cold things cold, our crisp things crispy.</p>
        <p>So you know youll get tasty, nutritious foodeven if you dont have much time to eat.</p>
        <p>Guidelines for a healthful diet.</p>
        <p>The U.S. Departments of Agriculture and Hlth and Human Services have established guidelines for a healthful diet.</p>
        <p>The most important is to eat a variety</p>
        <p>of foods.</p>
        <p>McDonalds measures up to these dietary guidelines. We serve many variations within the basic food groups.</p>
        <p>We serve meat, fish, poultry and eggs; dairy products, and grains.</p>
        <p>The guidelines also say to maintain desirable weight. To avoid too much fat, saturated fat and cholesterol. To drink alcoholic beverages only in moderation.</p>
        <p>To eat foods with adequate starch and fiber. And to avoid too much sugar and sodium.</p>
        <p>All of which can be easy to do and still enjoy your meal at McDonalds.</p>
        <p>Balance is best.</p>
        <p>Balance comes from eating a variety of foods. Because nutritionists agree, no one food provides all the necessary nutrients.</p>
        <p>At McDonalds, variety in our menu means you can balance what you order. And make sure your McDonalds meal balances with other meals you eat</p>
        <p>How to Gnd out even moft about McDonalds nutrition.</p>
        <p>Ask your McDonalds* Restaurant Manager for tfiis booklet, Mdfonalds Food, .The Facts.</p>
        <p>Or call our Nutrition Information Center at</p>
        <p>(312) 575-FOOD.</p>
        <p>We want you to know everything about our food. And about good nutrition.</p>
        <p>Because the smarter you are about food, the smarter you can eat.</p>
        <p>Its as simple as that</p>
        <p>nS A GOOD TIME FOR IHE GREAT TI5H</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0014" />
        <p>}NORDS/continued</p>
        <p>dictionary and edition of the Bible, from which he removed "offensive words. Farmers must have laughed to read breasts instead of teats, for instance.</p>
        <p>In the dictionary, under the verb form of love, the example of usage is solely religious. His definition Of duty is a small, stem primer on citizenship. In truth, Webster used the dictionary as his private pulpit from which to subtly preach to his countrymen about civics,</p>
        <p>religion and the raising of children.</p>
        <p>Because his dictionary standardized American English, it was invaluable. When he compiled it in his later years, he was a man greatly changed from the Connecticut farmboy full of vim and vigor who was a revolutionary, a progressive, a diehard Yankee. The best way to know that Noah Webster is to return to the house where he was bom, in West Hartford. Today, it has been meticulously restored to capture daily life in Colonial America in 1774, when Webster was a teen-</p>
        <p>Read It</p>
        <p>and</p>
        <p>reapTaking Charge OF your FinancesLook for The Prudential supplement Taking Charge of Your Finances in the February 1 issue of Parade. It could really pay off!The Prudential</p>
        <p>Insurance &amp;amp; Other Financial Services</p>
        <p>ager getting ready to go off to Yale, and the Revolution was building. A red wood house on a 90-acre farm, it was a center for raising com, barley, wheat, sheep, fruit and various staples. Noahs father was a farmer, weaver and a deacon who raised five children in four small rooms.</p>
        <p>The house is built around a massive brick fireplace, the source of heat and light, just as language is built around the working forge of a vocabulary. Drying herbs, vegetables and fmits hang from the walls. Tliere are barrels everywhere of dry goods and grains, cheesecloth sacks of salt from the West Indies and costly cones of sugar. They combine to give the house an aromatic, festive flavor, a rich sensuous aroma, which makes stark contrast with Noahs rigid Calvin-istic upbringing. The plain lines of his life are everywhere visiblein the stolid furniture, whitewashed walls and straw-filled mattresses, in the chilly bedroom he shared with two brothers. Raw wood floors are punctuated by gleaming nails. Exposed beams make long, hard sentences of wood! Behind the door of the grandfather clock, which stands in one comer of the parlor where Noah was bom, a brass pendulum swings between two large weights.</p>
        <p>In the kitchen, a central fire bums all the time. Eighteenth-century hearths were enormous and dangerous. You walk right into them and must climb over</p>
        <p>the fire to reach the bread ovens set into the brick on either side, or tend the meat roasting on a spit or the bacon being smoked. (Sand covered the floor, to catch grease fix)m the roasting meat and reduce the fire hazard.)</p>
        <p>Knives and other utensils stay sharp in a bucket of sand kept by the fireplace. Dried apples and pumpkins hang in garlands over the fireplace, their wizened flesh twisting like the faces of children who are spelling.</p>
        <p>As the single-edged razor lying on a side table tells us, Noahs father, like other 18th-century men, may have shaved his head and worn wigs smeared with axle grease and dusted with talcum powder. Around the house, he probably went bald and wore a cap against the cold.</p>
        <p>A thin draft of air eddies through the large keyhole on the kitchen door, high enough for a boy to peep out of at the lilacs that grew beside the house, at the maple tree fine for climbing in warm weather and the herb-and-flower garden his mother and two sisters tended when they werent cooking or spinning. Brass and pewter candle holders, which have caught the fallen wax of untold hours, bum lard or tallow and sometimes pine knots, though that is extremely messy. Daily life on a farm in Colonial America was full of wonders, but also chastening and hard.</p>
        <p>Formal portraits of Webster as an adult show a sour-faced man with hooded brown eyes and upswept hair. Those who knew him said he was pompous and austere, a tightwad who prized industry above all. There are many legends about him, but my favorite recalls when his wife caught him kissing the chambermaid. Why, Noah, Im surprised! she is supposed to have said. To which he replied, like the bona fide schoolmaster he was, "Madame, you are astonished; / am surprised.  S</p>
        <p>The author in parlor of Webster House, a model of Cohmial Me.</p>
        <p>MGE 14  MNUARY U, 1987  PARADE RU6AZINE</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0015" />
        <p>Capture the Frage Beauty of a Butterfly</p>
        <p>24K gold rim</p>
        <p> Strictly limited edition</p>
        <p> SVi" fine china</p>
        <p>One of the greatest delights of a summer day is seeing a clor-ful butterfly fluttering from flower to flower, light as a breeze and bright as the midday sun. We're fascinated as they rest in a pretty garden displaying the intricate patterns on their lovely wings.</p>
        <p>Famed naturalist artist Paul J. Sweany captures perhaps the most striking of all butterflies in his masterwork, "Spicebush Swallowtail." In this vibrant scene, Sweany chose to depict two of them resting on large, peach-colored roses in a misty summer garden.</p>
        <p>"Spicebush Swallowtail" represents Sweany's first limited-edition collector plate. And, as experienced collectors are aware, premiere offerings by talented new plate artists can create great demand that may lead to secondary</p>
        <p>01986 HC</p>
        <p>market appreciation, after the edition is closed.</p>
        <p>."Spicebush Swallowtail" premieres an elegant collection of eight plates entitled the Butterfly Garden Plate Collection. As an owner of "Spicebush Swallowtail," you will have the rightbut never the obligationto acquire all plates in the series.</p>
        <p>In addition, under our 100% Buy-Back Guarantee, you may return any plate within 30 days of receipt for a full refund, releasing your series rights for availability to another collector.</p>
        <p>Each issue in this magnificent</p>
        <p>collection will feature a different butterfly species in a lush garden setting from an original painting by Paul J. Sweany. Each plate will be priced at just $29.50 and will be strictly limited to a 14-day firing period. Furthermore, each plate will be hand-numbered and accompanied by a Certificate of Authenticity.</p>
        <p>This important introduction by Paul J. Sweany is expected to attract immediate attention and praise from nature lovers and collectors alike. So, to assure.a priority reservation for "Spicebush Swallowtail," you should return your order form promptly!</p>
        <p>i c^&amp;gt;iiiaiV 1  1</p>
        <p>RESPOND BY: _</p>
        <p>Limit: Two Plates Per Collector Please accept my application for "Spicebush Swallowtail" by Paul). Sweany. 1 wish to purchase _(1  or 2) "Spicebush Swallowtail"</p>
        <p>2.14 shipping and han-</p>
        <p>plate(s) at $29.50 (plus $2 dling) each, for a total pf $_</p>
        <p>n, .  .  ($31.64or$63  28*)</p>
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        <p> 1 enclose payment by check or money order.</p>
        <p> Charge my credit card. QVisa  MasterCard n American Express  Diners Club</p>
        <p>Account No.</p>
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        <p>15081</p>
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        <p>Name.</p>
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        <pb facs="00096520_0016" />
        <p>HiE AL T H ON PA It A P E</p>
        <p>HHEIW</p>
        <p>illlSHIWS</p>
        <p>Recent discoveries</p>
        <p>bring</p>
        <p>new hope</p>
        <p>Dolores King: An experimental vaccine helps her cai|jMr.</p>
        <p>When a physician or a nurse injects a few drops</p>
        <p>of measles vaccine into a child, the particles in that liquid set off an incredible chain of events within the childs body. And at the end of that sequence, the child is immune to any live, disease-causing measles virus.</p>
        <p>The vaccine triggers the childs immune system. And what</p>
        <p>ing germs from the day she was bom. Dwtors kept Sara alive for five months in a little three-sided box with air filters. Her parents, Steve and .Sheryl Brooks, could not touch or cuddle her. A single</p>
        <p>Uncovering the body's protective secrets, we get closer to curing AIDS and other ills</p>
        <p>a marvel that system is. Millions of microscopic blood cells, each smaller than a dust particle, swing into action. They create chemicals designed specifically to knock out the measles vims. They marshal the aid of scav-, enger cells to chew up g the attackers.  |</p>
        <p>Scientists recently* have learned how im-1 munity works and how 5 it fights invading bac-1 teria, vimses, parasites c and pieces of these, called antigens. Or how it sometimes turns against the body itself, causing diseases like arthritis, rheumatic fever, perhaps even diabetes. Or how it safeguards you from cancer.</p>
        <p>Measles, influenzaand polio no longer level large segments of the  worlds populace, thanks to vaccines. New medications and treatments are coming from research in medicine, chemistry and genetic engineering.</p>
        <p>Scientists today feel overwhelmingly that they have passed the threshold of major discoveries. The way is open to find the causes of cancer and a dozen other diseases, how to treat them and, possibly, how to prevent them.</p>
        <p>We are dealing with an unparalleled explosion of information on cancer biology," says Dr. Steven Rosenberg, chief of the surgeiy branch of the National Cancer Institute.</p>
        <p>Sara Brooks, 4. ot Sacramento, Calif., owes her life to this new knowledge. She inherited a defective immune system and had no protection against invad-</p>
        <p>B Y</p>
        <p>Aattsm (A) and antibody (B) bind, trlggarins immune system.</p>
        <p>stray germ could have killed her.</p>
        <p>Sara was pretty sick for a while, says her mother, but now the doctors consider her cured. Sara is so outspoken. She cracks you upmakes you happy. We call her a miracle baby."</p>
        <p>Dr. Morton J. Cowan of the University of California at San Francisco gave Sara a defect-free immune system by transplanting bone marrow from her father into her body. His healthy bone marrow contained all the cells Sara needed.</p>
        <p>Bone-marrow transplantation also has been successful in fighting leukemia. It replaces the diseased immune system by producing healthy red cells and platelets, as well as the immune systems white cells. This transplanting occurs</p>
        <p>after the leukemia is blasted with X-rays and chemicals that destroy both the cancer and the patients bone marrow.</p>
        <p>In this same way, bone-marrow transplants have helped several workers who received deadly doses of radiation at the nuclear accident at Chernobyl in the Soviet Union. The radiation had destroyed their immune systems.</p>
        <p>Although babies bom with defective immune systems are rare, the world is experiencing the horror of defective immunity in thousands of people who have AIDS (Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome). They acquired this condi</p>
        <p>tion from infection with a virus that knocks out a key white blood cell in the bodys delicate immune system.</p>
        <p>Without effective immunity, AIDS victims fall prey to bacteria and fungi that live harmlessly on the skin or inside healthy persons. Resultant infections ravage the body. AIDS kills almost all who contract it, making it the most deadly illness of modem times.</p>
        <p>The new knowledge about immunity allowed scientists to move fast against AIDS. The first cases in the U.S. were reported in 1981 as a strange pneumonia. But, in a year or two, scientists</p>
        <p>U B E L L</p>
        <p>mCC 16  JANUARV 18, UB7  niRADC MAGAZmi</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0017" />
        <p>had pinpointed the defect in immunity. In 1984, they isolated the killer virus. Now they are hard at work on an AIDS vaccine.</p>
        <p>Herpes viruses live forever in nerve cells. Some scientists believe they are triggered by cold, heat, fever, chemicals or menstruation. The virus grows out of the affected nerve cells and attacks other tissues. Shingles is really the reactivation of an old chickenpox virus, responding, some theorize, to the same triggers listed above. If scientists can solve the riddle of AIDS, they will be one step up on herpes and shingles.</p>
        <p>Four major discoveries have brightened the promise of immunology:</p>
        <p> The unraveling of the complex way in which the different types of white blood cells cooperate to attack foreign substances that get into the body.</p>
        <p> The discovery of chemicals released by the cells that give signals for white-cell action. Youve probably heard of interferon and interleukin. Both are promising cancer treatments. Interferon has been considered as a promising preventive for the common cold.</p>
        <p> The development of genetic engineering. (See PARADE, Jan. 27, 1985.) Scientists now know how to alter the biology of common sewage bacteria so that the germs can create unlimited amounts of human chemicals like insulin, interferon and interleukin.</p>
        <p> The creation of a strange and wonderful cell called a hybridoma. These hybrid cells can produce boundless amounts of antibodieschemicals that attack invading viruses, bacteria or fungi. Hybridoma antibodies 5so hold promise against cancer.</p>
        <p>Lets see what these historic advances mean for you.</p>
        <p>The white*cell network. Your blood contains red cells, which carry oxygen, as well as a clear yellow fluid called plasma that transports chemicals and food for the rest of the body, plus several kinds of white cells. The white cells control the immune system.</p>
        <p>One species of white cell, called a B-cell, manufactures the antibodies. Another, a macrophage (meaning big-eater), actually devours germs and cancer cells. Natural killer cells are believed to hunt down and kill cancer cells or normal cells infected with a vims. Another white cell, called a T-cell, also issues chemical signals.</p>
        <p>Memory cells, which last for life, remember the various germs that have attacked. These cells trigger the immune system quickly if the same germ attacks again. A vaccine is made of a weakened or dead germ, or a part of a germ that fools the memory cell into believing the live vims has attacked. T|ie memory cell is primed into action by the vaccine without the body experiencing the actual disease.</p>
        <p>It would take a much longer article to describe in detail how all these cells act to protect you against infection. The action has been compared to an army in battle. But this tells only part of the complex story.</p>
        <p>Doctors are putting the vaccine reaction to work against cancer, particularly melanoma, a skin cancer that is hopeless once it has metastasized, or spread. Dr. Jean-Claude Bystryn, director of the melanoma program at the Kaplan Cancer Center of the New York University Medical Center in Manhattan, has created a vaccine against melanoma. It is made from extracts of cancer cells, which are supposed to fool the immune system, stimulating it to spring into action and kill live cancer cells that have spread. Dr. Bystryn has tried the vaccine with 60 patients.</p>
        <p>In 1970, surgeons cut a malignant melanoma from the back of Dolores King, 57, a housewife from Fort Lauderdale, Fla. The cancer returned in 1983, and Dr. Bystryn gave Mrs. King injectionsof vaccine. Her skin turned reda good sign. Though Mrs. King says she</p>
        <p>PMAOE MMADNE  MMMRY U, 1987  PAGE 17</p>
        <p>feels fne now, she adds: My prognosis is very bad. But I have faith.</p>
        <p>We still dont know if we have cured the melanoma, says Dr. Bystryn. Now we need to see if the vaccine is safe.</p>
        <p>Study of white cells also has led to the idea that many couples arc infertile because the wifes immune system destroys the husbands sperm. Worse, the pregnant womans body may reject the baby in her womb.</p>
        <p>Sometimes the white cells attack normal body cel Is. Growing evidence suggests that this happens in the pancreas, which makes insulin. If our insulin-making cells die, we develop severe diabetes. As we reported (PARADE, April 21, 1985), doctors now give patients cyclosporine, a drug that slows down the immune system. It seems to work in some diabetics. They start producing insulin again.</p>
        <p>Dr. H. Peter Chase of the Barbara Davis Center for Childhood Diabetes in Denver says that for cyclosporine to stop diabetes, a patient would have to take it a long time, perhaps for life. The drug is expensive</p>
        <p>($6000 a year) andamong other negative side effectscould harm the patients kidneys.</p>
        <p>Other diseases caused by white cells that attack healthy cells include rheumatic fever, rheumatoid arthritis, a strange disease called lupus and, perhaps, multiple sclerosis.</p>
        <p>However, with cyclosporine, doctors have had great success in slowing down the immune systems reaction against transplants of organs ftom other individuals. So now kidney transplants from unrelated individuals have success rates as high as 95 percent, heart transplants as high as 85 percent and liver transplants as high as 70 percent.</p>
        <p>Immune chemicals. Interferon, one of the substances secreted by various virally infected cells, has been approved by the Food and Drug Administration for the treatment of a rare cancer called hairy-cell leukemia, a disease that until recently had no ueatment. Interferon also has been found in clinical tests to effectively fight chronic leukemia, kidney cancer andcontinued</p>
        <p>Tlielianlestiiligheeuerhadtodo was teil Sa% he had herpes. Butthankstohisdoctw^he could also tellherh^j</p>
        <p>Whether you have a mild, intermediate or severe case of genital herpes, you should see your doctor to help gain new control over your outbreaks, especially if you havent seen your doctor within the past year.</p>
        <p>The medical profession now has more information than ever before about the treatment of herpes, as well as effective counselling and</p>
        <p>treatment programs that can help you reduce the frequency, duration and severity of your outbreaks.</p>
        <p>If in the past you were told that nothing could be done for herpes, it's no longer true.</p>
        <p>Herpes is controllable.</p>
        <p>Ask your doctor about these treatment programs, and whether one of them would be suitable for you.See your doctor...there is help for herpes</p>
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        <p>Kaposis sarcoma, the cancer peculiar to AIDS victims.</p>
        <p>Another T-cell substance, interleukin, was said by the National Cancer Institute to be one of the major advances against cancer in a decade. The institutes iS-. Steven Rosenberg reported in December 1985 that, with interleukin, advanced cancers in one patient had retreated completely and 11 patients had at least a 50 percent reduction in tumor size. Here, really for the first time, we can use the immune system to attack a broad array of cancer, he says.</p>
        <p>Besides interferon and interleukin, scientists have identified other powerful immune-system chemicals. One, tumor necrosis factor, seems to destroy cancer cells without hurting normal cells.</p>
        <p>Genetic engineering. Interleukin and interferon are available in large amounts because scientists now grow them, using bacteria or yeast. Your white cells form interleukin, for example, under the control of your genes. A gene is another bit of chemical called DNA, containing the information the white cell needs to form interleukin. Through genetic engineering, scientists can take the gene for interleukin from a human cell and put it into a common germ that grows in a vat much as yeast grows in a beer vat, and the germ then makes interleukin. Scientists also are commercially manufacturing tumor necrosis factor and other T-cell substances that control the immune system.</p>
        <p>Hybridoma. This hybrid is perhaps the most bizarre creature ever created. It is made up of two cellsthe B-cell, which provides antibodies, and a whitecell cancer called myeloma. By fusing twocells, you get a hybrid that produces antibodies and lives forever. And the hybrid can be made to produce antibodies to any virus or germeven to a cancer, lliese are called monoclonal antibodies because they are specific to one particular germ or cancer. Hybridomas have produced antibodies to melanomas and to colon and pancreatic cancers.</p>
        <p>Norman J. Arnold, 57, of Columbia, S.C., was diagnosed as having incurable pancreatic cancer in July 1982. He went to the Wistar Institute, a biological research institution in Philadelphia. There, the director. Dr. Hilary Kop-rowski, injected him with monoclonal antibodies against the cancer. His cancer receded. Norman Arnold says he feels fine and that there has been no sign of the disease for 2'/2 years.</p>
        <p>The future of immunotherapy is bright, says Dr. Koprowski. Monoclonal antibodies are the greatest medical tools developed in the last 50 years. They arc in everybodys lab.</p>
        <p>And as research into the marvelous immune system continues, every scientist I spoke with expressed the same optimism. Immunology will lift much of mans burden of disease. E9</p>
        <p>IS  JANIMRY la, 1987  PMMOE MMAZINE</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0019" />
        <p>How to become a Straiglit-A Student</p>
        <p>REGARDLESS OF MDUR WST PEITO/IANCE IN saca</p>
        <p>All of US are capable of much more than we achieve. I learned this lesson the hard waythrough my own experiences as a student. My grades in high school were so poor that 1 had to go through a special remedial program to get into college, and once in college 1 received several Ds in my freshman year. But things changed. 1 went on to get a Ph.D. in Economics, and in the process 1 made an A in every course 1 tookin fact, I made an A on every test in every course I took! At the time 1 was attending classes at night, working at a full-time job, and taking care of home and family responsibilitiesbut 1 still had plenty of time left over for leisure activities.How to Improve Your Grades</p>
        <p>What was my secret for success? 1 knew exactly what to study for a test, when to study it, and how much to study. 1 have developed a complete system that turns studying into something you can excel at. It took me more than twenty years to develop my system but now it is available to you in just a few hours by reading my new book, GETTING STRAIGHT As. I start out by teaching you the basic skills, such as how to read books more effectively, and how to write term papers. You will learn how to plan a couree of study, how to select an instructor, where to sit ia class, secrets of good note-taking, and what to do to successfully complete assignments at home. You will also learn how to efficiently prepare for tests and strategies for taking different types of testsbecause performing successfully on tests is an acquired skill.</p>
        <p>not an innate ability. In my book 1 teach you the skills to become a test-wise student. I show you study tips that work, and the secrets of time man^ement, so you will have more time to enjoy the good life. And 1 present all of this in a format that is easy-to-follow and enjoyable to read.Become A Better Student or Ybur Money Back</p>
        <p>You don't have to be a bookworm or genius to go to the head of the class. I have helped many other students reach the topincluding those who previously had serious difficulties with their studies. Whether you are in high school, an undergraduate, or a graduate student, my book has something important to offer you. In fact, it may be one of the most important books you ever read! Let!s face it; The grades you receive now will help you get into the college of your choice, and beyond that, perhaps the job of your choice.</p>
        <p>I'll make you this guarantee: If you practice my techniques and don't see a significant improvement in your grades in just one semester. I'll give you your money back. No questions asked. You risk nothing. So why settle for less than your best? Aim for the top and you will see that it can change your life, as it changed mine. If you're a student or know one, help him or her start GETTING STRAIGHT A's now. Order your copy today!</p>
        <p>Gordon Green, Author,</p>
        <p>GETTING STRAIGHT A's</p>
        <p>What the Students Say. What the Experts Say:</p>
        <p>tiETTING STRAIGHT As" has helped me organize my thoughts and improve my study habits. I raised my grade point average from 2.2 to 3.S in just one semester!</p>
        <p>Diane Bedard, Virginia Commonwealth University</p>
        <p>Tour book has contributed significantly to my achievement of straight A's in hieh school. It should prove indupensable to all high school students, because the efficient study methods can easily be worked into even the busiest schedule."</p>
        <p>Kritis Du Gupta OxonHiU High School, Md.</p>
        <p>"At luta lucid study that provides sound advice and is fun to read. Gordon Green may just be the new Dale Carnegie on how to succeed in school!"</p>
        <p>Sar Levitan Director, Center for Social Policy Studies</p>
        <p>"This is a splendid book ... a very insightful and eminently practical guide.</p>
        <p>-Terrel H. BeU Former Secretary of Education</p>
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        <p> General Offices: 3711th Ave.. Hunngton Station. NY 11746.0 1986 National SyndicaUons Inc.</p>
        <p>TO|lnrnB send your name, address, zip code and check or money UnilCIf  order for $6.95 plus $1.25 postage and handling to: Publishers Choice, Box 4171, Dept. CAIO-PO , Huntington Station. NY 11746. NY and IL residents add appropriate sales tax.</p>
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        <pb facs="00096520_0020" />
        <p>PARADE'S SPECIALIntelligence Report</p>
        <p>of ralWM of mail rtcohiod, Pando roroU K caimot aamr qoorio*.</p>
        <p>Caiy Grant Remembered</p>
        <p>Were he alive, Cary Grant would be celebrating his 83rd birthday todayno doubt with his fifth wife, Barbara Harris, 36, a ' former press agent for Londons Royal Lancaster Hotel, and his only child, Jennifer Diane, 20, a senior at Stanford University majoring in American Studies.</p>
        <p>Unfortunately, Grant died last Nov. 29 in Davenport, Iowa, of a massive stroke after first stubbornly ignoring the advice of two physicians (he had little faith in doctors)</p>
        <p>that he desperately belonged in a hospital.</p>
        <p>Obituaries are characterized by a necessary sameness, and that is certainly true of those written about this superstar of yesteryear. In practically every one Ive read on the actor, he is described as having been handsome, debonair, jaunty, smooth, breezy, animated and high-spirited. Certainly he was all of these, and certainly he was married five times, acted in 72 films and retired in 1966 at age 62. But thats not the Cary Grant I remember interviewing intermittently from' 1943 to 1966 and b^ond. The Cary Grant I remember was rather an insecure, tentativeFrom the cold waters of the north: a lesson about heart disease.</p>
        <p>On the coast of Greenland, studies were done that fascinated researchers. They involved the Eskimos whose traditional high fat diet of seal, whale and walrus looked like an open door to coronary heart disease. Yet, researchers found little sign of it.</p>
        <p>They concluded the reason lies in EPA and DHA. Known scientifically as omega-3 fatty acids, EPA and DH A are found in certain marine animals and cold water, oily fish that the Eskimos sudlRsmackerei, herrii^ and salnxHi. cQiidlfatied by 20 years of studies with the Dutch and Jaranese. Whats more, numerous clinical studies pointed to the fact that EPA and DHA may be important links in reducing cholesterol ana the risk of harmful fatty deposits from</p>
        <p>building up in your arteries. You can see how fatty deposits can clog your arteries and may over time lead to a heart attack ur stroke.</p>
        <p>Here in America, a it is with the Eskimos. But,</p>
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        <p>Grant, who had a fondness for young wives, with No. 5, Barbara Ham's (46 years younger}: Top, wife No. 3, Betsy Drake (19 yearsi; No. 4, Dyan Cannon (33 years!</p>
        <p>man in search of an identity he could be comfortable with; a man fearful of returning to the poverty into which hed been born, and therefore ever tight with a buck; an actor of talent, ambition, courage and financial acumen who managed his career with exemplary care and foresight.</p>
        <p>Few movie fans knew it, but Grant was that rare leading man in the Depression days of the 1930s who decided he could do better as a free-lance than as a contract player (with Paramount). He was also one of the frst actors to accept a minimal salary plus 10% of the gross for starring in a film which is what he got in 1958 for acting opposite Sophia Loren in Houseboat. It was Grant who introduced the practice of using his own clothes in a film and then charging the studio a hefty wardrobe fee. With a managerial shrewdness second to none, he advanced to a position in Hollywood where he had approval not only of script, director and cast of his films but also of the publicity releases and still photos.</p>
        <p>He was also a litigious actor who sued or threatened to sue over alleged breaches of contract and aspersions cast on his sexual behavior. In the 1970s, for example. Grant sued 20th Century-Fox for using without remuneration a 30-second film clip of him from Monkey Business in its movie Myra Breckinridge. The court awarded him $10. Grant also sued Chevy Chase after the actor questioned his masculinity on a TV showa slander for which Grant reportedly accepted a handsome out-of-court settlement.BY LLOYD SHEARERel987</p>
        <p>PAGE 20. MNUARV IS, 1987  PARADE MAGAZINE</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0021" />
        <p>In the early 1930s, Grant quickly recognized that film was a directors medium. From the time he left Paramoimt, he made it a point to establish friendly working relationships with such outstanding directors as Howard Hawks, Geoige Stevens, Alfred Hitchcock, George Cukor and Leo McCarey. He made five films with Hawks, four with Hitchcock, and three each with Stevens, Cukor and McCarey.</p>
        <p>Once, on a 12-hour flight from Los Angeles to London, I asked Grant why he did so well in selecting scripts and so.poorly in choosing wives. He was married at the time to actress Dyan Cannon, who gave him his only offspring, Jennifer. Cannon was 33 years younger than Grant, and their marriage was foundering. In a script, he said, I know what Im looking for. In a wife, I guess, I dont.</p>
        <p>In 1981, the actor married British publicist Barbara Harris, 46 years his jimior. Despite the age-differential, she developed into an understanding wife of</p>
        <p>With his only offspring, daughter Jennifer</p>
        <p>whom Grant said, She keeps me happy, healthy and hopping.</p>
        <p>It is to his widow and his daughter that he bequeathed most of his estate, estimated to be worth $20 million. To the rest of us, he left a treasure-trove of films, many of which are truly pleasure-giving and unforgettable. Off the screen, however, he was not the bon vivant he played on it. He was, until his final years, a complex, intricate and emotionally embroiled man.</p>
        <p>Jackie Onassis Scouting</p>
        <p>Jackie Onassis and Dr. George Hatem, whose life story shed like to get Into print</p>
        <p>Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis, who works as an editor at Doubleday in New York, is trying to line up a biography or autobiography of Dr. George Hatem, 76. Hatem is the physician from Buffalo, N. Y., and Greenville, N.C., who won the Lasker Pubhc Service Award last year for his major role in the virtual eradication of venereal disease in China during the Mao regime.</p>
        <p>A resident of China for 53 years. Dr. Hatem (known to the Chinese as Ma Hadde, or Virtue from Overseas) currently is hard at work in Beijing, trying to cure the Chinese leper population of 100,000. As a</p>
        <p>physician who treated the late Mao Zedong, Zhou Enlai and many other Communist leaders, Dr. Ma is venerated in China, where he became a citizen in 1949, He is married to Chou Su-fei, a former child actress who today is a leading film director.</p>
        <p>When this reporter wrote the first article on Hatem to appear in this country (PARADE, Aug. 12,1973), the good doctor was besieged with offers from 15 publishers eager to commission a book on him. We forwarded all the offers and various propositions to Hatem, who several weeks later responded from China with a brief note: "Too busy treating the sick to toot my horn.</p>
        <p>PARADE MAGAZINE  JANUARY 18,1987  PAGE 21</p>
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        <pb facs="00096520_0023" />
        <p>IN STEP WITH:</p>
        <p>BY JAMES BRADYEmanud liigaro</p>
        <p>EOPLE HAVE THE WRONG idea about fashion designers. Take Emanuel Ungaro.</p>
        <p>He is a short, tough Frenchman who lives and works in Paris and who designs some of the loveliest clothes in the world. When I saw him in New Yoric a few weeks ago, he was wearing a sort of Don Johnson five-day beard and putting on a fashion show to raise money for cancer research. This was a quick tripall business and little pleasureand his girlfriend was not with him. His girlfriend these days is Anouk Aime, a startlingly beautiful woman who starred in La Dolce Vita and A Man and a Woman and who has the best cheekbones you have ever seen.</p>
        <p>I first got to know Ungaro about 20 years ago. I was hanging around Paris and writing about fashion for the newspapers. The big designers then were Coco Chanel and Cristobal Balenciaga, both of them now dead, and someone told me, Theres this young guy who works for Balenciaga. Hes a tailor. Maybe the best tailor in the world. And now hes going out on his own and opening his own fashion studio.</p>
        <p>I went to his first fashion collection, in a Paris apartment so tiny that people were sitting on the balconies looking in through the French windows to see the clothes. Emanuel said he raised the money for that first show by getting a loan on his girlfriends Porsche, The girlfriend then was not Anouk, but someone else, ^at is important to the story is that he raised the cash and soon was in a bigger establishment which, unfortunately, had a lot of small rooms: To show the collection to the fashion editors all at the same time, Emanuel came up with the clever idea of having closed-circuit TV sets installed, so wherever the model wandered among the small rooms, everyone could see her at once.</p>
        <p>That was all a long time ago. Today, when Ungaro comes to America, he goes up to see Jackie Onassis, some of whose clothes he makes.</p>
        <p>He has a place in Paris, a chalet in the Swiss ski resort of Klosters, where he does cross-country skiing, and he is driving his own sports car these days. Going out to dinner with Emanuel in Paris is an adventure. He drives the sports car very fast, and you hope you get thereand when you do, he parks on the sidewalk, where most Parisians park, because there is no room at the curb. His new perfume is called Diva," and it is making him another fortune. Emanuel knows he is a fortunate man and, unlike some of the fashion people I know, he is always grinning. He is very serious and professional about his tradewhich is to make women even more beautiful than they are alreadybut he is not serious about himself.</p>
        <p>Most designers cant stand one another. It is too tough a business, too competitive. It says something about Ungaro tfiat even his rivals like him. gg</p>
        <p>BORN: Feb. 13, 1933, inAix-en-Provence, France. CAREER HKIHLIGirrS: Collaboration wHh the couturier Baienciaga, 1956; first couture house in Paris, 1965; first licensing agreement, for scarves (he now has 50 iicensing agreements), 1968; expansion to U.S. and Japan, 19Z0s; creation of perfume, 1983. nUN WARDROBES: Le Saur*g tfor Catherine Deneuve), 1975; 6ior (for Gena Rowlands), 1979; La TniHe (for Isabelle Huppert), 1981; WraJaHe(for Anouk Aime),</p>
        <p>1983.</p>
        <p>\he French fa^im collections for / spring wiU he shown next week in / Paris. No designer is more important / now than Emanuel Ungaro, who /</p>
        <p>hocked his girlfriends sports car for the money to get started.</p>
        <p>PARAOE MAOAZME  JANUARY II. 1987  PAGE 23</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0024" />
        <p>BY BILL. HOESTJjaugh Varade</p>
        <p>HOWARD HUGE</p>
        <p>Youll have to ask your manager about your IRA account. Now...are there any other questions?</p>
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        <p>WORLD WAR II WITH WALTER CRONKITE</p>
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        <p>f volvingwhen ^ you realize wl the special planning that went into it.</p>
        <p>IN EPISODE I."TARGET: PLOESTI", the plan called for a surprise attack by 177 B-24 bombers. They would avoid German radar by flying all 1,200 miles to the oil refineries at Ploesti, Rumania at tree-top</p>
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        <p>IN EPISODE II. "RAID ON SCHWEINFURT", youll witness the first major American air strike deep inside Germany. Since the target was far beyond the range of Allied fighter protection, these B-17 "Flying Fortresses" had to rely on tight formation flying and combined firepower for survival. 28 are shot down before they even reach the target. And before its over, this air battle tests the limits of human endurance.</p>
        <p>IN EPISODE III. COUNTERBLAST: HAM BURG", youll board a U-boat on the attack and understand first-hand why the destruction of the U-boat manufacturing plants at Hamburg was so vital. In a single night raid, the RAF put up 800 bombers. How this huge force managed to jam German radar, get the Luftwaffe to defend the wrong city and hit the target with such deadly accuracy is one of the wars great success stories.</p>
        <p>AND IN EPISODE IV, GUIDED MISSILE", the Luftwaffes painful defeat in The Battle of Britain sets the stage for Hitlers "vengeance weapons." the V-1 and V-2 rockets. Youll watch them being launched at his secret base in Peenemunde . go on the massive air raid that forces their redeployment at hidden launching sites...view the onslaught as RAF Spitfires shoot down V-ls while supersonic V-2s rain down, one by one, on</p>
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        <p>42tO*</p>
        <p>eg'aair i I'm astaa I  *saeBr</p>
        <p>'AS40281*</p>
        <p>INXS</p>
        <p>UstenUke Thieves</p>
        <p>s88wtaBBi aaar</p>
        <p>347070 __assa!ist!fl?w I L3455B3*</p>
        <p>**^9raoSS'3ii J i</p>
        <p>AANiOmiMIIIAUS</p>
        <p>MMMMCfS</p>
        <p>WIMOPNONC</p>
        <p>roroT BEST OF BREAD</p>
        <p>^ataasgr</p>
        <p>290916*THE BEST OF EARTH : fl^i^WINO AND RRE vol. i ,</p>
        <p>256560*</p>
        <p>CAT STEVENS</p>
        <p>GREATEST HITS</p>
        <p>347831* UTOi</p>
        <p>W!"</p>
        <p>Available on records and cassettes only</p>
        <p>Selections with two numbers ore 2-record sets or louble-length topes, and count os two selectionswrite eoch number in o separate bo*</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0027" />
        <p>fM'W</p>
        <p>343004</p>
        <p>1551</p>
        <p>mBm 'iiyi ' ,</p>
        <p>j 1</p>
        <p>342790*</p>
        <p>f 348334 OKMWaniON &amp;gt; f 338750 , EODIERABBITT</p>
        <p>339291 JAMESntLOfl 1 TheriWhyrmHer* j</p>
        <p>tlF ^HhRH^j</p>
        <p>w</p>
        <p>346528*</p>
        <p>OK)</p>
        <p>wwwiWl</p>
        <p>INTERMISSION</p>
        <p>g  I  ('jBatf''gfflFi    wr  sisa]  [wr^mml  i  ar  misssmi \wat jsnm</p>
        <p>2_EMMYL0U HARRIS TH/R7EEN</p>
        <p>342782 JACKSON BROWNE Iitw1 UvMhiTlwBaltnct</p>
        <p>349332</p>
        <p>JSiStSSSSSir</p>
        <p>lii*i.iil</p>
        <p>mXmlmV</p>
        <p>343947</p>
        <p>IWu^l</p>
        <p>TWrBWWTT</p>
        <p>INIJMrV</p>
        <p>DCfLUOCt</p>
        <p>336S11</p>
        <p>[^Sl</p>
        <p>r 346544* KENNY 0</p>
        <p>[  duotones'V' .imar -i i ag aib' 11 as m I Hsr hmm i fWpene: i 1 iB-g^</p>
        <p>349548331033* CAT STEVENS @ FootmplnTh*D9ffc349340* aj.THOMAS ] NHSHTUFE J</p>
        <p>346900</p>
        <p>OAK RIDGE BOYS</p>
        <p>SEASONS</p>
        <p>f 3m3* EDOE MONEY I [5Sa CMHHOiDBtCK347766* RJH ^ UtaVRIchPagMM</p>
        <p>346635 EXILE @ GBBATESTHITS</p>
        <p>V</p>
        <p>Wk i%  PLUS  A  CHANCE  TO  GET2M0REALBUMS</p>
        <p>*vith monitxrship in tho Columbia Rocord &amp;amp; Tap Club Soti comp Info dot a tU on foUowinq pocjc</p>
        <p>tCPiSl,</p>
        <p>Over 50 more selections to choose from on the following pcicji</p>
        <p>348755  GLORIA LOHING</p>
        <p>331850</p>
        <p>mgyMiwe</p>
        <p>MNCY</p>
        <p>S47BS40 mrnjmgmm HBB jnSlgMBi</p>
        <p>MRDOMMA ] 18P*</p>
        <p>m eSHe I</p>
        <p>347856* QUEENSRYCHE l*&amp;lt;ag| RageForOrdar</p>
        <p> 324476 PRETENDERS  347252*WWNOfOWtrr^ j 346858* __' ' 343285* JOEiWa^ "j</p>
        <p>i (a Laaming To Crawl 1 ossk: Wfiustomo j , j 393230 WGWOmJ) J</p>
        <p>'j</p>
        <p>gr A</p>
        <p>1 auLi ^isr 1 8T Bb</p>
        <p>gEnjas&amp;amp;ai "wsr 1!</p>
        <p>342097</p>
        <p>Barbra Sirwufld ThBfOdwiif Album</p>
        <p>Rre At First Shtfit</p>
        <p>^ UETALHEAUH</p>
        <p>'1</p>
        <p>1^1 sHOUTArmeoenL</p>
        <p>m ym&amp;amp;fst</p>
        <p>CmnUmiamm</p>
        <p>iSBittSSSc</p>
        <p>^^5* JCHH</p>
        <p>322032 PATBENATAR</p>
        <p>LIVEFfOMEAfTHj</p>
        <p>320499 THEPOUCE Imsi smcHnoman</p>
        <p>339200 STEVtEWONDER InSquaraOrda</p>
        <p>' 338616</p>
        <p>E  MIAMI  VICE</p>
        <p>s&amp;amp;</p>
        <p>ORif youd prefer a trial membership.</p>
        <p>291773 Tba Bast Ot Pater. 1  306241  THEOOOflS</p>
        <p>&amp;amp;*riS3 PautAndMary J I Sga  GftEATESTHITS</p>
        <p>319558 ElTONJOt#rS IS] GraatastHits,Voi.2</p>
        <p>pfv</p>
        <p>nOAallOQ</p>
        <p>29164^ JIMI HENDRIX i  i  ao  I</p>
        <p>1^ SMASHHITS ;  1^51  OUT  OF  THE  CELLAR  J</p>
        <p>a^7 LEOZEPPEUN</p>
        <p>MoianOiTiaHair</p>
        <p>w^mn IB jsassc 11 m.mmm j</p>
        <p>^seucTwwswnMTiiwriuMMWAAtiAicowoamowpouau-yiOTOiwA ANO COUNT AS TWO leUCTIONt-llimiTi EACH MUMSW IN A aa*MUn^</p>
        <p>292243 JACKSON BROWNE THE PRETENDER</p>
        <p>ANY 6-1</p>
        <p>If you are |ust an occasional record or tope buyer if you prefer not lo oWigote yourself to purchose eigH more selections or if you connoi Imd 12 selections you wont right now-heres o perfect opportunity to "try out' the Club on o jpecicl tnol-membershp bosis!</p>
        <p>Just fill in the special "Tnal-Membership Application |ht-ond we'll seid you ANY 6 records or topes-ALl K plus shtppmg cxtd hondlmg In exchofiM, you simply juy os few os four selections lot regulor Oub pnces) m</p>
        <p>mm</p>
        <p>38W7te</p>
        <p>I asswjBsr '</p>
        <p>rim</p>
        <p>LKJ^IUI niut-niKTt't^ci  r  </p>
        <p>ot the nght-oncj we'll send you ANY 6 reccxds or topes-ALl lof only K p ogree to buy the next 3 yeors As a trial mernber youll enjoy off of the benefits of regulor</p>
        <p>-------but  without</p>
        <p>^fw3Sf^  membersfvp os described on the following poge-</p>
        <p>II I I .w/  Usnnfhx/  rrvnmitnvAnf vOu fflOV COftCW Of 00</p>
        <p>319996 M0T0WN62S#1HfTI 39999S^e) ***"</p>
        <p>SSSs-tSBSb,'*</p>
        <p>I' 327288 CHICAOO r?</p>
        <p> iwuMoawim*! .......i  j</p>
        <p>Bstg^ jBBakj [}i"B!8aggiie] gf jaB88.</p>
        <p>34M61  I</p>
        <p>391466 B  j</p>
        <p>r 336640*_ TRIUMPH ^  398644  STM^  _</p>
        <p>attrwJtl laa^iiWR</p>
        <p>348637*</p>
        <p>atomuwmyj</p>
        <p>39S632</p>
        <p>346446,5,^</p>
        <p>3864401*SSm.</p>
        <p>324632* A^SSF</p>
        <p>leanI  9vSmS&amp;gt;</p>
        <p> 324616  C^LAUPER</p>
        <p>! P^SSjfl SHE^SOUNUSUU.</p>
        <p>1986ColumlMHouM</p>
        <p>ony lengthy commttmeni you moy concel ot ony ixne ofter tx;yv&amp;gt;g ftrtt (ox fiKxe se^echooi- So il you'd p'eef' to eorott now under this speciol "get ocquowed' offer-moil tt speoo! C5ppi*cotco todoy, togetH^ with only $1,00 thots lc fcK yox 6 mtroduciory selections, plus 99c to cover shtppmg or^ hon-dlmgl Refer to "How the Club operoies" porogroph on following poge for further deioils</p>
        <p>Special Storl-Your-Membership Now Bonus Offer you may o/so choose your frst selection now-ond well grye it lo you for up to 60% off reidor Ckib pnces ionly S3.98) Endose payment cvfo you# receive it with your 6 mtroductorv olbwns Ttw discount purchose reduces your membership obligotion nrnediotelyyou'll then need buy |ust 3 more (msieod 0* 4) m the next three yeors Whot's more, this discount purchose ofjo ntfrte^ you lo st*ll 2 olbums os o bo^Hrt, PREE Just cnaci* bo ^ opoicofton and Wl *n the f^xnbefs o your frst selection ond 2 free bonus dbumsl</p>
        <p>NOTE we reserve the right to request odd itioool informolion or reject ony oppUcotion.</p>
        <p>Columbia Record A Pope Club, 1400 N. FruHridge P.O. Bok 1130, Terre Houte, Indiano 47811</p>
        <p>tbs. I'd Nee to "try out" the Oub-so lin enclosing check or money order lor 1100 (mol'i h ter my 6 mtroduciory saleciions. pkjs 99c lor shpping or^ hondling). Mese occepi my inot membership opplicoiion under the terms outlmed here 1 ogree to buy lour rrvye selections joi regulor Club pncesl dunng the comma three yeorsond I moy concel my membersnp ot ony fmie olier oong so Write in numbers of 6 selections.</p>
        <p>Send my selections in this type of recording (check one)  Cosseties  Records  8-lrock Conndges</p>
        <p>Myr</p>
        <p>(Bur</p>
        <p> hard BOCK OowJ te ftxti Gnevi</p>
        <p> HtAV' MHA CJu*i&amp;lt;X. &amp;gt;, OrrrOsboun</p>
        <p> COUt.-tBr</p>
        <p> Mr.</p>
        <p> Mr.</p>
        <p> Ml-</p>
        <p>ritowAvx}</p>
        <p>moin musical interest it (check one</p>
        <p>I moy ofwoyj cfioose from ony coiegov;</p>
        <p>son BOCK  </p>
        <p>MO0OWIQ Hjfy  ivtro ii'usonci</p>
        <p>leiwiS IhN*i  r^ Doiyyvi</p>
        <p> Black music*  C- ' </p>
        <p>UMhw ybnou.  'ir Mon-xy. Or^</p>
        <p>krkxtKr  f-y^inc/C</p>
        <p> ;A7Z*  ''QASSiCA  -r.Btra.n</p>
        <p>_Apt</p>
        <p>0y----</p>
        <p>Do you hove oletephon*? (Check one)</p>
        <p>1 creoil cord</p>
        <p>Siote Zip</p>
        <p>(DYIS DNO</p>
        <p>cord? fChoefc one) anS aNO</p>
        <p>iSt/SIt</p>
        <p>Doyouheveoi</p>
        <p>rMlW-Xio^JoeV-MC &amp;lt;0 AKwo H jfuUo -*te-</p>
        <p> Also send my first selection for up to o 60% diKounf, inr</p>
        <p>I om endosmg oddiionol poymerr o&amp;lt; V398 I too need b/r CAy r 3 more setecion imueoc! ot 4i, 01 regu</p>
        <p>kjrC-ub pnces n Itine.i Tvee yoors</p>
        <p>Hm diKOwnt purcho* ol0 WAQ/2E ntirt*imiorhet*2EXTVA .</p>
        <p>VWLR/MC 60NUSA16UM$HI</p>
        <p>, J</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0028" />
        <p>WOPGUt^ i "</p>
        <p>.  U</p>
        <p>BILLY JOEL</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p> ./A'i V  1 . j , V</p>
        <p>'.ii</p>
        <p>ieh^i</p>
        <p>ESZ3</p>
        <p>Emsa</p>
        <p>EE21</p>
        <p>EHni thF</p>
        <p>t bhiUo!</p>
        <p>am K .Mi</p>
        <p>r%</p>
        <p>HITS</p>
        <p>CYr.Di LAuf'LR</p>
        <p>FOR A C V PENNY</p>
        <p>Plus a chance to get</p>
        <p>IRUt COLORS</p>
        <p>E233</p>
        <p>PAFTNE^S</p>
        <p>STEVE WINWOOD</p>
        <p>THE POLICE</p>
        <p> Pi  m &amp;gt;</p>
        <p>. if  -ill  ^</p>
        <p> ^ kb__f!i:: LJ^LO</p>
        <p>!,tI</p>
        <p>lESSIV / '</p>
        <p>li s'- &amp;gt;</p>
        <p>i  ^</p>
        <p>EE1</p>
        <p>Over ?00 more olbums on orecedino oooes</p>
        <p>343236 WAM.ON JENNINGS B51  Will TIm WON SurvM</p>
        <p>J</p>
        <p>349613*</p>
        <p>a</p>
        <p>340158 HANKWIUJAMS.jn. f4woiOwlCHf4]rgSTH/TS Mol2</p>
        <p>11 lerrae. 11 Hfc *</p>
        <p>350388* WANG CHUNG</p>
        <p>IB] imsaic</p>
        <p>340398* SIMPLE MINDS (WWI ONCE UPON A VUf</p>
        <p>( 350355*</p>
        <p>I GS]</p>
        <p>GENERALPUBUC HANDTOUOUTH</p>
        <p>L</p>
        <p>Mra</p>
        <p>saar! rs* qwsHs</p>
        <p>wRpiBsta- I "r*i \m aam, \ I ar ^tobt- i iiagjaBiL i  i  g-'-aiK.</p>
        <p>342733</p>
        <p>l^gsg]</p>
        <p>WILUE NELSON The Promiseland</p>
        <p>342360 ANNCMUtuuy</p>
        <p>soNfmwoiOMuiiwour</p>
        <p>342287 mctumMaiid inSoSn</p>
        <p>360025*</p>
        <p>ALICE COOPER</p>
        <p>CONSTRICTOR</p>
        <p>SB  BE</p>
        <p>335638</p>
        <p>IS</p>
        <p>3TI7386 BSSrOfTHt 1 isssss\ DooBiewfomRs j</p>
        <p> 340927*</p>
        <p>THE BEST OF</p>
        <p>las&amp;lt;wj</p>
        <p>ARETHA FRANKUN</p>
        <p>341222*  YAT</p>
        <p>S Down For The Count</p>
        <p>ssr</p>
        <p>fcohimbia Itocord A lope Club, 1400 N. Fniitridge, P.O. Box 1130, Terr* Haute, IN 47811 I am endMing check or money order for $1.86 (which includes K for my  jh^q these</p>
        <p>12 seleclioni, plus $1.85 for shipping ond hondliog). Pleose occept my opptco-  n SELECTIONS</p>
        <p>AIRSUPPUf Hearts In Motion</p>
        <p>346940* peter CETERA</p>
        <p>iiMiti&amp;gt;Mi souruoeisoutAmt</p>
        <p>QUIET RIOT ORW</p>
        <p>348205*</p>
        <p>m.</p>
        <p>BELINDA CARUSLE BEUNDA</p>
        <p>lion under the terms outlined in this oovertisemeni I ogree to buy 0 more topes or records fat regufor Club prices) m the next three yeorsond moy concel membership onytime after domg so</p>
        <p>Send ny selections in this type of recording (check one):</p>
        <p>Cosseiies DRecords OBfoxliCorfridges</p>
        <p> HARD ROCK Gmm</p>
        <p>OHEAVr METAL* Oust Aol fell. CSryOiboumt  COUNTRY</p>
        <p>NIr.</p>
        <p> Mrs.</p>
        <p>]Miu</p>
        <p>My main musical interest is (check one):</p>
        <p>(But I moy ofwoys choose from ony colegory)</p>
        <p> SOFT ROCK   POP</p>
        <p>Modonv. Huey  Sodxo Sireionct</p>
        <p>l*w4nNfwi  NtJOomood</p>
        <p> BLACK MUSrC*   EASY LISTENING</p>
        <p>lulhtr LbndhMS  fhe Moniovon. Orcti,</p>
        <p>Jbnet Jbclrion  fron* Snotfo</p>
        <p> JAZZ* aaASSICAi* noBVotll</p>
        <p>(FkowtM</p>
        <p>hrslNome</p>
        <p>Inliol</p>
        <p>loilNom*</p>
        <p>_Apl-</p>
        <p>CRy</p>
        <p>State</p>
        <p>_Z3p_</p>
        <p>OoywihoveolelephcneTiamkooe) Dm ID NO Do you hove ocreetterdT (Check ond GTES NO</p>
        <p>1M/U7</p>
        <p>This dutounf purchote olso entitles me to these 2 EXTRA ALBUMS FREEl</p>
        <p>Also send my first selection for up to 60%</p>
        <p>- discount^ for which I om olso enclosing oddiiionol poymeni of $398 I then need buyonly7more(insteodof 8), at regular Club prices, in the next three yeors  WAN^VS  WAP/EM</p>
        <p>Ofkl not osoti* " AfQ TO Abikl Mdwm Rerto Ihxt wnte tor deo* of &amp;lt;*rnohwt o*r Conodofl rwdeits wvtd from bfonlo</p>
        <p>Now, get the music thot's got Americas temperature risingthe hottest hits of this season at a cool price. It's all port of a great new offer from the Columbia Record &amp;amp; Tape Club. To gel any 12 of these records or lopes right awoy, simply fill in and moil the opplicotion together with your check or money order for $1.86 os payment (thats K for your first 12 selections, plus $1.85 to cover shipping and hondling). In exchange, you simply ogree to buy 8 more topes or records (at regular Club prices) m the next three yeorsond you moy cancel membership onytime offer doing so.</p>
        <p>How the Club operates: every four weeks (13 times o yeor) youll receive the Clubs music magazine, which descnbes the Selection of the Month for eoch musicol interest...plus hundreds of oltemofes from every field of music. And up to six times o yeor you moy receive offers of Special Selections, usuolly of a discount off regular Club prices, for a total of up to 19 buying opportunities.</p>
        <p>If you wish to receive the Selection of the Month or the Speciol Selection, you need do nothingif will be shipped outomoticolly. If you prefer on alternate selection, or none at oil, simply fill in the response cord always provided and moil it by the dote specified. You will olwoys hove of least 10 days to moke your decision. If you ever receive ony Selection without having hod of leost 10 doys to decide, you rrmy return it of our expense</p>
        <p>The topes and records you order during your membership will be blled ot regulor Club prices, which currently</p>
        <p>^Available on records and cassettes only ore $798 to $9.98plus shipping ond handling. (Multiunit sets, special and classical selections may k&amp;gt;e somewhat higher.) And if you continue os 0 member offer completing your enrollment agreement, youll be eligible for our "buy oneget one free  bonus plan.</p>
        <p>Os also available to members. Each issue of the music magazine contoins o wide selection of the lotest hits and old favorites on Compoct Discswhich you moy order os o member. Of course, purchose of o CD will count toward fulfillment of your membership obligation.</p>
        <p>10-Doy Free Trial; well send detoils of the Oubs operation witli your introductory shipment. If you ore not satisfied for any reason, return everything within 10 doys for o full refund ond you will hove no further obligation.</p>
        <p>Order your first selection now at a big discount and get 2 extro albums FREE! You may also choose your first selection right nowwell give if to you for up to 60% off regulor Oub pricesonly $3.98. Endose poy-ment now ond youll receive it with your 12 introductory olbums. This discount purchose immediotely reduces your membership obligotionyou then need buy just 7 more (insteod of 8) in the next three yeors. Whofs more, this discount purchase also entitles you to still 2 more albums as 0 bonus, FREE. Just check the t)ox in the application and indicate your first selection ond your 2 free olbumsi</p>
        <p>NOTE; we reserve the right to request additional information or rojoctony opptkotion.</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0029" />
        <p>Pointer Sisters Star In First Special</p>
        <p>By Wendy Wallace Im really excited about it. Its like a dream come true, says June Pointer, the youngest member of the singing Pointer Sisters, rounded out by Ruth and Anita.</p>
        <p>Our first network special is getting to know the Pointer Sisters; its a lot of our own personalities coming out. And thats what the special is built around. Its our time and we want to make sure everyone else has a good time, too.</p>
        <p>Pointer is describing the sisters first special, Pointer Sisters...Up All Nite, airing Friday, Jan. 23 on NBC. The special features the Pointers in an all-night musical tour of Los Angeles after they miss the last planee home.</p>
        <p>Included are appearances at some of the citys top clubs, such as the Palace and Scream, as well as musical numbers from their latest album Hot Together.</p>
        <p>Were night people and we work mostly at night. For the title, it was a toss up between Up All Nite or Out All Nite, the singer says. Up All Nite was more realistic, more like what were really like. Once you see the special, youll realize that you can be Up All Nite and still have a good time.</p>
        <p>Joining the Pointers are guest stars Whoopi Goldberg and Bruce Willis, who makes his singing debut with songs from his upcoming debut album. The McGuire also make an appearance, which, according to Pointer, was in itself a rare treat.</p>
        <p>Whoopi Goldberg was definitely our choice. We asked her and she made time todo it, Pointer says. And in the middle of her honeymoon, too. We really appreciated that. And Bruce Willis, were singing on his latest single. So everything clicked, everything fell into place. It was a group effort.</p>
        <p>That the Pointer Sisters have been a dynamic presence in the music industry for over 12 years is quite evident by the number of awards theyve claimed  three Grammy Awards - and endless gold and platinum albums.</p>
        <p>Were hard workers and we like to do the best we can possibly do. And we do it well, thats what we go for.</p>
        <p>Well wait and see what will come out of this and well take it from there, the singer responds when asked about doing another special.</p>
        <p>We have the bait and everythings out there. Were just waiting for the fish to take it. Lets hope theyll bite and everything will work out for us.</p>
        <p>The Pointer Sisters (l.-r., June, Anita, Ruth) get together with Brut e Willi:, for the musical special "The Pointer Sisters ... Up All Nite. It airs Friday, Jan. 23. on NBC.</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0030" />
        <p>tv-2 The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C. Sunday, January 18,1987</p>
        <p>Sunday Daytime</p>
        <p>5:00 CD Weekend With The Stan Telethon (LIFE) Inveatment Advisory (NICK) Route M (USA) Night FUght 5:05 ONi^t Tracks 5:10 (MAX) History Of White People In America: White Rellgioo 5:50 (TMC) Movie Carbine Williams (1952)</p>
        <p>(USA) Night Flight 6:00ONewSight87 OCNNNews (BET) Video VibraUons (DIS) Donald Duck Presents (ESPN) Swimming (LIFE) Investment Advisory (MAX) Movie "The Gold Rush (1925)</p>
        <p>(NICK) Standby ...Lights! Camera! Action!</p>
        <p>(SHOW) Jennifers Journey (USA) Night FUght 6:300 Superbook O World Tomorrow 0 Focus (DIS) Contraption (SHOW) Mom And Dad Cant Hear Me 7:00 O Jimmy Swaggart O It Is Written O Sesame Street (R)g 0 Faith And Victory Church 0 Amazing Grace Bible Class (BET) Video Gospel (DIS) Mousercise (LIFE) Frederick K. Price (NICK) Dennis Tne Menace (USA)CalUope 7:30 O Tom &amp;amp; Jerry And Friends O Hour Of Freedom 0 Kenneth Copeland 0 Jim Whittington (DIS) You And Me, Kid (MAX) Movie "The Sluggers Wife (1985)</p>
        <p>(NICK) Out Of Control (SHOW) Blind Sunday (TMC) Movie "A Woman Of Paris" (1923)</p>
        <p>8:00 O James Kennedy O Sesame Street (R)g</p>
        <p>O Day Of Discovery 0 Robert SchuUerg 0 0 Weekend With The Stars Telethon Continues (ARTS) Journey To Adventure (BET) Frederick K. Price (DIS) Dumbos Circus (ESPN)SportaCenter (LIFE) Kenneth Copeland (NICK) Mr. Wlzard^s World (USA) Cartoons 8:30 O Christian Viewpoint 0OralRoberts (ARTS) Signature: Connie Francis</p>
        <p>(DIS) Good Morning Ml&amp;lt;^ (ESPN) College Football 86: A Look Back</p>
        <p>(NICK) Danger Mouse (SHOW) Puddnhead Wilson 9:00 O Kenneth CopeUmd O This Old House O Jimmy Swaggart 0 Sunday Morning 0 Movie "Sahara (1984) (ARTS) Movie "Raffles" (1940) (BEH Bobby Jones (DIS) Welcome To Pooh Comer (ESPN) FlshinHole (LIFE) Investment Advisory (NICK) Belle &amp;amp; Sebastian (TMC) Movie The Last Run (1971)</p>
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        <p>0 This Week With David Brink-</p>
        <p>(PN) SportsCenter Sunday (LIFE) Family Medicine U|^te (MAX) Movie ^ow (NICK) Star Trek 11:40 (DIS) DTV 12:00 0700 Club O McLaughlin Group O Meet The Press 0 NBA Basketball (ARTS) Movie Mine Own Executioner (1947)</p>
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        <p>(SHOW) Paper Chase (USA) Wrestling 12:30 OStateline Q Championship Fishing 0 Dancln To The Hits (DIS) Disney Channel Preview (ESPN) College BasketbaU: 1983 Final Four Highlights (MAX) Movie Where Do We Go From Here (1945)</p>
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        <p>(ESPN) Womens Tennis (UFE) Internal Medicine Update</p>
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        <p>1:150 Movie Three Godfathers (1949)</p>
        <p>1:300 Dance Fever (LIFE) AMA Video Clinic (NICK) Zoo Family (TMC) Movie Ticket To Hollywood (1980)</p>
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        <p>0 College Basketball (ARTS) Dancer</p>
        <p>(LIFE) Obstetrics / Gynecology Update</p>
        <p>(SHOW) Movie National Lampoons European Vacation (1985)</p>
        <p>2:45 (DIS) DTV 3:000 700 Oub O Joy Of Painting O SportsWorld</p>
        <p>0 Movie Flaming Star (1960) (DIS) Best Of Walt Disney Presents</p>
        <p>(ESPN) MISL Soccer (LIFE) PedUtrics Update (TMC) Movie Kiss Me Kate (1953)</p>
        <p>3:30 O Movie Red River (1948) O Justin Wilsons Louisiana Cookin</p>
        <p>(ARTS) Adieu Robert Scbunuuin (LIFE) Physicians Journal Update</p>
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        <p>(DIS) Movie The Kids Who Knew Too Much (1980)</p>
        <p>(MAX) Movie "The Sluggers Wife (1985)</p>
        <p>(NICK) Rated K; By Kids (USA) AUred Hitchcock Hour 4:05(SHOW) Movie "Marie (1985)</p>
        <p>4:300 PGA Golf 0 Sports Sunday (LIFE) Cardiology Update (NICK) Mr. Wizards World 5:00 O Out Of The Fiery Furnace 0 Dynasty</p>
        <p>0 Weekend With The Stars Telethon Continues (ARTS) Rhythm On Two: George Shearing (ESPN) NFL Films Presents (LIFE) Pediatrics Update (NICK) Route 66 (TMC) Movie Blow Out (1981) (USA) Check It Out!</p>
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        <p>(LIFE) Cause Of Death: Influenza</p>
        <p>(USA) Sanchez Of Bel Air 5:35 (DIS) Dr. Seuss The Cat In The Hat</p>
        <p>The Soap Dope</p>
        <p>Some soap operas pin their story lines on a conventional setting. General Hospital and The Doctors dramatized hospital hokum, Texas thrashed</p>
        <p>around themes of the antebellum South and the recently canceled Capitol had Washington intrigue to fuel its plots. CBSs newest soap, the half-hour The Bold and the Beautiful, premieres on March 23. The new daytime drama traces the exploits and intrigues of two Chicago families in the glamorous world of fashion.</p>
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        <p>Animals</p>
        <p>60 Minutes</p>
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        <p>60 Minutes</p>
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        <p>Masterpiece Theatre</p>
        <p>Sports Page</p>
        <p>Romance</p>
        <p>Jerry Falwell</p>
        <p>Manor Bom</p>
        <p>Movie: "Blood Vows: The Story Of A Mafia Wife"</p>
        <p>Movie: "Warm Hearts, Cold Feet"</p>
        <p>Out On A Limb</p>
        <p>Murder, She Wrote</p>
        <p>"Nikki, Wild Dog Of North"</p>
        <p>06 Movie: "The Great Caruso"</p>
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        <p>Ski World</p>
        <p>"This Is Elvis"</p>
        <p>AMA Video Clinic</p>
        <p>Movie: "Turk 182!"</p>
        <p>"Jewel Of The Nile"</p>
        <p>Movie: "Warm Hearts. Cold Feet"</p>
        <p>Star Search</p>
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        <p>Movie: "Bom Free"</p>
        <p>AWA Championship Wrestling</p>
        <p>Movie: "Murphy's Romance"</p>
        <p>Physician's Journal Update Cardiology Medicine</p>
        <p>Movie: "After Hours"</p>
        <p>Movie: "Young Sherlock Holmes"</p>
        <p>Movie: "Nighthawks"</p>
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        <p>Otetetrics</p>
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        <p>Movie Show</p>
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        <p>Movie: "Death Wish 3"</p>
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        <p>0 Whats Happening Now!! (DISlDango-Bay (ESPN) World Cop Skiing (MAX) Movie Turk 182! (1985)</p>
        <p>(SHOW) Movie "The Jewel Of The Nile (1985)</p>
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        <p>(DIS) Movie The Great Caruso" (1950)</p>
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        <p>(USA) The Virginian 7:30 O WUd, WUd World Of Animals</p>
        <p>(ESPN) Ski World (NICK) My Three Sons 8:000 Natiooal Geographic Ei-plorer Model airplane enthusiasts, a six-member teams journey to the North Pole; a trip down Thailands rivers; the ar-</p>
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        <p>O Valerie After taking the proper precautions, David considers consummating a relationship with longtime family friend, Lori Morgan. In stereo.</p>
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        <p>0 0 Murder, She Wrote Jessica helps a Scotland Yard inspector solve a murder and a jewel theft. g(l hr.)</p>
        <p>0 Out On A Limb Shirley Mac-Laine, Anne Jackson and Charles Dance star in this dramatization of the autobiographical best seller that chronicles Shirley MacLaines quest for psychic self-discovery. Tonight: Shirleys non-stop concert schedule and an unfulfilUng relationship with a British politician prompt her to question her role in life. (Part 1 of 2) g (3 hrs.)</p>
        <p>0 Movie Nikki, Wild Dog Of The North (1961) Jean Coutu, Emile Genest. (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>(ARTS) Amandas Amanda is gliding on a collision course with her scheming brother-in-law.</p>
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        <p>(MAX) Movie "After Hours (1985) Griffin Dunne, Rosanna Arquette. (1 hr., 37 min.)</p>
        <p>(NICK) Donna Reed (SHOW) Movie Young Sherlock Holmes (1985) Nicholas Rowe, Alan Cox. (1 hr., 49 min.)</p>
        <p>8:30 O Easy Street L.K becomes an easy mark for swindlers after helping a supposedly destitute former boxer get back on his feet In stereo.</p>
        <p>(ARTS) Yes, Prime Minister Politics threaten the careers of Hacker and Humphrey (NICK) Mister Ed (USA) Wanted: Dead Or Alive 9:000 700 Ouh O Masterpiece Theatre Goodbye Mr. Chips  Despite winning his quarrel with the new headmaster, Chips' tranquil life at Brookfield School is menaced by the rumblings of a coming war. (Part 3 of 3) g(l hr.)</p>
        <p>O Movie Blood Vows: The Story Of A Mafia Wife (Premiere) Melissa Gilbert, Joe Penny (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>HD O Movie Warm Hearts.</p>
        <p>Cold Feet (Premiere) Margaret Colin, Tim Matheson. (2 hrs.) OStarSeardi</p>
        <p>(ARTS) An Evening With Michel Liqprand Filmed at Londons Royal Festival Hall in 1984, the Oscar-winning composer is joined in performance by violinist Stepbane Grappelli and singer Nancy Wilson. Selections include Brians Song and Windmills of Your Mind. (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>(BET) Bobby Jones (DB) Movie Born Free (1966) Virginia McKenna, Bill Travers. (1 hr., 35 min.)</p>
        <p>(LIFE) Cardiology Update (NICK) Movie Tom Browns School Days (1940) Cedric Hardwicke, Freddie Bartholomew. (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>(TMC) Movie "Death Wish 3  (1985) Charles Bronson, Deborah Raffin. (1 hr., 30 min.)</p>
        <p>(USA) Robert Klein Time Scheduled: 3 Magicians. (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>9:30 (LIFE) Internal Medicine Update</p>
        <p>10:000 Sports Page O A Filie Romance 0News</p>
        <p>(ARTS) Nancy Wilson A Band</p>
        <p>Singer Nancy Wilson performs with Chick Corea, Stanley Clarke, Joe Henderson and Lenny White. Taped at Wolf A Rismiller's Country Gub in Reseada, Calif. (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>(BET) Real Estate And Investment Seminars (ESPN)RoUennanla (LDPE) Obstetrics / Gynecology Update</p>
        <p>(MAX) Movie Show Washington Post movie critic Paul Attana-sio hosts this monthly look at the world of movies, featuring interviews and commentary on trends in the movie industry. (SHOW) Brothers When Donalds cat dies, Cliff gives him one of his stray kittens and it ends up becoming a TV star, g (USA) Cover Story Guest The Judds.</p>
        <p>10:300 Jerry FalweU O To The Manor Bom (LIFE) Milestones In Medicine (SH07) Best Of Bizarre (TMC) Movie "The Last Run (1971) George C. Scott, Tony Musante. (1 hr., 40 min.)</p>
        <p>(USA) Hollywood Insider 10.40 (DB) Zorro Zorro helps a young man who is sentenced to die.</p>
        <p>11:000 Shoestring A 90-year-old woman witnesses a neighborhood murder. (1 hr.) O00News 0 CBS News O Capital OtyMagasliie</p>
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        <p>(ARTS) Evening At The Improv (ESPN) Americas Cup: Challenge Down Under Challengers Final. (Live) (3 hrs.)</p>
        <p>(LIFE) Spwialty Update: Surgery</p>
        <p>(MAX) Movie The Coca-Cola Kid (1985) Eric Roberts, Greta Scacchi. (1 hr., 37 min.)</p>
        <p>(NICK) Smothers Brothers (SHOW) Movie Missing In Action 2; The Beginning (1985) Chuck Norris, Soon-Teck Oh. (1 hr., 36 min.)</p>
        <p>(USA) Go For Your Dreams 11:10 (DB) Five MUe Creek "Maggie A young American leams that her parents have died in a cholera epidemic.</p>
        <p>11:15 OCharUeHarrisoo 0ABCNewsg OCBSNews 11:30 O John Ankerborg ORmmySwaggart 0 To Be Announced 0JimValvano</p>
        <p>0 Movie Crash (1976) William Shatner, Eddie Albert. (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>(LIFE) Cardiology Update (NICK) Monkees 11:45 0 Entertainment This Week</p>
        <p>Mariette Hartley discusses her new job as co-host of The Morning Program on CBS. (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>12:000 Larry Jones O Jimmy Swaggart 0 Dean Smith</p>
        <p>(ARTS) Amandas Amanda is gliding on a collision course with her scheming brother-in-law.</p>
        <p>(DB) Movie "0. Henrys Full House (1952) Marilyn Monroe, Dale Robertson. (1 hr., 57 min.) (LIFE) Pediatrics Update (NICK) Turkey Televialoo (USA) Can You Be Thinner?</p>
        <p>12:30 OJtdin Osteen O Jim Whittington 0 Whats Happening Now!!</p>
        <p>0 Duke Basketball Highlights (ARTS) Yes, Prime Minister Politics threaten the careers of Hacker and Humphrey.</p>
        <p>(LIFE) FamUy Medldne Update (NICK) Dave Deldotto Real Estate Seminar</p>
        <p>(TMC) Movie Blow Out (1981) John Travolta, Nancy Allen. (1 hr., 47 min.)</p>
        <p>(USA) Coasnaans $| Secrets 12:40 (MAX) Movie McCabe And Mrs. Miller (1971) Warren Beatty, Julie Christie. (1 hr., 55 min.)</p>
        <p>Dally Reflector, Greenville, N.C. 12:45 0 Duke Coaches (SHOW) Movie "That Was Then... This Is Now (1985) Emilio Estevez, Craig Sheffer. (1 hr., 42 min.)</p>
        <p>1:000 Specials O World Tomorrow 0 Southern S^wrtaman (ARTS) An Evening With Michel Legrand Filmed at Londons Royal Festival Hall in 1984, the Oscar-winning composer is joined in performance by violinist Stephane Grappelli and singer Nancy Wilson. Selections include Brians Song and "Windmills of Your Mind. (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>(BET) Real Estate And Investment Seminars (LIFE) Investment Advisory 1:150 Waltons 1:300 Larry Jones 0Fame</p>
        <p>(NICK) (USA) Keys To Success 2:000 700 Gub O Christian Childrens Fund (ARTS) Nancy Wilson A Band</p>
        <p>Singer Nancy Wilson performs with Chick Corea, Stanley Garke, Joe Henderson and Lenny White. Taped at Wolf &amp;amp; Rismillers Country Gub in Reseada, Calif. (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>(DB) Movie Thunder In The Valley (1947) Lon McCalUster, Edmund Gwenn. (1 hr., 43 min.) (ESPN) Americas Cup Continued</p>
        <p>(LIFE) Investment Advisory (NICK) Movie Tom Browns School Days (1940) Cedric Hardwicke, Freddie Bartholomew. (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>(USA) How To Make A MiUloo</p>
        <p>Sunday, January 18,1987 TV-3</p>
        <p>In The Stock Market 2:15 0 Nightwatch 2:300 Bob Newhart 0 Christian Childrens Fund (USA) Go For Your Dreams 2:35 (SHOW) Movie The Jewel Of The Nile (1985) Kathleen Turner, Michael Douglas. (1 hr., 44 min.)</p>
        <p>2:45 (MAX) Movie "Melody In Love (1981) (1 hr., 30 min.) 3:000 Movie The Way Ahead  (1944) David Niven, Stanley Holloway. (2 hrs.)</p>
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        <p>(ARTS) Evening At The Improv (BET)Video\^tlons (ESPN)SportsCenter (LIFE) Investment Advisory (TMC) Movie Death Wish 3 (1985) Charles Bronson, Deborah Raffin. (1 hr., 30 min.)</p>
        <p>3:300 Get Sinart (ESPN) Baseball: Old Timers Classic Film (USA)WnMUng 4:00 O Agriculture UXA.</p>
        <p>(DB) Restless Sea Live adion and animation are included in this study of the sea.</p>
        <p>(LIFE) Investment Advisory (NICK) Turkey Television 4:25 (MAX) Movie Alamo Bay (1985) Amy Madigan, Ed Harris. (1 hr, 38 min.)</p>
        <p>(SHOW) Movie National Lampoons European Vacation (1985) Chevy Chase, Beverly D'Angelo. (1 hr., 37 min.)</p>
        <p>4:300 Its Your Bualneas (ESPN) Horse Show Jumping Michelob Jumping Championship, from Tampa, Fla. (R) (1 hr., 30 min.)</p>
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        <p>TV-4 The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.</p>
        <p>Sunday, January 18,1987</p>
        <p>Monday - Friday Daytime</p>
        <p>5:000 Beverly HiUbUlia 0Cartoooi</p>
        <p>(DIS) Best Of Walt Disney Presents (Mon) Walt Disney Presents (Tue-Fri)</p>
        <p>(ESPN) Auto RsciDg(Tue)</p>
        <p>(LEPE) Investment Advisory (NICK) Route 66 (Mon)</p>
        <p>(SHOW) Shirley MscLaine (Tue) Free To Be You And Me (Thu) (TMC) Movie (Wed) A Woman Of Paris" (1923)</p>
        <p>(USA) Room 222 (Mon) Last Of The Wild (Tue)</p>
        <p>5:05 (TMC) Movie (Tue) Animals Are Beautiful People" (1975)</p>
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        <p>(USA) How To Make A MlUion In The Stock Market (Mon) That Girl (Tue) Room 222 (Wed, Thu) 6:15 0 ABC News g 6:30 O Tom It Jerry And Friends O NBC News 0News 0 Morning 0 Fat Albert (BET) Jimmy Swaggart (DIS) Mousercise (ESPN) Nations Business Today (LIFE) Physicians Journal Update (Tue, Thu) Obstetrics / Gynecology Update (Wed)</p>
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        <p>(MAX) History Of White People In America: White Religion (Tue)</p>
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        <p>(TMC) Movie (Mon) "The Cruel Sea" (1953)(Tue) "Ticket To Hollywood" (1986)</p>
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        <p>7:35 (SHOW) Movie (Mon) Mom-mie Dearest" (1981)</p>
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        <p>(DIS) Donald Duck Presents (UFE)F,I.T.</p>
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        <p>8:05 OI Dream Of Jeannle 8:30OGenUeBai Q EducaUonal Programming 0 Morning Program 0 My Little Pony N* Friends (DIS) Dumbos Circus (ESPN) SportsCenter (LIFE) Wok With Yan (NICK) Todays Special (TMC) Movie (Tue) Conan The Barbarian" (1982)</p>
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        <p>(LIFE) Attitudes - (MAX) Movie (Mon) Blood Alley" (1955KThu) ' She Wore A Yellow Ribbon" (1949KFri) Operation Pacific (1951)</p>
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        <p>(LIFE) Woman To Woman (MAX) Movie (Wed) Just One Of The Guys (1985)</p>
        <p>(SHOW) Movie (Mon) Crisis (1950)(Tue) Cattle King (1963XWed) Lullaby Of Broadway" (1951)(Thu) "On The Town" (1949)(Fri) Breakthrough "(1950)</p>
        <p>(USA) Gong Show 10:05 0 Movie (Mon) The Promise Of Love (1980XTue) Ride The Wild Surf (1964KWed) "Rachel And The Stranger " (1948KThu) Executive Suite " (l954XFri) Seven Women "(1966)</p>
        <p>10:30 O Globewatch (Wed) Equal Justice Under Law (Thu) Reading Rainbow (Fri)</p>
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        <p>(TMC) Movie (Mon) Superman (1978)</p>
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        <p>11:10 (DIS) aose Up On Die Planets (Thu)</p>
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        <p>(TMC) Movie (Thu) The Ust Run (1971)</p>
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        <p>(USA) CoUege BasketbaU Missouri at Kansas (Live) (2 hrs.) 8:300 Growing Pains A classmate, who doctored Mikes exam grade, demands that he take her along on a skiing trip.</p>
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        <p>(NICK) Mister Ed 9:000 700 Qub O ACE Awards The eighth annual ceremony honoring excellence in cable from the Wiltern Theatre in Los Angeles. Among those nominated in the 60 categories are Billy Crystal, Peter OToole, Robert Carradine, Susan Sarandon. Barbara Streisand and Robin Williams Co-hosts: Garry Shandling and Bernadette Peters. (2 hrs.) o The Conservatives From the 1948 Alger Hiss-Whittaker Chambers espionage case to the Reagan presidency, the American Conservative movements development as a major political force is examined. Among those interviewed: Barry Gold-water, Clare Boothe Luce and William F. Buckley Jr. (1 hr., 30 min.)</p>
        <p>O Hill Street Blues Hills emotional outburst at the funeral of a drug dealer nearly causes a riot and earns him a death threat. (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>0 0 Movie The Man With Two Brains" (1983) Steve Martin. Kathleen Turner. (2 hrs.)</p>
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        <p>(ARTS) Golden Age Of Television A Hollywoo4 director, (Cornel Wilde), misses a fatal cue in Coast to Coast; Gig Young and Everett Sloane star in The Spy. (Ihr.)</p>
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        <p>Tony- and Emmy-winner Colleen Dewhurst stalking Bigfoot? Disney has Dewhurst, as anthrolo-pologist Gladys Samco, stalking the half-ape, halfhuman Sasquatch in Californias San Bernardino Mountains in Bigfoot. The Disney Sunday Movie is being directed by Dan Huston, son of direc-tor-dad John, and will air sometime this season on ABC.</p>
        <p>Wait No More</p>
        <p>Production has been completed in Vancouver, British Columbia, on the CBS telefilm A Stranger Waits. Suzanne Pleshette stars as a widow who is imperiled by her passion for a mysterious young man. Tom Atkins, Justin Deas, Paul Benjamin, Ann Wedgeworth and Kenneth Welsh co-star.</p>
        <p>Newcomer Landry Perks UpAW</p>
        <p>ByCooniePassalacqua</p>
        <p>One of the beauties of daytime soaps (oh, yes, there are some!) is that it is a self-renewing medium. Just as popular young talents bolt for the world of nighttime TV and films as soon as their-initial contracts expire, a tide of even newer, younger actors rushes in to take their places. One of the most promising and refreshing of the new crop is Lauri Landry, who has just joined Another World as Nicole Love.</p>
        <p>Although this is her first contract role, Landry is no stranger to soaps. She has played recurring roles on both the New 'York-based Guiding Light (as the one woman who could resist Josh Lewiss charms) and the Hollywood-based Capitol (as Trey Qeggs bed-mate).</p>
        <p>"Its interesting, says Landry, who has also done guest spots on such prime-time shows as 'T.J. Hooker, "in New York Im alwaj cast as the poor, little wife and in California, Im always cast as a bitch. Im a brunette, so its funny to see how Im perceived on both coasts.</p>
        <p>Landry says she is excited to return to New York to do "Another World after two years in California.</p>
        <p>"Ive always wanted to do daytime and Ive always watched it, she says. It gives you the chance to work every day, instead of only two days a week doing guest shots. And I couldnt ask for abetter situation, with all the story lines coming together. The first week Nicole came home, her sister went into a coma, her brother was shot and her father was stabbed.</p>
        <p>Landry is also happy because Nicole will get to sing regularly on the show in her father Reginalds (John Considine) new nightclub. She says her Nicole will be different than her first incarnation - a coke freak played by Kim Morgan Greene (now seen on "The Colbys as Channing Colby).</p>
        <p>"Shell be frivolous now, but she has a dark past and I hope theres darkness about her, she says, And the Love family could use at least one sane member.</p>
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        <p>7:00  7:30</p>
        <p>Hardcastle And McCormick</p>
        <p>Sanford</p>
        <p>Business Rpt.</p>
        <p>Facts Of Life</p>
        <p>Newlyweds</p>
        <p>Fortune</p>
        <p>CBS News</p>
        <p>Taxi</p>
        <p>Movie</p>
        <p>Hmooners</p>
        <p>Statellne</p>
        <p>Benson</p>
        <p>Enl. Tonight</p>
        <p>Jeopardy</p>
        <p>PM Magazine</p>
        <p>M*A*SH</p>
        <p>Theater</p>
        <p>8:00  8:30  9:00  9:30  10:00</p>
        <p>Bring Em Back Alive</p>
        <p>700 Club</p>
        <p>Movie: "The Sons Of Katie Elder"</p>
        <p>Championship Skating</p>
        <p>Highway To Heaven</p>
        <p>New Mike Hammer</p>
        <p>P. Strangers Head Class</p>
        <p>New Mike Hammer</p>
        <p>Eyes On The Prize</p>
        <p>Gimme A Break'</p>
        <p>Magnum. PI</p>
        <p>Dynasty</p>
        <p>Magnum, PI.</p>
        <p>King</p>
        <p>Edison Twins</p>
        <p>Danger Bay</p>
        <p>College Basketball: Connecticut at Georgetown</p>
        <p>Movie</p>
        <p>Not News</p>
        <p>Marcus Welby.M.D.</p>
        <p>Movie Show</p>
        <p>"Brief Encounter</p>
        <p>10:30</p>
        <p>Snapshots</p>
        <p>Movie</p>
        <p>Fair Game!</p>
        <p>St, Elsewhere</p>
        <p>Equalizer</p>
        <p>Hotel</p>
        <p>Equalizer</p>
        <p>News</p>
        <p>Movie: "The Three Caballeros"</p>
        <p>Animals</p>
        <p>College Basketball: Vlllanova at Syracuse</p>
        <p>Movie: "Stripes"</p>
        <p>Call To Glory</p>
        <p>Regis Philbins Lifestyles</p>
        <p>Movie: "Just One Of The Guys </p>
        <p>Movie: "Missing In Action 2: The Beginning"</p>
        <p>Movie: "'Torchlight</p>
        <p>Hitchhiker</p>
        <p>Hitchhiker</p>
        <p>Dr, Ruth Show</p>
        <p>Movie: "American Flyers"</p>
        <p>Movie: "Mask</p>
        <p>Movie: "Pale Rider"</p>
        <p>Airwolf</p>
        <p>College Basketball Houston at SMU</p>
        <p>Riptide</p>
        <p>6:000 Big VaUey O MacNeil / Lehrer Newsbour Q0(BNews CD Threes Company (ARTS) Missing From Home (BET) Real Estate And Investment Seminars</p>
        <p>(DIS) Movie "The Silent One (1984)</p>
        <p>(ESPN) SportsLook (LIFE) Family (NICK) Monkees (USA) Cartoons 6:050 Beverly RiUblllies 6:300 NBC News (D CBS News 0ABCNewsg CD Too Gose For Comfort (ESPN)SportsCeDter (NICK) NICK Rocks: Video To Go</p>
        <p>(SHOW) Movie Brief Encounter" (1947)</p>
        <p>6:350 Andy Griffith 7:000 Hardcastle And McCormick</p>
        <p>O Nightly Business Report O Facts Of Life 0 Newlywed Game O Wheel Of Fortune O CBS News CD Taxi</p>
        <p>(ARTS) James At 15 (BET) On The Une With.., (ESPN)CoUegeBasketbaU (LIFE) Marcus Welby, M,D. (MAX) Movie Show (NICK) You Cant Do That On Television</p>
        <p>(TMC) Movie Torchlight (1984)</p>
        <p>(USA) Airwolf 7:050 Sanford And Son 7:30OSUteIine OBenson</p>
        <p>0 Entertainment Tonight 0 Jeopardy</p>
        <p>COTMKE Oft ftOACHES?</p>
        <p>aUTKMOmSNIMlS</p>
        <p>0 PM Magazine CDM*A*S*H</p>
        <p>(BET) Video LP (NICK) Danger Mouse 7:35 O Honeymooners 7:40 (DIS) Mouseterplece Tljeater</p>
        <p>8:00 O Bring Em Back Alive O An Evening Of Championship Skating U.S. amateur and professional skaters star in this Harvard University skating exhibition that includes a filmed retrospective of former champions. (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>O Highway To Heaven Fearing that Jonathans stay on Earth may be short-lived if they perform too many successful deeds, Mark sets out to sabotage their latest efforts. In stereo, g (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>0 0 New Mike Hanuner An</p>
        <p>amnesiac (Tony Dow) leads Hammer into a deadly confrontation with American and Soviet agents. (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>0 Perfect Strani^g CD King Martin Luther King Jr. (Paul Winfield) openly opposes the Vietnam War and pushes for antipoverty legislation before his assassination in 1968. Cicely Tyson, Ossie Davis and Howard Rollins co-star. (Part 3 of 3) (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>(ARTS) TwenUeth CMtury An</p>
        <p>examination of the secret training of the bomber crew destined</p>
        <p>for Hiroshima. Host: Walter Cronkite.</p>
        <p>(BET) The Professionals (DIS) Edison Twins " Monster On The Bluff" Paul comes up with a scheme to trap a giant beaver. (LIFE) Call To Glory (MAX) Movie "Just One Of The Guys  (1985) Joyce Hyser, Clayton Rohner. (1 hr., 40 min.) (NICK) Donna Reed (SHOT^ Movie Missing In Action 2: The Beginning (1985) Chuck Norris, Soon-Teck Oh. (1 hr., 36 min.)</p>
        <p>(USA) College Basketball Houston at SMU (Live) (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>8:05 O Movie "The Sons Of Katie Elder (1965) John Wayne, Dean Martin. (2 hrs., 30 min.)</p>
        <p>8:30 0 Head Of The Class Charlies forced to consider cheating on an exam in order to retain his license as a teacher, g (ARTS) Air Power A look at the events leading to the inevitable Japanese surrender. Host: Walter Cronkite.</p>
        <p>(DIS) Danger Bay Big Horns Jonah finds a Big Horn sheep with a mysterious illness.</p>
        <p>(NICK) Mister Ed</p>
        <p>9:000 700 Gub O Eyes On The Prise: Americas GvU Rights Years, 1954-1965 (Premiere) Julian Bond narrates this examination of black Americas fight for equal</p>
        <p>rights, in this episode. Mose Wright testifies against the two white men accused of murdering his nephew, Rosa Parks refuses to give up her seat on a Montgomery (Ala.) bus. g (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>O Gimme A Break! Nell considers giving up her professional career to pay closer attention to Matthew and Joey. In stereo, g (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>0 0 Magnum, P.I. Mac, a dead ringer for Magnums deceased Navy buddy, passes himself off as the private detective. (Ihr.)</p>
        <p>0 Dynasty Krystle searches for Blake and Alexis in Singapore; Nick Kimball rescues Dominique. g(l hr.)</p>
        <p>(ARTS) Africa Basil Davidson traces Africas medieval gold trade. (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>(BET) Video Soul (DIS) Movie The Three Caballeros (1945) Animated. (1 hr., 10 min.)</p>
        <p>(ESPN) CoUege BasketbaU Vil-lanova at Syracuse (Live) (Subject to blackout) (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>(LIFE) Regis PhUbins Lifestyles Guests: Riquette Hofstein with a guide to beauty; actress Audra Lindley; Julian Asher Miller on health; consumer expert Dick Debartolo, attorney Gail Koff on pre-nuptial agreements. (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>(NICK) My Three Sons (TMC) Movie Pale Rider (1985) Clint Eastwood, Michael Moriarty. (1 hr., 53 min.)</p>
        <p>9:30 (NICK) Ann Sothem 10:000 Fair Game! Author John Weistart ("The Law of Sports) moderates this panel discussion of problems within college sports - payoffs, gambling, drug abuse and academias failure to educate student athletes. Panelists include Howard Cosell and Notre Dame basketball coach Digger Phelps. (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>O St. Elsewhere Ehrlich wants to believe that the Oseranskys are really his long-lost parents. g(l hr.)</p>
        <p>0 0 Equslixer A judge asks a woman for sexual favors as part of an agreement to reduce her husbands drug-possession sentence. (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>0 Hotel Daves drug problem jeopardizes his chances of passing the bar exam. g(l hr.) QNews</p>
        <p>(ARTS) Amisb: Not To Be Modem A profile of the private Am-ish life, featuring an interview with former community member Dr. Milo Yoder. (1 hr) (LIFE) Dr. Ruth Show (MAX) Movie American Flyers (1985) Kevin Costner, Da-</p>
        <p>t      </p>
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        <p>** visit w*^cah*to^y* and ask about the Savin V-35 copier. Its well worth looking Into.</p>
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        <p>vid Graht.(l hr . 54 min )</p>
        <p>(NICK) I Spy</p>
        <p>(SHOW) Movie Mask " (1985) Cher, Sam Elliott (2 hrs.) (USA)RipUde 10:15 (DIS) DTV 10:30 O Amertcan Snapshots (DIS) Animals In Action  Beaks, Tongues And Teeth" A look at the ways in which animals feed. 10:350 Movie "Short Walk To Daylight" (1972) James Brolin, Don Mitchell. (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>11:000 Hardcastle And McCormick</p>
        <p>O Doctor Who O000News CD Late Show Host Joan Rivers. In stereo. (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>(ARTS) Evening At The Improv (BET) Video VibraUons (DIS) Best Of Oizie And Harriet The Kappa Sig Party" David gives a fraternity party at his home.</p>
        <p>(ESPN) NBA Today (LIFE) Two Marriages A celebration of marriage, family and friendship where traditional values survive the pressures of todays society. (1 hr., 30 min) (NICK) Route 66 (TMC) Movie Death Wish 3  (1985) Charles Bronson, Deborah Raffin. (1 hr, 30 min.)</p>
        <p>(USA) Alfred Hitchcock Hour 11:30 O Brass Bradleys ambitious son Austin (Robert Reynolds) plans to overtake the Hardacre empire with a silent but deadly explosive.</p>
        <p>O Tonight Show Host Johnny Carson In stereo. (I hr )</p>
        <p>0 Adderly 0 Nightline g 0 M*A*S*H</p>
        <p>(DIS) Movie "Cross Creek" (1982) Mary Steenburgen, Rip Torn. (2 hrs., 2 min)</p>
        <p>(ESPN) SportsCenter 11:55 (MAX) Movie "Stand Alone (1985) Charles Durning, Pam Grier. (1 hr., 49 min.)</p>
        <p>12:00 O Bums And Allen 0 Nightlife Host David Brenner Scheduled: actor Omar Sharif In stereo.</p>
        <p>0 Adderly Adderly's annoyed with his latest assignment - to act as a mail courier for another agent. (R)(l hr., 10 min )</p>
        <p>CD Odd Couple</p>
        <p>(ARTS) Twentieth Century An</p>
        <p>examination of the secret training of the bomber crew destined for Hiroshima. Host: Walter Cronkite.</p>
        <p>(ESPN) NFL SupenUn Profiled Mike Ditka (NICK) Donna Reed (USA) Dragnet 12:10 (SHOW) Movie "Scarred  (1984) Jennifer Mayo, Jackie Berryman. (1 hr., 25 min.) 12:200 Best Of Groucho</p>
        <p>O Late Night With David Letterman In stereo. (1 hr)</p>
        <p>0 Dukes Of Hazzard 0 Kojak</p>
        <p>(ARTS) Air Power A look at the events leading to the inevitable Japanese surrender Host: Walter Cronkite.</p>
        <p>(ESPN) Mark Soslns Saltwater Fishing Journal (LIFF) Investment Advisory (NICK) Mister Ed (USA) Edge Of Night 12:35 O Movie Once You Kiss A Stranger" (1969) Paul Burke, Carol Lynley. (2 hrs., 15 min.) 12:40 0 Movie</p>
        <p>12:45 (TMC) Movie The Cruel Sea" (1953) Jack Hawkins, Donald Sinden (2 hrs., 6 min.)</p>
        <p>1:000 Jack Benny (ARTS) Africa Basil Davidson traces Africas medieval gold trade (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>(BET) Real Estate And Investment Seminars (ESPN) Tom Mann Outdoors (LIFE) Everybodys Money Matters</p>
        <p>(NICK) My Three Sons (USA) Master 1:100 Movie The Fantastic Journey" (1977) Scott Thomas, Susan Howard. (1 hr, 20 min.) 1:300 Doble Gillls ONews</p>
        <p>0 Mission: Impossible (DIS) Movie "The Great Caruso (1950) Mario Lanza, Ann Blyth (I hr , 49min.)</p>
        <p>(ESPN) Auto Racing Barber Saab Pro Series, from Miami (K)</p>
        <p>(NICK) Ann Sotbero 1:35 (MAX) Movie Show Washington Post movie critic Paul At-tanasio hosts this monthly look at the world of movies, featuring interviews and commentary on trends in the movie industry (SHOW) Movie Runaway Train" (1985) Jon Voight, Eric Roberts (1 hr., 50 min )</p>
        <p>2:000 700 Gub 0 NIgbtwatch</p>
        <p>(ARTS) Amlsh: Not To Be Modem A profile of the private Am-ish life, featuring an interview with former community member Dr, Milo Yoder. (Ihr)</p>
        <p>(BET) Video Soul (ESPN)SportaLook (NICK) I Spy</p>
        <p>(USA) Movie The July Group" (1981) Kenneth Pogue, Nicholas Campbell (1 hr, 30 min.)</p>
        <p>2:20 (MAX) Movie "Crossover (1983) James Coburn, Kate Nel-ligan (lhr.,38 min )</p>
        <p>2:30 0 Nlghtwatch (ESPN) SportsCenter 2:500 Movie Countdown (1968) Robert Duvall, James Caan. (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>(Please Turn To Page 15)</p>
        <p>WHArS CAUSING YOUR PAIN?</p>
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        <pb facs="00096520_0036" />
        <p>CROSSWORD</p>
        <p>DAYTIME CONT.</p>
        <p>By DANIKI.M MABVIN</p>
        <p>1 ihe Love -</p>
        <p>) Vereen</p>
        <p>H Beciime alive</p>
        <p>I? (.orntort</p>
        <p>Kt Aliar</p>
        <p>i.onstellalion</p>
        <p>M Needle case</p>
        <p>15 Gold-silver alloy</p>
        <p>16 Adherent of suffix</p>
        <p>17 Journey</p>
        <p>18 Hog-like animal</p>
        <p>20 Actress Susan </p>
        <p>22 Youth</p>
        <p>23 New Guinea port</p>
        <p>24 Old Mexican civilization</p>
        <p>27 Trespass</p>
        <p>28 Hobo slang</p>
        <p>31 Sandra -</p>
        <p>ACROSS</p>
        <p>32 Made of oats</p>
        <p>34 Epoch</p>
        <p>35 Moslem Easter</p>
        <p>36 Reticent</p>
        <p>37 Actress Graff</p>
        <p>39 Needle comb form</p>
        <p>40 Meadow</p>
        <p>41 Wanderer 43 He was Lou</p>
        <p>Grant</p>
        <p>46 Singer Tennille</p>
        <p>47  Margret 49 Pull</p>
        <p>51 Poems</p>
        <p>52 Unearth</p>
        <p>53 French river</p>
        <p>54 Network</p>
        <p>55 Sault -Mane</p>
        <p>56 Employs</p>
        <p>DOWN</p>
        <p>1 Miss Arthur</p>
        <p>2 Kiln</p>
        <p>3 Bewildered</p>
        <p>4 Shirley</p>
        <p>5 Puppeteer Bil</p>
        <p>6 Bitter vetch</p>
        <p>7 Singer Cole</p>
        <p>8 Midler</p>
        <p>9 Other Sp to Wreck</p>
        <p>11 Bite</p>
        <p>t9 Industrialist Lee -21 Children's nurses</p>
        <p>24 Fruit drink</p>
        <p>25 Holland's Zuider </p>
        <p>26 Actor Danson</p>
        <p>27 Pig's home</p>
        <p>28 The -- Gees</p>
        <p>29 Large vase</p>
        <p>30 Late dctress West</p>
        <p>33 Wild sheep</p>
        <p>38 Martin</p>
        <p>39 A Mennonite sect</p>
        <p>40 Hope or Jessica</p>
        <p>41 Central point</p>
        <p>42 Persons</p>
        <p>44 Goddess of discord</p>
        <p>45 Scarce</p>
        <p>46 Cruise or Selieck</p>
        <p>48 Insect egg</p>
        <p>50 Sportscaster Parker</p>
        <p>(Answers On Page 12)</p>
        <p>Aidan Quinn (I.) listens as his father, played by James Whitmore, discusses his hopes lor the future in a new production of Arthur Millers Broadway drama All My Sons. It airs Monday, Jan. 19, on PBS. (Check local listings.)</p>
        <p>(Continued From Page 4)</p>
        <p>Wed, Prl) Let The Falcons Go (Tue) The Pintails (Thu)</p>
        <p>(E^N) NFL Films Presents (Mon-Thu)</p>
        <p>(raCK) Dennis The Menace (SHOW) Movie (Mon) AUces Adventures In Wonderland" (1972)</p>
        <p>(TMC) Movie (Mon) Pale Rider" (1985XTue) A Woman Of Paris (1923KWed) Kiss Me Kate (1953)</p>
        <p>(USA) Lets Make A Deal SOSO Gilligans bland (Mon, Wed-Fri)</p>
        <p>S:30O Rifleman O Rocky Road (Tue)</p>
        <p>O Timmy And Lassie O Peoples Court (D Hollywood Squares 0 Gimme A Break!</p>
        <p>0 Andy Griffith 0 Silver Spoons (DIS) Navajo Moon (Mon) Kids Of DeGrassi Street (Wed) Spread Your Wings (Fri)</p>
        <p>(ESPN) World Of Sports (Mon) Scholastic Sports America (Tue) Winner's Circle Horse Racing Magazine (Wed) Inside The PGA Tour (Thu)</p>
        <p>(LIFE) Couples (Wed)</p>
        <p>(MAX) Movie (Mon) Silverado" (1985)(Wed) Second Fiddle (1939)(Thu) Diane" (1956) (NICK) Double Dare (SHOW) Movie (Tue) Ape And Super-Ape (1973)</p>
        <p>(SHOW) Mom And Dad Cant Hear Me (Wed) Jennifers Journey (Thu) Get Along Gang (Fri) (TMC) Movie (Fri) D A.R.Y L  (1985)</p>
        <p>(USA) Dance Party USA 5:350 Rocky Road (Mon, Wed, Thu) Safe At Home (Fri)</p>
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        <p>Charles Dance "Out on a Limb" Jan. 18 &amp;amp; 19  ABC</p>
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        <pb facs="00096520_0037" />
        <p>Film title needs spice; Cosby plays Mr. Nice</p>
        <p>By Cindy Adams</p>
        <p>Jacqueline Bisset has made a movie in Greece. It was titled High Season." Too bland. Sounds like a sitcom," gurgled one genius. It was retitled Taramo Salata." Too confusing. sounds like nothin, gurgled another genius who didn't know that taramo salata is a caviar spread. Claire Pe-plo, Bernardo Bertoluccis wife, is directing Irene Papa-sis co-starring. Somebody else is researching a title. How's Highly Seasoned'" THAT won't be too bland.</p>
        <p>Bill Cosby</p>
        <p>Jacqueline Bisset</p>
        <p>Lynn Redgrave and Mary Tyler Moore were in Boston on tlie pre-Broadway run of  Sweet Sue " The only family member with Lynn was Teddy As in bear. Teddy was a gift from her nanny and the now-grown Miss Redgrave has had him for over 40 years. Lynn might occasionally travel without husband John, occasionally without kiddies Ben, Kelly and Annabel, but never without Teddy.</p>
        <p>In the early 60s Engelbert</p>
        <p>Humperdinck and Tom Jones were pals. In 1966 they MADF] IT. In 197.1 they fell out They didn't speak for 13 years Recently, reminiscing backstage in Vegas, they couldn't remember what they 'd been sore about Rod Steigers playing King Lear in Jean Luc Godards film version</p>
        <p>Anything Goes" was going into the Vivian Beaumont in Lincoln Center but was postponed until fall. The producers and MVP Jerry Zaks the semi-resident director who brought us "The Front Page" and won a Tony for ' House of Blue Leaves" - want either Bernadette Peters or Bette Midler for the Ethel Merman role.</p>
        <p>Bill Cosby will head the 175th birthday of the New York City Mission Society. Lincoln Center Pat Kluge, Caroll Petrie and DinalHerrill are the chair leaders. Diana Ross childhood was spent in a low-income housing project Her three daughters go to private school in Switzerland. Monthy tab Ten thou.</p>
        <p>MONDAY</p>
        <p>CAVANAUGHS</p>
        <p>On The Cavanaughs," Pop (Barnard Hughes) finds himself on the opposite end of a labor dispute with his son Chuck. The CBS sitcom airs Monday, Jan 19</p>
        <p>TUESDAY GROWING PAINS</p>
        <p>On Growing Pains," Mike (Kirk Cameron) finds it difficult to return a schoolmate's favor. The ABC sitcom airs Tuesday, Jan. 20.</p>
        <p>FEATURE OF THE WEEK</p>
        <p>Rollinwood Cluster Home-Decorators delight! Spacious 2 bedroom unit, features 2 baths, sfep-saver kitchen with all appliances including microwave, greatroom with corner fireplace, laundry facility with washer and dryer and more! Seller will pay points and closing costs up to $2400. Excellent buy at $58,900.</p>
        <p>MAVIS BUTTS REALTY 355-7653</p>
        <p>TV Chatter</p>
        <p>Weekend Update, the network news-show spoof that airs each week on Saturday Night Live, has had a lot of top comedians as its anchor, most notably Chevy Cliase and Dan Aykroyd. The current occupant of the chair is Dennis Miller, a 33-year-old standup comedian from Pittsburgh who has been holding down the job for the last two seasons. Although he pokes fun at politicians. Miller, unlike Will Rogers, doesnt consider any of them amusing. I dont find any politicians funny, except maybe George Bush, he says. To rise that high and have no power -its a funny quandary for a man. Its like being assistant manager at Zodys. He seems completely neutered." Despite all his jabs at the Oval Office, Miller attended a Christmas party at the White House as a guest of the Washington press corps. I got to meet the president. 1 dont think he knew who I was, I think his wife did. She looked at me and laughed a little. They watched the show when their son was on, but people that age just dont care or know about our show.</p>
        <p>At last, Isabel Sanford is getting her lifelong dream: performing pratfalls on TV. Honeymoon Hotel, which had a one-week tryout earlier this month in syndication, stars Sanford as the hapless manager of a rundown resort near San Diego. The five-day-a-week series is tentatively set to resume airing in the fall. Sanford agreed to the grind of taping five shows a week because the sitcom finally allows her to do something she never got to do as the upper-class wife of Sherman Hemsley on^The Jeffer-sons - fall on her face Ive always wWdt^do shtick, Sanford says, and they always denied rftrtfat on The Jeffersons' because I was too dignified.</p>
        <p>Although his previous series, Masquerade" and Bearcats," quickly disappeared from the small screen. Rod Taylor is optimistic about Outlaws, his new fantasy-adventure series airing Saturdays on CBS, In the series, Taylor portrays a sheriff from the Old West who is transported - along with the desperadoes he is chasing - to modern-day Houston by a freak lightning accident For a change, we re not in the suicide slot," says the Australian actor. Ive never been so lucky before. Ive had one disaster after another on TV. Network executives said, Oh, Masquerade" is going to be a hit, lets put it on against Dynasty! Smart thinking. Or with Bearcats, it was Hey, this is the greatest show in the world! Itll knock Dallas - or whatever was hot at the time - off the air. Whatever was really hot on TV, they always put my series up against. At last Taylor may be in luck. Outlaws airs against NBCs Facts of Life and 227 and ABCs Sidekicks and Sledge Hammer!</p>
        <p>Carrie Fisher, Princess Leia in all those Star Wars movies, is happy George Lucas has decided not to make any more films about the adventures of Luke Skywalker. Says Fisher, A dream project for me would be about an over-the-hill surfer chick in Gidget Goes to Hell. ... Everyone should have such problems. Tony Perkins thinks his youthful looks have hurt his acting career 1 couldnt play 40-year-olds when I was 45. But what could I do to make myself look older* I wasnt so dedicated to my craft that I was willing to undergo plastic surgery. Tony ODell, the preppie high school genius on ABC's Head of the Class. doesnt like it when people complain that hes just a clone of Alex Keaton, played by Michael J. Fox on Family Ties The only thing we have in common is that we re both Republicans,  says 0 t^ll.</p>
        <p>\</p>
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        <p>264 Bv Pass, Red Oak Plaza, Greenville. N C  35.5-2296</p>
        <p>Open Monday Thru Friday lOTKJ A M 'Til 5 f)f) P M_BEHIND THE SCENES</p>
        <p>Alan Zweibel thrives on anti-TV</p>
        <p>By Frank Lovece</p>
        <p>Alan Zweibel is a not-ready-for-prime-time player  small letters He used to write for the Not Ready for Prime-Time Players  capital letters - back in the glory days of Saturday Night Live," helping John Belushi define his Samurai character and winning three Emmys in the process.</p>
        <p>Featuring... Williamsburg Designs</p>
        <p>Lambrequins Tabs Su/ags Jabots Country Curtains Bedspreads</p>
        <p>  Free Etiimales!</p>
        <p>Alan Zweibr</p>
        <p>Now, as producer and co creator of Showtime's It s Garry Shandling's Show, Zweibel continues to prove that some of the best TV hap pens when you don t expect it It's Garry Shandlings Show is a successful example of anti-television": After a nighttime scene, the lights go on above the deliberately pho-ny-looking set Shandlmg says, See that" That's a transition Its supposed to be morning now ' He yawns and stretches 1 sure am refreshed'</p>
        <p>Instead of smooth dissolves.</p>
        <p>Shandlmg and his cast go from set to set in a golf cart They cant decide whether to walk in through the door of the set, real-lifelike, or just walk onto it and start the scene. Stuff like this hasnt been done on a sitcom since the days of George Burns and Gracie Allen</p>
        <p>We acknowledge tin fact we re on TV,  says Zweibel, who was plucked, fairy-tale style, from the stage of Catch a Rising Star' to the writing staff of Saturday Night Live</p>
        <p>We originally wanted Garry Shandling to have an Our Town' feeling." he adds, alluding to the Thornton Wilder play where the narrator steps in and out of the drama to addrc.s.s the audience As for the positive reaction to the show. Zweibel is only a little surprised</p>
        <p>I don't believ.v anybody thinks. Let's do our best anil see what happens ' They say they do. but you want people to like It I thought peopli' might spark to this because it's diflerent</p>
        <p>On cable thcic an' no com meriiaN to wiirry about, the rh\tlim IS more like a one-aet play than a normal sitcom " Zweibel, who has written plays and a book and eo-seript-ed the u[)eoming film Dragnet, is still committed to cable.</p>
        <p>I have very little expectations when It comes to primetime And anyway, as a writer-producer I m not steeped in the form Which suits him and "Garry Shandling's viewers just fine</p>
        <p>SUNDAY</p>
        <p>OUTONALMB</p>
        <p>SATURDAY GOLDEN GIRLS</p>
        <p>In Out on a Limb," Charles Dance (Jewel in the Crown") co-sUrs as a</p>
        <p>married British parliamentarian who On The Golden Girls, ' Rose (Betty has an affair with Shirley MacLaine  White) thinks she died, went to the</p>
        <p>The ABC miniseries, based on Mac-Lame s best seller, airs Sunday, Jan 18, and Monday. Jan 19</p>
        <p>outskirts of heaven' and then returned to life The Before and After" episode of the NBf sitcom airs Saturday, Jan 24</p>
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        <pb facs="00096520_0038" />
        <p>TV-10 The Daily Reflegtoi, Greenville, N.C.  Sunday,  January  18,1987</p>
        <p>Thursday Evening</p>
        <p>THURSDAY EVEN</p>
        <p>e</p>
        <p>7:00  7:30</p>
        <p>Hardcastle And McCormick</p>
        <p>O ! Sanford</p>
        <p>H mooners</p>
        <p>O I Business Rpt t Woodwright</p>
        <p>O Facts Of Lite ; Benson</p>
        <p>(D i Newlyweds I Ent Tonight</p>
        <p>NG</p>
        <p>8:00</p>
        <p>8:30</p>
        <p>9:00  9:30  10:00  10:30</p>
        <p>Daktari</p>
        <p>1700 Club</p>
        <p>Bill Cosby</p>
        <p>NBA Basketball: Los Angeles Lakers at Indiana Pacers</p>
        <p>! Movie</p>
        <p>Spaceflight</p>
        <p>I Mystery'</p>
        <p>I Nature</p>
        <p>Cosby Show Family Ties j Cheers  TheTortellis</p>
        <p>Shell Game</p>
        <p>I Simon &amp;amp; Simon</p>
        <p> Fortune I Jeopardy | Our World</p>
        <p>I The Colbys</p>
        <p> ! CBS News i PM Magazine</p>
        <p>Q)</p>
        <p>MA-S'H</p>
        <p>WS Movie</p>
        <p>Theater</p>
        <p>Shell Game</p>
        <p>I Simon &amp;amp; Simon</p>
        <p>Movie: "The Yakuza"</p>
        <p>L A Law</p>
        <p>Knots Landing</p>
        <p>20/20</p>
        <p>Knots Landing</p>
        <p>News</p>
        <p>Best Of Walt Disney Presents Movie: ' The Little Shepherd Of Kingdom Come"</p>
        <p>ESPN</p>
        <p>HBO</p>
        <p>UFE</p>
        <p>College Basketball. Cincinnati at Louisville</p>
        <p>Movie "A View To AI</p>
        <p>Marcus Welby. M 0</p>
        <p>Call To Glory</p>
        <p>MAX Movie</p>
        <p>SHOW</p>
        <p>TMC</p>
        <p>I Movie "Head Office"</p>
        <p>College Basketball: North Carolina at Wake Forest</p>
        <p>Movie: "Iron Eagle"</p>
        <p>Regis Philbin's Lifestyles</p>
        <p>Dr Ruth Show</p>
        <p>Movie: "Thief</p>
        <p>Movie</p>
        <p>I Movie "Beyond The Poseidon Adventure"</p>
        <p>Movie "Pale Rider"</p>
        <p>Movie "Superman</p>
        <p>I Movie: "Nighthawks"</p>
        <p>USA I Airwolt</p>
        <p>College Basketball: Auburn at Alabama</p>
        <p> Riptide</p>
        <p>6:00 O Big Valley O MacNeil / Lehrer Newshour O (D 0 Q) News Q) Threes Company (ARTS) Missing From Home (BET) Real Estate And Investment Seminars</p>
        <p>(DIS) Movie "Born Free (1966)</p>
        <p>(ESPN)SportsLook</p>
        <p>(LIFE) Family</p>
        <p>(NICK) Monkees</p>
        <p>(SHOV^ Movie Young Sherlock</p>
        <p>Holmes (1985)</p>
        <p>(USA) Cartoons 6:05 O Beverly Hillbillies 6:30 O NBC News (D CBS News 0 ABC News g 0) Too CTose For Comfort (ESPN) SportsCenter (NICK) NICK Rocks: Video To Go</p>
        <p>(TMC) Movie 'Superman (1978) 6:35 0 Andy Griffith 7:000 Hardcastle And McCormick</p>
        <p>O Nightly Business Report O Facts Of Life 0 Newlywed Game 0 Wheel Of Fortune 0 CBS News GDTaxi (ARTS)Tenko (BET) On The Line With... (ESPN)CoUegeBasketbaU (LIFE) Marcus Welby, M.D. (NICK) You Cant Do That On Television (USA)Airwolf 7:05 O Sanford And Son 7:30 O Woodi^ghts Shop O Benson</p>
        <p>0 Entertainment Tonight 0 Jeopardy 0 PM Magazine 0 M*A*SH</p>
        <p>(BET) Video LP</p>
        <p>(MAX) Movie Head Office (1986)</p>
        <p>(NICK) Danger Mouse 7:35 O Honeymooners 7:40 (DIS) Mouseterplece Theater</p>
        <p>S;00OD&amp;gt;ktrl O SpacefUfht A survey of the Apollo missions, from the first</p>
        <p>fatal attempt to Wally Schirra's successful flight and Neil Armstrong's moon walk, g (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>O Cosby Show In stereo, g 0 0 Shell Game Jennie and John go undercover with the bunko squad to expose a con artist on television. (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>0 Our World g</p>
        <p>0 Movie "The Yakuza" (1975) Robert Mitchum, Brian Keith (2</p>
        <p>hrs.)</p>
        <p>(ARTS) Jane Eyre The story of a penniless orphan who is left in the care of her unfeeling Aunt Reed. (Part 1 of 7)</p>
        <p>(BET) Black Forum (DIS) Best Of Walt Disney Presents Man In Space The potential hazards of space travel are examined. (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>(LIFE) Call To Glory (NICK) Donna Reed (SHO^ Movie "Beyond The Poseidon Adventure (1979) Michael Caine, Sally Field. (2 hrs., 2 min.)</p>
        <p>(USA) College Basketball Auburn at Alabama (Live) (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>8:05 O NBA Basketball Los Angeles Lakers at Indiana Pacers (Live) (Subject to blackout) (2 hrs, 15 min.)</p>
        <p>8:30 O Family Ties In stereo g (ARTS) aty Assets: Richmond "Were Still Making History Historic Richmond, Virginia, is profiled in this series highlighting American cities.</p>
        <p>(BET) Urban Scene (NICK) Mister Ed</p>
        <p>9:000 700 Gub O Mystery! The Secret Adversary After forming a detective agency with his former wartime nurse, Tuppence Cowley, Tommy Beresford and his partner are asked by their first client to retrieve a stolen document Stars Francesca Annis, James Warwick. (Part 1 of 2)g(lhr.) O Cheen Carla mediates when her ex-husband, Nick, and his new wife, Loretta, are having marital problems. In stereo, g</p>
        <p>IPGoodrieh</p>
        <p>Transmission Tune-Up Service</p>
        <p>2988 Coggins Cor Core</p>
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        <p>0 0 Simon &amp;amp; Simon 0 The Colbys A bullet intended for Jason wounds Cash Cassidy; Jeff confronts the mother of mysterious Hoyt Parker, g (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>(ARTS) Dancer An examination of the male role in the history of choreography. (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>(BET) Video Soul (DIS) Movie "The Little Shepherd Of Kingdom Come (1961) Jimmie Rodgers, Luana Patten. (1 hr., 48 min.)</p>
        <p>(ESPN) College Basketball</p>
        <p>North Carolina at Wake Forest (Live) (Subject to blackout) (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>(LIFE) Regis Philbins Lifestyles Guests: actresses Tracy and Missy Gold; psychic researcher Bruce Bond; H. Alan Meyers on cocaine addiction; author Dr. Martin Schwartz ( You Can Stop Stuttering). (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>(MAX) Movie Thief (1981) James Caan, Tuesday Weld. (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>(NICK) My Three Sons (TMC) Movie Nighthawks (1981) Sylvester Stallone, Rutger Hauer. (1 hr., 39 min.) 9:300 The Tortellls (Premiere) Comedy. In this "Cheers spinoff, Carta's womanizing ex-husband, Nick (Dan Hedaya), and his new wife, Loretta (Jean Kasem) move to Las Vegas. Tonight Nick hopes to make money as a TV repairman while Loretta works as a showgirl. In stereo.</p>
        <p>(NICK) Ann Sothem 10:00 O Nature A look at how Africas population growth and the need for more food have</p>
        <p>adversely affected the African elephants natural habitat. In stereo. g(l hr.)</p>
        <p>O L.A. Law McKenzie and his partners accept a lucrative buyout by a humorless legal firm, Markowitz ends his relationship with Kelsey. In stereo. (Ihr.)</p>
        <p>0 0 Knots I-anding g</p>
        <p>02O/2Og</p>
        <p>0News</p>
        <p>(ARTS) Life Of An Orchestra</p>
        <p>The London Symphony Orchestra tours Paris, Vienna and Frankfurt, featuring an appearance by Zubin Mehta, in performances of Mahler and Schubert. (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>(LIFE) Dr. Ruth Show (NICK) I Spy</p>
        <p>(SHOW) Movie Pale Rider (1985) Clint Eastwood, Michael Moriarty. (1 hr., 53 min.) (USA)RipUde 10:200 Movie Yankee Doodle Dandy (1942) James Cagney, Joan Leslie. (2 hrs., 30 min.) 10:300 Bill Cosby 11:000 Hardcastle And McCormick</p>
        <p>O Doctor Who O000News</p>
        <p>0 Late Show Host Joan Rivers In stereo. (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>(ARTS) Prodigy Dimitris Sgouros Plays Chopin This 13-year-old prodigy plays Chopins Concerto No. 1 in a performance taped in 1982 at the Caracas Conservatory of Music in Venezuela. (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>(BET) Video Vibrations</p>
        <p>(DIS) Adventures Of Ozzie And</p>
        <p>Harriet</p>
        <p>(ESPN) Inside The PGA Tour (LIDFE) Movie Just Tell Me You Love Me (1979) Robert Hegyes, Lisa Hartman. (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>(MAX) Howie Mandel: Live From Carnegie Mall A not-so-typical trip through an American shopping mall, with the comedian and St. Elsewhere star serving as your guide. In stereo.</p>
        <p>(NICK) Route 66 (TMQ Movie Blow Out (1981) John Travolta, Nancy Allen. (1 hr., 47 min.)</p>
        <p>(USA) Alfred Hitchcock Hour 11:30 O Dads Army O Tonight Show Host: Johnny Carson. Scheduled: comic actor Richard Pryor ("Critical Condition ), country music duo the Judds. In stereo. (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>0 Night Heat 0NightIineg 0M*A*S*H</p>
        <p>(DIS) Movie Beau Brummel (1954) Elizabeth Taylor, Stewart Granger. (1 hr., 51 min.)</p>
        <p>(ESPN) SportsCenter (MAX) Movie Personal Best " (1982) Mariel Hemingway, Patrice Donnelly. (2 hrs., 4 min.) 12:00 O Buna And Allen 0 Nightlife Host: David Brenner Scheduled: actor Dexter Gordon (Round Midnight), comedian Robert Wuhl. In stereo. 0 Night Heat OBrien and Giambone investigate the seam-</p>
        <p>PERSIOIA</p>
        <p>PPSl The Pride of *</p>
        <p>The Carolinas</p>
        <p>BOTTLED BY PEPSI-COLA BOHLING COMPANY OF GREENVILLE INC, 1809 DICKINSON AVENUE. GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA UNDER APPOINTMENT FROM PepsiCo, INC. PURCHASE. N Y</p>
        <p>ier side of the fashion industry. (Postponed from an earlier date.)(l hr., 10 min.)</p>
        <p>0 Odd Couple</p>
        <p>(ARTS) Jane Eyre The story of a penniless orphan who is left in the care of her unfeeling Aunt Reed. (Part 1 of 7)</p>
        <p>(ESPN) Wrestling (NICK) Donna Reed (SHOW) Movie "The Jewel Of The Nile (1985) Kathleen Turner, Michael Douglas. (1 hr., 44 min.)</p>
        <p>(USA) Dragnet 12:30 O Best Of Groucho O Ute Night With David Lettennan In stereo, (l hr.)</p>
        <p>0 Dukes Of Hazzard 0KoJak</p>
        <p>(ARTS) Gty Assets: Richmond</p>
        <p>We're Still Making History Historic Richmond, Virginia, is profiled in this series highlighting American cities.</p>
        <p>(NICK) Mister Ed (USA) Edge Of Night 12:400 Movie</p>
        <p>12:500 ACE Awards The eighth annual ceremony honoring excellence in cable from the Wil-tern Theatre in Los Angeles. Among those nominated in the 60 categories are Billy Crystal, Peter O'Toole, Robert Carra-dine, Susan Sarandon, Barbara Streisand and Robin Williams Co-hosts: Garry Shandling and Bernadette Peters. (R) (2 hrs.) 1:00 O Jack Benny (ARTS) Dancer An examination of the male role in the history of choreography. (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>(BET) Real Estate And Investment Seminars (ESPN) Ski World (LIFE) Everybodys Money Matters</p>
        <p>(NICK) Mv Three Sons</p>
        <p>Homelite XL 14</p>
        <p>Automatic Oiling Chain saw With Anti-Kickback Device</p>
        <p>(TMQ Movie She (1983) Harrison Muller, Sandahl Bergman. (1 hr., 39 min.)</p>
        <p>(USA) Edge Of Night 1:10 0 Movie The Last Survivors" (1975) Martin Sheen, Diane Baker. (1 hr., 20 min.) l:30 0DobieGilIis QNews</p>
        <p>0 Mission: Impossible (DIS) Movie "0. Henrys Full House  (1952) Marilyn Monroe, Dale Robertson. (1 hr., 57 min.) (ESPN) Winners Circle Horse Racing Magazine (NICK) Ann Sothem (USA) Master 1:35 (MAX) Movie Hundra" (1984) Laurene Landon, John Ghaffari. (1 hr., 40 min.)</p>
        <p>2:00 O 700 Gub 0 Nightwatch</p>
        <p>(ARTS) Life Of An Orchestra</p>
        <p>The London Symphony Orchestra tours Paris, Vienna and Frankfurt, featuring an appearance by Zubin Mehta, in performances of Mahler and Schubert. (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>(BET) Video Soul (ESPN)SportsLook (NICK) I Spy</p>
        <p>(SHOW) Movie Marie (1985) Sissy Spacek, Jeff Daniels. (1 hr., 52 min.)</p>
        <p>2:30 0 Nightwatch (ESPN) SportsCenter (USA) Movie M Station: Hawaii (1980) Jared Martin, Jo Ann Harris. (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>2:500 Movie The Bobo (1967) Peter Sellers, Britt Ekland. (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>3:000 Movie Sixteen Fathoms Deep (1948) Lloyd Bridges, Lon Chaney Jr. (1 hr., 30 min.)</p>
        <p>(Please Turn To Page 14)</p>
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        <p>The</p>
        <p>Friday Evening</p>
        <p>FRIDAY EVENING</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>O</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>DIS</p>
        <p>ESPN</p>
        <p>HBO</p>
        <p>UFE</p>
        <p>MAX</p>
        <p>SHOW</p>
        <p>TMC</p>
        <p>7:00  7:30</p>
        <p>Hardcastie And McCormick</p>
        <p>Sanlord</p>
        <p>Business Rpt.</p>
        <p>Carolina lllus.</p>
        <p>Newlyweds</p>
        <p>Forlune</p>
        <p>CBS News</p>
        <p>Taxi</p>
        <p>Movie</p>
        <p>SportsCenter</p>
        <p>Hmooners</p>
        <p>N. Carolina</p>
        <p>Benson</p>
        <p>Enl. Tonight</p>
        <p>Jeopardy</p>
        <p>PM Magazine</p>
        <p>MAS*H</p>
        <p>Zorro</p>
        <p>NFL Films</p>
        <p>Inside The NFL</p>
        <p>Marcus Welby.M.D.</p>
        <p>Movie</p>
        <p>Movie</p>
        <p>Movie</p>
        <p>USA</p>
        <p>8:00</p>
        <p>Butterfly</p>
        <p>):30</p>
        <p>Campbells</p>
        <p>9:00  9:30  10:00</p>
        <p>700 Club</p>
        <p>NBA Basketball: New York Knicks at Houston Rockets</p>
        <p>10:30</p>
        <p>Bill Cosby</p>
        <p>Motorweek</p>
        <p>Wash, Week</p>
        <p>Wall St. Wk,</p>
        <p>Stingray</p>
        <p>Scarecrow And Mrs King</p>
        <p>Webster</p>
        <p>Belvedere</p>
        <p>Scarecrow And Mrs. King</p>
        <p>Great Performances</p>
        <p>Miami Vice</p>
        <p>Dallas</p>
        <p>Gung Ho</p>
        <p>Dads</p>
        <p>Dallas</p>
        <p>Movie: "The Sign Of Zorro"</p>
        <p>Pointer Sisters UpAIINite</p>
        <p>Falcon Crest</p>
        <p>Starman</p>
        <p>Falcon Crest</p>
        <p>News</p>
        <p>Five Mile Creek</p>
        <p>S. Bowl</p>
        <p>NFL Films</p>
        <p>Movie: "Heartland"</p>
        <p>DTV</p>
        <p>Tennis: Australian Open Women's Final</p>
        <p>Movie: "Murphy's Romance"</p>
        <p>Call To Glory</p>
        <p>Regis Phllbin's Lifestyles</p>
        <p>Movie: "The Coca-Cola Kid"</p>
        <p>Movie: "The Glitter Dome"</p>
        <p>Dr Ruth Show</p>
        <p>Movie: "After Hours"</p>
        <p>Brothers</p>
        <p>Shandling</p>
        <p>Movie: "The Longshol" </p>
        <p>Airwolf</p>
        <p>Riptide</p>
        <p>Movie: "National Lampoon's European Vacation"</p>
        <p>Movie. "Firstborn"'</p>
        <p>Movie: "The Underground Man"</p>
        <p>(USA) Movie "The Underground Man" (1974) Peter Graves, Jack Klugman. (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>9:30 Dads g (NICK) Ann Sothern 10:000 Pointer Sisters... Up All Nite Anita, Ruth and June Pointer are joined by comic actress Whoopi Goldberg and "Moonlighting'" co-star, Bruce Willis, for an evening of music from various clubs in the Los Angeles area. In stereo. (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>  Falcon Crest The kidnappers demand both Meredith and a huge ransom in exchange for Richard's son; Lance refuses to have Melissa declared mentally incompetent. g(l hr.)</p>
        <p> Starman Scott and Starman are jailed when Scotts use of the magical sphere causes blue lights to emanate from their hiding place. (R)g(l hr.)</p>
        <p>CD News</p>
        <p>(UFE) Dr. Ruth Show (MAX) Movie After Hours (1985) Griffin Dunne, Rosanna Arquette. (1 hr., 37 min,)</p>
        <p>(NICK) I Spy 10:200 CNN News 10:300 Bill Cosby O Motorweek Illustrated</p>
        <p>6:000 Big Valley O MacNeil / Lehrer Newshour O   CE) News CD Frostys Winter Wonderland (ARTS) Missing From Home (BET) Real EsUte And Investment Seminars</p>
        <p>(DIS) Movie The Kids Who Knew Too Much (1980)</p>
        <p>(ESPN) SportsLook (NICK)Monkees (SHOW) Movie A Piano For Mrs. Cimino(1982)</p>
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        <p>O Washington Week In Review</p>
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        <p>(LIFE) Marcus Welby, M.D. (NICK) You Cant Do That On</p>
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        <p>(ESPN) Super Bowl Matchup A look at the two teams who will meet in Sundays Super Bowl XXI.</p>
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        <p>8:050 NBA Basketball New York Knick at Houston Rockets (Live) (Subject to blackout) (2 hrs., 15 min.)</p>
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        <p>(NICK) Mister Ed (SHOW) Its Garry Shandlings Show Garry Met A Girl Named Maria Garry is elected to marry the maid who works on his set to save her from deportation. In stereo.</p>
        <p>9:00 0700 Club O Great Performances Otel-lo This production of the Verdi opera, based on William Shakespeares tragic story, about a Moorish general who is tricked into believing his wife has been unfaithful, features tenor Jon Vickers as Otello and soprano Mirella Freni as Desdemona. Herbert Von Karajan conducts the Berlin Philharmonic. English subtitles. In stereo. (2 hrs., 30 min.)</p>
        <p>o Vice The death of an undercover cop leads Crockett and Tubbs to ultra-right wing Cuban commandos plotting to assassinate a Cuban diplomat. In stereo. (1 hr.)</p>
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        <p>(DIS) Movie "Heartland (1981)</p>
        <p>Rip Torn, Conchata Ferrell. (1</p>
        <p>hr, 36 min.)</p>
        <p>(ESPN) Tennis Australian Open, womens final, from Melbourne (Live) (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>(UFE) Regis Phllbin's Lifestyles Guests Jeffrey Tambor ("Mr Sunshine"); female boxers Shelley Acterberg and Karen Hanks, author David Kennedy ( "Perfectly Legal"); Dr. Art Mollen on the benefits of exercise, Dr. David Viscott, psychiatrist and creator of In Touch" cards. (1 hr)</p>
        <p>(NICK) My Three Sons (SHO?0 Movie National Lampoon's European Vacation (1985) Chevy Chase, Beverly DAngelo. (1 hr, 37 min.)</p>
        <p>(TMQ Movie Firstborn  (1984) Teri Garr, Peter Weller (1 hr, 40 min I</p>
        <p>Buddy &amp;amp; Loretta" a young as cowboy, his aging wife and his girlfriend form a love triangle, until an unexpected arrival brings the number to four 10:40 (DIS) DTV 10:45 (SHOW) Its Showtime 11:000 Hardcastie And McCormick</p>
        <p>O Night Tracks - Power PUy O 0   News Q) Late Show Host: Joan Rivers In stereo. (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>(ARTS) Buffalo Bill A drop in the ratings has Bill evaluating the show and his life.</p>
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        <p>(ESPN) Magic Years In Sports A</p>
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        <p>(LIFE) Movie Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy (1981) (Part 1 of 2) Jaclyn Smith, James Fran-ciscus. (3 hrs.)</p>
        <p>(NICK) Route 66 (SH09I Van Halen Alive! Van Halen performs songs from their ''5150" album, during this 1986 concert taped in New Haven, Connecticut, including Why Cant This Be Love, "Love Walks In. and Good Enough  In stereo. (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>(TMQ Movie 9 Deaths Of The Ninja  (1985) Sho Kusugi, Brent Huff.(l hr, 34 min.)</p>
        <p>(USA) Night Flight Comedy (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>11:30 O To The Manor Bom O Tonight Show Host: Johnny Carson. Scheduled: singer-gui-tarist Robert Cray, comic Roseanne Barr. In stereo. (1 hr.) KeepOnCrulsln CNightlineg M*A*S*H</p>
        <p>(ARTS) Signature: Alexander</p>
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        <p>(DIS) Movie "The Girl Next Door" (1953) June Haver, Dan Dailey (1 hr, 32 min.) (ESPN)SportaCenter 11:45 (MAX) Movie "Melody In Love" (1981) (1 hr., 30 min)</p>
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        <p> Nightlife Host David Brenner In stereo</p>
        <p> Keep On Crultin Guests: comedian Rick Overton, singer Little Anthony (Tears on My Pillow ), musical group New</p>
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        <p>Edition ("What s Your Name?); also, a Little Anthony sound-alike contest. (1 hr.)</p>
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        <p>(ARTS) Movie The River Niger (1976) Cicely Tyson. James Earl Jones. (2 hrs., 30 min.)</p>
        <p>(BET) Midnight Love (ESPN) NFL Filma Presents (NICK) Donna Reed (SHOW) Movie "The Breakfast Club  (1985) Emilio Estevez, Molly Ringwald. (1 hr., 37 min) (USA) Night Flight "Feature Film (2 hrs)</p>
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        <p>(NICK) My Three Sons 1:25 (MAX) Movie "Best Revenge" (1983) John Heard, Levon Helm. (1 hr., 31 min.) USOODobieGUlis CD Movie "The Thief Who Came To Dinner (1973) Ryan ONeal. Jacqueline Bisset. (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>(NICK) Ann Sothern 1:40 (SHOW) Just For Laughs Andrea Martin hosts the second annual Just For Laughs Comedy Festival from Montreal, featuring over 80 comedians from around the world, including Marsha Warfield, Sandra Bern-hard, Hale &amp;amp; Pace, Chris Elliot, The Frantics, and Paul Reiser. (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>TV-11</p>
        <p>Sunday, January 18,1987 2:000 700 Qub O Night Tracks ONews (BET) Video Soul (ESPN) SportsLook (LIFE) Everybodys Money Matters (NICK) I Spy</p>
        <p>(USA) Night Flight "Take Off (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>2:05 CNN News 2:30 (ARTS) Shortstories In Sally &amp;amp; Buddy &amp;amp; Loretta  a young Texas cowboy, his aging wife and his girlfriend form a love triangle, until an unexpected arrival brings the number to four. (DIS) Movie Heartland  (1981) Rip Torn, Conchata Ferrell. (1 hr, 36 min.)</p>
        <p>(ESPN) SportsCenter 2:45 (SHOT^ Movie " Young Lady</p>
        <p>Chatterley II  (1985) Harlee McBride, Brett Clark (1 hr., 30 min)</p>
        <p>2:55 (MAX) Movie "McCabe And Mrs Miller" (1971) Warren Beatty, Julie Christie. (1 hr., 55 min.)</p>
        <p>3:000 Movie The Lady Says No" (1952) David Niven, Joan Caulfield. (1 hr, 30 min.)</p>
        <p>O Night Tracks</p>
        <p>(ARTS) Buffalo Bill A drop in</p>
        <p>the ratings has Bill evaluating</p>
        <p>the show and his life</p>
        <p>(ESPN) Tennis Australian Open,</p>
        <p>womens final, from Melbourne.</p>
        <p>(R)(2hrs.)</p>
        <p>(LIFE) Investment Advisory (NICK) Route 66 (TMC) Movie D A R Y L  (1985) Mary Beth Hurt, Michael McKean (1 hr , 40 min )</p>
        <p>(USA) Night Flight "Comedy</p>
        <p>3:30 CD Movie Berlin Tunnel 21 (1981) Richard Thomas, Horst Bucholz. (3 hrs., 30 min)</p>
        <p>(ARTS) Signature: Alexander Godunov A series featuring famous people interviewed without a studio audience or onscreen host Guest Alexander Godunov.</p>
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        <p>Saturday Daytime</p>
        <p>5:00 O Night Tracks (DIS) Walt Disney Presents (ESPN) Heisman Trophy Winner Profile</p>
        <p>(LIFE) Investment Advisory (MAX) Movie The Coca-Cola Kid" (1985)</p>
        <p>(TMC) Movie Sombrero" (1953)</p>
        <p>5 20 (SHOW) Around The World In 80 Days 5:30 (ESPN) PGA Golf (LIFE) Brief Summaries 5 45 Q) Post 5 Reports 6:00 B Heritage Singers O CNN News  Telestory  U.S. Farm Report (BET) Video Vlbraons (DIS) Donald Duck Presents (NICK) Kids Writes '</p>
        <p>(USA) Night Flight -r30 B 700 Gub B Between The Lines  Inhumanoids S) Southern Sportsman (DIS) Contraption (LIFE) AMA Video Clinic (NICK) NICK Rocks: Video To Go</p>
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        <p>O A Better Way 0 Happy Days  Jem</p>
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        <p>Q) Insight</p>
        <p>(DIS) Mousercise</p>
        <p>(MAX) Movie Show</p>
        <p>(NICK) Dennis The Menace</p>
        <p>(TMC) Movie All Fall Down</p>
        <p>(1962)</p>
        <p>(USA) Jimmy Swaggart 7:30 B Speciab B Hogans Heroes OGEH)</p>
        <p>O Woody Woodpecker 0Good Times J Puttin On The Kids Pee-wees Playhouse Q) Vegetable Soup (DIS) You And Me, Kid (ESPN)SportsCenter (LIFE) Investment Advisory (NICK) Out Of Control (SHO^ Movie Any Number Can Play (1949)</p>
        <p>8:00 B Taking Stock 0 Wrestling O Write Course (R)g OKissyfur</p>
        <p>0 0 Berenstain Bears g 0Wuzzlesg S) Newsbag</p>
        <p>(ARTS) Benjamin Franklin (DIS) Dumbos Circus (ESPN)SpeedWeek (MAX) Movie On The Right Track" (1981)</p>
        <p>(NICK) Mr. Wizard's World (USA) Go For Your Dreams 8:30 B Catch The Spirit O Write Course (R)g O Disneys Adventures Of The Gummi Bearsg 00 Wildfire 0 Care Bears Family g Blnhumanolds nDIS) Good Morning Mickey!</p>
        <p>(ESPN) Jimmy Ballard Golf Connection</p>
        <p>(LIFE) Investment Advisory (NICK) Danger Mouse 9:00 B James Robison 0 National Geographic Explorer</p>
        <p>O New Literacy: An Introduction To Computers (R) g O Smurfs</p>
        <p>0 0 Jim Hensons Muppets, Babies &amp;amp; Monsters 0FUntstoneKidsg 0 Batman (BET) Video Soul (DIS) Welcome To Pooh Comer (ESPN) Inside The PGA Tour (NICK) Belle &amp;amp; Sebastian (TMC) Movie "Compromising Positions (1985)</p>
        <p>(USA) You Can Look Younger 9:30 0 Zola Levitt O New Literacy: An Introduction To Computers (R) g 0 Addams Family (ARTS) Year Of The French (DIS) Donald Duck Presents (ESPN) Action Outdoors With Julius Boros</p>
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        <p>5:50 (DIS) DTV</p>
        <p>Maclaine Takes On</p>
        <p>Offbeat Spiritual Trip</p>
        <p>By lao Banner</p>
        <p>HOLLYWOOD - Veteran actress Shirley Maclaine had plans to make a new feature film early in 1987, one which she says offered the prospect of an Academy Award to match the one she collected in 1984 for her performance in "Terms of Endearment.</p>
        <p>She decided not to sign on,opting instead for a grueling few months of city-hopping across the United States, hosting 8300-a-pop seminars at which she expounded her theories on reincarnation and extraterrestrial meddling in our daily lives.</p>
        <p>Her offth^wall beliefs get massive exposure this week in Out on a Limb, ABC's miniseries adaptation of the 1983 best seller in which Maclaine first went public with the conclusions she reached after a long spiritual quest.</p>
        <p>Only good news comes out of it, because while a significant percentage of the audience may be inclined to sign up Maclaine for a long spell in a rubber room, most viewers will recognize it as an involving and thought-provoking few hours of entertainment. '</p>
        <p>That word - entertainment - was uppermost in my mind as I wrote the script with my good friend Colin Higgins," says Maclaine as we sit in her vista-windowed beachfront apartment in Malibu,Calif.</p>
        <p>Obviously, I dont expect everyone who sees it to accept what I believe, any more than 1 did when I wrote the book," she says. It was ABCs idea to turn the book into a miniseries, not mine, and what everyone wanted was a movie that would attract and hold an audience </p>
        <p>Two important ingrediente make the project a success - MacLaines intelligence. which makes it hard to dismiss her ideas as mere looniness, and her shrewd decision to dress up her thesis as areal-life love story.</p>
        <p>She has a great sense of humor about her beliefs. When a wayward police helicopter swooped low over the surf outside her window, drowning out our conversation. she laughsand says: Dont worry - it's just a grounded UFO! MacLaine sees herself as the bearer of glad tidings of a sort. The good news is that we have all lived before, and will again, over and over, on this and other planets throughout the universe.</p>
        <p>Michele Will Tell</p>
        <p>Dear Michele: I watch NBCs Tom Brokaw every night, but I know nothing about his off-camera life. Please tell me aU about him. - KIRA KNIGHT. PITTSBURGH, PENN.</p>
        <p>Tom Brokaw was born Feb. 6,1940, in Yankton, S.D. In 1962, he graduated from the University of South Dakota with a degree in political science. Brokaw has been married for 23 years to his high school sweetheart, Melinda Auld (a former Miss South Dakota). The couple have three daughters: Jennifer, 20, Andrea, 18, and Sarah, 16. As managing editor and anchor of NBC News evening newscast, Brokaw earns $1.7 million a year. Thats a long way from his broadcast beginnings at KMTV in Omaha, Neb., in 1962, where he earned $100 per week. Brokaw enjoys mountain climbing and white-water rafting in his spare time.</p>
        <p>Dear Michele; Please help our aging memories. Who played the veterinarian in the series "Gloria, which starred Sally Struthers? I can see his face, but I cant recall his name. - ELIZABETH TEUFEL, YONKERS, N.Y.</p>
        <p>Veteran actor Burgess Meredith portrayed the croche-ty Dr. Willard Adams on the short-lived series Gloria, which aired during the 1982-83 season on CBS. The series also starred Jo de Winter as his partner Dr. Maggie Lawrence and Lou Richards as his assistant Clark Uhley.</p>
        <p>Dear Michele: What has Catherine Bach been up to since the cancellation of The Dukes of Hazzard? -JOHN OLIVER, BRISTOL, VA.</p>
        <p>Seven years in Daisy Dukes hot pants have enabled Bach to become financially independent, but she is still working. She made her stage debut last season in Extremities at the Burt Reynolds Theater in Jupiter, Fla. Bach says shes out to prove shes an actress, not just a pair of sexy gams in tight shorts.</p>
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        <p>Saturday Evening</p>
        <p>SATURDAY EVENING</p>
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        <p>7:00  7:30</p>
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        <p>Wrestling</p>
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        <p>Q)</p>
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        <p>SHOW</p>
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        <p>Fortune</p>
        <p>Wonder</p>
        <p>Road To Super Bowl '87</p>
        <p>3s Company 9 To 5</p>
        <p>8:00  8:30  9:00  9:30</p>
        <p>Movie;'Clash By Night"</p>
        <p>10:00  10:30</p>
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        <p>Movie: "Gunfight At The O.K. Corral"</p>
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        <p>Facts Of Life 227</p>
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        <p>Sidekicks</p>
        <p>S. Hammer</p>
        <p>Outlaws</p>
        <p>Spaceflight</p>
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        <p>To Be Announced</p>
        <p>Ohara</p>
        <p>Animals</p>
        <p>Austin City Limits</p>
        <p>Hunter</p>
        <p>Super Night At Super Bowl</p>
        <p>Spenser For Hire</p>
        <p>To Be Announced</p>
        <p>Super Night At Super Bowl</p>
        <p>Movie; "Jinxed!"</p>
        <p>News</p>
        <p>Movie: 16 Days Of Glory"</p>
        <p>SpoCtr.</p>
        <p>SportsCenter</p>
        <p>"The Flamingo Kid"</p>
        <p>Move Thundw In The Valley</p>
        <p>College Basketball; Georgia Tech at North Carolina</p>
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        <p>"A Nightmare On Elm Street. Part 2"</p>
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        <p>Movie: "Just Tell Me You Love Me"</p>
        <p>"Street Hero"</p>
        <p>Regis Philbin's Lifestyles</p>
        <p>Dr Ruth Show</p>
        <p>Movie: "Tuff Turf"</p>
        <p>Movie The Protector</p>
        <p>Movie; "Once Bitten"</p>
        <p>Move "J Edgar Hoover'</p>
        <p>Movie: "The Lt Tycoon"</p>
        <p>Move: Compromising Positions</p>
        <p>Riptide</p>
        <p>Movie: "Devil Doll"</p>
        <p>Hitchcock</p>
        <p>: Hitchcock</p>
        <p>6:000 Big VaUey O All Creatures Great And SmaUn O 0 O News 0 Alice O Silver Spoons (ARTS)Lovejoy (DIS) Best Of Ozzie And Harriet (MAX) Movie "Street Hero" (1984)</p>
        <p>(NICK) Spartakus And The Sun Beneath The Sea (TMC) Short Film Showcase (USA)Airwolf 6:05 O Wrestling 6:300 NBC News 0 0 CBS News 0ABCNewsg O Ted Knight ^ow</p>
        <p>Mini-Blinds Top Treatments|</p>
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        <p>(BET) Real Estate And Investment Seminars (DIS) My Friend FUcka (ESPN) Schoiastic Sports America</p>
        <p>(NICK) Star Trek</p>
        <p>(TMC) Movie "The Last Tycoon"</p>
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        <p>7:00 O Campbells O Wild America Q HeeHaw 0 Solid Gold 0 Wheel Of Fortune 0 Road To Super Bowl 87 0 Threes Company (ARTS) Golden Age Of Television</p>
        <p>(DIS) Movie "16 Days Of Glory </p>
        <p>(1986)</p>
        <p>(ESPN) SportsCenter Saturday (LIFE) Movie "Just Tell Me You Love Me (1979)</p>
        <p>(NICK) You Cant Do That On Television</p>
        <p>(SHOW) Movie "Once Bitten" (1985)</p>
        <p>(USA)RipUde 7:30 O Butterfly Island O Wild, WUd World Of Animals 0 Small Wonder 09To5 (BET) News</p>
        <p>(ESPN) SportsCenter: Super Bowl XXI Preview (NICK) Danger Mouse 8:000 Movie Clash By Night (1952) Barbara Stanwyck, Paul Douglas. (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>O Wonderworks "The WUd Pony" Rejecting his mother's marriage to the man who was partly responsible for his father's death, Christopher Fellows withdraws from people until a wild pony helps form a bridge between the boy and his</p>
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        <p>O Facts Of Ufe A reunion of former "Facts of Life cast members finds the ambitious Eastland grads revealing their hopes and dreams. Julie Anne Haddock, Julie Piekarski-Probft and Felice Schacter guest star In stereo. (R) g</p>
        <p>0 0 Outlaws The Outlaws travel to New York to track down a psychotic killer. (1 hr.)</p>
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        <p>0 Movie "Jinxed'" (1982) Bette Midler, Ken Wahl. (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>(ARTS) Movie The Stranger  (1946) Edward G. Robinson, Orson Welles. (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>(BET) Video Soul (ESPN) College Basketball Georgia Tech at North Carolina (Live) (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>(MAX) Movie Tuff Turf" (1984) James Spader, Kim Richards (1 hr.. 52 nun.)</p>
        <p>(NICK) Doooa Reed (USA) Movie Devil Doll" (1964) Bryant Halliday, Yvonne Remain. (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>8:050 Movie "Gunfight At The O K Corral " (1957) Burt Lancaster, Kirk Douglas. (2 hrs., 30 min.)</p>
        <p>8:300227 In stereo.</p>
        <p>0 Sledge Hammer! In stereo</p>
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        <p>(NICK) Mister Ed 9:000 Spaceflight A survey of the Apollo missions, from the first fatal attempt to Wally Schirra's successful flight and Neil Armstrong's moon walk, g (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>O Gdden Girls Rose becomes convinced shes dead and has gone to the "outskirts of heaven" after suffering an esophageal spasm. In stereo, g 0 0 To Be Announced 0Oharag</p>
        <p>(UFE) Regis Philtdns Lifestyles Guests: Christopher Hewett ("Mr Belvedere); Dr. Harvey Wolinsky on lowering cholesterol; author Louise Ber-nikow ("Alone In America - The Search For Companionship); Madhur Jaffrey cooks an Indian dish, Lesley Jane Nonkin talks about teenagers problenu. (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>(NTCK) Movie "That Uncertain Feeling" (1941) Merle Oberon, Melvyn Douglas (2 hn.)</p>
        <p>(SHOW) Movie J Edgar Hoover" (1987) Treat Williams, Rip Torn (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>(TMC) Movie Compromising Positions (1985) Susan Sarandon, Raul Julia. (1 hr., 38 min.) 9:300 Amen The choirmaster</p>
        <p>confesses that he had an affair with a woman in the congregation. In stereo.</p>
        <p>(DIS) Movie "Thunder In The Valley (1947) Lon McCallister, Edmund Gwenn. (1 hr., 43 min.) 10:000 Hardcastle And McCormick</p>
        <p>O Austin City Limits Singer-guitarist Steve Wariner performs "Some Fools Never Learn," "You Can Dream of Me and Lifes Highway; the group Restless Heart performs I Want Everyone to Cry, "Heartbreak Kid and Shes Coming Home. In stereo. (1 hr.) O Hunto' Hunters vacation is ruined when he falls in love with a paid killer. In stereo. (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>0 0 Supa* Night At The Supo* Bowl</p>
        <p>0 Spenser For Hire A federal agent, who once was Ritas lover, assists Spenser on a murder case. g(l hr.)</p>
        <p>0News</p>
        <p>(ARTS) Aristocrats A profile of journalist Mrchese Dino Frescobaldi of Italy. (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>(BET) College Sports USA (ESPN) Tennis Australian Open, men's final, from Melbourne. (Live) (3 hrs.)</p>
        <p>(LIFE) Dr. Ruth Show (MAX) Movie "The Protector" (1985) Jackie Chan, Danny Aiello. (1 hr., 35 min.)</p>
        <p>(USA) Alfred Hitchcock Presents</p>
        <p>10:30 (BET) College Sports (USA) AUred Hitchcock Presents</p>
        <p>10:350 WUd, WUd World Of Animals</p>
        <p>11:00 O John Ankerberg O Sneak Previews O000News 0 Odd Couple</p>
        <p>(ARTS) Black Adder Edmund plots to discredit his elder brother's claim to the throne, and nearly loses everything (LIFE) Partnws In Crinne (NICK) Route 66 (SHOW) Movie "One Night Only'" (1984) Lenore Zann, Helene Udy (1 hr., 26 min.)</p>
        <p>(TMC) Movie "Re-Animator (1985) Jeffrey Combs, Bruce Abbott. (1 hr. 26 min.)</p>
        <p>(USA) Night Flight "Feature Film "(2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>11:050 Night Tracks: Chartbus-ters</p>
        <p>11:150 ABC News g 0 Sports SatiWday (DIS)DTV 11:30 O Moviemakm The making of the westerns "Yellow Sky, High Noon, "The Ox-Bow Incident and "The Gunfighter. Guests Gregory Peck and Dana Andrews.</p>
        <p>O Saturday Night Live In stereo. (1 hr, 30 min.) I 0SoulTraln 00WresUlng 0 Movie "Invitation To Hell (1984) Robert Urich, Susan Luc-ci. (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>(ARTS) Signature: Jacqueline Bisset A series featuring famous people interviewed without a studio audience or on-screen host. Guest: Jacqueline Bisset. (DIS) Boone 11:40 (MAX) Movie Sex Through A Window (1972) James McMullan, Kate Woodville. (1 hr., 20 min.)</p>
        <p>12:000 Specials (ARTS) Movie "The Stranger (1946) Edward G. Robinson, Orson Welles. (2 hrs.) (UFE)Vacationstyles (NICK) Turkey Television 12:050 Night Tracks 12:300 Wrestling 0 Movie "The Island Of Dr Moreau" (1977) Burt Lancaster, Michael York (2 hrs, 5 min.)</p>
        <p>0 Movie "First You Cry " (1978) Mary Tyler Moore, Anthony Perkins. (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>(DIS) Movie "The Great Caruso (1950) Mario Lanza. Ann Blyth (1 hr., 49 min.)</p>
        <p>(LIFE) World Tomorrow 12:35 (SHOW) Movie City Heat (1984) Clint Eastwood, Burt Reynolds. (1 hr., 37 min.)</p>
        <p>1:00 O Victory O Christopher Qoseup (ESPN) Rollermania (LIFE) Everybodys Money Matters</p>
        <p>(NICK) Donna Reed (TMC) Movie "Can You Hear The Laughter (1979) Ira Anguslain, Kevin Hooks (1 hr ,</p>
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        <p>(USA) Night, Flight "New Sounds </p>
        <p>1:050 Night Tracks (MAX) Movie Tomboy (1985) Betsy Russell, Jerry Dinome. (1 hr., 32 min)</p>
        <p>1:300 Specials QNews</p>
        <p>0 Movie "Anzio" (1968) Robert Mitchum, Peter Falk (2 hrs) (BET) Video Vibrations (NICK) Mister Ed (USA) Night Flight "Video Vault"</p>
        <p>2:00 O Jewish Voice Broadcast (ARTS) Aristocrats A profile of journalist Mrchese Dino Frescobaldi of Italy (1 hr) (ESPN) Auto Racing Film (UFE) Investment Advisory (NICK) Movie "That Uncertain Feeling" (1941) Merle Oberon, Melvyn Douglas (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>(USA) Night Flight "Filmmakers Showcase (1 hr)</p>
        <p>2:050 Night Tracks</p>
        <p>2:20 (SHOW) Movie " Mommie</p>
        <p>Dearest" (1981) Faye Dunaway, Diana Scarwid. (2 hrs., 9 min.)^</p>
        <p>2:300 Heritage Singers 0 CNN News</p>
        <p>(DIS) Movie "The Silent One (1984) Telo Malese, George Henare. (1 hr, 35 min.)</p>
        <p>(ESPN) SportsCenter</p>
        <p>2:40 (MAX) Movie "Hard Choices" (1986) Margaret Klenck, Gary McCleery. (1 hr., 30 min.)</p>
        <p>3:000 700 Gub (ARTS) Black Adder Edmund plots to discredit his elder brothers claim to the throne, and nearly loses everything.</p>
        <p>(ESPN) NR Films Presents</p>
        <p>Highlights of Super Bowl I (Green Bay Packers vs Kansas City Chiefs)</p>
        <p>(UFE) Investment Advisory (TMC) Movie " Auntie Marne (1958) Rosalind Russell. Rogff' Smith. (2 hrs , 23 min )</p>
        <p>(USA) Night FUght Feature Film"</p>
        <p>3:050 Night Tracks</p>
        <p>3:300 Movie "Hatari'" (1962) John Wayne, Hardy Kruger (ARTS) Signature; Jacqueline Bisset A series featuring famous people interviewed without a studio audience or on-screen host Guest Jacqueline Bisset (ESPN) NFL Films Presentt Highlights of Super Bowl II (Green Bay Packers vs Oakland Raiders)</p>
        <p>4:000 Movie Casbah" (1948) Tony Martin, Marta Toren (ESPN) NFL Films PresenU</p>
        <p>Highlights of Super Bowl III (Baltimore Colts vs New York Jets)</p>
        <p>(LIFE) Investment Advisory (NICK) Turkey Television</p>
        <p>4:050 Night Tracks</p>
        <p>4:15 (DIS) Movie "Thunder In me Valley" (1947) Lon McCallister. Edmund Gwenn (1 hr, 43 min ) (MAX) Movie Personal Best (1982) Mariel Hemingway. Patrice Donnelly (2 hrs, 4 min)</p>
        <p>4:30 (BET) Video Vibrations (ESPN) NFL Films Presents</p>
        <p>Highlights of Super Bowl IV (Minnesota Vikings vs Kansas City Chiefs)</p>
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        <p>TV-14 The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.  Sunday, January 18.1987</p>
        <p>Movie Break-Out</p>
        <p>MONDAY</p>
        <p>JANUARY 19,1987 DAYTIME MOVIES</p>
        <p>6:00 (SHOW) Once Bitten (1985) 7:00 (MAX) Beyond The Poseidon Adventure (1979)</p>
        <p>(TMC) The Cruel Sea (1953) 7:39 (SHOW) "Mommie Dearest (1981)</p>
        <p>9:00(MAX) Blood Alley (1955) (TMC) "Sharma And Beyond (1984)</p>
        <p>9:30 (DIS) Gullivers Travels (1977)</p>
        <p>10:00 (SHOW)Crisis (1950) 10:090 The Promise Of Love (1980)</p>
        <p>10:10 (TMC) Superman (1978) 11:00 (MAX) Sweet Dreams - (1985)</p>
        <p>12:00 (ARTS) If I Were Rich (1934)</p>
        <p>(SHOW) Lady Jane (1986)</p>
        <p>1.00 (DIS)  The Girl Next Door  (1953)</p>
        <p>(MAX) "The Member Of The Wedding (1953)</p>
        <p>(TMQ Torchlight (1984) 1:090 "Six Bridges To Cross " (1955)</p>
        <p>3:00 (TMQ  The Cruel Sea (1953) 3:30 (MAX)  Operation Pacific (1951)</p>
        <p>4:00(ARTS) Little Lord FauntIeroy"(1936)</p>
        <p>(LIFE) "Sparkle (1976)</p>
        <p>9:00 (SHOW) Alices Adventures In Wonderland" (1972)</p>
        <p>(TMC) Pale Rider (1985)</p>
        <p>5:30 (MAX) Silverado (1985)</p>
        <p>TUESDAY</p>
        <p>JANUARY 20,1987 DAYTIME MOVIES</p>
        <p>909 (TMC) Animals Are Beautiful People (1975)</p>
        <p>9:10 (MAX) The Split (1968)</p>
        <p>0:90 (SHOW) "Ape And Super-Ape (1973)</p>
        <p>7:00 (TMC)  Ticket To Hollywood (1980)</p>
        <p>GREENVILLE AUTO CENTER</p>
        <p>7:30 (MAX) "The Last Time I Saw Paris (1954)</p>
        <p>8:00 (SHOW) Firstborn (1984) 8:30 (TMC) Conan The Barbarian (1982)</p>
        <p>9:30 (DIS) "The Kids Who Knew Too Much  (1980)</p>
        <p>(MAX) "The Ice Pirates" (1984) 10:00 (SHOW) "Cattle King (1963) 10:050 The Wild Surf (1964)</p>
        <p>11:00 (TMC) Carbine Williams (1952)</p>
        <p>11:30 (MAX) Thats Dancing! (1985)</p>
        <p>(SHOW) "Dune (1984) 12:00(ARTS) Little Lord Fauntleroy (1936)</p>
        <p>(USA) "Fighting Back (1982) 1:00 (DIS) Beau Brummel (1954) (1MC)Nighthawks(1981) 1:090 Sign Of The Pagan (1955)</p>
        <p>1:30 (MAX) Lost Horizon (1937) 2:00 (SHOW) J. Edgar Hoover (1987)</p>
        <p>3:00 (TMC)  The Last Run (1971) 4:00 (ARTS) My Dear Secretary (1948)</p>
        <p>(LIFE) "An Almost Perfect Affair" (1979)</p>
        <p>4:30 (MAX)  The Great Muppet Caper" (1981)</p>
        <p>5:00 (TMC) A Woman Of Paris  (1923)</p>
        <p>5:30 (SHOW) "Ape And Super-</p>
        <p>Ape" (1973)</p>
        <p>WEDNESDAY</p>
        <p>JANUARY 21,1987 DAYTIME MOVIES</p>
        <p>5:00 (TMC) A Woman Of Paris (1923)</p>
        <p>9:15 (MAX) The Manhunt (1984) 8:30 (^Q Animals Are Beautiful People (1975)</p>
        <p>7:00 (MAX) Cant Stop The Music (1980)</p>
        <p>(SHOW) "Eddie And The Cruisers (1983)</p>
        <p>9:00 (TMC) Torchlight (1984) 9:30 (DIS)  The Littlest Horse Thieves (1977)</p>
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        <p>10:00 (MAX)  Just One Of The Guys (1985)</p>
        <p>(SHOW) Lullaby Of Broadway (1951)</p>
        <p>10:09 O Rachel And The Stranger (1948)</p>
        <p>11:00 (TMQ The Cruel Sea (1953) 12:00 (ARTS) My Dear SecreUry (1948)</p>
        <p>(MAX) Gotcha! (1985)</p>
        <p>(SHOW) Mask (1985)</p>
        <p>(USA) The July Group (1981) 1:00 (DIS) The Great Caruso (1950)</p>
        <p>(TMC) Pale Rider (1985) 1:090 Lost In A Harem (1944) 2:00 (MAX) Carson City (1952) (SHOW) Eddie And The Cruisers" (1983)</p>
        <p>3:00 (TMC) Animals Are Beautiful People (1975)</p>
        <p>3:30 (MAX)  Summer Of 42 (1971)</p>
        <p>4:00 (ARTS) Northern Lights (1978)</p>
        <p>5:00 (TMC) Kiss Me Kate (1953) 5:30 (MAX) Second Fiddle (1939)</p>
        <p>THURSDAY</p>
        <p>JANUARY 22,1987 DAYTIME MOVIES</p>
        <p>9:30 (MAX) Alamo Bay (1985) 8:00 (SHOW) Marie (1985)</p>
        <p>6:30 (TMC) Superman (1978)</p>
        <p>7:30 (MAX) French Lesson (1985)</p>
        <p>8:00 (SHOW) Young Sherlock Holmes (1985)</p>
        <p>9:00 (MAX)  She Wore A Yellow Ribbon (1949)</p>
        <p>(TMC) Carbine Williams (1952)</p>
        <p>9:30 (DIS) "The Black Hole (1979)</p>
        <p>l(kOO(SHOW)  On The Town</p>
        <p>(1949)</p>
        <p>10:050 "Executive Suite (1954) 10:39 (TMC) Sharma And Beyond (1984)</p>
        <p>11:00(MAX) Turk 182! (1985) 12:00 (ARTS) Northern Lights (1978)</p>
        <p>(SHOW) 'Beyond The Poseidon Adventure (1979)</p>
        <p>(TMC) The Last Run (1971) (USA) "The Word (1978)</p>
        <p>1:00 (DIS) 0. Henrys Full House (1952)</p>
        <p>(MAX)  That Forsyte Woman</p>
        <p>(1950)</p>
        <p>1:090 Fury (1936)</p>
        <p>2:00 (SHOW)  The Jewel Of The Nile (1985)</p>
        <p>(TMC)  Conan The Barbarian (1982)</p>
        <p>3:00 (MAX) Silverado (1985)</p>
        <p>4:00 (ARTS) The Overlanders (1946)</p>
        <p>(LIFE) Just Tell Me You Love Me (1979)</p>
        <p>4:30 (TMC)  Carbine Williams (1952)</p>
        <p>9:30 (MAX) "Diane (1956)</p>
        <p>FRIDAY</p>
        <p>JANUARY 23,1987 DAYTIME MOVIES</p>
        <p>9:19 (TMC) The Last Run (1971) 8:00 (SHOW) A Piano For Mrs.</p>
        <p>Cimino(1982)</p>
        <p>7:30 (MAX) Animals Are Beautiful People (1975)</p>
        <p>(TMC) Sombrero (1953)</p>
        <p>8:00 (SHOW) National Lampoons European Vacation (1985)</p>
        <p>9:00 (MAX) Operation Pacific &amp;lt;^551)    .  </p>
        <p>9:30 (DIS) "Green Mansions (1959)</p>
        <p>(TMC) The Longshot (1986) 10:00(SHOW) Breakthrough (1950)</p>
        <p>10:050 Seven Women (1966) 11:00 (MAX) Sylvester (1985) (TMC) The Jazz Singer (1953) 12:00 (ARTS) The Overlanders (1946)</p>
        <p>(USA) The Word (1978)</p>
        <p>12:30 (SHOW) Reds (1981)</p>
        <p>1:00 (DIS) Maryland (1940) (MAX) The Sluggers Wife (1985)</p>
        <p>(TMQ Firstborn (1984)</p>
        <p>1:050 Ghost Of Zorro (1959) 3:00 (MAX) Harvey Middleman, Fireman (1965)</p>
        <p>3:30 (TMC) Agatha (1979)</p>
        <p>4:00 (ARTS) Against The Wind (1949)</p>
        <p>(LIFE) Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy (1981)</p>
        <p>4:30 (MAX) Blood Alley (1955) 5:30 (TMC) D.A.R.Y.L. (1985)</p>
        <p>Its Happy Trails For Ex-Cowboy Hewitt</p>
        <p>By Jay Carman</p>
        <p>George Hewitt likes to refer to himself as the old cowboy, and his status as a former rodeo champ certainly entitles him to the status.</p>
        <p>Hes a rancher with a huge spread near Owen Sound, Ont., and he's got hundreds of ridin, ropin and trail-ridin stories in his memory banks.</p>
        <p>But dont let that fool you. Hewitt is as sophisticated a showman as they come and his Open Roads series is devoted to a lot more than bucking broncos and herding cattle.</p>
        <p>In fact, the shows breadth is precisely the reason that it has become one of the least-sung successes in the Canadian television industry. Virtually unassisted, the 50-year-old cowboy has rustled himself up personal syndication that now extends to 21 major TV channels and 50 repeater stations frnn coast to coast.</p>
        <p>Open Roads is just the sort of success story that TV insiders will swear is impossible in this day and age. But then, of course, they would also have you believe that a budget of a measly 310,000 per episode is as viable as wings on pigs.</p>
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        <p>Hewitt just laughs at them He knows better. He has known it since back in 1976, when Open Roads first hit the airwaves on a single station in Kitchener, Ont. And 11 years later, he and his partner, John Peterson, who also serves as director and camera operator, are still going strong.</p>
        <p>At this writing, they have about 350 half-hour episodes under their ornate belt buckles. Each show is similar as far as intent goes, and completely different when it comes to content.</p>
        <p>Hewitt is fond of saying his show is a window on Canada and that all be wants "is to show neighbors to each other. To that end, he and Peterson spend much of the year hitching up the modern-day equivalent of the Wild West wagon train - a well-equipped, well-stocked mobile home that has so far logged half a million miles.</p>
        <p>Hewitt's beloved trailer has lumbered all the way from northern Ontario for stories about shipwrecks off Tobermory Island up to the Yukon to catch dangerous white-water rafting competitions.</p>
        <p>Yes, the dynamic duo has done its share of rodeo stories. But Hewitt says hes just as interested in city folks and how they live their lives. Hewitt has tried both ways of living himself.</p>
        <p>He grew up in the auto-manufacturing city of Windsor, Ont., dreaming of being a cowboy. At 18, he ran away to the rodeo and became a champion bronc and bull rider on the Canadian and American circuits.</p>
        <p>But when the inevitable broken bones and assorted other injuries finally caught up with him, Hewitt went into rodeo and sports announcing. After a brief interval as a singing cowboy, which, incredibly enough, included being on the same bill as the Rolling Stones in an English concert ball, Hewitt figured out what be really wanted to do.</p>
        <p>He's been doing it ever since with Open Roads.</p>
        <p>_JTHURSDAYco^lTi^</p>
        <p>(Continued From Page 10)</p>
        <p>(ARTS) Prodigy Dimitris Sgouros Plays Chopin This 13-year-old prodigy plays Chopins Concerto No. 1 in a performance tap^ in 1982 at the Caracas Conservatory of Music in Venezuela. (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>(E^hO Skiing World Cup Freestyle Championship, from Breckenridge, Colo. (R)</p>
        <p>(LIFE) Investment Advisory</p>
        <p>(NICK) Route 66 (TMC) Movie Conan The Barbarian (1982) Arnold Schwarzenegger, James Earl Jones. (2 hrs., 9 min.)</p>
        <p>3:25 (MAX) Movie Frank And I (1982) Jennifer Inch. (1 hr., 30 min.)</p>
        <p>3:30 (DIS) Movie Tender Mercies (1983) Robert Duvall, Tess Harper. (1 hr., 30 min.)</p>
        <p>(ESPN) World Of Sports 4:00 (BET) Video Vibrations (E^N) CoUege Basketball Cincinnati at Louteville (R) (2 hrs.) (UFE) Investment Advisory (NICK) Movie Tulsa (1949) Susan Hayward, Robert Preston. (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>(SHOW) Jennifers Journey The</p>
        <p>adventures of 15-year-oId Jennifer and her 10-year-old brother Michael, who take off with the family houseboat when they learn that it may be sold. (Part 3 of 4).</p>
        <p>4:300 Movie Spoilers Of The Forest (1957) Rod Cameron, Vera Ralston. (1 hr., 30 min.) (SHO^ Puddnhead Wilaoa Ken Howard stars in Mark Twains classic pre-Civil War story involving a m^tery based on mistaken identities that is solved by the towns lawyer, Puddnhead Wilson. (1 hr., 30 min.)</p>
        <p>(l^) Movie Nasty Habits (1976) Glenda Jackson, Melina Mercouri. (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>4:900 World At Large (MAX) Movie Head Office (1986) Judge Reinhold, Eddie Albert. (1 hr., 31 min.)</p>
        <p>Rock n Roll Rewind</p>
        <p>As rock parties go, this had plenty to twist n shout about, said USA Today about MTVs 1986 Video Music Awards. Now vi-deophiles who missed the live New York and Los Angeles telecasts in September can re-live the excitement with Warner Reprise Videos 41-minute release The MTV Video Music Awards Collection. Included are award-winning videos by Dire Straits, Prince, Pet Shop Boys, Janet Jackson and Motley * Crue.</p>
        <p>The Plaza Merchants</p>
        <p>p2^</p>
        <p>Invite You To Attend The Second Annual</p>
        <p>RADIOTHON</p>
        <p>To Benefit</p>
        <p>CEREBRAL PALSY</p>
        <p>Sunday, January 18th At The Plaza 1 P.M. T 7 P.M.</p>
        <p>Enjoy an afternoon of local entertainment concluding with...</p>
        <p>*The Breeze Band</p>
        <p> Were ^Close To Horoe...The Plaza,, Greenville</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0043" />
        <p>WEDNESDAYcont.</p>
        <p>(Continued From Page 7)</p>
        <p>8:00 O Movie The Human Jungle (1954) Gary Merrill, Jan Sterling. (1 hr., 30 min.)</p>
        <p>(ARTS) Evening At The Improv (ESPN) AcUon Outdoors With Julius Boros</p>
        <p>(LIFE) Investment Advisory (NICK) Route 66 (TMC) Movie Kiss Me Kate (1953) Kathryn Grayson, Howard Keel. (1 hr., 49 min.)</p>
        <p>S 30(DIS) Movie The Three Caballeros (1945) Animated. (1 hr., 10 min.)</p>
        <p>(ESPN) CoUe^ BasketbaU Vil-lanova at Syracuse (R) (2 hrs.) (USA) Candid Camera 8:35 (SHOW) White Mane The</p>
        <p>Cannes Film Festival award-winning tale of a wild white</p>
        <p>stallion who eludes capture until he encounters a loving young boy.</p>
        <p>4:00 (BET) Video Vlhraoiis (LDFE) Investment Advisory (MAX) Movie Commando (1985) Arnold Schwarzenegger, Rae Dawn Chong. (1 hr., 30 min.)</p>
        <p>(NICK) Movie An Inspector Calls (1954) Alastair Sim, Eileen Moore. (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>(l^) Movie Mr. Sycamore (1974) Jason Robards, Jean Simmons. (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>4:800 Movie Highway Dragnet (1954) Richard Conte, Joan Bennett. (1 hr., 30 min.)</p>
        <p>4:45(DIS)DTV</p>
        <p>4:500 World At Large</p>
        <p>SOAP OPERA WEEK</p>
        <p>Hopes to see more of GH star</p>
        <p>By Kimberly Redmond</p>
        <p>Please tell me all about Ian Buchanan, the actor who portrays Duke Lavery on General Hospital. I hope he will be on the show for a very long time. Id also like his address.  P.B., Far Rockaway, NY.</p>
        <p>Ian Buchanan</p>
        <p>Buchanan was born in East Kilbridge, Scotland, and grew up in the Scottish countryside. His Scottish burr was a bit of a problem when he first came to the United States, but now Buchanan says that when he returns home his family has a hard time understanding his American accent. A former model, his modeling jobs took him to Japan. Italy and France, He was dubbed Mr Walkman" in Japanese TV commercials that introduced the Walkman radios to the Orient. Despite the traveling and the glamour his modeling jobs brought him. Buchanan longed</p>
        <p>to embark on a serious acting career He came to New York City three years ago when he joined the Ford Modeling Agency. Soon after his arrival, Buchanan began studying acting at the Strasberg Theater Institute, Buchanans role on GH" is his first professional acting job. You can write to Buchanan c o "General Hospital." ABC-TV, 4151 Prospect Avenue. Hollywood. CA 90067</p>
        <p>I've been watching Another World for many years. Im quite puzzled by the fact that Matthew Cory, who is really about five years old, has suddenly been aged to about nine years old. He used to be several years younger than his sister, Amanda, who when I last saw her on screen appeared to be younger than Matthew. Can you explain this?  A.B., Prince Albert Island, Sask. Canada.</p>
        <p>It's true that Matthew is several years younger than his half-sister. Amanda Matthew, now played by Daniel Dale, was aged for plot-line purposes when his father. Mitch Blake (played by William Gray Espy), returned to the story line. We havent seen Amanda for many moons, but if, and when, she does reappear, she'll no doubt have blossomed into a teenager</p>
        <p>(Have a question about soap operas? Write Kimberly Redmond at 200 Park Ave., Room 602, Sew York, SY I0I66. Questions cannot be answered personally, but those of general interest will be answered in future columns.)</p>
        <p>LCtUS</p>
        <p>ambz you...</p>
        <p>mXl) CPRNC,</p>
        <p>Quality, aND SRViCC.</p>
        <p>Zl) PnfORMaNC PRiNtcns</p>
        <p>-  '  2901  s.  VS    GREENVILLE\</p>
        <p> * &amp;gt;****</p>
        <p>VllOE</p>
        <p>NTAMSlE the UETTgRS AMP USE THE CLUE SHOWN 10 SPELL THE NAME op A oiaarcf/.pREPOcei?,</p>
        <p>%</p>
        <p>VTnSEE</p>
        <p>Crockett (Don Johnson, I.) and Tubbs (Philip Michael Thomas) are at a disadvantage during a swank party where they are posing as drug dealers. The Cuba Libre episode of Miami Vice airq. Friday, Jan. 23, on NBC.</p>
        <p>Just One Check A Month Pays For Annes Tuition, Bobbys Braces, And The New Kitchen Cabinets.</p>
        <p>Let A First Union Mortgage Home Equity Loan Help Manage Your Bills.</p>
        <p>Now Fu^t Union Mortgage can arrange a personal payment plan to make your bill paying easier tlun ever before Because each month, you'll make only one affordable, prearranged payment Call First Union Mortgage today to see what your low monthly payment could be, based on our low fixed rates  ri</p>
        <p>A S)dhwdur&amp;gt; olFint I'mon NatMnal Eaak. Ctartonc. N C  B</p>
        <p>ROCK VIEW</p>
        <p>Hot rockers burn their way to the top</p>
        <p>By Marianne Meyer</p>
        <p>Take it literally that the Vmnie Vincent Invasion is a hot new band  in their premiere video clip "Boys .Arc (ionna Rock." the hcavy-metal quartet plays on through a pyrotechnic onslaught - the-most lavish attempted in a music video to date Bassist Dana Strum's description I felt like a piece of toast'</p>
        <p>Vinnie Vincent</p>
        <p>Fire marshals watched as amplifiers exploded, instruments burst into llame and a stuntman did a lull burn catching fire in an asbestos suit tor the rowdy tinale .Meanwhile, an anxious aide stood by former Kiss member Vinnie Vincent with a wet blanket should the new guitar star suddenly burst into llame too A leehmeian explained He s wearing one ol the most flammable substances known hairspray'</p>
        <p>The band spent over 29 hours desiroving .$16.(Mi(i</p>
        <p>worth of equipment for the clip Vincent admits, "It s a little heavy, but wo do it in the name of rock n' roll "</p>
        <p>The equipment-bashing may recall The Who in their early destructo days; the clip was directed by Jeff Stem, who put together The Whos feature film The Kids Are Alright The performance is representative of the Invasion's live show, though they re not allowed to use the pyro effects as an opening act (they're on the road now witli Iron Maiden I But when the group headlines, iliey do burn things up aboye and beyond Vincent's scorching solos The hand is being highly touted in the metal arena for Vincent s unique three-finger picking style, which gives him speed lar beyond most metal-men Its a technique he learned from his father's pedal-steel country band, and the Guitar Institute of Technology wants to put it on videotape for posterity Though Vincent might easily have honed his craft to a mainstream edge, he swears that heavy metal is the stage setting lor great guitar playing Not a bad place to meet women, eiiher The Invasion's latest mission is to assemble the lirst all lernale road crew lor their next tour, they re accepting applications trom wDinen who are photogenic, sdciable have musical experience a know ledge of electronics. and &amp;lt;an lill heavy weights</p>
        <p>Watch nut. wdiiien it could get hot</p>
        <p>Cyprc Creek Towphonje</p>
        <p>This lovely brick ranch is located m quiet wooded subdivision just minutes from Greenville. 1,600 plus square feet, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, great room with fireplace, dining room and breakfast nook in large kitchen. All this for $75.000.</p>
        <p>w.g. blount &amp;amp; associates</p>
        <p>756-3000 or 355-6330</p>
        <p>Office Hours: Monday*Friday, 9 a.m.5:30 p.m. Saturday, 10 a.m.-3 p.m. Sunday, 1 p.m.-3 p.m.</p>
        <p>201 -A Cofnmrc StfMt</p>
        <p>756-5455</p>
        <p>FMIMm</p>
        <p>Cwi</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0044" />
        <p>Sports This Week</p>
        <p>SUNDAYS SPORTS JANUARY 18,1987</p>
        <p>12;S0 O Championship Fishing</p>
        <p>1:000 CoUege Basketball North Carolina State at North Carolina (Live; (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>3:000 SportsWorld Scheduled: World Professional Figure Skating Championships, from Capital Centre in Landover, Md. (Taped) (1 hr, 30 min.)</p>
        <p>4:300 PGA Golf Bob Hope Chrysler Classic, final round. (Live) (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>11:30 Q) Jim Valvano 12:00 O Dean Smith 12:30 Duke Basketball Highlights 1:00  Southern Sportsman</p>
        <p>SATURDAYS SPORTS JANUARY 24,1987</p>
        <p>1:000 College Basketball Regional coverage of Arizona at Illinois or Temple at Alabama-Birmingham. (Live) (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p> Sports Center 1:30 College Basketball Duke at Clemson (Live) (2 hrs., 20 min.)</p>
        <p>3:000 College Basketball Notre Dame at UCLA (Live) (2 hrs.) 3:50  College Basketball Wake Forest at Virginia (Live) (2 hrs., 10 min.)</p>
        <p>7:00  Road To Super Bowl 87 A</p>
        <p>look at the two teams playing in Super Bowl XXI and a review of the NFL season in general. (1</p>
        <p>hr.)</p>
        <p>11:15  Sports Saturday 11:30 Wrestling</p>
        <p>College Hoops Action Fills Football Void</p>
        <p>ByAdamBeckennao</p>
        <p>You can turn to CBS, NBC or even ABC on Sunday, Jan. 18, and you wont find a single NFL game to watch. This week's hiatus between the conference championships and the Super Bowl is intended to get the United States of America frothing in anticipation of what annually degenerates into the largest mass anti-climax on network television.</p>
        <p>Hence, the football void will be filled by these offerings</p>
        <p> ABC trots out its college basketball shoes. A doubleheader, no less: defending NCAA champ Louisville at Purdue, and LSI at Kentucky. Al Michaels will do play-by-play of the premiere game along with former University of Kentucky coach Joe B. Hall, who at one time was the most hated man in the Bluegrass State because he only won one national title. As usual, the Cardi-</p>
        <p>Pythons Madness Flies On To Home Video</p>
        <p>By Frank Lovece</p>
        <p>There really is no person named Monty Python But there really were six guys called, collectively, Monty Python - as in "Monty Pythons Flying Circus,' the absurd, abstract and abundantly funny British TV series that often air on PBS. Now, at last, not only has Monty Python" come to video, but so have two other hilarious half-hour series by Python alumni: John Cleeses "Fawlty Towers and Michael Palin and Terry Jones' "Ripping Yams."</p>
        <p>While Fawlty Towers" was inspired farce - a universally popular form of comedy - "Monty Python" and Ripping Yarns" dealt in parody and satire that often sprang from what to American viewers might have been obscure references boarding schools, British folk hero Dennis Moore, the novel "Wuthering Heights, " Yet somehow, the humorous elements translate, "So long as there s any convention," says Palin, it doesn I matter if it's a Jackie Collins story or an old British schoolboy's adventure Once It has a certain style, it becomes a target for parody"</p>
        <p>Palm and Jones' "Ripping Yarns" skewers those targets in a more straightforward fashion than did the free form Monty Python, Each of the nine episodes takes and twists a familiar young man s adventure tale," similar to the Hardy Boys.</p>
        <p>"We wanted them to be funny on their own, so that even if you dont know the antecedents, you can still enjoy the story,' Palin says.</p>
        <p>nals are struggling inthe early going, while coach Gene Keadys Boilermakers are acting like legitimate Final Four participants.</p>
        <p>In the thoroughly entertaining Dick Vitale's "Basketball 86-87 (3uide, Coach V writes: If everything goes right for Keady, his Boilermakers could win it all." Vitale will be doing color beside Keith Jackson courtside at the Tiger-Wildcat game. If you dont have cable and haven't ever heard this bald, nearsighted used-car dealer-type B-ball cheerleader, please, be patient. He has got asgood a court sense as Billy Packer and as eclectic a hoops lexicon as Al McGuire. Plus, he's the only one of the three with his own sneaker contract.</p>
        <p>Also on Sunday, CBS has Syracuse vs. Michigan, two schools that always tease their faithful into thinking this could be the year, only to go belly up at tournament time, and NBC gives us North Ca-</p>
        <p>TV Circles</p>
        <p>rolina State vs. North Carolina.</p>
        <p>* Over in Palm Springs, Calif., financially gifted amateurs have been golfing on the four magnificent courses that comprise the Bob Hope Chrysler Classic for four days now, along with the pros who are trying to win the event. NBC airs the fifth round of play on Sunday,</p>
        <p>* By Monday night, the big game is only six days away. Wouldnt watching a fan chosen from the stands win million be a satisfying way to end the first day of the work week At halftime of the CBA Topeka Sizzler-Wyoming Wildcatter game on ESPN (the third in a season of 11 telecasts), one hopeful will stand at the foul line, aim for the basket above the opposite end line some 70 feet away,and heave-ho. In the four seasons of the Wilson 31 Million CBA Supershot, the fans have been held scoreless.</p>
        <p>By Gayle Discoe</p>
        <p>Words in the list below appear across, up. down, backwards and diagonally in the diagram. Find each word and circle it. Some circled letters appear in more than one word. Letters that form answers are left over. Arrange them in order to arrive at answer.</p>
        <p>Clue: A HALF DOZIN WAVES</p>
        <p>RUXBMSPEHYSSSUE E DA I OA EOGMKA I U E SVAE TOUVANNOHMD</p>
        <p>I I DAAOAY BYTNHPKL TOOCHCTM NDON E</p>
        <p>KMAT L SM I EEDEBL I RNB I L E NUOT I A I FARWECNYIEML TINLHROEXAER OAYAERTCMPTF A</p>
        <p>VTCBT S H M H V AUC I I NARNB</p>
        <p>EXE TCE I E S OP D AHC F NOOY</p>
        <p>TBOIOBRUAM</p>
        <p>CNOENTA LOF EAUTYEE I E F YPGNUOYXESDRLNS</p>
        <p>(SOLUTION: 11 letters, 2 words )</p>
        <p>ABC: Beauty, Boom Boom Room, Cha Cha, City, Daphne, Dave, Delay, Detectives, Diane McBain, Entertainer, Exchange, Exciting, Fountainebleau, Fun, Home, Hotel. Houseboat, Ken, Kooky. Miami, Neon, Number, Office, Pattern. Private. Sandy, Seemly, Sexy, Sporty, Style, Telephone, Trio, Troy Donahue, Van Williams, Yacht. Young</p>
        <p>C ftotuft Sndi&amp;lt;oit, Int</p>
        <p>x|$ opmins :MSNV</p>
        <p>NOW THRU SATURDAY, JAN. 24th</p>
        <p>Odd groups of Fine Mens Apparel including Suits, Sportcoats, Jackets, Sweaters, Sport Shirts, Dress Shirts, Pants, Ties, Topcoats, All-Weather Coats and Shoes.</p>
        <p>PRICE</p>
        <p>ALL ALTERATIONS EXTRA</p>
        <p>MENS WEAR</p>
        <p>Downtown Greenville Carolina East Mall Tarrytown Mall, Rocky Mount</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0045" />
        <p>OPEN 24 HOmif EVERYAY</p>
        <p>f</p>
        <p>PC 1 EKLMNOWX</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0046" />
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        <p>OVER THE curnNQi AND TRAY</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0047" />
        <p>f</p>
        <p>) the SINK 1NQ BOARD IRAY</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0048" />
        <p>AVAJUBLE AT KROGER 8AV-0N 8TQRE8 IN, CHARLOTTE. GASTONIA, SALISBURY, HIpKORY, FAYETTEVILLE, WILMINQTON, GREENVILLE. ROCK HILL, MYRTLE BEACH. COLUMBIA FLORENCE, CHARLESTON.</p>
        <p>SAVANNAH.</p>
        <p>HOUSEHOLD PLASTICS</p>
        <p>YOUR CHOICE</p>
        <p> 4-QT. COLANDER</p>
        <p> 7-QT. VANITY WASTE BASKET</p>
        <p> HANDY BASKET</p>
        <p> 2 PK. ICE CUBE TRAY</p>
        <p> BOWL BRUSH HOLDER</p>
        <p> WATERING CAN</p>
        <p> SPRAY BOTTLE</p>
        <p> STACKABLE BINS</p>
        <p>EACH</p>
        <p>PICTURE FRAMES</p>
        <p> DELUXE METAL FRAME ASSORTMENT</p>
        <p> PHOTO CUBE AND PENCIL HOLDER</p>
        <p> BLACK 5 X 7 EASEL</p>
        <p> BRAG BOOK</p>
        <p>YOUR CHOICE</p>
        <p>EACH</p>
        <p>HOUSEHOLD PLASTICS</p>
        <p>YOUR CHOICE</p>
        <p> SMALL STACKING BIN, WHITE</p>
        <p> ASSORTED SOAP DISHES</p>
        <p> MINI HANDY BASKETS</p>
        <p> 55-CT. FLEXIBLE STRAWS</p>
        <p> 2-PK. NON-STICK SPONGE</p>
        <p> DISH BRUSHES</p>
        <p>For</p>
        <p>bLOSET ACCESSORIES</p>
        <p> AMBER TRAY ORGANIZER</p>
        <p> UTILITY KNIFE</p>
        <p> 6-TIER SKIRT RACK</p>
        <p> SET OF 5 ADD-A-HANGER</p>
        <p> 4 SKIRT AND</p>
        <p>BLOUSE HANGERS</p>
        <p> 5-TIER SLACK RACK</p>
        <p> OVERDOOR HANGER</p>
        <p> KITCHEN SCRIBBLER WITH PAD</p>
        <p>YOUR CHOICE</p>
        <p>EACH</p>
        <p>CLEANING SUPPLIES</p>
        <p> 20-CT. SPONGES</p>
        <p> 4 SO. YDS. CHEESECLOTH</p>
        <p> IRON SHAPED BRUSH</p>
        <p>imOT. PAIL</p>
        <p> KITCHEN BRUSH</p>
        <p> 3 SCOURING PADS</p>
        <p> 4 CLEANING PADS</p>
        <p> 8 FEATHER DUSTER</p>
        <p> 18 FEATHER DUSTER</p>
        <p>YOUR CHOICE</p>
        <p>EACH</p>
        <p>ASSORTED PLASTICWARE</p>
        <p>$</p>
        <p>PLASTIC BOWLS AND CUPS</p>
        <p>YOUR</p>
        <p>CHOICE</p>
        <p> PINT FOOD CONTAINER 5-CT.</p>
        <p> JUART FOOD CONTANER 3-CT.</p>
        <p>For</p>
        <p> Va GAL. FOOD CONTAINER 3-CT.</p>
        <p> STORAGE BOX</p>
        <p> 5 QT. BUCKET WITH SPONGES</p>
        <p>ALMOND OR YELLOW 16-OZ. TUMBLERS</p>
        <p>For</p>
        <p>KITCHEN PLASTICS</p>
        <p> OVAL LAUNDRY BASKETS</p>
        <p> JUMBO STORAGE BINS</p>
        <p> 2-PC. DISH DRAINER SET - ALMOND</p>
        <p>YOUR CHOICE</p>
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        <pb facs="00096520_0049" />
        <p>
        </p>
        <p>y</p>
        <p>ANSER</p>
        <p>^jS0Sffi3jg</p>
        <p>#</p>
        <p>rwnv|j|</p>
        <p>n</p>
        <p>NET</p>
        <p>Cuas hod</p>
        <p>v&amp;lt;i&amp;gt;;</p>
        <p>pon</p>
        <p>AOmCD FOmjLA</p>
        <p>Cres</p>
        <p>NEW LOW PRICE'</p>
        <p>DtooolUhrr!</p>
        <p>3H  2$3  H  3H  H</p>
        <p>FOR I  for W  i  ^OR i  i</p>
        <p>Soap. Irish Spring 5oz or Flx shampoo or con- RuffiM .5-oz. bag.</p>
        <p>A|ox cleanser 14-oz. Tutsy cream or solid Crest 4.6-oz. regular,</p>
        <p>Sale prices good today through Wednesday, Jan. 21, 1987.</p>
        <p>ECKERd</p>
        <p>AMERICAS FAMILY DRUG STORE</p>
        <p>Come in and see how easy shopping can be</p>
        <p>60imu</p>
        <p>Vinii3in</p>
        <p>1.09</p>
        <p>CDco-Ooki pfodudi 2-Mor. Limit 3</p>
        <p>2</p>
        <p>FOR</p>
        <p>Poppycock 5-oz. cannlster</p>
        <p>Moybolllno Greot-Losh, Fresh Lash, Eye Styler or Blooming Colors shadow.</p>
        <p>2</p>
        <p>PKOS.</p>
        <p>L'oggs Regular pantyhose.</p>
        <p>lond&amp;lt;ild strips.</p>
        <p>l24oqpiul8iortablilsor KMERO longMe C ortr 2-pk. 4^ m. Limit 2  or  9^  1-pk.</p>
        <p>4  $2</p>
        <p>Dlj^ch T-120 blank video tope. Maxell UR 90-mlnute 2-pack.</p>
        <p>Quoker Mole HO30 1*qt.</p>
        <p>OPX AMfM dock racHo #0508. Bottery bCK:kHip and srKX&amp;gt;ze olorm. Reg 13.99 .</p>
        <p>OcHio moni water sport watch #F87W. Buit-in daly alarm.</p>
        <p>Rea 1495</p>
        <p>Homllton Beach con opener #829. RemoMOble cutting assembly for easy gleaning H.99</p>
        <p>Advantage plstic mini light #866 or Ightweight portable skvB 9 #2304-E. Reg. ^ 99 to 13.99  .  jg</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0050" />
        <p>r * \</p>
        <p>Learn more about symptoms of diabetes</p>
        <p>Bill Hillman</p>
        <p>Pharmacist of the Year Newberry, NC.</p>
        <p>Your Eckerd Pharmacist has a special program to help reduce the cost of diabetic care It s called D'abeticare As a member you II save on diabetic supplies and receive every seventh vial of insulin free An estimated 12 million people have diabetes, but nearly halt ot them don t know it. Today, this disease can be controlled, but first you mus know to look tor symptoms like  Frequent urination or extreme hunger</p>
        <p>V</p>
        <p> Unusual thirst or fatigue</p>
        <p> Drowsiness or blurred vision</p>
        <p> Rapid weight loss  \</p>
        <p>I you experience any ot these symptoms, see your doctor immediately for a simple blood glucose test And rely on your Eckerd Ptiarmacist for information on ttie latest de velopments in diabetic core i -nt-t i-r ,</p>
        <p>To an Eckerd Pharmacist, nothings more important than your health.</p>
        <p>ECKERD Cough Fonnulo M</p>
        <p>4-oz. formula.</p>
        <p>2.79</p>
        <p>ECKERD Com Rollof 50 tablets. ECKERD Irom-Topp 4-oz. elixir.</p>
        <p>1.49  1.29</p>
        <p>fom-Rilip 24 tablets. ECKERD Chett Rub 1.75-oz.</p>
        <p>Cltrucel 16-oz. jar</p>
        <p>Hbie Trtm 100 tablets.</p>
        <p>iUkoMlMr 24 tablels original or flavored.</p>
        <p>regular 100-pk. or maxirmim strer^ 60-pfc.</p>
        <p>AcWed 48 tablets.</p>
        <p>3.99</p>
        <p>Contac 20 capsules or caplets</p>
        <p>2.</p>
        <p>AMn 15-ml. regular or pump.</p>
        <p>1.39 Vltamin C 500-mg. 100 tablets.  laTT OyttorSheRl</p>
        <p>2.29 vmmln E 400 I.U. 100 capsulei  3*47 lSSaootaSrtl** ^</p>
        <p>vaporizer #120ai2&amp;amp;gal. capadly. rum 8-10 hours.</p>
        <p>AnANCl I) htlUK't^r y .</p>
        <p>1.77</p>
        <p>Equal 50 pockets.</p>
        <p>pa</p>
        <p>1.88</p>
        <p>PoiidenI 40 tabieti</p>
        <p>Hax 8-oz. bottle.</p>
        <p>nplaei</p>
        <p>8-oc. soluiioa R-0 with dgltal read-out and</p>
        <p>Iff</p>
        <p>beeper.</p>
        <p>imetapp</p>
        <p>I  .15k&amp;gt;z.  or  Bl^  .14-oz.</p>
        <p>rupHn 100 tabMi. Pompiln 24 tabtels 2 typei.</p>
        <p>Depend legutar 24^ or ta^ 18-pk.</p>
        <p>MmMbe4lttal|l8</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0051" />
        <p>ECKEI^Top names., Jop savings.</p>
        <p>9 00 Oglvtohome</p>
        <p>wi W W pemianent. Regular, extra or soft body.</p>
        <p>5i69 beauty 6-oz. regular or pump.</p>
        <p>OHof Otay</p>
        <p>rfluid</p>
        <p>99*</p>
        <p>4.99</p>
        <p>01 Of Otay</p>
        <p>27SOZ. beauty bar.</p>
        <p>of Otay</p>
        <p>nightcare cream 1.7-oi Jar.</p>
        <p>9 00 !&amp;lt;&amp;amp; twin  A OO</p>
        <p>7 7 pack drompoo  ^mWW</p>
        <p>or condmoner. AR typoi  tode cream y-ot 4 typee</p>
        <p>3.29 treatment 20*oz. 2.99 ftoftoolot</p>
        <p>Jar.ARtypes. VMh 299 mdHn nbota^ IHttaei</p>
        <p>$9 Pveffy Nous 5k)2.</p>
        <p>m non-acetone renrwMer wtti tee 2ok traveler and poWi</p>
        <p>$9* effy Nom 8k&amp;gt;2.</p>
        <p>M Initant remover with free 2-ol traveler and polish.</p>
        <p>Co(y ofreNm powder Mi*</p>
        <p>tCKHfP Jiieelnr deaner</p>
        <p>8-oz. liquid</p>
        <p>Look</p>
        <p>aerosol or pump.</p>
        <p>2.69</p>
        <p>Dry Ideo 25&amp;lt;. roN-on.</p>
        <p>nil SI H-oz. creme</p>
        <p>1199 as</p>
        <p>1250-watt dryer r|(0e5a3ln1 curling iron #CBSOO.</p>
        <p>Reg. 19.99</p>
        <p>19.99 4.00 ssa</p>
        <p>J5.99j___ /</p>
        <p>Ml. CoMm iHiilor 4^ coflMmakBf #JR-4. AutotnoDcalhr swIlctiM Aom brew to wann Reg. 23.99</p>
        <p>16.88</p>
        <p>2MS</p>
        <p>14.88 S,</p>
        <p>V &amp;gt;</p>
        <p>y mfi' If. ..</p>
        <p>Nomlllon Beach steom/dry Iron with sIVBrskxie soieplale #761-sa Easy-vlew water level window. Reg. 19.99</p>
        <p>MleneK Domed Smoke Grabber ashtray #ATD^ Operates on 2 "C batteries (not Induded). Reg. 19.99</p>
        <p>^**6.88</p>
        <p>tamNy Oe</p>
        <p>#FG488D.</p>
        <p>Oord smoke detector Reg. 8.99</p>
        <p>on traditional telephone. Pulse/tone swltchoble dialing and odMstable electionic ringer. Reg 3499</p>
        <p>liHiOi tastnimenti advanced sdenttfic ccfcutator with moth book #TI-350. Has 54 functions. Reg 22.99</p>
        <p>6.^7 Mdi</p>
        <p>OfX pocket rodk) wNh Rgfilwelght headphones #2090. Has convenient belt cNp. Reg 9.99</p>
        <p>39.99-</p>
        <p>MognovoK AM/FM cassette player #08040. Automatic frequency control. Reg. 49.99</p>
        <p>VHS T420 or BOo L-790 bfo* ddeo topa</p>
        <p>Hokb 36 oudta topei Reg 9.99</p>
        <p>B^x7*dearboKtame. Reg 189 r X or dear bew ham.  leo</p>
        <p>KM W 20-page.</p>
        <p>Holds any size print. Reg. 1.99 each.</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0052" />
        <p>I</p>
        <p>good today  ^</p>
        <p>WMnefday, Jan. 21. 1987^1</p>
        <p>ECKEip</p>
        <p>An AdvartMng Supptonwnl: NC. CM, AL EMion #8040117^' Second to none, Youre #1</p>
        <p>Margie Didley, Camera Associate Fort Myers, FLCount on us for savings Vblentine savings now.</p>
        <p>' ',6.'</p>
        <p>CariiW*  -</p>
        <p>tioiSr VA.tn '</p>
        <p>5.50^.</p>
        <p>-1.50</p>
        <p>4.00</p>
        <p>AmberglOMf JL Cose of 6 logs.</p>
        <p>1.29</p>
        <p>38 or 40-pk. Valentines. Reg. 1.89</p>
        <p>FOR</p>
        <p>Sweetheart assorted kids candy.</p>
        <p>Chocolate Hearts 8-oz. or 9-oz. bag</p>
        <p>Aloddbi kerosene heater. #TR3000. 10,500 BTU. Reg. 119.99</p>
        <p>29.88</p>
        <p>Ooloxy radiant heater #96009. Reg. 34.99</p>
        <p>99</p>
        <p>22-oz. scented oil.</p>
        <p>Mickey Mouse Luv Pops bag of 10.</p>
        <p>  Candy</p>
        <p>FOR I Conwrsotion. hearts, juju hearts and more.</p>
        <p>Greeting card with chocolate heart inside.</p>
        <p>FOR</p>
        <p>Personna twin 9-pk. or auto 10-pk.</p>
        <p>Palmolive</p>
        <p>Automatic</p>
        <p>Palmolive</p>
        <p>Liquid</p>
        <p>Child care intormatlon. Reg. 9.95</p>
        <p>shampoo,   ^ conditioner 16-oz., spray, hair spray gel 8-oz. or mousse 5-oz.</p>
        <p>5" UtMe DevH with message. 6" Rose Teddy  2.97</p>
        <p>Quaker snack bars assorted flavors.</p>
        <p>4 40 Cicno SMekii 30-pk. 2</p>
        <p>le IT Hjpes Comparo to Ootio  Ia*t7 16 Compae to Jolinionfk  Compare to Hoc 1</p>
        <p>4  2^012  types  4 AJ ICiaap UccaHve PWi QJC fCKBH) gta ete. re O OO</p>
        <p>le^7 Compote to Sute.  t#  aOpocH Oompom to &amp;amp;4ck  7#  32^ Congele to VMndex.  topack Conpoe tolcto</p>
        <p>It  9 AO teKmirnmiMf ditiiaint 4 90 ^DnnkllnwRiS^ 4 lOBHDMipoy 8^</p>
        <p>it  16-01. Compote toPondi. ^17 4k. Compom to\mSl leClr Compomto FeptomL Ie47 Oontoom toRMINet</p>
        <p>We</p>
        <p>SeN</p>
        <p>I MONEY ORDERSWe meive We rigM to Hmit quonlMe*. Al monutochNn nbciles am IfenHed to one per customer.  41^</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0053" />
        <p>I8852S 01/18/87 Advertising Supplement to: ASHEBORO COURIER TRIBUNE-BURLINGTON TIMES NEMS-DANVILLE REGISTER-GASTONIA GAZETTE-GREENVIUE REFLECTOR-HENDERSON DISPATCH-HICKORY RECORD-HIGH POINT ENTERPRISE-JACKSONVILLE NEUS-LEXINGTON DISPATCH-ROCK HILL HERALD-SALISBURY POST-THOMASVILLE TIMES-HILMINGTON STAR NEWSSURGEON GENERALS WARNING: Quitting Smoking Now Greatly Reduces Serious Risks to Your Health.</p>
        <p>ULTRA LIGHTS: 5 mg, "lar", 0.4 mg. nicotinfi av. pm cigareiie, FTC Repon JAN. '85: ULTRA LIGHTS lOOs b mg. "tar", 0,4 mg. nicotine: LIGHTS BOX lOO's: 111 mg. "tar",</p>
        <p>0.8 mg, nicotine, LIGHTS BOX: 11 mg, "tar", 0.7 mg. nicotine, LIGHTS: 11 mg. "tar", 0.8 mg. nicotine, LIGHTS lOO'S: 11 mg. "tar", 0.9 mg. nicotine, KING: 16 mg. "tar", 12 mg. nicotine, BOX: 17 mg. "tar", 1,1 mg. nicotine, lOO's: 18 mg. "tar", 1.2 mg. nicotine, av, per cigarette by PTC method</p>
        <p>^fvnstoB'</p>
        <p>I WAII INOHm I EXPIRES 3/78/87</p>
        <p>MAIL-IN CERTIFICATE FOR</p>
        <p>FREE CAP</p>
        <p>5H0G IMANIIffti.lliHlR f;f)llPIIN I EXPIRES 7/13/871 Uj</p>
        <p>1.50 OFF ACARTON OF WINSTON</p>
        <p>TERMS OF COUPON OFFER</p>
        <p>CONSUMER CAUTION'- j" '"' - '</p>
        <p>' M cotiied  y  eir'.a'-qi':''' v'e* "iutrr:</p>
        <p>saiti'aies Far:,:i|a'p|)i'1''htIfi-'"'a P t i" "" 'a .....</p>
        <p>paal s. r a' ,a" f. '*&amp;gt;.'    '</p>
        <p>a'a,' *' aa,'"Pi",'-a IIMIT ONE COUPON PER PURCHASE AND TO SMOKERS 21 YEARS OF AGE OR OLDER</p>
        <p>RETAILERS  ......</p>
        <p>'</p>
        <p>Mr,-.',')ufl' elP^'i' '</p>
        <p>'fie'p'y a.a al aiaaf. a'&amp;lt; a."'',' /pr  -f  ' i *</p>
        <p>W a.mauf-.a':  ,a at a -  .</p>
        <p>agf jjr,' a' 't * " " a- </p>
        <p>aapf, aaiui  iCOor.iyiM;',    tap:  Ma   -aaa-; "</p>
        <p>&amp;gt;'e Y) Bti TfJOt, Amsur Sa'er Nim'</p>
        <p>hTDG h^r.NlllAl.niHIH Mllll'IIN I EXPIRES 1/30/87]  M..50</p>
        <p>.50 OFF A CARTON OF WINSTON</p>
        <p>12300</p>
        <p>20278</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>TERMS OF COUPON OFFER CONSUMER CAUTION' ''&amp;gt;77,' ' g'.'.aVi 'y-'c';:-f.-afiqagt'v'.p-</p>
        <p>l-pa</p>
        <p>, an,-'a'..i</p>
        <p>12300</p>
        <p>20278</p>
        <p>'.d'-'  ||MIT</p>
        <p>ONf couPOM prn purchasi ano to SM0KCRS71 vrARSO AG( OR</p>
        <p>OLOTR</p>
        <p>RFTAIURS Mk'-;,'!' J- ..,; v - /</p>
        <p>rfi  ^  'Fi-.'.m- '-J/if' "  "</p>
        <p>r tj,'fW.i.f "iir,</p>
        <p>4, Jfi'-. ' Ci-  V 'I- '/!, A P V  1-  iit  I*-  'C</p>
        <p>HQF  VI  AY  Ik</p>
        <p>Stx</p>
        <p>MY USUAL BRAND IS</p>
        <p>n.50</p>
        <p>VALASS/S INSERTS</p>
        <p>7GGbS I *1-50</p>
        <p>7GGt.M</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0054" />
        <p>COMPARABLE RETAILVALUES1295</p>
        <p>*0R ORDER A SUPER BOWL CAP BY SENOING $12.95 PLUS $1.00 FOR POSTAGE AND HANDLING (CHECK OR MONEY ORDER), NAME ADDRESS (ZIP CODE REQUIRED) TO HOUSE OF HIBBERT, CN 05950, TRENTON, NJ 08650. ALLOW 4-6 WEEKS FOR SHIPMENT OFFER GOOD IN USA. OFFER VOlO WHERE RESTRICTEO OR PROHIBITED BY LAW. OFFER EXRES MARCH 28,1987.</p>
        <p>|MANIItAi:HlHtHi:nilPllN|tXPIRtSI/30./87| $1.50 I  iMANUEACTURfH  CllllPflN  I  EXPIRES  2.13/871  $1,</p>
        <p>*1.50 OFF ACARTON</p>
        <p>I  I  MAIL  iNOfEEfl  I  EXPIRES  3/28  87  |</p>
        <p>t-l P*A  I  MAIL-IN CERTIFICATE FOR</p>
        <p>^1.5001^1^  !  FREE CAP</p>
        <p>ACARTON</p>
        <p>GOOD FOR ANYSTYLE WINSTON</p>
        <p>M.50</p>
        <p>GOOD FOR ANYSTYLE WINSTON</p>
        <p>USE FIRST</p>
        <p>VDGbM I ^1.50</p>
        <p>USE SECOND</p>
        <p>7GGb5</p>
        <p>Til Id dvp J t'pp Siipd Biiai XXI rail simply T'ii iM thp rpvpisp snip 111 tins Inrni anil mail 111 amiiii rtiili tniii cailfin UPC AisoiNciunt asioocheck or MONEY ORDER f OR POSTAGE AND HANOLING DO NOT SEND CASH V.n 111 SiipPiBniAil CAP OFFER Hunspni HihtiPil CNOSRGO I'PiiM'i N,l OHEERO</p>
        <p>OHii rnlncttd 10 imohiii 21 vMii of l|&amp;lt; Of oWtf  owr-a rns'iMr</p>
        <p>ConomofiiHillpo*poilojo X ( "PS  itf-"''</p>
        <p>3P' "nkStPoic i sn p *pfi'.' ' s" rp" '"p' ami i-, ' ' c .PiP opp</p>
        <p>.j,J,,K  J*</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0055" />
        <p>4 *</p>
        <p>Greoivflle. North Cartdina</p>
        <p>C O M</p>
        <p>:&amp;gt;  -,V  ,  &amp;lt;</p>
        <p>c</p>
        <p>^' ' a^ifieds</p>
        <p>Tie Most</p>
        <p>Dont Mi)wTlii&amp;lt;Wed(( '</p>
        <p>:^</p>
        <p>Up*To-Date News &amp;amp; Sports</p>
        <p>PABADB</p>
        <p>Delivery Dial i . 75^4166 i.</p>
        <p>f</p>
        <p>*%ai/lT^ A LETTER</p>
        <p>, FROMYOR ,</p>
        <p>\BROTHERSPlKy</p>
        <p> _  ||||</p>
        <p>(^lOJv Jnotjp^^</p>
        <p>i44  cM/rp</p>
        <p>&amp;lt;t HirNL Xo ht J^ort^Ji^funJ'Jurto S'AfC  &amp;lt;id^.</p>
        <p>qOiWi^ &amp;lt;WL fftltJi &amp;lt;iAt ^</p>
        <p>jitMtMfm, i itvink lYM^ J/tl</p>
        <p>BLONPIE</p>
        <p>BY DEAN YOUNG &amp;amp; STAN DRAKE</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0056" />
        <p>DENNIS THE MENACE</p>
        <p>PRE-&amp;amp;/KWE maCAL REPORTS, TRlUlft COMTEStS, OPI^)IOMS, HIGH-U&amp;amp;HTS...PRE-&amp;amp;flME PL/W-6W-PWV REUlEWSOf PRJOR PRE-&amp;amp;flMES....</p>
        <p>...CUlMlMATlHfr NEXT SRTURDAV^ (N A LIVE, 2M-H0UR, NON-STOP TELECAST OF PRE-&amp;amp;/WIE OALA 5UPER60WL EVE FESTIVITIES//</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0057" />
        <p>ZIGGY</p>
        <p>BY TOM WILSON</p>
        <p>c</p>
        <p>tSum</p>
        <p>NANCY</p>
        <p>iv</p>
        <p>Featuring HAKRIIT RTANIjy n%RKBK</p>
        <p>Im looking for an all-purpose polish that will put a shine on my husband's dull ' personality."</p>
        <p>I was living behind your microwave. I guess I got too much radiation. Got a guest room I can use?</p>
        <p>&amp;lt;*He to&amp;amp;k up weight lifting once. The'ofw thing that got stronger yias his body odor.</p>
        <p>Never pet the neighbors cat with tuna on your breath!</p>
        <p>Remember yesterday, when you tossed a penny in the fountain and wished I had a . more bubbly personality?</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0058" />
        <p>DOONESBURY</p>
        <p>BY GARRY TRUDEAUFOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE</p>
        <p>BY LYNN JOHNSTON</p>
        <p>CAN YOU TRUST YOUR EYEST Thert art at laatt tin diffar tncM in drawlnfl dataiU bttwttn top and batfam panth. Haw auickty can yaw find them* Chack antwan with thata halaw.</p>
        <p>(MMW ) pIMH 9 piun a pNH S MffUM  jnidoi*|tg &amp;gt;  c  z  jaaaunanMOi  i  :MouaM||K]</p>
        <p>^uni^rWhir</p>
        <p>by Hal Kaufman</p>
        <p>a CATCH 26! Challanga: Starting at on# of tha Mtar Aa, and moving from aquara to aquara, acroaa, down</p>
        <p>,or diagonally, traca tha 26 lattara of tha alphabat In ordar In tha lattar diagram at right.</p>
        <p>Traca tha aaquanca In an unbrokan llna. You muat bagin wRh tha right lattar A.</p>
        <p>Mmm</p>
        <p>? ^ i</p>
        <p>iSf* '</p>
        <p>SUM MAGICAL NUMBERS</p>
        <p>Our magician friend above is toying with nine magical numbers. It is possible to insert these numbers in the small diagram in such a way that each row of three numbers  across, down and diagonally  will total exactly 33.</p>
        <p>For starters, let it be known that the unlucky number 13 occupies one of the diagrams four comers.</p>
        <p>Remember, the sum to be attained in each three-square row in all directions is 33.</p>
        <p>Can you achieve it?</p>
        <p> op pK 6 '61 S</p>
        <p>uMoq: 'u SI ojappiui t Cl aew MM &amp;lt;toi tf</p>
        <p>mmmm</p>
        <p> 000 LOTI Explain, if you can, thia vintaga varsHlad math: A third of twalva divida, by fuat a fiflh of aavan; and you will aoon decida, that thIa muat give alavan. How so?</p>
        <p>U m Mut (X (S) A Aq (ss) A1 ioim uouiou ap|A&amp;gt; Adwis</p>
        <p>STORY TIME! Apply crayons or colorad pencils naatfy to numbarad aagmanta above: 1Rad.2LL blua. 3YaHow. A--Lt. 8  Flaah tonaa. 6Qraan. 7Ok. brown. 8Purple.</p>
        <p>OEER iUI One of lour palhf raunRaa the Mam. upper tail, with Ita family. botWm rIgM. Whioh path?</p>
        <p>SPELLBINDER</p>
        <p>SCORE 10 points for using all the</p>
        <p>Iwo complata words:</p>
        <p>RMULSIOM</p>
        <p>----</p>
        <p>THEN score 2 pomti each far all ^ </p>
        <p>**</p>
        <p>found among tha Istlars. ^</p>
        <p>i!</p>
        <p>Tni laacMaatlqaallinalnIk j,, ^</p>
        <p>_.IjH</p>
        <p>i.</p>
        <p>4*</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0059" />
        <p>GARFIELD</p>
        <p>BY JIM DAVIS</p>
        <p>BUT, THE BEST WAV TO PRIVE THEM WILPIST HIPE OBJECTS FROM THEM</p>
        <p>Jf/M HB</p>
        <p>rm</p>
        <p>who iflg that mvsenot laiy jn the red dreii we saw* ang Kith Cecil</p>
        <p>Thin^ vrere hppfinj I '^nTriitpp^ ovw* the I bfeaiy^atuniaY I athelwiaiii</p>
        <p>hiukgt</p>
        <p>^twtthMbm dama^thitiksvho ico^ini Ijte into theweeoMS,</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0060" />
        <p>BORN LOSER</p>
        <p>BYARTSANSOM</p>
        <p>HAGAR THE HORRIBLE</p>
        <p>BY DIK BROWNE</p>
        <p>v';\'</p>
        <p>T</p>
        <p>ii</p>
        <p>''</p>
        <p>W"</p>
        <p>M.</p>
        <p>irs H&amp;lt;fT fiA5Y 5^IN&amp;lt;5 A C/^</p>
        <p>Z'LL /AY WMAT X'P i^ivl</p>
        <p>00 Tb A FuUrSei^ic^ ^TioN ONC5 IN/ A ,</p>
        <p>WMlLFi &amp;lt;SFTTJN^</p>
        <p>Wico^l</p>
        <p>ANP flf/? ^iNce THey IN^tAi-LfP W Al^ M&amp;lt;5 X  f M IS) HAV/P</p>
        <p>/.rr MY AFPFTIT^.</p>
        <p>ANP X CANT Sf'T ANY AMY THe-P/fONS /2INT IN TH^ MIPOL^</p>
        <p>,TH^Y ptAY TH^ /2APIO ^ Louo I &amp;lt;SeT THl^</p>
        <p>Y6^H- ANP M)/?5r OF ALt,</p>
        <p>i)un VWfN ir^ UM5  joser^m</p>
        <p>You Pnf out TWey(SOT</p>
        <p>VYAf^NTY</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0061" />
        <p>THE DAILY REFLECTOR</p>
        <p>106th YEAR</p>
        <p>NO. 16</p>
        <p>GREENVILLE, N.C.</p>
        <p>TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION MONDAY AFTERNOON, JANUARY 19,1987</p>
        <p>20 PAGES</p>
        <p>PRICE 25 CENTS</p>
        <p>NICOSIA, Cyprus (AP) - Iran said its forces today smashed through enemy defenses to push toward Iraqs No. 2 city of Basra and were poised to take four more islands in the Shatt-al-Arab waterway on the southern front.</p>
        <p>Iraq reported its warplanes today attacked four Iranian cities, including the holy city of Qom, and a missile battery in destructive raids.</p>
        <p>Iraqi President Saddam Hussein called a meeting in which political leaders praised their army for foiling the enemys evil intentions against great Basra, Iraqs official Baghdad radio reported.</p>
        <p>Western correspondents who visited Basra last week said Iranian shells were landing at a rate of one )er minute and many people were eaving the southern port city, which has a population of 1 million.</p>
        <p>The fall of Basra would be a major blow to Husseins government. Iran has claimed steady progress toward the city since it. launched a major attack across the southern border Jan. 9.</p>
        <p>Irans official Islamic Republic News Agency, monitored in Nic(ia, said Iranian forces overnight crossed</p>
        <p>the Jasim River 6 miles east of Basra.</p>
        <p>Moslem combatants of Iran smashed through the Iraqi defense line east of Basra in heavy fighting, killing or wounding 2,000 Iraqis since late Sunday, the agency reported.</p>
        <p>The report said Iranian troops in a lightning attack surrounded an Iraqi mechanized division in the area, inflicting heavy losses and damage.</p>
        <p>The smoke of destroyed enemy tanks and various military vehicles could be seen billowing into the sky of the region, the Iranian agency said.</p>
        <p>Iran said the number of Iraqis killed or wounded in 11 days of fighting on the southern front had reached 29,000.</p>
        <p>Most claims regarding casualties and attacks cannot be independently verified. Iraq and Iran rarely allow foreign journalists to visit the battle areas.</p>
        <p>IRNA said capture of the Iraqi islands of Umm al-Rassas, Be-janieh, and East and West Sindbad in the Shatt-al-Arab waterway was imminent.</p>
        <p>Iran claimed over the weekend that it captured three other islands in the waterway.</p>
        <p>Deputies Charge 15 Marchers During ProtestJn Grimesland</p>
        <p>By DON REUTER Reflector Staff Writer Pitt County deputies charged 15 people Sunday with parading without a permit after they demonstrated in Grimesland over the Jan. 4 shooting of a black youth by a white resident. Sheriff Ralph Tyson said.  ^</p>
        <p>Approximately 35 marcheirs'were arrested at about 3 p.m. Sunday, Tyson said today. The 15 participants who were charged were released hours later without bond.</p>
        <p>The demonstrators were trying to make Grimesland residents aware of the Jan. 4 incident, according to Bennie Rountree, president of the Pitt County Southern Christian Leadership Conference.</p>
        <p>Daniel Lee William8L^l. of P.O. Box 28, Grimesland, was arrest^ and charged with assault with a deadly weapon inflicting serious injury in connection with the shooting, Tyson said.</p>
        <p>Tyson said breaking and entering charges were brought against Jimmy Simmons, 16, of 404 Smith St., Bethel, today in connection with the shooting incident. The Bethel youth had been recovering from injuries sustained in the shooting.</p>
        <p>We went into Grimesland to raise the con sciousness of the system there, said Rountree, who was among those demonstrators arrested and charged.</p>
        <p>We didnt go to Grimesland to start trouble, but we had to say no one has the right to shoot down a person in the back, he said. We would come to</p>
        <p>the aid of white man or a black man.</p>
        <p>Confusion with Grimesland town officials over the necessity of a permit to parade led to the mix-up, according to Rountree, who said the group p anned to apply for a permit today.</p>
        <p>Rountree said arrest procedures went without incident.</p>
        <p>They didnt handcuff us. They didnt push us, Rountree said. They only had a job to do. They made sure everyone had transportation home when it was over.</p>
        <p>Meanwhile, Howard Simmons, 17, of P.O. Box 40, Bethel, and Bobby Simmons, 16, of 8 Lancelot St., Grimesland, have also been charged with breaking and entering a motor vehicle in connection with the incident, Tyson said.</p>
        <p>- Ml ni</p>
        <p>WET WALK  Gigi Dupont finds strolling down Fifth Street can be a lonely walk, especially on a cold and wet Monday. On a day like today, the best area residents could hope for was a day off to stay home  and out of the rain. (Reflector Photo by Cliff Hollis)</p>
        <p>Iranian Forces Near Iraqi City</p>
        <p>School Absences Minimal</p>
        <p>Few Pitt County students participated in the school boycott school )lanned for Martin Luther King Jr.s lirthday, according to school officials who reported attendance was normal.</p>
        <p>Area Southern Christian Leadership Conference officials planned the boycott to protest the lack of a paid holiday for Pitt County workers.</p>
        <p>A survey of several schools showed that there hasnt been any abnormal absences, said Barry Gaskins, public information officer for the schools.</p>
        <p>The Southern Christian Leadership Conference called for a boycott of the schools because a holiday had not been set aside for the King birthday.</p>
        <p> Some parents called the schools saying that their children would be absent because of the holiday, but not many, Gaskins said.</p>
        <p>Although there is a high instance of absence during the last several weeks, most is attributable to the colds and flu, he said. Due to the bad weather and the flu season, it really is hard to determine the reason for the absences today.</p>
        <p>Later in the week when we get the (attendance) tally we will be able to determine how many were out because of the holiday, Gaskins said.</p>
        <p>Students boycotting school today will receive an unexcused absence, he said.</p>
        <p>School Superintendent Eddie West was out of town today. Bennie Rountree, president of the local chapter of the SCLC, could not be reached for comment.</p>
        <p>Nation Recalls King As Racial Violence Stirs Old Memories</p>
        <p>By PETE BROWN Associated Press Writer Federal and many state workers got the day off today as Americans observed Martin Luther King Day, their memories of the slain civil rights leader stirred by recent outbreaks of racial violence in the North and South.</p>
        <p>We cannot just remember the dream and the dreamer, we must implement the dream, the Rev. Jesse L. Jackson said Sunday in New York, urging listeners to march to protest an attack by a white mob Dec. 20 that left a black man dead.</p>
        <p>Civil rights leaders in Georgia on Sunday said they would march again through an all-white county where a biracial brotherhoixl march Saturday was met by rock- and Iwttle-weilding protesters, including members of the Ku Klux Klan.</p>
        <p>Today is a holiday for federal workers around the country, and for</p>
        <p>employees of the District of Columbia and most of the 40 states that have a public holiday for King. Some states honor King on his birthday, Jan 15.</p>
        <p>Events scheduled for the day included the ringing of bells in state capitol buildings, churches and schools across the nation, a ceremony at the Liberty Bell in Philadelphia, and maicii aigs native Atlanta.</p>
        <p>F'inancial markets stavi* 1 open, but schools, banks and government offices in some states were closed.</p>
        <p>Secretary of State George Schulz joined black leaders in Atlanta for an observance today. Schulz stood with Kings widow, Coretta Scott King, at a wreath-laying ceremony at the slain civil rights leaders grave prior to an ecumenical service at Ebenezer Baptist Church, where King and his father once were co-pastors.</p>
        <p>After a guard placed the yellow</p>
        <p>and red wreath at Kings crypt, the Rev. Hosea Williams prayed tWt he and other King followers would rededicate ourselves ... until the dream becomes a living reality.</p>
        <p>Skies were cold and gray as hundreds crowded around the gravesite for the ceremony. Among those joining Schulz and Mrs. King were Sen. Sam Nunn, D-Ga.; civil rights leader Jesse Jackson; Kings sister, Christine King Farris; and his son, Martin Luther King 111.</p>
        <p>The ecumenical service included awarding of the Martin Luther King' Jr. Nonviolent Peace Prize to Philippine President Corazon Aquino, whose husband al.so was slain for his beliefs. A representative was to accept the award for Mrs. Aquino.</p>
        <p>King, a Baptist preacher awarded the 1964 Nolx1 Peace Prize for his leadership of the civil rights move-</p>
        <p>(See NATION. A-IO)</p>
        <p>Dollar Hits Lowest Japanese Level Since Post-WWII Years</p>
        <p>TOKYO (AP) - The U.S. dollar plunged to a record low against the Japanese yen today in Tokyo, tumbi ing to its lowest level since the late 1940s in heavy trading despite renewed intervention by the Bank of Japan.</p>
        <p>With Japanese industry already suffering from the high yen, which makes its goods more expensive</p>
        <p>overseas, government officials spoke of a concerted international effort to check the yen Japanese news reports said Finance Minister Kiichi Miyazawa had sent senior Finance Ministry officials to the United States to explore the possibility of a meeting of the (jiroup of Five nations in an attempt to stem the yens ri.se.</p>
        <p>The dollar closed at a record 150.45 yen today in Tokyo, compared with Fridays closing 153.10 yen, after briefly dipping below 150 yen for the first time since 1949. Later in Ixindon, where trading begias after Japans business day is over, the dollar traded at 150.90 yen in early activity.</p>
        <p>(See DOLLAR, A-10)</p>
        <p>Chinese Communists Oust Intellectual</p>
        <p>PEKING (AP) - The Communist Party has expelled the most prominent of a group of intellectuals accused of inciting student protests and spreading Western liberal ideas, the official Xinhua News Agency said to-day.</p>
        <p>mmier Zhao Ziyang meanwhile was quoted as saying Chinas commitment to reform and increased international contacts has not been shaken by its leadership change last week, in which Zhao replac^ the disgraced Hu Yaobang as party chief.</p>
        <p>Hu also was an apparent victim of the current campaign against Western liberal ideas bemuse he had</p>
        <p>defended intellectuals with unorthodox views.</p>
        <p>Xinhua today ouoted Zhao as assuring intellectuals they will not be victimized in the campaign.</p>
        <p>But in a later dispatch, the agency said Fang Lizhi, an astrophysicist who was fired last week as vice president of the China Science and Technology University in Hefei, was expelled from the party becau.se he attempted to incite intellectuals against the party and students to make trouble </p>
        <p>Xinhua said Fang incited people to change the true colors of the party and claimed Marxism no longer has meaning as a science. The agency</p>
        <p>quoted Fang as saying that if judged from the point of view of the socialist system, what we have done over the past three decades is nothing but failure.</p>
        <p>The China Science and Technology University in Hefei, the capital of eastern Anhui province, was the scene Dec. 5 of the first of a series of pro-democracy student demonstrations that eventually spread to at least 11 cities. The demonstrators praised Fang for supporting greater demix:racy.</p>
        <p>He was the second intellectual known to have been purged from the party in the crackdown on liberalism that followed the demonstrations.</p>
        <p>Xinhua said last week that Shanghai writer Wang Ruowang was expelled from the party.</p>
        <p>CTiinese sources say well-known investigative journalist Liu Binyan also has been expelled, but there has been no official word.</p>
        <p>There have been reports that other individuals are being criticized for bourgeois liberalism, or anti-party, anti-socialist attitudes.</p>
        <p>Hu resigned Friday. He reportedly was forced out because top leader Deng Xiaoping was unhappy with his handling of the student protests and</p>
        <p>(See CHINA, A-IO)</p>
        <p>Soviet Industry Falls Short</p>
        <p>MOSCOW (AP)  The government said Kremlin leader Mikhail S. Gorbachevs program for stimulating economic growth had some impact last year, triggering an increase in overall production but not enough to satisfy consumer demand.</p>
        <p>The Central Statistical Board on Economic Growth said in its annual report, however, Jiat industry in general fell short of government-set prod^tion targets by 1.4 percent.</p>
        <p>Violations of contractual obligations occurred at one in four enterprises, the report said.</p>
        <p>'Die report, published Sunday in</p>
        <p>the Communist Party daily Pravda, said factories failed to produce enough of many consumer items, including clothing, shoes, watches, glassware, television sets, refrigerators, washing machines, cars and motorcycles.</p>
        <p>The official Tass news agency complained that not all branches of industry are heeding the partys call for a decisive turn away from economic stagnation that marked the late 1970s and early 1980s.</p>
        <p>Since becoming Communist Parly chief in March 1985, Gorbachev has called for a complete overhaul of the</p>
        <p>economy, from more efficiency on the part of workers to broader application of high technology.</p>
        <p>Campaigns for uskoreniye (acceleration) and perestroika (restructuring) have been the rallying cries of media and officialdom for nearly two vears.</p>
        <p>Pravda (feclared Sunday that last year restructuring in Soviet society gained momentum.</p>
        <p>Electricity production was up 4 percent over 1985, according to the figures, but still short of the 1986 target.</p>
        <p>The report blamed the shortfall on</p>
        <p>difficulties that arose as a result of the accident at the Chernobyl nuclear power station and shortage of water in rivers.</p>
        <p>Yegor K. Ligachev, a member of the ruling Politburo and reputed No. 2 man in the Kremlin, tola industry and party leaders Friday that the cold wave that hit the Soviet Union this month has seriously threatened economic progress.</p>
        <p>He gave no details, but also blamed power-production difficulties on mismanagement.</p>
        <p>(See SOVIETS. A-10)</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0062" />
        <p>In The AreaFire Damage</p>
        <p>The home of Billy and Edith Warren in Farmville was extensively damaged by fire Sunday afternoon.</p>
        <p>Firemen were called to the Hillcrest Drive home at 3:18 p.m. Assistant Fire Chief Ray Mewborn said two rooms of the house were gutted and smoke damage was severe throughout the house. Mewborn estimated damage at $50,000.</p>
        <p>One fireman, Jerry Allen, was injured during the fire fighting. No one was home when the fire began.</p>
        <p>Mewborn said the cause of the fire was being investigated.Meeting Set</p>
        <p>The Greenville Human Relations Council will meet on Tuesday at 7 p.m. in the first floor conference room of the Municipal Building located on the corner of Fifth and Washington streets.</p>
        <p>discuss a Planned Unit Development Ordinance at a workshop meeting Tuesday night in the first floor conference room of City Hall.</p>
        <p>Council members will also hear an annual report from Bob Paciocco, executive director of the Mid-East Commission. The Mid-East Commission is a regional planning office for eastern North Carolina.</p>
        <p>The board will consider an amendment to the Zoning Ordinance relative to exercise centers in the Medical District.</p>
        <p>Council members are scheduled to hold an executive session to discuss appointments to boards and commissions.Break~ln Reported</p>
        <p>Police said a break-in at 1408A Ward St. was reported at 2:05 a.m. today.</p>
        <p>Officer L.R. McLeod said a kerosene heater was taken from the home.</p>
        <p>Council Meeting Double Trouble</p>
        <p>The Greenville City Council will A Greenville man was charged</p>
        <p>with driving without a valid license Saturday after his car caught fire at the intersection of First and Pitt streets, according to Greenville police.</p>
        <p>Milton Ray Clemons of 1402 Willow St., was arrested by investigators when he couldnt produce a drivers license.</p>
        <p>According to Officer J.W. Corbett, Clemons car caught fire around 9:28 a.m.Dance Workshop</p>
        <p>Tegger Benford, a percussionist and composer, and Martha Partridge, a dance choreographer, will present a dance workshop at E.B. Aycock Jimior High School Tuesday at 10 a.m. in the school media center.</p>
        <p>The presentation is sponsored by East Carolina University, the Pitt County Schools and the Community Schools Program.Indecent Exposure</p>
        <p>Police are looking for a man in connection with an indecent exposure incident in the parking lot at</p>
        <p>Rivergate Shopping Center that was reported to the department about 6:40 p.m. Sunday.</p>
        <p>Officer M.J. Nobles said a woman told investigators that a completely nude man got out of a green Pinto as she walked past the car.Top Teacher</p>
        <p>Cindy Cobb has been selected as Teacher of the Year at Falkland Elementary School. She works with speech and hearing impaired students at Falkland, A.G. Cox and Farmville Middle schools.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Cobb holds a degree in speech and language pathology from East Carolina University and currently is completing work for a masters degree. She is completing her fourth year with the Pitt County Schools.</p>
        <p>She has served as School-Based Committee chairperson. Teacher Assistance Team chairperson and editor for Falklands newsletter and Scribbles and Bits. She currently serves as SPIN representative and May Festival chairperson.</p>
        <p>Georgia Official Promises Protection If Civil Rights Marchers Come Back</p>
        <p>By DAVID SI.MPSON Associated Press Writer</p>
        <p>CUMMING, Ga. (AP)  Forsyth County Commissioner James Harrington Jr. vowed civil rights marchers who were pelted with rocks and bottles Saturday will get more help from authorities if they return to the all-white county.</p>
        <p>Also Sunday, the pastors of two of Cummings largest churches used their pulpits to denounce the violence. But both ministers said they would not support a second march.</p>
        <p>In Atlanta, civil rights leaders, including Coretta Scott King and Southern Christian Leadership Conference President Joseph Lowery, called on supporters to prepare fo- a second march. They did not .sf't a date, but Mrs. King called a news conference with other march orga-</p>
        <p>Weekend</p>
        <p>Thefts</p>
        <p>Reported</p>
        <p>Investigators said eight thefts were reported to Greenville police over the weekend.</p>
        <p>; Officer K.I) Lingerfelt said a</p>
        <p>fmrse containing $.5 in cash, a check or $150, credit cards and other items Nvas taken from a vehicle parked at B4 Doctors Park Apartments m an incident reported at 1:51 a.m Saturday. The officer also said a purse containing $58 in cash, a checkbook, several charge cards and keys, was taken from a vehicle parked at .500 E. Third St. in an incident reported at 3:02a.m.</p>
        <p>Officer J.M. Jones said a battery, a license plate and several pieces of molding and grill were taken from a car parked at Moores Body Shop at 1309 W. Fifth St. in an incident reported at 8:40 a.m., while Officer M.T. Scheid said a pcK'ket radio, power booster and radar deti*ctor were taken from a car parked at Kings Arms Apartments in an incident reported at 4:35 p m Officer W.S. Heath said a 1984 model van with H&amp;amp;M Satellites" written on the front doors was taken from a Carolina East Mall parking lot in an incident reported at 9;(w; ).m. Saturday, while Officer H.W ^wis said a purse containing a checkbook but no cash was taken from a car parked at 107A Maple C^urt in an incident reported at l ::13 a.m.Sunday.</p>
        <p>Officer L.R. Kepler said a coat con taining $54 in cash and several keys were taken from 800 W. Fourth St. in an incident reported at 1:35 p.m., while Officer A.P. White said two kerosene heaters were taken from 1306 Ward St. in a break-in reported at9:46p m</p>
        <p>nizers later today to announce specific plans.</p>
        <p>Lowery said he hopes to organize a huge march.</p>
        <p>Eight people were arrested Saturday after about 400 counterdemonstrators, including members of the Ku Klux Klan, interrupted a brotherhood anti-intimidation march. Police in riot gear could not control the crowd, and several of the 90 marchers were slightly injured Finally, tlie marchers were placed on a bus to complete their march out of range of the counterdemonstrators.</p>
        <p>The Klan then led a large rally at the county courthouse, with speakers saying whites will not tolerate blacks in the north Georgia county.</p>
        <p>Harrington said advance publicity abf'it the march, originally sug-gesU. Hal! County man, drew outiders into Forsyth County for Saturday s confrontation.</p>
        <p>It was on-again and off-again, and it gave t!ip Klan and the other people the chance to choose our fair county as a battleground, said Harrington, one of five county commissioners.</p>
        <p>Harrington said in a telephone interview he wants those arrested Saturday prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law. And I think they should probably receive with a fine, a jail sentence.</p>
        <p>The other thing is we need to assure ... (march leader the Rev. Hosea) Williams and the others that if they did intend to march again that</p>
        <p>Hawkins Ready To Leave Duke</p>
        <p>DURHAM (AP) - Former Sen Paula Hawkins of Florida is scheduled to leave Duke University Medical Center Tuesday and return home, two \^eeks after she came to North Carolina for back surgery, her husband said Monday.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Hawkins was expected to arrive at a private airport in Florida around 2:30 p.m. to 3 p.m., Hawkins said in a telephone interview. He declined to specify which airport shed use.</p>
        <p>Hawkins said his wife still experienced pain from a back injury, but the latest surgery at Duke had helped fuse to spinal discs in her lower back.</p>
        <p>I think shes prbgressing very well." he said. It will take quite a few weeks of convalescing. We hope the surgery will prove to be entirely successful."</p>
        <p>In previous operations, Mrs. Hawkins had surgery on her lower and upper back, Hawkins said. Those operations occurred during the Republicans unsuccessful Senate re-election campaign last year.</p>
        <p>Her future wi 1 include serving on a three-person commission to advise President Reagan on drug abuse, he said.</p>
        <p>REFLECTOR</p>
        <p>HOTLINE</p>
        <p>Hotline gets things done Write and tell us about the problem or issue into which you d like for Hotline to look. Enclose photostatic copies of any pertinent information. Oiir address is The Daily Reflector. Box 967, Greenville, .V.C, 27835. Because of the large numbers received. Hotline cannot answer or publish every item we receive, but we deal with all of those for which we have staff time. A'a/nes must be given, but only initials will 'be published.</p>
        <p>CANSURMOUM V OLUNTEERS ASKED ; The Pitt County Unit of the American Cancer Society is recruiting persons who have cancer and are medically and emotionally stabilized and those who have had cancer and have positive attitudes about the experience to help others recently diagnosed as having cancer. Training for CanSur-mount, a one-to-one visitor program to provide emotional support for cancer patients and their families, will start on Jan. 24 and Jan. 25. The phone number is 75^-2574.</p>
        <p>t</p>
        <p>we would do our best (to protect them),he said.</p>
        <p>At the First Baptist Church, the Rev. B.V. Franklin told about 550 worshipers he was saddened by the violence and said the news media unfairly portrayed Forsyth County as a bastion of racism because of a dispute waged largely by outsiders.</p>
        <p>Certainly our county has not been represented (accurately), and I think you would agree with me. Amen?  he said.</p>
        <p>The reponse was a chorus of Amen, followed by another when Franklin called on the congregation to set an example by our love.</p>
        <p>Asked in an interview how he would respond if leaders of a future march asked for aid from local clergy, Franklin said, I would not want to participate personally. ... I think that integration is going to come and I think the way to hanSe it is not to make a show and to accept what comes.</p>
        <p>The Rev. Harold Lawrence, pastor of Cumming United Methodist Church, said another march would only deepen divisions.</p>
        <p>Im not interested in being a participant in anybodys crusaile, Lawrence said.</p>
        <p>Conley High Team Wins In Quiz Bowl</p>
        <p>The team from D.H. Conley High School won the 1987 Sheppard Memorial Library Quiz Bowl held Saturday. The library sponsored the local Quiz Bowl for the eighth consecutive year, with the competition held in the City Council Chamber in the municipal building.</p>
        <p>Members of the first-place Conley team are Paul Bredderman, Joey Johnson, Becky Joyner and Kyle Hudson. Alternate members of the team are Ed West, Scott Claybrook, Chad Dickerson and Mark Whitehead. Faculty coaches are Barbara Rouse, Jena Kerns and Chris Waters.</p>
        <p>The Conley team won the Pitt County championship by defeating the J. H. Rose High School team by a score of 250 to 120 in the final game of the double-elimination tournament.</p>
        <p>Three other Pitt County schools took part in the preliminary rounds</p>
        <p>of the double-elimination process -Ayden-Grifton High School, Farmville Central High School and North Pitt High School.</p>
        <p>Moderator for the Saturday event was Dr. C.E. VanZandt of East Carolina University. Judges were Dr. Thomas Durham and Dr. Kathleen Kennedy, both of ECU, and attorney Gary B. Davis.</p>
        <p>Sheppard library staff assisting with Quiz Bowl were Willie Nelms, Meredith Foltz, Susanne Long, Han-sy Jones, Phyllis Conner, Vicki Ogden and Melissa Minteer.</p>
        <p>The winning Conley team won a trophy which will be displayed at D.H. Conley during the next year. Conleys team will now advance to a district Quiz Bowl to be held March 7. Whichever team wins at the district level will then take part in the state level Quiz Bowl to be held April 11 in Raleigh.</p>
        <p>COMPUTER GRAPHICS</p>
        <p>at</p>
        <p>PITT COMMUNITY COUEOC</p>
        <p> Create your own computer graphics in color  From pictures to animation</p>
        <p> Work with the Macintosh Computer  Introductory basic programming is a</p>
        <p>prerequisite    ^</p>
        <p>ENROLL IN:</p>
        <p>IPP 130 CowipiHT Orwphk  w 6:30-8:20 16.50</p>
        <p>IOP130LCoMpvtrOrplil&amp;lt;tUib  M 6:30-8:20  5.00</p>
        <p>tPRINC PMMeiSTRATION FURUARY</p>
        <p>Call a PCC Counselor lor more detailed Information</p>
        <p> PITT r. 3 COMMUNITY  COLLEGE </p>
        <p>756-3130, Ext. lS</p>
        <p>An Equal Opportunity/ Affirmative Action instttutionThird Place</p>
        <p>Chad Tulloch, a student at Ayden Middle School, was third place winner for the district in an essay contest for eighth graders sponsored by Keep North Carolina Beautiful Inc. Harry A. Jones Jr., teacher at Ayden Middle, also was a district winner.</p>
        <p>The second annual contest was held in cooperation with the A.J. Fletcher Foundation and the N.C. Department of Public Instruction.Workshop Set</p>
        <p>A financial aid and time management workshop for parents and students will be held Tuesday at 7 p.m. in the J.H. Rose High School library.</p>
        <p>At 8 p.m., George Weigand, former director of the East Carolina University Counseling Center, will discuss Time Management: How to Survive Your First Semester of College.Classroom Guest</p>
        <p>Meteorologist Skip Waters from WCTI-TV recently visited the fourth-grade classes of Helen Hodges and Nancy Beardsworth at Wahl-Coates School. He discussed elements of the weather and the use of computers in tracking hurricanes.Rainy Weekend</p>
        <p>Rain made a three-day visit to Pitt</p>
        <p>County as nearly an inch of precipitation was recorded in Greenville over the weekend, according to area forecasters.</p>
        <p>Rainfall amounts of up to 1.58 inches were recorded in north Greenville early today. The Tar River level was 4.2 feet above sea level.</p>
        <p>More rain is expected today with highs in the low to mid 60s. Lows will range in the 40s.</p>
        <p>Skies are expected to be partly cloudy Tuesday with highs in the mid 50s.Murder Suspect</p>
        <p>Pitt County deputies arrested a Swansboro man sought in connection with the Friday shooting death of a 46-year-old Hampton, Va., resident. Sheriff Ralph Tyson said today.</p>
        <p>Deputies arrested William R. Freuler, 42, on Warren Street in Greenville Saturday at 2 a.m., Tyson said. Freuler, who was transported to the Carteret County Jail Saturday, has been charged with first-degree murder in the death of Charlie Ray Pulley in Emerald Isle.</p>
        <p>The slaying appeared to be spurred by a domestic dispute, accoraing to Emerald Isle police chief Mark D. Wilson, who said Pulley had been shot with a .44-caliber pistol.</p>
        <p>The incident occurred in the Emerald Isle home of Helen Freuler, Freulers former wife, Wilson said.</p>
        <p>Four Zoning Changes Up For Consideration</p>
        <p>Four rezoning requests are among the items scheduled for consideration by the Greenville Planning and Zoning Commission at its monthly meeting Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. in the council chambers of City Hall.</p>
        <p>The board will consider a request by Bill Clark to rezone 26.51 acres located east of Westhaven subdivision and south of Whichport subdivision from residential/agricultural to medium density single-family residential.</p>
        <p>The commissioners also will hear a request by the city of Greenville to rezone a 1.78-acre tract from downtown commercial fringe to office and institutional. The property is located off the northern right-of-way of 14th Street between Clarke and Greene streets and is a portion of the South Evans Redevelopment area.</p>
        <p>The board will discuss a request by Joe T. Wright to rezone 18.28 acres located off the western right-of-way of State Road 1440 and north of N.C. 33 west from residential/agricultural to highway commercial.</p>
        <p>The panel will hear a request by Warren Street property owners to rezone their properties to a neighborhood revitalization area. The</p>
        <p>SUPPORT VOCATIONAL EDUCATION</p>
        <p>property is zoned for high density residential uses.</p>
        <p>Commissioners will consider preliminary plats of Whichport and Paramore Farms subdivisions, and Bedford devlopment.</p>
        <p>Whichport subdivision is located off the southern right-of-way of U.S. 264 By-Pass and east of proposed Hooker Road Extension.</p>
        <p>Paramore Farms subdivision is located off the western right-of-way of 14th Street Extension and north of Windy Ridge. The plat involves 70 lots and 3,420 linear feet of street on a 24.97-acre tract.</p>
        <p>Bedford development, which is located off the eastern right-of-way of Evans Street Extension, north of Fork Swamp Canal and west of Bedford subdivision, involves seven lots and 3,100 linear feet of street on a 59-acre lot.</p>
        <p>Other items to be addressed include bufferyards, a proposed amendment to the Zoning Ordinance to allow radio and television studios and transmission facilities as a special use in the MD-7 zoning classification, and a proposed amendment to the Subdivision Ordinance concerning required improvement performance guarantees.</p>
        <p>Views On Dental Health</p>
        <p>Kenneth T. Perkins, D.D.S., P.A. Family &amp;amp; General Dentistry</p>
        <p>GETTING RID OF YELLOW STAINS</p>
        <p>If you have a youngster with yellow stains on his teeth, this condition may have been caused by a tetracycline antibiotic or other medication prescribed for an illness. The tetracycline family of drugs is known to sometimes cause staining in childrens teeth. The resulting stain may be yellow, yellowish-gray, or gray-brown. Even though the stain is permanent, it doesn't have to stay on the teeth. Dentists have a good "cover up technique that can restore the affected teeth to their natural color.</p>
        <p>One option is to use a resin</p>
        <p>material or opaque veneer that can be applied to the surface of the teeth to hide the stain. The color of the veneer will be selected to match the natural color of the childs teeth.</p>
        <p>There may be other options that I may suggest. The important thing to keep in mind is that unsightly stains do not have to stay on anyones teeth, whether child or adult.</p>
        <p>Call my office for an appointment. Let s talk about what can be done to cover-up the stains. These procedures are painless and can really improve the apprearance of an individual.</p>
        <p>Preparad as a public service to promote bener dental health From the office of  t</p>
        <p>Perk,ns.DDS.P A .Evans St, Family and General DentisC  _ GrRRnvlllR  752-5126</p>
        <p>IN REMEMBRANCE OF</p>
        <p>DR. MARTIN LUTHER KING, JR.</p>
        <p>(January 15, 1929-April 4, 1968)</p>
        <p>We will be closed on Januaiy 19,1987 in commemoration of Dr. Kings dedication and sacrifices for the cause of justice and equality in America. We urge your recognition of this National Holiday.</p>
        <p>FITCH, BUTTERFIELD &amp;amp; WYNN</p>
        <p>Attorneys at Law 301 South Evans Street, Suite 401  t</p>
        <p>Greenville, North Carolina 27834</p>
        <p>, Milton F. Fitch, Jr. G.K. Butterfield, Jr. James A. Wynn, Jr.</p>
        <p>830-1900 (Greenville) 291-6500 (Wilson) 446-ATTY (Rocky Mount) 829-0911 (Raleigh)</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0063" />
        <p>Liberals Ran Last</p>
        <p>By SANDY JOHNSON Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON (AP)  In the politics of the far right and left, staunchly conservative Senate and House members far outnumbered the true-blue liberals in Congress last year according to Americans for Democratic Action.</p>
        <p>While most members of Congress fell somewhere in the middle in 1986 - the average ADA rating was 46 in the House (with 100 being most liberal) and 43.7 in the Senate  there was no shortage of strict conservatives and liberals, based upon the ADAs analysis of voting record.</p>
        <p>Three senators and 12 representatives voted in line with the liberal ADA position 100 percent of the time on 20 key issues, according to figures released Saturday. On the opposite end of the political spectrum, 15 senators and 48 representatives scored zero with the ADA.</p>
        <p>ADA based its annual House and Senate ratings on 20 votes, ranging from aid to Contra rebels in Nicaragua to spending for the Star Wars" anti-missile defense proposal.</p>
        <p>The ADA said it was disappointed in the 1986 voting record of Congress, but found solace in the November election results which shored up the Democratic majority in the House and put Democrats in control of the Senate for the first time since 1980.</p>
        <p>The message of the voters was clear, ADA Director Ann Lewis said. Candidates with higher ADA voting records did much better at the polls than lower rated opponents."</p>
        <p>Six of the seven GOP incumbent senators who were defeated had low ADA ratings: Jeremiah Denton of Alabama, 10percent; Paula Hawkins of Florida, 5 percent; Mack Mattingly of Georgia, zero; James Broyhill of North Carolina, zero; James Abd-nor of South Dakota, 5 percent; Slade Gorton of Washington, 35 percent; Mark Andrews of North Dakota, 65 percent.</p>
        <p>Conversely, some of the newly elected senators did well on the ADA scale, including three House members who moved up to the Senate: Tim Wirth, D-Colo., 75 percent; Tom Daschle, D-S.D., 80 percent; and Barbara Mikulski, D-Md., 90 percent.</p>
        <p>The perfect ADA scores in the Senate were Paul Sarbanes of Maryland, Quentin Burdick of North Dakota and Howard Metzenbaum of Ohio.</p>
        <p>In the House, they were Ron Dellums, Don Edwards, Mervyn Dymally, all of California; William Lehman of Florida; Lane Evans of II-linois; Barney Frank of Massachusetts; Peter Rodinoof New Jersey; Charles Rangel of New York; Louis Stokes of Ohio; Harold Ford of Tennessee; Mickey Leland of Texas; and Robert Kastenmeier of Wisconsin.</p>
        <p>Ms. Lewis noted the change in Senate control put Democrats with high ADA ratings in the top three leadership positions: Senate Majority Leader Robert C. Byrd of West Virginia, 75 percent; Alan Cranston of California, 95; and Daniel Inouye of Hawaii, 90, for an average of 86.6 percent. That compares with an average of 20 percent for the GOP leadership in 1986: Robert Dole of Kansas, zero; Alan Simpson of Wyoming, 10; and John Chafee of Rhode Island, 60.</p>
        <p>The Dally Reflector, Greenville, N.C.</p>
        <p>Monday, January 19,1987  ^^.3</p>
        <p>ON THE BEACH  Give a man some free time and hes bound to find a project. San sculptor Joe Maize did just that when he built his beachfront Hotel of the Future" along the waterfront in Honolulu. Maize said he*</p>
        <p>built the structure to honor the nearby Royal Hawaii Hotel, which is celebrating its 50th anniversary. (AP Laserphoto)</p>
        <p>Revolutionary Convicted In Death Of N.J. Trooper</p>
        <p>SOMERVILLE, N.J; (AP) - An avowed revolutionary was convicted in the slaying of a state trooper, but the identity of the actual killer was left in doubt as prosecutors failed to prove that a co-defendant was the triggerman.</p>
        <p>Both sides claimed partial victory after the jury Sunday declined to conclude that either defendant pumped nine bullets into the highly decorated trooper, and a mistrial was declared for one defendant.</p>
        <p>The jury convicted Thomas W. Manning of felony murder, which is homicide during commission of a felony, but acquitted him of the separate charge of murder. The two felonies he was found guilty of were robbery and escape.</p>
        <p>Superior Court Judge Michael Im-briani declared a mistrial for Mannings compatriot, Richard C. Williams, after the jury, which deliberated for 45 hours over five days, said it was deadlocked in regard to him.</p>
        <p>Attorneys on both sides said the verdict appeared to mean that the jury agreed Manning was at the scene, took back a gun the trooper had confiscated and fled, but was not the triggerman.</p>
        <p>Imbriani had instructed the jurors that if they determined either defendant had fired the fatal shots, they could convict him of murder.</p>
        <p>One juror, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, said seven members of the panel did not believe that there was proof enough that Williams was in the car.... We searched out every piece of evidence we could get our hands on."</p>
        <p>As the verdict was read. Manning, who with Williams already faces a lengthy prison term for bombing convictions, shouted Venceremos!  Spanish for We will conquer</p>
        <p>Deputy Attorney General Anthony Simonetti said he will recommend</p>
        <p>Hot Dog 'Bomber'</p>
        <p>CLEVELAND HEIGHTS, Ohio (AP) - A 37-year-old man was charged with aggravated robbery after he allegedly held up a savings and loan using a package of hot dogs.</p>
        <p>Murshin A. Rahman, 37, of University Heights, was held without bond pending an appearance Tuesday in Municipal Court.</p>
        <p>According to police, a man took a cab to a branch of Broadview Savings and Loan on Saturday and told the driver to wait while he went inside.</p>
        <p>The man told a teller that the brown leather attache case he was holding contained a bomb, authorities said. The teller gave him an estimated $2,400, police said.</p>
        <p>The man got back into the cab, and police pulled it over minutes later. But when members of the bomb squad went to dismantle the bomb,, they found hot dogs wrapped in foil, with wires leading to a wad of putty, said Detective Paul Bell.</p>
        <p>that Williams be retried.</p>
        <p> Defense attorney William Kunstler said he would appeal Mannings conviction.</p>
        <p>Philip Lamonaco, who was named Trooper of the Year in 1979, was shot nine times Dec. 21,1981, and left to die face down in a snowbank after stopping a car for a traffic violation on an isolated stretch of Interstate 80 in northwestern New Jersey,</p>
        <p>The state alleged that Williams shot Lamonaco and that Manning was the driver of the car.</p>
        <p>Defense attorneys maintained^ however, that Williams, who did not testify, was not present when Lamonaco was gunned down. Manning admitted shooting the officer but said it was in self-defense.</p>
        <p>Lamonacos widow, Donna, stood shaking next to state police Superintendent Col. Clinton Pagano after the jury returned.</p>
        <p>I am completely confident that both men are guilty," she said. I know Richard Williams was in the car and shot my husband. My husband was and is a hero unlike these self-important, so-called revolutionaries."</p>
        <p>Pagano characterized the defense case as an insult to us and to the intelligence of the people of this state."</p>
        <p>He called the defendants communists, socialists and terrorists and said he favored a retrial for Williams. Terrorism is todays form of warfare, but terrorism cant exist when you have a stable government and a police force willing to pursue it, and that means pursue it through to this trial, he saia.</p>
        <p>Lamonacos slaying triggered the largest manhunt in New Jersey his tory since the 1932 kidnapping ol aviator Charles Lindberghs infant son. Manning, 40, was on the lam for nearly Vk years; Williams, 39, for almost three.</p>
        <p>The men call themselves antiimperialist freedom fighters and soldiers in the armed struggle to establish a socialist state. They and Mannings wife, Carol, are alleged members of the United Freedom Front and the Sam Melville-Jonathan Jackson Unit, which have claimed responsibility for bombing East Coast offices and military installations and are accused of bank robberies.</p>
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        <p>1/2</p>
        <p>Manning and Williams await trial in Boston on charges of sedition and trying to overthrow the federal government.</p>
        <p>Williams called Sundays verdict a victory for the armed clandestine movement.</p>
        <p>Manning, who faces up to life in prison plus 30 years when sentenced, said in a statement:</p>
        <p>This is a victory in that we put forward to a large segment of the people a position of revolutionary resistance and ... that revolutionaries are not extraordinary but only those who see the truth and act on it.</p>
        <p>Storms Spreading Snow And Ice Across Country</p>
        <p>By PETE BROWN Associated Press Writer A stubborn winter storm blamed for 27 deaths socked the Plains with more snow and ice today after stranding hundreds of travelers, stopping the mail in Texas, glazing roads in the Northeast and swelling streams in the South.</p>
        <p>Will Rogers World Airport in Oklahoma City remained closed this morning becai^e of snow and ice. Some schools were closed in New Mexico, where four counties were declared disaster areas because of snow.</p>
        <p>Snow fell from Kansas and Oklahoma into New England. Freezing rain fell in Arkansas, Missouri, Illinois, Pennsylvania and Maine.</p>
        <p>Flood warnings were up in Alabama and Louisiana and advisories were posted from Georgia and Tennessee into New Jersey and New York.</p>
        <p>As one end of the slow-moving storm knocked out power Sunday to thousands in Oklahoma and brought travel to a near standstill in the Southwest, the other end dumped snow, sleet and freezing rain in Pennsylvania and New York.</p>
        <p>Two 17-car chain-reaction collisions on Interstate 87 north of Albany, N.Y., injured 23 pwple, three seriously, police said.</p>
        <p>By the time we got to this bridge, there was a wall of cars all the way across, and we had no place to go," said motorist Jim DeVoe. So we hit a couple of cars, and we were hit by two more, from behind and the side.</p>
        <p>Streets in Oklahoma City, shrouded by the states worst snowstorm in at least four decades, were dotted with cars abandoned by motorists who couldnt get through drifts of at least 3 feet. By nightfall. Oklahoma City had 9 inches on the ground, the heaviest snowfall siiice 1944. Gage had 13 inches.</p>
        <p>Nearly 200 landings and takeoffs at Will Rogers had been canceled by late Sunday. Runway crews had been working since Friday to clear a sheet of ice when the snow hit. It was just so awesome that they couldnt stay up with it, said airport spokesman Tom Morton.</p>
        <p>An estimated 11,000 people were without electricity Sunday in the Tulsa area. Utility crews on loan from three states worked today to repair lines.</p>
        <p>Kansas had received up to 14 inches of snow by Sunday. Illinois got up to 6 inches.</p>
        <p>The 15-mile stretch of Interstate 95 inside Philadelphia closed for nearly 3'^ hours Sunday because of ice, and 20 miles of the New York State Thruway closed for about two hours to allow police to clear away cars.</p>
        <p>Ice and snow in West Texas glazed highways, halted mail delivery in Odessa and Midland and stranded scores of motorists and bus riders who had to take refuge in churches and motels.</p>
        <p>At one point Sunday night, traffic was backed up 20 miles on Interstate 20 near Abilene, Texas, when truckers refused to navigate an icy hill, said Department of Public Safety spokesman Wendell Rheem.</p>
        <p>It took us seven hours to come the last nine miles on Interstate 20, said Mike Golembieski of Phoenix, Ariz., who was stopped at an Abilene motel.</p>
        <p>The storm was blamed for 10 deaths since Thursday in Texas; five in New Mexico; two each in Arizona, Missouri, Oklahoma and Kansas; and one each in Pennsylvania, New York, California and Colorado.</p>
        <p>In Alabama, where storms unloaded more than 7 inches of rain, authorities in Sumter County evacuated about 20 people from their homes in low-lying areas near the rain-swelled Sucarnoochee River on Sunday because of rising water.</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0064" />
        <p>Donald M. RotbbergEditoricils Wallace Moderation Shows King's ImpactLost Link</p>
        <p>Clearly it is too late to save from being closed the Norfolk Southern railroad bridge across the Albemarle Sound. It is, in fact, already closed after railroad officials said it needed major repairs to make it safe.</p>
        <p>They had earlier said that the bridge needed extensive repairs at a cost of $19 million. Since it is not economically feasible to pay that much for replacing the five mile bridge the decision was made to close it down. Now that has happened.</p>
        <p>The bridge closing ^as caused concern in northeastern North Carolina where it was used for transporting grain, fertilizer, pulp wood, chemicals and lumber to market.</p>
        <p>Pitt County officials say its use has diminished for our area. Most Norfolk Southern trains coming through the county are headed for Texasgulf phosphate mining operations and return.</p>
        <p>We should not forget, however that this was once the main line of the old Norfolk and Southern from Norfolk to Charlotte. It was, and still is, the shortest rail route through eastern North Carolina to the Tidewater metropolitan area and the major ports there.</p>
        <p>Eastern North Carolina is losing forever its direct rail link to Norfolk. True the present effect on Pitt County will be minimal. In the future, who knows? The loss could be a serious deterrent to the location of an industry for which such rail availability might be essential.Enough Warning</p>
        <p>The battered cigarette industry obtained a U.S. Supreme Court ruling which makes it more difficult to sue cigarette manufacturers over the health effects of smoking.</p>
        <p>The court left intact a decision which shields the manufacturers from legal liability for allegedly failing to provide adequate warning concerning smoking dangers.</p>
        <p>The case was brought on behalf of a woman who charged lack of adequate warning on cigarette health hazards and because of the alleged undermining of the effectiveness of health warnings later required by federal law.</p>
        <p>The 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that federal law pre-empts those state law damage actions relating to smoking and health that challenge either the adequacy of the warning on cigarette packages or the propriety of a partys actions with respect to the advertising and promotion of cigarettes.</p>
        <p>The Supreme Court ruling is seen as a significant victory for the cigarette industry, although it is expected that actions will continue against cigarette manufacturers.</p>
        <p>It would appear that the health warnings currently required on cigarette packages and in advertising are clear enough. Those who purchase cigarettes can hardly avoid those warnings. From that point on it is the individuals choice as whether or not to smoke. If that is the effect of the Supreme Court ruling, it seems reasonable.Tax Cheats</p>
        <p>It has to be discouraging for conscientious taxpayers who sweat over their annual 1040 forms to read the Internal Revenue Service estimates that about 3 million people who are required to file returns do not file each year.</p>
        <p>The agency is working to change that picture and results are already being felt.</p>
        <p>A pilot test last year, which ferreted out 55,000 delinquent taxpayers, is expected to bring in more than $2 billion in taxes (plus penalties and interest) this year.</p>
        <p>An assistant commissioner of the IRS says the tax cheats are made up of those who decided to drop out of the system and for the most part are driven by greed, not by ideology.</p>
        <p>Computerization of the tax-filing system has made tracking down the delinquents much easier just as it has made it possible for Uncle Sam to collect money owed the government by collecting" debts from tax refunds that may be due.</p>
        <p>Overall, the American taxpayer is widely regarded as the most conscientious in the world. Still, we do have our bad apples and finding them is an obligation owed those taxpayers who take their role seriously.</p>
        <p>Today's Thought</p>
        <p>Iran and Iraq, Lebanon, Afghanistan, Nicaragua ... these are countries where the killing goes on endlessly. We should not forget that the people involved bleed and suffer equally as they have in all previous wars.</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP) - It is an ironic footnote to a painful period in American history that George C. Wallace Jr. is leaving public life on the same day tht the nation commemorates the birth of Martin Luther King Jr.</p>
        <p>One final time their paths cross, these two men who symbolized black aspirations and white intransigence during the struggle to integrate American society.</p>
        <p>It was on Aug. 28,1963, that King, addressing a mass rally in front of the Lincoln Memorial, proclaimed, I have a dream..</p>
        <p>I have a dream that one day, down in Alabama, with its vicious racists, with its governor having his lips dripping with the words of interposition and nullification, one day right there in Alabama, little black boys and black girls will be able to join hands with little white boys and white girls as sisters and brothers.</p>
        <p>Words spoken by Wallace also are remembered decades later.</p>
        <p>Segregation now! Segregation tomorrow! Segregation forever! he proclaimed when he took office as governor of Alabama in January 1963.</p>
        <p>Those words and the memory of the governor standing defiantly in the doorway of the administration building of the University of Alabama in a futile effort to block integration are indelible parts of the Wallace image.</p>
        <p>One measure of the impact of Kings movement is the fact that Wallace now claims the support of many blacks in Alabama and seete to moderate the image he earned in the 1960s.</p>
        <p>I think the thing of segregation forever should not have l^n said, but I was aiming my vengeance toward the federal government, he said in a recent interview. As for his stand in the schoolhouse door, that, he said, was not a racial matter but a protest against the federal government and omnipotent guideline writers.</p>
        <p>Elements of Kings dream have become reality in Alabama and elsewhere in the South.</p>
        <p>And how better to demonstrate that than by knowing that Wallace courted black votes in his last campaign for governor and Sen. Strom Thurmond, R-S.C., was a sponsor of the legislation creating a federal holiday honoring King.</p>
        <p>Or by the fact that Mike Espy, a black lawyer, took office this month as a congressman from Mississippi.</p>
        <p>Or by the fact that blacks are a major political force in the South, their votes earned in the turbulent 1960s when King and Wallace came to prominence.</p>
        <p>The Baptist minister and the governor inspired fervent loyalty. Masses of Americans, black and white, marched with King and joined his demand for an end to segregation.</p>
        <p>Millions also marched with Wallace when he took his protest outside the South and ran for president. He stunned Democrats with strong showings in primaries in Wisconsin, Michigan, Maryland and Indiana. In 1972, he received 3.75 million votes in the Democratic primaries, nearly as many as Sen. George McGovern of South Dakota, who ended up as the partys presidential nominee.</p>
        <p>It was a tragic parallel that King and Wallace also inspired fear and hatred and both were victims of gunmen.</p>
        <p>King was assassinated in Memphis, Term., in 1968, and Wallace was crippled by a gunman in Maryland while campaigning for president in 1972.</p>
        <p>Wallace would never walk again. But he would campaign, running again for president in 1976, and serving two more terms as governor.</p>
        <p>By the time of his death. King had won the Nobel Peace Prize and was revered as a voice for peace and racial justice. A statue of the civil rights leaders stands in the U.S. Capitol.</p>
        <p>President Reagan used the occasion of Kings actual birthday, Jan. 15, to strive for a land free of bigotry, intolerance and discrimination.</p>
        <p>As he leaves office, Wallace is confined to a wheelchair, his hearing is failing, the bite is gone from his voice.</p>
        <p>He sees hope in how history treated other Southern politicians - Lyndon B. Johnson and Justice Hugo Black - who supported segregation early in their careers.</p>
        <p>Theyve been rehabilitated, he said. You dont refer to them as building their careers on racial hatred, but they all stood for it.</p>
        <p>Donald M. Rothberg is the chief political writer of The Associated Pr^s.</p>
        <p>Dist. News America Syndicate. 1987</p>
        <p> Barbara Roessner</p>
        <p>Decision Reinforces Laws Of Nature</p>
        <p>It is difficult for me to believe now, but a scant three years ago I was of the firm opinion that working women who became pregnant had something to prove. I thought they  I mean we</p>
        <p>make special accommodations for pregnant workers. How I applauded the implied but resounding declaration that men and women are different.</p>
        <p>'Have I regressed? Have I surrendered to the forces of chauvinism? Has the Supreme Court effectively sanctioned sex discrimination in the work place? The National Organization for Women and some other women's rights groups fear so,'</p>
        <p> had some kind of political obligation to ignore our obvious physical burdens and, once having given birth, to return to our jobs just as soon as we could hobble to our desks.</p>
        <p>I thought we needed to demonstrate that childbearing was as inconsequential as, say, a bout of flu. I thought we needed to show that we could attend to the minor matter of perpetuating the human race without causing our employers or our careers any major disruption.</p>
        <p>Oh, but how time  and experience</p>
        <p> change us.</p>
        <p>And how I rejoiced last week when the U.S. Supreme Court upheld the right of Lillian Garland to a four-month, job-protected pregnancy leave from tne California Federal Savings and Loan Association. How I delighted in the courts finding that states may require employers to</p>
        <p>Have I regressed? Have I surrendered to the forces of chauvinism? Has the Supreme Court effectively sanctioned sex discrimination in the work place?</p>
        <p>The National Organization for Women and some other womens rights groups fear so. In the Garland case, NOW agreed with Cal Fed that a California law requiring employers to provide up to four months of unpaid disability leave to pregnant employees is discriminatory because it doesnt require the same benefits for men and non-pregnant women.</p>
        <p>The opponents of the California law, incuding the Reagan administration. say it violates a 1978 federal law requiring employers to treat pregnancy the same way as any other temporary medical disability. Some womens rights groups fear that the California law could open the</p>
        <p>door to other forms of unequal treatment of women in the work force.</p>
        <p>But other womens advocates disagree. This is not preferential treatment because only women, obviously, get pregnant, says Fredrica Gray, director of Connecticuts Permanent Commission on the Status of Women, which filed an amicus brief in support of Garland. This is a very, very important victory for working women, especially in Connecticut and in the handful of other states whose laws on pregnancy leave are similar to Californias, Gray said.</p>
        <p>The whole issue of equal vs. preferential treatment goes well beyond the Garland case and, in fact, has sparked a small-scale civil war within the womens movement. At the crux of the conflict is the prickly question of whether we, as a society, ought to be gender-blind, or whether we ought to recognize gender differences and seek to accommodate them.</p>
        <p>Having once held the former view and having since embraced the latter, my own conclusion is that equality between the sexes doesnt mean sameness. Nor does different treatment of men and women necessarily mean preferential treatment.</p>
        <p>Nowhere is this more clear than in the area of pregnancy and childbear</p>
        <p>ing. Enduring on-the-job gestation and returning to work two months after my son was born led me to the startling discovery that men and women are indeed different, and that the more women downplay the demands of childbearing, the more we increase the disproportionate burden biology has given us.</p>
        <p>Attempting to deny the law of nature is not only futile, it is self-defeating.</p>
        <p>Accommodating nature is not discrimination, it is recognizing reality.</p>
        <p>If reality were different, if men could bear children, I would be perfectly happy for them to be given the same benefits as women who bear children. On the issue of child-rearing leaves, the reality is that men and women are equally capable of nurturing newborn or sick children and, therefore, should be accorded equal benefits.</p>
        <p>It all seems quite simple to me now. It is amazing what a difference three years - and personal experience  can make. Working women who get pregnant and have children do have something to prove. Lillian Garland proved it to the Supreme Court.</p>
        <p>Distributed by the Los Angeles Tinu Washington Post News Service</p>
        <p>The Daily Reflector</p>
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        <p> Elisha Douglas </p>
        <p>Strength For Today</p>
        <p>We go out on a clear, starry night and look up at the heavens. What we see is exactly what our primitive forebears saw 15,000 years ago. But something we cannot see makes it quite different. The air waves are alive with broadcast m^sages from radio, television and satellite stations.</p>
        <p>This example of our limitations shows how thoroughly inadequate our five senses are to com</p>
        <p>prehend the whole universe. But modern science has revealed so many wonders that man need not be overwhelmed with doubt as he reads in the Bible about great spiritual powers.</p>
        <p>Science should strengthen rather than destroy religious faith. If what we apprehend with our limited senses is so marvelous, how great may be the things which a good God has laid up for those who trust him!</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0065" />
        <p>Allister Sparks </p>
        <p>South African Rebels Change Approach</p>
        <p>JOHANNESBURG, South Afcs  After 2Mi years of blood and fury, the insurrection in South Africas black townships is beginning to subside, while the end of white-minority rule is not yet in sight.</p>
        <p>As this becomes apparent to the outlawed African National Congress, the leading antiapartheid group in exile, there are signs that it is adjusting its strategy for a longer haul, with greater emphasis on reaching out to South Africas whites and the nations of the West.</p>
        <p>Pretorias massive crackdown under the state of emergency declared last June is at last restoring a sullen quiet to the rebellious townships. Thousands of community leaders are in detention. Some have left the country. Many are in hiding.</p>
        <p>A mood of battle-weariness has settled over those who are left. Incidents still occur, but despite tight restrictions on news coverage it is clear that the number has declined sharply over the past month.</p>
        <p>Tom I^ge, a political scientist at Johannesburgs Witwatersrand University who is acknowledged as South Africas leading specialist on black politics, said recently he thinks the conflict is entering a lull that could last a year or more until the next crisis sends it to new heights.</p>
        <p>Black leaders here and in Lusaka, Zambia, where the ANC is headquartered, are reassessing the situation, Lodge said. There is a less-euphoric mood, and it is recognized that a popular insurrection leading to a seizure of power is unlikely.</p>
        <p>Lodge said he believes the ANC is broadening its strategy in light of this reassessment, placing more emphasis on political and diplomatic initiatives.</p>
        <p>They may continue to use the rhetoric of the seizure of power and the military struggle will still play a role, but I think they have recognized that in the end the ANCs victory is going to come as a result of shifts of mood which will affect people in decision-making positions within South Africa,he said.</p>
        <p>Recent statements by ANC leaders reinforce this view. They have openly acknowledged that there has b^n a setback, that it is more difficult now to organize resistance in the townships, that their guerrilla arm, Umkhonto we Sizwe (Spear of the Nation), did not manage to escalate the war as much as they had hoped last year, and that they are now making a strong pitch to South African whites and to the West.</p>
        <p>Pretoria is responding to the ANCs pitch to whites with apparent alarm. There is little likelihood that many whites will become committed supporters of the ANC, but the government of President Pieter W. Botha seems worried that significant numbers, particularly of Afrikaner intellectuals, may begin to recognize it as a force to be reckoned with and start pressing the government to legalize and begin negotiating with it. This, Botha does not want to do.</p>
        <p>The government is going to extraordinary lengths to prevent the ANC from hving direct access to local whites with its message of conciliation, while it launches a propaganda campaign of unprecedented intensity to portray the organization as a bunch of duplicitous communist extremists.</p>
        <p>Internally, Lodge believes the ANC and activist groups that support it will go in for a holding operation, trying to prevent the kind of organizational collapse that followed the Sharpeville crisis of 1960, when South African police opened fire on black demonstrators, killing 69 people, and the 1976 uprising in Soweto, the black township outside Johannesburg, in which several hundred were killed.</p>
        <p>Black politics is going to become a business of survival and consolidation, said Lodge. He said he expects the ANC to try to extend its underground structures and perhaps try to launch some more spectacular guerrilla attacks to boost black morale and make a psychological impact on the whites.</p>
        <p>My feeling is that if there is going to be any action this year it will be on the shop floors and through the union movement rather than the political bodies, he added. Thabo Mbeki, the ANCs director of information, tended to confirm this prognosis in a recent interview in Lusaka. There has been a definite setback, but we think it is temporary, Mbeki said. The basis is there for us to recover from it quickly.</p>
        <p>Mbeki said he felt the organizational structures established during the period of insurrection reached</p>
        <p>ly into the communities and would survive the government crackdown. But there would have to be adjustments to a new style of operating.</p>
        <p>Lots of people are underground, but now they will have to understand that they are not just lying low for a few months but that they are underground permanently and they will have to learn how to work from there, Mbeki added.</p>
        <p>At the same time, there are indications of growing Afrikaner interest in the black nationalist organization. TTie chairman of the white, politically influential Broederbona secret society. Prof. Pieter de Lange, met last June with Mbeki, a rising star in the ANC. They had lunch in New York when both were attending a conference there.</p>
        <p>Analysis</p>
        <p>But at least eight groups of Afrikaners who wanted to visit the ANC in Lusaka have come under pressure to cancel their trips in recent months. The latest press restrictions prohibit any reporting that reflects favorably on the ANC or even explains its policies.</p>
        <p>Meanwhile, scarcely a day passes without a ministerial speech, a major program on the state-control</p>
        <p>radio and television services or an article in the pro-government Afrikaans press denigrating the organization.</p>
        <p>In the past, the threat to the country was always described in fairly general terms, said Lodge. Now the ANC is specifically named day after day. Clearly they (the government) are worried and feel they have to confront it.</p>
        <p>A State Department report recently said the ANC has been influenced significantly by communism and is deeply beholden to the South African Communist Party and the Soviet Union for arms and training.</p>
        <p>The report said roughly half of the ANCs 30-member governing committee are known or suspected SACP members but the 11-page study did not deal with whether the ANC is motivated primarily by communist ideology or black African nationalism.</p>
        <p>Mbeki stressed the importance the ANC leadership places on its appeal to whites.</p>
        <p>The Pitt County Medical S^ety presents Medical Information Series</p>
        <p>99</p>
        <p>Aches, Pains and Arthritis</p>
        <p>Moderator: Edward L. Treadwell, M.D. Tuesday, January 20, 1987 7:30 p.m.</p>
        <p>Willis Building</p>
        <p>(corner of 1st and Reade Streets)</p>
        <p>This is a free medical information series.</p>
        <p>The public is cordially invited to attend.</p>
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        <p>Hollowell's Drug Store #4 - 1631 SE Qreenville Blvd. 752-0030</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0066" />
        <p>The Daily Reflector, Greenville. N.C._Monday,  January  19,1987</p>
        <p>Bookstore Killings May Have Been Execution Job</p>
        <p>WHERE THERES SMOKE - Boy Scouts Bryan Ter-rell and Michael McCoy of Swansboro warm up to their task of coaxing a flame from damp kindling. The chore</p>
        <p>came during a weekend camporee at the Brewster Scout Area near Jacksonville  a campout held in damp, cool weather where a fire was welcome. (AP Laserphoto)</p>
        <p>Aurora Residents' Attitudes Changing Toward Texasgulf</p>
        <p>AURORA, N.C. (AP) - As both the largest employer and taxpayer in Aurora, Texasgulf Chemicals Co. has long been considered a generous corporate citizen, but residents say that perception is now grudgingly changing.</p>
        <p>Last month, state officials imposed a $5.7 million fine on the phosphate company for polluting the air, the largest penalty of its kind in North Carolina.</p>
        <p>Trust in Texasgulf, expressed by both state inspectors and local resi- dents, has diminished. And although all of the state charges refer only to air pollution, critics now question the companys commitment to protecting the Pamlico.River.</p>
        <p>I dont want this to be a barren wasteland, Etles Henries Sr., a retired fisherman who lives near the river, said in an interview.</p>
        <p>People are having a little bit of an attitude change, said Etles Henries Jr., president of Carolina Seafood, a commerical fishing firm not far from the phosphate plant. Its a very small change, very subtle. Its a touchy suituation here in Aurora. Youve got everybody afraid to say anything.</p>
        <p>That tear, is based, residents say, on economics.</p>
        <p>Since 1966, when Texasgulf began mining phosphate in Aurora for use as a farm fertilizer, the company has held a unique postion in Beaufort County.</p>
        <p>Texasgulf pays $1.3 million in property taxes, or roughly a third of the total in the county. It contributes about $40 million a year into the local economy, employing about 1,230 people at its plant.</p>
        <p>Were a rural area. said Merril Bynum, office manager of the Wachovia Bank and Trust Co in Aurora, a town of about 7(Ml people The majority of my customers are employed at Texasgulf. If they were not here, a lot of p&amp;lt;ople would move.</p>
        <p>Texasgulf has retained the Greensboro law firm of Brooks, Pierce McLendon, Humphrey &amp;amp; Leonard to respond to the fine. A lawyer with the firm. George House, filed a legal brief Friday that denied that any of the pollution violations were willful. The company acknowledged only two violations - that fluoride emissions exceeded limits at one plant structure, and that high sulfur dioxide readings were not on a company monitoring devici' last Jan. 19and Julvl7.</p>
        <p>Crimestoppers</p>
        <p>If you have infonnation on any criine committed in Pitt CouiitN. call Crimestoppers, T.kS-7777. You do not have to identif&amp;gt; yourself and can be paid for the information you supply.</p>
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        <p>asphalt, petroleum and soda ash plants throughout this county and overseas.</p>
        <p>Youve got a company run by the French, complained Etles, the wholesale fisherman. Are they going to run it as a clean, environmentally safe company, or are they going to have a tendency to worry about profits?</p>
        <p>Fishermen complain that the phosphate byproducts that end up in the river are deadly to the areas multimillion dollar seafood industry.</p>
        <p>You cant eat the crabs that come from over there, said fisherman Willie Phillips, pointing to the plant. They have a high sulfur content. The smell is terrible. At times, it burns as it comes across the river.</p>
        <p>State inspectors also say they dont trust the plant anymore.</p>
        <p>They do have a history of non-compliance and a history of spills and violations of various sorts, said R. Paul Wilms, director of the state Division of Environmental Management. Weve seen a pattern of violations.</p>
        <p>Asked if he trusts Texasgulf and its efforts to protect the environment, Wilms said: We dont, not any more than we trust anyone else.</p>
        <p>All my neighbors are Texasgulf employees, Phillips said. Its one of the biggest tightropes we walk across. Its very frustrating as individuals to try to react to a giant like that. No one wants to fight Texasgulf. Its a no-win situation.</p>
        <p>SHELBY, N.C. (AP) - Authorities say they are investigating the background of an adult bookstore in Shelby where three men were killed and two others wounded by armed men wearing ski masks.</p>
        <p>The business history of that particular business and other businesses in North Carolina have some documentary evidence to suggest they are financed by people involved in shady businesses, Cleveland County Chief Deputy Ron McKinney said Sunday.</p>
        <p>Three bodies were found early Sunday morning in the Shelby III Bookstore, which had been set on fire after the shootings. The two men who survived apparently crawled from the building to their cars. The shootings occurred between 11:30 p.m. and midnight Saturday.</p>
        <p>The Greensboro News &amp;amp; Record reported that unnamed law enforcement sources said Shelby III Bookstore was one of 13 adult bookstores linked to a company called Direct Retail Associates by documents found in a 1984 raid of several bookstores by Charlotte police officers.</p>
        <p>The sources said Direct Retail is linked to Reuben Sturman, who federal and state authorities believe has dealings with organized crime, the newspaper reported. Sturman has denied any links with organized crime.</p>
        <p>My information is all third hand. Its from the police, but third hand and it is that it was an organized hit, Charlotte city attorney Robert Thomas told the Greensboro News &amp;amp; Record.</p>
        <p>That doesnt mean it was the Mafia. We dont know who organized the hit, Thomas said. But it does not appear that robbery was the motive, there does not appear to be any motive for the shooting other than to go in and kill somebody. And there is speculation about whether they got the person they were looking for.</p>
        <p>To me its plain out-and-out execution, said Edward Weston, the</p>
        <p>father of victim Paul Weston. I feel its plain cold-blooded execution. Weston, 26, of Forest City was one of the three men killed. The other victims were identified by Sheriff Buddy McKinney as Travis Don Melton, 19,</p>
        <p>of Ellenboro, an employee, and Kenneth Ray Godfrey, 29, of Forest City.</p>
        <p>The names, condition and location of the two men injured in the shooting were withheld for security reasons, McKinnw said. He said one survivor lives in Cleveland County, the other in South Carolina.</p>
        <p>It has been determined that three, wssibly four, men entered the Kwkstore at closing time, Sheriff McKinney said in a prepared statement at a news conference Sunday. These men were all dressed alike and were wearing brownish-gold ski masks and large brown corduroy coats. They were armed with various types of weapons. Upon entry, those in the store were ordered to lay face down on the floor, where they were each shot in the head.</p>
        <p>The information was based on statements from one of the survivors, he said.</p>
        <p>No money was found in the cash register, which was empty. Sheriff McKinney said.</p>
        <p>The Lattimore No. 7 Volunteer Fire Department received a call at 12:03 a.m. Sunday saying the bookstore</p>
        <p>was on fire, the sheriff said. Sheriff McKinney said containers of gasoline were used to start fires in the rear of the building where there were about a dozen bwths for movie viewing. Fire damage was concentrated there.</p>
        <p>When firefighters arrived on the scene, they found two people shot in the head in two cars outside of the bookstore.</p>
        <p>After entering the burning one-story concrete structure, firefighters found three more bodies lying face down with wounds to the head. Sheriff McKinney said. One body was found behind the counter, one in the aisle and one in the building doorway, he said.</p>
        <p>There was a good bit of blood, said one firefighter who asked not to be identified. I have never seen murder at a fire, but thats what this was. It was a mess in there.</p>
        <p>Sheriff McKinney said people in the area didnt hear any shots.</p>
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        <p>Some area residents say problems at Texasgulf worsened when a firm controlled by the French government bought the company five years ago. The buyer was Societe Nalionale Elf Acquilaine, a billion-dollar oil company that owns scores of chemical,</p>
        <p>Vivian: I just got married last 1 )ecember. Without t hese ehi(*ken houses I wouldnt have had t he kind of wedding I did.</p>
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        <p>Suzie: Bidore I had these .two chicken houses there would hav(' been no way possible for me to give her t he kind of wedding she had.</p>
        <p>I worked at the IVrdue t)lant in Lewiston for nine years before I started growing for Perdue. I started the day the plant ojiened and liked t liejoh there. But now Im my own hoss. I can attend tobusi-ness on mv own schedule.</p>
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        <p>The hardest part is when the birds first come in. But that parts over in about two weeks. Sometimes my sons come in to hang the fans or help clean up after a flock goes out. Otherwise, its work a woman can do by herself The money is good, and its not hard work at all. Growing with Perdue is my best job yet. Vivian: And its a good investment for the future. My bn )thers and I have all worked in t he chicken houses, and we know the business pretty well. So if she should ever want to retire, the business is something she can pass down to her children.</p>
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        <pb facs="00096520_0067" />
        <p>ipg  The  Dally Reflector. Greenville, N.C._Monday, January 19,</p>
        <p>Fewer Blacks Becoming Involved In Farming</p>
        <p>Monday, January 19,1987</p>
        <p>WINSTON-SALEM (AP) - The days of the black fanner may be numbered, agricultural officials say, in part because of the same problems that are affecting aU farmers -scarcity of credit and a dwindling number of young people willing, to take over family farms.</p>
        <p>Even if we dont stop the trend of loss of land, we want to at least slow it down, said Samuel J. Cornelius, who was appointed in 1984 to oversee civil rights issues in the U.S.</p>
        <p>Department of Agriculture. But wtoi the black farmer dies or sells the farm, no one comes to replace him.</p>
        <p>Other (rfficials of the agriculture department say the decline of black farmers is not due to discrimination within the agency.</p>
        <p>They attribute blacks leaving the land to a historical distaste for farming.</p>
        <p>Vance L. Clark, the administrator of Farmers Home Administration,</p>
        <p>said that the agency has made an extra effort this year to erase any perception of discrimination. The agency has made strides in that area, he added, but it has done a poor job of public relations.</p>
        <p>Young blacks just dont have the interest in farming that they used to, he said. The numbers were hearing now are not startling. But everything we do clicks into a commitment to do anything extra for the black farming community.</p>
        <p>The statistics show a steady downward spiral of blacks involved in agriculture.</p>
        <p>In 1920, one of every seven farmers was black. Today, that ratio is one in 67. In 1910, blacks owned 15.6 million acres; in 1982, 33,000 blacks were farming 3.1 million acres, mostly in the Deep South.</p>
        <p>The most recent North Carolina statistics show that, although they owned 1.2 million acres in 1950, black</p>
        <p>Bankers Say Farm Foreclosures Take Emotional Toll On Everyone</p>
        <p>By KAREN BENNETT Associated Press Writer ATLANTA (AP) - The economic troubles that brought farm foreclosures have emotionally drained not only the rural people who lost their land, but the baimers who made the unpopular decision to auction off the property as well.</p>
        <p>When loans fail, especially loans youre involved in making, you do have a certain sense of failure, said David Morgan, president of the Federal Land Bank of Central Georgia.</p>
        <p>A lot of loan officers have blamed themselves too hard. They need to remember that theyre in a risky business, and in these times are simply experiencing more of a downside risk than ever before.</p>
        <p>Morgan faced the harsh glare of national publicity when one of his customers, Lenard Hill III of Burke County, shot himself 20 minutes before his farm was to be sold at auction in February 1986.</p>
        <p>Hill apparently believed a life insurance policy would provide funds</p>
        <p>IN THE STATE</p>
        <p>iS3(,,y</p>
        <p>Charged</p>
        <p>EMERALD ISLE, N.C. (AP) - A Swansboro man has been charged with first-degree murder in the shooting death of a Virginia man. Emerald Isle police said.</p>
        <p>Authorities said William R. Freuler, 42, was charged in the death of Charlie Ray Pulley, 46, of Hampton, Va., said Mark Wilson, Emerald Isle chief of police.</p>
        <p>Wilson said the slaying appeared to be spurred by a domestic dispute. Wilson said Pulley had been shot with a.44-caliber pisto'.</p>
        <p>Dix Passes</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP)  Mental hospitals should consult family members before allowing patients with histories of violent behavior to leave hospital grounds on unsupervised passes, an advocate for the mentally ills says.</p>
        <p>Laurie Flynn, executive director for the National Alliance for the Mentally 111, said Saturday that Dorothea Dix Hosptial officials should supplement clinical judgment with advice from family members who are bound to know more about a men-tally-ill loved one.</p>
        <p>Ms. Flynn, of Arlington, Va., was in Raleigh to attend a regional conference of the alliance.</p>
        <p>Her comments come in the wake of incidents in which patients from Dorothea Dix who are considered dangerous have escaped or failed to return from permitted leaves. The incidents have led to debates about whether the pass system needs to be tightened.</p>
        <p>Pro~Buchanan</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP) - The two chief strategists of Sen. Jesse Helms political organization, the National Congressional Club, were in Washington recently trying to persuade White House communications director Pat Buchanan to run for president next year.</p>
        <p>Tom Ellis and Carter Wrenn, the</p>
        <p>chairman and executive director of the Raleigh-based club, attended a meeting at Buchanans home in McLean, Va.</p>
        <p>I feel that is is fairly likely he will run, Wrenn said. A lot of people there encouraged him to run.</p>
        <p>Buchanan has said he will make a decision by Feb. 1.</p>
        <p>McMillan Trip</p>
        <p>CHARLOTTE (AP) - U.S. Rep. Alex McMillan, R-N.C., returned from a fact-finding trip to Nicaragua convinced that President Daniel Ortegas Sandinista government is bent on destroying fre^om.</p>
        <p>Since last Saturday, McMillan, and Republican Reps. Frank Wolf of Virginia, Daniel Coats of Indiana and Guy Mollinari of New York have visited the Central American countries of Nicaragua, El Salvador, Honduras and Costa Rica.</p>
        <p>All of us have a deep concern about the issues of Central America that relate to U.S. positions of policy, McMillan said. We were most concerned about the issue of U.S. policy towards Nicaragua. It has an effect upon the whole region and, of course, U.S. security.</p>
        <p>McMillan said he was concerned about Ortegas increasingly Marxist government in Nicaragua and how to continue aid to the contra forces fighting that government.</p>
        <p>Successor</p>
        <p>STATESVILLE, N.C. (AP) - GOP officials say theres no favorite among the five people jockeying to succeed ^n. Bill Redman, but they say the district could lost some influence no matter who is selected.</p>
        <p>The district has lost Redman, R-Iredell, who was elected to a fifth term Nov. 4 and nominated by Gov. Jim Martin to the N.C. Utilities Commission Jan. 5, and former five-term Sen. Cass Ballenger, now 10th District US. representative. They were the last two Senate minority leaders.</p>
        <p>to save his three-generations-old farm. The policy did not but Atlanta businessman Frank Argenbright and New York developer Donald Trump helped his widow, Annabell Hill, raise the needed $187,000 months later.</p>
        <p>Morgan said he received hate let-tere from as far away as Iowa and Minnesota after the incident. He said hes considering leaving his job of 13 years, partly because of the emotional toll of foreclosures.</p>
        <p>Hills death brings home that decisions you make affect people in very strong and emotional ways. It doesnt mean you made the wrong decisions, but its still decisions about peoples lives, Morgan said. Were looking across the desk at real people, with real hearts and real feelings.</p>
        <p>The financial crisis facing many farmers is causing deep rifts in some small towns, said the Rev. Bill Dupree of Thomasville, who supervises United Methodist Church activities in 13 southwest Georgia counties.</p>
        <p>There are (farmers) in small towns who ... feel their close friends have let them down and misled them, he said. Some feel their friends encouraged them to make considerable loans that they discovered a couple years later they cant pay.</p>
        <p>But Dupree said he sympathized with the lenders.</p>
        <p>Im certain that people lay awake at night, wrestling with (foreclosure) decisions. To put a family off a farm that their grandfather owned is very difficult, he said.</p>
        <p>The federal Farmers Home Ad-</p>
        <p>rninistration said Georgia led the nation in the number of farmers in danger of foreclosure in the fiscal year that ended Sept. 30.</p>
        <p>During that period, 862 farmers, or 10.5 percent of the FmHA borrowers in the state, either had received letters demanding repayment or had sold some assets to meet the payments.</p>
        <p>The FmHA is one of the states largest agricultural lenders, said Jimmy Payne, a farm programs specialist with the federal agency.</p>
        <p>In Georgia, the FmHA foreclosed on five farms in 1986, said the agencys state farm programs director, Raymond Bryant.</p>
        <p>Morgan said many farmers woes have not come from bankers, but from a combination of spiraling interest rates, rising operating costs and sliding commodities prices.</p>
        <p>Were all suffering from changed circumstances that make past decisions not work out, Morgan said, adding that farmers whose land is repossessed seldom confront him about the decision.</p>
        <p>Most of the complaints have been you should never have loaned me this much money, he said. In hindsight, that proves to be true. But we never made a loan that someone didnt ask for.</p>
        <p>Farmer Lee Webster of Burke County, who was working with Hill when he commitN suicide and who has since lost his own farm at auction, thinks lenders may shoulder more of the blame.</p>
        <p>Webster said an auction has a rip-)le effect that lowers the value of and in the community and possibly leads to more foreclosures.</p>
        <p>Victims' Assistance Program Available</p>
        <p>CHARLOTTE (AP)  For more than a year, Mecklenburg Chief District Judge James Canning has lobbied for a service to help victims of misdemeanor crimes.</p>
        <p>The result - the misdemeanor unit of Mecklenburg Countys Victim Assistance program - opened in the county courthouse this month.</p>
        <p>They had needs particularly for information about their cases, about how theyre processed, for support services, Canning said. And nobody was doing this.</p>
        <p>Funded with a federal grant of $104,900 and matching money from the city of Charlotte, the program provides counseling, information about support services and volunteers who accompany victims to court.</p>
        <p>It has been offering services since September from a temporary office and has serv^ more than 200 clients. This month, it moved into a permanent home, in the courthouse.</p>
        <p>Victim Assistance has operated since 1976, but its focus has ^n or helping felony crime victims, misdemeanor unit coordinator Annette Morrison said.</p>
        <p>Victims of domestic violence  offenses such as assault, property</p>
        <p>damage and threats - will be a priority, she said. The program is coordinating its efforts with the Shelter for Battered Women.</p>
        <p>We can tell the people there is a shelter available and talk to them about different alternatives. We can refer them to various community services, Ms. Morrison said.</p>
        <p>The staff consists of Ms. Morrison, three counselors and a secretary. The program also will train volunteers to explain the court system and accompany victims to court.</p>
        <p>How does that help victims?</p>
        <p>One 35-year-old client, who asked not to be identified, offers her situation as an example.</p>
        <p>Two years ago, she took her husband to court for assaulting her. He received a suspended sentence and eventually persuaded her to return to him. She didnt go to Victim Assistance for help.</p>
        <p>In October, he assaulted her again by kicking her and later stabbing her. She left him and stayed at the shelter, then rented an apartment.</p>
        <p>farmers now own less than 400,000 acres.</p>
        <p>Until 1982, when the U.S. Civil Rights Commission released its benchmark report, The Decline of Black Farming in America, the loss of land by black farmers went almost unnoticed.</p>
        <p>In its report, the commission urged the FmH to increase black representation within its management, field operations and loan policies. The basis for those recommendations, the report said, was the FmHAs involvement in the very kind of racial discrimination that it should be seeking to correct.</p>
        <p>Five years after the commission issued its report, there is no sign that the trend has changed.</p>
        <p>George Ammons is a black farmer who farms 175 acres of cleared land and raises 100,000 turkeys a year in the piney woods about 70 miles east of Fayetteville.</p>
        <p>If I could get the interest rates lower and pay off on my turkey houses, I could stay in business, Ammons said. Hell, 1 could pay off some bills and start thinking about getting ahead, about making a profit.</p>
        <p>He says the commission could have saved money on the report because it hasnt made a difference. Betty Bailey, the director of the Farm Survival Project in Pittsboro, said: The Department of Agriculture hasnt done anything to correct discrimination. In fact, its probably gotten worse.</p>
        <p>Clark criticized programs within the department for failing to keep up their end, and singled out the nations land-grant colleges, which provide agricultural education. He said that these colleges are squandering money given to them by the FmHA to assist blacks.</p>
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        <p>6:30 P.M.Dinner Served  GUEST  SPEAKERS</p>
        <p>FOR JANUARY</p>
        <p>7:45 P.M.-Meeting Cost: Menu Price THE CAMERON FAMILY</p>
        <p>OF SCOTLAND</p>
        <p>This family of Scotland, is recognized as one of the foremost Praise Groups in the Christian world today. They travel worldwide, sharing in seminars and conferences on praise. The songs they write are sung internationally by many artists. They are also involved in evangelistic tours behind the Iron Curtain.</p>
        <p>Michael (the father) was the first one to receive Christ in this large family and through his prayers and faithfulness, saw everyone of them to come to know the Lord.</p>
        <p>Robert (the son) is the song writer for the Camerons and also the musician. His songs of praise and encouragement will thrill your heart.</p>
        <p>EXPECT A BLESSING!</p>
        <p>For additional information and reservations please call 756-1877. You must have reservations in by Thursday at noon before the mcfttng._</p>
        <p>ATTEND OUR WEEKLY MEETING</p>
        <p>6:30 A.M. each Tuesday for Men Toms Restaurant, West End Circle, Greenville</p>
        <p>7:00 A.M. each Saturday for Men</p>
        <p>BEST BUILT</p>
        <p>lARRELSON S</p>
        <p>Portable BIdgsTreated Lumber Outdoor Furniture</p>
        <p>Inc.</p>
        <p>Is Your Supplier For</p>
        <p>Pressure Treated Wood And Wood Products</p>
        <p> Buildings Outdoor Furniture  Lattice  Fancy Fence  Landscape Timbers</p>
        <p> Treated</p>
        <p>Lumber</p>
        <p>GkkI memories will Iasi ^ (^a lifetime...and_/^</p>
        <p>Pressure Treated Lumber</p>
        <p>100% Financing On Buildings!</p>
        <p>Whfi you buM ouf doors. gr Mottmt protoclion Irom ml and fermdes</p>
        <p>5/4x6 Decking</p>
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        <p> ms</p>
        <p>Wolmanized' 5/4' Decking</p>
        <p>Guaranteed For Life!</p>
        <p>3101 S. Evant-OpDn 10 A.M.Closed Sun. A Mon.-Phone 355-2869 (Behind Basic Transportation)</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0068" />
        <p>Lifestyle</p>
        <p>Appetite Stimulus Seems To Affect Mood Changes</p>
        <p>By.JAMIE TALAN</p>
        <p>I,.A. Tin)fs-\Vashiii)itoii iosl \*WS ST\ic</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON - Researchers )laced a tiny electrical device in the )rain of an obese woman to help curb her appetite. But while it worked to cut calories - by as much as 2.5 percent - the patient complained of feeling anxious, depressed and tired.</p>
        <p>The abrupt and unpleasant mofxl changes may inevitably make use of this technique impractical. But the findings, reported by researchers at the University of Chicago, suggest that electrical stimulation of certain brain areas, in particular the ventral medial hypothalamus, can control food intake If they could obtain similar weight loss - without the mood alterations - researchers say this could be a last resort for grossly otiese people who fail at normal dieting.</p>
        <p>We honestly dont know what caused the patient to be so depressed, said psychologist .John Metz. It could be that not eating brought about these feelings. On the other hand, the feelings could have affected her appetite. The findings were presented recently at the annual meeting of the Society for Neuroscience.</p>
        <p>The patient, a 32-year-old mother of two, underwent surgery in Novembiir 198.5. The brain electrodes were connected to a battery-powered stimulator implanted under the skin in the patients chest. She weighed 405 pounds.</p>
        <p>When the machine is turned on, sniaii bursts of electricity a. o sent to the hypothalamus. Stimulation to this area seems to regulate food intake, allowing the person to consume less.</p>
        <p>According to Dr Frederick Brown, the surgeon who developed the procedure, the patient lost 32 pounds in the four months following surgery.</p>
        <p>She returned to the hospital during the fifth month to undergo a series of studies to see exactly how much food was eaten while the machine was activated. Rosearchers also tested metabolic bram activity during such times to better understand the relationship between brain and behavior.</p>
        <p>Brain-imaging technique.-, showed that l)oth low and high levels of electrical stimulation prwluced dramatic increases in brain metabolism. The hy{)othalamus was highly charged.</p>
        <p>Behavioral changes - mood and food - were noticeable only follow, ing levels of high stimulation. During these times, the patient reduced her caloric intake by 25 p(mcent, and also repiirted feeling anxious, unfriendly, lethargic and sligfil !y depressed.</p>
        <p>According to the Thieago researchers, this human study offers the first hint that feelings might also be* mediated through (his brain site. It has been known for decades that the hypothalamus controls foiKl intake in animals.</p>
        <p>The researchers have yet to explain whether the high stimulation pnxluced such anhappiness that the</p>
        <p>patient didnt feel like eating, or the decreased appetite lead to unhappiness. We just dont know, Metz said.</p>
        <p>On a practical level, the procedure was a failure. The patient does not like the device and has opted not to continue using it. Theoretically, if it were a pleasant experience, Metz said, she might use it every day Now, she is well aware of the sad feelings produced when the device is on. The electrodes will remain in her brain forever.</p>
        <p>Metz said the behavioral feelings may be nothing more than normal irritability that stems from dieting. Most people who go on any kind of diet experience irritable feelings, he said. This procedure was not that different from other techniques of weight loss</p>
        <p>According to Dr. Robert G. Heath, professor emeritus of psychiatry and neurology at Tulane University School of Medicine, there are other areas of the hypothalamus that have l)een shown to produce feelings of pleasure. Maybe they need to go back and. tap these areas, Heath said.</p>
        <p>Similar procedures by Heath, Brown and others have been used in other parts of the brain for control of chronic pain, schizophrenia and some forms of epilepsy. It is generally done on patients for whom nothing else works. (Distributed by the Los Angeles Times-Washington Post News Service 1</p>
        <p>Dinner Clean-Up Was Alone</p>
        <p>Dear Abby</p>
        <p>By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN</p>
        <p>DEAR ABBY: I had my entire family over for Christmas dinner again this year. Ive had it here for vears because I have the largest house. Everyone brings an appetizer or a side dish, and 1 cook the turkey.</p>
        <p>Well, everything went great until it came time to do the dishes and clean up Abby,' no one moved  except to the couches and chairs. 1 did dishes for 16 people!</p>
        <p>Someone said, Why dont you sit down fora while?" My response, Id love to if only someone would give me a hand in the kitchen Nobody of fered, so I went ahead and did it myself. When I finished, I was ex hausted.</p>
        <p>This is not the first time they have done this to me. Am 1 being unfair to expect their help! - DISHPAN HANDS IN MASS</p>
        <p>DEAR DISH: You are not being unfair to expect their help, but you are being fwilish to depend on volunteers. DllAFT as many hands as you need, saying, Many hands make light work," or however that corny (but effective) phrase goes, hut whatever you do  dont go it alone next vear.</p>
        <p>DEAR ABBY: In a recent column you indicated that when a child ends a marriage, the legal relationship between the parent and the childs spouse ends.</p>
        <p>I lake issue with this and believe the rule to be that these spouses continue to be daughters-in-law or sons-in-law.</p>
        <p>For one thing, the relationship is recognized by the Internal Revenue Service. Suppose, for instance. I am providing over one-half of the sup port for a daughter-in-law I can claim her as an exemption Ixvause a</p>
        <p>relationship exists. The regulations provide, I ndieve, that the relation ship once existing is not destroyed for income tax purposes by divorce or by the death of a spouse.</p>
        <p>Based on this and the lack of any other legal authority. I suggest that the legal relationship continues Wondering," the lady who wrote you about this, will no doubt be relieved to get all of her relatives back! - GEORGE E McINTOSH, ATTORNEY, MOUNT VERNON. WASH.</p>
        <p>DEAR MR. McINTOSH;Wouder-ing" will uiiduubtedly be about as relieved" to get all her in-laws back as you (or I) would. I can readily understand tbat some in-laws do need financial protection under the law, but these days when marriages stand a .50-50 chance of ending in divorce, law or no law, the in-law who is out can properly be referred to as a "former" in-law.</p>
        <p>Row do you like them apples, Mr. McIntosh'. I Forgive me, the juicy tie-in was Um) appealing.)</p>
        <p>DEAR ABBY: Mike and I have been married for 14 years and have two wonderful children, but life has not been easy for me with (his man. Along the way he picked up a lot of bad habits such as drinking, smoking four packs a day. gambling and slay ing out all night.</p>
        <p>About a year ago he became a new man. He quit drinking, smok ing, gambling, and he stays out only one night a week - on Saturdays.</p>
        <p>He finally broke down and confessed that hes Ix'en seeing another woman, and he owes it all to her! He was honest enough to confess, but how can I tell him not to see her any more when she did more to make a man out of him than I did?  ON THE SPOT</p>
        <p>DEAR ON; Once you give your husband permission to "see" another woman, you can say giMMlbye to your marriage. Regardless of what your husband "owes " her, he shouldn't he</p>
        <p>paying it off with what belongs exclusively to you.</p>
        <p>(For Abbys booklet, How to Have a Lovely Wedding, send a check or money order for $2.50 and a long, stamped (39 cents), self-addressed envelope to; Dear Abby, Wedding Booklet, P.O. Box 447, Mount Morris. III. 61054.)</p>
        <p>Bridal</p>
        <p>Policy</p>
        <p>A black and white glossy five by seven photograph is requested for engagement announcements in The Daily Reflector. For publication in a Sunday edition, the information must be submitted by 12 noon on the preceding Wednesday. Engagement pictures must be released at least three weeks prior to the wedding date. After three w'ceks, only an announcement will be printed.</p>
        <p>I Wedding write-ups will be printed through the first week with a one column picture 1 During the second week, a one ' column picture v^ill be used i with a write-up giving less 1 description and after the I second week, just as an announcement.</p>
        <p>Wedding forms and pictures should be returned to The Daily Reflector one week prior to the date of the wedding. All information should be typed or written neatlv</p>
        <p>iT^ Coggins Carpet 1 Cleaning S</p>
        <p>Specializing in your carpal needs and I ^ exterior cleaning of your home and P  buildings.  ^</p>
        <p>5  of  cSata...</p>
        <p>  Carolina  East  Mall  Onl</p>
        <p>SELECTION</p>
        <p>OF</p>
        <p>LADIES SUITS SKIRTS SPORT COATS BLOUSES</p>
        <p>1/2-Patriotism is In Fashion Today</p>
        <p>HOME SEWN  Across America the hottest trend in menswear this season is the patriotic look of MADE IN THE USA  the brand  emblazoned on everything from pants and shirts to socks, caps and underwear. A group of menswear manufacturers, The American Fashion Council, are leading this grassroots effort. Retailers will donate a percentage of the garments purchase price to the charity of their choice. (Garments are made of Celanese Fortrel polyester and cotton.)Births</p>
        <p>Hooker</p>
        <p>Bom to Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Lee Hooker, Aurora, a daughter, Lee Anne, on Jan. 7,1987, in Pitt County Memorial Hospital.</p>
        <p>Mizelle</p>
        <p>Born to Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Wayne Mizelle, Stokes, a son, Christraher Wayne, on Jan. 7,1987, in Pitt (bounty Memorial Hospital.</p>
        <p>Dawson</p>
        <p>Born to Mr. and Mrs. Murphy Dawson, Snow Hill, a son, Travis LaBrien, on Jan. 8,1987, in Pitt County Memorial Hospital.</p>
        <p>McGlauflin</p>
        <p>Born to Mr. and Mrs. Arthur M. McGlauflin, 1302 Gotten Road, a daughter, Kristin Amanda, on Jan. 8, 1987, in Pitt County Memorial Hospital.</p>
        <p>Prayer</p>
        <p>Born to Mr. an(i Mrs. Jeffrey D. Prayer, 106 Anderson Drive, a son, Jeffrey Don Jr., on Jan. 8, 1987, in Pitt County Memorial Hospital.</p>
        <p>Davis</p>
        <p>Bora to Mr. and Mrs. Tony Lee Davis, Dover, a dau^ter, Jessica Lynn, on Jan. 8,1987, in Pitt County Memorial Hospital.</p>
        <p>Williams</p>
        <p>Born to Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Williams, Robersonville, a dau^ter,</p>
        <p>Patrice Sharell, on Jan. 8, 1987, in Pitt County Memorial Hospital.</p>
        <p>Beck-Jaffurs Born to Mrs. Barbara Beck and Dr. William Jaffurs, Grimesland, a son, Jacob Madison, on Jan. 9, 1987, in Pitt County Memorial Hospital.</p>
        <p>Rogerson Bora to Mr. and Mrs. Bernice L. Rogerson, Williamston, a son, Berais Allen, on Jan. 9,1987, in Pitt County Memorial Hospital.</p>
        <p>Waters</p>
        <p>Bom to Mr. and Mrs. Victor K. Waters, Bath, a son, Benjamin</p>
        <p>Donald, on Jan. 9,1987, in Pitt County Memorial Hospital.</p>
        <p>Caputo</p>
        <p>Bora to Mr. and Mrs. Anthony F. Caputo Jr., Ayden, a daughter, Kristin Collins, on Jan. 9,1987, in Pitt County Memorial Hospital.</p>
        <p>Eastern Electrolysis</p>
        <p>205 COMMERCE ST.</p>
        <p>PHONE 75M034, GREENVILLE. NC</p>
        <p>PERMANENT HAIR REMOVAL CERTIFIED ELECTROLOGIST</p>
        <p>SAPPHIRES, EMERALDS, RUBIES, PEARLS, DIAMONDS</p>
        <p>LAUTARES JEWELERS</p>
        <p>Est. 1912</p>
        <p>Specialists In Precious Gems</p>
        <p>Have A Job?</p>
        <p>Help Oer Yevliri</p>
        <p>Babysitting Yard Work House Cleaning Farm Work</p>
        <p>Kenneth Pollard</p>
        <p>A United Way Non-Profit Program</p>
        <p>Moving Restaurant Office Work General Labor</p>
        <p>312 E. 10th St.</p>
        <p>DIAL-A-TEEN</p>
        <p>758-1976</p>
        <p>Coordinator</p>
        <p>Greenville, N.C.</p>
        <p>7/acS^</p>
        <p>1/2 YEARLY SHOE SALE</p>
        <p>FALL SHOES NOW 1/2 PRICE</p>
        <p>Aigner</p>
        <p>Connie</p>
        <p>Bass</p>
        <p>Danelle</p>
        <p>Hampshires</p>
        <p>Soft Spots Nicole L.A. Gear Jasmine Green Rose*12 48Values To $96.00 HANDBAGS.........upTo  1/2  OH</p>
        <p>ALL SALES FINAL. . . SALE STARTS TODAYTiatchSA^</p>
        <p>Hours</p>
        <p>CirolltMEMlMall  Mon.-St,  1M</p>
        <p>Locations: Greenville  Fayetteville  Kintlon - Wilson</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0069" />
        <p>Double Ring Vows Performed Saturday</p>
        <p>The Daily Reflector, Gfeenville, N.C.</p>
        <p>Monday, January 19,1907  9</p>
        <p>ORIENTAL  The wedding ceremony of Susan Lee Thompson and David Robert Maier took place Saturday at 4:30 p.m. in the Oriental First Baptist ChUrch. The Rev. James Oliver conducted the double ring ceremony.</p>
        <p>Parents of the couple are Mr. and Mrs. Edward D. Thompson of Oriental and Dr. and Mrs. Robert H. Maier ofGn^nville.</p>
        <p>Charlyn DeHart presented a program of organ music.</p>
        <p>The bride was given in marriage by her parents. Her honor attendant was her sister, Cheryl Thompson of Fairfax, Va.</p>
        <p>The bridegrooms father served as best man.</p>
        <p>Thft bride wore a gown of knit chiffon over taffeta styled with a sweetheart neckline accented with Venise lace. It had short sleeves and the full skirt was accented with Venise lace which extended into a chapel length train. Her walking length veil extended from a cap of Venise lace and was edeed in matching lace. She carried a ^eaf bouquet of a dozen American beauty roses.</p>
        <p>The honor attendant wore a floor length gown of teal bridal satin designed with a scooped neck and long puffed sleeves. She carried a bouquet of three long-stemmed American beauty roses.</p>
        <p>A reception was given by the parents of the couple and was held at the Oriental Womans Club Assisting in serving were Norma Smith. Donna Rice, Lynn Jordan, Brenda Shaw. Brenda Maclay, Kelly Knight and Lois Gumbrecht.</p>
        <p>The couple will live in Guam after a wedding trip to California.</p>
        <p>The bride is a graduate of East</p>
        <p>MRS. MAIER</p>
        <p>Carolina University with a B.A. in intermediate education and M.A. in counselor education. The bridegroom is a graduate of ECU with a B.S. in business administration. He is an ensign in the U.S. Navy.</p>
        <p>A wedding breakfast honoring the bridal couple was given Saturday morning at Brantleys Village Restaurant for family and out-of-town guests by Sally Midyette and Mr. and Mrs. John Bond.Space Enthusiast Starts Program For Youngsters</p>
        <p>By EILEEN A. FERENCHAK The .Mesa Tribune MESA, Ariz. (AP)  Roy Enders was one of those kids who used to make balsa-tree wings and jump off barnyard roofs. His love for space and science has expanded to the formation of a worldwide, 3,000-member Junior Shuttle Pilot Program.</p>
        <p>The 29-year-old Mesa man plans to deliver his clubs space science-high technology newspapers to schools throughout the state. He has orders for about 20,000 papers to go to such districts as those in Mesa, Scottsdale, Yuma, Kingman and Payson.</p>
        <p>The 12-page broadsheet newspaper is written at a fifth-grade leve with</p>
        <p>information on such topics as computers, robotics, aerospace and science and technology.</p>
        <p>We take information from the brightest minds in industry, government and the private sector and pass it along to the children in a fun and rewarding fashion, he said.</p>
        <p>The paper includes stories, photographs, games, contests and experiments. The last page of each paper serves as a poster to encourage children to keep the issues, Enders said.</p>
        <p>More than 15,000 youngsters have written for newspapers and information from the Junior Shuttle Pilot News.</p>
        <p>*SUPER VALUE*</p>
        <p>The Diet Center Program</p>
        <p>FULL PRICE!</p>
        <p>Before you start any diet,</p>
        <p> COMPARE! </p>
        <p>Diet Center offers the most successful weight* loss program in the nation, but that doesnt mean that were the most expensive. On the contrary, our program is priced fairly and costs less, than many other programs, even when they are offered at half price! When you decide to lose weight, compare. Take the time to get the facts before you make your decision. If you do, were confident that you will select Diet Center.</p>
        <p>Our program is fast, safe and affordable!</p>
        <p>LOSE 17 TO 25 POUNDS IN JUST 6 WEEKS!</p>
        <p>NO SHOTS *N0 DRUGS *N0 CONTRACTS</p>
        <p>756-8545</p>
        <p>Linda Lynn Tripp. B.S., B.A., M.A. Ed. (Cminteling)</p>
        <p>Caroline C. Worthington B.S. (Foods &amp;amp; Nutrition)103 Oakmont</p>
        <p>Meeting Place</p>
        <p>MONDAY</p>
        <p>6:30 p.m.  Rotary Club meets 6:30 p.m.  Host Lion Club meets at Holiday Inn 6:30 p.m.  Optimist Club meets at</p>
        <p>^PK|PA QfpAISk</p>
        <p>7:30 p.m.  Woodmen of the World. Sim^n Lodge, meets at Community Building</p>
        <p>7:00 p.m.  Sweet Adelines, Eastern Carolina Chapter, meets at The Memorial Baptist Church.</p>
        <p>7:30 p.m.  Greenville Barber Shop Chorus meets at Jaycee Park Aa-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. 885 Loyal Order of the Moose 8:00 p.m.  Alcoholics Anonymous closed discussion, AA Building, Farmville Highway</p>
        <p>8:00 p.m.  Freedom Group of Narcotics Anonymous open speaker meeting, Saine Pauls Episcopal Church, 401 E. Fourth St.</p>
        <p>TUESDAY</p>
        <p>7:00 a.m.  Greenville Breakfast Lion Club meets at Three Steers 10:00 a.m.  Kiwanis Golden K Club iheets at Masonic Hall 6:30 p.m.  Greenville Claims Association meet at Three Steers 6:30 p.m.  Greenville Kiwanis Club meets at Riverside Steak Bar 7:00 p.m.  Post No. 39 of American Legion meets at Post Home 7:30 p.m.  Toughlove Parents Support Group meets at St. Pauls Episcopal Church</p>
        <p>8:00 p.m.  Pitt Co. Alcoholics Anonymous meets at AA Building, Farmville Highway</p>
        <p>I tamily Method</p>
        <p>group meets at St. James United 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 10:00a.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</p>
        <p>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 Anonvmous meets at Saint Pauls Episcopal Church.</p>
        <p>THURSDAY</p>
        <p>6:30 p.m.  Jaycees meet at Rotary Building</p>
        <p>6:30 p.m.  Exchange Club meets 7:00 p.m.  Gr(&amp;gt;enville Civitan Club meets at Three Steers 7:30 p.m.  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.  Epilepsy Association of North Carolina, Coastal Plains Chapter, meets at Pitt County Mental Health Center.</p>
        <p>8:00 p.m.  Alateen, a meeting for children of alcoholics will meet in room 32 of First Presbyterian Church.</p>
        <p>8:00 p.m.  Alcoholics Anonymous closed meeting at First Presbyterian Church 8:00 p.m.  Serenity Al-Anon meets at First Presbyterian Church, room 33 8:00 p.m.  Freedom Group of Narcotics Anonymous open meeting, St. Pauls Episcopal Church</p>
        <p>FRIDAY</p>
        <p>12 noon  Alcoholics Anonymous meets at St. Pauls Episcopal Church 8:00 p.m.  ^renity Group of Narcotics Anonymous has open discussion at St. Pauls Episcopal Church 8:00 p.m.  Alcoholics Anonoymous traditions and step (newcomers) closed meeting at AA Building, Farmville Highway</p>
        <p>SATURDAY</p>
        <p>9:30 a.m.  Overealers Anonymous Big Book meeting at First Presbyterian Church, Harvey-Webb room. Elm Street 1:30 p.m.  Duplicate bridge meets at Senior Center 8:U0 p.m.  Alcoholics Anonymous open discussion group meets at St. Pauls Episcopal Church 8:00 p.m.  Narcotics Anonymous book study meets at University Church of Christ</p>
        <p>ADJUSTING TO DIVORCE</p>
        <p>A Seminar For Separated/Divorced Men And Women</p>
        <p>Topics: coping with problems and emotions, relating to ex-spouse, children of divorce, how to begin again.</p>
        <p>MARILYN HUBER, RN, MA</p>
        <p>Counselor tor marital, sexual &amp;amp; divorce adjustment</p>
        <p>Beginning: Tuesday, Jan. 27 7:00-9:00 p.m.</p>
        <p>For information or registration call 756-7766 or 758-6080</p>
        <p>REVIVAL</p>
        <p>...This is that which was spoken by the prophet Joel; and II shall come to pass in these last days, saith God, I will poui out of my Spirit upon all flesh;... (Acts 2:16 17)</p>
        <p>lanoanilB-tS</p>
        <p> m PA NW</p>
        <p>(except Sunday7 PM)</p>
        <p>The Evangelist is Rev. latiy Hunt</p>
        <p>(Indian From Lumberton, NC)</p>
        <p>The Message is Jesus,</p>
        <p>The Power is the Holy Spirit GREENVILLE CHURCH OF GOD</p>
        <p>3lO.S S. Memorial Drive</p>
        <p>Special</p>
        <p>Singiny</p>
        <p>Anointed</p>
        <p>Preaching</p>
        <p>Pastor G. A. Haislip &amp;amp; Congregation invite the public to attend</p>
        <p>HtsANewlDw</p>
        <p>On Home Equity Ix&amp;gt;ans Throujih April 15,1987.</p>
        <p>Iniroducing I^oples I'quity Line iJiat leaturusa liiiiiU'd-tirtiu 1% iiiturust rate tiiats well Ik*Iow prime. And, dieivs no rij;iiialioii tee. lalcK you M- Ixun lx)inl)jirtlutl h\ Ixink adwrlisin^ lulling; \oii all \&amp;lt;ni u\ur wimied to know alxuii honiu utjuit\ loans and iou you can lake achanlaj'c ol lliu Iasi ol the hij; l;i\ l&amp;lt;H)ph)les And. it s ;ill true</p>
        <p>But, why pa&amp;gt;' more for a home e&amp;lt;iuity loan Uuui you have to? Ihe next linK* \oii need i asli lor a t ar tuition, home nipn)vemenl or oilier m;ijor e\|Xndilure. write yourselt a loan with your IVoples l.quily lane And. it \ou dnivv agiiinst wHir K-oples I tjuiiy Line now. youll pa\only 7% interest rate on the oul.standinj' Ixilantt ihrouj^i April IS. 198" .\tler that tiiiK*. \oiir interest rale will tonliriue ai a low rate of IVoples Iktiik s Prime Rate + h% tor hulanees over S1S,(KM) and lYime + Ifor hakinces Ix low SIS.(KM),' * You onlv liave to pav IS% of the balance (or SIOO. whichever is gR*aler) each month, and your line of credit is open lor IS years.</p>
        <p>Build up your tax deductions with leoples lx|uity Line. Ihohciiiiinga homeequit\ lo;in from IVonles Bank, vvri could pos.sibly start adding up your tax deductions for die tuiure 'llie .staff of IVoplcs Bank w ill Ix lia|)|)y to avsist vx)u in setting tip your IVoples l^quity Ijne (all or visit any ot our 62 ottiees today.</p>
        <p>n*MHlvrf\l  hlU nih mti  iI  H  nth  lloiiiMuutitH'Ikiiitiii i/Y,m m'/iT///// jpiiniiihi</p>
        <p>i/xtl Ii  Ikinb-hwi. k'.,h  v  ,  ^,,,,1.11&amp;gt;, .kLInl inli</p>
        <p>inf imktlinn Ill iiilin-\liktltu tfiny ftr bi&amp;lt;  (,.&amp;gt; ..//tw H /Vmti-&amp;lt;/ nih fn'n lt&amp;gt;m i'&amp;lt; tinii ntniunmli\/WyVo Ibink \ Itnm Hillr</p>
        <p>Peoples Bank</p>
        <p>^-Thinkin^Ahemr</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0070" />
        <p>A-10 The Dally Reflector, Greenville, N.C._Monday,  January  19,1987Stock And Market Reports</p>
        <p>By The Associated Press HOGS: Trend is 75 cents to $1.00 higher at N.C. buying stations. Kinston, Spiveys Corner, Murfreesboro, Siler City and Roberson-ville, 48.25; Clinton, Fayetteville, Dunn, Pink Hill, Pine Level, Chad-boum, Ayden, Laurinburg and Benson 48.25; Wilson 48.50; Rowland 47.50. Sows: (500 pounds up) Fayetteville 40.00; whiteville closed; Wallace 42.00; Spiveys Comer 41.00; Rowland 42.00.Stock Market Reports Grovying Numbers Of New, Small Investors</p>
        <p>FordMots</p>
        <p>Fuqua</p>
        <p>GTE Corp</p>
        <p>GenCorp</p>
        <p>GnDynam</p>
        <p>GenElec</p>
        <p>GenMills</p>
        <p>Gen Motors</p>
        <p>GnMotrE</p>
        <p>GenuPart</p>
        <p>GaPacU</p>
        <p>Goodrich</p>
        <p>BROILERS: The North Carolina fob dock quoted price on broilers for this weeks trading was 48.25 cents, based on full truck load lots of ice pack USDA Grade A sized to 3 pounds birds. 88 percent of the loads offered have been confirmed with a preliminary weighted average of 46.37 cents fob dock or equivalent. The market is slightly lower and the live supply is adequate for a moderate demand. Average weights desirable. Estimated slaughter of broilers and fryers in North Carolina Monday was 1,805,000, compared to 1,957,000 last Monday.</p>
        <p>GRAIN: No. 2 yellow shelled corn steady to 1 cent higher at mostly 1.72-1.89 in East and mostly 1.85-1.90 in the Piedmont; No. 1 yellow so&amp;gt;^ beans steady to 1 cent higher at mostly 4.85-5.03 in East and mostly 4.87-4.99 in the Piedmont; wheat mostly 2.45-2.62; (new crop wheat 2.31-2.37).</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (AP) - Stock prices got off to a weak start today as the market encountered profit-taking.</p>
        <p>The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials was down 16.45 at 2,060.18 by 10 a.m. on Wall Street.</p>
        <p>AMR Corp</p>
        <p>AbbottLab</p>
        <p>Allis Chaim</p>
        <p>Alcoa</p>
        <p>AmBrands</p>
        <p>Amer Can</p>
        <p>Am Cyan</p>
        <p>Amenlech</p>
        <p>AmlntGp</p>
        <p>Am Motors</p>
        <p>AmStand</p>
        <p>Amer T4T</p>
        <p>Amoco</p>
        <p>BellAtlan</p>
        <p>BellSouth</p>
        <p>Beth Steel</p>
        <p>Boeing</p>
        <p>Boise Cased</p>
        <p>Borden</p>
        <p>Burlngt Ind</p>
        <p>CSXCp</p>
        <p>CaroPwLt</p>
        <p>Celanese</p>
        <p>Champ Int</p>
        <p>Chevron</p>
        <p>Chrysler</p>
        <p>CocaCola</p>
        <p>ColgPalm</p>
        <p>Cumw Edis</p>
        <p> ,~rwd</p>
        <p>Grace Co</p>
        <p>GtNorNek</p>
        <p>Greyhound</p>
        <p>Herculesinc</p>
        <p>Honeywell .</p>
        <p>HCA</p>
        <p>ITT Corp</p>
        <p>IngRand</p>
        <p>IBM</p>
        <p>Int Paper InURe^ JamesRvr K mart KaisrAlum KanebSvc Kroger Ixwuieed LoewsCp McDermInt McKessn Mead Coip MercantSt MinnMM Mobil Monsanto NCNB Cp Nat Distill Navistar NorflkSou Nynex</p>
        <p>69%</p>
        <p>69</p>
        <p>69%</p>
        <p>27%</p>
        <p>26</p>
        <p>28%</p>
        <p>61</p>
        <p>80%</p>
        <p>60%</p>
        <p>78%</p>
        <p>77%</p>
        <p>78</p>
        <p>75%</p>
        <p>74%</p>
        <p>74%</p>
        <p>94</p>
        <p>93%</p>
        <p>93%</p>
        <p>45%</p>
        <p>45</p>
        <p>45%</p>
        <p>68%</p>
        <p>68</p>
        <p>68%</p>
        <p>29%</p>
        <p>29</p>
        <p>29</p>
        <p>47%</p>
        <p>47%</p>
        <p>47%</p>
        <p>43%</p>
        <p>42%</p>
        <p>43%</p>
        <p>50%</p>
        <p>49%</p>
        <p>SO</p>
        <p>44</p>
        <p>43%</p>
        <p>43%</p>
        <p>43%</p>
        <p>43%</p>
        <p>43%</p>
        <p>53%</p>
        <p>53%</p>
        <p>53%</p>
        <p>74%</p>
        <p>74%</p>
        <p>74%</p>
        <p>32%</p>
        <p>32%</p>
        <p>32%</p>
        <p>55%</p>
        <p>55</p>
        <p>55%</p>
        <p>61%</p>
        <p>61%</p>
        <p>61%</p>
        <p>32%</p>
        <p>32%</p>
        <p>32%</p>
        <p>56%</p>
        <p>56%</p>
        <p>56%</p>
        <p>65</p>
        <p>63%</p>
        <p>63%</p>
        <p>119%</p>
        <p>119</p>
        <p>119%</p>
        <p>86%</p>
        <p>85%</p>
        <p>86</p>
        <p>9%</p>
        <p>8%</p>
        <p>9</p>
        <p>37%</p>
        <p>37%</p>
        <p>37%</p>
        <p>47%</p>
        <p>47%</p>
        <p>47%</p>
        <p>15%</p>
        <p>15%</p>
        <p>15%</p>
        <p>2%</p>
        <p>2%</p>
        <p>2%</p>
        <p>30%</p>
        <p>30%</p>
        <p>3(KV4</p>
        <p>53%</p>
        <p>52%</p>
        <p>52%</p>
        <p>66%</p>
        <p>65%</p>
        <p>66</p>
        <p>23%</p>
        <p>23%</p>
        <p>23%</p>
        <p>36</p>
        <p>35%</p>
        <p>35%</p>
        <p>65%</p>
        <p>64</p>
        <p>64</p>
        <p>104</p>
        <p>103%</p>
        <p>103%</p>
        <p>124%</p>
        <p>124%</p>
        <p>124%</p>
        <p>43%</p>
        <p>43%</p>
        <p>43%</p>
        <p>83%</p>
        <p>83</p>
        <p>83%</p>
        <p>24</p>
        <p>23%</p>
        <p>23%</p>
        <p>51</p>
        <p>50%</p>
        <p>51</p>
        <p>6</p>
        <p>5%</p>
        <p>5%</p>
        <p>By MARYBETH NIBLEY AP Business Writer</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (AP) - The boom on Wall Street that has pushed stock values about $200 billion higher since the first of the year is attracting growing numbers of ordinary people eager to get in on the rally.</p>
        <p>The markets almost relentless surge since New Years Day has astounded some seasoned veterans of the financial community, who say the buying binge approaches unprecedented proportions.</p>
        <p>I think people want to jump aboard the rising bull market, said Ben Laden, chief economist of T. Rowe Price Associates Inc. in Baltimore. Theyre hearing terrific tales about stocks.</p>
        <p>At the markets open today, the Dow Jones average of 30 blue-chip stocks was up 180 points this year and the Whilshire Associates 5,000 Equity Index put the dollar value of the boom since New Years at about $200 billion.</p>
        <p>Brokers are getting calls from clients they havent heard from in years, Peter DaPuzzo, the director of retail equity trading at Shearson Lehman Brothers Inc., said during the height of trading Friday afternoon. We probably have had a record montn in over-the-counter transactions.</p>
        <p>Hugh Johnson, senior vice president at First Albany Corp., said: Im getting calls saying Dam it, I missed it! Get me in at any cost. But, he said probably a larger</p>
        <p>DelUiAirl</p>
        <p>DowChem</p>
        <p>duPont</p>
        <p>DukePow</p>
        <p>EstKodak</p>
        <p>EatonCp</p>
        <p>Exxon</p>
        <p>FPL Grp</p>
        <p>Firestone</p>
        <p>FstWachov</p>
        <p>Fla Progress</p>
        <p>-Midday stoclu:</p>
        <p>Hiih</p>
        <p>5B''h</p>
        <p>Low</p>
        <p>Last</p>
        <p>57%</p>
        <p>57%</p>
        <p>51%</p>
        <p>50^4</p>
        <p>50%</p>
        <p>2%</p>
        <p>2%</p>
        <p>2%</p>
        <p>39%</p>
        <p>38%</p>
        <p>38%</p>
        <p>46</p>
        <p>45%</p>
        <p>45%</p>
        <p>92%</p>
        <p>91%</p>
        <p>91%</p>
        <p>83</p>
        <p>82%</p>
        <p>82%</p>
        <p>140%</p>
        <p>140</p>
        <p>140</p>
        <p>65%</p>
        <p>64%</p>
        <p>65</p>
        <p>3%</p>
        <p>3</p>
        <p>3%</p>
        <p>45%</p>
        <p>45</p>
        <p>45%</p>
        <p>25%</p>
        <p>25%</p>
        <p>25%</p>
        <p>74%</p>
        <p>74%</p>
        <p>74%</p>
        <p>71%</p>
        <p>71</p>
        <p>71%</p>
        <p>61%</p>
        <p>61%</p>
        <p>61%</p>
        <p>7%</p>
        <p>7%</p>
        <p>7%</p>
        <p>50%</p>
        <p>49%</p>
        <p>49%</p>
        <p>70%</p>
        <p>69.</p>
        <p>70%</p>
        <p>51</p>
        <p>50%</p>
        <p>50/</p>
        <p>43%</p>
        <p>43%</p>
        <p>43%</p>
        <p>32%</p>
        <p>31%</p>
        <p>32</p>
        <p>40%</p>
        <p>40%</p>
        <p>241%</p>
        <p>241%</p>
        <p>241%</p>
        <p>36%</p>
        <p>35-.</p>
        <p>35%</p>
        <p>52%</p>
        <p>52</p>
        <p>52%</p>
        <p>44%</p>
        <p>44</p>
        <p>44%</p>
        <p>40%</p>
        <p>40%</p>
        <p>40%</p>
        <p>45%</p>
        <p>44%</p>
        <p>15</p>
        <p>36%</p>
        <p>36%</p>
        <p>16%</p>
        <p>30%</p>
        <p>30</p>
        <p>30%</p>
        <p>52.</p>
        <p>52%</p>
        <p>52%</p>
        <p>67%</p>
        <p>67</p>
        <p>67&amp;gt;-.</p>
        <p>95%</p>
        <p>94%</p>
        <p>94%</p>
        <p>48%</p>
        <p>48%</p>
        <p>48%</p>
        <p>74%</p>
        <p>73%</p>
        <p>73%</p>
        <p>78%</p>
        <p>77%</p>
        <p>77h</p>
        <p>78%</p>
        <p>77%</p>
        <p>77h</p>
        <p>33%</p>
        <p>33</p>
        <p>33</p>
        <p>29%</p>
        <p>29%</p>
        <p>29%</p>
        <p>40%</p>
        <p>39h</p>
        <p>39m</p>
        <p>41%</p>
        <p>41%</p>
        <p>41%</p>
        <p>Owenslll</p>
        <p>PacTel</p>
        <p>Pennw JC</p>
        <p>PepsiCo</p>
        <p>Phelps Dod</p>
        <p>PhilipMor</p>
        <p>PhilipPet</p>
        <p>Polaroid</p>
        <p>ProctGamb</p>
        <p>QuakerOats</p>
        <p>RJRNab</p>
        <p>RalstnPur</p>
        <p>Rockwel</p>
        <p>Scott Paper</p>
        <p>SealedPwr</p>
        <p>SearsRoeb</p>
        <p>Shaklee</p>
        <p>Skyline Cp</p>
        <p>Sony Corp</p>
        <p>Southern Co</p>
        <p>SwstBell</p>
        <p>StdOil</p>
        <p>Stevens JP</p>
        <p>TRW Inc</p>
        <p>Texaco Inc</p>
        <p>TexEastn</p>
        <p>USX Corp</p>
        <p>UnCamp</p>
        <p>UnCarbde</p>
        <p>USWest</p>
        <p>Unocal</p>
        <p>WalMart</p>
        <p>WestPtPep</p>
        <p>WestghEI</p>
        <p>Weyerhsr</p>
        <p>WinnDix</p>
        <p>Woolwrth</p>
        <p>Wrigley</p>
        <p>Xerox Cp</p>
        <p>46%</p>
        <p>55%</p>
        <p>56%</p>
        <p>78</p>
        <p>30%</p>
        <p>25</p>
        <p>79%</p>
        <p>12%</p>
        <p>71%</p>
        <p>84V4</p>
        <p>43%</p>
        <p>56%</p>
        <p>75%</p>
        <p>52%</p>
        <p>72%</p>
        <p>29%</p>
        <p>44%</p>
        <p>20%</p>
        <p>16%</p>
        <p>20%</p>
        <p>27%</p>
        <p>117%</p>
        <p>56%</p>
        <p>41%</p>
        <p>91%</p>
        <p>39</p>
        <p>32%</p>
        <p>24&amp;gt;/4</p>
        <p>59%</p>
        <p>25%</p>
        <p>57%</p>
        <p>29%</p>
        <p>47%</p>
        <p>59%</p>
        <p>65</p>
        <p>45%</p>
        <p>49</p>
        <p>42%</p>
        <p>52%</p>
        <p>66%</p>
        <p>90%</p>
        <p>68%</p>
        <p>46%</p>
        <p>54%</p>
        <p>56</p>
        <p>77%</p>
        <p>30%</p>
        <p>24%</p>
        <p>79%</p>
        <p>12%</p>
        <p>70%</p>
        <p>83%</p>
        <p>42%</p>
        <p>56%</p>
        <p>75%</p>
        <p>52%</p>
        <p>71%</p>
        <p>29%</p>
        <p>43%</p>
        <p>20%</p>
        <p>16</p>
        <p>20%</p>
        <p>27%</p>
        <p>116%</p>
        <p>55%</p>
        <p>41%</p>
        <p>91%</p>
        <p>38%</p>
        <p>32</p>
        <p>23%</p>
        <p>59</p>
        <p>25</p>
        <p>56%</p>
        <p>29%</p>
        <p>47%</p>
        <p>59%</p>
        <p>64%</p>
        <p>44%</p>
        <p>48%</p>
        <p>41%</p>
        <p>52</p>
        <p>65%</p>
        <p>90% 69 Vg 46% 55&amp;gt;/4 56% 77% 30% 25 79% 12% 70% 83% 43% 56% 75% 52% 71% 29% 43% 20% 16% 20% 27% 116% 55% 41% 91% 38/g 32 24 59 25% 56% 29% 47% 59% 64% 44% 48% 41% 52 66</p>
        <p>Beef Industry Launches Attack</p>
        <p>Following are selected stock quotations as of ll;00a.m.</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP)  Americas bwf industry is blanketing the nation with a $29 million advertising campaign designed to reverse a trend away from red meat among cholesterol-conscious consumers.</p>
        <p>Bankrolled by a $l-a-head fee on cattle sent to market, the radio, television and newspaper ads launched last week by the Beef Industry Council extol beef as real food for real p^le.</p>
        <p>This time the Chicago-based council and its advertising agency, Ket-chum Communications Co., aim to avoid any recurrence of a dispute two years ago that swirled around a simi-lar campaign, Beef Gives Strength.</p>
        <p>Consumer and nutrition</p>
        <p>have thus far not fully diges______</p>
        <p>latt campaign. But already some</p>
        <p>number of clients are cautious, asking whether raciiu stock prices have gotten ahead of themselves and wondering when the rally will run out of steam.</p>
        <p>It takes an awful lot to get an individual investor into this market and theres still a good deal of recalcitrance, he said, recalling clients questioning how stock prices can climb in the face of a dubious economic expansion, huge U.S. trade and budget deficits and the dollars decline.</p>
        <p>In many cases, smaller investors have tunied the driving over to somebody else, so to speak, and bought mutual funds, Johnson said. Mutual funds pool money and invest in stocks or bonds.</p>
        <p>Big-name mutual funds have been doing brisk business.</p>
        <p>Vanguard Groups headquarters in Valley Forge, Pa., is getting several thousand more calls a day tl^n usual from customers, said Vice President Brian Mattes.</p>
        <p>Vanguards gross sales in the first</p>
        <p>10 trading days this year were four times larger than in the same period last year. Mattes said. Total sales, including both stock and bond funds, top^ $1 billion in the 10 days.</p>
        <p>I dont think weve ever seen a billion dollars come in in 10 days. Mattes said.</p>
        <p>John Butler, president of Financial Programs Inc. in Denver, said: Were pretty much swamped ... I think everyone is right now.</p>
        <p>People are becoming more aware of investment opportunities, he added.</p>
        <p>Smaller, less well-known funds, however, reported less spectacular volume.</p>
        <p>David Straus, a vice president at American Investment Managers Inc. in Rockville, Md., said some people are taken aback by the stock markets behavior and lack confidence that the rally will endure.</p>
        <p>I think the individual investor is pretty stunned by it all, Straus said. I think they are just beginning to buy aggressively.</p>
        <p>AdhlanH Oil  cioi/  wwi, uuvaujr</p>
        <p>Unisys chortle that revealing shots of</p>
        <p>Conner Horn  . ....6% actress CybUl Shepherd in one TV ad</p>
        <p>Fieldcrest Mills.................................35%</p>
        <p>Flowers Inds.......................... 26%</p>
        <p>Halteras Inc. Securities.....................2(P/4</p>
        <p>Hilton Hotel Corp...............................70%</p>
        <p>Jefferson Pilot...................................36%</p>
        <p>John Deere........................................25%</p>
        <p>Lowes Company...............................28%</p>
        <p>Interstate Securities..........................13%</p>
        <p>Wickes...............................................3%</p>
        <p>Piedmont Aviation................................48</p>
        <p>SouUunark Corporation ............10%</p>
        <p>United Telecommunications...............26%</p>
        <p>Dominion Resources..........................47%</p>
        <p>Piedmont Natural Gas.......................23%</p>
        <p>OVER THE COUNTER</p>
        <p>Branch Bank...........................37/4  to  37%</p>
        <p>Planters National Bank............22% to 23%</p>
        <p>Vermont American.................  .17%  to  18%</p>
        <p>Chemlawn...............................16%  to  16%</p>
        <p>SouUiem National Bank..............24%  to  25</p>
        <p>Peoples Bank..........................14%  to  15%</p>
        <p>North Carolina Natural Gas 33% to 34%</p>
        <p>Cooper LaserSonics.......................2  to  2%</p>
        <p>Farm Fresh............................15%  to  15%</p>
        <p>recall the Madison Avenue adage that you sell the sizzle, not the steak.</p>
        <p>Leggy shots of Ms. Shepherd are backed by singers who swear off low-cholesterol nouvelle cuisine and dont care what they eat in San Francisco because they would rather be in Amarillo, in the heart of cattle country.</p>
        <p>Two of the four television ads feature Ms. Shepherd and the others actor James Garner. The council has budgeted $19.6 million for 28 weeks of network television, ^ million for print ads and $3.4 million for radio.</p>
        <p>Consumer use of beef reached a record 94 pounds per capita in 1976 and then fel through 1980, when it hit 76 pounds. Since then it has shown a slight upturn and reached 86 pounds last year, the highest level since 1978, according to Agriculture Department figures.</p>
        <p>Obituaries</p>
        <p>Soviets Fall Short</p>
        <p>Nation Recalls King</p>
        <p>(Continued from A-I)</p>
        <p>ment, was born in 1929. He was shot to death by a sniper in Memphis, Tenn., in 1968.</p>
        <p>On Sunday, a Milwaukee postal statton was named in Kings honor and a bronze sculpture of him was unveiled outside. In Birmingham, Ala., about 250 people Sunday night took part in a candlelight march.</p>
        <p>Memories of King were stirred Saturday when a group of civil rights marchers on a brotherhood antiintimidation" walk through an all-white Georgia county were pelted with rocks and bottles. Eight people were arrested and several marchers were injured</p>
        <p>Advisory Council</p>
        <p>The District XII Greenville K-6 Advisory Council will meet tonight at 7:30 in the library at Sadie Saulter School.</p>
        <p>League Meeting</p>
        <p>How the Needs of the Poor Are Being Met in Pitt County is the focus of the Greenville-Pitt County League of Women Voters open luncheon meeting Tuesday at noon at the Beef Bam.</p>
        <p>Edward Garrison, director of the Pitt County Department of Social Services, will be the speaker. In addition to addressing the topic of his talk, he will discuss the caps in existing programs and outline major concerns of his department.</p>
        <p>The meeting is open to the public.</p>
        <p>BAE Charges</p>
        <p>Greenville police arrested Jackie Lucender Lane, 26, of 1309 Broad St. on misdemeanor breaking and entering charges Friday night.</p>
        <p>Officer B.W. Lewis said Ms. Lane was charged after a caller reported a break-in m progress at Lot 3 Drum St. about 8:32 p.m. and police found Ms. Lane at the scene.</p>
        <p>CAM UMSIERS;^</p>
        <p>_j22aaaLL </p>
        <p>7S6-2215 Omonvllla 2801 S. Evans St.</p>
        <p>Cmttmy Oifia fywiwes</p>
        <p>Civil rights leaders vowed Sunday to march again some day through the county, where blacks were terrorized anddnvenoutin 1912.</p>
        <p>We feel very strongly about the right to make a non-violent march, as we did throughout the 60s. We have a right to march without being beaten up, said Coretta Scott King, the slain civil rights leaderss widow.</p>
        <p>Two of Kings lieutenants, the Rev. Ralph David Abernathy, former head of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, and the Rev. Hosea Williams, an Atlanta councilman, were to lead an afternoon parade followed by a march led by the King family.</p>
        <p>In Selma, Ala., a parade retracing part of a bloody 1965 civil rights march was planned along wiUi a prayer and candlelight vigil at Edmund Pettus Bridge, site of a violent clash between marchers and law enforcement officrs.</p>
        <p>In New York, the lawyers for two victims of the racial attack in the Howard Beach section of Queens planned a memorial service and a march today in memory of King and Michael Gnffith, who was cha^ to his death in front of a car during the attack.</p>
        <p>The point of the march is to show that there is a connection from Montgomery to Johannesburg to Howard Beach to Georgia, said lawyer C. Vernon Mason. Those connections are still there representing what he (King) fought for and what he would still be fighting for.</p>
        <p>(Continued from A-l)</p>
        <p>Oil production has been restored to its previous level, Tass said, referring to the volume produced in 1983 and 1984, before a two-year decline in oil output began.</p>
        <p>Pravda said the nation produced 4.304 billion barrels of oil last year, about 3 percent more than in 1985.</p>
        <p>Targets have been scaled back, and the party has set a goal of 4.374 billion barrels to 4.479 billion barrels by 1990. Economic plans for the first half of this decade predicted annual output of oil would reach 4.479 billion barrels by 1985.</p>
        <p>Natural gas production was up 7 percent over 1985 at 24 trillion cubic feet, 490 billion more than the previous year.</p>
        <p>The Soviet Union is the worlds largest producer of oil and natural gas, and exports are believed to provide as much as 70 percent of the hard-currency earnings the country needs to buy grain and implement Gorbachevs broad restructuring program.</p>
        <p>National income, which is believed to be the total value of goo^ and services produced in the country, was reported at $892 billion, up 4.1 percent from last year.</p>
        <p>Dollar</p>
        <p>(Continued from A-l)</p>
        <p>Todays close in Tokyo was the dollars lowest level against the yen since the Japanese government set an official exchange rate of 360 yen to the dollar in April 1949, ending a period of post-war fluctuation.</p>
        <p>The dollars previous closing low was 153.05 yen last Aug. 20. But the dollar recovered from that low point and closed at 163.75 yen last Dec. 17 before starting its current decline, in which it has plunged more than 2 yen on three of the last four trading days.</p>
        <p>Spot trading today in Tokyo totaled a record $10.2 billion, up sharply from last Fridays $5.54 billion.</p>
        <p>Dealers said the Bank of Japan bought between $1 billion and $2</p>
        <p>Industrial output grew by 4.9 percent and agricultural production by 5.1 percent, the media said.</p>
        <p>The 1986 ^ain harvest was 210.1 million metric tons, up about 1 percent from the previous year but still far short of the partys goal.</p>
        <p>Edwards</p>
        <p>Mr. Durwood B. Edwards, 73, died Sunday at his home. Route 3, Box 60, Vanceboro.</p>
        <p>A graveside service will be conducted at 2:30 p.m. Tuesday in the Edwards Family Cemetery by the Rev.LeePurifoy.</p>
        <p>Mr. Edwards, a native of Craven County, spent all his life in the Vanceboro community and was a retired farmer and carpenter. He served in the United States Army during World War II and was a member of Vanceboro Masonic Lodge.</p>
        <p>Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Velma Toler Edwards; two daughters, Mrs. Ramona E. Gaskins of Vanceboro and Mrs. Merle E. Rivenbark of Wilmington; one son, Everette C. Edwards of the home; two brothers, Billy Edwards of Vanceboro and Muny Edwards of New Bern; two sisters, Mrs. Mary Ethel Blackman of New Bern, and Mrs. Dave Hoff of Olympia, Wash., three grandchildren and two gr^t-grandchildren.</p>
        <p>The family will receive friends at the Wilkerson Funeral Home in Vanceboro from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. today.</p>
        <p>Harvey</p>
        <p>Mr. Vernon Harvey Sr. of 1615 Rawling St., Goldsboro, died in Wayne Memorial Hospital Sunday. Funeral arrangements will beannounced by Mitchells Funeral Home inWinterville.</p>
        <p>Little</p>
        <p>Survivors of Spec. 4 Vincent Eugene Little, who died Wednesday, include a brother, Randy Little of the home.</p>
        <p>White</p>
        <p>Mr. James Thomas (Coon) White died today in Pitt County Memorial Hospital. Funeral arrangements will announced by Flanagan Funeral Home.</p>
        <p>China</p>
        <p>(Continued from A-l) his failure to crack down on intellectuals critical of the party.</p>
        <p>The party Politburo appointed the 67-year-old Zhao as acting general secretary of the 44-million member &amp;gt;arty, pending ratification by the arger Central Committee.</p>
        <p>Xinhua today quoted Zhao as saying that intellectuals, who have borne the brunt of ideological campaigns in the past, will not be mistreated in the current campaign.</p>
        <p>We will not change our policy of respecting knowledge, treasuring talented people and giving full play to the enthusiasm and creativeness of intellwtuals in socialist construction, he was quoted as saying.</p>
        <p>China will not launch a political movement, still less resort to the left practice in the past.</p>
        <p>During the 1966-76 Cultural Revolution, leftists incited by Mao purged and persecuted millions of people for ideological impurities. Torture and killings were widespread. Intellectu-</p>
        <p>Elevations in Pitt County range from approximately 10 to 75 feet above mean sea level with the highest elevations occuring along the extreme western boundary of the county.</p>
        <p>als were among the worst sufferers.</p>
        <p>Xinhua said Zhao made the comments Sunday at a meeting with the secretary of the Hungarian Socialist Workers Party, Ferenc Havasi. They were the first reported statements by a senior official since Hus resignation.</p>
        <p>Zhao also was quoted as saying that the personnel change will not affect our line and policies, but will enable us to implement them more correctly. He did not mention Hu.</p>
        <p>We will continue the policy of opening to the outside world. We wUl expand instead of reducing our cooperation with foreign countries in trade, economic technical, monetary and other fields. This cooperation will be expanded in width and depth, Zhao said.</p>
        <p>Zhao supports the economic reforms Deng initiated when he took power in 1978 to modernize this still underdeveloped nation of 1 billion people.</p>
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        <pb facs="00096520_0071" />
        <p>THE DAILY</p>
        <p>REFLECTOR</p>
        <p>Greenville, N.C. Monday, January 19,1987</p>
        <p>Sports</p>
        <p>Comics</p>
        <p>Entertainment</p>
        <p>Classifeds</p>
        <p>B</p>
        <p>East Carolina Seeks To Bounce Back At Central Connecticut On Tuesday</p>
        <p>East Carolinas Pirates will try to get back on the winning side of the ledger Tuesday night as they visit Central Connecticut State for a nonconference basketballo game.</p>
        <p>The Pirates go into the contest following an 85-70 loss to Colonial Athletic Association rival UNC Wilmington on Saturday night. That dropped their record to 9-6 on the season and to 2-3 in CAA action. Brian Rowsom scored a school-record 39 points and pulled down 15 rebounds in leading the Seahawks to the win, their fourth in five CAA outings.</p>
        <p>Central Connecticut, however, will present a different sort of problem. The Blue Devils are only 3-13 on the year, having lost twice in the past week  once to another CAA team, James Madison.</p>
        <p>The Dukes downed the Devils, 75-62, in an overtime game early in the week, while Central lost to Maryland-Baltimore on Saturday, 87-61.</p>
        <p>The Pirates have won both of the irevious games with Central, taking ast years meeting in Greenville, 97-68. Of those returning this year.</p>
        <p>William Grady led the Pirates in that game with 18 points white Marchell Henry had 14 and Leon Bass had 11.</p>
        <p>Center Bryan Heron led the Blue Devils with 19 while Keith Coeman, a forward had 10.</p>
        <p>Heron, a 6-7 sophomore now playing at forward, is the leading scorer for the Blue Devils with a 12.5 averaage. Guard Dwayne Jones, a 5-9 senior, is the only other player in double figures at 10.2.</p>
        <p>The other starters include 6-6 senior forward Keith Coleman, 6-9 junior center John Wilgus, and 6-5 junior guard Brian Devlin. Wilgus averages 9.7 points a game, while Coleman had a 7.1 mark and Devlin is hitting 6.9 per game.</p>
        <p>Heron is the leading rebounder at 5.8 per game, just ahead of Wiglus, 5.7 and Coleman, 5.5.</p>
        <p>The game is the start of a four-game road swing by the Pirates. They will next be in action against CAA foe George Mason on Saturday, travel to James Madison on next Monday, then go outside the league for a game at Virginia Commonwealth on Jan. 28. They return home on Jan. 31 to host American.</p>
        <p>Meanwhile, East Carolinas Lady Pirates, after suffering their first CAA loss of the year at UNC Wilmington Saturday, 87-77, continues its road trip with a game at UNC Charlotte tonight.</p>
        <p>The Lady Pirates then return home to host George Mason on Saturday and nationally-ranked James Madison on Monday.Colonial A.A.</p>
        <p>Mens Basketball</p>
        <p>Conf. Overall W L  W  L</p>
        <p>Navy  5  1  11  3</p>
        <p>UNC-Wilmington  4  1  8  6</p>
        <p>Richmond  3  2  9  6</p>
        <p>East Carolina  2  3  9  6</p>
        <p>American  2  3  6  6</p>
        <p>James Madison  13  11  4</p>
        <p>George Mason  13  8  8</p>
        <p>William &amp;amp; Mary  13  4  9</p>
        <p>Saturdays Games Navy 96, American 60 UNu-Wilmington 85, East Carolina 70 William &amp;amp; Mary 71, James Madison 61 Richmond 74, George Mason 52</p>
        <p>,  Mondays  Games</p>
        <p>James Madison at Richmond George Mason at William &amp;amp; Mary Delaware at Navy</p>
        <p>J.R. Reid Hits 31 As</p>
        <p>Tar Heels Skin Wolfpack</p>
        <p>CHAPEL HILL (AP) - North Carolina basketball coach Dean Smith has tried to minimize his expectations of J.R. Reid, but Smith couldnt hide his pleasure after the freshmans 31-point performance in a %-78 victory over North Carolina State.</p>
        <p>"Recently, hes really coming on, Smith said after the third-ranked Tar</p>
        <p>Heels took their 13th straight victory. Hes getting confidence. Hes learning, but hes already a man when he gets the ball in low.</p>
        <p>Reid was 13 of 14 from the field and grabbed 13 rebounds to lead the Tar Heels. North Carolina is now 15-1, including a 4-0 mark in the Atlantic Coast Conference.</p>
        <p>Coach Smith sat down with me</p>
        <p>It's Mine</p>
        <p>North Carolinas J.R. Reid (34) takes a rebound away from N.C. States Avie Lester (left) and Mike Giomi (right) during Sundays Atlantic Coast Conference game in Chapel Hill. Reid scored a season-high 31 points to lead the H'i Tar Heels to a 96-78win. (AP Laserphoto)</p>
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        <p>this summer and talked to me. He said he wasnt really expecting that much because he knows how hard it is on freshmen, Reid said. He said it would depend on how well I picked up and adapted to the system here as to how much playing time I get.   Although he said he is still trying to learn, Reid has played in all 16 Tar Heel games and is averaging 11.2 points per game, one of six North Carolina players averaging in double figures.</p>
        <p>As late as last week. Smith was criticizing Reid for his lack of defensive skills. Against N.C. State, the coachs assessment paid a lot of attention to Reids offense, but gave more credit where it was due.</p>
        <p>If I were him, I would try to carry Kenny Smiths and Jeff Lebos bags for the passes they gave him, Smith said. Curtis Hunter also did a good job of getting him the ball, but he still had to score.</p>
        <p>Reids performance was aided by the absence of two key N.C. State performers, 6-foot-lO center Charles Shackleford and 6-9 reserve forward Chucky Brown, both of whom are ill. Without them to counter the 6-9 Reid, 6-9 Dave Popson and 6-10 Joe Wolf, North Carolina took control on the boards at both ends.</p>
        <p>Reid said, however, that it wasnt in the plans to exploit the Wolfpack problem.</p>
        <p>Coach Smith said just play the game we always play, dont change anything, play the same way as if Shackleford was playing, Reid said. He didnt change anything at all. Teviin Biins, a 6-10 senior starting in place of Shackleford, scored on a follow shot with 11:06 remaining in the first half to give the Wolfpack a 25-23 edge, but Reid scored on an alley-oop and tied the score again.</p>
        <p>The Wolfpack hit only one of its next 12 shots as the Tar Heels gained the lead for good.</p>
        <p>Six quick points, four by Reid, broke the tie. N.C. State got within 35-31 after a pair of free throws by Mike Giomi with 5:11 left before halftime, but another North Carolina run of eight points  six by Kenny Smith and two free throws by Reid  expanded the Tar Heel lead to 43-31 at the 4:10 mark.</p>
        <p>N.C. STATE MP FG FT R A F Pt Bolton  31  5- 9  9-10  5  2  4  22</p>
        <p>Giomi  34  2- 8  2- 3  1  2  4  6</p>
        <p>Binns  14 1- 65-6305  7</p>
        <p>Drummond  35  9-18  0- 1  2  5  3  20</p>
        <p>Del Negro 283-80-0440  6</p>
        <p>Lester  31  4-5  1- 4603  9</p>
        <p>Weems  7  2- 3  1- 1  0  2  1  5</p>
        <p>Lambiotte  9 1- 30-0002  3</p>
        <p>Kennedy  60-00-0000  0</p>
        <p>Howard  30-10-0000  0</p>
        <p>Jackson  1  0-0  0- 0  0  1  1  0</p>
        <p>Poston  1 0-00-0000  0</p>
        <p>Totals  200  27-61  18-25 23 16 23 78</p>
        <p>N. CAROLINA MP FC FT RA F Pt Popson  25  0- 6  2- 2  2  3  3  2</p>
        <p>Retd  29  13-14  5- 7  13  1  4  31</p>
        <p>Wolf  34  9-14  2- 4  10  6  3  20</p>
        <p>Lebo  31  2- 4  4- 4  4  7  3  9</p>
        <p>K.Smith  33  9-17  2- 3  0  5  1  22</p>
        <p>Hunter  15  2- 3  0- 0  5  3  4  4</p>
        <p>R.Smith  16  0- 4  2- 2  1  1  0  2</p>
        <p>Williams  9  1- 1  2- 2  5  0  3  4</p>
        <p>Bucknall  5  0-0  0- 0  1  0  3  0</p>
        <p>Hensley  1  0-0  0-0  0  0  1  0</p>
        <p>Denny  1  0-0  0-1  0  0  0  0</p>
        <p>Norwood  10-0  2- 2000  2</p>
        <p>Totals  200 3643 21-27 45 26 25 96</p>
        <p>N.C. sute..................................38  40-78</p>
        <p>N. Caroliaa................................53  43-04</p>
        <p>Three-point  goals-N.C.  State 6-13</p>
        <p>(Bolton 3-3, Drummond 2-8, Del Negro 0-1, Lambiotte 0-1). N. Carolina 3-12 (Lebo 1-3, K.Smith 2-7, R. Smith 0-2).</p>
        <p>TurnoversN.C State 22. N. Carolina 23.</p>
        <p>Technical fouls-None</p>
        <p>OfficialsWirtz, Fraim, Armstrong</p>
        <p>A-21.444.Into The Finals</p>
        <p>The bowman on Stars &amp;amp; Stripes prepared to pop the spinnaker as the l2-meter surfs through heavy seas with the big spinnaker reaching into the Freemantle waters as New</p>
        <p>Zealand Iries to gain the advantage as the boats approach the mark. The USA entrant won the race to advance to the Americas Cup finals later this spring. (AP l.aserphoto)</p>
        <p>Stars &amp;amp; Stripes Advances To America's Cup Finals</p>
        <p>FREMANTLE, Australia (AP)  Stars &amp;amp; Stripes, the yacht skipper Dennis Conner hopes to sail to an Americas Cup victory, returned to shore today to a trumpeter playing "God Bless America in celebration of its elimination of New Zealand.</p>
        <p>And Conner, who lost the Cup four years ago, felt he had been blessed with some luck when New Zealand hit a buoy lust as it was threatening to overtake his San Diego-based 12-meter one turn from the finish.</p>
        <p>It was a bit of relief, he said follwing a one-minute, 29-second victory that put Stars &amp;amp; Stripes into the finals against an Australian defender.</p>
        <p>They are a very scrappy bunch, Conner said of the Kiwis, who entered the best-of-seven series under skipper Chris Dickson with one just loss in the three-month-long challenger series.</p>
        <p>The victory by Stars &amp;amp; Stripes, which won four of five races against New Zealand, puts Conner in the finals for the third time. He defended the Cup aboard Freedom in 1980 and lost it at the helm of Liberty in 198:i.</p>
        <p>Stars &amp;amp; Stripes will open the final series Jan. 31. Its irobable opponent is Kookaburra III, which overcame a iroken backstay on the fifth leg of its race to defeat Australia IV by one minute, 13 seconds to move within a victory of a showdown with Stars &amp;amp; Stripes. Kookaburra III leads the best-of-nine defender finals 4-0.</p>
        <p>Both Australian boats flew protest flags, however.</p>
        <p>Another Kookaburra III victory would bring to an end the hopes of Australia IVs syndicate for a successful defense of sailings oldest prize. Headed by Alan Bond, the syndicate ended 132 years of American domination of the event when Australia II came from a 3-1 deficit to beat Liberty in 198:1.</p>
        <p>The 44-year-old Conner and his crew staged a typical locker room celebration, pouring champagne over each other as they whooped it up aboard Stars &amp;amp; Stripes. Wives and girl friends, standing out in stars and stripes rugby shirts of red, white and blue, also were doused.</p>
        <p>Stars &amp;amp; Stripes led by 36 seconds after the sixth leg of the eight-leg, 24.5-mile race in the Indian Ocean. But the next leg was downwind and New Zealand was close enough to steal the powerful breeze from the leader.</p>
        <p>Dickson steered his boat into position to cause the spinnaker on Stars &amp;amp; Stripes to flutter toward the end of the seventh leg. (Conners lead was cut to just nine seconds as Dickson appeared ready to round the buoy.</p>
        <p>But New Zealand banged into the mark. That required the boat to re-round the mark, costing it all the ground it had gained on that downwind run.</p>
        <p>By the time New Zealand could get around the mark again, it was behind by 39 seconds and Conner was home free.</p>
        <p>Stars &amp;amp; Stripes had lost the start by one second, but charged to a 42-second advantage on the first beat to windward. But on the second beat, a powerful 28-knot wind ripped Conners genoa and New Zealand cut the margin to 14 seconds by the end of that leg.</p>
        <p>It was down to eight seconds after the first reach, but back up to 16 seconds at the next rounding as New Zealand had problems attempting to change a spinnaker.</p>
        <p>In the aetenders race. Kookaburra Ills lead was just six seconds after the second leg. Then it boosted the advantage to 53 seconds on the third leg, heading into the wind, and it never dropped below .50 .seconds at any of the remaining marks.</p>
        <p>New Format Announced For Running Of Winston</p>
        <p>CHARLOnE (AP) - Sponsors of The Winston have developed a new format for the race that will include three segments of 75 laps, 50 laps and 10 laps, with the winning driver taking as much as $300,000 of the $600,000 purse.</p>
        <p>We wanted a format that rewards drivers for hard racing at the front of the field, said Gerald H. Ung, R.J, Reynolds Tobacco Co.s president and chief executive officer. "We feel we have done that with this new three-part concept for The Winston</p>
        <p>The payoff pan was announced Sunday at the National Motorsports Press Association annual convention.</p>
        <p>The third annual running of the event at Charlotte Motor Speedway May 17 will use the format, with a 10-minute breaks between the three legs.</p>
        <p>The starting order for the events 75-lap first leg will be determined in qualifying May 16.</p>
        <p>In the races first two years, the defending national champion started on the pole and the event was reserved for the previous seasons winners. This year, in order to get a 20-car field, winners through the May 3 Winston 500 at Talla(lega, Ala., also will be eligible. If the 20-car minimum is not met by 1986 and 1987 winners, the most recent previous victors on the circuit will complete the field.</p>
        <p>The winner of The Winston Open, the event preceding The Winston, also will compete in the event Fifteen drivers already have qualified for the race.  </p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>The leader at the end of the first 75 laps will receive $25,(0).</p>
        <p>The starting order for the races second segment will be determined by the number of times a driver a.ssumed the lead in the first part, Ung said at a news conference. The driver leading at the end of the .50-lap segment will win $.50,000. A $25,000 bonus also will be paid to the driver leading the most times during the first 125 laps.</p>
        <p>The driver who leads the most times in the first 125 laps will have the pole for the 10-lap sh(K)tout,</p>
        <p>followed by the driver who has led the second most times. The remainder of the lineup will be determined by a drivers finishing position from the second segment.</p>
        <p>The driver leading at the end of 10 green-flag laps will win The Winston and $200,(0). The events last-place finisher is guaranteed $10,000.</p>
        <p>Darrell Waltrip won the inaugural The Winston in 1985 at Charlotte, while Bill Elliott claimed the event last year at Atlanta International Raceway.</p>
        <p>Boosters Angered Over Loss Of Coach</p>
        <p>WINSTON-SALEM (AP) - Two sports boosters say Wake Forest should have I)egged head f(K)tball coach A1 Groh to stay tecause he has brought the Demon Deacon program light years during his tenure.</p>
        <p>Groh resigned Friday after six seasoas, saying he felt the progress of the program should have generated a vote of confidence in a contract extension from the school and Athletic Director Dr. Gene Hooks.</p>
        <p>I dont know all the facts, or all that transpired from Dr. Hooks standpoint, said Ken Crutchfield, a past president of the Deacon Club told the Winston-Salem Journal. But having served on the (Wake Forest) athletic council, I know the</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>ins and outs of the athletic department Wake Forest lost the best damn coach weve had here</p>
        <p>Crutchfield said in traveling around the country, hes heard nothing but praise for (}roh.</p>
        <p>The way he ran the program, the way he treated his players and his standing in the community was excellent,he said.</p>
        <p>Ill be frank - Im bitterly disappointed, Crutchfield said. (Al) Groh is a eood friend of Wake Forest and a gooa friend of mine. In my opinion, we should have begged him to stay.</p>
        <p>Jerry Francis, the president of Winston-Salems Sportsmans Club, said that he was also sorry to see Groh leave.</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0072" />
        <p>B-2 The Daily Reflector. Greenville, N C</p>
        <p>Monday. January 19, 1987</p>
        <p>SCOREBOARD</p>
        <p>TANK IFNANAIU*</p>
        <p>by Jeff Millar &amp;amp; Bill Hinds</p>
        <p>Rec Basketball</p>
        <p>Pee W ee Di\ iion Blue[)evils  4  0  6  6  16</p>
        <p>Terrapins  2  2  1  6  -11</p>
        <p>Leading scorers B - Beau Williams 10. Boh Pleants 4, T - Lee Jordan 6</p>
        <p>Wildcats  4  2  4  5  15</p>
        <p>Tar Heels  B  4  6  6  24</p>
        <p>Leading scorers TM Kevin Kirkland 12, Grange Hill 6 W -?7. Patrick Close 4</p>
        <p>Wade Fickling 1</p>
        <p>Midget League</p>
        <p>Cavaliers  6  6  7  11 :il</p>
        <p>Blue Devils .  9  8  6  6 29</p>
        <p>l&amp;gt;eading scorers C - Russell Williamson 12, Nathan Ellis 15. BD' -Josh Potter 20</p>
        <p>Sunday, Jan. 25 Super Bom I .At Pasadena. Calif.</p>
        <p>Denver vs New York Giants. 6 p m</p>
        <p>Pro Bom I Sunday. Feb. I At Honolulu</p>
        <p>AFC vs .NFC 4pm</p>
        <p>Golf Scores</p>
        <p>LA QLT.N7A Calif AP - Firal scores and pnie mones .Sunday in the JO.OOO Bob Hope Classic, plased at the Indian Wells. Bermuda Dunes PGA West and Tamaiisk golf courses all courses par-72i Corey Pavm. $162.000  72-71-65^^67-3</p>
        <p>N Adams St 87, Skidmore 73 Northeastern 93. Siena 64 NorMich 93, Suffolk 59 Nyack63,E Naiarene58 Oneonta St 65. Albany St. N Y 64</p>
        <p>Paceei, Adelphi54 Penn St -Harri Misericordia 78</p>
        <p>Phila Hopkins 55 *^i</p>
        <p>Corey Pavm. $162.000 '72-71-65^667-311 Bernard Lngr, 97.200  666668-70-70-342</p>
        <p>Mark Calcvcch, 61,20(1 David Frost, 39,800</p>
        <p>Wolfpack  8  8  10  4  30</p>
        <p>Terrapins  4  6  4  9-  23</p>
        <p>Leading scorers W Will MacKenzie 16. Jeff Carstarphen 6. T - Parham Sunley 17, Bryant Hill 4</p>
        <p>Junior Division Blue Devils  6  3  2  7-18</p>
        <p>Wolfpack  .0  6  6  10-  22</p>
        <p>Uading scorers BD - Benny Adler 14; W - Jason Bizzaro 13</p>
        <p>4-22</p>
        <p>9-27</p>
        <p>Wildcats  7</p>
        <p>Cavaliers  7  .  . .  ..</p>
        <p>Leading scorers W Jeff Jones 7 A1 Debase 4 C - Walt Clark 6, Grant Harmon 8</p>
        <p>NHL Standings</p>
        <p>Bv Tkf Associated Press All Tiraes EST WALES (ONFERENCE Patrick Division</p>
        <p>V, I, T Pts (,F (.A 31  12  3  65  IW  124</p>
        <p>23 19  4  ,iO  167  155</p>
        <p>15  2u  7  43  183  181</p>
        <p>18  22  ;  4.3  147  171</p>
        <p>IT  20  8  42  16!  155</p>
        <p>18  23  5  41  166  208</p>
        <p>Adams Disisiuo</p>
        <p>23  18  7  53  164  149</p>
        <p>21  19  6  48  149  154</p>
        <p>21  19  )  47  157  142</p>
        <p>18  22  7  43  156  155</p>
        <p>13  26  6  32  152  175</p>
        <p>CAMPBELL CONFERENCE</p>
        <p>Noms Division</p>
        <p>20  21  5  45  177  174</p>
        <p>18  20  8  44  140  156</p>
        <p>18  22  5  41  156  162</p>
        <p>17  23  6  40  164  189</p>
        <p>16  20  8  40  154  174</p>
        <p>Smvlhe Division</p>
        <p>30  14  2  62-  215  159</p>
        <p>25  17  4  54  160  1.54</p>
        <p>25  20  1  51  IM  179</p>
        <p>20  21  5  45  191  191</p>
        <p>14  27  5  33  1,53  18.3</p>
        <p>Saturday's (lames</p>
        <p>Philadelphia NY Islanders NY Rangers Washington Pittsburgh Ne^ Jersey</p>
        <p>Montreal Hartford Boston</p>
        <p>^bec</p>
        <p>Buffalo</p>
        <p>Minnesota Dernkt Toronto Chicago St Louis</p>
        <p>Edmonton Winnipeg Calgary Los Angeles Vancouver</p>
        <p>Bo8ton4,Piltsburgh2 Philadelphia 4. N V Islanders 2 Washington 6, Hartford I</p>
        <p>Detroit 3, (Juebec 2 .Montreal 4. Buffalo 2 Edmonton" Toronto4 Vancouver 4, Calgarv I Minnesota 3. Chicago 2 Los Angeles 4, St luiuist.lie Sunday 's (lames Washingtons, .Nevi Jersey 1 Buffaloi, Edmonton 5 OT N V Islanders 3, Philadelphia 1 Detroit I, Pittsburgh 0 Winnipeg 5 Minnesota t (Quebec 5. Chicago 3</p>
        <p>Monday's Lames Hartford at .Montreal, 7 35 p m Vancouver at Winnipeg, 8 l5pm N V Rangersat l/is Angeles in 35p m Tuesday's (lames Boston at (Quebec. 7 35pm New Jersey at Washington. 7 :i5 p m Calgary at NY Islamiers 8 (if. pm Buflaloat Minnesota 8 :i5pm</p>
        <p>NBA Standings</p>
        <p>By The Associated Press All Times E.ST</p>
        <p>EASTERN (ONEERENCE Atlantic Division</p>
        <p>W I, Pet t.B Boston  27  lU  7:iO</p>
        <p>Philadelphia  21  17  55.1  (,'</p>
        <p>Washington  19  1  m  8'</p>
        <p>New York  12  2:.  .124  15</p>
        <p>NewJeney  to  27  270  17</p>
        <p>(enlral Division Atlanta  25.11  694</p>
        <p>Detroit  24  II  (6</p>
        <p>Milwaukee  24  16  6(i(i  3</p>
        <p>Chicago  19  16  543  51.</p>
        <p>Indiana  19  18  514  6&amp;gt; -</p>
        <p>Cleveland  15  21  .195  II</p>
        <p>WESTERN (ONf ERENT E Midwest Division Dalla.s  24  14  6,12</p>
        <p>Itah  ':i  16  568  2'.</p>
        <p>Houston  18  19  486  5';</p>
        <p>Denver  tt,  '23  410  8'-.</p>
        <p>Sacramento  i!  26  '297  12-</p>
        <p>.SanA.ntonio  10  &amp;gt;8  ^'26.1  14</p>
        <p>Pacific Division L A Ukers  29  8  784</p>
        <p>Portland  24  16  i  6' </p>
        <p>Golden State  21  17  575  7'-</p>
        <p>Seattle  '2fl  17  .541  9</p>
        <p>Phoenix  I6  .12  421  13'</p>
        <p>L A Clippers  5  3.1  |;I2  24-,</p>
        <p>Saturday's (.ames Indiana 119.1)alla.s 115.2IIT IVtroi! 123, New Jersey 113 Cleveland 116 New York 111)</p>
        <p>Chicago 105, Philadelphia 89 San Antonio 102,1'tahOI Phoenix 1J2, L A Clipiiers iiii Sacramento 125, .Seallle 115 Sundas's l.ames Hoston 122, Huu.sliiii 99 LA LakersllS,Washington 101 Milwaukee 100, Atlanta iio Golden Slate 116. P.irll,mil KM Monday's'(.ames 1. A Lakers at New Jersey ,1pm BostonatNew York, ipni Phoenix at Philadelphia. Ip m HoustonatClevelaml, 5pm Chicagoat Indiana. 5 lop m Atlanta at Detroit. 7 to pm LA ClippersatSanAnlomo.8 81pm Portland at Denver , 9 .ip m Tuesday's (.ames Milwaukee at Chicago, 8 Uip m Golden State at Saeramenlo. 10 .111 |i m</p>
        <p>NFL Playoffs</p>
        <p>Bv The .Associated l*ress All Times EST .Sunday . Dee. 28 New York Jels'35, Kansas Cilv 15 Washington 19, lavs Angeles flams</p>
        <p>Andy l3ean,39 600 TC "Chen 29,137 EdFion.29,137 Blain.McCllstr, 29.137 JeffSluman,29,lJ7 LarnRinker, 22,500 Bob tway. 22.500 Charlie ^mg. 22.500 Hal Sutton 17.400 Fred Couples. 17,400 DanForsman, 17,400 Jay Delsing. 14.400 Danny Edwrds, 14,400 Davm EdwTds, 14,400 Curtis Strange. 11,295 Joey Sindelar, 11 295 Ray Floyd. 11,295 WiftieWW 11.295 Bobby Cole, 8,640 Davis Love III 8.640 AI Geiberger, 8 640 Scott .Simpson. 6.795 John Mahiaffev.6 795 Mark 0 Mear. 6 796 Johnnv Miller, 6,795 Ken Creen, 5.468 Payne Stewart. 5 468 Howard Twitty. 5,468 Mark Hayes, i.468 Don Poolev, 5,468 Tom Watson, 5.468 Mike Hulbert, 3,875 Ken Brown, 3,875 Mike Donald, 3,875 Jay Haas, 3.875 Jim Gallagher. 3,875 Kennv Knox. 3 875 DaveTlummells, 3,875 Bobby Clampett, 3.875 D A Weibnng, 3,875 Peter Jacobsen. 2,438 J C Snead. 2,438 Mike Sullivan. 2,438 Steve Pate. 2,438 Mike Reid, 2,438 Jack Renner, 2 438 Dan Halldorson. 2,4:18 LerjiieClemnt.s. 2.438 CraigStadler.2 438 Steve Jones, 21/70 ) Lyle, 2.070</p>
        <p> dagee 2 m</p>
        <p>TomPurtzer, 1,99 Tonv Sills, 1,998 Mark Lve, 1,998 Dave Stockton, 1,998 Bobby Wadkins, 1,998 BruceiCramptn, 1,899 BuddyGardner 1.899 Chris Pern 1.899 Calvin Peete, 1,899 Fred Wadswrth, 1 Brett Upper. 1,899 Andy Dillard, 1,827 Roger Maltbie, 1,827 Emie Gonzalez, i,79l Tim Simpson. 1,791</p>
        <p>,899</p>
        <p>6967-71-66-72- 345 68-71-726968-348 6368-75-72-70-348 7-7167-7268-350 6768-72-72-71-350 7069716971-350 68-716867-76-350 68-70-72-70-71-351 676970-74-71-351 7067-70-71-73-351</p>
        <p>71-71756768-352 696971-7568-352 6574-72-71-70-352 6872-736872-353 69697667-72-353 61-74-726977-353 7974697071-354 7269706974-354 69686874-75-354 6669756878-354 79756971-70-355 74-73-7167 70- 355 676 974-7975- 355 73-72-726 7 72-^-356</p>
        <p>72-73-736972-356 6973-72-72-70-356 72676971-77-356 7979796873-357 6871-74-7974-69726972-75-357 67-7971-71-72-357 73 72-736871-357 79746874-71-157</p>
        <p>71-74-726975-358 6879757975-358</p>
        <p>72-716972-74-358 7971-72-7975-358 69716877-73-358</p>
        <p>6971-7372-73-358 7467-71-7373-358 7369797373-358</p>
        <p>71-74-7971-72-358 7971-7972-79-359 71687471-75-359 7472-706875-359 7267-72-73-75-359 T2-7973-7976- 359</p>
        <p>72-79726877- 359 6977-706977-359 71-7972-7373-359 75 72697973-359 7971-7667-76-360 7269736878-360 686871-7479-360</p>
        <p>6972-736879-361 6979797979-361</p>
        <p>6973-73-7475-361 71 797372-75- 361</p>
        <p>71-74726975-361 6973-746878-:!62 7973 736 878- 362 706 973 73 77- 362 7168746989 362 71687473 79-162 79797067-79 .162 6973776978 363 7168-776978-363</p>
        <p>72-79746989-365 67 747971-83-365</p>
        <p>sburg 88.</p>
        <p>Pharmacy 63, Johns</p>
        <p>i[hlia textile 88, Gannon 83 Pittsburgh 112, (ihicagpSt 70 .^Plattsburgh St 110,Binghamton</p>
        <p>^tsdam St 61, CorUand St. 47 Providence 81. Boston College 7i Ramapo 66. Rutgers-Camden 62 Rhode Island 79, Rutgers 51</p>
        <p>Moms 58, St Francis,</p>
        <p>Rutgers-.Newark 98. Kean 71 Francis, Pa 104, Long Island</p>
        <p>St Johns 69 Connecticut 54 St Joseph's, Maine 118, Josephs, VL94 St Peter's 72, Fordham 67, OT St Vincent92,Geneva82 Sa em W,Va 65, Glenville St. 58 &amp;amp;lve Regina 75, Nichols 61 Seton Han 66, G^etown 65</p>
        <p>St.</p>
        <p>U w, |(vuiwn 09</p>
        <p>Shei^rd Faimont St 92. OT forfeit</p>
        <p>M trw, a sau iiiviia  Ay  A</p>
        <p>ampton 2, S Connecticut 0,</p>
        <p>Transactions</p>
        <p>By The Associated Press BASKETBAI.L National Basketball .Association MILWAlKEE BLCKS-Signed John Lucas, guard, for the re mainder of the season SAN ANTONIO SPURS- Signed Anthony Jones, guard FOOTBALL National Football League KANSAS CITY CHIEFS- Named Homer Smith offensive coordinator HOtKEY National Hockey I.eague DETROIT RED WlNGS- Traded John Ogrodnick. Doug Shedden, and Hasil McRae, forwards, to the (Juebec Nordiques for Brent Ashton and Mark Kumpel, forwards, and Gilbert Delorme, deienseman NEW JERSEY DEVILS-Recall ed Anders Carls.son, left wing, from Maine of the American Hockey I,eague</p>
        <p>College Basketball</p>
        <p>Saturday's .Scores Bv The AssiM'ialed Press EAST</p>
        <p>Allegheny 75, Deni.son 64 American Ini 79 Bentley 63 Amherst 88. Williams 75 Assumption 71. Brvant 69 Bale's 92, Worcester Tech 90. OT Bethany, W Va 79, Hiram 71 Bl(K)m.shurg85. UueensColl 78 1 sr 91, W. V</p>
        <p>79</p>
        <p>SEMassachusetts77,S Maine66 Suten Island 70, CCNY 52 Stonehill 71, Spnngfield 68 ^ony Brook 8, St Rose 70 Thiel 84, Grove City 65 Towson St 67, Bucknell 59 Trenton St 79, Montclair St 63 Tufts 95, New jEngland Coll 75 Union, N Y 89. SL Lawrence 78 Vassar75,JohnJay68 Vermont 72j:olgate64 Wagner 69, Fairleigh Dickinson 63 Washington. Md , Salisbury St</p>
        <p>74</p>
        <p>Wesley92,FroslburgSt,90 West Dberty 87, Davis &amp;amp; Elkins 74 W_ Virginia St. 109,- W Va Wesleyan 104, OT W. Maryland 83. Moravian 74 Westfield St. 96, Worcester St. 61 WKtminster, Pa 70, Point Park 69 Wheeling 83, Alderson-Broaddus</p>
        <p>77</p>
        <p>Winner 45, Dickinson 44 Yale 76, Columbia 66 York.N Y 83,NYU71 York, Pa. 84, Soring Garden 82 .WUTfl Alabama 71, Mississippi 62 ^ajBirmingham 80, Bradley 69 A abama St, 102, Southern IJ 88 AJbany St , Ga 115, Alabama A&amp;amp;M99</p>
        <p>Aub-Montgomery 85, Birm Southern 73 Baptist. SC. 86, Campbell 72 ^Beimont Abbey 78, .Newport News</p>
        <p>Berea 97 Thomas More 88 Bluefield Coll 84, Bridgewater, Va 75</p>
        <p>Catawba 62, Lenoir-Rhyne 52 Centre 89, Rhodes 71 Clems()n 72. Maryland 64 ^Coll of Charleston 66, Newberry</p>
        <p>Davidson 82, Appalachian St 59 DelU St 65, Troy St 63, OT Dillard 85, William Carey 75 Duke, Wake Forest 49 E_ Kentucky 79, Tennessee Tech 68 Elun72, Wingate 69 Faulkner 67 Montevallo 50 Florida 97, Tennessee 90 Fla Southern 86, Eckerd 67 Florida Tech W, St Thomas, Fla.</p>
        <p>81</p>
        <p>Furman 90. VM171 Georgetown, Ky 77, Alice Lloyd 58 Georgia 48. Mississippi St 41 ^Ga Southern 70, Cententary 68,</p>
        <p>Georgia SW 76, W Georgia 67 (Riorgia St. 79, Samford 5 Grambling 82, Texas Southern 76 Jackson SU 47, Alcorn St 45 Jacksonville 89, Old Dominion 71 Jacksonville St . 92, Berry 71 Johnson C. Smith 69, Paine 64, OT Ky. Wesleyan 80, Bellarmine 71 Limestone 99, Mars Hill 85 Livingston 89, Columbus Coll 70 l/ongwood 67, Liberty 64 Lynchburg 112, Emory &amp;amp; Henry 110.2OT  ^</p>
        <p>Marshall 72, UiUdel 69 Mary Washington 79, Shenandoah</p>
        <p>78</p>
        <p>Methodist 63. Va Weslevan 62 Middle Tenn. 81. MorehadSt. 72 Miss. Valley St. 74 Prairie View 67 Mobile 59, Louisiana Coll. 46 Morris Brown 79, Tuskegee 68 New OrleaiLs 100, ("oastal Carolina</p>
        <p>68</p>
        <p>N Carolina A&amp;amp;T 55, Bethune-Cookman 44 OT N C Charlotte 87 South Alabama</p>
        <p>HI</p>
        <p>N C Greensboro l(i5, N C Wesleyan 81 N (.' Wilmington 85, E Carolina 70 N. Alaliama lo4, Ala Huntsville 68 N Central 59, Fayetteville St 57 N Kentucky61,Kentucky.St 50 Norfolk St 82, Virginia SI 63 NE Louisiana 6(1, NW lamisiana 57</p>
        <p>Saturdav, Jan. :i Cleveland 23, New York JeLs 20, 20T</p>
        <p>Washington '27. Chicago 13 Suiidav. Jan. I New York Giants 49, San Fran cisco 3</p>
        <p>Denver 22. New England 17 Kundav.Jan It Denver 23. Cleveland 20. OT New York Giants 17, W ashington o</p>
        <p>Bluefield Sf 91, W. Virginia Tech</p>
        <p>Cabrmi 86, Alvernia HI California, I'a 90, Slippery R(x;k</p>
        <p>BO</p>
        <p>Charleston, W V;i lot. Concord83 Clark. Mass 80, Colby 65 Cornell 91, Brown 86 Dist of Columbia HO, Huwie SI 76 Dominican 86, Val. Forge Chris tian64</p>
        <p>Drew 86. Susquehanna 84,30T Drexcl76, la&amp;gt;nigii74 Duquesne 72, Massachusetts 59 E(linboro77, Clarion 69 Elizalx'thtown 88, Geltvshurg 80, OT  </p>
        <p>Fairfield 63, Li .Salle 60 George Washington 72, Penn SI 71 Hamilton 89, Elrnira78 Hart wick 72, W ConiU'Clicut 60 Hawthorne C&amp;gt;4, New England 62 Holy Cross 72, Armv'60 Howard U 86. Morgan St 81 Iona 75, Manhattan 71 Ithaca 63, RPI55 John Carroll 45. Wash A.Iefl 40 Juniata 69, Albright 57, OT Lafayette 84, Riiut 79 la'banon Valley 75, HaverfordtH U'hman67, Medgar Evers 51 la'Movne87,.St .Michael'sBl laH'k flaven 80 Indiana. Pa 65 Lowell 57, Bridgeport 55 Maine 6t. Boston U 62 Maine Farmington .50, Gordon 46 Marietta 72. Carnegie Mellon 71 Mans! 59, l.ovola, Md 55 Md Balt Countv 87. Cool ('on necticulOl M(*ssiali78, E .MennoouoO'. Middleburv 77, Braiulois .57 Monmouth. N .1 73, Mcrcv tU Ml St M.irv's, Md 86 .Millersville i&amp;gt;6 Navy 96, American 60 New Hamashire Coll Ul, .Sacred Heart 107, ;U1T N J Tivh 110. Steven s I'ech 62 NY Maritime 75, N Y Poly ,59 Niagara %. New ll.iinpNhir'e76</p>
        <p>Nova 104, St Leo 90 Oakland City 73, Lindsey Wilson 72 Oglethorpe fio, Flagler 57 Pan American 94, SW' Louniana 90 Radford 92. Augusta 68 Randolph-Macon 86, Johnstown 53 Richmond74, George Mason 52 Roanoke 80, Hampden-Sydnev 77 ^^St. Augustine's 78, Winston-alem</p>
        <p>St. Paul's 80. Hampton 73 Shaw 94, Livingstone 89 South Carolina 64, Memphis St 52 S Carolina St 87. Coppin St 68 .Southeastern, Fla 84, Palm Reach Atlantic 77 Southern Tech 92, Shorter 79 Spring Hill 78, Belhaven67 Stetson 78, Houston Baptist 77 Stillman 89, Le Moyne-Owen 87 Tn Chattanooga 77, N C Asheville 69 Union. Ky 77, rransylvania 70 Vanderbilt 91,.Auburn 75 VirgimaBB, Villaiiova59 ,^_^Virginia Tech 85, So Mississippi</p>
        <p>Washington &amp;amp; Lee 70, Marwille 55 W Carolina 64. E Tennessw* St .57 W Kentucky 90, Va Com monweallh71 William &amp;amp; Mary 71, James Madison 61</p>
        <p>MIDWEST Akron 89, Austin Feav 76 Albion 77, Olivet 76 Anderson 64, Wabash 47 Aurora79, Concordia, 111 56 Ball St 86, Ohio C 82 Bellevue 88, Chadron St 8:)</p>
        <p>Bethel, I nd 111, Goshen 74</p>
        <p>:______Dakota  SI  82</p>
        <p>Bowliiw Green 85, Kent St 8t Briareuff98, Wi&amp;gt;slniar87 Butler 70, Evansville 64 Calvin 90. Alma 76</p>
        <p>71</p>
        <p>Capital 58 Muskingum 47 ^nt Michigan76Toledo59 Chicago 61. Lawrence 59 Cincinnati 69, Florida St 67 Cincinnati Bible 103, Ohio Valley</p>
        <p>Cleveland St, 97, W Illinois 73 Cornell. Iowa 71. Illinois Coll 66 Creighton 65, Drake 63 DePaul 81, South Florida 55 DePauw 80, Washington. Mo 72 Doane90,Dana77 Drur&amp;gt; 97 Rockhursl63 Dyke 84, Mich -Dearborn 78 E Michigan 83, Tri-State 61 Evangel 65. Avila 57 Ferris St. 73,1,ake Superior St 64 Grace 67. HuntingtonM Graceland70,Tarkio59 Hamline63,St OlafSO Hope 96, Aquinas 92 Illinois 80, Minnesota 58 111 ^nedictine 109, Trinity, 111 71 I -t hicago 89, E Illinois 69 III Wesleyan 92, Carroll, Wis 62 Indiana 9^Northwestern 43 Indiana-SE 95, Marian, Ind. 81 Kalamazoo 61, Adrian 60. OT Kansas 82, Miami, Fla 47 Kansas St 68. Iowa St . 65 ^eamey St 113, Empona St 111,</p>
        <p>Lewis 69, Ashland 62 Lincoln Christian 77, Great Ukes Bible 76 Luther 84, Wartburg57 MacMurrav 83, Principia 66 Mankato Su 95, S. Dakota St 83 Marion 74. Franklin 71 Marquette 64, Davton 57 Miami, Ohio77, W Michigan 70 Michigan Tech 71, Grand Valley St. 69</p>
        <p>Mid-Am Nazarene 65, Culver-Stockton63 Minn.-Duluth62, Minn.-Morris 48 Missouri 87, Oklahoma St. 77 Mo.-Rolla 81, .ME Missouri 67 Monmouth, 111 102, Knox 81 Moorhead St 57, Bemidji St 51 Mt Umon 77, Heidelberg 75 Mi^ay St 61, Youngstown St 58 Nebraska 86, Colorado 66 Neb Omaha 78, Morningside 68 North Park 87. Wheaton 66 NW Missouri St. 78, Mo -St Louis</p>
        <p>76</p>
        <p>Northwestern, Iowa 83, Dordt 77 Oakland, Mich. 97, Northwood 85 OhioSt 81, Wisconsin 66 Ohio Wesleyan 88. Kenyon 70 Ottawa 78, Sterling 73 Pittsburg St 81, Missouri Western</p>
        <p>75</p>
        <p>Rio Grande 97, Tiffin 80 Riponee, Beloit 64 Rose-Hulman83,Fisk4D St. Ambrose 79, Judson 63 St, Cloud 88, Augustana, S D 76 St. Josephs, Ind 68, Ind.-Pur -Ft Wayne 60  .</p>
        <p>St Xavier 85, Olivet .Nazarene 70 School of the Ozarks 100, Park 78 Siepa Hts. 74, Concordia, Mich. 73 South Dakota 76, N Colorado 71 S Dakota Tech 89, Huron 69 SE Missouri 68, Cent Missouri 66  S. Indiana 92, Indianapolis 71 SW Minnesota 94. Winona St 93, 20T</p>
        <p>SW Missouri St 80. N Iowa 72 Spring Arbor 69, St Mary s, Mich.</p>
        <p>61</p>
        <p>Tulsa 69, Indiana St 48 Urbana 97, Ohio Dominican 87 Valparaiso 47. Wis.-Green Bay 45 Virginia Union 98, Elizabeth City St 92</p>
        <p>Washburn 91. Fort Hays St. 84, OT Wayne. Mich 71, Hillsdale 61 Wayne, Neb 70, Missouri Southern 69 West Virginia 57, Notre Dame 55 Wichita SI 81, S. Illinois 65</p>
        <p>Wis.-Eau Claire78,  Michigan 75 Wis -Oshkosh 87. Wis. Whitewater</p>
        <p>i</p>
        <p>Wis Parkside 97. Wis -Milwaukee</p>
        <p>)</p>
        <p>Wis.-Platteville 66, Wis I,acrosse</p>
        <p>63</p>
        <p>Wis-Stevens Ft 68, Wis-River Falls 55</p>
        <p>Wis -Superior 86, Northland 70 Wittenli;rg81, Baldwin Wallace 66 Wooster 107, Oberlin 104, OT Wright St. 93, Manchester 53 Xavier, Ohio 77, St Louis 69 SOUTHWEST Ark -Little Rock 90, Mercer 71 Austin Coll 71, Sul Ross St 63 Cent Arkansas 66, Arkansas Tech</p>
        <p>50</p>
        <p>E New .Mexico 70, Howard Payqe</p>
        <p>59</p>
        <p>Houston 60 Arkansas 55 Lamar 93, Hofstra 57 Louisiana Tech 61. Arkansas St 58. OT</p>
        <p>N Texas,St 72, .McNeeseSt 64 Oklahoma 89, Nev -Las Vegas 88 Oral Roberts 71, SW Texas St. 63 St Edwards, Texas 76, St Marys, Texas 67 Sam Houston St 91, NichollsSt. 73 Texas 61. So Methodist 60 Texas A&amp;amp; 169, Schreiner 64 Texas A&amp;amp;M 62. Texas Tech 60 fexas-San Antonio 109, Hardin-Simmons 95, OT W Texas St. 66, Angelo St 64 F \R WfrST Adams St 99, Colorado .Mines 93 Arizona 73, Washington 72 Azusa P.icific 56, Fresno Pacific</p>
        <p>50</p>
        <p>Brigham Young 90, Hawaii 79 California 87. Stanford 72 Cal Baptist 74, Pomona-Pitzer 68 Cal-Davis65,llayward St 62</p>
        <p>St* W 2f)'i^</p>
        <p>Cal-Riverside 81, I,os Angeles St</p>
        <p>74</p>
        <p>Cal-Sanla Barbara 93, Cal Irvine</p>
        <p>7-5</p>
        <p>Carroll, Mont 91. Montana Tech</p>
        <p>82</p>
        <p>Cent Washington 87, W. Washington 75 Claremont-Mudd 93. Shn Bernar dinoSt.82 Coll of Idaho Hi! Concordia, Ore</p>
        <p>75</p>
        <p>CiforgeFox il7, ,\W Nazarene86 Gonzaga 114, Lovola, Calif 101, OT</p>
        <p>Idaho 60, Boise St .10</p>
        <p>Uwis (lark SI 110, Seattle 100</p>
        <p>Long Beach St 80, New Mexico St</p>
        <p>75</p>
        <p>MetroSt 72, Seattle Pacific 56 Montana 71, Idaho St 65 Montana St 88. Weber St. 8:t Nev -Reno80, N Arizona 77 New Mexico80, Air Force 65 N. Mex flighlands 78, Mesa 61 Norlhridge St. 58, Cal Polv Pomona 55 Oregon Tech 71. W Baptist ,54 Portland 69, Pepperdinc ,57 Puget Sound 85, E. Montana 60 San Diego 68, San Francisco 56 San Francisco St 65, Chico St 41 San Jose St 62. Fresno St 61 Santa Clara 55, St Mary s, Calif.</p>
        <p>43</p>
        <p>Southern Cal 60, Oregon 56 S Oregon 73, Warner Pacific 68 Stanislaus St 77, Sonoma St 72 \ Utah 93, San Diego St. 65 UtahSt 73,Paciric69 W. Montana 90, N. Montana 88 W Oregon llO, E. Oregon 86 Western St., Colo 76, W New .Mexico 75</p>
        <p>Whitman 80, Linfield 68 Whittier 67, Redlands 60</p>
        <p>Athletes in Action 107, Biola 86</p>
        <p>TOURNAMENTS Chase Lincoln Tournament Championship Nazareth 90, Brockport St 73 'Third Place Hobart 92, St. John Fisher 80 Dixie Rotary Classic Championship Gardner-Webb 57, Francis Marion</p>
        <p>34</p>
        <p>Liberty Bank Classic Championship</p>
        <p>Trinity, Conn. 87. Connecticut Coll. 65</p>
        <p>Third Place</p>
        <p>E. Connecticut 67, Wesleyan 63 ( Trinity Classic Cbamnionship Colorado Coll; 85, Trinity. Texas 81 Third Place</p>
        <p>78</p>
        <p>MUlsaps 96. Dallas 62 Sundays Scores</p>
        <p>East Adelphi68,St Rose 53 Alfred 84, Clarkson 63 Gannon 68, West Chester 63 King's, Pa. 83, FDU-Madison 59 Rhode Island Coll. 74, W New England 70 Temple 70, St. Josephs 69</p>
        <p>sou-ra</p>
        <p>Miisiana St 76, Kentucky 41 North Carolina 96, N. Carolina St.</p>
        <p>Roanoke 55, Maryville 46 MIDWEST DePauw 80, 111 Wesleyan 76 Loloya, 111 94, Detroit73</p>
        <p>III.  lycVIUU  /J</p>
        <p>Michigan 91, Syracuse 88 Northern St, S </p>
        <p>82, OT</p>
        <p>D. 85, Winona St.</p>
        <p>thirdue 88, Louisville 73 SW Minnesota 92, Mt, Marty 70 SOUTHWEST Baylor 80, Rice 64</p>
        <p>F AR WEST Arizona St, 80, Washington St 64 UCLA 69, OregonSt 6f OT</p>
        <p>college baseball Top 25, with team and record last year:</p>
        <p>1 Texas (51-14)</p>
        <p>2. LSU (55-14)</p>
        <p>3. UCLA (39-23)</p>
        <p>4. Florida St. (6M3)</p>
        <p>5. Stanford (38-23)</p>
        <p>6 Oklahoma St (56-13)</p>
        <p>7 Miami, Fla. (49-17)</p>
        <p>8.Pepperdine(38-21)</p>
        <p>9. Georgia Tech (45-23)</p>
        <p>10 Loyola Marymount (50-15)</p>
        <p>11. Indiana St. (48-21)</p>
        <p>12. Cal-Santa Barbara (45 19)</p>
        <p>13. Wichita St. (45-18)</p>
        <p>14. Clemson (42-21)</p>
        <p>15. Arizona (49-19)</p>
        <p>16. Cal State Fullerton (36-21)</p>
        <p>17 Georgia (35-24)</p>
        <p>18. S. Carolina (43-23)</p>
        <p>19. Oklahoma (44-21)</p>
        <p>20. Michigan (47-12)</p>
        <p>21. Baylor (40-22)</p>
        <p>22. Oral Roberts (43-20)</p>
        <p>23. Hawaii (43-24)</p>
        <p>24. Old Dominion (43-16)</p>
        <p>25. Arizona St. (34-28)</p>
        <p>N. Carolina Clemson Duke N,C State Georgia Tech Virginia Wake Forest Maryland</p>
        <p>Pet</p>
        <p>WLPct W L</p>
        <p>4 0  1,000  15  1</p>
        <p>3 0  1.000  16  0  1 000</p>
        <p>3 1  .750  13  2  867</p>
        <p>3 2  600  11  4  733</p>
        <p>1 1 500 9 4 .692 1 2 .333 10 4 714 0 4  .000  8  6  .571</p>
        <p>0 5  .000  3  6  . 333</p>
        <p>Baseball Top 25 ACC Standings</p>
        <p>DURHAM (AF) - Here is the list of Baseball Americas oreseason</p>
        <p>By The .Associated Press</p>
        <p>Conference Overall</p>
        <p>Mondays Games Bucknell at Maryland Virginia at Jacksonville</p>
        <p>Tuesdays Games</p>
        <p>Clemson at Georgia Tech</p>
        <p>Wednesdays Games</p>
        <p>Duke at N Carolina St.</p>
        <p>W Virgmia at Maryland</p>
        <p>N.C.Scoreboard</p>
        <p>By The Associated Press</p>
        <p>Mens College Basketball</p>
        <p>N Carolina 96, N. Carolina St. 78</p>
        <p>Women's College Basketball Elon72, High Point 65</p>
        <p>Men's College Swimming</p>
        <p>Virginia 62, N. Carolina St. 46</p>
        <p>Giants Discover Quickly Not Just Another Game</p>
        <p>PASADENA, Calif. (AP) - Using the Ho, hum, its just another game, approach, the New York Giants settled into their Super Bowl hotel Sunday and quickly discovered that it most certainly isnt just another football game.</p>
        <p>Hordes of fans were waiting for the team and the players who ventured into the lobby were mobbed.</p>
        <p>The Broncos gave the Giants a one-day head start on the annual mayhem, preferring to fly to their headquarters today after a sendoff party Sunday at Denvers Mile High Stadium.</p>
        <p>While the AFC champs were partying, the Giants journeyed west. As their chartered jet flew over Denver, a Colorado-based air traffic con</p>
        <p>troller learned who was aboard the plane he was guiding.</p>
        <p>Maybe, he said kiddingly to the pilot, I ought to change vectors on you.</p>
        <p>Thg Giants remained nine-point favorites for the game, but that hardly disturbed the Broncos.</p>
        <p>I hope it goes up to 20, kicker Rich Karlis said. Let the pressure be on them.</p>
        <p>So much of this game is mental, wide receiver Vance Johnson said. Maybe theyll be overconfident. Johnson and Mark Jackson said Denvers dramatic 98-yard march to the tying touchdown in the final minutes of the AFC title game against Cleveland could give the team momentum for the Super Bowl. Jackson also pointed out that the</p>
        <p>Top Boot Denies Ditka Will Quit</p>
        <p>CHICAGO {AP)  The president of the Chicago Bears is denying reports that head Coach Mike Ditka has vowed to quit the team after the 1987 season.</p>
        <p>Bears President Michael Mc-Caskey said Sunday he had not been told of any such deadline by Ditka, according to Brian Harlan, a Bears spokesman.</p>
        <p>Harlan quoted McCaskey as saying Ditka has not resigned.</p>
        <p>Ditka reiM)rtedly was on vacation and not available for comment.</p>
        <p>The Boston Sunday Globe reported that Ditka had told his bosses he would leave after the remaining year on his contract is over due to a dispute over the NFL teams firing last week of General Manager Jerry Vainisi.</p>
        <p>The newspaper said Ditka told McCaskey of his intentions after Me-Caskey refused to rehire Vainisi.</p>
        <p>Then this season is my last, Ditka is reported as saying. Dont even bother to ask me about signing an extension of my contract, because I wont do it.</p>
        <p>After the conversation, Ditka reportedly told his assistant coaches that 1987 would be his last season</p>
        <p>with the Bears and they were free to start looking for new jobs immediately-</p>
        <p>The Globe said Ditka was fuming because Vainisi is his best friend and Ditkas strongest ally in Chicagos front office.</p>
        <p>Ditka and Jerry are best , friends, according to an uniden tified source quoted by the newspaper. When the big four (Ditka, McCaskey, Vainisi and personnel director Bill Tobin) got together, Jerry usually backed Ditka. </p>
        <p>of</p>
        <p>Broncos have lost just one game all year on grass, the surface at the Rose Bowl where the game will be played. The Giants, on the other hand, flourish on artificial surfaces like their home field.</p>
        <p>The first exposure to the Super Bowl scene was disquieting for some of the Giants.</p>
        <p>Reserve defensive lineman Jerome Sally took two steps out of his hotel elevator and found himself surrounded by perhaps 50 fans. He looked around, then took two steps back into the elevator and beat a strategic retreat to his room.</p>
        <p>Running back Joe Morris nearly was cornered but avoided the crowd, accelerating as he slipped away. Nice cut on the rug, one fan shouted after him.</p>
        <p>The players seemed to understand the situation.</p>
        <p>Eve^one is ready to play right now, linebacker Harry Carson, the Giants captain, said. Im pretty sure the Broncos feel the same way. Lets get out there, play the game and get it over with.</p>
        <p>The game, however, is a week away. Defensive back Kenny Hill, a veteran of two Super Bowls, tried to prepare his teammates for what they will face this week.</p>
        <p>After two days, Hill told some reporters, you guys become less and ess imaginative and start focusing on things that have less and less relevance and are not germaine. Suchas?</p>
        <p>Whats my favorite color and what gum do I chew?</p>
        <p>When the question was directed at him. Hill responded, Im not saying.</p>
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        <pb facs="00096520_0073" />
        <p>Tip From Caddy Helped Pavin Capture Hope Golf</p>
        <p>The Dally Rellector, Greenville, N.C.</p>
        <p>Monday, January 19.1987  5.3</p>
        <p>LA QUINTA, Calif. (AP) - Upon returning to earth after a soaring victory leap, Corey Pavin listed a fortunate pairing and a tip from his caddy as key factors in his one-shot triumph in the Bob Hope Classic.</p>
        <p>It was a lot of fun out there. A nice little Sunday game. Were friends, and we happened to be playing together, Pavin said of Bernhard Langer, the West German who was beaten by Pavins decisive birdie putt on the 90th hole.</p>
        <p>And I think that made it easier for me, easier for me to win, Pavin said. Im a little more relaxed playing with someone I like. Its easy to be relaxed playing with a friend.</p>
        <p>If its someone I dont know, or someone Ive had problems with in the past, I think I tend to try too hard, to maybe takes chances I shouldnt, things like that.</p>
        <p>There was little doubt of the friendship of the two central figures as they played the closing holes Sunday on the controversial PGA West course.</p>
        <p>Tied for the lead, with $65,000 (the difference between the winners</p>
        <p>$162,000 and the runnerup check) at stake, Pavin and Langer draped their arms over each others shoulders on the march up the 18th fairway and, when the gallery began to cheer, lifted their clasped hands in a joint salute.</p>
        <p>Lets make it an exciting finish, Pavin said as they neared the green and separated to mark their balls. Langer eventually missed a difficult 30-foot birdie attempt and Pavin rolled in the winner from about 20 feet.</p>
        <p>Then he went leaping high in the air in sheer joy, and Langer smiled broadly at the antics.</p>
        <p>At other times. Ive been disappointed when I felt I had lost the tournament with a bad shot or a bogey or a mistake. But I dont feel that way today, Langer said. I dont feel I lost the golf tournament. Its just that someone played better than I did.</p>
        <p>Corey was just outstanding. To shoot a 67 on this golf course is incredible, Langer said.</p>
        <p>It was the best round of the week on</p>
        <p>the PGA West course that was being played in this tournament for the first time. It finished off Pavins 90-hole total of 341, 19 under par, and provided his fifth victory in four years on the PGA Tour.</p>
        <p>The round also served as a climax to a rally that was touched off by a tip from Pavins caddy.</p>
        <p>He told me I was opening the putter (blade) just a little, Pavin said. I worked very hard on it. It felt a little strange at first, but Friday, something clicked.</p>
        <p>From that point on, he did not make a bogey and played the last 54 holes of the tournament 18 under par.</p>
        <p>Langer simply couldnt match it. He had a final-round 70 and finished one back of Pavin at 342.</p>
        <p>Mark Calcavecchia finished third for the second week in a row. He matched par 72 over the final 18 holes, despite hitting two balls in the water, and finished at 345.</p>
        <p>South African David Frost and Andy Bean were next at 348 and were the only others with eight shots of the lead. Frost had a 68 and Bean a 70.</p>
        <p>Glory</p>
        <p>Sooners Bask In After Stopping Las Vegas</p>
        <p>By DICK JOYCE AP Basketball Writer</p>
        <p>Theyd been No. 1 long enough, was the message from Oklahomas Darryl Kennedy after his jump shot with 12 seconds left beat top-ranked Nevada-Las Vegas.</p>
        <p>While Saturdays loss may knock the Runnin Rebels out of the nations top spot, the No. 16 Sooners 89-88 victory at Norman, Okla., also stirred more controversy over the three-point goal and involved the CBS broadcasting crew.</p>
        <p>A disputed shot by Nevada-Las Vegas Gary Graham just before halftime apparently cost the Rebels one point, according to one of the TV replays.</p>
        <p>Officials ruled Grahams goal a two-pointer - instead of a three-pointer from beyond the 19-foot, 9-inch range as UNLV Coach Jerry Tarkanian claimed. That left the game tied at halftime at 48.</p>
        <p>A horn was blown from the stands just as Graham launched his shot, causing confusion and prompting officials to look at the replay to determine whether the shot had been taken before time expired.</p>
        <p>The NCAA allows use of TV replays to correct the game clock, but not to correct judgment calls. The replay rule went into the books after last seasons clock malfunction in an NCAA tournament game allowed Kansas more time to pull out a victory over Michigan State.</p>
        <p>But a story in the Los Angeles Times quoted one of the officials as telling CBS broadcaster Brent Musburger: Were also trying to determine if the player shot from behind the three-point line.</p>
        <p>Musburger replied, Our replay is inconclusive.</p>
        <p>If you say it is inconclusive, then the basket remains a two-pointer, the Times quoted the official as telling Musburger.</p>
        <p>However,.after the officials left for the locker room, CBS came up with a replay from a different angle, apparently showing the goal was indeed a three-pointer. CBS commentator Billy Packer said it should have been called a three-pointer.</p>
        <p>What should we do? Musburger said on the air. Should we get the officials back here?</p>
        <p>Official Rick Wulkow denied that he or any other official attempted to use the replay to determine whether Grahams shot was a three-pointer.</p>
        <p>We looked at the replay to determine whether any time was left in the half, Wulkow said. We can only use the instant replay for time.</p>
        <p>"We made the decision of two (points) op the court. 1 and the other official (Mike Tanco) came together and the decision was made.</p>
        <p>After Kennedys final basket, Nevada-Las Vegas Armon Gilliam missed a jump shot and Jarvis Basnight missea a tip-in try.</p>
        <p>Tarkanian. whose team won its first 15 games, said the controversial call had nothine to do with outcome. I told them (officials) to watch the replay. Its clear it was a</p>
        <p>three-point play but theres nothing I can do about it.</p>
        <p>I think we should be No. 1 or leave Vegas there, said Oklahoma Coach Billy Tubbs, whose Sooners are now 12-3.</p>
        <p>Harvey Grant had 23 points and 16 rebounds for Oklahoma, while Gilliam scored 23 points for Nevada-Las Vegas.</p>
        <p>No. 5 Syracuse also fell from the unbeaten ranks, losing 91-88 at Michigan on Sunday. That left only No. 2 Iowa, which was idle this weekend, DePaul and Clemson as the only undefeated Division I teams.</p>
        <p>In other Sunday games involving the Top Twenty, No. 3 North Carolina defeated North Carolina State 96-78;, No. 6 Purdue rolled over Louisville 88-73; and No. 11 Temple edged St. Josephs 70-69. Also on Sunday, Louisiana State crushed Kentucky 76-41, the Wildcats worst defeat in 37 years and the worst at home in 60 years.</p>
        <p>In other Saturday games, it was No. 4 Indiana 95, Northwestern 43; No. 7 DePaul 81, South Florida 55; No. 8 Illinois 80, Minnesota 58; Seton Hall 66, No. 9 Georgetown 65; Vanderbilt 91, No. 10 Auburn 75; No. 12 Clemson 72, Maryland 64; No. 13 St. Johns 69, Connecticut 54; No, 14 Duke 69, Wake Forest 49; No. 15 Alabama 71, Mississippi 62; No. 18 Pittsburgh 112, Chicago State 70; No.</p>
        <p>19 Navy 96, American 60, and No. 20 Kansas 82, Miami. Fla. 47.</p>
        <p>No. 3 North Carolina 96, N.C. State 78</p>
        <p>J.R. Reid tied Mike OKorens 10-year-old school mark for points by a freshman by scoring 31 on 13-of-14 shooting from the field. He also grabbed 13 rebounds.</p>
        <p>Kenny Smith added 22 points and Joe Wolf 20 in the Tar Heels 13th straight win. North Carolina raised its Atlantic Coast Conference mark to 5-0 and its overall mark to 15-1. Bennie Boltons 22 points topped N.C. State, 11-4 overall and 3-2 in the ACC.</p>
        <p>No. 4 Indiana 95 Northwestern 43</p>
        <p>Led by Daryl Thomas 18 points, Indiana won its 11th straight, scoring</p>
        <p>20 straight points in the first half to turn the game into a rout. The Hoosiers, 14-1, raised their Big Ten record to 5-0.</p>
        <p>Northwestern, 5-11 and 0-6, dropped its ninth consecutive game.</p>
        <p>Michigan 91, No. 5 Syracuse 88</p>
        <p>Gary Grant and Garde Thompson scored 23 points each and Michigan held off a late Syracuse charge.</p>
        <p>Thompsons three-point basket with 2:26 remaining gave the Wolverines an 86-77 advantage, but Syracuse, 15-1, scored six points in 29 seconds to get within three with 1:57 remaining. A pair of free throws by Rony Seikaly, who scored 25 points, got Syracuse within two with 1:15 left, but the Orangemen got no closer despite two Michigan turnovers.</p>
        <p>Grant scored 17 of his points in the second half.</p>
        <p>No. 6 Purdue 88, Louisv ille 73</p>
        <p>Doug Lee scored 23 points and Todd Mitchell added 22 as Purdue improved to 14-1. its best start in 49 years.</p>
        <p>The Boilermakers, trailing by</p>
        <p>CLIFFS Seafood House aivd Oyster BarI'm So Happy!</p>
        <p>Corey Pavin leaps for joy Sunday after sinking a biraie putt at the 18th hole to win the 28th annual Bob Hope Chrysler Class c at PGA West golf course. (AP Laserphoto)</p>
        <p>eight points in the first half, rallied to a 40-38 lead at halftime. The Cardinals trailed by three in the second half before Troy Lewis scored five straight points to start a 19-6 streak that gave Purdue an 81-65 lead.</p>
        <p>No. 7 DePaul 81, South Florida 55 Kevin Edwards scored 18 points and Rod Strickland and Dallas Com-egys 14 apiece for DePaul, 14-0. Darrell Colemans 16 points paced South Florida, 6-7.</p>
        <p>No. 8 Illinois 80, Minnesota 58 Illinois, 13-3, boosted its Big Ten mark to 5-1 behind Ken Norman, who scored 27 points and grabbed 12 rebounds, and Doug Altenberger, who had 18 points. Minnesota, 9-6 and 2-3, got 16 points from Terrence Woods. Seton Hall 66, No. 9 Georgetown 65 Seton Hall upset Georgetown for the second time in two weeks, but this time it wasnt a 21-point laugher. The Pirates got 22 points from Mark Bryant, including two decisive free throws with 22 seconds left.</p>
        <p>Reggie Williams 28 points led the Hoyas, who are 12-2 overall and 3-2 in the Big East. The Pirates are 11-4 and 2-4.</p>
        <p>Vanderbilt 91, No. 10 Auburn 75 Freshman Scott Draud scored 23 points and Will Perdue added 22 in leading Vanderbilt to a Southeastern Conference upset. The Commodores advanced to 11-6 overall and 3-3 in the SEC, while Auburn fell to 10-3 and 3-2.</p>
        <p>The Commodores hit 16 of 20 free throws over the last 8*2 minutes to hold off a Tiger rally.</p>
        <p>No. 11 Temple 70, St. Josephs 69 Tim Perry and Mike Vreeswyk each had 18 points as Temple survived a six-minute scoreless stretch against St. Josephs.</p>
        <p>Temple, 16-2, took a 70-62 lead on a jump shot by Nate Blackwell with 5:58 to play. While the Owls failed to score again, the Hawks scored six</p>
        <p>straight points, pulling within 70-68 on a jumper by Rodney Blake with 3:18 to play. Blake scored the last point of the game on a free throw with three seconds to go, but he missed the second attempt.</p>
        <p>No. 12 Clemson 72, Maryland 64 Guards Michael Tait and Michael Brown each scored 16 points as Clemson raised its record to 16-0 overall and 3-0 in the ACC. Its the best start ever for the Tigers in the ACC.</p>
        <p>Steve Hood, a freshman, scored 20 points for Maryland, 3-6 and 0-5.</p>
        <p>No. 13 St. Johns 69, Connecticut 54 St. Johns, 12-2, raised its Big East record to 3-2 behind Shelton Jones 18 points and Mark Jacksons 15, while Connecticuts Phil Robinson was held to five points before fouling out. Phil Gamble led the Huskies, 6-8 and 1-4, with 16 points.</p>
        <p>Pair Wins Net Tourney</p>
        <p>The team of Norman Bryant and Margaret McGlohon took first place in the Greenville Recreation and Parks Departments annual New Years Mixed Doubles Tournament Saturday.</p>
        <p>The tournament was held at River Birch Tennis Center with 22 teams participating in the round-robin event.</p>
        <p>Winners were determined by the total number of games won, with each teams playing eight games against other teams. Six teams advanced to the finals held Saturday.</p>
        <p>Bryant and McGlohon finished the event with 22 points while Jim and Karen Akers took second place with 21. Third place went to A1 King and Frances Cain with 15, follow^ by Randy and Carla Brideman with 11. Joseph Taft and Paige Powell took fifth with 10, while Allen Farfour and Lou Taft were sixth after having to withdraw after an injury.</p>
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        <p>15 Firmnc'ss</p>
        <p>16 Fragram *</p>
        <p>17 Title for (tawam</p>
        <p>18 Morn or Pop</p>
        <p>20 Hegion</p>
        <p>of( luna</p>
        <p>23 Alaska city</p>
        <p>24 ive god</p>
        <p>25 Itissolved sul)stan</p>
        <p>CCS</p>
        <p>28 Wire</p>
        <p>measure</p>
        <p>29 Prefix for view or twine</p>
        <p>30 Chinese tea</p>
        <p>32 1 rutes with an allov</p>
        <p>34 So</p>
        <p>35 To the sheltered side</p>
        <p>36 Market stall</p>
        <p>37 Stammer</p>
        <p>40 Maxim</p>
        <p>41 Author critic James</p>
        <p>42 Hcgs</p>
        <p>47 Con tamers</p>
        <p>48 Chcunical salts</p>
        <p>49 It s faster than a walk</p>
        <p>50 Voung hoy</p>
        <p>51 Went on horse* hac k</p>
        <p>DOM'N 1 Distress call</p>
        <p>13</p>
        <p>2 G.l s address</p>
        <p>3 Jellylike substance</p>
        <p>4 Origi nates</p>
        <p>5 Recipe instruction</p>
        <p>6 Envelope ahhr</p>
        <p>7 They're dc'corated 26 in spring</p>
        <p>8 Dcve 27 token 29</p>
        <p>9 Morse or 31 penal</p>
        <p>10 Ending for</p>
        <p>19</p>
        <p>20</p>
        <p>21</p>
        <p>22</p>
        <p>23</p>
        <p>25</p>
        <p>flat or grid 11 Flit</p>
        <p>33</p>
        <p>34</p>
        <p>Solution time: 26 mins.</p>
        <p>Saturdays answer</p>
        <p>Wield a</p>
        <p>blue</p>
        <p>pencil</p>
        <p>River</p>
        <p>in Asia</p>
        <p>Egyptian</p>
        <p>god</p>
        <p>Rainbow</p>
        <p>Philippine</p>
        <p>knife</p>
        <p> Dame Scoffs She loved Narcissus CIccsc*</p>
        <p>Vain</p>
        <p>Than oak,</p>
        <p>and  ,</p>
        <p>and thorn"</p>
        <p>Newest</p>
        <p>fiar age</p>
        <p>vehicle</p>
        <p>Lure</p>
        <p>Datum</p>
        <p>Temples</p>
        <p>ex-</p>
        <p>hushand Jay of comedy CutU*rs ccjusin Wcjod sorrel Who am</p>
        <p> judge''" Williams of</p>
        <p>baseball</p>
        <p>Fompass</p>
        <p>reading</p>
        <p>CRYPTOQUIP</p>
        <p>S t, X \ Z M N  M  W  C  T  I  Z  M  I'  (i  S</p>
        <p>W I (. S II (,</p>
        <p>' X J N r Z X H</p>
        <p>T C N</p>
        <p>N C (i</p>
        <p>N J J N I</p>
        <p>Saturdays ( ryptoquip; TODAY, THE I'NEMPLOY MKNT OFFK K IS REACHED MY ITS TOIDFREE TKI.EPHoNK M MHER</p>
        <p>' Today s ( ry ptoijuip cluc*: N eciuals T</p>
        <p>Clay Ka-Boom!</p>
        <p>The Middle East today is the scene of ancient conflicts fought with modern weapons. But even some of the weaponry is not that modern. As early as the tenth century, Arab armies used primitive hand grenades. According to David Louiss 2207 Fascinating Facts, the grenades were made of terra cotta shaped to fit the contours of the hand, filled with inflammable naphtha and covered with relief designs to prevent them from slipping when being thrown.</p>
        <p>DO YOU KNOW  What nation in the Middle East has the largest reserves of petroleum?</p>
        <p>FRIDAYS ANSWER  The 21st Amendment repealed Prohibition.</p>
        <p>1.19-87    '  Kr,owied9e Unlimiied, Inc 1987</p>
        <p>Horoscope</p>
        <p>From The Carroll Righter Institute</p>
        <p>FORECAST FOR MONDAY Jan. 20</p>
        <p>GENERAL TENDENCIES: Wind up some of the specific items that have been requhing y(Hir attention. Be thoughtful and considerate of other persons. Dont give in to angry thoughts.</p>
        <p>ARffiS (March 21 to Api^ 19): Handle the usual routines today. Be careful in outside affairs so that you maintain your poise.</p>
        <p>TAURUS (April 20 to May 20): Make plans for recreation in the near future. Be more cooperative instead of argumentative with co-workers.</p>
        <p>GEMINI (May 21 to June 21): Get your home running smoothly in the morning, but be careful not to overspend for entertainment tonight.</p>
        <p>MOON CHILDREN (June 22 to July 21): Get busy at vital communications. Turn to persons who can help to bring more order into your home.</p>
        <p>LEO (July 22 to August 21): Financial affairs can be handled wisely. Take care that you drive carefully, especially in the evening.</p>
        <p>VIRGO (August 22 to September 22): You can easily gain the things you want the most. You cant re y on a financial wizard, so dont be disappointed.</p>
        <p>LIBRA (September 23 to October 22): You know exactly how to gain a wish tonight. Dont be too forceful with others in making headway.</p>
        <p>SCORPIO (October 23 to November 21): It would be wise to follow the advice of a good friend in order to gain a personal aim. Dont break promises.</p>
        <p>SAGITTARIUS (November 22 to December 2D: Be sure to handle civic duties during your spare time. Avoid a noisy group of friends.</p>
        <p>CAPRICORN (December 22 to January 20): Do something about the new ideas that assail you. Take no risks with your credit or good name.</p>
        <p>AQUARIUS (January 21 to February 19): Do something thoughtful for your mate. Dont get fooled by any new contacts youve made.</p>
        <p>PISCES (February 20 to March 20): Try not to upset your mate and make every effort to maintain peace. Take it easy tonight.</p>
        <p>IF YOUR CHILD IS BORN TODAY... he or she will do very well at studies and will have the ability to set up a plan and carry through with it succ^ful-ly. Teach this one the importance ot cooperation. Sports are good for building up the health and energy in life. This book worm will be a stickler for neatness.</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>Bridge</p>
        <p>By CHARLES COREN AND OMAR SHARIF</p>
        <p>ANSWERS TO WEEKLY BRIDGE QUIZ</p>
        <p>Q.lNeither vulnerable, a.s South you hold:</p>
        <p>AK 9AK1063  0AK852 46</p>
        <p>The bidding ha.s proceeded:</p>
        <p>West  North  East  South</p>
        <p>3   Pass  Pass  Dble</p>
        <p>Pass  3   Pass  ?</p>
        <p>What action do you take'.' A.-r-You have been placed in an almost untenable situation by Wests opening preempt. You have an enormous hand but here you are at the three-level with no fit uncovered. We suggest a cue-bid of four clubs. If North rebids spades, we will pass and hope he has a five-card suit. If he has only four spades and no four-card holding in a red suit, perhaps he might be inspired to bid a three-card fragment in one of our suits.</p>
        <p>Q.2Both vulnerable, as South you hold:</p>
        <p>95  9KJ982  0A1063  474</p>
        <p>The bidding has proceeded:</p>
        <p>North East South West</p>
        <p>Pass</p>
        <p>1  Pass 1 9</p>
        <p>2 NT Pass ?</p>
        <p>What do you bid now'.'</p>
        <p>A.Since you have an unbalanced hand, a suit contract might be preferable should partner have three-card heart support. The way to find out is to bid three diamonds. If partner prefers to three hearts, go on to game. If he bids three no trump, that will surely be the best contract.</p>
        <p>Q.3Neither vulnerable, as South you hold:</p>
        <p>K106  9AK985  073  4KJ6</p>
        <p>The bidding has proceeded:</p>
        <p>North  East  South  West</p>
        <p>1 4  Pass  1 9  Pass</p>
        <p>2   Pass  ?</p>
        <p>What do you bid now?</p>
        <p>A.You have at least one game, perhaps more, but you cant yet be sure of the final strain. You need to make a forcing bid to give partner the opportunity to describe his hand further. Two spades fits the</p>
        <p>bill perfectly. You dont have to fear a raise. If partner held four spades he would have shown them over one heart.</p>
        <p>Q.4Both vulnerable, as South you hold:</p>
        <p>9872  98  010532  4AK62</p>
        <p>The bidding has proceeded:</p>
        <p>West  North East  South</p>
        <p>1 0  Dble  Pass  ?</p>
        <p>What do you bid now?</p>
        <p>A.You have two problems: Which suit should you show, and at what level? Obviously, you should bid spades before clubs, despite the disparity in suit quality, because partner virtually guarantees four spades on this auction. And while you are on the borderline for a jump to two spades, the flimsiness of the suit suggests a conservative one spade.</p>
        <p>Q.5Both vulnerable, as South you hold:</p>
        <p>A1065  9J752  010643 4K</p>
        <p>The bidding has proceeded:</p>
        <p>South</p>
        <p>9</p>
        <p>East</p>
        <p>North East 1  Dble</p>
        <p>What action do you take?</p>
        <p>A.We dont think you should introduce a suit out of fear that one club doubled will get passed out and killed. However, we do feel you should bid something to make it more difficult for the opponents to enter the auction and to tell partner you do have something of value. Our choice would be one no trump.</p>
        <p>Q.6As South, vulnerable, you hold:</p>
        <p>964  9AK752  0K9  A107</p>
        <p>The bidding has proceeded:</p>
        <p>South West  North East</p>
        <p>1 9  Pass  3   Pass</p>
        <p>9</p>
        <p>What do you bid now?</p>
        <p>A.Once partner has made a jump shift, your sides first duty is to establish a trump fit. You know your side has one, so do what you are supposed to do. Raise to four clubs.</p>
        <p>FUNKY WINKERBEAN</p>
        <p>IF we'fsg 60MMA  With  Ttia</p>
        <p>To oor a way to tms \^FACT.</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0075" />
        <p>WTBS</p>
        <p>WITH</p>
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        <p>NDAY EVENING</p>
        <p>7K)0</p>
        <p>7:30</p>
        <p>8:00</p>
        <p>8:30</p>
        <p>9:00</p>
        <p>9:30</p>
        <p>10:00</p>
        <p>10:30</p>
        <p>O</p>
        <p>Hardcastle And McCormicfc</p>
        <p>Father Murphy</p>
        <p>700 Club</p>
        <p>Bill Cosby</p>
        <p>o</p>
        <p>Sanford</p>
        <p>H'mooners</p>
        <p>NBA Basketball: Atlanta Hawks at Detroit Pistons</p>
        <p>Movie</p>
        <p>o</p>
        <p>Business Rpt.</p>
        <p>N.C. People</p>
        <p>Planet Earth</p>
        <p>American Playhouse</p>
        <p>o</p>
        <p>Facts Of Life</p>
        <p>Benson</p>
        <p>ALF</p>
        <p>Amazing</p>
        <p>Crime Story</p>
        <p>(D</p>
        <p>Newtyweds</p>
        <p>Ent. Tonight</p>
        <p>Kate&amp;amp;Allie</p>
        <p>My Sis. Sam</p>
        <p>Newhart</p>
        <p>Cavanaughs</p>
        <p>Cagney &amp;amp; Lacey</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>Fortune</p>
        <p>Jeopardy</p>
        <p>MacGyver</p>
        <p>Out On A Limb</p>
        <p>CBS News</p>
        <p>PM Magazine</p>
        <p>Kate&amp;amp;Allie</p>
        <p>My Sis. Sam</p>
        <p>Newhart</p>
        <p>Cavanaughs</p>
        <p>Cagney &amp;amp; Lacey</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>Taxi</p>
        <p>M*A*S*H</p>
        <p>King</p>
        <p>News</p>
        <p>ns</p>
        <p>Movie</p>
        <p>Friend Rieka</p>
        <p>Boomer</p>
        <p>Movie: "The Black Hole"</p>
        <p>Preview</p>
        <p>ESPN</p>
        <p>College Basketball: St. John's at Pittsburgh</p>
        <p>College Basketball; Iowa at Purdue</p>
        <p>HBO</p>
        <p>Movie</p>
        <p>FraggleRock</p>
        <p>Movie: The Longshot"</p>
        <p>Humor And The Presidency</p>
        <p>Movie</p>
        <p>UFE</p>
        <p>Marcus Welby.M.D.</p>
        <p>Call To Glory</p>
        <p>Regis Philbin's Lifestyles</p>
        <p>Dr. Ruth Show</p>
        <p>MAX</p>
        <p>Movie: "Silverado"</p>
        <p>Movie: "Personal Best"</p>
        <p>Movie: "Sweet Dreams"</p>
        <p>SHOW</p>
        <p>Robin Hood</p>
        <p>Movie; Mommie Dearest</p>
        <p>"Lady Jane"</p>
        <p>TMC</p>
        <p>Movie; "Animals Are Beautiful People"</p>
        <p>Movie: "Superman</p>
        <p>USA</p>
        <p>Airwolf</p>
        <p>Riptide</p>
        <p>Wrestling</p>
        <p>CBS Official Says 'Morning' Will Find Spot By Mid-Year</p>
        <p>Channel listings above are for Greenville cable. WITN telecasts on Channel 7, WNCT on Channel 9 and WRAL on Channel 5.  _________</p>
        <p>For complst* TV programming Information, consult your wookly TV SHOWTIME from Sunday's Daily Rofloctor.</p>
        <p>McEuen Shakes Dirt Bank</p>
        <p>By PAT MCGRAW</p>
        <p>L.A. Times-Washington Post News Service</p>
        <p>DENVER  Perhaps the easiest way to say it, John McEuen remarked of his departure from the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band, is that the Partners, Brothers and Friends had a good time but, for me, things got a little weary.</p>
        <p>The announcement earlier this month that the multi-instrumentalist was leaving the quintet was not a complete surprise, since the 41-year-old Colorado resident had already embarked on some solo projects, including a moderately successful record album.</p>
        <p>But to many, the Dirt Band without its banjo and mandolin player will never be the real group.</p>
        <p>Describing himself as the Jerry Garcia of the Dirt Band, McEuen said his affiliation with the group will prove beneficial in his future projects. The Dirt Heads are similar to the (Grateful) Dead Heads. If Jerry Garcia goes out to do something by himself, he attracts a following.  </p>
        <p>And so, of course, will McEuen, who was clearly the most tradition-oriented member of the group. When it was observed that the band was moving increasingly toward country-rock, leaving the hillbilly behind, McEuen had only a single correction: Make that country-pop. </p>
        <p>In reality, though, McEuen is a product of the folk-music boom of the 60s - fueled with the enthusiasm and dollars of urban young p^ple  and not of Appalachian tradition. He was bom and raised in California, where a teen-age fascination with the banjo inspired by bluegrass practitioner Doug Dillard led to a comedic association with a high school classmate, comedian Steve Martin. The two worked together at Disneyland.</p>
        <p>While McEuen was starting college, guitarists Jeff Kunkel and Jeff Hanna were forming a folkish music group in their nearby Long Beach hi^ school. The group, originallv duDbed the Illegitimate Jug Band, had changed its name to the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band by 1966, when McEuen joined to replace a dropout named Jackson Browne.</p>
        <p>The group first hit nationally in 1967 with Buy for Me the Rain and has been at it ever since, with varying degrees of success.</p>
        <p>By 1970, partly because of the Los Angeles smog, the band risked moving to Colorado. Several band members now reside outside the state, but McEuen is happy in the mountains west of Denver. But two decades of show biz and its attendant demands are not without some personal cost. After 20 years of seeing 200 cities a year, I feel thats a lot, McEuen said.</p>
        <p>Though he remains on good terms with the other members of the band, he said, in recent years, I felt like</p>
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        <p>TELETHON FANS  Singers Johnny Cash, left, and Wayne Newton, right, pose with 4-year-old Christal Montayer of New York during television's Weekend with the Stars" telethon for cerebral palsy. The singers met with Christal during performances of the telethon at New Yorks NBC studios on Sunday. (AP Laserphoto)</p>
        <p>our divergent interests were creating a split. Things I wanted to do musically, the rest of the band didnt want to do, and the band has been using me less and less.... My input had been diluted in the last couple of years.</p>
        <p>One manifestation of his desire to do material that didnt interest the rest of the band was McEuens solo album, titled simply John McEuen, released about 18 months ago. The album included such things as McEuens musically backed version of Stephen Benets Mountain Whippoorwill, the kind of cut that wins critical acclaim but is far too cerebral for anyones Top 40 chart.</p>
        <p>But he intends to do more work of that sort. Part of what Im doing is taking more time to see what there is to do, McEuen said. One thing about the Dirt Band is that we worked an awful lot, and sometimes</p>
        <p>E GUIDE</p>
        <p>it would be numbing, with no time for recharging or reflecting.</p>
        <p>By MORGAN GENDEL</p>
        <p>L.A. Times-Washington Post News Service</p>
        <p>REDONDO BEACH, Calif. - CBS The Morning Program, the week-old Monday-through-Friday replacement for the beleaguered CBS Morning News, will successfully find its audience by midyear, its executive producer predicts.</p>
        <p>What is more, CBS commitment to the show is open-ended, Bob Shanks assured, speaking before TV critics gathered here.</p>
        <p>I may get a call 13 weeks from now saying pack up and get out of here, but thats not my sense of it, Shanks said. At a recent meeting with CBS chairman William Paley, he said, he was told to fine-tune the show and keep on doing what youre doing.</p>
        <p>Shanks, appearing alongside the shows stars, Mariette Hartley and Holland Smith, said: I think within three to six months the show will be very comfortable and people will begin to accept it and it wont be so startling to see a comedian in the morning.</p>
        <p>The latter comment referred to the presence of comic Bob Saget on the 7:30-to-9 a.m. show and the stand-up comedy routines performed by other comedians in the first half hour. Saget, along with videotaped personals and a live studio audience, have set The Morning Program distinctly apart from its predecessor as well as from its competition, ABCs Good Morning America and NBCs Today.</p>
        <p>The perceived softness has made The Morning Program a tough sell with critics, too, but Shanks and company gamely faced the press on the next-to-last day of the two-week-long series of network presentations.</p>
        <p>Hartley had given blood on the show that morning and seemed ready to have the critics go after more. Responding to charges that she reputedly interrupted co-host Smith during Week One, she said, He steps on me as much as I do on him, isnt that right, Holland?</p>
        <p>Absolutely, Smith readily replied. As much as I possibly can. The trio acknowledged some mistakes. Hartley said that, at Shanks suggestion, she will back off from her role as the Gracie Allen of sports, a reference to her exag-gerati non-knowledge of football during an interview with former Oakland Raiders coach John Madden and Pat Summerall, both of whom will be Super Bowl sportscasters.</p>
        <p>Shanks, for his part, admitted that, in his nervousness about the new show, he had booked too many</p>
        <p>Government, wholesale/retail and manufacuturine each account for 25 percent of total employment in Pitt County.</p>
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        <p>Across from East Carolina University  752-1907</p>
        <p>guests, forcing many of the interview segments to be overly brief. I take full blame for that, he said. We are loosening the format so that doesnt happen again.</p>
        <p>But Shanks defended some of the shows perceived gaffes with a sweeping call for some reality on TV. He said he hoped the show would have some moments when youre sitting at home and say, I cant believe I saw that!  </p>
        <p>Shanks and Smith, a former news anchor at the CBS-owned New York station, WCBS, also insisted that the presence of a studio audience did not compromise their ability to present newsworthy interviews. They both referred to Friday mornings interview with David Jacobsen, whose 17 months of captivity in Lebanon ended last November, and his son, Eric. The audience didnt hoot and holler, Shanks pointed out.</p>
        <p>He added that when breaking news</p>
        <p>warrants, the telecast would shift to coverage by CBS news division, which relinquished control of the morning slot when low ratings forced the morning news effort off the air after 23 years.</p>
        <p>Shanks, a veteran producer who helped launch Good Morning America and 20-20 at ABC, cleverly defused some of the negative reviews of The Morning Program by reading two typically scathing critiques. They lambasted everything from the corny and dull content to the impractical central set to the self-conscious hosts.</p>
        <p>Shanks then disclosed that the two reviews were not about The Morning Program at all. They were written in 1975 about Good Morning America, now in its 12th year, and in 1952 at the start of Today. Unkind reviews, he noted, are in the grand tradition of morning shows, even the long-lasting ones.</p>
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        <p>U.S. Waives Death Penalty To Get Hijack Suspect</p>
        <p>By TIM AHERN Associated Press Writer</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP) - The Justice Department plans this week to formally ask West Germany to turn over a man charged in the 1985 hijacking of a TWA jetliner, even though the suspect wont be sentenced to death if convicted.</p>
        <p>The department announced Sunday it wouldnt seek the death penalty against Mohammad Ali Hamadi, a decision which clears the way for Hamadi to be sent to the United States.</p>
        <p>West Germany has no death penalty and its laws bar extradition of people to countries which have capital punishment.</p>
        <p>Justice Department spokesman Patrick Korten said, We have concluded that the only way we can ge.t him back is through the use of the formal extradition process and that extradition process requires that we agree not to impose the death penalty if the suspect is convicted of capital crimes herein the U.S.</p>
        <p>Hamadi is charged with air piracy.</p>
        <p>which carries the death penalty, and murder.</p>
        <p>The department said Sunday it was preparing a formal extradition request to be presented to the West German government within the week.</p>
        <p>In Bonn, Juergen Schmid, a spokesman for the West German Justice Department, indicated that Hamadi could be extradited to the United States relatively soon now that U.S. officials have pledged not to seek the death penalty.</p>
        <p>The absence of the pledge has been the main obstacle, Schmid said. If this main obstacle is removed, the process could theoretically go fairly quickly. ... In theory at least, he could be extradited relatively soon.</p>
        <p>Hamadi, 22, was arrested last Tuesday at the Frankfurt airport after he arrived from Beirut. West German officials said customs agents searching Hamadis luggage found three wine bottles full of methyl nitrate, which can be used to make explosives. The officials said they thought he was planning a bomb</p>
        <p>attack, although they were unsure of his target.</p>
        <p>The Justice Department asked the West Gerrnans for Hamadh, but German officials said they wouldnt turn him over if he could be sentenced to death after a U.S. conviction.</p>
        <p>Hamadi and three other men are wanted by the United States in connection with the June 1985 hijacking of TWA flight 847 en route from Athens to Rome. The plane was flown to Beirut, where U.S. Navy diver Robert Stethem was shot to death and 39 Americans were held hostage.</p>
        <p>One of those hostages, Jimmie Dell Palmer of Little Rock, Ark., said Sunday he thinks Hamadi deserves the death penalty.</p>
        <p>I am certainly disappointed we have taken this route to get him back, Palmer said, but if thats the only way to get him to the United States, we dont have much choice.</p>
        <p>In related news, the West German Foreign Ministry said Sunday a West German businessman was kidnapped in Beirut. Newspapers in Hamburg and Bonn said the kidnappers ap-</p>
        <p>PRESIDENT RETURNS  President Leon Frebres tional airport. Cordero, who was kidnapped by air force Cordero, left with glasses, is greeted Sunday by commandos Friday, was released after 11 hours of cap-Ecuadoran officials upon his arrival at Quitos interna- tivity. (AP Laserphoto)</p>
        <p>Ecuadoran President Freed, Faces Impeachment Fight</p>
        <p>QUITO, Ecuador (AP)  President Leon Febres Cordero was back in the government palace today facing a tough fight against political enemies who seek to impeach him following his 11-hour kidnapping by renegade air force commandos.</p>
        <p>Many Ecuadorans said the conservative president was weakened politically by his decision to grant the kidnappers demand and release former air force commander Gen. Frank Vargas Pazzos, who was jailed after leading a failed rebellion last March.</p>
        <p>Febres Cordero rested two days in his native city of Guayaquil to recover from the beating and death threats he received while held captive at an air base there Friday. He flew back to Quito on Sunday afternoon.</p>
        <p>Except for a bruise on his left forehead, the president showed few signs of physical mistreatment.</p>
        <p>Febres Cordero of the Social Christian Party, who has projected an image as a tough leader since taking office in 1984, said after his release that he intended to complete his four-year term.</p>
        <p>But Congress President Andres Vallejo of the opposition Social Democrat Party scheduled a special legislative session for Tuesday to discuss the presidents conduct in office.</p>
        <p>At least some members of an opposition coalition of leftist and center-right parties want Febres Cordero impeached, claiming he has violated the constitution on numerous occasions by ignoring the powers granted to Congress.</p>
        <p>In the most recent clash, he blocked an amnesty for Vargas Pazzos approved by Congress in September by refusing to publish it in the official jazette. That kept it from becoming aw.</p>
        <p>The constitution says a ma jority in Congress can impeach a president for treason, corruption or any infraction that gravely affects the national honor." That last provision appears applicable if the legislature chooses to invoke it.</p>
        <p>If the special session of Congress decides to impeach Febres Cordero, Vallejo will have to call another special session, known as a political trial. during which evidence would be presented and Febres Cordero wou d be called to defend himself.</p>
        <p>The opposition controls 41 seats in the 71-seat bodv, enough to impeach him. But it needs two-thirds majority - 47 seats - to convict him and force him from office.</p>
        <p>Many Ecuadorans said Febres Cordero's decision to acede to the kidnappers demands dealt a crippling blow to his image as a tough leader and weakened his credibility.</p>
        <p>In other kidnappings, including the abduction of a federal judge last May and that of a banker in September 1985, he refused to negotiate with kidnappers. The judges captors freed him unharmed, but the banker and his kidnappers died when security forces raided the house where he was being held.</p>
        <p>Febres Cordero said he agreed to the demands of those holding him in order to protect the lives of about 25 people seized with him. He also signed a pledge not to prosecute or discipline those who took part in the kidnapping, which was staged as the president took part in a ceremony at the air base.</p>
        <p>Febres Corderos term ends in August 1988, and he cannot run for re-election. But campaigning has al</p>
        <p>ready begun for the first round of presidential elections set for next January.</p>
        <p>Political analysts and foreign diplomats in Quito said they doubted the opposition parties would vote to impeach Febres Cordero because it would weaken the countrys fragile democracy and because they are practically guaranteed of winning the upcoming elections.</p>
        <p>Febres Cordero is Ecuadors first elected president after seven years of military dictatorship.</p>
        <p>His popularity has tumbled with voters because of austerity measures his government impeded following a collapse in world prices of oil, the countrys main export.</p>
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        <p>parently hope to trade him for Hamadi.</p>
        <p>But West German authorities said it was too early to say if Saturdays abduction of Rudolf Cordes, 53, was linked to Hamadis arrest.</p>
        <p>The United States derives its authority to prosecute crimes against U.S. citizens overseas from several sections of law enacted by</p>
        <p>Congress in response to a wave of international terrorism in the past few years.</p>
        <p>One provision signed into law last year gives the government jurisdiction when terrorist assaults are committed against U.S. nationals in foreign countries. Another U.S. law which went into effect in January 1985 gives jurisdiction to the federal</p>
        <p>government for the taking of U.S. hostages overseas. A third U S. law on aircraft piracy provides for up to the death penalty on conviction if someone dies during the attempted piracy of an aircraft. A fourth law provides for federal jurisdiction and terms of up to 20 years imprisonment when a U.S. aircraft is damaged overseas.</p>
        <p>Germany Fears Kidnapping Linked To Hijacking Arrest</p>
        <p>BONN, West Germany (AP)  Officials said it was not clear if the kid-napping of a West German businessman in Beirut was aimed at forcing Bonn to release a Lel^nese man accused of hijacking a 'IWA jetliner in 1985.</p>
        <p>Two West German newspapers Sunday quoted unnamed government officials as saying they feared the two cases were linked.</p>
        <p>Foreign Ministry spokesman Reinhard Bettzuege said the kidnappers have not identified themselves or made demands. It could be a criminal act, or someone looking for ransom money, Bettzuege said.</p>
        <p>Ministry officials said Rudolf Cordes, 53, was kidnapped Saturday evening after arriving in Beirut from Frankfurt.</p>
        <p>Cordes is the Beirut manager for Hoechst AG, one of West Germanys largest chemical companies. He is based in Frankfurt and travels frequently to Lebanon on business, a company official said Sunday.</p>
        <p>The kidnapping brings to 19 the number of foreigners missing in Lebanon, including six Americans. A Frenchman and a Saudi Arabian also were kidnapped in the past week.</p>
        <p>Ministry sources, speaking on condition of anonymity, said Bonn authorities had warned the approximately 200 West Germans living in Beirut to take extra precautions following the arrest in Frankfurt last Tuesday of Lebanese Mohammad Ali Hamadi.</p>
        <p>Hamadi, a suspect in the June 1985 hijacking of a TWA jetliner, was arrested after arriving in FYankfurt from Beirut. Customs agents found he was cairying methyl nitrate, a fluid sometimes used in making explosives.</p>
        <p>Authorities said he was identified by fingerprints as one of the hijackers who seized the TWA aircraft, shot to death U.S. Navy diver Robert Dean Stethem and held 39 American</p>
        <p>passengers hostage for 17 days.</p>
        <p>American officials are seeking Hamadis extradition to try him in the United States on air piracy and murder charges.</p>
        <p>In Washington, Justice Department spokesman Pat Korten said Sunday that U.S. officials have agreed to West Germanys condition that if convicted, Hamadi will not be sentenced to death. A U.S.-West</p>
        <p>German extradition treaty requires such a pledge because West Germany does not have the death penalty.</p>
        <p>Korten s West German counterpart, Juergen Schmid, said Bonn has not yet received the necessary documents. The Bonn Foreign Ministry, meanwhile, said it set up a crisis team to find Cordes. Officials said late Sunday there were no new developments.</p>
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        <p>The Dally Reflector, Greenville. N C</p>
        <p>Mor.v1.y,January19,1987  g./</p>
        <p>SHES HAPPY - Maria Serrao, left, applauds along with other contestnts during the finals of the Miss Solano County pageant Sunday in Fairfield, Calif. Miss Serrao, 23, a model and actress who was paralyzed in a car accident 18 years ago, was the first wheelchair-bound contestant to compete in a local pageant leading to the Miss USA contests. (AP Laserphoto)</p>
        <p>Wheelchair Beauty Happy To Compete</p>
        <p>FAIRFIELD, Calif. (AP) - A wheelchair-bound woman who danced and modeled a swimsuit and nightgown in a local beauty pageant says she it was a rewarding experience even though she lost.</p>
        <p>Ive had a really good time here and I think that weve realized that there are more important things than winning, said Maria Serrao, 23. We all feel pretty good about ourselves right now. I think thats the most important thing.</p>
        <p>The title of Miss Solano went to 18-year-old Terri Zorn of Suisun City, who won out over 21 other contestants Sunday night.</p>
        <p>Miss Serrao, paralyzed in a car accident when she was 5 years old, was the first wheelchair-bound woman to enter a local beauty contest leading to the Miss USA and Miss Universe pageants.</p>
        <p>The movie and TV actress participated in the programs opening production, swinging her arms and spinning her wheelchair in a dance number that featured the contestants in a Las Vegas-style chorus line in feather headdresses and sequined costumes.</p>
        <p>Miss Serrao received enthusiastic applause dur</p>
        <p>ing the number, and in the evening gown and swimsuit competitions.</p>
        <p>If somebody looks to me as an inspiration, thats great, she said. People can do a lot of things they think they cant. If I could be a role model for someone to help overcome their obstacles, then Id feel good.</p>
        <p>Miss Serrao has appeared on televisions Cagney and Lacey, Trapper John, M.D. and General Hospital, and in the film The Falcon and the Snowman.</p>
        <p>Evangelist's Money-Or-Death Plea For Donations Stirs His Followers</p>
        <p>By GIL BROYLES Associated Press Writer</p>
        <p>TULSA, Okla. (AP) - Oral Roberts was the object of jokes in 1980 when he basecf a fund-raising campaign on a vision of a 900-foot-tall Jesus.</p>
        <p>Four years later, the evangelists ministry asked for donations while offering a 7-inch-tall replica of an angel Roberts said visited him.</p>
        <p>This vear, with his following dropping off, his City of Faith Medical Center unable to fill its beds and the university named after him struggling, Roberts told viewers he will die in March unless he raises $4.5 million for medical missionary scholarships.</p>
        <p>A spokeswoman says the evangelist means what he says and that his supporters have no reason to question his methods.</p>
        <p>Roberts said God gave him the ultimatum in March, warning that he had to raise a total of $8 million or Im going to call you home in one year. The money, $3.5 million of which already had been raised, is to</p>
        <p>allow Oral Roberts University medical students to graduate debt-free and become missionaries.</p>
        <p>Roberts latest apraal has been criticized by some religious leaders and a few of the 200 television stations that broadcast his program. One station said it would not run Roberts message, while others said they will screen programs for such appeals before broadcasting them.</p>
        <p>The danger is not so much in the way funds are raised, but in that it can lead people to believe in a God that is manipulative, said the Rev. Kent Ingram of the Boston Avenue Methodist Church, where Roberts is a registered member. He may not mean that, but thats what frightens me.</p>
        <p>The ministry said $1.6 million in cash and pledges poured in within two weeks of Roberts remarks Jan.</p>
        <p>4.</p>
        <p>Roberts rarely grants interviews and has been out of state since he reported his conversation with God.</p>
        <p>Jan Dargatz, the ministrys vice</p>
        <p>Study Shows Energy Audits Accomplishing Little</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP) - Federal requirements that utilities must offer energy audits to their customers - a major conservation initiative of the</p>
        <p>late 1970s  do not seem to have saved much energy, congressional investigators say.</p>
        <p>It is possible that more energy was</p>
        <p>spent doing the audits than was saved, according to the analyst in charge of a report from the General Accounting Office.</p>
        <p>Few homeowners participated. Those who did probably cut their household energy use by 4 percent at most.</p>
        <p>president lor creative development, said she believes the goal will be reached and that Roberts will live.</p>
        <p>He firmly believes that this is a mandate of God on his life, something that he must do. This is his next project for God, and his life is on the line about it. Its not atypical for him to do this, Dargatz said.</p>
        <p>Roberts, 68, entered the spotlight 40 years ago with fiery sermons and faith healing that drew thousands to huge tents erected across the South.</p>
        <p>Today, he heads a $500 million empire that includes the university named after him, a huge medical complex in Tulsa and an evangelistic association that has offices in seven countries. His syndicated TV specials began 30 years ago and his weekly Expect A Miracle program has been on for 20 years.</p>
        <p>The number of households watching the 30-minute show, however, has dropp^ in the last eight years from 2.5 million to 1 million, ministry officials say.</p>
        <p>In 1981, Roberts opened his medical center next to the campus, featuring three gleaming towers 20-, 30- and 60-stories high.</p>
        <p>But followers failed to flock to the City of Faith despite his warnings that the devil was trying to close it. The hospital was built to accommodate 777 beds but was allotted 294 by</p>
        <p>planning officials and has treated an average of only 120 at a time.</p>
        <p>Last year, he gave employees irizes for bringing patients and of-ered free airline tickets to followers who would fly to Tulsa for medical treatment.</p>
        <p>Ms. Dargatz said the hospital broke even last month. We feel like we have that ship righted, she said.</p>
        <p>Ministry officials also say that Oral Roberts University is now self-sufficient, but only after the dental school was closed and the law school was conveyed to fellow evangelist Pat Robertson.</p>
        <p>Income has also been dropping. The Tulsa Tribune reported last year that Roberts received $.58 million in contributions in fiscal 1985, a drop of nearly $30 million from five years before.</p>
        <p>In 1980, as funds for completing the City of Faith lacged, Roberts told followers he had had a vision of a 900-foot Jesus standing above the hospital and lifting it with his hands.</p>
        <p>1 felt an overwhelming holy presence all around me, Roberts wrote to supporters. "When 1 opened my eyes, there He stood ... some 900 feet tall, looking at me. His eyes... Oh! His eyes! He stood a full 300 feet taller than the 600-foot-tall City of Faith.Just A Call Sells It All!The Daily Reflector Classified Ads  752-6166</p>
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        <p>People MEEDPublic Notices</p>
        <p>NOTICE</p>
        <p>Having qualified as Ex ecutrix of the estate of William Lindsey Griffin, late of Pitt County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of said deceased to present them to the undersigned Executrix on or be fore July 5,1987 or this notice or same will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All person in debted to said estate please make Immediate payment.</p>
        <p>This 29th day of December, 1986.</p>
        <p>Thelma R. Griffin 209 Kirkland Drive Greenville, NC 27834 Executrix of the estafe of William Lindsey Griffin, deceased.</p>
        <p>January 5,12,19,26,1987</p>
        <p>NORTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF PITT</p>
        <p>NOTICE OF RESALE</p>
        <p>WHEREAS, under and by virtue of that certain ORDER dated and entered October 7,</p>
        <p>1986, In that Special Proceeding entitled "Jonn S. Fleming, Elizabeth Fleming and James E. Fleming, Petitioners, versus Olivia F. Dixon, et al., Re spondents," bearing File No 85 SP 371 In the Ottlce of the Clerk of Superior Court of Pitt County, the undersigned Commissioner sold the land described at public sale, and</p>
        <p>WHEREAS, within the time allowed by law a raised bid was filed with the Pitt County Clerk of Superior Court and an Order dated December 3, 1986, Issued directing the Commissioner to re sell the land described herelnbelow upon an opening bid of Six Thousand Three Hundred Fifty ($6,350.00) Dollars;</p>
        <p>NOW, THEREFORE, under and by virtue of the aforesaid Order of the Court, the under signed Commissioner will on Friday the 30th day of January,</p>
        <p>1987, at 12 00 Noon at the door of the Pitt County Courthouse, Greenville, North Carolina, of ter for sale, at an opening bid of Six Thousand Three Hundred Fifty (16,350.00) Dollars, to the highesf bidder for cash, that cer tain lot or parcel of land described as follows:</p>
        <p>yring and being situate In the Town of Ayden, County of Pm, State of North Carolina, and more particularly deKribed as follows; Being on the west side of Venters Street, and being that certain lot which was deed ed to W. S. Gardner by Wakefield Jones and wife, and from W. S Gardner to W. M Gardner, and from W. M. Gard ner to Leslie Gardner by deed recorded in Book X 15 at page 420 of the PIH County Public Registry; It being SO feet on001 Public Notices</p>
        <p>Venters Street, and running back 150 feet. Reference being made to aforesaid deeds for a more particular description. See Deed Book T-23, Page 314, Pitt County Registry.</p>
        <p>The sale of the above described lot or parcel of land will be subiect to any highway or roadway rights of way, ease ments, liens, ad valorem taxes, and any other encumbrances of record in the Pitt County Regis try.</p>
        <p>The highest bidder at the sale will be required to make an Immediate cash deposit of ten per cent (10%) of the amount of the bid and the sale is subject to confirmation or rejection by the Court.</p>
        <p>This the 22nd day of December, 1986.</p>
        <p>VernonG. Snyder III Commissioner OF COUNSEL:</p>
        <p>Gaylord, Singleton, McNally, Strickland 8, Snyder 206 teuth Washington Street P O. Drawer 545 Greenville, NC 27835 January 19,26,1987</p>
        <p>NOTICE IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE</p>
        <p>SUPERIOR COURT DIVISION BEFORE THE CLERK NORTH CAROLINA PITTCOUNTY</p>
        <p>The undersigned, having this day qualified as Executrix of the Estate of Swan Charles Ives, Jr., deceased, this Is to notify all persons, firms and corporations having claims against said deceased to present</p>
        <p>them to the undersigned or her attorneys on or before the 5fh day of July, 1987, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons Indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment to the undersigned.</p>
        <p>This 31st day of December, 1986.</p>
        <p>Wllda A. Ives, Executor Estate of Swan Charles Ives, Jr.</p>
        <p>P.O. Box 745 Bethel, NC 27812 C.W. Everett, Sr., Attorney P.O. Box 609 Bethel, NC 27812 Telephone: 825 5691 January 5,12,19,26,1987</p>
        <p>NOTICE OF DISSOLUTION OF</p>
        <p>GRIFTON ENTERPRISES, INCORPORATED</p>
        <p>Notice Is hereby given to all persons that "Grltfoo Enter prises, Incorporated", a North Carolina corporation formerly having Its principal office the Cl ty of orifton, Pitt County, North Carolina, is in the process of dissolution in accordance with the Articles of Dissolution thereof filed with the Secretary of State of North Carolina, and in accord with the provisions of Chapter 55 of the General Stat utes of North Carolina Mrs. Jean H. Williams is the person upon whom notice of any claim may be filed and she may be located at Forest Acres, Post Of flee Box 406, Griffon, North Carolina.</p>
        <p>This Sth day of January,</p>
        <p>1987</p>
        <p>GRIFTON ENTERPRISES, INCORPORATED</p>
        <p>WHITE A ALLEN, P.A Attorneys at Law CGJ/$mm 5356s</p>
        <p>January! 12,19,26,198)</p>
        <p>NOTICE OF iERVlCE OF PROCESS BY PUBLICATION STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA PITT COUNTY IN THE SUPERIOR COURT BEFORE THE CLERK LUCY B JAMES</p>
        <p>HELEN DUPREE ELIZABETH DUPREE GRIMES; JOSEPH C. DUPREE, JAMES EARNEST JOHNSON; SAM ED JOHNSON; BOBBY JOE DUPREE; and ANGELA DUPREE</p>
        <p>PIM County Clerk of Superior Court File ifiM^SP 179 TO Joseph C Dupree</p>
        <p>James Earnest Johnson Sam Ed Johnson Bobby Joe Dupree Take notice that a pleading seeking relief against you has been tiled In the above entitled racial procaeiAng. The nature001 Public Notices</p>
        <p>of the relief being sought is as follows.</p>
        <p>The sale of a triangular shaped piece of land containing approximately two acres located In Falkland Township, in which you own interests as te nants in common, tor division of the proceeds.</p>
        <p>You are required to make defense to such pleading not later than Monday, February 23, 1987, which date is more than forty days after the date of the first publication of this notice, which date Is January I2, 1987, and upon your failure to do so the party seeking service against you will apply to the court for the relief sought.</p>
        <p>This the 12th day of January, 1987</p>
        <p>UNDERWOOD&amp;amp;LEECH Attorneys for Lucy B. James,</p>
        <p>Petitioner P.O. Box 527,</p>
        <p>201 Evans Street Greenville.</p>
        <p>North Carolina 27835 Telephone: 919 752 3303 January 12, 19,26,1987 _</p>
        <p>NOTICE OF EXECUTOR</p>
        <p>Having qualified as Executor of the Estate of William C. Me Carley, late of Pitt County, North Carolina, the undersigned does hereby notify all persons, firms and corporations, having claims against the estate of said decedent to present such claims to the undersigned at P. 0. Box 5063, Greenville, North Carolina 27835 5063 on or before the 13th day of July, 1987, or this notice will be pled In bar of recovery. All persons indebted to said estate will please make Im mediate payment to the estate.</p>
        <p>This the 7th day of January, 1987</p>
        <p>DeWITTMcCARLEY</p>
        <p>Executor</p>
        <p>GWYNETTHILBURN Attorney tor the E state of William C.McCarley P.O. Box5063 Greenville,</p>
        <p>North Carolina 27835 January 12,19,26; February 2</p>
        <p>NOTICE OF SALE NORTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF PITT</p>
        <p>Under and by virtue of those certain ORDERS dated and entered May 1,1986; November 10,1986; December is, 1986, and January 12, 1987 In the Special Proceeding entitled "Mary Strong Summers and husbano. Andrew Summers, et al., Petl tioners, versus Diana Strong, Henry Strong, Jr., et al.. Re spondents," bearing File No 85 SP 453 In the ottlce of the Clerk Superior Court of Pitt County, the undersigned Commisslor&amp;gt;er will on Friday, the 30th day of January, 1987, at 12 00 Noon at the door of the Pitt County Courthouse, Greenville, North Carolina, otter for sale to the highest bidder(s) tor cash, wn an opening bid of SIXTEEN THOUSAND TEN DOLLARS ($16,010.00) that tract or parcel of land described as follows:</p>
        <p>Lying and being situate In Swift Creek Township, Pitt County, North Carolina, beginn Ing at a stake and pine pointers and runs North 80 IS West 1567 feet to a stake and pointers at a branch near the mouth of a ditch, running thence with said branch South 24 30 East 66 feet to the mouth of said ditch, thence with the ditch its various courses as follows: South 45 East 64 &amp;lt;/t feet. South 26 East 164 feet; South 1715 East 73 feet. South 40-15 East 219 feet; South 32 30 East 120.5 feet. South 21 45 East 156 feet; South 43 East 116.5 feet; South 72 35 East 209 feet. South 71 20 East 140 feet. South 38 30 East 184 feet. South 37 15 East 302 fact; thence a line South 40-30 East 477 feet exfen ding beyond said ditch to a stake in the back I'ne, thence a direct line North 4-00 East 1659 feet to the beginning, containing 32 2/5 acres, mere or less, as shown on survey made February 12, 1917 Further, being the same tract of land conveyed to H.C Strong by deed bearing date of February 16, 1917, and of record In book H-12, page S3. Pitt County Regis try.</p>
        <p>The sale of the above described tract or parcel of land will be ntade with no crop allot ments and subject to any highway or roadway rights of way, easements, liens, ad001 Public Notices</p>
        <p>valorem taxes subsequent to the year 1986, and any other encum brances of record in the Pitt County Registry.</p>
        <p>The highest bidder at the sale will be required to make an immediate cash deposit of ten per cent (10%) of the amount of the bid and the sale is subject to confirmation or rejection by the Court.</p>
        <p>This 12th day of January,</p>
        <p>1987</p>
        <p>L.W. Gaylord, Jr.</p>
        <p>Commissioner January 19, 26,1987</p>
        <p>NOTICE OF LAND SALE NORTH CAROLINA PITT COUNTY</p>
        <p>Under and by virtue of an Order of the Clerk of Superior Court of Pitt County, entered on the 7th day of January, 1987, made in the special proceeding entitled "Lois Ann Webb Dean, Executrix of the Estate of Susie Williams Webb, Deceased, and Lois Ann Webb Dean (Unmar ried) Individually Ex Parte", File Number 87 SP 3, the under signed, who was by said Order appointed Commissioner to sell the land described in the Peti tion, will otter tor sale tor cash at public auction at the door of the Pitt County Courthouse, tac ing Third Street, Greenville, Pitt County, North Carolina, at 12 00 Noon on Wednesday, February 11, 1987, the following real estate, to-wit</p>
        <p>Lying and being situated in the City of Greenville, Pitt Coun ty. North Carolina, and being Lot No. 11 In Block "F" of the "Johnston Heights" Additiion and being situated on the corner of Meade Street and ^cond Street, and beginning at the in tersection of Afoade and Second Streets, and runs thence with the property iine of Meade Street 58 7 feet to the corner of Lot No 10 in Block "F", thence with the common line of Lot No 10 and Lot No. 11 in block "F" 93 feet to the common corner of Lots Nos. 10 and 11 in Block "f, thence a northeastward course 53 2 feet to Second Street, thence with Second Street 91 6 feet to the beginning, and being Lot No 11 in Block "F" of the Johnston Heights Addition as shown by map of said property made by T.W Rivers, C E , in June, 1940, of record in Map Book 3, Page 136, Pitt County Registry, and being the identical property conveyed by Dora Johnston, et al, to Susie Williams Webb by deed dated April 5, 1951, of re cord In Book C 26, Page 306, Pitt County Registry</p>
        <p>The highest bidder will be required to deposit with the Commissioner fen (10%) per cent of his or her bid ad evidence of good faith</p>
        <p>The sale will be made sob ject to Pitt County and City of Greenville ad valorem taxes tor 1987 and to confirmation ol the Court</p>
        <p>This the 8th day ol January,</p>
        <p>1987</p>
        <p>William I Wooten, Jr, Attorney Commissioner 111 West Third Street Greenville, North Carolina 27834</p>
        <p>Telephone (919 ) 758 2111 January 19, 26; February 2, 9, 1987</p>
        <p>NOTICE OF SALE STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF PITT</p>
        <p>Under and by virtue of the power of sale contained in a cer tain Deed of Trust executed by Gene C Sherrod and wife, Dorothy D Sherrod, to James O Buchanan, Trustee, dated the 29th day of October, 1971, and recorded in Book K40. Page 56, in the Ottlce of the Register of Deeds tor Pitt County, North Carolina, default having been made In the payment of the in dabtedness thereby secured and failure to carry out or perform the stipulations and agreements therein contained, and the holder of the Indebtedness thereby secured having demanded a foreclosure thereof tor the purpose of satisfying said Indebtedness, and the Clerk of Court granting permission tor the torectosure, the undersigned Trustee will otter tor sale at public auction to the highest bidder for cash at the C^urt house door in Greenville, North Carolina, at 12 00 Noon, on the 2nd day of February 1987, the001 Public Notices</p>
        <p>land, as improved, conveyed in said Deed of Trust, the same lying and being in WIntervllie Township, Pitt County, North Carolina, and being more par ticularly described as follows: Lying and being situated In Winterville Township, Pitt County, North Carolina, and be ing all of Lot 42. Block "D" of the Robinson Heights Subdivi Sion as shown on map of same recorded in Map Book 6, page 63, Pitt County Registry. The above described lot Is conveyed herein subject to and impressed with the restrictive covenants ap plicable to Robinson Heights Subdivision duly of record in the Pitt County Registry. The re cord owners of this property as reflected on the records of the Register of Deeds of this county are Gene C. Sherrod and wife, Dorothy D. Sherrod Terms of the sale, including the amount of the cash deposit. It any, to be made by the highest bidder at the sale, are: Five percent (5%) of the amount of the highest bid must be deposited with the Trustee pending confirmation of the sale Dated this 6th day of January, 1987</p>
        <p>THURMAN E BURNETTE, Trustee, substituted by the in strument recorded In Book 85, Page 64, Pitt County Registry,</p>
        <p>January 19, 26.1987</p>
        <p>NOTICE</p>
        <p>Having qualified as Admr eta of the estate of Jasper Otto Derrick, late of Pitt County, North Carolina, this Is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of said deceased to present them to the undersigned amdr eta on or be tore July 17, 1987 or this notice or same will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons in debted to said estate please make immediate payment This 16th day of January,</p>
        <p>1987</p>
        <p>Jack Holley Derrick 1105 Vance Drive Tarboro, NC 27886 Admr eta of the estate of Jasper Otto Derrick, deceased January 19, 26; February 2, 9, 1987</p>
        <p>NOTICE TO CREDITORS</p>
        <p>Having qualified as Ad ministrator of the Estate of Billy Warren Dail, late of Pitt County, North Carolina, the undersigned does hereby notify all persons, firms and corporations having claims against the estate of said decedent to exhibit them to the undersigned at Route I, Box A 14, Snow Hill, North Carolina 28580, on or before the 16th day of July, 1987, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recov ery All persons, firms and cor poratlons indebted to the said estate will please make im mediate payment to the under signed</p>
        <p>This the 16th day ol January,1987</p>
        <p>Stephen W Bryant Administrator of the Estate of Billy Warren Dali Stephen W Bryant Route 1, Box A 14 Snow HIM, NC 28580 January 19, 26; February 2, 9, 1987</p>
        <p>REQUEST FOR PROPOSALS</p>
        <p>Pitt County Memorial Hos pital. Inc. it toliciling sealed proposals tor contract security services until 5 00 P M Wed nesday, February 4, 1987 in the office of Vice President Facllitites Services Contractors tor providing this service shall be licensed by the Private Pro tection Services Board of North Carolina State Bureau of In vestigation and shall have a minimum of two years experi ence vices more</p>
        <p>For information regarding the specifications, please con tact Ralph R Half. Jr. Vice President, Facilities Services, Pitt County Memorial Hospital, Inc., Greenville, North Carolina Phone 919 757 4587</p>
        <p>PIH County Memorial Hos pital, Inc reserves the right to reject any or all proposals, to waive formalities, and take such action as is in the best interest of the hospital</p>
        <p>Jack W Richardson President January 16,18.19,21,25,1987</p>
        <p>in providing security ser I in a hospital of 500 beds orClassified Ads007 Special Notices</p>
        <p>CHRISTIAN VIDEO rentals. $2.00 per day. Agape Christian Book Store. 946 9246, Highways 264 and 17, Washington, NC.</p>
        <p>LET ME MAKE YOU AN AFGHAN</p>
        <p>and Craft pictures Call 757 1132</p>
        <p>WE CARRY BATTERIES</p>
        <p>(Eveready) tor all makes of watches! Floyd G. Robinson Jewelers, Downtown Evans Mall, Greenville, 758 2452Oil Autos For Sale</p>
        <p>"A GOOD PLACE TO BUY!" EASTGATE MOTORS,INC</p>
        <p>130 East Greenville Blvd Greenville, 355 2193WINNER CHEVROLET</p>
        <p>Highway II Bypass, Ayden 746 4032or1 800 682 1826</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED ADS will go to work tor you to find cash buyers tor your unused Items To place your ad. phone 752 6166</p>
        <p>013Buick</p>
        <p>1975 WHITE. Transmission needs work Call 9 7, 758 5890</p>
        <p>1981 BUICK REGAL LTD Im maculate, owned by senior citi 7en $4500 752 4961</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED ADS will go to work tor you to find cash buyers tor your unused Items To place your ad, phone 752 6166</p>
        <p>014Cadillac</p>
        <p>1978 CADILLAC Coupe de Vllle, loaded 74,000 actual miles, 4 new Michelln tires. 758 3809</p>
        <p>015Chevrolet</p>
        <p>1964 CHEVROLET 4 door</p>
        <p>55,000 miles, 283 V 8. automatic S2250 Original Call Reggie 756 2615, 756 4)45</p>
        <p>1978 CHEVETTE, 4 door, 4 speed, air, 747 5742 after 6 00 pm</p>
        <p>1979 CORVETTE, new paint, automatic transmission, power steering, power brakes, power door locks, AM/FM stereo with cassette. New radials, excellent condition 757 0577 after 4 pm.</p>
        <p>1981 MONTE CARLO Landau, 2 door, gold in color, excellent shape, low mileage, V 6 Days 823 0886 or nights 758 6637</p>
        <p>1982 CHEVY Malibu Station wagon, automatic, air, power steering/brakes, excellent con dltion.$2100 756 9317</p>
        <p>1986 CAPRICE state Wagon, full power. 25,000 miles, oark blue woodgrain, $11,000 975 6076</p>
        <p>018Ford</p>
        <p>1976 FORD GRENADA, real running car $700 Call 746</p>
        <p>1978 FORD Thunderbird, new paint, runs and looks great,</p>
        <p>84.000 miles $1895 1978 Ford Fairmont Wagon, 4 cylinder, 4 speed, good tires, looks and runs good, $995 I13364D Call 746 im</p>
        <p>1980 FORD ountry iquire Sta tionwagon for sale by owner, low mileage Call 756 0025 aHer 6 00</p>
        <p>1980 FORD i^alrrnont 4 door, automatic, 6 cylinder, air, FM, silver gray metallic. 52,000 miles, I owner Call 756 7615 aHer 5 30 p m</p>
        <p>021Oldstnobile</p>
        <p>1969 98, 4 door hard top, 51,000 original miles Like new $2995/ offer 758 6006</p>
        <p>023Pontiac</p>
        <p>1982 PONTIAC J2000, $1,000 Call after 6p m 752 0730</p>
        <p>024Foreign</p>
        <p>BMW 1975 2002, good condition, emron paint, "babied", $4000 756 0698.  1</p>
        <p>DATSUN 1981, 280 ZX 23 2,</p>
        <p>black, T top, low miles, loaded Call 746 4263 after 6 pm</p>
        <p>MAZDA RX7, 1979, I owner, 5 speed, air, 67,000 miles, stereo cassette player, like new, 355 6302 Monday Friday.</p>
        <p>1971 MERCEDES Beni 220D, 4 door, FM radio, air, 4 speed, clean automobile 752 1416 after 6pm.</p>
        <p>1978 DATSUN 810 wagon, great condition, low mileage, many extras. Tuition due must sell! $2400 negotiable 752 1734</p>
        <p>1978 VOLKSWAGEN bus, 7 pas senger. 747 5742after 6 00p.m.</p>
        <p>1979 2B0ZX, 70,000 miles, loaded, excellent condition, new tires. 752 3021</p>
        <p>1980 MGB LIMITED. Webber $3500 Call 756 71)3</p>
        <p>198) TOYOTA Celica LIttback 5 speed, cruise control, power brakes, power steering, $2500 tIrm.Callatter Ip m 1 946 8981</p>
        <p>1983 BEIGE Honda Civic sta tionwagon5 speed, air, AM/FM cassette, excellent condition, $4200 Call 355 2395 after 6</p>
        <p>1984 TOYOTA Corolla LE Silver, 4 door, AM/FM stereo, automatic, cruise Excellent condition $6500 752 5648 after 5</p>
        <p>1985 SUBARU GL Statlonwagon. automatic, air, many extras.</p>
        <p>11,000 miles, excellent condition, must sell, $8,200 756 9317036 Cycles For Sale</p>
        <p>YAMAHA 4 WHEEL 60. was $839, now $729 Stan's Cycle Center, Inc 210 West Greenville Boulevard 757 0592</p>
        <p>1986 HONDA ATC, 200X, never raced, with wheel spacers and gear Including pants, helmet, chest protector 8 boots 51,750 negotiable. 758 5058 after 9pm or 830 1368 from noon to 8 30pm</p>
        <p>041Trucks</p>
        <p>ONE TON 74 Ford Van, 752 7131</p>
        <p>1984 TOYOTA 4x4, loaded. 30K miles. $8,000 753 3520</p>
        <p>044Child Care</p>
        <p>EXPERIENCED EDUCATION major available weekdays and weekends tor child care Have own transportation 758 0436. ask tor Jennifer</p>
        <p>050Pets</p>
        <p>AKC BLACK lab puppies, champion blood Call alter 6, 752 2611</p>
        <p>AKC SIBERIAN Huskys (tall after6pm 752 4577</p>
        <p>MIXED BREED puppies Free Call 758 4774 days, 355 5079 nights</p>
        <p>PUREBRED Pitt Bull puppy Call 746 2731057 Help Wanted Administrative</p>
        <p>AN EXCELLENT opportunity for an Administrative Secre tary The Individual we seek Is one who has good secretarial experience. Is a professional in appearance and work habits and seft ntollvated Typing of 60 words per minute required and word processing experience helpful Send resume to Ad minlstratlve Secretary, P 0 Box 1967, Greenville, NC 27835</p>
        <p>058Htlp Wanted Clerical</p>
        <p>BOOKKEEPING AND general office work Some computer ex perience helpful. Part time. Ref arencas needed Call 355</p>
        <p>7)2)</p>
        <p>EXPERIENCED Bookkeeper</p>
        <p>familiar with computer IBM System 34. Send reeume to P 0 Drawer 7166, Greenville, NC 27835 7166.058 Help Wanted Clerical</p>
        <p>FULL TIME entry level position with local optician Experience preferred but not necessary Reply with resume, P O Box 7006, Greenville, NC 27834</p>
        <p>FULL TIME SECRETARIAL</p>
        <p>position available immediately at Jarvis Memorial United Methodist Church Good typing skills a must Apply In person LEGAL SECRETARY ne^d for local law firm Typing re quired. Will train intelligent In dividual Send resume to Legal Secretary, P.O Box 1967, Greenville, NC 27835</p>
        <p>MEDICAL SECRETARY Must possess excellent typing skills with computer knowledge Mail resume to Director, Post Office Box 7145, Greenville, NC 27835</p>
        <p>PART TIME bookkeeper cus tomer service Will train Call Atlantic Personnel 355 7931</p>
        <p>RECEPTIONIST Dependable person with pleasant telephone voice Monday through Friday 8 30 to 5 30 Must be last and ac curate on calculator, some lyp ing required Send to Recep tionlsl, P 0 Box 1967, Green ville, NC 27834</p>
        <p>SECRETARY. Immediate open Ing tor clerical employee Must be outstanding in public rela tions, skilled In typing and operation of office machines 40 hour work week, fringe benefits Salary negotiable Send resume to: Secretary, 3004 S Memorial Drive, Greenville</p>
        <p>WORD PROCESSORS a Execu five Secretaries needed im mediately. Call Frankie, Man power, 118 Reade St , 757 3.300</p>
        <p>059Help Wanted Medical</p>
        <p>DENTAL HYGIENIST needed part lime one day per w&amp;lt;wk Ap ply In person Call ibi 2838 dFnTArASriSTANfS needed Good benefits Call Atlantic Personnel 355 7931 WANTED: Dental Hyglenist 3 days a week Start immediately It Interested call 1919) 946 3355</p>
        <p>73 BED skilled taclllty seeking full time Activity Director A perfect job tor someone who loves geriatrics and has the ap propriate education Send resume to Britthaven of New Bern, P 0 Box 3397, New Bern, NC 28560</p>
        <p>CLFSFIED ADS will go "to work for you to find cash buyers tor your unused Items To place your ad. phone 752 6166</p>
        <p>060</p>
        <p>Help Wanted MiscellaneousAAA EMPLOYMENT</p>
        <p>HYGIENIST Dental school graduates here's your chance! SECRETARY Nice, friendly environment</p>
        <p>CREDIT OFFICE 160 up Needs your loan eimerelnce RENTAL UNIFORM Common sense needed'</p>
        <p>101 West 14th Street Suite 203 758 1393 Low Fee Personnel Service</p>
        <p>AGES 16 21, out of school Free job training through Job Corps Also G E D Social Services, Greenville Wednesdays. 12 noon 2pm</p>
        <p>MHRS NEEDED. Ask tor Judy 355 7931</p>
        <p>COUNTER PERSON also some small engine repair and service Experience preferred Apply In person. Rental Tool Company No phone calls</p>
        <p>DELIVERY/Maintenance Full Time associate needed at Brody's Individual must be dependable and hardworking Good benefits Apply Brody's, Personnel Director, Carolina East Mall, Monday Thursday, 1:304</p>
        <p>DRY CLEANER trainee/ manager career opportunity Call Atlantic Personnel 355 7931</p>
        <p>EARN GREAT MONEY, work your own hours Sell Avon kl Beauty Company 756 6396060 Help Wanted Miscellaneous</p>
        <p>EXCELLENT WAGES for spare time assembly work i-lt-c tronlcs, crafts, others Addi tional information 504 641 IXIVI, extension 2817 /clays Call Nov/</p>
        <p>EXPERIENCED MOBIU</p>
        <p>home service man and plucnl er needed to work al A/.tli Mobile Homes ConlacI Tomm or J T. Williams 756 781'.</p>
        <p>HAIR DRESSER Now accep ting applications lur expert enced hair dresser Guaranteed salary plus commission Good benefits Apply in person Great Expectations, Carolina East Mall, next to Sears</p>
        <p>HAIR STYL 1ST needed New shop opening Stanton Square Call 355 5826 or 756 5773 HELP WAtlb: We are under new management and looking lor outgoing, neat and response ble Individuals lor lull and part time, all positions No experi ence necessary, will train Stu dents welcome Apply In person Monday Friday, 9 am 3 pm Wattle House, 306 East Green ville Boulevard, Greenville HIRtNGl Federal government lobs In your area and overseas Many Immediate openings without waiting list or test $15</p>
        <p>68,000 Phone call refundable (^) 838 8885_E^enj,ion 513 LIDOFF.NEEbjdr "</p>
        <p>We have immediate openings In all fields. Training with gocxi starting salary and benefits High school graduates Call toll tree in NC 1800 662 7231/7419 or outside N C l SOO 528 8713, Tuesday Friday 9 00 AM 7 00 PM</p>
        <p>LICENSED" hair "D"resser wanted at George's Hair De signers. The Pla/a Apply Tuesday Friday, 10 5 30</p>
        <p>LIGHT DELvFrT Musi know local and surrounding areas and have ec onomical car 756 3658AAEY-FUN TRAVEL</p>
        <p>Large company from F lorida has openings lor 6 girls arid guys who can start work today Must be neat, single, and looking tor a permanent job traveling East Coast to Florida, and west to New Orleans Car transporta tion and expenses furnished dur ing our 3 week training program starting now Above average earnings discussed at Interview See Donna Moody fuesday only, January 20, Holiday Inn, Green Vllle Ifom I 00 p rn to 6 00 p m No phorte calls, please apply In person Parents welcc/me at In ter view</p>
        <p>NEEDED IMMEDIATELY</p>
        <p>General maintenance person to complete staff of a large apart ment community Need own tools, car. ability to be poly graphed and a genuine desire to work New applicants only App ly Tar River Estates. 1400 Willow Street. 1.9 5 dally NEEDED Part time person to c lean c ars Inside and out Apply at Ortvnvilln Motor Valet, 1103 Dickinson Avenue l/etween 9and 12</p>
        <p>PARTS MANAGER Small</p>
        <p>engine repair c-xperience re guired Call Atlantic Personnel immediately 355 7V31 PROFESSIONAL RFTu'ME f omposition Atlantic Personnel Ser vices, 355 7931</p>
        <p>PUBLIC SCHCjOL"bus"dri;ers needed Call Rose High School 752 3169 tor Barbara Mallory Class will be set up for anyone desiring rertlllcatlon</p>
        <p>REPAIRMAN needed with ax</p>
        <p>perience in repairing mobile homes Apply In person between 9 and II a m , Monday Friday. No phone calls Conner Homes, 616 West Greenville Boulevard. Greenville</p>
        <p>RESUMES, COVER LETTERS</p>
        <p>professionally developed Even mg appointments Call 355 6390, RETAIL MANAGEMENT and Trainee position Must relocate $I7K $40K Fee Paid Call Atlantic Personnel 355 793)</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0078" />
        <p>B-8 The Daily Retl^ior, oioenville, N C  Monday,  January  19,  1987</p>
        <p>060 Help Wanted Miscellaneous</p>
        <p>S &amp;amp; S CAFETERIA. Carolina East Mall faking applications for chef cook. Would like mature experienced individual that willing to work hard and take responsibility If you feel yo have the qualifications and te desir, contact Mr Mims I 8950for appointment</p>
        <p>061</p>
        <p>He Id Vs'antrd Sah</p>
        <p>SHIRT PRESSOR or dry dean' ing pressor needed 2105 Charles Street</p>
        <p>SHELLING &amp;amp; SHELLING</p>
        <p>specializes in sales, manage ment trainee, accounting and clerical positions Call 758 0541 TETEPHONE talkers If you can dial and smile and sit awhile, we need you High school students welcomed Dav or evening hours available Call 750 3458</p>
        <p>TRACTOR TRAILER Drivers High pay. New equipment 2 years experience required Call t 800 682 6574</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>AN EXCITING opportunity to earn S35K J50K per year in commissioned outside sales rep i-csenting nation's largest e iii'."S home improvement ,'isior. Verified leads furnish IO and complete training pro  ided with full company sup port Only experienced siding salespeople need apply Call 355 7108 to arrange an interview</p>
        <p>ASSISTANTMANAGER</p>
        <p>RETAIL</p>
        <p>D A Kelly's, a rapidly growing women's fashion chain, has im mediate opening tor Assistant Manager position in store at Carolina East Mall Prior expe nence preferred Competitive salary, benefits, and incentives If interested, apply at D A Kel ly's, Carolina East Mali, Green VIlie, NC</p>
        <p>061</p>
        <p>Help Wanted Sales</p>
        <p>ATTENTION Real Estate Agents We presently have an opening for one full time agent with a North Carolina real estate license. Full time. Must plan to work 40 hours per week Leads and sales aids available For your confidential interview, call Ann Bass, CENTURY 21 Bass Realty, 756 6666</p>
        <p>BRODY'S NEEDS a full time sales associate in the gift department. Individual musten joy displaying and stockin? merchandise and working with the public Salary based upon experience Good benefit package Apply Brody's, Per sonnel Director, Carolina East Mall. Monday Thursday, 1:30 4</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>MANAGER</p>
        <p>Frozen Yogurt Store</p>
        <p>Requirements; High energy, responsible, people oriented, supervisory ability. Salary plus percentage of profits. Write:</p>
        <p>Manager P.O. Box 1967 Greenville, NC 27835</p>
        <p>Technician</p>
        <p>Needed</p>
        <p>GM experience preferred. Salary negotiable. Profit sharing. Call Guy Braxton at 756-2150 or come by.</p>
        <p>SALES</p>
        <p>COORDINATOR</p>
        <p>Administrative type individual needed to oversee staff in a sales department. Two years experience in supervising and organizing work for office staff. Above all you must be skilled in setting and communicating clear and achievable goals. Qualified applicants should send resume including current salary to:</p>
        <p>Sales Coordinator</p>
        <p>ORADV-WHITE</p>
        <p>BOATS</p>
        <p>P.O. Box 1527,</p>
        <p>Greenville. NC 27835</p>
        <p>(It Is Not Necessary To Reapply)</p>
        <p>BRODY'S NEEDS a ful,l time sales associate in the jewelry department Individual must en joy fashionable lewelry Salary based upon experience Good benefit package Apply Brody's Personnel Director, Carolina East Mall Monday Thursday,</p>
        <p>1 30 4</p>
        <p>COPtER/COMPUTER Sales Prefer experience Salary 118KS30K. Call Atlantic Per sonnel .355 7931</p>
        <p>IF YOU ARE A</p>
        <p>A PROFESSIONAL SALESPERSON</p>
        <p>And ready to make a change for the better, cpme by Joe Culliphcr Subaru between 9 and 2pm Monday through Friday</p>
        <p>LOOKING FOR ambitious, motivated real estate agents to work with a new and growing agency Must have real estate license Call for your interview today CENTURY 21 Janet Bowser 8. Associates, 355 7800</p>
        <p>MARKETING/SALESPERSON</p>
        <p>wanted by a fast growing local firm Our company is looking for a self motivator with a desire to succeed A degree in marketing or experience in sales helpful Send resume to Marketing.' Sales. P 0 Box 1733, Greenville, NC 27834</p>
        <p>NEEDED IMMEDIATELY.</p>
        <p>Compa,ny expanding, looking for aggressive person experienced in sales to work Greenville. Wilson, Rocky Mount area. We will train Send resume to Frank Smith, Carolina Model Homes, P 0 Box 469, Green viile,NC 27835,</p>
        <p>SALESPERSON</p>
        <p>Energetic, not afraid to work, willing to take responsibility in other areas, excellent opportu nity and good benefits, ad vancement is Up to you Please call Malcolm Williamsat</p>
        <p>Greenville TV &amp;amp; Appliance</p>
        <p>FOR APPOINTMENT</p>
        <p>756 2616</p>
        <p>TOP MONE Y STRTS HERE</p>
        <p>$35,000/S85,000 YEAR</p>
        <p>Music and video boom Manag ers/representatives We need help to service high vilume ac counts Immediate income plus bonuses Mr Lea, 818 783 8316</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON BASED com</p>
        <p>parry seeking aggressive self motivated individual for outside sales $20,000 * earning poten tial Must have own transporta tion Pickup truck helpful Call 9m 0228 9 am to 5 p m Monday through Frid.iy</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>.Train to be a TRAVEL AGENT TOUR GUIDE AIRLINE RESERVATIONIST</p>
        <p>Start locally, full time/part lime, train on live airline computers Home study and resident training. Financial aid available. Job placement assistance. National Headquarters-Lighthouse Point, FL.</p>
        <p>A.C.T.-TRAVEL SCHOOL</p>
        <p>1-800-327-7728</p>
        <p>Accredited Member NHSC</p>
        <p>WANTED</p>
        <p>LICENSED NORTH CAROLINA</p>
        <p>REAL ESTATE SALESPERSON</p>
        <p>Experience preferred. Opportunity to earn income on executive level.</p>
        <p>PHONE 756-8485</p>
        <p>IMMEDIATE OPENINGS FOR RN'S AND LPNS</p>
        <p>ICU AND EMERGENCY ROOM MEDICAL/SURGICAL ^</p>
        <p>PAID MEDICAL AND DENTAL INSURANCE FOR FULL OR PART TIME EMPLOYEES MANAGEMENT POSITIONS AVAILABLE</p>
        <p>GENEROUS BENEFITS For Working iCU or ER</p>
        <p>Contact Nursing Administration COMMUNITY HOSPITAL OF ROCKY MOUNT</p>
        <p>1031 Noell Lane, Rocky Mount. N.C. 27804 (919)443-9101 (EOE)</p>
        <p>IMMEDIATE OPENING hOR DIRECTOR OF BUSINESS SERVICES</p>
        <p>B. A. Degree in Accounting preterred " $vith ability to automate and improve operations through computer enhancements (MSA" software, NCR hardwareV A strong background in credit and collections (preferably medical field) is required. Responsibilities also include all Business Office functions.</p>
        <p>Excellent salary and benefits package for qualified individual</p>
        <p>Applications may be obtained from the Personnel Department of Community Hospital.</p>
        <p>COMMUNIfY HOSPITAL OF ROCKY MOUNT</p>
        <p>1031 Noell Lane, Rocky Mount, N.C. 27804 (EOE)</p>
        <p>061 Help Wanted Sales</p>
        <p>REPSNEEDED</p>
        <p>for business accounts. Full time. $60,000 $80,000 Part time, $12,000 $18,000 No selling, repeat business. Set your own hours Training provided Call: 1-612 938-6870, Monday-Friday, 8 a m to 5 p.m. (Central Standard Time)</p>
        <p>062</p>
        <p>Help Wanted Teachers</p>
        <p>SPECIAL EDUCATION Teach er needed with BS degree in Mental Retardation with an A Certificate or BS in Education with Certification in Mental Retardation. Salary commen surate. It interested please send resume to Personnel, Howell's Center, PO Box 2159, New Bern, NC 28560</p>
        <p>063 Help Wanted Technical &amp;amp; Trades</p>
        <p>AUTO BODY PAINTER and</p>
        <p>body person, 3 to 5 years experi ence needed. Own tools. Pay ac cording to ability Benefits. 758 7540</p>
        <p>COMPUTER OPERATOR Computer Operations in a large hospital environment: Multiple on line systems. 3 shift, 7 day operation Requires graduation from high school and 18 months experience m a large scale digital computer operation, in eluding IBM MvS experience</p>
        <p>APPLICATIONS ANALYST PROGRAMMER Positions available in Informa tion Services Division, with responsibilities to one of 3 areas</p>
        <p>Customizing and supporting the SMS Independence System Operating on an IBM 4381 under MVS/XA. Among other tunc tions the SMS system facilitates the hospital's clinic appointments, ADT and patient accoun ting Experience with IBM mVS/XA/CICS, sms and Ac counting Applications is desirable</p>
        <p>Migrating on integrated medi cal records system from a Honeywell 66/60 to the I BM 4381. System directly supports delivery of patient care in nospi tal clinics Experience with IBM MVS/XA/CICS and Honeywell IS desirable.</p>
        <p>Installing and supporting the hospital's MSA financial packages: General Ledger, Fix ed Assets, information Expert and Accounts Payable. Exoeri-ence with IBM MVS/XA/CiCS, MSA and Accounting Applica tion is desirable.</p>
        <p>Positions require graduation from a 4 year college with a degree in Computer Science, In formation Systems Manage ment, or a related curriculum, and 2 years progressive experience in programming and ap plications analysis, or an equivalent Salary commen surate with experience. Please refer to: Applications Analyst Programmer when responding.</p>
        <p>To apply contact:</p>
        <p>NC Memorial Hospital Employment Office Carr Mill Mall Room 202 Carrboro, NC 27510</p>
        <p>An Equal Opportunity Affirmative Action Employer</p>
        <p>EXPERIENCED FOREIGN</p>
        <p>car mechanic needed Apply Eurasian Service Center, 105 West Greenville Boulevard, across from Union Carbide</p>
        <p>LICENSED Cosmetologist. Preferably clientele Corhmis slons and bonuses. Call for an appointment. 756 3705.</p>
        <p>WANTED ELECTRICIANS and</p>
        <p>helpers. Send resume to: 205F Shiloh Drive, Greenville, NC 27834</p>
        <p>064 Work Wanted</p>
        <p>ALL LAWN CARE, roof, qutter cleaning, leaves raked, hedge trimming. Call Sam, 758 5818 Help a student today</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>SAVE 50 A MONTH! SAVE 4,200</p>
        <p>ON A QUALITY CONNER MOBILE HOME NOW!</p>
        <p>Conner Homes</p>
        <p>710 Southwest Grennvllle Boulevard Greenville. N C</p>
        <p>756-0333</p>
        <p>Beeed on e IDS down peyment wHh teo monthly peymenli end 11 Z5S Flied flete FHA Flnenclnq. Exclutlve at ulei Ux end IneurerKO</p>
        <p>SALES</p>
        <p>SALES</p>
        <p>MINDED</p>
        <p>Challenging position for competitive, independent, goal oriented person to consult with top executives on stale of the ad products in demand by businesses Potential for larg.' income for resourcelul, persistent, application minded problem solver as a member ol a closc knii team in an c-i standing local company. Position lor Greenville, NC</p>
        <p>Product Training 4 Figure Income Mo. Salary &amp;amp; Ckimmission</p>
        <p>Phone Mr. Bush Mon.-Tues -Wed, 821-4050 Raleigh 1-8G0-367-4748 NC</p>
        <p>I duol GP(X)rlynit&amp;gt; tmplovcr</p>
        <p>ices. 355</p>
        <p>&amp;lt;*mo</p>
        <p>airs, decks and fences.</p>
        <p>CATHYS CLEANING Service Residential, commercial and of flees Cathy 758-6009; Wanda 757 3731</p>
        <p>COMPLETE TREE SERVICE</p>
        <p>We safely remove trees and can split them for firewood in your yard. Also clean roof &amp;amp; gutters (awn maintenance, oak firewood Call 756 1339 for estimates.</p>
        <p>FLOOR SANDING and</p>
        <p>refinishIng, new and old. Call 752 1851</p>
        <p>GENERAL PAINTING, rea</p>
        <p>sonable rates. Experienced. Call 355-7611.</p>
        <p>HADDOCK CONSTRUCTION</p>
        <p>Company. Home building. Improvement, repair; also decks, garages, fences, etc. 355 7866.</p>
        <p>INTERIOR AND Exterior paint ing and wallpapering Refer enees, work guaranteed, 15 years experience. Free estimates. 355-6492after6:00</p>
        <p>J a V DRY WALL, hanging and finishing sheetrock. Sprayed ceilings. 752-5849.</p>
        <p>LPN DESIRES private duty nursing. Contact Sue, 946-9720. MOORE'S HOME Improvements. All types of remodeling and repair work. Room addn tions, decks, custom cabinets. For free estimate call Donnie Moore, 752 0830.</p>
        <p>PAPERING and Interior Paint ing. 10% off iobs scheduled for January and February, Present this ad at job completion. Wallpapering guaranteed in writing. Free estimates. Call Don English, 756-7010.</p>
        <p>PAPERING, INTERIOR Paint ing and paper removal. Call Don English, 756-7010.</p>
        <p>PROFESSIONAL Painters. Low rates. Silkwood Paint Company. Interior, exterior, wallpaper. Scott Patterson, 757 3276; Steve Bobbins, 830 0318.</p>
        <p>ROGERS' LANDSCAPING. Top</p>
        <p>soil, small loads. Call 746-2764 nights.</p>
        <p>ROOF LEAKS FIXED and</p>
        <p>minor repairs. 18 years experi ence. Work guaranteed. After 6 p.m. call 752 5906.</p>
        <p>WANT YOUR HOUSE CLEANED?</p>
        <p>Call 830-0245.</p>
        <p>067</p>
        <p>For Sale</p>
        <p>DECK AND FENCE Builders. Call Harrelsons for your best price on quality treated lumber. Contractor inquiries welcome. Open 10 a.m. 355 2869,</p>
        <p>069</p>
        <p>Auctions</p>
        <p>FARM MACHINERY Auction Sale. Tuesday, January 20, 1987 at 10 a.m. 125 tractors, 300 im plements. We buy and sell used equipment daily. Wayne Im p^lement Auction Corporation, P.O. Box 233, Highway 117 South, Goldsboro, N(f 27533 N.C, #188. Phone 734 4234,</p>
        <p>072 Building Supplies</p>
        <p>2,000 PAVER BRICKS Sand stone color. 756 5270.</p>
        <p>080 Fuel, Wood, Coal</p>
        <p>A CORD OF hardwood, delivered and stacked, $75 per cord. Call 355 2796,</p>
        <p>ALL SPLIT, oak firewood, ready to go. 756 3015.</p>
        <p>DAVENPOmWOODSERVICE</p>
        <p>Oak firewood Delivered and stacked. Discounts for quantity-756-1339.</p>
        <p>AACLAWHORN'S OAK FIREWOOD</p>
        <p>Discount tor quantity 756 7703</p>
        <p>PINE WOOD trim end, excellent for kindling. $20 per load. Call 756 7234._</p>
        <p>SEASONED OR green oak firewood, delivered and stacked. 758 6143</p>
        <p>SEASONED OAK firewood for sale Ready to go. Call after 6 p.m, 752 6420or 752-8847. STRICKLAND'S Oak Firewood Stacked and delivered.</p>
        <p>_758 5363_</p>
        <p>100% OAK firewood,$75/cord, 5 cords $350, $40/'/3 cord, any size or length Delivered tree. 1-823-6837 or 1 823 5407.</p>
        <p>081</p>
        <p>Furniture</p>
        <p>BEAUTIFUL ROCKING chair with electric lift seat for arthritic or handicapped, near new, $4S0/offer. 758 6006.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>' CANVAS AWNINGS C. L. Lupton Co. 752-6116</p>
        <p>Rent A</p>
        <p>NEW CAR</p>
        <p>As Low As</p>
        <p>$18.00</p>
        <p>Per Day</p>
        <p>Sharpest Fleet In Town</p>
        <p>RENT WAY AUTO RENT Brown &amp;amp; Wood</p>
        <p>Downtown</p>
        <p>752-2882</p>
        <p>Wl^^Furoltur#</p>
        <p>condMlon, tm. Call 355-7760 after 6.</p>
        <p>DRESSING TABLE, bench solid cherry, American Drew. Grandfather clock, oak. 756-9295.</p>
        <p>DRYER, heavy duty plus, wrinkle guard. Inside light Country sofa, barn red, 756-;</p>
        <p>FINE QUALITY Items. Various home accessories, lamps, pic tures, brass, gifts, etc. 756-9295</p>
        <p>QUEEN SIZE brown plaid sleeper sofa, $325 or best otter. Green vinyl recliner, $50. Call 752 8381.</p>
        <p>086 Farm Equipment</p>
        <p>FARMALL SUPER A tractor with cultivators, 1 Farmall 140 with cultivators, John Deere 950 with front end loader. 756-1016.</p>
        <p>WHY StORE THINGS you never use? Sell them tor cash with a Classified Ad.</p>
        <p>092</p>
        <p>Livestock</p>
        <p>HORSEBACK RIDING. Jarman</p>
        <p>Stables, 752-5237.</p>
        <p>WE HAVE horsefeed, salt blocks, rabbit and hog teed. Call Ayden Nitrogen, 746-2152,</p>
        <p>099 Miscellaneous</p>
        <p>BEAUTY SHOP equipment, 2 booths, 2 hydraulic chairs, 4 dryers. Call 946-1567 or 946-4628.</p>
        <p>CALL CHARLES TICE, 758-3013, for small loads sand, top-soil, stone, pine bark. Also backhoe and driveway work.</p>
        <p>FIXTURES FOR SALE</p>
        <p>Metal shelving, display shelv ing, circular clothes rack, siikscreening machine, photocopier, engraver, trophy parts and pieces, tennis racker stringing machine, desks, counters, pants rack, cash register, 8' wood and glass display case, antique display case.</p>
        <p>Bond s Sporting Goods 218 Arlington Boulevard (jreenville, NC</p>
        <p>FOUR-3U11.50 R1S LT radial whiteletter tires, 6 months old, $250 negotiable. Call after 6 p.m., 746 2701.</p>
        <p>GOING OUT OF Business. 25% oft AAary Kay Cosmetics. Call 355-5042.</p>
        <p>GREENVILLE ATHLETIC</p>
        <p>Club membership with dues paid through August 1987. $350. After 5 p.m., 756-0559.</p>
        <p>DON'T THROW IT away! Sell it for cash with a fast-actlon Classified Ad!</p>
        <p>GUNS</p>
        <p>LOANS ON BUY, SELL and</p>
        <p>trade. Southern Gun &amp;amp; Pawn Inc., 752-2464.</p>
        <p>INSTANT CASH</p>
        <p>LOANS ON &amp;amp; BUYING Guns, TV's, gold and silver jewelry coins, most anything of value Southern Gun &amp;amp; Pawn Inc., 752 2464.</p>
        <p>LARGE REFRIGERATOR with icemaker, like new, was $900, sell $370.355-6002.</p>
        <p>MAYTAG WASHER and dryer in good condition. 1 year old. $500. Call 753-3203 anytime.</p>
        <p>METAL LATHE. Logan 200,10' swing. 756-5270.</p>
        <p>MOVING SOON. Need to sell refrigerator, lawnmower. King size waterbed, fully equipped. Some odd and end furniture. Call after 5 p.m. 758-3558.</p>
        <p>NEW YEAR CLEARANCE</p>
        <p>Sale. F.H.A, Carpet $4.95/ square yard. Armstrong and Congoleum No Wax vinyl, $2.49/square yard. Congoleum Spring vinyl, $9.95/square yard. Commercial prints, $4.95 to $5.95/square yard, values to $35.00/yard. '/ Armstrong Ex celon Tile, $26.95/carton. The Carpet Bargain Center, Green ville. 758-0057.</p>
        <p>RAILROAD CROSSTIES, $1.00 each. 747-5742 atter6:00p.m.</p>
        <p>REFRIGERATOR, G E, no</p>
        <p>frost. $250. Call 752-9593.</p>
        <p>SHAMPOO YOUR RUGI Rent shampooers and vacuums at Rental Tool Company.</p>
        <p>SHINGLES, $12.50 square. 8'X 16' Hardboard Siding, $2.89. Re-ect Plywood by Unit '/j" $4.75, % $5.75, %" $6.75. Builders Bargain Center, 758-7061.</p>
        <p>STORAGE BUILDINGS FI</p>
        <p>nancing available also. Call 758 4449. After 6,946 9932.</p>
        <p>STORE FIXTURES and silk screen equipment for sale.756-6001.</p>
        <p>TOPSOIL, fill dirt, pinebark. Call 756-4472 atterOp.m.</p>
        <p>WASHERS, dryers, color TV's, refrigerators and stoves. $100 up. Guaranteed. 746-6929.</p>
        <p>10 CUBIC toot upright freezer, white, in perfect condition, $150. Call 752-3958.</p>
        <p>22.600 BTU kerosene heater. Brand new. Low, low price. 758 6301 after 8 p.m.</p>
        <p>SCHEDULE 40 PVC pipe, new, approximately 500', $95 per 100.752-0704 aHer 7 p.m.</p>
        <p>102 Mobile Homes For Sale</p>
        <p>ALREADY SET up in the</p>
        <p>Greenville area, ready to move</p>
        <p>into, A/C and underpinned Assume loan of only $137 per month. Call 756-0333</p>
        <p>BY OWNER 1982 14x70, 2 bedrooms, 2 baths, central heat and air. Reduced to $10,000. Call 756 4535</p>
        <p>CONNER HOME OWNERS;</p>
        <p>You are eligible tor tree monthly ments. Call John Quinn tor details, 756 7490</p>
        <p>DOUBLE WIDE Mobile Home on 1 1/4 Acre 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths. $20,000 negotiable. Call 756 5443</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>SUPERVISORY</p>
        <p>OPPORTUNITY</p>
        <p>Established, local industrial firm has immediate opportunity for dn experienced Assistant Supervisor. Must be able to work second shift. Require college background. Excellent advancement opportunity arid benefits.</p>
        <p>Reply to:</p>
        <p>SUPERVISORY OPPORTUNITY</p>
        <p>P.O. BOX 1967 GREENVILLE, N.C. 27835</p>
        <p>Automotive Service Advisor</p>
        <p>Due to expanding service we are in need of an additional Service Advisor. Must have good communication skills and some mechanical knowledge. Excellent pay, benefits and vacation plan.</p>
        <p>Contact:</p>
        <p>Steve Briley, Service Manager, Joe Pecheles Volkswagen, 756-1135.</p>
        <p>102</p>
        <p>ms</p>
        <p>Mobil* Homts For Solo</p>
        <p>*M0 down,</p>
        <p>mdown. Thofi right. iMt $500 down with affordable pay-* w&amp;lt;room and 2 baths. 3 ton air condition Ing unit, storm windows, 2 ceil Ing fans, deluxe wood furniture and much, much morel! Only</p>
        <p>$500 down to qualified buyers. Only at Luv Homas, 756-6996,264 By-Pau, Greenvllla.</p>
        <p>DRASTIC REDUCTIONS on all used homas. 1974 65x12, 3 bedrooms, IVS baths, $350 down.</p>
        <p>$m.60 per month. 197046x12, 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, $325 down, $124.09 per month. 1974 60x12, 2 ^ooms, I bath, $385 down.</p>
        <p>$142.72 per month. 1973 65x12, 2 bedrooms, l bath, $410 down.</p>
        <p>$152.37 per month. 1975 60x12, 2 grooms, 1 bath, $420 down.</p>
        <p>$1M.98 per month. 1977 60x12, 2 grooms, 1 bath, $435 down, $161.40 per month. All homes have been professionally remodeled. Delivei^ and set up Included. 11.99 APR OAC. Only at Luv Homas of Greenville, 264 By-Pass, 756-6996</p>
        <p>EXTRA CLEAN 1977 70x14, 3 bedrooms and 1'.^ baths. One owner. Payments as low as $135 per month to qualified buyers. Only at Luv Homes, 756-699, 264 By-Pass, Greenville</p>
        <p>FINANCINGII Luv Homes otters easy financing!! 24 hour</p>
        <p>approval. 7 year, "lO yVar,"2 15 y( ents</p>
        <p>ibie, quality built hoiiM'to</p>
        <p>i^r, and 15 year fincngi Downpayments as low as 5% t( luallfled buyers. We offer attor</p>
        <p>moot your needs. Only at Luv Homes, 756-6996, 264 By-Pass, Greenville</p>
        <p>FOR SALE OR RENT. Clean 2 bedroom, furnished. $170 plus deposit. 756- 145S after 5:00.</p>
        <p>FOR SALE by owner. mile from hospital. 2bedroom mobile home with add-on room on Vi acre wooded lot. Wood deck, sunporch, terraced garden. Cen tral heat. Storage buildings Very private. $20,000.758-5808.</p>
        <p>HOLIDAY SPECIAL $99 DOWN</p>
        <p>On Pre-Owned Homes OAKWOOD HOMES</p>
        <p>264 BY PASS GREENVILLE, NC 919-756 5434</p>
        <p>HONEYMOON SPECIAL!! 1987 14 wide, 2 bedrooms, V/i baths with garden tub, small bay window, Kenmore washer and dryer, celling fan, storm windows, deluxe exterior, quality Owens Cornlno insulation, large walk-ln pantry, house-type doors and much, much morel! Payments as low as $178. Only at Luv Homes, 756-6996, 264 By-Pass, Greenville.</p>
        <p>NEED A PLACE to live? Pay nothing down and earn your own home. 756-4298.</p>
        <p>NEW OOUBLEWIDES with celling tans, skirting, and completely furnished under $199 per month. Call 756-4298.</p>
        <p>NEW 1987 doublewlde, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, complete for $19,595. Free setup and delivery. Call Quinn at 756-7490.</p>
        <p>NO DOWN PAYMENT. 3</p>
        <p>bedrooms, 2 full baths, fully furnished, washer/dryer. Call 756-4298.</p>
        <p>SELECTED NEW homes at tac tory invoice price. Call Quinn at 756-7490.</p>
        <p>TAKE OVER payments of $194.56 with negotiable down payment for a 14x60 Oakwood mobile home, set up in park, ready to move in, central heat and air. Call Earl at 756-3640 between 6:30 p.m. and 10:30 p.m. or all day Saturday and Sunday.</p>
        <p>THIS WEEK'S SPECIAL. Our newest model 1987 Ambassador II doublewlde with 1248 square feet. Masonite siding, fireplace, stereo, 8" overhang, storm windows, French patio doors, oak kitchen cabinets. 2x4 stud construction, 16" on center. Quality insulation and name brand appliances. Payments as low as $278 per month to qualified</p>
        <p>TSO^'ew"  Homes,</p>
        <p>vtlle.</p>
        <p>264 By-Pass, Green-</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOM mobile home, $2500, good condition. 752-1729.</p>
        <p>USED HOME CLEARANCE. All used homes sold tor cost. 25 homes to choose from. Limited time only. Conner Homes, 710 Southwest Greenville Boulevard. 756-0333.</p>
        <p>USED HOMES sold at wholesale book value. Call Quinn at 756-7490.</p>
        <p>VETERANS AND ACTIVE mill tary. Quick no down payment. VA financing. Conner Homes, 616 West Greenville Boulevard. 756 0333.</p>
        <p>WANT TO BUY: 12 or 14 wide, 2 bedroom, 2 bath mobile home In park In Greenville for our ECU daughter. Call aHer 6:00 at 747 5188</p>
        <p>WE TAKE TRADE INS on</p>
        <p>mobile homes. Call 756-4298.</p>
        <p>12x60 TWO bedroom, furnished with washer, $4500 negotiable. Call 750 2423 or 7S8-ol86 and leave message.</p>
        <p>14X60 RIVERVIEW, new carpet, 12x12 sun deck, in nice park with pool. $8,000.758-6475.</p>
        <p>1971 CONNER 12 x 46. 2 bedrooms, already set up in nice park In Salter Path. Overhead deck. Only $4995. Financing available. Charles Miller Homes, 1-800 682-2801.</p>
        <p>1972 HAVELOCK mobile home, 2 bedrooms, small porch and barn Included. Also, underpinning, $4900 negotiable. Call after 8 p.m., 1-946 4627</p>
        <p>1972 MONARCH, 12x50. Call 752-5707.</p>
        <p>1974 MOBILE HOME for sale. $3400. Call after 6 p.m., 752-0098.</p>
        <p>1979 OAKWOOD, 14x63, 2 bedrooms, I'/i baths, with appliances. 524 5537. $9,500.</p>
        <p>1979 OAKWOOD Montibello. 2 bedrooms, 2 full baths, heat pump, appliances. $12,600. Call &amp;gt;30 0984, ask for Wanda.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>102</p>
        <p>Mobile Homes For Sale</p>
        <p>198$ OAKWoS? 14x76, . iMdrooms, 2 full baths. Call 355-5764 after 4.</p>
        <p>985 14'X78' SKYLINE, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, excellent condition. Assume loan with payments of $256 per month h2-5043after4.</p>
        <p>1986 CHAMPION, 14x50, . bedrooms, underpinned, set up In park, $11,000. 355-7576 even logs.</p>
        <p>191614 WIDE, payments as low as $141.86. Greenville volume dealer. Thomas' Mobile Home Sales. Across from Airport. 752 6068.</p>
        <p>1986 3 BEDROOM home. Fur nished, payments starting $130 per month. Call 756-4298.</p>
        <p>105Musical Instruments</p>
        <p>PRE-OWNED small Spinet piano, $790. Ideal for beginner. Will deliver. 355-6002.</p>
        <p>WE BUY, sell, trade and rent all types. All major lines including Peavey. New Bern Music, 14() Tatum Drive, 636-5640.</p>
        <p>109 Sporting Goods</p>
        <p>2170 pump guns, 114' boat, 1 55 commercial motor, 2 kerosun heaters, stereo, 355-7222.</p>
        <p>114 Instruction</p>
        <p>BOXING LESSONS available tor boys 7-10 years. Given by former collegiate boxer. Main purpose to build character and confidence; $5.00/lesson. Call Ron, 752-3034 evenings.</p>
        <p>NOW ACCEPTING students tor piano Instruction. Call Piano 8, Organ Distributors at 355-6002.</p>
        <p>115 Lost &amp;amp; Found</p>
        <p>LOST CHOW and collie mix near Highland Trailer Park, answers to King, 6 )gears old. Please call</p>
        <p>LOST: Brown snap front case and prescription eyeglasses Near University, R*</p>
        <p>Reward. 752-1260.</p>
        <p>fotary</p>
        <p>122</p>
        <p>Business</p>
        <p>Opportunities</p>
        <p>A BUSINESS? Buy or sell your business with C.J. Harris 8i Co., Inc. Financial 8, Marketing Con sultants. Serving the Southeastern United States. Greenville, N.C. 355-7799, nights 756-8444.</p>
        <p>SALON OR EQUIPMENT tor</p>
        <p>sale. Call aHer 6 p.m. 830-0337.</p>
        <p>TO BUY OR SELL a business or commercial property. Contact Snowden Associates, Brokers, 355-0327.</p>
        <p>124 Professional</p>
        <p>CHIMNEY SWEEPING. Gid</p>
        <p>Holloman. North Carolina's original chimney sweep, 30 years experience working with chimneys and fireplaces. Fireplace repair, chimney caps Installed, screens tor chimney tops. Call day or night, 753-3503, Farmvllle. NC.</p>
        <p>125 Home Improvements</p>
        <p>RAS CONSTRUCTION. Gener al subcontractors. Residential and commercial. Free estimates. 355-7982 or 830-1298 anytime night or day.</p>
        <p>132</p>
        <p>Commercial</p>
        <p>Property</p>
        <p>COMMERCIAL BUILDING for</p>
        <p>rent. 2,000 square feet, 125 feet oH Greenville Boulevard facing side street. Great location. Can 756-1320 days, 756-0944 nights.</p>
        <p>FOR RENT: Approximately 2000 square feet with parking. 705 Dickinson Avenue. 756-0640.</p>
        <p>FOR SALE BY OWNERS. Valu able property located at corner of Grande Avenue and Virginia Street. Zoned CDF. Phone 756 2127 or 758-6136 after 5:30 p.m.</p>
        <p>STORAGE SPACE tor rent 12,000-16,000-28,000 square feet-Write Box 972, Kinston.</p>
        <p>STORAGE SPACE for rent. 1800 square feet with 12' ceiling; clean, new facility, located in convenient Bell's Fork area. Loading dock and forklitt ser vice available. Available January IS through August 1. 756-9100 from 8:30-5.</p>
        <p>136</p>
        <p>Condominiums For Saie</p>
        <p>BY OWNER. /Motivated seller Quail Ridge. 3 bedrooms, i'/2 baths, fireplace, private patio, aHIc storage, outside storage. $55,500. Cal (1-484-3534.</p>
        <p>PATIO HOME in Heritage Village. Available AAay 15. 2 bedrooms, greatroom with fireplace, kitchen with all appliances, pantry with washer/ dryer connection, outside storage, fenced backyard. Excellent landscaping, immaculate condition. $40,000. Call 355-6521 evenings.</p>
        <p>139 Farms For Sale</p>
        <p>ISO ACRE FARM. 3 bedroom house. 65 acres cleared. 85 woods. 11,298 pounds tobacco, 1986.20 miles south of Greenville on Highway 43. Call 244-1036 aHer6p.m.</p>
        <p>3 LOTS 115x275, have been perk ed, on paved road #1777, with Eastern Pines water. 17 acres of cleared land, 550 toot road frontage, tobacco allotment. IB acres wooded land. 752 6500.</p>
        <p>140 Farms For Lease</p>
        <p>TOBACCO AND farm for rent, 4,390 pounds of tobacco and 36 acres of cleared land, tobacco to be raised on this farm, located 1 mile north of Ayden on paved road. 1-804-877-7295, Newport News, Virginia after 7.30 p.m.</p>
        <p>WANTED: TOBACCO POUNDS</p>
        <p>Call Robert Pierce now!! I 753-3078 day or night</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>rocotrrotts</p>
        <p>CAREER OPPORTUNITIES'</p>
        <p>FOR</p>
        <p>CASHIER/CLERKS</p>
        <p>Full A Part Time. AH BtncfHs Apply at the noireel</p>
        <p>FRESH WAY FOOD STORE</p>
        <p>EXPERIENCED SEWING MACHINE OPERATOR</p>
        <p>TOM TOGS, INC., Conetoe, N.C. now accepting applications for experienced Sewing Machine Operator. Apply in person Monday through Thursday, 8:30 am to 4:00 pm.</p>
        <p>TOM TOGS, INC.</p>
        <p>Highway 64 East CoiwtOR, N.C.</p>
        <p>MEDICAL TECHNOLOGIST</p>
        <p>Immediate opening (or medical technologist (ASCP or equivalent) to work in clinical laboratory. Must possess skills to work In hematology, blood bank, chemistry, uranalysis, microbiology. Must be able to communicate well with the laboratory and medical staff. Supervisory experience preferred. Salary to commensurate with education and experience. Fore more Information contact;</p>
        <p>PERSONNEL DEPARTMENT COMMUNITY HOSPITAL OF ROCKY MOUNT 1031 NOELL LANE ROCKY MOUNT. N.C. 27804 919-443^9101 EOE</p>
        <p>140 Farms For Lease</p>
        <p>WANtEb TOBACCO allotmwt 795-4578.</p>
        <p>IM^uswForSale</p>
        <p>North Summitt Street, 2 bedroom, i bath wlHi detached garage. 752^173 aHer6p.m.</p>
        <p>OWNER' Wintervllle school district, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, woodstove, solar water, fenced In yard. 756-2036 anytime.</p>
        <p>CAMBRIDGE. For sale by owner. Brick ranch. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, fireplace, fenced In yard. $59,900. Must sell. Owner fo relocate. Call aHer 7 p.m. or weekends, 756-4048.</p>
        <p>CUSTOM HOME BUILDER.</p>
        <p>CraH-Bilt Homes builds and finances on your lot competely finished home. Call 1-860-942-5211 anytime.</p>
        <p>IN LITTLE WASHINGTON.</p>
        <p>Prime walk to location. An architectural gem. 8 rooms, 1 floor, 2150 square feet. Reduced tosell,$89,nb. 975-3291.</p>
        <p>LYNNOALE/BUY REAL WORTH. $144,900. Custom elegance. 2 story Traditional. Electronic door opener, central air, crown mouldings, hardwood floors, formal dining room, foyer, bookcased library, many</p>
        <p>built-lns. Fireplace, a very 756-^5</p>
        <p>NO DOWN PAYMENT, $180 per month, 3 bedroom, V/z baths brick ranch. Call Home Realty Company, 355-4663.</p>
        <p>OLD HOUSE tree tor moving. Highway 903, 2 miles west of Wintervllle. 756-2543.</p>
        <p>REAL ESTATE AGENtS</p>
        <p>wanted. For your confidential interview, call Jean Hopper at University Realty. 355 5866.</p>
        <p>VAOWNED. No down payment! 323 Pinewood Drive in Lynndale. Call Darrell tor details, HIgnite Realtors, 757-1969 anytime.</p>
        <p>IWFIXEDRATE FINANCING AVAILABLE</p>
        <p>HUD OWNEOI Only $500 down with payments under $340/ AAonth. Located at 706 Howell Street.</p>
        <p>HUD OWNED! Only $500 down on this two bedroom townhouse next to Greenville Athletic Club.</p>
        <p>VETSI Nothing down on this three bedroom ranch in Green-briar! Seller will pay points and closing costs too !$40's.</p>
        <p>BUILDER WILL pay points and closing costs for 8% loan. New three bedroom brick ranch on Mlllbrook Street. He who hesi tates loses this excellent deal. $49,000.</p>
        <p>NEED FOUR bedrooms, but on have two bedroom budget? -ils aHractive siding ranch In Wethington Heights has the potential of living room and den with wood heater, fenced backyard and only $47,900. Seller Is anxious to sell.</p>
        <p>ALMOST NEW brick ranch in new section of Oakdale S/D. Possible loan assumption too! Only $48,900.</p>
        <p>On Duty Kristi Clark 756-7800</p>
        <p>HIGNITE REALTORS 757-1969 Anytime</p>
        <p>LYNNOALE/BUY REAL WORTH. $144,900. Custom ele janee. 2 story Traditional. Elec ronic door opener, central air, crown mouldings, hardwood floors, formal dining room, foyer, bookcased library, many built-lns. Fireplace, A very unl(ge^lan. Outtus Realty, Inc.</p>
        <p>148 Investment Property</p>
        <p>MOBILE HOME PARKS. Ex cellent return and some owner financing. 752-1269.</p>
        <p>MORTGAGES FOR SALE. 12%</p>
        <p>return. 752-1269.</p>
        <p>VALUABLE PROPERTY tor</p>
        <p>sale. Agnes Fullllove School, corner of Chestnut and Manhattan Avenue. Call tor more Information, 756-5880.</p>
        <p>150 Land For Sale</p>
        <p>693 ACRES, TYRRELL County. 1.75 M (Feet) Timber. $300 per acre. Weyerhaeuser Real Estate Co., 946-9121.</p>
        <p>151 Mobile Home Lots For Sale</p>
        <p>LARGE LOTS for mobile homes in the country. Excellent loca tion. Easy financing. Call Winnie, 752-4224, Faye, 756-5288 and days at 752-2814.</p>
        <p>MOBILE HOME lots tor sale; Low down payment, easy financing. Located on Old River Road and Eastwoods Country Estates. Call Benny Eastwood. 752-1802, anytime.</p>
        <p>152 Lots For Sale</p>
        <p>BEAUTIFUL TWO acre wooded lot In Baywood. Will build to suit. Wintervllle schools. Call Chapin 8. Associates, 756-1234.</p>
        <p>CLEARED LOTS between Ayden and GrIHon. % to IV4 plus acres. Starting at $3750.746-2417.</p>
        <p>HEAVILLY WOODED lots in desirable location now available beginning at $12,000.756-8702.</p>
        <p>LOTS FOR SALE with water and septic system. Guaranteed Hnatv^n^^wlth no downpayment.</p>
        <p>TWO ACRES. In Pitt County's elite country estate. Holly Ridge. $26,500. Darden Realty, 758-1983, nights and weekends, 155-6558.</p>
        <p>155 Resort Property For Sale</p>
        <p>PARADISE ON The Pamlico 30 minutes from Greenville-Only vacant waterfront lot available In this picturesque mobile home community oHering water and septic systems, sandy beach, 4 piers, concrete boat ramp, restrictive covenants, $26,500. Owner/Broker, 756-4965</p>
        <p>RIVER COTTAGE at Bayslde Shores In Chocowinity. Water on 3 sides. $50,000.752 1269.</p>
        <p>3 BEDROOM coHage In the Or ental area. River on the front Canal on side. Ideal retirement home. Large lot. County water. Seawall. $6S,0IW. Seller financ-Ing available. 758-0491.</p>
        <p>157</p>
        <p>Townhouses For Sale</p>
        <p>CONDOMINIUM for sale, Williamsburg Manor Only $250 down payment, 9% FHA financing, monthly payment, $356.</p>
        <p>BY OWNER 2 bedrooms, 1&amp;gt;/] baths with refrigerator, dishwasher, central air and heat pump, single family or Invest ment. Under $41,000. AHer 6 00 m., 704 786-2460</p>
        <p>TOWNHOUSE. Exclusive, quiet, wooded area. Ouail Ridge Uniquely beautiful two story, 3 bedroom, V/z baths Cathedral ceiling with balcony. Fireplace LandKaped brick patio tennis courts Pool. By owner $71,900 756-0429</p>
        <p>141</p>
        <p>Apartments For Rent</p>
        <p>A PERFECT PLACE to live. 1 bedroom apartments, $235 2 bedroom apartments, $275 Water Included Brand new, washer/dryer hookups, no pets Security deposit required Ap &amp;gt;roxlmately 1 mile from hospi tal. Call 756-1454 weekdays, 756 6118,7-9 week nights.</p>
        <p>ABSOLUTELY NICE Park Village, 2 bedrooms, washer-dryer hookups, water furnished, $275 per monH). 757 1626</p>
        <p>APARTMENTSI We have the one (or you! All areas, sizes and I trices immediate or future. '52-1375 Homelocators. Fee</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0079" />
        <p>161</p>
        <p>Apartments For Rent</p>
        <p>AVAILABLE JANUARY 1 at</p>
        <p>Shenandoah Village Townhouse with 2 bedrooms, 1 ',2 baths, gar bage disposal, dishwasher, and fireplace. $350. per month. 1 year lease and deposit required Call Clark Branch Realtors at 355 2000.</p>
        <p>AZALEA GARDENS'</p>
        <p>CLEAN AND QUIET one</p>
        <p>bedroom furnished apartments, energy efficient, free water and sewer, optional washers, dryers.</p>
        <p>cable TV. Couples or singles on mth</p>
        <p>ly. $195a month. A monthlease MOBILE HOME RENTALS Couples or singles. Apartments and mobile homes in Azalea Gardens near Brook Valley Country Club.</p>
        <p>Contact J.T or Tommy Williams 75-7815</p>
        <p>CANNONCOURT</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOM, l&amp;gt;, bdth</p>
        <p>townhouse includes washer dryer hookup, cable TV, drapes and new carpet.</p>
        <p>Call REMCO EAST, 758 6061.</p>
        <p>CAPTAINSOUARTERS</p>
        <p>East Twelfth Street</p>
        <p>Spacious one bedroom near ECU. Dishwasher, refrigerator.</p>
        <p>ange and washer hook up Cali REMCO EAST, 758 6061.</p>
        <p>CEDAR COURT</p>
        <p>SPACIOUS TWO BEDROOM.</p>
        <p>I'i bath apartments with range, refrigerator, dishwasher and washer/dryer hook ups. Call</p>
        <p>''^'~':ast,------</p>
        <p>REMCOE7</p>
        <p>,758 6061.</p>
        <p>CEDAR LANE Apartments. 1 bedroom, $185. Call 756 4948 or 756 3936.</p>
        <p>Cherry Court</p>
        <p>cious 2 bedroom townhi</p>
        <p>Spacious 2 bedroom townhouse with IV2 baths. Also 1 bedroom apartments available. All are carpeted, with modern kitchen appliances including compactor and dishwasher. Central heat and air. Free basic cable TV, water and sewer. Washer,'dryer hook ups plus laundry room, pool, sauna, tennis court, club house. 752 1557</p>
        <p>CYPRESS GARDENS</p>
        <p>2308 East Tenth Street</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOM apartment close to ECU campus. Energy efficient units in the woods. Washer/dryer hook ups, cable TV included in rent Call 758 6061. REMCO EAST</p>
        <p>DOCTORS PARK APARTAAENTS</p>
        <p>A wooded community planned</p>
        <p>with you in mind. If you are par-live.</p>
        <p>ticular about where you consider these features:</p>
        <p>One, Two and Three Bedroom Apartments Garden and Townhouse with Private Patio or Balcony Spacious Living Areas Dishwasher, Disposal, Frost Free Refrigerator Pantry Washer and Dryer Connections Adequate Storage Fully Carpeted Cablevision Energy Saving Heafpumps Fully Insulated Smoke Detec tors.</p>
        <p>Call 758-2577</p>
        <p>Apartments For Rent</p>
        <p>IN WINTERVILLE 3 bedroom apartment. Appliances and ed N</p>
        <p>water furnished. o children, no</p>
        <p>pets. D^osit and jease. $245 per</p>
        <p>month. Call 756-5007.</p>
        <p>MUST SEE attractive new duplex near Simpson on 3/4 acre</p>
        <p>lot. Call 752 4200,756 1889</p>
        <p>NEAR HOSPITAL 2 bedroom townhouse. Quiet neighborhood Call 757 0671 after 5 p.m</p>
        <p>NEW DEPLEX! Each side 2 bedrooms, bath, combined liv mg room, kitchen and dining Appliances furnished. $310 monthly. 830 1235 after 5 pm</p>
        <p>NEW ENERGY efficient 1 bedroom. Adams Boulevard, near Twin Oaks. Available 1/8, 87 $245. No pets. 758 6006</p>
        <p>NEW1 BEDROOM apartments Washer/dryer, cable TV, carpet, electric heat, air condi tioning, appliances. 756 3342</p>
        <p>OAKAAONT SQUARE APARTAAENTS</p>
        <p>Two bedroom townhouse apartments. 1212 Redbanks Road. Dishwasher, refrigerator, range, disposal included We also have Cable TV Very con venient to Pitt Plaza and Uni versify. Also some furnished apartments available 756 4151</p>
        <p>ONE AND TWO Bedroom apartments.Call Sm-ith In surance and Realty, 752 2754</p>
        <p>ONE AND TWO BEDROOM</p>
        <p>Apartments tor rent. Call 756 1160.</p>
        <p>ONE BEDROOM apartment Heat, hot and cold waler, sewage furnished. 201 North Woodlawn. $250 per month 756 0545 or 758 0635.</p>
        <p>ONE BEDROOM Apartments tor rent. $235 per month Contact D. G Nichols Agency, Inc., 752 4012.</p>
        <p>ONE BEDROOM apartment, carpeted, kitchen appliances, central heat and air, $225 Greenville Manor, 752 8915</p>
        <p>ONE BEDROOM APARTMENT</p>
        <p>tor rent No children or pets Call 756 5610 from 9 5.</p>
        <p>PETS OK! 2 bedroom $185 or 2</p>
        <p>bedroom $250 big yard. 752 1375</p>
        <p>Homelocators. Fee</p>
        <p>REGENCY HOUSE</p>
        <p>Corner of 5th &amp;amp; Reade</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOM apartment, new appliances, completely renovated. Across the street from ECU campus. Call REM CO EAST, 758 6061.</p>
        <p>SHENANDOAH</p>
        <p>I04A Shiloh</p>
        <p>Two bedroom, I'j bath duplex. Energy efficient appliances and washer/dryer hookups. Call REMCO EAST, 758 6061</p>
        <p>STRATFORD ARMS APARTMENTS</p>
        <p>Spacious 1,2 and 3 Bedroom Apartments CABLE TV,TENNIS COURTS,POOL Convenient to Shopping and ECU</p>
        <p>Office hours 9 a m; to 5 p m Monday through Friday</p>
        <p>EASTBROOK AND VILLAGE GREEN APARTAAENTS</p>
        <p>One, two and three bedroom apartments, featuring cable TV, modern appliances, clean laun dry facilities, swimming pools, I fully carpeted</p>
        <p>Office: 204 Eastbrook Drive</p>
        <p>752-5100</p>
        <p>ELM VILLA APARTMENTS.</p>
        <p>208 South Elm Street. One bedroom furnished, heat, air, and water furnished. Call 752 3376.</p>
        <p>ENERGY EFFICIENT duplex apartment near college, 2 large bedrooms, fisnced in backyard, and outside storage, heatpump, storm windows, and kitchen ap pliances. 756-0025 after 6 00 p.m</p>
        <p>FARMVILLE new 2 bedroom apartments. Hotpoint appli anees, patios at rear, cable ready, water and sewer includ ed All for only $250 per month. Call 753 4750.</p>
        <p>FURNISHED! 1 bedroom $200 or 1 bedroom $260 utilities paid 752 1375. Homelocators. Fee</p>
        <p>GREENMILLRUN</p>
        <p>APRATAAENTS</p>
        <p>CORNERLAWRENCEillTHSTREEIS</p>
        <p>Spacious garden apartments Fully carpeted. Excellent condi tion. Pool and laundry facilities. Free water, sewer and basic Cable TV. "Fire Proof" patios for grilling. 1 block from ECU, 4''2blocksTrom downtown</p>
        <p>758-2628</p>
        <p>GreeneWay</p>
        <p>Large 2 bedroom garden apart ments, all with 7 closets, carpeting, kitchen appliances including dishwasher, central heat and air. Free basic cable TV, water and sewer. Laundry rooms, spacious grounds, playground and pool, abundant parking Pets allowed. Adjacent to Greenville Country Club. {$2901.756 6869.</p>
        <p>GREENWOOD</p>
        <p>APARTAAENTS</p>
        <p>BETHEL</p>
        <p>New 1 and 2 bedroom units avaialble in February. Rentals begin at $200 Rent based on in come. For application call 756 I860, 4:30 6:30, or write in care of WIntergreen, 105 Sterling Court, Wintervllle, NC 28590</p>
        <p>KIDS OK! 2 bedroom duplex $185 or 3 bedroom $250 others 752 1375. Homelocators Fee</p>
        <p>KINGS ROW APARTAAENTS</p>
        <p>1 &amp;amp; 2 Bedroom Garden Apart</p>
        <p>mentsAppliances furnished, carpetCentral heat and Fr</p>
        <p>Callus 24 hours a day at</p>
        <p>756-4800</p>
        <p>STUDENTS. 2 BEDROOM</p>
        <p>apartment, Cindy Court, available December 20. $290 per month, heat and water furnish-ed No pets 756 3563 after 4 pm.</p>
        <p>TOBACCO ROAD</p>
        <p>Two bedroom, 1 Vj bath townhouse with fireplace, appli</p>
        <p>anees, washer/dryer^ hook u^s</p>
        <p>and outside storage Call RE CO EAST, 758 6061</p>
        <p>TOWNHOUSE 2 bedrooms, I'i baths, heat pump, dishwasher, refrigerator, stove. Available</p>
        <p>February I. $295 per month No pets. Call 756 3563 after 4 p m</p>
        <p>TRY THESE! 1 bedroom $165 or 2 bedroom duplex $275. Pets ok. 752 1375. Homelocators. Fee</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOMS, )'i bath duplex in nice quiet area $325/month. 355 2256.</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOMS, stove and refrigerator, washer, dryer hookup, central heat and air, carpeted. Lease and deposit re quired No pets. 705 Hooker Road. 756 0489 or 756 6382</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>161</p>
        <p>Apartments For Rent</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOM duplex at Frog $27(</p>
        <p>Level. No pels. $2fo monthly. Call 756 4624 before 5 or 756 8076 after 5</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOM townhouse 4 . miles west of hospital. 756 8996 or 756 5780.</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOM Apartment. Stove and refrigerator. $185 per month. Call 355-6753.</p>
        <p>TW BEDROOM townhouse, quiet neighborhood. Call 355 7071.</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOMS, 1'^ bath fireplace, dishwasher, washer dryer hookup, $275 per month 758 1312.</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOM apartment tor rent. Walking distance to ECU. $280 a month. Call 758 9110 or 919-477 2927. Available now!</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOM available. Cypress Gardens. Nice, wooded setting Good tor young protes sionalor couple Call 355 2025</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOM apartment, 1105 Forbes Street. Call collect 919 629-7628 after 5.</p>
        <p>UPSTAIRS APARTMENT for</p>
        <p>rent. $200 per month. Single oc cupant only. No pets. 1904 4th Street. Available immediately. Call CENTURY 21 Bass Realty, 756 6666</p>
        <p>WEDGEWOODARMS</p>
        <p>2 bedroom, 1'2 bath townhouses. Excellent location. Carrier heat pumps, Whirlpool kitchen, washer dryer hookups, pool, tenniscourl, 355 6302.</p>
        <p>WEST HILLS TOWNHOAAES</p>
        <p>SR 1204</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOM, 2'2 bath townhomes Fully eqwtpped with energy efficient appliances, storage, washer/dryer hook</p>
        <p>ups. Near PCMH. Call REMCO</p>
        <p>:AST, 758 6061</p>
        <p>WILLOUGHBY PARK</p>
        <p>Evans Street Extension Across from Lynndale</p>
        <p>BRAND' NEW three bedroom, two full bath apartment avail able for Immediate occupancy. Fireplace, ceiling tan, energy efficient appliances, washer/ dryer hook ups and private balcony. Call REMCO EAST, 758 6061 for details.</p>
        <p>WILSON ACRES APARTMENTS</p>
        <p>1806 East First Street 2 and 3 bedroom townhouses, 112 baths. Free water, sewer, and basic cable fv. Stove, frost free refrigerator, dishwasher, washer/dryer hookups. Fully carpeted with drapes included Pool, tennis court and sauna CLOSE TO CAMPUS.</p>
        <p>Call 752 0277 Anytime.</p>
        <p>WINDY RIDGE</p>
        <p>m Scott street</p>
        <p>THREE BEDROOMS, 2'2</p>
        <p>baths, refrigerator, dishwasher, garbage disposal and trash compactor included. Also POOL and tennis courts Call REMCO EAST, 758 6061.</p>
        <p>WOODSIDE</p>
        <p>98 Brookwood Drive</p>
        <p>ONE BEDROOM apartment available for February rental. Energy efficient appliances. Quiet wooded surroundings. Call REMCO EAST, 758 6061.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>TAYLOR</p>
        <p>OFFICES</p>
        <p>1S30 South Evans Street</p>
        <p>Office</p>
        <p>and</p>
        <p>Commercial</p>
        <p>Space Ample Parking Conveniently located</p>
        <p>Call</p>
        <p>756-8384</p>
        <p>PECAN GROVE</p>
        <p>Now Accepting Applications One and Two Bedroom Efficiency Apartments Located Near Hospital</p>
        <p>756-1454</p>
        <p>WANTED</p>
        <p>Licensed NC Real Estate Salesperson</p>
        <p>Earning potential in Executive Level.</p>
        <p>Call 756-8485 or 636-2588 Ask for Jan Davies</p>
        <p>airFree Cable TVPool and laundry tacllities24 hour imergency maintenance Located off East lOth Street behind Hardees and Western Steer. Office hours 9 30 5 30. Monday Friday</p>
        <p>752-3519</p>
        <p>KINGS ARAAS</p>
        <p>Large  bedroom apartments Carpeted, modern kitchen ap pliances, heat pump for energy efficient heating and cooling Laundry facilities. 1209 Charles Boulevard, Office Apartment 104. Also Available Mjrnished Apartments</p>
        <p>752-8915</p>
        <p>LANGSTON PARK</p>
        <p>Stancil Drive</p>
        <p>ONE-HALF month tree Nice b4(0 bedroom apartments by the iver. Energy efficient appli anees, washer dryer hook ups Water and cable Included in $300 rent REMCO EAST, 758 6061</p>
        <p>LOVE TREES?</p>
        <p>Experience the unique in apartment living with nature outside your door</p>
        <p>COURTNEY SQUARE APARTMENTS</p>
        <p>latlty construction, fireplaces, 'eat pumps (heating costs SO tercent less than comparable nits), dishwasher, washer 'ytr hook ups, cable TV,wall -wall carpet, thermopane wln-I. extra insulation</p>
        <p>fice Open 9-5 Weekdays</p>
        <p>i Saturday  15  Sunday</p>
        <p>rry Lane Off Arlington Blvd756 5067</p>
        <p>PHLEBOTOMY/EKG</p>
        <p>TECHNICIAN</p>
        <p>Immediate opening for Phlebotomy/EKG Tech to work in Clinical Laboratory. Must possess skills with Ven-punctures, EKGS, and basic typing or key boarding. Must be able to communicate well with the public, laboratory and Medical staff. For more information contact:</p>
        <p>PERSONNEL DEPARTMENT COMMUNIITY HOSPITAL OF ROCKY MOUNT ROCKY MOUNT, N.C. 27804 919-443-9101 EOE</p>
        <p>SALES PEOPLE</p>
        <p>NEEDED</p>
        <p>Looking for 2 exceptional sales people for multi-franchise automobile dealerships. Must have professional appearance, positive mental attitude, selfmotivated and career oriented. Demo provided, full health benefits. Contact Bob Oliver or Jeff Davis at 355-5099 from 9:00 a.m.  7:00 p.m. on Monday through Friday.</p>
        <p>161</p>
        <p>Apartments For Rent</p>
        <p>1 BEDROOM! Sunny loft $200 or</p>
        <p>2 bedroom duplex $235. Garage. 752-1375. Homelocators. Fee</p>
        <p>2 BEDROOM, heatpump, energy efficient, quiet neigh borhood, convenient to university. Married preferred. $320 per month. Call 355-7799; evenings 756 8444.</p>
        <p>163 Business Rentals</p>
        <p>APPROXIMATELY 2000 square feet of space tor lease. Adjacent to new Fuel Doc, corner of Greenville Boulevard and Highway 33. Call Oaughtrldge Oil Company, 756 1345.</p>
        <p>mobile storage tor rent Have storage space delivered to your home or business. Call 758 4449. After 6,946 9932.</p>
        <p>170 Condominiums For Rent</p>
        <p>TOWNHOUSE FOR RENT, 2</p>
        <p>bedrooms, I'2 baths, all appli anees. 355-6016 after 6 pm.</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOM. 1&amp;gt;2 bath townhouse, fully equipped kffchen, washer/dryer hookups, enclosed patio. Available im mediately. $360, Call 756 3666.</p>
        <p>173 Houses For Rent</p>
        <p>A COUNTRY! 4 bedroom $325 pets ok or 3 bedroom $250. 752 1375. Homelocators. Fee</p>
        <p>AVAILABLE March 1 on East ern Street. 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, 1,025 square feet, fireplace and screened porch. $400 per month. Years lease and deposit re quired, No pets. Call Clark Branch Realtors at 355 2000.</p>
        <p>AVAILABLE in January on Warren Street. 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, 1150 square feet, outside</p>
        <p>storage, nice yard. $400 per month. 1 years lease and deposit required. No pets. Call Llark</p>
        <p>Branch Realtors at 355 2000.</p>
        <p>AVAILABLE immediately. University Area. 3 bedrooms, I'z baths, living room, den with fireplace, eat in kitchen and carport. 1600 square feet. $500. per month. Lease and deposit required. Call Clark Branch Re altors at 355 2000.</p>
        <p>AYDEN. Two bedrooms, stove and refrigerator, $200 per month Call 355 6753.</p>
        <p>COUNTRY 2 bedroom apart ment, 11 miles south of Green villeon Highway 43. 524 5507</p>
        <p>IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY tor</p>
        <p>home in Wintervllle School District. Freshly painted throughout. Call 756 8485</p>
        <p>IN THE CITY, but no traffic this 4 year old, 3 bedroom brick ranch is located in the back of Orchard Hills. Nice yard,</p>
        <p>$385 per month. Call 21 Bass Realty, 756 6666</p>
        <p>IT'S A FACT! Only some of them are advertised. For a full selection of Greenville's rentals. 752 1375. Homelocators.</p>
        <p>KIDS OK! 3 bedroom $315 yard or 3 bedroom den 2 baths $375, 752-1375 Homelocators Fee</p>
        <p>173 Houses For Rent</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOMS, P'z baths Convenient to hospital. Low utilties. $350.757 0703</p>
        <p>UNIVERSITY AREA 3 bedroom tor rent. Call 756 1)60</p>
        <p>117 SOUTH WOODLAWN</p>
        <p>Avenue Near campus. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, study or</p>
        <p>179 Mobile Homes For Rent</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOM mobile home tor rent. Call 756 4687, Johnny's Mobile Home Sales.</p>
        <p>storage area upstairs, central heat and air, off street parking. $375 per month plus deposit. Cal I</p>
        <p>752 4066.</p>
        <p>2 BEDROOM house near uni versify, available February 1, $225per month Call 752 3958.</p>
        <p>2 BEDROOM! $250 kids pets ok or big 3 bedroom I' j bath $ 752-1375. Homelocators Fee</p>
        <p>or big 3 bedroom 1'</p>
        <p>3-4 BEDROOM brick home, 2400 square feet, 2'i baths, 2 fireplaces, fenced yard, double garage. Call 757 3084 days 355 6476 nights.</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOM mobile home tor rent. Furnished $145 a month. No children. Call days, 752 1592 ; 756 0108 nights.</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOM, furnished, large den, $195 plus deposit. Shady Knoll. 746 2047 alter</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOM mobile home, washer/dryer, air conditioning on private lot. $175 month plus $100 deposit. 355 7338 after 3</p>
        <p>WE CAN HELP YOUl Save a lot of gas and time. All areas, sizes and prices call today! 752 1375, Homelocators. Fee</p>
        <p>400 LINE AVENUE. Two</p>
        <p>bedrooms, central air and heat $250 per month. Appliances fur nished. Call 355 6753.</p>
        <p>174</p>
        <p>Townhouses For Rent</p>
        <p>NEW! 3 and 2 bedroom townhomes for rent. Great loca</p>
        <p>tion near Hospital Fireplace, patio, swimming pcwi, tennis</p>
        <p>court and many extras. 758 6050. Collice C, Moore and Associates.</p>
        <p>179 Mobile Homes For Rent</p>
        <p>BEHIND VENTER'S Grill on Mumtord Road 3 bedrooms $200 rent. $100 deposit. 756 4982</p>
        <p>FOR SALE OR RENT 1 and 2</p>
        <p>bedrooms, furnished. No children, no pets Call 758 6679.</p>
        <p>FURNISHED! 2 bedroom, den $160 or 3 bedroom 2 baths $235 752 1375. Homelocators Fee</p>
        <p>SMALL 2 bedroom mobile home. Colonial Park, $155 plus deposit. 758 0174.</p>
        <p>THREE BEDROOM, 2 bath, acre private lot Gritton. Call 752 4103.</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOM mobile home Central heat and air, washer/ dryer. New Bern Highway $200 per month plus deposit No pels, no children. Call 758 01/4.</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOM, furnished, air, located at Azalea Gardens, Greenville Call 792 8104.</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOMS, stove and refrigerator furnished. Call 355 6753</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOM, central heat, window air, waler furnished. No pets. Singles and couples only. Deposit/lease, $165.1 729 4241</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOMS, completely furnished, nice park, no pets. 752-7939or 758 8088</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>THREE BEDROOM, 2 bath brick home Living room with fireplace, kitchen with eat-in area, recreation room $475 a month. Call Mavis Butts Really, 355-7653 or Mavis Butts, 752 7073.</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOM house. Uni versify area, deposit, references and lease required. $300 month 758 4333 day, 756 5077 night.</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOM house with fireplace. University area, de posit, references and lease re quired. $325 month. 758 4333 day; 756 5077night</p>
        <p>CUSSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>SPECIAL Executive Desks</p>
        <p>60*  30' .tMeutiful wilnut finish ideal for horn# office</p>
        <p>Reg. Price $259.00</p>
        <p>Special</p>
        <p>$17900 TAFF OFFICE EQUIPMENT</p>
        <p>569 Evans St  752-2175</p>
        <p>1 AND 2 bedroom Mobile homes, $130 and up. Also Mobile home lot tor rent. No pets and no children. 758 0745.</p>
        <p>12x65, 2 bedroom, washer, dryer, air. Setup in nice park. Call 752 2684after 7p.m.</p>
        <p>2 BEDROOMS! $150/3 bedroom, 2 baths, $225 washer/dryer. 752 1375. Homelocators Fee</p>
        <p>180</p>
        <p>Mobile Homes Lots For Rent</p>
        <p>LARGE SHADY LOT for rent. Cable TV. Paved roads and driveways Call 758 0745.</p>
        <p>181</p>
        <p>Office Space For Rent</p>
        <p>ATTRACTIVE COMPLEX near Court House (between Coffmans and First Citizens Bank. Three offices, individually or together. Telephone answering and recep tion services available. 752 6888</p>
        <p>BOND'S SPORTING GOODS</p>
        <p>building tor lease on Arlington Boulevard, 6000 square feet, can be used tor retail or office. 756-6001 or 752 8179</p>
        <p>BRAND NEW OFFICES avail able January 1st. Great loca tion'. Call nights after: 756 0603, 355 5336 Days 756 6336.</p>
        <p>COLONIAL HEIGHTS Private, utilities furnished, $85 month 757 1626/752 4295.</p>
        <p>FREESTANDING OFFICE</p>
        <p>building, 1360 square leet Newly redecorated, excellent location, optional new phone system Call 354 4451</p>
        <p>NEW OFFICE SUITES tor lease at 301 West 14lh Street Avail able January 1987 One suite with 1135 square feel, two suites with 1375 square feel. $6 50 to $7 per square toot. Security system, separate utilities Call Ollie Harrington and Son Build ers. Inc., 752 5086</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>The Daily Reflector. Greenville, N.C</p>
        <p>181 Office Space For Rent</p>
        <p>OAKMONT PROFESSIONAL</p>
        <p>Oltices. 1300 square feet, 7 indi vidual offices plus reception area Very high quality. $728 per month. 756 1888,9 5.</p>
        <p>OVER 2650 square feet of retail or office space available at 102 West 10th Street (Formerly Carolina Microfilm and Pro cessing). $500 per month. Con tact D.G. Nichols Agency, 752-4012</p>
        <p>SINGLE OFFICE and suite</p>
        <p>space available $135 and up per (fox</p>
        <p>month. Call Jeannette Agency, 756 1322.</p>
        <p>TWO ROOMOFFICE SUITE</p>
        <p>Janitorial and utilities Included.</p>
        <p>Chapin Building, 3106 South Memorial Drive, 756 1234.</p>
        <p>1728 SQUARE feet, Eastbrook Drive, adjacent to Blue Cross-Blue Shield, utilities and anitorial furnished $1150/ month. 752 0763 or 758 2138</p>
        <p>2000 SQUARE leet of retail space available. Red Oak Shopp ing Center, $725 per month. Con fact D.G. Nichols Agency, 752 4012,</p>
        <p>185 Rooms For Rent</p>
        <p>PIRATES LANDING</p>
        <p>20OW. Eighth street</p>
        <p>Private furnished rooms lor rent. Utilities included Share bath and kitchen REMCO EAST, 758 6061,</p>
        <p>RO9MS FOR RENT 2 let! Females only Extra large, semi furnished. Total privacy Call 758 2719.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>Monday. January 19,1987 g.g</p>
        <p>185 Rooms For Rent</p>
        <p>SHARE 3 BEDROOM home near college. Serious student or business man preferred. 752 6888 days, 752 7564 nights.</p>
        <p>192 Roommate Wanted</p>
        <p>FEMALE ROOMMATE needed to share 2 bedroom apartment. $140 per month plus '/ ulllilles. Non smoker, student preferred. Call Lori at 752 7396.</p>
        <p>MALE ROOMMATE wanted, $145 plus utilities, Creeneway Apartments, 756 6869.</p>
        <p>MALE ROOMMATE wanted to share two bedroom, I'-j bath, luxury townhouse. Should be mature and liberal minded per son, $165 plus 1/2 utilities. 355 5291, leave message</p>
        <p>YOU CAN SAVE money 67 shopping tor bargains In the Classified Ads</p>
        <p>192 Roommate Wanted</p>
        <p>MATURE COUPLE or profp sional male wanted to sfitt* large 3 bedroom house. $J(K) .1 month plus W utilties. Call 7V-6074 after 6 p.m.</p>
        <p>ROOMMATr^Ata $r;s per month. $100 deposit Loll 355-7502 and leave message. TWO MALE MEDCATsf&amp;lt;7 ni. looking for roommate to shai e .1 bedroom solar powered hoin 1 miles from hospital 757 J3CI after 6 p.m.</p>
        <p>WANTEDWHITEmaletosh.if, furnished mobile home ' z k'hI utilities, and deposit. Lucatr&amp;lt;l miles southeast of Gteenviii ' 758 0788 after 5 p.m.</p>
        <p>194 Wanted To Buy</p>
        <p>WANT TO BUY pine and h.uU wood timber. Pamlico lindiM Company, Inc 756 8615. ttiqla .</p>
        <p>The</p>
        <p>Real</p>
        <p>Estate</p>
        <p>Corner</p>
        <p>MOBILE HOMES</p>
        <p>Something</p>
        <p>NEW</p>
        <p>CUSTOM</p>
        <p>WINDOWS</p>
        <p>Just For YOUl"</p>
        <p>C.L. Lupton Co. 752-6116</p>
        <p>MODERN OFFICE SPACE</p>
        <p>For Lease Prime Location</p>
        <p>ACROSS FROM COURT HOUSE</p>
        <p>Shore Drive Plaza Building</p>
        <p>Call</p>
        <p>758-6050</p>
        <p>Collice C. Moore &amp;amp; Associates</p>
        <p>NEED HOUSES AND FARMS TO SELL</p>
        <p>Vacant lot, 712 N Greene St adjii cent to Rivet sido Oyster Bar. 1U' x 225', $27,000.</p>
        <p>Lots on SR 1241</p>
        <p>Lot #1,12.354 actos, $25,dll')</p>
        <p>Lot #2, SOLD</p>
        <p>Lot #3, tOacies, $20,(KK)</p>
        <p>Lot #4,10 acres, $20,000 Lot #5, SOLD</p>
        <p>TURNAGE</p>
        <p>RUL (SMIE</p>
        <p>Get Mote With Les. Home 750 1179</p>
        <p>m</p>
        <p>752-2715</p>
        <p>RIALTOn</p>
        <p>40 Yeais</p>
        <p>Ex|&amp;gt;eilonco</p>
        <p>CARL* COMMERCIAL</p>
        <p>RIVER BLUFF</p>
        <p>Spacious Affordable Luxury Apartments</p>
        <p> Six And 12 Month Leases</p>
        <p> 2 Bedroom Townhouses &amp;amp; 1 Bedroom Garden Apartments</p>
        <p>Phone 758-4015</p>
        <p>Directions: 10th Street Extension To River Bluff Road, Next To Rlvergate Shopping Center.</p>
        <p>REDUCED FOR QUICK SALE!! LIKE NEW OFFICE BUILDING WITH FOUR SUITES APPROXIMATELY 6,025 SQUARE FEET 200 Eastbrook Drive</p>
        <p>758-6050</p>
        <p>(OUKE (. MOORE &amp;amp; ASStKUnS</p>
        <p>CORNER</p>
        <p>MAY87 BE A DELIGHT! CALL CARL AND BUY RIGHT!</p>
        <p>NEW. About 599' from the hospital piupeity on NC 43, 30 acres &amp;amp; $300,000. NEW. too foot lots on Greenville Uoulevaid $600 per front foot.</p>
        <p>NEW. Old Shoney's on Greenville oulevaid.</p>
        <p>Call Carl for details.</p>
        <p>NEW. On 10th Street, 5 lots and 4 houses</p>
        <p>SPECIAL OFFERING. Corner lot 150' X 200' on East 10th Street, $90.000. Good buy.</p>
        <p>OAROEN REALTY</p>
        <p>IH 75*19|</p>
        <p>Nighte &amp;amp; Weekends 355-6558</p>
        <p>Buy from the Winning Team...</p>
        <p>Down</p>
        <p>11% APR, 60 Months, Total Payment Price $7508.Tax And License Not Included.</p>
        <p>1983 $-104x4  hfp  inePOIITIAtSUNBIRD &amp;gt;213^</p>
        <p>Total payment price$4995,36Months................... IWf  Mo.  Total payment price$7995,42 Months................. lU</p>
        <p>19I6CIIEVIIIIIHCKVE1TE  1985 $10 PICKUP  HS2</p>
        <p>Total payment price $5995,42 Months............... I Ule  Mo.  Total payment price $5995,42 Months................... lUfc</p>
        <p>1984 FORD ESCORT  1986IZUZU l-MARK  $213^^</p>
        <p>Total payment price$4295,30Months................ lU  I  Mo.  Total payment price$7995,42 Months................. 4e IV</p>
        <p>1984 $10 PRXUP  1984CIEVET1E  IlfV</p>
        <p>Total payment price $4495,30 Months........................ IVV  Mo.  Total payment price $4495,30 Months............. IVV</p>
        <p>Mu.</p>
        <p>Mu</p>
        <p>Mu</p>
        <p>Mu.</p>
        <p>$1000 Down, 12% APR, Tax And Tags Not Included</p>
        <p>WINNER</p>
        <p>'AYDEN</p>
        <p>Hwy. 11 NIRByPits  Ayden, North Carolina WINTERVILLE \  746-4032</p>
        <p>OPEN SATURDAYS</p>
        <p>mm</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0080" />
        <p>If your banker changes the sulgect</p>
        <p>Mhen you ask about mcMiey market</p>
        <p>rates, maybe its time tochange</p>
        <p>your account to First ifederal.</p>
        <p>Our First Insured Money Fund pays higher rates on a low minimum balance.</p>
        <p>Its never been quite clear why l)ig banks reporting millions in earnings every quarter consistently pay lower rates on money market accounts than First Federal. But its a fact.</p>
        <p>So, the next time youre checking rates on money market accounts, check the rates on our First Insured Money Fund. You can open a First Insured Money Fund account with |1,0(K) and earn our highest money market interest (as longas yoiu' average balance remains alx)ve $1,000). Youll tilso get unlimited personal withdrawals and up to three cliecks per month. There are no service chtu ges, access to your funds through our 24-hour teller, no-fee travelers checks tmd even free noUuy services. All insured to  J.e FSLIC.</p>
        <p>All in all. First Insured Money f und pays more interest and offers you more services. So, we dont want to change the subject when you mention money market rates. We want to change where you bank.FIRST FEDERALThe best place to bank.</p>
        <p>MEMBERFSLIC</p>
        <p>Eadim Snn9( E Loan mturanc* Cofp</p>
        <p>Ibut Stvingi lniMfd 10 ttOO 000</p>
        <p>GREENVILLE: 324 S. Evans SI./758-2145-514 E. Greenville Blvd./756-6525-AYDEN: 107 W. 3rd SI./746-3403-WRMVILLE: 128 N. Main S1./753-4139-GRIFT0N: 118 Queen St./524-4128T</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0081" />
        <p>DevelopmentNew Economic Study Says Lack Of Start-Up Money Is Hampering Many Rurai CountiesStory on A-6</p>
        <p>INSIDE TODAY</p>
        <p>Swed^THE DAILY REFLECTOR</p>
        <p>106th YEAR NO. 17</p>
        <p>GREENVILLE, N.C.</p>
        <p>TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION TUESDAY AFTERNOON, JANUARY 20,1987</p>
        <p>20 PAGES</p>
        <p>PRICE 25 CENTS</p>
        <p>Blacks Urged To ^Live Dream'</p>
        <p>By CHERIE EVANS Reflector Staff Writer Local minority leaders who gathered at Sycamore Hill Baptist Church Monday night to commemorate the birthday of Martin Luther King Jr. spoke on a common theme - Live the Dream.</p>
        <p>You can kill the dreamer, but you</p>
        <p>cant kill the dream, said Dr. Howard W, Parker to about 100 people who attended the service. Parker, the pastor of Sycamore Church, was the keynote speaker for the service.</p>
        <p>He told a story of how author Howard Thurman was helped by a black man who bought his bus ticket when going to college. Years later,</p>
        <p>Thurman dedicated a book to the stranger at the bus station, Parker said.</p>
        <p>Now to him that is able, find that person and restore their dream, he said, like the stranger in the bus station had done.</p>
        <p>Other speakers during the program reflected on Kings contribu-</p>
        <p>CANDLELIGHT VIGIL - The Eta Nu chapter of Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity hosted a candlelight vigil to honor Martin Luther King Jr. Monday night at Mendenhall Student Center at East Carolina University. This first vigil</p>
        <p>sponsored by the fraternity to honor the slain civil rights leader was attended by about 150 people. (Reflector Photo by Cliff Hollis)</p>
        <p>tions to society, and they discussed where blacks should be focusing their attention this year.</p>
        <p>The year 1987 will be a crucial year for black people, said Willie Mae Carney of the Pitt County Caucus. For many of us the dream has gone, she said, explaining that many blacks had dreamed of voting, sitting at all-white lunch counters and using public restrooms.</p>
        <p>Begin dreaming again, Mrs. Carney said. Challenge racism and discrimination wherever it exists. We must not let go of that dream, she said.</p>
        <p>King learned to deal with fear, said Ernest Brown of the Pitt County Concerned Citizens for Justice. Being afraid would not have allowed him to be free.</p>
        <p>Concerned Citizens for Justice are all about doing the things we were afraid to do, he said. Power is never given up voluntarily. You have to take it, Brown said, paraphrasing the words of Fredrick Douglas.</p>
        <p>We (blacks) are the only people in this country that dont have an ecor nomic base, he said. Were the only people that when they pay us on Friday the mans got it all back on Monday.</p>
        <p>Blacks must develop an economic base. Brown said, expressing support for a six-district plan being reviewed by the Pitt County Board of Commissioners and the Board of Education.</p>
        <p>Out of six districts, we can get one-third of the districts predominantly black - thats two of the six, he said.</p>
        <p>(See KING. A-IO)</p>
        <p>KKMEMBKKINti;  Howard W. Parker, pastor of Sycamore Hill Baptist Church, spoke to about 100 people who attended a commemoration service for Martin Luther King Jr. at the church Monday night. He challenged his audience to restore a dream in someone's life. (Reflector Photo by Cliff Hollis).County Board Extends Deadline For Tax Lists</p>
        <p>By STUART SAVAGE Reflector Staff Writer</p>
        <p>Property owners in Pitt County were given a reprieve of sorts by the Board of County Commissioners Monday.</p>
        <p>Since Jan. 31 falls on a Saturday this year, the board voted to extend the deadline for listing property for tax purposes until Feb. 2. In doing so, commissioners are giving property owners an extra workday to list their property before a late listing penalty is charged.</p>
        <p>But people who fail to list their property before the close of business on Feb. 2, or those persons who list by</p>
        <p>mail and fail to have their mail abstracts postmarked before midnight Feb. 2, will face the late-listing charge.</p>
        <p>Ccommissioners approved the purchase of an ultra high frequency advanced life support radio  at a cost of $7,760  for a Greenville Fire-Rescue Department rescue truck.</p>
        <p>Bobby Joyner, the countys emergency services coordinator, reported that Greenville rescue workers are the only rescue squad members in the county who are certified to use defibrillators on cardiac</p>
        <p>patients in the field and said the radio is mandatory to provide the communications link with doctors in the hospitals emergency department.</p>
        <p>Joyner said the new radio will give the city three vehicles equipped to send telemetry signals to the hospital.</p>
        <p>The board also approved a 5 percent increase - $950 a year - in payments to Crothall American for such supplies as toilet tissue, paper towels, wastebasket liners, drinking cups, lightbulbs, soap, which are used in county office buildings, Crothall American provides</p>
        <p>housekeeping services and supplies to the county under contract.</p>
        <p>In other business, commissioners adopted a resolution endorsing and asking that the county be included in the N.C. Agriculture Cost Share Program and approved a letter endorsing a proposed research and demonstration farm and farm show.</p>
        <p>The purpose of the cost share program is to help protect the water quality in the state by reducing the amount of agricultural pollutants (sediment, nutrients, animal wastes, pesticides) that enteV streams and rivers, and to assist farmers in mak</p>
        <p>ing their production o|&amp;gt;erations more efficient by increasing the level of on-farm management.</p>
        <p>Administered by soil and water con.servation district offices in the state, the program  at no cost to the county  can provide up to 75 [Kt-cent of the average cost of such projects as con.servation tillage, field</p>
        <p>borders, .sediment control structures, grassed waterways, stripcropping and animal waste management</p>
        <p>systems.</p>
        <p>The Ijoard agreed to endorse a proposed research and demonstration farm and farm .show after Clifton</p>
        <p>(See DEADLINE. A-IO)</p>
        <p>Dr. Ray Minges, Surgeon And Benefactor, Dies At 66</p>
        <p>DR. RAY D. MINGES</p>
        <p>The</p>
        <p>Weather</p>
        <p>Dr. Ray Donald Minges, 66, of Greenville died Monday in Pitt County Memorial Hospital.</p>
        <p>He was a retired surgeon and a benefactor and worker for many causes he considered worthy, mostly in the Pitt County community.</p>
        <p>His funeral will be conducted at 2 p.m. Wednesday in the Wilkerson Funeral Chapel by the Revs. Dan Wilkers and Richard R. Gammon. Burial will be in Pinewood Memorial Park.</p>
        <p>Born in Claremont, he moved to Greenville as a youth and was a 1937 graduate of Greenville High School. He graduated from Davidson College in 1941 and from the Medical College of Virginia in jl944. He served as a first lieutenant and captain in the</p>
        <p>Forecast</p>
        <p>Cloudy through Wednesday. Low tonight in lower 30b. H) Wednesday in upper 40b.</p>
        <p>Looking Ahead</p>
        <p>Chance of rain TlHirBday and Friday. Fair but colder Saturday.</p>
        <p>Medical Corps of the Army at Fort Umnak, Alaska, from 1946 through 1948.</p>
        <p>From 1953 until 1970, he practiced general surgery in Greenville. During that time, he served on the Pitt County Memorial Hospital staff, having terms as both chief of surgery and chief of the medical staff. He was a part-owner and a member of the boards of directors of Pepsi Cola Bottling Company of Greenville, Kinston and New Bern.</p>
        <p>He had served as president of the Pitt County Medical Society and as a director of the North Carolina State Medical Society. In 1981, the Pitt County Hospital Foundation awarded him its annual service award.</p>
        <p>A member of the First Presbyterian Church of Greenville, he had been a deacon and an elder and president of the Mens Fellowship.</p>
        <p>A member of the Pitt-Greenville</p>
        <p>Chamber of Commerce, he served on its Committee of 100. In 1983, he was honored as Greenvilles Citizen of the Year by the Pitt-Greenville Chamber of Commerce.</p>
        <p>He was a co-founder of the first chapter of the Mental Health Association in North Carolina, and later traveled the state helping form more chapters. He was one of the state associations first presidents and later was a director.</p>
        <p>An organizer of the Century Club of East Carolina College, he served as its president for five years. When the college became a university, the Cen tury Club liecame the Pirate Club and he served as its third president and was its first life memtxT. He helped in. the drive to build Ficklen Stadium and later chaired the successful drive to expand Ficklen</p>
        <p>(See DR., A-IO)</p>
        <p>Expo '87 To Be Held April 2-4</p>
        <p>ByJANEWELBORN Reflector Staff Writer</p>
        <p>Greenvilles third annual trade Show, Expo 87, will tie held April 2-4 at the New Greenville Warehouse on highway 33, Pitt-Greenville (hamber of (ommerce officials announced today.</p>
        <p>Chamljer officials said the trade show is expected to attract over 150 exhibitors spotlighting local business and industry, agriculture, education and home and garden products. Both large and small companies from eastern North Carolina will participate.</p>
        <p>The chamlxir is sponsoring the event, which is organized by the Special Projects Division.</p>
        <p>Expo CO chairman Wayne Dempsey said the attendance goal is 25,000. Last year's trade fair attracted 20,(K)() |x*ople during the three-day event.</p>
        <p>Peopl( have come in not only from Pitt (,'ounty but from all over eastern North Carolina, said chamtHT president Ed Walker. It has been a healthy situation both for business and for customers and consumers in the area to come in and see what is offered</p>
        <p>.Just about everything you can imagine will fxi on sale during the trade fair, Dempsey said. Both large and small items will l)e sold, and a wide range will he displayed.</p>
        <p>Walker said the space has been added for 20 exhibits this year by tightening up the h(K)th arrangement A concession sUmd will be heated in the rear of the warehouse, in addition to the fiXKl iKXjths near the front entrance.</p>
        <p>Entertainment for the trade sfiow will include the Embers, SupcT Grit Cowboy Band and Atlantis</p>
        <p>Hours for Ex(x) '87 are from 10 a.m. until 9 p.m. April 2 and April 3 and from 10 a ill until (i p rn April 4 An admission fee will l&amp;gt;e charged.</p>
        <p>Applications for exhibits must lie completed by March 13. For information call the chamlMT at 7.")2-4101.</p>
        <p>Waite Prolongs Stay In Beirut</p>
        <p>in 30b Satnrday.</p>
        <p>FYiday, in teem</p>
        <p>in 30b</p>
        <p>Thursday and Saturday.</p>
        <p>Inside</p>
        <p>A-2~ Local news A-4- Editorials A4~-Stateoaivi AlO-Obitnariei B*l-&amp;amp;ortB B4-(&amp;gt;oB8word</p>
        <p>BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) -Hostage negotiator Terry Waite met with Shiite Moslems holding American hostages and then decided today to prolong his stay in Lebanon, sources close to the Anglican Church envoy said.</p>
        <p>It looked like he has had a breakthrough, said one source, speaking on condition of anonymity. He will have further meetingis with the captors.</p>
        <p>Waite had planned to take a morning flight to London. The sources said he canceled his plans after returning</p>
        <p>to his hotel from a late-night meeting with Islamic Jihad, the prolranian Shiite Moslem group which says it holds two American captives</p>
        <p>This morning, Waite appeared in the lobby of his seaside hotel in Moilem west Beiruts Druse-con trolled Ein Mreisseh district at 9:20 a.m. He and three Druse bodyguards then drove off to an unknown destination.</p>
        <p>The envoy returned two hours later and went straight to his room, refusing to answer questions about his activities and plans.</p>
        <p>Waite said Monday he had established contact with Islamic Jihad, or Islamic Holy War, and had received assurances that kidnapped Americans Terry A. Anderson and Thomas .Sutherland were well liKjked after</p>
        <p>Their condition is generally go(KJ,hesaid.</p>
        <p>Peggy Say, Andersons sister, said today from her home in Batavia, N.Y that she was encouraged by Waites assessment that the hostages are healthy.</p>
        <p>Im just waiting it out, said Mrs.</p>
        <p>Say. I dont know anything more than whats in the media.</p>
        <p>In an interview Monday with The A.ssociated Press, Waite also said he feared he might be kidnapped hirn.self Attempts were made to kidnap him during four previous negotiating trips to Beirut, he said.</p>
        <p>He said the danger that a terrorist group would abduct him during a negotiating session was made "increasingly dangerous by the arrests in Europe of two Lebanese suspected of terrorism.</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0082" />
        <p>In The Area</p>
        <p>Exchange Program</p>
        <p>'Riree fourth-grade students at Falkland Elementary School will participate in a student exchange IHX)gram with HB. ^igg School.</p>
        <p>Twn Gray. Jeff Randolph and Roger Peaden have been selected for the program, which is designed to allow students to experience different t\-pes of scheduhng and class changes</p>
        <p>Funds Raised</p>
        <p>The House Staff Auxiliar)- of Pitt Countv Memorial Hospital has presented roo to the Ronald McDonald House of Greenville. The funds were raised from their annual Doctors Day project.</p>
        <p>Barbeque Dinner</p>
        <p>The Christian Men's FeUowship of the First Christian Church in Grifton will sponsor a barbeque chicken dinner Sunday at 12:00 in the Fellowship Hall of the Church.</p>
        <p>New Surcharges</p>
        <p>The N.C. Reinsurance Facility approved new annual recoupment surcharges totaling 44.7 percent in order to recover $80.2 million in operating</p>
        <p>losses oi the state-mandated facility which reinsures high-risk drivers. The new recoupment surdiarges will affect policies that become raective during the year beginning Awil 1, 1987.</p>
        <p>The recoupmit surcharges will affect all private passenger automobile liability insurance wlicies with Safe Driver Insurance Ian iSDDP) points, whether or not the policies are reinsured by the facility-.</p>
        <p>All insurance companies are required, by law. to obtain annually Motor Vehicle Records on all driver to determine if they should have SDIP point surcharges. The SDIP provides surcharges ranging from 10 lercent fw one point to 450 percit or 12 points.^</p>
        <p>Meeting Canceled</p>
        <p>The January Mothers Against Drunk Driving meeting scheduled for tonight has bn canceled.</p>
        <p>The next meeting will be held Feb. 17 at 7:30 p.m. at St. Paul's Epict^l Church.</p>
        <p>Cookie Sales</p>
        <p>Members of local Girl Scout troops w-ill take orders for cookies Friday-through Febuary 8.</p>
        <p>Proceeds from the cookies sale go to ite local troops!- their programs.</p>
        <p>land</p>
        <p>Board Proposes Joint Meeting</p>
        <p>Members of the Pitt County Board of Commissioners agreed Monday to ask representatives of the Board'of Education to meet to discuss using coterminus boundries for new election districts for both boards.</p>
        <p>The commissioners will b^in a series of pMjblic hearings Wednesday mght on a proposed new method of electing members of the board.</p>
        <p>Commissioners in the past have voiced support for hav-ing the same district boundries. but the board has never met with the school board to discuss district lines</p>
        <p>The school board, as well as the Board of Commissioners, is in the process of establishing a new- method of electing members to insure black representation</p>
        <p>At a public heanng last week, speakers urged members of the Board of Education to adopt, a six-district plan similar to one commissioners will present at six public hearings over the next three weeks - one in each of the proposed six districts.</p>
        <p>The county elections board has also recommended that the school board and commissioners use the same district lines.</p>
        <p>Commissioner Tom Johnson said people attending the hearings should be encouraged to have input on any .. districting plan." not just the proposed six-district plan, and on the question of at-large representation.</p>
        <p>.All of the public hearings on proposed changes in the method of electing commissioners will be at 7 p.m. The one Wedne^y w-ill be at North Pitt High School while one Thursday will be at Ayden-Grifton High School.</p>
        <p>Other hearings are scheduled for Jan. 22 at Farmrille Central High School, Jan 29 at Pactolus School. Feb. 4 at Wahl-Coates School in Greenville, and Feb. 5 at A G. Cox School in Winterville.</p>
        <p>property- fund for the Girl Scout Council of Coastal Carolina.</p>
        <p>For further information contact Theresa Hewett at 756-9991.</p>
        <p>Suspects Arrested</p>
        <p>Greenville police said suspects in thefts from five local stores were taken into custody Monday.</p>
        <p>Officer Alexander Batts said several juveniles were turned over to the department's juvenile division in connection with the theft of a package of underwear from the K-Mart store at Greenville Square Shopping Center that was reported at 5:39 p.m.. and in connection with the theft of a set of bicycle hand brakes from Rose's Stores at The Plaza mall that was reported at 6 p.m.</p>
        <p>Batts also said Robert Dway-ne Joy-ner. 19. of 1500 My-rtle Ave. was charged with shoplifting in connection with the theft of a pair of tennis shoes from Nichols Discount City on Greenville Boulevard that was reported about 7:57 p.m.</p>
        <p>Officer R.G. Mendenhall said Charles Ray Dixwi. 31. of 203B Roundtree Drive was charged with slK^lifting in connection with a 9:06 p.m. incident at the Sav-A-Center at Greenville Square Shopping Center, while Officer W.S. Heath said Renay Rosita Moody. 19. of KM Abby Road was charged with larceny- in connection with the theft of $10 worth of cosmetics from Kroger Sav-On on Greenville Boulevard in an incident reported at 9:21 p.m.</p>
        <p>Tax Seminar</p>
        <p>East Carolina University's Division of Continuing Education will present a seminar on preparation of individual income taxes Saturday in Mendenhall Student Center.</p>
        <p>Presented by Dr. Donald E. Duke, associate professor of accounting, the seminar will focus on the 1986 Tax Reform Act and planning by the taxpayer who prepares his own return There will be an explanation of preparing individual income tax returns for 1986 and planning information for 1987 and 1988</p>
        <p>For further information or to register call 757-6143.</p>
        <p>Young Democrats</p>
        <p>The Pitt County Young Democrats will meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at the Three Steers Restaurant on Memorial Drive.</p>
        <p>Officers for the coming year will be elected at the meeting.</p>
        <p>PATIENT VAN  New Bern resident Henry Smith turns over the keys of a new van to Dr. Charles Scaran-tino, director of the East Carolina University Radiation Oncology Center. Standing at their right are, left to right, Craig Bruno, patient care coordinator of the center: Dr.</p>
        <p>Mary Raab, medical oncologist, and Dr. William E. Laopus, dean of the ECU Medical School. The van will be used to transport patients in eastern North Carolina counties who receive radiation and chemotherapy at the ECU center. (ECU Photo)</p>
        <p>REFLECTOR</p>
        <p>HOTLINE</p>
        <p>' Hotline gets things done Write and tell us about the problem or issue into which you d hke for HoUine to look Enclose photostatic copies o any pertinent iniormatm Our address IS The Daily Reflector. Box 1967. Greenville. S C . 27835. Because of the large numbers received. Hotline cannot answer or publish every item we receive, but we deal with all of those for wbch we ha ve staff time. Sames must be given, but only initials wtZ/ be publi^ied</p>
        <p>TS STUDY</p>
        <p>Duke University is seeking families having more than one person w ith tuberous sclerosis. Dr. Raymond S. Kandt of Duke is doing research on how the disease is inherited. He described it as affecting the skin with light-colored patches, bumps on the face, around fingernails and toenails, thickened skin on the lower back, and sometimes cysts and benign tumors of the kidneys, eyes, brain, heart tumors in babies and lung problems in vvomen. Mental retardation and seizures can be a part of it.</p>
        <p>TS is an autosomal dominant disease. When a person has it, half of his or her phildren are likely to develop it. However, some cases appear to have begun by mutation.</p>
        <p>.Any family which can help is asked to call Dr. Kandt at 684-3219. To obtain more information about TS, call collect, Debbie .Murphy, 747-8592.</p>
        <p>NAACP Meeting</p>
        <p>The Executive Committee of the NAACP will meet today at 7 p.m. at 403 Hudson St. The agenda will include discussion new horizons and mother-of-the-year.</p>
        <p>GRIMESLAND MARCH  Civil rights activ-ist Golden Moodav. The demonstration was held to protest the Frinks, center, and Bennie Rountree, president of the Pm shooung of a black youth. (Reflector Photo by Cliff County Southern Christian Leadership Conference, right, Hollis &amp;gt; lead about 50 marchers down Pitt Street in Grimesland</p>
        <p>Civil Rights Marchers Stage Grimesland Walk</p>
        <p>About 50 people sang civ-il rights hymns and called for justice during a march through Grimesland Monciay aftemoon to protest the Jan. 4 shooting of a black youth.</p>
        <p>On Sunday. 15 marchers were arrested for parading without a license in a similar demonstration Demonstrators had a valid permit for Mtmday's march.</p>
        <p>We have come here to sene notice on Grimesland that racism has no part in North Carolina." Ben</p>
        <p>nie Rountree, president ot tne Pitt County Southern Leadership Conference. told demonstrators during a stop at Grimesland Towm Hall.</p>
        <p>Rountree was among those arrested Sunday.</p>
        <p>Participants, who were led by-Rountree and civil rights activist Golden Frinks on the one-mile march, began their journey on Lancelot Street and w alked dow-n Pitt Street to Town Hall before returning on the same route.</p>
        <p>Daniel Lee Williams, 21. of P.O. Box 28, Grimesland. was arrested and charged with assault with a deadly weapon inflicting serious injury- in connection with the shooting, according to Pitt County Sheriff Ralph Tyson.</p>
        <p>Meamwhile, three youths, including Jimmy Simmons, 16, of 4(M Smith St.. Bethel, who was injured in the shooting, have been charged with breaking and entering a motor vehicle in connection with the incident, Tyson said.</p>
        <p>Police Investigate 12 Thefts</p>
        <p>Investigators said 12 thefts were reported to Greenville police Monday.</p>
        <p>Officer J.G. Bridges said two air compressors, with a total value of $880. were taken from Southern States on Line Avenue in a break-in reported at 8:45 a.m. and four tires and rims were taken from a car parked at Bob Barbour Honda at the intersection of Greenville Boulevard and Memorial Drive in an incident reported at 1:25 p.m.. while Officer J.M. Jones said a battery- was taken from a vehicle parked at *lM) White Hollow Dr.,in an incident reported at 8:50a.m. 1</p>
        <p>Officer J.W. Corbett said radios, speakers and other items were taken from five cars and two vans at Joe Cullipher Chry-sler Ply-mouth Dodge at the intersection of Memorial Drive and Greenville Boulevard in an incident reported at 9:20 a.m.. while Of-</p>
        <p>Brownie Scouts</p>
        <p>Brownie Troop No. 792 has adopted Novella Exum of Greenville has their grandmother.</p>
        <p>The girls have visited Miss Exum and will register her as a member of their troop. Currently, they are working on their Joy patch.</p>
        <p>Stooges Win</p>
        <p>BUENA PARK. Calif. (AP) - The Three Stooges beat the Barryinores in a popularity- contest at Movieland Wax Museum, and visitors also are asking to see Don Johnson and Michael J. Fox done in wax.</p>
        <p>"We think The Three Stooges are really having a revival with young people now," said Terry Thrift, marketing director for the museum. "They're on TV all weekend. But who ever sees the Barrv-mores?"</p>
        <p>ficer E.E. Laughinghouse said a nine-horsepower outb^rd motor was taken from 110 Wilkshire Drive in an incident r^rted at 9:45 a. m.</p>
        <p>Officer I.E. Nevelle said four tires and rims were taken from a vehicle parked at Stallings Tire Service at 1620 N. Greene St. in an incident reported at 11:20 a.m. and radios and speakers taken from two cars parked at Cox Armature Works on Memorial Drive in an incident reported at 2 p.m.. while Officer R.S. Sawwer said a purse containing $320 in cash, a diamond ring, two calculators and a checkbo(A were taken from a car parked at 403 Church St. in an incident reported at 4 p.m.</p>
        <p>Officer J.E. Woolard said four hubcaps were taken from a car parked in a lot at Greenville Square Shopping Center in an incident reported at</p>
        <p>In 1985. Pitt County's average weeklv manufacturing wage was</p>
        <p>$332.98.</p>
        <p>4:50 p.m., while Officer C.M. Credle said 18 duck decoys, two folding stools and a totebag were taken from a boat parked at 1111 Hillside Drive in an incident reported at 5:27 p.m.</p>
        <p>Officer M.J. Nobles said a radiotape player and 15 tapes were taken from a car parked at Sweet Caroline's restaurant at 740 E. Greenville Blvd. in an incident reported at 9:30 p.m., while Officer J.W. Isenhour said a bicycle was taken from 1925A Norcott Circle in an incident reported at 10:43 p.m.</p>
        <p>Jewelry Repair  Watch Repair Ali Work Done On Premlaes</p>
        <p>Tetterton Jewelers</p>
        <p>214 E. 5th St. 752-7055</p>
        <p>Engraving (Alto Inaidc ringa) Watchea Elcctronicatiy TlMd Battertea For All Watchea Over 30 Ycara Expcrlenct Mon.-Fri. 9-5, Sat. 9-12:30</p>
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        <p>PHOTOGRAPHY CLASSES PITT COMMUHITY COUEOE</p>
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        <pb facs="00096520_0083" />
        <p>THREE INJURED IN ACCIDENT - Three people were injured Monday when a vehicle driven by Norma Jean Bunch of Chocowinity collided with another vehicle driven by Joseph Lancaster III of 107 Lakewood Drive, Greenville, on N.C. 33 1.4 miles east of Greenville.</p>
        <p>Josephine Lancaster, a passenger in the second auto, was listed in critical condition early today at Pitt County Memorial Hospital. Joseph Lancaster and Ms. Bunch were also injured in the accident. (Reflector Photo by Cliff Hollis)</p>
        <p>ECU Fund Established To Honor Dead Nurses</p>
        <p>The faculty of the school of nursing at East Carolina University has established a memorial scholarship fund to honor the memory of nurses Pamela Demaree and Mike McGinnis, who were killed in the crash of the EastCare helicopter ambulance in Jones County Jan. 8.</p>
        <p>In addition to Miss Demaree and McGinnis, pilot Perry Reynolds and a 3-month-old infant being transported from Camp Lejeune Naval Hospital to Pitt County Memorial Hospital in Greenville were killed.</p>
        <p>Pam Demaree, of Raleigh, was a 1981 graduate of the ECU School of Nursing and was a part-time graduate student in nursing at ECU. McGinnis was the chief flight nurse for EastCare and had been an emergency care nurse in Chapel Hill and Durham prior to employment at PCMH. He was a resource person for the ECU Senior</p>
        <p>Leadership Course and had worked in the clinical setting with faculty and students.</p>
        <p>The nursing school faculty contributed $2(X) to initiate the scholarship. Additional gifts have been made by individual nursing faculty members, students and alumni.</p>
        <p>Mike Ball of the ECU Office of Institutional Advancement said the Demaree-McGinnis scholarship will be awarded annually to deserving nursing students selected by the schools scholarship committee.</p>
        <p>Persons interested in making contributions to the scholarship fund should contact the ECU Foundation Inc., Taylor/Slaughter Alumni Center, ECU. Contributions should be designated for the Pam Demaree and Mike McGinnis Memorial Scholarship Fund in Nursing, Ball said.</p>
        <p>Some Military Dependants Will Pay For Medical Care</p>
        <p>By NORMAN BLACK AP Military Writer</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP) - Some military dependents and retirees will have to begin paying for outpatient medical care at military hospitals next year, and Pentagon officia s say they don-t like it any more than the patients will.</p>
        <p>The charges are part of a test program ordered by the White House Office of Management and Budget to reduce what a spokesman for the 0MB said might be called the frivolous use of free government hospitals and to save taxpayers money. It would not apply to personnel on active-duty.</p>
        <p>This is rather obscurely buried in the budget and the word is only now starting to seep out, said one top Pentagon official who spoke Monday only on condition of anonymity.</p>
        <p>But its already sending people up the walls. The general public might view this as reasonable. But its an incredibly emotional thing to the mil</p>
        <p>itary. Rational people get unrational on this, he said.</p>
        <p>Ed Dale, spokesman for 0MB, acknowledged there was some back-and-forth internally between his agency and the Pentagon over the idea.</p>
        <p>But its purpose is fairly obvious, he said. As with other user fees, its purpose is to reduce marginal  some might say frivolous - utilization of health care facilities.</p>
        <p>You can understand the genesis of it, one Pentagon official said, also speaking on condition he not be identified. But, the official added, the military has certain obligations to its people. For example, the sailor goes off to sea, leaving behind a teen-age wife and new baby. The wife doesnt know how to take the babys temperature so she brings him to a clinic. It happens. So how are you going to charge her for that?</p>
        <p>Were very concerned about this, agreed Chapman Cox, the Pen</p>
        <p>tagons top official for personnel issues.</p>
        <p>Military authorities are worried that the test could lead to a permanent system of outpatient fees, reducing a key military benefit, undermining morale and damaging recruiting and retention efforts.</p>
        <p>The size and location of the experiment have yet to be determined. Pentagon officials say they will, however, keep it small and have proceeds from fees plowed back to military personnel as contributions to the morale and recreation fund or use it for improvement of medical facilities.</p>
        <p>All told, 7 million retirees and military dependents are eligible to use military hospitals and clinics without charge if space is available. Active-duty personnel are guaranteed free medical care at all times.</p>
        <p>Military medical facilities handle some 50 million outpatient visits every year.</p>
        <p>Adminhtrafion Proposes Immigration Rules Change</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP) - The Reagan administration proposed today tentative immigration rules requiring every citizen or alien hired for a new job to prove residency and eligibility to work in the United States.</p>
        <p>The rules would, for the first time, require all U.S. citizens to prove their legal status when applying for a job.</p>
        <p>The rules, released today by the Immigration and Naturalization Service, provide the first glimpse in</p>
        <p>to administration plans for enforcement of the landmark immigration law passed by Congress in 1986 after years of unsuccessful efforts.</p>
        <p>Under the proposed rules, evidence of eligibility for work could be shown with a passport or a naturalization certificate or a combination of documents such as a Social Security card and a drivers license with a photo.</p>
        <p>These would have to be shown to an employer within 24 hours of employ-</p>
        <p>Coastal Resources Hearings Scheduled</p>
        <p>RALEIGH - The Coastal Resources Commission will receive public comments on two proposed rule changes at hearings during its meeting Thursday and Friday in Beaufort.</p>
        <p>The hearings Thursday will begin at 10 a.m. A proposed change in marina standards would make it possible for a marina to be built in areas without existing shellfish resources if the project would not violate water quality standards. The rules for pier construction would be revised so that only private, non-^mmercial activities would be exempt from obtaining a major development permit.</p>
        <p>At 1:30 p.m. Thursday concurrent</p>
        <p>committee meetings will begin. Land use plan updates for Emerald Isle, Plymouth, Havelock. Elizabeth City and Chowan County will be reviewed and a report on coastal water quality will be discussed.</p>
        <p>The committee will also reveiw the report on the nomination of Buxton Woods as an area of environmental concern and consider guidelines for establishing beach access areas.</p>
        <p>On Friday, the CRC will hear various reports from the committee meetings and consider requests for a declaratory ruling.</p>
        <p>The meeting will be held at Duke University Marine Laboratory in Beaufort, will all sessions to begin at 9 a.m. and to be open to the public.</p>
        <p>ment, said the source, who spoke Monday only on condition of anonymity. Forms showing the employer has verified eligibility must be available in the workplace in case of an inspection by immigration agents.</p>
        <p>The INS is following an unusual procedure that makes the tentative rules public before they normally would be released. Formal release usually comes when rules are printed in the Federal Register - a procedure which is scheduled for Feb. 25. A 30-day period for public comment begins on that day.</p>
        <p>The immigration service decided to circulate in advance what amounts to a draft copy to Congress, other government agencies and interest groups that have been following the immigration law.</p>
        <p>"This is a unique opportunity to solicit a broad range of public comment by allowing working drafts to be distributed, said Mark W Everson, executive as.sociate INS commissioner.</p>
        <p>INS Commissioner Alan C. Nelson said. We are taking this unprecedented step to permit as much public input as possible to ensure that the new legislation will be implemented effectively, fairly and in an orderly manner."</p>
        <p>Nelson said comments on the tentative rules should be received by the agency by Feb. 5. After publication in the Federal Register at the end of February, further responses should be received by the end of March, with final rules to be issued in mid-April, Nelson said.</p>
        <p>Witness Says Conrail Crew Was Violating Rules Before Crash</p>
        <p>By H. JOSEF HEBERT Associated Press Writer</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP) - The operators of the Conrail locomotive that collided with an Amtrak passenger plane violated at least a half-dozen operating rules and actually were increasing speed when a signal told them to slow down, a congressional hearing was told today.</p>
        <p>John Riley, head of the Federal Railroad Administration, testified that if the Conrail crew had observed and responded in a timely manner to any of six warning signals," the locomotive would have stopped short of the track intersection where the collision took place.</p>
        <p>Riley was the leadoff witness in the first of a series of congressional hearings planned in the aftermath of the Jan. 4 rail accident near Baltimore in which 16 people were killed and 175 were injured. It was the worst accident in Amtraks history.</p>
        <p>In opening remarks, Sen. Frank Lautenberg, D-N.J., said the accident makes clear that train engineers should be licensed and that the railroad industry should be required to comply with a broader drug- and alcohol-testing program.</p>
        <p>Today (train engineers) dont even need a (automobile) drivers license, said Lautenberg, the chairman of the Senate transportation appropriation subcommittee.</p>
        <p>Riley said the signal system at the accident site apparently was operating properly and told the Conrail train operators to slow to no more than 20 miles per hour nearly a mile from the track junction. That signal, he said, should also have flashed in the cab and triggered a warning whistle, but both of those devices were malfunctioning.</p>
        <p>As the train was being told to slow, Riley said, The Conrail freight actually accelerated through this point toa maximum speed of 62 mph.</p>
        <p>In separate testimony prepared for the subcommittee, W. Graham Claytor Jr., president and chairman of Amtrak, said that the Conrail crew violated at least six safety operating rules from the time they left the freight yard in Baltimore to when the collision occurred.</p>
        <p>Compliance with any one of (these rules) ... could have avoided the accident, Claytor testified.</p>
        <p>He said operating rules were violated when the Conrail engineer and brakeman did not properly inspect</p>
        <p>Crash House</p>
        <p>SANTA ROSA, Calif. (AP) - The sound of a car passing Bill and Elizabeth Russels home might make them cringe these days, because six vehicles have careened off a narrow road and crashed into their yard in a year.</p>
        <p>The last was a tanker truck carrying 1,000 gallons of old motor oil. The truck crashed as workers were repairing $15,000 in damage to the Russells fence and garage from a New Years Day car accident.</p>
        <p>The truck hit a ditch, went out of control and overturned a few yards from the master bedroom.</p>
        <p>Russell said the problem started when the county repaved the road, an old stagecoach route.</p>
        <p>For as long as I can remember, the road was full of potholes and for years we kept after the county to fix it, he said. Well, they did and now people speed where l&amp;gt;efore they had to drive slow to avoid blowing a tire.</p>
        <p>I wish wed left well enough alone.</p>
        <p>Government, wholesale/retail and manufacuturing each account for 25 percent of total employment in Pitt County.</p>
        <p>the cab signal system and pulled out even though it was not working properly. Investigators have found that the warning whistle had been taped over and muffled and that a light bulb was apparently missing on a critical signal device.</p>
        <p>Claytor said other violations included not taking care to observe signals, passing a speed signal without communications between the brakeman and engineer, failure to slow when a cab signal malfunction was noticed, failure to respond to a speed restriction signal and running through a stop signal.</p>
        <p>Among the issues of concern to members of Congress are the question of freight trains using the same track as high-speed passenger trains in the Northeast corridor.</p>
        <p>Lautenberg suggested that freight traffic could not economically be barred from the corridor and Riley said, There is nothing inherently unsafe about</p>
        <p>But Sen. Claiborne Pell, R-R.l, said in a recent letter to Lautenberg that the accident underscores the need to expedite the removal of all freight service from the corridor. He said Congress ought to begin a study of the issue and make recommendations by the end of the year. -</p>
        <p>An average of 24 Conrail freight trains a day use the Amtrak tracks</p>
        <p>between Washington and Philadelphia, with about 70 percent of them operating between 10 p.m. and 6 a.m. when there are few passenger trains, according to industry officials.</p>
        <p>On Thursday, the House government activities and transportation subcommittee holds a session to examine the adequacy of drug testing and other efforts to ensure that railroad workers are not under the influence of drugs.</p>
        <p>Among the questions is whether federal regulations that went into force less than a year ago are ade-ouate to curb the use of alcohol and drugs by railroad employees.</p>
        <p>Blood and urine tests have showed marijuana use by both the Conrail engineer and brakeman, though it has not been determined whether the two were impaired to the point at which drug use contributed to the accident.</p>
        <p>Federal safety officials for years have complained about alcohol  and more recently drug  involvement in railroad accidents. According to the Transportation Department, there were 48 train wrecks between 1975 and 1985 resulting from drug or alcohol impairment. In those accidents 37 people died and 80 were injured.</p>
        <p>Japan Schedules Talks On Dollar</p>
        <p>TOKYO (AP) - Finance Minister Kiichi Miyazawa said today that he plans an emergency meeting with U.S. Treasury Secretary James Baker to discuss the surge of the yen against the dollar.</p>
        <p>Though we cannot write any scenario, we just cant sit here and waste time, Miyazawa told a news conference after todays Cabinet meeting.</p>
        <p>Yuko Kurihara, director general of the Defense Agency, said Miyazawa would leave Wednesday for the United States to discuss the soaring yen, which closed at a post-1949 low of 150.45 yen to the dollar on Monday.</p>
        <p>Miyazawa said the currency market situation was serious enough to require a meeting with Baker as stipulated in an agreement between the two officials announced last October.</p>
        <p>In that agreement, issued after the Bank of Japan cut its official discount rate to a record low of 3 oer-cent, Miyazawa and Baker pledged to cooperate in keeping the two currencies stable.</p>
        <p>The discount rate is the interest rate charged by the central bank in its loans to commercial banks.</p>
        <p>But the Miyazawa-Baker accord did not specify what level the two countries considered appropriate for the dollar and the yen. It generally was believed that they had an exchange rate of about 160 yen to the dollar in mind.</p>
        <p>Miyazawa declined to confirm local news reports there would be a meeting of the Group of Five - the</p>
        <p>United States, Japan, Britain, West Germany and France - in an attempt to stop the yens surge, which is causing export and employment problems in Japan.</p>
        <p>A stronger yen makes Japanese products more expensive overseas.</p>
        <p>At a meeting in New York in September 1985, the Group of Five agreed under U.S. pressure to decrease the dollars value from its rate at the time of 242 yen per dollar because of Americas huge trade deficit with Japan.</p>
        <p>The U.S. dollar plunged by 2.65 yen Monday on the Tokyo Foreign Exchange Market, closing at 150.45 yen, compared with its Friday closing of 153.10 yen. Today, the dollar rebounded to close at 152.25 yen in Tokyo.</p>
        <p>Mondays dollar closing was the lowest since the Japanese government set an official exchange rate of 360 yen to the dollar in April 1949 following a period of post-World War II fluctuations.</p>
        <p>The dollars previous post-1949 low was 153.05 yen per dollar, reached last Aug. 20.</p>
        <p>The high yen has slowed Japanese exports, eroded corporate earnings and forced many manufacturers to cut production and investments.</p>
        <p>PARROnCANUAS CO., INC.</p>
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        <p>West End Circle 756-4011</p>
        <p>ADJUSTING TO DIVORCE</p>
        <p>A Seminar For Separated/Divorced Man And Woman</p>
        <p>Topics; coping with problems and amotions, relating to ex-spouse, children of divorce, how to begin again.</p>
        <p>MARILYN HUBER, RN, MA</p>
        <p>Counselor for marital, sexual &amp;amp; divorce adjustment</p>
        <p>Beginning: Tuesday, Jan. 27 7:00-9:00 p.m.</p>
        <p>For Information or registration call 756-7766 or 758-6080</p>
        <p>4 Of &amp;lt;Sa[z...</p>
        <p>oPiVnan^</p>
        <p>Selected Groups Of All-Weather Coats And Top Coats</p>
        <p>1/2 off</p>
        <p>and lower</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0084" />
        <p>Editorials</p>
        <p>Sound Plan</p>
        <p>The Pitl County Commissioners appear to have done their homework before they proposed a new election plan for the board.</p>
        <p>The plan is a sound one because it incorpwrates members elected by both residency district and at-large. It provides for minority representation on the board by creating two predominantly blacjc districts but it protects the one-man, one-vote stipulation.</p>
        <p>The plan also keeps the board to a reasonable number  nine members  a most important measure.</p>
        <p>As public hearings on the issue get under way Wednesday and Thursday, the citizens should carefully consider these merits.</p>
        <p>Given the variables and the population distribution of Pitt County, the proposal is in the best interest of the county. Minorities should recognize the potential it affords them and other citizens should appreciate the protection it gives their concerns.</p>
        <p>By providing both at-large and residency district voting, the plan ensures that the county commission will remain balanced. The three at-large members  politically responsible to all the voters in the county  will keep the board from becoming a panel serving only the interests of their individual districts.</p>
        <p>On the other hand, by creating predominantly minority districts, the plan assures that minorities will have a visible voting voice when it comes to electing commissioners.</p>
        <p>Objections by local civil rights advocates to including some students from East Carolina University in one of the predominantly black districts is a nonissue. Students rarely, if ever, vote in local elections, and it is doubtful they could sway the outcome if they did. Further carving of election districts could destroy the integrity of the individual vote  a point which cannot be compromised.</p>
        <p>The county commission should proceed with its proposal. It must be thoroughly explained and defended at the six public hearings across the county.</p>
        <p>Public input, always important, should be considered, but commissioners should not abandon their pledge to a combination of at-large and residency voting. Nor should they increase the the number of representatives on the board.</p>
        <p>Those two changes could plunge the county back into provincialism that spells regression.Cody Shearer ^</p>
        <p>New Ideas For An Old Problem</p>
        <p>More Awareness</p>
        <p>Former National Security Adviser Robert McFarlane, himself a key figure in the Iran-Contra arms dealings, claims to be especially concerned about public interest in American foreign policy. He wants more.</p>
        <p>As a speaker at the Rochester Institute of Technology, McFarlane welcomed appearance of demonstrators at his lecture because it was a show of student interest in the shaping of foreign policy. One aspect of his address was the listing of three conditions that should be met before the United States backed groups to change their government by revolutionary means.</p>
        <p>The country must be vital to U.S. interests; the planned change must have support of the countrys population; and the attempt should have a good chance of success.</p>
        <p>He acknowledged those conditions were hard to meet, but the point was that there ought to be a list on how to deal with the problem. He had a good point.</p>
        <p>Our government looks with favor on some revolutionary movements and shuns others; sometimes we become involved and often do not. Still, a broad awareness as to how those decisions are reached is often absent. It is a shortcoming that should be remedied.</p>
        <p>The Daily Reflector</p>
        <p>INCORPORATED 209 Cotanche StrMt,</p>
        <p>Graanvilla, N.C. 27834</p>
        <p>Established 1882 Published Monday Through Friday Afternoon and Sunday Morning</p>
        <p>DAVID JULIAN WHICHARD. Chairman of the Board JOHN S. WHICHARD  DAVID J. WHICHARD. Publishers Second Class Postage Paid At Greenville, N C.</p>
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        <p>(Pricas Include lax where applicable)</p>
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        <p>MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to use for publication all news dispatches credited to It or not otherwise credited to this paper and also the local news published herein. All rights of publications of special dispatches here are also resenred.</p>
        <p>Advertising rates and deadlines available upon request Member Audit Bureau of Circulation.</p>
        <p>BOSTO.N  Massachusetts Gov. Michael Dukakis soul-serching ruminations over the awesome task he faces in deciding whether to seek the 1988 Democratic presidential nomination have been tantamount to an announcement of candidacy. Tired of New York neighbor Mario Cuomos flirtations with the race, Dukakis turned his recent inaugural into a bid for the status of Democratic governor to watch. The clearest sign was that the theme of the Duke's speech, bringing down the barriers to economic opportunity  drug abuse, teen iregnancy, school dropouts, il-iteracy and delinquent child support -- was lifted straight from the National Governors Associations latest</p>
        <p>platform. The group meets in Washington, D.C., next month to discuss economic strategy and welfare reform. Dukakis plainly hopes that he, not Mario Cuomo, will appear the standardbearer.</p>
        <p>Dukakis, 53, is among a group of neoliberal Democratic governors who stress fiscal responsibility, economic expansion - especially in high-tech industries  and public-private sector cooperation, leavened, as Boston Globe columnist Bob Kuttner dryly puts it, with a pinch of social justice. Massachusetts Employment Training (ET) program, which helps welfare mothers find work, has gotten national attention. Dukakis would be a new ideas candidate in 1988.</p>
        <p>To some, the governors leadership on the poverty issue seems ironic: Massachusetts is now contesting a court order which would require higher benefit levels for its 85,000 families on AFDC (Aid to Families With Dependent Children). The new-liberal recipe of budget balancing and compassion can be hard to follow. But, in fact, its precisely Dukakis problem with AFDC that should give us hope. Heres why.</p>
        <p>Look back at the five barriers to success that the National Governors Association and Dukakis cite. Which has the largest direct impact on poverty? School dropouts? Drugs, so much shouted over recently? Not even close.</p>
        <p>The biggest short-term source of</p>
        <p>LITTLE SHOP OF HORRORS</p>
        <p>poverty in the United States is lack of child support. According to my reporter Kyle Chadwick, the numbers are surprising.</p>
        <p>The fraction of American kids living in poverty, about one-fourth, is higher than that for any other group, including the elderly. Its often due to family composition. Seventy-three percent of all poor black families in 1985 were female-headed. And among all children who are stuck in poverty, about half are in singleparent families.</p>
        <p>The current system of providing financial support for these children, says Tom Corbett of the University of Wisconsin Institute for Research on Poverty, is not doing the job.</p>
        <p>Recent academic estimates say up to 75 percent of single mothers receive less than adequate child support. Women who have never married have it worst: 83 percent have no court-ordered settlements at all; 91 percent dont get a cent from the dad, settlement or no. Rich fathers are just as likely to welch as poor ones. But a Massachusetts study concluded last year found that nine out of 10 families on AFDC in that state would not be if child support were forthcoming.</p>
        <p>Now, none of this is new to policymakers. In 1984, Congress unanimously ordered states to Impound the wages and tax refunds of absent parents who fell more than a month behind in child-support payments. Last year, such collections are estimated to have transferred $3.2 billion to single-headed families of all income levels. In liberal Wisconsin, grandparents are liable for support; Massachusetts and New York also have particularly tough laws.</p>
        <p>But its still not enough. State collection bureaus are swamped with work. The irony is that experts agree if enough effort were expended on child-support collection, states could actually save millions of dollars on AFDC.</p>
        <p>Copyright 1987 News America Syndicate</p>
        <p> Sidney Schanberg</p>
        <p>Cambodians Still Forgotten People</p>
        <p>The world's attention span for disasters is usually not of much longer duration than th&amp;lt; headlines that generated the sympathetic interest in the first {ilaee (.ambodia is one of those major disasters that has just about fallen from public view.</p>
        <p>In truth, the small Southeast Asian nation was always an alter!bought for all the great powers, which have bt'en waging war then* in oiu* torm or another through surrogate armies - since 1970. Vietnam was the priority, CamfxKlia the country that was pulled into its wake.</p>
        <p>And, now. we have another demonstration of the (ainbodians as a forgotten people, Thailand has decided to close down the refugee camp that represented a last hope of resettlement abroad for Cambodians who had escaped their countrys misery and turmoil.</p>
        <p>It isnt that the camp, called Khao I Dang, is empty. Ihere are still 26,(KH Cambodian refugees in it. But Thailand has deeided that it has waited long enough for Western na tions to accept them and that it can no longer bear the burden of having a</p>
        <p>large, long-term refugee population on its soil.</p>
        <p>So many have only promised and have taken no action, said Prasong Soonsiri, the senior Thai official announced recently that Khao I Dang would soon be shut down.</p>
        <p>Unless something happens to alter this decision, the 26,000 people in this camp not far from the border with Cambodia, including many infants born there, will lose their legal status as refugees and become displaced persons - vulnerable pawns once again.</p>
        <p>Initially, these people will be moved even closer to the border to camps that are administered not by tne United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees but by the resistance groups that have been waging guerrilla war against the Vietnamese army and the client government it installed in Cambodia in 1979.</p>
        <p>^ The new arrivals will join 250,000 Cambodians who are already classified as displaced persons. These are people who have fled into Thailand in the last couple of years to escape the stepped-up fighting. (In</p>
        <p>addition to these Cambo-dians-without-a-country, there are perhaps 100,000 similarly displaced Laotians and a small number of Vietnamese.)</p>
        <p>The rose-colored notion behind the denial of refugee status is that these victims of the Indochina war can be returned to their nations of origin when conditions permit. That would require the restoration of something approaching normalcy in Cambodia. And that, in turn, would require all three great powers - China, the Soviet Union and the United States -to agree to make Cambodia a priority, something they have never done.</p>
        <p>So these hundreds of thousands of leople will likely remain in wretched imbo for years, maybe decades.</p>
        <p>The people of Khao I Dang were the last large group to have special status, protection from the displaced label. This was because these Cambodians, or at least most of them, had escaped into Thailand before August 1984  a deadline set by the Thai government, after which no one could be a legal refugee.</p>
        <p>Of the 26,000 in Khao I Dang, about</p>
        <p>Public Forum</p>
        <p>To the editor;</p>
        <p>1 think the insur;iiu'&amp;lt;' companies should pav the salaries of the commissioner of insurance and his staff because that is who the commission is working for and not for the citizens of N'ort h Carolina,</p>
        <p>.lames Patty Greenville</p>
        <p>To the editor:</p>
        <p>The movie Mercy or Murder'," aired .Ian, 11 raises several important issues.</p>
        <p>It is the story of Roswell Gilbert. 71. who was convicted of killing his terminally ill wife, Gilbert is serving a life sentence for the March. 198.'). shooting death of Emily, his wife of 51 years, .She suffered from .Alzheimers disease and osteoporosis.</p>
        <p>.As a chapter of \l/.heimer's Disease and Related Disorders A.ssociation i .ADHD.A). a national not-for-profit health organization dedicated to easing the burden and finding the cure' for .M/heimers disease, we recognize and are sensitive to the sometimes overwhelming emotional burdens AD families face each day. However, the ass(Kiation must also affirm the dignity and worth of all individuals. We n'cognize that the taking of another persons life, whether premeditated or otherwise, is against the law and cannot tx* tumdoned.</p>
        <p>We suggest that actions like Gilberts do not have to happtm Tmfay. the 2..5 million families of Alzheimer's uisea.se ha\ e a choice l&amp;gt;etween coping alone or learning to live with the disease - ADRDA. What started six years ago with a small group, twlay is 159 chapters and more than 1.000 support groups strong nationwide.</p>
        <p>We are a network of ;10.000 volunteers. We provide information and support to those who care for a loved one with AD.</p>
        <p>Yet a broader issue is the need for establishing a system to provide for the long-term care of the people in our area and nationwide who are part of the Graying of America. By the year 2000, more than 17 million people over 75 will need some form of long-term care.</p>
        <p>I hope you will join us in communicating to your</p>
        <p>readers that there is a resource in our community for those having a loved one with Alzheimers disease.</p>
        <p>Brent Heiser, exec, director ADRD.A-Eastern N.C. Chapter 1033 Wade Ave., Suite 207 Raleigh</p>
        <p>To the editor:</p>
        <p>As a Sadie Saulter parent. I cannot stay silent; In my sons three years at Sadie Saulter. our experience has been very positive. We have been very impressed with the fine teachers, support staff and principal. They are a very qualified, dedicated and caring faculty. And this is truly a compliment to Sadie Saulter.</p>
        <p>Sadie Saulter parents care - and are concerned. We care that inequalities exist at our school (and Third Street School) that do not exist elsewhere in our merged school system. How can our school board and school system allow such inequality to continue?</p>
        <p>Point No. 1, Racial Inbalance. Our sons classes at Sadie Saulter are now 75 percent black, 25 percent white. With the new school lines, four new classrooms are earmarked for Sadie Saulter, six new classrooms at Third Street, six new at Eastern and four new at Elmhurst. They propose, however, that construction at Eastern and Elmhurst begin in this new year, while they do not recommend the construction at Sadie Saulter and Third Street until the following year. Why so? Presently, expansion has begun at W H. Robinson and the new school is to open in the fall.</p>
        <p>Again, why are we treated differently? If we are the most crowded, why are we not the first building priority?</p>
        <p>We parents of Sadie Saulter only ask to be treated fairly and equitably. We ask our school board, superintendent of schools and all Pitt County citizens to address  and correct - these inequalities.</p>
        <p>Joelly n C. Cohen Greenville</p>
        <p>Submissions to the Public Forum should consist of no more than 300 words and sh&amp;lt;mid deal with public issues. The editor reserves the right to cut longer letters. Signatures and phone numbers should be included on all letters.</p>
        <p>16.000 are legal refugees. There is an in-between group of some 6,000 who were allowed in and given ration cards but did not qualify for fidl refugee status. And then there are about</p>
        <p>4.000 who are listed as having slipped into the camp illegally.</p>
        <p>Masked by these cold bureaucratic labels is the fact that manv of these people have relatives in tne United States, France and other countries -family members who escaped to Thailand before them and achieved resettlement when the regulations were more relaxed  and therefore have legitimate claims to get out of the camps and rejoin them now. Legitimate, that is, unless you determine a persons right to freedom by the date of his escape from oppression.</p>
        <p>No one has precise figures, but responsible relief officials estimate that perhaps 30,000 of the Cambodians in Khao I Dang and other camps qualify, through family connections and other rational criteria, for resettlement.</p>
        <p>Los Angeles Times-Washington Post News Service</p>
        <p> Elisha Douglas </p>
        <p>Strength</p>
        <p>For</p>
        <p>*</p>
        <p>Today</p>
        <p>A little girl, who was asked to describe the Bible, said it begins with Genesis and ends with revolutions.</p>
        <p>This answer is much more accurate than might at first seem to be the case. Religion that does not produce some kind of revolution is a poor kind of religion.</p>
        <p>If the religion we profess does not bring about a revolution in our lives, then it is not worth professing. The gospel of Christ sets worldly ideals on their heads. True Christianity not only turns the world upside down; it turns the person upside down who practices it.</p>
        <p>What a person held before as the most important things in life now seem valueless, '^e Christian then begins to live in a different world.</p>
        <p>If people read their Bibles in the hope that the Word of Gk)d would produce a revolution, they would derive more inspiration from them.</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0085" />
        <p>Ernest Conine </p>
        <p>Just how much money is enough for the nations defense? The answer depends on your view of the world and of the role of military power in maintaining peace and protecting U.S. interests and democratic values. It also depends on the political popularity of other, non-military, demands on the Treasurys piggy bank.</p>
        <p>From where military planners sit, the defense budget is never large enough. But if the world was really as benign a place as many Pentagon critics seem to think, we wouldnt need a military establishment at all. Public and congressional perceptions as to the appropriate balance have varied wildly over the years.</p>
        <p>President Keagans proposed new defense budget is $312 billion - a 3 percent increase after inflation over</p>
        <p>Tough Choices For The Nation On Defense</p>
        <p>the amount approved by Congress last year. Thats a tall pile of money no matter how you count it, and there is little question that most members of the Democratic-run100th Congress are in a mood to cut it.</p>
        <p>Its worth noting, however, that Chairman Sam Nunn, D-Ga., of the Senate Armed Services Committee has pointedly refrained from joining them.</p>
        <p>Ni^ is the most knowledgeable and influential Democrat on military issuf on Capitol Hill. He is also a possible contender for the presidency in 1988.</p>
        <p>The Georgian recognizes that the defense budget cannot be sacrosanct in an era of huge federal budget deficits. But in a recent television interview he made it clear that he finds more fault with how the Pentagon</p>
        <p>Analysis</p>
        <p>proposes to spend the money than with the bottom-line total.</p>
        <p>I think the president and secretary of defense have presented a legitimate defense budget this year, he said. It will be taken seriously by our committee.</p>
        <p>It will be interesting to see whether Nunns calm, nonpartisan approach prevails with his fellow Democrats.</p>
        <p>A little perspective is in order.</p>
        <p>Defense budgets during the last years of the Eisenhower administration, well after the Korean War ended, averaged close to 10 percent of gross national product. The figure</p>
        <p>was still more than 7 percent in 1965, before the massive U.S. involvement in Vietnam.</p>
        <p>In the post-Vietnam atmosphere, military spending steadily declined until, in 1979, it bottomed out below 5 percent of GNP. During the late 1970s, however, the impression grew both at home and abroad that the pendulum had swung too far, that America was projecting an image of weakness that was tempting the Soviets to do things like invade Afghanistan and use surrogate Cuban troops to promote Marxist governments in Africa.</p>
        <p>Reagan entered office promising to restore a favorable U.S.-Soviet balance of power. Congress, reading the election returns, voted doubledigit increases in military spending for the first couple of years, and imposed only modest restraint for a time thereafter.</p>
        <p>Even so, it is important to understand that military spending during the Reagan administration has never gone much over 6 percent of GNP -a respectably low level, by historical standards.</p>
        <p>Under the effect of a frightening budget deficit and horror stories about waste in defense procurement, public enthusiasm for military spending has waned. In the last two years Congress hacked about $50 billion from his defense-budget requests in order to allow much smaller cuts in domestic spending programs.</p>
        <p>This year the administration finally bowed to political reality. The new budget request is $8 billion less than what the Pentagon wanted last year, and is actually smaller than the request for fiscal 1985.</p>
        <p>Many congressional Democrats are talking in terms of cutting the defense budget back to zero growth in real, inflation-adjusted terms, or &amp;gt;erhaps even lower. It may happen, )ut no one should imagine that there wont be real consequences. Each services would have to choose between investment in new weapons and readiness for combat with the weapons that it already has.</p>
        <p>Either way, the power and effectiveness of the U.S. armed forces would unavoidably deteriorate over time - es^ially if the Pentagon isnt forced to make the kind of choices that Nunn insists it should make.</p>
        <p>^ Roger Morris </p>
        <p>Haig's Tracks Are All Over U.S. Policy</p>
        <p>There is a specter hanging over the Iran-contras affair, a familiar apparition of gravel voice and craggy good looks whose haunting significance in the scandal has scarcely been noticed. The ghost in the Reagan rafters is Alexander Meigs Haig Jr. - one-time National Security Council staff deputy to Henry A. Kissinger, White House chief of staff for Richard M. Nixon and, in 1981-82, Ronald Reagans first secretary of state.</p>
        <p>Haig apparently played no direct role in the seamy sale of weapons to the Iranians and the raking off of the deals excess profits to arm the Nicaraguan rebels. Having resigned from the administration in a huff more than four years ago after a stormy tenure in the State Department, he is busily running for the GOP presidential nomination in 1988 and solemnly deploring what he calls a lack of foreign-policy discipline.</p>
        <p>Yet to look beneath the public surface of the scandal is to find Haig as an early co-conspirator at almost every turn. The outspoken, ever-ambitious general accounts for much of the personnel, the bureaucratic style and the dubious policy behind the debacle. Understanding the connection ought to raise questions not only about Haigs presidential candidacy but also about the deeper his-to^ and meaning of the unfolding crisis.</p>
        <p>To begin with, Haig is the patron, in spirit and in fact, of the can-do.</p>
        <p>tragically uninformed military officers who have been at the center of the Iran-contra imbroglio. In 1969-70 A1 Haig was another obscure military officer in the bowels of the NSC. In rising shrewdly from intelligence briefer and clerk to become Kissingers deputy and Nixons favorite house soldier, from colonel to four-star general, he paved the way, made the White House West Wing safe, for the military caste that has so largely usurped civilian authority and dominated the NSCs crucial advisory role ever since.</p>
        <p>Haig brought Marine Col. Robert C. McFarlane into the inner circle of Reagans foreign policy - first as counselor at the State Department, then as NSC deputy. From there McFarlane went on to be the presidents national-security adviser and an author and emissary of the Iranian arms deal. McFarlanes successor at the NSC, Vice Adm. John M. Poindexter, was another shadow protege of the general, with ties dating back to Poindexters tenure in the Pentagon during the Nixon years, and Haigs still unexcavated role with the White House Plumbers.</p>
        <p>Even the ubiquitous Lt. Col. Oliver L. North owes his now-tarnished celebrity in part to Haig, whose ally and confidant. Navy Secretary John Lehman, snatched the zealous North out of Marine staff obscurity in 1981 and arranged his assignment to the NSC staff. Not least, there is a key civilian in the story, Georgetown ac</p>
        <p>ademic Michael Ledeen, who played a crucial and yet-to-be-explored role in the disastrous overtures to Tehran. Ledeen first came into the drama Tinder the cachet of  you guessed it - Alexander Haig.</p>
        <p>Haigs influence hardly stops with the new old-boy network of former cadets running the Reagan foreign policy, important as that society has become in Washington. The very style of the scandal is vintage Haig as well. If there were ever a prototype for the escapades of Ollie North, it was Alexander Haig in the 1970s, sallying forth from the NSC to help select targets for the bombing of Cambodia, dispense military aid and other largess to foreign governments, and alternately mollify or bully troublesome clients like South Vietnams President Nguyen Van Thieu.</p>
        <p>At home, Haig - along with Kissinger - was an architect and expert practitioner of the bureaucratic furtiveness and rivalry that long ago poisoned the relationship between the NSC and the rest of government. And as Reagans secretary of state he brought to the administration of this genial if distracted president the added in-fighting and back-biting that finally propelled the NSC out of control. In very real ways the structure of foreign wlicy now collapsing around Reagan s head was built by Haig.</p>
        <p>Finally, and more subtly, we also are witnessing the awful toll of</p>
        <p>Haigs own policies in the Middle East and Central America. His approving wink if not active connivance in the Israeli invasion of Lebanon in 1982, his willingness to leave U.S. diplomacy and intelligence hostage to Israeli policy and perspective, set in motion the whole tragic sequence from the dispatch of the Marines to Beirut to the catastrophic attack on their barracks, the U.S. shelling of Moslem positions in the city, the</p>
        <p>seizure of American hostages, the weapons ransom to Iran, and on and on. It was Haig who in 1981 reportedly gave the first green light for the Israeli shipment of military parts to the government of the Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini.</p>
        <p>Meanwhile, back in this hemisphere, it was Haig who at the outset formed and fixed the administrations obsessive hostility to the San-dinistas and the Salvadoran rebels.</p>
        <p>instigating the CIA proxy wars that the Iranian arms deal was to bankroll.</p>
        <p>Roger Morris worked on the senior staff of the National Security Council under presidents Johnson and Nixon, and is the author of books on Henry A. Kissinger and Alexander M. Haig Jr. He is completing the first of a two-volume biography of Richard M. Nixon.</p>
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        <p>NATIONAL JAYCEE WEEK</p>
        <p>JAN. 18-24</p>
        <p>1986-1987 GREENVILLE JAYCEES BOARD OF DIRECTORS</p>
        <p>PRESIDENT - RUFUS WALSTON ADM. V.P. - ROBERT WILKERSON INDIVIDUAL DEVELOPMENT VP - MICHIE FAULCONER MANAGEMENT DEVELOPMENT VP - RICK CANNON COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT VP  PHIL TRULL SECRETARY/STATE DIRECTOR  KEN SMITH TREASURER - CLYDE NAYLOR ASSISTANT TREASURER - DOUG DANIEL PAST PRESIDENT - JEFF ALLEN</p>
        <p>DIRECTORS - TOM JOHNSON</p>
        <p>KEN MOOREFIELD RICH MORRISON WILLIAM MORTON TOM BULLARD PARLIAMENTARIAN - BILLY PATE</p>
        <p>Left to right: Robert Wllkerson, Michie Faulconer, Rufus Walston, Phil Trull and Rick Cannon.</p>
        <p>GREENVILLE JAYCEE MEMBERSHIP ROSTER</p>
        <p>EUGENE LANGFORD PHIL KAYLOR JOHN BEACH RICK COLEMAN ROBERT MOSER CONNIE PRICE</p>
        <p>PETE HAMBIDGE JACK MORGAN, JR. DENNY PURSER TIM EDWARDS BILL BURNETT WAYNE CRAWFORD</p>
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        <p>STEVE NAYLOR TERRY WHITFORD PHILIP GORDON TOM HYLTON</p>
        <p>UNITED STATES JAYCEE AMBASSADORS</p>
        <p>JAYCEE INTERNATIONAL SENATORS</p>
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        <p>GENE PRESCOTT TOM REESE HAL SMITH BRAD WALLS</p>
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        <pb facs="00096520_0086" />
        <p>A-6 The Dally Reflector, Greenville. N.C.</p>
        <p>Tuesday. January 20.1987</p>
        <p>Economic Study Cites Funding Need For Development Of Rural Counties</p>
        <p>By The Associated Press</p>
        <p>Rural counties are often hamstrung in economic development by a lack of start-up money, a shortage of information for entrepreneurs and a reliance on outmoded industrial recruiting techniques, a new study says.</p>
        <p>The report, based on case studies of Hertford, Richmond and Jackson counties in North Carolina, points out some of the problems that are producing economic stagnation throughout the South, said George Autry, president of MDC in Chapel Hill, the company that produced the study.</p>
        <p>The three counties are neither unusually blessed or depressed, Autry said in an interview. They are relatively typical for their areas of the state.</p>
        <p>The report identifies the scope of the problem</p>
        <p>in North Carolina, the barriers to economic growth in our rural areas, and what can be done to overcome those barriers, he said.</p>
        <p>The full report, prepared for the North Carolina Commission on Jobs and Economic Growth, also examines the role of political and business leaders in helping or hindering economic growth, Autry said. The full report is scheduled to be released next week.</p>
        <p>Autry has argued for more than a year against attempts to recruit manufacturing companies with large work forces from outside a county or state.</p>
        <p>The case studies show ways local leaders can work together to strengthen a countys economy.</p>
        <p>In Hertford County, for example, officials have formed a business incubator that provides sup</p>
        <p>port services for new businesses that have little money of their own.</p>
        <p>In Jackson County, local officials are trying to revitalize the small town of Dillsboro by creating a marketing center for area craftsmen.</p>
        <p>In Richmond County, local officials successfully promoted a bond issue to pay for new library and computer facilities for the local community college  a necessary step to prepare the work force for the future.</p>
        <p>Autry said his researchers found that existing resources, particularly state programs, were not being used as they could by business people in small towns and rural areas.</p>
        <p>We think the state needs to find ways to take the resources it already has and make them available to rural areas, he said.</p>
        <p>Martin, Jordan Differ On Plans For Naming School Superintendent</p>
        <p>AUTOPSY SCHEDULED  A .SS-foot sperm whale is being kept afloat in a slip at the Hatteras Inlet Coast Guard Station after being discovered dead in the inlet. The whale is to be examined by a Smithsonian Institution team that planned to conduct an autopsy to determine its cause of death. (AP Laser-photo)</p>
        <p>Sperm Whale Found Dead At Hatteras</p>
        <p>WINSTON-SALEM (AP) - The states two highest elected officials agree that the state school superintendent needs to be appointed rather than elected, but disagree on how that change should take place.</p>
        <p>Gov. Jim Martin, Lt. Gov, Bob Jordan and state school Superintendent Craig Phillips were in Winston-Salem Monday as part of the three-day 1987 Winter Leadership Conference for local school superintendents and school board chairmen.</p>
        <p>Jordan, a Democrat, said he supports a Senate plan that calls for the superintendent to be appointed by the State Board of Education, which in turn would be appointed by the gov-</p>
        <p>ever going to change the system during my lifetime, it will be in 1987, he said.</p>
        <p>Martin, a Republican, told the Greensboro News &amp;amp; Record he agrees with the concept of an appointed superintendent, but said the Senate plant does not allow the governor enough influence.</p>
        <p>People expect the governor to be an educational leader, Martin said, someone who can get things done.</p>
        <p>By allowing the governor to appoint only eight of the 14 school board members, the governors influence is diminished considerably, he said.</p>
        <p>The governor must be able to appoint a clear majority, Martin said.</p>
        <p>Under the current system, the governor appoints 11 of 13 members of the State Board of Education, and the superintendent is elected by a statewide vote. The board then ap</p>
        <p>points a controller to handle the systems finances.</p>
        <p>Jordan said the superintendent needs to be insulated from the governors office. Allowing the governor eight appointments  a slim majority - would help protect future superintendents who would be in danger of losing their jobs every time a new governor comes to office and appoints board members.</p>
        <p>ernorand Genera</p>
        <p>Assembly.</p>
        <p>HATTERAS, N.C. (AP) - A 55-foot, 50-ton sperm whale found dead in Hatteras Inlet over the weekend will be examined by scientists from the Smithsonian Institution, who say this is the first time a mature whale has washed up on the North Carolina shores.</p>
        <p>Its a very rare occurrence. When they die, they usually just disappear, said Jim Mead, curator of the Smithsonians marine mammals division. Mead and three other researchers hope to preserve the entire skeleton for future study.</p>
        <p>Several of them have washed ashore in the last 20 years, but theyve all been calves or females, Mead said. This is the first record we have of a fully mature male washing up in North Carolina, </p>
        <p>The only other male sperm whale to wash up in the state was in 1928 at Wrightsville Beach, Mead said. Its skeleton hangs in the states Museum of Natural History in Raleigh.</p>
        <p>The animal was spotted about 12:30 p.m. Sunday as it rolled through Hatteras Inlet, said Petty Officer D.F. ONeal of the Cape Hatteras Coast Guard Station. Crewmen on the ferry Ocracoke reported it as looking ill and moving sluggishly Sunday.</p>
        <p>The whale was dead by the time rescuers reached it. Scientists say the animal probably died of natural causes since it was fully mature.</p>
        <p>probably 20 to 40 years old, and had no visible wounds.</p>
        <p>We took it to the station because it was both an unusual occurrence and because we knew there were Smithsonian people in the area, said Daniel Picciotto, a Coast Guard first mate and officer of the day at Hatteras Inlet. A Smithsonian researcher had been on Hatteras Island Sunday studying porpoises and examined the whale before alerting others in Washington.</p>
        <p>Some 500 people came to the tip of Hatteras Island Monday to gaze at the creature.</p>
        <p>Moby Dick was a sperm whale, Mead said. "The shape has always impressed me as an animated boxcar, square and chunky. The skin is wrinkled, and its the only whale that has teeth.</p>
        <p>The sperm whale, which feeds on squid, also has a heart that weighs nearly half a ton.</p>
        <p>Deterioration already has begun inside the whale and will probably render the carcass unusable for research. Mead said. Parasites and other organisms that would have given clues about how the whale died will probably be gone, he said.</p>
        <p>Most male whales are found in New England, and few venture closer than 40 miles to shore. Mead speculates it died at sea and drifted in on the currents and tides.</p>
        <p>According to the proposed constitutional amendment, which died in the House in 1985 after being passed by the Senate, eight members of the board would be appointed by the governor, four by the General Assembly and two  the lieutenant governor and state treasurer  would serve by virtue of their office.</p>
        <p>Phillips was elected in 1984 and already has said he would not seek re-election next year. Since there will be no incumbent, Jordan said now is the time to make the change. If were</p>
        <p>Task Force Says Schools For Deaf Should Merge</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP) - A state task force has recommended that high school programs for the deaf should be eliminated at Wilson and Morgan-ton by 1991, and all residential education for the deaf should be consolidated in Greensboro by the end of the century.</p>
        <p>By an 18-3 vote Monday, the task force recommended that Central</p>
        <p>Robeson Schools Consider Merger</p>
        <p>North Carolina School for the Deaf in Greensboro become the states only residential high school for the deaf in July 1991. The task force said a single residential school should be developed byu 2000.</p>
        <p>The Greensboro school currently offers classes in preschool through eighth grade, and its high school students go to Wilson or Morganton.</p>
        <p>The consolidation will require about $7.3 million in extra buildings</p>
        <p>to house about 170 high school students on the 75-acre Greensboro campus, and $150,000 for vans to transport students.</p>
        <p>But state officials say it would save the state about $600,000 a year in operating costs.</p>
        <p>I think its a step forward for pro-vidinjg top-notch education to our hearing-impaired students, said state Sen. James Ezzell, D-Nash, one of the 23 members on the task force.</p>
        <p>LUMBERTON, N.C. (AP) - Three of the five school boards in Robeson County have agreed to send representatives to the first meeting of a committee designed to draw up plans to merge the countys school systems.</p>
        <p>The Robeson County Board of Commissioners set up the committee last week and asked chairmen of the five school boards and five county commissioners to participate.</p>
        <p>The Robeson County system and the city school systems in Fairmont</p>
        <p>Nuclear Plant Is Operational</p>
        <p>NEW HILL, N.C. (AP) - The Shearon Harris Nuclear Power Plant l)tgan operating for the first time Monday night but was to be shut down hours later as part of ongoing testing at the plant.</p>
        <p>The plant Ix'gan producing electricity for Carolina Power &amp;amp; Light Co. customers at 9:47 p.m., CP&amp;amp;L spokesman Mac Harris said. During the initial power production, the plant will produce between 50,000 and 100,000 kilowatts, or 5 to 10 percent of the unit's capacity of 900.000 kilowatts.</p>
        <p>"The milestone of this is that its the first time that electricity has been produced from nuclear fuel at the Harris plant. Harris said.</p>
        <p>During the testing, the plant will Ir' brought up to various power levels, tested at those levels and shut down, Harris said.</p>
        <p>When the testing is completed, the unitwill become part of the (P&amp;amp;L generating system that supplies power to more than 860.000 customers in North Carolina and South Carolina.</p>
        <p>CP&amp;amp;L owns 83 percent of the plant</p>
        <p>and the Eastern N.C. Municipal Power Agency owns 17 percent.</p>
        <p>CP&amp;amp;L received the full-power license from the Nuclear Regulatory Commission last week but delayed starting the $3.8 billion reactor after problems were discovered with an emergency cooling system for heating and ventilation equipment</p>
        <p>and with a backup water pump for one of the plants tnree steam generators.</p>
        <p>The cooling system for the heating and ventilation equipment was fixed Tuesday, and Harris said the emergency water pump for the generator was fixed Saturday.</p>
        <p>and Red Springs have agreed to attend. The St. Pauls Board of Education on Saturday rejected participation on the committee.</p>
        <p>The Lumberton Board of Education has not acted on the matter, but school officials say its chairman is likely to attend.</p>
        <p>Plans drawn up by the committee would be submitted to the General Assembly, which would, in turn, be asked to set up a countywide referendum on the merger question.</p>
        <p>The Robeson County school system has endorsed merging the five school systems in the county, while the city systems have traditionally opposed merger.</p>
        <p>County Commissioner Jack Morgan, chairman of the merger committee, said the city systems are now more willing to participate because commissioners have made clear their determination to settle the merger question.</p>
        <p>The commissioners voted not to approve additional funds for school construction and repair until the merger question was settled.</p>
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        <p>Drug Raid</p>
        <p>NEWTON, N.C. (AP) - Catawba County authorities arrested more than three dozen suspected drug dealers Monday after a 10-month undercover operation targeted at higher-level traffickers.</p>
        <p>A Catawba County Grand Jury last week indicted 52 alleged drug dealers on 206 charges of drug trafficking, drug possession with intent to sell and conspiracy after the investigation by the Catawba County Sheriffs</p>
        <p>Department and State Bureau of Investigation narcotics agents.</p>
        <p>Authorities began arrests at 6 a.m. By 4:30 p.m. Monday, authorities had rounded up 37 of the suspects. During the arrests, made without incident, authorities seized drug paraphernalia and some weapons.</p>
        <p>In the operation, code-named Operation Wipe Out, agents spent more than $75,000 on purchases of cocaine, LSD and marijuana, said sheriffs Maj. Richard Cannon, The drugs have a street value of more than $225,000, he said.</p>
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        <pb facs="00096520_0087" />
        <p>IN THE STATE</p>
        <p>Panel Backs Cap On Jury Award</p>
        <p>Schools Cited</p>
        <p>CHARLOHE (AP) - For West Charlotte High School, glory arrived in a 40-second segment on a network news show that used the integrated school as an example of a place where the teachings of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. are being practiced.</p>
        <p>ABC News Monday selected Charlotte as a city where the desegregation of public schools has been peaceful and fruitful.</p>
        <p>In a report on racial attitudes in the 1980s, ABCs World News Tonight</p>
        <p>contrasted West Charlotte with a predominantly white high school in Dearborn, Mich., and a predominantly black high school in Detroit.</p>
        <p>Fire Rescue</p>
        <p>BURLINGTON (AP)  Police and fire officials say some of the nine residents saved from a burning Burlington boarding house probably would have died if two police officers and another resident had not fought their way into the blaze.</p>
        <p>No one died in the fire, but five people were injured including resident Walter Edwards, 29, and 0^ ficers Joe King and Bennie Bradley. Others injured were Joseph B. Poston, 67, and Howard Barnes, 41, also residents of the house.</p>
        <p>All were treated for injuries including cuts, bruises and smoke inhalation and released from the two</p>
        <p>Alamance County hospitals. Poston suffered from second- and third-</p>
        <p>degree burns.</p>
        <p>Ten residents lived at the house and were left homeless after the fire Sunday.</p>
        <p>Missing Plane</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP) - Military officials at the Cherry Point Marine base have identified a marine who died and another who was listed as missing after their jet crashed into the Mediterranean Sea over the weekend.</p>
        <p>Pilot Capt. Miguel I. Gonzalez Jr. of Laredo, Texas, was recovered about 12 hours after the A-6 Intruder crashed into the sea, said Maj. Dennis Brooks, a public affairs officer at Cherry Point. Gonzalez was suf</p>
        <p>fering from severe hypothermia and died af</p>
        <p>other injuries and died after extensive medical efforts, said Capt. Craig Fisher, a Marine Corps spokesman.</p>
        <p>The search is continuing for the bombardier navigator, 1st Lt. Robert J. Cox, Brooks said.</p>
        <p>The plane was from Marine Attack Squadron 533, based in Cherry Point, and was on a training mission in the western Mediterranean with the USS John F. Kennedy aircraft carrier.</p>
        <p>Hydro Plant</p>
        <p>GREENSBORO (AP) - A hydroelectric plant will be built at the B. Everett Jordan Lake in Chatham County by late 1988, and will sell the energy it generates to Carolina Power &amp;amp; Light Co. for more than $1 million a year, according to a spokesman for a New York company.</p>
        <p>Catalyst Energy Corp. also hopes to renovate a facility at the Eury Dam in Montgomery County to generate hydroelectric power, said Christopher Kysar, associate development principal for the firm.</p>
        <p>The Jordan Lake plant, expected to be a 10-megawatt facility, would generate about 40 million kilowatt hours of electricity a year, Kysar said. That is enough to provide power for about 4,000 homes annually, he said.</p>
        <p>The much smaller Montgomery County plant would generate about 2.3 million kilowatt hours a year, he said.</p>
        <p>Tainted Hams</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP)  Consumers</p>
        <p>should make sure that any hams they buy are properly labeled, packaged</p>
        <p>and packed after 471 hams being held due to possible contamination were stolen, state Agriculture Department officials said Monday.</p>
        <p>Dr. Claud Carraway, director of the meat and poultry inspection service, said the hams were removed from Simmons Country Hams, where they were being retained because of an anonymous telephone call concerning possible adulteration.</p>
        <p>Randomly selected hams were analyzed by health officials, but because the safety of all the hams could not be guaranteed, the hams were condemned and scheduled for disposal.</p>
        <p>Food Bank</p>
        <p>WILMINGTON (AP) - The New Hanover County Board of Commissioners gave the Food Bank of the tower Cape Fear a one-time allocation of $5,000 to administer a distribution program for surplus commodities, only to find that there may be no program to administer.</p>
        <p>The N.C. Department of Agriculture announced that President Reagan has ordered funds for administering the program - which</p>
        <p>provides free cheese, butter, corn-meal and other commodities to needy families  be cut off in April. Unless the order is changed. North Carolina will not accept shipments of the^ surplus food after Jan. 31, said Bill Ray, director of the distribution program for the state Agriculture Department.</p>
        <p>Ray said he received word of the presidential directive late last week. The New Hanover County Commissioners didnt know that Monday when they turned the program over to the food bank, nor aid officials of the Department of Social Services, which had previously been responsible for distribution.</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP)  A legislative panel studying liability insurance has agreed on a split vote to seek a limit of $250,000 on jury awards for noneconomic damages like pain and suffering.</p>
        <p>The Liability and Property Insurance Markets Study Commission agreed to the cap on a 5-4 vote Monday despite complaints by representatives of the North Carolina State Bar Association that such limits would be unfair.</p>
        <p>In a 5-4 vote, the Liability and Property Insurance Markets Study Commission agreed to urge the 1987 General Assembly to prohibit damages of more than $250,000 for noneconomic damages such as pain and suffering.</p>
        <p>In addition to the cap, the panel also tentatively agreed to seek legislation that would make local governments immune to claims for punitive damages and would limit to $100,000 the total damages juries could assess against. Other proposed legislation would abolish the principal of joint and several liability for non-economic and economic</p>
        <p>damages in cases where the defendant was less than 25 percent responsible for the damages, and allow courts to spread out damage payments of $250,000 or more.</p>
        <p>Some lawmakers remained doubtful about whether lawmakers will look favorably on major changes in the legal system unless there is some guarantee that insurance rates will fall.</p>
        <p>I would want to know if it would lower the rates, House Speaker Liston Ramsey said. If it is not going to lower the rates, there is no use doing it. But if it will lower the rates, it is certainly worth considering.</p>
        <p>operating fairly and no major changes are needed.</p>
        <p>The bar association overwhelmingly believes it is absolutely and totally unfair to impose arbitrarily a limit on the amount of damages that someone could recover for pain and siSfering,</p>
        <p>simply l^ause its only in the most egregioi</p>
        <p> i incurred, that</p>
        <p>cases, where severe bodily injury l__________,_____</p>
        <p>those caps were likely to approach, John Beard, association president, told the panel.</p>
        <p>Lt. Gov. Bob Jordan has previously said he does not see a major coalition forming to push for the reforms.</p>
        <p>Most committee members agreed that plaintiffs still could recover economic damages for injuries and loss of wages and that a non-economic limit of $250,000 would be fair.</p>
        <p>The $250,000 limit would apply to any civil action to recover damages for noneconomic losses to</p>
        <p>Mondays committee action came after a debate in which some bar association officials said lawmakers should not approve damage ca because the states civil justice system is</p>
        <p>compensate for pain and suffering, physical im-alai  </p>
        <p>pairment, inental anguish, loss of capacity for enjoyment of life, and other damages that cannot be proven to have specific economic value, the committee decided.</p>
        <p>Bus Wreck</p>
        <p>Louisburg College To Mark Bicentennial</p>
        <p>WILKESBORO, N.C. (AP) - A chartered bus lost its brakes on a mountain near here and plowed into an emergency sandpile, injuring 12 members of a church youth group returning to Florida, authorities said.</p>
        <p>The group of teen-agers from Eniscoi</p>
        <p>Grace Episcopal Church in Ocala, Fla., was returning Sunday on U.S. 421 from a ski trip at Ski Hawksnest in Watauga County, said Edward DAvi, a leader of the group.</p>
        <p>David W. Gould, 28, of Cocoa, Fla., the driver for the charter company, Christian Fellowship in Action Inc. of Titusville, Fla., has been charged with exceeding a safe speed, authorities said.</p>
        <p>LOUISBURG, N.C. (AP) -Louisburg College officials are planning a big celebration when the nations oldest church-related junior college has its 200th birthday. In fact, theyve been planning for the bicentennial since Louisburg had its 175th anniversary.</p>
        <p>We observed Founders Day back then, but nothing like what were doing for the bicentennial, says Sarah E. Foster, a former instructor who came out of retirement to organize a Founders Day convocation to be held Saturday.</p>
        <p>what eventually became Louisburg College.</p>
        <p>On a tract of land that was once the town commons, four schools have stood. Franklin Mens Academy, originally chartered in 1787, was so successful when it held its first classes in 1805 or 1806 that a Womens</p>
        <p>Academy later opened across the street. The schools coexisted for sev</p>
        <p>eral years, but the womens branch enjoyed higher attendance and eventually became Louisburg Female College. The mens academy closed around 1900.</p>
        <p>The college will be celebrating the 200th birthday of the charter of Franklin Mens Academy, Franklin Countys first school, and the start of</p>
        <p>To survive the grip of the Depression, the womens college started ac</p>
        <p>cepting men in 1931 and changed its name to Louisburg College. Today</p>
        <p>the school consists of about 25 buildings and has about 800 male and female students.</p>
        <p>Ms. Foster said there have been a few changes at the private, two-year college supported by the United Methodist Church since she came there in 1945 to teach music.</p>
        <p>For instance, as a leftover from the days when the college was Louisburg Female College, female students in the mid-1940s werent allowed to travel into town unchaperoned. Today, students keep cars on the oak-shaded campus, coming and going as they please. More than 600 live in the five dorms scattered over the grounds, which sit squarely in the middle of a state-designated historic district.</p>
        <p>Officials say Louisburg, whose tu</p>
        <p>ition is about $6,000 a year including</p>
        <p>housing, has something special to fer.</p>
        <p>Students can expect some attention here, said Allen de Hart, the schools director of public affairs. The classes are small, averaging about 22 to 24 per class. The ratio of students to teachers is about 20 to one. That statistic alone says students here can get special help if they need it.</p>
        <p>The strength of a junior college is that its designed for the student who wants a four-year degree but needs a bridge between high school and a large university, de Hart said.</p>
        <p>TheThm%u11 UkeMost</p>
        <p>About</p>
        <p>inmgi</p>
        <p>OurW</p>
        <p>ome Equity Loan</p>
        <p>Is Havinglb Bay The Inteiest</p>
        <p>Because the interest is all you have to pay until a home equity oan from NCNB reaches maturity</p>
        <p>LineOne Equity is a revolving line of credit based on the equity in a home. And its one of the few consumer loans for which interest deductions may still be allowable under the new tax law But its different from most other home equity loans in that it allows you to pay as little or as much of the principal each month as you choose.\bu even have the option of only paying the interest each month.</p>
        <p>And thats a big plus, which can be seen from the chart shown below.</p>
        <p>line Of Credit Monthly Rqiayment Schedule.</p>
        <p>.Credit</p>
        <p>Amount</p>
        <p>NCNB</p>
        <p>Bank A</p>
        <p>BankB</p>
        <p>BankC</p>
        <p>$10,000</p>
        <p>$71</p>
        <p>$150</p>
        <p>$170</p>
        <p>$300</p>
        <p>$20,000</p>
        <p>$142</p>
        <p>$300</p>
        <p>$340</p>
        <p>$600</p>
        <p>$50,000</p>
        <p>$354</p>
        <p>$750</p>
        <p>$850</p>
        <p>$1500</p>
        <p>$100,000</p>
        <p>$708</p>
        <p>$1500</p>
        <p>$1700</p>
        <p>$3000</p>
        <p>Assumes un S''/!: rale'and an (nUstandm^ hakim e equal Ui the &amp;lt; redil amount shown, I5yr term Intereslonh [&amp;gt;a\m&amp;lt;nto[ition -^Reqnired payments as a qen enlace of outstanding balance (Interest and jrm&amp;lt; ipalpay mentj_</p>
        <p>Whats more, LineOne Equity from MCNB can offer you advantages that home equity loans from most banks</p>
        <p>[cross the state just dont.Which include: 1) No origination fees; 2) A fast closing of usually 10 to 15 business days after you apply; 3) No fees for unused credit; and 4) A credit line of up to $100,000 or more, or up to 100% of the equity in your home.</p>
        <p>But best of all, LineOne Equity allows you to use your credit anytime, anywhere, just by writing a check.</p>
        <p>So visit your local NCNB office or call Phone-A-Loan at 1-800-342-9701 (in Greensboro, 855-NCNB), and ask about LineOne Equity.</p>
        <p>Then, compare it to other home equity loans.We think that you| M LineOne Equity to be an item of interest.</p>
        <p>*Example is based on NCNB's Prime Rate plus /%. NCNBs lYime Rate is the rate announced by NCNB from time to time as its lYime Rate. A Ithough</p>
        <p>Equal Housing Lender</p>
        <p>the Annual Percentage Rate may vary, on December 10,19H6 the Annual Percentage Rate was 8 '/2%.</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0088" />
        <p>Lifestyle</p>
        <p>Home Care Is Alternative Costume Design Program Set To Hospital Rehabilitation</p>
        <p>By LAWRENCE KILMAN Associated Press Writer</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (AP) - Jo-Ann Friedman left the hospital in a wheelchair, her arms, lees and eyes paralyzed, A year later, she was atop Buttermilk Mountain in Colorado, skiing for the first time in her life.</p>
        <p>Ms, Friedman said she recovered quickly because she fled the hospital to recuperate at home.</p>
        <p>What drove me home was I knew that the worst thing 1 could do was sit still," she said. She had a rare nerve disorder called Guillain-Barre syndrome, characterized by muscular weakness that generally takes many months to subside.</p>
        <p>By leaving the hospital after 2'/2 weeks, Ms. Friedman Wame one of a growing number of Americans who choose home care. Other people are forced home by high hospital costs.</p>
        <p>Going home has its rewards, but it isnt easy. For Ms. Friedman, getting out of bed, taking a shower and wiling on clothes took 3/2 hours, ^etching mail from the lobby of her New York high-rise was a major trek.</p>
        <p>For such people, help is essential. Some people need physical therapy, or other medical supervision. Some may require someone to cook, or clean, or watch the children. Others need just an arm to lean on.</p>
        <p>The home health care business is booming, with various organizations providing aid. Searching for the right one can ^confusing.</p>
        <p>There are 6,005 Medicare certified home health care agencies, up from 1,275 20 years ago. From 1982 to 1984, the number increased by more than 50 percent.</p>
        <p>The House Select Committee on Aging estimates that $2 billion is spent each year on home care and for home medical equipment. It is a lucrative business: The for-profit segment of the home care incfustry grew 300 percent from 1982 through 1984.</p>
        <p>This success comes partly because costs are pushing people out of hospitals faster than ever before, said Gary Christopherson, director of health legislation for the congressional committee. Home care is often less expensive than hospital care.</p>
        <p>Ms. Friedman left the hospital for another reason - she was having trouble arranging for her needs. At home, she received twice-a-day visits from a physical therapist; a housekeeper and friends helped, too.</p>
        <p>I did more entertaining in those few months than I have in the years since, she said. "I realized how important it was for me to have all that socialization, something that wouldnt have happened in the hospital. ... I think that being out of tne place where illness is treated, and being in my own home, had me thinking of the things you do when youre well."</p>
        <p>Before she became ill five years ago, Ms.o Friedman was a speech therapist in a hospital, and she knew about nerve and sensory diseases. Today, at 40, she is a health care consultant.</p>
        <p>In her college training, she had been required to sit in a wheelchair to feel how it was to be handicapped. Later the handicap, although temporary, was real.</p>
        <p>The experience led Ms. Friedman to write a book, "Home Health Care, a guide for those who need help while recuperating at home.</p>
        <p>You need to be an educated consumer," she said. Even though I had all this experience, I had a fairly tough time. And all I could think of was, my God, what does a regular person do who doesnt know they need occupational therapy, who didnt know, as I did, that if 1 had a larticular kind of wheelchair that Id ) able to take a shower?"</p>
        <p>Home care patients range from people like Ms. Friedman, who need help for only a few months, to people who need long-term help, like elderly stroke victims or those who suffer from Parkinsons disease.</p>
        <p>While home care can be beneficial, it is not for everyone.</p>
        <p>Any recovery of any illness, most often, is better taking place at home," said Ms. Friedman. But there are a lot of qualifiers. It depends on the person. It depends on the home. If youre recovering from a broken leg and you live on the fourth floor of a walk-up apartment, home care can be a chal enge </p>
        <p>Ms. Friedmans book provides a</p>
        <p>directory of social, legal and medical associations that can help in finding home care. They include the American Association of Retired Persons, the Arthritis Foundation, American Council of the Blind, and the American Cancer Society.</p>
        <p>Ms. Friedman recommends people investigate several agencies. At a minimum, the agency should be Medicare-certified. But the best bet is to choose an agency that is accredited by the National League for Nursing, which requires an extensive quality assurance procedure.</p>
        <p>Ms. Friedmans book also provides details on how to outfit and pay for a home care environment and what consumers should be prepared to face.</p>
        <p>Most people dont know what to expect from a home care aide. They really dont know what the job description is of this person who is going to come in and be helpful," said Ms. Friedman. I spend a lot of time in my book explaining what an aide does, that she isnt supposed to sit and watch soap operas....</p>
        <p>Ive hearcf stories of aides who have no training... stories where the aide wouldnt show up ... stories where aides would in fact rob, take jewelry or valuables," she said.</p>
        <p>Congress is also concerned that consumers may not be adequately protected. The House Select Committee on Aging held a hearing last year on home care quality assurance.</p>
        <p>The purpose was to take a look at whats going on out there in an industry that is expanding just incredibly fast, said Christopherson. "Theres very little monitoring going on in terms of quality of the care.</p>
        <p>A lot of people are very vulnerable, Christopnerson said. They need these services when theyre very vulnerable.</p>
        <p>Legislation that would improve the monitoring of home care and provide consumer protection is to be introduced in Congress next month.</p>
        <p>Lets propose some changes in the law so that quality is what were paying for," Christopherson said. So we can feel that the care for our parents, our grandparents, ourselves, is good."</p>
        <p>Personal Shopper Is Ignored</p>
        <p>DEAR ABBY: I am married to a man who has two children by a previous marriage. The children are 13 and 16 years old, and live with their mother in another state.</p>
        <p>Heres the problem: My husband is quite remiss about sending gifts to his children on their birthdays and holidays, so I have always done the shopping. I try to select tasteful, ap-)ropriate gifts for each child. I even )uy lovely cards that my husband signs: With love from Dad."</p>
        <p>I find myself feeling very resentful when the children write and express tlianks to him, seldom thanking me unless instructed to do so - which is even worse.</p>
        <p>Should I quit spending my time selecting gifts for them? Or do you think I am being selfish and expecting too much? I should add that my relationship with his children is an amiable one. - RESENTFUL IN TEXAS</p>
        <p>DEAR RESENTFUL: His children have no way of knowing their gifts were selected by you when the cards are signed, With love from Dad"  unless, that is, "Dad" tells them. You say the children seldom thank you unless instructed to do so. Who instructs them? If the "instructor is Dad, then it would be much more generous and straightforward if the cards read: "With love from Dad and ( )" (whatever they call you). Settle this now to ensure that the relationship with your husband is also an amiable one.</p>
        <p>DEAR ABBY: Your advice to Heidi in Paulding, Ohio" brought</p>
        <p>Dear Abby</p>
        <p>By ABIGAIL VAN BIJREN</p>
        <p>back some precious memories. Heidi complainetl that nobody ever answered her letters, so you advised her to send a stamped, self-addressed envelope.</p>
        <p>I had a younger brother I used to write to, but he would never answer my letters, so I sent him an SASE and even enclosed some paper to write on. With it I sent a note: Please write back and at least say Hi! </p>
        <p>Well, he did. His letter read: Dear Sis: Hi. Im fine. Bye, Love, Wayne."</p>
        <p>Eighteen months ago, the dav before his 29th birthday, my beloved brother died of cancer.</p>
        <p>My little joke of sending him an SASE envelope worked because after that he wrote more often and we talked on the phone a lot. But that first letter is one of my most cherished possessions.</p>
        <p>By the way I tried the same thing with my older brother, but it didnt work. He still writes only once a year - at Christmastime. SUSAN IN GOSHEN, CALIF.</p>
        <p>DEAR SUSAN: I send my heartfelt sympathy at the loss of your beloved brother. Maybe your older brother will see this and send you a Valentine.</p>
        <p>DEAR ABBY: After you printed that letter from "Paul in La Mirada," who enrolled in law school</p>
        <p>at age 42 and is soon to graduate, I had to write.</p>
        <p>I served 30 years as a naval officer. After that I had two businesses  real estate in Florida and buffalo raising in South Dakota.</p>
        <p>Then I entered law school at age 61.</p>
        <p>1 am now 70 and have a thriving law iractice. - E.K. HALSEY, VERO EACH, FLA.</p>
        <p>DEAR MR. HAIEY: Congratulations. Its too late to fulfill your dream only if you THINK it is.</p>
        <p>Now for an encouraging word from a neighboring state:</p>
        <p>DEAR ABBY: Thanks for the boost to older college students. At Ken-nesaw College in Marietta, Ga., there is even a name, SOTA (Students Over the Traditional Age), for students who are over 25 years old.</p>
        <p>With a fall quarter enrollment of 7,297,1,712 students were 30 or over. Of these, 526 were 40 or over; 92 were 50 or over; and 14 were between 65 and 72!</p>
        <p>With such a dynamic campus, theres certainlv no generation gap herel-AHAP^YSOTA</p>
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        <p>The North Carolina Museum of Art will present a symposium on The Art of Fashion" Saturday from 10:15 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. The program will explore costume design, both traditional and contemporary, as an art form.</p>
        <p>Opening the symposium will be Jean Druesedow, associate curator of the Costume Institute at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York. She will compare 18th-and early 19th-century garments in the (iostume Institute with those in portraits in the North Carolina Museum of Art.</p>
        <p>Richard Martin of the Fashion Institute of Technology in New York will discuss the impact of several elements on Postmodern" fashion design, including nostalgia, new configurations of clothing in relation to the body and the innovative use of colors.</p>
        <p>The work of renowned Japanese-born designer Issey Miyake will be discussed by his spokesperson, Jun Kanai. Miyake has commented that his challenge is to create something different, not traditional Japan nor pure western, something which has the best of both." Ms. Kanai will</p>
        <p>show a videotape of a recent Miyake collection to illustrate his adventurous designs.</p>
        <p>Registration for the symposium will begin at 9:45 a.m. A two-hour break from 12:30-2:30 p.m. will permit time for lunch and viewing of the museum galleries.</p>
        <p>For information, call the museum at 833-1935.</p>
        <p>Births</p>
        <p>Draper</p>
        <p>Born to Mr. and Mrs. Richard E. Draper Jr., Aulander, a son, Steven Andrew, on Jan. 9,1987, in Pitt County Memorial Hospital.</p>
        <p>Pekala</p>
        <p>Born to Mr. and Mrs. Phillip H. Pekala, 1512 Hollybriar Lane, a daughter, Jessica Catherine, on Jan. 9,1987, in Pitt County Memorial Hospital.</p>
        <p>Coburn</p>
        <p>Born to Mr. and Mrs. William W. Coburn, Williamston, a son, Detric Seantrell, on Jan. 9, 1987, in Pitt County Memorial Hospital.</p>
        <p>Johnson</p>
        <p>Born to Mr. and Mrs. Donnie E. Johnson, Ayden, a son, Donnie Earl Jr., on Jan. 9, 1987, in Pitt County Memorial Hospital.</p>
        <p>Eastern Electrolysis</p>
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        <p>ART OF FASHION  The work of Japanese-born designer Issey Miyake will be explored during the symposium "The Art of Fashion" at the N.C, Museum of Art Saturday.BUSV?</p>
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        <pb facs="00096520_0089" />
        <p>More Chinese Are Buying Homes</p>
        <p>By JIM ABRAMS Associated Press Writer</p>
        <p>SHANGHAI, China (AP)  In their old rented home, Wu Huidings family of four slept in one bed, a common plight of residents here in the most crowded city of this crowded country. Now they have two rooms with two beds in an apartment they own.</p>
        <p>The 57-year-old construction worker is a pioneer in Chinas experiment with private home ownership, a concept the Communist government hopes eventually will improve living conditions and relieve serious housing shortages.</p>
        <p>Shanghai, with an average of only 55 square feet of living space for each of its 12 million people, has been a leader in private housing, building 2,904 units m 1985 and perhaps twice that number in 1986, said Xu Rending of the Shanghai Housing Administration Bureau.</p>
        <p>The demand is s great that even those who dont get subsidies buy homes, Xu said.</p>
        <p>Wu was one of the fortunate who had to pay for only one-third of his apartment, the rest being subsidized by the government and his work unit. He said the apartment cost 13,740 yuan ($3,713), for which he provided a 2,000-yuan ($540) down payment and pays 50 yuan ($13.50) a month for the balance.</p>
        <p>He said it is an easy burden to carry. With income from his wife and 20-year-old daughter, the family br-in in 400 yuan ($108) a month.</p>
        <p>The apartment, on the sixth floor of a building with no elevator, has two small rooms, each filled to capacity with a bed, sofa or chair and table.</p>
        <p>The floors are concrete, there is no hot water and no heat, which is common in Shanghai even though temperatures in winter drop to freezing. The kitchen consists of a one-pot coal burner and a cold water sink in the hallway. The closet-size bathroom has a toilet and a small tub with a shower.</p>
        <p>On the first floor of the next building, Wang Mingli, 54, a retired teacher, told how she, her husband and her brother bought their large unsubsidized apartment for 22,000 yuan ($5,946).</p>
        <p>She said her brother received compensation from the government for money taken from the family, former capitalists who ran a large wheat mill, in the early days of Communist rule.</p>
        <p>If we rented, wed get less space and worse quality, said Mrs. Wang, who proudly showed off her small garden and the interior' she'decorated herself. She :Complained, how</p>
        <p>ever, that the apartment, in a southwest Shanghai suburb, still had no gas, that public transporation was poor and shopping was inconvenient.</p>
        <p>Still, the Wu and Wang homes are plush compared to the average urban residence.</p>
        <p>A recent nationwide survey showed that 30 percent had no kitchens, 27 percent no running water and two-thirds no toilets. In many cities, people must wait as long as 10 years to receive new housing.</p>
        <p>The situation is particularly acute in Shanghai, which is densely populated and has few high-rise buildings in the central city area. Much of the city is occupied by once-stately European-style two-story homes built in the 1920s and 1930s when Shanghai was still an enclave of European business interests.</p>
        <p>Today, the old homes are crumbling and overflowing with several families each, but peoples attachment to them has blocked urban renewal projects.</p>
        <p>Hu Sisheng of the China State Building Development Corp. in Peking said private housing was seen as a key way to raise the capital needed to build more apartments. In 1985, he said, 160 Chinese cities were selling homes.</p>
        <p>This is a major policy change,</p>
        <p>Hu said. Now individuals can buy homes from the state, just like they buy refrigerators or fans.</p>
        <p>The effort to make housing a commodity, however, has been stymied by artificially low rents. Housing is heavily subsidized, and most urban Chinese, who earn about 100 yuan ($27) a month, pay only 2 percent or 3 percent of their wages in rent.</p>
        <p>In 1983, Hu said, the state took in 450 million yuan ($122 million) in rent, not even enough to pay for half the sum spent in building upkeep.</p>
        <p>He said the government, to bring in more money and make private housing more attractive, is going to have to raise rents, a highly sensitive issue in a nation where subsidies long have been a way of life.</p>
        <p>Shanghais Xu agreed that reform of the rental system was crucial to creating a real private housing market. Meanwhile, the city is arranging low-interest bank loans to home buyers and encouraging housing enterprises to build more commercial units.</p>
        <p>Im very satisfied, said homeowner Wu. In his last cramped quarters, he added, he was asked to leave by the renter who was subletting the room to him.</p>
        <p>It gives me a sense of security to own my own home, he said.</p>
        <p>What Will Children Remember?</p>
        <p>At Wits End</p>
        <p>By ERMA BOMBECK</p>
        <p>In 1955 1 lived in a suburb I have since renamed Mother Walton Village. Every house had an Olivia at the door waving good-bye to the school bus, spending hours ironing shoelaces and color coding meals.</p>
        <p>I had a small child at home and was offered a publishing Job that took me out of the home one day a month. When I shared this with one of the Olivias she said to me, If you can stand to see your daughter run to the arms of a baby-sitter when she is hurt, you can be a career woman. That was the first shot of guilt I</p>
        <p>ever had, administered by needle directly into my vein.</p>
        <p>There was no doubt in my mind that from that day forward, Sara Lee would get the Mothers Day cards ... my childs acceptance speech for the Oscar would be the shortest one in history as there would be no one to thank... and unlike Citizen Kane her last gasping breath would not be for a sentimental sled called Rosebud, but Latchkey.</p>
        <p>Mothers today are consumed with world-class guilt. The battle cry among women working outside the home is, Dont start the crisis without me. Ill be home at 6:30. </p>
        <p>It has always been. Ill never forget being at that infamous one-day-a-month job when my daughter fell and cut her lip. For days I went around beating myself to death with snow</p>
        <p>chains, saying, I should have been playing bridge when it happened instead of working.</p>
        <p>The key seems to be what DO kids remember about their childhood and what is unimportant enough to forget.</p>
        <p>They dont remember the yellow-wax build-up that you made disappear from behind the toilet bowl that took half a day and three scouring pads to pull off and how great the floor looked after that.</p>
        <p>They do remember the afternoon when there was nothing to do and you hosted a taffy pull for the neighborhood kids and Mike got his retainer caught in the taffy and they never had such a fun time.</p>
        <p>They dont remember that you served on a committee that was in</p>
        <p>strumental in keeping a sonic hamburger drive-in from building on the site of the towns first cemetery.</p>
        <p>They do remember the night you sat in the rain to watch them play for 36 seconds in a football game.</p>
        <p>They rarely remember the mundane events that seem so important to adults, like ironed T-shirts, order, daily crises, routine tears, disagreements and decisions. They are taken for granted,</p>
        <p>They do remember moments. They recall rare flashes when you did something different, fun, risky, unexpected. They remember the times when you looked at them and didnt see something that needed washing or fixing. If a child never receives that part of you, then you deserve guilt for the rest of your life.Snow Fun Time</p>
        <p>SLEDDINGCassie Shires, top, and Tracey Berkshire took advantage of a snowy Oklahoma City park to do some sledding earlier this week. OklahomaBasic Microwave Class Planned</p>
        <p>City received 8 inches of the white stuff during the weekend storm. (AP Laserphoto)</p>
        <p>A basic microwave class will start Feb. 3 at the Agricultural Extension Office. The class will continue for four weeks with sessions at 9:30 a.m. and 7p.m.</p>
        <p>Adcfie R. Gore, home economics extension agent, will teach the class which is designed for new microwave oven owners.</p>
        <p>For further information on registration and class outlines, call 752-2934, extension 370, by noon Jan. 26.</p>
        <p>North Carolinas first Baptist Conference was organized in (ireenville in 1830.</p>
        <p>HOW DO YOU HELP A FRIEND? PITT COMMUNITY COUECE</p>
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        <p>Lunch Tips from Debbie:Theres nothing better than lunch at our place...</p>
        <p>We serve the best sandwiches in town...Ribeye, Chicken Filet, French Dip Prime Rib, Chicken Salad, Sliced Turkey, Club, plus many more, all served with potato salad, potato chips, and pickle spears. Plus for the weight conscious, we offer the half sandwich and cup of soup.</p>
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        <p>7.56-1161 4(X) St. Andrews Dr.</p>
        <p>Meeting Place</p>
        <p>WEDNESDAY</p>
        <p>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 D.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.  Jaycees meet at Rotary Building 6:30 p.m.  Exchange Club meets 7:00 p.m. - Greenville Civitan Club meets at Three Steers 7:30 p.m.  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.  Epilepsy Association of North Carolina, Coastal Plains Chapter, meets at Pitt County Mental Health Center.</p>
        <p>Buck-Shuler Vows Spoken</p>
        <p>SPINDALE - Evangel Fellowship was the scene of the Dec. 7 wedding ceremony of Tammy Charlene Shuler and John Richard Buck. The Rev. Roger Gosnell conducted the ceremony.</p>
        <p>The bride is the daughter of Mrs. Jack Shuler of Spindale and the late Mr. Shuler. The bridegroom is the son of Mrs. Matthew R. Buck of Ayden and the late Mr. Buck.</p>
        <p>The couple is living in Spindale.</p>
        <p>The bride has earned a masters degree of higher education and is employed by Isothermal Community Colege as adult basic education coordinator. The bridegroom holds a masters degree in biology and is employed by Spartanburg technical College in South Carolina as coordinator of industrial training.</p>
        <p>Textured Walls Making Comeback</p>
        <p>ATLANTA (AP)  Painting, wallpapering and paneling are the most popular ways of covering gypsum wallboard.</p>
        <p>Texturing, however, is coming into its own.</p>
        <p>Textured walls once were the province of highly paid artisans. With the aid of wall texturizers and joint compound, the competent do-it-yourselfer can evoke patterns, swirls and other designs with a trowel, sponge and brush.</p>
        <p>Georgia-Pacific, a maker of building products, attributes the increased popularity of texturized walls to a sense of individuality, originality and custom design.</p>
        <p>8:00 p.m.  Alateen, a meeting for children of alcoholics will meet in room 32 of First Presbyterian Church.</p>
        <p>8:00 p.m.  Alcoholics Anonymous clos--ed meeting at First Presbyterian Church 8:00 p.m.  Serenity A-Anon meets at I First Presbyterian Church, room 33 8:00 p.m.  Freedom Group' of Narcotics Anonymous open meting, St. Pauls Episcopal Church  ;</p>
        <p>FRIDAY</p>
        <p>12 noon  Alcoholics Anonymous meets at St. Pauls Episcopal Church 8:00 p.m.  Serenity Group of Narcotics Anonymous has open discussion at St. Pauls Episcopal Church 8:00 pm.  Alcoholics Anonoymous traditions and step (newcomers) closed meeting at AA Building, Farmville Highway</p>
        <p>SATIHDAY</p>
        <p>9:30 a m.  Overeaters Anonymous Big Book meeting at First Presbyterian Church, Harvey-Webb room, Elm Street 1:30 p m 'Duplicate bridge meets at Senior Center 8:00 p m.  Aleobolies Anonymous open discussion group meets at SI. Pauls Episcopal (nuren 8:(K) p.m - Narcotics Anonymous iwok study meets at University Church of Christ</p>
        <p>SUNDAY</p>
        <p>8:00 p m  Adult children of alcoholics meeting at St Paul's F^piscopal Church 8:(K) pm. - Narcotics Anonymous meeting at Charter North Hidge Building, Oakmont Drive</p>
        <p>Bridge Winners Are Announced</p>
        <p>Mrs. J.W.H. Roberts and Mrs. Lacy Harrell were first place, North-South winners in the duplicate bridge game plaved at the Senior Center last Saturday. Their percentage was .,57.</p>
        <p>Others winning were Nancy Pate and Mildred Marker, second; Sara Bradbury and Dr. Charles Duffy, third.</p>
        <p>East-West winners were Estelle Eastw(H)d and Charles Davenport, first, with .58 ptTcent: Bertha Jones and Mrs. C.I. McClelland, second; Mrs. Harold Forties and Emma Warren, third.</p>
        <p>Winners Wednesday morning were Mrs. Sidney Skinner and Mrs. Stuart Page, first with .64 pt'reent; Mrs. Ray Gunderson and Dot McKemie, second; Mrs. Warren Maxon and Mrs. Raymond Lyder, third; tied for fourth were Mrs. C.I. McClelland and Mrs. George Marlin with Jeff McAllister and George Martin.</p>
        <p>Afternoon game winners, North-South were Mrs. J R. Rhodes Jr. and Mrs. Roger Critchcr Jr., first with .59 percent; Mrs. M. 11. Bynum and Mrs. Eli Bloom, second; Mrs. Stuart Page and Sibyl Basart, third; Mrs. Ray Gunderson and Dot McKemie, fourth.</p>
        <p>East-West winners included Mrs. Sol Schechter and Mrs. Max Chused, first with .67 pi*reenl; Effie Williams and Mrs. Harold Forbes, second, Mrs. Wiley Corliett and Janie Judy, third; Mrs. (hris Jones and Mrs. Ed Bass, fourth.</p>
        <p>A unit tournament will be held Wednesday afternoon.</p>
        <p>P\DI|NG</p>
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        <p>752-7131</p>
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        <p>MENS ENTIRE STOCK30%-50% OFF</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0090" />
        <p>Stock And Market Reports</p>
        <p>Obituaries</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (AP) - The stock market vigorously extended its early-year rally in active trading today.</p>
        <p>The Dow Jones average of 30 industrial shares had jumped 14.20 points to2,116.70 by 10:00a.m. EST.</p>
        <p>Advances led declines by about 7-to-3, with 771 issues advancing, 363 declining and 473 unchanged. Volume on the Big Board was a hefty 28.84 million shares.</p>
        <p>The NYSEs composite index rose 0.56 to 154.27. At the American Stock Exchange, the market value index rose 0.76 to 294.73.</p>
        <p>IBM was up 1 2 at 126'.j. The computer giants earnings for the fourth quarter, released early today, were considered slightly worse than expected.</p>
        <p>The Dow Jones industrial average had climbed 25.87 points to a new record of 2,102.50 on Monday, the 11th consecutive session in which it closed at a record level.</p>
        <p>Mondays advances outpaced declines by about 2-to-l, with 1,045 issues gaining and 568 falling, while 370 were unchanged on the Big Board. NYSE volume totaled 162.83 million shares.</p>
        <p>Mobil</p>
        <p>Monsanto</p>
        <p>.NCNB Cp</p>
        <p>.Nat Uistni</p>
        <p>Navistar</p>
        <p>Norflk.Sou</p>
        <p>Nynex</p>
        <p>Olint.'p</p>
        <p>Owens! II</p>
        <p>PacTcl</p>
        <p>Penney .IC:</p>
        <p>PepsiCo</p>
        <p>Phelj Oml</p>
        <p>Philip.Mor</p>
        <p>PhiiipF^et</p>
        <p>Polaroid</p>
        <p>PrcK'tOamb</p>
        <p>(JuakerOats</p>
        <p>RJR.Nab</p>
        <p>ItaistnF'ur</p>
        <p>Rockwel</p>
        <p>Scott Faper</p>
        <p>SealedFwr</p>
        <p>Sears Roeb</p>
        <p>.Shaklee</p>
        <p>Skyline C.p</p>
        <p>.Sony Corp</p>
        <p>.Southern Co</p>
        <p>SwstRell</p>
        <p>StdOil</p>
        <p>Steveas JP</p>
        <p>TRW Inc</p>
        <p>Texaco Inc</p>
        <p>TexEastn</p>
        <p>USX Corp</p>
        <p>UnCamp</p>
        <p>UnCartxle</p>
        <p>USWest</p>
        <p>UmKal</p>
        <p>WalMart</p>
        <p>WestPtPep</p>
        <p>Wt*stghEI</p>
        <p>Weyerhsr</p>
        <p>WinnDix</p>
        <p>Woolwrth</p>
        <p>Wrigley</p>
        <p>Xerox Cp</p>
        <p>4:04 mi 24 52 6'. 92', 70-'h 47', 59 57', 78'k :n K 25' 1 82', 12^ 7ti', 8.5M 45</p>
        <p>57 75M ,52'' ZVh 29 45'H</p>
        <p>2Uh</p>
        <p>16'-</p>
        <p>20',</p>
        <p>28',</p>
        <p>118",</p>
        <p>.57</p>
        <p>42</p>
        <p>(M",.</p>
        <p>:I9</p>
        <p>:12k</p>
        <p>24'H til</p>
        <p>2li', 57'.. 29", 49", .59':-67 4ti' 49' , 4.'i' , 52, 69",</p>
        <p>4:i'i 84h 211", 5 IS 6</p>
        <p>91",</p>
        <p>70',</p>
        <p>46,</p>
        <p>.58",</p>
        <p>56",</p>
        <p>78</p>
        <p>:io,</p>
        <p>2.5 82 12", 78', 84", 48'. 57', 75 .52'., 78', 29", 44", 21', 16", 20", 27, 118 .56', 41", 94', :i8", 82", 28", 60 25', 57' I 29', 48, .58, 65", 46, 48", 42", .52';. 68',</p>
        <p>48',</p>
        <p>84,</p>
        <p>2:$,</p>
        <p>51,</p>
        <p>6&amp;gt;,</p>
        <p>92</p>
        <p>70'</p>
        <p>47',</p>
        <p>58,</p>
        <p>.57',</p>
        <p>78",</p>
        <p>81</p>
        <p>25</p>
        <p>82</p>
        <p>12",</p>
        <p>74",.</p>
        <p>84,</p>
        <p>44",</p>
        <p>57",</p>
        <p>75</p>
        <p>52',</p>
        <p>78',</p>
        <p>29".,</p>
        <p>45</p>
        <p>21',</p>
        <p>16",</p>
        <p>20",</p>
        <p>28</p>
        <p>118',</p>
        <p>56",</p>
        <p>41",</p>
        <p>94'.,</p>
        <p>:i8',</p>
        <p>82,</p>
        <p>ZV'H</p>
        <p>mi</p>
        <p>25, .57'., 29", 49'2 ,59 65", 46', 48', 42", 52", 68,</p>
        <p>NEW YORK 'APi</p>
        <p>AMR Corp AbbottI&amp;gt;ar)</p>
        <p>Allis Chaim Alcoa AmBrands AmerCan Am Cyan Amentech AmlntOp Am Motors AmStand Amer T4T Amoco BellAtlan Bell.South BethSt&amp;lt;x&amp;gt;l Boeing Boise Cased BoiseCpfC Borden s Burlngt Ind CSX Cp CaroPwI.l Celanese Champ Int Chevron Chrysler CocaCola ColgPalm Comw Edis .ConAgra OeltaAirl OowChem duPonl Uuke Pow Estl&amp;lt;odak EatonCp Exxon FPU Grp Firestone FstWachov FlaProgress FordMot Fuqua (iTE Corp (ienCorp OnDynam GenElec GenMills (ien Motors GnMotr F,</p>
        <p>GenuParf</p>
        <p>GaPacif</p>
        <p>Gotxlrich</p>
        <p>(icKxlyear</p>
        <p>(xxlyear wd</p>
        <p>(trace Co</p>
        <p>GtNorNek</p>
        <p>(reyhound</p>
        <p>llerculeslnc</p>
        <p>IFonevwell</p>
        <p>HCA </p>
        <p>ITT Corp Ing Rand IBM</p>
        <p>Ini IaiK-r</p>
        <p>InllRtH'l</p>
        <p>.lamesRvr</p>
        <p>K mart</p>
        <p>KaisrAlum</p>
        <p>KanebSvc</p>
        <p>Krogf'r</p>
        <p>Ixxknetxl</p>
        <p>Ixx'wsCp</p>
        <p>McDermliit</p>
        <p>McKessii</p>
        <p>Mead Corp</p>
        <p>MercaiitSt</p>
        <p>MinnMM</p>
        <p>Midday stix-High Uow</p>
        <p>ks:</p>
        <p>mi" .52', 2"-, 89 46', 91', 85', 141'., 66' , 8</p>
        <p>45', 26", 74", 71, 61 7', mi', 72", .59';. .mi', 45", 82", 40", 242', 242',</p>
        <p>61' , 5.8 2, 89'.. 46';. 91 5 mi' , 142', 67 8', 45", 27', 74, 72'., 61", 71.. 51':. 7.8"., .59' . 51", 45" 4 88</p>
        <p>40,</p>
        <p>88',</p>
        <p>.52",</p>
        <p>46',</p>
        <p>42',</p>
        <p>45,</p>
        <p>87</p>
        <p>81</p>
        <p>.55" 1 70', 96',</p>
        <p>mi</p>
        <p>75", 79", 78", 88", 29", 40", 48 71"., 27", til', mi 75 96 45'.. 71 81</p>
        <p>48',. 44, 51'.. 14', 44',</p>
        <p>81'" 88', .57", 65', 82';, 59 65", 127' , 89' . 9", 89", 48", 15', 2, 81', 58", 67' , 28, :i6 67 102 180</p>
        <p>88 51", 45", 41', 45', 86", 80 .55', 69' , 95' . 49, 74, 79', 78", 88', 29", 4(1', 42'  70", 27';. 61 79 74", 95", 45', 7(1' . 80', 48', 44' , 51</p>
        <p>44', 44 54", 79', 88', 57', 64", 82 58', 64', 128 89 9' , 89 48', 15', 2, 80, 52", 66 ', 28", 85 ' . 66", 101' . 128',</p>
        <p>l.ast</p>
        <p>60" 1</p>
        <p>52", 2", 89 46', 91', 85", 141", 67 8', 45' . 26, 74", 72", 61", 7",</p>
        <p>mi",, 78',-1 59'-.</p>
        <p>.mi",</p>
        <p> 45"., 82, 40', 242', :i8 51, 45, 41", 45",</p>
        <p>86H 8(1", .55", 69', 95",</p>
        <p>mi</p>
        <p>74, 79", 78", 88', 29", 40", 48 71', 27', 61', 7'J", 75 95' . 45' . 70', 80", 48', 44", 51',-44', 44',</p>
        <p>79',</p>
        <p>88',</p>
        <p>57',</p>
        <p>64',</p>
        <p>82",</p>
        <p>58",</p>
        <p>65".,</p>
        <p>128,</p>
        <p>89</p>
        <p>9',</p>
        <p>89",</p>
        <p>48'.,</p>
        <p>15',</p>
        <p>2,</p>
        <p>81</p>
        <p>52,</p>
        <p>(i,',</p>
        <p>28', 85' . 66, 101'  129' ,</p>
        <p>Following are selected stock (juotations as ofll.Wa.m :</p>
        <p>Ashland Oil....................................58'4</p>
        <p>Unisys ...............................-..............95'i</p>
        <p>Conner Homes  ............ 6-'h</p>
        <p>Fieldcrest Mills.................................:I5"h</p>
        <p>Flowers Inds.....................................26,</p>
        <p>Hatteras Inc. Securities.....................20",</p>
        <p>Hilton Hotel Corp...............................73't</p>
        <p>Jefferson Pilot..................................36",</p>
        <p>John Deere ..................... 26'  .,</p>
        <p>Imiwes Company  ...................28',</p>
        <p>Interstate Securities ..............14,</p>
        <p>Wickes..........................]...... 3T|</p>
        <p>Piedmont Aviation................................50</p>
        <p>Southmark Corporation......................10',</p>
        <p>United Telecommunications...............26,</p>
        <p>Dominion Resources..........................47",</p>
        <p>Piedmont Natural Gas......................23,</p>
        <p>OVER THE COUNTKR</p>
        <p>Branch Bank...........................37' i to.37 *..</p>
        <p>Planters National Bank............22 ' i to23' i</p>
        <p>Vermont American.................18' i to 18",</p>
        <p>Chemlawn...............................16't to 16'2</p>
        <p>.Southern National Bank..............24", to 25</p>
        <p>Peoples Bank..........................14'2 to 15' 1</p>
        <p>North Carolina Natural Gas :!3" 1 to .34",</p>
        <p>Cooper La.ser.Sonics...................2  to 2 1/16</p>
        <p>F'arm Fresh...........................15'2 to 15",</p>
        <p>Child Selling</p>
        <p>JACKSONVILLE. Fla. (AP) - A pregnant woman who allegedly offered to sell her baby for $15,000 so she could buy a car and pay off debts has been charged with child selling, authorities said.</p>
        <p>Joi E. Silverthorne, 27, of Tampa was arrested after the Jacksonville couple, whom authorities would not identify, met her at Jacksonville International Airport.</p>
        <p>They were to give $3,-500 to Ms. Silverthorne as a first payment for her baby, authorities said. Instead, they turned her over to investigators who were nearby and recording the conversation, according to a police report.</p>
        <p>Child selling is a felony punishable by up to five years in prison, said Assistant State Attorney E. McRae Mathis. Ms. Silverthorne was released on $5,(MK) bond and is to appear in court Jan 28, a jail official said.</p>
        <p>Deadline Extended</p>
        <p>(Continued from A-I)</p>
        <p>Dixon of Route 1. Grimesland, explained tentative plans for the project.</p>
        <p>Dixon said the projects include using the Oakland Grove Farm near</p>
        <p>King</p>
        <p>(Continued from A-1)</p>
        <p>Blacks represent one-third of the population in Pitt County, Brown said. Theres no reason why we shouldnt be a third on the Pitt County Board of Commissioners.</p>
        <p>Greenville City Council member Ed Carter said In 1987, we will be able to get more blacks on the (ity Council, that is, if we dont have too many running for the same seat</p>
        <p>Carter said blacks should concern themselves with electing more black public officials in Pitt County, with the black prison population, and with what he called unjust fees levied against the poor such as garbage fees.</p>
        <p>King loved his fellow man. and he laid down his life for his friends, said D.D. Garrett, president of the Pitt County Chapter of the N AACP.</p>
        <p>As black people, we need to start doing whats rignt for us. Youve got to stand up for something,  he said.</p>
        <p>The program, sponsored by the Pitt County Chapter of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, also included speakers from the Old North State Medical Society, National Medical Association: the Pitt County chapter of North Carolina Association of Educators; the Eastern North Carolina Regional Association of Black Social Workers, and National Civil Rights Activity.</p>
        <p>The commemoration service also included congregational singing of "Lift Every Voice and Sing and "We Shall Overcome. Other music was performed by the Revelations and the Amazing Gospel Choir.</p>
        <p>Bynum</p>
        <p>TARBORO - A funeral service for Miss Angel Ruth Bynum, 31, will be held Wednesday at 3 p.m. at St. Pauls A.M.E. Zion Church, Tarboro by the Rev. Sterling Gregory. Burial will be in East Lawn Memorial Gardens, Tarboro.</p>
        <p>Surviving are three brothers. Dr. Leroy Bynum, Jr. of Tifton, Ga., Kermint Harrison of Tallahassee, Fla., and Karlton Bynum of Bethel.</p>
        <p>The body will be at Willoughby Mortuary, Tarboro from 5 to 9 tonight.</p>
        <p>Haughton</p>
        <p>NEWPORT NEWS, Va. - Mrs. Pansy Pilgreen Haughton, 58, died Sunday in Walter Reed Hospital in Gloucester, Va.</p>
        <p>Her funeral will be conducted at Weymouth Funeral Home, 12746 Nettles Drive, Newport News, at 3 p.m. Tuesday. Burial will be in Peninsula Memorial Park in Newport News.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Haughton, a Pitt County native, was a member of Calvary Baptist Church in Gloucester County, Va., and the Newport News Firefighters Ladies Auxiliary.</p>
        <p>Surviving are her husband, William Haughton of the home; two daughters, Mrs. Louetta Gay of Hayes, Va., and Mrs. Peggy Gunn of Newport News; her mother, Mrs. May A. Nolf of Hampton, Va., a brother, Robert Max Pilgreen of</p>
        <p>Newport News, 11 grandchildren and one great-grandchild.</p>
        <p>Holton &amp;lt;</p>
        <p>BETHEL - Mrs. Cora Holton died today in Pitt County Memorial Hospital. Arrangements will be announced by Flanagan Funeral Home.</p>
        <p>Mills</p>
        <p>GARNER - Mr. Floyd Rudy Mills Sr., 42, of 2902 Dunhaven Dr. died Sunday.</p>
        <p>A memorial service was conducted Monday in the First Presbyterian Church by the Rev. Sam Burgess. A private inurnment followed in the mausoleum of Pinecrest Memorial Gardens.</p>
        <p>Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Tracy H. Mills of the home; one son, Rudy Mills Jr. of Raleigh; one daughter. Miss Elizabeth Leigh Mills of the home; his mother, Mrs. Myrtle Tripp Mills of Greenville, and two sisters, Mrs. Peggy M. Overbey of Nashville, Tenn., and Mrs. Jean Riggs of Winterville.</p>
        <p>In lieu of flowers, memorials may be made to the North Carolina Wildlife Commission.</p>
        <p>Smith</p>
        <p>Mr. Frederick Joseph Smith, 90, died at his home in Ayden Monday.</p>
        <p>A memorial service will be held at 11 a.m. Wednesday in the chapel of</p>
        <p>Farmer Funeral Home in Ayden by Father Terrence Collins. Entombs ment will be in Homestead Memorial Gardens near Greenville.</p>
        <p>Mr. Smith was a retired officer with the Newark, N.J., police department.</p>
        <p>Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. Dorothy Dollberg of Ayden; a son, Frederick Terrence Smith of Irvington, N.J., and three grandchildren.</p>
        <p>Teel</p>
        <p>Mrs. Sally Teel of Route 4, Greenville, died today in Pitt County Memorial Hospital. Arrangements will be announced by Flanagan Funeral Home.</p>
        <p>Wiggins</p>
        <p>PINETOPS  A funeral service for Mr. Richard Henry Wiggins, 46, will be held Wednesday at 1 p.m. at Hem-by-Willoughby Mortuary, Tarboro. Burial will be in Dancey Memorial Cemetery, Princeville.</p>
        <p>Surviving are a daughter. Miss Kimberly Ann Wiggins of the home; his mother, Mrs. Annie Mae Wiggins of Pinetops; a sister, Mrs. Willia Smith of Rocky Mount; two brothers, Billy Ray Wiggins of Long Island, N.Y. and Johnny C. Wiggins of Bethel, and two grandchildren.</p>
        <p>Family visitation will be from 7 to 8 tonight at Hemby-Willoughby Mortuary, Tarboro.</p>
        <p>Williford</p>
        <p>Mr. James Curtis (Jim) Williford Jr., 57, of New Bern died Monday.</p>
        <p>His funeral will be conducted at 11 a.m. Wednesday in the First Presbyterian Church of New Bern by the Revs. Richard Boyd and J. Murphy Smith. Burial will be in Greenleaf Memorial Park in New Bern, with Masonic rites.</p>
        <p>He was employed by Carolina Telephone Company for 35 years. A member of the First Presbyterian Church of New Bern, he was a member of Ocean Masonic Lodge No. 405 of Morehead City, St. Bernard Commandery No. 21 York Rite Bodies of Rocky Mount, the Sudan Temple, the New Bern Shrine Club and the Sudan Patrol. Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Barbara A. Williford of the home; two sons, James Curtis (Curt) Williford III of Greenville and David Neil Williford of Fort Bragg; a daughter, Mrs. Kathi Todd of Matthews; a brother, Charles C. (Buck) Williford of High Point; and two grandchildren.</p>
        <p>The family will receive friends at Cotten Funeral Home in New Bern from 7 to 9 tonight. At other times, they will be at the home.</p>
        <p>Memorials may be made to the Shriners Crippled Childrens Fund, P.O. Drawer 49, New Bern, N.C. 28560.</p>
        <p>Wind Gusts To 50 MPH Knock Out Power Across N. Carolina</p>
        <p>Grimesland as a site for a year-long show, from planting to harvest for various crops and equipment.</p>
        <p>Farmers need diversity in Pitt County, Dixon said, suggesting that wed like to do a pilot vegetable market show this year to show farmers how to grow it, how to care for vegetables and to "develop a pilot market.</p>
        <p>This could help Pitt County and surrounding counties with diversity, Dixon said.</p>
        <p>Commissioners also agreed to hold public hearings on proposed* noise control, dog leash and massage control ordinances once a series of public hearings on proposed changes in the meth()d of electing commissioners ends in early February.</p>
        <p>Treatment</p>
        <p>ROCHESTER, Minn lAP) -Tammy Wynette is bt'ing treated for an undisclosed ailment, and reportedly is keeping up with her music practice in tne hospital.</p>
        <p>The Rochester Post-Bulletin quoted friends as saying Ms. Wynette leased a $1,000 electric piano keyboard from a music company to use while at St. Marys Hospital.</p>
        <p>A Mayo Clinic spokesman confirmed the 44-year-old country-western singer was a patient at the clinic-affiliated hospita . She was hospitalized for X-rays and tests at St. Marys in 1977 after complaining of alxlominal pains while on a concert tour.</p>
        <p>More Beer</p>
        <p>PEKING (AP) - China produced more beer than hard liquor in 1986 for the first time, the official China Daily said.</p>
        <p>The English-language daily said the nation made aM 1 billion gallons of beer last year, topping liquor by 21.6 million gallons. Beer production has been increasing at a rate of 30 percent a year since 1981.</p>
        <p>By The Associated Press</p>
        <p>Winds that gusted near 50 mph knocked limbs and trees onto power lines across North Carolina, causing power outages for several thousand residents along the coast and in the mountains.</p>
        <p>More than 3,350 homes and businesses in southeastern North Carolina were without power part of Monday, and service was cut to over 2,600 customers in the mountains for periods ranging from 20 minutes to several hours.</p>
        <p>Wind gusts reached 49 mph at the New Hanover County Airport and 46 mph at New Bern, according to the National Weather Service in Wilmington. Winds gusted up to 46 mph, according to National Weather Service reports from Asheville Regional Airport.</p>
        <p>In the mountains, damage to a transmission line that feeds an area from Elk Mountain to Canton created power problems for 1,182 Carolina Power &amp;amp; Light Co. customers in the Leicester area and 1,452 customers in the Erwin region for about 20 minutes Monday.</p>
        <p>Charles Horton, a division dispatch supervisor with CP&amp;amp;L, said about 1,200 customers in Castle Hayne and along Carolina Beach Road were without power Monday. About 800 people in Beulaville and 400 customers in Wallace also lost electricity when trees and limbs fell on CP&amp;amp;Ls power lines, he said.</p>
        <p>A pine tree fell on a primary line along U.S. 117 in Wallace, knocking out power for about an hour.</p>
        <p>Four County Electric Membership Corp. employees were busy Monday restoring power. Bryant Herring, a district manager in Elizabethtown, said he was still trying to determine how many customers lost power. Workers are still writing up orders, he said. Herring estimated that 480 customers in Bladen County and 70 in Sampson County were without power. The high winds seemed to hit in streaks, primarily east and west of Elizabethtown, he said.</p>
        <p>We had a real bad start this morning, Herring said. He said CP&amp;amp;L lost power in parts of Elizabethtown, and Four Countys office was unable to communicate by radio with the main office in Burgaw or with repair trucks. Power was off 20 to 25 minutes, he said. Herring said they improvised radio communications by hooking a vehicle to a main tower and walking back and forth from the telephone to the radio to report customers calls.</p>
        <p>T.R. Vick, a district manager with Four County in Burgaw, said about 400 of the 6^000 customers served in Pender lost power briefly Monday.</p>
        <p>Power outages were reported across the mountains throughout the day and into the evening hours, officials said, and all available electrical crews were called in to restore power.</p>
        <p>Nearly 800 CP&amp;amp;L customers in the Candler School Road area of Buncombe County, including Candler Elementary School, were without x)wer after a tree fell across a feeder ine about 1:30 p.m., said (ieorge Treadyway, Carolina Power &amp;amp; Light Co. dispatcher.</p>
        <p>It was pretty bad over there. he said, adding that power had been</p>
        <p>Crimestoppers</p>
        <p>If you have information on any crime committed in Pitt County, call Crimestoppers. 758-7777. You do not have to identify yourself and can be paid for the information you supply.</p>
        <p>restored to most customers in that area by 8 p.m.</p>
        <p>A 35-foot power pole holding a</p>
        <p>transformer was broken around noon near n Candler when winds toppled a tree there, Treadway said. About 30</p>
        <p>Dr. Minges Dies</p>
        <p>(Continued from A-1) Stadium. He was a life member of the East Carolina Educational Foundation. ECUs Minges Coliseum is named for his family.</p>
        <p>He was chairman of the successful drive to raise $1 million for the Eastern Carolina Vocational Center and helped revive the East Carolina Summer Theatre. He served as chairman of the American Lung Associations drive to raise money for a research grant for lung disease and health at the East Carolina University School of Medicine. He was area chairman for fund raising for Duke University Medical Centers Comprehensive Cancer Research.</p>
        <p>For 20 years, he served as a member of the Greenville Utilities Commission, retiring in 1981.</p>
        <p>He was a member and past president of Greenvilles Ducks Unlimited conservation organization. He led North Carolina in most sponsor members recruited and served on the national board of trustees of Ducks Unlimited until 1981. He was presented its Trustee Emeritus Award in 1981.</p>
        <p>A member of the Brook Valley Country Club and the Greenville Country Club, he served on the board of governors of the latter.</p>
        <p>A past president of the Greenville Exchange Club, he was honored with its Books of Golden Deeds Award in 1966.</p>
        <p>Elected a member of the board of directors of State Bank of Greenville in 1958, he served until the bank merged with North Carolina National Bank and then continued on the Greenville NCNB board until 1980.</p>
        <p>A Hnancial supporter of the J.H. Rose High School Band Booster Club, he served as football team physician in the early I960s and received the E.B. Aycock Award for Service in 1968.</p>
        <p>A patron of the Museum of Art in Greenville, he and his family helped buy the Flanagan home on Evans</p>
        <p>Street to serve as the Art Center, later renamed the Museum of Art.</p>
        <p>He was member of the board of directors of the Salvation Army in Greenville and a member of the Elks Lodge.</p>
        <p>A member of the Pitt County Wildlife Club, he donated money to buy the land for permanent wildlife club facilities near Falkland. He was a member of the North Carolina Wildlife Club and the Mattamuskeet Waterfowl Tomorrow organization.</p>
        <p>He had worked with the Babe Ruth Baseball League, the Boy Scouts of America, the Pitt County Law Enforcement Fund, the American Heart Association, Hospice of East Carolina, the Friendship Force, and the Community Ambassador Fund, and as a fund raiser for Carolina Country Day School.</p>
        <p>Surviving are his wife, Mrs.</p>
        <p> Virginia Waring Minges; a son, Thomas Eugene Minges of Greenville; two daughters. Miss Patricia Page Minges of Greenville and Miss Virginia Morrow Minges of Alexandria, Va.; three brothers. Max E. Minges and John F. Minges, both of Greenville, and Hoyt A. Minges of Kinston, and three grandchildren.</p>
        <p>The family will receive friends at the funeral home from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. tonight.</p>
        <p>The family suggests that those desiring to make memorial contributions consider the Pitt County Athletic Complex Fund-Raising Drive, c/o the Pitt County Schools, 1717 W. Fifth St., Greenville. N.C. 27834. with checks payable to the Athletic Complex Fund-Raising Committee.</p>
        <p>r SOMiTHINONEW*"l</p>
        <p>I A new independent church has  I started downtown Greenville at I I 404 S. Evans St. Bill Rouse, I</p>
        <p>Pastor, 355-7886. Everyone is |</p>
        <p>* welcome.  |</p>
        <p>customers in that area were without power for a couple of hours.</p>
        <p>The majority of major outages had been cleared up by 8 p.m., another CP&amp;amp;L spokesman said.</p>
        <p>Fallen limbs and trees blown by the wind also knocked out numerous distribution lines in the five-county area served by Nantahala Power &amp;amp; Light Co., said George Barrett, superintendent of transmission and distribution for the firm.</p>
        <p>"MY FRIENDS LAUGHED</p>
        <p>When I Made Funeral I Buriol Pre-Arrangements!</p>
        <p>'TiMy reoHy kidded me-unta oiw of our friendi died unexpectedly. They quickly leonied bout the difficult deciiioiu...the p-perwork...ofld the coiti lurvhrort nwtt itrvq-gle wHh.</p>
        <p>Pre-Antmgement could hove ipered the family moet of thou anxious decisions, end M much of tho poperaofk and expenu in-voWed-oii at a time of deep emotionai strau.</p>
        <p>My friends don't laugh about pra-arrange-mont onymora-tboy've leomod what a caring, comforting thing it con be for fomUiet."</p>
        <p>HOMESTEAD</p>
        <p>f^uneralHome tni Memorial Gardens</p>
        <p>752-9336 or 830-0648 HWY. 33 EAST</p>
        <p>For FREE Brochure</p>
        <p>On The Maoy Benefits Of Pre-arrangement Mall This Coupon Now.</p>
        <p>Name  _</p>
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        <p>FEDERAL PROCUREMENT Seminar</p>
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        <p>The Worlds Largest Purchaser</p>
        <p>The Federal Government</p>
        <p>Speaker: John Harvie, Small Business Specialist Defense General Supply Center</p>
        <p>WHERE: Willis Building  WHEN:  Wednesday,  January  21,1987</p>
        <p>1st and Reade Streets  8:30 am to 12:15 pm</p>
        <p>Greenville</p>
        <p>COST: $20.00 - Includes all seminar materials and refreshments SPONSORED BY: Congressman Walter Jones, Sr.</p>
        <p>For more information call 757-6183</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0091" />
        <p>THE DAILY</p>
        <p>REFLECTOR</p>
        <p>Greenville, N.C. Tuesday, January 20,1987</p>
        <p>Sports</p>
        <p>Entertainment</p>
        <p>Comics</p>
        <p>Classifeds</p>
        <p>BIowa Moves To No. 1; Heels 2nd</p>
        <p>By The Associated Press About five hours after moving into the No. 1 spot in the Associated Press college basketball poll, Iowa proved it belonged there.</p>
        <p>With leading scorer Roy Marble missing ail but nine minutes because of an eye injury, Iowa nonetheless pulled out a 70-67 victory over fifth-ranked Purdue, a club whose only</p>
        <p>previous defeat had been to No. 2 North Carolina.</p>
        <p>The combination of losing Roy and playing on the road in a tough arena and overcoming those things is the greatest tribute you can give this ballclub, Iowa Coach Tom Davis said. The effort these kids put out after Roy Marble went out of the game is incredible. I even got a little</p>
        <p>UNC Charlotte Edges EC Women</p>
        <p>CHARLOTTE - Kristin Wilson scored 27 points and snatched away 16 rebounds to lead UNC Charlotte to a 71-66 basketball victory over East Carolinas Lady Pirates Monday night.</p>
        <p>The loss was the third straight for the Lady Pirates, who drop to 10-6 on the season. The Lady Niners climb to 11-1 on the year.</p>
        <p>Monique Pompili scored a career high of 28 points in the game, but got little help from her teammates. Chris OConnor was the only other Lady Pirate to surpass single figure scoring, hitting 12.</p>
        <p>The Lady Pirates had the opportunity, and led for much of the game.</p>
        <p>We showed a lot of composure in the first half, Coach Emily Man-waring said. Butwith 5:33 left in the game, we had unforced turnovers and came down the court and gave the ball away three straight times.</p>
        <p>Our team captains are not providing the leadership that we need right now, the coach added. We will start electing new team captains each week now.</p>
        <p>Manwaring added that the Lady Pirates much work on being more patient against a pressure defense. We are not together as a team right now,she said.</p>
        <p>The Lady Pirates were outshot in the game, 44.4 percent to 37.3 percent, as the Laoy 49ers scored only one less field goal. But Charlotte made up big ground by hitting 23 of 32 at the free throw line. East Carolina got only 10 of 17 - the second straight night they have been badly hurt by fouls. ECU outfouled the Niners, 23 to 14.</p>
        <p>Charlotte also held a firm reboun</p>
        <p>ding edge, 49-32, led by Wilson and Francine Benson, who pulled down 10. East Carolinas effort on the boards was led by Pompili with nine.</p>
        <p>In addition to Wilsons scoring, UNCC got 13 from Benson, 12 from Tolanda Rose and 10 more from Elizabeth Walker.</p>
        <p>The Lady Pirates return home and reenter the Colonial Athletic Association wars on Saturday, playing host to George Mason in a 7:30 p.m. game. Then, on Monday, they host nationally ranked James Madison, the CAA leader and defending champion.</p>
        <p>East Carolina (66)</p>
        <p>Williams</p>
        <p>Hamilton</p>
        <p>Pompili</p>
        <p>OConnor</p>
        <p>Mabry</p>
        <p>Miller</p>
        <p>Cooper</p>
        <p>Bond</p>
        <p>Bethea</p>
        <p>Gray</p>
        <p>Rodriquez</p>
        <p>Team</p>
        <p>Totals</p>
        <p>MP FG</p>
        <p>19 0-5 16 1-6 39 12-21 25 6-9</p>
        <p>3-10</p>
        <p>0-0</p>
        <p>1-3</p>
        <p>1-2</p>
        <p>1-2</p>
        <p>1-5</p>
        <p>2-4</p>
        <p>FT</p>
        <p>(H)</p>
        <p>0-0</p>
        <p>4-7</p>
        <p>04)</p>
        <p>2-4</p>
        <p>0-0</p>
        <p>1-2</p>
        <p>0-0</p>
        <p>2-2</p>
        <p>0-0</p>
        <p>1-2</p>
        <p>R F A</p>
        <p>2 1 3 0 2 2 9 3 3</p>
        <p>3 4 3 5 4 2 0 0 0</p>
        <p>4 2 0 1 0 0</p>
        <p>0 5 0 3 0 0</p>
        <p>1 2 0</p>
        <p>200 25-67 10-17 32 23 13 66</p>
        <p>UNC Charlotte (71)</p>
        <p>Witherspoon</p>
        <p>Benson</p>
        <p>Garrett</p>
        <p>Harnett</p>
        <p>Reedus</p>
        <p>Kennington</p>
        <p>Walker</p>
        <p>Rose</p>
        <p>Johnson</p>
        <p>Wilson</p>
        <p>Team</p>
        <p>Totals</p>
        <p>FT</p>
        <p>2-2</p>
        <p>.MP FG</p>
        <p>22 0-1 22 6-10 1-2 19 0-2  04)</p>
        <p>5 0-1 9 1-1</p>
        <p>Pt</p>
        <p>2</p>
        <p>R F  A</p>
        <p>1 0  1</p>
        <p>10 2  0  13</p>
        <p>10  2  0</p>
        <p>10  0  0</p>
        <p>12  0  0</p>
        <p>36 1-2 34 3-11 25 4-7 2 04)</p>
        <p>8 1 1 1 5 2</p>
        <p>0-0 04)</p>
        <p>3-4</p>
        <p>4-5 4-8 04)</p>
        <p>26 9-19 9-11 16 4 6</p>
        <p>200 21-54 23-32 49 14 12 71</p>
        <p>0 12 0 0 0 0 1 27</p>
        <p>East Carolina.....................30  36  66</p>
        <p>UNC Charlotte....................28  43  71</p>
        <p>Turnovers; ECU 17 (Cooper 4); UNCC: 29 (Walker 5. Rose 5).</p>
        <p>Technical fouls; None.</p>
        <p>Officials: Franklin and Goodwin. Attendance; 800.</p>
        <p>Ditka Statement In Fit Of Anger</p>
        <p>CHICAGO (AP) - Mike Ditka says his statement that he would quit as head coach of the Chicago Bears after the 1987 season was made only to his assistants in a fit of anger.</p>
        <p>I did mention that to them, but of course I mention a lot of things in the heat of anger. Im not sure everything I say would stay that way, Ditka said Monday in an interview with WBBM-TV in Chicago. I said nothing to the management of this organization, or to any reporter,Ditka added.</p>
        <p>The Boston Globe reported Sunday that Ditka, upset over the firing of his friend Jerry Vainisi as Bears general manager, had told his bosses he would leave after the remaining year on his contract is over.</p>
        <p>Vainisi. who remains a team consultant, was dismissed because of philosophical differences, according to Bears President Michael Me-Caskey. The Globe reported that Ditka was fuming over the</p>
        <p>dismissal of Vainisi, a friend and ally</p>
        <p>Ditka, who also has been rumored to be among several coaches being considered by the Altanta Falcons, told WBBM Monday that leaving the Bears would not be easy.</p>
        <p>If I did leave, a very big part of my life would leave also, he said. You kind of get to love it. You dont just want to walk away from it.</p>
        <p>But Ive learned to walk away from other things in life, and if it came down to that, I probably could doit.</p>
        <p>For now, Ditka says, his only sure job commitment is the job of giving Bears fans something to be proud of in 1987.</p>
        <p>I dont know what Im going to do, he told WBBM. But I know one thing we are going to do: were going to play great football in 1987... and try to keep all the other stuff out of the newspapers</p>
        <p>Sports Calendar</p>
        <p>Editors Note: Schedules are supplied by schools or sponsoring agencies and are subject to change without notice.</p>
        <p>Today's Sports Baskflbaii</p>
        <p>Mattamuskeet at Jamesville Aydeo-Grifton at Parmville Central (5p.m.)</p>
        <p>WiUiamston at Plymouth Roanoke at NorthampUm East Washington at Ha velock (5 p m.) Greenvule Christian at Bethel (5 p.m.)</p>
        <p>East Carolina at Central Connecticut State(7:30p.m.)</p>
        <p>RecLeafptes Pee Wee Division Blue Devils vs. pirates (3;30 p.m.) Terrapins vs. Wolfpack (4; IS p.m.)</p>
        <p>Midget Division Cavaliers vs. Pirates (5 p.m.)</p>
        <p>A Division Perdue vs. Family Practice (ES - 7 p.m.)</p>
        <p>Overton's vs. Wachovia (SG7 p.m. BarTenders vs. Dixie (Es  8</p>
        <p>p.m.)</p>
        <p>PCBvs. Bamooe (SGp.m.)</p>
        <p>CRv Heat vs. Honeycutt's (SG - *</p>
        <p>p.m.)</p>
        <p>AAA Division Collins &amp;amp; Aikman ll vs. PiU Memorial (ES-9 p.m.)</p>
        <p>uiaiuy itiuw; va. ivecreauon &amp;amp; Parks (ES-iOp.m.)</p>
        <p>Wednesdays Sporto Wrestling Havelock at Wadiington (7 p.m.)</p>
        <p>BasketbaU Pitt C.C. at Southeastern (7;30 p.m.) Rec Leagues Pee Wee Division Cavaliers vs. Tar Heels (4; 15 p.m.)</p>
        <p>Midget Division Blue Devib vs. Terrapins (5 p.m.) Wildcats vs. Wolipack (5:45p.ra.)</p>
        <p>JuniM'Division Wolfpadi vs. Wildcats (6:30 p.m.) Blue Devils vs. Tar Heels (7:15 p m.)</p>
        <p>Senior Division Wolipack vs. Blue Devils (I p.m.) Wildcats vs. Cavaliers (t:4Sp.m.)</p>
        <p>AADivisk</p>
        <p>Hooters vs. GUCO (ES8p.m.) Coolw 4 EOu vs. CoUim 4 Aikman 13 (ES9 p.m.)</p>
        <p>Ameritogs vs. Fieldcrest (ES - 10 p.m.)</p>
        <p>AAA Division (^oOins 4 Aikman #1 vs. Acbeuns (WG-7p.m.)</p>
        <p>Empire Brushes vs. Grady White (WG-8p.m.)</p>
        <p>437 Auto vs . CoBus 4 Attman 13 (WG 9p.m.)</p>
        <p>SiriniBing East Candma at NoAi Carolina (5 p.m.)</p>
        <p>emotional in the second half seeing how hard they were working.  </p>
        <p>The news that Iowa had supplanted Nevada-Las Vegas atop the poll came to Davis as he and his players</p>
        <p>prepared to leave their hotel for Monday nights game.</p>
        <p>"They (the players) all had their televisions on before the game. Im sure it was something they were</p>
        <p>Trapped ,</p>
        <p>Iowas B.J. Armstrong, left, finds nobody to pass to against Purdues Everette Stephens in Rig Ten basketball action Monday night. Iowa, selected No. 1 on the AP Poll earlier in the day, won the game. (AP Laserphoto)</p>
        <p>, aware of, Davis said. We never Teally talked about it when we were No. 2 or No. 6.</p>
        <p>It was the first time in its history that Iowa has been ranked No. 1.</p>
        <p>"It would be nice if we bad about a week or so to celebrate." Davis said. But it's going to be that way for everybody throughout the country, regardless of who's No. 1 We all have a lot of tough games in our respective leagues.</p>
        <p>Iowa has another test coming up Thursday, at Iowa City against third-ranked Indiana.</p>
        <p>Iowa, now 17-0, was the beneficiary of UNLVs one-point loss at Oklahoma, this weeks No. 11 team. The Hawkeyes received :14 first [place votes from a nationwide panel of sportswriters and broadcas^ji'rs to 28 for North Carolina. The Hawkeyes accumulated 1.26:1 points, ll more than the Tar Heels, 15-1 Indiana, 14-1, was next with 1,1 points while UNLV, ranked first for six weeks, slipped to fourth with three first-place votes and 1,088 points.</p>
        <p>The Hunnin Rebels bounced hack to h(at Fullerton State 7:?-65 Monday night to improve their record to 16 1, Iowas only game last week was an impressive 91-88 overtime victory at Illinois - in which the Hawkeyes erased a 22-point deficit with 16 minutes left.</p>
        <p>Nevada Las Vegas lost at Oklahoma 89-88 in a nationally televised game on Saturday. UNLV had a chance to pull out a victory in that game, but two shots in the final seconds wouldn't fall and Oklahoma avenged a loss to UNLV earlier in the season.</p>
        <p>After Purdue, the rest of the Top 10 included DePaul, Syracuse, Temple. Illinois and Clemson.</p>
        <p>Oklahoma led the Second Ten, followed by Duke. Alabama, ,St. Johns. Georgetown, Pittsburgh, Auburn, Navy, Texas Christian aiul North Carolina State.</p>
        <p>Last weeks Second Ten was Tern pie, Clem.son, St. Johns, Duke, Alabama, Oklahoma, North Carolina State. Pittsburgh, Navy and Kansas.</p>
        <p>Illinois, i:i-:i, bounced hack from its loss to Iowa to iK'at Minnesota 80.58 and slipjied only one spot in the poll.</p>
        <p>Purdue, now 14-2, and DePaul, 15-6 after a 61-49 victory Monday night over Indiana State, each improved one spot from last week.</p>
        <p>Syracuse, last weeks No. 5, dropped two spots after a 91-88 loss to Michigan, the fifth-place team in the Big Ten,</p>
        <p>Georgetown, 12-2, fell from ninth to 15th after losing - for the second time this season - to fellow Big East member Seton Hall. The Hoyas, who lost by 21 at home earlier in the season, were lieaten 66-65 by the Pirates last Saturday.</p>
        <p>Auburn, blitzed 91-75 by Vanderbilt at Nashville, Tenn., dropped from 10th to 17th, It was the second major scalp for Vanderbilt, the only team to iM'at Indiana this season.</p>
        <p>Kansas, 10 5, fell from the Top Twenty after losing to Oklahoma 76-74 The Jayhawks came back to beat Miami, Fla., 82-47 on Saturday.</p>
        <p>Texas Christian, making its first-ever appt'arance in the poll, improved to 14 3 with a 52-37 thqmping of Iexas Monday night. The Horned Frogs are now .5-0 in the Southwest Conference.</p>
        <p>riu- Top Twonlv loams in The AsMK iatinl Tress' oollo(&amp;gt;e basketball poll, with first placo votos in parentheses, total )Hm(s based on 2(119-18 17 1G-1.5-14-I:M2-11-10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1, rmird throui&amp;gt;h Jan, 18 and last weeks ranking:</p>
        <p>Record Tts Tvs</p>
        <p>1 Iow a C!4i</p>
        <p>16-0</p>
        <p>1263</p>
        <p>2</p>
        <p>2.Norlh( anilina (28)</p>
        <p>t.5-1</p>
        <p>12.52</p>
        <p>3</p>
        <p>3 liuliaiia</p>
        <p>14 1</p>
        <p>1133</p>
        <p>4</p>
        <p>4 Nev. Las Vegas (3)</p>
        <p>1.5-1</p>
        <p>1088</p>
        <p>!</p>
        <p>r&amp;gt; Iurdiie</p>
        <p>14 1</p>
        <p>1063</p>
        <p>6</p>
        <p>6 DePaul</p>
        <p>14 0</p>
        <p>974</p>
        <p>7</p>
        <p>7..Syracuse</p>
        <p>15-1</p>
        <p>774</p>
        <p>5</p>
        <p>11 Temple</p>
        <p>162</p>
        <p>696</p>
        <p>11</p>
        <p>9 Illinois</p>
        <p>133</p>
        <p>680</p>
        <p>8</p>
        <p>lO.CIeinsoii</p>
        <p>16-11</p>
        <p>670</p>
        <p>12</p>
        <p>11 Oklahoma</p>
        <p>12 3</p>
        <p>655</p>
        <p>16</p>
        <p>12 Duke</p>
        <p>13-2</p>
        <p>.568</p>
        <p>14</p>
        <p>13 Alabama</p>
        <p>13 2</p>
        <p>567</p>
        <p>15</p>
        <p>11 ,Sl John s</p>
        <p>122</p>
        <p>514</p>
        <p>13</p>
        <p>Georgetown K. Pittsburgh</p>
        <p>12 2</p>
        <p>4IM</p>
        <p>9</p>
        <p>13 3</p>
        <p>296</p>
        <p>18</p>
        <p>17 Auburn</p>
        <p>103</p>
        <p>295</p>
        <p>10</p>
        <p>IX.Navv</p>
        <p>11-3</p>
        <p>189</p>
        <p>19</p>
        <p>19.T(li</p>
        <p>13 3</p>
        <p>L54</p>
        <p>2(I.N. Carolina St.</p>
        <p>ll-t</p>
        <p>113</p>
        <p>17</p>
        <p>Others receiving voles: Florida 79; Kan sas 59 New Orleans 24; Kairsas Stale 21; (H I,A 18, Seton Hall 17; Houston 15; Cleveland State 10, Virginia 9; SI. Ixiuis7; Memphis State 6; Michigan 6; Texas El Taso 6; West Virginia 6; Georgia Tech 5; Trovidence 5, Vanderbilt 4, Western Kentucky 4; Brigham Young 2; Ohio Stale 2; Tulsa 2; Arizona 1, Kentucky 1; Middle Tennessee I; New Mexico 1; Utah 1</p>
        <p>GiantS/ Denver Deny Odds</p>
        <p>PASADENA, Calif. (AP) - The oddsmakers arent sure the Denver Broncos belong on the same field as the New York Giants for the Super Bowl. Both teams claim otherwise.</p>
        <p>The point spread for Sundays game at the Rose Bowl has gone from 8 immediately following the conference championship games to 9'2 and even 10. Considering the number of New York fans with added interest in the game this year, the spread could go higher,</p>
        <p>Its ludicrous, Giants Coach Bill Parcells said Monday as the teams began final preparations for the National Football League championship game, We only beat them by three points in New York. Its ridiculous. The teams are more even than that.</p>
        <p>The Giants edged the Broncos 19-16 on a last-minute, 34-yard field goal by Raul Allegre on Nov. 23. The Broncos outgained the Giants 405 yards to 262, rallied to tie the score 16-16, then fell victim to an eight-play, 55-yard drive that led to the winning kick.</p>
        <p>The spread is exaggerated, badly exaggerated, Giants linebacker Carl Banks said. We may have beaten them but we cant be overconfident with Denver. These guys are very good. They are a lot better than what the oddsmakers are making them.</p>
        <p>The Broncos struggled to an 11-5 finish after starting 6-0, while the Giants won their final nine regular-season games. Denver was routed 41-16 in its season finale by Seattle.</p>
        <p>The Giants have continued their overwhelming play in the playoffs, routing San Francisco 49-3 -and Washington 17-0, The Broncos had close victories of 22-17 against New England and 23-20 in overtime at Cleveland.</p>
        <p>How we got here shouldnt matter</p>
        <p>Colonial A.A.</p>
        <p>Men'll Rahketball</p>
        <p>Conf. Overall W I.  W  I.</p>
        <p>Navy  51  12  3</p>
        <p>UN(i-Wilmington  4  1  8  6</p>
        <p>Richmond  3  3  9  7</p>
        <p>James Madison  2  3  12  4</p>
        <p>East Carolina  2  3  9  6</p>
        <p>George Mason .  2  3  9  8</p>
        <p>American  2  3  6  6</p>
        <p>William &amp;amp; Mary  14  4  10</p>
        <p>as much as our being here, Broncos linebacker Tom Jackson said The Giants are a much better football team than the one we played in November, Maybe thats why the betting line is so high But we feel were better, too. We didnt give up a touchdown to them offensively in the last game.</p>
        <p>Denver Coach Dan Reeves also claimed both teams are better now than in November.</p>
        <p>They had been playing very well then, Reeves .said, but right now, they have not been in a lot of close football games and thats impressed a lot of people,</p>
        <p>Giants quarterback Phil Simms, who completed 11 of 20 passes for 148 yards - half of that in the last drive, including a 46-yard pass to Phil Me Conkey - doesn't have fond memo ries of the previous game with Den ver. And he expressed shock that the Giants are so heavily favored I dont understand why we are a</p>
        <p>big favorite, Simms said. The game was as tough as any weve had I know a little about betting and it means the New York iK'ttors an; bet ting the iiiants and there are more New York tn'ttors than Denver Ik4-tors.</p>
        <p>They did such a go(Kl job of cover ing our receivers that 1 didnt want to see that confrontation again. They won that battle in New York, I thought</p>
        <p>The (Hants held a full-scale practice Monday, while the Broncos, who arrived on .Monday, scheduled their first practice today. The intensity and interest in those .sessions is, ac ccirdmg to Reeves, extremely im pdrtant. the most important days for us.</p>
        <p>But Reeves thinks his team is ready now The players were ready to play after the pep rally, Reeves said of the sendoff by 63,257 fans who went to Mile High .Stadium to do nothing</p>
        <p>more than cheer their heroes as they were introduced. From an emotional stand{X)int, we wouldve been ready to play it then and there. Emotionally, according to Banks, the Giants can get a lift simply from listening to the radio.</p>
        <p>We were driving to practice and I heard on this radio station al)out the Criminal of the Week,  Hanks said. They gave it to LT (I^awrence Taylor) and the Giants defense for having a Ixiunty on quarterbacks.</p>
        <p>We dont have any bounty on quarterbacks. We play hard, tough, clean football, I told LT aliout it. He wasflablxTgasted,</p>
        <p>Whicfi is precisely how Parcells said he felt when he heard about the point spread for the first Giants ap-x'arance in a .Super Bowl. Denver ost in 1978 to Dallas.</p>
        <p>Its a pnxluct of the way we played the last two wins, Parcells said. People think were that good. I can assure you were not. </p>
        <p>.Monday's (&amp;gt;amfs James Madison 62, Richmond 59 George Mason 50. William 4 Mary 49 Navy 84 Delaware GO</p>
        <p>Tuesdays (&amp;gt;amr East Carolina at Central Connecticut</p>
        <p>Almost Ready</p>
        <p>New York Giant Phil .McGonkey puts on his jersey prior to the Giants first practice in Anaheim, Calif., .Monday as they begin</p>
        <p>preparations for their Sunday meeting with the Denver Broncos in Super Bowl XXI. (AP l.aserphoto)</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0092" />
        <p>Rampants Run Past Hunt, 77-60</p>
        <p>WILSON - Rose High School continued its unbeaten march through the first half of the Big East basketball season, downing Wilson Hunt Monday night. 77-60.</p>
        <p>Roses girls also came away with another victory, downing Hunt 37-30/ to maintain their first place standing also.</p>
        <p>Both Roses boysand-girlsare6-0 in the conference, one! game shy of</p>
        <p>the half-way point in the conference season.</p>
        <p>The Rampants missed on their first shots in the game allowing Hunt to grab the opening lead on a basket by John Finch with 7:03 remaining. Then, after another Rose miss, Anthony Howard hit on a breakaway for a 4^) lead before Keyford Langley finally broke the ice for the Rampants with 6:00 showing.</p>
        <p>Thirty seconds later Melvin</p>
        <p>Jenkins hit to tie it up, but Brad Neal scored and added a free-throw to give Hunt a 74 lead.</p>
        <p>Earrol Wooten hit the next two baskets for Rose pushing the* Rampants back into the lead, 8-7, but Neal countered to give Hunt the lead once more. Wooten hit once more to return the lead to Rose and the Rampants never trailed again.</p>
        <p>Langley scored with 3:35 left to open up a 12-9 lead. Finch countered,</p>
        <p>but baskets by Jenkins and Wooten ran the Rose lead to 16-13 by the time the period ended.</p>
        <p>Kevin Cobb and Wooten combined to open up a 10-point lead for the Rampants early in the second quarter, 23-13. Then, after Finch hit with 4:10 left, Curtis Perkins and Wooten scored to run the lead to 29-15. After another basket by Neal, Langley and Jenkins both hit baskets</p>
        <p>Cavs, Terrapins Post Wins</p>
        <p>By The Associated Press</p>
        <p>Virginia used two clutch free throws by John Johnson to end Jacksonvilles eight-game winning streak in non-conference college basketball.</p>
        <p>Johnson hit on the front end of a one-and-one free throw situation with 21 seconds left and repeated it again with 7 seconds left to give Virginia the 82-81 victory Monday night.</p>
        <p>In the only other game involving an Atlantic Coast Conference team, Maryland defeated Bucknell 77-68. Clemson faces Georgia Tech tonight in the only ACC action on the schedule.</p>
        <p>Johnson led Virginias scoring with 20 points, followed by Andrew Ken</p>
        <p>nedy, who contributed 19 points and 10 rebounds. Tom Sheehey added 13 points and Mel Kennedy 12.</p>
        <p>Jacksonvilles Ronnie Murphy scored for 31 points, including seven of 11 shooting from three-point range. Pat Laguerre had 18 points and Willie McDuffie had 15.</p>
        <p>Virginia outrebounded the Dolphins 40-29, but Jacksonville compensated by making 12 of 22 three-pointers while the Cavaliers missed their only three-point attempt. ,</p>
        <p>Jacksonville fell to 10-6, while Virginia is at 11-4.</p>
        <p>In College Park, Maryland took the lead over Bucknell with 3:43 left and went on to forge a 9-point victory.</p>
        <p>The Terps, 4-6, sank their last 16 free throw attempts, and scored only one field goal after Bucknell went ahead 59-58 on a basket by Mark Atkinson with 6:20 left.</p>
        <p>A field goal by freshman Steve Hood, scoreless until that point, launched Marylands comeback with the Teqps trailing 55-49.</p>
        <p>Derrick Lewis had 22 points, nine rebounds and six blocked shots for Maryland, which had lost six of its last seven including the last four to Atlantic Coast Conference foes.</p>
        <p>Bucknell, 9-7, was Seneca with 16 points.</p>
        <p>led by Chris</p>
        <p>VIRGINIA</p>
        <p>M. Kennedy</p>
        <p>MP</p>
        <p>35</p>
        <p>FG</p>
        <p>5- 8</p>
        <p>FT</p>
        <p>2- 2</p>
        <p>R A</p>
        <p>5 1</p>
        <p>F Pt</p>
        <p>3 12</p>
        <p>Iowa, Newly Elected # I, Subdues Purdue By 70-67</p>
        <p>By The Associated Press</p>
        <p>The Iowa Hawkeyes, the newest No. 1 kids on the college basketball block, were determined not to get knocked off.</p>
        <p>The most humiliating thing is (if) we got No. 1 today and then wed go out a couple hours later and were not No. 1. The whole teams worked three years to get to this place where we are. Eight hours, what does that mean? Jeff Moe said after undefeated Iowa averted that possibility Monday night by beating No. 5 Purdue 7047 in a tough Big Ten game.</p>
        <p>Iowa, 17-0, moved into the top spot Monday, replacing Nevada-Las Vegas, which lost to Oklahoma 89-88 on Saturday. The Hawkeyes showed they belonged there when they rallied to win on the road despite playing without their top scorer, Roy Marble, for most of the game.</p>
        <p>Kevin Gamble led Iowa with 19 points, Ed Horton had 14 and Moe added 11.</p>
        <p>In other Top Twenty games. No. 4 UNLV beat Fullerton State 73-65, No. 6 DePaul defeated Indiana State 61-49, No. 14 St. Johns downed No. 16 Pittsburgh 63-62, No. 18 Navy routed Delaware 84-60 and No. 19 Texas Christian beat Texas 52-37.</p>
        <p>Iowa trailed 48-40 with 18 minutes remaining. Yet even without Marble, who leads the team with a 15.5 scoring average but was sidelined after he suffered a scratched eye midway through the first half, the Hawkeyes came back.</p>
        <p>Gambles basket with 3:58 left broke a 65-65 tie and, after Purdue missed a pair of three-point shots, a three-point play by Horton made it 7045.</p>
        <p>Melvin McCants basket pulled the Boilermakers within three points, and Iowas B.J. Armstrong missed the first foul shot in p one-and-one situation with 12 seconds to go.</p>
        <p>But Troy Lewis, who led Purdue with 20 points, missed a three-point try with three seconds remaining. Iowa was called for traveling with one second left, but Lewis missed again on a desperation three-point attempt at the buzzer. The Boilermakers made just four of 17 three-point shots.</p>
        <p>Iowa Coach Tom Davis said his team knew it was ranked No. 1 going into the game.</p>
        <p>I think they were rattled a bit but I think they hid it, Davis said. As</p>
        <p>we get more experience, were doing a better job of handling things that might have disrupted us before.  Purdue, 14-2, led 42-38 at halftime, helped by 18 Iowa turnovers. The Hawkeyes committed 30 turnovers overall, but outrebounded Purdue 43-24.</p>
        <p>If were going to stay in the upper division weve got to get some help from our big men, Purdue Coach Gene Keady said. Im not going to tolerate them standing around and watching the game.</p>
        <p>No. 4 UN-LV 73, Fullerton State 65 Freddie Banks scored 22 points and Armon Gilliam 18 as UNLV surged past Fullerton State in the second half in their Pacific Coast Athletic Association game.</p>
        <p>UNLV, 16-1, led 44-34 at halftime before Fullerton State came back and eventually took a 57-56 lead with 8:41 remaining. The Runnin Rebels then scored eight straight points and stayed ahead the rest of the way.</p>
        <p>Gerald Paddio added 16 points for UNLV. Herman Webster scored 18 for host Fullerton State.</p>
        <p>No. 6 DePaul 61, Indiana State 49 Dallas Comegvs scored 19 points and sparked unbeaten DePaui past visiting Indiana State.</p>
        <p>The Blue Demons, 154, trailed 38-34 early in the second half before running off 11 straight points, four by Comegys.</p>
        <p>Rod Strickland added 18 for DePaul. Darrion Applewhite scored 12 for the Sycamores, who made nine of their first 11 shots from the field and led 21-10 midway through the first half.</p>
        <p>No 14 St. John's 63, No. 16 Pitt 62 Shelton Jones scored 23 points, including two free throws with 21 seconds left that lifted St. Johns over host Pitt in the Big East.</p>
        <p>After Jones gave the Redmen the lead, Charles Smith had a chance to win it for Pitt, but his eight-foot shot missed with three seconi left.</p>
        <p>Mark Jackson added 16 points as St. Johns, 13-2, won its fourth straight game. Mike Goodson led the Panthers, 13-4, with 15 points and Curtis Aiken had 13.</p>
        <p>No. 18 Navy 84, Delaware 60 David Robinson scored 32 points and became Navys all-time reooun-ding leader as the Midshipmen trounced visiting Delaware.</p>
        <p>Robinson, a 7-foot-l senior, grabbed eight rebounds, giving him a total of 1,122. The All-America center</p>
        <p>Junior High Basketball</p>
        <p>scored 11 points during a 25-4 burst in the first half that turned a seven-point deficit into a 32-20 le^d.</p>
        <p>Carl Liebert scored 12 points for Navy, 12-3. Barry Berger had 14 for the Blue Hens.</p>
        <p>No. 19 Texas Christian 52, Texas 37</p>
        <p>TCU celebrated its first-ever ap-learance in the Top T\^'enty by )eating Texas as Carven Holcombe scored 15 points and Jamie Dixon had 13.</p>
        <p>The Horned Frogs, 14-3, won their 10th straight game, their longest winning streak in 35 years. TCU leads the Southwest Conference with a 54 record.</p>
        <p>TCU outscored the visiting Longhorns 18-4 to close the first half and led 28-14 at the break. Texas did not get a field goal in the final 16 &amp;gt;2 minutes of the first half, missing 17 straight shots, before ending their slump early in the second half.</p>
        <p>Texas 37 points were the fewest allowed by TCU in a conference game since 1956.</p>
        <p>Trophy To Honor Petty</p>
        <p>CHARLOTTE (AP) - John Carrington, an unsuccessful Republican candidate for lieutenant governor in 1984, will be listed as the owner of Richard Pettys Pontiac on NASCARs Winston Cup circuit this year. Petty announced Monday.</p>
        <p>Petty, a seven-time NASCAR national champion, said the 2-1-2 Pontiac will still be from Petty Enterprises and STP will be his sponsor with Prestone as an associate sponsor.</p>
        <p>Meanwhile, officials at the National Motorsport Press Associations annual convention announced that beginning in 1988, the organizations Driver of the Year will receive a special award called the Richard Petty trophy.</p>
        <p>I guess they did this because they felt like I wouldnt win another one of these, Petty said. To me, it is a super, super big honor. Being named Driver of the Year is the ultimate. I cant think of any other trophy I would rather have named after me.</p>
        <p>Carrington, who said he plans to run for lieutenant governor again in 1988, said he believed the ownership arrangement would benefit both men.</p>
        <p>I think racing is pretty strong in North Carolina, said Carrington, whose name will appear on Pettys car.</p>
        <p>As the sport gets more and more expensive, you need more people involved, said Petty, a Republican and a former Randolph County commissioner.</p>
        <p>A. Kennedy</p>
        <p>Sheehey</p>
        <p>Morgan</p>
        <p>Johnk)n</p>
        <p>Martin</p>
        <p>Blanks</p>
        <p>Sitnms</p>
        <p>Totals</p>
        <p>33</p>
        <p>32</p>
        <p>27</p>
        <p>38</p>
        <p>16</p>
        <p>2</p>
        <p>17</p>
        <p>8-12 6-15 3-12 8-10 2- 4 0- 0 1- 2</p>
        <p>3- 4 10</p>
        <p>1- 1 9</p>
        <p>2- 2 7</p>
        <p>4-7 0 0-0 3 0-0 0 4-5 2</p>
        <p>2  19 5 13 1 8</p>
        <p>3  20 1 4 0 0 0 6</p>
        <p>200 33-63 16-21 40 19 15 82</p>
        <p>JACKSONVILLE</p>
        <p>MP</p>
        <p>Pearson Murphy McDuffie Boykin Williams Laguerre Brown Smith Slocum Totals</p>
        <p>FG</p>
        <p>32 0- 3 36 11-21</p>
        <p>34</p>
        <p>21</p>
        <p>18</p>
        <p>29</p>
        <p>9</p>
        <p>9</p>
        <p>12</p>
        <p>5-  8 2- 5</p>
        <p>0-  5</p>
        <p>6-  9 0- 2</p>
        <p>1-  3 4- 5</p>
        <p>FT</p>
        <p>0- 0 2-3 4 5- 7 12 0- 1 3 0-0 2 2-2 2 0-0 0 0- 0 1 2-2 0</p>
        <p>R A</p>
        <p>5 3 3 1 1 0 7 0 0 0</p>
        <p>FPt</p>
        <p>5 0 4 31</p>
        <p>1  15</p>
        <p>2  5 2 0 4 18 0 0 0 2</p>
        <p>3  10</p>
        <p>200 29-61 11-15 29 15 21 81</p>
        <p>Virginia.....................................41  4182</p>
        <p>Jacksonville..............................32  4981</p>
        <p>Three-point goalsVirginia 0-1 (Morgan 0-1). Jacksonville 12-22 (Pearson 0-1, Mur-7-11, Boykin 1-1, Williams 0-2,</p>
        <p>and Wooten made a three-point play to open up a 38-23 lead with 56 seconds left in the half.</p>
        <p>Johnny Ebron closed out the half to give Rose a 40-25 lead.</p>
        <p>Jenkins, Terry Warren and Wooten each hit baskets in the opening seconds of the second half to open up a 46-25 lead. Wooten then added a basket and a three-point play to run it out to 52-29 with 2:12 remaining.</p>
        <p>By the end of the period. Rose held a comfortable 57-34 lead.</p>
        <p>After pushing the lead out to 69-43 in the early going of the fourth quarter. Rose went to its bench to polish off the game.</p>
        <p>Wooten poured in 26 p()ints to lead Rose while Warren added 12 and Jenkins had 10. Neal scored 24 for Hunt while Finch had 22.</p>
        <p>The Rampants are now 12-2 overall,</p>
        <p>In the girls contest. Rose scored the first nine points of the game and was never in any danger after that, despite a slow-paced game. The Rampants held a 9-4 lead after one period and extended that to 19-9 at intermission. </p>
        <p>Rose continued to pull away in the third period, 10-7, running its lead out to 29-16. During the fourth period. Rose doubled the scored on the Lady Warriors, 34-17 near the halfway K)int in the frame, and went to its )ench to finish out the contest.</p>
        <p>Kim Dupree led Rose with 21 points</p>
        <p>while Jackie Rogers paced Hunt with 19.</p>
        <p>We were a little flat after our big win on Friday (over Wilson Fike), Coach Bill Kuykendall said. Having two big games last week and no practice between Friday and last night hurt us somewhat. But we played well, considering the circumstances.</p>
        <p>The Rampettes are now 10-2 on the year overall.</p>
        <p>Rose will play host to Elizabeth City Northeastern on Friday, reaching the halfway point in the Big East season.</p>
        <p>Girls Game  j</p>
        <p>ROSE (37)</p>
        <p>Dupree 101-4 21, Maxon 0 0-10, Leisten 4 04) 8, Bridges 0 2-4 2, Rodgers 2 04) 4, Hill 0 0-10, Barr 0 0-10, Williams 10-12, Smith 0 04)0, Hamze 004)0. Totals 17 3-12 37.</p>
        <p>HUNT (30)</p>
        <p>Rogers 5 9-1419, Farmer 2 3-5 7, Howard 10-0 2, Joyner 10-0 2, Sims 0 04) 0, King 0 0-0 0, Taylor 0 0-0 0, Riley 0 0-0 0, Vick 0 0-0 0. Totals 912-19 30.</p>
        <p>Rose..............................9 10 10  837</p>
        <p>Hunt..............................4  5  7  14-30</p>
        <p>Boys Game</p>
        <p>ROSE (77)</p>
        <p>Langley 3 2-2 8, Lee 0 0-0 0, Warren 4 4-4 12, Wooten 12 2-2 26, Jenkins 5 0-110, Ebron 3 04) 6, Cobb 21-2 5, Perkins 104) 2, Wille 0 0-0 0, Smith 0 0-10, Best 0 2-3 2, Johnson 1 2-2 4, Taft 1 0-1 2, Austin 0 0-0 0. Totals 32 13-1877.</p>
        <p>HUNT (60)</p>
        <p>Finch 10 2-3 22, Neal 11 2-3 24, Jones 104) 2, Howard 104) 2, Rilley 2 0-14, Tucker 2 04) 4, Parker 00-00, Barnes 0 2-4 2, Danzy 0 0-0 0. Totals 27 6-1160.</p>
        <p>Rose............................16  24  17  20-77</p>
        <p>Hunt............................13  12  9  26-60</p>
        <p>phy  .</p>
        <p>Laguerre 4-6, Brown 0-1). Tui</p>
        <p>imoversVirginia 11, Jacksonville 10. Technical foulsNone.</p>
        <p>OfficialsArmstrong, Dodge, Herring. A-7,284.</p>
        <p>BUCKNELL</p>
        <p>Atkinson</p>
        <p>Schrader</p>
        <p>Heiden</p>
        <p>Allsteadt</p>
        <p>Seneca</p>
        <p>Joseph</p>
        <p>Butts</p>
        <p>Beecy</p>
        <p>Totals</p>
        <p>MARYLAND</p>
        <p>Dickerson</p>
        <p>Hood</p>
        <p>Lewis</p>
        <p>Johnson</p>
        <p>McCoy</p>
        <p>Reyes</p>
        <p>Nared</p>
        <p>Powell</p>
        <p>Karver</p>
        <p>Totals</p>
        <p>MP</p>
        <p>38</p>
        <p>29 14</p>
        <p>30 37 14 24 14</p>
        <p>FG 7-15 5- 9 4- 5 2-14 7-12 2- 3 2- 7 0- 2</p>
        <p>FT R</p>
        <p>0- 0 13 2-2 2 0- 0 0- 0 0- 1 0- 0 0- 2</p>
        <p>1- 2</p>
        <p>FPt</p>
        <p>4  14</p>
        <p>5  14 3 8</p>
        <p>3  6</p>
        <p>4  16 2 5</p>
        <p>1  4</p>
        <p>2  1</p>
        <p>Conley Dumps East Carteret</p>
        <p>200 29-67 3- 7 36 18 24 68</p>
        <p>MP</p>
        <p>36</p>
        <p>33</p>
        <p>35</p>
        <p>22</p>
        <p>29</p>
        <p>5</p>
        <p>11</p>
        <p>20</p>
        <p>9</p>
        <p>FG</p>
        <p>5-10</p>
        <p>1-11</p>
        <p>9-12</p>
        <p>1-  5</p>
        <p>2-  5 0- 0 0- 0 4- 8 1- 1</p>
        <p>FT</p>
        <p>0- 1 5- 6</p>
        <p>4-  4</p>
        <p>5-  6 7- 8 2- 2 0-0 3- 3 2- 2</p>
        <p>R A</p>
        <p>6 2</p>
        <p>FPt</p>
        <p>4 10 3 7 2 22 2 8 2 13 0 2 0 0 0 11 1 4</p>
        <p>200 23-52 28-32 37 18 14 77</p>
        <p>Bucknell..................................36 3268</p>
        <p>Maryland  ........................38 39-77</p>
        <p>Three-point goals  Bucknell 7-10 (Schrader 2-3, Allsteadt 2-4, Seneca 2-2, Joseph 1-1), Maryland 3-10 (Hood 0-3, Johnson 1-1, M cCoy 2-3, Powell 0-3). Turnovers  Bucknell 12, Maryland 11. Technical fouls  Beecy.</p>
        <p>A-3,175.</p>
        <p>HOLLYWOOD - D.H. Conleys Vikings got away to an early lead and powered their way to a 58-40 Coastal Conference basketball victory over East Carteret High School Monday night.</p>
        <p>East Carterets girls took a 47-44 win in their game with the Valkyries.</p>
        <p>Conleys boys pushed their way out to a 17-8 lead in the opening quarter of the game and were never in trouble after that. East Carteret did outscore the Vikings, 13-10, in the second quarter, but Conley still led at the half, 27-21.</p>
        <p>In the third quarter, Conley pulled away again with a 16-9 advantage, running the lead out to 43-30. They polished off East Carteret, 15-10, in the final quarter.</p>
        <p>Phil Medlin led Conley with 17 points while Paul Merritt added 12.</p>
        <p>Chocowinity Tops Bear Grass, 66-54</p>
        <p>BEAR GRASS - Chocowinity High School swept a pair of Tobacco Belt Conference basketball games from hosting Bear Grass Monday night.</p>
        <p>The Indians took a 66-54 win in the boys game while the girls took a 37-31 decision.</p>
        <p>Chocowinity doubled the scored on the Bears in the first quarter of play, taking a 20-10 lead. The Tribe continued to pull away in the second period, 13-8, building up a 33-18 lead to take into the dressing rooms.</p>
        <p>In the third quarter, Chocowinity added another point to its lead, holding a 46-34 lead as the final period opened. In that, the Indians allowed a 24-20 comeback by the Bears.</p>
        <p>Dail Garnett led Chocowinity with 19 points while Curtis Myers added 12. Bear Grass was led by Aimer Riddick with 22 while Steve Brown had 14 and Shawn Stalls had 10.</p>
        <p>The Indians are now 7-6 overall and 6-5 in TBC play. Bear Grass falls to 3-18 overall, 2-8 in the league.</p>
        <p>Chocowinitys girls pushed out into a 10-4 lead in the first quarter of their game. But Bear Grass rallied, 12-9, in the second period and trailed by only 19-16 at intermission.</p>
        <p>The Lady Indians pulled away again in the third quarter with a 10-4 advantage, giving them a 29-20 lead to take in the the final period. Bear Grass again rallied, 11-8, but fell short.</p>
        <p>Drusilla Crawford led Chocowinity with 12 points while Janet Rodgerson led the Bears with 17.</p>
        <p>Chocowinity continues to lead the TBC with an 11-0 record, 12-1 overall. Bear Grass is now 2-8 in the con</p>
        <p>ference and 2-12 overall.</p>
        <p>Chocowinity will play host to Aurora on Friday while Bear Grass travels to Creswell.</p>
        <p>JV Game: Bear Grass 65, Chocowinity 35.</p>
        <p>Girls Game CHOCOWINITY (37)</p>
        <p>Crawford 4 4-912. Peele 2 4-7 8, Bradley 1 (H) 2, Myers 2 5-9 9, Grice 12-3 4, W. Dixon 1 0-02. Totals 11 15-28 37.</p>
        <p>BEAR GRASS (31)</p>
        <p>Rodgerson 7 3-4 17, Harrison 2 0-1 4. Mobley 2 0-0 4, Rawls 1 0-1 2, Lawrence 1</p>
        <p>0-2 2, Lilly 10-12, Little 0 04) 0, Askew 0 04) 0, Leary 0 04) 0, Winn 0 0-0 0, Raynor 0 04) 0. Totals 14 3-1031.</p>
        <p>Chocowinity.................lO  9  10  837</p>
        <p>Bear Grass....................4  12  4  1131</p>
        <p>Boys Game CHOCOWINITY (66)</p>
        <p>Garnett 9 1-2 19. Myers 6 0-2 12, A. Haywood 2 0-0 4, Moore 4 0-18, Tyson 3 2-4 8, Abdullah 3 2-2 8, German 10-0 2, Guion 2</p>
        <p>1-1 5, Raynor 0 04) 0, Hawley 0 04) 0. Totals 306-1266.</p>
        <p>BEAR GRASS (54)</p>
        <p>Riddick 10 2-3 22, Brown 6 2-4 14, Stalls 5 04) 10, Scott 0 04) 0, Rodgers 2 04) 4, Little 2 04)4 Totals 25 4-9 54.</p>
        <p>Chocowinity.................20  13  13  2066</p>
        <p>Bear Grass...................lO  8  12  2454</p>
        <p>Russell Reed had 10 points to lead the Mariner scoring.</p>
        <p>The victory boosts the Conley record to 8-^ overall and 4-1 in the Coastal.</p>
        <p>East Carterets girls eased out into a 10-7 lead in the opening period of their game. Conley rallied in the second period, however, 12-7, and edged out into a 19-17 halftime lead.</p>
        <p>The Valkyries held onto the lead in the third period, 9-7, and were up 28-24 going into the final frame. But in that. East Carteret rallied to outhit Conley, 23-16, and pull out the victory.</p>
        <p>Kim Oden led East Carteret with 24 points while Shelly Lewis added 13. Trellaney Boyd had 17 and Rhonda Jackson had 11 to pace Conley.</p>
        <p>The Conley girls are now 5-10 overall and H in the league.</p>
        <p>Conley plays host to North Pitt in a non-conference game on Thursday night.</p>
        <p>JV Game: Conley 63, East Carteret 61.</p>
        <p>Girls Game EAST CARTERET (47)</p>
        <p>Oden 6 12-15 24, Robinson 01-21, Johnson 13-4 5, Ellison 2 0-14, Lewis 4 5-913, Willis 0 0-0 0, Davis 0 04) 0. Totals 13 21-3147. CONLEY (44)</p>
        <p>Boyd 5 7-1017, Jackson 4 3-411, Payton 1 04) 2, Davenport 3 04) 6, Whitehurst 0 0-2 0, McGhee 10-0 2, Hardy 3 0-16, Henderson 0 0-00, Barbee 00-00. Totals 17 10-1744.</p>
        <p>East Carteret.................10  7  7  2317</p>
        <p>Conley............................7  12  9  1644</p>
        <p>Boys Game EAST CARTERET (40)</p>
        <p>Carter 0 04) 0, Johnson 1 0-0 2, Walker 0 04) 0, Hancock 0 04) 0, Singletary 0 0-0 0, Lewis 0 04) 0, Hucks 3 1-17, Murrell 3 1-17, Reed 3 4-4 10, Garrison 2 0-1 4, Graham 1 2-34, Ellison 3 0-0 6. Totals 168-1140. CONLEY (58)</p>
        <p>E. Merritt 1 3-3 5, Ebron 3 0-0 6, Smith 0 04) 0, E. West 0 0-0 0, A. West 0 04) 0, P. Merritt 5 2-612, Bonner 01-21, Wilder 0 04) 0, Patrick 13-4 5. Clemons 104) 2, Best 104) 2, Farrow 3 2-5 8, Medlin 81-3 17. Totals 23 12-2358.</p>
        <p>East Carteret.................8  13 9 10-^0</p>
        <p>Conley.........................17  10 16 1558</p>
        <p>SAADS SHOE REPAIR</p>
        <p>Quality Shoe Repairing 113 Orando Ave.</p>
        <p>Corner of Dickinson &amp;amp; 10th St. Parking In Front Mon.-Fri. 06  Sat. 9-2 Phono 750-1220</p>
        <p>BETHEL - Bethel swept a pair of junior high school basketball games from G.R. Whitfield Monday night.</p>
        <p>In the boys game. Bethel rollee up a 46-26 victory. Larry Hines had 14 and James Perkins had 11 to lead Bethel while T. Barnhill had 12 for Whitfield In the girls game. Bethel took a 24-13 win.</p>
        <p>Bethels boys are now 3-1 while the girls are 2-2.</p>
        <p>Avden-Frink AYDEN - Ayden Middle School took a pair of basketball victories from Frink on Monday.</p>
        <p>The Ayden boys took a 46-38 win. Robert Dixon led Ayden with 15 while Corey Stokes had 12. Mike Moye led Frink with 12.</p>
        <p>In the girls game. Ayden recorded</p>
        <p>a 26-23 win. Sherrese Wallace led Ayden with 10 while Michele Joyner and Tammy Hunter each had seven. Frink was led by S. Bradford with 8.</p>
        <p>Aydens girls are now 7-0 while the boys are 6-1.</p>
        <p>Wellcome-Farmville</p>
        <p>Farmville Middle School won two basketball games from hosting Wellcome Monday.</p>
        <p>In the boys game, Farmville rolled up a 54-38 victory. Morris Foreman led Farmville with 16 while Jeff Tyson added 10 and Kelvin Reid had 10. Wellcome was led by Danny Suggs with 15 and Steve Staton with 10.</p>
        <p>Farmvilles girls took a 23-11 win in their game. Pam Lang led Farmville with 12 while Toyna Daniels was high for Wellcome with four.</p>
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        <pb facs="00096520_0093" />
        <p>SCOREBOARDThe Daily Reflector, Greenville. N.C.</p>
        <p>Tuesday, January 20,1987  Q.3</p>
        <p>TANK NCNANARA^</p>
        <p>by Jeff Millar &amp;amp; Bill Hinds</p>
        <p>u..  CC</p>
        <p>Rec Basketball</p>
        <p>Junior Division</p>
        <p>Blue Devils.............4 6 8 6-24</p>
        <p>Cavaliers..............4 ii 5 13-33</p>
        <p>a^'''*.  -  Benny</p>
        <p>Aoler 8. Jonathan Powers 6; C -Walt Clark 12, Matt Aldridge 10</p>
        <p>Wolfpck..........</p>
        <p>Tar Heels..................6  9  8  5-28</p>
        <p>4 5 6-23</p>
        <p>V T-..................  ^  o  j0</p>
        <p>Leadinfl scorers: W - Jason Biz-zarp 9, Dron Johnson 8; T - Kim Andrews 7, Mark Taylor 9.</p>
        <p> AADivision</p>
        <p>Aid. 4 Southerland........18  18-36</p>
        <p>StppShpp......................19  16-35</p>
        <p>Leadi^ scorers: AS-Allen Far-four 11; S  Lee Latham 12</p>
        <p>Hooters.....</p>
        <p>Fieldcrest</p>
        <p>19  18-37</p>
        <p>35-63</p>
        <p>,Ceading scorers: H - Ty Ferrell 13; F C^tis Spell 20.</p>
        <p>nentogs  34  31-65</p>
        <p>il.4Aikman(&amp;gt;4...........14  18-32</p>
        <p>Leading scorers: A - Charles Moore 17, Larry Rodgers 12; CA -Steve Sherman 8</p>
        <p>Cooke 4 Elks................20  2545</p>
        <p>Stingray......................32  23-55</p>
        <p>Leading scorers: CE - David Brooks 17, Myron Jones 10; S -  pc^T</p>
        <p>Terry Shelton 23, Gordon Dunn 21.  Pittsburgh s</p>
        <p>AAA Division</p>
        <p>Empire Brushes.............7  14-21</p>
        <p>Col.4Aikman#2........... 20  3050</p>
        <p>Leading scorers: EB - Doug Dixon 11, Alfred Braxton 6; CA - Rudy Carmon 10, Joshua Artis 8.</p>
        <p>7 Auto.......................33  47_8o</p>
        <p>Acheson's....................20  33-53</p>
        <p>Leading scorers: 427 - David Ungley 17, Linwood Harris 17 , A -Robert Farnville 21, Darrin Moore 12.</p>
        <p>fttts^  17  20  8  42  161  155</p>
        <p>New Jersey  18  23  5  41  166  208</p>
        <p>Adams Divisioo Moneal  23  19  7  53  168  154</p>
        <p>Hartford  22  18  6  50  152  155</p>
        <p>Boston  21  19  5  47  157  142</p>
        <p>Queto  18  22  7  43  156  155</p>
        <p>Buffalo  13  26  6  32  152  175</p>
        <p>C AMPBELL CONFERENCE Norris Division Minnesota  20  21  5  45  177  174</p>
        <p>Detroit  18  20  8  44  140  156</p>
        <p>Toronto  18  22  5  41  156  162</p>
        <p>tego  17  23  6  40  164  189</p>
        <p>St.LouiS  16  20  8  40  154  174</p>
        <p>Smyth* Divisioo Edmonton  30  14  2  62  215  159</p>
        <p>tjMipeg  26  17  4  56  165  158</p>
        <p>Calgary  25  20  l  51  183  179</p>
        <p>^Angeles  20  21  6  46  193  193</p>
        <p>Vancouver  14  28  5  33  157  188</p>
        <p>Monday's Games Hartford 5, Montreal 4, OT Winnipeg 5, Vancouver 4 N Y Rangers 2, Los Angeles 2, tie Tuesday's Games Boston at Quebec,7:35pm.</p>
        <p>New Jersey at Washington, 7:35 p m CalgaryatN.Y.Islan(fers,8:05p.m. , Bufialo at Minnesota, 8:35 p.m Wednesday's Games Montreal at Hartford, 7:35 p m N Y IslandersatDelroit,7^35pm St. Louis atToronto,7:35 p.m Edmonton at Winnipeg, 8 :35 p.m. Philadephia at Chicago, 8:35 p m N Y. Rangers at Vancouver, l0:35p m Pittsburgh at Los Angeles, 10:35 p.m.</p>
        <p>NBA Standings</p>
        <p>Bv The .Associated Press All Times EST EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division</p>
        <p>W L Pet. GB</p>
        <p>Rockers................... 20  24- 44</p>
        <p>Battlecats....................i? 22-39</p>
        <p>Leading scorers: R - Lindsey Blount 10, Ed Hobby 12; B - Samuel Smith 11, Earl Holloway 6.</p>
        <p>NHL Standings</p>
        <p>By The Associated Press All Times EST WALES CONFERENCE Patrick Division ^  W L T Pts GF GA</p>
        <p>Philadelphia  31  12  3  65  194  124</p>
        <p>NY Islanders  23  19  4  50  167  155</p>
        <p>NY Angers  18  20  8  44  185  183</p>
        <p>Washington  18  22  7  43  147  171</p>
        <p>Boston Philadelphia Washington New York New Jersey</p>
        <p>Detroit</p>
        <p>Atlanta</p>
        <p>Milwaukee</p>
        <p>Chicago</p>
        <p>Indiana</p>
        <p>Cleveland</p>
        <p>Dallas</p>
        <p>Utah</p>
        <p>Houston</p>
        <p>Denver</p>
        <p>^cramento</p>
        <p>San Antonio</p>
        <p>L A Lakers Portland Golden State</p>
        <p>27 11</p>
        <p>22 17 19 19 13 25 10 28</p>
        <p>Central Division 25 II 25 12 24 16</p>
        <p>19 17</p>
        <p>20 18 15 24  </p>
        <p>WESTERN CONFERENt E Midwest Division 24 14 21 16 19 19 17 23 11 26 11 28 Pacific Division 30 8 24 17</p>
        <p>23 17</p>
        <p>'11 -</p>
        <p>564</p>
        <p>,500</p>
        <p>.342 14 .263 17</p>
        <p>.694 -.676  '2</p>
        <p>600 3 ,528 6 526 6 385 ll'j</p>
        <p>.632 -,568 2'2 .500 5 .425 8 .'297 12'z 282 13'2</p>
        <p>.585 Vj .575 8</p>
        <p>SeatUe  20  17  .541  9&amp;gt;2</p>
        <p>Phoenix  16  23  ,410  Ith</p>
        <p>LA Clippers  5  34  .128  254</p>
        <p>Monday's Games L A. Lakers 126, New Jersey 115 New York 111, Boston 109 Philadelphia 107, Phoenix 104 Houston 127, Cleveland 103 Indiana 109, Chicago 95 Detroit 106, Atlanta 98 San Antonio 113, L A. Clippers 106 Denver 118, Portland 116</p>
        <p>Tnesdav's Games Milwaukee at Chicago, 8:30 p m Golden State at Sacramento, 10:30pm Wednesdav's Games Indiana at Boston, 7:30p m Phoenix at New Jersey, 7:30 p m Seattle at Philadelphia, 7:30 p m L A Lakers at Atlanta, 7 30 p.m Milwaukee at Cleveland. 7:30 p.m NewYorkatDallas.8:30pm Houston at San Antonio. 8:30 p.m Golden State at Denver. 9:30 p.m Detroit at Utah.9:30pm.</p>
        <p>NFL Playoffs</p>
        <p>By The Associated Press All Times EST Sunday. Dec. 28 New York Jets 35, Kansas City 15 Washington 19, Los Angeles Rams</p>
        <p>Saturday. Jan. 3 Cleveland 23, New York Jets 20, 20T</p>
        <p>Washington 27, Chicago 13 Sunday. Jan. 4 New York Giants 49, San Francisco 3</p>
        <p>Denver 22, New England 17 Sunday, Jan. II Denver 23, Cleveland 20, OT New York Giants 17, Washington 0 Sunday, Jan. 25 Super Bow l At Pasadena. Calif.</p>
        <p>Denver vs New York Giants, 6 p.m.</p>
        <p>Pro Bowl Sunday, Feb. I At Honolulu</p>
        <p>AFC vs NFC, 4pm</p>
        <p>Transactions</p>
        <p>Bv The Associated Press , BASEBAI.L .American League BALTIMORE ORIOLES- Agreed to a one-year contract with Mike Young, outfielder.</p>
        <p>MILWAUKEE BREWERS-Traded Dion James outfielder, to the Atlanta Braves tor Brad Kom-minsk, outfielder.</p>
        <p>TEXAS RANGERS-Announced</p>
        <p>that Toby Harrah, infielder, has retired and will manage Port Charlotte of the Gulf Coast C^gue National League</p>
        <p>ATLANTA BRAVES-Agreed to a one-year contract with David Palmer, pitcher.</p>
        <p>CHICAGO CUBS-Announced that Larry Cox. manager, and Dick Pole coacn, had been retained at Iowa of the American Association. Named Jim Essian manager at Pittsfield of the Eastern League, Jay Loviglio manager at Winston-Salem of the Carolina League, Jim Tracy manager at Peoria of the Midwest League, and Tom Spencer manager at Geneva of the New York-Penn-</p>
        <p>sylvania League MONTREAL</p>
        <p>  EXPOS-Signed</p>
        <p>Mike Fitzgerald, catcher, to a one-year contract and Dave Engle, catcher-outfielder, to a minor-league contract NEW YORK METS-Named Butch Hobson manager at Columbia of the South Atlanfic League and John Tamargo manager at Lynch-</p>
        <p>of the South Atlanfic League and</p>
        <p>burg of the Carolina League ST. LOUIS CARDlNittS-Signed Ken Dayley and Dave. LaPoint, pitchers, to one-year contracts BASKETBALL National Basketball Association MILWAUKEE BUCKS-Signed Marvin Webster, center, to a iMay contract.</p>
        <p>FOOTBALL National Football League HOUSTON OILERS-Named Kim Helton offensive line coach COLLEGE ARIZONA-Named Arnold Jeter, defensive line coach, and Ron McBride, offensive line coach LOUISIANA STATE-Named Pete Jenkins defensive coordinator and announced he will retain his duties as defensive line coach Named Joe Wessel inside linebackers coach, John Mitchell outside linebackers coach and Mike Nolan defensive secondary coach Declared Dennis Brown, basketball guard, academically ineligible for the rest of the season MIAMI, Fla.-Announced that Karl Schmitt, sports information director, is leaving the school to ac cept a position in media relations at Churchill Downs</p>
        <p>College Basketball</p>
        <p>By The Associated Press EAST</p>
        <p>Baruch 74, Kings Point 64 Bluefield St. 93, Concord 77 Bridgeport 92, New Hampshire</p>
        <p>Brown 108, Bryant 78 Canisius 88, New Hampshire 65 Clarion 89, La Roche 81 Clark 68, Bowdoin 58 CW Post at Bloomsburg, ppti snow</p>
        <p>Delaware.St 80. Md E Shore 72 Drew 61, Swarthmore 40 Drexel 91, Boston U 73 Edinboro 79, Wright St 77 Fairmont St, 92, Davis &amp;amp; Elkins 82 Frostburg St. 110, Salisbury St 98 Glenville St 82, Aldersoii-Broad dus70</p>
        <p>i'anoO  Keene St at Army, ppd snow</p>
        <p>ilHav  LeMoyne 82, Quitinipiac 75</p>
        <p>Loyola, Md 94. Monmouth, N.J 81 Manhattanville 98, John Jay 71 Maryland 77, Bucknell t'i8 Md.-Balt County 45, Morgan St 25.SUSP Medger Evers 72. CCN Y 61 Millersville 82. .Shipptnisburg 70 Mt. St. Mary's, N Y 77, Liberty 72 Navy 84. Delaware 6o Nazareth.N Y 87,GeneseoSt 84 N. Adams St 8. Bridgewater. Mass 74 Penn St . 80, Rutgers 60 Pitt.-Johnstown 107, California, Pa. 102</p>
        <p>Rhode Island 89, St Bonaventure</p>
        <p>79</p>
        <p>Rochester Tech 69, Clarkson 61 St. John Fisher 105, Utica Tech 101,2T St. John's 6:), Pittsburgh 62 St Paurs69, Bow ie St 66 St.Rose87, Keuka71 Salem, W Va 107, W Virginia Wesleyan 106 Stonehill 72, Lowell 70 Utica 80. Buffalo St 48 West Virginia 67, Massachuselts</p>
        <p>45</p>
        <p>StU'TIl</p>
        <p>Alabama St 73. Alcorn St 6&amp;lt;i Ala.-HunUsville72. Birm .Southern</p>
        <p>68</p>
        <p>Athens St 66, Jacksonville St 65 Atlantic Christian 91, Pemliroke St 83</p>
        <p>Bethune-C(K)kman 58, S. Carolina St 40</p>
        <p>Bridgewater, Va 7t, Lynchburg66 Campbell 87. Armstrong St 74 Citadel 82, VMl 78 Covenant lOl. Shorter 93 Davidson 106, E Tennessee St. 65 Florida Tech 75, Flagler 59 ^^George Mason ,50, WMIiam &amp;amp; Mary</p>
        <p>Georgetown, Kv 64, Union, Kv, 58 ''--"liaSW88,Viedmont7? '</p>
        <p>72</p>
        <p>Grarnbling^92, Prairie View 68 Hampdeniydney 99, Averett 78 Jackson St i3. Southern U 63 James Madison 62. Richmond 59 Johnson C. Smith 114, Livingstone</p>
        <p>UGrange 88. (knirgia Coll 82 Lenior-Rhyne 67 PTeiffer 65 Lindenwood 81 Principia 75 Longwood 65. Klon 60 Marshall 76. Furman 72 Memphis .St 76, Florida .St, 68 MiddleTenn 89, E Kentucky 83 Miss Valley St. 97,Texas Southern 75 Morehead St 92, Tennessw Tech</p>
        <p>70</p>
        <p>Morris Brow n 74, Savannah St 73 New Orleans 101, SW Louisiana 72</p>
        <p>N.C Asheville 69, Augusta 63 N (leorgiaBl, Berry 66 Paine 88. Florida aAm 74</p>
        <p>Park 71, Missouri Baptist 67 Radford 72, Winthrop64 _^South Alabama 82, Old Dominion 77</p>
        <p>S.C -Spartanburg 111, Morris73 .Southern Tech 62. Kennesaw 59 Stillman 52. Montevallo 50 _^Thomas More 88, Campln-llsville</p>
        <p>Tuskegw' 75, Morehouse 72 Virginia 82, Jacksonville 81 W Carolina M, Appalachian St 55 W Georgia 86, N Alabama 84 W Kentucky 61, .South Florida 46 W'laston-Safem 86, Fayetteville SI 80 20T Wofford 67, lamder 59 Xavier. NO 70. Louisiana Coll. 64</p>
        <p>MIDWEST Akron 76, MurravSt 70 Austin Peav 74, Youngstown St 68 Bradley 73Jllinois St 65 Butler fel. St. Louis 58 Carthage 70. Rockford 60 Concordia, Minn. 52, Augsburg 49 Dana 97, Peru St. 71 DePauUl, Indiana St 49 Fort Hays St. 89, Marymount, Kan 61 Hamline 66. Bethel, Minn. 62 Iowa 70. Purdue 67 John Carroll 48, Penn St Behrend</p>
        <p>37</p>
        <p>Mid-Am Nazarene 83, Benedic line, Kan 75 Millikn61, Washington, Mo 59 Minot St 95, Jamestown 63 Mo -SI lx)uis82, Quincy 62 N Iowa 76, Valparaiso 73 St Ambrose 83, Mercy 75 St John's. Minn 69. Gustav Adolphus 67 St 01af61, Macalester56 St Thomas, Minn 65, Carlelon 57 SW Missouri 89. W Illinois 75 Tabor 83, McPherson 58 Valley City St . 81. Dickinson .SI ,59 Wayne, Mich. 68, l.iewis56 Wis -Green Bay 86, 111 -Chicago 77 Wis -Milwaukee 60, Carroll, Wis</p>
        <p>59</p>
        <p>Xavier, Ohio 77, Evansville 70 SOUTHWEST Abilene Christian 64, Texas A&amp;amp;l 58 Angelo St 90, E New Mexico 73 Ark Little Rock 89, Cieorgia .St 86, OT</p>
        <p>Bartlesville Weslyn 103, Ozark Christian 61 Cent Arkansas 11. Ark Pine Bluff</p>
        <p>73</p>
        <p>Harding 93, Hendrix 67 Ouachita 75, S Arkansas 73 Sam Houston St 81, SE laiuisiana</p>
        <p>70</p>
        <p>SW Texas St 85, Nicholls St 71 Stephen F Austin 69, NW Louisiana 62 Texas A&amp;amp;M 57, Houston 45 Texas Christian 52, Texas ;17</p>
        <p>Tews Tech 75. So. Methodist 64 W Texas St. 75, Howard Paine 65 F AR WEST Arizona 77, Stanford 70 California 85, Hofstra 55 Cal-Santa Barbara 75, New Mexico St 62 Long Beach SI 78, Cal-lrvine 71 Neb Wesleyan 102, Bellevue 70 Nev Las Vegas 73, Fullerton St 65 Rocky Mountain77, N Montana 76 S Utah 119, WassukT? TOURNAMENTS Rotary Pocono Classic First Round Phila Textile 78, Bloomfield 67</p>
        <p>N.C.Scoreboard</p>
        <p>By The Associated Press</p>
        <p>Men's College Basketball</p>
        <p>W Carolina 63 Appalachian St. 55 Davidson 106, E Tennessee St. 65</p>
        <p>Campbell 87, Armstrong St. 74 Lenoir Rhyne67, Pfeiffer 65 Atlantic Christian 91, Pembroke</p>
        <p>St</p>
        <p>^ L8lwwood65, Elon60</p>
        <p>N Carolina Asheville 69, Augusta</p>
        <p>Radford 72, Winthrop 64</p>
        <p>ACC Standings</p>
        <p>By The Associated Press</p>
        <p>Conference Overall W I, Pet W L Pet</p>
        <p>N Carolina  4  0  1  000  15  I  .938</p>
        <p>Clemson  3  0  I  000  16  0  1.000</p>
        <p>Duke  3  1  750  13  2  .867</p>
        <p>N C State  3  2  600  11  4  733</p>
        <p>Georgia Tech 1 1 500 9 4 692 Virginia  12  .333  11  4  733</p>
        <p>Wake Forest  0  4  000  8  6  571</p>
        <p>Maryland  0  5  000  4  6  400</p>
        <p>Tuesday's Games Clemson at Georgia TechKookaburra III To Defend Cup</p>
        <p>FREMANTLE, Australia (AP) -Kookaburra III won the Americas Cup defender trials Tuesday, eliminating Australia IV and ending owner Alan Bonds hopes of defending the trophy he won in 1983.</p>
        <p>Kookaburra III beat Bonds yacht for the fifth straight time after a bungled start by Australia IVs skipper, Colin Beashel. Iain Murray forced Beashel to circle to avoid hitting the committee boat just before the start.</p>
        <p>The final margin of victory was 55 seconds.</p>
        <p>Kookaburra III won the best-of-nine competition 5-0, but her place in the decisive series against Stars &amp;amp; Stripy and skipper Dennis Conner starting Jan. 31 isnt assured.</p>
        <p>Trials with stablemate Kookaburra II, eliminated in the previous round, are planned to see which of those boats would have a better chance of beating the U.S. challenger in the best-of-seven series.</p>
        <p>In 1983, the Bond Syndicates Australia II rode her innovative winged keel to an Americas Cup victory over Conner and Liberty. It was the first time since the competition</p>
        <p>began in 1851 that a U.S. boat didnt win the Cup.</p>
        <p>Conner earned a chance to avenge his 1983 loss Monday when Stars &amp;amp; Stripes completed a 4-1 victory over New Zealand in the challenger finals.</p>
        <p>Conner saw his fulfilled as he survived a torn jib to defeat New Zealand by 1:29, earning the chance to get the trophy back.</p>
        <p>New Zealand skipper Chris Dickson, 25, and his smal nation saw their last hopes dim when his Kiwi Magic hit the seventh  and last  mark and had to re-round it. Dickson had pulled his yacht within two boat lengths of the Americans with one leg left.</p>
        <p>Thirteen years experience beat 13 months, Dickson said at a news conference after a race that had mixed tension with disaster.</p>
        <p>Conner won, but another possible contest still remained to be resolved. Conner would like to tune his boat for the Jan. 31 opening of the Cup finals by practicing against New Zealand. Traditionally, the challengers gang together against the Cup defender. Before 1983, the defender was always the United States.</p>
        <p>But tradition was shattered in 1983</p>
        <p>when Conner lost the Cup to Australia, and it may take another beating because of New Zealands regional tie with the Australian defenders.</p>
        <p>Conner didnt help himself overcome the Down Under brotherhood when, last month, he said that any challenger that built a fiberglass yacht did so with the intention of cheating. New Zealands yacht is a plastic 12-meter while all the rest are built of aluminum.</p>
        <p>Earlier in the three-month-long elimination process, Conners syndicate pressured to have New Zealands subjected to extensive analysis, finals.</p>
        <p>Dickson has said he would prefer to support the Australian defender rather than the U.S. yacht because it would be easier to enter the 1990 Americas Cup if it is held in Fremantle rather than in the United States, Fay indicated after Mondays loss that no decision had been made.</p>
        <p>It is something that, up until last night, was not at the top of our priority list, he said today. It wasnt when I woke up this morning but its quickly getting to the top.</p>
        <p>Mike Tyson Doll: Wind It Up And It Intimidates</p>
        <p>By ED SCHUYLER JR.</p>
        <p>AP Boxing Writer A plan is in place to market Mike Tyson, the unbeaten and exciting heavyweight champioii.</p>
        <p>Look for a movie and a book, and expect to see Tyson selling products on television.</p>
        <p>And a man who will be involved in the promotion said, Id expect a toy company would be interested in doing something.</p>
        <p>Can you picture a Mike Tyson Doll? Wind it up and it intimidates other dolls.</p>
        <p>Jimmy Jacobs, who manages Tyson along with his business partner, Bill Cayton, laughed at the doll suggestion. He knew it was joke. But the selling of the youngest man to win a heavyweight title is serious business. Con men and cranks need not apply.</p>
        <p>Jacobs and Cayton, equal partners in Reel Sports Inc., which has a personal services contract with Tyson, have signed an agreement with Ohlmeyer Communications Co. for the marketing and licensing of the fighter.</p>
        <p>Ohlmeyer Communications will differentiate between various deals offered to us. Jacobs said. They will make recommendations, then well decide.</p>
        <p>These two men mapped a cam</p>
        <p>paign of 28 fights in a little more than 20 months that resulted in Tyson becoming a champion at age 20.</p>
        <p>They tell me who to fight and I fight them, Tyson has said.</p>
        <p>Selection of marketing and licensing deals will reflect that the hard-punching but soft-spoken Tyson is going to be a very important role model, John Martin, president of Ohlmeyer Communications, said.</p>
        <p>Among the transactions to be looked into, Cayton said, are sponsorship deals, a film deal and a book deal. Weve had offers from three motion picture companies.</p>
        <p>Martin feels a movie wouldnt be so much The Mike Tyson Story as it would be Cus and The Kid.</p>
        <p>Cus DAmato, the late boxing teacher who guided the careers of heavyweight champion Floyd Patterson and light heavyweight champion Jose Torres, first saw Tyson spar when Tyson was 13 or 14 and an inmate of an upstate New York reform school.</p>
        <p>The rise of Tyson from a tough kid off the streets of Brooklyn to the</p>
        <p>heavyweight championship under the tutelage of DAmato, who died in 1985, and the guidance of Cayton and Jacobs would seem to be a sure-shot storyline.</p>
        <p>The first time DAmato watched Tyson, he told him that, if he listened and worked hard, he could become heavyweight champion.</p>
        <p>I thought he was  crazy old white dude, Tyson said after winning the World Boxing Council title on a second-round knockout of Trevor Ber-bick last Nov. 22.</p>
        <p>That would be a good place to end a movie or a book.</p>
        <p>But Cayton thinks a better ending would be Tyson winning the undisputed championship. That could happen this year.</p>
        <p>Tyson is scheduled to take a step toward that goal with a March 7 fight at Las Vegas against James Bonecrusher Smith, the World Boxing Association champion.</p>
        <p>Jacobs, Cayton and Martin all said that, while deals will be discussed, none probably will be made until after the Smith fight.</p>
        <p>To my surprise, there already have been a number of things happen from some unexpected q'uariers that would indicate that this is fast becoming an issue.</p>
        <p>Fay said he and Malin Burnham, head of the San Diego-based Stars &amp;amp; Stripe-s syndicate, will meet "quite soon.</p>
        <p>Disaster struck Conner and his crew during Mondays race when their tautly trimmed jib tore from top to bottom on the third of eight legs in winds that reached a high of 28 knots.</p>
        <p>Conner said nothing when left alone at the helm while his 10 shipmates raced forward to repair the damage. They had a new jib up and flying in 2 minutes, 52 seconds But the mishap cost Stars &amp;amp; Stripes two-thirds of what had been a nine-boat-length lead.</p>
        <p>Conner just managed to fight off Dickson on the next reaching leg. New Zealand was foaming in her wake and threatening to overtake Stars &amp;amp; Stripes when the Kiwis experienced trouble of their own.</p>
        <p>The New Zealanders were changing spinnakers and the sails became entangled in a billowing confusion of cloth. The mixup allowed Conner to double his lead, to 16 seconds, around the fifth mark as the Kiwis slowed to about nine knots</p>
        <p>Rose-Hunt Mat Match Is Reset</p>
        <p>Rose High Schools wrestling match with Wilson Hunt, scheduled for Monday night, has been rescheduled.</p>
        <p>The match will now be held on Jan. 30 at Wilson Hunt.</p>
        <p>GORDON'!</p>
        <p>Selected Ski Bibs</p>
        <p>*39.95</p>
        <p>264 By-Pass 756-1003</p>
        <p>Dickson charged back and. coming around the seventh buoy at the top of the home stretch, was only two lengths astern. But Dickson, who has only been sailing Cup 12-meter yachts since late 1984, hit the inflated orange bouy. Racing rules dictated that he go around it again and Conner was left with an easy lead to the finish, crossing the finish line with a lead of 1 minute, 29 seconds.</p>
        <p>In football terms, Dicksons mistake was like fumbling on the goal line with the game on the line.</p>
        <p>Well be back, said Fay. Unfortunately, weve caught the Americas Cup bug.</p>
        <p>Its great to be back in the finals, Conner said as he came ashore. He has been working for three years to regain the trophy he lost at Newport, R.I.</p>
        <p>On Monday, Kookaburra III defeated Australia IV for the fourth straight time in the best-of-nine defender finals, winning by 1:13.</p>
        <p>A protest lodged by Australia IV charging Kooakaburra III with sailing below its proper course was dismissed. Two protests by Kookaburra III were then withdrawn.</p>
        <p>John Marshall, a coordinator of the Stars &amp;amp; Stripes campaign, said Kookaburra III is a fast boat, and -its going to be a real fight.</p>
        <p>a</p>
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        <p>I</p>
        <p>Have You Missed Your Daily Reflector?</p>
        <p>First Call Your Independent Carrier.</p>
        <p>If You Are Unable To Reach HJm Call The Daily Reflector.</p>
        <p>752-3952</p>
        <p>Between 6:00 P.M. And 6:30 P.M. Weekdays And 8 A.M. 'Til 9 A.M. On Sundays.</p>
        <p>Selected Groups Of Leather Jackets</p>
        <p>1/2 off</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0094" />
        <p>Crossword By eucene sheffer</p>
        <p>ACROSS</p>
        <p>1 Radio aniat*urs 5 Mead ( &amp;lt;Kk 9 Wa^es</p>
        <p>12 Concert halls</p>
        <p>13 Venetian coins</p>
        <p>14 Madrid cheer</p>
        <p>15 Role for Mavley Mills</p>
        <p>17 Mauna </p>
        <p>18 Sell</p>
        <p>19 He played Charlie Chan</p>
        <p>21 Rahhit fur</p>
        <p>24 Indian yellow pigment</p>
        <p>25 Vene/uela c(ppi*r center</p>
        <p>26 (irieved</p>
        <p>30  T ake Romatu e"</p>
        <p>31 Li^ht l)oat</p>
        <p>32 Money of account</p>
        <p>33 Compared critically</p>
        <p>35 &amp;lt; )ld oath</p>
        <p>36 Prong</p>
        <p>37 &amp;lt; hitrnoded</p>
        <p>38 Rio de</p>
        <p>la -40 Dullard</p>
        <p>42 I/K)se</p>
        <p>43 Do the work of a hee</p>
        <p>48 Lyric poiun</p>
        <p>49 Hahylon ian</p>
        <p>g&amp;lt; xldess</p>
        <p>50 Fit( her</p>
        <p>51 Toady's word</p>
        <p>52 Hritish gun</p>
        <p>53 Beloved DOWN</p>
        <p>1 School danc</p>
        <p>2 Fuss</p>
        <p>3 Singer Torme</p>
        <p>4 Flowering plant</p>
        <p>5 Tribe</p>
        <p>6 Female red deer</p>
        <p>7 Sea bird</p>
        <p>8 Facial part</p>
        <p>9 Tadpoles 10 Medic iiial</p>
        <p>|)lant</p>
        <p>Solution time; 25 miiis.</p>
        <p>IS I BMP</p>
        <p>t; I BtMNpME [E.R0,MS;0^ u fp]s M I lM* NT  rMc hTa S'OLDERsiirHuls</p>
        <p>a l eeMbooth PAL t;e;rMsa!wM|| ageeMsal.icT^ C A N sMa,C E T.A Ties</p>
        <p>t'r o'tBt aoBrioidie</p>
        <p>Yesterdays answer *'2^^</p>
        <p>11 ( alc'ndars duration</p>
        <p>16 Strong urge'</p>
        <p>20 Spanish gold</p>
        <p>21 .Secular</p>
        <p>22 Singer  Ciiitlirie</p>
        <p>23 Voting  fees</p>
        <p>24 &amp;lt; ioad</p>
        <p>26 Surfeit</p>
        <p>27 I ndivided</p>
        <p>28 f^poc hs</p>
        <p>29 FIccrida countv</p>
        <p>31 Party' goodies</p>
        <p>34 IgnitecI</p>
        <p>35 DeseiTed</p>
        <p>37 Luau dish</p>
        <p>38 Stratagem</p>
        <p>39 Bail</p>
        <p>40 ' Suede</p>
        <p>.Shoes</p>
        <p>41 Pcarl Bin k heromc'</p>
        <p>44 Table ' leaving</p>
        <p>45 Solemn wonder</p>
        <p>46 Myson or herb</p>
        <p>47 Be human </p>
        <p>I'raditionalists?</p>
        <p>Youtliful punk styles may shock you, hut many of the details of sucli fads are far from new. The fashionable Renaissance* woman shaved her hair several inches ftack from ht-r natural hairline*. In Alexander the (Ireats time*. (ire*e*ks had a penchant for hlond hair, and both men and women bleached their locks. But in ancie*nt Kgypt, beautiful woman had to have bald he'ads. Wome*n use*d tvvet*ze*rs to remove every hair and the*n polishe*d their scalps to a glossy sheen.</p>
        <p>DO YOU KNOW - What is a coiffeur?</p>
        <p>MONDAY S ANSWER - Saudi Arabia has the Middle Easts largest reserves of petroleum.</p>
        <p>' '(0 &amp;gt;1  Kni.'wleflqp  Unlimited, Inc .1987</p>
        <p>Horoscope</p>
        <p>From The Carroll Righter Institute</p>
        <p>FORECAST FOR WEDNESDAY Jan. 21</p>
        <p>GENERAL TENDENCIES: An excellent day for you to put your best foot forward and take advantage of an opportunity concerning a relationship. Finish tasits today with a fine touch.</p>
        <p>ARIES (March 21 to April 19): You have a fine chance to cement better relations with others and become more successful.</p>
        <p>TAURUS (April 20 to May 20): Be more precise with your work and add an extra flair to it so that you can command greater benefits.</p>
        <p>GEMINI (May 21 to June 21): Some risk you want to take can work out successfully now. Dont get into activities that waste your time.</p>
        <p>MOON CHILDREN (June 22 to July 21): Choose the friends and relatives you want to enjoy amusements with and make plans for such.</p>
        <p>LEO (July 22 to August 21): Do some little favor for those with whom you are regularly allied with. Show far away friends that you are kind.</p>
        <p>VIRGO (August 22 to Sepiember 22):, Get everything around you more sparkling and charming. Study your newspaper for bargains and tips.</p>
        <p>LIBRA (September 23 to October 22): You have social charm now and should use this wisely. Be with large groups to increase your magnetism.</p>
        <p>SCORPIO (October 23 to November 21): Do something thoughtful for your mate and youll both come to a better understanding.</p>
        <p>SAGITTARIUS (November 22 to December 21): It would be wise to go along with the views of Others and not be so independent at this time.</p>
        <p>CAPRICORN (December 22 to January 20): Get busy at public and business affairs and make big headway. Using trickery will get you nowhere.</p>
        <p>AQUARIUS (January 21 to February 19): Look into new interests that could help you to have a more prosperous life in the future.</p>
        <p>PISCES (February 20 to March 20): Study the conditions around you and know how to make the improvements that are needed.</p>
        <p>IF YOUR CHILD IS BORN TODAY... he or she will be very charming and can get iust about everything desired very easily, but teach this one to work and ead a more productive life. Permit a lot of playmates for your progeny, for they will be lifelong friends. Slant the education along cultural lines.</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>Bridge</p>
        <p>By CHARLES COREN AND OMAR SHARIF</p>
        <p>MARK A BREAK</p>
        <p>I5iii li V iilnci ;thlp Soni h .NORTH</p>
        <p>i!.*;ils.</p>
        <p>CRYPTOQUIP</p>
        <p>1-20</p>
        <p>V Z X .1 .S Y R  K  .s  F .s V K (. X</p>
        <p>X B K V NO K .S B X S .1 N (i F</p>
        <p>II V N O R  I  Z N O V</p>
        <p>Yesterdays Clryptoquip: DKNTTST'.S IMBLISHFD PLEDOE; NOTHINO BI T THE TOOTH "</p>
        <p>Today'.s Crjptoiniip cha*. O equals R The Cryptoquip is a simple substitution cipher in which each letter used stands for another. If you think that X equals 0, it will equal 0 throughout the puzzle. Single letters, short words, and words using an apastrophe can give you clues to locating vowels. Solution is accomplished by trial and error.</p>
        <p> A Q .5</p>
        <p>A g 10 9 7 3 2</p>
        <p>A</p>
        <p> K 9</p>
        <p>WEST</p>
        <p>EAST</p>
        <p> 10 8 6 4</p>
        <p> 2</p>
        <p>4</p>
        <p>.ISO 5</p>
        <p>K Q .1 8 6</p>
        <p>10 7 4</p>
        <p> Q8 2</p>
        <p> .1 7 6 r, 3</p>
        <p>SOI TH</p>
        <p> K ,1 9 7 ;i</p>
        <p>K</p>
        <p>9;</p>
        <p>) .3 2</p>
        <p> A 10 4</p>
        <p>Th(* bi(l(</p>
        <p>Img</p>
        <p>Soulh</p>
        <p>WVsl</p>
        <p>North East</p>
        <p>1 ^</p>
        <p>Pass</p>
        <p>;) Pass</p>
        <p>:} </p>
        <p>Pass</p>
        <p>4  Pass</p>
        <p>4</p>
        <p>Pass</p>
        <p>4 NI Pass</p>
        <p>5</p>
        <p>Pass</p>
        <p>5 NT Pass</p>
        <p>6</p>
        <p>Pass</p>
        <p>7  Pass</p>
        <p>Pass</p>
        <p>Pass</p>
        <p>(&amp;gt;|Miimg</p>
        <p>lead:</p>
        <p>King ot</p>
        <p>That (*\t ra chaiu c which t*nsiiics</p>
        <p>a contract is often concealed. Can you spot the w'inning line on today's hand.^</p>
        <p>North-.South bid intelligently to an (*xcellent spade slam.</p>
        <p>North chose to play in spades rather than hearts because the former might be able to withstand a bad heart break, and in spades an &amp;lt;*xtra trick or two might be devcl-ojied by diamond ruffs.</p>
        <p>West led the king of diamonds, and declarer saw immediately that his slam was on ice if either major suit broke :)-2 Could he protect against a 4-1 break in both suits?</p>
        <p>It did not take South lung to realize that it would be fatal to cash the king of hearts because the opening lead had r(*moved a key dummy *ntry. The campaign he adopted could not be improved upon.</p>
        <p>After winning the ace of diamonds, he cashed the king and (pi(*en of sjiades. Had both defenders followed, declarer would have' (ashed the king of hearts before</p>
        <p>drawing the last trump, and a heart ruff would then have set up that suit even if it divided 4-1. But when East showed out on the second trump, declarer fell back on his alternative line.</p>
        <p>He cashed the ace of trumps, came to hand with the ace of clubs and drew the last trump. Next, he overtook the king of hearts with the ace and cashed the queen. Had both defenders followed, a ruff would have set up the suit while the king of clubs was there as an entry; and the suit would have been good had the Jack dropped. But declarer was still in command when West showed out. He led the</p>
        <p>10 for the marked ruffing finesse, and whether or not East covered, the heart suit could be brought in and the grand slam was made.</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>Count On Classified To Fill Your Job Openings! Call 752-6166niNKYWINKIRBEAN</p>
        <p>BC</p>
        <p>Ti. ;Jju at Pj^AoSL</p>
        <p>Voje QUA|?1B^0AC&amp;lt; 12</p>
        <p>TO HUier His</p>
        <p>\i i MgvgierimHr</p>
        <p>Of fHAr.,..</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0095" />
        <p>O)</p>
        <p>WTBS</p>
        <p>WITN</p>
        <p>WNCT</p>
        <p>wen</p>
        <p>WHAL</p>
        <p>TUESDAY EVENING</p>
        <p>e</p>
        <p>o</p>
        <p>o</p>
        <p>(D</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>D</p>
        <p>OIS</p>
        <p>ESPN</p>
        <p>HBO</p>
        <p>LIFE</p>
        <p>MAX</p>
        <p>SHOW</p>
        <p>TMC</p>
        <p>7:00  7:30</p>
        <p>Hardcastle And McCormick</p>
        <p>Sanford</p>
        <p>Business Rpt.</p>
        <p>Facts Of Life</p>
        <p>Newlyweds</p>
        <p>Fortune</p>
        <p>CBS News</p>
        <p>Taxi</p>
        <p>Movie</p>
        <p>H'mooners</p>
        <p>Bodywatch</p>
        <p>Benson</p>
        <p>Ent. Tonight</p>
        <p>Jeopardy</p>
        <p>PM Magazine</p>
        <p>M*AS*H</p>
        <p>Theater</p>
        <p>8:00  8:30</p>
        <p>Hell Town</p>
        <p>World Of Audubon</p>
        <p>Nova</p>
        <p>Matlock</p>
        <p>Wizard</p>
        <p>Whos Boss? Grow. Pains</p>
        <p>Wizard</p>
        <p>9:00  9:30  10:00</p>
        <p>700 Club</p>
        <p>10:30</p>
        <p>Chefs</p>
        <p>ACE Awards</p>
        <p>The Conservatives</p>
        <p>Hill Street Blues</p>
        <p>Occidental</p>
        <p>Magnum, P.l.</p>
        <p>Movie: "The Man With Two Brains"</p>
        <p>College Basketball: Clemson at Georgia Tech</p>
        <p>Movie: "The Man With Two Brains"</p>
        <p>King</p>
        <p>Boone</p>
        <p>College Basketball: Virginia Tech at Louisville</p>
        <p>"Home From Hill"</p>
        <p>Marcus Welby, M.D.</p>
        <p>"Daffy Duck's Move"</p>
        <p>Paper Chase</p>
        <p>News</p>
        <p>Movie: "Call Me Mister</p>
        <p>DTV</p>
        <p>College Basketball: Clemson at Georgia Tech</p>
        <p>Movie: The Flamingo Kid"</p>
        <p>Call To Glory</p>
        <p>Regis Philbin's Lifestyles</p>
        <p>Movie: "On The Right Track</p>
        <p>Movie: "Mischief"</p>
        <p>Movie: "Conan The Barbarian"</p>
        <p>USA Airwolf</p>
        <p>1st &amp;amp; Ten</p>
        <p>Heartbeat</p>
        <p>Dr. Ruth Show</p>
        <p>"Pee-wee's Big Adventure"</p>
        <p>Movie: Firstborn</p>
        <p>Movie "Invasion U.S.A."</p>
        <p>College Basketball: Missouri at Kansas</p>
        <p>Riptide</p>
        <p>The Daily Reflector. Greenville, N.C.</p>
        <p>Tuesday, January 20,1987  g.5</p>
        <p>Baryshnikov Asked To Dance At Home</p>
        <p>Channel listings above are for Greenville cable. WIT telecasts on Channel 7, WNCT on Channel 9 and WRAL on Channel 5^__</p>
        <p>For complot* TV programming information, coniult your wookiy TV SHOWTIME from Sunday's Doily Reflector.</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (AP) - Ballet virtuoso Mikhail Baryshnikov is considering an invitation from the Soviet Union to dance at Moscows famed Bolshoi Theater some 13 years after defecting from his native land, his manager says.</p>
        <p>Misha (Baryshnikov) said, Let me think me about that after receiving the invitation from Bolshoi artistic director Yuri Grigorovich, said manager Edgar Vincent.</p>
        <p>Grigorovich disclosed the invitation to Baryshnikov, 38, during a news conference Monday outlining the Bolshois four-city U.S. tour.</p>
        <p>Ive met with Baryshnikov and Misha will be dancing at the Bolshoi Theater, Grigorovich said through an interpreter. Ill be very happy on that occasion.</p>
        <p>However, Vincent said the dancer has not made a decision.</p>
        <p>Asked under what conditions Baryshnikov might return, the man-</p>
        <p>Oscar-Winning Producer Turns Out Documentary On American POWs</p>
        <p>By JERRY BUCK AP Television Writer</p>
        <p>LOS ANGELES (AP) - Producer Arnold Shapiro says the toughest part of making a documentary on American prisoners of war was that he was nearly overwhelmed by stories of heroism and survival in enemy hands.</p>
        <p>Shapiro picked nine men to tell the story in the two-hour documentary P.O.W. - Americans in Enemy Hands: World War II, Korea and Vietnam. The program, narrated by Robert Wagner, will be seen across the country between now and Feb. 10.</p>
        <p>We began by talking to more than 100 former POWs and each had great stories to tell, said Shapiro. We wanted to get it down to nine men. It was the toughest selection process Ive ever been involved in. Its a tribute to all POWs because these nine men together are representative of all the things that happened.</p>
        <p>Shapiro says P.O.W. rounds out a trilogy saluting American servicemen that began with Return to Iwo Jima and The Unknown Soldier. He won an Oscar for his 1978 documentary Scared Straight! and has won 12 Emmys for various documentaries.</p>
        <p>More than 130,000 Americans were taken prisoner in all three wars, said Shapiro. Most people here have no idea what these men</p>
        <p>ARNOLD SHAPIRO</p>
        <p>endured and what physical and emotional scars they were left with.</p>
        <p>If you think about it, young peoples knowledge about prisoners in World War II is limited to Hogans Heroes. Their knowledge of the Korean War is non-existent or limited to M-A-S-H. And for Vietnam, they have Rambo to look to. This documentary is the first TV special to deal accurately and factually with the POW experience.</p>
        <p>The nine former prisoners are Daniel Steckler, Ralph Levenberg, Morris and David Shoss from World War II, Davy Booker and Robert Fletcher from Korea, and Everett Alvarez Jr., Nick Rowe and Richard Stratton from Vietnam.</p>
        <p>The Shoss brothers were prisoners on opposite sides of the world. David was captured by the Germans in Europe and Morris was taken prisoner by the Japanese after his ship was torpedoed in the Pacific. Both escaped and returned home within one day of each other.</p>
        <p>I think the experiences of these nine men give a pretty complete picture of what our prisoners endured, he said. We deal not only with their survival but the humor that kept them going. You wouldnt think so, but there was a lot of humor. There was also a lot of heroism. It took a tremendous amount of courage and stamina to survive.</p>
        <p>The special examines how the prisoners were captured, their day-to-day existence, torture and brainwashing, great escapes, the waiting families at home and the homecomings.</p>
        <p>It points out that survival often depended on who the captors were. For instance, only 1 percent died in German prison camps, but 35 percent died in Japanese camps. Shapiro said the Germans separated Jewish POWs and sent them to forced labor</p>
        <p>camps where the survival rate was very low.</p>
        <p>We took one former prisoner back to the camp, which was in East Germany, he said. To say it was an emotional experience for him is an understatement. He cried. He took the crew to the spot where he was beaten and whipped and tortured.  -</p>
        <p>He said the Veterans Administration hospitals have therapy groups for former World War II prisoners who still find it difficult to talk about their experiences.</p>
        <p>Carol L. Fleisher was producer-director-writer for the special, which she called the most emotionally difficult project she had ever worked on. She added it was also extremely gratifying because it gives me great hope for the resiliency of the human spirit.</p>
        <p>Shapiro also returned to New Jersey to interview all the youths who appeared in Scared Straight! for a follow-up documentary called Scared Straight! - 10 Years Later. The original show, narrated by Peter Falk, will be re-released, followed by the new documentary narrated by Whoopi Goldberg.</p>
        <p>He is also at work on a documentary called Future Flight, which will create 10 flights of the future both on Earth and in space.</p>
        <p>Another show, Hiroshima Maidens, an hour-long drama, is being prepared for PBS Wonderworks.</p>
        <p>PBS To Air Sympathetic Portrayal Of Conservative Movement's Birth</p>
        <p>By EVANS WITT AP Political Writer</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP) - At the very least, no one is going to accuse the Public Broadcasting Service of liberal bias for presenting The Conservatives.</p>
        <p>The 90-minute documentary, which airs tonight, is a portrait from within the conservative movement, which grew from the anti-communist activism after World War II to the Goldwater campaign of 1964, the New Right of the 1970s and the election of Ronald Reagan as president in 1980.</p>
        <p>The documentary is dotted with rarely seen film from the early events that shaped the movement. The dark, grainy shots of confessed former Soviet spy Whittaker Chambers at a congressional hearing</p>
        <p>fingering Alger Hiss as a fellow traitor are a particular highlight, as is the class picture of the 22 young conservatives who met in a the Avenue Motel in Chicago on Oct. 8, 1961, to plot the conservative takeover of the Republican Party three years later.</p>
        <p>It is structured around interviews with many of the players in the movement, including an Oval Office chat with Reagan; former Sen. Barry Goldwater of Arizona; long conversations with Clifton White, architect ot the Goldwater campaign; and repeated clips of William F. Buckley Jr. and William Rusher, both of National Review, the movements journal.</p>
        <p>Lest anyone be misled, this is a sympathetic history of the conser</p>
        <p>vative movement, not a critical one.</p>
        <p>It was produced by Neal B. Freeman, the first producer of Buckleys Firing Line, a program that has showcased the conservative view as espoused by Buckley. Funds for the program were provided by the Lynde and Harry Bradley Foundation, the John M. Olin Foundation and the J.M. Foundation.</p>
        <p>Some conservatives might be sur-)rised to see this show on PBS, which las often been accused from the right of exhibiting a liberal bias.</p>
        <p>In September last year, 57 House members called for a study of the apparent political imbalance of PBS shows. And Reed Irvine, head of Accuracy in Media, a private, conservative group which judges news coverage, called one PBS presenta-</p>
        <p>Literature Awards Presented</p>
        <p>CHICAGO (AP) - A book about discovering friendship and illustrations for the story of a janitors tropical fantasy won the 1987 Newbery and Caldecott medals Monday, awards considered the Pulitzer Prizes of children s literature.</p>
        <p>Sid Fleischman won the John Newbery Medal, honoring distinguished writing for children, for The Whipping Boy. about the adventures of Prince Brat and (}emmy.</p>
        <p>Richard Egielski, an illustrator, was awarded the Randolph Caldecott Medal for excellence in childrens )icture books for his work in the KX)k, Hey Al, in which a janitors drab existence is transformed by a tropical bird.</p>
        <p>The awards, given annually by the Association for Library Service to Children, were announced Monday at the American Library Associations winter convention.</p>
        <p>The competition was very stiff, said Kay E. Vandergrift, chairwoman of the 15-member Caldecott awards committee.</p>
        <p>Trevelyn Jones, who chaired the 15-memb(Br Newbery awards panel, said the two medals are the most prestigious honors in childrens liter</p>
        <p>ature and compare with the Pulitzers for journalism and literature.</p>
        <p>The committees also selected runners-up, or honor books, in each category. Named Newbery honor books were On My Honor by Marion Bauer; Volcano by Patricia Lauber; and A Fine White Dust by Cynthia Kylant.</p>
        <p>Selected as Caldecott honor books were Village of Round and Square Houses, illustrated by Ann Grifalconi; Alphabatics, illustrated by Suse MacDonald; and Rumpelstiltskin, illustrated by Paul Zelinsky.</p>
        <p>In a separate announcement, Mildred Pitts Walter, a writer, and Jerry Pinkney, an illustrator, were named winners of the 1987 Coretta Scott King awards for excellence in</p>
        <p>childrens literature by a black author and artist.</p>
        <p>The awards are given by the associations Social Responsibilities Round Table to commemorate the life and works of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., the slain civil rights leader, and his wife.</p>
        <p>Ms. Walter won the award for her book, Justin and the Best Biscuits in the World. Pinkney was honored for his illustrations in the book, Half a Moon and One Whole Star. </p>
        <p>This years Newbery medal, established in 1922, honors Fleischmans book for children in grades 4-7, said Ms. Jones, book review editor of the School Library Journal in New York The book is a very funny stoi7 of mistaken identities and of friendship, she said.</p>
        <p>tion in 1986 a sleazy, dishonest, inaccurate pro-communist propaganda film. That criticism was leveled at When the Mountains Tremble, a documentary about guerrillas in Guatemala.</p>
        <p>Largely in response to criticism, PBS last year set up a panel of outsiders to study its programs and policies to make certain they reflect the great diversity of human thought, expression and experience.</p>
        <p>And the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, the conduit for federal funds to PBS, sent out a proposal last fall for a study into the objectivity and balance of the programs it funds. A key advocate of the CPB study is board member Richard Brookhiser, managing editor of. National Review. When those studies get around to reviewing The Conservatives there will be no doubt as to the point of view of the program.</p>
        <p>There can be no doubt as well that the show tells the story well from the conservative perspective, marking clearly the steps along the road that eventually led Reagan to the White</p>
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        <p>ager replied: I dont think that was even discussed. Grigorovich wanted Baryshnikov to know the Russian government would not frown about him coming, that detente is on, and they are trying to get some of the great Russian artists to reappear in Russia.</p>
        <p>Baryshnikov, who was trained at the Kirov Ballet in Leningrad, has not performed in the Soviet Union since defecting in 1974.</p>
        <p>Since 1980, Baryshnikov has been artistic director of the American Ballet Theater. Before that, he was a dancer in the company.</p>
        <p>Grigorovich announced that the Bolshoi Ballet will be at the Metropolitan Opera in New York from June 30 to July 18; at the Opera House in Washingtons Kennedy Center July 21 to Aug. 1; at the War Memorial Opera House in San Francisco, Aug. 4-9; and at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion in Los Angeles Aug. 11-30.</p>
        <p>It last toured the United States in 1979, shortly before the cultural exchange agreement between the two countries lapsed. A new agreement was signed in November 1985.</p>
        <p>Grigorovich, 60, choreographs all the ballets on the U.S. tour. They are The Golden Age, to music by Shostakovich; a revised version of Marius Petipas Raymonda, to music of Glazunov; a new production of Giselle to music by Adam, and a mixed bill.</p>
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        <p>B-6 The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.</p>
        <p>Tuesday, January 20, 1987</p>
        <p>Republican Takes Over Alabama's State Reins From George Wallace</p>
        <p>By D.AVTl) TREADWELL</p>
        <p>I..A. Times-Washin^ton Post News Service</p>
        <p>MONTGOMERY, Ala. - Guy Hunt, a northern Alabama cattleman, Am-way distributor and lay Primitive Baptist minister, was sworn in Monday as Alabamas first Republican governor since Reconstruction, bringing to an end the often turbulent era of George C, Wallace, the one-time arch-segrega-tionist governor.</p>
        <p>This is, indeed, a new day in Alabama, Hunt, 53, declared in his inaugural address to thousands of Alabamians who braved chilling winds and overcast skies to attend the ceremony in front of the white-domed state Capitol.</p>
        <p>Now, today have we come full circle, he said. Now today have we arrived at that long awaited moment in Alabama history, the moment when we finally put to rest the forces that have divided us....</p>
        <p>Hunt, whose only previous experience in elected office was as a two-term county probate judge, pledged to fight for unity, equality and economic opportunity for all Alabamians.</p>
        <p>He also vowed to run an administration dedicated to honesty and integrity so that, in the future, not only will we Alabamians be able to say were proud to t)e from Alabama but people everywhere, when they meet an Alabamian, will say: You must be proud to be from Alabama.  </p>
        <p>The new governor delivered his remarks near the spot on the west steps of the (apitol where Jefferson Davis was sworn in as president of the Confederacy in 1861 and where Wallace proclaimed Segregation now! Segregation forever!  in his first inaugural address in 1963.</p>
        <p>Hunt, who had been considered a sacrificial lamb when he entered the gubernatorial race in this heavily Democratic state, pulled off a surprise victory last November after a prolonged and bitter primary election feud among Democrats led to massive voter defections to the Republican column.</p>
        <p>Hunt outpolled former Lt. Gov. Bill Baxley, his Democratic challenger, by more than 170,000 of the total 1.3 million votes cast in the general election.</p>
        <p>As the first GOP governor in this Heart of Dixie state since 1874, Hunt faces an uphill struggle in his attempt to move Alabama out of nearly a quarter-century of Wallaces domination. The state is plagued by staggering state budget deficits, lagging economic development and still deep racial divisions.</p>
        <p>At the same time. Hunt also must contend with a state Legislature dominated by Democrats, many of them still smarting from his gubernatorial victory.</p>
        <p>Hes going to have to be Merlin the Magician to work with that crowd, said Wayne Greenhaw of Montgomery, editor of Alabama magazine.</p>
        <p>In a pre-inaugural interview. Hunt said that he looked forward to the challenges of his new office. I hope it will be said of our administration that ... we restored honest government, created jobs for all Alabamians who really want to work and brought Alabama together instead of tearing it apart;</p>
        <p>He said that he had met with 135 of the 140 Alabama House members and has received pledges from them to work together with him dn critical state issues. In Alabama, elected Democrats have the same philosophy as Republicans in a lot of areas  education, economic development and crime, he said.</p>
        <p>Hunt al.so has .said that he wants a colorblind administration. But of 20 persons named as Cabinet officers or as heads of state government agencies in recent weeks, all but one are white men.</p>
        <p>Hunts inauguration fell on the same day that Alabama observed a holiday for both Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee and martyred civil rights leader Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., who once served as pastor of the Dexter Ave. Baptist Church, one block west of the Capitol.</p>
        <p>Hunt paid homage to these Southern herws, saying of King that he paid the supreme .sacrifice in his struggle for racial equality.</p>
        <p>And he said turning to Wallace who has been confined to a wheelchair in almost constant pain since an assassination attempt in 1972 left him paralyzed telow the waist: Gov. Wallace, your sacrifice will be forever remembered by all Alabamians.</p>
        <p>announced last year that he would not run for an unprecedentec fifth term tecause of ill health, declaring: I have climbed my last political mountain.</p>
        <p>LAST DAY  Alabama (lov, George Wallace waves to friends Monday just prior to the inauguration of Republican Guy Hunt. Wallace, who served four terms as governor, announced last year he would not seek re-election, saying he had climbed my last political mountain. (AP Laserphoto)</p>
        <p>New Air Force One Sits Unmarked On Boeing Plant's Assembly Line</p>
        <p>Bv NORMAN BLA( K AP Military Writer</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP) - .Somewhere on the production line of the Bwing Co.s manufacturing plant in Everett. Wash., a collection of 747 aircraft parts is moving toward the body join area, waiting to be assembled into the next Air Force One</p>
        <p>By May. the parts will have been fashioned into what Boeing calls a green plane: flyable, but without any interior. It will then be flown to the B(King Military Airplane Co. in Wichita. Kan . for outfitting, when' it will liegin its life as one of the most closely guarded airplanes in the world.</p>
        <p>Until May. though, there is no overt security to mark the new presidential plane; no guards standing liy. no security clearances for workers, no special inspectors constantly standing watch.</p>
        <p>Rather. Bwing and the Air Force are relying on anonymity</p>
        <p>The airframes are going down the production line in an unidentifii'd manner, explains Boeing spokesman Pete Dakan, noting a second, backup Air Force One will emerge as a green plane in March 1988</p>
        <p>The first Air Force One replacement is now mixed in among other unidentified planes moving down the line. That airplane is on the line and probably next month will go into Ixxly join i for the attachment of the wings to the fuselage) and then into final assemblv </p>
        <p>There are normally 12 fledgling 747s on the line at any one time, and Boeing has limited the number of employees who actually know which plane will be turned into Air Force One, Dakan says.</p>
        <p>"But there are no other special Air Force-requested security requirements at this stage beyond not identifying which one it is on the line, the spokesman added.</p>
        <p>All that will change in May when the newly minted plane arrives in Wichita.</p>
        <p>It will become secure when it goes to Wichita, says Dakan. Everyone will be required to have a scurity clearance and everything will be in a guarded area.</p>
        <p>Boeing's facility in Wichita, because it alreadv works on military planes, has long been phvsicallv secured by a guard force. To outfit the new plane with office and sleeping spaces, communications gear and all the trappings of the presidency, Boeing will use only employees with military clearances and pay special attention to their work.</p>
        <p>Boeing has experience in the process - but its dated experience. The primary and backup planes now used by the president are Boeing 707s. manufactured 14 and 24 years ago. respectively.</p>
        <p>Boeing won a $249.8 million contract to build the two planes last summer, beating out the McDonnell Douglas Corp. and its DC-10. Boeing is expected to begin flight testing the first replacement m summer 1988 and deliver it to the Air Force bv</p>
        <p>J</p>
        <p>November 1988. It should be available to ferry President Reagan home to California and retirement two months later.</p>
        <p>The second plane is scheduled to be delivered in May 1989.</p>
        <p>The Air Force also is planning construction of a new hangar for the huge 747s at Andrews Air Force Base, Md.. and sometime closer to the first delivery date, Boeing will begin flight training for presidential air crews.</p>
        <p>The term Air Force One actually is a radio call sign applied to any airplane that is carrying a president. But the term has become synonymous with the two Boeing 707s maintained by the 89th Military Airlift Wing at Andrews.</p>
        <p>The planes, with their distinctive striping and American flag on their tails, are recognizable around the world. According to the Air Force, however, they are also of such a vintage that it is becoming increasingly difficult to support them with spare parts.</p>
        <p>The new 747s are being constructed in such a way as to carry about 70 passengers and 23 crew members, compared with the 400 passengers that can be carried by the commercial version of the four-engine jet.</p>
        <p>The Air Force has said the new planes will have state-of-the-art communications equipment, an emergency medical facility and special work and rest areas for the president, his staff, the Secret Service and the news media.</p>
        <p>Congress Ready, Willing To Begin Revamping New Tax Reform Law</p>
        <p>By JIM LI TIIEH AP Tax Writer</p>
        <p>W.ASHINGTONiAP) If you real ly believed the 879-pago Tax Reform Act of 1986 was the tax bill to end all tax hills and that C ongress was going to enact the landmark measure and leave the tax code alone for awhile, well, you'd better think again</p>
        <p>The Congressional Record for the first few days of the 1987 session shows that more than UH) tax bills have been introduced, many of them proposing to undo provisions that were approved barelv three months ago.</p>
        <p>Some of the bills seek to plow new ground. Some are introduced routinely, year after year. Most reflect concern about safety, education, home ownership, the economy - and. of course, the folks back home.</p>
        <p>Following is a sampling of the proposals and theif sponsors. They would:  !</p>
        <p>-Grant a tax credit for the cost of</p>
        <p>buying child restraint systems used in cars Sen, DanielInouye, D-Hawaii</p>
        <p>-Repeal the income tax on Social Securitv pensions. Rep Stephen Neal. D-N.C </p>
        <p>-Allow homeowners who refinance their mortgages a full deduction for points in the year thev are paici. Rep Sherwood Boehlert, R-N Y.</p>
        <p>-Restore the deduction for state and local sales taxes. Rep. Stewart McKinney. R-Conn.</p>
        <p>-Allow all homeowners a once-a-lifetime tax exemption for up to $125,000 in profits from the sa e of their principal home; present law limits the benefit to those 55 or older. Rep, Benjamin Gilman, R-N. Y.</p>
        <p>-Exclude tips from taxation. Rep. Phil Crane, R-Ill.</p>
        <p>-Permit deduction of expenses of higher education. Rep. James Quillen. R-Tenn</p>
        <p>Deny deductions for contributions to the athletic program of any</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>college that does not meet certain academic requirements. Rep. James Howard. D-N.J.</p>
        <p>-Prevent giant food-processing companies from taking advantage of an accounting system meant for family farms. Sen. Edward Zorin-sky. D-Neb.</p>
        <p>-Permit taxpayers to earmark ieir taxes for a fund to fight hunger. Rep. Bob Carr. D-Mich.</p>
        <p>-Put the Senate on record against raising the reduced income-tax rates in the new law. Sen. Bob Dole. R-Kan.</p>
        <p>-Require that any tax increase be subject to approval by two-thirds majorities in the House and Senate Rep. Robert Lagomarsino. R-Calif.</p>
        <p>-Permit tax-free withdrawal from Individual Retirement Accounts to</p>
        <p>gurchase a first home. Sen. Donald iegle, D-Mich.</p>
        <p>Impose a new tax on imported oil. Sen. Don Nickles. D-Okla.</p>
        <p>-Permit a deduction for corj^-</p>
        <p>muting by mass transit. Rep. Norman Lent. R-N.Y.</p>
        <p>-Allow low- and middle-income renters to deduct part of their rent. Lent.</p>
        <p>Allow full deduction of interest paid on student loans. Rep. Thomas Tauke, R-Iowa.</p>
        <p>Authorize a one-time amnesty from criminal and civil penalties for a tax cheat who settles accounts with the IRS. Sen. Alan Dixon. D-Ill.</p>
        <p>-Permit a $50O-a-year tax credit for any taxpayer maintaining in the household a dependent over the age of 65. Rep. Mario Biaggi, D-N.Y.</p>
        <p>-Grant taxpayers a bill of rights to assure fair treatment by the IRS. Sen. Harry Reid, D-Nev.</p>
        <p>-Deny a tax exemption to any hospital or organization that performs or finances abortions. Sen. Gordon Humphrey, R-N.H.</p>
        <p>-Exempt unemployment com</p>
        <p>ipen-</p>
        <p>sation from taxation. Rep. Dale Kildee, D-Mich.</p>
        <p>OASSIFIED</p>
        <p>INDEX</p>
        <p>AAISCELLANEOUS</p>
        <p>Personals In Memoriam Card Of Thanks Special Notices Travel 8i Tours Automotive . ,</p>
        <p>Child Care...........</p>
        <p>Day Nursery</p>
        <p>Health Care......</p>
        <p>Employment For Sale Instruction Lost And Found Business Services Business Opportunities Professional Home Improvements Real Estate</p>
        <p>Appraisals........</p>
        <p>Loans And Mortgages Rentals</p>
        <p>WANTED</p>
        <p>Help Wanted . . Administrative Clerical... Medical</p>
        <p>Miscellaneous......</p>
        <p>Sales</p>
        <p>Teachers</p>
        <p>Technical &amp;amp; Trades Work Wanted Wanted</p>
        <p>Roommate Wanted Wanted To Buy Wanted To Lease Wanted To Rent</p>
        <p>RENT/LEASE</p>
        <p>Apartment For Rent  i6i</p>
        <p>Business Rentals........163</p>
        <p>Campers For Rent.........i67</p>
        <p>Condominiums For Rent  170</p>
        <p>Farms For Lease  140</p>
        <p>Houses For Rent  173</p>
        <p>Lots For Rent........... 175</p>
        <p>Merchandise Rentals  177</p>
        <p>Mobile Homes For Rent......179</p>
        <p>Mobile Home Lots For Rent. 180 Office Space For Rent  18I</p>
        <p>Resort Property For Rent  I84</p>
        <p>Rooms For Rent..........135</p>
        <p>SALE</p>
        <p>Autos For Sale...........</p>
        <p>011-029</p>
        <p>Bicycles For Sale.........</p>
        <p>030</p>
        <p>Boats And Motors.........</p>
        <p>. 032</p>
        <p>Camping Equipment......</p>
        <p>.....034</p>
        <p>Cycles For Sale..........</p>
        <p>.....036</p>
        <p>Jeeps And Vans...........</p>
        <p>, 040</p>
        <p>Truclts For Sale........</p>
        <p>,041</p>
        <p>Pets...................</p>
        <p>050</p>
        <p>Antiques</p>
        <p>.066</p>
        <p>Auctions</p>
        <p>069</p>
        <p>Building Supplies......</p>
        <p>,072</p>
        <p>Fuel, Wood, Coal</p>
        <p>.080</p>
        <p>Furnitu're........</p>
        <p>081</p>
        <p>Garage Yard Sales</p>
        <p>082</p>
        <p>Heavy Equipment ,,</p>
        <p>. 084</p>
        <p>Household Goods</p>
        <p>085</p>
        <p>Farm Equipment</p>
        <p>086</p>
        <p>Farm Products</p>
        <p>088</p>
        <p>Fruits &amp;amp; Vegetables</p>
        <p>089</p>
        <p>Livestock. .</p>
        <p>092</p>
        <p>Insurance</p>
        <p>095</p>
        <p>Miscellaneous , ,</p>
        <p>. 099</p>
        <p>Mobile Homes For Sale</p>
        <p>102</p>
        <p>Mobile Home Insurance</p>
        <p>103</p>
        <p>Musical Instruments</p>
        <p>105</p>
        <p>Sporting Goods</p>
        <p>. 109</p>
        <p>Woodstoves</p>
        <p>...112</p>
        <p>Commercial Property</p>
        <p>.132</p>
        <p>Condominiums For Sale</p>
        <p>.136</p>
        <p>Farms For Sale</p>
        <p>.139</p>
        <p>Houses For Sale</p>
        <p>.144</p>
        <p>Business Investment Property 147</p>
        <p>Investment Property .</p>
        <p>148</p>
        <p>Land For Sale</p>
        <p>... 150</p>
        <p>Mobile Home Lots For Sale</p>
        <p>.. 151</p>
        <p>Lots For Sale</p>
        <p>. .152</p>
        <p>Resort Property For Sale</p>
        <p>.155</p>
        <p>Timberland &amp;amp; Timber</p>
        <p>156</p>
        <p>Townhouses For Sale.....</p>
        <p>...157</p>
        <p>DAILY</p>
        <p>REFLECTOR</p>
        <p>Classified</p>
        <p>Advertising</p>
        <p>Rates</p>
        <p>752{166</p>
        <p>3 Line Minimum</p>
        <p>1 Day 8S&amp;lt; per line per day</p>
        <p>2 3 Days 65t per line per day 4 6 Days S8{ per line per day 714 DaysS3t per line per day IS 25 Days 48i per line</p>
        <p>per day</p>
        <p>26 Or More</p>
        <p>Days 44per line per day</p>
        <p>Classified Display</p>
        <p>$3 45 Per Col, Inch Contract Rates Available</p>
        <p>DEADLINES Classified Lineage Deadlines</p>
        <p>Mon...........Fri,  4 p.m.</p>
        <p>Tues......Mon. 3p.m.</p>
        <p>Wed  ..Tues3pm.</p>
        <p>Thurs.  Wed. 3 p.m</p>
        <p>Fri.  Thurs  3 p.m.</p>
        <p>Sun.  Fri.  Noon</p>
        <p>Classified Display Deadlines Mon .  Fri. Noon</p>
        <p>Tues  Fri.  4p.m.</p>
        <p>Wed.....Mon.  4 p m.</p>
        <p>Thurs  Tues.  4 p m.</p>
        <p>Fri  Wed 2pm</p>
        <p>Sun  Wed. 5 p.m</p>
        <p>ERRORS</p>
        <p>Errors must be reported immediately. The Daily Reflector cannot make allowances for errors after 1st day of publication</p>
        <p>THE DAILY REFLECTOR reserves the rirtt to edit or reicct any advtrtisement submitted.</p>
        <p> 1-</p>
        <p>Feeling</p>
        <p>cramped?</p>
        <p>Find space in classified's home and apartment iistings.</p>
        <p>The very best items are in ciassified!</p>
        <p>Public</p>
        <p>Notices</p>
        <p>NORTH CAROLINA PITT COUNTY</p>
        <p>NOTICE</p>
        <p>Having this day qualified as Administratrix of the Estate of Horace Franklin Norris, late of Pitt County, this is to notify all persons having claims against said estate to present them to the undersigned Administratrix on or before the 20th day of July, 1987, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate will please make immediate set tiement.</p>
        <p>This the 16th day of January, 1987.</p>
        <p>Margaret Leona Fosky Norris Route 4, Box 3 E Greenville, NC 27834 William 1. Wooten, Jr., Attorney Greenville, NC 27834 January 20, 27; February 3, 10, 1987</p>
        <p>NOTICE OF</p>
        <p>FORECLOSURE SALE</p>
        <p>Under and by virtue of the power of sale contained in a cer tain deed of trust made by William R. Wright and wife. In grid H. Wright to Josephine M Brown, Trustee(s), dated the 7th day of October, 1985, and re corded in Book 55, Page 127, Pitt County Registry, North Carolina, default having been made in the payment of the note thereby secured by the said deed of trust, and the undersigned, DAVID B CRAIG, have been substituted as Trustee in said deed of trust by an instrument duly recorded In the Office of the Register of Deeds of Pitt Coun ty, North Carolina, and the holder of the note evidencing said indebtedness having directed that the deed of trust be foreclosed, the undersigned Substitute Trustee will offer for sale at the Courthouse Door, in the City of Greenville, Pitt County, North Carolina, at Ten (10;00) o'clock a m on Tuesday, the 27th day of January, 1987 and will sell to the highest bidder for cash the following real estate, situate in Pitt County, North Carolina, and being more par ticularly described as follows: LYfNG AND BEING in the City of Greenville, Greenville Township, Pitt County, North Carolina and the POINT OF BEGINNING is an iron stake set in the northern right of way line of Orton Drive; said stake being the southwest corner of Lot No. 20 and the southeast corner of Lot No. 21 of Block "B" of Brookgreen Subdivision, and running from said POINT OF BEGINNING North 13 degrees 00' 00" East 149.76 feet to an iron pipe, a corner; thence South 77 degrees 34' 20" East 127.37 feet to an iron pipe, a corner, thence South 21 degrees 25' 00" West 152.29 feet to a railroad spike, a corner; thence North 77 degrees 12' 36" West a chord distance of 105.07 feet having a radius of too 0' to the POINT OF BEGIN NING and being all of Lot No. 20 and a part of Lot No. 19, Block "B" of Brookgreen Subdivision as shown on a map prepared by Thomas W. Rivers recorded in Map Book 4, Page 67, Pitt Coun ty Public Registry.</p>
        <p>Including the single family dwelling located thereon; said jroperty being located at 231 Or on Drive. Greenville, NC 27834 This sale is made subject to all taxes and prior liens or en cumbrances or redord against the said property, and any recorded releases</p>
        <p>A cash deposit will be re quired at the time of sale</p>
        <p>This 6th day of January, 1987.</p>
        <p>DAVID B CRAIG SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE DAVID B CRAIG Attorney at Law 2504 Raetord Road P.O. Box 153 Fayetteville, Nc 28302 January 13,20,1987</p>
        <p>NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE SALE</p>
        <p>Under and by virtue of the power of sale contained in a cer ain deed of trust made by Michael Kent Rolison and wile, Elizabeth Norwood Rolison PRESENT RECORD OWNER Rhonda Pirillo to Central AAor toage &amp;amp; Investment Company, Trustee(s). dated the 28th day of July, 1983. and recorded In Book A52, Page 502, Pitt County Reg istry, North Carolina, default having been made in the pay ment of the note thereby secured by the said deed of trust, and the undersigned. DAVID B. CRAIG, have been substituted.as Trust ee in said deed of trust by an in strument duly recorded in the Office of the Register of Deeds of Pitt County, North Carolina, and the holder of the note evidencing said Indebtedness having directed that the deed of trust be foreclosed, the under signed Substitute Trustee will otter for sale at the Courthouse Door, in the City of Greenville, Pitt County, North Caroline, at Ten (10:00) o'clock am on Tuesday, the 27th day of January, 1987 and will sell to the highest bidder tor cash the fol lowing real estate, situate in Pitt County. North Carolina, and be Ing more particularly described as fol lows:</p>
        <p>BEGINNING at an iron pipe In the eastern right of way lint of Cedar Drive (SR 1586) in the centerline of a canal, said beginning point being further rewrenced as the northernmost corner of Lot 1 of the extension of Forrest Acres Subdivision as shown on plat of record In Deed Book E 41, Page 551, from said Beginning Point running with the eastern line ot Cedar Drive South 33 SS West 32.3 feet to a concreta monument, thence continuing with the eastern line of Cedar Drive South 54 02 West 1*3 feet to a concrete monument at the corner ot Lot 3 shown on said plat; thence with the dividing line between Lots 2 and 3 South 35 SI East 154 4 feet to a concrete monument, another corner between Lots 2 and 3;</p>
        <p>001 Public Notices</p>
        <p>thence with the line of Lots 1 and 2 North 55 51-30 East 192.46 feet to the centerline of the canal; thence with the centerline of the canal and the line ot Lot 1 North 38 13 West 48.8 feet; thence con tinuing with the centerline of the canal and the line of Lot 1 North 20-59 West 127.2 feet to the Point of Beginning and being the same property shown on plat for Michael Kent Rolison and Elizabeth Norwood Rolison, prepared by Willard R. Hall, R.S. dated July 23,1983. Further being the same property conveyed to John Samuel Fleming, Jr. by deed of record in Book E 41, page 547, ot the Pitt County Registry.</p>
        <p>Including the single family dwelling located thereon; said property being located at Route 5, Box X 85, Cedar Drive 2, Greenville, NC 27834.</p>
        <p>This sale is made subject to all taxes and prior liens or en cumbrances or record against the said property, and any recorded releases.</p>
        <p>A cash deposit will be re quired at the time ot sale.</p>
        <p>This 6th day ot January, 1987.</p>
        <p>DAVID B. CRAIG</p>
        <p>SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE DAVID B. CRAIG Attorney at Law 2504 Raetord Road P.O. Box 153 Fayetteville, Nc 28302 January 13,20,1987</p>
        <p>NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE SALE</p>
        <p>Under and by virtue of the of sale contained in a cer ain deed of trust made by Marc J. Fitchettand Cammy Suzanne Tew to Josephine M. Brown, Trustee(s), dated the 6th day ot July, 1984, and recorded in Book E53, Page 561, Pitt County Reg istry, North Carolina, detault having been made in the payment ot the note thereby secured by the said deed of trust, and the undersigned. DAVID B. CRAIG, have been substituted as Trustee in said deed of trust by an in strument duly recorded in the Office ot the Register ot Deeds ot Pitt County, North Carolina, and the holder ot the note evidencing said indebtedness having directed that the deed ot trust be foreclosed, the under signed Substitute Trustee will fer for sale at the Courthouse Door, in the City ot Greenville, Pitt County, North Carolina, at Ten (10:00) o'clock a.m. on Tuesday, the 27th day ot January, 1987 and will sell to the highest bidder tor cash the fol lowing real estate, situate in Pitt County, North Carolina, and be ing more particularly described as follows:</p>
        <p>Being all of Lot 6 A in Block 'A" in Heritage Village Sub divison, as shown on the map of Heritage Village Subdivision, Section One (Revised) made by Rivers 81 Associates Inc and re corded in Map Book 31, at Page 196 ot the Pitt County Registry.</p>
        <p>Including the single family dwelling located thereon; said operty being located at 1913 White Hollow Drive, Greenville, North Carolina 27834</p>
        <p>This sale is made subject to all taxes and prior liens or en cumbrances or record against the said property, and any recorded releases.</p>
        <p>A cash deposit will be required at the time ot sale.</p>
        <p>This 6th day of January, 1987.</p>
        <p>DAVID B. CRAIG SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE DAVID B. CRAIG Attorney at Law 2504 Raetord Road P.O. Box 153 Fayetteville, Nc 28302 January 13,20,1987</p>
        <p>NOTICE OF SALE STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF PITT</p>
        <p>Under and by virtue of the power of sale contained in a cer lain Deed ot Trust executed by Ennis C. Tyson and wife, Frances M. Tyson, to James 0 Buchanan, Trustee, dated the 14th day of March, 1978, and re corded in Book 046, Page 463, in the Office ot the Register ot Deeds for Pitt County, North Carolina, and a certain Deed ot Trust executed by Ennis C. Tyson and wife, Frances M Tyson, to James 0. Buchanan, Trustee, dated the I4th day ot March, 1978, and recorded in Book 046, Page 468, in the Office of the Register ot Deeds for Pitt County, North Carolina, default having been made in the pay ment of the indebtedness thereby secured and failure to carry out or perform the stipulations and agreements therein con tained, and the holder ot the in debtedness therby secured hav ing demanded a foreclosure thereof for the purpose ot satis tying said indebtedness, and the Clerk ot Court granting perm is Sion for the foreclosure, the</p>
        <p>N.C. point i</p>
        <p>undersigned Trustee will otter tor sale at public auction to the highest bidder tor cash at the Courthouse door in Greenville, North Carolina, at 12;(X) Noon, on the 3rd day ot February, 1987, the land, as improved, conveyed in said Deeds ot Trust, the same lying and being in Pactolus township, Pitt County, North Carolina, and being more par ticularly described as follows: FIRST TRACT: Being bounded on the west by N.C. Highway No 30, on the north by land now or formerly owned by Levi Clem mons, on the east by Satter thwaite and on the south by Jack . Warren, and BEGINNING at stake in the eastern right ot way line of N.C. Highway No. 30 at Levi Clemmons fine, and said BEGINNING POINT also being referenced as being located 50 50 feet North 66 10 18 East from a point in the centerline of Highway No 30, which in the center line is located 5887.69 feet north of the center line ot N.C. Secondary No. 1557, as measured along the center line ot N.C. Highway No 30, and running thence with Levi Clemmons line North 66 10-18 East 1452.97 foet to a corner with Satterthwaite; thence South 20 10 37 East 199.83 feet, a corner; thence South 12 35 06 West 15 95 feet, a corner, thence South 66 10 IB West 1461,85 feet to the eastern right ot way ot N C Highway No. 30; thence with said right ot way North 15 30 West 214.52 feet to the BEGINN ING, containing 7.12 acres, and being shown on map prepared by James M Walker, L S , dated May 25,1977, and being all ot the tract conveyed to Jack S War ren et al by L.F. Worthington et al on May 19, 1977, by deed re corded In Book Q45, Page 804, Pitt County Registry, and a part of the tract conveyed to Jack S Warren et al by J.D Briley on April 15, 1977, be deed recorded In Book 045, page 301, Pitt County Registry Subject, how ever, to the property taxes tor the year 1986 The record owners ot this property as reflected on the records ot the Register of Deeds of this county are Ennis C Tyson and wife, Frances M Tyson. Terms ot the sale, in eluding the amount of the cash deposit, ifany.tobemadeby the highest bidder at the sale, are Five percent (5%) of the amount of the highest bid must be depos ited with the Trustee pending confirmation ot the sale Dated this 6th day ot January, 1987 THURMAN E BURNETTE, Trustee, substituted by the In struments recorded in Book 88, Page 310 Pitt County Registry, NC</p>
        <p>January 20,27,1917</p>
        <p> 545</p>
        <p>NORTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF PITT</p>
        <p>The undersigned, having qualified as Executor ot the estate of MARY WILLIS ELKS STRICKLAND, deceased, late of Pitt County, North Carolina, this S to notify all persons hav ing claims against said estate to jresenf them to the undersigned Executor at Route 7, 216 Circle Drive, Greenville. NC 27834, on</p>
        <p>before June 30, 1987, or this notice will be plead In bar of their recovery All persons in debted to said estate will please make payment to the under signed Executor j^^This 18th day of December,</p>
        <p>ROGER STRICKLAND. EX ECUTOR ESTATE OF MARY WILLIS ELKS STRICKLAND Gaylord, Singleton, McNally, Strickland 1 Snyder P O Box 545 Greenville, NC 27135 0545 December 30, 1986; January 6. 13,20,1*17</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0097" />
        <p>OAsynED</p>
        <p>CflNCQLir</p>
        <p>Classified Ads</p>
        <p>002</p>
        <p>Personals</p>
        <p>MEET YOUR MATCH for all</p>
        <p>aoes and unattached. Thousands of members anxious to meet</p>
        <p>you. Prestige Acquaintances. Cail toll tree 1-800-23 6673 noon</p>
        <p>to 8 p.m.</p>
        <p>007 Special Notices</p>
        <p>CHRISTIAN VIDEO rentals, $2.00 per day. Agape Christian</p>
        <p>Book Store, 946-9246, Highway:</p>
        <p>n.NC.</p>
        <p>264 and 17, Washington,</p>
        <p>LETME MAKE YOU AN AFGHAN</p>
        <p>and Craft pictures. Call 757-1132.</p>
        <p>WE PAY CASH for diamonds. Floyd G. Robinson Jewelers, 407 Evans Mall, Downtown Green</p>
        <p>ville.</p>
        <p>Oil Autos For Sale</p>
        <p>"AGCXDDPLACE TO BUY!" EASTGATEMOTl</p>
        <p>130 East Green Greenville,</p>
        <p>INSURANCyMm|ap4 to 12</p>
        <p>points, we ctjBoS^a lots of money. Call IBaWrornes In surance, 2408 Huth Charles Boulevard, 355 7557 or 355-7373.</p>
        <p>NEED A RIDE or looking parts? Motor, transmission, tires, etcetera. I have 3 cars $200each. Call 355 7573.</p>
        <p>WINNER CHEVROLET</p>
        <p>Highway 11 Bypass, Ayden 746 4032or1 800 682 1826</p>
        <p>013</p>
        <p>Buick</p>
        <p>1975 WHITE Transmission needs work. Call 9 7,758-5890</p>
        <p>1981 BUICK REGAL LTD Im</p>
        <p>maculate, owned by senior citi zen.$4500 752 4961.</p>
        <p>1983 RIVIERA, loaded, ex cel lent condition, $8,495. Call atter 6 p.m. 753-5740.</p>
        <p>015</p>
        <p>Chevrolet</p>
        <p>1968 EL CAMINO, restored, beautiful, 6 cylinder, 3 speed $2995/offer. 758 6006.</p>
        <p>018</p>
        <p>Ford</p>
        <p>1976 EL CAMINO, good condi tion, $1800. Dealer #4685. 757 3019.</p>
        <p>1980 FORD Country Squire Sta tionwagon for sale by owner, low m i leaqe. Ca 11 756 0025 after 6:00</p>
        <p>021 Oldsmobile</p>
        <p>1969 98, 4 door hard top, 51,000 original miles. Like new. $2995/ offer. 758 6006.</p>
        <p>023</p>
        <p>Pontiac</p>
        <p>1979 BONNEVILLE full size sta tionwagon, 1 owner. A tirst class car needs nothing, fully loaded, $2895 355 7317 after 6.</p>
        <p>1979 GRAND PRIX, 1 owner, excellent condition, air, cruise, stereo, white with black vinyl top $1950.746-3301.</p>
        <p>024</p>
        <p>Foreign</p>
        <p>BMW 1975 2002, good condition, emron paint, "babied", $4000 756 0698.</p>
        <p>MAZDA RX7, 1979, 1 owner, 5 speed, air, 67,000 miles, stereo cassette player, like new, 355 6302 Monday-Friday.</p>
        <p>1971 MERCEDES Benz 220D, i door, FM radio, air, 4 speed, clean automobile. 752 1416 atter 6p.m.</p>
        <p>1978 DATSUN 810 wagon, great condition, low mileage, many extras. Tuition due must sell! $2400 negotiable 752 1734</p>
        <p>1979 280ZX, 70,000 miles, loaded, excellent condition, new tires, 752 3021.</p>
        <p>1981 TOYOTA Clica Littback 5 speed, cruise control, power</p>
        <p>brakes, power steering, $2500 firm. Call atter 1 p m. 1 946-8981.</p>
        <p>1983 BEIGE Honda Civic sta tionwagon, 5 speed, air, AM/FM cassette, excellent condition, $4200 Call 355 2395 atter 6</p>
        <p>1984 TOYOTA Clica GT, 2 door, low mileage, 1 owner, excellent condition, $7,800. Call Harry Pair, 756 2291</p>
        <p>1984 4 DOOR Honda Accord, AM/FM cassette, air, automatic. $7500. Days, 355-7700: nights 355 5393.</p>
        <p>032 Boats &amp;amp; Motors</p>
        <p>WINTER STORAGE for Boats, Cars, Campers, etc Monthly leases. Cannon's Warehouse, 2113 Dickinson Avenue, Ray Cannon, owner, 756-4125</p>
        <p>036 Cycles For Sale</p>
        <p>YAMAHA 4 WHEEL 60, was</p>
        <p>$839, now $729. Stan's Cycle Center, Inc. 210 West Greenville Boulevard. 757 0592.</p>
        <p>040 Jeeps &amp;amp; Vans</p>
        <p>GRAND WAGONEER Custom, like new, 19,000 miles, loaded, new radials: $12,900 firm. 756-3831</p>
        <p>1977 JEEP CJ7, V8, new tires, new paint, very nice, $3300. 757 30M anytime</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>041</p>
        <p>Trucks</p>
        <p>OWE TON 74 Ford Van, 752-7131.</p>
        <p>^'' * cylinder, #3s*757^19:</p>
        <p>19M TOYOTA 4*'4, loaded, 30K miles, $8,000. 753 3520.</p>
        <p>044 Child Care</p>
        <p>EXPERIENCED EDUCATION</p>
        <p>mafor available weekdays and weekends for child care. Have own transportation. 758-0436, ask for Jennifer.</p>
        <p>LOOKING FOR Christian woman to keep 6 month old bab</p>
        <p>in our home AAonday through Friday 7:30 to 4:00. Please call aHer 4:00,756-7127.</p>
        <p>050</p>
        <p>Pets</p>
        <p>champion blood. CairaRer'Ji 752-2611.</p>
        <p>AKC GOLDEN RETRIEVER</p>
        <p>pups. Call 796-1541 after 8 pm. AKC REGISTERED Cocker pups, black and white, 1 female and 3 males, $125.524-5123.</p>
        <p>AKC REGISTERED German S^rd puppies. Call 792-3243 after 6:00 p.m.</p>
        <p>AKC SIBERIAN Huskys. Call after 6 p.m. 752-4577.</p>
        <p>MIXED BREED puppies. Free. Call 758-4774 days; 355 5079 nights.</p>
        <p>RESIDENTIAL PET CARE</p>
        <p>Service. Insured, bonded. Ref erences available. Sherry J. Dendy,746-4818.</p>
        <p>057 Help Wanted Administrative</p>
        <p>AN EXCELLENT opportunity for an Administrative Secretary. The individual we seek is one who has good secretarial experience, is a professional in appearance and work habits and self motivated. Typing of 60 words per minute required and word processing experience helpful. Send resume to Ad</p>
        <p>ministrative Secretary, P.O Box 1967, Greenville, NC 27835.</p>
        <p>058</p>
        <p>Help Wanted Clerical</p>
        <p>ACCOUNTANT. Position open immediately for accountanf in</p>
        <p>multi-company operation. Abili ty to coordiante all aspects of accounting systems a must. Contact Glenda Oliver at 1-800-682-0062 for interview or send resume to Ranbdy Uzzele, P.O Box 190, Hookerton, NC 28538.</p>
        <p>BOOKKEEPING AND general office work. Some computer ex perience helpful. Part time. References needed. Call 355 7121.</p>
        <p>fcxi'ERiENCED Bookkeeper familiar with computer IBM System 34. Send reeume to P.O. Drawer 7166, Greenville, NC 27835 7166.</p>
        <p>FULL TIME entry level position with local optician. Experience preferred but not necessary. Reply with resume, P.O. Box 7006, Greenville, NC. 27834.</p>
        <p>FULL TIME SECRETARIAL</p>
        <p>position available immediately at Jarvis Memorial United Methodist Church. Good typing skills a must. Apply in person.</p>
        <p>LEGAL SECRETARY needed for local law firm. Typing re-luired. Will train intelligent in-livldual. Send resume to: Legal Secretary, P.O. Box 1967, Greenville, NC 27835.</p>
        <p>MEDICAL SECRETARY: Must possess excellent typing skills with computer knowledge. Mail resume to: Director, Post Office Box 7145, Greenville, NC 27835.</p>
        <p>RECEPTIONIST/Typist. Posi tIon open immediately for a recepfionist/typist word pro</p>
        <p>tion</p>
        <p>immedia'</p>
        <p>for a</p>
        <p>cessor at Pharm Save Incor porated. Contact Glenda Oliver at 1-800-682-0062 for details.</p>
        <p>SECRETARY. Immediate open</p>
        <p>ing for clerical employee. Must be outstanding in public reia t\</p>
        <p>tions, skilled in typing and operation of office machines. 40 hour work week, fringe benefits. Salary negotiable. Send resume to: Secretary, 3004 S. AAemorial Drive, Greenville.</p>
        <p>WORD PROCESSORS 8i Execu tive Secretaries needed im mediately. Call Frankie, Man power, 118 Reade St., 757 3300.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED ADS will go to work for you to find cash buyers for your unused items. To place your ad, phone 752 6166.</p>
        <p>059</p>
        <p>Help Wanted Medical</p>
        <p>DENTAL HYGIENIST needed part time one day per week. Ap ply in person. Call 752 2838</p>
        <p>PART TIME Pharmacist posi tion available for hospital and satellite clinic. Salary negotiable. Contact George Brandt, Martin General Hospital, Williamston, NC 919 792 2186</p>
        <p>RECEPTIONIST/Secretary with experience in insurance and/or AAedicaid for new doctor's office In Greenville. Send resume to P.O. Box 114, Farm ville, NC 27828.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>059</p>
        <p>Help Wanted Medical</p>
        <p>73 BED skilM facilify seeking</p>
        <p>full time Activity Director perfect job for someone who loves eriatrics and has the appropriate education. Send resume to: Britthaven of New Bern, P.O. Box 3397, New Bern, NC 28560.</p>
        <p>060</p>
        <p>Help Wanted Miscellaneous</p>
        <p>AM EMPLOYMENT</p>
        <p>UCHimST: 10 too Boss pars for your skills.</p>
        <p>... yo---------</p>
        <p>MANAGER TRAINEE; $180 up</p>
        <p>ith</p>
        <p>Opportunify to advance wi retail.</p>
        <p>METAL FABRICATOR: to $360 Read blueprints? Pipe fitter? Hurry.</p>
        <p>DELIVERY: AM'S Perfect for sfudent.</p>
        <p>ASSISTANT MANAGER; to $220 Energetic? College background will start you now. OFFICE: Take charge payments Greet the public.</p>
        <p>101 West 14th Street Suite 203 758-1393 Low Fee Personnel Service</p>
        <p>AGES 16-21, out of Khool. Free job training through Job Corps. Also G.E.D. Social Services, Greenville. Wednesdays, 12 noon-2 p.m.</p>
        <p>BOB BARBOUR Volvo, BMW and AMC needs counterhelp in parts department. Includes</p>
        <p>shipping and receiving. Experience required. Apply In person at 3303 South AAemorial Drive.</p>
        <p>Ask for Rocky Thornhill.</p>
        <p>COUNTER PERSON also some small engine repair and service. Experience preferred. Apply in person. Rental Tool Company No phone calls.</p>
        <p>DELIVERY/AAaintenance Full Time associate needed at Brody's. Individual must be depen^ble and hardworking</p>
        <p>KAnAfifc Annlu QrAWiv'e</p>
        <p>Good benefits. Apply Brody's, Personnel Director, Carolina</p>
        <p>f^4 AAonday-Thursday,</p>
        <p>DO YOU KNOW weights and measurements? Are you able to lift 70 pounds? Can you work afternoons and evenings? If so, S B S CAFETERIA may have a storeroom position for you. Ap plications will be taken 8 9 a.m., Monday-Frlday only. No phone calls.</p>
        <p>EARN GREAT MONEY, work your own hours. Sell Avon - #1 Beauty Company. 756-6396.</p>
        <p>ELDERLY HANDICAPPED</p>
        <p>white lady seeks live-in compa nion. Ideal for another elderly</p>
        <p>lady tirl of living alone. Room and board, possible salary. Call</p>
        <p>Carl at 752 5733 for details.</p>
        <p>EXPERIENCED MOBILE</p>
        <p>home service man and plumber-needed to work at Azalea AAobile Homes. Contact Tommy or J.T. Williams. 756-7815.</p>
        <p>EXPERIENCED MOBILE</p>
        <p>home service man needed. Im mediate opening. Apply in per son. Calvary AAobile Homes, Chocowinity.</p>
        <p>FULL TIME help needed. Apply The Optical Palace.</p>
        <p>GOVERNMENT JOBS! Now</p>
        <p>hiring in your area, both skilled  kill  "  ......</p>
        <p>and unskilled. For list of jobs and application: Call 615 383 2627 extension J501</p>
        <p>HAIR DRESSER Now accep ting applications for experi enced hair dresser. Guaranteed</p>
        <p>salary plus commission G^ benefits. Apply in person Great</p>
        <p>Expectations, Carolina East AAall, next to Sears</p>
        <p>HIRING! Federal government iobs in your area and overseas Many immediate opening; without waiting list or test. $15 68,000. Phone call refundable (602) 838 8885. Extension 513.</p>
        <p>INCREDIBLE Information Earn up to $600.00 per week and drive a new Mercedes without cost. Call 615 292-6900, extension M108.</p>
        <p>LADY TO STAY in home at night with elderly lady, 7 nights weekly. Good pay. 758 1246.</p>
        <p>LICENSED HAIR Dresser wanted at George's Hair De signers. The Plaza. Apply Tuesday Friday, 10 5:30.</p>
        <p>LIGHT DELIVERY. Must know local and surrounding areas and have economical car. 756 3658</p>
        <p>LONG DISTANCE truck driver over age 25. Home weekends. At least 2 5 years experience and good driving record hauling tumber and steel. Call 752-5785 after2:30p.m.</p>
        <p>NEEDED IMMEDIATELY</p>
        <p>General maintenance person to</p>
        <p>complete staff of a large apart If  .....</p>
        <p>menf community. Need own</p>
        <p>tools, car, ability to be poly ire tc</p>
        <p>graphed and a genuine desire to work. New applicants only. A|</p>
        <p>y App</p>
        <p>ly Tar River Estates, 1400 Wi</p>
        <p>villow Street, #1,9-5 daily.</p>
        <p>NEEDED: Part time person to</p>
        <p>clean cars inside and out. Apply t, 1103</p>
        <p>at Greenville Motor Valet. ____</p>
        <p>Dickinson Avenue between 9 and</p>
        <p>12.</p>
        <p>PROFESSIONAL RESUME</p>
        <p>composition Atlantic Personnel Services, 355 7931</p>
        <p>PUBLIC SCHOOL bus drivers needed. Call Rose High School 752-3169 for Barbara AAallory. Class will be set up for anyone desiring certification.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>EXPERIENCED SEWING MACHINE</p>
        <p>OPERATOR</p>
        <p>TOM TOGS, INC., Conetoe, N.C. now accepting applications for experienced Sewing Machine Operator. Apply in person Monday through Thursday, 8:30 am to 4:00 pm.</p>
        <p>TOM TOGS, INC.</p>
        <p>Highway 64 East Conatoe. N.C.</p>
        <p>CRAFTED SERVICES</p>
        <p>Quality furniture Refinishing and repairs Superior caning for all type chairs, larger selection of custom picture framing, survey stakesany length, all types of pallets, selected framed reproductions.</p>
        <p>EASTERN CAROLINA VOCATIONAL CENTER Industrial Park. Hwy. 13 758-4188 8 AM-4:30PM Greenville. N.C</p>
        <p>PHLEBOTOMY/EKG</p>
        <p>TECHNICIAN</p>
        <p>Immediate opening for Phlebotomy/EKG Tech to work in Clinical Laboratory. Must possess skills with Ven-punctures, EKGS, and basic typing or key boarding. Must be able to communicate well with the public, laboratory and Medical staff. For more information contact:</p>
        <p>PERSONNEL DEPARTMENT COMMUNIITY HOSPITAL OF ROCKY MOUNT ROCKY MOUNT, N.C. 27804 9104484101 EOE</p>
        <p>Train to be a TRAVEL AGENT TOUR GUIDE AIRLINE RESERVATIONIST</p>
        <p>Start locelly, full llmefpert time, train on live airline computers. Homo study and resident training. Financial aid availabto. Job plactmtnl assistance. Natlonel Heedquartera  LtgMhouac Point FL</p>
        <p>1-800-327-7728</p>
        <p>SUPERVISORY</p>
        <p>OPPORTUNITY</p>
        <p>Established, local industrial firm has immediate opportunity for an experienced Assistant Supervisor. Must be able to work second shift. Require college background. Excellent advancement opportunity and benefits.</p>
        <p>Reply to:</p>
        <p>SUPERVISORY OPPORTUNITY</p>
        <p>P.O. BOX 1967 QREENVIUE, N.C. 27835</p>
        <p>T</p>
        <p>060 Help Wanted Miscellaneous</p>
        <p>HAIR STYLIST wanted for new salon In Stanton Square. Call 355 5826 or 756 5773.</p>
        <p>RELOCATION Coordinator. 20 hours per week for a mature Individual. Duties will include working with newcomers and assisting OHice AAanager. Computer knowiedge valuabie but not mandatory. Ask for Ann or Dot at Century 2t Bass Realty,</p>
        <p>7AA AAA</p>
        <p>REPAIRMAN needed with ex perience in repairing mobile homes. Apply in person between 9 and II a.m., Monday-Frlday</p>
        <p>No phone calls. Conner Homes, 616 West Greenville Boulevard,</p>
        <p>Greenville.</p>
        <p>RESUMES, COVER LETTERS</p>
        <p>professionally developed. Even ing appointments. Call 355-6390.</p>
        <p>SHIRT PRESSOR or dry clean ing pressor needed. 2105 Charles Street.</p>
        <p>SHELLING B SHELLING</p>
        <p>specializes in sales, manage ment trainee, accounting and clerical positions. Call 758-0541</p>
        <p>TELEPHONE TALKERS If</p>
        <p>you can dial and smile and sit awhile, we need you. High school students welcomed. Day or evening hours available. Call 756-3658</p>
        <p>TRACTOR TRAILER Drivers</p>
        <p>High pay. New equipment, 2 irs experience required. Call</p>
        <p>1800-682-6574.</p>
        <p>WANTED EXPERIENCED</p>
        <p>Serging or Overlock Sewing</p>
        <p>Machine Operators for children's knitwear. Apply ir person at Maury Garmenf &amp;lt;;om</p>
        <p>^y^ In Maury be^een 8 5</p>
        <p>ly through Friday or call 747 8594.</p>
        <p>WANTED</p>
        <p>Mothers, with small children, who would like to stay at home and still contribute financially to the family budget. Shaklee is now accepting applications from qualified persons Interested in nutrition counseling and sales. An ideal In home business. Ex cellent benefits, full time or part time. Training provided. Call 757-3040 for interview appoint ment.</p>
        <p>WANTED: EDITOR for 17,500 circulation dally newspaper located In Eastern North Carolina. Responsible for make-up of editorial page, in</p>
        <p>eluding writing editorials, work ing with and teaching reporters, critiquing fheir work and offer</p>
        <p>Ing suggestions for improvements and rewarding excellence with praise. Would fill in for</p>
        <p>editor during vaca</p>
        <p>tion or other absences. Requires broad knowledge of all phases of</p>
        <p>editorial content of paper. Must jnitv &amp;lt;</p>
        <p>be active in community affairs. Send resume and references to AAorgan Dickerman, Publisher, The Wilson Daily Times, Inc P.O. Box 2447, Wilson, NC 27894 2447:</p>
        <p>WE ARE GROWING and ex</p>
        <p>landing our managemenf staff .ooking for one responsible, outgoing person fo work full time as an Assistant Manager at Video Views. Apply In person at Carolina Easf Centre. No phone calls please.</p>
        <p>061 Help Wanted Sales</p>
        <p>AN EXCITING opportunity fo earn $35K-$50K per year in commissioned outside sales rep resenting nation's largest retailers home Improvement division Verified leads furnish</p>
        <p>ed and complete framing pro fu "</p>
        <p>vided with full company sup</p>
        <p>port. Only experienced siding salespeople need apply. CaM</p>
        <p>355-7108 fo arrange an interview.</p>
        <p>ASSISTANT MANAGER RETAIL</p>
        <p>D.A. Kelly's, a rapidly I'S fc</p>
        <p>women's fashion chain, has im mediate opening for Assistant AAanager bosition in store at Carolina East Mall. Prior expe rience preferred. Competitive salary, benefits, and incentives. If interested, apply at D.A Kel ly's, Carolina East Mall, Green ville, NC.</p>
        <p>ATTENTION Real Estate</p>
        <p>Agents. We presently have an one full time agent</p>
        <p>opening for one ........</p>
        <p>with a North Carolina real estate license. Full time. Must plan to work 40 hours per week. Leads and sales aids available For your confidential interview, call Ann Bass, CENTURY 21 Bass Realty, 756 6666</p>
        <p>BRODY'S NEEDS a full time sales associate in the gift department. Individual musten joy displaying and stocking merchandise and working with the public. Salary based upon experience Good benefit package Apply Brody's, Per sonnel Director, Carolina East AAall, AAonday Thursday, 1:30 4.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>SPECIAL</p>
        <p>Safe</p>
        <p>Model S-1 Special Price</p>
        <p>Reg. Price $177.00</p>
        <p>TAFF OFFICE EQUIPMENT</p>
        <p>569 S. Evans St. 752-2175</p>
        <p>CharllB Goodman</p>
        <p>Proftsslonal</p>
        <p>Tranaportatlon</p>
        <p>Consultant</p>
        <p>Any make or modal-new car, truck Of RV</p>
        <p>Lease or Purchase Used cars, trucks or RVs Bank financlng AMERICAN TRUCK 8 AUTO LEASING</p>
        <p>Hwy. 11 S. QraeiwIHe Work: 7SA483S Heme: 7IB-7t</p>
        <p>061</p>
        <p>Help Wanted Sales</p>
        <p>BRODY'S NEEDS a full time sales associate in the jewelry department. Individual musten ioy fashionable jewelry. Salary based upon experience. Good</p>
        <p>benefit package. Apply Brody's, Personnel Director, Carolina</p>
        <p>E*4 AAall, AAonday-Thur^y,</p>
        <p>FEAAALE HELP Wanted. Earn $10 for 2 hours morning, afternoon, or evening, 5 days per</p>
        <p>week. Car necessary. For per sonal Interview, call 753 3514.</p>
        <p>LOOKING FOR ambitious, motivated real estate agents fo</p>
        <p>work with a new and growing al estate</p>
        <p>agency. Must have real estate license. Call for your Interview today. CENTURY 21 Janet Bowser B Associates, 355-7800</p>
        <p>AAARKETING/SALESPERSON wanted by a fast growing local firm. Our company is looking for a self motivator with a desire to succeed A degree In marketl</p>
        <p>NC 27834</p>
        <p>NEEDED IMMEDIATELY.</p>
        <p>Company expanding, looking for aggressive person experienced in sales to work Greenville,</p>
        <p>Wilson, Rocky AAount area. We will train. Send resume to:</p>
        <p>Frank Smith, Carolina AAodei Homes, P.O. Box 469, Green ville, NC 27835.</p>
        <p>repsHeeded</p>
        <p>for business accounts. Full time, $60,000 $80,000 Parf-time, $12,000 $18,000 No selling, repeat business. Set your own hours. Training provided. Call: 1612</p>
        <p>938-6870, AAonday-Friday, 8 a.m.</p>
        <p>to 5 p.m. (Central Standard Time)</p>
        <p>SALESPERSON</p>
        <p>Energetic, not afraid to work, in</p>
        <p>willing to take responsibility in other areas, excellent opportunity and good benefits, ad</p>
        <p>?iood b( s up to you. Please call Malcolm Williams at</p>
        <p>Greenville TV</p>
        <p>nance</p>
        <p>FOR APPOINTMENT</p>
        <p>756-2616</p>
        <p>TOP MONEY STARTS HERE</p>
        <p>$35,000/$85,000YEAR</p>
        <p>Music and video boom Managers/representatives. We need help to service high vilume ac counts. Immediate income plus bonuses Mr Lea,B18 783 8316.</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON BASED com</p>
        <p>pany seeking aggressive self motivated indiviclual tor outside sales. $20.(XX)t- earning potential. Must have own transportation. Pickup truck helpful Call 946 0228 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday.</p>
        <p>062</p>
        <p>Help Wanted Teachers</p>
        <p>SPECIAL EDUCATION Teach</p>
        <p>er neecM with BS degree in with</p>
        <p>AAental Retardation witn an A Certificate or BS in Education with Certification in Mental Retardation. Salary commen surate It interested please send resume to: Personnel, Howell's Center, PO Box 2159, New Bern, NC 28560.</p>
        <p>063 Help Wanted Technical &amp;amp; Trades</p>
        <p>CONSULTANT PHARMACIST.</p>
        <p>Pharmacist needed immediate ly to serve as a long term care consultant pharmacist. Position requires some overnight travel, some clinical experience re quired Salary commensurate</p>
        <p>with experience and ind.</p>
        <p>background Contact Danny Yates or Randy Uzzell at i 800 682-0062 for details/interview or send resume to Pharm Save In corporated, P.O Box 190, Hookerton, NC 28538.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>063 Help Wanted Technical &amp;amp; Trades</p>
        <p>au^^dypainte^^</p>
        <p>body person, 3 to 5 years experi ence needed. Own tools. Pay ac c^ing to ability. Benefits. 758</p>
        <p>EXPERIENCED FOREIGN</p>
        <p>car mechanic needed. Apply Eurasian Service Center, 105 West Greenville Boulevard across from Union Carbide</p>
        <p>LICENSED Cosmetologist Preferably clientele. Commis slons and bonuses. Call for an appointment. 756-3705.</p>
        <p>WANTED ELECTRICIANS and</p>
        <p>helpers. Send resume to: 205F Shiloh Drive, Greenville, NC 27834.</p>
        <p>064 Work Wanted</p>
        <p>ALL LAWN CARE, roof, QuHer cleaning, leaves raked, hedg&amp;lt; trimming. Call Sam, 758-5818 Help a sfudent today.</p>
        <p>CARPENTER. Remodeling repairs, decks and fences. 35 i</p>
        <p>5700.</p>
        <p>CATHY'S CLEANING Service Residential, commercial and of flees. Cathy 758-6009; Wanda 757 3731.</p>
        <p>COMPLETE TREE SERVICE We safely remove trees and can split them tor firewood In your yard. Also clean root B gutters lawn maintenance, oal firewood. Call 754-1339 tor estimates.</p>
        <p>FLOOR SANDING and</p>
        <p>refinishing, new and old. Call 752-1851.</p>
        <p>GENERAL PAINTING, rea</p>
        <p>sonable rates. Experienced. Call 355 7611.</p>
        <p>HADDOCK CONSTRUCTION</p>
        <p>Company. Home building, Im provemenl, repair; also decks, garages, fences, etc. 355-7866</p>
        <p>irpen</p>
        <p>contractors for framing or Inte rior or exterior trim or siding call 919-522-5612 anytime</p>
        <p>INTERIOR AND Exterior paint Ref</p>
        <p>Ing and wallpapering. Refer enees, work guaranteed, IS</p>
        <p>years experience. Free estimates. 355-6492 after 6:00</p>
        <p>J B V DRY WALL, hanging and :k. Sprayed</p>
        <p>finishing shetrock ceilings. 752-5849.</p>
        <p>LPN DESIRES private duty nursing. Contact Sue, 946-9720</p>
        <p>MOORE'S HOME Improve</p>
        <p>ments. All types of remodeling addl</p>
        <p>and repair work. Room tions, decks, custom cabinets. For tree estimate call Donnie Moore, 752-0830</p>
        <p>NEED WOOD CUT, something painted, weeds pulled or other odd jobs. Free estimates. Guar antee good job. Call 752 5424 or 752-0786 anylime. Ask for Rob or Bert.</p>
        <p>PAPERING and Interior Paint</p>
        <p>Ing. 10% oft ^s scheduled tor r</p>
        <p>January and February. Present this ad at job completion. Wallpapering guaranteed In writing. Free estimates. Call Don English, 756 7010</p>
        <p>PAPERING, INTERIOR Paint ing and paper removal. Call Don English, 756 7010</p>
        <p>PROFESSIONAL Painters Low rates. Sllkwood Paint Company Interior, exterior, wallpaper. Scott Patterson, 757 3276; Sieve Bobbins, 830-0318.</p>
        <p>ROGERS' LANDSCAPING. Top</p>
        <p>soil, small loads. Call 746-2764 nights.</p>
        <p>ROOF LEAKS FIXED and</p>
        <p>minor repairs. 18 years experi 1. After 6</p>
        <p>ence. Work guaranteed</p>
        <p>p.m. call 752-5906</p>
        <p>SKINNER'S FURNITURE</p>
        <p>Refinlshlng. Stripolng and  ana delivery</p>
        <p>repairs. Pickup 756 1607.</p>
        <p>WANT YOUR HOUSECLEANEOr</p>
        <p>Call 830 0245.</p>
        <p>072 Building Supplies</p>
        <p>2,000 PAVER BRICKS Sand stone color 756 5270</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>WANTED</p>
        <p>Licensed NC Real Estate Salesperson</p>
        <p>Earning potential in Executive Level.</p>
        <p>Call 756-8485 or 636-2588 Ask for Jan Davies</p>
        <p>MEDICAL TECHNOLOGIST</p>
        <p>Immediate opening for medical technologist (ASCP or equivalent) to work In clinical laboratory. Must possess skills to work in hematology, blood bank, chemistry, uranalysis, microbiology. Must be able to communicate well with the laboratory and medical staff. Supervisory experience preferred Salary to commensurate with education and experience, Fore more Information contact:  1</p>
        <p>PERSONNEL DEPARTMENT COMMUNITY HOSPITAL OF ROCKY MOUNT 1031 NOELL LANE ROCKY MOUNT, N.C. 27804 919443-9101</p>
        <p>EOE</p>
        <p>Automotive Service Advisor</p>
        <p>Due to expanding service we are in need of an additional Service Advisor. Must have good communication skills and some mechanical knowledge. Excellent pay, benefits and vacation plan.</p>
        <p>Contact:</p>
        <p>Steve Briley, Service Manager, Joe Pecheles Volkswagen, 756-1135.</p>
        <p>IMMEDIATE OPENING FOR DIRECTOR OF BUSINESS SERVICES</p>
        <p>B. A. Degree in Accounting "preferred with ability to automate and improve operations through computer enhancements ("MSA software, NCR hardware). A strong background in credit and collections (preferably medical field) is required. Responsibilities also include all Business Office functions.</p>
        <p>Excellent salary and benefits package for qualified individual.</p>
        <p>Applications may be obtained from the Personnel Department of Community Hospital.</p>
        <p>COMMUIIfY HOSPnAL OF ROCKY MOONr</p>
        <p>1031 NogII Lane, Rocky Mount, N.C. 27804 (EOE)</p>
        <p>T</p>
        <p>The Dally Reflector, Greenville, N.C.</p>
        <p>Tuesday,January 20,1987 3.7</p>
        <p>080 Fuel, Wood, Coal</p>
        <p>ALL SPLIT, Mk firewood, ready to go. 756-3015.</p>
        <p>DAVENPORTSWOODSERVICE</p>
        <p>Oak firewood Delivered and stacked. Discounts for quantlty-756-1339.</p>
        <p>MCLAWHORN'S OAK FIREWOOD</p>
        <p>Discount for quantity - 754-7703</p>
        <p>PINE WOOD trim end, excellent for kindling. $20 per load. Call 754-7234.</p>
        <p>SEASONED OR green oak firewood, delivered and stacked. 758-4143.</p>
        <p>SEASONED OAK firewood for</p>
        <p>sale. Ready to go. Call atter'4 .m, 752^or 752 8847.</p>
        <p>STRICKLAND'S Oak Firewood Stacked and delivered.</p>
        <p>&amp;lt;s 758 5343</p>
        <p>144% OAK firewood,$75/cord, 5 cords $350, $40/VS cord, any size or length. Delivered tree. 1-423-6137 or 1-823-5407.</p>
        <p>081</p>
        <p>Furniture</p>
        <p>BLUE AND cream sofa with 2 chairs, good condition, $125. Call 355-7760 atter 4.</p>
        <p>DRESSING TABLE, bench, solid cherry, American Drew. Grandfather clock, oak. 754-9295.</p>
        <p>DRYER, heavy duty plus, wrinkit guard. Inside light. Country sofa, barn red, 754-5247.</p>
        <p>FLOOR DSION sofa, loveseat</p>
        <p>and chair, $235. Dining room suit, oak, 4 chairs, $50. Maple coHee table, $25. Call 754-8317.</p>
        <p>QUEEN SIZE brown plaid sleaper-sofa, $335 or best offer. Green vinyl reclinar, $50. Call 753-4381.</p>
        <p>SOFA AND LOVESEAT, Earth Tonas, both, $90. Call after 4 p.m., 757 3415.</p>
        <p>SOLID GOLD sofa. 6ood condi tion. Bestoffer. Call 752-4517.</p>
        <p>092</p>
        <p>Livestock</p>
        <p>HORSEBACK RIDING. Jarman Stables, 753-5237.</p>
        <p>WE HAVE horsefeed, salt</p>
        <p>099 Miscellaneous</p>
        <p>CALL CHARLES TICE, 758 3013, for small loads sand, top</p>
        <p>soli, stone, pIna bark. Also lari</p>
        <p>backhoe and driveway work.</p>
        <p>ELECtRIC DRAIN machine, Moer, whirlpool bathtub white Cail830^)073.</p>
        <p>FIXTURES FOR SALE</p>
        <p>Metal shelving, display shelv Ing, circular clothes rack, sir</p>
        <p>kscreening machine, photocopier, engraver, trophy parts and pieces, tennis racker stringing machine, desks.</p>
        <p>counters, pants rack, cash reals display</p>
        <p>ter, 8' wood and glass display case, antique display case.</p>
        <p>Bond s Sporting Goods 218 Arlington Boulevard Greenville, NC</p>
        <p>FOUR-31X11.54 R15 LT radial whIteleHer tires, 4 months old, $350 negotiable. Call atter 6 p.m., 744-2701.</p>
        <p>GEORGE SUMERLIN Fur nlture. Stripping, repairing and refinlshlng. Pactolus Highway 752-3509.</p>
        <p>GOING OUT OF Business. 35% off AAary Kay Cosmetics. Call 355 5042.</p>
        <p>GREENVILLE ATHLETIC</p>
        <p>Club membership with dues paid through August 1987. $350 Atter 5 p.m., 754 0559.</p>
        <p>GREENVILLE ATHLETIC</p>
        <p>Club Family membership, paid up through November 1987. Will sell tor $350. Call 746 2319 or 752-0334.</p>
        <p>GUNS</p>
        <p>LOANS ON BUY, SELL and trade. Southern Gun &amp;amp; Pawn Inc., 752-2444</p>
        <p>HALF PRICED Slashed S0%!</p>
        <p>Our best, large flashing arrow sign $2891 Lighted, non arrow $279! Unllghted $2391 Free let tersi Seis locally Call today!</p>
        <p>Factory; 1 (800) 423 0163, anytime.</p>
        <p>INSTANT CASH</p>
        <p>LOANS ON B BUYING Guns</p>
        <p>TV^s, gold and silver [ewelry ol value</p>
        <p>coins, most anything .. _____</p>
        <p>Southern Gun B Pawn Inc., 752 2464.</p>
        <p>blKkf, rabbit and hog feed. Call ...... ,  746^52.</p>
        <p>Ayden Nitrogen,</p>
        <p>099 Miscellaneous au^^tc"wa$her"^^</p>
        <p>condition, reasonably priced. 752 3551.</p>
        <p>BEAUTY SHOP equipment, 2 booths, 3 hydraulic chairs, 4 dryers. Call 946 1567 or 946 4628.</p>
        <p>DESKS 100 and Office Chairs 500-Fireproof tile cabinets, metal shelvlr^ and supply cabi</p>
        <p>nets. IBM Selectrlcs Must sell, iquidatlng. Call Gol (919) 714-2497 or 734 5020.</p>
        <p>now liq</p>
        <p>oldsboro.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>LARGE REFRIGERATOR with Icemaker, like new, was $900, sell $370.355-6003.</p>
        <p>MOVING SOON Need to sell refrigerator, lawnmower King size waterbed, fully equlppeo! Some odd and end furniture Call atter 5 p.m. 758 3558.</p>
        <p>NEW YEAR CLEARANCE</p>
        <p>Sale. F.H.A. Carpet $4.95/ square yard. Armstrong and</p>
        <p>Congoleum No Wax vinyl,</p>
        <p>. ,. . - . - - 0</p>
        <p>$2.4Wiquare yard. C^ongoleum toring vinyl, $9.9S/square yard. Commercial prints, $4.95 to $5.95/square yard, values to</p>
        <p>$35.00/yard. '/ Armstrong Ex celon Tile, $26.95/carton The</p>
        <p>ville. 758</p>
        <p>larga li</p>
        <p>-0057.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>MANAGER</p>
        <p>Frozen Yogurt Store</p>
        <p>Requirements; High energy, responsible, people oriented, supervisory ability. Salary plus percentage of profits. Write:</p>
        <p>Manager P.O. Box 1967 Greenville, NC 27835</p>
        <p>SALES PEOPLE</p>
        <p>NEEDED</p>
        <p>Looking for 2 exceptional sales people for multi-franchise automobile dealerships. Must have professional appearance, positive mental attitude, selfmotivated and career oriented. Demo provided, full health benefits. Contact Bob Oliver or Jeff Davis at 355-5099 from 9:00 a.m.  7:00 p.m. on Monday through Friday.</p>
        <p>099 Miscellaneous</p>
        <p>METAL LATHE. Logan 200,10" swing. 756-5270.</p>
        <p>PORTABLE COLOR TV. Ad</p>
        <p>vent Stereo speakers, toys, children's clothes (boys' size 12 )6 and 27W and girls' size 8-101.355 6239.</p>
        <p>REFRIGERATOR, G E, no</p>
        <p>frost. $250. Call 752-9593.</p>
        <p>SHAMPOO YOUR RUG! Rent shampooers and vacuums at Rental Tool Company.</p>
        <p>SHINGLES, $12.50 square. 8'X 16' Hardboard Siding, $2.89. Re by Unit W</p>
        <p>[ecf Plywood by Unit W $4.75, H $5,75, Ik" $6.75. Builders Bargain Center, 758 7061.</p>
        <p>STORAGE BUILDINGS. FI</p>
        <p>nancing available also. Call 758 4449 Atter 6,946 9932.</p>
        <p>STORE FIXTURES and silk screen equipment tor sale.7S6 6001.</p>
        <p>tOPSOIL, fill dirt, pinebark. Call 756 4472 atter 6 p.m.</p>
        <p>WASHERS, dryers, color TV's, relrlgerators and stoves. $100 up Guaranteed. 746-6929.</p>
        <p>1000 SUNBEDS Sunal-Wolft. Save 50%. Call tor tree color catalogue and wholesale prlc-</p>
        <p>Excellent money maker or</p>
        <p>Mastercard or Visa ac cepted. Call 1 800 228 6292.</p>
        <p>1983 14x60 Rivervlew. New carpet, 12x12 sundeck, located in nice park with cable TV, pool.</p>
        <p>large lots. Must sell by February 20 Payments $13/month. 758 6475</p>
        <p>22,600 BTU kerosene heater Brand new. Low, low price. 758 6301 atter 8 pm.</p>
        <p>S" SCHEDULE 40 PVC pipe, new, approximately 500', $95 per 100.752 0704 atter 7 p.m.</p>
        <p>102 Mobile Homes For Sale</p>
        <p>ALREADY SET up In the Greenville area, ready to move</p>
        <p>Into, A/C and underpinned. Assume^loan of only $137 per</p>
        <p>month Call 756 0333</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>SALES</p>
        <p>SALES</p>
        <p>MINDED</p>
        <p>Challenging position for compeli-tive. independent, goal oriented person to consult with top executives on state of the art products in demand by businesses Potential for larye income for resourceful, persistent. application minded problem solver as a member ol a close-knit team in an oui standing local company. Position lor Greenville. NC</p>
        <p>Product Training i 4 Figure income Mo. J Salary &amp;amp; Commission</p>
        <p>Phone Mr. Bush Mon.-Tues.-Wcd, 821-4050 Raleigh 1-800-367-4748 NC</p>
        <p>I quolOpporlunitv tmployrr</p>
        <p>IMMEDIATE OPENINGS FOR RNS AND LPNS</p>
        <p>ICU AND EMERGENCY ROOM MEDICAL/SURGICAL</p>
        <p>PAID MEDICAL AND DENTAL INSURANCE FOR FULL OR PART TIME EMPLOYEES MANAGEMENT POSITIONS AVAILABLE</p>
        <p>GENEROUS BENEFITS For Working ICU or ER</p>
        <p>Contact Nursing Administration COMMUNITY HOSPITAL OF ROCKY MOUNT</p>
        <p>1031 Noell Lane, Rocky Mount, N.C. 27804 (919) 443-9101 (EOE)</p>
        <p>American TRUCK &amp;amp; AUTO</p>
        <p>0f(Q|V00P Leasing</p>
        <p>GREENVILLES</p>
        <p>HEAVY-DUTY TRUCK CENTER</p>
        <p>SERVICE &amp;amp; PARTS</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>TRUCKS</p>
        <p>FRANCHISED dealer</p>
        <p> 24 HR. ROAD SERVICE  756-3635 TOLL FREE IN N.C. 1-800-682-2216</p>
        <p>Donald FrMman Parts a Srvlc Dirtctor J.D. CkKNy, Jr.</p>
        <p>SarvlCB Managtr  custorntr Satltfaction * All Work QuarantMd *</p>
        <p>Repair work done on any make or model, medium or heavy duly truck Labor Rate S28 per hour.</p>
        <p>Wd would Mkd to tak* this opfwrtunity to thank all of our cuetomrs for your</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0098" />
        <p>Th Dally Rtlltctof. Qreenvllle. N.C Tuesday, January 20, 1967</p>
        <p>102 Mobile Homei  For Sale</p>
        <p>1913 14.70, baroomi, 2 batht, central haat 75 a$  to  110,000.  Call</p>
        <p>CNNfR HOME OWNERS. You ara eligible for free noonthly payment. Call John Oulnn ' detall, 7M7490.</p>
        <p>OIMO SPCIAL" UOO down, $500 down. That' right, ]ut $500 down with affordable pay mwtll 19M 70x14, 2 bedroom and 2 batht. 3 ton air condition Ing unit, ttorm window, 2 cell Ing fan, deluxe wood furniture and much, much more! I Only $500 down to qualified buyer Only at Luv Home, 7M 69M, 264 By Pa, Greenville</p>
        <p>DOUBLE WIDE Mobile Home on 11/4 Acre. 3 bedroom, 2 full bath $20,000 negotiable. Call 756 5443.</p>
        <p>oAaSTIC reductions on ued hornet 1974 65x12, bedroom, I'.'i bath, $350 down $134.61 per month. 197046x12, I bedroom, 1 bath. $325 down $124.09 per month 1974 60x12. bedroom, 1 bath, $385 down $142.72 per month. 1973 65x12, . bedroom, 1 bath, $410 down $152.37 per month. 1975 60x12, bedroom, 1 bath, $420 down $155.98 per month 1977 60x12, . bedrooms, 1 bath, $435 down $161.40 per month. All homes have been professionally remodeled. Delivery and set up Included. 11.99 APR OAC. Only at Luv Homes of Greenville, 264 By Pass, 756 6996</p>
        <p>EXTRA CLEAN 1977 70x14, bedrooms and IV] baths. One owner. Payments as low as $135 per month to qualified buyers. Only at Luv Homes, 756 6996, 264 By Pass, Greenville.</p>
        <p>FINANCINOII Luv Homes of fers easy financing!! 24 hour</p>
        <p>approval. 7 year, 10 year,</p>
        <p>15 'nti uyer</p>
        <p>dable, quality built homes to meet your needs Only at Luv Homes, 756 6996, 264 By Pass Greenville</p>
        <p>year, and l5 year flnanclnr Downpayments as low as 5% ^ qualified buyers We offer affor</p>
        <p>FOR SALE OR RENT. Clean bedroom, furnished $170 plus deposit. 756 1455after 5:00</p>
        <p>FOR SALE by owner. '/] mile from hospital. 2 bedroom mobile home with add on room on '/i acre wooded lot Wood deck sunporch, terraced garden. Cen tral heat Storage buildings Very private. $20,000.758 5808</p>
        <p>HOLIDAY SPECIAL $99 DOWN</p>
        <p>On Pre-Owned Homes OAKWOOD HOMES</p>
        <p>264 BY PASS GREENVILLE, NC 919 756 5434</p>
        <p>HONEYMOON SPECIALII 1987 14 wide, 2 bedrooms, IV2 baths with garden tub, small bay win dow, Kenmore washer and dryer, celling fan, storm win dows, deluxe exterior, quality Owens Corning insulation, large walk In pantry, house type doors and much, much morel! Payments as low as $178. Only at Luv Homes, 756 6996 , 264 By Pass, Greenville</p>
        <p>NEED A PLACE to live? Pay nothing down and earn your own home 756 4298.</p>
        <p>NEW DOUBLEWIDES with celling fans, skirting, and com pletely furnished under $199 per month. Call 756 4298</p>
        <p>NEW 1987 doublewlde, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, complete tor $19,595. Free setup and delivery Call Quinn at 756 7490</p>
        <p>NO DOWN PAYMENT 3</p>
        <p>bedrooms, 2 full baths, fully fur nlshed, washer/dryer. Call 756 4298</p>
        <p>SELECTED NEW homes at fac tory Invoice price. Call Quinn at 756 7490.</p>
        <p>TAKE OVER payments of tl94.56 with negotiable down payment lor a 14x60 Oakwood n-ioblle home, set up in park, ready to move In, central heal .ind air. Call Earl at 756 3640 be tween 6:30 p.m. and 10:30 p.m ur all day Saturday and Sunday</p>
        <p>THIS WEEK'S SPECIAL Our</p>
        <p>newest model 1987 Ambassador II doublewlde with 1248 square feel Masonite siding, fireplace stereo, 8" overhang, storm win (luws, French patio doors, oak Kitchen cablnefs. 2x4 stud con structlon, 16" on center. Quality insulation and name brand ap pllances Payments as low as $278 per month to qualified buyers!! Only at Luv Homes 756 6996, 264 By Pass, Green vine.</p>
        <p>TWO OLDER mobile homes for sale. Need repairs 758 7420</p>
        <p>USED HOME CLEARANCE</p>
        <p>All used homes sold for cost 25 homes to choose from. Limited time only Conner Homes, 710 Southwest Greenville Boule vard 756 0333</p>
        <p>USED HOMES sold at wholesale book value Call Quinn at 756 7490</p>
        <p>VTERANS and active mill tary. Quick no down payment VA financing Conner Homes, 616 West Greenville Boulevard 756 0333</p>
        <p>WANT ToTuYiTir TiwideT; bedroom, 2 bath mobile home in park In Greenville for our ECU daughter Call after 6 00 at 747</p>
        <p>WE TAKE TRADE INS on</p>
        <p>mobile homes. Call 756 4298.</p>
        <p>12x60 TWO bedroom, furnished with washer, $4500 negotiable Call 758 2423 or 758 0886 and leave message</p>
        <p>14X60 RIVERV 1WTew carpel, 12x12 sun deck. In nice park with pool $8.000 758 6475 1971 CONNER TTTIiFl bedrooms, already set up In nice park In Salter Path Overhead deck. Only $4995 Financing available Charles Mille Homes, 1 800 682 2801</p>
        <p>1974 MOBILE HOME for sale $3400 Call after 6 p m , 752 0098 1979 bAKWDTTiirT; bedrooms, l"j baths, with appll anee 524 5537 $9,500 1979 OAKWOOD'Moniibei 10 1 bedrooms. 2 lull baths, hoal pomp, appliances $12 600 Call 830 0984, ask lor Wanda</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>Rent A</p>
        <p>NEW CAR</p>
        <p>As Low As</p>
        <p>$18.00</p>
        <p>Per Day Sharpett Fleet In Town</p>
        <p>RENT WAY AUTO RENT Brown &amp;amp; Wood</p>
        <p>Downtown</p>
        <p>752-2882</p>
        <p>SAVE ^50 A MONTHI SAVE M,200</p>
        <p>ON A QUALITY CONNER MOBILE NOME NOWI</p>
        <p>C(mner Homei</p>
        <p>710 8willnml OreeflvIHe leuievtrd areenWle. N.C</p>
        <p>756-0333</p>
        <p>(e en I lOH etwn psynwM Xh 1M RWnM MMMnts ine 1I.7SH Plaee fWt nu Flntnctnt iiohitivt el niM sue liMUrsnM</p>
        <p>102</p>
        <p>Mobile Hsrras For Sale</p>
        <p>198$ OAKWOOD, 14x76, bedrooms, 2 full baths. Call 355 5764 after 4</p>
        <p>1985 I4'X70' SKYLINE, 3</p>
        <p>bedrooms, 2 baths, excellent condition. Assume loan with payments of $256 per month 752 5043 after 4.</p>
        <p>1986 CHAMPIN, 14x50, 2 bedrooms, underpinned, set up In park, $t1,000 . 355-7576 even Ings.</p>
        <p>1916 14 WIDE, payments as low as $141,86. Greenville volume dealer. Thomas' Mobile Home Sales Across from Airport. 752 6068</p>
        <p>1986 3 BEDROOM home. Fur nlshed, payments starting $130 per month. Call 756-4298</p>
        <p>105Musical Instruments</p>
        <p>ASSUME SMALL monthly payment on modern style piano, like new condition. Can be seen locally Please call. Manager, 1 B0O67 3I40</p>
        <p>PRE-OWNED small Spinet piano, $790. Ideal for beginner Will deliver. 355-6002.</p>
        <p>RESPONSIBLE PARTY</p>
        <p>assume small monthly pay ments on console piano, been locally Call Manager 618 594 3439 or write P.O. Box 171, Carlyle, Illinois, 62231</p>
        <p>WE BUY, sell, trade and rent al types. All major lines Including Peavey, New Bern Music, 1409 Tatum Drive, 636 5640</p>
        <p>109 Sporting Goods</p>
        <p>2 870 pump guns, 1 14' boat, 1 55 commercial motor, 2 kerosun heaters,stereo,355 7222</p>
        <p>114 Instruction</p>
        <p>NOW ACCEPTING students for piano Instruction. Call Plano 8, Organ Distributors at 355-6002</p>
        <p>11s Lost &amp;amp; Found</p>
        <p>LOST CHOW and collie mix near Hlohland Trailer Park, answers to King, 6 years old. Please call 757 1563.</p>
        <p>LOST FEMALE red Chow, Candlewick area, reward of fared 752 9278</p>
        <p>LOST: Brown snap front case and prescription eyeglasses. Near University, Rotary. Reward. 752 1260</p>
        <p>122</p>
        <p>Business</p>
        <p>Opportunities</p>
        <p>A BUSINESS? Buy or sell your business with C J. Harris 8. Co., Inc Financial a. Marketing Con sultants. Serving the Southeastern United States Greenville, N.C. 355 7799, nights 756 8444.</p>
        <p>HEALTH INSURANCE Sales We offer a high quality indlvidu al lina, top commissions, plus point of sale computer. Amerl can Republic Insurance Com pany: 1 800 255-2255, extension 4277</p>
        <p>JOB SECURITY may be yours by preparing at home for Gov ernment Civil Service entrance exams! Call toll free 1 800 524 2515, Or write: NATIONAL TRAINING SERVICE, INC. Box 508, Voorhees, NJ 08043</p>
        <p>NOTE BROKERS Of America own a note Brokering Agency. Hottest Franchise going. Brokering Real Estate Backed Notes. Explosive$200,000 Billion Dollar Industry. National Net work of Brokers. No finance or Real Estate experience needed Investment $15,000. Toll free, 1 600 826 4969</p>
        <p>SALON OR EQUIPMENT for sale Call after 6pm 830 0337</p>
        <p>TO BUY OR SELL a business or commercial property Contact Snowden Associates, Brokers, 355 0327</p>
        <p>124 Professional</p>
        <p>CHIMNEY SWEEPING Gid</p>
        <p>Holloman North Carolina's original chimney sweep, 30 years experience working with chimneys and fireplaces. Fireplace repair, chimney caps Installed, screens lor chimney tops. Call day or night, 753 3503, Farmvllle. NC.</p>
        <p>125 Home improvements</p>
        <p>R A S CONSTRUCTION Gener al subcontractors. Residential and commercial Free estimates, 355 7982 or 830 1298 anytime night or day</p>
        <p>132</p>
        <p>Gommerciai</p>
        <p>Property</p>
        <p>ABOUT 500 feet Irom the hospi lal on NC 43, 30 acres at $300,000 Call Carl at Darden Realty, 758 1983, nights and weekends, 355 6558</p>
        <p>COMMERCIAL BUILDTngT rent 2,000 square feet. 125 feet oft Greenville Boulevard facing side street Great location. Call 756 1 320 days, 756 0944 nights</p>
        <p>FOR RENT; Approximately 2000 square leet with parking 705 Dickinson Avenue 756 0640</p>
        <p>CLASSiFiED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>CANVAS AWNINGS C. L. Lupton Co. 752-6116</p>
        <p>132</p>
        <p>Commtrcial</p>
        <p>Proporty</p>
        <p>R SALE BY WNERS, Valu able property located at corner of Grande Avenue and Virginia Street Zoned CDF. Phone 756 2127or 758 6136after5;30p m</p>
        <p>NEW. ld Shoney's on Green vllle Boulevard. Call Carl at Darden Realty, 758-1983, nights and weekends, 355 6558</p>
        <p>NEW. n 10th treat. 5 lots and houses. Call Carl at Darden Re alty, 758-1983. nights and weekends. 355 6558</p>
        <p>NEW. 100 foot lots on Greenville Boulevard $600 per front foot Call Carl at Daroen Realty, 758 1963, nights and weekends, 355 6558</p>
        <p>STORAGE SPACE for rent</p>
        <p>12.000 16,000 28.000 square feet Write Box 972, Kinston.</p>
        <p>136 Condominiums For Sale</p>
        <p>PATIO HOME In Heritage</p>
        <p>Village. Available May I5. 2</p>
        <p>bedrooms, greatroom with fireplace, kitchen with all appliances, panfry with washer/</p>
        <p>dryer connection, outside storage, fenced backyard Excellent landscaping, Im maculate condition $40,000 Call 355 6521 evenings</p>
        <p>139 Farms For Sale</p>
        <p>150 ACRE FARM 3 bedroom house. 65 acres cleared 85 woods 11.298 pounds tobacco, 1986.20 miles south of Greenville on Highway 43 Call 244 1036 after6p.m.</p>
        <p>250 ACRES. Fronts the Tar River $84,500. Call Carl, Darden Realty, 758 1983, nights and weekends, 355 6558</p>
        <p>140 Farms For Lease</p>
        <p>WANTED: TOBACCO POUNDS</p>
        <p>Call Robert Pierce now! I! 753 3078 day or night</p>
        <p>WANTED TOBACCO allotment ounds for purchase. Call lobert May at 3-3512,</p>
        <p>144 Houses For Sale</p>
        <p>BROOK VALLEY/PAMPER</p>
        <p>THE FAMILY, $105,900. Brick styling adds to this gem. Ranch, central air, decorator upgrades, wood paneling, hardwooo floors, formal dining room, foyer, sun room, family room. Fireplace, formal living and dining room Duffus Realty, 756 5395</p>
        <p>CAMBRIDGE For sale by owner. Brick ranch 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, fireplace, fenced in /ard, $59,900 Must sell. Owner 0 relocate. Call after 7 p.m. or weekends, 756 4048</p>
        <p>'WFIXEDRATE-</p>
        <p>FINANCINGAVAILABLE</p>
        <p>NEED WINTERVILLE</p>
        <p>Schools? Need formal living and den with fireplace' How about three big bedrooms, and two baths? we'll even throw in a country kitchen and fenced yard! $50's.</p>
        <p>RED OAK! Contemporary with two wood heaters, three bedrooms, two baths, garage, deck and located on large lot on Pearl Drive. $60's.</p>
        <p>HUD OWNEDI Lost in the coun try about tour miles from Greenville on Highway 264 be tween Greenville and Farm vllle Only $1,000 down and good credit and job will get you in this four bedroom, two bafh brick ranch with formal areas, den with fireplace, double garage, and priced right at only $67,250.</p>
        <p>EXECUTIVE HOME In Cherry Oaks with large sunken great room, country kitchen, three bedrooms, 2'] baths, dining room, double garage, yard with 6' high cedar privacy fence, and loocfloan assumption available, High$80's.</p>
        <p>FOUR BEDROOM Contem porary with 3/4 acre lot in the ines in Ayden You'll Inve the tour levels, the corner lot, detached garage, and the price! Only $94,900.</p>
        <p>VA OWNEDI Grey cedar siding two storv at 323 Pinewood Drive in Lynnoale area Formal areas, den with fireplace, eat in kilch en with bay window, large wrap a round deck, three bedrooms, 2'j baths, and VA will finance with no money down! Pay 1% VA funding fee and prepaids at closing Call for appointment now! $123,500</p>
        <p>On Duty Kristi Clark 756 7800</p>
        <p>HIGNITE REALTORS 757-1969 Anytime</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>144 Houms For Sale</p>
        <p>USTOM HOME BUILDER Craft-Bllt Homtt builds and fl naneas on your lot compataly finishad homa. Call 1-800-942 52llanytlma.</p>
        <p>FOR SALE: Trailer set up at house. 4 bedrooms, 2'/] baths large lot, nice neighborhood 829,500. After 5 p.m , 756 8790.</p>
        <p>IN LittLE WASHINGTON Prime walk to location. An ar chltactural gam. 8 rooms, t floor, 2150 square feet. Reduced to sell, $89,500.975-3291.</p>
        <p>NEED A HOME? Will build It on your lot in Brick, Wood or Vinyl for $200 down and no closing coift. Free Zenith 19" color TV or VCR If you buy now. Call col lect. Raleigh: 919 834 9708, Charlotte: 704-568 6884, Fayet tevllle: 919 323 5991, Greensboro 919-697 0440</p>
        <p>NEED MORE SPACE7 Check this 4 bedroom home located in the WIntervllle School District 1'/) baths, fenced In back yard with a small swimming pool. 158 Vernon Avenue, Wnterville $40'$ The Wingate Agency, 757 3441 or 758 1280, 355 5007</p>
        <p>NO DOWN PAYMENT, $180 per</p>
        <p>month, 3 bedroom, IV2 baths brick ranch. Call Home Realty Company, 355 4663.</p>
        <p>OLD HOUSE tree for moving Highway 903, 2 miles west of WIntervllle. 756 2543.</p>
        <p>REAL ESTATE AGENTS</p>
        <p>wanted. For your confidential Interview, call Jean Hopper at University Realty, 355 5866.</p>
        <p>RESORT HOME at Beaufort Landing with boat slip on Taylor's Creek, Beaufort, NC $180,000 negotiable. By owner/ builder 1-8M 682 9978 or 919 291 0190.</p>
        <p>VA OWNED. No down payment! 323 Pinewood Drive in Lynndale Call Darrell for details, Hignite Realtors, 757 1969 anytime.</p>
        <p>BY OWNER, WIntervllle school district, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, woodstove, solar water, fenced in yard. 756 2036 anytime</p>
        <p>148 Investment Property</p>
        <p>MOBILE HOME PARKS Ex</p>
        <p>cel lent return and some owner tinanclng. 752-1269.</p>
        <p>MORTGAGES FOR SALE. 12%</p>
        <p>return. 752 1269  _</p>
        <p>VALUABLE PROPERTY for</p>
        <p>sale. Agnes Fullllove School, corner of Chestnut and Manhat tan Avenue Call for more in formation, 756 5880</p>
        <p>151</p>
        <p>Mobile Home Lots For Sale</p>
        <p>LARGE LOTS for mobile homes in the country. Excellent location. Easy financing. Call Winnie, 752 4224, Faye, 756 5288 and daysat 752 2814.</p>
        <p>MOBILE HOME lots tor sale. Low down payment, easy fi nancing. Located on Old River Road and Eastwoods Country Estates. Call Benny Eastwooo 752 1802, anytime.</p>
        <p>152 Lots For Sale</p>
        <p>BEAUTIFUL TWO acre wooded lot In Baywood. Will build to suit WIntervllle schools Call Chapin &amp;amp; Associates, 756 1234.</p>
        <p>CLEARED LOTS between Ayden and Griffon. i to t '-4 plus acres. Starting at $3750. 746 2417.</p>
        <p>HEAVILLY WOODED lots in desirable location now available beginning at $12,000. 756 8702.</p>
        <p>HOLLYRIDGE. 5 acres Coun try estate living at its best. Darden Realty, 758 1983, nights and weekends, 355 6558.</p>
        <p>LOTS FOR SALE with water and septic system. Guaranteed financing with no downpayment. Call 758 5103.</p>
        <p>NEW. Lots near Winterville, $12,900 Water and sewer Call Carl for details, Darden Realty, 758 1983, nights and weekends, 355 6558</p>
        <p>TWO ACRES. In Pitt County's elite country estate, Holly Ridge $26,500 Darden Realty, 758 1983, nights and weekends, 355 6558</p>
        <p>153 Loans &amp;amp; Mortgages</p>
        <p>"$5,000-$750,000 Best rates first and second mortgages to 30 'ears Pay bills, refinance, buy lome, taxes, business. 9 a m 6 m. Refused by others try us. (703)343 6140 "</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>155 Resort Property For Sale</p>
        <p>PARAoiT^^he^amnc^</p>
        <p>minutes from Greenville-Only vacant waterfront lot available In this picturesque mobile home community offering water and septic systems, sandy beach, 4 piers, concrete boat ramp, restrictive covenants, $26,500 Owner/Broker, 756 4965</p>
        <p>RIVER COTTAGE at Bayside Shorts In Chocowlnlty. Water on 3sldei $50,000. 752 1269</p>
        <p>WILKES COUNTY, NC. Heart of Longbottom Mountain Beauty Alexander Farm Restored Home, Deer, Trout, Timber. 700 acres at $2.000. 919 366 4864, Paul Shumate.</p>
        <p>3 BEDROOM cottage in the Oriental area. River on the front. Canal on tide. Ideal retirement home Large lot. County water. Seawall. $65,000 Seller flnanc Ing available 758-0491.</p>
        <p>157 Townhouses For Sale</p>
        <p>CONDOMINIUM for sale, Williamsburg Manor Only $250 down payment, 9% FHA flnanc Ing, monthly payment, $356. $42.900. 756 3M6</p>
        <p>BY OWNER 2 bedrooms, I'l baths with refrigerator, dish washer, central air and heat pump, single family or invest menf. Under $41,000 After 6:00 p.m., 704 786 2460</p>
        <p>TOWNHOUSE. Exclusive, quiet, wooded area. Quail Ridge Uniquely beautiful two story, 3 bedroom, 2'/i baths Cathedral</p>
        <p>celling with balcony Fireplace Landscaped brick patio Tennis courts. Pool. By owner $71,900</p>
        <p>756-0429,</p>
        <p>161</p>
        <p>Apartments For Rent</p>
        <p>A PERFECT PLACE to live 1 bedroom apartments, $235 2 bedroom apartments, $275 Water Included, Brand new, washer/dryer hookups, no pets Security deposit required Ap proximately I mile from hospi tal. Call 756 1454 weekdays, 756 6118,7 9 week nights.</p>
        <p>ABSOLUTELY NICE Park Village, 2 bedrooms, washer^ dryer hookups, water furnished, $275 per month. 757 1626</p>
        <p>ABSOLUTELY unbelievable. ) bedroom apartment. Available immediately $245 a month. Nights after 6 : 756 0603, 355 5336. Days; 756 6336.</p>
        <p>APARTMENTS! We have the one for you! All areas, sues and prices immediate or future. 752 1375. Homelocators Fee</p>
        <p>AVAILABLE JANUARY 1 at</p>
        <p>Shenandoah Village Townhouse with 2 bedrooms, 1'2 baths, gar bage disposal, dishwasher, and fireplace $350 per month 1 year lease and deposit required Call Clark Branch Realtors at 355 2000</p>
        <p>AZALEAGARDENS*</p>
        <p>CLEAN AND QUIET one</p>
        <p>bedroom furnished apartments, energy efficient, free water and sewer, optional washers, dryers, cable TV. Couples or singles on ly. $195 a month. 6 month lease. MOBILE HOME RENTALS Couples or singles. Apartments and mobile homes in Azalea Gardens near Brook Valley Country Club ContactJT or Tommy Williams 756 7815</p>
        <p>BRYTON HILLS Apartments, 2 bedrooms, $250 month Call 752 4131 after 9:30 p.m. or before 8 am</p>
        <p>CANNON COURT</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOM, I&amp;gt;3 bath townhouse includes washer dryer hookup, cable TV, drapes and new carpet.</p>
        <p>Call REMC EAST, 758 6061.</p>
        <p>CAPTAINSQUARTERS</p>
        <p>East Twelfth Street</p>
        <p>^aclous one bedroom near ECU Dishwasher, refrigerator, range and washer hook up. Call REMCO EAST, 758 6061.</p>
        <p>CEDAR COURT</p>
        <p>SPACIOUS TWO BEDROOM,</p>
        <p>1'/] bath apartments with range, refrigerator, dishwasher and washer/dryer hook ups Call REMCO EAST, 758 6061.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>FOOOfTORU</p>
        <p>CAREER OPPORTUNITIES</p>
        <p>FOR</p>
        <p>CASHIER/CLERKS</p>
        <p>Full R PrH Tlnw. All BGnaflts Apply at thGriMrGst</p>
        <p>FRESH WAY FOOD STORE</p>
        <p>WANTED</p>
        <p>LICENSED NORTH CAROLINA</p>
        <p>REAL ESTATE SALESPERSON</p>
        <p>Experience preferred. Opportunity to earn income on executive level.</p>
        <p>PHONE 756-8485</p>
        <p>Sensational Savings!</p>
        <p>Chevy S-10</p>
        <p>12719</p>
        <p>per month</p>
        <p>ms</p>
        <p>Many to chose from - Ready for Immediate Delivery!</p>
        <p>Pric(' |HM iiionth l),is('(l on hO iiinnth', with si'IIiiki piK't' ol $6548.00 vvilh $548,00 down, tnx not iiu liidnd, nnd hiMnn.L'(1 nl 1 1.5 AidI nt.il (.if nnvni(Mit:&amp;gt; $/O,'! 1 40</p>
        <p>RHELiPSi</p>
        <p>2308 memorial DR</p>
        <p>GM QUALfTY URVtCI FART1</p>
        <p>r.AsirMn CAHOnriA s voi nMn DtiAixH"</p>
        <p>161</p>
        <p>Apartments For Rent</p>
        <p>CEDAR LANE Apartments. ) bedrcxjm, $185. Call 756-4948 or 756 3936_</p>
        <p>Cherry Court </p>
        <p>Spacloui 2 bedroom townhOusa with ]'/} baths. Also 1 bedroom apartments avallablt. All are carpeted, with modern kitchen appliances including compactor and dishwasher. Central heat and air Free basic cable TV, water and sewer. Washer/dryer hook-ups plus laundry room, pool, sauna, tennis court, club house. 752-1557</p>
        <p>161</p>
        <p>Apartments For Rent</p>
        <p>CYPRESS GARDENS</p>
        <p>2308 East Tenth Street</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOM apartment close to ECU campus. Energy efficient units in the woods. Washer/dryer hook-ups, .cable TV Included In rent. Call 758-6061 REMCO EAST.</p>
        <p>DOCTORS PARK APARTMENTS</p>
        <p>A wooded community planned with you In mind. If you are particular about where you live, consider these features:</p>
        <p>One, Two and Three Bedroom Apartments Garden and Townhouse with Private Patio or Balcony Spacious Living Areas Dishwasher, Disposal, Frost Free Refrigerator Pantry Washer and Dryer Connections Adequate Storage Fully Carpeted Cablevlsion Energy Saving Heatpumps Fully Insulated Smoke Detectors.</p>
        <p>Call 758-2577</p>
        <p>EASTBROOK AND VILLAGE GREEN APARTMENTS</p>
        <p>One, two and three bedroom apartments, featuring cable TV, modern appliances, clean laun dry facilities, swimming pools, fully carpeted.</p>
        <p>Office: 204 Eastbrook Drive</p>
        <p>752-5100</p>
        <p>elm villa APARTMENTS.</p>
        <p>208 South Elm Street. One bedroom furnished, heat, air, and water furnished. Call 752-3376.</p>
        <p>ENERGY EFFICIENT duplex apartment near college, 2 large bedrooms, fenced in backyard, and outside storage, heatpump, storm windows, and kitchen appliances. 756 0025 after 6:00p.m.</p>
        <p>FARMVILLE new 2 bedroom apartments, Hotpoint appli anees, patios at rear, cable ready, water and sewer includ ed All for only $250 per month. Call 753 4750,</p>
        <p>FOR RENT: two bedroom duplex. 103 B Juniper Lane, corner of 14th Street and Red Banks Road. Central air, carpet, stove and refrigerator. 1 bath. $280 a month. 12 months lease. 1 month rent as security deposit No pets. Available now. Billy Laughinghouse, Bostic Sugg Furniture Company, 401 West iOth Street, Greenville, 758 2513.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>FUkNISHEDI 1 b^room 8200 or 1 bedroom 8260 utilities paid. 752-1375, Homelocators. Fat</p>
        <p>ftEEN MILL RUN APRATMENTS</p>
        <p>CORNER LAWRENCE 8 HTH STREETS</p>
        <p>Spacious gardon apartmants. Fully carpated. Excallcnt condition. Pool and laundry facllltia. Free water, sewer and basic Cable TV. "FIra Proof" patios for grilling. 1 block from ECU, 4'/5 blocks from downtown.</p>
        <p>758-2628</p>
        <p>161</p>
        <p>Apartments For Rent</p>
        <p>KINGS ARMS</p>
        <p>Larga i bedroom apartments. Carpeted, modern kitchen ap-PlloncM- heat pump for energy efficient heating and cooling. Laundry faclllflt. 1209 Charles Boulevard, Office Aparfmanf 104. Also Available Fijrnlshed Apartments.</p>
        <p>752-8915</p>
        <p>GreeneWay</p>
        <p>Large 2 bedroom garden apartments, all with 7 closets, carpeting, kitchen appliances Including dishwasher, central haat and air. Free basic cable</p>
        <p>dishwasher, central ..... .... air. Free basic cable TV, water and sewer. Laundry jaclous grounds, and pool, abundant</p>
        <p>playground and pool, abundant parking, Pats allowed. Adjacent to Greenville Country Club. (1290). 756 6869.  ^</p>
        <p>GREENWOOD</p>
        <p>APARTMENTS</p>
        <p>BETHEL</p>
        <p>New 1 and 2 bedroom units avaialble in February. Rentals begin at $200. Rent based on In come. For application call 756 1860, 4:30-6:30, or write in care of WIntergreen, 105 Sterling Court, Winterville, NC 28590.</p>
        <p>&amp;gt;N WINTERVILLE 3 bedroom apartment. Appliances and water furnished. No children, no pets Deposit and lease. $245 per</p>
        <p>month. Call 756-5007.</p>
        <p>KIDS OKI 2 bedroom duplex $185 or 3 bedroom 1250 others 752-1375. Homelocators. Fee</p>
        <p>KINGS ROW APARTMENTS</p>
        <p>1 8,2 Bedroom Garden Apart-mentsAppllances furnished, carpetCentral heat and alrFree Cable TVPool and laundry faclllties24 hour emergency maintenance. Located off East 10th Street behind Hardee's and Western Steer. Office hours 9:30 5:30, Monday - Friday.</p>
        <p>752-3519</p>
        <p>LARGE ONE bedroom furnish ed apartment, close to ECU Carpet, air, $200.752 3804,</p>
        <p>LOVE TREES?</p>
        <p>Experience the unique in apartment living with nature outside your door.</p>
        <p>COURTNEY SQUARE APARTMENTS</p>
        <p>Qualify construction, fireplaces, heat pumps (heating costs 50 percent less than comparable units), dishwasher, washer-dryer hook-ups, cable TV,wall-to-wall carpet, thermopane windows, extra Insulation.</p>
        <p>Office Open 9-5 Weekdays</p>
        <p>9 5 Saturday  15  Sunday</p>
        <p>Merry Lane Off Arlington Blvd.</p>
        <p>756-5067</p>
        <p>DON'TTHROWITawaylSelllt for cash with a fast-actlon Classified Adi</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>NOW ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS</p>
        <p>Two bedroom apartments. Wall to wall carpet, fully equipped kitchen, washer dryer connections, energy efficient.</p>
        <p>Office Hours: 12:00-5:30 P.M.</p>
        <p>t=i</p>
        <p>756-4615</p>
        <p>REDUCED FOR QUICK SALE!! LIKE NEW OFFICE BUILDING WITH FOUR SUITES APPROXIMATELY 6,025 SQUARE FEET 200 Eastbrook Drive</p>
        <p>758-6050</p>
        <p>COLUCE (. MOORE &amp;amp; ASSOQAHS</p>
        <p>LANGSTON PARK</p>
        <p>Stancil Drive</p>
        <p>ONE-HALF month free, Nice two bedroom apartments by the river. Energy efficient appliances, washer/dryer hook ups. Water and cable included In $300 rent. REMCO EAST, 758 6061.</p>
        <p>MU$Y SEE attractive new dupkx near Simpson on 3/4 acre lot. Call 752-4200,756-1889.</p>
        <p>NEW OEPLEXi Each side 2 bedrooms, bath, combined llv Ing room, kitchen and dining. Appliances furnished. $310 monthly. 830-1235 after 5 pm.</p>
        <p>NEW 1 BEDROOM apartments. Washer/dryer, cable TV, carpet, electric heat, air condl-tlonlng, appliances.. 756-3342.</p>
        <p>OAkMONfSOUARE</p>
        <p>APARTMENTS</p>
        <p>Two bedroom townhouse apartments. 1212 Redbanks Road. Dishwasher, refrigerator, range, disposal Included. We also have Cable TV. Very con venlent to PItf Plaza and University. Also some furnished apartments available.</p>
        <p>756-4151</p>
        <p>ONE AND TWO Bedroom apartments.Call Smith In-suranceand Realty, 752 2754.</p>
        <p>ONE AND TWO BEDROOM</p>
        <p>Apartments for rent. Call 756-1160.</p>
        <p>ONE BEDROOM apartment. Heat, hot and cold water, sewaoe furnished. 201 North Woodtawn. $250 per month. 756-0545 or 758 0635.</p>
        <p>ONE BEDROOM Apartments for rent. $235 per month. Contact D. G. Nichols Agency, Inc , 752-4012.</p>
        <p>ONE BEDROOM apartment, carpeted, kitchen appliances, central heat and air, $225 Greenville Manor, 752 8915</p>
        <p>ONE BEDROOM APARTMENT</p>
        <p>for rent. No children or pets. Call 756 5610 from 9 5.</p>
        <p>161</p>
        <p>Apartments For Rent</p>
        <p>REGENCY HOUSE</p>
        <p>Corner of 5th &amp;amp; Reade</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOM apartment, new appliances, completely renovated. Across the street from ECU campus. Call REM CO EAST, 758-6061.</p>
        <p>SHENANDOAH</p>
        <p>106A Shiloh</p>
        <p>Two bedroom, I'/i bath duplex. Energy efficient appliances and waiher/dryer hookupi. Call REMCO EAST, 758 6061</p>
        <p>STRATFORD ARMS APARTMENTS</p>
        <p>Spacious 1,2 and 3 Bedroom Apartments CABLE TV,-reNNlSCOURTS,POOL Convenltnt to Shopping and ECU</p>
        <p>Office hours 9a.m. to 5p,m. Monday through Frioay</p>
        <p>Call us 24 hours a day at</p>
        <p>756-4800</p>
        <p>STUDENTS. 2 BEDROOM</p>
        <p>apartment, Cindy Court, available December 20. $290 per nipnth, heat and water furnished. No pats. 756-3563 after 4 pm.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>PETS OKI 2 bedroom $185 or 3 bedroom $250 big yard. 752 1375. Homelocators. Fee</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>Swimming Pools</p>
        <p>Chemicals, Supplies Construction</p>
        <p>MIINVIILI POOL A SUPPLY</p>
        <p>355-7121</p>
        <p>Hlwty 43 South, Qreanvllla</p>
        <p>MOBILE HOMES</p>
        <p>Something</p>
        <p>NEW</p>
        <p>ClISTOM WINDOWS </p>
        <p>Just For YOU!</p>
        <p>C.L. Lupton Co. 752-6116</p>
        <p>TAYLOR</p>
        <p>OFFICES</p>
        <p>1530 South Evans Straat</p>
        <p>Office</p>
        <p>and</p>
        <p>Commercial</p>
        <p>Space Ample Parking Conveniently located</p>
        <p>Call</p>
        <p>756-8384</p>
        <p>RIVER BLUFF</p>
        <p>Spacious Affordable Luxury Apartments * Six And 12 Month Leases</p>
        <p> 2 Bedroom Townhouses &amp;amp; 1 Bedroom Garden Apartments</p>
        <p>Phone 758-4015</p>
        <p>Directions; 10th Street Extanaion To River Bluff Road, Next To Rlvergele Shopping Center.</p>
        <p>PECAN GROVE</p>
        <p>Now Accepting Applications One and Two Bedroom Efficiency Apartments Located Near Hospital</p>
        <p>756-1454</p>
        <p>MODERN OFFICE SPACE</p>
        <p>For Lease Prime Location</p>
        <p>ACROSS FROM COURT HOUSE</p>
        <p>Shore Drive Plaza Building Call</p>
        <p>758-6050</p>
        <p>Collice C. Moore &amp;amp; Associates</p>
        <p>You're Goin.</p>
        <p>To Love</p>
        <p>Greenville</p>
        <p>From just about any standpoint-agricultural, educational, industrial, and cultural-you cant beat Greenville. The warrhth and friendliness of the people who live here are a major reason for its growth.</p>
        <p>The grace and charm of distinctive living in this southern city can be yours. Find out why THANKS A LQT, JEANNETTE is spoken with meaning, not out of habit in Greenville. We can make relocation and finding the right home easy.</p>
        <p>f.</p>
        <p>Anyone can find a house. But at JEANNETTE CQX AGENCY we do so much more for you. Let our Marketing and Relocation Department show and tell you how.</p>
        <p>You'rt Going To Lov0 GrMnvill</p>
        <p>We can help you with individual moves and any group move your company makes as well.</p>
        <p>Call for the Youre Going To Love Greenville portfolio.</p>
        <p>Office (919) 756-1322</p>
        <p>Jeannette Cox Agency, Inc.</p>
        <p>756-1322  ra</p>
        <p>Thanks A Lot, Jeannette!</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0099" />
        <p>U1</p>
        <p>Apartments For Rent</p>
        <p>TOBACCO ROAD</p>
        <p>Two bedroom, I'/i bath townhouse with tireplace, appli</p>
        <p>anees, washer/dryer hook ups</p>
        <p>,  -  reM</p>
        <p>and outside storage. Call CO  AST, 758 061.</p>
        <p>TOWNHOUSE. 2 bedrooms, V/i baths, heat pump, dishwasher, refrigerator, stove. Available</p>
        <p>February l. $2VS per month. No  17V "</p>
        <p>pets. Calf 7S6-3563 after 4 p.m</p>
        <p>TRY THESE11 bedroom $165 or 2 bedroom duplex $275. Pets ok. 752-1375. Homelocators. Fee</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOMS, V/7 bath duplex in nice quiet area. $325/month. 355-2256.</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOMS, stove and refrigerator, washer, dryer hookup, central heat and air, carpeted. Lease and deposit required. No pets. 705 Hooker Road. 756-0489 or 756-6382.</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOM duplex at Frog Leye]. No pets. $270 monthly.</p>
        <p>Call 756-4624 before 5 or 756 8076 after 5.</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOM Apartment. Stove and refrigerator. $185 per month. Call 355-6753.</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOM townhouse, quiet neighborhood. Call 355-7071.</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOMS, V/i bath, fireplace, dishwasher, washer dryer hookup. $275 per month. 758 1312.</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOM apartment for rent. Walking distance to ECU. $280 a month. Call 758 9110 or 919-477-2927. Available now!</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOM available. Cypress Gardens. Nice, wooded setting. Good tor young profes-sional or couple. Call 355-2025.</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOM apartment, 1105 Forbes Street. Call collect 919 629-7628 after 5.</p>
        <p>170</p>
        <p>Condominiums For Rent</p>
        <p>SHENANDOAH Townhouse, 2 bedroom, 1'/4 bath, washer/</p>
        <p>dryer hookup, heat pump, young professional or couples only. No pets. $325 monthly. Call 355-7725</p>
        <p>pets. $325 monfhlV after 6 p.m.</p>
        <p>TOWNHOUSE FOR RENT, 2</p>
        <p>bedrooms, l'/4 baths, all appli-ances. 355-6016 aHer 6 pm.</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOM, I'/i bath townhouse, fully equipped kitchen, washer/dryer hookups, enclosed patio. Available im mediately. $360. Call 756-3666</p>
        <p>173 Houses For Rent</p>
        <p>A COUNTRYI 4 bedroom $325 pets ok or 3 bedroom $250. 752-1375. Homelocators. Fee</p>
        <p>available March 1 on East-ern Street. 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, 1,025 square feet, fireplace and screened porch. $400 per month. Years lease and deposit required No pets. Call Clark branch Realtors at 355-2000.</p>
        <p>AVAILABLE immediately. University Area. 3 bedrooms, I'/i baths, living room, den with fireplace, eaf-in kitchen and carport. 1600 square feet. $500. per month. Lease and deposit required. Call Clark Branch Re-altorsat355 2000._</p>
        <p>AYOEN. Two bedrooms, stove and refrigerator. $200 per month. Call 355-6753.</p>
        <p>COUNTRY 2 bedroom apartment, 11 miles south of Green-Vi Me on Highway 43.524-5507.</p>
        <p>FOR RENT: 3 bedroom house. 107 South Summitt Street. Carpet and appliances, central heat and air. $350 a month. 12 month lease. 1 month rent as se</p>
        <p>curity deposit. No pets. Billy Laughinghouse, Bostic Sugg Furniture Company, 401 West</p>
        <p>UPSTAIRS APARTMENT for</p>
        <p>rent. $200 per month. Single oc niv.     </p>
        <p>cupant only. No pets. 1709 4th Street. Available immediately. Call CENTURY 21 Bass Realty, 756-6666.</p>
        <p>WEDGEWOODARMS</p>
        <p>2 bedroom, 1 '/i bath townhouses. Excellent location. Carrier heat pumps. Whirlpool kitchen, washer-dryer hookups, pool, tennis court. 355-6302.</p>
        <p>WESTHILLS TOWNHOMES</p>
        <p>SR 1204</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOM, 2&amp;lt;/2 bath townhomes. Fully equipped with energy efficient appliances, storage, washer/dryer hook i. Near PCA *  -</p>
        <p>, 758-6061</p>
        <p>/ Ul 7CI IIUUIV'</p>
        <p>Near PCMH. Call REMCO</p>
        <p>WILLOUGHBY PARK</p>
        <p>Evans Street Extension Across from Lynndale</p>
        <p>BRAND NEW three bedroom, two full bath apartment available for Immediate occupancy</p>
        <p>Fireplace, ceiling fan, energy</p>
        <p>efficienf appliances, washer/ dryer hook ups and private balcony. Call REMCO EAST, 758-6061 for details.</p>
        <p>WILSON ACRES APARTMENTS</p>
        <p>1806 East First Street 2 and 3 bedroom townhouses, 1V2 baths. Free water, sewer, and basic cable tv. Stove, frost free refrigerator, dishwasher, washer/dryer hookups. Fully carpeted with drapes included. Pool, tennis court and sauna.</p>
        <p>CLOSE TO CAMPUS.</p>
        <p>Call 752 0277 Anytime.</p>
        <p>WINDY RIDGE</p>
        <p>m Scott street</p>
        <p>THREE BEDROOMS, 2&amp;lt;/2</p>
        <p>baths, refrigerator, dishwasher, garbage disposal and trash compactor included. Also POOL and tennis courts Call REMCO EAST, 758-6061.</p>
        <p>WOODSIDE</p>
        <p>98 Brookwood Drive</p>
        <p>ONE BEDROOM apartment available for February rental. Energy efficient appliances. Quiet wooded surroundings. Call REMCO EAST, 758 6061.</p>
        <p>1 BEDROOM apartment at Green Villa-Hooker Road and Arlington Boulevard - $220 per month. 1 bedroom apartment at Cheyenne Court-oft Red Banks Road $235 per month. 2 bedroom apartment at Village East on Cedar Court $310 month. 1 year lease and security deposit required. Dutfus Realty,</p>
        <p>Inc. 756 2675</p>
        <p>1 BEDROOM! Sunny loft $200 or</p>
        <p>2 bedroom duplex $235. Garage. 752 1375. Homelocators. Fee</p>
        <p>2 BEDROOM, heatpump, energy efficient, quiet neigh-borhotxl, convenient to universi fy. AAarried preferred. $320 per month. Call 355-7799; evenings 756 8444.</p>
        <p>  Company, 4</p>
        <p>10th Street, Greenville, 758 2513.</p>
        <p>IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY tor</p>
        <p>home in Winterville School District. Freshly painted throughout. Call 756-8485.</p>
        <p>IN THE CITY, but no traffic this 4 year old, 3 bedroom brick ranch is located in the back of Orchard Hills. Nice yard, 0 $385 per month. Call CENTU 21 Bass Realty, 756 6666.</p>
        <p>IT'S A FACT! Only some of them are advertised. For a full selection of Greenville's rentals. 752-1375. Homelocators.</p>
        <p>KIDS OK! 3 bedroom $315 yard or 3 bedroom den 2 baths $375. 752-1375. Homelocators. Fee THREE BEDROOM, 2 bath brick home. Living room with fireplace, kitchen with eat in area, recreation room. $475 a month. Call Mavis Butts Realty, 355 7653 or Mavis Butts, 752 7073.</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOM house. Uni versify area, deposit, references and lease required. $300 month. 758 4333day, 756 5077 night.</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOM house with tireplace. University area, de posit, references and lease re</p>
        <p>auired. $325 month. 758 4333 ay; 756 5077 night.</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOMS, 1/2 baths Convenient to hospital. Low Utilties. $350. 757 0703.</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOM, stove and refrig</p>
        <p>refrigerator, lease and deposit required, no pets. $320. 204 East 12th Street. Call after 6:00 p.m..</p>
        <p>12th</p>
        <p>756 0489 or 756 6382.</p>
        <p>UNIVERSITY AREA 3 bedroom for rent. Call 756 1160.</p>
        <p>117 SOUTH WOODLAWN</p>
        <p>Avenue. Near campus. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, study or</p>
        <p>storage area upstairs, central heat and air, off street parking.</p>
        <p>$375 per month plus deposit. Call 752 4066.</p>
        <p>2 BEDROOM! $250 kids pets ok or big 3 bedroom V/7 bath $315.</p>
        <p>752-1375. Homelocators. Fee</p>
        <p>3-4 BEDROOM brick home, 2400 square feet, Vh baths, 2 fireplaces, fenced yard, double garage. Call 757 3084 days. 355 6476 nights.</p>
        <p>400 LINE AVENUE Two</p>
        <p>bedrooms, central air and heat. $250 per month. Appliances fur nished. Call 355-6753.</p>
        <p>174</p>
        <p>Townhouses For Rent</p>
        <p>NEW! 3 and 2 bedroom townhomes for rent. Great loca tion near Hospital. Fireplace, patio, swimming pool, tennis court and many extras. 758 6050. Collice C. Moore and Associates.</p>
        <p>179 Mobile Homes For Rent</p>
        <p>APPROXIMATELY 3 miles south from Greenville, one on private lot, one in park. 355 2340.</p>
        <p>BEHIND VENTER'S Grill on Mumford Road. 3 bedrooms. $200 rent. $100deposit. 756 4982.</p>
        <p>FOR SALE OR RENT 1 and 2</p>
        <p>bedrooms, furnished. No children, no pets. Call 758 6679.</p>
        <p>2 BEDROOM DUPLEX. Deposit required. Short term lease available. 756 6834.</p>
        <p>163 Business Rentals</p>
        <p>APPROXIMATELY 2000 square feet of space for lease. Adjacent to new Fuel Doc, corner of Greenville Boulevard and</p>
        <p>Highway 33. Call Daughtridge OirCompany, </p>
        <p>,756 1345.</p>
        <p>MOBILE STORAGE for rent Have storage space delivered to your home or business. Call 758 4449 AHer 6, 946 9932</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>FURNISHED! 2 bedroom, den $160 or 3 bedroom 2 baths $235. 752 1375. Homelocators Fee</p>
        <p>FURNISHED two bedroom. Limit one child, no pets. 756 2495 after 3 pm and before 9 pm.</p>
        <p>SMALL 2 bedroom mobile home. Colonial Park. $155 plus deposit. 758 0174.</p>
        <p>THREE BEDROOM, 2 bath, acre private lot Griffon. Call 752 4103.</p>
        <p>THREE BEDROOM, central heat and air, $200. 746 6394 or 752-5167.</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOM mobile home. Central heat and air, washer/ dryer. New Bern Highway. $200 per month plus deposit. No pets, nochildren. Call 758 0174.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>Technician</p>
        <p>Needed</p>
        <p>GM experience preferred. Salary negotiable. Profit sharing. Call Guy Braxton at 756-2150 or come by.</p>
        <p>SALES</p>
        <p>COORDINATOR</p>
        <p>Administrative type individual needed to oversee staff in a sales department. Two years' experience in supervising and organizing work for office staff. Above all you must be skilled in setting and communicating clear and achievable goals. Qualified applicants should send resume including current salary to:</p>
        <p>Sales Coordinator</p>
        <p>ORADY-WHITE BOATS</p>
        <p>P.O. Box 1527, Greenville, NC 27835 (NKNotNMMryToRMpply) '</p>
        <p>179 Mobile Homes For Rent</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOMS, stove and refrigerator furnished. Call 355 6753.  _</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOM, central heat, window air, water furnished. No pets. Singles and couples only. Deposit/lease, $165.1-729 4241.</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOM mobile home for rent. Call 756 4687, Johnny's Mobile Home Sales.</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOM, furnished, large den, $195 plus deposit Shady Knoll. 746-2047aHer6.</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOM mobile home, washer/dryer, air conditioning on private lot. $175 month plus $100 deposit. 355-7338 after 3.</p>
        <p>WE CAN HELP YOU! Save a lot of gas and time. All areas, sizes and prices call today! 752 1375. Homelocators. Fee 1 AND 2 bedroom Mobile homes, $130 and up. Also Mobile home lot for rent. No pets and no children. 758-0745.</p>
        <p>12x65, 2 bedroom, washer/ dryer, air. Setup in nice park. Call 752-2684 after 7 pm 2 BEDROOMS! $150/3 bedroom, 2 baths, $225 washer/dryer. 752 1375. Homelocators. Fee</p>
        <p>2 BEDROOMS, washer, dryer, good condition, good park, no children, no pets, 756 0801.</p>
        <p>180 Mobile Homes Lots For Rent</p>
        <p>LARGE SHADY LOT for rent Cable TV. Paved roads and driveways. Call 758-0745</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>181</p>
        <p>Office Space For Rent</p>
        <p>ATTRACTIVE COMPLEX near Court House (between Coffmans and First Citizens Bank. Three offices. Individually or together.</p>
        <p>ngandrecep &amp;gt;ble. 752 6888.</p>
        <p>Telephone answer! tion services availabl</p>
        <p>BOND'S SPORTING GOODS</p>
        <p>building for lease on Arlington Boulevard. 6000 square feet, can be used for retail or office. 756 6001 or 752-8179.</p>
        <p>BRAND NEW OFFICES avail able. Private bath, kItcheneHe. Separate entrance. $8 a square foot. Corner of Probes and 8th Street. Great location. Call nights after 6 : 756 0603, 355 5336. Days: 756 6336.</p>
        <p>COLONIAL HEIGHTS Private, utilities furnished, $85 month. 757 1626/752 4295.</p>
        <p>FREESTANDING OFFICE</p>
        <p>building. 1360 square feet. New ly redecorated, excellent loca tion, optional new phone system. Call 354-4451.</p>
        <p>NEW OFFICE SUITES for lease at 301 West 14th Street. Available January 1987. One suite with 1135 square feet, two suites with 1375 square feet. $6.50 to $7 per square foot. Security system, separate utilities. Call Ollie Harrington and Son Build ers, Inc., 752 5086.</p>
        <p>OAKMONT. PROFESSIONAL Offices. 1300 square feet, 7 individual offices plus reception area. Very high quality. $728 per month. 756 1888,9 5.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>181 Office Space For Rent</p>
        <p>185 Rooms For Rent</p>
        <p>OVER 2650 square feet of retail or office space available at 102 West 10th Street (Formerly Carolina Microfilm and Processing). $500 per month. Contact D.G. Nichols Agency, 752-4012.</p>
        <p>ROOMS FOR RENT. 2 leH. Females only. Extra large, semi-furnlshed. Total privacy. Call 758-2719.</p>
        <p>SHARE 3 BEDROOM home near college. Serious student or business man preferred. 752-6888 days, 752-7564 nights.</p>
        <p>SINGLE OFFICE and suite space available. $135 and up per month. Call Jeannette (.ox Agency, 756 1322.</p>
        <p>192 Roommate Wanted</p>
        <p>TWO ROOM OFFICE SUITE</p>
        <p>Janitorial and utilities included. Chapin Building, 3106 South Memorial Drive. 756 1234.</p>
        <p>FEMALE R00MA4ATE wanted to share fully furnished 2 bedroom house, $150 month, half utilities. Must be clean, depen dable and non-smoker. AHer 6 p.m. 752-2236.</p>
        <p>1728 SQUARE feet, Eastbrook Drive, adjacent to Blue Cross/ Blue Shield, utilities and janitorial furnished. $1150/ month. 752 0763 or 758 2138.</p>
        <p>2000 SQUARE feet of retail space available. Red Oak Shopp ing Center, $725 per month. Con tact D.G Nichols Agency, 752 4012.</p>
        <p>MALE ROOMMATE wanted, $145 plus '/) utilities, Greeneway Apartments, 756-6869.</p>
        <p>MALE ROOMMATE wanted to share two bedroom, l',i bath, luxury townhouse. Should be mature and liberal minded per son. $165 plus 1/2 utilities. 355 5291, leave message.</p>
        <p>MATURE COUPLE or profes sional male wanted to share large 3 bedroom house. $300 a month plus /&amp;gt; utilties. Call 756 6074 after 6 p.m.</p>
        <p>185 Rooms For Rent</p>
        <p>EFFICIENCY APARTMENT</p>
        <p>for male. Utilities included. Call 758 2585.</p>
        <p>TWO MALE MEDICAL students looking for roommate to share 3 bedroom solar powered home 4 miles from hospital. 757 3384 after 6 p.m.</p>
        <p>PIRATES LANDING</p>
        <p>200 W. Eighth Street</p>
        <p>Private furnished rooms for rent. Utilities included. Share bath and kitchen. REMCO EAST, 758 6061.</p>
        <p>194 Wanted To Buy</p>
        <p>WANT TO BUY pine and hard wood timber Pamlico Timber Company, Inc 756 8615, nights.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>The Daily Reflector. Greenville. N.C.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>Tuesday, January 20,1987 g.g</p>
        <p>CUSSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>ACCIDENT? CAR IN THE SHOP? NEED A SPARE?</p>
        <p>CALL U-SAVE AUTO RENTAL</p>
        <p>756-2595</p>
        <p>$8.50</p>
        <p>Daily .08 Mile</p>
        <p>(CDW and tax not included)</p>
        <p>-We are the car replacement specialist -We have pickup and delivery service -No credit card required WE MAKE RENTING EASY"</p>
        <p>y-SAVE SAVES YOU MONEY!</p>
        <p>SDK SfflSntATI</p>
        <p>$400,000</p>
        <p>Biggest Used Car Sale la Our History I</p>
        <p>This Week Only - Monday,Jan. 19th-Saturday, Jan. 24th</p>
        <p>Stock 12194 1986 Ford Escort</p>
        <p>1 Automatic, air, former rental, 3 more just I alike.</p>
        <p>WM iJAta MOW $,49*</p>
        <p>Stock #2173 I9S5 Otmttt.</p>
        <p>Automatic, air.</p>
        <p>OiUy SM.00 Pur Moth* fits Down Doyot</p>
        <p>tMi on 46 mondiB. 13.2SH AMI, MlHng prtea tUM.Ot. pprawd erMt tu ind lag* ailra.</p>
        <p>Stock 12174 1985 Otitfon</p>
        <p>Automatic, air.</p>
        <p>ONly SlISPorMoth* S39S Down Doynt</p>
        <p>'*** an  ntaMK*, 11.M% AMI, aaWng prtM  i</p>
        <p>i.pr..!.. caH. 1*1 and tag* aiM.</p>
        <p>Stock #2170 1985 Ford Escort</p>
        <p>Automatic, air</p>
        <p>ONly $130 Dor Mooth* $399 Down Doywoot</p>
        <p>'***4 on 4 moMiia.  AMI,  catHng  prle*  1221  43  i</p>
        <p>1 oradH. Ua and tag* aalr*.</p>
        <p>Stack #1201 IM6 Minimi GT</p>
        <p>Automatic, air.</p>
        <p>WAS $13,493 NOW $1M9S</p>
        <p>Stock #2196 1983 OMs Cutlou WAS $4,493 NOW $3,993</p>
        <p>h</p>
        <p>Stock #2180 1985 Mostong Coovortiblo</p>
        <p>V-6, automatic, powgr stwnng and brakes, power windows, air, cruise control</p>
        <p>Stock #2197 1985 Morcory Coogor WAS $9,493 NOW $M93</p>
        <p>WAD $13,993 NOW $11,393</p>
        <p>Stock #051A 1981 VW Doslior</p>
        <p>Diesel, air.</p>
        <p>WAS $3,493 NOW $3,493</p>
        <p>Stock #2199 1985 Ford SuporCob Loriot</p>
        <p>Loaded</p>
        <p>WAS $9,993 NOW $9,493</p>
        <p>Stock #S323A 1983 LTD Stotio Wogoo</p>
        <p>44,000 Miles</p>
        <p>WAS $3,994 NOW $4,993</p>
        <p>Stock #2188 1986 Ford Crown Victorio</p>
        <p>Loaded, only 6,000 miles</p>
        <p>WAS $14,493 NOW $13,493</p>
        <p>4</p>
        <p>L</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0100" />
        <p>Sweden Arrests Trio In Prime Minister's Death</p>
        <p>STOCKHOLM, Sweden (AP) -Police arrested three suspects in last Febniarys assassination of Prime Minister Olof Palme, and suggested today that the killing was linked to a government crackdown on a leftist Kurdish group.</p>
        <p>The three were informed of suspicion of complicity in the murder of Olof Palme, said the statement from Stockholm Police Chief Hans Holmer and Chief Prosecutor Claes Zeime, who have led the investigation.</p>
        <p>Palme, 59, a four-term Socialist</p>
        <p>I)rime minister, was shot in the back ast Feb. 28 while walking with his wife down a busy Stockholm thoroughfare.</p>
        <p>The statement did not say when the three were arrested, give their identities or say where they were being held. Police spokeswoman Carin Brange said a news conference would be held this afternoon on the arrests, but refused to give further details.</p>
        <p>Security was increased around police headquarters and the building was surrounded by armed police.</p>
        <p>The police statement also said three people were arrested on suspicion of taking part in the Noveml^r 1985 slaying of a Kurdish immigrant in Stockholm, but did not make clear whether they were the same three suspected in the Palme slaying.</p>
        <p>ingarnas Telegrambyra said 20 people, including the three Palme ispects, were picked up early today. The police statement said several</p>
        <p>sus</p>
        <p>of the persons affected by the police ith ties to H</p>
        <p>measures were Kurds with ties to the Kurdish Workers Party, a Marxist organization that seeks to set up a separate Kurdish state in Turkey. Palmes government declared the party a terrorist organizaton in 1984.</p>
        <p>The Kurdish immigrant shot in November 1985, Cetin Gungor, was a defector from the Kurdish Workers Party.</p>
        <p>The national news agency Tidn-</p>
        <p>Palme, a champion of disarmament and Third World causes, was shot at point-blank range with a</p>
        <p>.357-caliber Magnum. He and his wife, Lisbet, had just left a movie theater and were walking down a main street in central Stockholm.</p>
        <p>The killer fled on foot down a darkened street and has been the object of Swedens most intense manhunt.</p>
        <p>Two defectors from the Kurdish Workers Party were assassinated in Sweden in 1984 and 1985, and the Palme government sentenced the killers to life in prison. It placed nine party members suspected of complicity in the slayings under district arrest, meaning they were confined to the area of their homes.</p>
        <p>Party was involved in Palmes slaying out of revenge, but party spokesmen repeatedly have clenied any involvement.</p>
        <p>^veral west European countries have sizeable communities of Kurds, most of them refugees from war or repression in their home region, which includes parts of Iraq, Iran and eastern Turkey.</p>
        <p>National news media have speculated that the Kurdish Workers</p>
        <p>The goverment keeps no official records on the number of Kurds in Sweden, listing them instead by country of origin. However, the Sw^ish Communist Party last year estimated that there were 7,000 to 8,000 Kurds in Sweden, most of them from Turkey.</p>
        <p>The Kurdish Workers Party was founded in Turkey in the 1970s and later expanded its organization to Western Europe. It has been tom by internal strife and has been accused of killing defectors and detractors.</p>
        <p>Prime Minister Ingvar Carlssons Social Democratic government was informed of the arrests and the interrogations with a number of other persons in connection to the investigation of the murder in Med-borgarhuset in November 1985 and the murder of Olof Palme, a government statement said.</p>
        <p>Gungor was shot in a public building in Stockholm called Med-borgarhuset.</p>
        <p>West Germans Expected To Extradite Hijack Suspect</p>
        <p>PEACE MISSION  Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega, center, flanked by Mexicos foreign minister, Bernardo Sepulveda, left, Brazil's foreign minister Roberto Dabreu, right, and Perus foreign minister, Allan Wagner, center background, walks past an honor</p>
        <p>guard in Managua on Monday. The foreign ministers conducted a series of high level talks in South America Monday on a peace mission sponsored by the Organization of American States. (AP Laserphoto)</p>
        <p>Latin American Diplomats Seek Proposals For Peace</p>
        <p>GUATEMALA CITY (AP) - Ten Latin American diplomats seeking to resume talks for a Central American peace treaty heard a Costa Rican proposal for a cease-fire and free elections in Nicaragua and a Nicaraguan call for bilateral talks with Washington.</p>
        <p>The diplomats travel today to El Salvador and Honduras.</p>
        <p>The delegation is made up of U.N. Secretary-General Javier Perez de Cuellar, who is from Peru, Secretary-General Joao Baena Soares of the Organization of American States, who is Brazilian, and foreign ministers of the four Contadora nations and their four support nations.</p>
        <p>They began their mission Monday, meeting in quick succession with Costa Rican President Oscar Arias n San Jose, Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega in Managua and Guatamalan President Vinicio Cerezo in Guatamala City.</p>
        <p>Ortega told the diplomats "not to spare efforts" in trying to bring the United States and Nicaragua</p>
        <p>together in bilateral talks with the aim of normalizing relations.</p>
        <p>He said Nicaragua wants "to arrive at bilateral accords that guarantee the legitimate security concerns of the United States in the region.</p>
        <p>Nicaraguas leftist government and the United States held nine rounds of talks before President Reagan suspended them in January 1985.</p>
        <p>Washington wants the Sandinista government to talk with the U.S.-backed Nicaraguan opposition. However, Nicaragua insists any peace talks be held directly with Washington, which it considers the real aggressor because the United States aids the Nicaraguan rebels, called Contras.</p>
        <p>Ortega told reporters later that the diplomats mission was fruitful but was only a step toward "containing escalation of the conflicts and opening space for peace."</p>
        <p>While this mission travels in Central America, the North American government continues its policy of</p>
        <p>terror aginst Nicaragua, continues disregarding the sentence of the International Court of Justice, Ortega said.</p>
        <p>BONN, West Germany (AP) - Officials said a Lebanese man charged in the United States with air piracy and murder in a 1985 TWA hijacking could be extradited very quickly now that Washington has pledged he will not face the death penalty.</p>
        <p>Justice Ministry spokesman Juergen Schmid said Monday that the need for such a pledge had been the main obstacle to extraditing Mohammed Ali Hamadi, who was arrested in Frankfurt a week ago.</p>
        <p>Today, the government for the first time linked Hamadis arrest to the subsequent kidnapping in Lebanon of a West German business.</p>
        <p>U.S. Justice Department officials said Sunday they would comply with the West German demand that Hamadi not face the death penalty, and Schmid said West Germany now is waiting to receive the promise in writing.</p>
        <p>Once the required papers arrive, he said, they will be sent to a Frankfurt court for a ruling on whether the terms of the 1978 U.S.-West German extradition treaty have been fulfilled.</p>
        <p>The treaty requires U.S. officials to promise criminal suspects will not be sentenced to death if convicted. West Germany does not have the death penalty. When we do get the documents, then it can go very fast, Schmid said, but refused to predict when the process might be completed.</p>
        <p>It is in our interest to do it as fast as possible. We are under obligation to fulfill the terms of the treaty ... as quickly as possible. he said.</p>
        <p>U.S. Justice Department spok^man Patrick Korten said in Washington that the department will file its formal extradition request in the next few days.</p>
        <p>Hamadi, 22, is charged in the United States with air piracy, murder and more than a dozen other crimes. West German authorities said he was identified by fingerprints as one of the hijackers who seized a TWA jetliner June 14,1985, on a flight from Rome to Athens.</p>
        <p>The hijackers shot U.S. Navy diver</p>
        <p>Robert Stethem to death at Beirut airport and held 39 American passengers hostage for 17 days.</p>
        <p>In Washington, Associate Attorney General Stephen Trott said Monday that if convicted, Hamadi faces ap^ proximately life sentence, although were studying the possibility of even asking for more.</p>
        <p>Trott noted that former Navy communications specialist Jerry Whitworth was sentenced in San Francisco last August to 365 years in prison.</p>
        <p>Military Supports Ecuadoran Leader</p>
        <p>QUITO, Ecuador (AP) - The joint military command expressed support for President Leon Febres Cordero and criticized attempts by op-X)sition pjarties to condemn him fol-owing his 11-hour kidnapping by disgruntled paratroopers.</p>
        <p>A special session of the opposition-controlled Congress was called today to review Febres Corderos conduct in office. Some leftist and center-left lawmakers said they would seek to impeach him if he does not resign.</p>
        <p>But Defense Minister Medardo Salazar read a brief communique over national television Monaay night saying the armed forces reject the attempt of those who are trying to exploit unfortunate events to</p>
        <p>put on trial the actions of those who were offended instead of judging those who promoted and carried out this criminal attempt.</p>
        <p>The nations top military court on Monday dropped a rebellion charge against renegade air force commander Gen. Frank Vargas Pazzos, in keeping with an amnesty Febres Cordero signed while held captive last Friday.</p>
        <p>The president was held by a small group of air force paratroo^rs loyal to Vargas Pazzos. They freed him in return for the release of Vargas Pazzos from jail and a promise that the former general would not be prosecuted for leading a failed rebellion last March.</p>
        <p>WHyiHEMONIH</p>
        <p>MOST PEOPU TRAVEL</p>
        <p>THE LEAST SHOULD</p>
        <p>BE THE MONTH you</p>
        <p>PITT COMMUNITY COLLEGE</p>
        <p>TRAVEL THE MOST</p>
        <p>Has Computer Classes For You! Whether a novice or experienced vyith computers, PCC offers the training you want</p>
        <p>Electronic Data Processing</p>
        <p>EVENING CLASSES</p>
        <p>IDP 113 Bask I Tu 6:30-8:2016.50 or Th 6:30-8:2016.50 Introduction to personal computer programming</p>
        <p>IDP 113L Bask I Lab. Tu 6:30-8:20 or 8:30-10:20 5.00 Th 6:30-8:20 or 8:30-10:20 orTBA</p>
        <p>Its the old supply-and'demand story. Fewer people fly in February, so our ow'fare seats are easier to get. But youve got to call 30 days in advance to get the best fares. So call your travel agent or the Piedmont Commuter System at 1'800'438'7833 right away. Because with fares this low, demand is sure to be high</p>
        <p>SERVICE FROM PITT-GREENVLLE:</p>
        <p>IDP 113 Bask IIM 6:30-8:20 22.00 Continuation of Basic I.</p>
        <p>IDP 113L Bask II Lab M 8:30-9:20 and W 6:30-9:2010.00</p>
        <p>IDP 1U Intro to Comp. Concopts W 7-9:5016.50 Introduction to computers-hardware, applications systems, history, social implications, and job opportunities</p>
        <p>IDP 11S lortran TTh 7-9:50 22.00* A language for the novice programmer Lab 10.00 IDP 119 Cobol II MW 7-9:50 22.00</p>
        <p>LablQ.PQ</p>
        <p>IDP ISOConipatorOrapbksW 6:30-8:20 16.50 IDP 130L Compoter Orapbks Lab M 6:30-8:20 5.00 _Color Graphics programming on personal computers</p>
        <p>IDP 1SQ Introduction to Coptor CoocnpH TTh 7-9:20 27.50 A comprehensive introduction to computers for coliege transfers</p>
        <p>IDP 3M fpstwns nh 7-8:5016.50 A study of computer operating systems, utilities, sorts and program generators.</p>
        <p>ATLANTA.......</p>
        <p>$96^</p>
        <p>Khie</p>
        <p>LOS ANGELES</p>
        <p>.....$154*</p>
        <p>BALTIMORE .</p>
        <p>$79-^'</p>
        <p>KFk'</p>
        <p>MEMPHIS ........</p>
        <p>KEU</p>
        <p>$109^'^</p>
        <p>BOSTON.....</p>
        <p>$7400</p>
        <p>Kfc'tO</p>
        <p>NASHVILLE..........</p>
        <p>KF. 30</p>
        <p>$69^^</p>
        <p>CHICAGO . .</p>
        <p>NEWARK......</p>
        <p>KF 50</p>
        <p>$4900</p>
        <p>CINCINNATI.......</p>
        <p>Kite</p>
        <p>KFte</p>
        <p>NEW ORLEANS</p>
        <p>KFIO</p>
        <p>DALLAS/FT. WORTH</p>
        <p>ORLANDO..........</p>
        <p>KFJO</p>
        <p>$124*</p>
        <p>DENVER.,.</p>
        <p>. . .</p>
        <p>PiriSBURGH</p>
        <p>KF 50</p>
        <p>FT. LAUDERDALE</p>
        <p>KF10</p>
        <p>SAN FRANCISCO</p>
        <p>JACKSONVILLE, FL.....</p>
        <p>.... $99"^'</p>
        <p>KF 10</p>
        <p>TAMPA............</p>
        <p>KF30</p>
        <p>$94*</p>
        <p>KEY WEST ...</p>
        <p>.....$114^'^^</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON, DC</p>
        <p>KF30</p>
        <p>$69^''</p>
        <p>KE30</p>
        <p>SPRINO PMRCeiSTRATION KR. 4-6</p>
        <p>Call a PCC Counselor for more detailed information</p>
        <p>756-3130 Exf. 245</p>
        <p>^CAU NOIV FOR nEDMONTS low FEBMIARy EMtES.</p>
        <p>BrvughtTd\bu ByThe Piedmont Commuter System.</p>
        <p>An Equal,Opporlunlty/Afflrmativ* Action Institution</p>
        <p>.ithout notice,</p>
        <p>BUILDING AMERICA'S FUTURE</p>
        <p>Restrictiom apply to tares shouv abine. Fares shoun are me-half of required round-trip purchase. Fares are subject to change or expire Ul cJiul nuj\ be higher during artain peak traiel perios. Floria State fuel uix surcharge, SI.00 per person from all Florida cities. City of Boston fuel tax</p>
        <p>surcharge, S2.50 per person from Boston. Seats are limited.</p>
        <p>CPirtmo.-!*,(lines,9e;</p>
        <p>jL</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0101" />
        <p>INSIDE TODAY</p>
        <p>rr-</p>
        <p>Kl</p>
        <p>'V</p>
        <p>'' V S *&amp;gt;"  </p>
        <p>tt^ Story on A^</p>
        <p>INSIDE TODAY</p>
        <p>SPORTS TODAY</p>
        <p>St&amp;lt;yi|i*tTHE DAILY REFLECTOR</p>
        <p>106fh YEAR</p>
        <p>NO. 18</p>
        <p>- GREENVILLE, N.C.</p>
        <p>TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION</p>
        <p>WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, JANUARY 21,1987</p>
        <p>48 PAGES PRICE 25 CENTSEastCare Authorized To Resume Service</p>
        <p>ByCAROLTVER Reflector Staff Writer Pitt County Memorial Hospitals EastCare air ambulance service can resume operation, hospital trustees agreed Tuesday night.</p>
        <p>The trustees said the helicopter emergency transportation service may get back under way as soon as flight personnel training is completed to the vice president for nursing services satisfaction. Om-niFlight, the supplier of helicopters,</p>
        <p>pilots and mechanics for EastCare, has said that it can supply what is needed to start up whenever the EastCare staff is ready.</p>
        <p>Hospital administrators earlier had said that, with the trustees approval, the startup could occur within three to six weeks.</p>
        <p>The vote to resume EastCare, which shut down after a Jan. 8 helicopter crash in which four people were killed, was unanimous and there was little discussion.</p>
        <p>During an earlier executive com</p>
        <p>City Considers Plan To Develop Difficult Tracts</p>
        <p>By DON REUTER Reflector Staff Writer A proposed Planned Unit Development Ordinance will facilitate compromises between developers and surrounding landowners on controversial projects by establishing new requirements, according to Greenville planning officials.</p>
        <p>The ordinance, which establishes a new zoning classification, can be requested by developers.</p>
        <p>The purpose of developing a planned unit development concept is to allow the development of politically and geographically hard-to-build parcels through the conditional use process and the cluster development, City Planner Harry Hamilton told City Council members at a workshop meeting Tuesday.</p>
        <p>Problems with developing land in odd-shaped parcels and fl(^ zones or near single-family residential</p>
        <p>Bedford</p>
        <p>Proposal</p>
        <p>Rejected</p>
        <p>By DON REUTER Reflector Staff Writer</p>
        <p>The Greenville Planning and Zoning Commission has rejected a revised preliminary plat of Bedford development after hearing objections from nearby homeowners, who said the plan would have a negative impact on their neighborhood.</p>
        <p>The proposed plat, which was denied by the panel at its monthly meeting Tuesday night, called for an extension of Bremerton Drive to Evans Street. Commissioners cited increased traffic as the reason for the ruling.</p>
        <p>I speak for the residents of Graylei^, Bedford and Lynndale subdivisions in saying we oppose the extension of Bremerton to connect with Evans Street, said Dr. Henry Stone of 310 Dupont Circle.</p>
        <p>The extension of the road will change the complexion of surrounding neighborhoods, according to Stone, an associate professor of</p>
        <p>(See PANEL. A-14)</p>
        <p>zones would be alleviated under the PUD plan, Hamilton said.</p>
        <p>They (geographically hard to develop areas) may be very expensive properties, but they are very hard to build under conventional standards, Hamilton said. An example of politically hard-to-build parcels would be an area, perhaps any development, that is located adjacent to singlefamily residential or single-family zoning district.</p>
        <p>The PUD ordinance will allow developers to present plans at an earlier date than is presently permitted, according to Bobby Roberson, director of Planning and Community Development, who said an eight-member committee began work on the proposal about 16 months ago.</p>
        <p>It means they would have the opportunity to show how they are going to develop property, Roberson said. It also gives residents the opportunity to see exactly where single-family, multifamily and and duplexes will be placed on a tract.</p>
        <p>It guarantees the planning commission (the power) to require the developer to actually show what hes going to do. The proposal would, in reality, be part of the rezoning request.</p>
        <p>Under this district concept, the Zoning (Jrdinance specs would have to be amended to provide a new zoning district like one of the medical districts, Hamilton said. Within that district, we would have some specific use and dimensional standards listed right in the text of the ordinance.</p>
        <p>Prior to any type of development, a special use permit for a specific development or a land use plan would have to be presented and approved.</p>
        <p>In other business. Bob Paciocco, executive director of the Mid-East Commission, presented the regional economic development and planning organizations annual report for 1985-86.</p>
        <p>Serving the counties of Beaufort, Bertie, Hertford, Martin and Pitt, the cities of Greenville and Washington, and 31 towns, the areas of responsibility have expanded to include such programs as aging, emergency medical services and manpower, Paciacco said in the report.</p>
        <p>The region covers almost 3,000 square miles - 6 percent of the total land area for the state - and is inhabited by more than 210,000 people, Paciocco said.</p>
        <p>The land is basically rural with</p>
        <p>(See PLAN, A-14)Fmeeart</p>
        <p>Rlin to^ ami nunday. Lov fraaStoM. High nanday near .Lookb^ Ahead</p>
        <p>Baja FHday, eaU and dry Satorday and Sunday. nwty near 40. hem in 90i Friday, in kw 20i Saturday md Stm^ d^y.</p>
        <p>buA</p>
        <p>A-i-LaeaiDm</p>
        <p>A.M-0MlHa4ea</p>
        <p>C-</p>
        <p>-UUHnPMTQ</p>
        <p>mittee meeting, the riskiness of helicopter operation, especially in emergency rescue situations, was discussed. But the concensus was that EastCare administratorsand crew want to continue, the public wants the service, other tertiary care hospitals offer it, and so should Pitt Memorial. A report from the National Transportation Safety Board on the possible cause of the Jan. 8 crash may be six months away, board members were told.</p>
        <p>Approval was given for the hiring of the accounting firm of Ernst and</p>
        <p>Whinney of Raleigh to conduct a long-range financial plan for the hospital. The cost of the service is not to exceed $48,000.</p>
        <p>Kathryn Lewis, chairman of the guest relations committee, reported that the list of candidates for the newly created vice president for guest relations position has been narrowed from 80 to five. Interviewing will be held next Monday and Thursday.</p>
        <p>Charles Gaskins reported that the laboratory addition construction project is about 10 days behind schedule, mostly because of weather. He said</p>
        <p>bids on the neonatal unit addition will be received Feb. 10.</p>
        <p>A nominating committee was appointed. Norman Van Veld is chairman and Arlee Griffin and Bill Flowers are committee members.</p>
        <p>Hospital President Jack Richardson reported that Pitt Memorial is the states eighth largest hospital, tied with Wake Medical Center with 560 beds. He said utilization of beds in this hospital often ^uals utilization in much larger hospitals like Presbyterian in Charlotte with 642 beds.</p>
        <p>Unlike many other hospitals in the</p>
        <p>country, utilization at PCMH continues to grow. In December, the hospital had 14,444 patient days, in contrast to 13,053 the previous December.</p>
        <p>Resolutions of respect were approved both for the EastCare crew members killed in the Jan. 8 crash and for Dr. Ray Minges, long a surgeon and a former hospital chief of the medical staff, who died Monday. A copy of the appropriate resolution will be sent to the family of each.</p>
        <p>WINTER FISHING  Even though the weather may be dull and cool, it doesnt stop the avid fisherman from finding a favorite pond and a little extra time for bass fishing. Donny Dunbar of Greenville found his favorite spot Tuesday at a pond near Winterville. Dunbar said he had a few bites but no fish</p>
        <p>when the photo was made, although a farm cat was finding his own catch of the dy as he discovered the bait bucket that contained Dunbars live minnows. After repeated tries, the cat was treated to a minnow snack. (Reflector Photo by Tom my For rest)</p>
        <p>Waite Holds All-Night Negotiation As 2nd German Reported Missing</p>
        <p>BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) - An anonymous caller said today a West German was kidnapped overnight, the second German adbucted in Beirut since the arrest in Frankfurt of a Lebanese on charges of hijacking a TWA jetliner in 1985.</p>
        <p>Anglican Church envoy Terry Waite met with pro-Iranian Shiite Moslem extremists in what was apparently an all-night negotiating session aimed at freeing U.S. hostages Terry Anderson and Thomas Sutherland, who were kidnapped in 1985.</p>
        <p>Jihad Zohairi, a spokesman for the Druse militia that has escorted Waite in Beirut, told reporters: Mr. Waite is having a meeting with the h(tage-hoIders. Were waiting for a phone call from him to go and pick him up.</p>
        <p>The anonymous caller to a Western news agency office in west Beirut said, We kidnapped yesterday night German national Alfred Schmidt in the</p>
        <p>vicinity of the Summerland hotel. The caller, who s^ke Arabic, hung up without saying what group he represented.</p>
        <p>The claim, if genuine, would bring to 19 the number of foreigners missing and believed kidnapped in Lebanon.</p>
        <p>Schmidt, 46, is an engineer with the Siemens company and was in charge of installing equipment for the new 9-story Middle East Hospital, about half a mile from the hotel.</p>
        <p>The hospital manager. Dr. Adel Alyeh, said Schmidt was kidnapped from his hotel room, but did not elaborate.</p>
        <p>A Summerland hotel spokesman, however, said Schmidt left the hotel Tuesday morning and has not returned. The spokesman said Schmidt checked into the seaside hotel in the Jnah district on Thursday.</p>
        <p>Another Summerland employee denied Schmidt was kidnapped from his room.</p>
        <p>I saw him Tuesday morning. He told me bye and left the hotel, said the employee, who also spoke on condition of anonymity.</p>
        <p>A Siemens company source in Christian east Beirut, who also spoke on condition of anonymity, said, We have no information about Mr. Schmidt.</p>
        <p>In Bonn, West German government spokesman Juergen Findeisen refused to comment, saying officials did not have any information on Schmidt.</p>
        <p>West German businessman Rudolf Cordes was kidnapped Saturday shortly after arriving at Beirut airport. No group has claimed responsibility for his abduction, but West German security sources said he was being held by Hezbollah, a Shiite group loyal to Iran.</p>
        <p>King's Fraternity Honors Three</p>
        <p>By CHERIE EVANS Reflector Staff Writer</p>
        <p>Three people were honored Tuesday night at East Carolina University as outstanding minority leaders of the community in recognition of Martin Luther King Jr.s birthday.</p>
        <p>The Eta Nu chapter of Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity at ECU named Raymond Carney as the outstanding minority keader in the community; Lisa Reddick received the outstanding Greek award, and Stephen Pierce was presented the Martin Luther King Jr. Student Leadership Award.</p>
        <p>The third annual ceremony, held in Mendenhall Student Center, was a tribute to King, who pledged the fraternity at Morehouse College.</p>
        <p>The chapter chooses the individual in the community who we feel has su[^rted the minority students on</p>
        <p>campus,  said Anthony Jackson, a member of the fraternity.</p>
        <p>We also recognize all leaders of minority organizations during the ceremony and choose the students of the year, he said.</p>
        <p>The students chosen have gone beyond the call of duty in their organizations and in helping other organizations... He does those things necessary to bring the black community together as well as keep up with the academics, Jackson said.</p>
        <p>Carney is a fireman-rescuer with the Greenville Fire-Rescue Department, said Ralph Meachum, a member of the fraternity. He owns the Unlimited Touch and Flamingo Records.</p>
        <p>ECU doesnt provide adequate social facilities for blacks on campus, Meachum said, so Camev allows black organizations to use his club and keep any profits they make.</p>
        <p>Hes putting a lot back into the community, he said.</p>
        <p>Ms. Reddick is a senior at ECU who exemplifies hard work in her organization and tries to pull together the black Greek structure and blacks overall, Meachum said.</p>
        <p>Meachum said that many blacks at ECU are apathetic about things. People such as Ms. Reddick try to break that down.</p>
        <p>Pierce is a member of the ECU Student Government Association, president of the Christian Fellowship, a member of the campus branch of the NAACP and a member of the Gospel (Twir.</p>
        <p>A junior at ECU, Pierce is a Marine veteran and is an associate minister at a local church, Meachum said.</p>
        <p>The fraternity also solicited signatures supporting Kings holiday</p>
        <p>as a slate holiday in a petition to be sent to university officials.</p>
        <p>We feel that the state as well as the campus of East Carolina should take into consideration the contribution this man (King) has given the United Stales, Meachum said.</p>
        <p>Jackson said, We would like the university to observe the day as a true holiday.</p>
        <p>Gold ribbons, symbolizing a color of the fraternity, were given to those who signed the petition. Theyre (the ribbons) just an outward expression of being aware of a holiday, Meachum said A candlelight vigil also was held Monday evening to allow a period of reflection for the students, Jackson said.</p>
        <p>Songs of the civil rights movement were sung during the vigil and a campus minister made remarks, Meachum said.</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0102" />
        <p>In The Area</p>
        <p>Property Is Taken</p>
        <p>Tliret* tlicfls wt-te re^Hnted to Cr('&amp;lt;!ivillo ^H)lice 'lucsday.</p>
        <p>OKiier J.W. ('oibott said several items of elofliioH. a wallet eoiitaining $40 ill cash and a watch were taken fiom a car parked at Co)k and Elks Motors on Hismark St. in an incident reported at 10;r)l a.m., while Officer .U. Wyiick said a l!?7ii mrxlel car was taken from a lot at Hose High S(.'1hx)1 in an incident rcjnn ted at 2:32 p.m.</p>
        <p>According to Officer J.K. McCarthy, a 23 horsepower outlroard motor valued at $1&amp;lt;)0 was taken from 102 Wilkshiie Drive in an incident repoi ted at 11:53 p.m. McCarthy said the nnitor was taken sometime over the past weekend.</p>
        <p>Theft Arrests</p>
        <p>Two men were arrested on th(ft charges rtie:sday hy (ireenville jHiliee</p>
        <p>Sgt. T V Woolard said Thomas Oar land Waters, 22, of Route 1, Winterville, was ehargf'd with auto larceny in (onneitioii with the theft of a truok from a |&amp;gt;;okiog lot on Reade Stie&amp;lt;i, iHlween hiflh and Cotanelio streets, tirat was r&amp;lt;iHit('d Jan. 15.</p>
        <p>Officer ( A. Shai{x.* said Oregory Scott Chi i;'itenson, 20, of 203 Oak St. was charged with larceny in connec tion witli the theft of three compact audio discs, valued at $1191, from the KMart stoi* at Oreenville Square Shopping tenter that was reported at It: 19 p in.</p>
        <p>Larceny Charge</p>
        <p>Ernest 'IVrl Iine Jr, 211, of 109R Howard Circle was arrested by Oifenville jMiliee Monday on theft and assault char g's.</p>
        <p>Sgt. T.V. Woolard said Dano was taken into ctislorly ahout 2:43 p rii. on</p>
        <p>larceny hy employee and simple assault charges in connection with an irrcident at the Holiday Inn that was reprrrtCHlJan. 8.</p>
        <p>Marijuana Counts</p>
        <p>Officers of the Martin County Sheriff's Department have arrested two Hamilton residents on marijuana manufacturing charges.</p>
        <p>Amy Jo Hardison, 19, and Randall Lee Hott, 22, were charged with manufacturing a controlled substance and were released on $l,.500b&amp;lt;jrids.</p>
        <p>The arrests were made after more than a dozen marijuana plants were found growing under lights in a closet at the house occupied by Hott and Ms. Hardi.son on Main Street in Hamilton, according to Sheriff Willie Rogers.</p>
        <p>Christian Singles</p>
        <p>The Christian Singles annual Valentine's party will held Saturday at the Three Steers Restaurant starling at 7 p.m. Reservations must lx made l)v Friday by calling Jon or Susan at 737-:t88, Jewell at 756-4883 or reimy al 7.38 1760.</p>
        <p>Citizen Of Year</p>
        <p>The Ayden Council of the Fitter eeriville Chamber of Commerce is seeking nominations for the charnlxrr's Citizen of the Year award.</p>
        <p>Citizens of Ayden and chamber memljers may send nominations, including resumes of the individual and reasons for nomination, before Feb. 9 to Ayden's Citizen of the Year, Pitt-Creenville Chaml)er of Commerce, P.O. Rox 31, Ayden.</p>
        <p>Officials said the nominee should Ix* someone who has made significant contributions to the Ayden-Pitt County area. The candidate should</p>
        <p>QUIZ BOWL WINNF RS - \ team from D.H. Conley recently won the Pitt County Quiz Bowl against teams from other area high schools. Pictured, left to right, are</p>
        <p>Conley team members Becky Joyner, Joey Johnson and Paul Bredderman. Not pictured is member Kyle Hudson. (Reflector Photo By Tommy Forrest)</p>
        <p>be involved in business and civic activities and have a good general reputation.</p>
        <p>The award will be presented at the annual meeting.</p>
        <p>Nomination forms may be obtained from Southern Bank &amp;amp; Trust, Planters National Bank, Edwards Pharmacy and the town hall. For information contact Frances Faust at the chamber office in Greenville at 752-4101.</p>
        <p>Alumni Gathering</p>
        <p>The Pitt County chapter of the North Carolina Central University Alumni Association will meet Thursday at 8 p.m. at 1813 Battle Drive.</p>
        <p>ir\\&amp;lt; I' .'IMIN \l! Iigg*r RcoHird, ccnlct, a per iiissioiiist coiiiposri, (oiidiKled a dame seminal Tiies-da\ al I U. \\KKk Jiiiiini High Sehmd. The seminar, sponsined i)\ Fa*'! ( ainlina I'niversily and Ihe I'ilK'oun-ly Cemmmiil v .^ liools tliioiigh a giant finm Ihe N ('. ,\rls</p>
        <p>Council, will also be held al D.ll. Conley and North Pill high schools this week. Benford was assisted by dance choreographer Martha Partridge. (Photo By Barry Gaskins)</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>Two ECU Projects Funded</p>
        <p>'two |nnj(T(.s by Ivi.d ('aroliiia Uiiivnsily ('ihn ab'i.s |o slieiiglheii scieiKC and inalh trarhing in Ihe jmblic sdnxds have bren funded by the Univeisily of Noilh Caioliiia's Mali) and .^eiome I'diiealion Net vvoik</p>
        <p>A $11.97(1 awaid was appioved for Dr Donald I , .^}&amp;gt;*'nee, t&amp;lt;M&amp;gt;idinalor of iui&amp;lt;Mle p.iades ednealion in the schixd of ediKalioii, lo eaiiy out a piojeet lo stu'iip.lben |e lelier knowl edge and piofieienev in math and science in the Ci aven County middle schiHiI.s</p>
        <p>The Craven middle school science m illi stalf development pio ject is designed to slienglhen teach eis ability to man ig.e iiisliuction in scieiu e and malli on multiple levels, including increased use of maiiipulafive and cxfx-iicnlial activities in the classi cmiiii I he ojt'ct will also use inslriK Ik'H m inalli, science and instiuctional technology to stienglhen teacher undc'i standing of the middle scluwd coiiccpt. S|H&amp;gt;nce said</p>
        <p>Dr Michael lxe Jones of the dc'partiiu'nt of science education was awaided a $I(M(K) grant to expand a pilot program, called Foundational Approaches in Science Teaching (FAST), lo additional middle grades in eastern North Carolina.</p>
        <p>The FAST program was begun on a pilot basis in 1985 and 1986 by the Science Math Education Center at ECU in selected school districts. It is an interdisciplinary, environmental science program emphasizing foundational concepts and methods of the physical, biological earth sciences and relates them to practical issues of human uses of environments. Students are dir ectly involved in typical pKxe.sses of inrjuiry and research. Jones .said</p>
        <p>In the FAST program, teachers are requir ed to complete a lO-day training program to become certified FAST teachers. Follow-up sessions and on site visitations are part of the on going teacher training, he said.</p>
        <p>Under the new award, a F.AST 1 and FAST 2 teacher training</p>
        <p>workshop would be scheduled at ECU this summer. The project seeks to train additional middle grades teachers to implement the first phase of the program and to provide previously certified FAST teachers the necessary training to implement the second phase of the curriculum.</p>
        <p>For directions or more information, call Juanita Bullock at 752-5069.</p>
        <p>All District Honors</p>
        <p>Alyssa Kishore and Patrick Winsted, students at A.G. Cox School, were recently selected as members of the 1987 All District Band in eastern North Carolina at auditions at J.H. Rose High School.</p>
        <p>A clinic and concert will be held Feb. 6 and Feb. 7 at East Carolina University.</p>
        <p>Toastmasters Meet</p>
        <p>The Unicorn Toastmasters Club 50.58 will meet Thursday at 6:30 p.m. in the executive conference room of Burroughs Wellcome.</p>
        <p>Toastmaster of the evening will be Steve Martin and Annie Carrnon will present table topics. Speakers will be Jim Hernn, Kirk Maness, Don Martens, John Powell and Janie Martin. For more information, contact Bill Sanders at 830-2198.</p>
        <p>wow Lodge Met</p>
        <p>Woodmen of the World Life Insurance Society, Lodge 218, had its January meeting recently with lodge president James C. Blythe presiding.</p>
        <p>Officers will be installed at an area meeting of lodges Thursday at Parkers. Lillie Randolph will be installing officer for the meeting.</p>
        <p>Five delegates were appointed to attend The jurisdictional meeting April 10, 11 and 12 in Raleigh. Al Bartlett, Sylvia C. Mills, Addie and Lewis Ricks, and Annie Turner will attend, while Lillie Randolph will serve as state jurisdictional officer.</p>
        <p>Health Board Meets</p>
        <p>The Pitt County Board of Health</p>
        <p>Correction</p>
        <p>The date for a public hearing on proposed changes in the methiid of electing members of the Board of County Commissioners to be held at Farmville Central High School was listed incorrectly in Tuesdays edition of The Daily Reflector.</p>
        <p>The date of the hearing in Farmville is Jan 27.</p>
        <p>mcK Li: c I OK</p>
        <p>HOTLINE</p>
        <p>//&amp;lt;'////&amp;lt; gi/.s (/('fH' Itific/ lell us iihnit ihv uvhk tu or issue into which you d like (or Holline to li'i'k Hiielose iiliotosUtie copies of :iii\ fri tiiieiit information. Our ad-ikess IS ihe i.iih Uelleeloi. Uo\ Onrimlle, .vC, 27X(,7 hvause of the large rjiiiih is leti'n eii. Holline e.iiiiiol oiiswer or piihlisli e\eiy item ue iwene. but we deal with all of iho&amp;gt;e loi \Oii&amp;lt; h uc lui\e staff liiiie. Sanies iinist U'given, but only initials will In' fHlblhlUHl</p>
        <p>nOl'SEBlIHNi:!) riie I'li viu ami Beitie IMaiiiiiiig family lost its home near Paetolus to fire F i iday morning. The family has been given plenty of clothing, hut needs household goo&amp;lt;ls, furniture and dry giMHls. rranters ( reek ('hnrch of ('hrist is appealing for donations on behalf of the Mannings and their two sons. Anyone who can help is asked to leave items at the Elliott Carrow home at Main and Lancelot streets in (ii iinesland. Inquiries Oiav be made by calling the (arrow home, 752-34(16.</p>
        <p>For Your Convenience You May Now Pay Your Utility Bills In Person At Any Branch Of</p>
        <p>FIRST FEDERAL SAVINGS &amp;amp; LOAN</p>
        <p>Were pleased to add First Federal Savings &amp;amp; Loan to the following list of banks which accept payment on utility bills;</p>
        <p>Branch Banking &amp;amp; Trust First Citizens Bank &amp;amp; Trust Co.</p>
        <p>*First Federal Savings &amp;amp; Loan Peoples Bank &amp;amp; Trust Co.</p>
        <p>Planters National Bank Wachovia Bank &amp;amp; Trust</p>
        <p>Note: utility bills also may be paid by mail, by bank draft, at GUCs main office building or by using the night depository. If you have any questions, please call 752-7166.</p>
        <p>GREENVILLE</p>
        <p>UTILITIES</p>
        <p>COlfJ</p>
        <p>Srvlng the Citizens of Greenviiie and Pitt County Since 1905</p>
        <p>will meet Thursday at 7 p.m. in the conference room of the health department. West Sixth Street.</p>
        <p>Coastal Bike Treks</p>
        <p>The 100-mile coastal bike treks sponsored by the American Lung Association of North Carolina are planned and registration is going on now.</p>
        <p>The treks will be held the weekends of May 2-3 and May 9-10. Each will follow a 50-mile course along the Cape Fear River from Wrightsville Beach to Long Beach, and then back the following day.</p>
        <p>For information, call 752-5093.</p>
        <p>Quarterly Meeting</p>
        <p>St. James Free Will Baptist Church, Farmville, will begin quarterly meeting services Saturday at 7:30 p.m. with Holy Communion. The Rev. J.H. Vines and Lewis Chapel Church will be guests.</p>
        <p>After regular 11 a.m. services Sunday, the Rev. Blake Phillips and Zion Hill Church, Winterville, will be guests at the 2:30 p.m. service.</p>
        <p>ECU First Choice</p>
        <p>East Carolina University placed first among choices of students in populous northern Virginia who go to out-of-state colleges and universities.</p>
        <p>The statistic was revealed in a survey by the Fairfax County, Va., school system which showed that 86.7 percent of Fairfaxs high school graduates planned to go to college. Two-thirds planned to go to four-year colleges and universities.</p>
        <p>In out-of-state college destinations, ECU ranked first, ahead of Penn State and West Virginia University which tied for second place. Elon College was fourth, followed by Florida State University, Brigham Young University, N.C. State University and Duke.</p>
        <p>Fairfax County turned out nearly 5,000 college-bound high shool graduates last spring.</p>
        <p>MASONIC NOTICE A stated communication will be held by Crown Point Lodge No. 708 Thursday at 7:30 p.m. Work will be done in the Second Degree.</p>
        <p>Farm Life</p>
        <p>Hearing</p>
        <p>Scheduled</p>
        <p>WILLIAMSTON - Parents of students attending Farm Life &amp;amp;hool will have another chance to voice opposition to tentative plans to close the school at the end of the current school year.</p>
        <p>A public hearing will be held Feb. 2 at 7:30 p.m. at the Martin County Board of Education offices.</p>
        <p>After school board members recently expressed the hope the meeting will not become a long, heated discussion such as occurred last July, school board attorney Dan Manning said the board could legally control the hearing. With that assurance, the board has decided to limit the Feb. 2 hearing to one hour. Anyone not part of the Farm Life School group who wants to speak will be allowed only three minutes.</p>
        <p>Several board members said they think the hearing might be a waste of time. Why should they accept our reasons for wanting to close the school this time any more than they did the last time, said Associate Superintendent Comer Griffin. Other board members agreed with Griffin, but board member Wayne Peel, a Farm Life resident, said the hearing is necessary.</p>
        <p>Several questions have come up within the community since the last hearing, Peel said, and theres lot of misinformation being spread around because people dont have all the facts.</p>
        <p>Peel said several issues should be addressed at the hearing, such as the fate of school personnel, what to do with the building, how student travel will be affected, and other issues.</p>
        <p>'The initial decision two years ago to close the school was based on the fact that attendance at the country school has fallen to below 100 students. State officials have estimated that about $80,000 to $120,000 can be saved annually by the closure of the school and reassigning students to larger schools in the county.</p>
        <p>Ruling</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP)  Questions about a Davidson County mans participation in devil worship and his sons attempt to smuggle marijuana to him in jail should not have been allowed, but the mistakes were not serious enough to overturn his conviction for aiding a double murder, a state appeals court has ruled.</p>
        <p>In a 2-1 decision, a panel of the North Carolina Court of Appeals ruled Tuesday that the improper questions were not decisive factors in Charles Ray Kimbrells 1985 trial.</p>
        <p>We hold ... that there is no reasonable possibility that had these errors not been committed, a different result would have been reached at trial and that the error was harmless in the light of the other evidence properly admitted at the trial, Judge Hugh Wells wrote in the majority opinion.</p>
        <p>MASONIC NOTICE William Pitt Masonic Lodge No. 734 AF&amp;amp;AM will hold a stated communication at 7:30 tonight. Work will be done in the first degree.</p>
        <p>(Pur Warehouse Runneth Over So We're Having An</p>
        <p>_ 4NSTOR</p>
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        <pb facs="00096520_0103" />
        <p>Pitt Site Included</p>
        <p>State Agency Lists 139 Potential Waste Sites</p>
        <p>The Dally Reflector, Greenville, N.C</p>
        <p>Wednesday, January 21,1987 ^^.3</p>
        <p>r</p>
        <p>By JOHN FLESHER Associated Press Writer</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP) - The North Carolina Hazardous Waste Treatment Commission today released a list of 139 potential sites  including one in Pitt County  for a state hazardous waste treatment facility.</p>
        <p>The counties with the most sites are Mecklenburg and Rowan, with 13 each. Another 11 are located in Edgecombe County. Forty-one of the states 100 counties have at least one site on the list.</p>
        <p>Specific location of the sites was not available.</p>
        <p>The sites meet only the most general guidelines for a hazardous waste incinerator, such as nearness to interstate highways, a minimum of 50 acres and being at least a mile from institutions such as schools or hospitals, according to commission Chairman Deborah Parker.</p>
        <p>The commission is considering stricter criteria for paring the list to 10 to 15 sites when the panel meets Feb. 12.</p>
        <p>The General Assembly has ordered</p>
        <p>Congress Moves Ahead On Road Bills</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP) - The House and Senate are moving ahead with multibillion-dollar highway bills amid warnings from the secretary of transportation that the measures had better conform with Reagan administration policy.</p>
        <p>The Senate Environment and Public Works Committee began writing its version of a four-year, $54 billion highway bill today.</p>
        <p>Reauthorization of the federal-aid highway program is essential to everyone who depends on our highway system for business travel, personal travel and movement of goods, said Sen. Quentin Burdick, D-N.D., chairman of the committee. Let us move quickly.</p>
        <p>The full House also was set to' debate and perha[ vote on a five-year, $91 billion highway and mass transit bill.</p>
        <p>Construction industry and state officials have been calling for quick passage of transportation spending bills since Congress deadlocked on legislation last fall and provided no new money for the fiscal year that began Oct. 1.</p>
        <p>There was support in both chambers for several controversial amendments, but it was unclear which of the measures would be introduced or approved.</p>
        <p>In the Senate, an amendment was expected to be introduced during committee debate by Sens. Robert Stafford, R-Vt., and Daniel Moynihan, D-N.Y., that would allow states gradually to remove billboards near interstates and other federal roads and ban new signs.</p>
        <p>The House was expected to permit no amendments to its bill, although there was a possibility that supporters of a measure to allow states to raise speed limits above the federally mandated 55 mph would try to force consideration of their measure.</p>
        <p>Late Monday, Transportation Secretary Elizabeth Dole served notice on the legislators that their bills would receive administration support  if they reflected administration desires.</p>
        <p>In a letter to Burdick, Mrs. Dole said she would urge President Reagan to sign the Senate bill in its current form.</p>
        <p>But she warned, I urge you to oppose any amendments... that further increase the authorization or obligation levels in the bill for highway programs or that will slow the reauthorization process down</p>
        <p>the commission to select a site  or two in case the incinerator is separate from a treatment facility  by April 1. But Ms. Parker said the commission plans to seek an extension.</p>
        <p>The list does not rank the 139 sites, said Dave Dunbar, branch manager for PEI Associates, a Cincinnati-based environmental consulting company that compiled the report.</p>
        <p>The list consists of 131 industrial sites and eight owned by the state.</p>
        <p>The facility, on which construction is expected to start in 1988, will consist of a rota^ kiln incinerator, a distillation unit, and several batch chemical treatment units. It will not include a landfill.</p>
        <p>Hazardous waste consists of spent chemicals and other toxics and does not include radioactive materials or polychlorinated biphenyls.</p>
        <p>Ms. Parker said some counties</p>
        <p>have expressed interest in the facility because of the jobs it would create, although others are leary of such an operation.</p>
        <p>Among the counties with more than one potential site are Johnston with seven; Scotland and Randolph with six; Forsyth, Nash and Wilson with five; and Chatham, Davidson, Guilford, Harnett, Iredell and Lincoln with four; Cabarrus, Northampton, Person, Robeson, Rutherford and Wake with three; and Burke, Catawba, Durham, Hoke and Polk with two.</p>
        <p>Alamance, Bladen, Brunswick, Cumberland, Davie, Gaston, Halifax, Henderson, Orange, Pitt, Rockingham, Sampson, Stokes, Union and Wayne counties have one potential site each.</p>
        <p>One additional site was offered by the owner of the property and its county was not disclosed.</p>
        <p>DOUBLE-TAKE TRIP  Motorcyclist Don Desautels  he manages in Vancouver. Canada. To make the trip,</p>
        <p>got a kick out of seeing startled drivers and pedestrians  Desautels taped the creatures arms together and put</p>
        <p>as he delivered an inflated mascot to the waterbed store  them around his neck. (AP Laserphoto)</p>
        <p>Gunmen Kill 12 South African Blacks</p>
        <p>By JAMES F. SMITH Associated Press Writer JOHANNESBURG, South Africa (AP)  Attackers gunned down 12 blacks, seven of them children, in an assault early today on a home in a black township south of Durban, authorities said.</p>
        <p>The assailants burst into the house of Willie Ntuli, 50, and opened fire on the occupants with AK-47 assault ri</p>
        <p>fles at about 2 a.m., said Maj. Chari du Toit, the Durban police spokesman.</p>
        <p>Ntuli and 11 others who were in the house were killed, including six children aged between 3 and 7 and another who was 17, du Toit said. Two other people were wounded.</p>
        <p>Only one person escaped unhurt, a 10-year-old boy who evaded the attackers by hiding in a closet. Four of</p>
        <p>Court Clarifies Pregnancy Ruling</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP)  States are under no spwial legal obligation to pay unemployment benefits to women who lose their jobs after taking maternity leave, the Supreme Court ruled today.</p>
        <p>The court said a federal law barring discrimination based on pregnancy in unemployment benefit payments bans states from singling out pregnancy for unfavorable treatment only. The law does not mandate preferential treatment for pregnant workers, the court said.</p>
        <p>The 8-0 decision is a defeat for a woman refused unemployment benefits after being denied reinstatement as a Kansas City, Mo., department store cashier when she wanted to return from maternity leave.</p>
        <p>Just last week the court, in interpreting a separate federal law, ruled that states may require employers to give pregnant workers job protections not available to other employees.</p>
        <p>The justices in that decision upheld a California law requiring employers to grant un[id leaves of absence and insure reinstatement for women whose pregnancies leave them unable to work  even if leaves are not granted for any other disability.</p>
        <p>But today the court said no such special protection was intended by Congress when it passed the Federal Unemployment Tax Act of 1978.</p>
        <p>Justice Sandra Day OConnor, writing for the court, said, Congress intended only to prohibit states from singling out pregnancy for unfavorable treatment ... If a state adopts a neutral rule that incidentaUy disqualifies pregnant or formerly pregnant claimants as part of a larger group, the neutral application of that rule is legal.</p>
        <p>Missouri law disqualifies anyone from collecting unemployment benefits for leaving work voluntarily for reasons not job-related.</p>
        <p>According to court documents, similar policies are enforced in Minnesota, North Dakota, Vermont and the District of Columbia.</p>
        <p>The practical impact of todays ruling likely will be limited because most states include leaves of absence taken because of pregnancy in those good cause leaves that do not disqualify a worker from collecting unemployment if later denied reinstatement.</p>
        <p>When Linda Wimberly tried to collect unemployment benefits in 1983 she was turned down because of the Missouri law.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Wimberly had been granted a maternity leave of absence from her job at J.C. Penney Co. in August 1980. Her child was bom Nov. 5 of that year, and on Dec. 1 Mrs. Wimberly notified her employer that she was ready to return to work.</p>
        <p>At the time, however, no cashier positions were available.</p>
        <p>After unsuccessfully applying for unemployment compensation, Mrs. Wimberly sued. She won in two state courts but the Missouri Supremb Court ruled against her.</p>
        <p>Todays decision upheld the state Supreme Court ruling.</p>
        <p>In finding that the Missouri law does not conflict with the 1978 federal law, OConnor noted that all persons who leave work for reasons not causally connected to the work or the employer are disqualified from receiving benefits.</p>
        <p>To apply this law, it is not necessary to know (Mrs. Wimberly) left because of pregnancy; all that is relevant is that she stopped work for a reason bearing no causal connection to her work or her employer.</p>
        <p>Justice Harry A. Blackmun did not participate in the case.</p>
        <p>The case is Wimberly vs. Labor and Industrial Relations Commission, 85-129.</p>
        <p>, TO The people</p>
        <p>rthCatollna</p>
        <p>.&amp;lt; nf Pitt county  g  extended</p>
        <p>stees and    ot  syt'P*'^^,^ge  on  January  8.</p>
        <p>3T every express  crew  and  tdeir</p>
        <p>the tiui'd'e'ls  and  are</p>
        <p>his brothers and sisters were killed.</p>
        <p>Members of the United Democratic Front, the nations largest legal anti-apartheid coalition, accused In-katha, a political and tribal organization led by Zulu chief Mangosuthu Buthelezi, of staging the attack against the home of a UDF member. The groups differ over how to oppose apartheid.</p>
        <p>The attack in Kwa-Makhuta township near Amanzimtoti, 15 miles south of Durban, was one of the worst reported incidents of violence in South Africa in months.</p>
        <p>More than 2,200 people have been killed in political unrest since September 1984. Last June, the government declared a state of emergency and limited press reporting in many areas. The limits later were broadened to ban or restrict reporting about unrest, security force actions, treatment of detainees, most forms of peaceful protest and statements the government considers subversive.</p>
        <p>Du Toit said officials initially reported incorrectly that the attackers firebombed Ntulis house and then shot the victims as they fled.</p>
        <p>Police with tracker dogs scoured the area around the house, which was sealed off and under guard, residents said.</p>
        <p>The victims included two brothers, Mavoko Ntuzhini, 5, and Bashi Ntuzhini, 3, and their sisters, Savile Ntuzhini, 4, and Phumsele Ntuzhini,</p>
        <p>;, according to a police statement, as well as two 50-year-old women, Mbusu Ndwalani and Isabel Khubeka. The others were Nunu Ntuli, 7, Jabu Ndlovu, 17, Phumale Ndlovu, 22, and two unidentified people.</p>
        <p>A 10-year-old girl was wounded along with a Mrs. A. Khumalo, while another child from the Ntuzhini family, Ernest, 10, escaped unharmed.</p>
        <p>Kwa-Makhuta and other townships in Natal province have been wracked by fighting between Inkatha the United Democratic Front.</p>
        <p>Ntulis son, Victor, is a leading member of a United Democratic Front affiliate, according to Joseph Gumbi, a coalition official in Durban. Victor Ntuli probably was the main target but he went into hiding last week and was not at home during the attack, Gumbi said.</p>
        <p>There is no doubt at all, from what we have gathered from people in that area that the attack was launched by Inkatha, Gumbi said.</p>
        <p>Buthelezi said in a statement that the killings were probably a continuation of the internecine clashes between rival black groups. He said he was shocked by the dimensions which the violence... is assuming.</p>
        <p>The front and the African National Congress, an outlawed guerrilla group, criticize Buthelezi for his willingness to work within structures created by the South African government. Buthelezi is a critic of apar</p>
        <p>theid but differs with the two groups on how to oppose it.</p>
        <p>Under apartheid, South Africas system of forced racial segregation, the countrys 24 million blacks are denied a voice in national affairs. The 5 million white control the gov-, ernment and economy and maintain separate residential districts, health facilities and schools.</p>
        <p>Two members of Inkatha have been killed in Kwa-Makhuta in attacks since New Years Eve, and a third badly wounded.</p>
        <p>Drug Program</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP)  Fifth- and sixth-graders will be taught how to resist peer pressure that leads to drug use under a program unveiled by state officials today.</p>
        <p>State school Superintendent Craig Phillips said the new program will be called DARE, which stands for Drug Abuse Resistance Education. He said the semester-long program will be implemented this spring in at least one pilot site to be selected in each of the eight educational regions.</p>
        <p>Phillips said the program, first usl in Lob Angeles In an effort to curb the supply of drugs by reducing demand, could be aided by nearly $2.8 million in federal funds through the Drug Free Schools and Community Act of 1986.</p>
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        <pb facs="00096520_0104" />
        <p>Editorials</p>
        <p>Shifting Resource</p>
        <p>It is seldom that a state can watch a portion of one of its ports crumble into the sea.</p>
        <p>That was what happened at the Morehead City State Port last weekend.</p>
        <p>Granted it was the old Berth 1 and the North Carolina State Ports Authority had said it should spend $800,000 to rebuild the 350-foot berth, which the authority said was over 50 years old and structurally unsafe. Nevertheless its collapse, along with adjacent paving and structures made spectacular pictures. There was real danger as nearby oil tanks were threatened by crumbling ground. Over 130 truckloads of rock were hauled in to end the threat to the tanks.</p>
        <p>Shoreline erosion is usually seen as a slow process. In this case, however, the visible deterioration occurred rapidly. Authorities said that the sea breached a protective bulkhead and the erosion had moved at the rate of 5 to 10 miles per hour toward the storage tanks. Much of the oil was pumped out of the tanks as a precautionary measure.</p>
        <p>The problem did not affect the newer, adjoining berth and most of the Morehead City port was unaffected.</p>
        <p>The problem does illlustrate again the unique conditions of North Carolinas coastal areas. Our coast is sand based and sand is subject to shift. There are methods to protect something so important to us as a state port but other areas cant be protected.</p>
        <p>Some coastlines are rocky and they resist the ravages of the sea. North Carolinas coast is constantly moving. It is a great natural resource, but it resists mans construction efforts.</p>
        <p> Paul T, O'Connor </p>
        <p>Time To Fill In The Price Tag</p>
        <p>RALEIGH - For the past six months, the many different professional organizations which comprise the education lobby have waged an unusual peace with each other. Theyve cooperated to draft a salary schedule for certified educators upon which they can all agree.</p>
        <p>But that peace may not last much longer. The time has come to fix a price tag to that salary schedule, and in a year of limited funds for new state spending, the various lobbies may try to implement the schedule in</p>
        <p>ways that best serve their self interests at budget time.</p>
        <p>In 1986, the legislature told a study commission to draft a fair salary schedule for certified educators. The current schedule is wrought with inequities and inconsistencies.</p>
        <p>The commission passed the job to the various professional educator groups, and they devised a wonderfully neat plan. Their schedule aligns eveiy professional educator, from beginning teacher to superintendent of the biggest school system, in 17 dif</p>
        <p>ferent pay classifications with as many as 10 different steps in each classification.</p>
        <p>While that job may have been hard enough, the fixing of actual salary levels to those various classifications poses an even bigger task. There are several different views of how that should be done, with each view favoring a different segment of the education world.</p>
        <p>Gene Causby, executive director of the N.C. School Boards Association, has been the spokesman for the coali-</p>
        <p>Dist News America Syndicate, 1967</p>
        <p>tion of education groups. He told the legislative commission that by the end of January, or early February, he can have present an affordable plan for implementing the pay scale. He estimated a total cost of between $6 million and $10 million.</p>
        <p>Rep. Billy Watkins, D-Granville, committee coKihairman, was doubtful. They were talking about $6 million to $8 million and I knew they didnt know what they were talking about, Watkins said. He predicts a )rice tag more in the range of that oreseen by Patrie Mullen, lobbyist for the N.C. Association of Educators: $200 million.</p>
        <p>How could the two estimates be so far apart? Its a matter of vertical and horizontal lines.</p>
        <p>Causby says the commissions job is to get the various education jobs in proper alignment with each other. For example, the commission should determine the proper relationship of teacher salaries to principal salaries. This is called the vertical schedule. Under this reasoning, the commission would create an algebraic formula that would set all salaries by using teacher salaries as a starting point. If teacher salaries arent increased, then the amount of money involved remains relatively low because teachers are by far the largest group involved.</p>
        <p>Sen. Marvin Warad, D-Forsyth, warned the educators that they should not recommend a pay scale which will prove overly expensive because two'or three years down the road well have to freeze things again because it costs too much. Thats what got the state in its current mess, he said.Bridging A Gap</p>
        <p>Sooner or later the United States has to bridge the gap between it and Iran.</p>
        <p>It is also certain the longer this country nourishes the anger stirred up by Khomeinis revolutionary fanatics of a few years ago, the more difficult it will be for an American government to bring about any kind of normalcy in relations with Iran.</p>
        <p>Each additional month or year of prolonging the emotionally-charged adversarial role makes it more difficult to achieve any semblance of a dispassionate relationship.</p>
        <p>Iran wants and needs return of the several hundreds of millions of dollars that are tied up by the U.S. for weaponry that was paid for (but not delivered) during the Shah of Irans regime. The Ayatollah is said to recognize the need for some made-in-America economic, political and social incentives. That necessity could, in due course, produce compromises.</p>
        <p>There is a major rebuilding job to be done inside Iran and U.S. talents could be a mighty inducement to reasonable relationships between the two countries. There are signs the Moslem revolution is settling down. If that is truly the case, our government should waste no time in seizing whatever opportunities there may be for coexistence.</p>
        <p>There is just enough truth in the fallback alibi charted by the Reagan administration in its hostage ransom scheme to justify a major policy effort along those lines.</p>
        <p>Public Forum</p>
        <p>To the editor:</p>
        <p>I am concerned that inequalities exist at Sadie Saulter and Third Street Schools that do not exist elsewhere in our merged school system. How can our school board and school system allow such inequality to continue?</p>
        <p>Point No. 1. Racial Inbalance. Our sons classes at Sadie Saulter are now 75 percent black, 25 percent white. With the new school lines proposed, the ratio next year would be 67 percent black/ 33 percent white. (Likewise, Third Street School would be 73 percent black/ 27 percent white.)</p>
        <p>This is a step in a balanced direction  a very small step, however. We can  and must  do better. The ratios proposed at the other schools are: Elmhurst 55 percent black/45 percent white; Eastern 44 percent black, 56 percent white; Robinson 28 percent black, 72 percent white; new school 26 percent black, 74 percent white.</p>
        <p>Why are we treated so differently? Was not one of the primary goals of our school merger defined to be racial balance in all our schools?</p>
        <p>Point No. 2  Proposed renovations and appropriations. The Facilities Survey Analyses of Recommendations report stated that Sadie Saulter is and will be the most overcrowded elementary school over the next five years. They recommended four new classrooms for Sadie Saulter, six new classrooms at Third Street, six new at Eastern and four new at Elmhurst. They propose, however, that construction at Eastern and Elmhurst begin in this new year, while they do not recommend the construction at Sadie Saulter and Third Street until the following year. Why so? Presently, expansion has begun at Robinson and the new school is to open in the fall.</p>
        <p>Again, why are we treated differently? If we are the most crowded, why are we not the first building priority? It is time to remedy these inequalities. Joellyn C. Cohen Greenville  *</p>
        <p>Editors note: Mrs. Cohen's letter published yesterday is being rerun because a portion was left out by error on the part of the newspaper.</p>
        <p>To the editor:</p>
        <p>Your Public Forum recently included several letters addressing the Westhaven 3-7 position statement made at the school board hearing on school lines. These writers have misinterpreted our position. Our position statement reflects favorably on teachers and administration at Sadie Saulter: We found that the faculty and staff of Sadie Saulter have been highly recommended.</p>
        <p>The average test scores in reading and math of third graders at Robinson</p>
        <p>are approximately V&amp;gt;2 years higher than these averages at Sadie Saulter. This disparity is not a result of differences in staffing between the two schools. We feel it is fair to compare the averages of the total groups because a students motivation to learn is influenced, not only by teachers, but also by peers. Our purpose in quoting these statistics was not to attack any group or school, but to emphasize the inequities of the current system and the staffs proposal, which does little to change it.</p>
        <p>Our written statement emphasizes the need for racial balance in individual schools throughout the entire system. This point has been ignored in news accounts, editorials and public statements. The staffs proposal nurtures an inner city school system in Greenville. Sadie Saulter and Third Street are to remain about 70 percent black, while the new school and Robinson remain over 70 percent white. Over the next five years. Rose is projected to go from 51 percent white to 58 percent black. Conley is projected to go from 63 percent white to 73 percent white! We find these projections unacceptable and so should the entire county.</p>
        <p>The major issue for everyone is one of reasonable racial balance within all schools. The school board must use its power to equalize the educational experiences of children throughout the county. This racial balance will lead to better educational opportunities for all children, both black and white.</p>
        <p>Griff Garner Julie H. Tucker Katherine M. Burke Spokespersons for Westhaven 3-7</p>
        <p>To the editor:</p>
        <p>In reference to the editorial, Well Equipped.</p>
        <p>You mention East Carolina University as an institution that can take its place among the outstanding of the nation and that ECU can be a catalyst for an improved way of life in Ule east, that it will be Dr. Eakins challenge to do so. With no disrespect to Dr. Eakin, hr will be coming to an institution that is already filling the above, thanks to his predecessors, faculty, students, alumni, community and supporters.</p>
        <p>Carlisle Jennings Greenville</p>
        <p>Submissions to the Public Forum should consist of no more than 300 words and should deal with public issues. The editor reserves the right to cut longer letters. Signa tures and phone numbers should be included on all letters.</p>
        <p> Rowland Evans &amp;amp; Robert Novak </p>
        <p>Why Pat Buchanan Won't Run</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON - Patrick J Buchanan, in five days of introspection, reversed two months of escalation toward a presidential candidacy and decided not to run  partly for personal reasons but mainly because of apprehension over damage to the conservative movement Just when conservatives were all but unanimous in guessing he would run, sober second thoughts intervened. Buchanan wondered whether he wanted to buy fishbowl scrutiny of</p>
        <p>him and his family. He also started thinking hard on the unliklihood of becoming the Republican nominee.</p>
        <p>But the tipping factor was the argument by Rep. Jack Kemps sup-wrters. He did not want to go down in listory as the wrecker of Kemps chances who opened the way for a non-conservative presidential nominee. In effect. Buchanan at some time over last weekend made a decision enabling Kemp to mobilize the conservative movement if he can.</p>
        <p>The Daily Reflector</p>
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        <p>Greenville, N.C. 27834</p>
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        <p>{USPS 145-400)</p>
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        <p>MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to use for publication all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited to this paper and also the local news published herein. All rights of publications of special dispatches here are also resenred.</p>
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        <p>Member Audit Bureau of Circulation.</p>
        <p>That was scarcely Buchanans thinking on Wednesday evening, Jan. 14. when right-wingers gathered at his northern Virginia home to discuss his imminent run for president. They included his most ardent supporters: his sister, Angela (Bay) Jackson; Howard Phillips of the Conservative Caucus , Tom Ellis and Carter Wrenn of the Congressional Club of North Carolina; Wall Street fund-raiser Harlan Schlicher; Washington Times columnist John Lofton.</p>
        <p>It was not a happy evening. Supporters ready to get the campaign rolling were disturbed by lack of organization and the presence of conservatives who preferred Kemp to Buchanan (notably Tom Winter and Allan Ryskind of Human Events). What bothered them most was their prospective champions newly-ap-pearkl indecision.</p>
        <p>That evening began Buchanans serious second thoughts. He always had flinched from intense personal scrutiny, pondering the impact on his aged father of his campaigns treatment in his hometown newspaper, the Washington Post. What made it seem worthwhile was the impossible dream, his actual nomination.</p>
        <p>But polls showing remarkable name recogniton (higher than Kemps) also showed huge negative ratings. To lower them, Buchan^ would have to appeal to centrist. Republicans and independents. But how then could he continue to preach the East-West struggle, support for contras and traditional social values</p>
        <p> messages that had generated a presidential groundswell?</p>
        <p>Then there was the Kemp question. Kemps deputy campaign manager, Jeff Bell, had predicted his old comrade on the Right would think long and hard before splitting the movement. Indeed, while Buchanan abjured criticism of Kemp, he began to accept Bells prediction that his campaign naturally must turn against Kemp.</p>
        <p>Buchanans worst-case scenario had him blamed by the Right for crippling chances for Kemp and Pat Robertson, while George Bush or Robert J. Dole was nominated. His best case was not much better. Buchanan would become the Republican Gary Hart of 1988, going all the way to the convention but unable to win there. That would dictate a conservative selected as Bushs or Doles vice president: anybody but Buchanan.</p>
        <p>All this invited Buchanan to consider an alternative scenario. While foregoing a presidential run and playing the good solider, he could spread the conservative gospel just as well. If a conservative (probably Kemp) were nominated an(l elected, he would get credit. If not, then maybe the party would look more seriously at Buchanan in 1992.</p>
        <p>On Thursday, the day after his meeting, Buchanan did not personally visit his old chief, Richard M. Nixon, as planned, but did talk to him on the telephone. Whether or not he said so, the former president does not</p>
        <p>think Buchanan should run. On Friday, Buchanans growing doubts were deepened by a Human Events article. Disinterested friends committed to no presidential candidate urged him not to run. By Monday morning, he had decided.</p>
        <p>Buchanans days at the White House are at an end. He knows he cannot have flirted with scaling the mountaintop and then descend to his windowless White House communications directors office. He also is tired after two years of promoting the conserative cause and has no more zest to battle what he calls the mice, chief of staff Donald T. Regans subalterns. He will soon leave the presidents staff, just as he would have had he decided to run.</p>
        <p>What he does next is unknown. On Sunday night, he talked with Kemp and suggested they meet before he announced anything, but on reflection decided that might look like cutting a deal. Kemp is the only candidate Buchanan might endorse. Whether he does or not, he already has conveyed inestimable service to Kemp. Amid the Buchanan furor, Sen. Bill Armstrong of Colorado  long feared by Kemp forces  said he wo^d not run. Right field is now Kemp's to roam alone, save for Robertson. This was not only the result but the intent of Buchanans decision that so disappoints his followers.</p>
        <p>Copyright 1*87 News America Syndicate</p>
        <p> Elisha Douglas Strength For Today</p>
        <p>The Bible has a great deal to say about hypocrites and everything it says is loaded with condemnation. Many people today are so afraid of being called hypocrites that they actually practice a form of hypocrisy by refusing to acknowledge their religious beliefs.</p>
        <p>Yet this reaction is at best overcompensation and at worst cowardice. The devout Christian, if he is entirely honest with himself and othere, does not claim to be a Christian  he aims to be a Christian. He may believe everything a Christian is supposed to believe, but he realizes, with sorrow, that he is fallible and will not be able to achieve his highest religious ideals.</p>
        <p>This is not an excuse by which we are to comfort ourselves in our failings. It is a realistic facing of the facts. God does not expect us to be perfect, but he expects us to aim for perfection.</p>
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        <pb facs="00096520_0106" />
        <p>Helms Grabs Top GOP Post On Foreign Relations Panel</p>
        <p>TAKES POST  Sen. Jesse Helms of North Carolina meets reporters on Capitol Hill Tuesday after Senate Republicans named him to the top GOP post on the Foreign Relations Committee. Heims ousted Sen. Richard Lugar of Indiana, who had served as chairman while Republicans dominated the Senate. (APLaserphoto)</p>
        <p>Company Donates Seed To Farmers</p>
        <p>FAYETTEVILLE (AP) - Drought-stricken farmers in four Southeastern states will be getting about $5 million worth of donated corn seed next month, officials of the Church World Services Organization say.</p>
        <p>About 100,(KX) 50-pound bags of seed will be distributed in North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia and Alabama, according to Tom Trantham, regional field coordinator for the program in the Carolinas.</p>
        <p>Trantham and Church World Services officials in New York said the company donating the seed had asked to remain anonymous.</p>
        <p>Each state will receive about 25,000 bags of corn seed, Trantham said.</p>
        <p>People will .say, big deal... I may only get one bag of .seed. But we hope to be able to supply a large number of farmers with all the seed theyll need, Trantham said.</p>
        <p>That is not a lot statewide, but it is enough to have an impact on the corn market in the region, .said John Anderson of the N.C. Agricultural Extension Service. He said the 25,(KK) bags represent about 7 percent to 8 percent of the states corn crop.</p>
        <p>North Carolina farmers plant about 1.8 million acres of corn per year, Anderson said. About 54,0(X) of the states 73,(KK) farms grow some corn, he said.</p>
        <p>Trantham said more than 6(KJ North Carolina farmers and 200 farmers in South Carolina already have submitted requests for a share of the seed. He said he expects to have requests from about 1,4(K) farmers from both states by P&amp;gt;iday, the deadline for applications.</p>
        <p>In early December, the seed company contacted Church World Services after learning of the plight of southern farmers at a Thanksgiving dinner held at Tranthams farm m Pelzer, S.C.</p>
        <p>Church World .Services is a division of the National Council of Churches and handles relief work, developement and refugee assistance for the parent organization.</p>
        <p>Since mid-August, Church World Services has maintained distribution centers throughout the Southeast to distribute hay and feed grain. There are four centers in North Carolina at Harmony, Siler City, Oak Ridge and Cedar Grove; two in South (arolina at Pelzer and Manning, one in Atlanta and one in Epes, Ala.</p>
        <p>By SARA FRITZ</p>
        <p>L.A. Times-Washington Post News Service</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON - Maverick conservative Sen. Jesse Helms, R-N.C., was chosen Tuesday as the ranking GOP member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee in a move that signaled a more combative approach by Senate Republicans to foreign policy matters.</p>
        <p>By a secret vote of 24-17, the Senate Republican caucus voted to install Hems as the committees ranking member over Sen. Richard G. Lugar of Indiana, who had earned a reputation as a compromiser while serving as chairman of the panel during the last two years.</p>
        <p>The position gives greater influence over foreign policy to Helms, who in the past has used his position as a member of the committee to promote conservative ideology, frequently differing with policies of the Reagan administration.</p>
        <p>For that reason. Helms said. State Department officials tried unsuccessfully to encourage Republicans to vote against him. Many State Department officials refused to comment publicly on that charge, but one acknowledged that they viewed Helms ascension with horror.</p>
        <p>Although a few GOP liberis and moderates supported Helms on grounds that they were upholding the Senates sacred seniority system, the vote was widely interpreted as a Republican rebuke of Lugar for his moderate approach as committee chairman - particularly his support for sanctions against South Africa and his efforts backing the ouster of Philippines President Ferdinand E. Marcos.</p>
        <p>Unlike Lugar, Helms is expected to adopt a more confrontational style in dea ing with the Senates Democratic leadership. As a.result of Helms new position. Sen. Alan K. Simpson, R-Wyo., predicted, the debate over foreign policy might be slightly more spirited on the floor than it would have been otherwise.</p>
        <p>Conservatives viewed the choice of Helms and his fierce opposition to Democratic legislation as a boon for GOP fund raising for the election in 1988, when Republicans will be seeking to regain a majority in the Senate and retain control of the White House.</p>
        <p>Yet supporters of the Reagan administration feared that Helms combativeness would further complicate efforts to win needed Democratic support for continued U.S. funding ol Nicaraguan rebels. In addition, he is expected to use his position to insist on changes in the ad-</p>
        <p>Spangler Proposes Special Plan To Boost Elizabeth City State</p>
        <p>ELIZABETH CITY, N.C. (AP) -University of North Carolina President C.D. Spangler Jr. says he hop&amp;lt;*s to persuade the General Assembly to finance a new scholarship program for Elizabeth City State University that would help the school attract top-quality students.</p>
        <p>Spangler announced a $1 million plan to upgrade the school 'I'uesday during a special meeting of the ECSU trustees.</p>
        <p>University officials have agreed, Spangler told The Virginian-Pilot and The Ledger-Star ot Norfolk. Va., that a new course ot action is necessary for ECSU. which has struggled to attract quality students in recent years.</p>
        <p>If the legislature agrees to provide $225,(KK) in initial funding. ECSU will award as many as 250 full scholar-shijK this fall to high schiMil or community college graduates from 16 northeastern counties. Spangler said.</p>
        <p>The scholarship program - tor freshmen and transfer students -would provide $5,000 a year, enough to cover the $854 annual tuition and</p>
        <p>fees to help defray costs of housing, f(KK and lK)oks.</p>
        <p>To qualify, students must rank in the top half of their high school graduating class and earn a B average in college by their junior year. The same number of scholarship recipients will be sought the following year.</p>
        <p>To be eligible for the scholarship program, freshmen must be graduates of high schools in one of the following counties: Beaufort, Bertie, Camden, Chowan, Currituck, Dre, Gates, Halifax, Hertford. Hyde, Martin, Northampton, Pasquotank, Perquimans, Tyrrell and Washington.</p>
        <p>In addition, they must agree to carry 15 semester hours each semester, to give eight hours to public service activities and to undergo standardized assessments periodically to assist in evaluating how well they are being educated.</p>
        <p>Transfer students must have completed one or two years of study at one of the following institutions: the (ollege of Albemarle, Halifax Com-munitv College. Martin Community</p>
        <p>College and Roanoke-Chowan Technical College. Transfer students must also meet requirements regarding coursework and grade-point averages prior to admittance. Other eligibility requirements are similar to those for freshmen scholarship students.</p>
        <p>University officials devised the plan during a marathon two-day session in September, said Lloyd V. Hackley, the systems vice president for student services. No similar plans are being made for the systems four other predominantly black universities, he said.</p>
        <p>The officials focused on ECSU for a variety of reasons, he said. Since the university, with about 1,600 students, is the smallest university in the system, we felt we could get the best benefit from the smallest amount of money, he said.</p>
        <p>ministrations foreign aid budget and, as he has done in the past, block any ambassadorial nominess that he views as not sufficiently conservative.</p>
        <p>Emerging from the closed meeting in which he was chosen. Helms, 65, immediately provided a demonstration of the feisty style for which he has become famous by telling representatives of the news media: Im sorry to disappoint you folks, but you lost. It was an apparent reference to a New York Times editorial endorsing Lugar.</p>
        <p>Lugar, 54, was clearly stunned and shaken by the defeat. I am disappointed that I lost, he said, adding; It was a responsibility that I had hoped to attain. By default. Lugar wi I inherit the position of ranking Republican on the Agriculture Committee that Helms is relinquishing.</p>
        <p>Although Lugar during his two years as chairman had forced the administration to accept a number of compromises that Reagan opposed - such as his South African sanctions legislation approved over a )residential veto  he generally has )een a Reagan loyalist and a close ally of Secretary of State George P. Shultz.</p>
        <p>Lugar, saying the he feared that Helms style would hurt the</p>
        <p>Republicans, maintained that his approach to foreign policy would be better for the party.</p>
        <p>First elected to the Senate in 1972, Helms, 65, has a reputation for using his position as senator to dabble in U.S. foreign relations, always intervening in support of staunch anti-communists, such Roberto DAubuisson in El Salvador. The Department of Justice is known to be investigating the alleged role that Helms played in tipping off President Augusto Pinochet of Chile to a U.S. intelligence-gathering operation in that country.</p>
        <p>By seniority rights. Helms would have become chairmain of the Foreign Relations Committee two years ago after the defeat of the former chairman, Charles Percy. But Helms gave up the position two years ago to fulfill a promise that he had made to his constituients during a hard-fought re-election campaign to protect North Carolina tobacco interests by accepting the chairmanship of the Agriculture Committee instead.</p>
        <p>But, clearly. Helms never lost his interest in foreign policy. As chairman of the Agriculture Committee, he sought unsuccessfully to subpoena a Soviet sailor who jumped ship in New Orleans in 1985 and was returned to his ship by U.S. officials. During</p>
        <p>Senate consideration of the South African sanctions, which he opposed. Helms arranged for two senators to be lobbied by telephone in the Senate cloakroom by Pretorias foreign minister.</p>
        <p>After the Republicans lost control of the Senate in last Novembers election, Helms announced that he had decided to reclaim his ranking position on the Foreign Relations Committee. But Lugar refused to give it up voluntarily, forcing a showdown vote.</p>
        <p>Helms bid to regain his Foreign Relations position received support from many of his ideological opponents, like liberal Republican Sen. Lowell P. Weicker of Conneticut, who viewed the Lugar challenge as a precedent-setting attack on the seniority system. Weicker and others reasoned that the seniority system protects all ideologies equally.</p>
        <p>By voting for Helms, the Republican caucus overturned a 7-0 vote of the Republican members of the Foreign Relations Committee in favor of Lugar.</p>
        <p>The influence of Helms, as ranking minority member of the committee, is expected to be enhanced because Chairman Claiborne Pell, D-R.L, is viewed as a much weaker personality than Lugar.</p>
        <p>Martin Endorses Jack Hawke For GOP State Chairmanship</p>
        <p>By JOHN FLESHER Associated Press Writer RALEIGH (AP) - R. Jack Hawke, Gov. Jim Martins choice as interim chairman of the state Republican Party, says he will work for party unity, but the GOP conservative wing says it will field its own candidate against him.</p>
        <p>Hawke, 45, managed Martins 1984 campaign and is director of policy and planning in the state Department of Administration. He vowed Tuesday to build the GOPs grassroots organization and said he would extend to the partys New Right wing an open hand to join with me ... to bring about victory in North Carolina.</p>
        <p>But Carter Wrenn, executive director of the National Congressional Club, called Hawke a Martin partisan whos been closely associated with the country-club wing of the Republican Party. I think you can see why he wouldnt be viewed by conservatives as a compromise candidate.</p>
        <p>Wrenn called Hawke a nice guy and said a battle over the chairmanship would not hurt the party.</p>
        <p>I dont think theres going to be a bloodletting, Wrenn said. I do think there are real differences between the conservative wing of the Republican Party and the country-club wing ... that need to be debated.</p>
        <p>However, tension between the two sides was evident. Hawke said he earned his conservative credentials as an aide to former GOP Chairman Jim Gardner in the late 1960s when there was no such thing as a Congressional Club, and the leaders of the Congressional Club were still registered Democrats, I believe.</p>
        <p>Wrenn called the remark unfortunate.</p>
        <p>That sort of denigrates people whove switched over to the Republican Party, Wrenn said. If it hadnt been for those people, you wouldnt have had a Ronald Reagan or a Jesse Helms.</p>
        <p>Martin had negotiated with Helms and Wrenn in an attempt to find a</p>
        <p>compromise chairman, but said 'Tuesday in announcing his endorsement of Hawke that the negotiations had failed.</p>
        <p>I of course am disappointed that we were not able to reach an agreement so that we would be able to have a combined endorsement, Martin said in a crowded news conference at state GOP headquarters.</p>
        <p>Martin said he would recommend that the state Republican Executive Committee elect Hawke interim chairman at its Jan. 31 meeting in Winston-Salem.</p>
        <p>The new chairman will complete the unexpired term of Bob Bradshaw, who is stepping down to return to his Charlotte law practice. Hawke said he also intended to seek a full two-year term at the GOP state convention in May.</p>
        <p>Both sides said they did not expect the squabble to plunge the state GOP into a repeat of its mid-1970s civil war, when allies of Helms and former Gov. Jim Holshouser battled for supremacy in the party.</p>
        <p>I dont think theres any rancor that would lead to any rupture or rift in the party, Martin said. He acknowledged there were differences, but described them as normal in a growing organization and said his talks with Helms and Club leaders had been cordial.</p>
        <p>The conversion of many conservative Democrats to the GOP in the 1960s and 1970s led to conflict between the newcomers and traditional Republicans, who generally are less dogmatic than Helms and his allies.</p>
        <p>The two sides reached an uneasy</p>
        <p>truce after the mid-70s, but the feud was rekindled last year in the U.S. Senate primary race between former Sen. Jim Broyhill, a leader of the partys traditional wing, and David Funderburk, former U.S. ambassador to Romania and the Congressional Clubs handpicked candidate to succeed the late Sen. John East.</p>
        <p>Wrenn said the Broyhill wing of the party bases its appal on mush-ball politics and pragmatism, downplaying ideology. The Helms wing emphasizes staunch conservatism popular with right-wing Democrats from eastern North Carolina whose support Republicans must have to win, Wrenn said.r SOMETHING NEW </p>
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        <pb facs="00096520_0107" />
        <p>IN THE STATE</p>
        <p>\</p>
        <p>The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.</p>
        <p>Wednesday, January 21,1987</p>
        <p>Insurance</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP) - Nearly a halfmillion of the states working poor  from shop clerks to gas station attendants - have no health insurance coverage, a legislative panel has been told.</p>
        <p>A Duke University study shows many of them do not make enough money to pay all their medical bills. The working poor, along with the unemployed ^r, left North Carolina hospitals with an unpaid medical bill of $242 million last year.</p>
        <p>Duke researcher C. Johnston Conover told a subcommmittee of the Indigent Care Study Commission Tuesday that 55.6 percent of the 872,000 state residents with no health insurance had full-time jobs.</p>
        <p>The same group, he said, also tends to have more need for medical care than people with health insurance.</p>
        <p>Charged</p>
        <p>FORT BRAGG, N.C. (AP) - Three Fort Bragg soldiers have been charged in connection with a theft of two submachine guns that led authorities to confine 500 soldiers to the base, officials said Tuesday.</p>
        <p>Army specialist Michael R. Hof-bauer of the 18th Airborne Corps mblic affairs office said Pfc. Adam j. Berman, 19, was charged with conspiracy to commit larceny, two counts of larceny and one count of possession of an unregistered machine gun.</p>
        <p>Pfc. David K. Wimbish, 21, was charged with one count of conspiracy to commit larceny, one count of larceny, one count of wrongfully receiving stolen property ana one count of possessing an unregistered machine gun, Hofbauer said.</p>
        <p>Pfc. Larry McKenzie, 19, was charged with one count of accessory after the fact of larceny, one count of receiving stolen property and one count of possessing an unregistered machine gun.</p>
        <p>All three were assigned to Company E, 407th Supply and Service Batallion of the 82nd Airborne Division, Hofbauer said.</p>
        <p>Twice Burned</p>
        <p>MOUNTAIN PARK, N.C. (AP) -Frankie S. Jenkins hail been released from the burn center at Baptist Hospital for only a few hours when she was a victim of a second fire early Tuesday morning.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Jenkins trailer was destroyed by fire on Dec. 31, and she suffered smoke inhalation and second-degree burns over 20 percent of her body. She was in critical condition for several days at the burn center.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Jenkins wasnt burned in the fire Tuesday, but she got so upset that she hyperventilated. The fire did about $23,000 damage to the home of Mrs. Jenkins grandmother.</p>
        <p>Murder Plea</p>
        <p>ELIZABETH CITY, N.C. (AP) - A former Fort Bragg soldier charged with hiring another man to kill a woman who spurned him pleaded guilty Tuesday to first-degree murder in the case, officials said.</p>
        <p>Latchmie Toolasprashad, 23, faces a mandatory sentence of life imprisonment, but had several related federal firearms charges dismissed in exchange for his plea. No sentencing date was scheduled.</p>
        <p>Judge Terrence Boyle in U.S. District Court ordered Toolasprashad held at the Federal Correctional Center in Butner pending completion of a pre-sentencing report.</p>
        <p>The defendant was charged in the December 1985 shotgun slaying of</p>
        <p>Spec. 4 Beverly Ann Dozier. In a recent hearing, Toolasprashad had pleaded not guilty by reason of insanity.</p>
        <p>Parents Upset Over Proposals To Consolidate Schools For Deaf</p>
        <p>Dormitory</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP) - A Tennessee company wants to build a 14-story privately owned dormitory near N.C. State University that would house 949 students.</p>
        <p>Allen &amp;amp; OHara Inc. of Memphis has filed plans to build the $15 million dormitory on 1.61 acres owned by Raleigh developer and real estate broke M.E. Valentine.</p>
        <p>The site also is where N.C. State University officials announced earlier this month they want to build a $7 million, 1,200-space parking deck with three or four stories.</p>
        <p>Agency Awarded</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP) - The administration of Republican Gov. Jim Martin, which recently canceled the contract of a Democratic businessman to run a license plate office in Cary, has awarded the job to a Republican with party ties.</p>
        <p>The Division of Motor Vehicles gave the new contract to Marla Ann Pearson, a Raleigh loan processor and wife of Ernest C. Pearson, who is chairman of the 4th Congressional District Republican Party and a former chairman of the Wake GOP.</p>
        <p>As far as politics being involved ... the division acknowledges that political connections exist with this selection, James E. Rhodes, director of vehicle registration for the state, said Monday. But politics was not the determining factor in the selection of Mrs. Pearce for this position, though it certainly did not hurt.</p>
        <p>Hotline</p>
        <p>GREENSBORO (AP) - Telephone hotlines in North Carolina and Ohio have been launched to help older people confused by changes in Medicare payment.</p>
        <p>The hotlines have been started by the American Association of Retired Persons, a nonprofit, nonpartisan group with some 24.5 million members.</p>
        <p>John Denning of Clinton, president of the association, toured the Triad Monday to promote the new hotline, whose toll-free number is 1-800-527-5226.</p>
        <p>Denning, 75, the former superintendent of the Sampson County Schools, said trained operators are on hand from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. to answer questions about Medicares payment schedules -by diagnosis-related groups.</p>
        <p>Conference</p>
        <p>DURHAM (AP) - To help doctors and family care-givers identify and cope with Alzheimers Disease, the Joseph and Kathleen Bryant Alzheimers Disease Research Center at Duke University Medical Center is sponsoring the first of what will be a series of annual conferences on the disease.</p>
        <p>The conference will be held Feb. 10 and 11. On the first day, neuroscientists from across the country will report on work in progress. On the second day, a talk titled Bridging Research and Practice will introduce a series of presentations on new diagnostic, treatment and coping strategies for Alzheimers patients and their families.</p>
        <p>By The Associated Press Parents of children at schools for the deaf in Wilson and Morganton say they may be forced to enroll their children in public schools if a state task force recommendation to consolidate high school programs in Greensboro is approved.</p>
        <p>Wanda Griffin, who drives her son from North Wilkesboro to Morganton each day for a preschool program, says she eventually will have to enroll him in public school if the high school program leaves Morganton.</p>
        <p>We cannot uproot and move to Greensboro, she said. A lot of these parents are not going to uproot their families.</p>
        <p>Mainstreaming is difficult for any deaf child, Mrs. Griffin said.</p>
        <p>Cause up there (at the school for the deaf) they are all alike, she said. Theyve got their friends. They can talk to each other. You throw them in public school, no one can talk to them. Theyre going to feel like outsiders.</p>
        <p>Elevations in Pitt County range from approximately 10 to 75 feet above mean sea level with the highest elevations occuring along the extreme western boundary of the county.</p>
        <p>A 23-member task force set up to study what could be done to improve the states schools for the deaf and make them more cost-efficient announced Monday that it would recommend that the two high schools be consolidated by the fall of 1991. The task force also recommended studying a consolidation of all residential education programs at one school by 2000.</p>
        <p>Officials from the state Division of Human Resources have estimated the cost of establishing a new high school in Greensboro at around $7.3 million but say it would save about $600,000 in annual operating costs.</p>
        <p>Brenda Patton, a member of the task force and the mother of a student at the Morganton school, said her family moved to Morganton five years ago because they like the school and the community. She said many other parents of deaf children have relocated for the same reason.</p>
        <p>Where do you draw the line on education and family life? she said. Most of these parents are very concerned about their children and are very involved in their education. Theyre not willing to bus their children to Greensboro or anywhere else for that matter.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Patton said she thinks that parents of children at the schools in</p>
        <p>Morganton and Wilson will join efforts to maintain the high school programs at both schools.</p>
        <p>East and west historically have fought over high school programming, but now the lines of communication are wide open to maintain their high school programs, she said.</p>
        <p>I agree something needs to be done, but I dont agree that consolidating and building a new $7 million school is the answer, said Natalie W. McKeel, whose 9-year-old son attends the school in Wilson. We moved here a year ago to be closer to the school, and now theyre talking about closing it.</p>
        <p>We have given up so much, it seems, and we re continuing asked to give up more, Mrs. McKeel said, its like we asked to have handi-</p>
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        <p>Human Resources Secretary Phil Kirk said Tuesday he understands parents concerns and said he is not ready to endorse the recommendation or dismiss t without further stu^.</p>
        <p>These are monumental decisions, Kirk said. I feel as strongly as anyone that families should not be disrupted any more than absolutely necessary.</p>
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        <pb facs="00096520_0108" />
        <p>Reagan Offers To Appear Before Iran-Contra Panel</p>
        <p>By W. DALE NELSON Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON (AP) - President Reagan has a date to be interviewed by the panel he named to review operations of the National Security Council, a spokesman for the panel says.</p>
        <p>Spokesman Herbert E. Hetu said the White House proposed a date for such a meeting on Tuesday and the three-member panel accepted. Neither Hetu nor White House spokesman Albert R. Brashear would disclose the date.</p>
        <p>The White House counsellor on the Iran-Contra issue, David Abshire, said the interview with Reagan would be in the very near future but not until after the presidents State of the Union message to Congress on Jan. 27.</p>
        <p>- Abshire, speaking to reporters as he emerged from a Senate nearing on the affairs of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, where he is winding up his service as ambassador, said there is absolutely</p>
        <p>no stonewalling by the White House QP the Iran-Contra issue.</p>
        <p>Three hearings on the Iran controversy were scheduled in Congress today.</p>
        <p>Secretary of State George P. Shultz was to appear before the House Foreign Affairs Committee to testify about the administrations Iran policy. The Senate Foreign Relations Committee was meeting across Capitol Hill at the same time and on the same subject. And later in the day, the House Select Committee on Iran</p>
        <p>was holding a closed-door organizational meeting.</p>
        <p>Meanwhile, former National Security Adviser Robert McFarlane said he was told by the White House last May that a deal had been worked out, with Reagans approval, to release all four U.S. hostages in Lebanon before McFarlane made his May 1986 trip to Iran with a planeload of weapons for the Iranians. He said the White House had instructed him not to negotiate while in Iran.</p>
        <p>McFarlane, in an interview that lasted into the early morning on</p>
        <p>Bush Confirms That Captors Tortured, Then Killed CIA's Chief In Lebanon</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP) - U.S. officials believe hostage William Buckley was tortured and then killed in 1985 by his captors in Lebanon, according to Vice President George Bush.</p>
        <p>Buckley, identified in published reports as CIA station chief in Beirut when he was kidnapped on March 16, 1984, has been believed dead since the Islamic Jihad terrorist organization announced in October 1985 that it had executed him.</p>
        <p>But U.S. officials had not confirmed it untl Bushs statement Tuesday. Former National Security Adviser Robert McFarlane said in an interview on ABCs Nightline that he was told of a deal whereby Buckleys body would be returned in Lebanon just after four living U.S. hostages were to be released. Only one</p>
        <p>hostage, David Jacobsen, was freed, however.</p>
        <p>Bush said the administration will explore every channel, run down every lead. We will go the extra mile to free those hostages.</p>
        <p>Bush, who is a former CIA director, did not specify which government agency Buckley worked for and did not say how he was sure that Buckley was dead.</p>
        <p>Saying that Reagan did not try to trade arms for hostages. Bush added, At the same time, you should know the concern that the president feels when an American in terrorist hands is tortured, and in the case of William Buckley, killed.</p>
        <p>The vice presidents press secretary, Marlin Fitzwater, said the statement on Buckleys death reflects an acceptance of the situation as we know it. The problem is</p>
        <p>Mr. Buckleys body has not been recovered. It has been difficult to acknowledge his death in the past, he added.</p>
        <p>Bush, who headed a presidential task force on terrorism in 1985-86, drew the distinction between contacting terrorists and bargaining with them, a point that has been made by other administration officials.</p>
        <p>1 believe we must reaffirm our policy with a better understanding that there is a very thin and delicate line between talking with terrorists and negotiating with terrorists, Bush said.</p>
        <p>We do not make concessions to terrorists, Bush said. We do not pay ransoms. We do not release prisoners. We do not encourage other countries to give in to terrorists. And we do not agree to other acts that might encourage future terrorism.</p>
        <p>ABCs Nightline, said if any laws were broken in the affair, the president certainly didnt do it and didnt authorize anyone else to.</p>
        <p>A White House official, who declined to be identified, confirmed Tuesday that Reagan was briefed in the Oval Office on Dec. 19 by Sen. David Durenberger, R-Minn., then chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee which had been investigating the Iran affair, including the alleged diversion of profits to Nicaraguas Contra rebels.</p>
        <p>The official called the meeting a very brief update on what happened, a discussion of (the fact that) we wanted to get the story out but that there were problems due to the refusal of fired National Security Adviser Adviser Vice Adm. John Poindexter and staff member Lt. Col. Oliver North to testify.</p>
        <p>In our minds, it was not highly irregular, said the official, adding that Durenberger also briefed Vice President George Bush the next day.</p>
        <p>Brashear saia that Reagan has met twice with Chief of Staff Donald T. Regan for lengthy discussions touching on the presidents recollection of events chronicling the clandestine sales of U.S. arms to Iran.</p>
        <p>Brashear told reporters in the</p>
        <p>White House briefing room that the presidents orders from his doctors to take it easy for awhile impeded his ability to come down here, or in any other forum, and take individual questions on the issue.</p>
        <p>The president has been spending part of each day in the Oval Office, and Brashear said his work time in the office will be gradually increased this week. No public appearances have been scheduled, however.</p>
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        <p>By ED BLANCHE Associated Press Writer</p>
        <p>NICOSIA, Cyprus (AP) - Irac said today its jet fighters bombee four Iranian cities, including the holy city of Qom, after its ground forces halted an Iranian advance on the southern Iraqi provincial capital of Basra.</p>
        <p>Iran meanwhile said overnight fighting east of Basra left 1,500 more Iraqi troops killed or injured, bringing to 33,000 the number of Iraqi casualties Iran has claimed since beginning its push toward Basra on Jan. 9.</p>
        <p>Irans official Islamic Republic News Agency, monitored in Nicosia, did not report major new advances toward the city overnight.</p>
        <p>Iran had claimed Tuesday to have ambushed Iraqi troops less than 6 miles east of Basra, also killing or wounding 1,500 enemy soldiers. Iraq denied the claim and said the city, its second largest, was in no danger of falling into enemy hands.</p>
        <p>An Iraqi military spokesman told state-run Baghdad Radio that fighter-jets launched a devastating raid at 4:45 a.m. on IJom, about 60 miles south of the Iranian capital of Tehran.</p>
        <p>He said other jets simultaneously bombed Hamadan and Dezful in western Iran and Isfahan in the</p>
        <p>south, reducing their targets to rubble.</p>
        <p>Qom and Hamadan were among five Iranian cities bombed by Iraqi planes on Tuesday, and Iran said 1,57 civilians were killed in those raids. Iran did not immediately respond to the latest Iraqi claim.</p>
        <p>The Iraqi military spokesman, who was not identified by the broadcast monitored in Nicosia, said the air strikes were designed to punish the criminal enemy for its recent ugly crimes.</p>
        <p>His remark apparently was a reference to Irans firing of a surface-to-surface missile at Baghdad on Monday. Iran said the target was the headquarters of Iraqs ruling Baath Party, but Iraq said it crashed in a residential neighborhood and killed an unspecified number of civilians.</p>
        <p>The Iraqi air force has maintained air supremacy since the two countries began fighting in September 1980. The military spokesman said todays raids should have taught the charlatans in Qom a real lesson."</p>
        <p>Most of Irans ruling clergymen have homes in Qom. But revolutionary patriarch Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, according to Tehran sources, has been spending most of his time at his residence in Jamaran, north of the capital.</p>
        <p>Iran has claimed its forces broke</p>
        <p>through Iraqi defenses and are inching toward Basra. IRNA said Tuesday that^ Iranian forces ambushed Iraqi troops west of the Jasim River, less than 6 miles east of Basra.</p>
        <p>Iranian warplanes bombed Iraqi positions and troop concentrations in the region five times Tuesday, inflicting substantial casualties and losses, IRNA claimed.</p>
        <p>But an Iraqi military communique said Iraqi troops fought off three Iranian ground attacks in the area Tuesday night and the corpses of Iranian fighters were littering the battlefield.</p>
        <p>The fall of Basra, a city of 1 million people, would be a major blow to the government of Iraqi President Saddam Hussein.</p>
        <p>In Washington, Pentagon spokesman Robert Sims said Tuesday that talk of the citys fall was premature.</p>
        <p>Contrary to some reports and some claims, I have nothing to indicate that Basra is in imminent danger of falling, although their</p>
        <p>(Iranian) shelling there has been intense^ at times in the past few weeks, he said.</p>
        <p>A foreign military analyst in Iraq capital of Baghdad, speaking on condition of anonymity, said he was reasonably confident the main Iraqi defense line east of Basra could stop an Iranian assault.</p>
        <p>Dry terrain replaces the border marshes on the approaches to Basra, giving Iraqs highly mechanized army an advantage over the human wave infantry assaults favored by Iran.</p>
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        <pb facs="00096520_0109" />
        <p>The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C._Wednesday.  January  21,1987  /^.g</p>
        <p>. .  I w 1..^, . w, &amp;gt; &amp;gt; , WCII mqi y ^ I, I yofCourt To Rule On Freedoms For High School Papers</p>
        <p>By DAVID G. SAVAGE L.A. Times-Washington Post News Service</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON  The Supreme Court agreed Tuesday to decide whether the Constitutions guarantee of freedom of the press extends to a high school newspaper.</p>
        <p>The case poses the right of students to report on subjects of interest to their readers  in this instance, on teen-age pregnancies and divorce by their parents  against the responsibility of school officials to control the curriculum.</p>
        <p>In July, an appeals court ruled that the First Amendment covered high school newspapers and declared that students could publish what they wished, as long as the stories would not materially disrupt the school atmosphere or lead to a lawsuit against school officials.</p>
        <p>But, in appealing to the Supreme Court, officials argued that the school  not the students  publishes the paper and that the principal has the final authority over what is printed.</p>
        <p>In a 1969 case involving students wearing black armbands to protest the Vietnam War, the Supreme Court said young people do not shed their constitutional rights to freedom of speech or expression at the schoolhousedoor.</p>
        <p>Recently, however, the justices have appeared to be backing away from that broad declaration.</p>
        <p>Two years ago, for example, in a case involving a New Jersey school girl with drugs in her purse, the Supreme Court said students do not have the same rights as adults to be</p>
        <p>Five Killed As Aircraft Hit, Crash</p>
        <p>INDEPENDENCE, Mo. (AP) - A private plane and military aircraft collided over one of the Armys largest munitions plant, killing a brigadier general and the four other people on the planes, authorities said.</p>
        <p>Debris from the U-21 twin-engine turbo-prop military plane burst into flames Tuesday as it fell near buildings at the 3,900-acre Lake City Army Ammunition Plant 20 miles east of Kansas City. There was no danger of explosions.</p>
        <p>The worst case would have been a small fire, said safety specialist Ken Roggenkamp.</p>
        <p>Bill Melton, the Armys chief engineer at the plant, said the buildings were reinforced and materials such as gunpowder and propellants were stored separately. He said the only damage was a brief power failure.</p>
        <p>Lt. Col. John Garlinger, public affairs officer at Fort Leavenworth, Kan., said the military plane and twin-engine Piper Navajo collided at 7,000 feet, killing all aboard both aircraft.</p>
        <p>Brig. Gen. David H. Stem, commandant of the military police school and deputy commandant general at Fort McClellan, Ala., was presumed dead pending positive identification of the remains, the Army said in statement from Washington.</p>
        <p>Army spokesman Maj. Bill Auer identified the dead pilot of the U-21 as Maj. Michael G. Johnston of Alexandria, Ala.</p>
        <p>The identities of the civilian copilot of the military plane and the two people aboard the private aircraft were withheld pending positive identification.</p>
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        <p>free from unreasonable searches and seizures without search warrants. Instead, it ruled, school officials need only a reasonable suspicion of wrongaoing to search students.</p>
        <p>And last July, the justices ruled that a high school student has no right to make a lewd and offensive speech in a school assembly.</p>
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        <p>ings on school ne' Supreme Ccourt has not jbject.</p>
        <p>Iers, the ed on the subject.</p>
        <p>Were not too confident they (the justices) appreciate the right to student free speech, said Mark Goodman, director of the Student Press Law Center in Washington. These were well-written newspapr stories about topics that are of vital interest to high school students, he said.</p>
        <p>On the other side, Gwendolyn Gregory, counsel for the National School Boards Association, said it trivializes the First Amendment to suggest that student reporters have the full right to freedom of the press. This was not a state censoring a privately owned newspapr. This was aprt of the school curriculum, said Gregory, who had urged the court to hear this case.</p>
        <p>The case arose in 1983 when the principl of the Hazelwood East High ^hool, near St. Louis, deleted two pages of the student newspaper that contained personal accounts of students who had become pregnant or whose parents had been divorced.</p>
        <p>Three reprters, include Cathy Kuhlmeier, filed suit, alleging that their First Amendment rights had been violated. A District Court</p>
        <p>dismissed the suit, concluding that the principal had acted correctly to protect the privacy of students and prents named in the stories. The U.S. 8th Circuit Court of Appeals reversed that ruling on a 2-1 vote and said the lower court should consider awarding damaps to the students.</p>
        <p>The justices will hear arguments in the case of Hazelwood School District vs. Kuhlmeier, 86-836, in the fall.</p>
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        <p>Sell PRICE A ^</p>
        <p>Retail $450.00.</p>
        <p>6' X 9' Wool Chinese Thick Pile Rugs</p>
        <p>$100</p>
        <p>4 To SALE I # # Sell PRICE ^ ^ ^</p>
        <p>Retail $220.00. 42'X66'</p>
        <p>Wool Rugs</p>
        <p>Mno</p>
        <p>12 To SALE 1 Sell PRICE JL W ^</p>
        <p>Retail $130.00. T X 4' Wool Chinese Rugs</p>
        <p>20 To SALE 1 1 A  Sell price</p>
        <p>Retail $150.00.</p>
        <p>3 Ft. Round Wool Chinese Rugs</p>
        <p>^70</p>
        <p>10 To SALE m \ m Sell PRICE m</p>
        <p>Retail $250.00.</p>
        <p>4' X 4' Round Wool Chinese Rugs</p>
        <p>$100</p>
        <p>To sale</p>
        <p>Sell PRICE A mm ^</p>
        <p>ketail $325.00.</p>
        <p>2' 3 X 8' Chinese Wool Runners</p>
        <p>$11Q</p>
        <p>10 To SALE I Sv ^ Sell PRICE 4IL M ^ ,</p>
        <p>Retail $1300.00. 8' X 10' Indian Wool Rugs</p>
        <p>b To SALE . 1 ^ ^ 1 Sell PRICE V ^ V</p>
        <p>Retail $1695.00.</p>
        <p>9 X12' Indian Wool Rugs</p>
        <p>^70*1</p>
        <p>bio SALE # ^.1 Sell PRICE m ^ V</p>
        <p>THIS IS JUST A PARTIAL LISTING OF RUGS NOW ON SALE.</p>
        <p>Retail $140.00. Pillow Back Cane Side Arm Chairs</p>
        <p>SALE PRICE</p>
        <p>Exquisite velvet fabric in four rich colors.</p>
        <p>Retail $230.00. Tall Back Cane Arm Chairs In Rich Velvet</p>
        <p>SALE PRICE</p>
        <p>Deep hand tufted back. Fruitwood trim</p>
        <p>Special Direct Import Of White Wicker Bedroom Pieces!!</p>
        <p>Retail 395. White Wicker Vanity Desk &amp;amp; Matching</p>
        <p>Tall Back Chair</p>
        <p>SALE PRICE</p>
        <p>Save $100.00 To $155.00. On Wicker Dressers.</p>
        <p>Retail $495.00. 42 Double Dresser</p>
        <p>One Drawer. Glass Top.</p>
        <p>SALE</p>
        <p>PRICE</p>
        <p>*340</p>
        <p>Six Drawers Wicker</p>
        <p>Retail $595.00 58'" Double Dresser</p>
        <p>SALE</p>
        <p>PRICE</p>
        <p>495</p>
        <p>Six Long Drawers. 60" Wide. 3 To Sell</p>
        <p>Retail 230. Twin Size Headboard</p>
        <p>SALE</p>
        <p>Retail $400. Large 5 Drawer Chest. . . price</p>
        <p>*275</p>
        <p>Retail 360. Lingerie Chest. 5 Drawers rrice</p>
        <p>ir. ^449</p>
        <p>Retail 750. Twin Headboard &amp;amp; 2 Nite Stands..</p>
        <p>SALE</p>
        <p>PRICE</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0110" />
        <p>A-10 The Daily Reflector. Greenville, N.C.</p>
        <p>Wednesday. January 21,1987</p>
        <p>DKKKIS STOHKI)  Workmen at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station con-Jinue the process of storin} debris recovered from the space shuttle Challen){er accident. Part of the left side of the orbiter is being lowered into an unused minnteman missile silo. The first anniversary of the accident will be on Jan. 2S. ( Al* l.aserphoto)</p>
        <p>Buchanan Bows</p>
        <p>Out Of GOP Race</p>
        <p>Bv KOKKHT SHOtiAN</p>
        <p>L.A. Tinies-Washinnttm INist News .Service</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON - While House communications director Patrick Buchanan, who had been considering running for the GOP presidential nomination, said Tuesday he had decided not to make the race to avoid splitting the conservative movement and hurting the prospects of New York Rep. Jack Kemp.</p>
        <p>Many con.servatives have urged me to enter the race, Buchanan said in a statement issued by the While House. But he also acknowledged that others advised him that his campaign would amount to the Picketts charge of the American right and that its only certain and predictable consequence would lie to mortally wound the campaign of Congressman .lack Kemp, whose service to lh(' cause has earned him an unimp(ded shot at the nomination.</p>
        <p>A hard-line conservative with a belligerent style, Buchanan was a long time aid( to former Pre.sident Nixon and then a newspap&amp;lt;*r columnist and broadcast commentator before joining the Reagan White House early in the presidents second term. Interest in his presidential candidacy among conservatives was sparked by his defense of Reagan against criticism of his handling of the Iran arms scandal.</p>
        <p>In characteristic fashion, Buchanan took the offensive against the presidents critics. In a newspaper column he excoriated Ui'publi-cians who headed for the tall grass</p>
        <p>rather than support Reagan. At a rally for conservatives here earlier this month, he charged that critics of the Iran-contra affair are not after the truth - theyre after Ronald Reagan.</p>
        <p>Some conservatives thought Buchanan would make a stronger candidate than either Kemp or television evangelist Pat Robertson, the two GOP prospects with the most claim on right-wing support. And even Buchanans adversaries conceded that he would make a forceful advocate of conservative beliefs as a presidential candidate.</p>
        <p>But political professionals pointed out that he had never sought elective office before and some thought voters might find his style abrasive.</p>
        <p>In withdrawing Buchanan said: I reluctantly yield to the argument that a Buchanan candidacy, launched in the near future would fractionate - and embitter  not unite the leaderhsip and rank-and-file of the conservative cause.</p>
        <p>In a statement of his own on Buchanans decision, Kemp hailed him as a great leader of the conservative movement and the pro-Reagan agenda, adding: I hope to work with him and other conservatives to advance the cause in which we both believe.</p>
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        <p>Next Shuttle May Have Escape Hatch But Still No Way To Ferry Astronauts</p>
        <p>By HARRY F. ROSENTHAL Associated Press Writer</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP) - When the space shuttle Discovery lifts off on the first post-Challenger mission next year, it may have an emergency escaj^ hatch but not a rocket system to blast astronauts away from the ship if they need to leave in a hurry.</p>
        <p>We do not feel comfortable at this time in committing to that part of the system because we do not think studies of all the pros and cons and the balance between risk and gain have been completed, Richard Truly, the head of the shuttle program, said Tuesday in a year-after-Challenger review.</p>
        <p>He said, however, the agency will design and install explosives in the hatch doors of the three ships in the fleet and in the replacement for the Challenger, which was destroyed on liftoff a year ago.</p>
        <p>Modification work on Discovery will have to start before mid-April if it is to be completed in time for the scheduled Feb. 18, 1988, liftoff, but the shuttle will fly even if the work is not done, Truly said.</p>
        <p>The modifications will cost $45 million.</p>
        <p>Such an escape system would not have saved the seven astronauts who died in the Challenger explosion on Jan. 28 last year. It would be useful only when a shuttle is in level, gliding flight below 20,000 feet - such as an emergency ditching at sea. Individual parachutes and survival equipment will also be put on the shuttles.</p>
        <p>After a long study, its clear this hatch-jettison modification to the orbiter will be a true enhancement to</p>
        <p>safety not only with the very far-out potential of providing a bail-out capability from stable fli^t, but also will have advantages in incidents that might occur on the runway, Truly said.</p>
        <p>A crew member bailing out of the shuttle could smash against the crafts wing or tail unless pulled clear by rockets, according to a study at the Johnson Space Center in Houston.</p>
        <p>We just do not understand the risk</p>
        <p>versus gains, Truly said. We intend to do some wind tunnel experiments.</p>
        <p>At least 200 changes are being made on the shuttles. Twenty are on the shuttle engines, and 13 to 15 modifications are involved in the booster rocket joints and seals, said Arnold. Aldrich, who was appointed director of the space transportation system in a space agency management shakeup.</p>
        <p>In the investigation that followed the Jan. 28 explosion, it was learned</p>
        <p>that waivers had been issued on the last six flights of the reusable space plane  including Challengers - to Ignore problems with the solid rocket boosters that otherwise would have grounded the ships.</p>
        <p>All such waivers have been canceled, Aldrich said, and none will be issued in the future unless the decision is made at headquarters. There is also a complete revamping of how launch commitments are made and for flight procedures.</p>
        <p>Cropland Bonus Is Available</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP) - Farmers will have a fourth  and sweeter  opportunity to deposit highly erodible cropland in the Conservation Reserve Program during a Feb. 9-27 signup period. Agriculture Secretary Richard E.Lyng says.</p>
        <p>The sweetener is a one-time, one-year bonus that will be available to get vulnerable corn land out of production, he said. The bonuses will be paid in the form of generic certificates redeemable in surplus government-owned commodities at the rate of $2 for each bushel of normal</p>
        <p>long-term conservation use, Lyng said.</p>
        <p>The bonus offer is limited to new CRP contracts beginning with the 1987 crop year, he said. It is not retroactive for corn base acreage</p>
        <p>under CRP contracts already signed. The payments will be made at the</p>
        <p>time new 1987 contracts are signed.</p>
        <p>More than 8.9 million acres of highly erodible cropland were ac-cept&amp;amp;d for retirement under the CRP during three signup periods last year. The goal, as spelled out by Congress in the Food Security Act of</p>
        <p>1985, is to remove 40 million to 45 million acres of highly erodible cropland from production.</p>
        <p>Under the program, farmers agree to take their land out of production for 10 years. In return, based on bids they submit, farmers get annual rental payments from the government and one-time assistance pay for half the cost of planting trees and grass to guard against erosion.</p>
        <p>In the three previous signups, the annual bids accepted for the program ranged from $42.82 per acre to $46.94 per acre.</p>
        <p>yield on land put into the program, the</p>
        <p>referred to as the CRP.</p>
        <p>Since a paid land diversion is in effect under the 1987 feed grain program to restrain further buildup of corn stocks, this rental payment is being offered to encourage highly erodible, excess corn acreage into</p>
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        <p>BM</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0111" />
        <p>The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C._Wednesday.  January  21,1987 A-H</p>
        <p>By MARK FRITZ Associated Press Writer</p>
        <p>CLIMAX, Mich. (AP) - The sign for this historic little village often draws double takes from motorists on Interstate 94. Some even try to steal it,</p>
        <p>Its tough keeping signs around here, said hardware store owner A1 Hoover.</p>
        <p>However, replacements might not be necessary soon, as residents vote Thursday whether the village of Climax should cease to exist.</p>
        <p>Some residents say merging the one-stoplight village with rural Climax Township would lower the cost of local services. Others say it would mean a loss of control and identity.</p>
        <p>I had a great-great-grandfather who help^ settle this land in 1836, said Maxine McNutt, who has lived in the village all of her 69 years. It took 150 years to get this far and itd be a shame if we got rid of the village.</p>
        <p>Former village President Steve Johnson, who collected the 102 petition signatures to put the issue to a vote, said Tuesday that disincorpora-tion would lower taxes and make services more efficient.</p>
        <p>I just think the village form of government is obsolete and the township form of government has the power, he said. We have so many duplications.</p>
        <p>The move to disincorporate must be approved by at least two-thirds of the villages 370 registered voters, or 247 people. The Kalamazoo County Board of Commissioners would have the final say at its annual meeting in October.</p>
        <p>Climax is about 15 miles from both Kalamazoo and Battle Creek and almost midway between Detroit and Chicago.</p>
        <p>The area encompassed by Climax Township was founded in 1835 and the population center within it was incorporated as a separate village in 1899. The township has 1,978 residents, white 1,619 live in the village.</p>
        <p>In 1896, Congress singled out the area for an experiment with rural free delivery. Today, a monument stands in the village center, built with stones from each of the 300 farms on Americas first RFD route.</p>
        <p>Gun Crackdown</p>
        <p>DETROIT (AP) - The number of guns found in and near public schools has been cut in half due to a crackdown by police, prosecutors and school officials on students and parents, a spokeswoman said.</p>
        <p>Twenty-three students have been caught with guns this school year,' compared with 47 during the same period last school year, Detroit School District spokeswoman Marie Furcron said.</p>
        <p>During the 1985-86 school year, 106 guns were taken from public school students, she said.</p>
        <p>Under the districts policy, students caught with guns are expelled but often allowed to attend special night or day classes, Furcron said.</p>
        <p>The area also is known for its unusual name and the tongue-in-cheek comments it provokes. A village store sells souvenir t-shirts trading on the monikers off-color connotations.</p>
        <p>Residents are good-natured about the occasional ribbing about the town, which got its name because it climaxed the original inhabitants search for a place to settle.</p>
        <p>I never heard jokes about it until I went to orientation at college and learned to be embarrassed, said Marilyn Woodman.</p>
        <p>Except for lower taxes, little would change in Climax if it were to cease being a village, said Township Supervisor Allan Hayward, who is tax assessor for the township and the village.</p>
        <p>The villages mystique could be preserved while getting rid of its cumbersome form of government, Hayward said. Michigan is divided into townships, which sometimes overlap with villages or, as in the case of Climax Township, contain them.</p>
        <p>Among those against disincorpora-tion is Village Clerk Lucille Betz, who lives in the house she was born in 69 years ago and said she doubts county road crews could remove snow as quickly as village plows.</p>
        <p>Im kind of supposed to sit on the fence, but I have lived here all my life and would hate to see the village go, she said.</p>
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        <p>CORRECTION</p>
        <p>In the Sears sale section in todays paper on page #10, the #29124 Ergometer Bike sale priced $199.99 is not available.</p>
        <p>We regret any inconvenience that this may cause.</p>
        <p>SEARS, ROEBUCK &amp;amp; CO.</p>
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        <p>DIVIDED TOWN  Climax, Mich., residents Kyle and Anita Smith engage in horseplay near the water tower in the town, where residents will vote Thursday on whether to dissolve the village. Smith says hell vote to end the village, while his wife says shell vote to keep it. (AP Laserphoto)</p>
        <p>Village Of Climax May Be Near End</p>
        <p>Louie's</p>
        <p>SALE ENDS JAN. 26,1987</p>
        <p>12' Automatic Electric Heat Tape</p>
        <p>Single element Electric One-year limited warranty Glass-lined tank #26325</p>
        <p>Fiberglass Pipe Wrap</p>
        <p>Protective Faucet Freeze Cap</p>
        <p>Water Heater Blanket</p>
        <p>$099</p>
        <p>Regular $7.99 #24414</p>
        <p>Kerosene Heater</p>
        <p>$7099</p>
        <p>m  10.500  BTU</p>
        <p>Auto ignition &amp;amp; extinguishing #30487</p>
        <p>2 Gallons K-1 Kerosene</p>
        <p>$599</p>
        <p>#30555</p>
        <p>Propane Torch Kit</p>
        <p>14 ounce cylinder Stainless stell tube Solid brass burner Up to 15 hours burning time #91312</p>
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        <p>Rebate ends 7/15/87 Limit 2 #4007931.2.4,91</p>
        <p>With fan</p>
        <p>Automatic ignition #30489</p>
        <p>13,500 BTU Kerosene Heater</p>
        <p>Woodchief Heater____</p>
        <p> Burns wood up to 2 feel in length</p>
        <p> Firebrick-lined firebox</p>
        <p> Cast iron grates #37370</p>
        <p>*209</p>
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        <pb facs="00096520_0112" />
        <p>Lifestyle</p>
        <p>Mother And Daughter Recognized Nationally</p>
        <p>ByJANEWELBORN Reflector Staff Writer</p>
        <p>Successful women abound in the 1980s, but it is unusual to find two nationally recognized females in the same family in the same year.</p>
        <p>A mother and daughter from Burlington each have received countrywide acclaim - the mother for her teaching ability and the daughter for her beauty and intelligence.</p>
        <p>Donna Oliver, the North Carolina Teacher of the Year, has been selected as one of four finalists in national competition for the best teacher. Her 21-year-old daughter, Rachel, recently was crowned Miss Black USA.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Oliver was in Greenville</p>
        <p>together this year has been limited because each of them has such a hectic schedule.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Oliver will leave Monday for New York, where she will be interviewed by Good Housekeeping magazine. She will then go to Washington for the national Teacher of the Year competition. The award will be presented in April by President Ronald Reagan.</p>
        <p>Tuesday to y)eak to education ma-t East C^r(</p>
        <p>jors at East Carolina University. She was accompanied by her daughter, who happened to be in Burlington for a short visit.</p>
        <p>The Olivers said their time</p>
        <p>I am serving as an ambassador for education, she said. I spread the gospel of education throughout the state. She has taken a years leave of absence from teaching biology at Cummings High School in Burlington, a job she has had for 13 years. She was named Teacher of the Year for her school, the school system, the region and the state before being considered for the national award.</p>
        <p>College in Boston, has taken a break from school in order to travel the country as the winner of the Miss Black USA pageant. She has had television appearances and newspaper and magazine interviews throughout the country. She was named Miss Black Massachusetts before winning the national title in October.</p>
        <p>The sad part is, I would love to travel with Rachel, but we have to go our separate ways, Mrs. Oliver said.</p>
        <p>Both mother and daughter expressed support and pride for the other. They said they have encouraged each other to reach for their dreams.</p>
        <p>She said that in pageants, I can show my talent. I can get up there and be an actress - be the star I always wanted to be and I am trying tobe.</p>
        <p>Miss Oliver sang the ballad Too Shy to Say by Stevie Wonder in the Miss Black USA competition. She said she has had one year of formal voice training, but has been singing since I was 4 years old in the church, thanks to my mom, who directed the choir or accompanied me.</p>
        <p>Since the age of 15,1 have always liked the platform pageants offered, said Miss Oliver. She entered her</p>
        <p>Miss Oliver, a student at Emerson</p>
        <p>first pageant at her high school, and tne title o'*"</p>
        <p>won School.</p>
        <p>! of Miss Cummings High</p>
        <p>Miss Oliver said she plays the piano and guitar and has been in the recording studio singing background vocals for recordings. She is a radio broadcasting major who hopes to try her luck in Hollywood after she completes her degree. She has participated in musicals and plays while in school.</p>
        <p>She said that although her mother</p>
        <p>Stitches Add Spark To Sleeves</p>
        <p>had never entered pageants, she encouraged her to do so.</p>
        <p>My big dream at age 14 was to becorne the first black Miss America, Miss Oliver said. Vanessa Williams beat me to it, but I still may enter the pageant.</p>
        <p>She said that she and her mother have worked hard for the titles they have received.</p>
        <p>1 just thank God, ,Miss Oliver said. It has taken a lot of hard work. It is so wonderful that my mother and I both, after working so hard, have found success.</p>
        <p>Miss Oliver said she has enjoyed traveling the country and speaking to school groups. She said her message has been against taking illegal drugs and in support of students reaching for their dreams.</p>
        <p>I tell them that through faith and a lot of hard work they can do whatever they want, she said.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Oliver said that at her speaking engagements, she tries to raise the morale of teachers throughout the state.</p>
        <p>I have been concerned with the</p>
        <p>low morale among teachers, she said. For a while there was a real negativism. All we heard about were the bad things in the schools. I want to help restore the publics confidence in education ana educators.</p>
        <p>Right now, teacher salaries are a concern. Teacher salaries always have been low in North Carolina, but some things are being done to change that, she said. And the Basic Education Plan is bringing a parity to the schools that has been needed.</p>
        <p>If the teachers in the state feel better about themselves, the children will be the benefactors, she said. We are out here for what we can do for the young people.</p>
        <p>She said that when teachers are</p>
        <p>singled out and rewarded as Teacher of the</p>
        <p>of the Year, it raises their morales.</p>
        <p>She said that she and her daughter both are keeping journals of their adventures this year, and they may write a book about their experiences.</p>
        <p>My husband is a part of this team, Mrs. Oliver added. He is staying there (in Burlington) and keeping our feet on the ground.</p>
        <p>Youll make a fashion statement when you wear this designer sweater created especially for the woman who demands style and flair from her wardrobe. A flattering diagonal slash across the front is created with a shiny acrylic and mohair blend yarn. Modern but feminine, this sweater can be worn or weekends with pants or to work with a smart skirt. An exciting mix of patterns and stitches accentuate the rolled neckline and full dolman sleeves, creating the perfect loose-fitting top.</p>
        <p>For textured impact, the Point Ottoman pattern stitch u.sed on the sleeves and left side of the sweater front is hard to beat. To work it, you purl all stitches on the first two rows and knit all stitches on the third and fourth rows. These four rows are repeated throughout wherever this pattern stitch is used.</p>
        <p>Easy-to-follow directions are written for small/medium and large/ extra-large sizes with finished bust measurements of 40 and 42 inches respectively. The gauge is five stitches per inch.</p>
        <p>Pats Pointers</p>
        <p>By PAT TREXLER</p>
        <p>To obtain directions for making the Delicate Diagonal sweater, send your request for Leaflet No. z-01187 with $2 and a long, stamped, self-addressed envelope to : Pat Trexler Crafts, The Daily Reflector, P.O. Box 419148, Kansas City, Mo. 64141.</p>
        <p>Or you may order Kit no. k-011887 by sending a check or money order for $17.95 to Pat Trexler Crafts at the same address. The kit price includes shipping charges, full instructions and yarn in your choice of ecru with peach blush or lavender with orchid.</p>
        <p>Dear Pat: I have a complaint to air. Why dont you tell us the needle or hood size needed for the knit and crochet leaflets you offer? This would really help us decide if we want to make the item.-A Sometimes Disgruntled Fan.</p>
        <p>Meeting Place</p>
        <p>WKD.NKSDAV</p>
        <p>7:00 pni  (Irecnville/liU County</p>
        <p>Youth Couiuil mcots at the (roenvilli* Kocroation and Parks Dcpartmont, ( Vdar I.Kin*.</p>
        <p>7::U)p ni. - WintorvilU* .laym's moot at Jaycecllut</p>
        <p>8:(X) 0 m  - Narcotics Anonytnous</p>
        <p>mid week o|K*n meeting meets Paul's Kpiscopal Church</p>
        <p> p.m.  New Beginning Womens Alcoholic Anonymous meets at Saint Pauls Kpiscopal Church</p>
        <p>at St</p>
        <p>Inner Clock Gets Disoriented</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (API - Why does it seem so difficult to get started for work on Monday mornings'.' Scientists think it has to do with sleeping patterns.</p>
        <p>According to research, humans have biological inner clocks which try to regulate sleep patterns. When people keep regular sleeping schedules during the week and then stay up late and sleep late on weekends, the inner clwk is disoriented. The result is Blue Mondays.</p>
        <p>Jet lag, insomnia and shift work also throw off the inner clock. When schedules go against the bmly cliK'k. serious physical problems can devel op, including ulcers, heart problems and sleeping disorders.</p>
        <p>Scientists recommend maintaining a regular schedule of meals, work and exercise. When you stay up later than usual, try to wake within an hour of your regular rising time.</p>
        <p>nilRSDAY</p>
        <p>(i lio p m ~ .laycoes meet at Rotary Building</p>
        <p>f)::tO p.m.  Kxchange Club meets 7:(K) p.m.  (Ireenville Civitan Club meets at Three Steers I'.'M) pm  Overealers Anonymous meets at First Presbyterian Church 7:;) p m. - Duplicate bridge meets at Senior Center 8:00 p.m  Chapter i:t08 of the Women of the M(M)se meets 8:(K) p.m  VFW Auxiliary meets at Post Home 7:;to p m.  Kpilepsy Association of North Carolina. Coastal Plains Chapter, meets at Pitt County Mental lleath Center</p>
        <p>8:00 p m  Alateen, a mwting for children of alcoholics will mw't in room :52 of First Presbyterian Church 8:00 p m ~ Alcoholics Anonymous closed meeting at First Presbyterian Church 8:00 p m.  Serenity A1 Anon meets at First Presbyterian Chiirch, rMim :w 8:00 p m.  Frmlom Croup of Narcot</p>
        <p>ics Anonymous open meeting, St. Paul's Kpiscopal Church</p>
        <p>FRIDAY</p>
        <p>-- - -    _..nyr</p>
        <p>at St Pauls Kpiscopal Church 8:00 p m. - .Serenity Croup of Narcotics Anonymous has open discussion at St Pauls Kpiscopal Church 8 (HI p m Alcoholics Anonoymous traditions and step (newcomers) closed meeting at AA Building, Farniville Highway</p>
        <p>SATl'RDAY</p>
        <p>0 :U) a in.  Overeaters Anonymous Big Book meeting at First Preshyterian Church, Harvey Webb room, Kim Street</p>
        <p>1 :to p m Duplicate bridge meets at Senior (enter</p>
        <p>Savings Of Up To</p>
        <p>50%</p>
        <p>On All Fall And Winter Merchandise</p>
        <p>All Sales Final.</p>
        <p>Cash. MasterC'ard, Visa or American F.xpress No Return and No In Store Charges</p>
        <p>Newest Spring Merchandise Arriving Daily!</p>
        <p>Open Monday thru Saturday 10 a.m.  6 p.m.t</p>
        <p>600 Arlington Blvd. Arlington Village  756-8210</p>
        <p>There is a good reason why this particular information is not included unless the item is worked on the giant implements, such as size 50 needles or size Q crochet hoc'.i, for which there is no.similar sized tool.</p>
        <p>For almost any knit or crochet patterns, you can-and should~use any size needle or hook that will give you the gauge specified in the directions. Gauge is the key work, and the one most often overlooked by the average person. This is the reason that so many are disillusioned by a poor fit. Lets take a simple example to show you how this works.</p>
        <p>For a finished bust measurement of 40 inches and a gauge of five stitches per inch, you will work on a total of 200 stitches or 100 stitchfes each for the back and front. The number of stitches necessary for the desired finished width is determined by multiplying the inches by the gauge -in this instance, 40 times five equals 200.</p>
        <p>If your gauge is just slightly off, you will never achieve the planned width or circumference. If you knit more loosely than the designer and your true gauge is 41/2 stitches per inch, your garment will be almost 44 1/2 inches. Or if you are a tight knitter and your true gauge is 5 1/2 stitches to the inch, your garment will measure only 361/3 inches. The same is just as true in crochet.</p>
        <p>To most needlecrafters, it is hard to believe how much difference even a half stitch pjer inch makes, and most of them ignore the gauge information and select the suggested needle or hook size. But even if you</p>
        <p>Winter Clearance</p>
        <p>All Gowns and Robes</p>
        <p>25% off</p>
        <p>Sale Days-Jan. 19th-23rd</p>
        <p>or's</p>
        <p>Intimate Apparel</p>
        <p>Carolina East Centre Hrs. M-Thurs&amp;amp;Sat 10-6 Fri 10-9</p>
        <p>DIAGONAL SLASH - Shimmering acrylic-mohair yarn makes the slash stand out on this sweater.</p>
        <p>REMODELING PROBLEMS</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP) - The path to successful home remodeling isnt always a smooth one. Now, however, if problems do arise between homeowners and contractors, they may be settled by a disinterested third party under a program called Remodelcare.</p>
        <p>The National Council of Better Business Bureaus and the National Association of the Remodeling Industry put the pro-consumer program together.</p>
        <p>The service is being implemented through 172 Better Business Bureaus and 55 national chapters of NARl, a trade association of more than 3,5(X) home improvement and remodeling contractors.</p>
        <p>think you work to an average tension, sooner or later you are almost certain to follow directions from a designer whose idea of average differs from yours.</p>
        <p>I speak from sad experience. As a self-taught knitter, many years ago, I had no idea what was meant by gauge, so I just ignored that part of the instructions. My first three sweaters fit well, so I had no qualms about starting a Christmas gift sweater for my husband.</p>
        <p>It is surprising, but true, that you cant detect the finished size of a garment while it is on your needles. After weeks of secret knitting, I bound off the stitches of the back and front, which had been done in one piece on circular needles, and saw that I had a sweater that would have fit a small giant.</p>
        <p>This has been a long explanation to answer a short question, but I think you will see why I dont mention needle size.</p>
        <p>(Because of the large volume of mail she receives, Pat is unable to answer your letters personally. However, she welcomes ail questions and hints and will use those of general interest in the column whenever possible.)</p>
        <p>CORDON</p>
        <p>Ski Apparel 20%-80% off</p>
        <p>264By(&amp;gt;ass</p>
        <p>AROLINA</p>
        <p>LOTHING</p>
        <p>ALL WINTER I MERCHANDISE</p>
        <p>Off</p>
        <p> Grand Award Perm Special </p>
        <p>* includd) Reg, SI9.50 Now 6.50  *</p>
        <p>^ IIIUIUUVW^  DVFVV  1  a  </p>
        <p>*  WHh  Coupon  </p>
        <p>1^  xp/r0  Wed..  Jan.  28,  1987  J</p>
        <p>Lustra Curl</p>
        <p>I I</p>
        <p>($60.00 Value) SO 050  *</p>
        <p>Rag. $39.50 Now  *</p>
        <p>with Coupon  I</p>
        <p>Explroa Wad., Jan. 28. 1987  I</p>
        <p>Ivery4ay Lew Prkee  NelrtwH M Ihewpee A M. llwipee a Blew Dry |S</p>
        <p>All tenlce* performed eicluthrely by iludenis No ippolnlmenl neceeaery. Neiaut  Nallonelly accredited. Long hair sllghlly higher.</p>
        <p>C^itcheU's</p>
        <p>Monday I to S:M TM.-frL, 10 to a aturday 0 to 4:M</p>
        <p>HAIR STY LING</p>
        <p>426 Arlington</p>
        <p>Blvd.</p>
        <p>756 3050</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0113" />
        <p>The Daily Reflector, Greenville. N.C. Wednesday, January 21,1987  ]  3</p>
        <p>m  H  I    "w  wMiiy  .    %jiopnvmo,  ni.v/.  yypuiicoueiy,  OdiiUciry    I,  IjQA</p>
        <p>Working Together' Is Young Careerist Selected</p>
        <p>Success Of 58 Years</p>
        <p>By ROSALIE TROTMAN Reflector Lifestyle Editor The success of 58 years is working together, according to Kathleen Manning Woolard. She and her husband, Eugene (Red) Murray Sr., are celebrating their 58th wedding anni</p>
        <p>versary today.</p>
        <p>Show your love and work together, is Mrs. Woolards advice to young people getting married to-</p>
        <p>da.</p>
        <p>The</p>
        <p>e Wtwlards have been residents at Carolina Care Rest Home in Greenville since March 5,1986. We lived in Greenville about 45 years. We had to make a change because we couldnt take care of each other, she said.</p>
        <p>Red enjoys television, visiting up and down the hallways and talking. He enjoys a good joke. I participate in the centers activities when 1 feel like it. When you reach 80 and 90, you slow down a little bit, she said.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Woolard was in nurses training at Parrott Hospital in Kinston when she met her future husband. 1 was standing on the porch with another off-duty nurse when Red and his roommate rode by. His roommate, whom I knew, waved anduve waved back. They came back and started talking. I didnt like Red at first but he didnt give up. After about two months, we started dating and were married about 10 months later. He was 31 and I was 21  it was about time we got married, she said.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Woolard didnt work after her marriage. He said he wanted me to work for him  keeping house and cooking would be enough for me to do, she said.</p>
        <p>Woolard was working for the N.C. Department of Transportation in maintenance when the couple met and was later transferred to Greenville.</p>
        <p>In telling about his nickname of Red, Woolard said, I was working in a garage in Virginia and the owner called me Jack. I told him my name was Murray, which he couldnt remember. He finally started calling me Red because of my red hair. Of</p>
        <p>Red and Kathleen Woolard</p>
        <p>course, theres not much red up there now - its all white, said Woolard.</p>
        <p>Woolard enjoyed attending baseball games. Mrs. Woolard and their son, Eugene, enjoyed fishing. Red was raised on the water (in Bath) but didnt like fishing. He was always tinkering and talking to people, she said.</p>
        <p>The Woolards son died in October 1985.</p>
        <p>The couple also enjoyed playing cards. She was an active member of the First Christian Church, White</p>
        <p>Shrine and VFW Auxiliary. She is a former member of the Greenville Womans Club and is a past Great Pocahontas of North Carolina. We both go riding and 1 enjoy going to Bums Restaurant in Ayden and getting collards to eat, she said.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Woolard has two sisters, Sudie M. Wright and Dicy M. Pittman, both of Clinton. Her sister-in-law, Estelle Reel, lives in Greenville. Woolard has a half-sister, Alice Mercer of Benson.</p>
        <p>Smoking Gets Big Kick</p>
        <p>DEAR READERS: The Great American Smokeout of 1986 broke all records for participation, with an unprecedented 23.8 million smokers trying to kick the habit for 24 hours.</p>
        <p>Through a Gallup survey, it was learned that 43.7 percent of the nations 54.5 million smokers took part in the 10th annual Smokeout on Nov. 20, either by avoiding cigarettes completely or by cutting down.</p>
        <p>Of the participants, 7 million smokers were able to make it through the day without lighting up, and another 16.8 million cut down. The survey findings confirm that smokers want to quit.</p>
        <p>For smokers who need help quitting, the American Cancer Society offers the quit-smoking course, FreshStart, through its local divisions and units. The course is also available on audio and videocassette, as well as in paperback. If you need help quitting but cant find the time to attend a course, the tapes and book ^ve you the freedom to take advantage of FreshStart at your own leisure. The tapes, produced by Simon and Schuster, are sold at many bookstores and retail outlets.</p>
        <p>For more information on FreshStart classes, call your local American Cancer Society. To order the FreshStart audio and videocassettes, call (800 ) 445-3800, operator 866.</p>
        <p>Smoking is hell.</p>
        <p>Quitting is heaven,</p>
        <p>..Yours for a healthier 87.</p>
        <p>-ABBY</p>
        <p>DEAR ABBY: Thank you for printing the list of questions thoughtless ana insensitive people should not ask the parents of internationally adopted children.</p>
        <p>Dear Abby</p>
        <p>By ABIGAIL VAX BUREN</p>
        <p>1, too, am the mother of two beautiful children (a boy and girl) adopted from Korea.</p>
        <p>P ease add one more question to that list: Are your children sister and brother?</p>
        <p>I have been asked this question many times, and I always respond emphatically, Yes, they are! and would you believe that some people have had the nerve to continue probing further with ... but I mean, are they REAL brother and sister? -LUCKY MOTHER IN CANADA DEAR LUCKY: Read on. You may even want to clip it and carry the next letter with you. It speaks volumes:</p>
        <p>DEAR ABBY: We have eight children, five domestically adopted. They dont look like us (there are four races among us), but some people do ask the cruelest questions Here are a few definitions for people who ask (iuestions about adopted children who ook Chinese, Korean or whatever:</p>
        <p>Natural child: Any child who is not artificial.</p>
        <p>Real parent: Any parent who is not imaginary.</p>
        <p>Your own child: Any child who is not someone elses.</p>
        <p>Adopted child: A natural child, whose parents are not imaginary, chosen by us and is now ours. -RITA LAWS, HARRAH, OKLA.</p>
        <p>(Problems? Write to Abby. For a personal, unpublished reply, send a self-addressed, stamped envelope to Abby, P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CaliL 90069. All correspondence is confidential.)</p>
        <p>CUSTOM VERTICALS FACTORY DIRECT</p>
        <p> MINI BLINDS  MICRO MINI BLINDS  VERTICAL BLINDS Free Shop At Home Service</p>
        <p>Installation</p>
        <p>Available</p>
        <p>Call 757-3011 For AppointmentYOU DESERVE SOME CREDIT</p>
        <p>\</p>
        <p>Instant Credit Exclusively for Medical Services</p>
        <p>Never worry about health care emergencies again through the American Medical Credit Corp. The card is useful and convenient for insurance deductibles, emergency bills or bill consolidation.</p>
        <p>The peace-of-mind card free applications are available.</p>
        <p>We hope you stay healthy, but it's comforting to Know that in an emergency you can have instant credit from the American Medical Credit Corporation.</p>
        <p>Call Today For Fraa Cradlt Application Or Stop By Tha Following Provldtrt Which Ara Now Accapting Tha AMC Card:</p>
        <p>Charter Northrldga Hospital</p>
        <p>Drs. Capps &amp;amp; Qualliotine, Family Dentistry</p>
        <p>(704)-331-48661-800-843-63737 a.m.-7 p.m., Mon.-Frl.</p>
        <p>Debra Meadows Williams has been named Young Careerist by the Greenville Business and Professional Womens Club.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Williams is a registered nurse at Pitt County Memorial Hospital. She is a graduate of East Carolina</p>
        <p>March Observance Planned Thursday</p>
        <p>Plans for World Day of Prayer were discussed at the Thursday meeting of Church Women United.</p>
        <p>The observance will be held March 6 starting at 11 a.m. at The Memorial Baptist Church. The 100th anniversary will be celebrated. Dr. Richard H. Crapps will be keynote speaker. The report was given by Mrs. Herbert Paschal.</p>
        <p>Plans were also announced for May Fellowship Day on May 1 at the First Presbyterian Church.</p>
        <p>Freda Steinbeck reported on UNICEF, migrant kit collection and Church World Service blanket and clothes drive.</p>
        <p>A donation was made to N.C. Church Women project CO-OP.</p>
        <p>Mrs. W.H. Taft, president, conducted the meeting and 19 churches were represented.</p>
        <p>University with a B.S.N. degree. She is married to Fred L. Williams Jr. of Greenville and daughter of Harry Meadows Jr. of Route 7, Henderson.</p>
        <p>She was awarded first place for her significant achievements in her</p>
        <p>career area and outstanding cun tiibutions to her community," .s.ii-l Patrice Alexander, president of ih' club.</p>
        <p>Belinda Kay Foster, a junior in tin ECU School of Business, was nm ner-up. She is the daughter of Cbai In-F. Foster of Belhaven.</p>
        <p>Judges for the local compu'tilirM were Dick Flye, Florence Holt an I Laura Sweet.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Williams will compt'te at llu District X level in Tarboro in Mai i h The district winner will compete .i* the N.C. State Convention in June ju Charlotte.</p>
        <p>The Young Career Women pin gram is BPWs way of highlightioe. the significant achievements i f young business and profession 11 women.</p>
        <p>For further information al'oni BPW call Ann Harper at 83d (Kiila</p>
        <p>DEBRA WILLIAMS</p>
        <p>According to the last die. 'inn il census, 45.5 percent of Pitt ('(iiiiit\ labor force was composed  t females; roughly 12 pereeni ol workers belonged to minoni. groups.</p>
        <p>"Greenville's Finest Bakery For 68 Years"</p>
        <p>815 Dickinson Ave. (Downtown)</p>
        <p>Decorated Cakes For All Occasions</p>
        <p>752-5251</p>
        <p>T)orthys Truffled Origiryilsl</p>
        <p>Custom Curtain I Special15% off through January 31st!</p>
        <p>\ t)iir homo is a uniqiio oxprossion of you. Create your own look through Dorothv's Custom Curtains. Clioose from a wide variety ot tahries in manv stylesKiiffled, Pouffe, t ailored. Balloon Curtains and more . . .</p>
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        <p>N( , 'H'l 7';s SIHHl^ in .1 in I' in ''f</p>
        <p>Shape Up In Style And Save...</p>
        <p>WOMENS SHOES January Clearance Sale</p>
        <p>Mm   $49.99  I  Up  To  50%  Off</p>
        <p>465  $41.99  Selected  Leofards,  Tights and  Legwar nil I'</p>
        <p>-^0  $38.99  4AO/  Qil</p>
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        <p>Freestyle............$34.99  10%  Off</p>
        <p>Charisma  $37.99  Children's  Leotards,  Tights  and  Legwanm</p>
        <p>Instructor  $44.99</p>
        <p>Phase I...............$32.99  /  20  ^ Off</p>
        <p>Phase I Leather...$39.99  f  Warm  Up Suits</p>
        <p>Aerobic .....$35.99  '  i^MCA/ING</p>
        <p>Westndge Villdge Shopping Center  |/V/  CTV7  f   ^--------</p>
        <p>Rochy Amount, N.C 27804    Y li V Of 1</p>
        <p>f) 443)112  KXERCLSE  FA.SIIIONS  Hilt  TOlLW</p>
        <p>'VttlMEN ANll ( 1111,1 lit F, \</p>
        <p>RNAL (10) DAYS!</p>
        <p>GOING OUT OF BUSINESS!</p>
        <p>TOi</p>
        <p>OFF,</p>
        <p>EVERYTHING!ENTIRE INVENTORY</p>
        <p>of New Cuneiit Famous^laine Fashions!YOU MUST SAVE AT lEAST 60%</p>
        <p>every DRESS every SWEATER every JACKET every BLOUSE every SWRT every SUIT every PANTNOTHING Held Back! EVERYTHING Must Go!</p>
        <p>Shop with Visa. MasletCard. AmerKon Express. Cash</p>
        <p>CorolirK] Eost Mall GREENVIliE</p>
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        <pb facs="00096520_0114" />
        <p>A*14 The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.</p>
        <p>Wednesday, January 21,1987</p>
        <p>' Stock And Market Reports</p>
        <p>Panel Rejects Revised Bedford Proposal</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (AP) - Stock prices dropped broadly in early trading today, as the markets heated New Year rally cooled further.</p>
        <p>The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials was down 14.06 to 2,090.41 at 10 a.m. on Wall Street.</p>
        <p>In the broader market, decliners outpaced advancing issues by about 4 to 1 on the New York Stock Exchange, with 1,002 declining, 267 advancing and 405 unchanged. The government reported today that inflation registered the lowest reading in 25 years during 1986 with U.S. consumer prices rising only 1.1 percent, and the U.S. homebuilding industry had its best year since 1978.</p>
        <p>The dollar rose on foreign exchange markets early today as traders awaited the outcome of U.S.-Japanese talks on stabilizing the dollar-yen exchange rate. Gold bullion fell to around $408.50.</p>
        <p>Navistar led the NYSE most active list, unchanged at 6% in early trading.</p>
        <p>IBM, off Vk on Tuesday, was down another /2 to 122^4.</p>
        <p>Among other active issues, Salomon Inc was down Vs to 39Vs, American Express fell % to 67Vs, AT&amp;amp;T rose V4 to 26% and General Motors fell '/2to70%.</p>
        <p>Volume on the New York Stock Exchange was 26.33 million shares in the first 30 minutes of trading.</p>
        <p>The NYSEs composite index was off 0.84 to 152.78.</p>
        <p>On the American Stock Exchange, the market value index was down 1.91 to 292.57.</p>
        <p>On Tuesday, the Dow Jones industrial average closed 1.97 points higher at 2,104.47, a record 13th straight gain for the index, after a volatile sesin which saw the average down by as many as 10 points at one time.</p>
        <p>Big Board volume totaled 224.79 million shares, against 162.83 million in Mondays session.</p>
        <p>The exchanges composite index was off 0.09, at 153.62.</p>
        <p>The American Stock Exchange market value index edged up 0.51 to 294.48.</p>
        <p>NKW YOKK (AF)</p>
        <p>AMK Corp AbbotlLat) Allis Chaim Alcoa</p>
        <p>AmBrands Amer (^an Am Cyan Amcntech Amcritch wi AmlntGp Am Motors AmSland Amcr T&amp;amp;T Am(K'o HellAllaii BellSouth Beth Steel Boeing Boise Cased Boiset  pfC Borden Burlngt Ind CSX Cp Carolwl.t Olanese Champ Int Chevron Chrysler CocaCola Colg Palm Comw Kdis ConAgra</p>
        <p>Midday stocks:</p>
        <p>High</p>
        <p>Low</p>
        <p>Last</p>
        <p>59*4</p>
        <p>59'/4</p>
        <p>59%</p>
        <p>52%</p>
        <p>52%</p>
        <p>52%</p>
        <p>2''.</p>
        <p>2%</p>
        <p>2:%</p>
        <p>3H%</p>
        <p>38',4</p>
        <p>38'2</p>
        <p>46%</p>
        <p>46%</p>
        <p>46%</p>
        <p>91%</p>
        <p>90%</p>
        <p>904h</p>
        <p>84</p>
        <p>83 &amp;gt;2</p>
        <p>84</p>
        <p>141%</p>
        <p>140%</p>
        <p>I41&amp;gt;4</p>
        <p>96</p>
        <p>95%</p>
        <p>96</p>
        <p>67</p>
        <p>66%</p>
        <p>67</p>
        <p>3%</p>
        <p>3</p>
        <p>3</p>
        <p>45%</p>
        <p>45:&amp;gt;k</p>
        <p>45%</p>
        <p>26%</p>
        <p>26:%</p>
        <p>26%</p>
        <p>74'2</p>
        <p>73%</p>
        <p>74'4</p>
        <p>72'/2</p>
        <p>71'h</p>
        <p>72%</p>
        <p>62&amp;gt;4</p>
        <p>61%</p>
        <p>61%</p>
        <p>7*4</p>
        <p>7</p>
        <p>7'h</p>
        <p>51%</p>
        <p>51</p>
        <p>51 &amp;gt;H</p>
        <p>73*2</p>
        <p>73</p>
        <p>73%</p>
        <p>60</p>
        <p>59'4</p>
        <p>60</p>
        <p>50'4</p>
        <p>49%</p>
        <p>50</p>
        <p>45'h</p>
        <p>44%</p>
        <p>44%</p>
        <p>32'2</p>
        <p>32'.h</p>
        <p>32*4</p>
        <p>41*4</p>
        <p>40</p>
        <p>40</p>
        <p>242&amp;gt;2</p>
        <p>242%</p>
        <p>242'j</p>
        <p>37''h</p>
        <p>37</p>
        <p>37%</p>
        <p>.51%</p>
        <p>51</p>
        <p>51%</p>
        <p>45 &amp;gt;2</p>
        <p>45</p>
        <p>45%</p>
        <p>41</p>
        <p>40h</p>
        <p>41</p>
        <p>45'.4</p>
        <p>44%</p>
        <p>45'/4</p>
        <p>36%</p>
        <p>36&amp;gt;2</p>
        <p>36%</p>
        <p>30*4</p>
        <p>30</p>
        <p>30</p>
        <p>(ASH RECISIERS;^</p>
        <p>299ondupl  A*'</p>
        <p>756-2215 Greenville 2801 S. Evans St.</p>
        <p>Cmtfurf Data Syffeme'</p>
        <p>eannet M  lngt$  ciMtMMr.</p>
        <p>*</p>
        <p>DelUAirl</p>
        <p>DowChem</p>
        <p>duPont</p>
        <p>DukePow</p>
        <p>EstKodak</p>
        <p>EatonCp</p>
        <p>Exxon</p>
        <p>FPL Grp</p>
        <p>Firestone</p>
        <p>FstWachov</p>
        <p>FlaProgress</p>
        <p>FordMot s</p>
        <p>Fuqua</p>
        <p>GTE Corp</p>
        <p>GenCorp</p>
        <p>GnOynam</p>
        <p>GenElec</p>
        <p>GenMills</p>
        <p>Gen Motors</p>
        <p>GnMotrE</p>
        <p>GenuPart</p>
        <p>GaPacif</p>
        <p>Goodrich</p>
        <p>Goodyear</p>
        <p>Goodyear wd</p>
        <p>Grace Co</p>
        <p>GtNorNek</p>
        <p>Greyhound</p>
        <p>Herculeslnc</p>
        <p>Honeywell</p>
        <p>HCA</p>
        <p>ITT Corp</p>
        <p>Ins Rand</p>
        <p>IBM</p>
        <p>Int Paper InURect JamesRvr K mart KaisrAlum KanebSvc Kroger Lockheed LoewsCp McDermlnt McKessn Mead Con&amp;gt; MercantSt MinnMM Mobil Monsanto NCNB Cp Nat Distill Navistar NorflkSou Nynex OlinCp Owenslll PacTel Penney JC liCo</p>
        <p>54/  54%</p>
        <p>69%  68%  69%</p>
        <p>95%  94%  95%</p>
        <p>50%  49%  50%</p>
        <p>74%  73%  T4%</p>
        <p>81  80  80%</p>
        <p>79%  78%  79%</p>
        <p>33%  32%  33%</p>
        <p>29%  29%  29%</p>
        <p>41%  40%  40%</p>
        <p>43  42%  42%</p>
        <p>70%  70%  70%</p>
        <p>27  26%  26%</p>
        <p>60%  60%  60%</p>
        <p>79%  78%  78%</p>
        <p>75%  74%  75%</p>
        <p>97V4  95%  97</p>
        <p>45%  45  45%</p>
        <p>70%  70%  70%</p>
        <p>30%  30  30</p>
        <p>48%  48  48%</p>
        <p>44%  43%  44%</p>
        <p>51  50%  50%</p>
        <p>45%  44%  45</p>
        <p>44%  44%  44%</p>
        <p>54%  54  54%</p>
        <p>8OV4  78%  80</p>
        <p>33%  32%  33V4</p>
        <p>57%  57  57%</p>
        <p>64  63%  63%</p>
        <p>32%  32%  32%</p>
        <p>58V4  57%  58</p>
        <p>65%  64%  65%</p>
        <p>122%  121%  122%</p>
        <p>89%  88%  89%</p>
        <p>9%  8%  8%</p>
        <p>39  38%  38%</p>
        <p>48  47%  47%</p>
        <p>14%  14V4  14%</p>
        <p>2%  2%  2%</p>
        <p>31  30%  31</p>
        <p>51%  50%  51%</p>
        <p>66%  65%  66%</p>
        <p>23%  23%  23%</p>
        <p>35V4  34%  34%</p>
        <p>68  67 %  67%</p>
        <p>103% 103  103%</p>
        <p>130% 129% 130 43%  43%  43%</p>
        <p>86%  85  86</p>
        <p>24  23%  24</p>
        <p>51%  51  51%</p>
        <p>6%  6%  6%</p>
        <p>92%  92  92%</p>
        <p>70%  69%  70%</p>
        <p>47%  47%  47%</p>
        <p>59%  59%  59%</p>
        <p>56%  56%  56%</p>
        <p>(Continued from A-1)</p>
        <p>microbiology at East Carolina University.</p>
        <p>We are particularly concerned for the safety of our children, he said. In the past 12 months, two children have been injured by cars on Queen Annes Road. This proposal will increase traffic on Bremerton. There are 28 children within the very first block of Bremerton.</p>
        <p>There are no playgrounds and sidewalks in Grayleigh, Bedford and Lynndale. The streets are in fact pedestrian walks. Pedestrian use of the streets is a characteristic use of our neighborhood.</p>
        <p>Under the original plat, which is still valid following the denial of the proposed plat, Bremerton and another proposed road connect with Evan Street. Residents at the meeting said they didnt expect developers to use the original plat.</p>
        <p>Meanwhile, city officials had recommended approval of the revised plat.</p>
        <p>The citys position is that once the subdivision is built about 200 lots in back of Bedford will need more than one access road to Evans Street, said Bobby Roberson, director of Planning and Community Development.</p>
        <p>Presently, Martinborough Road and Pinewood Road connect the development with Evans Street.</p>
        <p>The Bedford development included in the plat is located off the eastern right-of-way of Evans Street extension, north of Fork Swamp Canal and</p>
        <p>Plan Considered</p>
        <p>(Continued from A-1)</p>
        <p>78%  78%  78%</p>
        <p>PepsiCo  30%  30%  30%</p>
        <p>Phelps Dod  24%  24%  24%</p>
        <p>PhiiipMor  82Vg  8IV4  82</p>
        <p>PhilipPet  12%  12%  12%</p>
        <p>Polaroid  78%  75%  77%</p>
        <p>ProctGamb  85%  84%  85%</p>
        <p>QuakerOats  45  44  44%</p>
        <p>RJRNab  57%  57%  57%</p>
        <p>RalstnPur  75%  74%  75%</p>
        <p>Rockwel  52%  51%  52</p>
        <p>Scott Paper  72%  72%  72%</p>
        <p>SealedPwr  29%  29%  29%</p>
        <p>SearsRoeb  45'%  44%  44%</p>
        <p>Shaklee  21%  21%  21%</p>
        <p>M%  m  agriculture, forestry, fishing and</p>
        <p>soufoernco  M%  28%  28%  mining composing the bulk of  the</p>
        <p>swfoii  57%  M%  m%  economic base, he said. Industry</p>
        <p>TRW i^c ^  %% M%  and commercial development are on</p>
        <p>Texaco Inc  38%  38  38  theincrease.</p>
        <p>usicoiS  23%  i%  M%  Paciocco  said other notable char-</p>
        <p>uncfl^e  K% 25   acteristics of the region are the</p>
        <p>uswest  w%  M%  w%  significant historical sites and  the</p>
        <p>wSrt  48%  48%  48%  higher education institutions,  in-</p>
        <p>wratSEf  64%  64%  eluding four community colleges  and</p>
        <p>weyerhsr  46%  45%  46%  East Carolina University and Medi-</p>
        <p>WinnDix  49%  48%  49^4</p>
        <p>wooiwrth  42%  42%  42%  cai (..enter.</p>
        <p>K!fip  OT% w%  The  purpose  of  the  commission is</p>
        <p>to provide a strong organization and  .  ,  .  .  . ,  .4 a well qualified staff that can serve</p>
        <p>nSim''  the needs of the member jurisdic-</p>
        <p>Ashiand Oil............................. 57  tions, Paciocco said. Another pur-</p>
        <p>(Jnisys.. ................................95Vg  poge is to provide a vehicle for all</p>
        <p>.  localities, large and small, voice</p>
        <p>Flowers inds.....................................26%  their opinions and suggestions on</p>
        <p>Halteras Inc. Securities.....................2OV2  issues with regional impacts.</p>
        <p>jelSpiiS''::;::::ai the conclusion of the meeting,</p>
        <p>John Deere........................................25%  Council member Ed Carter express-</p>
        <p>Lowes Company .............................ed gratitude to fellow members for</p>
        <p>..........................  establishing a holiday</p>
        <p>Piedmont Aviation........'.....'..'....'..........49'/2  to celebrate the birthday of Dr. Mar-</p>
        <p>Southmark Corporation. .......................10  Jijj Luther King</p>
        <p>United Telecommunications...............26%   , , ,  nrmiri tn hp n</p>
        <p>Dominion Resources..........................47%  *  extremely  prOUQ 10 DC a</p>
        <p>Piedmont Natural Gas.......................23%  part of the City Council that has the</p>
        <p>OVER THE COUNTER  foresight to do what it did, Carter</p>
        <p>Steis Sttaa Bank:;  iS 23J saW- "I knew ' cesl the city money in</p>
        <p>Vermont American..................18% to 18%  terms of closmg down, but I don t</p>
        <p>Chemiawn  ...................know that we can assess the return</p>
        <p>Southern National Bank..............25  to 25%  nat</p>
        <p>Peoples Bank............................14% to 15 ^e investment that we get from</p>
        <p>North Carolina Natural Gas.....34% to 35%  all this.</p>
        <p>Cooper LaserSonics 115/16 to 21/16 piack parents face a difficult deci-Farm Fresh............................ a  to 15question ot school atten</p>
        <p>dance on the day, according to</p>
        <p>In 1985, the assessed valuation of real property in Pitt County totaled ' We blacks are facing a sitiMtion l,744,6iri57; personal projirty was  where we re having a hard ton</p>
        <p>valuedat$75oS92J  to make even reUtive to our children</p>
        <p>west of Bedford subdivision.</p>
        <p>In other business, commissioners approved a preliminary plat of Whichport subdvision. The subdivision is located off the southern right-of-way of U.S. 264 and east of proposed Hooker Road extension.</p>
        <p>Under the newly-approved plat, a private drive would be exteniied between the adjoining owners of Nichols Discount City and the Hilton, according to Roberson.</p>
        <p>The private drive would be built to N.C. Department of Transportation street designs and would be signalized, Roberson said. In addition, the intersection of Landmark Street and Greenville Boulevard will be signalized.</p>
        <p>According to the original plat, streets at the Hooker intersection would not line up, Roberson said.</p>
        <p>The DOT would not allow a signal to occur at the Hooker Road intersection because of the offset, he said.</p>
        <p>Opponents to the proposed plat argued that property was sold based on the road construction plans in the original preliminary subdivision plat.</p>
        <p>Meanwhile, the panel agreed to review a request by Warren Street property owners to rezone their properties to a high-density single family residential use in a future meeting.</p>
        <p>The property owners, who originally requested that the Warren Street land and property on Fourth Street be rezoned to a neighborhood revitalization area, revised their request after planning staff members</p>
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        <p>HOAte F6D6RAL SAVMGS</p>
        <p>AMDIOAMASSOOAIION</p>
        <p>OF EASTERN NORTH aROUNA</p>
        <p>Downtown Ortonvill* 75R-3421 Arlington Boulovord 75R-2772</p>
        <p>on whether to take them out of school on that date because we do want to honor Dr. Martin Luther King, but we are also concerned about the educational progress of our kids, he said.</p>
        <p>Of course, we understand, too, the positions that some other agencies have taken including the county and the state.</p>
        <p>North Carolina and Pitt County governments have not established a legal holiday for Dr. King.</p>
        <p>NCSU March</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP) - About 75 students marched across the campus of North Carolina State University to demand that the school divest all its holdings in U.S. companies conducting business in South Africa.</p>
        <p>Its about time State students took the initiative, let it be known that we dont want to be affiliated with those companies, marcher Sandra F. McManus said.</p>
        <p>The march Monday came on the second national observance of the birthday of Martin Luther King Jr., the civil rights leader murdered in 1968.</p>
        <p>Protesters and university officials said they did not know how much money N.C. State has invested in companies that do business in South Africa.</p>
        <p>Crimestoppers</p>
        <p>If you have information on any crime committed in Pitt County, call Crimestoppers, 758-7777. You do not have to identify yourself and can be paid for the information you supply.</p>
        <p>"\ DISCOVERED</p>
        <p>Dimmsm</p>
        <p>For Moiling Fwiorol I Boriil Pro-Arrengeoienti..."</p>
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        <p>fwM mr tmOf wl aaa4 far Mta mi</p>
        <p>HOMESTEAD</p>
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        <p>told them they didnt qualify for the change.</p>
        <p>In R6-N zoning classifications, only 14 percent of the property can be used for duplexes and multifamily. The remaining 86 percent has to be used for single-family development, Roberson said. Under the proposal suggested, Fourth Street would exceed 14 percent.</p>
        <p>The board approved a request by Bill Clark to rezone 26.51 acres located east of Westhaven subdivision and south of Whichport subdivision from residential/agricultural to medium density single-family residential.</p>
        <p>The commissioners also approved a request by the city of Greenville to rezone a 1.78-acre tract from downtown commercial fringe to office and institutional. The property is located off the northern right-of-way of 14th Street between Clarke and Greene streets and is a portion of the South Evans Redevelopment area.</p>
        <p>The commission approved a preliminary plat for Paramore Farms subdivision, located off the western right-of-way of 14th Street extension and north of Windy Ridge. The plat involves 70 lots and 3,420 linear feet of street on a 24.97-acre tract.</p>
        <p>The board denied a request by Joe T. Wright to rezone 18.28 acres located off the western right-of-way of State Road 1440 and north of N.C. 33 west from residential/agricultural to highway commercial.</p>
        <p>Owners of adjacent properties told the board the zoning change would depreciate the value of their homes.</p>
        <p>Commissioners recommended approval of a proposed amendment to the Subdivision Ordinance concerning required improvement performance guarantees which will eliminate second deeds of trust as forms of security.</p>
        <p>Because of what we learned when the Radisson project failed, we knew that second deeds of trust were going to be unacceptable as forms of security for subdivision improvements, said City Attorney Mac McCarley. .</p>
        <p>The amendment provides that first deeds of trust will be acceptable because thev are not subject to the same risk of being extinguished by a senior lien the second deed of trust is exposed to.</p>
        <p>The board approved an amendment to the ^ning Ordinance to allow radio and television studios and transmission facilities as a sp^ial use in the MD-7 zoning classification.</p>
        <p>Obituaries</p>
        <p>Anderson ROBERSONVILLE - Mr. Brayom Eugene Buster Anderson, 78, died Tuesday morning.</p>
        <p>A graveside service will be conducted Thursday at 11 a.m. in the Robersonville Cemetery by the Rev. James O.Hagwood.</p>
        <p>Mr. Anderson was a member of Merry Heart Presbyterian Church and was a charter member of the Robersonville Rotary Club.</p>
        <p>He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Anna Mae Anderson of the home; one daughter, Mrs. Gene Taylor of Robersonville; one son, Brayom E. Anderson Jr. of Greenville; three sisters, Mrs. Sara Tew of Gamer, Mrs. Maurie Anderson of Tarboro and Mrs. Selma Alford of Wendell; two brothers, E.G. Anderson of Robersonville and David Gaskill Anderson of Leggetts, and four grandchildren.</p>
        <p>Family visitation will be from 7 p.m. until 8:30 p.m. today in Biggs Funeral Home.</p>
        <p>In lieu of flowers,, contributions may be made to the North Carolina chapter of the Arthritis Foundation, P.O. Box 2505, Durham, 27705.</p>
        <p>Harvey</p>
        <p>GOLDSBORO - A funeral for Mr.</p>
        <p>mmmmmmmmmmm</p>
        <p>g  JosDph's  I</p>
        <p>Repairs Typewriters </p>
        <p>I  355-2723  </p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>Vemon H. Harvey Sr., 56, of 1615 Rawling St. will be conducted Thursday at 2 p.m. in Woods Chapel Free WUl Baptist Church by W.H. Mitchell. Burial will be in Old Mill Cemetery.</p>
        <p>Surviving are five daughters, Mrs. Vernice Austin, Mrs. Donna Ford and Mrs. Jane Devaughan, all of Goldsboro, Mrs. Van J. Webb of Farmville and Bonnie Harvey of Dudley; five sons, Vernon Harvey Jr. and Ivan Harvey, both of Goldsboro, Jerry Harvey and Willie Harvey, both of Dorchester, Mass., and Edward Joyner of Fremont ; two sisters, Mrs. Annie F. Lewis and Mrs. Louise Smith, both of Fremont; one brother, Herbert Newson of Chicago; 30 grandchildren, and five great-grandchildren.</p>
        <p>The family will receive friends today from 7 p.m. to 8 p.m. at the church. Arrangements are being handled by Mitchells Funeral Home, Winterville.</p>
        <p>Expressions of Thanks</p>
        <p>Bless you for every act of kindness. God used your kind expressions of sympathy to lighten our burdens. Of all the ways gratitude and thanks can be expressed; the sincere phrase "God bless you" to us seems to be the best.</p>
        <p>The Family of the lata Mrs. Lydia Flaming Dixon</p>
        <p>It just doesnt matter to me."</p>
        <p>...Just doesnt matter, theres no need to worry about it.</p>
        <p>Who cares? I'll never know the difference."</p>
        <p>When people first think about preairangement, inevitably, these statements - or ones like them - come up. And, the truth is, they are legitimate thoughts - if you only consider your own views.</p>
        <p>Who does care? Others care. Family, friends, neighbors, business associates. Prearrangement is important not so much to yourself, but to others.</p>
        <p>(Contact us at S.G. Wilkerson &amp;amp; Sons to arrange a private consultation about our prearrangement services. And resolve your responsibility to all those who care.</p>
        <p>S.G. Wilkerson and Sons Pinewood Memorud Park</p>
        <p>752-2101</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0115" />
        <p>THE DAILY</p>
        <p>REFLECTOR</p>
        <p>V</p>
        <p>Greenville N.C. Wednesday, January 21,1987</p>
        <p>Sports</p>
        <p>Scoreboard District Court Classifeds</p>
        <p>BCC5U Stuns East Carolina, 81-64</p>
        <p>By TOM MORRIS Reflector Sports Writer NEW BRITAIN, Conn. - Central Connecticut broke open a tight bail game in the second half and cruised to a 81-64 win over East Carolina Tuesday night in college basketball action.</p>
        <p>I think CCSU deserves a lot of credit, said ECU coach Charlie Harrison. I think they went out and saw that they could win the ball game.... They got enough confidence and took control of the ball game. The Pirates trailed 54-49 with ten minutes remaining when the Blue Devils ran off a 9-2 streak that put them up 63-51 with 5:08 left.</p>
        <p>We had to shut down the inside and we had to stop them on the break, said CCSU coach Bill Detrick. I dont think they got too many easy baskets.</p>
        <p>Detrick said it is hard to win on the road and used his two previous losses to ECU in Greenville as an example.</p>
        <p>The more Ive been around, it is so difficult to travel, Detrick said. Derrick Scurry began the Blue</p>
        <p>Devils key second half run with a jumper from the corner to bring it to 5649.</p>
        <p>Keith Sledge then turned the ball over and Bryan Heron hit a bank shot to make it 5849. Marchell Henry countered for ECU to bring it to 58-51.</p>
        <p>Scott Bosley then drove the lane and hit a bucket to bring the CCSU lead to 60-51. Heron then slammed one home on the fast break and drew the foul to put the Blue Devils up 63-51 with 5:08 remaining.</p>
        <p>"I think the biggest thing that hurt us was we that we came out thinking that things were going to happen and they didnt happen, said Harrison. All of a sudden we got ourselves into a bind where they got a rhythm, they got to wanting it. They got to thinking they were going to be able to take us one-on-one. They got every loose ball rebound. They shot the ball extremely well underpressure.</p>
        <p>Thats what happens when you come in here and you play in a way that you think all of a sudden everything is going to be all right and then you find out that things arent</p>
        <p>going to be all right. They just didnt work their way through adversity at times.</p>
        <p>Heron led the Blue Devil scoring with 28 points while Dwayne Jones added 17 and Scott Bosley had 12 off the bench, along with starter John Wilgus.</p>
        <p>After falling behind by 11, the Pirates were never able to challenge again as the Blue Devils were able to maintain as much as an 11-point lead the rest of the way.</p>
        <p>We got good shots, but (after falling behind) then you have to start going for those bombs (three-point baskets), Harrison said.</p>
        <p>The Pirates had chances to pull within three early in the second half but failed to capitalize as they suffered through 35 percent shooting in the final period.</p>
        <p>In the second half we had the ball six times with a chance to cut it to three and we did not. We had six shots in those possessions, Harrison said. We had one shot in those six possessions. The others were either turnovers or fouls.</p>
        <p>CCSU came into the game with a 3-13 record while the Pirates sported a 9-6 mark. For most of the second half, the teams looked as if they had exchanged records.</p>
        <p>You dont come on the road and just let them completely take (the) tempo,* Harrison said. You have to work your way through sometimes. There are two things that should be constant in the game of basketball. Thats defense and rebounding, because you dont know when you are going to get a good whistle. You dont know when the ball isnt going to be in the hole and you dont know when you are going to have three thumbs. I think it was a combination of those three things here tonight.</p>
        <p>The Blue Devils led 38-33 at the half, paced by 11 points from Herron.</p>
        <p>CCSU edged out to a a 26-22 lead with 7:08 left on a three point play by Herron following a Blue Devil steal.</p>
        <p>The Pirates pulled back within two points on three separate occasions on two jumpers by Jeff Kelly and one by John Williams.</p>
        <p>CCSUs Jones then connected on a</p>
        <p>jumper to give the Blue Devils a 34-28 advantage.</p>
        <p>Henry pulled the Pirates back within 34-30 before Keith Colemah hit a layup to bring it to 36-30. Reed Lose then hit a three pointer with nine seconds left to pull ECU within 36-33.</p>
        <p>Jones followed with a jumper from the corner as the first half expired to give the Blue Devils a 38-33 lead.</p>
        <p>I thought we got good bench performance in the first half, Harrison said.</p>
        <p>With the loss, ECU falls to 9-7. The Pirates return to action Saturday when they travel to George Mason for a Colonial Athletic Association contest.</p>
        <p>Central Connecticut improved to 4-13.</p>
        <p>They shot the lights out of the ball and we gave them too many second chances,  said  ECU guard  Reed</p>
        <p>Lose. When they made mistakes, we didnt capitalize.</p>
        <p>East Carolina (64)</p>
        <p>MP  K  FT  R  F  A  Pt</p>
        <p>Henry  38  9-20  2-3  4  3  1  20</p>
        <p>Edwards  34  7-11  1-3  11  4  1  15</p>
        <p>Bass</p>
        <p>Brown</p>
        <p>Sledge</p>
        <p>Kelly</p>
        <p>Lose</p>
        <p>Williams</p>
        <p>Jones</p>
        <p>Mann</p>
        <p>Battle</p>
        <p>Grady</p>
        <p>Team</p>
        <p>Totals</p>
        <p>Scurry</p>
        <p>Hcrori</p>
        <p>Wilgus</p>
        <p>Jones</p>
        <p>Devlin</p>
        <p>Campbell</p>
        <p>Bosley</p>
        <p>Mack</p>
        <p>Coleman</p>
        <p>Team</p>
        <p>Totals</p>
        <p>East Carolina.....................;13  3164</p>
        <p>C. Connertk-ut...................:18  43  HI</p>
        <p>Three Point Goals: ECU: 3-13 (Henry 0-2. Edwards 0-1,  Sledge  2-4,  Lose 1-2,</p>
        <p>Williams 0-3, Grady 0  1);  CC:  ;i-7 (Heron</p>
        <p>2-6, Jones 1-1).</p>
        <p>Turnovers: ECU: 17 (Brown 4); CC: 13 (Bosley 3).</p>
        <p>Technical fouls: None.</p>
        <p>Officials: Fontana,Scalise.</p>
        <p>Attendance: 1,315</p>
        <p>19 2-5</p>
        <p>0-0</p>
        <p>5</p>
        <p>3</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>4</p>
        <p>17 1-2</p>
        <p>04)</p>
        <p>4</p>
        <p>5</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>2</p>
        <p>31 4-11</p>
        <p>04)</p>
        <p>4</p>
        <p>3</p>
        <p>4</p>
        <p>10</p>
        <p>20 2-3</p>
        <p>0-0</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>4</p>
        <p>11 1-3</p>
        <p>04)</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>2</p>
        <p>3</p>
        <p>3</p>
        <p>11 2-9</p>
        <p>0-2</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>4</p>
        <p>9 04)</p>
        <p>2-2</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>2</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>2</p>
        <p>1 0-1</p>
        <p>0-0</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>4 0-0</p>
        <p>0-0</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>5 0-1</p>
        <p>0-0</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>3</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>200 28-66</p>
        <p>2</p>
        <p>5-10 33 26 12</p>
        <p>64</p>
        <p>('. Connn'ticuKHl)</p>
        <p>MP FG FT R F A</p>
        <p>Pt</p>
        <p>17 2-3</p>
        <p>0-1</p>
        <p>5</p>
        <p>4</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>4</p>
        <p>40 9-17</p>
        <p>8-10</p>
        <p>9</p>
        <p>3</p>
        <p>2</p>
        <p>28</p>
        <p>36 54)</p>
        <p>2-3</p>
        <p>6</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>12</p>
        <p>37 6 11</p>
        <p>4-5</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>7</p>
        <p>17</p>
        <p>12 0-1</p>
        <p>0-0</p>
        <p>2</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>1 0-0</p>
        <p>0-0</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>18 2-4</p>
        <p>8-8</p>
        <p>3</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>12</p>
        <p>16 2-4</p>
        <p>1-1</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>5</p>
        <p>23 1-1</p>
        <p>1-3</p>
        <p>2</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>3</p>
        <p>3</p>
        <p>200 27-37 24-31 32 11</p>
        <p>12</p>
        <p>81</p>
        <p>By 50-46 In Overtime</p>
        <p>Chargers Outlast Jaguars</p>
        <p>By WOODY PEELE Reflector Sports Editor FARMVILLE - Even though Farmville Central had been defeated for the first time in Eastern Plains Conference basketball play Friday night by Pamlico, Tuesday nights meeting with Ayden-Grifton had quite a bit of significance.</p>
        <p>The Jaguars, with a victory, could draw the EPC race back into a tie for first place, while the Chargers, with a win, could consolidate their hold on first place and remain unbeaten in league play.</p>
        <p>The Chargers didnt play all that well - but the Jags were hampered by the loss of two of their starters and Ayden-Grifton managed to pull it out. 50-46, in an overtime.</p>
        <p>Then, in the meeting of the girls teams  both unbeaten in league play  Farmville Central prevailed, M-56, to take over first alone.</p>
        <p>I thought we stole one tonight, Ayden-Grifton coach Bob Murphrey said. We didnt play very well and they were at a disadvantage. </p>
        <p>That disadvantage was the loss of starter Reggie Miller and the ateence of another starter, James Reid. There was a disagreement about we is in charge here, Coach Mike Terrell said. Mitchell will not be back, nor will (reserve) Tim Dupree. James will return, but was suspended for this week.</p>
        <p>That put the Jaguars into a situation where it was starting two players who had not started before. One of them probably had not been playing 30 seconds a game. </p>
        <p>The game was tied 10 times along the way with 10 lead changes. Five of those ties and three lead changes came in the final period, which ended in a 42-42 tie.</p>
        <p>Ronnell Peterson tied it up for ^den-Grifton with 1:42 left, and the .(^rgers got the ball back with 1:10 remaining and called time out. They moved the ball around until 13 seconds remained, then called time again to set up the final play.</p>
        <p>Peterson again took the shot, with four seconds left, but it bounced away and Farmville came up with the rebound with one second left. Following a time out, the Jaguars were unable to get the ball past midcourt and get off a shot.</p>
        <p>In the overtime, Peterson hit with 1:13 left, then added two free throws with 55 seconds left for a 4642 lead. The two teams then exchanged points</p>
        <p>the rest of the way as the Chargers kept the Jaguars from having a chance to tie it up again.</p>
        <p>Neither team shot well. Ayden-Grifton made 17 of 46 shots from the floor, 37,0 percent. Farmville canned 23 of 53 for a slightly better 43.4 percent.</p>
        <p>The difference came at the free throw line, where the Chargers made 16 of 22 as compared to none of two for the Jags, who had a 35-28 rebounding edge.</p>
        <p>Our perimeter people played poorly on offense, Murphrey said. (Farmville) did a good job of clogging up the middle and keeping the ball away from our inside men. That was the best zone defense Ive seen this year.</p>
        <p>Im just happy to win. Peterson hit some big baskets for us and I thought Shawn Farmer did a good job of running the team. But we were fortunate to win even though they were handicapped. I thought Farmville showed a lot of courage.</p>
        <p>Terrell said he was proud of the effort his team gave in the game. Our inexperience was what beat us at the end. I think we got a little complacent with our offense and made a couple of key turnovers when we had the chance to pull away.</p>
        <p>Early on, it looked like Ayden-Grifton might cruise. The Chargers too the opening lead and scored the first five points in the game, moving out to a 104 lead in the first four-plus minutes. But Kennedy Williams sparked a comeback by the Jaguars, including a buzzer basket that finally put the Jaguars up, 14-13.</p>
        <p>From there on out, it was nip-and-tuck. The lead changed four times in the second period, with Ayden-Grifton holding a 20-16 lead at one time before two baskets by Tyrone Joyner tied it up again and then put Farmville ahead, 22-20. Leon Dixon, however, scored with five seconds to go to tie it at 22-22 at the half.</p>
        <p>Farmville maintained the lead throughout much of the third period although the Chargers tied it on three occasions before taking a 31-30 lead on a shot from underneath by Peterson. Ayden-Grifton opened up a 34-30 lead before taking a 34-32 edge into the final quarter.</p>
        <p>Williams scored twice to put Farmville back up, 36-34, but James Woods and Hilton Ellison came back to return the lead to A-G, 38-36. Alexander Daniels canned a baseline</p>
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        <p>jumper and Joyner scored from underneath to again put the Jags on top, 40-38, but two baskets by Peterson around one by Joyner tied it again at 42 and forced the overtime.</p>
        <p>Peterson finished the game with 18 to lead Ayden-Grifton while Woods added 16. Williams had 18 and Joyner had 12 for-Farmville.</p>
        <p>The win leaves Ayden-Grifton with a 10-3 overall and 4-0 conference record. Farmville drops to 104 overall and 3-2 in the league.</p>
        <p>
        </p>
        <p>The girls game was a battle for outright possession of first place in the league, both coming in with perfect records.</p>
        <p>Both teams swapped baskets early before Ayden-Grifton took an 10-6 lead on a basket by Karen Edmonds with 3:41 left in the first period. But two baskets by Liesa Lang tied it up before the Lady Chargers inched back out into a 14-13 lead after one period.</p>
        <p>Langs follow shot with 5:37 left put Farmville ahead in the second period, 15-14 and both Vickie Best and Kim Harrison followed to open up a 19-14 advantage. Helped by a three-point play by Felica Barrett, Farmville opened up a 10-point lead, 26-16 before Ayden-Grifton began to get moving again.</p>
        <p>Farmville led, 34-28, at the half.</p>
        <p>In the third period, Ayden-Grifton, led by two baskets each from Carole Stokes and Kim Barfield, tied it up at 40-40 with 4:06 left to go. But Farmville regained the lead on a basket by Harrison with 3:51 showing, and Lang hit on a turnaround jumper to open up a four-point lead again.</p>
        <p>Farmville never trailed again, moving out to a 4845 lead by the end of the quarter.</p>
        <p>In the final period, Ayden-Grifton cut the lead to three once more, but Farmville pulled away after that, led by Harrison and Lang, leading by as much as 16, 66-50, before it finally ended.</p>
        <p>We worked hard against the press to be ready for them, Coach Hilda Worthington of Farmville said. But in the first quarter, we stood back too much instead of using our own press against them. I think we were nervous to begin with and that hurt for a while. But it was a great team effort.</p>
        <p>I think we got the heebie-jeebies</p>
        <p>Robinson Again CAA Top Player</p>
        <p>RICHMOND, Va. (AP) - Navy senior center David Robinson on Tuesday became the first player in the Colonial Athletic Association to receive the leagues basketball player-of-the-week honors for the second time this season.</p>
        <p>In the last week, Robinson scored at least 30 points in three games. On Jan. 14, the 7-foot-l Robinson scored 30 points and grabbed 15 rebounds in a 75-71 Navy win over Lafayette. Three days later, he had 31 points and 12 rebounds in the Midshipmens 96-60 conference win over American, and on Monday, he collected 32 points and eight rebounds as Navy posted an 84-60 victory over Delaware.</p>
        <p>For the week, Robinson shot ^ percent from the floor and 74 percent from the free-throw line. He also blocked 14 shots  seven against Delaware - and made six steals.</p>
        <p>Robinson leads the CAA in scoring, rebounding and blocked shots.</p>
        <p>again in the third period, but they know what they had to do to win and did it.</p>
        <p>Ayden-Grifton coach Kathy Frazier said getting both Edmonds and Juanita Murphy in early foul trouble  both collecting their first three early) hurt the A-G effort. We couldnt be as effective as we wanted to be with them on the bench, she said. Farmville has a good team, but I think we did more to beat ourselves than they did. We missed a couple of assignments at key times in the game that hurt us. They shot well from the line too, (14-18) and we made only six of 13.</p>
        <p>Its hard to stop them too with their size in the half-court game. I think we got a little tired in the fourth quarter. We just couldnt get that spurt of energy.</p>
        <p>Lang poured in 26 to lead Farmville while Harrison added 14. Michele Whitfield led Ayden-Grifton with 16 while Edmonds had 14 and Barfield had 10.</p>
        <p>Farmville Central is now 9-3 overall, 5-0 in the conference. Ayden-Grifton drops to 10-3,3-1.</p>
        <p>The Chargers play host to C.B. Aycock on Friday, while Farmville is idle until next Jan. 29 when it visits Aycock.</p>
        <p>JV Game: Farmville Central 56, Ayden-Grifton 50.</p>
        <p>Girls Game AYDEN-GRIFTON (56)</p>
        <p>Mercer 0 0-00, Murphy 2 1-3 5, Edmonds 6 2-4 14, Barfield 5 0-1 10, Stokes 3 2-3 8,1, Brown 1 1-2 3, Whitfield 8 04) 16. Totals 25 6-1356.</p>
        <p>FARMVILLE C ENTRAL (68)</p>
        <p>Best 31-3 7, Barrett 3 3-3 9, Harrison 7 0-1 14, stancil 02-2 2, Reid 10-02, Lang 9 8-9 26, Manning 4 04) 8. Totals 27 14-IK 68.</p>
        <p>Ayden-Grifton..............14  14  17  11-56</p>
        <p>Farmville C..................13  21  14  20-68</p>
        <p>Boys Game AYDEN-GRIFTON (50)</p>
        <p>Hart 0 0-0 0, Blount 03-3 3, Farmer 14-56, Moye 0 04) 0, Reeves 00-10, Ellison 10-2 2, Peterson 8 2-2 18, Woods 5 6-7 16, Harper 1 1-2 3, Dixon 10-0 2 Totals 17 16-2250. FARMVILLE CENTRAL (46)</p>
        <p>Joyner 6 04) 12, Moore 4 04) 8, Daniels 3 0-06, K. Williams90-218, M. Williams004) 0, K. Johnson 104) 2. Totals 23 0-2 46.</p>
        <p>Ayden-Grifton 13 9 12  8 H50</p>
        <p>Farmville C...............14  8 10 lO 416</p>
        <p>Jaguar Defense</p>
        <p>Farmville Centrals Kennedy Williams (44) goes up to try to block a shot by Ayden&amp;lt;Griftons Leon Dixon during first half action in their game Tuesday at Farmville. Ayden-(irifton slipped past Farmville, 50*46, in overtime to remain unbeaten atop the Eastern Plains Conference. (Reflector Photo by Tommy Forrest)</p>
        <p>Tait's Late Basket Allows Tigers To Stay Unbeaten</p>
        <p>ATLANTA (AP) - Georgia Tech Coach Bobby Cremins knew what to expect, but lOth-ranked Clemson didnt follow the script.</p>
        <p>We triple-teamed (Horace) Grant, Cremins said. We knew they were going to him.</p>
        <p>The Tigers did go to Grant, who quickly whipped a pass to Michael Tait in the right comer, and Tait drilled an 18-footer with four seconds left to give unbeaten Clemson a 67-66 victory in an Atlantic Coast Conference basketball game Tuesday night.</p>
        <p>It was the 17th victory in a row this season for the unbeaten Tigers, who went to 4-0 in the ACC for the first time in their history.</p>
        <p>"Its a win Ill cherish for a long time, Tiger Coach Cliff Ellis said. This is early in the ACC season and its still a long ways to go. Were not made up of a bunch of superstars, but I think the chemistry on this club is good.</p>
        <p>Taits game-winner on the pass from Grant came after Tech had</p>
        <p>t</p>
        <p>taken a 66-65 lead on Tom Hammonds basket with 1:55 to play.</p>
        <p>Clemson failed to score on its possession and Tech had a chance to build a three-point lead before Bruce Dalrymple was called for charging with 49 seconds to go The Tigers ran down the clock, hit Grant on the inside before the Tiger center found Tait alone in the right comer</p>
        <p>The play was designed to go to me but three guys collapsed on me, Grant said. I feel anybody with any basketball knowledge isnt going to take the shot with three guys on him. I saw Michael and kicked it out to him.</p>
        <p>I was looking to go backdoor to get the rebound, Tait said. When I saw the three guys on him, I stepped back out so he could have a passing lane. I was wide open.</p>
        <p>It was a great win for Clemson, Cremins said. It was a very tough, very disappointing loss for us.</p>
        <p>Now we really have our backs against the wall because we have</p>
        <p>Virginia (Thursday night) and North Carolina (Saturday) coming up, he said. Now were going to have to suck it up.</p>
        <p>Grant, who sat out 11 minutes of the first half with two fouls, led the Tigers with 16 points, Jerry Pryor had 14 and Tait 12.</p>
        <p>Duane Ferrell of Tech had 21 and Hammonds 20, including 10 in the final 6:05.</p>
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        <p>Thorpe Is On Roll For Kings</p>
        <p>SA(1{AMK.\T(). Calif. (AF) -Saciaiiif'iit') f('(wai(l Otis Tlitiipe is</p>
        <p>un a roll as he nears the halfway point of his third NBA season.</p>
        <p>Duke And State Tangle In ACC</p>
        <p>l;v iOMKUti;M \N Jr.</p>
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        <p>Nn, ]'&amp;gt; Oiikc. txsiA by two cases of the III! and oili* I assoiled ailiiiciits. nx'cts a 2'illi ranked .Joitli Carolina .Staf' leain wtiicli is liitpin^ to get at least niie il.i key foFiiieis l.tack ill toactiuii tuniglit.</p>
        <p>'I he nine Devils went into piactice Tuesday witlieiit guard Toinriiy ,\inaker and tfs'ove Ceorge Murgin, Ix'lli of wlinni cheeked into the scIkm)! Mifinnary Kevin Strickland was re lOver ing (loin a Ivuiph ii'xleinfection atirl Kobeit Ibiekey |(xike&amp;lt;i as though he was ab'iut to couie down with the lluariddidnotiiraetiee.</p>
        <p>John Smith, a so[thoiiioie avr-rag-iiig 10 D'ints fKT game, returned to practice after sitting out last we*keiid's Wake koicst contest with a strained back.</p>
        <p>.Sophomore Ikmriy I'crry, one of the hr-allhy ones, .said the game would hinge on who showed up for the 7SiOstait at IteynoldsColiseum.</p>
        <p>It's going to l, a hard played game, no doubt, kerry said Its</p>
        <p>just who's going to be in there ready</p>
        <p>to go.</p>
        <p>The Wolfpack missed 6foot-I center Charles Shackleford and 6-9 forward Chucky Brown in last Sundays 96 78 loss to second-ranked North Carolina. Shackleford returned to practice Tuesday, but is still listd as questionable. Brown did not work out and is not likely to play against the Blue Devils.</p>
        <p>If they are missing Chucky Brown and Shack, its going to be.something we re really going to have to try and lake advantage of, Ferry added.</p>
        <p>N.C. State coach Jim Valvano called the meeting with Duke another in a very diificult stretch of games for us.</p>
        <p>Duke Ireat N.C. State twice last sea.son by .scores of 74-64 and 72-70, the latter coming on a late pair of Johnny Dawkins free throws.</p>
        <p>Maryland goes against West Virginia in the only other contest involving an ACC school. The Terrapins stopjred Bucknell 77-68 Monday night, while West Virginia trounced Massachusetts 67-45.</p>
        <p>On Monday, Thorpe won his first NBA Player of the Week award. He followed it up by scoring 19 points and grabbing ll rebounds Tuesday night as the Kings beat the Golden State Warriors 123-114.</p>
        <p>Its a great feeling to be recognized by your peers and those who vote on the award. Thorpe said.</p>
        <p>Guard Reggie Theus scored 31 points and guard Derek Smith added 27 as the Kings improved their record to 12-26.</p>
        <p>Golden State, which fell to 23-18, was led by guard Eric "Sleepy Floyd with 24 points and by center Joe Barry Carroll with 22.</p>
        <p>In the only other NBA game Tuesday, Chicago beat Milwaukee 103-90.</p>
        <p>Thorpe, the Kings first-round pick in 1984, had double figures in both points and rebounds for the ninth time in 10 games.</p>
        <p>Things are definitely looking up for us now that weve finally three games in a row, Thorpe said.</p>
        <p>Despite the loss. Golden State coach George Karl said his team is play extremely good ball.</p>
        <p>I have a lot of confidence in them, he said. Normally you wouldnt feel that way just three months into a campaign with a new team.</p>
        <p>I thought both teams came out and shot well, said Sacramento coach Phil Johnson. The big difference was our big guys did a good job. We wanted to concentrate nn not letting their other guys (other than Carroll) free up for the long shots.</p>
        <p>Plymouth Sweep Tigers In Two NEAC Contests</p>
        <p>iLYMOUIll Hosliiig Plymouth High ScIkmiI swept a pair of Northeastern .Conference basketball games from Williainston Tuesday</p>
        <p>Might.</p>
        <p>Plyiimiilh bxik (he boys' game, 81-</p>
        <p>52, and squeezed past the Lady Tigers, 47-45.</p>
        <p>Plymouth held only a 15-13 lead after one jreriod of the boys game and was able to increase that to just 31 24 by halftirne. But in the third</p>
        <p>Roanoke Girls Alone In First</p>
        <p>CONWAY Itoaiioke High Schools )&amp;gt;oys kiKM keil olf Noitham pton 1kisl, 50 42. Tijosday night, while the Lady Hed.skiiis (rxik a 43 41 win and movr'd into soh* [Mrsse.ssion of fiistplar&amp;lt;&amp;gt;.</p>
        <p>'I'he Keilskiiis victory in the boys game iK'osled (Iimo to .{ 1 in league play and (ic&amp;lt;! llx'm with the liams for fii.st place in the Noillieastein Con fetence basketball standings It was Noitbarnplon IvasTs fiist conb'rerice loss.</p>
        <p>Roanokes gills, im'anwbile, broke out of a tie wilb the I,ady Rams, moving to 4 0 in the league, all alone in first. It w.is also tin* liist loss for the I July Rams in theoiiference</p>
        <p>Roanoke juinjH'd ruit to an early lead ill the boys game, taking a 114 advant.ige in the *|K'iiing quarter. The Rams lallierl, 17 13, in the second peroKl, but the Redskins tiKik a 27 21 lead into intei mission</p>
        <p>III the thiid (|uaiter, both teams scorr'd IOiK)ints, moving the score to r/ 31, and Roanoke out hit the Rams, 13 11. in the tinal (piaiter to ^ost (he will</p>
        <p>Ricbaid Mooie led Roanoke with 15 [Hiints while Denick Midgett had 11 to lead NoithamplMii Fast.</p>
        <p>Roanokr* climbs t&amp;lt;i 5 7 overall.</p>
        <p>Roanokes gills rsised out into a 108 |e,ad alb'i one |m''&amp;lt;kI, then ex tended that to ?! I2liy halllime with a 12 4 advantage in the second qiiailei</p>
        <p>The Ixoiy Rams cut it back to 31-25 in the thinl frame and outhit the L'ldy Redskins, 16 12, in the final IH'i iod, but was never able to catch up.</p>
        <p>Joyce Outlaw led Roanoke with 20 IHiints while Sheila Carlisle added 14. Josie Bell led the Rams with 21 while Stephanie I larris had 10.</p>
        <p>riie Roanoke girls climb to 6-6 overall</p>
        <p>Roanoke will play host to Ahoskie on Friday.</p>
        <p>.IV</p>
        <p>47</p>
        <p>Nttithaniploii Kast 51, Roanoke</p>
        <p>(iils(iaiii&amp;lt;&amp;gt;</p>
        <p>|{0,\N0KK(i:i)</p>
        <p>(lullaw 9 2 7 20, G. Wallace I 0-2 2, Hog gatd 1 1 2 ;t, ('arlcsle 7 0-4 14, Harris 0 2 5 2, D'cle 100 2, Raynard 0 0 0 0, Rot)crson 0 0 00 Totalsl.viK i;i. XOKTIIAMl'TONKASTdl)</p>
        <p>Hai I is 5 0 010, Hell 101 5 21, Ward 0 2 5 2, Ram.sey 2 (10 4. Ea.son 2 0 14, (reasey 0 00 0 Totals l!i;i 12 II.</p>
        <p>Roanoke.......................lu 12  9  124;l</p>
        <p>Noilhaioiitoii K.   4  13  l(&amp;gt;41</p>
        <p>Ho\sGatiie</p>
        <p>ROANOKE ("an M(hiic7 1 2 Morning30 06, Little 13 4 5, iMigem.s 3 12 7, Congleton 3 1-2 7, J ('omn'2004, R Counci300G, Patterson 0 0 0 0 U Lillie 0 0 0 0, Raynor 0 0-0 0 lolals 22 6-IO.VO.</p>
        <p>NOR IIIAMIION EAST (42)</p>
        <p>Midgril r, 1 I 11, Vaughan 3 1-2 7. Rose 2 0 0 4, G l .dwaids 3 0 0 6, Sexton I 0-0 2. 0 ImD.ihIs 0 ;&amp;gt; 2 2. Ramsey 4 92 8, Bentall 1 002, ItuwserOOOO  Totals  194-7  42.</p>
        <p>Ro.inoke.......................II  13  10  1350</p>
        <p>.Ni&amp;gt;itliaio|t|oii E..............4  17  10  1112</p>
        <p>period, the Vikings began to roll, outscoring the Tigers, 26-13. That pushed them into a 57-37 lead going into the last stanza. Plymouth outhit Williamston, 24-15, in that quarter.</p>
        <p>Robert Chesson led Plymouth with 16 points while James Carter had 15 and Johnny Young had 14. Guy Spruill led the Tigers with 16 while Reggie Randolph and Boris Brown each added 10.</p>
        <p>Williamston drops to 5-9 overall and 1-4 in Northeastern play.</p>
        <p>Williamston jumped out to a 10-4 lead in the first quarter of the girls game, but was unable to hold on. Plymouth came back with an 11-7 advantage in the second quarter to cut the lead to 17-15 at halftime.</p>
        <p>Williamston pulled away again in the third period, ninning out to a 32-24 lead. But Plymouth rushed back, 23-13, and got two free throws from Patricia Boston with nine seconds left to pull out the victory.</p>
        <p>Boston led Plymouth with 16 points while Tracy Hyman added 10 and Shawn McCray had 10. Monique Pou led Williamston with 15 while Dana Hardison and Kim Haw'kins each hit 10.</p>
        <p>The I.ady Tigers drop to 7-7 overall, 2-3 in the conference Williamston returns to action on Friday, hosting Roanoke Rapids.</p>
        <p>Girls Gumc Wll.I.IAMSniN (1.5)</p>
        <p>Pou 15, Hardison 10, K Hawkins 10, Miller 4, Johnson 6.</p>
        <p>PI,YMOETH(47)</p>
        <p>Boston 16, Hyman 14, Metray 10, Ran some 4. McNair 2, Taylor 1,</p>
        <p>Williamston..................10  7  15  1315</p>
        <p>Ilyiiiouth ...............I  II  9  2347</p>
        <p>Bovs Game WII.I.IAM.STON (.52)</p>
        <p>.Speller 2, R. James 4, V James (i, Randolph 10, Brown 10, Spruill 16. .Matthews 4. IM.YMOl'TII (81)</p>
        <p>Carter 15, Barrow.8, Brown 2. Chesson 16, Young 14, Gaylord 5, Hunter 4, Puckett 6, Armond7, Franklin 4</p>
        <p>Williamston..................13  II  13  1,552</p>
        <p>Plvmuuth.....................15  16  26  2481</p>
        <p>Johnson was pleased with what he called Smiths aggressive offensive and defensive play.</p>
        <p>Smith credited speculation by teammates that he was on the brink of losing his starting assignment due to what they perceived as poor play with inspiring him Tuesday night. I play better when Im angry, he said.</p>
        <p>Sacramento point guard Franklin Edwards, who came to the Kings with Smith in a trade with the Los Angeles Clippers last summer, credited the Kings improved play to a strong team effort,</p>
        <p>When we run, it makes us a good team ... The last three games prove that, Edwards said.</p>
        <p>Thorpe hit six free throws in a 2&amp;gt;2-minute stretch late in the fourth quarter to assure the Kings victory.</p>
        <p>The Warriors were trailing 110-102 when they attempted to make a run at the Kings with 3:59 left. Thorpe hit his first pair of free throws with 3:46 remaining and capped a nine-point Kings scoring effort with another set at 1:29 left to keep Sacramento on top, 119-111.</p>
        <p>During the stretch, Floyd hit his third three-point basket in an attempt to get the Warriors back in the game, but Golden State was unable to get closer than six points after Thorpes final free throws.</p>
        <p>Bulls 103, Bucks 90 Michael Jordan scored 31 points, 14</p>
        <p>in the final quarter, as the NBAs leading scorer shook off some stitches in the mouth to lead the Bulls.</p>
        <p>Jordan needed the medical attention after being elbowed in the first quarter by Bucks center Paul Mokeski.</p>
        <p>They gave me stitches and novo-caine and told me it wouldnt hurt, Jordan said. I was a little tentative getting back into the game, which is not unusual right after something like that happens.</p>
        <p>Gene Banks wasnt tentative for Chicago, as the reserve forward scored a season-high 18 points.</p>
        <p>Havelock Tops Pam Pack</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON - Havelock held off a Washington rally in the final quarter to take a 65-58 Coastal Conference basketball victory Tuesday night.</p>
        <p>Havelocks girls made it a sweep with a 53-50 win in their outing.</p>
        <p>Havelock held a slim 14-12 lead after the first quarter, and managed to outhit the Pam Pack, 15-12, in the second. That gave the Rams a 29-24 halftime lead.</p>
        <p>The Rams pulled away in the third period, 20-15, running their lead to 49-39. Then, in the final quarter, Washington rallied, 19-16, but fell short,</p>
        <p>Alvin West led Havelock with 20 points while A1 McCabe had 12 and Napoleon Simmons had 11. Ryan Dixon led Washington with 20 while Joe Daniels hit 15 and Tyron Lodge added 11.</p>
        <p>The loss dropped Washington to 2-11 overall and 0-4 in Coastal play.</p>
        <p>Havelock held a 10-8 lead after one quarter, but increased that to 24-18 by the end of the half. In the third quarter, Washington came back to trail by only 39-35.</p>
        <p>Swimmers In Meet</p>
        <p>CHAPEL HILL - Several Greenville swimmers took part in the Emergency Invitational held this past weekend in Chapel Hill.</p>
        <p>The top finish for a Greenville swimmer was a third-place finish by Bert Powell in the senior boys 100-meter breaststroke.</p>
        <p>Other Greenville finishers:</p>
        <p>Eight and under boys: John Powell, 6th m 25 free m 17 52,4th in 25 back in 21.48,4th in 25 breast in 24 69, 7th in 25 fly in 26.27, 6th in 1(X) IM in 1:51.72; David Simo, 7th in 25 breast in 25,79, Hth in 25 fly in 25.87.</p>
        <p>Eight and under girls: Kathryn Hicks, 4lh in 25 free in 23.37 ; 5th in 25 back in 29.14, 4th in 25 breast in 31.16, 5th in 25 fly in 35 2:1</p>
        <p>9-10 boys: Jeremy Simo, 8th in 50 free in 38.58,7lh in 50 back in 42.81; ,5th in 50 fly in 47 57,5thinlOOIMinl;38.01.</p>
        <p>9-10 girls: Christy Goodman, 7th in 50 free in 36.90,8th in 50 back in 46 22,6th in 50 breast in 48 81, 4th in 50 fly in 45.29; 5th in 100lMinl;34 35.</p>
        <p>11-12 bovs: Kenny Parker, 7th in 50 free in :i3.28, 8th m 50 back in 43.57, 7th in 50 breast in 48.94, 8th in 50 fly in 47.95, 8th in 100 IM inl:.37 04; Barry Simo. 6th in 50 free in :!2.27; 5th in .50 back in 39.07, 6th in 50 breast m 45.85, 5th in 50 fly in 41.58, 6th in IOOlMinl:24 14.</p>
        <p>Senior boys: Bert Powell, 7th in 100 free in 1 06 56. 4th in 100 back in 1:21.98, 5th in 100 breast in 1:24 46, 3rd in 100 fly in l:24.53,4thin2(K)IMin2:49.45.</p>
        <p>In the final quarter, Washington outhit Havelock, 15-14, but could not pull out the win.</p>
        <p>Laura Maxwell poured in 30 points to lead the Lady Rams while Michele Barrett added 11. Tonya Holley paced Washington with 25 while Angela Holley had 10.</p>
        <p>The loss leaves Washington at 7-4 overall, 2-2 in the Coastal.</p>
        <p>The Pam Pack will play host to West Craven on Friday.</p>
        <p>JVGame: Havelock 58, Washington55.</p>
        <p>Girls Game HAVELOCK (53)</p>
        <p>Maxwell 13 4-7 30, Myers 2 0-14, Barrett 4 3-4 11, Godette 0 0-0 0, Burroughs 0 0-0 0,</p>
        <p>Morris 0 0-0 0, Sorenson 0 (H) 0. Totals 21 11-1653.</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (50)</p>
        <p>T. Holley 113-3 25, Davis 21-2 5, Connor 0 1-31, A. Holley 2 6-710, Occhipinti 2 3-7 7, V. Reddick 0 2-2 2, Oden 0 04) 0, Grice 00-0 0. Totals 17 16-2450.</p>
        <p>Havelock ...............10 14 15 1453</p>
        <p>Washington....................8  10  17  15-50</p>
        <p>Boys Game HAVELOCK (65)</p>
        <p>West 9 2-4 20, McCabe 5 2-212, Simmons 5</p>
        <p>1-3 11, Robinson 2 2-2 6, Borden 4 0-2 8, Boswell 3 2-2 8, Mullins 0 04) 0, Carter 0 04) 0, Sykes 0 (H) 0, Morris 0 04) 0, Boone 0 0-0 0. Totals 28 9-15 65.</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (58)</p>
        <p>Daniels 6 3-3 15, Warren 2 2-3 6, Dixon 9</p>
        <p>2-3 20, Holscher 1 04) 2, Hodges 0 04) 0, Mack 0 04) 0, Moore 12-3 4, Lodge 3 5-711. Totals 2214-19 58.</p>
        <p>Havelock......................14 15 20 16-65</p>
        <p>Washington..................12 12 15 10-58</p>
        <p>Knights Capture Two From Bethel</p>
        <p>North Carolinas first Baptist Conference was organized in Greenville in 1830.</p>
        <p>KINSTON  Greenville Christian Academy took a pair of basketball games from hosting Bethel Christian Tuesday night.</p>
        <p>Greenville won the boys game, 56-52, and the girls came away with a 77-52 victory.</p>
        <p>In the boys game, Greenville eased out into a 15-12 lead in the opening quarter. Bethel came back, however, with a 20-18 advantage, and trailed by only 33-32 at intermission.</p>
        <p>In the third period, Greenville held off any further advances by Bethel and eased out to a 42-40 lead going into the final quarter. The Knights then outhit Bethel, 14-12, to hold on for the win.</p>
        <p>I dont feel like were playing real sharp at times, Coach Dale Thatcher said. The game was closer than it should have been. But we played heads up at the end and were able to pull it out.</p>
        <p>Robin House led Greenville with 22 points while Paul Hollingsworth added 12. Lewis Deaver led Bethel with 15 while Barry Deaver had 13 and Doug Moody and Jesse Harrison had 10 each.</p>
        <p>Greenvilles girls eased to an 18-12 lead in the first quarter of their game. Both teams hit 10 in the second period, leaving the Lady Knights up at intermission, 28-22.</p>
        <p>in the third quarter, Greenville burned the nets for 30 points while allowing 11. That pushed them out to a 58-33 lead going into the final period. Both teams scored 19 points in that.</p>
        <p>Amber Tripp and Kim Faulkner each had 14 to lead Greenville, while Stephanie Stevens added 13 and Sandy Johnston and Tammy Huggins each had 10. Kim Jones had 32 and</p>
        <p>Sheila Shiver had 10 for Bethel.</p>
        <p>Once our defense and fast break took over, we had the game well in hand,Thatcher said.</p>
        <p>Greenvilles boys are now 10-3 while the girls are 7-1. GCA travels to Friendship Academy of Raleigh on Friday.</p>
        <p>JV Game: Greenville Christian 55, Bethel Christian 54 (2 OT)</p>
        <p>Girls Game GREENVILLE CHRISTIAN (77)</p>
        <p>Johnston 5 04) 10, Tripp 6 2-414, Stevens 6 1-3 13, Boyd 1 04) 2, Huggins 5 04) 10, Faulkner 6 2-214, Cherry 41-2 9, Boseman 1 04) 2, Locklear 0 1-3 1, Spivey 1 0-0 2, Swindell 0 04) 0. Totals 35 7-14 77.</p>
        <p>BETHEL CHRISTIAN (52)</p>
        <p>Pickens 0 0-0 0, McCoy 1 0-3 2, Taylor 2 0-2 4, Rouse 0 04) 0, Grier 00-00, White 11-2 3, Shiver 3 4-5 10, Howard 01-41, Jones 13 6-14 32. Totals 2012-30 52.</p>
        <p>Greenville....................18  10  30  19-77</p>
        <p>Bethel..........................12  10  11  19-52</p>
        <p>Boys Game GREENVILLE CHRISTIAN (56)</p>
        <p>Parker 2 4-6 8, Hollingsworth 5 2-5 12, Coletrain 11-3 3, Holloman 3 2-5 8, House 9 4-7 22, Williams 00-00, May 0 0-0 0, Dixon 1 1-13. Totals 21 14-27 56.</p>
        <p>BETHEL CHRISTIAN (52)</p>
        <p>B. Deaver 5 3-813, Moody 3 4-410, Heath 2 0-2 4, Harrison 3 4-710, L. Deaver 6 3-315, McCoy 00-0 0, Perry 0 04) 0. Totals 1914-24 52.</p>
        <p>Greenville....................15  18  9  1456</p>
        <p>Bethel..........................12  20  8  1252</p>
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        <p>U.S. Foe Set  Well, Maybe</p>
        <p>FREMANTLE, Australia (AP)  It will be Stars &amp;amp; Stripes of the United States against Kookaburra III of Australia for the Americas Cup  maybe.</p>
        <p>Kookaburra III made Alan Bond a one-term Cup holder Tuesday by compleng a 5-0 sweep of Bonds Australia IV in the defender finals. Bond is the Perth wheeler-dealer who in 1983 broke the New York Yacht Clubs 132-year hold on the trophy.</p>
        <p>Kevin Parry, another Perth tycoon, now will defend the Cup with a Kookaburra against Americas Stars &amp;amp; Stripes. Whether he will use Kookaburra II or III is to be decided in some as yet unspecified runoff.</p>
        <p>Kwkaburra II was eliminated earlier in the defender series. But Bond and Parry settled a protest war</p>
        <p>10 days ago by agreeing with the Royal Perth Yacht Club, the official holder of the Cup, to give Kookaburra</p>
        <p>11 another chance.</p>
        <p>The truce terms were not detailed. The ill feeeling between the Bond and Parry camps surfaced, however, at a news conference after 'Tuesdays race.</p>
        <p>The fact that you werent good enough is a fact of life, Parry said to Bond, sitting some 10 feet away.</p>
        <p>He said Bond had been childish in saying that if Parry lost the Cup, Bond would have to get the Cup back.</p>
        <p>Parry admitted he might have been behaving like an ungracious winner, but that internal squabbling ' was damaging Australias effort to retain yachtings most coveted prize.</p>
        <p>The bickering between the two syndicates is making headlines in Australias sports-loving press, even to the point that the Jan. 31 opening of the Americas Cup championship series is sometimes overlooked.</p>
        <p>Iain Murray, Kookaburra Ills victorious skippier  and who may or not be the defending helmsman, depending on which Kookaburra is selected  said of his certain rival, Dennis Conner: Ive never met big, bad Dennis. Im an admirer of his sailing skills. He has tremendous upwind sailing skills, but weve done the same the past week.</p>
        <p>Colin Beashel, skipper of the ousted Australia IV called the two Kookaburras very competitive. I wouldnt want to say which is the better.</p>
        <p>The challengers also have something to resolve. Stars &amp;amp; Stripes has asked New Zealand to provide its Kiwi Magic, which lost four of fives races to the American boat in the challenger finals, to help the Americans train for the Kookaburra contest. Although it lost to Stars &amp;amp; Stripes, New Zealand possesses the</p>
        <p>same swift maneuvering abilities as the Kookaburras.</p>
        <p>Such cooperation among challengers was commonplace in )ast Americas Cup tournaments, )ut each time the defender was the United States.</p>
        <p>This time, however, the defender is Australia, and New Zealand has a natural affinity for its Southern Hemisphere neighbor. And the Kiwis also have a selfish motive.</p>
        <p>A victory by Conner, who is trying to regain the Cup I</p>
        <p>in 1983, means the next series would</p>
        <p>I he lost to Australia</p>
        <p>be held off the coast of California. Those are home waters for Conner, whose yacht is sponsored by the San Diego Yacht Club of which he is a member. A victory by the Australians would keep the competition in the Indian Ocean, familiar waters for the New Zealanders, and far less expensive than a trek to California.</p>
        <p>Conner didnt help himself when, last month, he said no one would build a Cup 12-meter yacht out of fiberglass, as the new zealandersi did, unless they intend to cheat.</p>
        <p>Conner unsuccessfully campaigned to have Plastic Fantastic, the nickname given New Zealands boat, extensively surveyed to determine whether she was legal. He claimed the weight of her hull was concentrated amidships instead of being of</p>
        <p>Lendl, Edberg Battle Way Into Semifinals</p>
        <p>MELBOURNE, Australia (AP) -A confident Ivan Lendl and defending champion Stefan Edberg of Sweden blasted their way today into the semifinals of the $1.65 million Australian Open tennis championships at Kooyong.</p>
        <p>Lendl, seeking his first Grand Slam title on grass, scored a crushing 7-6, 6-1, 6-3 triumph over ninth-seeded Anders Jarryd of Sweden, while Edberg, seeded fourth, completely outplayed No. 6 Miloslav Mecir of Czechoslovakia 6-1,6-4,6-4.</p>
        <p>Im confident as Im playing better than I was at the end of Wimbledon last year, said Lendl, who reached the final at the All-England Club before falling to West Germanys Boris Becker.</p>
        <p>Australians Pat Cash and unseeded Wally Masur clinched the other semifinal spots, with the llth-seeded Cash ousting No. 3 Yannick Noah of France 6-4,6-2,2-6,6-0 with some impressive pressure tennis.</p>
        <p>Cash now faces Lendl, who has won all four of their previous meetings, while Masur kept up his sensational run in the tournament by downing unseeded New Zealander Kelly Evernden6-3,7-5,6-4,</p>
        <p>Masur, 23 and ranked just 71st in the world, upset Becker in five sets in Tuesdays fourth round and will play Edberg. Masur held two match points against Edberg in the last Australian Open, in December 1985, before losing that match.</p>
        <p>Both womens singles semifinals are scheduled for Thursday.</p>
        <p>Defending champion Martina Navratilova of Fort Worth, Texas, faces Swedens Catarina Lindqvist and Hana Mandlikova of Czechoslovakia meets West Germanys Claudia Kohde-Kilsch.</p>
        <p>Cash, the 21-year-old hero of Australias Davis Cup final victory over Sweden at Kooyong last month, was cheered on by a sellout center court crowd as he downed Noah, who is making his first serious assault at grass court tournaments.</p>
        <p>The Australian kept the pressure on Noah at every opportunity, never</p>
        <p>SALE</p>
        <p>MID-WINTER</p>
        <p>CLEARANCE</p>
        <p>allowing the Frenchman to settle into a rhythm.</p>
        <p>I didnt serve well enough to be a threat to him, Noah admitted. I was serving so badly it killed my confidence, while he was playing well. Cash played down his chances of upsetting Lendl when they meet Friday.</p>
        <p>Im playing the No. 1 player in the world, Cash said. I cant be super-confident, but Ill be giving it all Ive got.</p>
        <p>The fiery Cash was given a warning for ball abuse in the first set, but</p>
        <p>otherwise kept his temper in check against Noah.</p>
        <p>Lendl stretched his career record to seven wins in eight matches against Jarryd. And, after criticizing the scheduling, which has seen him play two matches on outside courts, said he was pleased with his form.</p>
        <p>Im winning and not making too many errors, he said.</p>
        <p>Edberg was the most impressive victor t^ay, serving with tremendous power and precision against the tricky Mecir.</p>
        <p>Dooley Named, As Wake Coach</p>
        <p>By TOM FOREMAN Jr.</p>
        <p>AP Sports Writer</p>
        <p>WINSTON-SALEM (AP) -Former Virginia Tech coach Bill Dooley was named head football coach at Wake Forest today, the schools 10th football coach since it joined the Atlantic Coast Conference in 1953.</p>
        <p>Dooleys new job will mark his second stint in the ACC. Dooley previously served at North Carolina, where he won conference titles in 1971,1972 and 1977. He finished with an overall record of 69-53-2. His Tar Heel teams played in the Peach Bowl in 1970 and 1976, the Gator Bowl in 1971, the Sun Bowl in 1972 and 1974 and the Liberty Bowl in 1977.</p>
        <p>In January 1978, Dooley accepted the dual position of head football coach and athletic director at Virginia Tech. His 63 victories at the Blacksburg, Va., school made him the winningest coach in the schools history. He closed his career at Virginia Tech with a 25-24 victory</p>
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        <p>uniform thickness as are the other 12s, all built of aluminum.</p>
        <p>Despite the various barriers, the Americans held hopes of negotiating New Zealand syndicate head Michael Fay over to their side.</p>
        <p>Kookaburra III won her decisive race Tuesday even before it started. Peter Gilmour was forcing Australias Colin Beashel into the path of the committee boat prior to the gun.</p>
        <p>Beashel jibed away too late and gave Gilmour a killing 36-second starting margin. The rest of the race</p>
        <p>was a parade for Murray, Kookaburra Ills other helmsman. He won by 55 seconds and set off a celebration back in port.</p>
        <p>The lemon-colored Kookaburra sailed into the Royal Perth Yacht Club dock where Bond congratulated Parry as the crews exchanged sporting handshakes and champagne toasts.</p>
        <p>We won the Cup, Bond said. Dont you lose it, Kevin.</p>
        <p>Then Bond told the crowd: If Kevin doesnt defend it, well go and get it back for you.</p>
        <p>Referring to Bonds racing symbol, a kangaroo brandishing boxing gloves. Parry said: I dont think the kangaroo belongs to you or the kookaburras (an Australian bird) to us. Instead, he added, both syndicates were racing in the interests of retaining the Cup for Australia.</p>
        <p>Warren Jones, Bonds spokesman through five Cup campaigns, said of .Kookaburras victory: It takes a tough syndicate to roll over us and Task Force (Kookaburra) rolled over us fair and square. Well take it on the chin.</p>
        <p>Spying Nothing Special In America's Cup Races</p>
        <p>over North Carolina State in the Peach Bowl. Virginia Tech also was 20th in the final Associated Press college football poll for 1986.</p>
        <p>Gene Hooks, Wake Forests athletic director, declined Monday to reveal the identities of the primary candidates to replace A1 Groh, who announced Friday he was leaving the program after he and Hooks were unable to agree on furture contractual terms.</p>
        <p>Dooley, coach at North Carolina for 11 years, has spent the last nine seasons as Virginia Techs head coach. He left on Jan. 1 in the after-math of a contractual disagreement with the universitys administration.</p>
        <p>Dooley has won 131 games, lost 91 and has three ties during his 20-year coaching career. He is the brother of Georgia head coach Vince Dooley.</p>
        <p>He ranks 11th among the nations active football coaches in victories and is 17th among active coaches in winning percentage.</p>
        <p>FREMANTLE, Australia (AP) -The sailors were in the sky. The big yellow bird was in the water.</p>
        <p>In this Southern Hemisphere port, where its day at the same time that its night in the United States, the high-tech era of Americas Cup yacht racing has spawned some strange activities.</p>
        <p>Aerial surveillance of the enemy, for one.</p>
        <p>While Kookaburra III, the yellowhulled yacht named for an Australian bird, was sailing against Australia IV on Tuesday, two members of the Stars &amp;amp; Stripes team were spying from a helicopter.</p>
        <p>Its nothing very special. We do a fair amount of that, said John Marshall, coordinator for the American syndicate which is trying to regain possession of the Cup lost to Austrtalia in 1983.</p>
        <p>The American boat, which ousted New Zealand on Monday in the finals of challenger series, will race for the Cup in a bst-of-seven series starting Jan. 31. Marshall and tactician Tom Whidden took to the air to study Kookaburra III, the probable defender.</p>
        <p>She beat Australia IV by 55 seconds Tuesday to sweep the best-of-nine defender finals 5-0. Unless Kookaburra II, eliminated earlier, appears better in speed trials. Kookaburra III will be the defender against the Americans. And the challengers want to find out as much as they can about her.</p>
        <p>Until 1983, all 12-meter yachts were basically the same, Marshall said. In that year, Australia II showed up with a winged keel and won the Cup. This time. New Zealand featured a fiberglass hull, and it won 28 straight races at one point.</p>
        <p>The rate of change is greater, Marshall said. People are willing to take bigger risks and make changes to make progress. The boat you might have been looking at a month ago is different than the one youre looking at now.</p>
        <p>The sailors take to the skies to keep up with those changes.</p>
        <p>We have to assume were also being watched, Marshall said. New Zealand had a helicopter up every single day of the entire season. They own the helicopter. We rent ours.</p>
        <p>Marshall said theres not much a crew can do about spies.</p>
        <p>Its pretty much part of doing business, he said. The sky up there is pretty much anyones who wants to use it within the limits of aviation safety.</p>
        <p>'Tuesdays mission, he admitted, wasnt especially fruitful. Kookaburra III took a huge 36-second lead at the start and sailed defensively the rest of the way:</p>
        <p>We got some ideas. We always do, Marshall said. We got a look at Kookaburras sail trim that you couldnt see from the ground.</p>
        <p>The fact that Australia IV lost the start made it not so interesting to us tactically, he added. Additionally, todays (calm) weather conditions were unusual.... Every day is valuable in some fashion or other and no single day is complete so I guess it was probably as good as any.</p>
        <p>Will there be better days? Will the Stars &amp;amp; Stripes reconnaissance team be watching the two Kookaburras working against each other in the days leading to the final?</p>
        <p>Well be around, Marshall said.</p>
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        <pb facs="00096520_0118" />
        <p>The Daily Reflector. Greenville, N C</p>
        <p>Wednesday, January 21,1987All Come To Praise Giant Defense</p>
        <p>PASADENA, Calif. (AP) - Like Marc Antony, everyone seems to have come to the Super Bowl to praise the New York Giants defense, After all, it has buried just about everyone this season.</p>
        <p>Even the Denver Broncos, who will play the Giants in Sunday's Super Bowl, have nothing but nice things to say about New York's overpowering defense.</p>
        <p>Still, there is this little matter of the Giant secondary, which supposedly is the vulnerable part of a unit that ranked second in the National Football League in total defense and first against the run.</p>
        <p>They say we're the weak link?" cornerback Elvis Patterson said with</p>
        <p>TANK FNANARA</p>
        <p>7</p>
        <p>a look filled with doubt. If were the weak link, then go ahead and expose us. Nobody has done it yet.</p>
        <p>We will scratch and claw and kick and fight and do whatever it takes to win. This is the biggest game of our careers.</p>
        <p>Patterson clearly recalls that Denver quarterback John Elway threw for 336 yards against New York on Nov. 23. He also remembers that the Giants won the game 19-16.</p>
        <p>Elway presents every problem in the world, Patterson said. He can do it all. He can even throw the ball 50 yards in the air when he is laying down. He's very mobile or he can sit in the pocket and he is a very accurate passer.</p>
        <p>When he is rolling or scrambling, he causes a problem. Their guys can get behind you. But we didnt let it happen last time. Their receivers know that they will be hit when he gets out of protection because the rules let us. They are live game when he is scrambling and we will be hitting them.</p>
        <p>New Yorks defensive record is built mainly on its sensational linebackers and strong front line, which applies extreme pressure on quarterbacks and shuts down rushing games. The Broncos dont run very well, anyway, which means Elway often will be testing Patterson, fellow cornerbacks Perry Williams and Mark Collins and</p>
        <p>by Jeff Millar &amp;amp; Bill Hinds</p>
        <p>iTAPF^f^^TMATTi^e</p>
        <p>" 0EF" UA'i? COAlOGtP Mie? t-6^lRT FDK Tp| 6-PCOKjP MAlP</p>
        <p>SCOREBOARD</p>
        <p>Bowling</p>
        <p>Aloha .Mixed l.ea^ue ^</p>
        <p>Cherry Court................:18',  29'..</p>
        <p>Gone Sailin'.................37  31</p>
        <p>Boat People................32'j  35'a</p>
        <p>Military Mutts  2K  40</p>
        <p>High game and series, Harold Kwell, liK. 551; Faye Ewell, 217, .524</p>
        <p>Rec Basketball</p>
        <p>Pee Wee Division Blue Devils  2 0 tl 4 12</p>
        <p>Pirates  045211</p>
        <p>Leading scorers:  HI) - Beau</p>
        <p>WilliamsG, P Gavin Fliekingerfi</p>
        <p>Terrapins......... 0 4 0 0 22</p>
        <p>Wolfpack............. 4 0 4 2 10</p>
        <p>Leading scorers T Uh&amp;gt; .Jordan 10, Patrick Porter 0, W Scott Selby 6. Jonathan Adams 0</p>
        <p>Midget Division Cavaliers  li  4 h i:&amp;gt; 35</p>
        <p>Pirates  o  H H  2  25</p>
        <p>I,eading scorers  (' Bussell</p>
        <p>Williamson 13, Nathan Ellis lo. 1 Brian Fields 15, .Ion Gavigaii 4</p>
        <p>Divisiim</p>
        <p>Perdue....... 2o 12 32</p>
        <p>Family Practice ,  21 lo 37</p>
        <p>Leading scorers 1* Hector Lewis 14. Jerrv Biwker H. FP Hot) Ross 10, Vates'Sa lander 9</p>
        <p>BarTenders  14  27 31</p>
        <p>Winn Dixie  25  22 47</p>
        <p>Uading scorers H Steve Ward 6, JimllolteO, WD  DoiigColey II</p>
        <p>Overtons</p>
        <p>Wachovia</p>
        <p>21  31)</p>
        <p>2:i 45</p>
        <p>Leading scorers () Larry Sugg ); W Kick Morrison7</p>
        <p>10</p>
        <p>PCB  11  111  29</p>
        <p>Barnone  lo  15  25</p>
        <p>la&amp;gt;ading scorers PC  Clarke</p>
        <p>Everette 10; B Christopher Burt !i. John Smith 6</p>
        <p>City Heal..........lo  22  32</p>
        <p>Honeycutt's......23  29  52</p>
        <p>Leading scorers 11 Erie Shorl 24; CH Shelton Ward 14. Joe Bartlett 14</p>
        <p>Col AAikmanxl  24  41  05</p>
        <p>Pitt Memorial  29  12  41</p>
        <p>liCadmg scorers CA T Pelt way 20, M Baker 12, Bo Tvson 12; PM-L Bectonll</p>
        <p>Grady White  2H  31  ,i9</p>
        <p>Rec &amp;amp; Parks......;)4  lO  ;&amp;gt;o</p>
        <p>Leading scorers: GW  Keith</p>
        <p>Clark 26, Hobbv Fleming 12, BP T Crandol 16, It Illgrwn 14</p>
        <p>NFL Standings</p>
        <p>Bv Thf tsswialed Irew All Times Ksr WM.EStONKEHKVt &amp;gt;:</p>
        <p>Patrick thvlsiim W 1 T Pis (</p>
        <p>Calgary:).\V Islanders!</p>
        <p>Minnesota 5. BuffaloO</p>
        <p>Wednesday's Games Montreal atJlartford, 7 :!5p m N V Islanders at Detroit. 7 35 pm St Diiiis.atToronto,? !5p m Kdmonton at Winnipeg. 8 :)5 p m Philadephia at Chicago. 8:15 p m N Y Rangers at Vancouver, 10:35 p m PilLslmrgh at Dis .Angeles, 10 :)5p m Thursday 's (lames Montreal at Boston, 7:15 p m Calgary at New Jersey, 7 315 p m</p>
        <p>NFL Playoffs "</p>
        <p>Bv The AssiK-iatPd Press All Times E.ST Sunday. Dec. 2H New York .lets 35, Kan.sasCitv 15 Washington 19, Los .Angeles Bams</p>
        <p>7</p>
        <p>Saturday. .Ian. 3 Cleveland 23, N'ew York .lets 20. 20T</p>
        <p>Washington 27, Chicago 13 Sunday. Jan. I New York Giants 49, San Fran CISCO 3</p>
        <p>Denver 22 New England 17 Sunilav. Jan. 11 I )enver 2:). Cleveland 2U, ()T New York Giant.s 17. Washington 0 Sunday. .Ian. 25 Super Bowl At Pasadena. Calif.</p>
        <p>Denver vs New York Giants, 6</p>
        <p>Pro Bowl Sunday. Feb. I At Honolulu</p>
        <p>AFC vs NFC,4p 111</p>
        <p>NBA Standings</p>
        <p>By The Assot iati'd Press Alt Times K.ST EASTERN CilNEEHEM E Allanlic Hivisiiin</p>
        <p>Eastern 75, Allentown 67 Fordham 79, Columbia 77 E'raminjgham St. 102, Worcester 78 Gallaudet 78 W. Maryland 71 George Washington 85. Duquesne</p>
        <p>Hartford 80, Maine 68 Hartwick62, Bhaca57 Hawthorne 99. Lyndon St. 98, OT Holy Cross 72, Iona 66 Howard U. 82, Coppin St, 65 Kings, N.Y. 78, NE Bible 36</p>
        <p>65</p>
        <p>USalIe65,St.beters56 Maine-FarmingtonSl, Maine Maritime 47 Norwich 71, Castleton St 67 Penn 80, Lafayette 64 Plattsburgh St. 100, Union, N J. 83 BPI78, Skidmore 72 Salem St 73, Westfield St. 67 .Scranton 65, Juniata 63 SE Massachusetts 88, Fitchburg \St 68</p>
        <p>Spring Garden 93, Penn St.-Capitol</p>
        <p>81</p>
        <p>Trinity, Conn. 58, Wesleyan 55 Tufts 71, E Nazarene69 Upsala77.FDU-Madison65 Wash &amp;amp; Lee 80. E Mennonite60 Washington, Md 79. Johns Hopkins 64 AVavnesburg 87, Point Park 79 Wilkes 99, Albright 93 williams69, Middlebury 55 SDlTH</p>
        <p>Ala Birmingham 79, Va Commonwealth 70 Centre 80, Lindsey Wilson 58 Chris. Newport 90, N.C. Wesleyan</p>
        <p>85</p>
        <p>Clearwater Christian 72. Warner .Southern 70 Clemson 67, Georgia Tech 66 Cumberland. Ky 70, Transylvania</p>
        <p>Gonzaga 79. E. Washington 69 Humbolt St. 57, Menlo 51 Loyola, Calif. 100, Chapman 95 Pepperdine 75, Chicago St. 72 Portland 71, Pacific Lutheran 51 Rocky Mountain 88. N. Montana 86 Sacramento St. 82. Stanislaus St</p>
        <p>73</p>
        <p>S Colorado 83. Panhandle St 79, 2T</p>
        <p>S Utah 89. Adams St 71</p>
        <p>U.S. International 107, Point Loma</p>
        <p>94</p>
        <p>Western St.. Colo 68, Mesa 53 W Washington 113, Sheldon Jackson 89</p>
        <p>TDIRNAMENTS Rotary Pocono Classic Championship Phila Textile 96, Dominican 73 Third Place Bloomfield 72, E. Stroudsburg 69</p>
        <p>Transactions</p>
        <p>By The Associated Press BASEBALL .American League MINNESOTA TWINS-Signed Tim Laudner, catcher, to one-year contract  *</p>
        <p>National League CINCINNATI REDS-Invited Bill Scherrer, Carl Willis, Jeff Mon</p>
        <p>tgoi</p>
        <p>Botl</p>
        <p>Disl of Columbia 69, Hampton U Fla .Southern 99. St Thomas, Fla.</p>
        <p>W 1</p>
        <p>Id GB</p>
        <p>liosMlI</p>
        <p>i: 11</p>
        <p>711</p>
        <p>rtiil.iili'lphia</p>
        <p>22 17</p>
        <p>r.64</p>
        <p>5';</p>
        <p>M.ishmplim</p>
        <p>I'l I'l</p>
        <p>Mm</p>
        <p>8</p>
        <p>New \'ork</p>
        <p>13 25</p>
        <p>;142</p>
        <p>14</p>
        <p>Ni'vi Ji'rst'\</p>
        <p>10 28</p>
        <p>26)</p>
        <p>17</p>
        <p>Crnlral DBKiiin</p>
        <p>Di'Iroil</p>
        <p>25 11</p>
        <p>m</p>
        <p>All.int.i</p>
        <p>ii 12</p>
        <p>676</p>
        <p>Milnaiikii'</p>
        <p>'24 17</p>
        <p>;&amp;gt;8,5</p>
        <p>:I't</p>
        <p>('hicajn</p>
        <p>20 17</p>
        <p>:&amp;gt;4i</p>
        <p>5'?</p>
        <p>lnili;iti.i</p>
        <p>I'lt'Vflaml</p>
        <p>20 IK 15 24</p>
        <p>526</p>
        <p>.18.5</p>
        <p>6</p>
        <p>11'.,</p>
        <p>WKSTKItN KIVKKRFM K</p>
        <p>MidursI Di\isitin</p>
        <p>Dallas</p>
        <p>24 U</p>
        <p>612</p>
        <p>-</p>
        <p>llah</p>
        <p>21 1C)</p>
        <p>.)68</p>
        <p>2'2</p>
        <p>llousion</p>
        <p>I'l to</p>
        <p>Mm</p>
        <p>.5</p>
        <p>Dcnvt'r</p>
        <p>17 23</p>
        <p>425</p>
        <p>8</p>
        <p>Sacranii'iilii</p>
        <p>12 26</p>
        <p>316</p>
        <p>12</p>
        <p>S.II1 \nlonio</p>
        <p>n 28</p>
        <p>282</p>
        <p>13':</p>
        <p>I.nific Division</p>
        <p>I, A l..ikrrs</p>
        <p>:io K</p>
        <p>7K9</p>
        <p>Iorll.iml</p>
        <p>24 17</p>
        <p>Xi</p>
        <p>7'"</p>
        <p>1,1'lili'nSlati'</p>
        <p>23 IK</p>
        <p>.'i61</p>
        <p>8'.</p>
        <p>S('allli&amp;gt;</p>
        <p>20 17</p>
        <p>.')41</p>
        <p>O'-.</p>
        <p>Ihix'iiix</p>
        <p>16 '21</p>
        <p>410</p>
        <p>14';</p>
        <p>1 A ClipiH'rs</p>
        <p>5 .14</p>
        <p>P28</p>
        <p>'25'-'</p>
        <p>Philadelphia NY Islanders Washington NY Rangers Pittsburgh New Jersey</p>
        <p>2.) Ai 4 ,'ai</p>
        <p>.E I.</p>
        <p>31 12 3 65 I'M liW 15,t 18.5 181 IH9</p>
        <p>19  22  T  45</p>
        <p>18  20  8  44</p>
        <p>17    8  42</p>
        <p>18  24  5  41</p>
        <p>Adams Division</p>
        <p>23  19  :  ,5,1</p>
        <p>22  18  8  Ml</p>
        <p>22  19  5  49</p>
        <p>18  23  7  4:1</p>
        <p>13  27  8  ;)2</p>
        <p>(AMPBEI I, (ONEEKENt</p>
        <p>Norris IHyjsion 21  21  5  47</p>
        <p>18  20  8  44</p>
        <p>18 '22  41</p>
        <p>17  2.)  8  40</p>
        <p>18  20  8  40</p>
        <p>Smvthr Division</p>
        <p>' 30  14  2  82</p>
        <p>20  1</p>
        <p>20  20  1</p>
        <p>20  21  0</p>
        <p>14  28  5</p>
        <p>Tuesday s liantes</p>
        <p>Boston 5. yjuelxv .1 WashinglonO. Nev* .lersey ,i</p>
        <p>Montreal</p>
        <p>Hartford</p>
        <p>Boston</p>
        <p>Quebec</p>
        <p>Buffalo</p>
        <p>Minnesohi Detroit Toronto Chicago SI Uhiis</p>
        <p>Edmonton Winni(eg Calgary Los Angeles Vaneouvei</p>
        <p>4  :*</p>
        <p>At 4&amp;lt;:</p>
        <p>:u</p>
        <p>Tuesday's (tames</p>
        <p>Chicago lO.t, Milwaukee9'</p>
        <p>S.U ramento 123. Golden Suite 114 VAednesdav's (.ames Indiana a! Boston. ? 30 p m PhiH'tiiv.itNew .lcrscy.7 topni Seaitle.ii lhila(lelphij,7 topm. I. \ iMkcrsat Atlanta.? ;iOpni Milwaiik(Hat('levei.ind.7 topm New Viirkal Dallas. 8 30 p m Houston at ,Nin Antonio. 8 to (i m Golden State.it Dtmver, o tOp m Detroit ai I'l.ih.o to pm</p>
        <p>Thursday 's Game 1. A l.ikersat Indiana.Bp m</p>
        <p>College Basketball</p>
        <p>By The Asstu iated Press FAST</p>
        <p>B.dtson 89,1'iKist Guard .5(1 Bitslon Coll 79. .Se'ton Hall 75</p>
        <p>C.ihnni l:lt. B.(pt(st Bihle9'2</p>
        <p>('em I'niiiiecld'ul 81, F Carolina</p>
        <p>*4</p>
        <p>(.ley elaiiil .St 52, Marist 49 Cornell89, llaniilloii86 Curry 83, E;merson.53</p>
        <p>D.irt'nio((th H, Vermont M</p>
        <p>Louisville fM. Virginia Tech 62 Marv Washington 82, Roanoke 80 N (' Charlotte 85. Coastal Carolina 61 Palm Beach Atlantic 93, Miami Christian 69 Pikeville 82, Union, Ky 73 Providence92, Miami. Fla 88 St Augustine's 98, Livingstone 80 Trevecca 80, Cumberland, Tenn</p>
        <p>65</p>
        <p>MIDWEST Cent. Iowa 79, Simpson 66 Dana 85, Briar Cliff 79 Drury 91, William Jew ell 86. OT Goshen 72, Marion 69 Hastings 94, Mt. Marly 42 Huntington 86, Bethel, Ind 78 . Iowa Sf 91. Nebraska 75 Kansas 71, Missouri 70 Miwrence57, St. Norbert 56 Malone 81, Urbana 61 Monmouth, III 95, MacMurray 82 Mis.souri Western 66, Grand View</p>
        <p>63</p>
        <p>Morningside77, Mankata St. 72 NE Illinois 83, Olivet Nazarene 74 Peru SI . 72, Midland Lutheran 62 North Central 75. Augustana, III</p>
        <p>65</p>
        <p>Northwestern. Iowa 109, Westmar</p>
        <p>83</p>
        <p>.Si Cloud St 69. S Dakota 65 .SchiHil of the Oziirks 99, Central Bible 62 Thiel 93, Hiram 75 I'piHT Iowa 92, Idiras 89 Waoash 54. Rose-Hulman 52 Washburn 87, Emporia St 66 W eslmmster 94,1.aGrange 78 Wis Parkside87. Manan 66 AVis River Falls 75. Wis -Superior</p>
        <p>WTs Whitewater 94. Wis Ilatteville 82</p>
        <p>SOI'TIIWEST Austin Coll 91, Trinityu Texas 84 Hardin-Simmon-s 90, E New Mex ICO 74</p>
        <p>Okla Christian 85. Langston 79 Okla Citv 104, Cameron 75 Oral Roberts 59, Stephen F Austin</p>
        <p>54</p>
        <p>Pan American 74, Lamar 69 Paul Quinn 83, Wiley 61 S Nazarene 72, Central St., Okla</p>
        <p>65</p>
        <p>F AR WEST Biola 75, Southern Cal Coll 56 ChadronSt 83, Mary 62 Cent Washington 6., Puget Sound</p>
        <p>62</p>
        <p>;omery, Mike Konderla and Derek athelo, pitchers, to spring training PITTSBURGH PIRATES-Signed U.L Washington and Houston Jimenez, shortstops, lo minor-league contracts SAN DIEGO PADRES- Signed Storm Davis, pitcher, to a one-year contract</p>
        <p>SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS-Signed Bob Brenly, catcher, lo a two-year contract</p>
        <p>BASKETBALL National Basketball Association BOSTON CELTICS-Signed Con ner Henry, guard, for the rest of the season</p>
        <p>HOtKEY National Hockey League NHL-Reversed lis three-game suspension on Steve Konroyd, defenseman, for the New York Islanders for his part in a brawl dur ing Sundays game with the Philadelphia Fivers DETROIT RED WINGS-Sent Dale Krentz, left wing, to Adiron dack of the American Rocky I.eague</p>
        <p>NEW YORK RANGERS -Claim ed Brad Maxwell, defenseman. on waivers from the Vancouver Canucks</p>
        <p>PITTSBURGH PENC.UINS-Recalled l.e Giffin, right wing.</p>
        <p>from Oshawa of the Ontario Hockey</p>
        <p> ----'Id,</p>
        <p>ng. f  "</p>
        <p>American Hockey League</p>
        <p>league Recalled Dwight Schofield right wing, from Baltimore of the</p>
        <p>ST LOUIS BLUES-Recalled Philippe Bozon, left wing, from St Jean of the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League.</p>
        <p>TENNIS MEN'S INTERNATIONAL PRO FESSIONAL TENNIS COUNCIL-Fined Boris Becker $2,000 for bad conduct at the Australian Open ten nis championships</p>
        <p>COLLEGE NCAAAnnounced that Southern Illinois University at Edwardsville's appearance in a 1986 Division II men's basketball championship will be deleted from NCAA records because an ineligible athlete played Announced that an ineligible player competed for UCLA in the 198a Divi Sion I Women's Outdoor Track Championships The performance in the 400-meter relay would be stricken from NCAA records, and four points earned by the relay team would be deleted from the team total The team's standing will be adjusted from a tie for fourth place to a tie for fifth place MCNEESE STATE-Aniiounced Michael CTitnght. guard, has been re instated to the basketball team NAVY-Named Dean Pease defensive assistant coach NORTHEAST LOUISIANA-Named Bob Lane quarterback coach</p>
        <p>safeties Kenny Hill and Herb Welch.</p>
        <p>Were confident in ourselves and in the guys surrounding us, Williams said. We know if we are one step off of their receivers, we are in for a long day. When most quarterbacks start to scramble, the receivers cut off their routes and come back to help out. Denvers guys go deep. If we take a nap for even a second, they can hurt you.</p>
        <p>Denvers Mark Jackson, a rookie from Purdue who has joined Steve Watson and Vance Johnson as Elways favorite receivers, knows the Giants wont throw anything fancy at his team.</p>
        <p>They are a basic, hard-hitting,</p>
        <p>hustling defense and their defensive backs let you know youre going to be hit and they try to strip the ball, Jackson said. I dont know if they have the talent of the Chiefs or Raiders in one-on-one coverage, but they spread it out so you cant pick on one person.</p>
        <p>I like our chances with a John Elway. He adds another dimension with his arm. All receivers have a scramble rule that they stay deep if they are on the side of the scramble, cut short or go across when theyre on the other side.</p>
        <p>With John, if I see hftn scramble right and Im left, I feel comfortable</p>
        <p>Calcavecchia Is A Contender</p>
        <p>going deep because he can get it there.</p>
        <p>While there are questions being raised about New Yorks defensive backs, the Broncos secondary is one of the strengths of a quick defense which also is stingy against the run. New Yorks wide receivers arent outstanding and quarterback Phil Simms isnt as explosive as Elway. But this is anything but a mismatch.</p>
        <p>They know how to get open, free safety Steve Foley said. Theyre good even if theyre not known. They have a great tight end who catches the ball, is strong and a great blocker in (Mark) Bavaro. Simms strengths are on play-action because he is so good at looking off the receiver and he has a strong arm.</p>
        <p>We would like to be in a position where the passing game must win it, where they must rely on the pass, since theyre not used to it.</p>
        <p>PHOENIX, Ariz. (AP) - In less than a year, Mark Calcavecchia has gone from caddy to contender.</p>
        <p>This is a lot more fun, he said before a practice round for the $600,000 Phoenix Open golf tournament.</p>
        <p>Last year at this time, Calcavecchia, who had been stripped of his playing rights on the PGA Tour, was playing in some mini-tour events in the area. Since he was in the neighborhood, he took to hanging around the Phoenix Open press tent just seeing what was going on, he said.</p>
        <p>This year, hes been hanging around the lead in a couple of prestige-laden tournaments. He had ,a chance to win both and is a factor to be considered in this event, which gets underway Thursday.</p>
        <p>Its been storybook stuff for the husky Calcavecchia.</p>
        <p>After playing the tour without appreciable success for four full seasons, he lost his playing card at the end of the 1985 season.</p>
        <p>He became a golfing nomad, looking for a game anywhere he could find one. He played the mini-tours and from time to time caddied on the PGA Tour for his friend, Ken Green.</p>
        <p>One of those occasions was at the Honda Classic last spring. The following week, he won his way through the open qualifying round and got a spot in the Doral Open. He had a first-round 65 and went on to finish eighth, good for $13,000.</p>
        <p>A little later, he got into the U.S. Open, matched the course record with another 65 and won $11,028.</p>
        <p>Shortly after that, another strong finish at Hartford gave him another $13,300 and, more importantly, his playing rights.</p>
        <p>Calcavecchia took full advantage of the reinstatement. He had top-10 finishes at Milwaukee and in the Bank of Boston Classic in September and then won the Southwest Classic at Abilene, Texas in October.</p>
        <p>From $15,957 in 1985 earnings, he went to $155,012 in 1986.</p>
        <p>Only two tournaments into the 1987 season, hes well on his^way to surpassing that figure.</p>
        <p>He finished third in both the Tournament of Champions and the Bob Hope Classic and has won $91,000. He leads the Tour in birdies, eagles and putting.</p>
        <p>Im playing real well right now, Calcavecchia said. Im a streak player, but most everybody is. Its a game of streaks, and Im on one. Ill just ride it as far as I can.</p>
        <p>"Its fun to be playing well, and be up there around the lead. Its something you have to do. You cant win every time. But the more times you're up in contention, the more youre going to win.</p>
        <p>Ive been there several times, and Ive won once. Im more comfortable up there now, kind of feel more like I know what Im doing.</p>
        <p>The more you get close, the more youre going to win.</p>
        <p> The two men who beat him in the Hope last week, winner Corey Pavin and runnerup Bernhard Danger of West Germany, also are among the 144 players who are chasing a $108,000 first prize on the new TPC course in suburban Scottsdale.</p>
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        <pb facs="00096520_0119" />
        <p>E. Carolina Names Honor Students</p>
        <p>The Daily Reflector. Greenville. N.C.</p>
        <p>Wednesday, January 21,1987  3.5</p>
        <p>East Carolina University has announced th names of students earning academic honors for the fall semester.</p>
        <p>Most elite of the honors is all As. Those making the deans list have earned a B-plus average with-no grade below a G. The honor roll includes students with a B-average and no grade below a C.</p>
        <p>Local students and students from foreign countries named to the honor lists include:</p>
        <p>AH A*s</p>
        <p>AYDEN  Leo Venters and Barry Williamson.</p>
        <p>BETHEL  Connie Dupree, Mabel Perry and Scott Rawls.</p>
        <p>GREENVILLE - Marilee Bienes, Dorothy Craig, David Farris, Chandra Floyd, Kelly Jones, Caroline Ladely, Jimmy Chung Le, Julie Mason, Linda McMillan, Grayson Morris, Sandra Phillip, Arthur Pittman, Carol Poston, Gina Wescott, David Priestley, Kathryn Ross, Elizabeth Wightman, Margaret Wilkerson, Carlie Wille, Tull Worthington, Rocky Ziehr, Merja Tevanlinna-Alvarez, John Elrod, Beverly Gartman and Mary McKinley.</p>
        <p>GRIFTON - Russell Tyndall.</p>
        <p>GRIMESLAND  Joseph Roughton.</p>
        <p>HOOKERTON - Stephanie Clemmons.</p>
        <p>JAMESVILLE - Kathy Williams.</p>
        <p>ROBERSONVILLE - Sara Harris.</p>
        <p>SNOW HILL  Cynthia Atkinson.</p>
        <p>STOKES - Steven Harrell.</p>
        <p>WALSTONBURG  Michael Eastwood.</p>
        <p>WILLIAMSTON - Elizabeth Johnson, Jesse Martin, Rhonda Mayer, Lori McLelland, Natalie Beacham, Gayle Coo-</p>
        <p>G;r. Beth Ann Gardner and Christopher ollidav.</p>
        <p>WINTERVILLE - Ellen Brock, Joseph Buck and Nancy Owens.</p>
        <p>LEBANON  Joumana Razzouk.</p>
        <p>MALAYSIA - Zakrimah Zakaria.</p>
        <p>NORWAY  Knut Erik Loevstad.</p>
        <p>Deans List</p>
        <p>AYDEN  Iris Cannon, Michael McDermott, Lori Stroud and Wendy Wooten.</p>
        <p>BETHEL - Sharon Etheridge.</p>
        <p>CHOCOWINITY - Paul Pierce.</p>
        <p>FARMVILLE - Kelly Hobgood and Hilda Tew.</p>
        <p>GREENVILLE - Kenneth Britt, Timothy Brock, Jonathan Buck, James Buie, Marcella Bullard, Howard Clark, Kenneth Coburn, Sharon Colston, Timothy Conway, Sheryl Cummings, Penny Daniels, John Davanzo, William Deanhardt, Barry Deans, Steven Dudley, Curtis Edwards, Inger Fearing, Marci Gallineto, Robert Gantt, Donald Grizzard, Judith Hacker, Robert Haggard, Matthew Harris, Vina Hassell, Laurie Hillis, Robin Irwin, Grace Jendrasiak, David Jester, Barbara Johnson, Dechanile Johnson, Carrie Jones, Kelly Jones, Lonnie Jones, Wendy Jones, Michael Kanetzke, Wendy Keith, Thomas Kemp, Mary Kraczon, Frankie Langley,</p>
        <p>Nancy Leggett, Gregg Lowe, Mark Ma-iette, Mary Jon May, Keith McAllister, Marcus McClanahan, Terence McEnally, Robert Lathan Mills, Janet Mizelle, Mark Moorman, Jessica Murphy, Sallie Naves, Kristen Noland, Brett Nover, Trudy Oakley, Clyde Owens, Trace Pittman, Renee Rice, Katharine Richardson, Lewis Roberson, Esther Smith, Sylvia Snyder, Bernard Webb Spilman, Brian Stewart, Troy Stox, Clark Justin Sturz, Elaine Thompson, Alana Tinkham, Robin Tripp, Sarah West, Thuy White, Deborah Williams, Hubert Williamson, Carolyn Willis, Janice Wiseman, Nancy Clinkscales, Charles Fadel, Sara McGinnis, Tonya Pardue and Patricia Lindsey.</p>
        <p>GRIFTON - Ellen Barnett, Rebecca Denson, Lisa Trinp and John Grice.</p>
        <p>GRIMESLAND - Robert Taft.</p>
        <p>HOOKERTON - Mary Beth Whitfield.</p>
        <p>JAMESVILLE  Susan Peele, Cynthia Getchell and Mary Hardison.</p>
        <p>ROBERSONVILLE - Richard Parker, Paula Bailey and Donna Medlin.</p>
        <p>SIMPSON - Kimberly Tripp.</p>
        <p>STOKES - Kimberly Tripp.</p>
        <p>SNOW HILL - Kenneth Cortright, Christopher Dunn, Brian Hall and Aretha Lanier.</p>
        <p>WILLIAMSTON - Melody Kerley, Mary McCallum, William Perry, Janet Davenport. Delmas Cumbee, Rhonda Harrington, Barbara Smith, Elizabeth Spruill and Lester Thomas.</p>
        <p>WINTERVILLE - Katherine Dunn, Ragan Spain, Amy Waters and Annie Gallegos,</p>
        <p>INDONESIA  Indrawati Tjiptorahard-</p>
        <p>jo.</p>
        <p>IRAN KasraBehfar.</p>
        <p>MALAYSIA - Rozita Abdul-Latif and ChaulinSen.</p>
        <p>NORWAY - Paal Christian Kaperdal and Petter Norstrand.</p>
        <p>REPUBLIC OF KOREA - Eunju Choi.</p>
        <p>SINGAPORE - Soo Chan Lim.</p>
        <p>THAILAND - Julmate Hanchaikul.</p>
        <p>Honor Roll</p>
        <p>AYDEN - Danette Braxton, Scott Brick, Gregory Cannon, Karen Cannon, Kristy Hardee, Melodee Ladd, Billy Mayo, William Rouse, Maria Sieber, Laurie Van-diford, Rhonda Vandiford, Tina Venters.</p>
        <p>BELL ARTHUR - Phillip Lewis.</p>
        <p>BETHEL - Myra Moore, Shelby Register</p>
        <p>EVERETTS - Sonya Teele.</p>
        <p>FARMVILLE - Karen Bruce, Johnnie Eastwood, Eric Faison, Julie Farrior, Jason Harrell, Shelia Oakley.</p>
        <p>FOUNTAIN - Timothy Biggs, Gina Pennell</p>
        <p>GRIFTON - Michael Cannon, Drew</p>
        <p>Auto policy expiring?</p>
        <p>You may qualify for Allstate Good Driver Rates and be entitled to some discounts, too.GREG  CHUCKCARTER  HUMPHREY</p>
        <p>Account Agont Scnlof Account Agont756-0185  756-0185</p>
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        <p>Covert, Linda Drobinske, David Liles, Gary Parisher, Steleana Rountree, Mary Spikes.</p>
        <p>GRIMESLAND - Catherine Clark, Jeffrey Taft.</p>
        <p>HOOKERTON - Clara Aycock.</p>
        <p>JAMESVILLE - Kerry Mebane, Sherry Brown,</p>
        <p>OAK CITY-Paula Rogister.</p>
        <p>ROBERSONVILLE - Allison Leggett.</p>
        <p>SNOW HILL  Herman Babb, Lisa Ginn, Gilbert Jones, Michael Jones, Sharon Myatt.</p>
        <p>WALSTONBURG - Jan Beaman.</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON - AprilWeatherington.</p>
        <p>WILLIAMSTON - Lee Jenkins, Lisa Kallen, Vemita Ore, Betty Peed, E)onald Roberson, Linda Bond, John Hodges, Claudia Summerlin, Fletcher Thomas, Christy Wynn,</p>
        <p>WINTERVILLE - Velma Branch, Deborah Hall, William Hall, Crystal McLawhom, Kevin Ousley, Rhonda Riddick.</p>
        <p>GREENVILLE - Mary McGee, Raleigh Bland, Cathleen Bozik, Helen Broaddus, Alan Broadhurst, Steven Broadhurst,</p>
        <p>Patricia Brown, Susan Bullock, Maurice Bunch, Kenneth Butler, James Ciridwell, Christopher Carson, Michael Clancy, Qm-thia Clark, Elizabeth Clayton, Micki Coleman, Jennifer Collie, Caroline Connolly, Constance Cooper, John Dawson, Robert Dickinson, Lisa Distefano, Jimmy Dixon, Sharon Dixon, Barbara Eadie, Cynthia Ezami, Jeffry Fecho, Joe Fomes, David Franck, George Fuller, Michele Garris, Paula Garris, Regena Garris, Laura Gillikin, Henry Goodson, Teresa Goolsby, Karen Green, Stacy Hamilton,</p>
        <p>Frederick Hampton, Lisa Hardee, Bobby Heath, Rebecca Hicks, Patricia Hoots, Denna Howell, Robert Hursey, Thomas Ir-rera, Lisa Ivey, Joseph Jenkins, Jac-</p>
        <p>?ueline Jensen, Constance Jones, Mary len Joyce, James Kelly Kee, Kathleen Kilcoyne, Jennifer Koonce, Neil Kopping, Da via Langley, Cathy Lassiter, Wendy Leutgens, Jonn-Pauf Lyons, Isabella Malby, Amanda Manning, Timothy Maples, Kimberly Martin, Teresa McLawhorn, Caroletta Metcalf, Jeffrey Mitchell, Kim Moreno, Karen Morris, Kenneth Nelson, Peter Notti, Dianne Oakley, Carleton Owen. William Owens,</p>
        <p>Robin Pagel, Camille Parker, Dorothy Parker,</p>
        <p>Maxwell Parker, Raymond Parker, Brenda Perry, Dorice Pollard, Amy Pope, Kevin Richards, Virginia Robbins, William Robie, Denise .Robinson, Debra Rohs, Katherine Ruffin, Sara Scott, John Smith, Rodney Speight, Lisa Stancill, Sheri Stokes, Christoper Stone, Linwood Stroud, Grego^ Sullivan, Dale Swanson, Louise Taft, Churchill Thomas, Venla Urwick, Karen Wainwright, Rhonda Walston, Robert Watts, Jackie Wendling, Michael White, Laura Wilkerson, Daniel Williams, Kathy Williams, Jaimie Winters, Timothy Wood, Margaret Farris and Tony Rumple Jr.</p>
        <p>BERMuDA  Monica Cann.</p>
        <p>HONG KONG - Muk-Hing Ngan.</p>
        <p>JORDAN  Yousef Ali Al-Sharawneh.</p>
        <p>KOREA - Hyekyung Yoon.</p>
        <p>MALAYSIA - Jamalunlaili Abdullah. Rosman Ahmad, Dominic Wee Heah, Rosli Osman and Noorhasmy Tupar.</p>
        <p>NORWAY-Nina Hordnes.</p>
        <p>UNITED ARAB REPUBLIC - Fatma Naguib Fakhry.</p>
        <p>VENEZUELA - Carmen Cabello.</p>
        <p>Have You Missed Your Daily Reflector?</p>
        <p>First Call Your Independent Carrier.</p>
        <p>If You Are Unable To Reach Him Call The Daily Reflector.</p>
        <p>752-3952</p>
        <p>Between 6:00 P.M. And 6:30 P.M. Weekdays And 8 A.M. 'Til 9 A.M. On Sundays.</p>
        <p>HOTTEST YEARBEGMS WITH</p>
        <p>HBO 87... an unprecedented year of big entertainment... is getting underway this winter. Youll see spectacular movies like the 1986 Best Picture Academy Award-winner Out of Africa. Youll go ringside lor boxings World Heavyweight Series. Youll spend an electrifying evening with Tina Turner. And have some laughs with Bruce Willis in his first TV special. And youll have cables round-the-clock news, sports, music and more.</p>
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        <pb facs="00096520_0120" />
        <p>B-6 The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.</p>
        <p>Judges E. Burt Aycock Jr.. J.W.H.  - Roberts, James E. Ragan III and H, Horton Rountree disposed of the following cases during the Jan. 5-9,1W7, term of District Court in Pitt County:' .</p>
        <p>' Thomas K Kvans. Grt'enway Apart, ments. worthless cht*ck 2 counts), 30 days jail in each case suspended on payment of $25 in each case and costs in each case and checks in each case, probation 1 year Lajena Ann Godley. Gnmesland, failure toyield. voluntary dismissal. .</p>
        <p>Edmund Thoriias Morgan Sr . Gher-rywood Drive. sf)eeding. prayer for judgment continued on payment of costs.,</p>
        <p>James Jones. Fleming Street, failure to reduce speed, voluntary dismissal.</p>
        <p>Earnest l&amp;gt;ee Hardy', fherokee Drive, speeding, pay costs,</p>
        <p>Glenda Hoston Ewell, Jamesville, exceeding safe sp&amp;lt;Hd. pay $10 and costs.</p>
        <p>Sylvia Turner Wright. Washington, .N.C,, failure toyield, voluntary dismissal Ricky tiaverne Smith, Walstonburg. inspection violation, voluntary dismissal.</p>
        <p>James Michael Smith, Bell Arthur, speeding faster than reasonable, pay $10 and costs.</p>
        <p>Charles Edwin Powell Jr., (ioldsfxiro, un.safe movement violation, voluntary dismissal.</p>
        <p>John Horace Fotter Jr., Did Well Drive, umsafe movement violation, voluntary dismissal</p>
        <p>Virginia Dare .Mills, Route 8, Greenville, following t(K)closely, voluntary dismissal Everett Lamor McIntosh. .Jacksonville, following t(K) closely, pav $10 and costs Dwight I.amar Hifi, .Mount Olive, speeding, pay $10 and costs.</p>
        <p>Betty Kay Hatcher, Ridge Place, umsafe movement violation, voluntary dismissal Lynda Jo Burnett. Wilmington, exceeding .safe spi.*ed, pay $10 and costs Ronald M Williams. Wa.shington, ,\.C., speeding, pay $10 and costs .</p>
        <p>Harry UeWilliams, West Fifth .Street, speeding, pay $10 and costs Linda Faye Rouse, Ayden, speeding, pay $10 and costs Arlie Eugene Lawrence 11, Ayden, speeding, pay $10 and costs .Sammy Carol Gray, Robersonville, unsafe movement violation, pay $20 and costs</p>
        <p>Clifton Ronald Deanhardt, Foxhaven Drive, speeding, 30 days jail suspended on payment of $2f) and costs.</p>
        <p>Rushion Junior Carr, Rose Hill, speeding, pay $10 and costs Michael A Medlin, West 10th Street, worthless check, voluntary dismissal Ronald Moore, West Conley Stn-et, wor-</p>
        <p>Wednesday, January 21,1987</p>
        <p>District Court</p>
        <p>thless check, 30 da vs jail suspended on payment of costs and check.</p>
        <p>Roy C. .Nash, Farmville, worthless check (3 counts), 30 days jail in each case to run consecutively suspended on pay ment of $2.5 fine in each case and costs in each case and checks in each case Paula N Pyle, Route 13, (Jreenville, worthle.ss check, voluntary disrnis.sal Marie Carroll, Pinetowri, worthless check, 90 days jail susixmded on payment of costs and check Anthony 1) Dancy, Tarboro, worthless check, 30 days jail susjHTided on payment of costs and check Vera C Bland, Williamston, worthless check, 30 days jail sus|K'nd&amp;lt;d on payment of costs and check Ricky Laverne Smith, Edgewood Trailer Park, possession of marijuana, 30 days jail suspended on payment of $1.5 and costs.</p>
        <p>Bradley Stacy Reid HI, Eastbrook Apartments, possession of drug parapher nalia, dismis.sed at the close of slates evi denc(*</p>
        <p>Daniel Allen Ford, .Stancil Drive, indecent exposure, 0 months jail susixmded on payment of $1(K) and costs, obtain man dalory assessment and treatment Princess Jeanette Tyler, Nash Street, expired registration, voluntary dismissal Ricky Laverne Smith. Walstonburg, in sp&amp;lt;rtion violation, 5 days jail suspended on payment of $5 and costs; no liability in surance, voluntary dismi.ssal William Leggett .Slaughter. New Bern, driving while impaired, lit) days jail suspended on payrm'iil of $150 and costs, surrender operator's license, attend alcohol scIkmiI and p&amp;lt;rform 72 hours corn munity service and pay fer*s Jack Richardson, West Mooi'e Street, no liability insuranee, voluntary dismissal.</p>
        <p>Charles Patrick Millard, Forbes Street, expired registration, voluntary dismissal Everett Lamor McIntosh, .jacksonville, no liability insurance, voluntary dismissal</p>
        <p>Thomas Edward McNiff, Southern Pines, driving while consuming mall bev erage. volunlarv dismis.sal</p>
        <p>Andrew Scott Mackie, Riverbluff Apartments, driving while consuming malt beverage, voluntary dismissal.</p>
        <p>Carolyn Y Gorham, Route 4, Greenville, no liability insurance, 60 days jail suspended on payment of $20 and costs; no operator s license, expired registration, 60 days jail suspended on payqaent of $15 and costs</p>
        <p>Sherry Harris Baker, .North Washington Street, driving while impaired, 60 days jail suspended on payment of $100 and costs, surrender operators license, attend alcohol school and perform 48 hours community service and pay fees Bob Matkins, Winterville, worthless check (2 counts), 30 days jail in each case suspended on payment of costs in each ca.se and checks in each case.</p>
        <p>James F^arl Barnhill. Robersonville, hit and run driving, voluntary dismissal.</p>
        <p>Robert Earl Barnhill, Blands Trailer f'ark, driving while impaired, 12 months jail suspended on payment of $3,50 and costs, not to drive until properly licensed, spend 7 days in jail, obtain mandatory a.ssessment at mental health    i</p>
        <p>William Harvey Case, .New Bern, expired registration, voluntary dismissal.</p>
        <p>Edwin .Scott Evans, Route 13, Greenville, exceeding safe speed, pay $10 and costs, not to drive until properly licensed.</p>
        <p>Kevin Dale FJvans, Wanterville, sfieeding, no operators license, pay $25 and costs,</p>
        <p>Ethel Hardy (annon. Route 4. Greenville, speeding, prayer for judgment continued on payment of costs.</p>
        <p>George Alan McCarter, Grifton, assault with a deadly weapon, dismissed by the court</p>
        <p>Dennis Ray Atkimson, Grimesland, no operators license, voluntary dismissal, Evelvn Davenport, Kings Drive, possession of weapon on educational property, pay $100 and costs,</p>
        <p>Sudie Bell l..aiigley, Grimesland, trespass, dismissed by the court.</p>
        <p>Jim Norman, Prince Road, allow dog to run at large, pay $10 and costs.</p>
        <p>Barnett Crandall, Winterville, assault on a female, damage to personal property, 90 days jail suspended on payment of $25 and costs</p>
        <p>Kenneth Barnes, Paris Avenue, assault on a female, damage to real property, voluntary dismissal.</p>
        <p>Barbara Ann Newton, West Fifth Street, operating a lottery. 6 months jail suspended on payment of $500 and costs.</p>
        <p>Willie Earl Taylor, Tyson Street, resisting arrest, communicating threats, 90 days jail suspended on payment of $50 and costs.</p>
        <p>Graddie Thomas, Church Street, posses sion of marijuana, pay $1(X) and costs.</p>
        <p>Moses Williams Jr., Washington, .\ C., possession of drug paraphernalia, volun tary dismissal.</p>
        <p>Clinton Wilson, Norcott Circle, resisting arrest, pay costs.</p>
        <p>Doris Mullins Heath, Garden Terrace, operating a lottery, not guilty.</p>
        <p>Christopher Allen Houk, Charlotte, consume alcoholic beverage in public, pay costs.</p>
        <p>Moses Williams Jr., Washington, N.C., driving while license revoked, 6 months jail suspended on payment of $200 and costs</p>
        <p>Barbara A Newton, West Fifth Street, no operators license, 60 days jail suspended on payment of $25 and costs; no operators licen.se. not guilty John Shepard Smith Jr., Forbes Street, speeding, prayer for judgment continued on payment of costs Wilbur Wright Veargin Jr., Clinton, exceeding safe speed, pay $10 and costs.</p>
        <p>Tammy l.ynn Harris, Circle Drive, exceeding safe speed, pay $10 and costs.</p>
        <p>Harriet Parsons iiarnette, Shawnee Place, unsafe movement violation, volun tary dismisssal liavid Carl Bunn, East Fifth Street, unsafe movement violation, voluntary dismis.sal.</p>
        <p>Kristin Anne Hall, Crestline Boulevard, driving without rear lights, voluntary dismissal.</p>
        <p>Blanche Ruth Rayford, Dix'tors Park, un.safe movement violation, voluntary dismissal</p>
        <p>Cassie Nelson Buck, .Ayden, sjH'eding, pay $10 and costs</p>
        <p>Bruce Allen Bulkxk, Crestline Boulevard, sfx'eding, pay $10 and costs</p>
        <p>Josepn Rex Carraway, Academy Drive, speeding, pay $10 and cost.</p>
        <p>Thomas Wesley Dail, Southridge Road, failure to reduce speed, voluntary dismisal</p>
        <p>Rosemary Hardy Daniels. Ayden, speeding, prayer for judgment continued on payment of costs David Edwards Drymon, East 14th Street, speeding, pay $10 and costs.</p>
        <p>Terence Antonio Edwards, Glen Arthur, speeding, pay $10 and costs.</p>
        <p>David Patrick F'ranck, Ravenwood Drive, speeding, pay $10 and costs Timothy F^dward Haislip, Bethel, speeding, remit costs Della Jean Harris, Tarboro. exceeding safe sfieed, pay $10 and costs Ramona Perry .Markarian, Washington. N.C., speeding, pay $10and costs.</p>
        <p>Jeffrey Lewis Norris. .New Bern, exceeding safe speed, pay $10 and costs Marsha Claire Paul, Washington, .N.C,. speeding, prayer for judgment continued on payment of costs.</p>
        <p>Tommy Lee Thompson. Kinston, speeding, pay $10 and costs.</p>
        <p>Harvey I.iee Stepps, Grifton, driving while impaired, 12 months jail suspended on payment of $3,50 and costs, spend7 days in jail, pay $1.50 attorney fees.</p>
        <p>Robin Ann Herring, Grimesland, expired registration, voluntary dismissal.</p>
        <p>Walter Roberson, Vanceboro, speeding, pay $10 and costs.</p>
        <p>Russell Junior Robinson, Wilson, speeding, prayer for judgment continued on payment of costs,</p>
        <p>Leon Bynum, Rocky Mount, hit and run driving, pay $10 and costs.</p>
        <p>James Earl Barnhill, Robersonville, no operators license, voluntary dismissal.</p>
        <p>Kenneth Tyson, Ayden, assault on a female, voluntary dismissal.</p>
        <p>Wayne Dawson Walls. Ayden, assault by pointing a gun, voluntary dismissal.</p>
        <p>Linda Reives, Ward Street, damage to real property, voluntary dismissal.</p>
        <p>Munsey Joseph Wheby, Virginia, driving while impaired, 60 days jail suspended on payment of $50 and costs, surrender operators license, attend alcohol school and perform 24 hours community service and pay fees.</p>
        <p>Frank Jeffery Moore, Bethel, speeding, pay $10 and costs.</p>
        <p>Michael Anthony Reid, Fountain^ sell liquor to underage, not guilty.</p>
        <p>Lonnie Ray Atkinson, Route 4, Greenville, speeding, pay $15 and costs.</p>
        <p>Clifton Earl Wilson II, Pari Drive, exceeding safe speed, pay $10 and costs.</p>
        <p>Eric Laroy Young, Douglas Avenue, driving too fast for conditions, voluntary dismi.s.sal.</p>
        <p>Debra Ledbetter W'atts, Grimesland, exceeding safe speed, pay $10 and costs Charles Leroy Stott, Fremont, speeding, pay $10 and costs.</p>
        <p>Susan Emma Smiley, Rollins Drive, spt'eding, pay $10 and costs,</p>
        <p>Eric Tyler Smith, Washington, N.C., speeding, pay $10 and costs.</p>
        <p>Anita Alligood Saleeby, Washington, N.C., speeding, pay $10 and costs.</p>
        <p>Phyllis Weatherly Rosner, Washington, N.C., speeding, pay $5 and costs,</p>
        <p>Donald Reid Pope, Angier, speeding, pay $10 and costs John Fitzgerald Mophaul, Fayetteville, spoeeding, pay $10 and costs.</p>
        <p>Leslie Theron Murrell, Kinston, speeding, pay $10 and costs.</p>
        <p>Kelly Ann Nicholson, Swansboro, exceeding safe speed, pay $10 and costs.</p>
        <p>Gloria Traver Manning, East 14th Street, speeding, pay $5 and costs.</p>
        <p>.Scott Alan Kendrick, Greenville Boulevard, pay $10 and costs.</p>
        <p>Eileen Bowen Hobbs, Ayden, speeding, pay $10 and costs.</p>
        <p>Wanda Gay Hodges, Washington. N.C,, speeding, pay $10 and costs,</p>
        <p>Emmett Earl Hardy, Grifton, speeding, pay $10 and costs.</p>
        <p>Kim (oleman F'aucett, Kinston, exceeding safe speed, pay $10 and costs.</p>
        <p>Roenell Lidea Fields, Kinston, speeding, pay $5 and costs.</p>
        <p>Millard Carl Edwards, speeding, pay $10 and costs.</p>
        <p>James Kearnev Daly. Kinston, exceeding safe speed, pay $10 and costs.</p>
        <p>William Scott Browning, Cheshire Drive, speeding, pay $10 and costs.</p>
        <p>Catherine Sykes Bullock, Route 8. Greenville, unsafe movement violation, voluntarv dismi.ssal.</p>
        <p>GENERAL FOODS</p>
        <p>At Cost Cutter Prices</p>
        <p>Stl</p>
        <p>ALL GRINDS</p>
        <p>Maxwell House &amp;lt; (ado Coffee..... ag ^2</p>
        <p>MAXWELL HOUSE</p>
        <p>Instant s aaa Coffee %</p>
        <p>ELECTRIC PERK OR ADC</p>
        <p>Sanka  13</p>
        <p>Coffee.....Bag  ^3^</p>
        <p>INSTANT COFFEE</p>
        <p>Sanlta $099</p>
        <p>Decaf Jar ir</p>
        <p>INSTANT COFFEE</p>
        <p>Brim Roasted 4</p>
        <p>Buds......?ar  ^3^^</p>
        <p>LOG CABIN</p>
        <p>tp......  S1S9</p>
        <p>POST</p>
        <p>Bran  ie</p>
        <p>Flakes.....L</p>
        <p>ASSORTED</p>
        <p>Fruitn  1314  ejAA</p>
        <p>Fibre......bx   r*</p>
        <p>INSTANT SUGAR FREE</p>
        <p>Jello  11</p>
        <p>Puddings III Box</p>
        <p>ASSORTED SUGAR FREE</p>
        <p>Jello  3</p>
        <p>Gelatins 1111 box</p>
        <p>REGULAR &amp;amp; THIN OR ELBOWS</p>
        <p>Ronzoni  ie</p>
        <p>Spaghetti I I Box</p>
        <p>55^</p>
        <p>420</p>
        <p>ASSORTED</p>
        <p>Crystal Light..</p>
        <p>ORANGE</p>
        <p>IP</p>
        <p>Light..</p>
        <p>INSTANT</p>
        <p>Breakfast</p>
        <p>ASSORTED</p>
        <p>Kool-Aid Koolers...</p>
        <p>iTfM POL'</p>
        <p>f JfD 0 WVf'tlSfO Him IS rfqulriO tO Of 'f A&amp;lt;tn sibf'f U'f l fiCf' xtpgfr P' fkffpt spffitUJi y dotffl in this afl wf rtp -un out P* iffm W" P*f' vPu vOu' Appi.f 0* .1 CompArieif Itfm wn#n AwAiMPif 'f fsl' W t''f wvngs c* ,i 'AtnfnfiN tif VOu to pu'Cni$f tOf Aityff^tlsfC* Rf nt it fne ,y{1y|tl$ffl  WifOin  Oixs</p>
        <p>coupon wi:( Bf .UCfpffCl Iff'n</p>
        <p>CopvrlQUt 1987 Kroger Sav On Ouant)tv Rignts Reserved None Sold To Dea)ers</p>
        <p>OPEN 24 HOURS EVERYDAY</p>
        <p>(&amp;gt;00 liREENVILLE Blvd.  Greenville</p>
        <p>iioqer</p>
        <p>^on</p>
        <p>M B Items and Prices m W Effective thru Sat jan 2a. 1987</p>
        <p>William Ivon Beddingfield, Wendell, speeding, pay $10 and costs.</p>
        <p>Barbara Welch, Washington, N.C., speeding, pay $10 and costs.</p>
        <p>James Herman Meiser, Ayden, red light violation, voluntary dismissal.</p>
        <p>Charles Allen James, Route 1, Green-1 costs.</p>
        <p>I Anne Road, voluntary dismissal.</p>
        <p>Sharon Marie Beatty, Clemmons, failure to reduce speed, voluntary dismissal.</p>
        <p>Gary Thomas Wiliams Jr., Charlotte,</p>
        <p>driving while impaired, 60 days jail suspended on payment of $100 and costs, surrender operators license, attend alcohol school and pay fee, not to drive for 60 days</p>
        <p>Hector Manuel Campos, East 13th Street, disorderly conduct, 10 days jail suspended on payment of $25 and costs.</p>
        <p>Rufus Dalton Smith, speeding, pay $10 and costs.</p>
        <p>Chocowinity,</p>
        <p>Johnny Allen Teesateskie, Robbinsville, reckless driving, 10 days jail suspended on payment of $25 and costs.</p>
        <p>Sonnie Moore Jr., Robersonville, speeding, pay $15 and costs.</p>
        <p>Joseph D. Paul, Aycock Hall, speeding, pay $10 and costs.</p>
        <p>Harry Eltrert Smith Jr., Route 8, Greenville, speeding, pay $10 and costs.</p>
        <p>Billy W. Griffin, Ayden, assault on a female, voluntary dismissal.</p>
        <p>Cardora Renay Barnes, Havelock, speeding,jpay $15 and costs.</p>
        <p>Troy Donnell Barnes, Fountain, speeding,pay $15 and costs.</p>
        <p>Hilda Reel Barwick, Cortland Road, speeding, pay $10 and costs.</p>
        <p>Charles Kenneth Bird, Oxford Road, speeding, pay $10 and costs.</p>
        <p>Dea Joann Crousore, Washington, N.C., reckless driving, 6 months jail suspended</p>
        <p>Charles I'riplett, Winterville, exceeding safe speed, pay $10 and costs.</p>
        <p>(See DISTRICT, B-8)</p>
        <p>SHOP EZE</p>
        <p>WOODLAND</p>
        <p>WE GLADLY ACCEPT USDA FOOD STAMPS &amp;amp; WIC VOUCHERS. QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED. NONE SOLD TO DEALERS PRICES EFFECTIVE: JANUARY 21-24. 1987</p>
        <p>GWALTNEY SLICED</p>
        <p>BACON........</p>
        <p>REG. OR THICK SLICED 1 LB. PKG.</p>
        <p>GWALTNEY</p>
        <p>FRANKS</p>
        <p>GWALTNEY BONED N'TENDER</p>
        <p>BUFFET HAMS.....</p>
        <p>GWALTNEY TURKEY</p>
        <p>BUFFET HAMS....................</p>
        <p>GWALTNEY</p>
        <p>GREAT DOGS.....................</p>
        <p> LB.</p>
        <p> LB.</p>
        <p>)12 OZ. PKG.</p>
        <p>GWALTNEY BIG 8 BEEF OR MEAT</p>
        <p>FRANKS..............</p>
        <p>1 LB. PKG.</p>
        <p>GWALTNEY</p>
        <p>BEEF OR MEAT BOLOGNA. SALAMI OR SLICED LUNCHEON MEAT..............</p>
        <p>1.49</p>
        <p>99</p>
        <p>8 OZ. PKG.</p>
        <p>GWALTNEY</p>
        <p>BOLOGNA  1LB. PKG.</p>
        <p>GWALTNEY COOKED, SMOKED OR PRESSED</p>
        <p>HAM  6 0Z.</p>
        <p>GWALTNEY</p>
        <p>GREAT BOLOGNA................</p>
        <p>GWALTNEY HOT OR MILD</p>
        <p>SAUSAGE.............</p>
        <p>LB. ROLL</p>
        <p>1.39 1.69</p>
        <p>99</p>
        <p>*1.39</p>
        <p>1 LB. PKG.</p>
        <p>AVOID</p>
        <p>THEOID</p>
        <p>CAU DOMINOS PIZZA</p>
        <p>Meet the NOID' He loves to rum your pizza He makes your pizza cold, or late, or he squashes your pizza box so the cheese gets stuck to e fop</p>
        <p>With one call to Domino's Pizza, you can avoid the NOID So when you want hot. delicious, quality pizza delivered m less than 30 minutes One call does it all'</p>
        <p>$1.00</p>
        <p>OFF</p>
        <p>Order any delicious pizza with two or more toppings and get $1 00 OFF the price'</p>
        <p>One coupon per pizza</p>
        <p>Offer good thru 2/1/87</p>
        <p>Not valid with any other offer</p>
        <p>Please p'ov^ae name aoaress pnone on coupon BEFORE J' ' n'l.es Name  Pnpne</p>
        <p>SBrving East Grsn wills</p>
        <p>a Rivergate Shopping Center</p>
        <p>752-6996</p>
        <p>Sarving Wsst Gran wills and ECU Campus</p>
        <p>a 1201 Charles Blvd</p>
        <p>758-6660</p>
        <p>Ssrwing Wast Grsanwilis</p>
        <p>a 2405 West Dickinson Ave NE</p>
        <p>756-9998</p>
        <p> HOURS</p>
        <p>11AM-lAVI Sin-Tnurs 11AM-2AM FfiSSat</p>
        <p>LimiteaOeiivety Areas '</p>
        <p>Dnveis cany less than $20 00</p>
        <p>DOMINOS</p>
        <p>PIZZA</p>
        <p>DELIVERS</p>
        <p>FREE.</p>
        <p>1987 Domino's Pizza, Inc</p>
        <p>K</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0121" />
        <p>Food Lion $7,97 Lower Than Farm Fresh</p>
        <p>DOUBLE COUPONS</p>
        <p>NO SUBSTITUTE FOR</p>
        <p>EXTRA LOW PRICESSome supermarkets claim they save customers money other 25* by charging more for other items in the store, with double coupons. But, if a supermarket gives a Soactually, YOU, THE CUSTOMER, pay the price for dou-customer 50* for a 25* coupon, they must make up that ble coupons!</p>
        <p>FARM FRESH TOTAL.......$144.87</p>
        <p>FOOD LION TOTAL.........$136.90</p>
        <p>DIFFERENCE................$7.97</p>
        <p>FARM FRESH LOWER ON.. 19 ITEMS FOOD LION LOWER ON.... 89 ITEMS</p>
        <p>L  LOWEST</p>
        <p>FARM</p>
        <p>FRESH</p>
        <p>FOOD</p>
        <p>LION</p>
        <p>FARM</p>
        <p>FRESH</p>
        <p>FOOD</p>
        <p>LION</p>
        <p>Del Monte Apricot Nectar (12 Oz.)</p>
        <p>Realime Juice (8 Oz.)..........................</p>
        <p>Realemon Juice (16 Oz.).........................</p>
        <p>Clamato Juice (32 Oz.).........</p>
        <p>Feather Weight Tomato Juice (12 Oz.)</p>
        <p>White House Spice Apple Ring (15 Oz.)</p>
        <p>Feather Weight Peach Slices (16 Oz.)</p>
        <p>Feather Weight Saida Fruit (16 Oz.) ................</p>
        <p>Feather Weight Peach Slices (8 Oz.)................</p>
        <p>Del Monte Free Stone Peach Slices (8.75 Oz)</p>
        <p>Del Monte Glass Fig (17 Oz.)</p>
        <p>Del Monte Tropical Fruit (15.25 Oz.) .................</p>
        <p>Ocean Spray Strained Cranberry Sauce (8 Oz.)</p>
        <p>Ocean Spray Whole Cranberry Sauce (No. 300 Can)</p>
        <p>Del Monte Whole Spice Peaches (28.5 Oz.)</p>
        <p>Libby Pumpkin (No. 303 Can)</p>
        <p>Seneca Apple Juice (64 Oz. Glass Jar)</p>
        <p>White House Apple Juice (7 Oz.)</p>
        <p>White House Apple Juice (32 Oz.)</p>
        <p>White House Apple Juice (64 Oz.)</p>
        <p>White House Apple Juice (48 Oz.)</p>
        <p>Ocean Spray White Grapefruit Juice (48 Oz)</p>
        <p>Ocean Spray Pink Grapefruit Juice (48 Oz )</p>
        <p>Sunbright Unsweetened Pink Grapefruit Juice (46 Oz)</p>
        <p>Sunbright Unsweetened Grapefruit Juice (46 Oz.)</p>
        <p>Sunbright Unsweetened Orange Juice (46 Oz )</p>
        <p>Welchs Sparkling Red Grape Juice (25.4 Oz.)</p>
        <p>Welchs White Grape Juice (24 Oz.)</p>
        <p>Welchs Grape Juice (24 Oz.)</p>
        <p>Welchs Grape Juice (40 Oz.).......</p>
        <p>Welchs Blended Vineyard Juice (40 Oz.)</p>
        <p>Realemon Juice (8 Oz.)</p>
        <p>Realemon Juice (32 Oz.)</p>
        <p>Del Monte Pineapple-Orange Juice (44 Oz Glass Jar)</p>
        <p>Del Monte Pineapple-Grapefruil Juice (44 Oz. Glass Jar)</p>
        <p>Del Mone Pineapple Juice (46 Oz.)</p>
        <p>Sunsweet Prune Juice (32 Oz.)</p>
        <p>Sunsweet Prune Juice (40 Oz.)</p>
        <p>Ocean Spray Cranapple Drink (64 Oz.)</p>
        <p>Ocean Spray Crangrape Juice (64 Oz.)</p>
        <p>Ocean Spray Cranberry Juice (64 Oz.)</p>
        <p>Ocean Spray Local Cranberry Juice (32 Oz.)</p>
        <p>Ocean Spray Cranberry Juice (32 Oz.)</p>
        <p>Ocean Spray Cranblueberry (48 Oz.)</p>
        <p>Ocean Spray Crangrape Juice (48 Oz.)</p>
        <p>Ocean Spray Cocktail Cranberry (48 Oz.)</p>
        <p>Orange Gatorade (4 Pk./16 Oz)</p>
        <p>Lemon Lime Gatorade (32 Oz.)</p>
        <p>Orange Gatorade (32 Oz.) .,</p>
        <p>Lemon/Lime Gatorade (46 Oz.)</p>
        <p>Orange Gatorade (46 Oz.)</p>
        <p>Ocean Spray Cranapple (48 Oz.)</p>
        <p>Hawaiian Punch Red Grape (46 Oz.)</p>
        <p>Hawaiian Punch Tropical Fruit (46 Oz.)</p>
        <p>Hawaiian Punch Lite Red (46 Oz )</p>
        <p>Gatorade i&amp;gt;unch  (46 Oz.)</p>
        <p>Hawaiian Punch  Wild Fruit (46 Oz.)</p>
        <p>Hawaiian Punch  Juice Red (46 Oz)  i </p>
        <p>Hawaiian Punch  Box Juicy Red (8 5  Oz73 Pk )  ......</p>
        <p>Ocean Spray Cran-Raspberry (48 Oz.)</p>
        <p>Ocean Spray Box Apple Juice (3 Pk./250M)</p>
        <p>Ocean Spray Crantastic (3 Pk./8 45 Oz.)</p>
        <p>Kool-Aid Grape Cooler (8 45 Oz )</p>
        <p>Minute Maid Fruit Punch (3 Pk.TTetra-Brik)</p>
        <p>Minute Maid Orange Juice (3 Pk./Tetra-Brik)</p>
        <p>Kool-Aid Tropical Punch Cooler (3 Pk./8 45 Oz.)</p>
        <p>Ocean Spray Concentrated Cranberry Juice (8.45 Oz./Tetra-Brik) Hawaiian Punch Box Tropical Fruit (3 Pk./8.45 Oz.)</p>
        <p>Hi-C Orange Tetra-Brik (3 Pk./8.45 Oz.)</p>
        <p>Hi-C Grape Tetra-Brik (3 Pk./8.45 Oz.)</p>
        <p>Hi-C Fruit Punch Tetra-Brik (3 Pk./8.45 Oz.)</p>
        <p>Hi-C Fruit Double Cooler (3 Pk./8 45 Oz.)</p>
        <p>Hi-C Double Fruit Cooler (46 Oz.)</p>
        <p>Hi-C Cherry (46 Oz.)................................</p>
        <p>56</p>
        <p>85</p>
        <p>1.02</p>
        <p>1.39 79</p>
        <p>1 05 1.25</p>
        <p>1.39 .89 65</p>
        <p>1 26 89 39 L 591 1 99 .79 1.63</p>
        <p>2.09 79 L</p>
        <p>1 09 79 L</p>
        <p>1.59</p>
        <p>1.59</p>
        <p>1 09</p>
        <p>1.09</p>
        <p>1.39</p>
        <p>2 19</p>
        <p>1.19</p>
        <p>1.09 1.59L</p>
        <p>1.59 .73</p>
        <p>1.39 99 ,99</p>
        <p>1 29</p>
        <p>1 29 1.45 2.66 L</p>
        <p>2 66L 2 66L 1.49L 1,49 1.99 L 1 99</p>
        <p>1 99 209 85 85 1 09 1 09 1.99L ,89 89 89 1 09 95 89 79 1 99L 1 09 1 09 95 99 1 29 95</p>
        <p>1.19 79 79 79 .79 79 89 89</p>
        <p>.53 L .8U 1.02 1.27 L .58 L .98 L</p>
        <p>1.07 L 1.25 L</p>
        <p>.741</p>
        <p>.561</p>
        <p>1.29 L .831 .41 .69</p>
        <p>1.79 L .691 1.19L</p>
        <p>2.07 L .93 .99 L .89</p>
        <p>1.49 L</p>
        <p>1.49 L 1.01L 1.01 L 1.04L 2.04 L</p>
        <p>1.08 L</p>
        <p>1.07 L</p>
        <p>1.67</p>
        <p>1.49 L .73</p>
        <p>1.29 L .99 .99 .99 L</p>
        <p>1.15L 1.39 L</p>
        <p>2.68 2.68</p>
        <p>.2.68</p>
        <p>1.50 1.42 L 2.10 1.93 L 1.89 L 1.91 L</p>
        <p>.831 .83 L .99 L .99 L 2.10 .89 .89 .89 .99 L .89 L .89 .69 L 2.10 .99 L .99 L .80 L .91 L 1.10L .80 L</p>
        <p>1.08 L .691 .79 .79 .79 .79 .79 L .79 L</p>
        <p>Hi-C Grape (46 Oz )</p>
        <p>Hi-C Orange (46 Oz )</p>
        <p>Instant Orange Tang (17 6 Oz )</p>
        <p>Instant Tang (26.4 Oz Jar)</p>
        <p>Orange Tang (9 Qt)</p>
        <p>Sugar Free Tang (2 3 Oz )</p>
        <p>Campbell's Tomato Juice (46 Oz )</p>
        <p>Campbells Tomato Juice (6 Pk./6 Oz.)</p>
        <p>Campbells Tomato Juice (12 Oz )</p>
        <p>Campbells Tomato Juice Tetra-Bnk (3 Pk,/8 45 Oz ) Campbells V-8 Juice Tetra-Bnk (3 Pk78 45 Oz ) Campbells V-8 Low Sodium Juice (6 Pk /6 Oz.)</p>
        <p>V-8 Cocktail Juice (6 Pk,/6 Oz.)</p>
        <p>V-8 Spicy Hot Juice (6 Pk,/6 Oz.)</p>
        <p>V-8 Cocktail Juice (46 Oz.) l ucks Fried Apples (16 Oz.)</p>
        <p>Whitehouse Applesauce (50 Oz.)</p>
        <p>While House Diet Applesauce (16 Oz )</p>
        <p>Whitehouse Applesauce (25 Oz.)</p>
        <p>Whitehouse Natural Plus Applesauce (25 Oz Glass Jar) Whitehouse Applesauce (No 303 Can)</p>
        <p>Ocean Spray Jellied Cranberry Sauce (No 300 Can)</p>
        <p>Del Monte Lite Fruit Cocktail (16 Oz )</p>
        <p>Libbys Lite Fruit Cocktail (16 Oz )</p>
        <p>Feather Weight Fruit Cocktail (16 Oz.)</p>
        <p>Feather Weight Fruit Cocktail (8 Oz )</p>
        <p>Del Monte Fruit Cocktail (17 Oz )</p>
        <p>Del Monte Fruit Cocktail (8 75 Oz )</p>
        <p>Del Monte Lite Chunk Fruit Mix (16 Oz.)</p>
        <p>Del Monte Mandarine Orange (11 Oz.)</p>
        <p>Feather Weight Peach Halves (16 Oz.)</p>
        <p>Del Monte Sliced Peaches (8 75 Oz.)</p>
        <p>Del Monte Free Stone Peaches (16 Oz.)</p>
        <p>Del Monte Yellow Cling Peach Halves (29 Oz )</p>
        <p>Libbys Lite Peach Slices. (16 Oz.)</p>
        <p>Del Monte Yellow Cling Peach Slices (29 Oz )</p>
        <p>Del Monte Yellow Peach Halves (16 Oz )</p>
        <p>Del Monte Yellow Cling Peach Slices (16 Oz)</p>
        <p>Del Monte Lite Peach Halves (16 Oz.)</p>
        <p>Del Monte Lite Peach Slices (16 Oz )</p>
        <p>Feather Weight Peach Halves (8 Oz )</p>
        <p>Del Monte Pear Halves (16 Oz.)</p>
        <p>Del Monte Pear Halves (29 Oz.)</p>
        <p>Del Monte Lite Pear Halves (16 Oz )</p>
        <p>Feather Weight Pear Halves (16 Oz.)</p>
        <p>Del Monte Pineapple Chunk in Juice (15.25 Oz )</p>
        <p>Del Monte Pineapple Spears in Juice (15 25 Oz )</p>
        <p>Del Monte Pineapple Tidbits in Juice (15 25 Oz )</p>
        <p>Del Monte Crushed Pineapple in Syrup (20 Oz )</p>
        <p>Flat Crush Pineapple in Syrup (8.25 Oz)</p>
        <p>Del Monte Sliced Pineapple in Syrup (8 25 Oz)</p>
        <p>Del Monte Seedless Raisins (6 Pk )</p>
        <p>79</p>
        <p>.79</p>
        <p>79</p>
        <p>.79</p>
        <p>1 99</p>
        <p>1.91L</p>
        <p>269</p>
        <p>2.63 L</p>
        <p>3.63</p>
        <p>3.63</p>
        <p>2 79</p>
        <p>2.72 L</p>
        <p>.93</p>
        <p>.91L</p>
        <p>1 25</p>
        <p>1.15L</p>
        <p>,37</p>
        <p>.33 L</p>
        <p>.99</p>
        <p>.85 L</p>
        <p>1.19</p>
        <p>.97 L</p>
        <p>1 49</p>
        <p>1.40 L</p>
        <p>1 35</p>
        <p>1.35</p>
        <p>1 40</p>
        <p>1.40</p>
        <p>921</p>
        <p>.96</p>
        <p>89</p>
        <p>.79 L</p>
        <p>1 49</p>
        <p>1.19L</p>
        <p>59</p>
        <p>.52 L</p>
        <p>69</p>
        <p>.59 L</p>
        <p>69</p>
        <p>.59 L</p>
        <p>341</p>
        <p>.40</p>
        <p>59 L</p>
        <p>.69</p>
        <p>83</p>
        <p>.79 L</p>
        <p>89</p>
        <p>.85 L</p>
        <p>1 35</p>
        <p>1.13 L</p>
        <p>89</p>
        <p>.75 L</p>
        <p>83</p>
        <p>.79 L</p>
        <p>59</p>
        <p>.50 L</p>
        <p>84</p>
        <p>.84</p>
        <p>81</p>
        <p>.69 L</p>
        <p>1 25</p>
        <p>1.07 L</p>
        <p>.65</p>
        <p>.50 L</p>
        <p>.89</p>
        <p>.83 L</p>
        <p>1 15</p>
        <p>1.09 L</p>
        <p>82</p>
        <p>.79 L</p>
        <p>1 15</p>
        <p>1.09 L</p>
        <p>80</p>
        <p>.79 L</p>
        <p>80</p>
        <p>.79 L</p>
        <p>80</p>
        <p>.77 L</p>
        <p>80</p>
        <p>.77 L</p>
        <p>89</p>
        <p>.74 L</p>
        <p>83</p>
        <p>.79 L</p>
        <p>1 29</p>
        <p>1.17L</p>
        <p>83</p>
        <p>.79 L</p>
        <p>1 29</p>
        <p>1.17 L</p>
        <p>59 L</p>
        <p>.68</p>
        <p>591</p>
        <p>.68</p>
        <p>59 L</p>
        <p>.68</p>
        <p>89</p>
        <p>.86 L</p>
        <p>49</p>
        <p>.45 L</p>
        <p>49</p>
        <p>.451</p>
        <p>89</p>
        <p>.69 L</p>
        <p>IS</p>
        <p>Fastest Growing Supermarket Chain</p>
        <p>This comparison was made on December 12, 1986 Some prices may have changed since that dateIM</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0122" />
        <p>District Court</p>
        <p>(Continued from B-6)</p>
        <p>on payment of $100 and costs, not to drive for 12 months.</p>
        <p>Jeffrey Jerome F'enner, Farmville, speeding, pa v $13 and costs.</p>
        <p>Bettie Faulkner Fussell, Ayden, expired registration, voluntary dismissal.</p>
        <p>James Ray Lewis, Kinston, speeeding, pay costs.</p>
        <p>Velton Tyrone Williams, Melody Lane, assault on a female, 6 months jail suspended on payment of $50 and costs, not to assault prosecuting witness.</p>
        <p>Linda Reid, Ward Street, trespass, voluntary dismissal.</p>
        <p>Margaret Cunningham, Oakdale Road, failure to return hired property, voluntary dismissal.</p>
        <p>Brian Timothy Walsh, Wright Road, unsafe movement violation, voluntary dismissal</p>
        <p>Norris Earl Smith, Branches Estates, unsafe movement violation, voluntary dismissal</p>
        <p>Patricia Oliver Radcliff, West Haven Road, un.safe movement violation, voluntary di.smissal</p>
        <p>Robert Pittman Hines Jr., Winterville,</p>
        <p>unsafe movement violation, voluntary dismissal</p>
        <p>Carla Kay Edwards. Umstead Dorm, st^sign violation, voluntary dismissal.</p>
        <p>Tara Parker Berkey, King George Road, improper passing, voluntary dismissal.</p>
        <p>James Robert Barbre, Dickinson Avenue, unsafe movment violation, voluntary dismissal.</p>
        <p>David Lee McCartney, Raleigh, stop sign violation, voluntary dismissal</p>
        <p>Bobby Bowen, Grifton, hunt deer on road, 30 days jail suspended on payment of costs and $139.50 restitution to Wildlife Commission.</p>
        <p>Chad Cannon, Ayden, hunt deer on road, .30 days jail suspended on payment of costs and $139.50 restitution to Wildlife Commission.</p>
        <p>Robert Lee Elks, Route 3, Greenville, no liability insurance, no registration, voluntary dismissal.</p>
        <p>Patricia U'wis, Pinetown, larceny, voluntary dismissal</p>
        <p>Winston Mewborn, Grifton, simple assault, voluntary dismissal</p>
        <p>Martha Johnson Momen, East First Street, possession of stolen goods, voluntary dismissal.</p>
        <p>Public Notices</p>
        <p>ADVERTISEMENT FOR BID PROPOSAL</p>
        <p>Sealed proposals will be re celved by the Purchasing Department ot Pitt County Me moriai Hospital until and public ly opened at</p>
        <p>TIME 2 OOP:M DATE February 16,1987 LOCATION: Purchasing Department Conterence Room at Pitt County Memorial Hospi tal, Greenville, North Carolina, to furnish, deliver, install, and train personnel in the use of the following One (1) Cardiac Catheterization Laboratory Specifications and bid pro</p>
        <p>posal forms are on file in the of fice of the Purchasing [ ment, Pitt County Memorial</p>
        <p>Hospital, and may be obtained upon reuest between the hours of 8 30 a m and 5:00 p.m., Monday through Friday</p>
        <p>Pitt County Memorial Hos pital reserves the right to reject any or all bids, waive for malities and fake such actions as is in the best interest of the hospital</p>
        <p>Jack W Richardson President January 21, 28; February 1, 6, 1987</p>
        <p>FILENO 84SP202</p>
        <p>FILM NO. 84 59 1484</p>
        <p>IN THE GENERAL COURT OF</p>
        <p>JUSTICE</p>
        <p>SUPERIOR COURT DIVISION NORTH CAROLINA PITT COUNTY BEFORE THE CLERK</p>
        <p>IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF ANNIE AM BROSE HOLLOWELL, In competent</p>
        <p>NOTICE OF SALE Pursuant to Order duly entered by Sandra Gaskins. Clerk of Superior Court of Pitt County on the 30th day ot December, 1984, the undersign ed S W Bowen and Mary S Harris, Guardians of Annie Am brose Hollowell, will, on the 6th day of February, 1987, at 12 00 Noon on the front steps of the Piff County Courthouse, Green ville. North Carolina, offer for sale to the highest bidder for cash the following described real property:</p>
        <p>That certain tract or parcel of land situate, lying and being In Belvoir Township, Pitt Coun fy. North Carolina, adjoining the lands of G A Stancill and others, and beginning at Rober son's Bridge in G A Stancill's line, thence with the road leading to Shllo Church, MES</p>
        <p>to the head of the ditch on said road known as the Graveyard Ditch, thence with said ditch to a fence on the creek of Gum Tree; thence West to the run of said Creek, thence down the run ot said Creek to the beginning and containing 25 acres, more or less, and being the identical tract of land conveyed to Jesse J, Bullock and wife, Minnie Bullock, by Mrs Dora Clark, Commissioner, et al on November I, 1943, by deed r corded in Book D 25 at page 670 of the Pitt County Registry, and the same land conveyed by Jesse J Bullock and wife, Min nie Bullock, to Wiley K Clark, Jr and wife, Bernice H. Clark, by deed dated June 6, 1944, and the same conveyed by Wiley K Clark, Jr. and wife, Bernice H. Clark, to D M. Hollowell, as ap pears in the office of the Regis ter of Deeds of Pitt County</p>
        <p>The highest bidder at the sale shall be required to make a cash depost of fen percenf (10%) of the successful bid pending confirmation or rejection thereof</p>
        <p>The undersigned guardians shall have the right to accept or reject the highest bid.</p>
        <p>This the 6th day of January, 1986.</p>
        <p>S W. Bowen Mary S Harris Co Guardians of ANNIE AMBROSE HOLLOWELL, Incommefent Route I, Box 43 D Greenville, NC 27834 Michael A Colombo Colombo8i Kitchin P 0 Box 7143 Greenville, NC 27835 Telephone (919) 758 5835 January 14, 21, 28, February 4, 1987</p>
        <p>FILMO ;</p>
        <p>IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE</p>
        <p>SUPERIOR COURT DIVISION STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF PITT BEFORE THE CLERK</p>
        <p>WILLIAM C SHIVER and wile, JACQUELINE SHIVER; AMOS HENRY JORDAN and wife, UVERNAJORDAN VERSUS</p>
        <p>ANSON HAROLD JORDAN and wife, SALLY LOUISE JORDAN, and GONNIE MAE JORDAN NOTICE OF RESALE</p>
        <p>Under and by virtue of an Order, of Sale dated January 9. 1987, filed herein, an Order of Resale issued by the Clerk ot</p>
        <p>Superior Court of Piff County upon an advanced bid on January 15, 1987, the undersign ed Commissioner will, on the 2nd day of February, 1987 af 12:(X) noon, at the door of fhe courthouse of Pitt County, Greenville, North Carolina, of fer for sale to the highest bidder for cash upon an opening bid of TWELVE THOlTsAND SIX HUNDRED FIFTY DOLLARS ($12,650 (X)), subject to the con firmation of the Court, that cer tain property described as follows</p>
        <p>That certain tract of land located in Winterville Township, Pitt County, North Carolina and beginning at the centerline in fersecfion of NCSR 1708 and NCSR 1725, thence South 80 36 27 West 1158 34 feet to a P K. nail set in the centerline of NCSR 1708, fhence South 82 19 46 West 139 71 feet to a point in the centerline of NCSR 1708, thence South 82 19 46 West 199 92 feet to a P K. nail set in the centerline of NCSR 1708, THE POINT OF BEGINNNING, fhence from fhe POINT OF BEGINNING, South 05 06 19 East 29.99 feet to an iron, thence South 05 06 19 East 200 26 feet to an iron, fhence North 82 11 08 East 100.01 feet to an iron, thence North 82 19 30 East 100 03 feet to an iron, fhence South 05 08 00 East 444.23 feet to an iron, in the savage line, thence South 72 48 47 West 276 38 feet with the savage line to an iron, thence North 04 55 57 West 720.07 feet toa P K. nail set in the centerline of NCSR 1708, fhence North 82 19 46 East 68. T1 feet to the POINT OF BEGINN ING, containing 3.249 acres ex elusive of right of way and being shown as Lot 5 of fhe Survey for Holly Hardy Heirs by Olsen Associates, Inc dated January 19,1984.</p>
        <p>Said real estate shall be sold as is without express or implied warranties subject to Piff Coun ty Ad Valorem Taxes and assessments, all liens and en cumbranees whatsoever; that the highest bidder at said sale shall be required to deposit five percenf (5%) of his bid as evi dence of good faith; and that said undersigned shall report said sale to me Court for con firmation</p>
        <p>This the 16th day of January,1987</p>
        <p>James A Nelson, Jr Commissioner January 21, 28,1987</p>
        <p>Jeffrey Randal Howard, Route 4, Greenville, injury to personal property, voluntary dismissal.</p>
        <p>Jeffrey Wayne Davis, Trip Avenue, assault on a female, pay costs.</p>
        <p>Johnny Bright, Ayden, unauthorized use of motor vehicle, voluntary dismissal.</p>
        <p>Johnny Frizzelle, Grifton, worthless check, voluntary dismissal.</p>
        <p>Brian Jones, Cherry Point, bastardy, voluntary dismissal.</p>
        <p>William Thomas Smith, Greenville, possession of marijuana, voluntary dismissal.  </p>
        <p>Shirley Forbes, Greenville, assault by pointing a gun, voluntary dismissal.</p>
        <p>Scott Bond, Winterville, damage to real property, 60 days jail suspended on payment of costs, probation 2 years, perform 50 hours community service and pay fee, not to go on premises of ECU.</p>
        <p>Wiley Clark, Gooden Place, intoxicated and disruptive, 30 days jail suspended on payment of $25 and costs.</p>
        <p>Beatrice Dupree, Lakeview, poss^ion of cocaine, possession of marijuana, resisting arrest, 6 months jail suspended on payment of $200 and costs, probation 2 years.</p>
        <p>Albert Frank Furbush III, Woodhaven Drive, damage to real property, 60 days iail suspended on payment of costs, perform 50 hours community service and pay fees, probation 2 years.</p>
        <p>Everette Lee Wooten Jr., Kinston, following too closely, no operators license, voluntary dismissal.</p>
        <p>Ricky Donnell White, Monroe, expired registration, voluntary dismissal.</p>
        <p>David Lee McCartney, Raleigh, driving while license revoked, voluntary dismissal.</p>
        <p>Charlie Lee Cratch, Industrial Park, no operators license, no registration, no liability insurance, 6 months jail suspended on payment of $250 and costs, probation 2 years, not to drive until properly licensed.</p>
        <p>Carl Douglas Darden, Woodstock Drive, driving while impaired, not guilty.</p>
        <p>Patricia Rogers Graham, Lakeview Terrace, no operators license, 30 days jail suspended on payment of $25 and costs.</p>
        <p>John Scott (iray. Village Green, expired registration, pay costs.</p>
        <p>Evelyn Davenport, Kings Drive, carry weapon on educational property, pay $100 and costs.</p>
        <p>Sudie Bell Langley, Grimesland, tres-pa.ss, dismissed by the court.</p>
        <p>Jim Norman, Prince Road, allow dog to run at large, pay $10 and costs.</p>
        <p>Barnett Crandall, Winterville, assault on a female, damage to personal property, 90 days jail suspended on payment of $25 and costs.</p>
        <p>Kenneth Barnes, Paris Avenue, assault on a female, damage to real property, voluntary dismissal.</p>
        <p>Doris Mullins Heath, Garden Terrace, operating a lottery, not guilty.</p>
        <p>Willie Earl Taylor, T^son Street, communicating threats, resisting arrest, 90 days jail suspended on payment of $50 and costs.</p>
        <p>Graddie Thomas, Church Street, possession of marijuana, pay $100 and costs.</p>
        <p>Moses Williams Jr., Washington, N.C., possession of drug paraphernalia, voluntary dismissal; driving while libense revoked, 6 months jail suspended on payment of $200 and costs, license revoked for additional year.</p>
        <p>Clinton Wilson, Norcott Circle, resisting arrest, pay costs.</p>
        <p>Barbara Ann Newton, West Fifth Street, operating a lottery, 6 months jail suspended on payment of $500 and costs; no operators license, not guilty; no operators license, 60 days jail suspended on payment of $25 and costs Christopher Allen Houk, Charlotte, consume alcohol in public, pay costs.</p>
        <p>John Shepard Smith Jr., Forbes Street, speeding, prayer for judgment continued on payment of costs.</p>
        <p>Harvey Lee Stepps, Grifton, driving while impaired, 12 months jail suspended on payment of $350 and costs, probation 3 years, spend 7 days in jail, pay $150 attorney fees.</p>
        <p>James Earl BarnhiH, Robersonville, no</p>
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        <p>You see, Merita Lite has  3 fewer calories than regular bread</p>
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        <p>You'll be amazed that a bread so delicious can be this low in calories too!</p>
        <p>Merita Lite. In Wheat or White.</p>
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        <p>lE'dDU 1D1S2D</p>
        <p>'d</p>
        <p>operators license, hit and run driving, voluntary dismissal.</p>
        <p>Robert Earl Barnhill, Blands Trailer Park, driving while impaired, 12 months jail susmnded on payment of $350 and costs, obtain mandatory assessment at mental health, spend 7 days in jail and pay fees</p>
        <p>Leon Bynum, Rocky Mount, hit and run driving, My $io and costs.</p>
        <p>Russell Junior Robinson, Wilson, speeding, prayer for judgment continued on payment of costs.</p>
        <p>Robin Ann Herring, Grimesland, expired registration, voluntan) dismissal.</p>
        <p>Walter Roberson, Vanceooro, speeding, pay $10 and costs.</p>
        <p>Kevin Dale Evans, Winterville, no operator s license, speeding, pay $25 and costs.</p>
        <p>Ethel Hardy Cannon, Route 4, Greenville, speeding, prayer for judgment continued on payment of costs.</p>
        <p>Dennis Ray Atkinson, Grimesland, no operators license, voluntary dismissal.</p>
        <p>George Alan McCarter, (Jrifton, assault with a deadly weapon, dismissed by the court.</p>
        <p>William Harvey Case, New Bern, expired registration, voluntary dismissal.</p>
        <p>Edwin Scott Evans, Route 13, Greenville, exceedirig safe speed, pay $10 and costs, not to drive until properly licensed.</p>
        <p>William Mark Gray, Ayden, speeding, -ycosts.</p>
        <p>rimothy Loftin, Ayden, driving while license revoked, 6 months jail suspended on payment of $200 and costs, not to drive until properly licensed.</p>
        <p>Benjamin William Bell, Bethel, breaking, entering and larceny, voluntary dismissal.</p>
        <p>Timothy Edward Haislip, Bethel, breaking, entering and larceny (2 counU), voluntary dismissal.</p>
        <p>William Edward Martin, Bethel, breaking, entering and larceny, voluntary dismissal.</p>
        <p>Steve Suggs, Bethel, breaking, entering and larceny, possession of beer underage, trespass, voluntary dismissal.</p>
        <p>Gregory Dirk Simpson, Maysville,</p>
        <p>payi</p>
        <p>Til</p>
        <p>speeding, prayer for judgment continued on payment of costs.</p>
        <p>Stuart Dennis Hoffman, Virginia, speeding, pay costs.</p>
        <p>Mildred Harris Huggins, Ayden, speeding, prayer for judgment continued on payment of costs.</p>
        <p>Michael Ray Butler, Ayden, failure to reduce speed, pay $25 and costs.</p>
        <p>William Louis Bell, Aurora, exceeding safe speed, pay costs.</p>
        <p>Kimble Lovell Williams, Myrtle Avenue, stop sign violation, pay costs.</p>
        <p>Michael Kevin Clilgo, Atlantic, stop sign violation, praver for judgment continued on payment ofcosts.</p>
        <p>Jerry Neil Smith, Trenton, red light violation, pay $10 and costs.</p>
        <p>Michael Wayne Seate, Durham, speeding, pay costs.</p>
        <p>James Rufus Rogers IV, Raleigh, speeding, pay costs.</p>
        <p>James Eugene Kendall Jr., South Sylvan Drive, speeding, pay costs.</p>
        <p>Louedell Green, Winterville, unsafe movement violatiop.pay costs.</p>
        <p>Bart Matthew Mc(jbwan, Raleigh, stop sign violation, pay $25 and costs.</p>
        <p>Billy Lee Rodgers, Ayden, speeding, pay costs.</p>
        <p>Judy Andrews, Ayden, intoxicated and disruptive (2 counts), 30 d^s ja il.</p>
        <p>Linwood Earl Tillman, Route 13, Greenville, driving while impaired, not guilty.</p>
        <p>Donna Dunn Whitley, Falkland, driving left of center, 30 days jail suspended on payment of $25 and costs; deatn by vehicle, voluntary dismissal.</p>
        <p>Christopher Douglas Simpson. Route 7, Greenville, exceeding safe speed, no operators license, pay $15 and costs.</p>
        <p>^ymond Milton Mills, Grimesland, failure to comply with restricted driving.</p>
        <p>iVC -----</p>
        <p>', prayer for judgment lent of costs.</p>
        <p>not guilty; speeding, pay $15 and costs. Curtis Rayallen Cannon, Ayden, expired license, pi</p>
        <p>in payment ______</p>
        <p>Raynor Artis, Ayden, intox</p>
        <p>operators license, continued on |</p>
        <p>Kenneth Rayr icated and disruptive, 20" days jail suspended on payment of $15 and costs. Jeffrey Randal Howard, Route 4,</p>
        <p>Greenville, damage to personal property (2 counts), voluntary dismissal.</p>
        <p>Junior Earl Moore, Ayden, assault with a deadly weapon, 60 days jail suspended on payment of $50 and costs, not to assault prosecuting witness.</p>
        <p>April D. Hall, Kinston, worthless check, 30 days jail suspended on payment of $75 and costs and check.</p>
        <p>Wadie Tucker, Ayden, assault on a female, prosecution frivolous and malicious, prosecuting witness pay cost.</p>
        <p>Calvin Henderson, Winterville, worthless check, 10 days jail suspended on payment of costs and check.</p>
        <p>William H. Humbles Jr., Ayden, damage to real property, 20 days jail suspended on payment of $15 and costs, not to go on premises of prosecuting witness.</p>
        <p>William Humbles III, Ayden, worthless check, intoxicated and disruptive, 20 days jail suspended on payment of costs and check.</p>
        <p>Herman Jackson, Ayden, assault with a deadly weapon, remit costs.</p>
        <p>Dalton Earl Foreman, Howard Street, driving while license revoked, 6 months jail suspended on payment of $200 and costs, not to drive until properly licensed.</p>
        <p>William Earl Artis, Ayden, trespass, 30 days jail suspended on payment of $25 and costs, not to go on premises of prosecuting witness.</p>
        <p>Johnny Ray Cannon, Ayden, assault on a female, prosecution frivolous and malicious, prosecuting witness pay costs.</p>
        <p>Jeffrey Howard Phykitt, Wilson, driving while impaired, 30 days jail suspended on payment of $100 and costs, surrender operators license, attend alcohol school and perform 24 hours community service and pay fees.</p>
        <p>Robert Lee Sutton, Grifton, intoxicated and disruptive, pay costs.</p>
        <p>Beniamin Stellar Stowe II, Grifton, assault on a female, resisting arrest, 6 months jail suspended on payment of $200 and costs, obtain mandatory assessment at mental health.</p>
        <p>Rsidio /haeK</p>
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        <p>Color Computer Disk Drive</p>
        <p>FD-501 Color Thinline Disk #0 by Tandy</p>
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        <p>19095</p>
        <p>Reg.</p>
        <p>299.95</p>
        <p>Low As $20 Per Month &amp;lt;</p>
        <p>Gives your Color Computer with Extended BASIC over 156K of data storage! #26-3131</p>
        <p>Compact Digital Disc Player</p>
        <p>CD-2200 by Realistic'</p>
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        <p>Built-In BASIC Reg- 69.95</p>
        <p>Performs 72 scientific and 17 statistical calculations. 2K RAM, With batteries. #26-3673</p>
        <p>1-Piece Personai Phone</p>
        <p>ET-120 by Radio Shack</p>
        <p>1295</p>
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        <p>With voice-actuated recording, variable message length and call-monitor. Switchable tone/ pulse dialing'. #43-315</p>
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        <p>Recorder CTR-75 by Realistic</p>
        <p>Reg HALF 59 95 price</p>
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        <p>Reg Cut</p>
        <p>Eech  330/0</p>
        <p>3-Watt Range-Boost System for Extended Signal Reach</p>
        <p>Keep in touch! With Ch. 14 crystals. #21-1639 Batteries, additional crystals extra</p>
        <p>13" Color Television Cut 20/</p>
        <p>By Radio Shack</p>
        <p>teve^gggS</p>
        <p>Reg. 249.95</p>
        <p>Perfect for bedroom, den or dorm! Features 1-touch fine- Low As $20 Per Month, tuning. #16-237  Measured  diagonally</p>
        <p>64K Color Computer 2 By Tandy</p>
        <p>NEW LOW PRICE!</p>
        <p>Save *60</p>
        <p>9995</p>
        <p>Low As $20 Per Month.</p>
        <p>Was $159.95 in 1987 Cat. #406</p>
        <p>Extended BASIC, 8-color graphics, sound effects #26-3127</p>
        <p>All-in-One Stereo System</p>
        <p>Clarinette'-117 by Realistic</p>
        <p>SI? 11995</p>
        <p>Was $219.95 in 1986 Cat. #393</p>
        <p>Record cassettes from FM, AM, phono and 8-track player. 17"-high speakers. #13-1221</p>
        <p>Low As $20 Per Month</p>
        <p>Two-Way Speaker System</p>
        <p>Nova-15 by Realistic</p>
        <p>OQQ5 Reg HALF O^^ch  PRICE</p>
        <p>Foam-Surround 8" Woofer and 2V2" Cone Tweeter</p>
        <p>Save $80 on a pair! Walnut veneer. 19"-high. #40-4034</p>
        <p>AM/FM Stereo Cassette</p>
        <p>SCR-18 by Realistic</p>
        <p>HALF PRICE</p>
        <p>4995</p>
        <p>Reg. 99.95</p>
        <p>Record FM, AM or live" with built-in Stereo-Wide mikes! #14-788 Batteries extra  Adds  Depth</p>
        <p>8-Range Battery Tester</p>
        <p>By Micronta'</p>
        <p>21%</p>
        <p>Off</p>
        <p>788</p>
        <p>Reg.</p>
        <p>9.95</p>
        <p>Stereo Headphones 10 Off</p>
        <p>Nova-40 by Realistic</p>
        <p>Reg Cut</p>
        <p>24.95</p>
        <p>40%</p>
        <p> Cushioned Earcups</p>
        <p> Adjustable Headband</p>
        <p>Get closer to your music! 3V2'' drivers. #33-993</p>
        <p>Tests Under Load Conditions</p>
        <p>Stop throwing away perfectly good batteries! #22-031 For battery tests only</p>
        <p>Blood Pressure/Pulse Tester</p>
        <p>By Micronta</p>
        <p>^ 3495..</p>
        <p>Measures Systolic and Diastolic Pressure</p>
        <p>Easy way to monitor health at home! #63-661 Battery extra</p>
        <p>Check Your Phone Book for the Radio/haeN Store or Dealer Nearest You</p>
        <p>tSWiTCHABLE TOUCH TONE PULSE piones worK on botn tone anq Dulse lines Tnerefore in areu naving only pulse (rotary dial) imes you can siiM use services requmng tonas iii&amp;gt;e tne new longdistance systems and computer lied services PULSE SIGNALING phones eioi-K on botn rotary dial and tone lines but do not produce tonas FCC registered Not (or party lines We service what we sen</p>
        <p>Most Mi^or Credit Cards Accepted</p>
        <p>CitiLine revolving credit from Citibank Payment may vary depending on balance</p>
        <p>PBCIS  AT  PABTlClPATltyG  STOflES  AND  OEAlERS</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0123" />
        <p>001 Public Notices</p>
        <p>tection Services Board of North Carolina State Bureau of In vestlgatlon and shall have a minimum of fwo years experi</p>
        <p>ence In providing securlty'^ser vices In a hospital of 500 beds or</p>
        <p>more</p>
        <p>For Information regarding</p>
        <p>tact Ralph R. HalC Jr., Vice President, Facilities Services, Pitt County Memorial Hospital, Inc., Greenville, North Carolina. Phone: 919-757-4587.</p>
        <p>Pitt County Aflemorial Hos</p>
        <p>pital, Inc. reserves the right to als, to</p>
        <p>Public</p>
        <p>Noh'ces</p>
        <p>NORTH CAROLINA PITT COUNTY</p>
        <p>NOTICE TO CREDITORS</p>
        <p>The undersigned, having qualified as Administrator of the Estate of Jimmie L. Edwards, deceased, late of Pitt County, North Carolina, this is to notify</p>
        <p>all persons having claims fc</p>
        <p>against said estate fo present them to the undersigned on or</p>
        <p>before the 8th day of July, 1987, or this notice will be pleaded in</p>
        <p>bar of fheir recovery. All per sons Indebted to said estate will please make immediate pay ment to the undersigned.</p>
        <p>This the 5th day of January, 1987.</p>
        <p>Harold J. Edwards, Administrator CTA P.O. Box 251</p>
        <p>Simpson,</p>
        <p>North Carolina 27879 Sam B. Underwood, Jr. UNDERWOOD a, LEECH Attorneys at Law 201 Evans Street Greenville, N.C. 27834 January 7, 14,21,28,1987.</p>
        <p>NORTH CAROLINA PITT COUNTY</p>
        <p>NOTICE TO CREDITORS AND DEBTORS</p>
        <p>Having qualified as Execu tor of the Estate of Harriet N. Roseveare, deceased, late of Pitt County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons, firms and corporations having claims against said Estate fo present them to the undersigneo or his attorneys on or before the 14th</p>
        <p>Jrney ^  _</p>
        <p>day of July, 1987, or this Notice will be pleaded in bar of their</p>
        <p>recovery. All persons indebted to the said Estate will please make immediate payment to the undersigned.</p>
        <p>^^^This the 9th day of January,</p>
        <p>WILLIAM E. ROSEVEARE Executor 200 Pineview Drive Greenville, NC 27834 STANLEY M. SAMS HOWARD, BROWNING, SAMS POOLE, HILL 8, DANIEL Attorneys at Law P.O. Box 859</p>
        <p>Greenville, NC 27835 0859 Telephone: (919)758 1403 January 14, 21, 28, February 4, 1987  '</p>
        <p>NOTICE</p>
        <p>Having qualified as Execu of the estate of (3eorge M'-Coy Respess, late of Pitt (fount</p>
        <p>North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of said deceased to present them to the undersigned Executor on or be fore July 1, 1987 or this notice or same will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons In debted to said estate please</p>
        <p>make immediate payment.</p>
        <p>This 29th day of December,</p>
        <p>1986</p>
        <p>Victor M, Respess 7912 Mark Lane Fort Smith, Arkansas 72903 E xecutor of the estate of George McCoy Respess, deceased.</p>
        <p>December 31, 1986, January 7, 14,21,1987</p>
        <p>reject any or all proposals, waive formalities, and take such action as is in the best Interest of</p>
        <p>the hospital. Jac</p>
        <p>JackW. Richardson President January 16,18,19,21,25,1987</p>
        <p>the VILLAGE OF SIMPSON is</p>
        <p>rww accepting applications from housing rehabillTation contractors interested in participating In the Village's CDBG Neighborhood Improvement Phase</p>
        <p>Project. Applications may be obtained at the Village Of</p>
        <p>ffice</p>
        <p>f rom 8:30 a. m. through 4:30 p. m. Monday through Friday. January 21,25,1987</p>
        <p>007 Special Notices</p>
        <p>024</p>
        <p>Foreign</p>
        <p>9I0 VOLVO. Sliver, excellent condition, sunroof, air, automatic. 752-4275.</p>
        <p>1981 TOYOTA Clica Liftback. 5 speed, cruise control, power brakes, power steering, $2500 ll after'</p>
        <p>firm. CalFafterl p.m. 1-?6-898T</p>
        <p>1912 MAZDA GLC, air, AM/FM cassette, 4 speed or Toyota Tercel, 5 speed. Phone 355-7074.</p>
        <p>1913 BEIGE Honda Civic sta tionwagon, 5 speed, air, AAA/FM cassetfe, excellent condition, $4200. Call 355-2395 after 6</p>
        <p>058</p>
        <p>Help Wanted Clerical</p>
        <p>ABETTER</p>
        <p>OPPORTUNITY</p>
        <p>ANNE'S</p>
        <p>TEMPORARIES</p>
        <p>The area's leading temporary</p>
        <p>xfTaf ^ </p>
        <p>1914 TOYOTA Clica GT, 2 door, low mileage, 1 owner, excellent condition, $7,800. Call Harry Pair, 756-2291.</p>
        <p>&amp;lt; pOOR Honda Accord AM/FM cassette, air, automatic. $7500. Days, 355-7700, nights 355-5393.</p>
        <p>032 Boats &amp;amp; AAotors</p>
        <p>BASS BOAT, 1985 Stratos, 18', 150 horsepower Mercury. Motorguide Brute 12-24 volt trolling motor, LCR 2000. Low</p>
        <p>hours, excellent shape. $10,2M laftei</p>
        <p>Call Dave, 746-3223 after 7 p.m</p>
        <p>CHRISTIAN VIDEO rentals, $2.00 per day. Agape Christian</p>
        <p>Book Store, 946-9246, Highways 1, tfc.</p>
        <p>264and 17, Washington,</p>
        <p>LETMEAAAKE YOU AN AFGHAN</p>
        <p>and Craft pictures. Call 757 1132</p>
        <p>WE CARRY BATTERIES</p>
        <p>(Eveready) for all makes of watches! Floyd G. Robinson Jewelers, Downtown Evans AAall, Greenville, 758-2452.</p>
        <p>Oil Autos For Sale</p>
        <p>GOOD PLACE TO BUY!" EASTGATE MOTORS,INC</p>
        <p>130 East Greenville Blvd. Greenville, 355-2193</p>
        <p>MOVING! MUST SELL. 1972 Dodge Polara, 440 4 barrel, good condition.</p>
        <p>condition, $500 negotiable. 19 Ford AAaverIck, 6 cylinder.</p>
        <p>1973</p>
        <p>-rJ, good condttFon, $500 nego tiable. 1972 Toyota, 4 cylinder, good condition, automatic, $600 negotiable. Call 756 6293 anytime.</p>
        <p>NEED A RIDE or looking parts? Motor, transmission, tires, etcetera. I have 3 cars, $200each. Call 355 7573.</p>
        <p>WINNER CHEVROLET</p>
        <p>Highway 11 Bypass, Ayden 746 4032or1 800-682 1826</p>
        <p>013</p>
        <p>Buick</p>
        <p>1975 WHITE. Transmission needs work. Cali 9 7,758 5890.</p>
        <p>1981 BUICK REGAL LTD. Im maculate, owned by senior citi zen. $4500.752 4961.</p>
        <p>1983 RIVIERA, loaded, ex cellent condition, $8,495. Call after 6 p.m. 753 5740.</p>
        <p>014</p>
        <p>Cadillac</p>
        <p>1972 CADILLAC, good motor, 3268.</p>
        <p>for sale as Is. 758 :</p>
        <p>015 Chevrolet</p>
        <p>1968 EL CAMINO, restored, beautiful, 6 cylinder, 3 speed, $2995/offer. 758^006.</p>
        <p>1H9 CHEVROLET Impala, $275 as Is. Call 355-6273 after 6 p.m.</p>
        <p>1979 CHEVROLET Impala, runs good, new tires, new battery, $1500. 756 1461.</p>
        <p>1979 CAMARO for sale. Call after 6:00,757 0798.</p>
        <p>1980 CAMARO Berllnette, V6, automatic, air, AM/FM, tilt wheel, spoke wheels, excellent condition, 78,000 miles. $3500. 756-8000 after 6:00p.m.</p>
        <p>1986 Z 28, Still under warranty, 305 TPI, t-tops and most options, 6,000 miles, $12,500.355 7564.</p>
        <p>NOTICE</p>
        <p>Having qualified as Co Administrators of the estate of Ruth Aman Arnold, late of Pitt County, North Carolina, this is</p>
        <p>to notify all persons having claims against the estate of sale deceased to present them fo the</p>
        <p>undersigned Co-Administrators on or before July 1, 1987 or this notice or same will be pleaded in</p>
        <p>bar of their recovery. All per</p>
        <p> ----  !sta(</p>
        <p>sons indebted to said estate please make immediate pay ment.</p>
        <p>This 29th day of December, 1986.</p>
        <p>William V. Arnold, Jr 6713 Perkins Road Raleigh, NC 27612</p>
        <p>John E Arnold 935 De Buys Road Gulfport, Miss 39507</p>
        <p>Co Administrators of the estate of Ruth Aman Arnold, deceased. December 31, 1986, January 7, 14,21,1987</p>
        <p>NOTICE TO ALL CREDITORS AND DEBTORS OF PAUL LEE BAKER</p>
        <p>All persons, firms and cor porations having claims against Paul Lee Baker, deceased, are notified to exhibit them to Mrs. Sallie G Baker, Administratrix CTA of the decedent's estate on or before July 15, 1987 at 2813 Jefferson Drive, Greenville, North Carolina, 27858 or be bar' red from their recovery. Debt ors of the decedent are asked to make immediate payment to the above named Administratrix CTA</p>
        <p>SALLIE G BAKER ADMINISTRATRIXCTA January 14, 21, 28; February 4, 1987</p>
        <p>NOTICE</p>
        <p>Having qualified as Co executors of the estate ot Mamie Mills Dixon Boyd, late ot Pitt County, North (.arolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of said deceased to present them to the</p>
        <p>undersigned Co-executors on or July 14,</p>
        <p>of same will be pleaded in bar of</p>
        <p>before</p>
        <p>1987 or this notice</p>
        <p>their recovery All persons in debted to said estate please make immediate payment.</p>
        <p>This 12th day of January</p>
        <p>1987</p>
        <p>Elmer B Dixon Route 3, Box 347 Greenville, NC 27834</p>
        <p>Jesse David Dixon 1302 Red Banks Road Greenville, NC 27834</p>
        <p>Mack Vernon Dixon Route 3, Box 345 Greenville, NC 27834</p>
        <p>Coexecutors of the estate or Mamie Mills Dixon Boyd deceased</p>
        <p>January 14, 21, 28, February 4 1987</p>
        <p>NOTICE OF DISSOLUTION OF DEPENDABLE CORPORA TION</p>
        <p>NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that Articles of Dissolu tion of Dependable Trading Cor poratlon, a North Carolina cor poration, were filed in the office of the Secretary of State of North Carolina on the 22nd day of December, 1986. and that all creditors of and claimants against the corporation are re quired to present their respcc tive claims and demands im mediately in writing to the cor poration so that it can proceed to collect its assets, convey and dispose of its properties, pay, satisfy and discharge Its llabilifies and obligations and do all other acts required to llq uidate its business and affairs</p>
        <p>This the 14th day of January, 1987 Dependable Trading Corporation 115 West 4th Street Greenville. NC 27834 Michael A (lolombo Colombo &amp;amp; KItchin P.O Box 7143 Greenville. NC 27835 7143 January 21, 28. February 4, 11, 1987</p>
        <p>REQUEST FOR PROPOSALS</p>
        <p>Pitt County Memorial Hos pital, Inc is soliciting sealed</p>
        <p>proposals for contract security ''M, Wed</p>
        <p>services until 5:00 P nesday. February 4, 1987 in the office of Vice President Facllltites Services Contractors for providing this service shall be Ikansed by the Private Pro</p>
        <p>018</p>
        <p>Ford</p>
        <p>1965 FORD convertible, nice car, $3000. 752-2995 from 6 a.m.</p>
        <p>to 7 p.m.</p>
        <p>1976 EL CAMINO, good condi tion, $1800. Dealer H4685 757 3019.</p>
        <p>1980 FORD Country Squire Sta tionwagon for sale by owner, low mileage. Call 756 0025 after 6 00</p>
        <p>021 Oldsmobile</p>
        <p>1969 98, 4 door hard top, 51,000 original miles. Like new. $2995/ offer. 758 6006.</p>
        <p>1976 OLDSMOBILE OMEGA Only 74,745 actual miles, air, ex cellent condition Asking $1995 Callafter6p.m ,756 7118</p>
        <p>023</p>
        <p>Pontiac</p>
        <p>1979 GRAND PRIX, 1 owner, excellent condition, air, cruise, stereo, white with black vinyl top. $1950.746 3301.</p>
        <p>1985 PONTIAC Firebird, T tops, fully loaded, 5 year warranty, maroon with gray interior, ex cellent condTltion Pay off balance of loan. 752 4225 or 752 8045.</p>
        <p>SAVE MONEY this winter . shop and use the Classified Ads every day!</p>
        <p>MARINER 150, V^, $2500 with warranty installed. Call 355 2383.</p>
        <p>WE SERVICE ALL outboard motors, boats and trailers. OMC authorized dealer. Billy's</p>
        <p>AAarine and Repair. 1 mile south of Bells Forks. 555 2793.</p>
        <p>WINTER STORAGE for Boats. Cars, Campers, etc. Monthly leases. Cannon's Warehouse, 2113 Dickinson Avenue, Ray Cannon, owner, 756-4125.</p>
        <p>036 Cycles For Sale</p>
        <p>YAMAHA 4 WHEEL 60, was</p>
        <p>$839, now $729. Stan's Cycle Center, Inc. 210 West (ireenville Boulevard. 757-0592.</p>
        <p>040 Jeeps &amp;amp; Vans</p>
        <p>GRAND WAGONEER Custom like new, 19,000 miles, loaded new radlals. $12,900 firm. 756 3831.</p>
        <p>1977 JEEP CJ7, V8, new tires new paint, very nice, $3300.757 3080 anytime.</p>
        <p>041</p>
        <p>Trucks</p>
        <p>FORD DUMPTRUCK 12 yarder 758 5998.</p>
        <p>ONE TON 74 Ford Van, 752 7131</p>
        <p>1979 FORD pickup truck good condition. $1700. 1985 Hon</p>
        <p>da Blgj^ed 3 wheeler, $900. Call</p>
        <p>753</p>
        <p>1980 FORD F100, 6 cylinder, straight drive, shortbed. Dealer 114685.757 3019.</p>
        <p>1984 TOYOTA 4x4, loaded, 30K miles, $8,000. 753 3520</p>
        <p>044 Child Care</p>
        <p>EXPERIENCED EDUCATION</p>
        <p>major available weekdays and weekends for child care. Have own transportation 758 0436, ask for Jennifer,</p>
        <p>LOOKING FOR Christian woman to keep 6 month old bab</p>
        <p>In our home Monday throug Friday 7:30 to 4 00. Pleas after 4:00, 756 7127.</p>
        <p>NEED SOMEONE to care for</p>
        <p>year old girl in Club Pines area Hours: Monday Thursday, 12</p>
        <p>p.m., Fridays8 4 pm. Refer enees required. Qll 756 4456</p>
        <p>after 7 p.m.</p>
        <p>050</p>
        <p>Pets</p>
        <p>champion blood. Call^alfer 752 2611</p>
        <p>AKC GOLDEN RETRIEVER</p>
        <p>pups. Call 796 1541 after 8 pm</p>
        <p>AKC REGISTERED Cocker pups, black and white, 1 female and 3 males, $125, 524 5123.</p>
        <p>AKC REGISTERED German Sheperd puppies. Call 792 3243 after6:00p.m.</p>
        <p>AKC SIBERIAN Huskys. Call after 6 p.m. 752 4577.</p>
        <p>MIXED BREED puppies. Free. Call 758 4774 days, 355 5079 nights</p>
        <p>RESIDENTIAL PET CARE</p>
        <p>Service. Insured, bonded. Ref erences available. Sherry Dendy, 746 4818</p>
        <p>057 Help Wanted Administrative</p>
        <p>AN EXCELLENT opportunity for an Administrative Secre tary. The Individual we seek ii one who has good secretarial experience, is a professional in appearance and work habits and self motivated. Typing of 60 words per minute required and word processing experience helpful. Send resume to Ad ministrative Secretary, PO Box 1967, Greenville, NC 27835</p>
        <p>058</p>
        <p>Help Wanted Clerical</p>
        <p>ABACK-LOGOF CHALLENGING WORK IS WHAT WE HAVE AND</p>
        <p>024 Foreign</p>
        <p>BMW 1975 2002, good condition, emron paint, "babied", $4000 756 0698.</p>
        <p>OATSUN 1981, 280 ZX 2+2, black, T top, low miles, loaded, $6500. Call 746 4263 after 6 pm</p>
        <p>MAZDA RX7, 1979, 1 owner, 5 speed, air, 67,000 miles, stereo cassette player, like new, 355 6302 AAonday Friday.</p>
        <p>1971 MERCEDES Benz 220D, 4 door, FM radio, air, 4 speed, clean automobile 752 1416 after 6pm.</p>
        <p>1978 DATSUN 810 wagon, great condition, low mileage, many extras. Tuition due must sell! $2400negotiable. 752 1734.</p>
        <p>1979 280ZX, 70,000 miles, loaded, excellent condition, new tires, 752 3021.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>WE NEED YOU!</p>
        <p>We have immediate openings for:</p>
        <p>TYPING-(50 WPAA) DATA ENTRY WORD PROCESSING</p>
        <p>We offer Bonuses, Health and Life Insurance, Paid Holida and Vacations. Plus tree in ol fice word processing/personal computer training No other temporary help firm can otter what we can. Find out why' Callus</p>
        <p>MANPOWER</p>
        <p>Temporary Services</p>
        <p>118 Reade Street, Greenville</p>
        <p>757-3300</p>
        <p>EOE  M/F/H</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>REGISTERED NURSES</p>
        <p>Lenoir Memorial Hospital has positions available in Medical, Surgical, Labor and Delivery and Critical Care. Must be registered to practice in North Carolina. We offer excellent salary and benefits package. Contact;</p>
        <p>Lynn Wallace Personnel Lenoir Memorial Hospital P.O. Drawer 1678 Kinston, NC 28501 or call 919-522-7393</p>
        <p>Automotive Service Advisor</p>
        <p>Due to expanding service we are in need of an additional Service Advisor. Must have good communication skills and some mechanical knowledge. Excellent pay, benefits and vacation plan.</p>
        <p>Contact:</p>
        <p>Steve Briley, Service Manager, Joe Pecheles Volkswagen, 756-1135.</p>
        <p>service has Immediate needs for secretarles/typlsts and a wide range of clerical workers.</p>
        <p>Earn Top Benefits:</p>
        <p>Vacation and holiday pay Health and Life insurance</p>
        <p>Word processing training Sharpen your skills</p>
        <p>Start a rewarding career with Anne's today!</p>
        <p>CALLUS!</p>
        <p>Ask for Jean or Becky</p>
        <p>ANNE'S</p>
        <p>TEMPORARIES</p>
        <p>758-6610</p>
        <p>Flowers Office Complex 1410 S. Evans Street (Use Evans Street Entrance) EOE-M/F/H</p>
        <p>ABETTER</p>
        <p>OPPORTUNITY</p>
        <p>ANNE'S</p>
        <p>TEMPORARIES</p>
        <p>The area's leading temporary service has immediate needs for</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>secretaries/typists and a wide range of clerical workers.</p>
        <p>Earn Top Benefits:</p>
        <p>Vacation and holiday pay Health and Life Insurance Word processing training Sharpen your skills</p>
        <p>Start a rewarding career with Anne's today!</p>
        <p>CALLUS!</p>
        <p>Ask for Jean or Becky</p>
        <p>ANNE'S</p>
        <p>TEMPORARIES</p>
        <p>758-6610</p>
        <p>Flowers Office Complex 1410 S. Evans Street (Use Evans Street Entrance) EOE M/F/H</p>
        <p>ACCOUNTANT. Position open nf in</p>
        <p>immediately for accounfanfin multi company operation. Abili ty to coordiante all aspects of accounting systems a must. Contacf Glenda Oliver at 1 800 682-0062 for interview or send resume to Ranbdy Uzzele, P.O Box 190, Hookerton, NC 28538</p>
        <p>BOOKKEEPING AND general office work. Some computer ex perience helpful. Part time References needed Call 355 7121</p>
        <p>EXPERIENCED Bookkeeper familiar with computer IBM System 34 Send reeume to P.O Drawer 7166, Greenville, NC 27835 7166.</p>
        <p>EXPERIENCED Bookkeeper needed for business in Farm vllle. Computerized general ledger, payroll, and accounts receivable knowk for this position</p>
        <p>knowledge necessary n Send resume</p>
        <p>and salary requirements fo Con troller, PO Box 8405, Greenville.</p>
        <p>NC 27835</p>
        <p>FULL TIME entry level position with local optician. Experience preferred but not necessary. Reply with resume, P O. Box 7006, Greenville, NC. 27834</p>
        <p>FULL TIME SECRETARIAL</p>
        <p>position available immediately at Jarvis Memorial United Methodist Church. (3ood typing skills a must. Apply in person.</p>
        <p>LEGAL SECRETARY needed for local law firm. Typing re luired. Will train intelligent in ll vidual. Send resume to: Legal Secretary, P 0. Box 1967, Greenville, NC 27835.</p>
        <p>MEDICAL Transcriptionisf (Experienced) with references required. Full time. Send resume to Transcriptionisf, P.O. Box 1967, Greenville, NC 27835</p>
        <p>PART TIME bookkeeper cus tomer service Will train Call Aflantic Personnel 355 7931</p>
        <p>RECEPTIONIST/Typisf P( tion open immedialely for receptionlst/typisf word p</p>
        <p>Posi</p>
        <p>receptionlst/typisf word pro cessor af Pharm Save Incor porated. Contact Glenda Oliver at 1 800 682 0062 for details.</p>
        <p>RECEPTIONIST Typist needed. Apply in person at Carolina Of flee Equipment Company 8 a.m. foSpm</p>
        <p>SECRETARY. Immediate open</p>
        <p>Ing for clerical employee Must te outstanding in public rela</p>
        <p>tipns, skilled in typing and operation of office machines 40 hour work week, fringe benefits. Salary negotiable Send resume to: Secretary, 3004 S Memorial Drive, Greenville</p>
        <p>WORD PROCESSORS &amp;amp; Execu five Secretaries needed im mediately. Call Frankie, Man power, 118 Reade St, 757 3300</p>
        <p>059</p>
        <p>Help Wanted Medical</p>
        <p>DENTAL HYGIENIST needed part time one day per week Ap ply in person Call 2 2838</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>MATTHEWS SEPTIC TANK CO,</p>
        <p>NEW INSTALLATIONS REPAIRS PUMPING 6 CLEANING Pitt County Ptrmif #104 14 Yuri Exp*lr0r}C0</p>
        <p>PHONE 753-4097</p>
        <p>8 A.M to 9 P.M.</p>
        <p>Rent A</p>
        <p>NEW CAR</p>
        <p>A Low As</p>
        <p>$18.00</p>
        <p>Per Day</p>
        <p>Sharpest Fleet In Town</p>
        <p>RENT WAY AUTO RENT kown &amp;amp; Wood</p>
        <p>Downtown</p>
        <p>752-2882</p>
        <p>059</p>
        <p>Help Wanted Medical</p>
        <p>DENTAL ASSISTANT for Gen eral Dentistry Practice, Cer titled or experienced person preferred. Send resume to P.O, 1X487, Ayden, 28513</p>
        <p>DENTAL ASSISTANTS needed. Good benefits. Call Atlantic Personnel 355-7931</p>
        <p>PART TIME Pharmacist posi tion available for hospital and satellite clinic. Salary negotia ble. Contact (Seorge Brandt,</p>
        <p>Martin General Hospital,' 1186</p>
        <p>Wllllamsfon,NC. 919-792-21</p>
        <p>RECEPTIONIST/Secretary with experience in Insurance and/or AAedlcaid for new doctor's office In Greenville. Send resume to P.O. Box 114, Farm vllle, NC 27828.</p>
        <p>73 BED skllM facility seeking</p>
        <p>full time Activity Director.</p>
        <p>perfecf job for someone who loves geriatrics and has the ap propriate education. Send</p>
        <p>resume fo: Britthaven of New Bern, P.O. Box 3397, New Bern, NC 28560.</p>
        <p>060 Help Wanted Miscellaneous</p>
        <p>AAA EMPLOYMENT</p>
        <p>ASSOCIATE MANAGER; $255 Retail needs your bubbly per</p>
        <p>sonality!</p>
        <p>Sc</p>
        <p>PARTS CLERK: Mature? If you know the catalog, we know your new boss!</p>
        <p>MAID: Employer needs you to day.</p>
        <p>PRECISIONS GRINDER:</p>
        <p>(Jperate variety of machines OFFICE: Light typing, filing? Look no more.</p>
        <p>SALES: Large items practically sell themselves, needs you for paperwork.</p>
        <p>101 West 14th Street Suite 203 758 1393 Low Fee Personnel Service</p>
        <p>ACCOUNTS RECEIVABLE</p>
        <p>Clerk. Credit investigation. III Ing, typing and phone collec</p>
        <p>tions. Apply at_ Tom Togs, la JacI</p>
        <p>Panama Jack Division, 1W1 Dickinson Avenue.</p>
        <p>AGES 16-21, out of school.' Free job training through Job Corps. Also G.E.D. Social Services, Greenville. Wednesdays, 12 noon 2 p.m.</p>
        <p>ATTENTION I You need money? I need 2 homemakers to show quality, tasteful lingerie at home parties. Set own hours. No experience necessary, $io$25/ hour + . No collecting or delivering. Easy, fun, profitable, Te spectable. Call Sandy, Mon day Friday 8 a m. to 1 p.m tor appointment in your home, 756</p>
        <p>BOB BARBOUR Volvo, BMW and AMC needs counterhelp in parts department. Includes shipping and receiving. Expert ence required. Apply in person at 3303 South Memorial Drive. Ask for Rocky Thornhill.</p>
        <p>CASHIERS NEEDED im</p>
        <p>mediately. All shifts available.  Pe</p>
        <p>Atlantic Personnel, 355 7931.</p>
        <p>COUNTER PERSON also some small engine repair and service. Experience preferred Apply In person. Rental Tool Company No phone calls.</p>
        <p>060 Help Wanted</p>
        <p>Helpv</p>
        <p>Miscella</p>
        <p>neous</p>
        <p>FULL TIME help needed. Apply The Optical Palace.</p>
        <p>LADY TO STAY in home at nighf with elderly lady, 7 nights weekly. Good pay. 758-1246.</p>
        <p>LICENSED HAIR Dresser wanted af (George's Hair Oe signers. The Plaza. Apply Tuesday Friday, 10-5:30.</p>
        <p>LIGHT DELIVERY Must know local and surrounding areas and have economical car. 756 3658</p>
        <p>LONG DISTANCE truck driver overage 25. Home weekends. At least 2 5 years experience and good driving record haulln lumber and steel. Call 752 578 after 2:30 p.m</p>
        <p>ilEEOEO experienced electri</p>
        <p>ixperl</p>
        <p>clans. G.B. Electric. 355-6011 or 355-2093</p>
        <p>NEEDED IMMEDIATELY</p>
        <p>(General maintenance person to</p>
        <p>complete staff of a large apart</p>
        <p>nt  .....</p>
        <p>ment community. Need own</p>
        <p>tools, car, ability to be poly graphed and a genuine desire Ic work. New applicants only. App ly Tar River Estates, 14( Willow Street,!, 9 5daily.</p>
        <p>NEEDED: Part-time person to clean cars Inside and out. Apply at Greenville Motor Valet, 1103 Dickinson Avenue between 9 and</p>
        <p>12.</p>
        <p>PART TIME food service worker. 3 months prior expert ence Is a must. Cashier expert ence also helpful. Guaranteed 20 hours per week. Call 752 1100 ex tension 282, ask for Charlie.</p>
        <p>PARTS MANAGER Small</p>
        <p>engine repair experience re quired. Call Atlanfic Personnel</p>
        <p>Immediately 355 7931.</p>
        <p>PROFESSIONAL RESUME</p>
        <p>composition - Atlantic Personnel Services, 355 7931.</p>
        <p>RELOCATION Coordinator. 20 hours per week for a mature in dividual. Duties will include working with newcomers and assisting Office Manager. Com puter knowledge valuable but not mandatory. Ask tor Ann or Dot at Century 21 Bass Realty. 756 6666.</p>
        <p>REPAIRMAN needed with ex rience in repairing mobile mes. Apply In person between 9 and 11 a.m., Monday Friday</p>
        <p>No phone calls. Conner Homes, 616 West Greenville Boulevard,</p>
        <p>Greenville.</p>
        <p>RESUMES, COVER LETTERS</p>
        <p>professionally developed Even Ing appointments. Call 355 6390</p>
        <p>RETAIL MANAGEMENT and</p>
        <p>Trainee position. Must relocate. $17K $40K Fee Paid Call Atlan tic Personnel 355 7931</p>
        <p>SHELLING a SHELLING</p>
        <p>specializes in sales, manage ment trainee, accounting and clerical positions. Call 758 0541</p>
        <p>STARTING AN Accounting course at night, January 26. Greenville School ot Commerce, 752 3177,</p>
        <p>DELIVERY/Maintenance Full Time associate needed at Brody's. Individual must be dependable and hardworking</p>
        <p>(Good benefits Apply'Brody's, Personnel Director, Carolina</p>
        <p>East Mall, Monday Thursday, 1:30 4.</p>
        <p>DO YOU KNOW weights and measurements? Are you able fo lift 70 pounds? Can you work afternoons and evenings? It so, S &amp;amp; S CAFETERIA may have a storeroom position for you Ap plications will be taken 8 9am., Atonday Friday only. No phone calls.</p>
        <p>DRY CLEANER trainee/</p>
        <p>manager career opportunity Call Atlantic Personnel 355 7931</p>
        <p>EARN GREAT MONEY, work your own hours. Sell Avon 1 leauty Company. 756 6396</p>
        <p>ELDERLY HANDICAPPED</p>
        <p>white lady seeks live in compa nion. Ideal for another elderly lady tired ot living alone. Room ana board, possible salary Call Carl at 752 5733 tor details</p>
        <p>EXPERIENCED MOBILE</p>
        <p>home service man and plumb er-needed to work at Azalea AAobile Homes. Contact Tommy or J.T. Williams. 756 7815</p>
        <p>EXPERIENCED MOBILE</p>
        <p>home service man needed. Im mediate opening. Apply in per son. Calvary Mobile Homes, Chocowlnlty_</p>
        <p>HAIR DRESSER Now accep ting applications for experi enced hair dresser. Guaranteed salary plus commission Good benefits. Apply in person Great Expectations, Carolina East Mall, next to Sears</p>
        <p>HAIR STYLIST wanted for new salon In Stanton Square Call 355 5826 or 756 5773</p>
        <p>HIRINGI Federal government</p>
        <p>lObs in your area and overseas Many immediate openings without waiting list or test $15</p>
        <p>68,000 Phone call refundable (602)838 8885 Extension 513</p>
        <p>TELEPHONE TALKERS If</p>
        <p>you can dial and smile and sit awhile, we need you. High school students welcomed. Day or evening hours available. CafI 756 3658</p>
        <p>TRACTOR TRAILER Drivers</p>
        <p>High pay New equipment 2 requlr</p>
        <p>years experience required Call 1 800 682 6574</p>
        <p>WANTED</p>
        <p>Mothers, with small children, who would like to stay at home and still contribute financially to the lamily budget Shaklee is now accepting applications from qualified persons interested in nutrition counseling and sales An Ideal in home business. Ex cellent benefits, full time or part</p>
        <p>time. Training provided. Call  -  Inte</p>
        <p>757 3040 for Interview appoint ment</p>
        <p>WE ARE GROWING and ex</p>
        <p>panding our management staff Looking for one responsible, outgoing person to work full time as an Assistant Manager at Video Views Apply In person at Carolina East Centre No phone calls please</p>
        <p>ATTENTION Real Estate</p>
        <p>Agents. We presently have an III</p>
        <p>opening for one full lime agent with a North Carolina real estate license. Full time. Must</p>
        <p>Clan to work 40 hours per week eads and sales aids available For your confidential Interview, call Ann Bass, CENTURY 21 Bass Realty. 756 6666</p>
        <p>The Dally Reflector, Greenville, N C__Wertnesday,  January  21.1987 Q.g</p>
        <p>Ml Help Wanted Sales</p>
        <p>AN EXCITING opportunity to</p>
        <p>earn $35K $50K per year in commissioned outside sales representing nation's largest retailers home improvement division. Verified leads furnish</p>
        <p>training pro</p>
        <p>vided with full company sup</p>
        <p>port. Only experienced sidin salesoeoole need apply. Cal</p>
        <p>7108 fo arrange an interview</p>
        <p>FEMALE HELP Wanted Earn $10 tor 2 hours morning, after noon, or evening, 5 days per</p>
        <p>week. Car necessary. For per sonal Interview, call 753-3514</p>
        <p>LOOKING FOR ambitioui; motivated real estate agents to</p>
        <p>work with a new and growing b1 estate</p>
        <p>agency, Must have real</p>
        <p>-w-'  r'  icoi vaiaic</p>
        <p>license. Call for your interview today. CENTURY 21 Janet</p>
        <p>&amp;lt;1 jai</p>
        <p>Bowser 8, Associates, 355 7800</p>
        <p>MARKETING/SALESPERSON wanted by a fast growing local firm. Our company Is looking tor a self motivator with a desire to succeed. A degree In marketing or experience in sales helptu Send resume to Marketing/ Sales, P.O Box 1733, Greenville, NC 27834</p>
        <p>BRODY'S NEEDS a full time sales associate in the gift department. Individual musten joy displaying and stocking merchandise and working wil t the public Salary baseo upon experience Good benetl</p>
        <p>package Apply Brody's. Per sonnel Director, Carolina East</p>
        <p>Mall, Monday Thursday, I 30 4</p>
        <p>BRODY'S NEEDS a lull time sales associate In the jewelry department Individual musten joy fashionable accessories and</p>
        <p>lewelry Salary based upon ex perience (Good benefit package</p>
        <p>Apply Brody's, Personnel DIrec tor, Carolina East Mall, AAon day Thursday, 1:304</p>
        <p>COPIER/COMPUTER Sales Prefer experience Salary $I8K $30K Call Atlantic Per sonnel 355 7931</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>HELP IS HERE!</p>
        <p>752-6166</p>
        <p>PHLEBOTOMY/EKG</p>
        <p>TECHNICIAN</p>
        <p>Immediate opening for Phlebotomy/EKG Tech to work in Clinical Laboratory. Must possess skills with Ven-punctures, EKGS, and basic typing or key boarding Must be able to communicate well with the public, laboratory and Medical staff For more information contact:</p>
        <p>PERSONNEL DEPARTMENT COMMUNIITY HOSPITAL OF ROCKY MOUNT ROCKY MOUNT, N.C. 27804 919-443-9101 EOE</p>
        <p>IMMEDIATE OPENING FOR DIRECTOR OF BUSINESS SERVICES</p>
        <p>B. A. Degree in Accounting "preferred with ability to automate and improve operations through computer enhancements ("MSA software, NCR hardware). A strong background in credit and collections (preferably medical field) is required. Responsibilities also include all Business Office functions.</p>
        <p>Excellent salary and benefits package for qualified individual.</p>
        <p>Applications may be obtained from the Personnel Department of Community Hospital.</p>
        <p>COMMUmTY HOSPnAL OF ROCKY MOUNT</p>
        <p>1031 Noell Lane, Rocky Mount, N.C. 27804 (EOE)</p>
        <p>NEEDED IMMEDIATELY.</p>
        <p>Company expanding, looking for aggressive person experienced In sales to work Greenville.</p>
        <p>Wilson, Rocky Mount area. We will train. Send resume fo</p>
        <p>Frank Smith, Carolina Model Homes, P.O Box 469, Green vllle, NC 27835</p>
        <p>REAL ESTATE Sales Agent. At tractive commission package with incentives. Call Tim Smith at the Real Estate Center for confidential interview 355 6666</p>
        <p>REPSNEEDED</p>
        <p>tor business accounts. Full time. $60,000 $80,000 Part time. $12,000 $18.000 No selling, repeat business. Set your own hours Training provided. Call: 1612 938-6870, Monday Friday, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. (Central Standard Time)</p>
        <p>SALESPERSON</p>
        <p>Energetic, not afraid to work</p>
        <p>willing to fake responsibility In other areas, excellent opportu nity and good benefits, ad</p>
        <p>nity</p>
        <p>call litoicoim wfillamsat</p>
        <p>vancement Is up to you Please</p>
        <p>Greenville TV</p>
        <p>nance</p>
        <p>FORAf&amp;gt;t*OINTMENT</p>
        <p>756-2616</p>
        <p>SALESPERSON to call on small to medium size businesses in and around Greenville tor</p>
        <p>unique new mobile bookkeeping firm. No bookkeeping experi ence required, no high pressure</p>
        <p>ighp re</p>
        <p>Sales Training Provided (Gen erous commission Reply fo</p>
        <p>Sales, P.O. Box 1967, Greenville NC 27835</p>
        <p>TOP MONEY STARTS HERE</p>
        <p>$35,000/$85,000YEAR</p>
        <p>Music and video boom. Manag ers/representatlves We need help to service high vllume ac counts. Immediate income plus bonuses. Mr. Lea, 818783 8316</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON BASEO com</p>
        <p>r seeking aggressive self motivated Individual lor outside sales. $20,0(W+ earning poten tial Must have own transporta tion Pickup truck helptul Call 946 0228 9 a m to 5 p m Monday through Friday</p>
        <p>042</p>
        <p>Help Wanted Teachers</p>
        <p>SPECIAL EDUCATION Teach er needed with BS degree In Mental Retardation with an A Certlllcate or BS In Education with Certification In Mental Retardation Salary commen surate It interested please send resume fo: Personnel, Howell'! Center, PO Box 2159, New Bern. NC 28560</p>
        <p>043 Help Wanted Technical &amp;amp; Trades</p>
        <p>CONSULTANT PHARMACIST' Pharmacist needed Immediate</p>
        <p>ly to serve as a long term care</p>
        <p>-----------   :isf  -</p>
        <p>consultant pharmacist Position requires some overnight travel some clinical experience re quired Salary commensurate with experience and background Contact Danny Yates or Randy Uzzell at I 800 682 0062 tor detalls/lntervlew or send resume to Pharm Save In</p>
        <p>corporated, P O Box 190 Hook</p>
        <p>ikerfon, NC 28538</p>
        <p>EXPERIENCED FOREIGN</p>
        <p>car mechanic needed Apply Eurasian Service Center, 105 West Greenville Boulevard, across from Union Carbide</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>SAVE &amp;lt;50 A MONTH! SAVE &amp;lt;4,200</p>
        <p>ON A QUALITY CONNtR MOBILE NOME NOW!</p>
        <p>Conmr Hoimi</p>
        <p>710 SotritiMil OrMiwllli Boultnrd OrMovlll*. N C</p>
        <p>756-0333</p>
        <p>1  tos dwm ptynwnt &amp;gt;Wi</p>
        <p>ISO montM, ptmwMt ina II MS FlUdRaWFHAFIntnclMl [iclyita*</p>
        <p>043 Help Wanted Technical &amp;amp; Trades</p>
        <p>LICENSED Cosmetologist Preferably clientele. Commis slons and bonuses. Call tor an appointment. 756-370$.</p>
        <p>POSITION AVAILABLE Educational/Vocational EXrector</p>
        <p>BOYS CLUB OF PITT COUNTY</p>
        <p>Responsibilities Include plann Ing, organizing, directing and evaluating educatlonaf and vocational programs. Send resume to:</p>
        <p>Boys Club of Pitt County Educational/VKafional Director</p>
        <p>502 West Arlington Boulevard Greenville, NC 27834</p>
        <p>Job description available at Boys Club</p>
        <p>WANTED ELECTRICIANS and</p>
        <p>helpers. Send resume to; 205F Shiloh Drive, Greenville, NC 27834.</p>
        <p>044 Work Wanted</p>
        <p>ALL LAWN CARE, roof, gutter cleaning, leaves raked.</p>
        <p>trimming. Call Sam, 758 5818 Help a student today</p>
        <p>CARPENTER. Remodeling, r^lrs, decks and fences. 355</p>
        <p>CATHY'S CLEANING Service Residential, commercial and of tices Cathy 758 6009, Wanda 757 3731</p>
        <p>COMPLETE TREE SERVICE</p>
        <p>We safely remove trees and can split them for firewood In your yard. Also clean root &amp;amp; gutters lawn maintenance, oak firewood. Call 756 1339 for estimates.</p>
        <p>FLOOR SANDING and</p>
        <p>retinlshing, new and old Call 752 1851</p>
        <p>GE MOBILE home repair, no job too small, roof and sealing, general repair, plumbing, underpinning, replacing win dows and doors, estimator 758 0779 or 752 1623,</p>
        <p>GENERAL PAINTING, rea</p>
        <p>sonable rates. E xperlenced Call 355 7611</p>
        <p>HADDOCK CONSTRUCTION</p>
        <p>Company Home building. Im provement, repair; also decks, garages, (enees, etc 355 7866.</p>
        <p>IF YOU NEED Carpenter Sub</p>
        <p>(raming or Inte</p>
        <p>contractors tor  ......,  .......</p>
        <p>rior or exterior trim or siding call 919 522 5612 anytime</p>
        <p>INTERIOR AND Exterior paint Ing and wallpapering Refer enees, work guaranteed, 15</p>
        <p>years experience Free</p>
        <p> ------- 3H .....</p>
        <p>estimates 35 6492 after 6 00</p>
        <p>J A V DRY WALL, hanging and &amp;gt;ck. Sprz</p>
        <p>finishing sheetrock. Sprayed ceilings 752 5849</p>
        <p>LPN DESIRES private duty nursing Contact Sue, 946 9720 MOORE'S HOME Improve' ments. All types ot remodeling and repair work Room add! tIons, decks, custom cabinets For free estimate call Donnie Moore, 752 0830</p>
        <p>NEED WOOD CUT. something pointed, weeds pulled or other odd jobs Free estimates (Guar antee good job Call 752 5424 or 752 0786 anytime Ask for Rob or Bert.</p>
        <p>NO JOB TOO small. Remodel Ing, carpentry, and repair work. Decks, roof leaks fixed Estimates, 752 1623 or 758 0779</p>
        <p>PAPERING and Interior Paint</p>
        <p>ing 10% oil jobs scheduled for</p>
        <p> -----  F(  </p>
        <p>January and February. Present this ad at job completion Wallpapering guaranteed In writing Free estimates Call Don English, 756 7010</p>
        <p>SKINNER'S FURNITURE</p>
        <p>Retinlshing Stripping and repairs Pickup and delivery 756 1607</p>
        <p>WANT YOUR HOUSECLEANEOT</p>
        <p>Call 830 0245</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>044 Work Wanted</p>
        <p>papering, interior Paint</p>
        <p>ing and paper removal. Call Don English, 756-7010.</p>
        <p>professional Painters. Low rates. Sllkwood Paint Company</p>
        <p>l^nterlqr, exterior, wallpaper i; Sfev</p>
        <p>Scott Patterson, 757 3276 Bobbins, 830-0318.</p>
        <p>repairs of any type due to rot or termite damage. 20 years experience. 752 0091.</p>
        <p>ROGERS' LANDSCAPING. Top</p>
        <p>soil, small loads. Call 746-2764 nights.</p>
        <p>roof LEAKS FIXED and</p>
        <p>minor repairs. 18 years experi ence. Work guaranteed After 6</p>
        <p>p m call 752 5906</p>
        <p>048 Antiques</p>
        <p>antique DUNCAN Phyfe sofa, good condition. Call 756</p>
        <p>7066 after 5 30.</p>
        <p>MAHOGANY TABLE (or sale $200. Call 758 0786 after 5 pm.</p>
        <p>072 Building Supplies</p>
        <p>2,000 PAVER BRICKS. Sand stone color 756 5270.</p>
        <p>080 Fuel, Wood, Coal</p>
        <p>A CORD OF 100% Oak firewood. $75/cord, 5 cords $350, $40/'/i cord, any size or length Delivered tree 1 823 6837 or 1 823 5407</p>
        <p>ALL SPLIT, oak firewood, ready to go 756 3015.</p>
        <p>DWEHPOmilOODSEIIVICE</p>
        <p>Oak firewood Delivered and stacked. Discounts tor quantity 756 1339</p>
        <p>fisher insert Excellent condition $375 756 6482</p>
        <p>MCLAWHORN'S</p>
        <p>OAKFIREWCX)D</p>
        <p>Discount for quantity 756 7703</p>
        <p>PINE WOOD trim end, excellent lor kindling $20 per load. Call 756 7234</p>
        <p>SEASONED OR green oak firewood, delivered and stacked 758 6143</p>
        <p>SEASONED OAK firewood for sale Ready to go. Call after 6 p m, 752 6420or 752 8847.</p>
        <p>STRICKLAND'SOak Firewood Stacked and delivered.</p>
        <p>758 5363</p>
        <p>081</p>
        <p>Furniture</p>
        <p>BUNK BEDS with mattresses.</p>
        <p>$25. Lazy boy recliner, $20. Girl's bookcase, $20. 758 8783.</p>
        <p>COUNTRY PRINT sola and loveseat. $400 Oak dresser with</p>
        <p>mirror, $200 2 wingback chairs, $150each Call 355 2588after 5.</p>
        <p>DRESSING TABLE, bench, solid cherry, American Drew. Grandfather clock, oak. 756 9295</p>
        <p>DRYER, heavy duly plus, wrinkle guard. Inside llghl Country sofa, barn red, 756 5247</p>
        <p>QUEEN SIZE brown plaid sleeper sofa, $335 or best otter Green vinyl recliner, $50 Call 752 8381</p>
        <p>RUST/GOLD/BEIGE striped sofa with 2 matching chairs $200 Call 757 0179atter 6p m</p>
        <p>SOFA AND LOVESEAT, Earth Tones, both, $90 Call after 6 pm ,757 3415</p>
        <p>SOLID GOLD sola (Good condl lion Best offer Call 752 4517.</p>
        <p>082 Garage-Yard Sales</p>
        <p>ANTIQUES AND Collectibles, J 8. B's HIDDEN TREASURES beside Tyson Brothers In Stokes New hours 2 6 pm . Thursday Friday Sunday. 9 6 Saturday 757 304</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>SUPERVISORY</p>
        <p>OPPORTUNITY</p>
        <p>Established, local industrial firm has immediate opportunity for an experienced Assistant Supervisor. Must be able to work second shift. Require college background. Excellent advancement opportunity and benefits.</p>
        <p>Reply to:</p>
        <p>SUPERVISORY OPPORTUNITY</p>
        <p>P.O. BOX 1967 GREENVILLE, N.C. 2763S</p>
        <p>EVENING SHIFT SUPERVISOR</p>
        <p>Lenoir Memorial Hospital is currently seeking a 2nd shift supervisor fo be responsible for 2nd shift activities and personnel in the cardiopulmonary department. Must be a registered Respiratory Therapist or registry eligible Minimum of 3 years experience preferred Competitive salary and excellent benefits package. Send resume to</p>
        <p>Arends Battle Personnel Assistant Lenoir Memorial Hospital P.O. Drawar 1678 Kinston, NC 28501 orcsll 919-522-7386</p>
        <p>We give high priority to</p>
        <p>high-tech office workers.</p>
        <p>At Manpower Temporary Services, we welcomeand appreciateskilled office workers. People who thrive in automated office sites. And like the freedom and variety of temporary work.</p>
        <p>As our employee, you'll work in some of this areas most advanced offics. With good, weekly pay A flexible work schedule. And, if you have good typing skills or previous word processing experience, a chance at our fast, free Skillware training.</p>
        <p>If you have information processing, data entry or other office experience, call us. Learn about the priorities we give to special people like you.</p>
        <p>O MANPOWER</p>
        <p>temporary services</p>
        <p>118 Reade Street Qreenville, N.C.</p>
        <p>757-3300</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0124" />
        <p>B-10 The Daily Rei m . Greenville, N.C</p>
        <p>Wednesday, January 21.1987</p>
        <p>084 Heavy Equipment</p>
        <p>340A INTERNATIONATDo;er</p>
        <p>Asking $3000 or best offer Ca i 756 W38_</p>
        <p>084 Farm Equipment</p>
        <p>ROANOKE BULK BARNT lif</p>
        <p>racks, LP gas, 1975 year moc!&amp;lt; Call 758 0168 from 6 fo 10 p m</p>
        <p>092</p>
        <p>Livestock</p>
        <p>WE HAVE hcsefeed, salt blocks, r^ibbif and hog feed. Call Ayden Nitrogen, 746 215J.</p>
        <p>099 Miscellaneous</p>
        <p>088 Farm Products</p>
        <p>PEANUT HAY. $1 50 bale Call 758 0168</p>
        <p>089 Fruits &amp;amp; Vegetables</p>
        <p>GROW YOUR own fruit Free copy 48 page Planting Guide Catalog in color, offering one of the most complete lines of plant material including fruit trees, nut trees, berry plants, grape vines, landscaping plant mate rial Waynesboro Nurseries Waynesboro, VA 22980</p>
        <p>092</p>
        <p>Livestock</p>
        <p>HORSEBACK RIDING. Jarman Stables,752 5237</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED AOS will go to work for you to find cash buyers for your unused items To plate your ad, phone 752 6166</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>CANVAS AWNINGS C. L. Lupton Co. 752-6116</p>
        <p>A'.L MAJOR USED appliances. Reduced and guaranteed. Call 74.5 2446</p>
        <p>AUTOMATIC WASHER, good condition, reasonably priced</p>
        <p>752 2551</p>
        <p>BEAUTY SHOP equipment, 2 booths, 2 hydraulic chairs, 4 dryers Call 946 1567or 946 4628</p>
        <p>CALL CHARLES TICE, 758</p>
        <p>3013, for small loads sand, top soil, stone, pine bark Also backhoe and driveway work.</p>
        <p>ELECTRIC DRAIN machine, pager, wljiiripool bathtub white. Call 830 0073</p>
        <p>FIXTURES FOR SALE</p>
        <p>Metal shelving, display shelv ing, circular clothes rack, s11 k sc reen ing machine, photocopier, engraver, trophy parts and pieces, tennis racker stringing machine, desks, counters, pants rack, cash regis ter, 8' wood and glass display case, antige display case.</p>
        <p>Bond s Sporting Goods 218 Arlington Boulevard Greenville, NC</p>
        <p>FOUR BURIAL soaces Crestlawn Memorial Gardens, $1200 or best offer Call collect, 919 686 0960after 6 p m.</p>
        <p>GOING OUT OF Business 25% off Mary Kay Cosmetics. Call 355 5042</p>
        <p>GOOD USED washers, dryers Guaranteed $50 and up. Call S G Williams Repair, 746 2391.</p>
        <p>GREENVILLE ATHLETIC</p>
        <p>Club membership with dues paid through August 1987 $350. After 5p m . 756 0559.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>EQUIPMENT</p>
        <p>Chain Saw Sales, Rentals &amp;amp; Repoirs</p>
        <p>107 Manhattan Avenue</p>
        <p>830-1367</p>
        <p>099 Miscellaneous</p>
        <p>GREENVILLE ATHLETIC</p>
        <p>Club Family membership, paid up through November 1987. Will sell for $350. Call 746 2319 or 752 0334</p>
        <p>GUNS</p>
        <p>LOANS ON BUY, SELL and</p>
        <p>trade. Southern Gun &amp;amp; Pawn Inc., 752 2464.</p>
        <p>INSTANTCASH</p>
        <p>LOANS ON a BUYING Guns TV's, gold and silver iewelry coins, most anything of value Southern Gun &amp;amp; Pawn Inc., 752 2464.</p>
        <p>JEANETTE'S COUNTRY Cot</p>
        <p>tage. Molded teddy bears and ducks. Also woodcrafts and wreaths. Open Thursday through Sunday 1:30-5:30. Turn right on 43 at Bell Forks, approximately 4 miles, cottage on left. Watch for signs.</p>
        <p>KIRBY VACUUM cleaner with attachments, $100. Call 355-6273 after 6 p.m.</p>
        <p>LARGE REFRIGERATOR with Icemaker, like new, was $900, sell $370. 355 6002.</p>
        <p>METAL LATHE Logan 200,10' swing. 756-5270.</p>
        <p>MOVING SOON Need to sell: refrigerator, lawnmower. Kinc size waferbed, fully equipped Some odd and end furniture Call after 5 p.m. 758 3558.</p>
        <p>moving. RCA 26", remote con trol, color TV, $425 4 piece Bassett bedroom suit, queen size mattress, $800. Couch and chair, $200 746 3575after 5p.m.</p>
        <p>NEW YEAR CLEARANCE</p>
        <p>Sale. F.H.A. Carpet $4.95/ square yard. Armstrong and Congoleum No Wax vinyl, $2 49/square yard. Congoleum Spring vinyl, $9.95/square yard. Commercial prints, $4.95 to $5.95/square yard, values to $35.00/yard. '/% Armstrong Ex celon tile, $26.95/carton. The Carpet Bargain Center, Green vine 758 0057.</p>
        <p>PORTABLE COLOR TV. Ad</p>
        <p>vent Stereo speakers, toys, children's clothes (boys' size 12 16 and 27W and girls' size 8 10) 355 6239.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>WANTED</p>
        <p>LICENSED NORTH CAROLINA</p>
        <p>REAL ESTATE SALESPERSON</p>
        <p>Experience preferred. Opportunity to earn income on executive level.</p>
        <p>PHONE 756-8485</p>
        <p>CHICKEN  BURGERS  BISCUITS</p>
        <p>WE ARE A GROWING COMPANY LOOKING FOR EXPERIENCED FOOD SERVICE MANAGERS AND ASSISTANT MANAGERS. IF YOU CAN HANDLE THE MANAGEMENT RESPONSIBILITIES OF A FAST FOOD ENVIRONMENT. WE. WANT TO TALK WITH YOU.</p>
        <p>WE OFFER: EXCELLENT SALARY WITH MANAGEMENT BONUSES, INSURANCE PACKAGE, VACATION &amp;amp; SICK PAY, RETIREMENT PLAN &amp;amp; CREDIT UNION. BE IN THE COMPANY OF SUCCESSFUL PEOPLE. A COMPANY ON THE MOVE IN GREENVILLE.</p>
        <p>APPLY NOW TO: JOB SERVICE OFFICE 3101 BISMARK ST. GREENVILLE, N.C.</p>
        <p>INTERVIEWS TO BE HELD ON FRIDAY, JANUARY 23rd, 9:00 a.m. to 4:00 pH-</p>
        <p>PO. Box 749 Rocky Mount. NC 27802-0749 (919)937-2036</p>
        <p>r</p>
        <p>099 Miscellaneous</p>
        <p>REFRIGERATOR, G E, no</p>
        <p>frost. $250. Call 752 9593. SHAMPOO YOUR RUGI Rent shampooers and vacuums at Rental Tool Company.</p>
        <p>SHINGLES, $~12.S0 square. 8'X 16' Hardboard Siding, $2.89. Re iect Plywood by Unit W $4.75, W $5.75, %" $6.75. Builders Bargain Center, 758 7061.</p>
        <p>102 Mobile Homes For Sale</p>
        <p>CONNER HOME OWNERS;</p>
        <p>You are eligible for tree monthly payments. Call John Quinn for details, 756 7490</p>
        <p>STORAGE BUILDINGS. Fi nancing available also. Call 758-4449. After 6,946 9932.</p>
        <p>STORE FIXTURES and silk screen equipment for sale.756' 6001.</p>
        <p>TOPSOIL, fill dirt, pinebark Call7S6-4472after6p.m.</p>
        <p>WASHERS, dryers, color TV's, refrigerators and stoves. $100 up. Guaranteed. 746-6929</p>
        <p>22,600 BTU kerosene heater Brand new. Low, low price. 758 6301 aHer8p.m</p>
        <p>4*8 UTILITY trailor, steel floor, heavy duty, new. $525. 355-2657 days.</p>
        <p>5" SCHEDULE 40 PVC pipe, new, approximately 500', $95 per 100.752-0704 after 7 p.m.</p>
        <p>9x14 STORAGE building $400. Above ground pool, 18'x32'x4', pump, filter, and vacuum in eluded, $400. Moving out of town, must sell. 757-0545.</p>
        <p>102</p>
        <p>AAobile Homes For Sale</p>
        <p>A CLEAN 12x70 REPO.3 bedrooms, 2 baths. $395 down. Payments under $160 per month. Call Johnny's Mobile Homes, Inc., 316 West Greenville Boule vard, Greenville, NC. 756-4687.</p>
        <p>A SPECIAL PLACE. Conve niently located to medical district, almost new 14x70 mobile home situated on 8'/2 acres. $46,000. Call Nancy Dudley, 756-3500 or 756 5596, evenings. Aldridge &amp;amp; Southerland.</p>
        <p>ALREADY SET up In the</p>
        <p>Greenville area, reaoy to move Into, A/C and underpinned</p>
        <p>Assume loan of only $137 per month. Call 756 0333.</p>
        <p>BY OWNER 1982 14x70, 2 bedrooms, 2 baths, central heat and air. Reduced to $10,000 Call 756 4535.</p>
        <p>CLEAN 1982 14x70 Repo. 2 bedrooms, 2 baths. $395 down, with payments less than rent. Call Johnnys Mobile Homes, Inc., 316 West Greenville Boule vard, Greenville, NC. 756 4687</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>"DEMO SPECIAL" $500 down, $500 down. That's right, just $500 down with aftordable pay-.menfs!! 1986 70x14, 2 bedrooms and 2 baths. 3 ton air conditioning unit, storm windows, 2 ceil ing tans, deluxe wood furniture and much, much more!! Only $500 down to qualified buyers. Only at Luv Homes, 756 6996,264 By Pass, Greenville.</p>
        <p>DOUBLE WIDE Mobile Home on 1 1/4 Acre. 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths. $20.000 negotiable. Call 756-5443.</p>
        <p>DRASTIC REDUCTIONS on,all</p>
        <p>used homes. 1974 65x12,' 3 bedrooms, 1',^ baths, $350 down, $134.68 per month. 197046x12. 2 bedrooms, I bath, $325 down, $124.09 per month. 1974 60x12, 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, $385 down, $142.72 per month. 1973 65x12, 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, $410 down, $152.37 per month. 1975 60x12, 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, $420 down, $155.98 per month. 1977 60x12, 2 bedrooms. 1 bath, $435 down, $161.40 per month. All homes</p>
        <p>have been professionally remodeled. Delivery and set up included. 11.99 APR OAC Only</p>
        <p>at Luv Homes of Greenville, 264 By Pass, 756 6996.</p>
        <p>EXTRA CLEAN 1977 70x14. 3 bedrooms and baths. One owner. Payments as low as $135</p>
        <p>ir month to qualified buyers, jnlyat Luv Homes, 756 6996, By-Pass, Greenville.</p>
        <p>FINANCINGII Luv Homes of ters easy financing!! 24 hour approval. 7 year, 10 year, 12 year, and 15 year financing! Downpayments as low as 5% to qualltlea buyers. We offer affordable, quality built homes to meet your needs. Only at Luv Homes, 756-6996, 264 By Pass, Greenville.</p>
        <p>FOR NEWLY WEDS, Tri Coun ty Homes, Greenville has a 2 bedroom, 1 bath for only $477 down payment, monthly pay ments (ess than $149 per montn. Call 756-0131.</p>
        <p>SEARCHING for the right townhouse? Watch Classihed every day</p>
        <p>HOLIDAY SPECIAL $99 DOWN</p>
        <p>On Pre-Owned Homes OAKWOODHOMES</p>
        <p>264 BY PASS GREENVILLE, NC 919 756 5434</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>MEDICAL TECHNOLOGIST</p>
        <p>Immediate opening for medical technologist (ASCP or equivalent) to work in clinical laboratory. Must possess skills to work in hematology, blood bank, chemistry, uranalysis, microbiology. Must be able to communicate well with the laboratory and medical staff. Supervisory experience preferred. Salary to commensurate with education and experience. Fore more information contact:</p>
        <p>PERSONNEL DEPARTMENT COMMUNITY HOSPITAL OF ROCKY MOUNT 1031 NOELL LANE ROCKY MOUNT, N.C. 27804 919-443-9101 EOE</p>
        <p>SALES PEOPLE NEEDED</p>
        <p>Looking for 2 exceptional sales people for multi-franchise automobile dealerships. Must have professional appearance, positive mental attitude, selfmotivated and career oriented. Demo provided, full health benefits. Contact Bob Oliver or Jeff Davis at 355-5099 from 9:00 a.m. - 7:00 p.m. on Monday through Friday.</p>
        <p>1987 Ford Ranger</p>
        <p>BUILT FUN-TOUGH AND VERSATILE</p>
        <p>102 Mobile Homes For Sale</p>
        <p>FOR SALE OR RENT. Clean 2 bedroom, furnished. $170 plus deposit. 756-1455 aHer 5:00.</p>
        <p>HONEYMOON ^ECIAL!! 1987 14 wide, 2 bedrooms, I'/i baths with garden tub, small bay window, Kenmore washer and dryer, ceiling fan, storm windows, deluxe exterior, quality Owens Corning insulation, large walk-in pantry, house-type doors and much, much more!! Payments as low as $178. Only at Luv Homes, 756-6996, 264 By Pass, Greenville.</p>
        <p>LIKE NEW 14x70 3 bedrooms, 2 baths. $395 down, with payments less than rent. Call Johnny's AAobile Homes, Inc., 316 West Greenville Boulevard, Green ville, NC. 756-4687.</p>
        <p>NEED A PLACE to live? Pay nothing down and earn your own home. 756-4298.</p>
        <p>NEW DOUBLEWIDES with celling fans, skirting, and completely furnished under $199 per month. Call 756-4298.</p>
        <p>NEW LISTING. Spacious 3 bedroom doublewide on 1 acre near Ayden-Grifton High School. Features lovely greatroom with woodstove insert, formal dining room, )&amp;gt;lus many more special features. $51,900. Call Nancy Dudley, 756 3500 or 756 5596, evenings. Aldridge &amp;amp; Southerland.</p>
        <p>NEW 1987 doublewide, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, complete for $19,595. Free setup and delivery. Call Quinn at 756-7490.</p>
        <p>NO DOWN PAYMENT. 3</p>
        <p>bedrooms, 2 full baths, fully furnished, washer/dryer. Call 756-4298.</p>
        <p>SELECTED NEW homes at fac tory invoice price. Call Quinn at 756 7490.</p>
        <p>TAKE OVER payments of $194,56 with negotiable down payment for a 14x60 Oakwood mobile home, set up In park, ready to move in, central heat and air. Call Earl at 756-3640 between 6:30 p.m. and 10:30 p.m. or all day Saturday and Sunday.</p>
        <p>THIS WEEK'S SPECIAL Our</p>
        <p>newest model 1987 Ambassador II doublewide with 1248 square feet. Masonite siding, fireplace, stereo, 8" overhang, storm windows, French patio doors, oak kitchen cabinets. 2x4 stud construction, 16" on center. Quality insulation and name brand appliances. Payments as low as $278 per month to qualified buyers!! Only at Luv Homes, 756-6996, 264 By Pass, Green ville.</p>
        <p>TRI COUNTY HOMES, Green ville have several 2 and 3 bedroom pre owned homes. Down payments low as $350. Monthly payments as low as $110. Call 756 0131.</p>
        <p>TRI COUNTY HOMES, Green ville has a spacious 3 bedroom, 2 bath doublewide now on location for less than $252 per month. Call 756-0131.</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOM 14x52, 1 bath, $9500 includes air conditioning unit, underpinning, curtains and blinds, furniture, and utility building. Call David, 355-5099 or 827 5679.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>102 Mobile Homes For Sale</p>
        <p>TWO OLDER mobile homes for sale. Need repairs. 758-7420. UNBELIEVABLE 1983 14x70, like new, no down, big bonus. 752-9749 after 6 p.m.</p>
        <p>USED HOME CLEARANCE All used homes sold for cost. 25 homes to choose from. Limited time only. Conner Homes, 710 Southwest Greenville Boulevard. 756 0333.</p>
        <p>USED HOMES sold at wholesale book value. Call Quinn at 756-7490.</p>
        <p>VETERANS AND ACTIVE mill</p>
        <p>tary. Quick no down payment. VA financing. Conner Homes, 616 West Greenville Boulevard. 756-0333.</p>
        <p>WANT TO BUY; 12 or 14 wide, 2 bedroom, 2 bath mobile home in park in Greenville for our ECU daughter. Call after 6:00 at 747-S)68.</p>
        <p>WE TAKE TRADE INS on</p>
        <p>mobile homes. Call 756-4298.</p>
        <p>WHERE ELSE can you pur</p>
        <p>chase a Fleetwood doublewide 3-1-2, fully furnished, storm windows, celling fan, for under $200 per month? Only at Family Housing of Greenville. Call Ken, Richard or Ron. 809 Greenville Boulevard, Southwest. 355-5060</p>
        <p>12 WIDE REPO. 2 bedrooms, 1 bath. $395 down, payments under $122 per month. Call Johnny's AAobile Homes, Inc., 316 West Greenville Boulevard, Greenville, NC. 756-4687.</p>
        <p>12x60 COAAMODORE, central heat/air, stove, refrigerator, 2 8x8' add on rooms, 220 amp ser vice pole, concrete steps, 8x12 awning, 2-150 gallon oil storage tanks. Must be moved AAarch 1, 1987. Available February 1,1987. S4995. Call 5-9 p.m., 756-8765.</p>
        <p>14X60 RIVERVIEW, nw</p>
        <p>carpet, 12x12 sun deck, in nice park with pool. $8,000.758-6475</p>
        <p>1971 CONNER 12 x 46 .</p>
        <p>bedrooms, already set up In nice park in Salter Path. Overhead deck. Only $4995. Financing available. Charles Miller Homes, 1-800-682 2801.</p>
        <p>1973 OAKWOOD mobile home, 2 bedrooms, Vh baths. Call after 5 p.m., 758-6828.</p>
        <p>1974 MOBILE HOME for sale $3400. Call after6 p.m., 752-0098. 1979 OAKWOOD, 14x63, 2 bedrooms, V/2 baths, with appli anees. 524-5537. $9,500.</p>
        <p>1979 OAKWOOD AAontlbello. 2 bedrooms, 2 full baths, heat pump, appliances. $12,600. Call 830-0984, ask for Wanda.</p>
        <p>1982 14x60 Riverview. New carpet, 12x12 sundeck, located in nice park with cable TV, pool, large lots. Must sell by February 20. Payments $l39/month. 758-6475.</p>
        <p>1985 OAKWOOD, 14x76, 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths. Call 355-5764 after 4.</p>
        <p>1985 14'X70' SKYLINE, 3</p>
        <p>bedrooms, 2 baths, excellent condition. Assume loan with payments of $256 per month. 752-5043 after 4</p>
        <p>DON'T THROW IT away I Sell It for cash with a fast-action Classified Ad!</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>EXPERIENCED SEWING MACHINE OPERATOR</p>
        <p>TOM TOGS, INC., Conetoe, N.C. now accepting applications for experienced Sewing Machine Operator. Apply in person Monday through Thursday, 8:30 am to 4:00 pm.</p>
        <p>TOM TOGS, INC.</p>
        <p>Highway 64 East Conetoe, N.C.</p>
        <p>REGISTERED</p>
        <p>NURSES</p>
        <p>HERITAGE HOSPITAL, a 127 bed acute care facility has full and part time positions available tor Registered Nurses in the Medical/Pediatrics, ICU/CCU and Surgical areas.</p>
        <p>We offer competitive salaries and excellent benefit package including flexible paid days off, education tuition reinbursement and stock purchase options.</p>
        <p>Interested candidates should call 919-641-7140 tor appointment or submit resume to:</p>
        <p>Personnel Department</p>
        <p>HERITAGE HOSPITAL</p>
        <p>111 Hospital Drive Tarboro, NC 27886 EOE</p>
        <p>YOUNGBLOOD TRANSPORTATION SYSTEMS, INC.</p>
        <p>Announces EMPLOYMENT CAREER SEMINAR</p>
        <p>for</p>
        <p>INEXPERIENCED DRIVERS with strong desire I to become professional tractor trailer drivers I while being paid.  |</p>
        <p>GRADUATES OF TRUCK DRIVING SCHOOLS | or 6 months OTR.  ,</p>
        <p>EXPERIENCED DRIVERS with minimum 18 f months OTR.  </p>
        <p>I Those interested may attend free seminar at I I Holiday Inn,' Greenville, NC, 701 South I I Memorial Drive, Highway 13 at 6:30 p.m., Thurs- | I day, January 22, 1987. For information  I 919-537-0821. EOE.  </p>
        <p>102</p>
        <p>Mobile Homes For Sale</p>
        <p>1986 CHAMPION, 14x50, . bedrooms, underpinned, set up in park, $11,000. 355-7576 even Ings.</p>
        <p>1916 14 WIDE, payments as low as $141.86. Greenville volume dealer. Thomas' AAobile Home Sales. Across from Airport. 752 6068.</p>
        <p>1N6 3 BEDROOM home. Fur nlshed, payments starting $130 per month. Call 756-4298.</p>
        <p>105Musical Instruments</p>
        <p>PRE-OWNED small Spinet Plano, $790. Ideal for beginner Will deliver. 355 6002.</p>
        <p>KSO</p>
        <p>5.9% 36 Mo. 7.9% 48 Mo. 9.9% 60 Mo.</p>
        <p>A Place You Can Count On</p>
        <p>HASTINGS FORD</p>
        <p>10th Street &amp;amp; 264-Bypass  Greenville, N.C.  919-758-0114</p>
        <p>WE BUY, sell, trade and rent all types. All major lines Including Peavey. New Bern Music, 1409 Tatum Drive, 636-5640.</p>
        <p>109 Sporting Goods</p>
        <p>3 870 pump guns, 114' boat, 1 55 commercial motor, 2 kerosun heaters, stereo, 355-7222.</p>
        <p>114 Instruction</p>
        <p>NOW ACCEPTING students for lano instruction. Call Piano 8,  gan Distributors at 355-6002.</p>
        <p>On</p>
        <p>115 Lost &amp;amp; Found</p>
        <p>LO^T CHOW and collie mix near Hiahland Trailer Park, answers</p>
        <p>LOST FEMALE red Chow, Candlewick area, reward of fered. 752 9278.</p>
        <p>LOST SMALL black poodle, male, wandered from Cher rywood Drive in Cherry Oaks area, answers to Lucky, wear Ing a red collar with blue tag Call 355-6425.  ^</p>
        <p>LOST: Cameo shaded, persian cat left In cat carrier in front of SPCA January 10. It found or Information, please call 355-5716. Reward.</p>
        <p>122</p>
        <p>Business</p>
        <p>Opportunities</p>
        <p>A BUSINESS? Buy or sell your business with C.J. Harris i Co., Inc. Financial &amp;amp; AAarketing Con sultants. Serving the Southeastern United States. Greenville, N.C. 355-7799, nights 756-8444.</p>
        <p>ESTABLISHED full-line service station for sale. Excellent location. Call Richard Allen at The Real Estate Center, 355-6666</p>
        <p>MEN AND WOMENS Clothing Store. AAall location. Excellent potential with successful track ^.ecord In two other locations. Full line of name brand clothing. Priced to sell at $56,000. Call Mike Davis with Century 21, Janet Bowser &amp;amp; Associates at 355-7800 or 355-6777.</p>
        <p>OWN YOUR OWN Jean Sport swear. Ladies Apparel, Childrens/Maternity, Large Sizes, Petite, Oancewear/ Aerobic or Accessories store. Jordache, Chic, Lee, Levi, Izod, Gitano, Guess, Calvin Klein, Sergio Valente, Evan Picone, Liz Claiborne, AAembers Only, Gasoline, Healthtex, over 1000 others. $14,800 to $26,900 inventory, training, fixtures, grand opening, etcelera. Can open 15 days. AAr. Loughlin (612) 888</p>
        <p>4228</p>
        <p>SALON OR EQUIPMENT for</p>
        <p>sale. Call after 6 p.m. 830-0337.</p>
        <p>TO BUY OR SELL a business or commercial property. Contact Snowden Associates, Brokers, 355-0327.</p>
        <p>124 Professional</p>
        <p>CHIMNEY SWEEPING. Gid</p>
        <p>Holloman. North Carolina's original chimney sweep, 30 years experience working with chimneys and fireplaces. Fireplace repair, chimney caps Installed, screens for chimney tops. Call day or night, 753-3503, Farmville. NC.</p>
        <p>125 Home Improvements</p>
        <p>R a S CONSTRUCTION. Gener al subcontractors. Resldentia) and commercial. Free estimates. 355-7982 or 830-1298 anytime night or day.</p>
        <p>132</p>
        <p>Commercial</p>
        <p>Property</p>
        <p>ABOUT 500 feet from the hospital on NC 43,30 acres at $300,000. Call Carl at Darden Realty, 758-1983, nights and weekends, 355 6558.</p>
        <p>COMMERCIAL BUILDING for</p>
        <p>rent. 2,000 square feet, 125 feet off Greenville Boulevard facing side street. Great location. Call 756-1320 days, 756 0944 nights.</p>
        <p>FOR SALE BY OWNERS. Valu able property located at corner of Grande Avenue and Virginia Street. Zoned CDF. Phone 756 2127 or 758-6136after 5:30 p.m.</p>
        <p>NEW. Old Shoney's on Green ville Boulevard. Call Carl at Darden Realty, 758 1983, nights and weekends, 355 6558.</p>
        <p>NEW. On 10th Street. 5 lots and 4 houses. Call Carl at Darden Realty, 758 1983, nights and weekends, 355-6558.</p>
        <p>NEW. 100 foot lots on Greenville Boulevard. $600 per front foot. Call Carl at Darden Realty, 758 1983, nights and weekends, 355 6558.</p>
        <p>400' ROAD FRONTAGE avail able on North Greene Street Excellent location for commer clal deveiopment with high traf tic count. Priced In low $20's. Call Mike Davis with Century 21, Janet Bowser &amp;amp; Associates at 355-7800 or 355-6777.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>Train to be a TRAVEL AGENT TOUR GUIDE AIRLINE RESERVATIONIST</p>
        <p>Start locally, lull tlma/part tima, train on live airline computers. Home study and resident training. Financial aid available. Job placement asslalanct. National Hsadquartars  Llghthousa Point, FL.</p>
        <p>A C T -TRAVEL SCHOOL</p>
        <p>1-800-327-7728</p>
        <p>Accrnditad Mambar NHSC</p>
        <p>IMMEDIATE OPENINGS FOR RNS AND LPNS</p>
        <p>ICU AND EMERGENCY ROOM MEDICAL/SURGICAL</p>
        <p>PAID MEDICAL AND DENTAL INSURANCE FOR FULL OR PART TIME EMPLOYEES MANAGEMENT POSITIONS AVAILABLE</p>
        <p>GENEROUS BENEFITS For Working ICU or ER</p>
        <p>Contact Nursing Administration COMMUNITY HOSPITAL OF ROCKY MOUNT</p>
        <p>1031 Noell Lane, Rocky Mount, N.C. 27804 (919)443-9101 (EOE)</p>
        <p>136</p>
        <p>Condominiums For Sale</p>
        <p>PATIO HOME in Heritage Village. Available May 15. 2</p>
        <p>bedrooms, greatroom with fireplace, kitchen with all appliances, pantry with washer/</p>
        <p>fireplace, kitchen with all appli-</p>
        <p>dryer connection, outside storage, fenced backyard. Excellent landscaping, immaculate condition. $40,000. Call 355-6521 evenings.</p>
        <p>139 Farms For Sale</p>
        <p>WOULD LIKE TO buy tobacco pounds. Call after 6 p.m., 752 5968.</p>
        <p>250 ACRES. Fronts the Tar River. $84,500. Call Carl, Darden Realty, 758-1983, nights and weekends, 355-6558.</p>
        <p>140 Farms For Lease</p>
        <p>WANTED: TOBACCO POUNDS</p>
        <p>Call Robert Pierce now! I!  753-3078 day or night</p>
        <p>WANTED TOBACCO allotment pounds for purchase. Call Robert May at 753-3512.</p>
        <p>WANTED; Tobacco pounds (Pitt County). Call Jack Sharp, 795 4578.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED AOS will go to work for you to find cash buyers for your unused items. To place your ad, phone 752-6166.</p>
        <p>144 Houses For Sale</p>
        <p>- RARE FIND In TIP TOP con dition. Immaculate 3 bedroom home with fireplace, 2 full baths,</p>
        <p>large closets, separate utility room. Situated on a large, wooded lot in Pineridge. This home</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>has the charm and convenience you have been looking for at only S58,500. Nancy Dudley, 756 3500, evenings 756-5596. Aldridge &amp;amp; Southerland.</p>
        <p>AYDEN: Tastefully renovated home on extra large lot with 30'x20' barn for plenty of storage with offlcp/studio possibilities. This 3 bedroom, 2 bath home Is a must to see. Priced to sell in the low $50's. Call Mike Davis with CENTURY 21 Janet Bowser and Associates, 355-7800 or 355-6777.</p>
        <p>BY OWNER, Winterville school district, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, woodstove, solar water, fenced In yard. 756-2036 anytime.</p>
        <p>CAMBRIDGE. For sale by owner. Brick ranch. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, fireplace, fenced in yard. $59,900. Must sell. Owner to relocate. Call after 7 p.m. or weekends, 756-4048.</p>
        <p>CAMELOT. Rambling ranch home offering expansive</p>
        <p>fireatroom, formal dining room, arge kitchen with breakfast area, three bedrooms, and two full baths. Plus garage. On large lot. Buyer's delight...move-in condition. $70's. Call Nancy Dudley, 756-3500 or 756-5596, evenings. Aldridge &amp;amp; Southerland.</p>
        <p>CAMELOT/PRICE CUT, MAKE AN OFFER! $69,900. For real style see this super sharp Traditional home. Just one owner. Great family area, central air, active solar, paddle fans, carpeting, great room, formal dining room, eat-in kitchen. Fireplace, available now. $65,000. Duffus Realty, Inc., 756-5395.</p>
        <p>CLUB PINES. This 4 bedroom ^adifional, located In one of Greenville's most desirable areas features living room, separate dining room, family room with fireplace. This charming neighborhood offers the warmth, beauty and convenience every family needs. $96,500. Aldridge &amp;amp; Southerland Realtor, call June Wyrick 756-3500; nights 756 5716.</p>
        <p>COLLEGE COURT: 2200+ or square feet with 3 bedrooms, 2'/i baths and a large recreation room with built-in extras! Ranch style brick home located on large corner lot. Owner anxious to sell. Low $70's. Contact Mike Davis. CENTURY 21, Janet Bowser and Associates at 355-7800 or 355-6777. Turn ot 14th Street onto West Ragsdale and follow signs.</p>
        <p>COLONIAL HEIGHTS Im</p>
        <p>maculate 3 bedroom brick home with 2 full baths. Features living room with fireplace, kitchen with dining area, utility room, fenced in yard and lots of storage space. $54,900. Call Jeff Aldridge at Aldridge 8, Southerland, 756-3500 or nights 355 6700.</p>
        <p>COLONIAL HEIGHTS. Get in on</p>
        <p>the good life for $58,900. Built with uncompromising quality which includes 3 bedrooms, 2 fireplaces, central air and much much more. Seller will pay $1,000 toward closing. A truly qreat house! Cali Quincy Scarbrough of CENTURY 21, Janet Bowser and Associates at 355 7800. Nights 355 6686.</p>
        <p>CONSTRUCTION IS completed, and this brand new home is waiting to be yours. Convenient for hospital employees, this charming 3 bedroom, 2 bath home has great room with fireplace, large master bedroom and deck. $61.900. Call Jane Harrison, Aldridge and Southerland, 756 3500 or 752 4616.</p>
        <p>COUNTRY HOME. Over 2,000 square feet on 3.5 acres This Cape Cod has loads of charm. Hardwood floors, all formal areas, screened porch. $70's. For details, call Nancy Dudley, 756 3500 or 756 5596, evenings. Aldridge 8, Southerland.</p>
        <p>CUSTOM HOME BUILDER.</p>
        <p>Craft Bilt Homes builds and fi nances on your lot - competely finished home. Call 1-800 942-5211 anytime.</p>
        <p>CUTE AS A BUTTON. This 3 bedroom home features a fireplace in the living room, dining room and a workshop out back. Close proximity fo snopp-ing and a great starter home at only $49,900 CENTURY 21 Bass Realty, 756-6666</p>
        <p>EASTWOOD- Neat three bedroom brick home features family room with fireplace, convenient kitchen with breakfast area, double garage, workshop, and a spacious fenced-in yard. $74,900. Call Jeff Aldridge, Aldridge &amp;amp; Southerland, 756-3500 or nights, 355-6700.</p>
        <p>EXTRA INCOME - comes with this 3 bedroom, I'/j bath ranch with efficiency apartment that rents tor $150 month. Located on large corner lot near shopping areas and schools. Upper $50's</p>
        <p>FOR ONLY $64,900 you can own a home thpt is convenient to work, shopping, recreation, 3 bedrooms, IVi baths, bright, sunny llvinq room with fireplace, single car garage wired for workshop area. Owner</p>
        <p>anxious. Bring us an offer Call Aldridge 8, Sutherland. 756-3500; Katherine Vinson, 752-</p>
        <p>5778.</p>
        <p>FOR SALE: Trailer set up as house. 4 bedrooms, 2''s baths, large lot, nice neighborhood. $29,500 After 5 p.m., 756-8790.</p>
        <p>FOR SALE BY Owner, countr home, brick ranch, 3 bedroomj 2 ceramic baths, new carpet an wallpaper. Seller will pay points Large lot with trees $57,000 756-2491 after 6 pm</p>
        <p>HARDEE ACRES. A perfect starter In mint condition Three bedrooms, 1'^ baths, garage, situated on well-landscaped lot Move In condition $50's. Ask for Nancy Dudley, Aldridge 8, Southerland, 756 3500 or 756 5596, evenings</p>
        <p>IN LITTLE WASHINGTON</p>
        <p>Prime walk to location. An ar chltectural gem 8 rooms, 1 floor, 2150 square feet. Reduced to sell, $89,5&amp;lt;. 975-3291,</p>
        <p>LARGE NEW LISTING In</p>
        <p>Briarwood! Home features tremendous downstairs master bedroom suite with large dress ing area, living room, dining room, family room, 4 bedrooms, brick patio across back of heme and hardwood floors Many ex tras! $169,900 595 CENTLIRY 31 Bass Realty, 756 6666</p>
        <p>LYNDALE. Under Construe tion, exceptional 5 bedroom custom house on 200 foot deep wooded lot 2800 square feet, 2 cuitom fireplaces, whirlpool bath and many other special features make this the best buy at $165,000 Call 355-6367 for ap pointnrent</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0125" />
        <p>.</p>
        <p>144 Houses For Sale</p>
        <p>NEAR UNIVERSITY-Charming older home features 2 or 3 bedrooms, sun room, living room with fireplace, dining room, and is within walking distance of campus on a private wooded lot. $51,900. Call Jeff Aldridge, Aldridge &amp;amp; Southerland, 756-3500 or nights, 355-6700.</p>
        <p>NEW CONSTRUCTION in the</p>
        <p>country - Only 8 miles fror.i Greenville. This cedar ranch home offers 3 bedrooms, 2 baths and a large country tot. Features private security alarm ^stem. Call Mike Davis with CCNTURY 21, Janet Bowser &amp;amp; Associates, 355-7800 or 355-6777.</p>
        <p>NEW LISTING. Brookgreen.</p>
        <p>Elegant living in this gracious 4 bedroom traditional. On corner</p>
        <p>lot in this exciusive neighbor hood. Air of gracious formality in this living room. Cozy wood paneled study, bright and sunny den, formal dining room, eat in kitchen, basement, and more. For private showing, call Nancy Dudley, Aldridge 8. Southerland. 756-3500 or 756 5596,</p>
        <p>, evenings.</p>
        <p>NO DOWN PAYMENT, $180 per month, 3 bedroom, l'/j baths brick ranch. Call Home Realty Company, 355 4663</p>
        <p>ONE BLOCK from campus. 4 bedrooms, 1 bath, 2040 square foot house. Excellent invest ment  for  $550</p>
        <p>month.</p>
        <p>EXTRA INCOME comes with this 3 bedroom, l',^ bath ranch with etficiency apartment that rents for $150 month. Located on</p>
        <p>large corner lot near shopping $50's.</p>
        <p>areas and schools. Upper ]</p>
        <p>NEAR HOSPITAL this lovely 3 bedroom, 1 bath ranch is just right for a great start. Just $44,500. Short Term lease also available!</p>
        <p>LANDMASTERS REAL ESTATE CORPORATION</p>
        <p>830-0005</p>
        <p>Ernest Brown On Call -355 7437 Bob Moore, 756 1754 Jo Linda Sanders, 355 2508</p>
        <p>PRICED TO SELL! This taste fully decorated home is in mint condition. Three bedrooms, I'j baths, garage. Large, detached workshop. Wei I-landscaped lot. $54,900. Nancy Dudley, 756-3500, evenings 756 5596. Aldridge &amp;amp; Southerland.</p>
        <p>QUAIL RIDGE...This 3 bedroom, i'/2 bath like new combo is a must seel This home features a large master suite with a walk-in closet, is beautifully decorated, has living</p>
        <p>room with fireplace, dining area and a patio for privacy $68,900. CENTURY 21 Bass Re</p>
        <p>#573.</p>
        <p>alty, 756-6666</p>
        <p>REAL ESTATE AGENTS</p>
        <p>wanted. For your confidential interview, call Jean Hopper at University Realty, 355 5866.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>144 Houses For Sale</p>
        <p>quail ridge. Three bedrooms, 2'^i baths. Popular Summrell plan. Gorgeous parquet flooring in living and dining rooms, built in microwave, ceiL ing fans, and more. Excellent FHA loan assumption. Great for young execuflves who want qualify, location, and no yard work. $60's. Call Nancy Dudley, Aldridge &amp;amp; Southerland, 756-3500 or 756 5596, evenings.</p>
        <p>restoration SPECIAL 2443</p>
        <p>square feet, 5 bedrooms, living room, dining room, and large</p>
        <p>country kitchen. Outside has vin.....</p>
        <p>been vinyi sided, downstairs has storm windows but some work needs to done on inside. Heat</p>
        <p>pump and large corner wooded lot. H</p>
        <p>lome needs some tender loving care. Located in Aurora, it would make an excellent rent al property for Texas Gulf workers. Offers in As Is condi tion. #558. $27,500. CENTURY 21 Bass Realty, 756-6666.</p>
        <p>ROLLINWOOD: Savor the good life with quiet luxury. Beautifui-ly landscaped home startegical-ly located near Carolina East Mall and Pitt Memorial Hospital. This 2 bedroom, 2 baths, fireplace with central air is priced with you in mind. Sellers will pay $2000 in points and closing costs. Call CENTURY 21, Janet Bowser and Associates at 355-7800. $57,900.</p>
        <p>ROLLINWOOD - Former model home features 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, large living/dining combination with fireplace, microwave, mini-blinds, enclosed patio, storage area. Priced to sell at $56,900. Call Linda Gaddis, CENTURY 21, Janet Bowser and Associates, 355-7800 or 756 3291.</p>
        <p>SUBSTANTIAL REDUCTION</p>
        <p>It you need more space, this spilt level with unfinished lower level is the answer to your problems. Otters 1988 square feet in a quiet subdivision near Winter ville. Reduced to $56,000. #548. CENTURY 21 Bass Realty, 756 6666.</p>
        <p>The Evans Company</p>
        <p>OWNERS ANXIOUS to sell well maintained two bedroom, I'Y bath condominium with fireplace. Excellent location.</p>
        <p>STOKES HIGHWAY nestled on a 4 acre wooded lot, you'll find this beautiful cedar siding home with country porch greeting you. This 3 bedroom, 2 bath home features a dining area with dark stained wide random length pine floors. The great room boasts a cathedral ceiling with exposed beams, a brick tireplace and the wide pine floors to complete this country charmer.</p>
        <p>FARMER'S HOME Loan Assumption. Near Wellcome Middle School. 3 bedrooms, car port, large lot</p>
        <p>STATE ROAD 1780 (near Simp son). New 3 bedroom, V/2 batt</p>
        <p>brick home offers country living at an affordable price. Mid $40's.</p>
        <p>USED</p>
        <p>REFRIGERATORS RANGES &amp;amp; WASHERS</p>
        <p>FOR SALE</p>
        <p>V. A. Merritt (Sons</p>
        <p>207 Evans 752-3736</p>
        <p>NEW LISTING. Coun'ry charm abounds throughout this well planned 3 bedroom, 2 bath brick home. Central air and deck for your summer enjoyment. Located in Singletree.</p>
        <p>The Evans Company</p>
        <p>752-2814</p>
        <p>Winnie Evans. Faye Bowen...</p>
        <p> 752-4224</p>
        <p> 756 5258</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>INSURANCE SPECIALIST</p>
        <p>Section #125 Cafeteria Style Benefits Programs</p>
        <p>Colonial Life &amp;amp; Accident has an exceptional opportunity for an insurance professional with commercial experience. Colonial is an A f rated "state-of-the-art, payroll marketing company. We are rapidly expanding our client base, and offering Section #125 Cafeteria-Style Benefits to our existing client's of 50-1-employees in North Carolina.</p>
        <p>WE WANT:</p>
        <p>A dynamic personality Successful group experience and executive sales skills A sense of urgency A "Sales Pro</p>
        <p>WE OFFER:</p>
        <p>$35K-I--I- first year potential Existing client market Lifetime level renewals Unique product portfolio Section #125 expertise</p>
        <p>FREDRAAB</p>
        <p>919-355-2666 Mon. Jan. 26, 8am*5pm Or send resume to:</p>
        <p>P.O. Box 1556 Goldsboro, NC 27533</p>
        <p>144 Houses For Sale</p>
        <p>TAKE ADVANTAGE of this ex cellent loan assumption instead</p>
        <p>.   ^mp</p>
        <p>of paying high closing costs Charming 3 bedroom, *2 bath</p>
        <p>home, almost new, on large lot. great room with fireplace, $54,9(X). Call Jane Harrison, Aldridge and Southerland, 756-3500 or 752-4616.</p>
        <p>THIS CHARMING</p>
        <p>Williamsburg home features 3 bedroom, 2*'^ baths, formal areas, fenced-in yard and extra features to numerous to name. Call for details about this attractive home. Club Pines, $105,500. Call Diana Barwick at Alice Moore Realty 355 6712 or 756 6364.</p>
        <p>THIS HOME is priced in the low $50's to sell now! Its condition in and out is superior with fresh paint, immaculate yard, dining room/living room combination, garage and 3 bedrooms. Call Diana Barwick at Alice Moore Realty 355-6712 or 756 6364.</p>
        <p>UNDER CONSTRUCTION In</p>
        <p>Sfantonsburg Estates. Lovely bay windowed traditional in this nice neighborhood. Three spacious bedrooms. Large kitchen with sunny breakfast area and separate utility room. Formal dining room. Many special features Low 70's. Call Nancy Dudley for details, 756 3500 or 756-5596, evenings. Aldridges, Southerland.</p>
        <p>UNIVERSITY AREA Don't miss this affordable home only a few blocks from campus. This</p>
        <p>traditional home has a deep lot and is located on a quiet dead</p>
        <p>end street. Priced at $43,900. #584. CENTURY 21 Bass Realty, 756-6666.</p>
        <p>VA OWNED. No down payment I Lynndale.</p>
        <p>323 Pinewood Drive in Lynndale. Call Darrell for defails, Hignite Realtors, 757-1969 anytime.</p>
        <p>WHERE DREAMS BEGIN!</p>
        <p>Perfect for that first home buy. $Thousands$ in remodeling on this charming brick ranch. Like new kitchen with Jenn Aire. Lovely living room with fireplace. Dining area which opens onto deck. Three spacious bedrooms. It you want something really nice tor only $58,900, then see this one tor sure. Nancy Dudley, 756 3500, evenings 756 5596. Aldridge &amp;amp; Southerland.</p>
        <p>WINTERVILLE: Just reduced $2,000, this 2450 square foot home with 4 bedrooms and 4 fireplaces has loads of potential. Needs some work but priced in the $30s it is well worth the et-tort. Owner anxious to sell so call Mike Davis with CENTURY 21 Janet Bowser 8, Associates. 355 7800 or 355 6777.</p>
        <p>YOU'LL LOVE THIS brand new 3 bedroom, 2 bath home and all</p>
        <p>its charm. Sunken great room ala</p>
        <p>with masonry fireplace, large eat-in kitchen, separate dining room with bay window, and even a large laundry room with an area tor an upright freezer. Priced to sell, $78,900. Call Jane Harrison, Aldridge &amp;amp; Southerland, 756 3500/752 4616</p>
        <p>148 Investment Property</p>
        <p>HIGGS AREA. One owner has three great rental properties tor sale. 3 bedroom, 1 bath, rents tor $255 month. $25,000. (2) 2 story houses. 3 bedrooms, 1'j baths, $29,900 and $32,500. Rent $315 month each.</p>
        <p>TAKE A CLOSE look at what you could do with this multi purpose building on S. Pitt Street. Former health club has over 5,000 square feet available</p>
        <p>including sauna, tanning booths, dressing rooms, etc. Ottered al</p>
        <p>$130,000.</p>
        <p>LANDMASTERS REAL ESTATE</p>
        <p>830-0005</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>148 Investment Property</p>
        <p>MOBILE HOME PARKS Ex</p>
        <p>cellent return and some owner financing. 752-1269.</p>
        <p>MORTGAGES FOR SALE. 12%</p>
        <p>return. 752-1269</p>
        <p>VALUABLE PROPERTY for</p>
        <p>sale. Agnes Fullllove School, corner of Chestnuf and Manhat fan Avenue. Call for more in formation, 756 5880.</p>
        <p>dfttPBD CRN Birr</p>
        <p>150 Land For Sale</p>
        <p>DEVELOPERS! Your opportu nity to develop a fantastic sub division midway between the mall and the hospital has arrived. 71 acres with water and sewer nearby. Call Richard to day for more information. The Real Estafe Center, 355 6666</p>
        <p>SEVERAL TRACTS of land and lots for sale around Pitt County areas. Call Worley Warren at Aldridge &amp;amp; Southerland Realtors, 756 3500, nights, 795 3222.</p>
        <p>TEN ACRES, cutover woodsland located between Stokes and Greenville. Asking price $12,000. Call Worley War ren at Aldridge 8, Southerland Realtors, 756 3500, nights. 795 3222.</p>
        <p>WANTED FARMS, land, or lots for sale. Have many potential buyers interested in buying these properties Call Worley Warren at Aldridge &amp;amp; Southerland Realtors, 756-3500, nights, 795 3222.</p>
        <p>12V&amp;gt; ACRES. Will make nice home site. Good perk, land drains well Or could be used tor mobile homes. Located on State Road #1947, St. Johns Communi ty. $15,500. The Wingate Agency. 757 3441 or 758 1280, 355 5007</p>
        <p>693 ACRES, TYRRELL County 1.75 M (Feet) Timber $300 per acre. Weyerhaeuser Real Estate Co., 946 9121.</p>
        <p>151 Mobile Home Lots For Sale</p>
        <p>LARGE LOTS tor mobile homes in the country Excellent loca tion Easy financing. Call Win nie, 752 4224, Faye, 756 5288 and days at 752 2814</p>
        <p>MOBILE HOME lots for sale.</p>
        <p>Low down payment, easy fi nancing. Located on Old River</p>
        <p>Road and Eastwoods Country Estates. Call Benny Eastwoocl. 752 1802, anytime.</p>
        <p>152 Lots For Sale</p>
        <p>BEAUTIFUL TWO acre wooded lot in Baywood Will bqild to suit. Winterville schools. Call Chapin 8, Associates. 756 1234.</p>
        <p>CLEARED LOTS between Ayden and Griffon. 4ii to Hit plus acres Starting at $3750.746 2417.</p>
        <p>HALF-ACRE to 9 acre residen tial lots. Industrial Park area Owner financing Starting at $5,500. Call Richard Allen at The Real Estate Center, 355 6666</p>
        <p>HEAVILLY WOODED lots in desirable location now available beginning at $12,000.756 8702.</p>
        <p>HOLLYRIDGE. 5 acres Coun try estate living at its best. Darden Realty, 758 1983, nights and weekends, 355-6558.</p>
        <p>LOTS FOR SALE with water and septic system. Guaranteed financing with no downpayment Call 758 5103.</p>
        <p>LOTS ON THE Pamlico River: Wooded lots at Captain's Walk with river fronting. Owner fi nancing available. Call Kathy Webster at CENTURY 21 Janet Bowser 8, Associates tor your</p>
        <p>showing today. These lots won't last 355 7800 or 756 6528</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY GREENVILLE UTILITIES COMMISSION</p>
        <p>DIRECTOR OF GAS SYSTEMS</p>
        <p>Responsible position available for person to direct total operation of gas system serving 4,600 customers. Requires a bachelor's degree in mechanical engineering or other appropriate field with a minimum of five years administrative gas utilities experience. Excellent fringe benefits. Send resume and salary history by January 31, 1987, to the Personnel Office, (jreenville Utilities Commission, P!0. Box 1847, Greenville, North Carolina 27835-1847.</p>
        <p>An Equal Opportunity Employer</p>
        <p>f AAlER/OtOTOmyS CHEVROLET</p>
        <p>On Selected S-10 Blazers</p>
        <p>or</p>
        <p>$600 Cash Back</p>
        <p>and S-10 Trucks</p>
        <p>15=^ CM quauty" lifll SiBVICi PABTS J</p>
        <p>m5!^S&amp;gt;8I^SS1SS5i</p>
        <p>*24 months-Ask Dealer for details</p>
        <p>T</p>
        <p>152 Lots For Sale</p>
        <p>NEW. Lots near Winterville, $12,900 Wafer and sewer. Call</p>
        <p>Carl for details. Darden Realty, 758 1983. nights and weekends, 355 6558</p>
        <p>TWO ACRES. In Pitf County's elite country _estafe. Holly</p>
        <p>Ridge. $26,500. Darden Realty, 758 1983, nights and weekends, 355 6558</p>
        <p>WATERFRONT LOTS on the</p>
        <p>Pamlico River. River Hills Sub division, Chocowinlty, NC. Beautiful wooded lots with underground ufilifies, 1200</p>
        <p>square feet minimum footage Must see there. Call Kathy</p>
        <p>Webster at CENTURY 21 Janet Bowser and Associates tor more information. 355 7800or 756 6528</p>
        <p>1/2 ACRE LOTS with communi W water located 4 miles south of Farmville off Highway 258. Ask ng price. $5.000. Call W</p>
        <p>Worley</p>
        <p>Warren at Aldridge &amp;amp;</p>
        <p>Southerland Realtors, 756 3500, nights, 795-3222.</p>
        <p>3 ACRE LOT close to Greenville on Rams Horn Road. Call Worley Warren at Aldridge 8, Southerland Realtors, 756 3500. nights, 795 3222.</p>
        <p>155 Resort Property For Sale</p>
        <p>PARADISE ON The Pamlico 30 minutes from Greenville Only vacant waterfront lot available in this picturesque mobile home</p>
        <p>community offering water and iti</p>
        <p>septic systems, sandy beach. 4 piers, concrete boat ramp, restrictive covenants, $26,500. Owner/Broker, 756 4965.</p>
        <p>RIVER COTTAGE at Bays'de Shores in Chocowinity Water on 3 sides. $50,000. 752 1269</p>
        <p>3 BEDROOM cottage in the Ori ental area. River on the front. Canal on side. Ideal retirement</p>
        <p>home. Large lot. County, water. Seawall. $65,000. Seller financ</p>
        <p>ing available. 758-0491.</p>
        <p>157</p>
        <p>Townhouses For Sal</p>
        <p>CONDOMINIUM for sale, Williamsburg Manor. Only $250 down payment, 9% FHA tinanc</p>
        <p>ing, monthly payment, $356 $42,i"</p>
        <p>1,900.756 3666.</p>
        <p>BY OWNER 2 bedrooms, l&amp;lt;^ baths with refrigerator, dishwasher, central air and heat pump, single family or invest menf Uncfer $41.000 After 6:00 p.m., 704 786 2460.</p>
        <p>MOSS CREEK TOWNHOUSESr</p>
        <p>Luxurious townhouses around Lake Ellsworth. 5 different floor plans,..most with unfinished 3rd floors. Prices start at $58.900 tor 2 bedrooms. 2 and 3 bedroom styles available Call Janet Bowser CENTURY 21 Janet Bowser 8, Associates 355 7800 or 756 8580</p>
        <p>TOWNHOUSE, Exclusive, quiet, wooded area. Quail Ridge (Jniquely beautiful two story, 3 bedroom, 2W baths. Cathedral</p>
        <p>celling with balcony. Fireplace Landscaped brick patio. Tennis</p>
        <p>courts. Pool. By owner. $71,900 756 0429.</p>
        <p>TREETOPS - Custom built townhouse located on a quiet wooded cui de sac, this 2 bedroom, 2'/j bath home with loads of extras is ready for you now. Owner must move due to</p>
        <p>family size and says make an of ter. Tneir loss is your gain! Call Mike Davis with CENTURY 21</p>
        <p>Janet Bowser &amp;amp; Associates 355 7800 or 355 6777 Low 60 s</p>
        <p>UPTON COURT 2 spacious bedrooms, 7'/i baths, crown</p>
        <p>molding, chair rail, spacious il (</p>
        <p>private patio, beautiful decor and a great location near Greenville Athletic Club are cn ly a tew of the features you'll en joy in this adorable townhome $48,900. Call Jett Aldridge. Aldridge 8, Southerland. 756 3500 or nights, 355 6700</p>
        <p>161</p>
        <p>=or Rent</p>
        <p>A PERFECT PLACE to live 1 bedroom apartments, $235 2 bedroom apartments, $275 Water included. Brand new, washer/dryer hookups, no pets Security deposit required Ap proximately 1 mile from hospi tal. Call 756 1454 weekdays, 756 6118,7 9 week nights</p>
        <p>ABSOLUTELY NICE Park Village, 2 bedrooms, washer/ dryer hookups, wafer furnished, $275. per month. 757 1626</p>
        <p>Absolutely unbelievable, i</p>
        <p>bedroom apartment. Available immediately. $245 a month Nights after 6 : 756 0603, 355 5336 Days: 756 6336</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>TAYLOR</p>
        <p>OFFICES</p>
        <p>1530 South Evans street</p>
        <p>Office</p>
        <p>and</p>
        <p>Commercial</p>
        <p>Space Ample Parking Conveniently located</p>
        <p>Call</p>
        <p>756-8384</p>
        <p>SALES</p>
        <p>SALES</p>
        <p>MINDED</p>
        <p>Challenging position for competitive, independent, goal oriented person to consult with top executives on state of the ad products in demand by businesses Potential for lary.i income for resourceful, persistent, application minded problem solj/er as a member of a close-knit team in an c-i standing local company Position lor Greenville, NC.</p>
        <p>Product Training 4 Figure Income Mo. Salary &amp;amp; Commission</p>
        <p>Phone Mr Bush' Mon.-Tues -Wed 821-4050</p>
        <p>1-800-367-4748</p>
        <p>NC</p>
        <p>C quol Opportunity L mpluver</p>
        <p>161</p>
        <p>or Rent</p>
        <p>AVAILABLE JANUARY 1 at</p>
        <p>Shenandoah Village-Townhouse with 2 bedrooms, 1'/y baths, gar bage disposal, dishwasher, and fireplace. $350 per month. 1 year lease and deposit required. Call Clark Branch Realtors at 355 2000.</p>
        <p>AZALEA GARDENS</p>
        <p>CLEAN AND QUIET one</p>
        <p>bedroom furnished apartments, energy efficient, free water and sewer, optional washers, dryers, cable Tv. Couples or singles only. $195 a month. 6 month lease. MOBILE HOME RENTALS Couples or singles. Apartments and mobile homes In Azalea Gardens near Brook Valley Country Club.</p>
        <p>Contact J T. or Tommy Williams 756 7815</p>
        <p>BRYTON HILLS Apartments, 2 bedrooms, $250 month. Call 752 4131 after 9:30 p.m. or before 8 a.m.</p>
        <p>CANNON COURT</p>
        <p>The Dally Reflector, Greenville, N.C._Wednesday,  January  2i.  1987  B--f-|</p>
        <p>161</p>
        <p>Apartments For Rent</p>
        <p>EASTBROOK AND VILLAGE GREEN APARTAAENTS</p>
        <p>One, two and three bedroom apartments, featuring cable TV, modern appliances, clean laun dry facilities, swimming pools, fully carpeted.</p>
        <p>Office: 204 Eastbrook Drive</p>
        <p>752-5100</p>
        <p>ENERGY EFFICIENT duplex</p>
        <p>apartment near college, 2 large In backyard.</p>
        <p>bedrooms, fenced and outside storage, heatp'ump, storm windows, and kitchen ap pliances. 756 0025 after 6:00 p. m</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOM, l,y bath townhouse Includes washer dryer hookup, cable TV, drapes</p>
        <p>and new carpet Call REMC(5 EAST, 758 6061</p>
        <p>CAPTAINSQUARTERS</p>
        <p>East Twelfth Street</p>
        <p>^aclous one bedroom near ECU. Dishwasher, refrigerator.</p>
        <p>RE</p>
        <p>nge and washer hook up. Call EMCO EAST, 758 6061</p>
        <p>CEDAR COURT</p>
        <p>SPACIOUS TWO BEDROOM.</p>
        <p>1W bath apartments with range, refrigerator, dishwasher and</p>
        <p>washer/dryer hook ups Call REMCO EAST, 758 6061</p>
        <p>CEDAR LANE Apartments. 1 bedroom, $185. Call 756 4948 or 756 3936</p>
        <p>Cherry Court</p>
        <p>:ious 2 bedroom townhi</p>
        <p>Spacious 2 bedroom townhouse with IW baths. Also 1 bedroom apartments available All are carpeted, with modern kitchen appliances Including compactor and dishwasher. (Tentral heat and air. Free basic cable TV, water and sewer Washer/dryer hook-ups plus laundry room, pool, sauna, tennis court, club house. 752 1557</p>
        <p>CYPRESSGARDENS</p>
        <p>2308 East Tenth Street</p>
        <p>TWO BEDR(X)M apartmenf close to ECU campus. Energy efficient units In the woods. Washer/dryer hook ups, cable TV included in rent. Cali 758 6061. REMCO EAST.</p>
        <p>DOCTORS PARK APARTMENTS</p>
        <p>A wooded community planned</p>
        <p>with you in mind. II you are par-five,</p>
        <p>ticular about where you consider these features:</p>
        <p>One, Two and Three Bedroom Apartments Garden and Townhouse with Private Patio</p>
        <p>or Balcony Spacious Living</p>
        <p>-        -  if.</p>
        <p>Areas Dishwasher, Disposal. Frost Free Refrigerator Pantry Washer and Dryer Connections Adequate Storage 'Fully Carpeted Cablevison Energy Saving Heatpumps Fully Insulated Smoke Detec tors.</p>
        <p>Call 758-2577</p>
        <p>FOR RENT: two bedroom duplex. 103 B Juniper Lane, corner of 14th Street and Red Banks Road. Central air, carpet, stove and refrigerator 1 bath $2dO a month. 12 months lease 1 month rent as security deposit No pets. Available now Billy Laughinghouse, Bostic Sugg</p>
        <p>Furniture Company, 401 Wesi I, Greenville, 758 2513.</p>
        <p>10th Street,</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>FAIRLANE FARMS APARTAAENTS</p>
        <p>1,2 &amp;amp; 3 BEDROOMS With Fireplace</p>
        <p>$150 Security Deposit 6 8, 12 Month Leases Washer Dryer</p>
        <p>Connections Pets Conditional Two Full Baths in two &amp;amp; three bedrooms</p>
        <p>MONDAY FRIDAY 10 6 SATURDAY 9 1 1510 Bridle Circle 355 2198 Equal Housing Opportunity</p>
        <p>FARMVILLE new 2 bedroom apartments, Hotpoint appli anees, patios af rear, cable ready, water and sewer includ ed. All for only $250 per month. Call 753 4750.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>161</p>
        <p>Apartments For Rent</p>
        <p>FURNISHEOI 1 bedroom $200 or 1 bedroom $260 utilities paid. 752-1375. Homelocators. Fee</p>
        <p>GREENAAILLRUN</p>
        <p>APRATMENTS</p>
        <p>CORNER LAWRENCE $HTH STREETS</p>
        <p>Spacious garden apartments. Fully carpeted. Excellent condl &amp;gt;1 an</p>
        <p>tion. Pool and laundry facilities. Free water, sewer and basic Cable TV "Fire Proof" patios</p>
        <p>for grillino. I block Irom'ECO^ blocks from downtown.</p>
        <p>758-2628</p>
        <p>KIDS OK! 1 bedroom $185 carpets or 2 bedroom $250 pet ok. 752 1375. Homelocators. Fee</p>
        <p>KINGS ROW APARTAAENTS</p>
        <p>1 8i 2 Bedroom Garden Apart mentsAppliances furnished, carpetCentral heat and alrFree Cable TVPool and laundry facilities24 hour emergency maintenance. Located off East 10th Street behind Hardee's and Western Steer. Office hours 9:30 5:30, Monday Friday.</p>
        <p>752-3519</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>161</p>
        <p>Apartments For Rent</p>
        <p>GreeneWay</p>
        <p>Large 7 bedroom garden apartments, all with 7 closets,</p>
        <p>irpeting, kitchen appliances eluding dishwasher, central heat and air. Free basic cable</p>
        <p>Inc</p>
        <p>TV, water and sewer. Lajindry</p>
        <p>rooms, spacious grounds, iround and pool, abundant</p>
        <p>playgr-----------------------</p>
        <p>parking. Pets allowed. Adjacent to Greenville Country Club.</p>
        <p>($290). 756-6869.</p>
        <p>GREENWOOD APARTAAENTS BETHEL</p>
        <p>New 1 and 2 bedroom units avalalble in February. Rentals begin at $200. Rent based on In come For application call 756 1860. 4:30 6:30, or write In care of Wintergreen, 105 Sterling Court, Winterville, NC 28590. FmHA.EHO.</p>
        <p>IN WINTERVILLE 3 bedroom</p>
        <p>apartment. Appliances and ed. No children, no</p>
        <p>water furnished _____________</p>
        <p>pels Deposit and lease $245 per month (fall 756 5007.</p>
        <p>IT'S A FACT! Only some of them are advertised. For a full selection of Greenville's rentals. 752 1375. Homelocators.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>KXXtfTOMS</p>
        <p>CAREER OPPORTUNITIES</p>
        <p>FOP</p>
        <p>CASHIER/CLERKS</p>
        <p>FullAPrtTlm.AHB#tMfiU ' Apply at thonMrait FRESH WAV FOOD STORE</p>
        <p>FRSFliUP</p>
        <p>WIIHA</p>
        <p>nSTDmVL</p>
        <p>Now through Feb- isn't limiteci.if you act ruary 28, when you test / now Ancd that's rive a Bob Barbour ,r our selection</p>
        <p>onda.Toyota or  ,,, of cars.</p>
        <p>II IP) itvI IqpHrP)r ..^</p>
        <p>f,3g (he</p>
        <p>Qua ity Used Car, we' I buy you a elicious steak din ner at</p>
        <p>0 den</p>
        <p>.orra</p>
        <p>nis</p>
        <p>orter is limited to one</p>
        <p>car you want, the options you want and the pnce you to pay. So come in now for</p>
        <p>dinner per family.  a itte drive.</p>
        <p>But something else  And a big steak dinner.</p>
        <p>BOB BARBOUR HONDA</p>
        <p>Creem'ille 3'jooS \^moriLil Drive 'i^^-'2^(X)lh/\oreheiuiCitif Uu'W 7&amp;lt;&amp;gt;hus/ 247-'488</p>
        <p>BOBBARBOURTOVOn</p>
        <p>2i8 F Mififi Street. Hmrlock 447-2067 Nuw'Uzti every Sunday 1-3 pm</p>
        <p>QUALITY USED CARS</p>
        <p>Greenville 3006 South Memorial Dnve 335-5099</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0126" />
        <p>B--J2 The Daily Reflector, Greenville. N.C._Wednesday,  January  1.1987</p>
        <p>More New Toyotas With The Most ^vings!</p>
        <p>At Toyota East youll find the mostand best</p>
        <p>savings on more Toyotas. Weve got the brand new 87 for you and for less!</p>
        <p>1987 Toyota Corolla</p>
        <p>A Great Car Deserves A Great Selection</p>
        <p>22 Now In Stock!</p>
        <p>Look At Everything You Get</p>
        <p> Automatic Transmission</p>
        <p> Power Steering</p>
        <p> Floor Mats</p>
        <p> Pm Stripe</p>
        <p> AM/FM Stereo</p>
        <p> Steel Radial Tires</p>
        <p>Lease For Only</p>
        <p>*195</p>
        <p>Pm Month</p>
        <p>Payments total:</p>
        <p>OltrtJinauiai mco  (t* -J ^</p>
        <p>With Air Conditioning  ^ j  /MM</p>
        <p>Includes 5 Year/60,000 MileMechan-ical Breakdown Protection Plan'</p>
        <p>1987 Toyota Clica ST</p>
        <p>ST3232</p>
        <p>Totally Redesigned For Maximum Performance...</p>
        <p>And Enjoyment!</p>
        <p>Lease For Only</p>
        <p>Look At Everything You Get</p>
        <p> All-New 16 Valve Engine</p>
        <p> AM'/FM Multiplex Radio</p>
        <p> Radial Tires</p>
        <p> Instrumentation Package</p>
        <p>*199</p>
        <p>Month'</p>
        <p>Payments total:</p>
        <p>*11,940</p>
        <p>Includes 5-Year/60,000 Mile Mechanical Breakdown Protection Plan!</p>
        <p>1987 Toyota MR2</p>
        <p>AW3051</p>
        <p>Discover What Excitements All About!</p>
        <p>Only</p>
        <p>Look At Everything You Get:</p>
        <p> Air Conditioning  f  fniil</p>
        <p> Cruise Control  8cJ i  </p>
        <p> 5-Speed Transmission  1  *</p>
        <p> Sunroof  Over 10</p>
        <p> And Much More'' fQ ChOOSe From!</p>
        <p>Yours For Dealer Cost!</p>
        <p>1987 Toyota 4Runner</p>
        <p>m</p>
        <p>Test Drive Toyotas New 4-Wheel (prive Sport Utility Vehicle!</p>
        <p>On-the-road or off-the-road, you'll discover power, comfort, versatility and economy! And, at Toyota East, you'll find were first in the area with super discounts on brand new '87 trucks!</p>
        <p>All 4Runners Include:</p>
        <p> Hi-Trac Independent Front Suspension</p>
        <p> Unique Removable Rear Top</p>
        <p> And Much More'</p>
        <p>Hurry-Only 7 Left In Stock!</p>
        <p>"First months payment and $200 refundable deposit required upon delivery, with approved credit 60 monthly payments Purchase option at lease end fair market value You pay 8C per mile over 90,000 at lease end. Price includes tax tags are extra</p>
        <p>Premium Values</p>
        <p>*99 Or Less Per Month!</p>
        <p>tF'-</p>
        <p>Right now you can choose from over 150 top-quality previously-owned models from Toyota East. Its one of North Carolinas, largest and best selections!  *</p>
        <p>So when you want the finest previously-owned cars for the lowest possible prices.. .you want Premium Values from Toyota East.</p>
        <p>At Basic Transportation by Toyota East we have a fantastic selection of good, used carsand each is available for under ^99 per month.</p>
        <p>And we even have a few basic bargains for less than M9 per month! When it comes down to the basics...come down to Basic Transportation by Toyota East!  ^</p>
        <p>Vi,</p>
        <p>1986 Dodge CoH Di 4-Doo S&amp;lt;?drip</p>
        <p>Year</p>
        <p>Make/Model</p>
        <p>Stock #</p>
        <p>Each Packed With Great Features Like</p>
        <p>From Only</p>
        <p> Air Conditioning</p>
        <p> Automatic Transmission</p>
        <p> AM FM Stereo</p>
        <p> And More'</p>
        <p>3055B</p>
        <p>i</p>
        <p>Includes 12 Month 12.000 Mile Warranty' 54 monlhs termal 11 S% APR with approved credit and $1,200 down, cash or trade Tax and tags extra</p>
        <p>1980 Toyota Corolla 2mk 1982 Dodge Colt 1982 Ford Courier Pickup</p>
        <p>3069B</p>
        <p>1983 Toyota Corolla Wagon 1982 Buick Regal 1981 Toyota Terce</p>
        <p>3099A</p>
        <p>3143 A</p>
        <p>3209A</p>
        <p>19851988 Toyota Cresstdas</p>
        <p>Tiiyuta's Eleij.inl TV'dan I uaded With Luxury '.Luting From Only</p>
        <p>*11,985!</p>
        <p>Choose Yours From Our Superb Selection'</p>
        <p>12-42 months term at 12-18% APR (terms vary depending on age of automobile) with approved credit and $800 down, cash or trade Tax and tags extra  '</p>
        <p>P </p>
        <p>.iJ-</p>
        <p>, i Corner of Evans Street &amp;amp; U.S. 264 Bypass  ' ' Greenville 756-3228</p>
        <p>&amp;gt;</p>
        <p>A Sigmon Management Company</p>
        <p> I  A    Express  Service  Savings</p>
        <p>Quick Change Artists! From Toyota Eastl</p>
        <p>A Sigmon Management Company</p>
        <p>Now Toyota East proudly introduces Express Service. Express Servicefast, first quality ininor inaintenance specifically designed for busy Toyota owners on the go.. .to keep their Toyotas going strong'</p>
        <p>Only</p>
        <p>20 Minute, Quick Service  h  TnvnXA</p>
        <p>Oil and Filter Change special 3&amp;gt;1488|  ISl'SS</p>
        <p>OTA EAST</p>
        <p>109 Trade Street, Greenville 756-3228 Call Us Toll Free: 1-800-682-5437</p>
        <p>m</p>
        <p>|i</p>
        <p>Get Freedom Of Choice With Big Savings</p>
        <p>On Your Choice Of New Cars!</p>
        <p>Now at Freedom Buick-Pontiac-GMC Trucks we're offering special savings on our extraordinary selection of the nicest new cars available! And the choice is up to you. For whatever your needs, we have the new carte fit you...and your budget!</p>
        <p>I ,.L r-ontian6000 Sedan List Price *12,935 Now Discounted *1,500!</p>
        <p>3045</p>
        <p>For driving excitement...try Pontiacs perfect blend of high-tech engineering and advanced styling!</p>
        <p>1987 GMC S-15 Sierra Truck</p>
        <p>Only</p>
        <p>1987 Buick LeSabre</p>
        <p>    permt</p>
        <p>One Of The 10 Best Automotive Values In The United States! Fantastic SelectionOver 20 In Stock!</p>
        <p>Prices Starting From An</p>
        <p>per month!</p>
        <p>Tough and versatile...its all the truck you need!</p>
        <p>60 months term at 11 Olo APR with approved credit and $1 (XX3 down cash or trade Tax and tags extra</p>
        <p>:es Starting From</p>
        <p>Incredibly Affordable  -  D--</p>
        <p>Highway 264 Bypass Farmville 753-7103</p>
        <p>Buick-Pontiac-GMC Trucks</p>
        <p>Ask U About Euro-LMsingt</p>
        <p>yisrQ</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0127" />
        <p>U1</p>
        <p>Apartments For Rent</p>
        <p>KINGS ARMS</p>
        <p>Large i bedroom apartments Carpeted, modern kitchen ap pliances. heat pump for energy efflcitnt heating and cooling Laundry facilities. 1209 Charles Boulevard, Otflce Apartment 104. Also Available Furnished Apartments.</p>
        <p>752-8915</p>
        <p>LANGSTON PARK</p>
        <p>Stancil Drive</p>
        <p>ONE-HALF month free. Nice two bedroom apartments by the river. Energy efficient appii anees, washer/dryer hook ups Water and cable included in $300 rent. REMCO EAST, 758 6061</p>
        <p>LOVE TREES?</p>
        <p>Experience the unique in apartment living with nature outside your door.</p>
        <p>COURTNEY SQUARE APARTMENTS</p>
        <p>Quality construction, fireplaces, heaf pumps (heating costs 50 percent less than comparable units), dishwasher, washer dryer hook ups, cable TV,wall to wall carpet, thermopane win dows, extra insulation.</p>
        <p>Office Open 9 5 Weekdays</p>
        <p>9 5 Saturday  15 Sunday</p>
        <p>AAerry Lane Off Arlington Blvd</p>
        <p>756 5067</p>
        <p>NEAR HOSPITAL. 2 bedroom townhouse. Quiet neighborhood. Call 757 0671 after 5 p.m</p>
        <p>NEW OEPLEX! Each side 2 grooms, bath, combined liv ing room, kitchen and dining Appliances furnished. $310 monfhly. 830 1235 after 5 pm</p>
        <p>NEWI bedroom apartments Washer/dryer, cable TV, carpet, electric heat, air condi tioning, appliances 756 3342</p>
        <p>oakaaontsquarT</p>
        <p>APARTMENTS</p>
        <p>Two bedroom townhouse apartments. 1212 Redbanks Road. Dishwasher, refrigerator, range, disposal included We also have Cable TV. Very con venlent to Pitt Plaja and Uni versify Also some furnished apartments available.</p>
        <p>756 4151</p>
        <p>ONE AND TWO Bedroom apartments.Call Smith In surance and Realty, 752 2754 ONE AND TWO BEDROOM</p>
        <p>Apartments for rent Call 756 1160.__</p>
        <p>ONE BEDROOM apartment. Heat, hot and cold water, sewa furnished. 201 North Woodlawn. $250 per month. 756 0545 or 758 0635.</p>
        <p>ONE BEDROOM Apartments for renf. $235 per month. Contact D. G. Nichols Agency, inc., 752 4012.</p>
        <p>ONE BEDROOM apartment, carpeted, kitchen appliances, central heat and air, $225, Greenville Manor, 752 8915,</p>
        <p>kM</p>
        <p>Fo</p>
        <p>or Rent</p>
        <p>PROFESSIONAL Neighbors: T mile hospital. Townhouse. 2 bedrooms, baths, energy, really nice. $285.825 4931.</p>
        <p>REGENCY HOUSE</p>
        <p>Corner of 5th &amp;amp;Reade</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOM apartment, new appliances, completely renovated. Across the street from ECU campus. Call REM CO EAST, 758 6061</p>
        <p>SHENANDOAH</p>
        <p>100A Shiloh</p>
        <p>Two bedroom, l'/y bafh duplex. Energy efficient appliances and washer/dryer hookups. Call REMCO EAST, 758 6061.</p>
        <p>STRATFORD ARMS APARTMENTS</p>
        <p>Spacious 1.2 and 3 Bedroom ^artments CABLE TV.TENNIS COURTS,POOL Convenient to Shopping and ECU</p>
        <p>Office hours 9 a.m. to5p m. Monday through Friday</p>
        <p>Call us 24 hours a day at</p>
        <p>756-4800</p>
        <p>STUDENTS. 2 BEDROOM</p>
        <p>apartment, Cindy Court, available December 20 $290 per month, heat and water furnish-ed.No pets. 756 3563 after 4 pm,</p>
        <p>SUPER DEAL! 2 bedroom, I' j bafh $275 fireplace, pool, tennis. 752-1375 Homelocators</p>
        <p>TOBACCO ROAD</p>
        <p>Two bedroom, 1'-j bath townhouse with fireplace, appliances, washer/dryer hook ups and outside storage. Call REM CO EAST, 758 6061</p>
        <p>TOWNHOUSE 2 bedrooms. IW baths, heat pump, dishwasher, refrigerator, stove. Available February 1. $295 per month. No pets. Call 756 3563 after 4 p m.</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOMS, 1'j bath duplex in nice quiet area. $325, month 355 2256.</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOMS, stove and refrigerator, washer, dryer hookup, central heat and air, carpeted Lease and deposit re quired No pets 705 Hooker Road. 756 0489 or 756 6382</p>
        <p>TWO Be DROOM duplex at Frog Level. No pets. $270 monthly. Call 756 4624 before 5 or 756 8076 after 5.</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOM townhouse, quiet neighborhood. Call 355 7071.</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOMS. 1'^ bath, fireplace, dishwasher, washer-dryer hookup. $275 per month. 758 1312.</p>
        <p>ONE BEDROOM APARTMENT</p>
        <p>(or rent. No children or pets. Call756-5610from9 5.</p>
        <p>ONE BEDROOM Handicapped available.Contact: Wintergreen, 105 Sterling Court, Winterville, NC 28590 FmHA. EHO</p>
        <p>PET LOVERS! 1 bedroom $185 or 2 bedroom $250 washer/ dryer. 752 1375. Homelocators.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>MOBILE HOMES</p>
        <p>Something</p>
        <p>NEW</p>
        <p>CUSTOM</p>
        <p>WINDOWS</p>
        <p>Just For YOU!</p>
        <p>C.L, luptoR Co, 752-6116</p>
        <p>RIVER BLUFF</p>
        <p>Spacious Affordable Luxury Apartments 'Six And 12 Month Leases</p>
        <p> 2 Bedroom Townhouses &amp;amp; 1 Bedroom Garden Apartments</p>
        <p>Phone 758-4015</p>
        <p>Directions; 10th Street Extension To River Bluff Road, Next To Rivergete Shopping Center.</p>
        <p>IS YOUR FLAT ROOF LEAKING? E.P.D.M. (Rubber)</p>
        <p>Is The Answer -Free Estimates-ATUS ROOFING COMPANY</p>
        <p>756-5952</p>
        <p>FARM FOR SALE</p>
        <p>152 acres. 98 acres cleared. 26,000 pounds of tobacco. Location: Between Stokes and Pactolus on Highway 30.</p>
        <p>Call after6 p.m. 758-2996 or 758-1676</p>
        <p>NOW ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS</p>
        <p>Two bedroom apartments. Wall to wall carpet, fully equipped kitchen, washer dryer connections, energy efficient.</p>
        <p>Office Hours: 12:00-5:30 P.M.</p>
        <p>i=r</p>
        <p>756-4615</p>
        <p>SALES</p>
        <p>COORDINATOR</p>
        <p>Administrative type individual needed to oversee staff in a sales departrnent. Two years experience in supervising and organizing work for office staff. Above all you must be skilled in setting and communicating clear and achievable goals. Qualified applicants should send resume including current salary to:</p>
        <p>Sales Coordinator</p>
        <p>ORADY-WHITE BOATS</p>
        <p>P.0.BOX1M7,</p>
        <p>Greenville, NC 27035 (N18 Not Nocomry To Roappfy)</p>
        <p>161</p>
        <p>Apartments For Rent</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOM Apartment. Stove and refrigerator. $185 per month. Call 355-6753.</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOM apartment for rent Walking distance to ECU. $280 a month. Call 758-9110 or 919-477-2927. Available now I</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOM available. Cypress Gardens. Nice, wooded setting. Good for young profes-slonal or couple. Call 355 2025.</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOM apartment, 110$ Forbes Street. Call collect 919A29 7628atter5.</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOM Duplex. 757 2778 days, 355-6054 evenings and weekends.</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOM, 1 bath ap proximately 10 miles from Greenville in the country. $250 per month rent, same deposit. No pets. Available Feb. 1. 746 2010after6pm.</p>
        <p>UPSTAIRS APARTMENT tor</p>
        <p>rent. $200 per month. Single oc cupant only. No pets. l709 4th Street. Available immediately. Call CENTURY 21 Bass Realty. 756 6666</p>
        <p>WEDGEWOODARMS</p>
        <p>2 bedroom. Pi bath townhouses. Excellent location. Carrier heaf pumps. Whirlpool kitchen, washer dryer hookups, pool, tennis court . 355 6302</p>
        <p>WEST HILLS " TOWNHOAAES</p>
        <p>SR 1204</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOM. 2&amp;lt;i bath townhomes. Fully equipped with energy efficient appliances, storage, washer/dryer hookas Near PCMH. Call REMCO EAST, 758-6061</p>
        <p>WILLOUGHBY PARK</p>
        <p>Evans Street Extension Across from Lynndale</p>
        <p>Brand new three bedroom, two full bath apartment avail able for immediate occupancy. Fireplace, ceiling fan, energy efficient appliances, washer/ dryer hookups and private balcony. Call REMCO EAST, 758-6061 for details.</p>
        <p>WILSON ACRES APARTMENTS</p>
        <p>1806 East First Street 2 and 3 bedroom townhouses. Pi bafhs. Free water, sewer, and basic cable tv. Stove, frost free refrigerator, dishwasher. Fully uded</p>
        <p>washer/dryer hookups. Full) carpeted with drapes Included Pool, tennis court and sauna</p>
        <p>CLOSE TO CAMPUS.</p>
        <p>Call 752 0277 Anytime.</p>
        <p>161</p>
        <p>Apartments For Rent</p>
        <p>WINDY RIDGE</p>
        <p>)!I32 Scott street</p>
        <p>THREE BEDROOMS, 2&amp;gt;i baths, refrigerator, dishwasher, garbage disposal and trash compactor included Also POOL and tennis courts Call REMCO EAST, 758 6061</p>
        <p>WOODSIDE</p>
        <p>98 Brookwood Drive</p>
        <p>ONE BEDROOM apartment available for February rental. Energy efficient appliances Quiet wooded surroundings. Call REMCO EAST, 758 6061</p>
        <p>2 BEDROOM, heatpump, energy efficient, quiet neigh borhood, convenient to universi ty. AAarried preferred. $320 per month. Call 355-7799; evenings 756 8444.</p>
        <p>2 BEDROOM DUPLEX. Deposit required. Short term lease available. 756-6834.</p>
        <p>2 BEDROOM! Duplex $235 garage or 3 bedroom $315 Pi baths. 752 1375 Homelocators</p>
        <p>163 Business Rentals</p>
        <p>APPROXIMATELY 2000square feel of space for lease. Adjacent fo new Fuel Doc, corner of Greenville Boulevard and Highway 33. Call Daughfridge OifCompany, 756 1345.</p>
        <p>MOBILE STORAGE for rent Have storage space delivered to your home or business Call 758 4449. AHer 6,946 9932</p>
        <p>170 Condominiums For Rent</p>
        <p>SHENANDOAH Townhouse, 2 bedroom. Pi bath, washer,</p>
        <p>dryer hookup,heat pump, young professional or couples only Nb pets. $325 monthly Call 355 7725</p>
        <p>after6p m.</p>
        <p>TOWNHOUSE FOR RENT, 2</p>
        <p>bedrooms. Pi baths, all appli anees. 355-6016 after 6 pm.</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOM, Vi bath townhouse. fully equipped kitchen, washer/dryer hooxups. enclosed patio Available im mediately $360. Call 756 3666</p>
        <p>173 Houses For Rent</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOM, stove and</p>
        <p>refrigerator, lease and deposit required, no pets $320 204 East 12tn Street. Call after6 OOp m , 756 0489 or 756 6382</p>
        <p>UNIVERSITY AREA 3 bedroom for rent Call 756 1160</p>
        <p>173 Houses For Rent</p>
        <p>A COUNTRY! 2 bedroom $250 or big 4 bedroom $325 on acreage 752-1375. Homelocators Fee AVAILABLE March 1 on East ern Street. 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, 1,025 square feet, fireplace and screened porch. $400 per month. Years lease and oe^it required. No pets Call Clark Branch Realtors at 355 2000 AVAILABLE immediately. University Area. 3 bedrooms. Hi baths, living room, den with fireplace, eat in kitchen and carport. 1600 square feet. $500. per month. Lease and deposit required. Call Clark Branch Re altorsat355 2000._</p>
        <p>AYDEN. Two bedrooms, stove and refrigerator. $200 per</p>
        <p>month. Call 355 6753_</p>
        <p>COUNTRY 2 bedroom apartment, 11 miles'south of Green villeon Highway 43 524 5507 EASTWOOD SUBDIVISION 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, formal areas, large den and kitchen. $550 per month. 1 month renf re quired tor deposit. Call 825 7982 FOR RENT: 3 bedroom house 107 South Summitt Street Carpet and appliances, central heaf and air. $350 a month 12 month lease. I month rent as se curity deposit No pefi Billy Laughlnghouse, Bostic Sugg Furniture Company, 401 West 10th Street, Greenville. 758 2513</p>
        <p>IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY for</p>
        <p>home in Winterville School District. Freshly painted throughout. Call 756 8485</p>
        <p>IN THE CITY, but no traffic this 4 year old, 3 bedroom brick ranch is located in the back of Orchard Hills Nice yard, only $38$per month Call (TENTURY 21 Bass Realty, 756 6666</p>
        <p>173 Houses For Rent</p>
        <p>WECANHELPYOUI Save a lot of gas and time. All areas, sizes and prices call today! 752 t375. Homelocators Fee</p>
        <p>117 SOUTH WOODLAWN Avenue Near campus 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, study or storage area upstairs, central heat and air, off street parking $375 per month plus deposit Call 752 4066</p>
        <p>2 BEDROOMI $325 fireplace pet ok or 3 bedroom 2 baths $375, 752 137$, Homelocators Fee</p>
        <p>3 BEDROOM HOME In College Court Available Immediately. Lease and deposit required. No pets. $425 per month Estate Re alty Company, 830 1040_</p>
        <p>3-4 BEDROOM brick home, 2400 square (eel. 2'i baths, 2 fireplaces, fenced yard, double garage. Call 757 3084 days 355 6476 nights.</p>
        <p>400 LINE AVENUE Two</p>
        <p>bedrooms, central air and heat. $250 per month. Appliances fur nished. Call 355 6753.</p>
        <p>174</p>
        <p>Townhouses For Rent</p>
        <p>AVAILABLE NOW 2 bedroom, I'l bath at Lexington Square $385 per month Security deposit required 756 9459 after 6 00</p>
        <p>NEWI 3 and 2 bedroom townhomes for rent Great loca tion near Hospital Fireplace, patio, swimming pool, fennls court and many extras 758 6050. ColliceC. Moore and Associates</p>
        <p>NEAR HOSPITAL, 3 bedrooms. 1'/j baths, heat pump, washer, dryer hookup, large lot Lease and deposit required $450 a month Available February 9 355 2961</p>
        <p>THREE BEDROOM, 2 bath brick home Living room with fireplace, kitchen with eat in area, recreation room $475 a month. Call Mavis Butts Realty, 355 7653 or Mavis Butts, 752 7073.</p>
        <p>TRY THESE! 2 bedroom $250 kids pet ok or 3 bedroom $325 752 1375, Homelocators. Fee</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOM house, Uni versify area, deposit, references and lease required. $300 month. 758 4333day, 756 5077 night.</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOM house with fireplace. University area, de posif, references and lease re gulred $325 month. 758 4333 day; 756 5077 night.</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOMS, Ih baths Convenient to hospital. Low ufllties, $350. 757 0703</p>
        <p>179 Mobile Homes For Rent</p>
        <p>A FURNISHEOI 2 bedroom $150 private lot or 3 bedroom $190 752 1375, Homelocators.</p>
        <p>The Daily Reflector, Greenville. N.C. Wednesday, January 21,1987  B-13</p>
        <p>179 Mobile Homes For Rent</p>
        <p>THREE BEDROOM, central heaf and air, $200 746^4 or 752 5167</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOM mobile home Central heat and air, washer/ dryer New Bern Highway. $200</p>
        <p>per month plus deposit. No pets :hlldren. Call 78 0174,</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOM furnished. $150 00 per month plus deposit. 752 1623 or 758 0779.</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOMS, stove and refrigerator lurnished. Call 355^753.</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS</p>
        <p>Call 752 4811 atter6:30pm</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOM, furnished, large den, $195 plus deposit Shady Knoll. 746 2047 after 6</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOM mobile home, washer/dryer, air conditioning on private lot. $175 month plus $100 deposit 355 7338 after 3</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOM, central heat, window air, wafer furnished. Private lot. Limit 1 child No pets Oeposlf/lease, $165 1 729 4241</p>
        <p>1 AND 2 bedroom AAobile homes, $130 and up Also Mobile home lot tor renf No pels and no children 758 0745.</p>
        <p>12x6$, 2 bedroom, washer/ dryer, air. Setup in nice park. Call 752 2684after 7p.m.</p>
        <p>2 BEDROOMS, washer, dryer, good condlflon, good park, no children, no pets, 756 0801.</p>
        <p>2 BEDROOMSI Washer/dryer $200 or 3 bedroom 2 baths $235 752 1375. Homelocators,</p>
        <p>180 Mobile Homes Lots For Rent</p>
        <p>APPROXIMATELY 3 miles south from Greenville, one on private lot. One In park 35$ 2340</p>
        <p>BEHIND VENTER'S Grill on Mumtord Road. 3 bedrooms. $200 rent. $100 deposit 756 4982</p>
        <p>FOR SALE OR RENT 1 and 2</p>
        <p>bedrooms, furnished No children, no pets Call 758 6679</p>
        <p>FURNISHED two bedroom Limit one child, no pefs 756 2495 after 3 pm and before 9 pm.</p>
        <p>Furnished deposit and refer ence required. No pets or children. 752 4008</p>
        <p>MOBILE HOMESI We have the one for you! All areas, sizes and prices Immediate or future 752-137$. Homelocators Fee</p>
        <p>SMALL 2 bedroom mobile home, Colonial Park, $155 plus deposit 758 0174</p>
        <p>THREE BEDROOM, 2 bath, acre private lot Griffon Call 752 4103</p>
        <p>LARGE SHADY LOT for rent Cable TV Paved roads and driveways Call 758 0745</p>
        <p>181</p>
        <p>Office Space For Rent</p>
        <p>ATTRACTIVE COMPLEX near Court House (between Coffmans and First Citizens Bank Three offices, individually or together Telephone answering and recep tion services available 752 6888</p>
        <p>BOND'S SPORTING GOODS</p>
        <p>building for lease on Arlington Boulevard 6000 square feet, can be used for retail or office. 756 6001 or 752 6179</p>
        <p>BRAND NEW OFFICES avail able. Private bafh, kitchenette Separate entrance $8 a square foot. Corner of Frobes and 8th Street Great location. Call nights after 6 756 0603, 355 5336 Days 756 6336</p>
        <p>COLONIAL HEIGHTS Private, utilities furnished, $85 month 757 1626/752 4295</p>
        <p>181</p>
        <p>Office Space For Rent</p>
        <p>FREESTANDING OFFICE building. 1360 square feet. New ly redecorated, excellent loca tion, optional new phone system Call 3S 4451.</p>
        <p>NEW OFFICE SUITES lor lease at 301 West I4th Street. Avail able January 1967. One suite with 1135 square feet, two suites with 1375 square feet. $6.50 to $7 per square foot. Security system, separate utilities. Call Ollie Harrington and Son Build ers, Inc., 753-5086</p>
        <p>NICE OFFICE AVAILABLE</p>
        <p>Immediately on Memorial Drive. Utilities and Janitorial services included In rent. Con tact Keith Warren at 752 3850 for more Information.</p>
        <p>OAKMONT PROFESSIONAL</p>
        <p>Oftlces. 1300 square feel, 7 Indl vidual offices plus reception</p>
        <p>SINGLE OFFICE and suite space available. $135 and up per month. Call Jeannette Cox Agency, 756 1322.</p>
        <p>TWO ROOM OFFICE SUITE</p>
        <p>Janitorial and utilities included Chapin Building, 3106 South Memorial Drive 756 1234.</p>
        <p>1721 SQUARE feet. Eastbrook Drive, adlacent to Blue Cross/ Blue Shield, utilities and lanltorial furnished $1150 month 752 0763or 758 2138</p>
        <p>2 OFFICES AVAILABLE. Front exposure on 264 Business at Frog Level. $200 per month. Call Lorelle at Clark Branch, Real tors, 355 2000.</p>
        <p>3 SUITES, Mlnges Building 1 room, 3 rooms, 4 rooms $7 $0 per square foot including utilities and janitorial</p>
        <p>OFFICE BUILDING available end of year. 2170 square feet PlenW of parking off Charles Street at $8.00 per square toot</p>
        <p>BRICK OFFICE BUILDING recently renovated with 1428 square feet available now at $7.00 per square foot Private parking off Charles Street</p>
        <p>SEVERAL SUITES available on Commerce Street 600 square feet and more From $5 $7 per square toot.</p>
        <p>UNDER CONSTRUCTION off</p>
        <p>Arlington Blvd. You design Inte rior 1000 square feet and up Could also be retail Ottered at $8.00 per square loot Comple lion In 6 7 weeks</p>
        <p>CLARK-BRANCH,</p>
        <p>REALTORS</p>
        <p>355 2000</p>
        <p>181</p>
        <p>Office Space For Rent</p>
        <p>SMALL BODY SHOP or repair shop available with olfitri, garage door opening and fencc ) rear yard storage. Available Immediately off 264 Business a Frog Level. $350 per month. Call Lorelle at Clark Branch. Real tors, 355 2000</p>
        <p>185 Rooms For Rent</p>
        <p>EFFICIENCY APARTMENT for male. Utilities included Ci'i 758 2585.</p>
        <p>FEMALE ROOMMIF</p>
        <p>wanted, $125 per monlh tall 758 3860 after 5</p>
        <p>PIRATES LANDING</p>
        <p>200 W. Eighth SIrool</p>
        <p>Private furnished rooms 1. rent. Utilities included Si.v. bath and kitchen.</p>
        <p>EAST, 758 6061</p>
        <p>SHARE 3 BEDROOM bo"  near college Serious sludm i m business man prefer ted 6888 days, 752 7564 nights</p>
        <p>192 Roommate Wanted</p>
        <p>FEMALE ROOMMATE w Vil !</p>
        <p>to share fully turnisti,,;! bedroom house, $150montti, I .o' utilities Must be clean, d-( &amp;lt;' , dable and non smoker Alt'  p.m 752 2236</p>
        <p>MALE RCTOMMATE w.int d ' share 6 year old liiinis',- ! ,t bedroom house tri coun'iy J:  12 minutes from Gen i. 757 1050alter 6 OOp ni</p>
        <p>MALE' ROOMMATE vs.v t $145 plusulililips, Gr pi n,  i Apartments, 756 686V MALE ROGABATE wa '. d share two bedroom, 1 . i, r luxury townhouse Sttnnld b mature and lilieral mindnd i-  son $165 plus 12 ulililK's 1 / 5291, leave message</p>
        <p>MATURE COUPLE or i&amp;gt;..' - sional male wanted In si .r  large 3 bedroom house $ i ,i month plus h ubiiies fail 6074 after 6 p m</p>
        <p>responsible FEMAl E ' .</p>
        <p>share 3 bedroom, I'b.db iioi  In Colonial Heights Latyi**i r ed backyard, washei diy i $150 plus ') ulililies ( .III (b'c ^ y at 753 3124 before 5 ;s&amp;gt;'6m/ after 6pm</p>
        <p>TWO MALE MEDICAL sbidei '. looking (or rcwmmate to rii o e | bedroom solar powered birne r miles from hospital /S. ti'U after 6pm</p>
        <p>194 Wanted To Buy</p>
        <p>WANT TO BUY pine and batd wood timber Pamlico tiid'* ' Company, Inc 756 8615 nnit,''.</p>
        <p>PECAN GROVE</p>
        <p>Now Accepting Applications One and Two Bedroom Efficiency Apartments Located Near Hospital</p>
        <p>756-1454</p>
        <p>MODERN OFFICE SPACE</p>
        <p>For Lease Prime Location</p>
        <p>ACROSS FROM COURT HOUSE</p>
        <p>Shore Drive Plaza Building Call</p>
        <p>758-6050</p>
        <p>Colilce C. Moore &amp;amp; Associates</p>
        <p>T</p>
        <p>H</p>
        <p>E</p>
        <p>i j I M ! !! i i I  i i i</p>
        <p>R1 d!; I: iimii</p>
        <p>1 ' i</p>
        <p>E</p>
        <p>A</p>
        <p>CAROLINA EAST</p>
        <p>REALTY, INC.</p>
        <p>355-7774 2192 S. Evans St., Greenville, N.C.</p>
        <p>REDUCED</p>
        <p>Beautiful Westhaven offers you this sprawling 3 bedroom, 2 bath, brick ranch home with formal areas, family room with fireplace and garage Must Sell' Reduced to $79,900.00,</p>
        <p>REDUCED FOR QUICK SALE!! LIKE NEW OFFICE BUILDING WITH FOUR SUITES APPROXIMATELY 6,025 SQUARE FEET 200 Eastbrook Drive</p>
        <p>758-6050</p>
        <p>(OUKE (. MOORE 8 ASSOCIATES</p>
        <p>vans</p>
        <p>Company</p>
        <p>752-2814</p>
        <p>OGteenvieInc</p>
        <p>ATTRACTIVE 3 bedroom, IV2 bath home m North Hills. Kitchen and dining room combination, walk-in closet in master bedroom, sliding glass doors in dining room, E-300. masonite siding. 90 x 130 lot Under $50,000.</p>
        <p>NEW TRADITIONAL brick home in Camelot featuring a separate dining room and eat-in well planned kitchen Master bedroom has adjoining dressing area with walk-in closet. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, a roomy great room with fireplace, plus other extras tor the selective buyer High S60'i.</p>
        <p>Excellent FHA/VA and conventional 1</p>
        <p>illeble.</p>
        <p>Faye Bowen 756-5258</p>
        <p>E</p>
        <p>S</p>
        <p>T</p>
        <p>A</p>
        <p>T</p>
        <p>E</p>
        <p>C</p>
        <p>O</p>
        <p>R</p>
        <p>N</p>
        <p>E</p>
        <p>R</p>
        <p>FOR SALE BY OWNER</p>
        <p>V2 mile from hospital 2 bedroom mobile with add-on room on V2 acre wooded lot. deck, sunporch, terraced garden. Central Storage buildings. Very private.</p>
        <p>$20,000</p>
        <p>home</p>
        <p>Wood</p>
        <p>heat.</p>
        <p>758-5808</p>
        <p>CARL*</p>
        <p>COMMERCIAL</p>
        <p>CORNER</p>
        <p>MAY '87 BE A DELIGHT! CALL CARL AND BUY RIGHT!</p>
        <p>NEW. About 500' from the hospital propr'ify on NC 43,30 acres (( $300,000</p>
        <p>NEW. 100 foot lots on Greenville BouI'v,imI $600 per front foot NEW. Old Shoneys on Greenville Bouiovm) Call Carl for details.</p>
        <p>NEW. On 10th Street, 5 lots and 4 housr";</p>
        <p>SPECIAL OFFERINQ. Corner lot 150' X 200 &amp;lt;m East 10th Street, $90,000. Good buy</p>
        <p>DARDEN REALTY</p>
        <p>'eekends 355-655H</p>
        <p>WINTER SPECIAL 4 New Homes At Reduceti Prices</p>
        <p>For A Limited Time Only</p>
        <p>GEEP JOHNSON</p>
        <p>CURK-BRANCH, REALTORS</p>
        <p>SELLING?</p>
        <p>I can sell your home. Our recent success in sales leaves me in a position needing properties to sell. Let me tell you about our plan. Call me now!</p>
        <p>355-2000</p>
        <p>Office</p>
        <p>756-1719</p>
        <p>Homo</p>
        <p>The ,VSIM N IIHOSij Ft Living Area</p>
        <p>S/U7:' zl/.S/JOA'</p>
        <p>Tfic S I K.VlTi )KI) 12S() S(j I t I.iviiig Area</p>
        <p>SAVE 12,200.</p>
        <p>T he l/\MEsM( )}&amp;lt;( J J tO Srj Ft Living Area</p>
        <p>SAVE 11,355.</p>
        <p>ThcNOKTHFOHK IV I t-ft sq, Ft Living Area</p>
        <p>CAI.I. f .OI I K I</p>
        <p>(iKELNVI! I I ^1 'I</p>
        <p>P 0 Box (I'J (0 .Mcrii' iii.i! I h 1 (irecfivillc \(</p>
        <p>NitTK..</p>
        <p>Send lor IKFF, iloiin (.ii.il k</p>
        <p>.VJdfO'..</p>
        <p>(.It) suit.</p>
        <p>PfKlfK _</p>
        <p>(&amp;gt;) Vulj uWli Ijli'.l'L : Irs / I</p>
        <p>CAROLINA MODEL HOME CUhf</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0128" />
        <p>WE GUARANTEE IT! YOU GET THE LOWEST TOTAL FOOD BILL WITH...</p>
        <p>Double Manufacturers Coupons V Pnces Everyday</p>
        <p>3. Lowest Priced Weekly Specials</p>
        <p>4. Below Cost Coupons &amp;gt;</p>
        <p>PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU 1-24-87</p>
        <p>SEAFOOD</p>
        <p>eVANTITV RIGHTS RESERVED</p>
        <p>SMALL  OOO</p>
        <p>SHRIMP  2**</p>
        <p>SEA LEG  raoo</p>
        <p>SUPREME  3^</p>
        <p>GROUPER  OAQ</p>
        <p>FILLET...............LB.  </p>
        <p>TROUT  ^iQ</p>
        <p>FILLET...............lb  1-*^^</p>
        <p>FRKSH QUARTER I.OIIV</p>
        <p>PORK</p>
        <p>CHOPS</p>
        <p>BEEF</p>
        <p>BARBEQEE</p>
        <p>RIBS</p>
        <p>98</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>Lb.</p>
        <p>FRESH</p>
        <p>FRYER</p>
        <p>RREAST</p>
        <p>HILLSHIRE FARMS SMOKED</p>
        <p>SAUSAGE</p>
        <p>3</p>
        <p>18</p>
        <p>GWALTMEY GREAT DO OR GREAT</p>
        <p>Lb.</p>
        <p>BOLOGIVA</p>
        <p>98*</p>
        <p>GWALTNEY</p>
        <p>SLICED</p>
        <p>BACO^</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>68</p>
        <p>Lb.</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON STATE RED DELICIOUS APPLES</p>
        <p>APPLES</p>
        <p>49*</p>
        <p>RUSSET BAKING</p>
        <p>3 $1</p>
        <p>Lbs. </p>
        <p>POTATOES</p>
        <p>TEMPLE</p>
        <p>ORAXGES</p>
        <p>10*</p>
        <p>CRISP CiREES FLORIDA</p>
        <p>CABBAGE</p>
        <p>19*</p>
        <p>CHICKEN OF THE SEA TLNA oii.-wati;h</p>
        <p>(..&amp;gt;0/. C'uii</p>
        <p>STOKLEY VEGETABLES</p>
        <p>Hholt&amp;gt; kt^rnol Corn ( uf Cprc^rn Brans SurrI Pras ,%ssl. Sizrs</p>
        <p>4/n</p>
        <p>WISE    59</p>
        <p>POTATO CHIPS I Lb. bag</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>WHITE HOLSE APPLE SALCE l6 0a.Cn</p>
        <p>3/*l</p>
        <p>BORDENS CHEESE SLICES</p>
        <p>ISr Dl l'  12  Oz.  PkK.</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>49</p>
        <p>LNCLE BENS COLNTRY INN RICE</p>
        <p>Issl. Kiies &amp;amp; Varilies</p>
        <p> BEVERAGE SPECIALS</p>
        <p>COKE</p>
        <p>CHERRY COKE</p>
        <p>SPRITE</p>
        <p>MELLO =*</p>
        <p>YELLOW</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>09</p>
        <p>COORS</p>
        <p>BEER</p>
        <p>RrN-Lighl. L I2 Oz. Cans</p>
        <p>24*</p>
        <p>SEN COUNTRY WINE COOLERS</p>
        <p>Assl. Varivlies, 2 L</p>
        <p>2</p>
        <p>MILLER LITE BEER</p>
        <p>12/12 Oz. CanN</p>
        <p>4</p>
        <p>DERNASSAGE DISH LIQLID</p>
        <p>22 Oz. BUI.</p>
        <p>BUY ONE GET ONE FREE</p>
        <p>&amp;amp;</p>
        <p>DOWNY FABRIC SOFTENER</p>
        <p>Of OFF 90z. B(l.</p>
        <p>2**</p>
        <p>BANQUET</p>
        <p>CHICKEN NUGGETS</p>
        <p>.411 Varielirs 12 Oz.</p>
        <p>21.</p>
        <p>TROPICANA FROZEN ORANGE JUICE</p>
        <p>12 Oz. Can.</p>
        <p>99</p>
        <p>SEALTEST SOUR CREAN</p>
        <p>l Oz. Caal.</p>
        <p>89*</p>
        <p>TROPICANA</p>
        <p>109</p>
        <p>ORANGE JUICE</p>
        <p>Re|{.&amp;gt;HonieStyle 04 ai. etn. Pure Premluni 64 oz. etu. 1*79</p>
        <p>. COUPOW GOUPOM COUPOI\l CT</p>
        <p>SUGAR</p>
        <p>FRESH COUPON '</p>
        <p>COUPON- COUPOIU-COUPOni- W- coupon- coupon coupon-  coupon- goupon-coupon</p>
        <p>SCOTT PAPER TOWELS</p>
        <p>!$ISGLE ROLL REG.9r FOR-</p>
        <p>WITH TMS COUPON LIMIT 1 WITH PIMCHMf or 7 W ON MOM LIMIT 1 COUPON PtN CUSTOM0I</p>
        <p>1011</p>
        <p>VOID AFTER 1-24A7</p>
        <p>EAR</p>
        <p>LAUMDRY DETERGEIYT</p>
        <p>42 OZ. BOX</p>
        <p>99L</p>
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        <p>i&amp;lt;eM7</p>
        <p>WITN TNia COUPON LNMT t WITH PUNCHAae OP 7 JO ON MOM LNMT 1 COUPON PER CUITOMCR</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0129" />
        <p>THE DAILY</p>
        <p>REFLECTOR</p>
        <p>Greenville N.C. Wednesday, January 21.1987</p>
        <p>Entertainment</p>
        <p>Comics</p>
        <p>Expressions</p>
        <p>e</p>
        <p>ECU Gospel Choir Is Ready For 1st Album</p>
        <p>By CHERIE EVANS Reflector Staff Writer</p>
        <p>Coughs and sneezes, heard from several places in the paneled room with hard-wood floors, may have been a result of sweating and then cooling off in the winter air.</p>
        <p>But, those affected by the winter bug did not seem concerned with the opened doors of the rectangular buildmg though it was mid January.</p>
        <p>It was hot.</p>
        <p>Several people were fanning, and others could be heard clearing their throats above a hum of chatter.</p>
        <p>These were stirrings of people in the Ledona S. Wright Building at East Carolina University who had met to work on a common goal -Making Dreams a Reality.</p>
        <p>Pardon me, please! said Karen Malone, the sergeant of arms in the group. People adjusted their chairs</p>
        <p>and straightened their backs, preparing to sing.</p>
        <p>It was time to practice.</p>
        <p>The ECU Gospel Choir was practic-</p>
        <p>said Shelia Wooten, president of the choir.</p>
        <p>First, choir members have had that dream even before us, she said, so it has been a challenge to make the album a reality.</p>
        <p>We want to reach people to let them see what theyre supporting, Ms. Wooten said, defining the second purpose.</p>
        <p>The third purpose is just to show that students on a college university campus could actually do it, she said.</p>
        <p>We started planning in August to do the album, said Gregory Horton,</p>
        <p>director and trainer for the choir. He also wrote the eight songs to be featured on the album. The choir has to vote on a name for the album, he said.</p>
        <p>The songs are written to project an atmosphere of unity and love, Horton said. With songs, we encourage and let people know youre not alone in this world.</p>
        <p>We are not a religious organization but a student-functioning organization, he said, explaining that the almost 100 members in the choir stem from different religious backgrounds.</p>
        <p>The album will cost about $5,000 to record and produce with Mega Sound Studios of Bailey, Horton said.</p>
        <p>The university gave the choir $2,000 for the album, Ms. Wooten</p>
        <p>(SeeECU.C-2)</p>
        <p>MUSIC C0A('1I  ECU Gospel Choir director Gregory Horton coaches choir members in tempo and emphasis as they practice, preparing for an album recording Satur</p>
        <p>day. It will be the first album for the group. (Reflector Photoby Cliff Hollis).</p>
        <p>TO THE BEATMembers of the East Carolina University Gospel Choir often clap to the rhythm of the songs they sing, said director Gregory Horton,</p>
        <p>standing. Individuals in the choir also improvise on some songs, creating a natural mood in the music. (Reflector Photo bv Cliff Hollis).</p>
        <p>This Salesman Knows The Problem</p>
        <p>By SUSAN OKULA Associated Press Writer</p>
        <p>NEW HAVEN, Conn. (AP) - When Joseph P. Genera makes a sales call, he and his customer usually come to more than a business understanding.</p>
        <p>Genera has lost the use of his legs, and he is in the business of modifying vans and cars for the disabled. He started his company. Independence Van Inc., in September.</p>
        <p>As much as I hate being in a wheelchair, it gives me insight as to what (disabled) people go through and what people need, says the 29-year-old businessman.</p>
        <p>In November 1982, a car being serviced in his fathers North Branford garage fell off a lift and struck Genera, breaking his back.</p>
        <p>In a recent interview. Genera said little more about his personal experiences as he talked about the company that he and his wife own.</p>
        <p>About two years after his accident, he went to work for Trans Vans, a Danbury company that also modifies vans for the disabled. The only other similar firm in Connecticut then was Target Industries in East Windsor, and Genera felt another such company in New Haven would fill a geographical gap in the market.</p>
        <p>Through personal financing and loans from a bank and the New Haven Community Investment Corp., (Jenera raised $60,000 and set up shop in a concrete 6,000-square-foot garage on New Havens Columbus Avenue.</p>
        <p>The company, with four full-time employees and one who works part time, has serviced or modified about 20 vans so far. The company alters vans and cars for disabled people who want to drive them or just ride in them. It also installs luxury items in vans for anyone.</p>
        <p>Genera demonstrated some of the specialized equipment. A lift that gets the wheelchair-bound in and out of the vehicle can be activated magnetically. A special floor section in the driving area can be raised or lowered to give a driver in a wheelchair a good line of vision.</p>
        <p>Other equipment includes hand or arm controls for the brake and accel erator, as well as modified steering systems. Controls are available for drivers who might not necessarily use a wheelchair but have a disability of an arm or leg.</p>
        <p>Generas company usually purchases the equipment from factories and then installs it in the car or van that the customer provides.</p>
        <p>The biggest thing that people need to know ... is what avenues are open to them, Genera said. There are lots of people out there who can drive even though they dont.</p>
        <p>Genera recently outfitted a van with a lift for a wheelchair-lxiund man from northern (-onnecticut.</p>
        <p>He hadnt been out of the house for seven years. His wife couldnt handle getting him and his chair in and out of a car anymore, Genera .said. He has a whole new sen.se of freedom ..It gave him back a sense of normalcy ,</p>
        <p>Genera said he advises potential customers to check first with the state Department of Motor Vehicles, which helps disabled people determine whether they can drive, pro vides driving lessons and licenses them.</p>
        <p>But even if those reouiremenLs are met, the cost of a vehicle can Ix; a stumbling block for a potential driver. Genera said. He said new van prces can climb well alxive $10,iJ00,</p>
        <p>(See SALESMAN. (:-;{)</p>
        <p>Comics</p>
        <p>The Zip And The Zap Are Returning</p>
        <p>By NANCY MILLER Associated Press Writer</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (AP) - It was an overnight sensation 50 years ago - a thin, smallish magazine with cartoon drawings and men of steel. But the zowie and the zap somehow zoomed out of comic books and they became a business nightmare.</p>
        <p>Today, comic books are booming once again, with contemporary stories about real people as well as the engaging innocence of the cartoon animals of the 1930s.</p>
        <p>Its reminiscent of the Golden Age period when comic books were really big, said Robert M. Overstreet, publisher of The Comic Book Price Guide, the industry bible. We have new publishers coming into the market every week now and about 300 different new titles every month.</p>
        <p>The value of old comic books also is steadily rising, averaging 20 percent a year, he said.</p>
        <p>Some books appreciate even more</p>
        <p>dramatically. In August, a mint con dition DCs Action Comics No. 1, the 1938 premier Superman issue, sold for $30,000 at the comic book convention in San Diego. Earlier in the year, it had been valued at $18,500,</p>
        <p>But whats hot this year may not be hot next year. "Its like the stock market. Its real volatile and prices can jump up and down, Overstreet said.</p>
        <p>For publishers of new comic books, the news is equally upbeat, says Steve Geppi, owner and presi(lent of Geppis Ciomics World, a national distrilxitor.</p>
        <p>The reason for their new strength in the $120 million-a-year industry can partly be found in the comic book specialty store and a new distribution system which enables publishers to sell their books to retailers on a non-returnable basis.</p>
        <p>News carriers and supermarket owners, the original comic book distributors, dont understand the high return comic books offer. Geppi</p>
        <p>said. Comic books have bigger sales per square foot than the costlier adult magazines because people tend to buy more than one comic book at a time.</p>
        <p>Its the existence of the comicbook shop that saved the comic book market. It opened a new avenue, Overstreet said.</p>
        <p>Nostalgia is another element in the comic book renaissance</p>
        <p>Baby boomers have finally reached a point in life where they can have nostalgia and also share that experience with their kids. said Michael Usiand, producer of Swamp Thing, and an upcoming Batman movie.</p>
        <p>your</p>
        <p>Adults also collect them for their value as an art form and introduce the books to their children, who enjoy them for different reasons.</p>
        <p>On a psychological level, its all about power, taking off those glasses, Usiand said. Suddenly, youre no longer a weakling or a kid</p>
        <p>who has to do everything parents tell you to.</p>
        <p>I actually learned to read when I was 3 years old from comic Ixxiks. .. Unlike other parents, they let me read them. They didn't Ixdieve they were a communist plot. Usiand was referring to the parental concern during the 1950s Mc(!arthy Era that led to the creation of a self-censoring comic book board. It marked the beginning of a serious decline in the irmstry, which had been launched in 1933.</p>
        <p>But according to child psychologist Jonathan Kellerman, comics can be good for youngsters. For kids who dont like to read, comics provides a good entree. It is hard to know what will stimulate a childs creativity, he said.</p>
        <p>According to The Comic Book Buyers Guide, the first comic book was issued by Eastern Color Printing Company as a premium for Procter</p>
        <p>(SeetOMICfiC-2)</p>
        <p>Carolina Events</p>
        <p>Student Recitals Scheduled</p>
        <p>Recitals by two students in the school of music at East Carolina Univeisity have been scheduled for Thursday and Friday in the A.J. Fletcher Recital Hall on the ECU campus. Admissiofi is free and the events are open to the public.</p>
        <p>At 7 p.m. Thursday, Neville E. Curtis of Elon College, a student of Harold A. Jones, will present his senior recital in percussion, assisted by percussionists Steve Amowitz, 1 )an Davis, Chris Holliday and Chris Moore.</p>
        <p>For his program, Curtis has listed four compositions; Images by William Kraft; Three Technical Sketches for Marimba by Bob Margolis; Three Pieces for the Winter Solstice by John Bergamo, and Back Talk by Harry Brever.</p>
        <p>Joseph Glen Buck of Winterville, a student of James A. Searl, will present his junior trumpet recital at 7 p.m. Friday, assisted by Alisa Weatherington, piano; Anthony Jackson, tenor; Mark Ganso, organ, and Kath'-rine Jetter, cello.</p>
        <p>Buck has chosen four compositions for his recital: Sound The Trumpet by Henry Purcell; Suite for Trumpet by Alec Wilder; Caprice by Eugene Bozza, and Der Mysliche Trompeter by Friedrich Wildgans.</p>
        <p>Opera Set In Kinston</p>
        <p>KINSTON - Opera Carolina, the .Southeasts largest musical theater touring company, will present .School for Ijovers, an English adaptation of</p>
        <p>Mozarts opera, at 8:15 p.m. Monday at the Kinston Airport Theater.</p>
        <p>e is the second of five events in the Community Council</p>
        <p>for</p>
        <p>The performance the Arts 1986-87 season.</p>
        <p>School for Lovers, the English version of Mozarts comic opera, Cosi Fan Tutte, is set in the South follovdng the Civil War Two young men make a wager about their sweethearts faithfulness with an old friend that the girls would remain faithful even if they return home as carpetbaggers. From there the situation becomes comically confusing and complex.</p>
        <p>In the Kinston production, the roles of Freddy and William will be played, respectively by Steve Hamilton and Gregg l^uterbach. Their lady loves, Lily and Dorabella, will feature Belh Schwartz and Karen Nestvold. Alfonso, the buddy, will be played by Sam Stevenson.</p>
        <p>For ticket information call the arts council at ,5*27 2517. Tickets will also be available at the door prior to curtain time.</p>
        <p>PBS Radio To Carry BBC</p>
        <p>NEW BERN - Beginning in hebruary, WTEB-FM will carry BBC news programs three times per day with a 10-minute newscast at each top of the hour. WTEB will broadca.st the BBC news at 10 a m., 3 p.m and 10 p.m.</p>
        <p>The BBC news is being underwritten by Burroughs Wellcome through a $3,000 grant to the public radio station which .serves 17 counties in eastern North Carolina</p>
        <p>WTEB also broadcasts news on Morning Edition for two hours from 6 am until 8 am and AllThings Considered in the afternoon.</p>
        <p>Reading Day Set At Mall</p>
        <p>Heading Day for Pitt County children will be held Saturday from 10 a.m. until 4 p.m. at Carolina East Mall. Stories will fxi told</p>
        <p>Station Gets New Name, Tower</p>
        <p>NEW BERN - Radio station WAZZ-FM in New Bern will return to the air Thunsdday as WIKS FM (KI.SS 102) with a new 1,010 foot tower and 100,000 watts of power. The format of the station will be Urban Hock The station was recently purchased by Joyner Communciatioas Inc. of Gary which spent more than $500,000 on new additions to the station. Ten added fulltime jobs have lx*en added to the staffOn The Town</p>
        <p>Here are some of the evening entertainment activities scheduled for Greenville in the coming week:</p>
        <p>Beaus</p>
        <p>Friday, Jan. 23: All ages will Ix* admitted for Teen Night. Doors open at 8 p.m.</p>
        <p>.Saturday, Jan. 24: A disc j(x.-key will play Top 40, beach and dance music. Country Junction</p>
        <p>Wednesday, Jan 21 - Thursday, Jan. 22: The club will open at 8 p.m., with juke box music</p>
        <p>Friday, Jan. 23 - Saturday, Jan 24: Country music will Ixi performed by The Dalton Brothers D(X)rs open at 8 p.m., and the band will play at 9 p.m.</p>
        <p>New Deli</p>
        <p>Wednesday, Jan. 21: The Connells will perform  </p>
        <p>Friday, Jan. 23: Other Bright Colors will entertain.</p>
        <p>Saturday, Jan. 24: Music will be played by the Ixiopard S(x;iety Off the Cuff Ixiunge at the .Sheralon-Greenville Wednesday, Jan, 21 - Tuesday, Jan. 27; A disc jockey will provide music.</p>
        <p>Silver Bullet</p>
        <p>Wednesday, Jan, 21: Top 40 and country music will be played by a disc j(x:key</p>
        <p>Friday, Jan. 23 - Saturday, Jan. 24: Silver Wings will perform country</p>
        <p>music Doors open at 8 p.m., and the band will play from 9 p.m. until) a.m.</p>
        <p>The Attic</p>
        <p>Wednesday, Jan. 21: Two comedians, Bill Sacra and Mark Ros.si, will be featured in The Comedy Zone.</p>
        <p>Thursday, Jan. 22: The Assassins will perform.</p>
        <p>^ Friday, Jan. 23; Brice Street will be featured in concert.</p>
        <p>Saturday, Jan 24: Panic will perform.</p>
        <p>Sunday, Jan. 25: Super Bowl XX1 will be shown on the gianttelevision</p>
        <p>SCT(?n.</p>
        <p>The Ixift at the Beef Barn Friday, Jan. 23 - Saturday, Jan, 24: Klee Williams will entertain.</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0130" />
        <p>Comics Collector Makes Childhood Hobby Pay</p>
        <p>|{y  Nh  VVliV</p>
        <p>.\ss&amp;lt;K'iii(&amp;lt;&amp;gt;il Pn*ss Writer DKNVKIl (Ai*) - Chuck Uu/ariski</p>
        <p>bigan icadiiit cuitiic Ivroks when he was 5 years old. By his 12lh hiilluiay</p>
        <p>he was collecting his favoi ites: Seven years later, he opened his first shop in the hack of a haseinent science fiction h(K)kstore llozan.ski gnickly niovcfl fioni the basement to the liig time. Me now owns Mile High Comics, a mail order hiLsiness which he advertises as Americas Largest Comics Ih'aler."</p>
        <p>At any one time, he stores 3 million collector comics. His business generates annual sales of $4 million, counting a distribution firm run by his wife and the five stores he started.</p>
        <p>Success has come as no surprise to the 31-year-old Uozanski, who still loves Disney comics best. In fact, his role model is Uiicle Scrooge, Donald Duck's uncle who owned 2 cubic acres of money.</p>
        <p>ics, and I always knew I would make it, Ro'zanski said. Ive always been able to survive my mistakes. Ive known people who were much smarter, but for some reason they couldnt turn that into anything. Youve got to have the capacity to capitalize on luck and the capacity to survive bad luck.</p>
        <p>door in Michigan offering to shovel snow for neighbors. He also sold pop bottles and fruit.</p>
        <p>Ive given my whole life to corn-</p>
        <p>Born in Bavaria, Rozanski was adopted when he was 4 years old by an American soldier who married hfs mother. He entered the business world at age 6, going from door to</p>
        <p>I still have some of the coins I made when I was 6, he said. Ive always been big on savings and big on investment. I was in elementary school when I put together my first financial portfolio.</p>
        <p>At 14, Rozanski realized his friends were willing to pay top prices for certain old comics, and he began selling them.</p>
        <p>By the time he entered junior high school, his father had retired and moved the family to Colorado Springs, where Rozanski sold comics at flea markets. At 17, he attended his first comics convention.</p>
        <p>Before I opened my first store, I spent the summer living in my mothers car and driving from comic convention to convention, Rozanski said, Id use the money I made at one convention to get a money order and send it on to the next convention to rent booth space. Id sleep on someones floor or on a picnic bench or in the car.</p>
        <p>By summers end, Rozanski had accumulated $800, which he used to open his first shop in Boulder in September 1974.</p>
        <p>Rozanski studied finance at the University of Colorado but dropped out in his senior year when he realized he was making more money than his professors.</p>
        <p>Ask a classic bookseller about the money hes made, and he might quote Tolstoy. Ask Rozanski, and he quotes Uncle Scrooge: I made it by being tougher than the toughies and smarter than the smarties, and I made it SQUARE!</p>
        <p>New Cajun Hero 'Crawfish-Man</p>
        <p>SEARS Runs CARS</p>
        <p>II Alt V K V COMK S  llarvrv riiblu alioiis Inc.. publisher of "Richie Rich, "Casper" and other &amp;lt; omic  lassies, has gone liack to the presses after a four-year hiatus. Ihe onipany is printing half a inillim hooks per month, half what it published in I9S2. (Al* I asi i photol</p>
        <p>NEW ORLEANS (AP)-Look! Out in the swamp! Its a fish! Its a boat!</p>
        <p>Its Crawfish Man!</p>
        <p>Out of the way Superman. Enter Loui.sianas caped crustacean, a Super Hereaux who can stop speeding bullets with his steely shell and leap tall cypress ti-ees at a single bound.</p>
        <p>Inspired by the swamps and bayous of his native Louisiana, author and illustrator Tim Edler has created a Cajun comic b(K)k hero that youngsters here can call their own.</p>
        <p>"In 1979, I was watching the Incredible Hulk on TV and I said to myself. Why dont we have a super hero in Louisiana'.' 1 just sat down at a table and drm Crawfish-Man. the 38-year-old cartoonist said.</p>
        <p>From a pile of Spanish moss, Crawfish-Man leaped into print with giant claws to snare Dark Gator, and a powerful tail to speed across dank swamps to Cypress Castle, borne of the big fat Swamp Witch.</p>
        <p>^ Ediers books, at least 15 now in the series, catch the magical lilt of Cajun French, which has been pas.sed down over two centuries.</p>
        <p>He spins his yarns and distributes the books by mail order. For publicity, he shrouds himself in mystery, refusing photographs except when hes in costume as Crawfish-Man.</p>
        <p>Edler has financed and published approximately lOO.tKK) copies'of his books and tries to break even. He sells insurance and helps his wife in the jewelry business on the side.</p>
        <p>Here is a sample from Crawfish-Mans Christmas tale:</p>
        <p>Santa Clause has been captured by Dark Gator an his pals. Dey tryin to stop Christmas. All duh children of Cajunland are dependin on us fuh a happy Christmas, says one of the characters.</p>
        <p>We muss all join togetha an attack Cypress Castle an save Santa, Crawfish-Man says The plot unfolds. Crawfish-Man and all the animals march on Cypress Castle and battle the Do (horns, nasty winged alligators that do the bidding of the wicked witch. But the witchs ai my is outnumbered and no match for the entire swamp. Saint Nick is out in a jiffy</p>
        <p>ANDIRUnS.</p>
        <p>^ P miimiiB A -  -W-</p>
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        <p>Comic Books Are Staging A Comeback</p>
        <p>(CoMtiiiii(d fiotn (- I I</p>
        <p>and Gambh' Co. /Vllhoiigli il coiilaiii cd no newomics only Sunday c;u loHislnpipiinis the in.CXlcopKs ()f I'llilliies 'II Iai.ide " well' ;i big, bit</p>
        <p>III I9.M. the lust to cent comic biMik, I'aiiioii:; I'lniiiics. Scries 1. was sold ill (liaiii stoics Oilier.s followed, including Supennan, Batman, Ca.sjMT, Archie and I'oiky I'if' The liisl coiine hook (onveiilion was held in I'.Hd (oincidin)t with a r'newed IHipulai it V among colh'tie students Today, the iridiisti v is:aic.s de|c tive,'siijM&amp;gt;rheid. honir, lomanee. po lilical. S' irnr In lion and inanv othei lv(H'solcoimc ImhiKs About 130 iniHioii idinic hiHiks aie sold aiiiuiatly. accoiding to Maggie 'I lioinpsoii,  (I editor ot Comies Buyer Giinle 'Ihev i.oig.e in pnee frnm 75  (ills to and liom $4 9.5 to $141)5 Ion nine book novels (inne book nianiilaelnii is aie</p>
        <p>lebcniv yp*iim&amp;gt;nting and honing Iheir liaiid irlwoik At D' Batman and vSupernran have Ihvm revamped The Dark Knight series hnrks at Batman as dark, lealistic, violent, says tVggy May, DCs publicity marrager. SujHM tnan has Irecome more vulnerable, she said.</p>
        <p>To celebrate its 25tli anniversary last year, Marvel introduced New Universe  titles, featuring characters who exist in the real world, age</p>
        <p>in actual time and affect the lives of others.</p>
        <p>In the past two years, black and white comic txHrks have grahlred 8 pt'reent to 9 jHreent of the business, says Hick Dhadiah, president and publisher of First (omics, inc.. in Chicago.</p>
        <p>"There were (almost) no black and white comics from about 197,5 on, he said.</p>
        <p>Then "Teenage Mutant Ninja Tur ties hit the sjnicialty stores two</p>
        <p>S/ide Program Available</p>
        <p>A 45 miliule k'ctuie and slide program on tire historic and ni(Hl rn roles of women in Japan has k'eri prepared by the Japan Center East at East Cat rima Ihiiversity and is available for public showing.</p>
        <p>The program tiepicts the evolution of womens roles in Japan from ancient limes to Ihe pi '.sent in slides and a written commentary t)asd on n'search in both pi Hilary and secondary materials. Dr. Roh rt Govven, [nofi-ssor of Irisfo I y and diicior of Japan Center East, said.</p>
        <p>years ago. The Ninja spoof debuted with 3,(KX) issues at $1.75 a shot. Those early issues now fetch $75. In November, Obadiahs company reprinted those early editions as a $9.95 color graphic novel.</p>
        <p>But the boom period for comic iMKrks wont last forever, many in the indu.stry say.</p>
        <p>With the flMid of product that is entering the market today ... we are going to see a settling out, Overstreet said. Some of the publishers will make it and some wont. I think comic fandom will become jaded, tired of all the black and white comic books coming out.</p>
        <p>But for now, those in the industry agi'ee: Its up, up and away.</p>
        <p>ECU Gospel Choir To Cut Album</p>
        <p>(( MllilHH'd IllUII (' I I</p>
        <p>said And w lurid i.iHt'd'lo ga't lli othei siippoil. '</p>
        <p>Alter tile lei'iiding .Satind.iy, it will lake .ihoul a iiieiilh Ixbnt' the album will he dc'ti ihnled, she said</p>
        <p>Th*ie will he l.atMialbums in the first hulk b&amp;gt; Ik' s)I1 at $8 each by choir meiiiln'is The clinir. organized in 1971) al ECU. was list'i in the' top seven choiis ceiigH'tmg during the 1988 Carolina (osjH'lh'st, sponsored by</p>
        <p>McDonald's, Ms. Wooten said The choir won second place in the 1985 contest and is now using the prize, a puhlie address system, to re cord the alhum The choir also is ac companied hv a synthesizer, lead guitar, bass guitar, drums and piano</p>
        <p>Readings</p>
        <p>HAVEKllILL. Mass. lAP) -Stephen King. Kurt Vonnegut, John Updike and seven other celebrated authors are gathering for a series of readings to raise money for a little-known writer of short stories who was crippled by a car.</p>
        <p>Andre 1 tubus. .51). has run up about $1(K).(KH) m hospital bills since he was run down .luly 23 after stopping to helj) another motorist in tr ouble</p>
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        <p>The Dally Reflector, Greenville, N.C,</p>
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        <p>9:30  10:00  10:30</p>
        <p>700 Club</p>
        <p>Movie; The Sons Of Katie Elder"</p>
        <p>Championship Skating</p>
        <p>Highway To Heaven</p>
        <p>New Mike Hammer</p>
        <p>P. Strangers Head Class</p>
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        <p>Marcus Welby,M,D.</p>
        <p>Movie Show</p>
        <p>"Brief Encounter"</p>
        <p>Movie: "The Three Caballeros"</p>
        <p>Animals</p>
        <p>College Basketball; Villanova at Syracuse</p>
        <p>Movie: "Stripes"</p>
        <p>Call To Glory</p>
        <p>Regis Philbin's Lifestyles</p>
        <p>Movie: Just One Of The Guys"</p>
        <p>Movie: Missing In Action 2: The Beginning"</p>
        <p>Movie: "Torchlight"</p>
        <p>Airwolf</p>
        <p>Hitchhiker</p>
        <p>Hitchhiker</p>
        <p>Or. Ruth Show</p>
        <p>Movie: American Flyers"</p>
        <p>Movie: Mask"</p>
        <p>Movie: "Pale Rider"</p>
        <p>College Basketball: Houston at SMU</p>
        <p>Riptide</p>
        <p>Wednesday, January 21,1987 C-3</p>
        <p>Singer Robert Cray Shows Surge As Black Bluesman</p>
        <p>Channel listings above are for Greenville cable. WITN telecasts on Channel 7, WNCT on Channel 9 and WRAL on Channel 5. _</p>
        <p>For complete TV programming information, consult your weekly TV SHOWTIME from Sunday's Daily Reflector.</p>
        <p>By JIM KELTON</p>
        <p>L.A. Times-Washington Post News Service</p>
        <p>Already 1987 looks like it is going to be Robert Crays year.</p>
        <p>With two classy albums behind him and a third (Strong Persuader) generating extraordinary interest, Cray is in a position to become one of the most popular young black bluesman in the world.</p>
        <p>He has never sounded better, and he has the international promotion and distribution of the Polygram organization on his new album. Interest in the blues also seems to be on the rise.</p>
        <p>Still, Crays case is unique - more unusual than most people imagine.</p>
        <p>He is, to begin with, one of the few young black muesmen working anywhere. The blues have largely been given over in the past two decades to</p>
        <p>A Movie Review</p>
        <p>'Wanted' Is Dead On Arrival</p>
        <p>By MICHAEL HEALY L.A. Times-Washington Post News Service</p>
        <p>Wanted: Dead or Alive is a bit of despicable nonsense ripped off from the old Wild West TV show that starred Steve McQueen. The only connection between the movie and the TV series is some absolutely hideous harmonica playing on the sound track that is supposed to give the present-day setting in Los Angeles an old-timey feel. It does not.</p>
        <p>Bounty hunter Nick Randall (Rutger Hauer) is supposed to be the grandson of Josh Randall, another bounty hunter, as if hunting down wanted men for a reward were some kind of genetically inherited gift. Nick does not like his work any more than he liked working for the CIA. He wants to refinish his boat, the H.M.S. Bounty (get it?) and sail off with his new-found love, Terry (Mel Harris),</p>
        <p>who is not only a stewardess but also a Ph.D. candidate in anthropology. This is not enough to make her interesting, but Randall does not mind. She gives him an antique harmonica, which he plays even worse than the guy on the sound track.</p>
        <p>Meanwhile, an Arab terrorist has snuck into America and blown up a movie house where Rambo is playing. Perhaps Malak A1 Rahim (Gene Simmons) has a background in film criticism. At any rate, we are sup-p(ed to think of this as a dastard y crime, which brings Malak to the attention of the CIA, and Randalls old Company buddy Phil Walker (Robert Guillaume) talks him into taking on the Malak case. If he can capture the terrorist in a week, he will be paid $250,000. If captured alive, Malak is worth another $50,000. Nice work if you can get it.</p>
        <p>The problem is that Malak and</p>
        <p>BENEFIT PERFORMANCE  Television traveler-commentator Charles Kuralt, left, and Charlotte musician Loonis McGlohon, a native of Ayden, will give a benefit performance of North Carolina Is My Home at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill on Friday. Proceeds will go to the Wallace H. Kuralt Chair, the first endowed chair in the school of social work at UNC-Chapel Hill. (AP Laserphoto)</p>
        <p>All Seats $2.25 Everyday Til 5:30 P/T)</p>
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        <p>Randall are old enemies, and the CIA is using our boy as bait to bring the terrorist out in the open. The CIA has contacts in the Arab community who inform Malak of Randall's every move.</p>
        <p>This is one of those deeply stupid and racist movies that sees every owner of a falafel stand as a potential mass murderer. If any other ethnic or religious group were subjected to the kind of mindless hatred this movie directs at the Arabs, people would scream. But hating Arabs en masse is treated as just good clean shoot-em-up fun in Wanted: Dead or Alive.</p>
        <p>The committee that wrote this</p>
        <p>Salesman</p>
        <p>(Continued from C-l)</p>
        <p>while sound used vans cost between $3,000 and $8,000.</p>
        <p>Modifications cost extra. A lift may run between $600 and $700, while specialized driving systems may cost between a few hundred dollars and $20,000, he said.</p>
        <p>(ienera says he will drive to a potential customers house if that person has trouble getting out.</p>
        <p>About half the time I will talk to them about the vans. The other half is a lot of interrelating. Were on the same wavelength. For one thing, we see eye to eye, he said.</p>
        <p>Minnie's TV</p>
        <p>NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) - Grand Ole Opry comedian Minnie Pearl says shes taken to watching cable television and isnt always thrilled by what she sees, especially when shes watching herself.</p>
        <p>It has what you might call, extended my TV world, said the 74-year-old star, whose real name is Sarah Cannon and is known for her flowered hat with its dangling price tag.</p>
        <p>It has been extremely embarrassing for me to watch myself. Why did I do or say that? I asc myself again and again. My appearance bugs me, too,  she said. 1 keep hoping to look aiiierent on a live concert stage in costume, with the help of makeup professionals and soft lighting. But Ive come to the conclusion I look the same silly way no matter how expe-antii</p>
        <p>rienced the lighting technicians are.</p>
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        <p>sucker tried desperately to come up with some kind of plot to keep Hauer blasting away at the rag heads (can you believe it?) for as long as possible, torturing and killing and being righteously brutal. What the geniuses came up with is the attempt to cause a Bhopal-style industrial accident, which fizzles out rather than coming to a conclusion. No matter.</p>
        <p>Handsome Hauer totes many handsome weapons and gives line readings that are so strange and wimpery that he might easily be mistaken for a Martian. Hauer was most impressive as the man-made replicant in Blade Runner, but he seems to have skipped his last few 50,000 mile check-ups. Get thee back to the factory for a tune up. Rut.</p>
        <p>The action s^uences, the only reason for this films existence, are ineptly staged and shot, and they are separated by long stretches of wasted film in which nothing happens. Actually, the whole film is just a shaggy dog story that builds up to one sadistic punch line, the utter destruction of the villain, that will appeal to the beast in us all.</p>
        <p>There is no earthly reason to see this film.</p>
        <p>Distributed by the Los Angeles Times-Washington Post News Service</p>
        <p>veteran black musicians or to their young white followers. Most of the leading blues stars, with the exception of B.B. King and Albert King, have died off, leaving a lot of empty shoes that have not been filled. Lost are such giants of the art as Muddy Waters, Howlin Wolf, Magic Sam, Freddie King and Lightnin Hopkins.</p>
        <p>Second, when Cray got his start in the mid-1970s, the blues were in a state of steep decline. Their value to the rock audience had been amply demonstrated and they were perhaps falling out of fashion.</p>
        <p>In any case, along came Cray, and he hung on through mostly tough times until the end of the decade. He landed a recording contract at that point with the Tomato label and made an album that was released sparingly.</p>
        <p>Next, Tomato rather abruptly went out of business. As a result, most of the companys performers went unpaid and Tomato records (which were no longer in production) quickly became collectors items.</p>
        <p>Cray had to wait until the mid-80s before a similar opportunity arrived. At that time he signed with Hightone, a small California label. His first two LPs for that outfit, False Accusations and Bad Influence, were regular smashes in blues terms and modest though noteworthy pop breakthroughs.</p>
        <p>Married</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (AP)  Singer-com-poser Steve Winwood will divide his time between England and Tennessee now that hes married to a Nashville native, Warner Bros. Records says.</p>
        <p>Winwood, from Birmingham, England, married Eugenia Crafton last weekend at the Fifth Avenue Presbyterian Church during a private ceremony, the record company said in a statement.</p>
        <p>Winwood was recently nominated for five Grammys, including best pop vocalist and prciducer of the year, for his album Back in the High Life.</p>
        <p>His wife is a recent graduate of Nashvilles Belmont College.</p>
        <p>Neither of those records captured Crays raw, in-person energy, though.</p>
        <p>What the first two Hightone albums proved, on the other hand, was that he was a solid studio craftsman with a good head for writing original tunes. His arrangements were tight, and h)s songs were varied, strangely enthralling and slightly eerie.</p>
        <p>With Strange Persuader, the live Cray and the studio Cray met in a manner that added up to nothing more or less than a low-keyed blockbuster.</p>
        <p>Cray sounded as though he were holding back a hurricane.</p>
        <p>And by achieving that, by paring down his style to its minimum and then rebuilding it not in imitation of his blues mentors but in his styles own best interest, he created an original voice, one that was entirely his own.</p>
        <p>And that is the most important thing that a bluesman must do if he is ever to gain the respect of his peers. Otherwise, he is forever (as many are) referred to as B.B. Jr. or Little Wolf.</p>
        <p>No, the element of originality is everything in the blues, and the delightful thing in Crays case is that it has brought him fame and (hopefully ) some degree of fortune.</p>
        <p>It most certainly has established him as the foremost young bluesman of his day and as his musical forms greatest hope.</p>
        <p>Sale of electricity today generally is based on kilowatt hours. A kilowatt hour is the amount of electrical energy needed to operate a 100-watt lightbulb for 10 hours.</p>
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        <pb facs="00096520_0132" />
        <p>Airline Lost-Found Has Everything From Key To Teeth</p>
        <p>By SHARON DIRLAM</p>
        <p>L.A. Times-Washington Post News Service</p>
        <p>After a flight from Paris to New York, and a layover at John F. Kennedy Airport, and halfway through the five-hour flight from New York to Los Angeles, a travelers new dentures were giving him a big pain. He groggily took out the partial plate and slipped it into the seat pocket in front of him. Then he could nap more comfortably.</p>
        <p>His wife picked him up at the airport and drove him home. In the car, Pierre Venant remembered that he had left his dentures in the seat pocket.</p>
        <p>It was late when Venant called American Airlines and reported the loss. He was told that they would phone him in the morning if the teeth were found.</p>
        <p>Nobody phoned, so he called the next day. This time he was told that the plane he was on had gone on to Dallas and had not been cleand during its stop in Los Angeles, and that furthermore from Dallas it went on to Honolulu. In any case, his teeth didnt show up in any of those destinations.</p>
        <p>Next, Venant decided to confront someone at American Airlines in person at Los Angeles International Airport. This time he was told that there was no way to trace the missing dentures.</p>
        <p>After three weeks and several more phone calls, Venant decided to file a claim against American Airlines for $5,000 to pay for a new partial plate. The claim was denied.</p>
        <p>Airlines rejwrt that they generally dont take the blame for items lost by the traveler. Their main concern is the luggage that is tagged and transported by the airline.</p>
        <p>The loss of carry-on items are treated as an inconvenience for the person that we do try to deal with, said Larry Gottardi, spokesman for American Airlines. If they leave behind something worth less than $10, even, well keep it around for 15 days. Something expensive, cameras or jewelry, for instance, well keep for 60 days. Cash, well keep for six months.</p>
        <p>Basically, if an item is not tendered to us, we dont take responsibility for it, explained Jerry Trop, manager of consumer affairs for United Airlines.</p>
        <p>The story of the missing dentures didnt surprise Trop. We get two or three a month, he said. And recently someone left behind an artificial leg. If people call us and identify their item, well return it.</p>
        <p>Other things that passengers have left behind on airplanes include wheelchairs, movie scripts, briefcases, cameras, jewelry, coats, car keys, eyeglasses, fi I m, even money.</p>
        <p>We may have 40 or 50 London Fog topcoats, Trop said, but usually theres no way to match them with a caller. The same with prescription eyeglasses. How do you know whose they are?</p>
        <p>Generally, each airline has its own method of dealing with lost and found, and airports have their own system as well. Theres not necessarily much coordination between the two, and theres really no standard procedure.</p>
        <p>If something is lost in an airports main terminal, we encourage the finder to turn it in to the local airport authority, Trop said. But if its left at the gate, then well take custody of it.</p>
        <p>Lost and found, according to Trop, is dealt with as a service to the customer, but at the bottom line its really not a high priority.</p>
        <p>Yet, as James A. Arey, spokesman for Pan American World Airways, noted, The transportation industry has a pretty good record on getting lost items back to people. Your chances of getting something back are certainly better than things that you lose in a department store or a sports stadium or even city hall.</p>
        <p>The best advice is to hang on to your belongings. And the next best advice is to label the things you might lose so that you can identify them if someone turns them in.</p>
        <p>Tear-gas canisters, knives, scissors and plastic guns that security personnel confiscate from boarding passengers also make their way to lost and found.</p>
        <p>Cleanup crews around the airport report finding such stuff in the trash cans as dynamite, batteries, weapons and illegal drugs, often dumped just outside a security checkpoint.</p>
        <p>Drugs are not infrequently left aboard planes, too, noted Arey, spokesman for Pan Am. Probably by people who planned to smuggle them in to the U.S., and decided it was too risky. People do get cold feet. Or theyll find out halfway across the (K-ean that theyre not allowed to bring in that salami or those fresh flowers, so they leave them on the plane.</p>
        <p>Pan Am has its own lost and found at each terminal, but like the other airlines it only wants to handle items left in its own areas. If a passenger has been in and out of our area and doesnt know where the item was lost, that does compound the problem, he said.</p>
        <p>While other airlines keep lost and found items at the individual airports. United ships unclaimed articles to a central warehouse at OHare International Airport in Chicago after three days.</p>
        <p>We try to find the owner, trop said. But it is time-consuming and we can only do so much, particularly with things that arent labeled with the owners name. Only a small percentage of the property is ever claimed, he said.</p>
        <p>Of 50 cartons of materials that come in to the Chicago clearinghouse, maybe 50 to 70 items a week, or 8 percent to 10 percent, find their way back to their owner, Trop estimated. Theyre kept for 90 days and then given to charity.</p>
        <p>American Airlines is still waiting for someone to call in and prove they lost a pair of moose antlers or a complete set of sails for a 12-meter racing yacht. They also have a harpooners pulpit and an artificial leg.</p>
        <p>United Airlines has a book of baby pictures dated 1955, a play book for a football team, and a script for the ABC soap opera, Ryans Hope.</p>
        <p>Author Picks 'Best' Retirement Locations</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP) - Would you retire to New Jersey? Or Oklahoma? Or Wisconsin?</p>
        <p>Not all of the best retirement havens are in the Sun Belt, which has attracted so many elderly Americans, reports the author of a new book on the subject.</p>
        <p>Peter A. Dickinson, who wrote Sunbelt Retirement a few years ago, has now addressed the rest of the nation  and finds plenty more places to settle down in the golden years,</p>
        <p>Comedians may make light of New Jersey, for example, but Dickinson says l)iat "if you avoid the ugly cities and set'k the* lovely countryside and seashore, you'll know why this is called the Garden State.</p>
        <p>The Jersey shore rates excellent in his new book. Retirement Edens; Outside the Sunbelt." He cites the beautiful shore and countryside and closeness to the attractions of major cities.</p>
        <p>Turning attention westward. Oklahoma "is more than just OK. says Dickinson. "It's on its way to becoming a new retirement mecca as more people discover it as a great place to visit and a better place to stay.</p>
        <p>Both Muskogee and Miami. Okla.. rate excellent in his listing. He cites the variable climate, low-cost health care and housing and a low cost of living in general, as well as lots of recreation and services for seniors.</p>
        <p>Wisconsin's sometimes stern winters don't dissuade Dickinson, who gives his top retirement recommendation to both Green Bay and Madison.</p>
        <p>The Great Lakes help moderate the climate, he points out. while medical</p>
        <p>care facilities are excellent, there is a wide choice of recreational oppr-tunities and plenty of specialized services for seniors. One note of caution though - taxes are tough. he comments.</p>
        <p>States where Dickinson found communities he considers excellent choices for retirement were Colorado. Connecticut. Illinois. Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts. Minnesota, Missouri, Nevada. New Hampshire, New Jersey. New York, northern California. Oklahoma. Oregon. Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Tennessee, Utah. Vermont, Virginia. Washington and Wisconsin.</p>
        <p>What makes a retirement eden*?"</p>
        <p>Dickinson observes that no one place is right for everyone - if it were, everyone would go* there.</p>
        <p>So he assesses the features of the 37 states he considers to be outside the Sun Belt.</p>
        <p>Not all of them rate good or excellent as retirement places, and he bases his choices on a variety of criteria including climate, cost of living, housing variety and cost, medical facilities, recreational and cultural activities and special services for senior citizes.</p>
        <p>Climate likely has been a major factor in the movement to Sun Belt states in recent years, as many elderly persons sought to avoid extreme winters by heading South and West.  ,</p>
        <p>Yet not everyone wants a warm even climate, and even the perpetual moderation of San Francisco may not suit people accustomed to the challenge of four seasons. Millions remain retired in Northern states, enjoying their weather for the most part.</p>
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        <p>when you buy any size or variety 100% Natural KRAfT Chunk Cheese</p>
        <p>OfTMflk Kralt, lee will relmburee you lor the lace value ol ihli coupon plut It it aubmlttid In cempliiiici with Kralt'i Coupon Redemption Peliey. ...........</p>
        <p>previoutly provided to retailer and Incorporated by reterince hereik wM wkeri taxed, reitricted orprohlbltui Caib value 1100t #2I0,1 Fawcett Ol. Del Ole. n</p>
        <p>coupon PtR ITtM PURCHASio -</p>
        <p>fo taxM, reitncted or nrohl Mall to faftt, Ik. (m, CM M. #2OIO, 71041. Otter fnte mmToi COUPOH RlOaMPRMIPTLr</p>
        <p>EIGOO EE7fll</p>
        <p>00</p>
        <p>27</p>
        <p>MANUFACTURER S COUPON I EXPIRATION DATE: 6/30/87</p>
        <p>SAVEZtK</p>
        <p>idien you buy two 1-lb PARKAY Margarine Sticks -or - one 1-ib. bottle of SQUEEZE PARKAY Margarine</p>
        <p>20^</p>
        <p>HliUUII: Rratt, Inc will reimburie you tor the tace value ot this coupon plui 8( II lubmitted In compliance with Kralt I Coupon Redemption Policy, previously provided to retailer and Incorporated by reler-ence herein Void where taxed, restricted or prohibited Catb value 1 toot Mail to Iratt, toe. (RFC). CMS Oepl. wBoOO, 1 Fawcett Di, Dal Me, n 7H4D. Otter E:</p>
        <p>CHAStO-RmCMPRi</p>
        <p>TLY</p>
        <p>AMO</p>
        <p>II, leOTw  a  a Wtrwtt  i^l</p>
        <p>: A3037. OlVf COUPOH PR HIM PUR</p>
        <p>ElOGO LESb?</p>
        <p>000'3 5</p>
        <p>MANUFACTURER S COUPON EXPIRATION DATE: 6 30/87</p>
        <p>S4VE15</p>
        <p>when you buy one 1-Ib. or 2-Ib. package of VELVEETA Pasteurized Process Cheese Spread, any variety</p>
        <p>15</p>
        <p>RCTMUII: Krett. Inc will relmburee you lor the lace value ol Ihit coupon</p>
        <p>plot SC II aubmlttid In compliance with Kralt i Coupon Redemption hillcy. provlouily provided to retailer and Incorporate herein wid where tued, reitricted or prohibited Cat!</p>
        <p>Mail to Kntt toe. (mi, CM 7M4D. Otter EniraK iV7 REOeCM PROMPTLY</p>
        <p>irtcted or prohlbiteil Caih value 1 lOOt Deal. #21000,1 Fawcett Dr.. Del Me, n</p>
        <p>. ant COUPOH per item purchased </p>
        <p>MB7-5</p>
        <p>EIDOO EE7L3</p>
        <p>00</p>
        <p>5A10</p>
        <p>|2(K I I I I</p>
        <p>MANUFACTURER S COUPON | EXPIRATION DATE: R3Q/87</p>
        <p>SAVE2(K</p>
        <p>whea you buy any varlrty 8-01. or larger 100% Natural KRAFT Shicdded Cbeeae</p>
        <p>RE1SI1R: Kratl. Inc will relmburee you lor the lace vilue ol thli coupon plus 1C It tubmHtod In cempliance with Kralt i Coupon Redemption Pol Icy. areviouaty provided lo retailer and Incorprh rated by reterince herein Void where taxed, re i^d or prohibited Caih value 1100( Mali to ^.toc (imcuiDiwi. #2im, 1 Fawcett fc, W Me. nf 7!lltor Ei^ t,WV.</p>
        <p>OHE COUPOH PER ITEM PURCHaSd - REDEEM PROMPTLY</p>
        <p>2(K</p>
        <p>^wiiArfk</p>
        <p>sc;710</p>
        <p>ElODO EEA3E</p>
        <p>21</p>
        <p>00</p>
        <p>56</p>
        <p>40^</p>
        <p>( MANUFACTURER COUPON/NO EXPIRATION DATE )</p>
        <p>40'</p>
        <p>SAVE40</p>
        <p>ON VOUR NEXT PURCHASE OE</p>
        <p>Bushels of Taste</p>
        <p>40^</p>
        <p>COnSUWin one - to one cotoon tf Mcugv</p>
        <p>PurrljiM</p>
        <p>nnaiun xellocg saiEScompanv w- n</p>
        <p>X,(n I' KComnKI mW ail rfOemiVion OOiCy cotm jDon mucsl Cun vtiue '  OW VM nr-r i)(onibii! iMW a rumcwi ov &amp;gt; Uav counni lo</p>
        <p>DEPT po 8o&amp;gt; ?oo?o ft PASO T* rwte xeiloga Comoany '91 Xenogg Com*mv</p>
        <p>3800C</p>
        <p>56340</p>
        <p>35</p>
        <p>( MANUFACTURER COUPON/NO EXPIRATION DATE )</p>
        <p>35'</p>
        <p>SAVE 35*</p>
        <p>ON TtXlR NEXT PURCHASE OE</p>
        <p>How about those Kelloggs Corn Flakes now?</p>
        <p>Ujwaueifn .XV. joooj'WviufVCiPTvnguspvnQ  V Mcxtgv: *x s le one ioaxn' or Mcnaflv X'cnuvil</p>
        <p>nnanih , ,oc sn.ES compauv w vown ru . :\jooi' 1' KconUntf nm ov vdenxWon oetc, .ornu Ai-'Kw uoon 'tqueu Ca# &amp;gt;M 1''001 MM onrv p'omtii'eo iiwd a etmcM to '# couwmi ic OEPT. Poi(B?oa?OEi.toso n-esei  VO09 L.vnoanv '91XMOOO Conxn&amp;gt;</p>
        <p>as*'</p>
        <p>38000 50135</p>
        <p>( MANUFACTURER COUPON/NO EXPIRATION DATE')</p>
        <p>25'</p>
        <p>SAVE 25</p>
        <p>ON YOUR NEXT PURCHASE OF .</p>
        <p>High Fiber</p>
        <p>25</p>
        <p>CONSUMER: Otter gooOon Ni sias EXCEPT smgN-senrmg sire pacliaees end is limled to one coupon per paiAage purchased</p>
        <p>nniUltR: KELLOGG SALES COMPANY mil redeem this coupdn m accordance nth our rvdemplion policy copies availalile upon reouesl Cash value t/tOM Void vhere prolvliited taxed or restncted by law Mail coupons lo DEPT K PO Box 20070 EL PASO, TX 79996  Kelloflfl Company 1987 KeHogg Company</p>
        <p>Good on any variety ALL-BRAN</p>
        <p>38000 52325</p>
        <p>THIS MAIL IN OFFER FORM MUST ACCOMPANY REQUEST</p>
        <p>PIEAKSEMMVIIEFUWTO;</p>
        <p>Name</p>
        <p>Miracle Whip Coupon Refund</p>
        <p>too 32 ox or liroar lan ol MIRACLE WHIP DrotilM or MIRACLE WHIP Light Reduced I Salad Oreitlng</p>
        <p>Address.</p>
        <p>.Apt</p>
        <p>City.</p>
        <p>State.</p>
        <p>Zip.</p>
        <p>MIT: Itoo 32 ox or I sued DrssilM or M</p>
        <p>Calorie Salad Oreitlng _</p>
        <p>SOD: Itoo prMli-ol-pwchata MMRP Irom 32 oi or larger Jars ol MIRACLE WHIP Salad Drauing or miracle whip llgbl Reduced Calorie Silid Dressing.</p>
        <p>RECEIVE: St 00 coupon good on tho purchest ol any - brand  otiunchmiil</p>
        <p>I... e . u u. .. ..  Hnro  Coupon Rtlund.</p>
        <p>(Allow 0 8 wsoks lor dellvtry) rq Dos 725, DapI 1606, Lubbock. TxTm95</p>
        <p>OFFER EXPIRES S.30/ST REQUESTS FOR OFFER FORMS TO TINS PO SOI NUMIER OR IRAH WILL NOT IE ACINOWIEDOED LIMIT ONE OFFER PER FAMILY OR ADDRESS TMi eHir Hed Mb la U S A . Ni ttrrlHilM and mHRa^aMmui I wMcA IMi Otlti Fsmi la ilaplnte w aSvsniaee ViM amen taaal. raaMcltl or eroAIMM OUPIICATE REQUESTS WILL CONSTmiTI FRAUD THEn, DIVERSION. REPRODUCTION SAU OR PURCHASE OF THIS FORM IS PROHMITEO LWITONE REQUEST PER ERVELOPE PnMa Mpunkiaa aaAfliNtM ly civla er eifMliMlMa all Ml kakiMrte</p>
        <p>Praol ot eenAaio aod mall I* Mrm mol te MrwarM lo oe oovoloeo arith aoltlcloor lat clau poatoea Moll wllA InulNclool ootlMO wW lo rotanwd</p>
        <p>MANUFACTURER'S COUPON | EXPIRATION DATE: 6/30/87</p>
        <p>S4VE1S</p>
        <p>when yon buy KRAfT Dressings, any size or flavor</p>
        <p>IKTAIUI: Kntt, toe. will nimbwsa you lor the lace value ol Dili coepoe plus IQ II submmed to compll-inca with Kntl't Cdepea RidempUoa Policy, prevl-outly providid to retailer and iRcereorstad ly raltr-enca hareie. Void where taiei, restricted or prohibited Cash vilee 1/100t. Mall to tatt, lec. mj, CMS 8ipL #m, 1 Fawcett 8i, Bel Me, n 7MI. Otter Expires: IWn. Wf COI/POiV Pf/i ITEM PURCHASED  REDEEM PROMPTLY</p>
        <p>15^</p>
        <p>^WAFT^</p>
        <p>K7-7</p>
        <p>21D0Q L3010</p>
        <p>000</p>
        <p>34</p>
        <p>MANUFACTURER'S COUPON  EXPIRATION DATE: 6 30/87</p>
        <p>S4VE15</p>
        <p>' when you buy any variety 12-oz. or larger KRAfT Singles pasteurized process cheese food</p>
        <p>RETAUR: Kntt. Inc. will reimbons you lor the lice value ol this coupon plus It It submitted In compliincs with Kratt's Coupon Rodomption Policy, previoutly provided to ntillsr and incorponud by ntennce horein Void where taxed, nstrictid orprohlbildiT Cash vafua 1100C Mail to Kntt, Inc. (mi, CM IM. #21MD, 1 Fcwcctt Di, Del Me, n 7M4D. Oftw Enim: n87. OHE COUPOH PER ITEM PURCHmO </p>
        <p>HOMPTLY</p>
        <p>15^</p>
        <p>REDEEM PRO</p>
        <p>^WAFfk</p>
        <p>21000 22567</p>
        <p>MC7-4</p>
        <p>21000</p>
        <p>12</p>
        <p>15</p>
        <p>2m</p>
        <p>I MANUFACTURER'S COUPOM | EXPIRATION DATE 6 30 87</p>
        <p>S4VE25</p>
        <p>when yon buy 3 KRAfT Macaroni and Cheese Dinners 7'/i-oz.y H'/z-oz. or 5'/z-oz. Spirals</p>
        <p>RET8AER: KnR. Inc will nimburtt you lor tho taco vcluo ol this coupon plot 8t It aubmlttid In cofflpUmco wllh Kratl a Coupon Rndomptton Pol-id to ntallir and IncatpinM by ntennce hinlN OD Maine e.Tl</p>
        <p>25&amp;lt;/3</p>
        <p>Icy. pntrliutly provided te retalli Veld when laiad. natrlctid ir prohUNid Cash valee 1/1 Kralt. lac. (m|, CUKOapt. #218M, 1 FawcanH, DallHa, t '  ~  tmm.  OHE  COUPOH PER ITEM PURCHASED-</p>
        <p>78841.</p>
        <p>REDEEM</p>
        <p>L7-3</p>
        <p>21000 L27L1</p>
        <p>UUU lUL</p>
        <p>2(K</p>
        <p>MANUFACTURER'S COUPON | EXPIRATION DATE. 6/30/87</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>gnr.f</p>
        <p>1 [</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>S4VE20</p>
        <p>iuyou bm uy size CARROLL SHELBY'S ICINAL liXAS BRAND CUli Nix</p>
        <p>2(K</p>
        <p>^AFtJ CS7-2</p>
        <p>wbn</p>
        <p>ORI</p>
        <p>CHASED-REDEEMPROMPTLY  733.,^^</p>
        <p>50</p>
        <p>C MANUFACTURER CX3UP0N/N0 EXPIRATION DATE )</p>
        <p>50'</p>
        <p>SAVE50</p>
        <p>ON VOUB NEXT purchase Of</p>
        <p>Fiber-rich Bran Flakes</p>
        <p>50</p>
        <p>CONSUMin, 0% good on di wn except wgie sefvioo</p>
        <p>SUV DXCkigK rd limnni to nt couoon pti geciuge (Xjrchjsed</p>
        <p>nniuun keljigg sales company i r^Nm itus couoon m KConlince wm oof rwemohon ooKy toom , lYMibb uoon rwiuvil CAsTnrHtje t'tODI Yd hert orobbwd UMd Of fwincted by la* Mm couoons lo OEPT K PO Bov ?(XQ El PAS'; TX 79996  iWogQ Comeinv 1987 KiVogg Comianv</p>
        <p>5  3  000  52150</p>
        <p>C MANUFACTURER COUPON/NO EXPIRATION DATE ^</p>
        <p>25'</p>
        <p>SAVE 25</p>
        <p>ON YOUR NEXT PURCHASE OP</p>
        <p>Wholesome new flavor... its naturally sweet.</p>
        <p>CONSUWEn Crfty- .j |o on coubon Ot- Mdugv bufcniud</p>
        <p>nnAIUn KE, ,0GG sales company -Mvtm It.5 cwwn *1 KconUncv nth out mdemceon oovcy coos MiUbM upon fvqiiM CMhvwut t'tOOl Aoidih,fv bhXMxwd ttMd Of twvaid by la* Mat coooom to OfPTx PO 8 20020 EL PASO T* 79991  *099 Comomy tH7 KMafg Compwfy</p>
        <p>25*'</p>
        <p>Good on try variety NUTRI'GRAIN</p>
        <p>38000 53025</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0133" />
        <p>RYE, MULTIGRAIN, HONEYWHEAT OR WHITE</p>
        <p>The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C._Wednesday,  January  21,1987  C-5</p>
        <p>ARE THE HOLIDAYS BEHIND YOU ?</p>
        <p>TAKE IT OFF AT THESE DE LITE FUL COST CUTTER PRICES</p>
        <p>KROGER LITE MAYONNAISE, WEIGHT WATCHERS SALAD DRESSING OR</p>
        <p>LO-CAL</p>
        <p>Bread</p>
        <p>Mayonnaise</p>
        <p>Margarine</p>
        <p>KROGER</p>
        <p>1/2% Lowfat Miik</p>
        <p>IN OIL OR WATER</p>
        <p>Kroger</p>
        <p>Tuna</p>
        <p>1^ nrniM*'</p>
        <p>KROQER QUARTERS</p>
        <p>Lite</p>
        <p>Spread</p>
        <p>6.5</p>
        <p>Oz.</p>
        <p>Can</p>
        <p>4ri299</p>
        <p>Dairy De-Lites</p>
        <p>WEIGHT WATCHERS</p>
        <p>Cottage Cheese .</p>
        <p>LOW-FAT</p>
        <p>Weight Watchers Yogurt..</p>
        <p>12</p>
        <p>Oz.</p>
        <p>Ctn.</p>
        <p>8</p>
        <p>Oz.</p>
        <p>Cup</p>
        <p>79</p>
        <p>49</p>
        <p>ASSORTED</p>
        <p>Weight Watchers Cheese .</p>
        <p>DANNON</p>
        <p>Low Fat Yogurt..</p>
        <p>Frozen De-Lites</p>
        <p>Grocery De-Lites</p>
        <p>OAaOCHmNWITHVK/rA/ WCI ^ UiSTHANXXJCAH-KULS</p>
        <p>KROGER</p>
        <p>Bacon</p>
        <p>Buds......</p>
        <p>KROGER SUGAR FREE ^</p>
        <p>Dutch  5.3</p>
        <p>Cocoa   Pkg.</p>
        <p>SUGAR SUBSTITUTE</p>
        <p>Equal  100</p>
        <p>Sweetener I Box</p>
        <p>KROGER LITE  ^</p>
        <p>Pancake 24 ^ Syrup...</p>
        <p>ASSORTED KROGER</p>
        <p>Light  1-2</p>
        <p>Drink Mix</p>
        <p>ASSORTED</p>
        <p>KROGER</p>
        <p>Sugar Free ^ Geiatins w </p>
        <p>ASSORTED KROGER</p>
        <p>Ute  16-17</p>
        <p>Fruits . . . Can</p>
        <p>ASSORTED KROGER</p>
        <p>Lite Saiad s Dressings Bit</p>
        <p>ENTREES  ^</p>
        <p>Light &amp;amp;  8-11</p>
        <p>Eiegant.  box</p>
        <p>STEAK FRIES OR NATURAL FRIES  ^</p>
        <p>Ore-lda  24 ^</p>
        <p>Lite ....  Bag</p>
        <p>TREESWEET LITE  ^</p>
        <p>Orange  12</p>
        <p>i .  Oz.</p>
        <p>Juice ...  Can</p>
        <p>ASSORTED LITE  STYLE ^</p>
        <p>Le Menu  lo.s</p>
        <p>Dinners .  box</p>
        <p>r/' ASSORTED LITE</p>
        <p>Benihana Dinners.</p>
        <p>WEiGHT WATCHERS</p>
        <p>Double Fudge 12 Treats...... box</p>
        <p>VEAL PARMIGIANA, (SOUTHERN FRtED CHiCKEN 12 OZ.) OR 1</p>
        <p>Weight Watchm e.s' Lasagna. bx</p>
        <p>STRAWBERRY SHORTCAKE, CHOCOLATE CAKE, APPLE PIE OR CHERRY PIE ^</p>
        <p>Weight Watchers s-e^ Desserts Box</p>
        <p>25OFF</p>
        <p>the purchase of any loaf of Low Sodium  0^</p>
        <p>Kroger White or ; Wheat Breads / . r</p>
        <p>NOT TO BE DOUBLED</p>
        <p>i-aa;-    I'l</p>
        <p>'(llj l.iMt'A lllll.l',</p>
        <p>Eipirition Dtt Jinuary 29. 1987</p>
        <p>L krogTc^p^^ "</p>
        <p>25&amp;lt;*OFF</p>
        <p>the purchase of any box of</p>
        <p>Kroger Unsaited Saltines Oyster Crackers, or</p>
        <p>Low Sodium Wheat Crackers</p>
        <p>NOT TO BE DOUBLED</p>
        <p>iV.liW</p>
        <p>  _  Exp&amp;lt;raiion  Data  January  29;  1987  ..n-.  -u  -  ^  ^</p>
        <p>[25^___________[25^</p>
        <p>s C9</p>
        <p>cK|tr* IJJ</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>Expiration Data January 29. 1987  if3|||k</p>
        <p>4Qo</p>
        <p>25OFF</p>
        <p>the purchase of any loaf o*,</p>
        <p> '-rv</p>
        <p>Lite</p>
        <p>Kroger White or Wheat Breads</p>
        <p>NOT TO BE DOUBLED</p>
        <p>"     I."  i'.r  'a</p>
        <p>I-,  *':  &amp;amp;&amp;gt;; . **</p>
        <p>k ** S , .M*'   ti</p>
        <p>*&amp;lt;.! f . V,  ' . . &amp;gt;** 'ro fitMKAi J'a</p>
        <p>Expiration Data January 29 1987</p>
        <p>Items and Prices Effective thru Sat Jan 14,1987</p>
        <p>OPEN 24 HOURS EVERYDAY</p>
        <p>600 GREENVILLE Blvd. - Greenville</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0134" />
        <p>//  copyright</p>
        <p>Kroger sa</p>
        <p>  _ V M  Quantity  N</p>
        <p>Fay0rites..r Kmqer }^fNon</p>
        <p>(Chips ^  ,  w  Beverages</p>
        <p>1987</p>
        <p>Sav-On</p>
        <p>Rights Reserved</p>
        <p>To Dealers</p>
        <p>Items and Prices Effective thru Sat. Jan. 24,1987</p>
        <p>rsav on ei</p>
        <p>cept as spfcificiiiy noted m rnts aa if we do run out of an Item we win offer you vour cnoice of a com paraoie item wnen avanaoie refiKtmg tne same savings ora rainc neck wnicn will entitle you to pur cnase me advertised item at tne advertised price witnm )0 days oniy one vendor coupon win oe ac</p>
        <p>cepted per item</p>
        <p>SANDY MAC</p>
        <p>oiled Ham</p>
        <p>WISHBON</p>
        <p>Fried Chicken</p>
        <p>SAVE'^</p>
        <p>$3j00</p>
        <p>11-OZ. BAG FRITO LAY TORTILLA</p>
        <p>Doritos</p>
        <p>OR</p>
        <p>15-OZ. BAG REGULAR OR RIDGIE WISE</p>
        <p>Potato</p>
        <p>Chips</p>
        <p>Each</p>
        <p>ASSORTED VJ RIETIES REGULAR DIET COKE</p>
        <p>Coke</p>
        <p>Classic</p>
        <p>Ltr.</p>
        <p>NRB</p>
        <p>PREMIUM</p>
        <p>Miller</p>
        <p>Ute</p>
        <p>$</p>
        <p>449</p>
        <p>LIMIT 1</p>
        <p>Ni</p>
        <p>EAGLE SNACK DRY ROASTED OR</p>
        <p>ORVILLE REDENBACHER</p>
        <p>POLAROID'</p>
        <p>Honey Roasted Peanuts</p>
        <p>$&amp;lt;|99</p>
        <p>12</p>
        <p>Oz.</p>
        <p>Can</p>
        <p>Microwave</p>
        <p>Popcorn</p>
        <p>$^79</p>
        <p>.'Polaroid</p>
        <p>1. Video</p>
        <p>T-120 Video Tapes</p>
        <p>WITH $10 OR MORE ADDITIONAL PURCHASE</p>
        <p>i buy 3 '</p>
        <p>;VI&amp;gt;i ri?C</p>
        <p>FREE!</p>
        <p>WITH MAIL-IH REBATE</p>
        <p>4 HEAD WITH WIRELESS REMOTE</p>
        <p>Samsung VCR</p>
        <p>$97096</p>
        <p>^i   MODEL</p>
        <p>MODEL</p>
        <p>VT226T</p>
        <p>Super Bowl Meats For sandwiches And Other Party Pleasers!</p>
        <p>OSCAR MAYER SLICED</p>
        <p>All Beef Bologna</p>
        <p>OSCAR MAYER SLICED</p>
        <p>All Meat Bologna</p>
        <p>OLOE ITALIAN BRAND (16 OZ.) DELUXE OR</p>
        <p>Pepperoni</p>
        <p>Pizza</p>
        <p>3.5</p>
        <p>LOUIS RICH SLICED</p>
        <p>Turkey 12 Variety Pak. P^g</p>
        <p>929</p>
        <p>ALL VARIETIES OLDE ITALIAN BRAND</p>
        <p>Snack Pac Pizza...</p>
        <p>12</p>
        <p>Oz.</p>
        <p>Pkg.</p>
        <p>^99</p>
        <p>ALL VARIETIES OLD VILLAGE</p>
        <p>Smoked</p>
        <p>Sausage.</p>
        <p>Lb.</p>
        <p>99</p>
        <p>OSCAR MAYER</p>
        <p>r All Meat Wieners.</p>
        <p>Lb.</p>
        <p>Pkg.</p>
        <p>469</p>
        <p>KAHN'S SMOKIES OR LITTLE</p>
        <p>Cocktail Wieners.</p>
        <p>Lb.</p>
        <p>Pkg.</p>
        <p>299</p>
        <p>PLUMROSE</p>
        <p>WAGONMASTER</p>
        <p>Sliced Ham..</p>
        <p>Lb.</p>
        <p>Pkg.</p>
        <p>999</p>
        <p>OSCAR MAYER</p>
        <p>All Beef</p>
        <p>Franks..</p>
        <p>Lb.</p>
        <p>Pkg.</p>
        <p>179</p>
        <p>ALL VARIETIES LAND OF FROST</p>
        <p>Chipped Meats..</p>
        <p>2.5</p>
        <p>Oz.</p>
        <p>Pkg.</p>
        <p>49</p>
        <p>ZEN-ZEN SPINACH, MEAT OR SHRIMP</p>
        <p>ALL VARIETIES</p>
        <p>PLUMROSE THIN SLICED HAM OR</p>
        <p>Turkey</p>
        <p>Breast</p>
        <p>20</p>
        <p>Ot</p>
        <p>Pkg</p>
        <p>499</p>
        <p>MICKELBERRY</p>
        <p>WHOLE</p>
        <p>Boneless</p>
        <p>Ham</p>
        <p>Claussen Pickles.. Ea</p>
        <p>159</p>
        <p>FARMLAND OR OLD VIRGINIE WHOLE 7-9 LB. AVG. WGT.  i</p>
        <p>Egg</p>
        <p>Rolls</p>
        <p>16</p>
        <p>Oz.</p>
        <p>Pkg.</p>
        <p>199</p>
        <p>Boneless Ham....</p>
        <p>Lb.</p>
        <p>199</p>
        <p>ALL VARIETIES ABBOTTS FRESH</p>
        <p>Seafood Party Dips</p>
        <p>Oz.</p>
        <p>Pkg.</p>
        <p>199</p>
        <p>CHUNK STYLE</p>
        <p>$949</p>
        <p>Kroger</p>
        <p>Braunschweiger.</p>
        <p>Lb.</p>
        <p>99</p>
        <p>PLUMROSE</p>
        <p>Sliced</p>
        <p>Bacon</p>
        <p>Lb.</p>
        <p>Pkg.</p>
        <p>179</p>
        <p>KROGER CHUNK STYLE</p>
        <p>All Meat Bologna.</p>
        <p>Lb.</p>
        <p>119</p>
        <p>'*5uper Bowi Deiicious</p>
        <p>ff</p>
        <p>seafood And Party Shrimp!</p>
        <p>(KcCluted...</p>
        <p>CAJUN STYLE COOKED PEEL-N-EAT</p>
        <p>Shrimp Party Tray</p>
        <p>  Ea.</p>
        <p>1999</p>
        <p>120 PEEL-N-EAT CAJUN STYLE COOKED SHRIMP</p>
        <p> 16 OZ. COCKTAIL SAUCE..</p>
        <p>PREVIOUSLY FROZEN 36-50 COUNT LARGE</p>
        <p>Headless</p>
        <p>Shrimp</p>
        <p>S</p>
        <p>Lb.</p>
        <p>S99</p>
        <p>MRS. PAUL S CRISPY</p>
        <p>CRUNCHY</p>
        <p>Fish</p>
        <p>Fillets</p>
        <p>$</p>
        <p>21V4</p>
        <p>Oz.</p>
        <p>Pkg.</p>
        <p>339</p>
        <p>MRS. PAUL'S</p>
        <p>CRISPY CRUNCHY</p>
        <p>Fish</p>
        <p>Sticks</p>
        <p>S</p>
        <p>23</p>
        <p>Oz.</p>
        <p>Pkg.</p>
        <p>369</p>
        <p>PREVIOUSLY FROZEN 50-70 CT. MEDIUM</p>
        <p>Headless Shrimp..</p>
        <p>SAU-SEA</p>
        <p>Shrimp Cocktail.</p>
        <p>Lb.</p>
        <p>499</p>
        <p>FROZEN COST CUTTER OEVEINED  I</p>
        <p>Peeled Shrimp..</p>
        <p>Lb.</p>
        <p>Pkg.</p>
        <p>COST CUTTER FROZEN ^</p>
        <p>Fish  ^</p>
        <p>Sticks ..</p>
        <p>Oz.</p>
        <p>Jar</p>
        <p>99</p>
        <p>FROZEN SERVE AND SAVE COOKED  ^</p>
        <p>Salad Shrimp..</p>
        <p>Oz.</p>
        <p>Bag</p>
        <p>189</p>
        <p>COST CUTTER FROZEN</p>
        <p>Fish</p>
        <p>Sticks</p>
        <p>FROZEN 5 OZ. AND UP</p>
        <p>Snow Crab Clusters.</p>
        <p>Fish</p>
        <p>Portions</p>
        <p>FROZEN FRESHORE BREADED</p>
        <p>Butterfly Shrimp..</p>
        <p>16</p>
        <p>Oz.</p>
        <p>Pkg.</p>
        <p>499</p>
        <p>COST CUTTER FROZEN BREADED  1</p>
        <p>Round Shrimp..</p>
        <p>16</p>
        <p>Oz.</p>
        <p>Pkg.</p>
        <p>299</p>
        <p>FROZEN PEEL-N-EAT COOKED</p>
        <p>Cqjun Style Shrimp..</p>
        <p>Lb.</p>
        <p>Bag</p>
        <p>799</p>
        <p>FROZEN NEW ENGLAND LARGE COOKED ^</p>
        <p>Cocktail Shrimp..</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>Lb.</p>
        <p>Bag</p>
        <p>999</p>
        <p>FROZEN NEW ENGLAND COOKED  I</p>
        <p>Salad Shrimp..</p>
        <p>Lb.</p>
        <p>Bag</p>
        <p>599</p>
        <p>NONE SOLD TO DEALERSOPEN 24 HOURS EVERYDAY</p>
        <p>600 Greenville Blvd. - Greenville 756-7051'</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0135" />
        <p>The Dally Reflector, Greenville, N.C._Wednesday,  January  21,1987 QJJ</p>
        <p>Go Krogering...</p>
        <p>Come Join Us At Our Super Bowl Sidewalk Sale</p>
        <p>This Sat., Jan. 24 11 AM-5 PM. Well Have...</p>
        <p>Fresh Cooked while you watch BBQ Chicken &amp;amp; Ribs Football Shaped Cakes  ^  jh</p>
        <p>Pepsi Diet or ReQular Case Sale  ...................6-2uterBti.</p>
        <p>Your Choice. No Limit</p>
        <p>Pepsi Hot Dog Wagon Specials:  O / $ 1 00</p>
        <p>Chili or Kraut Dogs</p>
        <p>Plus Tax</p>
        <p>USDA GOVT. INSPECTED STORE GROUND OR FLAVOR SEALED</p>
        <p>Ground Beef</p>
        <p>Lb.</p>
        <p>3 LBS.</p>
        <p>OR MORE PACKAGE</p>
        <p>KROGER GRADE A</p>
        <p>Large Eggs</p>
        <p>GOLDEN RIPE DOLE</p>
        <p>Bananas</p>
        <p>Lb.</p>
        <p>DOUBLE/COUPONS</p>
        <p>%</p>
        <p>UP TO 50' FACE VALUE.</p>
        <p>WITH</p>
        <p>EACHS10 , ^ ccc details</p>
        <p>PURCHASE '</p>
        <p>IN STORE</p>
        <p>USDA CHOICE HEAVY WESTERN GRAIN FED BEEF TAIL-LESS T-BONE OR</p>
        <p>Porterhouse</p>
        <p>Steak</p>
        <p>$</p>
        <p>Lb.</p>
        <p>399</p>
        <p>USDA CHOICE HEAVY WESTERN GRAIN FED BEEF CENTER CUT</p>
        <p>Boneless Top Sirloin Steak</p>
        <p>$</p>
        <p>Lb.</p>
        <p>299</p>
        <p>POPULAR</p>
        <p>Miller Lite Beer</p>
        <p>12</p>
        <p>12-Oz.</p>
        <p>Cans</p>
        <p>s</p>
        <p>A49</p>
        <p>LIMIT 1 WITH $10  ADDL PURCHASE</p>
        <p>Lb.</p>
        <p>FRESH, CRISP</p>
        <p>Green</p>
        <p>Cabbage</p>
        <p>19</p>
        <p>HOLLY FARMS FRESH</p>
        <p>V</p>
        <p>\  )  FLORIDA GOLD OR</p>
        <p>&amp;gt;   ^  KRAFT MAGIC TREE</p>
        <p>Fryer Thighs or Drumsticks</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>Lb.</p>
        <p>99</p>
        <p>Vi</p>
        <p>Gal.</p>
        <p>Ctn.</p>
        <p>Orange</p>
        <p>Juice</p>
        <p>99</p>
        <p>ALL VARIETIES DIET COKE OR</p>
        <p>Coke</p>
        <p>Classic</p>
        <p>Ltr.</p>
        <p>NRB</p>
        <p>KROGER WHITE OR WHEAT</p>
        <p>Buttercrust</p>
        <p>Bread</p>
        <p>$</p>
        <p>24</p>
        <p>Oz.</p>
        <p>Lvs.</p>
        <p>419</p>
        <p>Lb.</p>
        <p>QUARTER PORK LOIN CUT INTO</p>
        <p>Pork</p>
        <p>Chops</p>
        <p>$179</p>
        <p>EAGLE SNACK REGULAR OR</p>
        <p>Honey Roast Peanuts</p>
        <p>KROGER V2%</p>
        <p>Lowfat</p>
        <p>Miik</p>
        <p>DORITOS</p>
        <p>Tortiila</p>
        <p>Chips</p>
        <p>12</p>
        <p>Oz.</p>
        <p>Can</p>
        <p>$</p>
        <p>499</p>
        <p>Gal.</p>
        <p>Jug</p>
        <p>499</p>
        <p>SEAFOOD SHOPPE</p>
        <p>Full Service Floral Shoppe</p>
        <p>FRESH MAINE</p>
        <p>Lobsters .</p>
        <p>SEALEGS</p>
        <p>Supreme .</p>
        <p>WHOLE</p>
        <p>Croakers,</p>
        <p>Pan Trout</p>
        <p>or Mackerel LB</p>
        <p>6</p>
        <p>$399</p>
        <p>99</p>
        <p>ices</p>
        <p>1499</p>
        <p>At Our Everyday Low PriMS Beautiful 6 In.,</p>
        <p>Potted Mums</p>
        <p>Asst. Foliage 6 In.</p>
        <p>Hanging $ ^99 Baskets  W Each</p>
        <p>Fresh Cut Bouquet</p>
        <p>Margarita Daisies</p>
        <p>Each</p>
        <p>DELICATESSEN</p>
        <p>EMMBERS LEAN N TENDER</p>
        <p>Gourmet</p>
        <p>Meats</p>
        <p>$</p>
        <p>PHARMACY COUPON</p>
        <p> ITALIAN BEEF</p>
        <p> PASTRAMI</p>
        <p> CORNED BEEF Lb.</p>
        <p>399</p>
        <p>FREE</p>
        <p>GALLON JUG WHOLE OR LOWFAT</p>
        <p>Kroger MHk</p>
        <p>With any New Prescription</p>
        <p> LIMIT ONE PEP FAMILY    THIS COUPON MAY BE</p>
        <p> DOCTORS WILL NEED TO BE USED WITH OTHER CALLED FOR TRANSFERS  PROMOTIONS</p>
        <p> TRANSFERS FROM OTHER KROGER STORES NOT VALID</p>
        <p>Pharmacist</p>
        <p>COUPON CKAINtt t&amp;lt;)li|r</p>
        <p>RXOPEN 24 HOURS EVERYDAY</p>
        <p>600 Greenville Blvd.  Greenville 756-7031</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0136" />
        <p>Crossword By eugene sheffer</p>
        <p>ACROSS</p>
        <p>1   Na Na of TV 4 Modified plant 8 fainter I^onhcur</p>
        <p>12 Sailor</p>
        <p>13 Tireless di&amp;gt;?er</p>
        <p>14 " an</p>
        <p>fixed</p>
        <p>mark</p>
        <p>15 Man from</p>
        <p>~&amp;gt;U A ( TOSS</p>
        <p>Hi ( ard ^atne 18 (irmder</p>
        <p>20 .Jackdaw, m</p>
        <p>S( olland</p>
        <p>21 IMa(cs</p>
        <p>24 Vomi^ cod 28 ( arditials</p>
        <p>32 You Melons</p>
        <p>33 .Shoshone</p>
        <p>34 Vaults 30 Lacrosse</p>
        <p>team 37 Clumsy h(ats</p>
        <p>39 'I'ermiti'</p>
        <p>41 Locations</p>
        <p>43 even keel</p>
        <p>44 Iroinise</p>
        <p>40 hole lor</p>
        <p>50 Wife murderer 55 Have to repay 50 (iaze askaiK (*</p>
        <p>57 Kxchan&amp;gt;{e premium</p>
        <p>58 .hthnson or</p>
        <p>( litairn</p>
        <p>59 Ivy</p>
        <p>Lia^'ue</p>
        <p>colle^'e</p>
        <p>00 Mevel out</p>
        <p>01 Storm centei</p>
        <p>DOWN</p>
        <p>1 .Stalk</p>
        <p>2 Saintly syintiol</p>
        <p>3 Seed (oat</p>
        <p>4 Inv((lve in</p>
        <p>trouhle</p>
        <p>5 IV^j^untain pass</p>
        <p>0 lie --mode</p>
        <p>7 Ioop or orlop</p>
        <p>8 Discard</p>
        <p>9 Ls</p>
        <p>10 as</p>
        <p>wine 1 1 Raiders of the I.ost</p>
        <p>17 Diitdi ( U|)hoard 19 Vestment 22 Work ^an^i</p>
        <p>Solution time: 24 minN.</p>
        <p>m</p>
        <p>1-21</p>
        <p>23r.S. border state 25 Comjioser .Nino 20 Siin of things to corm;</p>
        <p>27 Fender hlemish</p>
        <p>28 WJieel grooves</p>
        <p>29 Retl( ule</p>
        <p>30 Red ink niimher</p>
        <p>31 Whirl 35 Film</p>
        <p>extra s i!''al 38 Harsh 40 Spanish (|iieeri 42 ()ne type of stor\</p>
        <p>45 Wash's partner</p>
        <p>47 Iljieon</p>
        <p>48 Not ;if  j^ome</p>
        <p>49 I)('si artes</p>
        <p>50 Re|)OIler Nellie</p>
        <p>51 Meadow</p>
        <p>52 HiLIk al name</p>
        <p>53 personal (jiiestion </p>
        <p>I 21</p>
        <p>CRVPTOQIIII*</p>
        <p>Y K r M ( Y V III M Y , R M II L F A Y V</p>
        <p>KWLC i; M K Y M FAJI N I II V H R</p>
        <p>(i L F M W W N (i W T M Y K I' I V O I YoHterdayN Cryptotjuip: I'lIF LA'/Y MACAZINF KDITOR MADK A LdNti .STORY SHORT</p>
        <p>rodays ('ry|ilo(jiiip cine I e(|iials (</p>
        <p>The CrypUtquip i.s n .simple .suhstitultori cipher in which each letter used sUin(J.s for another</p>
        <p>F</p>
        <p>O</p>
        <p>C</p>
        <p>U</p>
        <p>s</p>
        <p>Have A Tadpole  ^</p>
        <p>Some American companies have learned that it can be treacherous totfitnslate some brand names and slogans into certain foreign languages. In Chinese, the word (oca-(ola means Hite the wax tadpole. Coke has adopted a new name, which translates as May the mouth rejoice. Pepsi has al.so had its troubles iri^sia. In Thailand, the slogan Come alive, youre in the Pepsi generation means Pepsi brings your ancestors back from the dead.</p>
        <p>DO YOU KNOW - What is the official language of</p>
        <p>Cana^da?</p>
        <p>TUESDAYS ANSWER  A coiffeur is a hairdresser.,</p>
        <p>1-?1 8/  '  Knowledge  Unlimited.  Inc  1987</p>
        <p>Horoscope</p>
        <p>From The Carroll Righter Institute</p>
        <p>FORECAST FOR THURSDAY Jan. 22</p>
        <p>GENEIUL TENDENCIES: Today there are some difficulties in putting your ambitions across. Its time to build up your vitality and to avoid asking favors from influential people.</p>
        <p>ARIES (Rterch 21 to April 19): Try to be of assistance to those associates who are having problems now. Enjoy some hobby with your mate.</p>
        <p>TAURUS (April 20 to May 20): Be most careful in whatever activites you engage in. Avoid a tiff with a fellow worker today.</p>
        <p>Gemini (May 21 to June 21): Avoid agruments during the day, whether business or pleasure. Try to make your surroundings more charming.</p>
        <p>MOON CHILDREN (June 22 to July 21): Get out today and avoid friction at home. Take some deserving friends out to a fine restaurant.</p>
        <p>LEO (July 22 to August 21): You may feel depressed during the day and feel you are not accomplishing much, but cheer up tonight. Be happy.</p>
        <p>VIRGO (August 22 to September 22): Dont commit yourself financially. Enjoy worthwhile activities and avoid unpleasant conditions.</p>
        <p>LIBRA (September 23 to October 22): Get into cheerful activities and steer clear of trouble. Plan how to rid yourself of money problems.</p>
        <p>SCORPIO (October 23 to November 21): You feel frustrated and want to do something drastic, but take it easy. The evening can be very enjoyable.</p>
        <p>SAGrlTTARIUS (November 22 to December 21): A friend who is usually reliable is too busy now, so dont rely on this person. Settle your own affairs.</p>
        <p>C^RICORN (December 22 to January 20): Be wise in the business world and improve your standing there. Go after pleasure in the evening.</p>
        <p>AQUARIUS ( January 21 to February 19): You want to get into new interests during the daytime, but you make little progress. Wait for a better time.</p>
        <p>PISCES (February 20 to March 20): You may be irked over a bill or some other practical matter. Wait for new idea on how to handle this issue.</p>
        <p>IF YOUR CHILD IS BORN TODAY ... he or she may be a bit selfish and demanding during the early youth, so teach this one to work and build up the character thusly. Later your progeny will appreciate the needs of others and will be helpful, too. Permit this one to participate in sports.</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>Bridge</p>
        <p>By CHARLES COREN AND OMAR SHARIF</p>
        <p>THE BEST CHANCE</p>
        <p>vulnerable. South</p>
        <p>.Norlfi-Soiitfi deals</p>
        <p>NORTH</p>
        <p> 9 7 4 .3 *</p>
        <p>/ 5 2</p>
        <p>Q10 8 6</p>
        <p> 874 WES'I  EAST</p>
        <p> Q102  438</p>
        <p>1098 4  9,1763</p>
        <p>-y 7 5 li  y A 4 2</p>
        <p> Q9  KI053</p>
        <p>SOUTH</p>
        <p> A K 5</p>
        <p>; AKQ / K ,I 9</p>
        <p> A .1 6 2 'I'lie bidding:</p>
        <p>South We.Ht North East</p>
        <p>2  Pass  2 0 Pass</p>
        <p>3 NT Pass  Pass Pass</p>
        <p>OfKTiing lead: 'Pen of 9</p>
        <p>When iilanning your play, take into account that your opponents are likely to come up with the most (dfective defense Tb(*n see if you</p>
        <p>can put that fact to good use.</p>
        <p>Souths opening bid was artificial and forcing, and his rebid showed a balanced hand of 25-27 fioints. North was delighted to pass.</p>
        <p>Wests lead of the top of his sequence is better than a spade away from the queen, which might cost a trick. Declarer could count eight fast tricks and, although he could set upa ninth trick in diamonds, it was odd.s-against his ever being able to use itas long as the delender with the ace in the suit had it guarded at least twice, a holdup</p>
        <p>play would thwart u.se of the extra trick.</p>
        <p>However, the fact that the opponents would have to hold up the ace for one round meant that declarer could force an entry to dummy in diamonds. He could use that to cash a long spade if that suit split evenly. But declarer saw that playing on clubs offered a</p>
        <p>much better chance for the game-going trick.</p>
        <p>After winning the opening lead, declarer immediately ducked a club. Wests nine won and he did as well as he could by continuing with a heart, declarer continued with the ace of clubs and then overtook the jack of diamonds with the tables queen. East could not afford to win that trick, so declarer used his entry to dummy to lead a club toward the jack. The defenders had no recourse.</p>
        <p>Observe that declarers line would succeed not only as the cards lie, but also if clubs were 3-3</p>
        <p>or if either defender held a doubleton K-Q. Or if the ace of diamonds were singleton or doubleton.</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>From Secretaries To Engineers... Classified Covers The Job Market CLASSIFIED COVERS PEOPLE WITH JOBS! Call 752-6166</p>
        <p>rUNKV WINKERBIAN</p>
        <p>s A 'Hovie RBLPAPvAiirAse'</p>
        <p>iMPClO'ANr ToYoO^</p>
        <p>Nor</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0137" />
        <p>Expressionsa page for our young readers  ^</p>
        <p>Edited By DIANE WILLIAMS - Reflector NIE Coordinator</p>
        <p>essays</p>
        <p>art</p>
        <p>games</p>
        <p>Jack And Jill</p>
        <p>By Janelle Moore</p>
        <p>Two children,</p>
        <p>Id say only five years of life to each,</p>
        <p>are playing in the sandbox.</p>
        <p>A sandcastle.</p>
        <p>Almost finished</p>
        <p>is now given another tower</p>
        <p>made from a cup.</p>
        <p>What a pretty blue pail,</p>
        <p>Jack has found.</p>
        <p>That Jill now wants.</p>
        <p>What a big four-letter vocabulary,</p>
        <p>Thar Jill has learned.</p>
        <p>In only fjve years of life.</p>
        <p>How proud her parents must be.</p>
        <p>Now a cup, filled with sand.</p>
        <p>Is dumped over Jills head. Now that pretty blue pail, filled with a present eft by a dog.</p>
        <p>Is dumped over Ja :ks head. And now,</p>
        <p>two extremely intelligent</p>
        <p>children of five,</p>
        <p>have turned on the</p>
        <p>waterhose.</p>
        <p>And now,</p>
        <p>both are drenched.</p>
        <p>And here comes mom.</p>
        <p>Janelle Moore, 14, a student at J.H. Rose High School wins this weeks writing contest.</p>
        <p>The Lonely</p>
        <p>By Dennise Bright</p>
        <p>dreams,  hate  .  .  ,,  ,  . . ,  .  .  ,</p>
        <p>Their parents filled with Because of us it is their fate I m Frosty the snowman. Hike boys and girls. Look at my earmuffs. Arent they pretty? I dont</p>
        <p>like the sun! It makes me melt. I come in winter. I have a hat. Dont you like me? I like winter!</p>
        <p>doubt.</p>
        <p>Their cries are silent Waiting to be free.</p>
        <p>Hoping for a friend.</p>
        <p>Someone meant to be.They are the ones to sit alone,  Beth  Knox,  6,  a  student  at  W.H.  Robinson  Elementary  School  wins  this  weeks</p>
        <p>Wanting to reach out  They are the ones to hide at  Dennise Bright, 16, a student  drawing contest</p>
        <p>But always so afraid.  home,  at J.H. Rose High School  ^</p>
        <p>Hearts full of hopes  and  They do not know of love and  receives special mention.</p>
        <p>LaTonya Wilkes, 11, a student at H.B.Sugg School receives special mention.</p>
        <p>Send In Your Entries To Expressions</p>
        <p>The Daily Reflector is looking for elementary, middle, and high school students to draw pictures, write stories, essays and poems. Each week we will publish the best writing and drawing. The winner of each will receive $2. We will publish stories and art work we feel should receive special mention.</p>
        <p>Entries must be original. Drawings must be in ink, crayon, markers, or paint on thick, light colored paper. Entries will be held for a period of thirty days and will be considered for that period of time. Entries will be returned if a self-addressed, stamped envelope is included.</p>
        <p>Parents or teachers who sign the entry form should monitor for good taste and plagiarism.</p>
        <p>Fill out the form and attach it to your entry.</p>
        <p>Expressions The Daily Reflector P.O. Box 1967 Greenville, N.C. 27834</p>
        <p>NatiM</p>
        <p>School</p>
        <p>Ago</p>
        <p>Parontc</p>
        <p>EnlraiH't homo addroaa</p>
        <p>Being A Working Woman Is Rewarding But Tiring</p>
        <p> By Marc Swanner-</p>
        <p>I am tired and I want to give up. I have been standing here for 99 long years. What reward do I get? None! People dont seem to like me anymore.</p>
        <p>I have been standing on this pedestal for 99 long years, proudly shining,The American Promise... the hope for a better life in a new land. I have given all I can, and asked for nothing in return.</p>
        <p>They came, I welcomed them, and they went on to live their lives with a new freedom. From the day they first set foot on Ellis Island, they were given the chance to make all their dreams come true ... they were given EVERYTHING.</p>
        <p>The water is starting to splash up on my banks The water is blue and warm. I would love to go for a swim, but I cant. I can only look at other people go swimming.</p>
        <p>As I look at New York and the other states, I see many people whom 1 have welcomed. Hey! Could it be? Yes, it is David.</p>
        <p>1 remember when Davids family first came to Ellis Island. They came with very little money and a few prized possesions. His father was only 22 years old. He was a man of tall stature, about six foot. Davids mother was a beautiful woman. She had long blonde hair that looked like gold. David was their on</p>
        <p>ly child, the son that both parents were very proud of.</p>
        <p>Davids father became a farmer. He grew corn and wheat and raised cows. The farm did very well for several years, but then things began to change. Four years of failing crops put Davids father in deep debt. So, being a very proud man, it was hard for Davids father to admit he needed help. It took a lot for his father to go to the bank and request a loan to save his farm.He told the banker he needed money to feed his cows and pay his workers, the few he had managed to keep. So when the banker told Mr. Roberts, Davids father, that he couldnt give him the loan, he left the bank very discouraged.</p>
        <p>So, that night not knowing which way to turn. Mr. Roberts decided the only thing he could do was rob a bank.</p>
        <p>It was about 1;35 a.m. Everybody was asleep. The wind was blowing slow and the air was cool. Even the cats and dogs were asleep. The wind knocked over a trash can. It made Davids father think someone was watching him. Little did he know,</p>
        <p>1 was watching him. I had to stop him. I climbed down off my pedestal and went over to him,</p>
        <p>Mr Roberts could not believe his eyes. He said,Is it</p>
        <p>you? Is it Ms. Liberty? I said, Yes. But do you know what you are doing? You cannot rob the bank. It is not the right thing to do. You could be put in jail, and then what would become of your family? Mr. Roberts said,But what do I do? If I do not get more money, I will lose my farm. I said,You need to go to other banks. He said,But I thought if one bank wouldnt lend me money, then none of the other banks would either. I said,  Just because one bank does not have the money, it does not mean that another bank would not give you the money.It could have been that the other banks did not have the money to lend you. Do not give up hope. You can make your farm work. If you</p>
        <p>were to be put in jail, then your farm and family would suffer.</p>
        <p>The next day he went to a new bank and got the sum of $5,600.00. That is what makes America great. Its the land of promise, where dreams come true.</p>
        <p>That is my reward. To see people come from everywhere with nothing but dreams and the promise that their dreams come true. Yes, thats the reason I must continue to hold my torch high for ail to see. It is a symbol for their hope for the future. A great future.</p>
        <p>Marc Swanner, 15, a student at D.H. Conley School receives special mention.</p>
        <p>PUZZLE CORNER</p>
        <p>How Many Fish Can You Find In This Picture?</p>
        <p>Project For A Rainy Day</p>
        <p>Layers of Paper</p>
        <p>Paront'a or Toochor' slgnolurt</p>
        <p>Materials:</p>
        <p>Colored Paper Scissors Rubber Cement Pencil</p>
        <p>Colored Poster Board</p>
        <p>Before beginning this project, make a rough sketch of the design. The layers of the</p>
        <p>design must be cut one at a time. After cutting the top layer of paper, paper clip the next layer of paper to the underside of it. With a pencil, draw the contours of the cuts to be made on the next layer of paper, cut. Follow the same procedure for each layer of the design. Rubber cement the layers together and mount the entire design to a piece of colored paper.</p>
        <p>&amp;lt;;i :j3MS*uv</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0138" />
        <p>C-10 The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C. . Wednesday, January 21,1987</p>
        <p>OVERTON6</p>
        <p>for a taste ofOPEN 8 AM - 8 PM MONDAY THROUGH SATURDAY, 1 PM - 6 PM ON SUNDAY</p>
        <p>SWIFT PREMIUM HEAVY WESTERNSIRLOIN STEAKS</p>
        <p>T-BONE</p>
        <p>STEAKS</p>
        <p>SWIFT PREMIUM FULL CUT</p>
        <p>ROUND STEAK</p>
        <p>LB.</p>
        <p>*1</p>
        <p>S9</p>
        <p>DELI SPECIALS</p>
        <p>TURKEY BREAST... AMERICAN CHEESE</p>
        <p>LB.</p>
        <p>.LB.</p>
        <p>$099</p>
        <p>$279</p>
        <p>GWALTNEY</p>
        <p>SMOKED PICNICS</p>
        <p>SWISS MISS REGULAR FLAVOR</p>
        <p>HOT COCOA MIX.</p>
        <p>12 OZ. BOX</p>
        <p>99*</p>
        <p>WHITE CLOUD</p>
        <p>TOILET TISSUE</p>
        <p>4 ROLL PKG</p>
        <p>WHOLE OR HALF</p>
        <p>PORK LOINS</p>
        <p>SLICED FREE!</p>
        <p>GWALTNEY</p>
        <p>GREAT BOLOGNA GREAT FRANKS.. BACON... .....</p>
        <p>LB. PKG.</p>
        <p>99^</p>
        <p>. LB. PKG. 99*^</p>
        <p>$-|29</p>
        <p>$-|49</p>
        <p>12 OZ. PKG.</p>
        <p>PEANUT CITY WHOLE OR HALF</p>
        <p>COUNTRY HAMS..........lb</p>
        <p>FAMILY PAK SPECIALS  n  n.</p>
        <p>PORK NECK BONES..................w  lb  pkg  lb  03*</p>
        <p>FIRST CUT PORK CHOPS.............. s i lb pkg lb. 99*</p>
        <p>PORK CHITTERLINS.................. 10 lb pkg.</p>
        <p>PRICES EFFECTIVE WEDNESDAY-SATURDAY, JAN. 21-24</p>
        <p>CMEKMS</p>
        <p>GRADE A FRESH</p>
        <p>WHOLE FRYERS</p>
        <p>211 JARVIS STREET</p>
        <p>CASE PRICE (70 LBS.) $3099</p>
        <p>QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED HOME OF GREENVILLES BEST MEATS</p>
        <p>SHEDDS</p>
        <p>SPREAD</p>
        <p>LB. PKG. QTRS.</p>
        <p>RICHFOOD</p>
        <p>MILK OR</p>
        <p>TROPtCANA CHILLED</p>
        <p>ORANGE JUICE</p>
        <p>1/2 GALLON PAPER CARTON</p>
        <p>99*</p>
        <p>^ 3/*1</p>
        <p>BANQUET FROZEN</p>
        <p>CHICKEN POT PIES</p>
        <p>8 OZ. PKG.</p>
        <p>STOKELY</p>
        <p>CATSUP</p>
        <p>QUART</p>
        <p>BOTTLE</p>
        <p>89*</p>
        <p>MERICO</p>
        <p>TEXAS BISCUITS</p>
        <p>12 OZ. , CAN</p>
        <p>DUNCAN HINES YELLOW</p>
        <p>CAKE MIX</p>
        <p>18 OZ. BOX</p>
        <p>MAOLA ASSORTED FLAVORS</p>
        <p>ICE CREAM.....</p>
        <p>1/2 GALLON CARTON</p>
        <p>MILLER LITE</p>
        <p>BEER..</p>
        <p>12 PACK 12 OZ. CANS</p>
        <p>PEPSI|^| 2L^ER</p>
        <p>Si ^1</p>
        <p>REGULAR OR DIET</p>
        <p>PEPSI</p>
        <p>COLA</p>
        <p>2 LITER BOTTLE</p>
        <p>09</p>
        <p>SOUTHERN BISCUIT PLAIN OR SELF-RISING</p>
        <p>2 LB. BAG</p>
        <p>,  69 VALUE</p>
        <p>buy ONE AT n RGULAR PRICE, It GET ONE</p>
        <p>bal FREE!</p>
        <p>FAB</p>
        <p>DETERGENT</p>
        <p>42 OZ. BOX</p>
        <p>$1</p>
        <p>49</p>
        <p>NABISCO SALE</p>
        <p>CAMPBELLS CREAM OF</p>
        <p>MUSHROOM SOUP</p>
        <p>10 OZ. CAN</p>
        <p>38</p>
        <p>BOUNTY</p>
        <p>PAPER TOWELS</p>
        <p>GIANT ROLL</p>
        <p>OREO COOKIES. . .2ooz bag^2 ALMOST HOME COOKIES, all varieties M NILLA WAFERS. . .i2oz.pkg PREMIUM SALTINES. lb box 89*^</p>
        <p>RICHFOOD ORANGE, GINGER ALE OR COLA</p>
        <p>BIG 3 LITER BOTTLE</p>
        <p>SOFT DRINKS</p>
        <p>APPLE PIES</p>
        <p>FRESH FROM OUR BAKERY * -</p>
        <p>24 OZ. SIZE</p>
        <p>READY TO EAT!</p>
        <p>LOOSE-U BAG EM</p>
        <p>RED POTATOES</p>
        <p>SibbM</p>
        <p>EXTRA LARGE FLORIDA</p>
        <p>TEMPLE ORANGES</p>
        <p>6/*1</p>
        <p>CRISP VIRGINIA</p>
        <p>WINESAP APPLES</p>
        <p>3 LB. BAG</p>
        <p>99*</p>
        <p>FLORIDA</p>
        <p>WHITE GRAPEFRUIT</p>
        <p>4/1</p>
        <p>BAKING</p>
        <p>POTATOES</p>
        <p>5 LB. BAG</p>
        <p>99*</p>
        <p>YELLOW ONIONS</p>
        <p>GRADE A BROWN</p>
        <p>JUMBO EGGS</p>
        <p>WAXED RUTABAGAS OR FRESH GREEN CABBAGE</p>
        <p>DOZEN</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0139" />
        <p>THE DAILY</p>
        <p>REFLECTOR</p>
        <p>QreenvilleN.C. Wednesday, January 21,1987</p>
        <p>Food</p>
        <p>D</p>
        <p>COWBOY CHILI  Cowboy chili may satisfy a hearty appetite with the chili herbs and spices. It is among other chili recipes listed on this page, half-inch cubes of boneless chuck used in the dish along with the traditional  (Reflector Photo by Cliff Hollis).</p>
        <p>Pizza</p>
        <p>Pizza is one food with plenty of options. It can come in a cardboard box from the corner pizzeria with your choice of three toppings or from stylish Hollywood restaurants with ingredients ranging from caviar to clams. From coast to coast and in all its forms, pizza remains an American favorite.</p>
        <p>Pizza prepared at home can also suit any taste, from light California fare to a substantial food fit for the meat-and-potatoes crowd. Pizzas are easy to make at home, especially when hot roll mix with quick-rising yeast is substituted for traditional crust recii^.</p>
        <p>California Cashew Pizza conforms to the current culinary trend of light foods. But light doesnt mean bland. Far from it, this pizza starts with a crust seasoned with oregano, basil and onions.</p>
        <p>Top the crust first with tomato sauce, shredded Monterey jack and Cheddar cheeses, then with a variety of colorful vegetables, including red and green bell peppers, sliced black olives and fresh mushrooms. On top of the vegetables, add this pizzas main attraction, cashews. After baking, top the dish with the hallmark of li^t eating - alfalfa sprouts. Let stand for five minutes, then enjoy.</p>
        <p>CALIFORNIA CASHEW PIZZA</p>
        <p>Crust:</p>
        <p>Light, Heavy, Medium, They Come With Plenty Of Options^</p>
        <p>1 package Pillsbury Hot Roll Mix</p>
        <p>2 teaspoons oregano leaves 1 teaspoon basil leaves</p>
        <p>1 cup finely chopped onions</p>
        <p>ri/4 cups hot water (110 to 120 degrees)</p>
        <p>2 tablespoons oil Topping:</p>
        <p>8-ounce can tomato sauce 12 ounces (3 cups) shredded Monterey jack cheese 4 ounces (1 cup) shredded Cheddar cheese</p>
        <p>1/2 medium red bell pepper, cut into strips</p>
        <p>1/2 medium green pepper, cut into strips</p>
        <p>1/3 cup sliced black olives 1 cup sliced fresh mushrooms 1/2 cup cashews Alfalfa sprouts, optional</p>
        <p>Heat oven to 425 degrees, Place rack at lowest position. Grease 14-inch pizza pan or 15xlO-inch jelly roll pan. In large bowl, combine flour mixture, yeast from foil packet, oregano, basil and onions; mix well. Stir in hot water and oil until dry particles are moistened. Turn dough out onto lightly floured surface. With greased or floured hands, shape dough into ball. Knead dough fo r 2 or 3 minutes or until smooth and no longer sticky. With greased hands, pat dough into prepared pan forming</p>
        <p>a 1/2-inch rim around edges. Spread tomato sauce over dough. Sprinkle with cheeses. Top with red and green peppers, olives, mushrooms and cashews. Bake at 425 degrees on lowest oven rack for 25 to 35 minutes or until crust is deep golden brown. Arrange alfalfa sprouts on top. Let stand 5 minutes Before serving. Makes 6 to 8 servings.</p>
        <p>Peasant Loaf Pizza is for those who like a substantial, meaty pizza. The pizza actually looks like a crusty round loaf of bread, but concealed inside is a hearty filling of sausage, green pepper, onion and more.</p>
        <p>To make the pizza loaf, roll the crust into an 18-inch circle. The large circle of dough will drape over the edge when you transfer the crust to a 9-inch round pan. Next, spoon the filling into the pan. Then bring the excess dough up over the filling, forming pleats, and twist the pleats at the center top to make a topknot that seals the dough.</p>
        <p>For delicious flavor and texture, wheat germ is added to the hot roll mix as you make the dough. Experiment with adding other seasonings, like basil or oregano, to your pizza crusts by combining them with the flour and yeast mixture.</p>
        <p>PEASANT LOAF PIZZA</p>
        <p>1 package Pillsbury Hot Roll Mix</p>
        <p>1/2 cup wheat germ</p>
        <p>1 1/3 cups hot water (110 to 120 degrees)</p>
        <p>2 tablespoons oil</p>
        <p>1 pound bulk Italian sausage</p>
        <p>2 medium green peppers, cut into strips</p>
        <p>1 large onion, sliced</p>
        <p>2 garlic cloves, minced</p>
        <p>1 teaspoon oregano leaves</p>
        <p>1/4 teaspoon pepper</p>
        <p>6-ounce can tomato paste</p>
        <p>Grease 9-inch round pan. In large bowl, combine flour mixture, yeast from foil packet and wheat germ; mix welt. Stir in hot water and oil until dry particles are moistened. Turn dough out onto lightly floured surface. With greased or floured hands, shape dough into ball. Knead dough for 2 to 3 minutes or until smoth and no longer sticky. Cover loosely with plastic wrap or lowel while preparing</p>
        <p>In large skillet, brown sausage, green pepper, onion and garlic; drain well. Stir in oregano, pepper and tomato paste. On lightly floured surface, roll dough into 18-inch circle; fold into quarters. Unfold in prepared pan, letting excess dough hang over edge. Spoon sausage mixture onto dough in pan. Bring dough up over filling, folding to form pleats.</p>
        <p>Bring ends of pleats to center; twist to form a knob. Cover dough with plastic wrap or towel. Let rise on countertop 15 minutes. Heat oven to 375 degrees. Uncover dough. Bake at 375 degrees for 35 to 45 minutes or until deep golden brown. Let stand lo minutes before serving. Makes 6 .servings.</p>
        <p>Easy-To-Make Chili 'Perfect' For Hard Day</p>
        <p>After a long, hard day at work, a spicy bowl of chili may be the perfect meal for someone vvho doesnt want to spend hours over the stove. Just chop the ingredients, mix them together and let it simmer until dinner time. Try the variety of chili recipes listed below.</p>
        <p>COWBOY CHILI</p>
        <p>1 pound dried pinto beans 48 ounces canned pint beans 3 cups chopped onion</p>
        <p>112 cup plus 4 tablespoons chill powder 16 cloves garlic, minced 1/4 cup vegetable oil</p>
        <p>3 pounds boneless chuck, cut into I /2-inch cubes Shredded cheddar cheese  *</p>
        <p>Sort and wash beans; place in Dutch oven. Cover with water 2 inches above beans; cover and let soak overnight. Drain beans; cover with water. Add 3/4 cup chopped onion, 1/4 cup plus 2 tablespoons chili powder and 8 cloves garlic Cover and simmer 1 hour or until tender, adding more water if necessary. Heat oil in large Dutch oven. Add beef, 11/2 cup chopped onion, green pepper and 8 cloves of garlic. Cook over medium heat until beef is brown^.</p>
        <p>Add beans and 1/4 cup plus 2 tablespoons chili powder; cover and simmer 1 hour. Serve and sprinkle with extra onion and cheese.</p>
        <p>Yield: 21/2 quarts.</p>
        <p>V ENISON CHILI 112 pound salt pork, cut into 4 pieces</p>
        <p>2 pounds venison, coarsely ground</p>
        <p>2 medium onions, chopped</p>
        <p>16 ounces canned tomatoes, undrained</p>
        <p>I cup w ater</p>
        <p>3/4 cup red wine</p>
        <p>2-3 large green chiles, diced</p>
        <p>1 clove garlic, minced</p>
        <p>3 tablespoons chili powder 3/4 teaspoons oregano</p>
        <p>112 teaspoon cumin seeds, crushed</p>
        <p>Cook salt pork in Dutch oven over medium heat until brown. Add venison and onion, cook, stirring frequently, until meat is browned. Stir in remaining ingredients. Reduce heat and simmer uncovered 1 hour; stir occasionally. Remove salt pork before serving. Yield: 2 quarts.</p>
        <p>( HILK ON CARNE</p>
        <p>4 tablespoons butter</p>
        <p>2 tablespoons salad oil</p>
        <p>2 large onions, finely chopped 2 cloves garlic, minced 2 pounds ground beef 2 or 3 tablespoons chili powder 11/2 cups beef broth</p>
        <p>4 to 5 fresh tomatoes, peeled and coarsely chopped (or 3 cups canned tomatoes)</p>
        <p>215-ounce cans kidney beans, drained 1 teaspoon celery seed 11/2 teaspoons cumin seed 1 good pinch of oregano 1 good pinch of cayenne pepper Salt to taste</p>
        <p>Heat butter and salad oil in a large, heavy pan Add the onions and garlic, and cook over moderate heat until onions are soft, but not brown. Add beef and continue to cook until meat lost its color. Stir in the chili powder (more, if you like it hot), tomatoes, beef broth, kidney beans and all the seasonings. Continue cooking over very low heat for 1 1/2 to 2 hours. Stir occassionally. If moisture dries out, add more broth. Chili con Carne should be wet, but not soupy. Taste for seasoning. Serve with tortillas, which should be browned on a hot griddle on both sides, ^rves 8.  *</p>
        <p>QUICK CHILI</p>
        <p>I tablespoon shortening 1/2 cup chopped onions I pound ground beef I green pepper, chopped 1101 /2-ounce can tomato soup 1 teaspoon salt</p>
        <p>4 teaspoons (or more) chili powder 1/8 teaspoon pepper Dash ground red pepper I or 216-ounce cans red kidney beans</p>
        <p>Melt shortening in a heavy skillet. Add onions and cook until brown. Add ground beef and brown. Stir frequently so that there will be no lumps of meat. Add remaining ingredients. Heat mixture thoroughly and serve hot. Serves 6.</p>
        <p>Students Learn By Trying</p>
        <p>KANKAKEE, 111. (AP)  A lesson in coasumer education turned into a physics eggs-periment for 111 Kankakee students, who watched as boxes of raw eggs they had packaged were dropped from a plane 200 feet high.</p>
        <p>The students, in third- through fifth-grade academically talented classes of Kankakee School District 111, took )art in what they called The Great American Egg )rop at the Greater Kankakee Airport.</p>
        <p>Students designed the packages to prevent the eggs from breaking, and the drop was arranged to test the designs</p>
        <p>Amazingly, 56 students engineered packages that protected all three of their eggs from breaking, and all ot the participants will receive recognition for their efforts.</p>
        <p>Teachers Linda Beck, Paula Brigham and Debra Brooks planned the event after discussing the topic of packaging in industry as part of a consumer education unit.</p>
        <p>After learning how manufacturers design packages to be cheap, effective and tamper-proof, the,children were asked to design egg containers and given  limit of $1 to spend on packaging materials.</p>
        <p>The packages were dropped to a grassy area at the airport, tne boxes were opened, and judges determined winners on several criteria - the number of surviving eggs and the creativity and construction of the containers.</p>
        <p>vSchool administrators and teachers served as judges, a Midway Airlines pilot flew the plane and a catering company donated hot chwolate sold to help defray the cost of the flight.</p>
        <p>Little Is Big In Vegetables</p>
        <p>LIGHT. TASTY TREAT - California cashew pizza, above, starts with a crust seasoned with oregano, basil and onions. So much for the notion that light foods, as V</p>
        <p>this pizza is, must be bland. The addition of cashews gives the pizza its main attraction. And a touch of alfalfa spouts, added after baking, gives it the final touch.</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>By KATHLEEN BOIILAM) Associated Press Writer</p>
        <p>SOMIS, Calif, (AP) - Dont be afraid to buck popular opinion by admitting an affinity for vegetables, those healthy things that made you gag as a child. In this state where living is defined by the latest trend, baby carrots are in.</p>
        <p>Conventional vegetables havent lost their flavor; the babies just have that much more, grower Craig Underwood says.</p>
        <p>Its son of like comparing veal to beef, Underwood noted from his office in this Ventura County town. Part of it is what your eyes tell you and part of it is what your nose and mouth tell you.</p>
        <p>Although Underwood maintains baby carrots are the hottest of the lit tie vegetables, hes not averse to raising baby Japanese eggplant, baby gold turnips or baby reel pear tomatoes, among others,</p>
        <p>California growers have been raising specialty crops only within the last 10 vears or so in the face of increased foreign and domestic competition with conventional fruits and vegetables.</p>
        <p>Specialty crops are unusual fruits ana vegetables, such as a cherimoya, a baby kohlrabi or fuyu fruit, items which havent been produced and sold in mass quantities. The crops require intensive hand labor and</p>
        <p>shrewd marketing skills, Underwood said.</p>
        <p>Underwoods family has been farming in Ventura County since the late 1800s. In his great-grandfathers time, farming was a romantic avocation. Today its big business.</p>
        <p>It isnt enough to till the soil anymore, Underwood said. You have to know how and where youre going to sell your crops.</p>
        <p>Before Underwo()d entered the baby vegetable business three years ago, he tested the market in the microcosm of the family produce stand.</p>
        <p>(See LITTLE, D-2)</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0140" />
        <p>0-2</p>
        <p>VVed'iescJay. January 21. 19&amp;lt;j7</p>
        <p>Apple And Crumbs Yield Fancy Bread</p>
        <p>A.-</p>
        <p>r.\ \:ini \ 15kal llittiips and (lardfns</p>
        <p>Vfiila' '"picy appir* filling ;ri&amp;lt;l a cninih f&amp;lt;ippMi(i ftarisfortfi whit* yc.ist d(u2h i'ltna fancy hrcakfast cr liuri b hrnai!</p>
        <p>hnr fh^ fillinp, i.lio''** a tart appi* that )i"M. it:' &amp;lt;hafx- w*II v.h*i) nyik e&amp;lt;i. a .Jnn.itii iri. firanny Srnith rf Uni'^ap \ III''hum SI/.* appI,* make wdyiiit ' . (JUinf',tinp|y&amp;lt;l appi*</p>
        <p>\tH Ksiltpt sM If</p>
        <p>W, OIIIK ' I'nif flnynii white Ilf ea'I dnm'h 1 t:dd'sp&amp;lt;K(iis mar 'ar ine nr hiltt f, ''nllem*l t'j ups lirmlv (linppr-d I'' I (I apples ( up'pa ked ImrAu siii'ar I teaspiHUi pi nimd (imiamnii 1 lahl sp&amp;lt;Hni mari'ar in* nr huUer, m*ll (1</p>
        <p>2 tahlesponns all-purpose riour</p>
        <p>2 tablespoons granulated supar</p>
        <p>I tablespiion rnarparine or butter</p>
        <p>tup slivererl almonds 'optional</p>
        <p>Thaw (Joijgh according to package direction.s. DivnJe dough in half; let rest lu inmutes. On floured surface roll ea:h dough half into an B-inch s'juarc* Spread each with half the s'iflene! butter Arrange half the apples down the center of each dough square Combine brown sugar and cirinainon; sprinkle over apples. Cutting t'fward filling, make 2-inch-long cuts 111 dough at 1 inch intervals on t/oth sides of apples Fold strips alternately over apples; fold under  ridsofloaf</p>
        <p>Clac* loavi's on a greased ir&amp;gt; bv 10</p>
        <p>Microwaves Can Handle Spicy Latin Recipes</p>
        <p>COFF'EE BREAD  Pass softened cream cheese with this deliciops Streusel Coffee fkead.</p>
        <p>by 1-inch baking pan. Brush with melted butter. Stir together flour and granulated sugar. Cut in the 1 table spoon margarine until mixture resembles coarse crumbs. Sprinkle half the crumb mixture over each loaf; top with almonds, if desired Cover; let rise until nearlv (huihie &amp;lt; 4.')</p>
        <p>to 60 minutes. Bake in a 350-degree oven 30 minutes or until brown. Serve warm. Makes 2 coffee breads. 24 servings. '</p>
        <p>Nutrition information per serving; % cab. 2 g pro.. lOgcarbo . 3g fat. 1 mg chol . 115 mg sodium.</p>
        <p>For a spicy fiesta, you can travel south of the border with these tangy recipes for a microwave ov'en.</p>
        <p>Specially flavored Chili-Cheese Dip and tortilla chips provide a delicious pre-dinner snack in under eight minutes.</p>
        <p>Smothered in tomatoes and onions, and seasoned with chili powder and garlic. Mexican Chicken and Rice provides a zesty touch of Mixican-style gourmet cooking in the privacy of your own home Ole!</p>
        <p>MEXIC.AN CHICKE.N .\.ND RICE</p>
        <p>1 cup chopped onion</p>
        <p>2 gloves garlic, mixed</p>
        <p>1/4 cup water</p>
        <p>17-1/2 ounce can tomatoes, cut up</p>
        <p>Water</p>
        <p>I tablespoon instant chicken bouillon granules</p>
        <p>Souffles Rise To The Occasion</p>
        <p>|{\ lU.l'iWDIJ II. WIIKIJ.hK</p>
        <p>I \ I iiH* VV  To-  r</p>
        <p>I MID \l'VS '</p>
        <p>Moi* y ar^ ;igi than on'* v.';il&amp;lt;l ta*; In &amp;lt; oiint, a yniing woiiian wat. li ed ugiig a^ li*'! i"iiiiiiiat* v.liip[);(l lip a siip'ib (li**:-* 'iiufll* wiHi'iiit</p>
        <p>l).ll*flt Ilf ri'( i(K It v,;iT l(|i&amp;gt; yiiuiig wdfiiaii s fir' t 'ii'iiuiii'T wiHi this ctli*r*al di'.li, iiii'l it, wa... th" i'kum mat* (iiiilf sd. III* (iiilv thing sh&amp;lt;* kii*w li'i'.v f'l iiiak*</p>
        <p>\Vti*ii III* wiiinan. Ill) liiiig' r yniiiig hut sill! nillirall') liv Ih' niagical  lu iiii.'trv df III sc niry &amp;lt; gg disli*s, atli'iiqil*! h*r fust -diilll*, a r*ci|K,* y,;is n&amp;lt;'*l (l;iiiil fdlh.i.vd laillilully Hut that s III) ( I ini'* ' II s c.isy In triumph at i iHikiiip anylhing v.iHidul a rvci|x* wIk'Ii it s the duly pnxadun* you havi* m iiidn/l </p>
        <p>.'4o if y&amp;lt;o tiav** iid',*r mad* a sik cssful Sdiifll', pay i Id.i atlciilidii to lh* re i|X and Sdm* iiiipdilaiil lips and yon, Hmi, i ;ni b* a v. inn r A snerssfiil sonllh* d&amp;lt; ix'iids cliir'l ly ii lutw III' ( g.g wliibs ai* lM'al*(l. 1 luy slionhl I* at iMim b*m(x*i atuic, the lM*aliiig jmpm*rif and bowl scnipnioiisly 11 an, arul n&amp;lt;l a s|x*ck ol yolk may l*allow'(l Tin* wbib's mu .I I* bcab'ii to lli*ir grcalcst volniiif' aii'l lo Hi* sliinv, still prak sl.ig,', bill nol lo Ih* jionil ol Id'iknig, dull and (Manillar TImii tfi*y arcqou klv anl lipliHy folded m lolli&amp;lt;'b.isS.|ii'&amp;lt;*.</p>
        <p>In wliipping III' v.lidc.s. i leam ol lailai IS Did as ;i slabilL/cr, Hus i.ai't iii'eessai v l Hh*v aie beafoii in ail iililiiied (opp' r bowl (lli liK'lal has ail ;k idle leadioii wiHi Hu* wliilr*;</p>
        <p>l)";seil ',diilll' s ( an I"' a lillh* inn ny III Mil* ini'ldle. in wliicli case Iln* iiiiiiiy p'litioii IS ns'd a'i a saud* lor lb'* ollii'r p.nls, iiini disli soiiltlcs an* nsuallv In inrr, bol dill moist and any It vdiidon't lik*a w*! soulllc, |ii;d baicd il a lillh* Idiigi'i than 111* ic('i|)i;dls lor</p>
        <p>llsnally. sdiiHles an* si n led-at a higli Icmpcialiiii*.nid tlien |heheat is icducid, bill Hu y seem h hold np longer il lliey ate b.iked eiiliiely at a low'b'liipoiaUiH*</p>
        <p>I.EMON .KOl FFI.E 6 egg whiles at room temperature t egg yolks, lightly beaten together ' 2 tablespixm soft sweet butter</p>
        <p>1 tablesp^xm granulated sugar '  eup all purpose flour</p>
        <p>1-3 ( Up granulated sugar *2 eup milk</p>
        <p>f tabl&amp;lt; spxns lemon juice</p>
        <p>2 tablespems grated lemon pt*el 2 lablespoiins soft sweet butter</p>
        <p>') ti aspoon ( ream of tartar (onfeetioiiers sugar</p>
        <p>1 Ilaee egg wliites in large bowl of eleetrie mixer Air unlineel copper Ixiwj), yolks in a small bowl. Butter Id quart, straight sided souffle dish ami sprinkle thoroughly and evenly with granulated sugar. Turn out ex e*ss.</p>
        <p>2 In a medium saucepan, combine Hour, 1 3 eiip granulated sugar and milk and stir until srn(M)th. Ciwk over m'*liiim li*;it, stirring constantly H&amp;gt;e sure to reach all surfaces of Ifie pan IxiUomi, until mixture is thickened and comes to a Ixril, Bemove from h(*at.</p>
        <p>3 Stir a liHle of the crxiked mixture into egg yolks, (iiadually stir yolk mixture into rest of mixture in the .saucepan Cixik. stirring, until mixture Ix'glris to hiihble. Remove from heat</p>
        <p>1 Add lemon juice, |x*el and 2 ta hles|xx)Ms luitter, and whisk until wi'll hlended Tiiiii into a large mix iiig howl ;md cixil about 5 minuU's he lore starling next step.</p>
        <p>.5 Heal egg whites slowly until foamy, then add cream of tartar. (Iradnally increase Ix-ating speed (use higlxst sjx'cd on electric* mixer) nnlil slitf |x*aks form when fK*ater is slowly raised. Fold ' t of the (gg whiles into b'lnori mixture until well comhmed Carefully fold in re maiiiing whites until just comhiiied. taking III) more than 1 minute &amp;lt;some whiteslii'aks may show),</p>
        <p>6 Sc(K)psoiiflle mixture gently into prepari'd .souffle dish and smooih top lightly At Hits jM)int, souflle may be baked immediately, or i(frigerat('d for up to 3' -hours.</p>
        <p>Little Is Big</p>
        <p>iCoiUinin il iiDiii ir 11</p>
        <p>On a g,iv*ii day. I'k.iIs ha\i* Hi' ii pi( k ot pm [lie anl pink I'Jislci *gg t.nlislKS, b.iliy licncti caiinis, baby I* ok*;, and ba'V wlnlo .tapanca* tin nips pilld high m baskets at the load si'le stand  'I hey saw b;dy \egclahlcs liavi* really goinl Havor and really gio&amp;lt;l hxiks, and it w,isn't soiueHiing you &amp;lt;onld liiid III ii'iinial (lianiiels. ' |lrid*rwdMls.iid Th' 36 connnodilics sinci* d*V('l oped liy III Iancli ai e sold ino.d ollen in iiu'tiopolitan au'.is, iiu liidnig bos Angeles. New Voik, Dallas. Washington. New Oilcans and Mon tieal</p>
        <p>tteslaiii ants at e the I'iggesI liiver s ot haliy \'i'.elal&amp;gt;ls. alHioneh sup*? inarki'i (liams havi* pu ked n(i on Hie lieiid, said .lellersoii I &amp;lt;iwe. Dnd*i wixhI's inaikelingdneclor Metiooolitaii aiea remlenls .na* iiioie liKcIy Hian those who live (l.sewh&amp;lt;*ie III Hie (oiintiy tociHik with l*ahy \eg'laltl'*s, but the maioiilv ot sliopp( IS uniii I b ive nil idea wli.it to do wiHi a lo'u kolihabi it they saw one. bowe said ,\ I'.iby kolillalii is a small &amp;lt; al'b.ig.e Hiat hxiks like a Ini nip</p>
        <p> Kveiyoiic looks at a baby turnip and they Hunk it's troin outer space." he said 'Cm iosity will take you only so far, th*n you have to figure out what todowilh it bowe lias toed to interest stores in supplying H'cijK's at Irahy vegetable displays. The company has promoted baby vegetables as snacks, .salads or hors d'cH'vies, such as baby Easter egg ladishes gannslud with black anil golden caviar UiideiwiHHl Ranches often fills ciisloiii ordeis, hand picked at the huyersri'qiiest, bowe won't iev(*al any of the company's growing t('chni(jues, calling them trades('CK'ts  It's like going lo a defen.se con-liactor and asking how to build an F 16," he said .Some growers plant baby vegetahh's close togellier, which foiccs them to conqrt'te for nutrients, and they grow smaller as a result, said Ron Vo.ss, director of (he coop-ciative extension program at the Diiivei sily ol California at Davis,</p>
        <p>&amp;lt;lowers al.so plant seeds that produce smalh'r vegetabU's and tend to liarvest (hem ('arly iH'fore thrw're fully grown, he said.</p>
        <p>MVSt I\( II KIN xn4 IDS I Ml KK) l\MN|s</p>
        <p>II M\M l\( II KIW xuH I</p>
        <p>SAVM .^(K</p>
        <p>I I</p>
        <p>{H iD M r ir</p>
        <p>ON \N&amp;gt; rKIIOL\&amp;gt;SMlk\MHHr  </p>
        <p>ukIikImv SR IRIMJI(Mn\H||*  ^</p>
        <p>l*io^tixi I vlHIR) I f &amp;lt;' x&amp;gt;iHyil ^(U</p>
        <p>nnHWLUsnwiim .|</p>
        <p>Liir' MMi'-'M ,</p>
        <p>MMIH Inn</p>
        <p>(ai vaV,'  t*v</p>
        <p>'I'' 4'^ *</p>
        <p>Mm 1'  IV  X*'  'V'</p>
        <p>r.)r(l o)i| ir* vfns &amp;lt;-f iiiH</p>
        <p>*</p>
        <p>by lN*( % I</p>
        <p>1 Mw</p>
        <p>I VlHIR) I</p>
        <p>SIDM|H t  IRAMS</p>
        <p>X' I nxNx'r imv-. l-U fO(MI *t x V III  (tins H&amp;lt; Nx</p>
        <p>mxii   r'   Kf</p>
        <p> I*tvi 0&amp;gt;1 '  "Its  ' m I-Oi^to</p>
        <p>t. Ill6    </p>
        <p>N W.M ...I    l-J.I, H &amp;gt;  II    '</p>
        <p>A.   I  -W  n-.'  I</p>
        <p> mii&amp;lt;w&amp;lt;* hn.snl wr*    ((</p>
        <p>- rv.ti::'/.3,  -  I</p>
        <p>I"  -  s  ^8400  103)  j|</p>
        <p>7. About ]' t hour.s fx*tore serving, place ciX)kie sheet on lower shell o oven and preh*at oven to 3,.)0 (J*grees Place souffle rlish on co)kie shc*el and hake 40 minutes 4.*i to .50 minutes it it has been refrigerat*d  baking time may vary according to oven', Souffle should be nicely browned and quiver ju.st slightly when dish is shaken gently. l)ust with confectioners' sugar.and ser ve immediately. .Makes 4 to 6 servings</p>
        <p>BROd OI.M IIKFSKSDI I FI E '2 labl*spM)ii soft blitter ' 2 cup walnuts, ( hopped fine ' I cup onions, chopped fine .) tablespoons butter i cup ciMiked hroicoli, chopped fine</p>
        <p>' 2 cup grated parmesan (hee&amp;gt;e ' 2 cup grated eheddar cheese ' j teaspixin hot-red pepper Hakes .Salt and pepper to taste 3 tablespoons all-purpose flour I cup milk, scalded</p>
        <p>1 egg yolks egg whites</p>
        <p>' I teasp(K)n cream of tartar</p>
        <p>1 Spread bottom and sides of a 1: quart souffle dish with table-spx)n bufter; coat with walnuts. Turn out excess. Set aside.</p>
        <p>2, In skillet. co&amp;lt;jk onions in 1 tablespoon of the butter over low heat, stirring until onions are .soft. Put onions in large bowl, add broccoli, cheeses, red-pepper flakes, salt. f&amp;gt;epper Set aside,</p>
        <p>t In a medium saucepan, melt re maining butter over moderately low heal, whisk in flour and cook, stirring, for 3 minutes. .-\dd scalded milk 'which has been heated until small bubbles form around edges) in a steady stream, whisking, and bring mixture lo a t)oiI. Simmer for 5 minutes, stirring constantly (fre sure spcxtn reaches entire Ixittom of the pan Whisk in yolks and bring to a boil while stirring. Fold thoroughly into broccoli mixture.</p>
        <p>4. Beat egg whites slowly until foamy, then add cream of tartar; gradually increase speed to high and beat until stiff peaks form when beater is slowly lifted.</p>
        <p>5. Stir 1-3 of the egg whites into broccoli mixture until blended. Gently but quickly fold in remaining egg whites, taking no more than 50 seconds 'some white streaks may show. Gently scoop the mixture into the prepared souffle dish. At this point, the souffle may be baked immediately. or refrigerated for up to 3'2 hours.</p>
        <p>6. About 1*4 hours before serving, preheat oven to 350 degrees. Place souffle dish in a pan with enough hot water to come halfway up the sides of the dish, and bake until souffle is puffed and golden brown and does not quiver when the dish is shaken. This should take about 45 minutes (about an hour if the souffle has been refrigerated). Serve at once. Makes 6 servings.</p>
        <p>1/2 teaspoon salt 1 /4 teaspoon chili powder 1/4 teaspoon pepper M/2 cups minute-type rice 1 3-3-1/2 pound broiler-fryer chicken, cut up Paprika (optional)</p>
        <p>1 cup frozen peas</p>
        <p>1 2-ounce can sliced pimiento, drained and chopped</p>
        <p>In 12x7-l/2x2-inch baking dish combine onion, garlic, andl/4 cup water. Cook, uncovered at High for 3-1/2 minutes till tender. Drain tomatoes, reserving juice in measuring cup. Add enough water to make 1-1/4 cups liquid. Add tomato liquid, tomatoes, bouillon granules, salt, chili powder, and pepper to onion. Cook at High for 8 minutes till boiling. Stir in rice; spread mixture evenly in bottom of baking dish. Arrange chicken atop rice, with the meatiest chicken portions to outside of dish. If desired, sprinkle chicken with a little paprika. Cover and cook at Medium High for 27 minutes till tender. Carefully stir peas and pimiento into rice, rearranging chicken as necessary. Cook at High for 5 minutes till heated through. Makes 6 servings.</p>
        <p>CHILI-CHEESEDIP 1/2 cup finely chopped onion</p>
        <p>1 tablespoon butter or margarine</p>
        <p>2 medium tomatoes, peeled, seeded, and chopped</p>
        <p>14-ounce can green chili peppers, rinsed, seeded and chopped 1/4 teaspoon salt</p>
        <p>1-1/2 cups shredded cheedar cheese Milk</p>
        <p>Tortilla chips</p>
        <p>In 1-quart cassserole combine onion and butter. Cook at High for 2 minutes till tender, stirring once. Stir in tomatoes, chili peppers, and salt. Cover and cook at High for 5 minutes. Add cheese, a little at a time, stirring till melted. Stir in a little milk, if mixture becomes too thick. Cook on High for 45 seconds. Stir, serve with tortilla chips. Mades 1-3/4 cups.</p>
        <p>GET YOUR CORNMfiWARf l</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>SPAGHETTI CASSEROLE.</p>
        <p>$^5</p>
        <p>plus 2 UPC codes Irom any Skinner Pasta Products.</p>
        <p>A $22^ Retail Value.</p>
        <p>You Save12^!</p>
        <p>3-PIECE CORNING WARE^ Freezer/Oven/ Stovetop/Microwave/Table Casserole Set includes 2 QT. Oven-Proof Casserole Dish and Glass Lid, plus Plastic Storage Lid.</p>
        <p>Mail |ust S9 95 (payable to Skinner CORNING WARE </p>
        <p>Offer) plus 2 UPC codes from any Skinner' Pasta Products to SkinnerSpaghetti Casserole Otter. PO Box 15000, Waynesboro. VA 22980 Virginia residents, please include</p>
        <p>applicable sales tax</p>
        <p>Please print legibly;</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>SAVE OVER 50% 0N1HSC0RNIIIGWARE SPAGHETTI CASSBtOLL</p>
        <p>S'ale.</p>
        <p>-7ip.</p>
        <p>Ai'jw 6 8 /Keckslof delivery Pruotsuipufrnasesubmined witfioutiris Qiie' Form Kv il riot De hurioteo Vod here crotiibiled Mer (ipim kUf 31,1M7. CORNING WARE is a Reqisiered Dademark ol Corning Glass Works Corning New York 14831</p>
        <p>SDH</p>
        <p>MONEY SAVING^UPONC</p>
        <p>the Sunflower Group  1695 Lowell. Overland Park, Kansas 6621</p>
        <p>Hf RSHEY )00DS CORPORATION 1987</p>
        <p>Jj t7Z69tO ImiAVUFACTUflER COUPOWl EXPIRES t/3l/BB|</p>
        <p>! SAVE m</p>
        <p>ON THREE OR MORE BARS OF BATH OR REGULAR SIZE OR</p>
        <p>TWO BARS OF FAMILY SIZE</p>
        <p>17000</p>
        <p>THE DIAL CORPORATION 015974</p>
        <p>[ M'Mki II trtNMIX hjN I ill in'V.vrix.s I  I  </p>
        <p>')C(1' whn&amp;gt;im|Hirihji.'4*iUiN  I</p>
        <p>t)/lT Ix U / T  h.m('S(./ iirUnx*r)  </p>
        <p>IXWIltlS' (IHM KXNUr n.\V(W  r</p>
        <p>"nmriu.NdiiR</p>
        <p>TO 10 CUITORI. liMiwin ) i&amp;gt;mv un i"*,.).!)jeodwtt li&amp;lt;r</p>
        <p>IIMIl'OrillHieSllrtilH rOUTYIOOli'IHAOSU(ll moHKK</p>
        <p>uw (,| Iitulm I'/) I UNlten" (r *. Iw 10 OU* KALin ti.0 In m'lln'.f Ik* I** ''u* Hi Ikr' nkKlun flu, #C lor hindklH J If* Mm lw.n  tlk  SutimM)k  kv  tem</p>
        <p>bipimrwf'i iniimenf, ii&amp;gt;tH'ki-f* iHfw guid lee, ki US* w IVflo</p>
        <p>Hi&amp;gt; siaiw,'.'. If</p>
        <p>iwi.a iW k ne* el iW nrikki I, ytil*,, jiuthiMirfa nr</p>
        <p>w' ti'lltryl' krin k.</p>
        <p>l.i.h ..k* 1  *</p>
        <p>riii'tMflls tti lukrl</p>
        <p>Doolor: The DIAl CORPORATION will reimburse you for tbe lace value o coupon plus 8C handling provided you and tfw consumer have complied with the terms ot the oiler Cash value 1 100th otic THE DIAL CORPORATION. Boa 2033S El Paao. TX 799M</p>
        <p>20&amp;lt; I</p>
        <p>Reach for the best tasting highest fiber bran flakes*</p>
        <p>TeMt'd dftamst the leading brand</p>
        <p>.M.A.M F.AV'Tl RER'S COIPON EXPIRES 4/30/lW</p>
        <p>35^1</p>
        <p>if C wf tmttnK fov kv wt In W o n cougok gw n fk*-ri.lOlMlk|..ttfCin"iplWiftC,C I at go&amp;gt;Mktv9t*nna VMontfiMnmHSvnMr *cn K 9ir -irrkem  tnm IMcauW Mkarn W GC Cf  ne  aew.fn'irwiiKir  PO</p>
        <p>when you buy</p>
        <p>bran</p>
        <p>FIAKES</p>
        <p>SaveSSH</p>
        <p>I I I</p>
        <p>astKAI</p>
        <p>Hums</p>
        <p>UVHiWTHN</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0141" />
        <p>SUPER MARKETS, INC.</p>
        <p>Where Shopping Is A Pleasure'*</p>
        <p>DISCOIT</p>
        <p>ON EVIRYTIIINt BUT OUAIITY</p>
        <p>Wt Rstnr Th Right To Limit Quontitiot Wo Accept Food Stamps And WIC Vouchors</p>
        <p>Lean Cuisine</p>
        <p>Less Than 300 Calories</p>
        <p>OMENTAL DINNER..</p>
        <p>*1</p>
        <p>99</p>
        <p>CHICKEN AND VEGETABLE DINNER.....</p>
        <p>99</p>
        <p>GLAZED , CHICKEN DINNER.</p>
        <p>29</p>
        <p>^  , BEEF AND PORK $  00</p>
        <p>^ CANNELLONI T |</p>
        <p>dinner  I</p>
        <p>isine</p>
        <p>SALISBURY STEAK DINNER ....</p>
        <p>99</p>
        <p>I CHICKEN CACCIATORE i DINNER_____</p>
        <p>*1</p>
        <p>99</p>
        <p>STUFFED CABBAGE DINNER..</p>
        <p>*1</p>
        <p>99</p>
        <p>CHICKEN A L'ORANOE DINNER_____</p>
        <p>29</p>
        <p>LeanCuisine</p>
        <p>TURKEY</p>
        <p>_ DIJON DINNER...</p>
        <p>*1</p>
        <p>99</p>
        <p>OREEN PEPPER STEAK.......</p>
        <p>$J19</p>
        <p>STUFFED</p>
        <p>PEPPERS</p>
        <p>2</p>
        <p>19</p>
        <p>CASHEW</p>
        <p>CHICKEN</p>
        <p>49</p>
        <p>BEEF</p>
        <p>TERIYAKI</p>
        <p>*2</p>
        <p>49</p>
        <p>LASAONA</p>
        <p>. 31 OZ.</p>
        <p>49</p>
        <p>PEPPERONI PIZZA..</p>
        <p>*2</p>
        <p>19</p>
        <p>DUUXE PIZZA</p>
        <p>
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        <p>*2</p>
        <p>49</p>
        <p>SUPER MARKETS, INC.</p>
        <p>Where Shopping Is A Pleasure'</p>
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        <p>ON EVtRYTHIIK BUT OUAUTY</p>
        <p>Wo Rosorvo Tho Right To Limit Quantitios Wo Accept Food Stamps And WIC Vouchors</p>
        <p>PRICES GOOD THRU SATURDAY</p>
        <p>IT'S OUR</p>
        <p>/^TTTTik</p>
        <p>SUPER BOWLI PARTY</p>
        <p>KRAFT</p>
        <p>OBttJBUn</p>
        <p>iSss</p>
        <p>'UNNUnON SaSiSLapT</p>
        <p>KRAFT</p>
        <p>MAYONNAISE</p>
        <p>32 OZ. JAR</p>
        <p>Maj^Maisci</p>
        <p>KRAFT</p>
        <p>SALAD DRESSING</p>
        <p>8 0Z.</p>
        <p>niNCH</p>
        <p>CATALINA</p>
        <p>NEW</p>
        <p>RANCNRR6</p>
        <p>CHOICE</p>
        <p>KRAFT</p>
        <p>AJUURICAN</p>
        <p>SINGLES</p>
        <p>12 OZ. PACKAGE</p>
        <p>SINGLES</p>
        <p>AMEMCAN f</p>
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        <p>KRAFT</p>
        <p>71</p>
        <p>KRAFT</p>
        <p>MIRACLE WHIP</p>
        <p>32 OZ. JAR</p>
        <p>Miracle</p>
        <p>Whip</p>
        <p>c- - ... A .</p>
        <p>KRAFT</p>
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        <p>CHUNK CHEDDAR CHEESE</p>
        <p>8 OZ. MILD</p>
        <p>\</p>
        <p>mx'MJiifuL</p>
        <p>cheese</p>
        <p>KRAFT</p>
        <p>PARKAY</p>
        <p>MARGARINE</p>
        <p>Nfroi wrjBnti</p>
        <p>&amp;amp;</p>
        <p>1 LB. 1/4's</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0142" />
        <p>SUPER MARKETS, INC.</p>
        <p>Where Shopping Is A Pleasure</p>
        <p>Wf Rcstrv* Th Right To Limit Quantititt Wo Accept Food Stamps And WIC Vouchors</p>
        <p>PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU WEDNESDAY</p>
        <p>D.A. WESTERN BONELESS</p>
        <p>EYE</p>
        <p>STEAKS</p>
        <p>LB.</p>
        <p>U.S.D.A WESTERN BONELESS</p>
        <p>SIRIOIN TIP OR RUMP ROAST...</p>
        <p>U.S.D.A WESTERN BONELESS</p>
        <p>CUBE</p>
        <p>STEAKS.............</p>
        <p>FRESH COUNTRY STYLE</p>
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        <p>BACKBONE.......</p>
        <p>country STYLE</p>
        <p>PORK</p>
        <p>FRESH GRADE A</p>
        <p>FRYER</p>
        <p>LEG</p>
        <p>QUARTERS</p>
        <p>C</p>
        <p>.B.</p>
        <p>iLB.</p>
        <p>'M</p>
        <p>FRESH</p>
        <p>GROUND</p>
        <p>ROUND...</p>
        <p>(GROUND FRESH DAILY)</p>
        <p>LB.</p>
        <p>.B.</p>
        <p>U.S.D.A. WESTERN FULL CUT</p>
        <p>ROUND STEAK</p>
        <p>HOUSE OF RAEFORD</p>
        <p>FRYER</p>
        <p>THIGHS.....</p>
        <p>HOUSE OF RAEFORD</p>
        <p>FRYER</p>
        <p>DRUMSTICKS</p>
        <p>JUMBO</p>
        <p>JUMBO</p>
        <p>  0  pack</p>
        <p>LB.</p>
        <p>U.S.D.A. WESTERN</p>
        <p>BONELESS ROUND STEAK</p>
        <p>JESSE JONES</p>
        <p>SAUSAGE.._______</p>
        <p>JESSE JONES</p>
        <p>FRANKS...........</p>
        <p>JESSE JONES</p>
        <p>BOLOGNA----</p>
        <p> 0</p>
        <p>)14 OZ.</p>
        <p>&amp;gt;12 OZ.</p>
        <p>12 OZ.</p>
        <p>HARRIS</p>
        <p>BACON.....</p>
        <p>LUTERS</p>
        <p>FRANKS...</p>
        <p>GRILL READY</p>
        <p>FRANKS...</p>
        <p>JAMESTOWN</p>
        <p>SAUSAOE.</p>
        <p>59 OSCAR MAYER</p>
        <p>L. WIENERS..</p>
        <p>SMITHFIELD LEAN AND TENDER</p>
        <p>WHOLE SMOKED PICNICS</p>
        <p>c</p>
        <p>[(4-7 LB.)</p>
        <p>POCAHONTAS SALE</p>
        <p>LB.WHOLE KERNEL OOLDEN CORN, FRENCH STYLE GREEN BEANS OR LONG CUT GREEN BEANS</p>
        <p>  t </p>
        <p>303 CANSMIXED VEGETABLES, LITTLE PRINCESS PEAS OR WHOLE SWEET POTATOES.</p>
        <p>112 OZ.</p>
        <p>&amp;gt;12 OZ.</p>
        <p>&amp;gt;1 LB.</p>
        <p>&amp;gt;1 LB.</p>
        <p>&amp;gt;1 LB.</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0143" />
        <p>The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C._Wednesday.  January  21,1987  Q-5</p>
        <p>PRODUCE</p>
        <p>kEEbiEft</p>
        <p>16 OZ.</p>
        <p>HONEY GRAHAMS OR CINNAMON CRISP. 14OZ</p>
        <p>ZESTA</p>
        <p>SALTINE CRACKERS.. .14 0Z</p>
        <p>DR. PEPPER OR DIET DR. PEPPER</p>
        <p>2 LITER</p>
        <p>$09</p>
        <p>HUNTS</p>
        <p>KETCHUP</p>
        <p>32 OZ. JUG</p>
        <p>FRENCH'S</p>
        <p>MUSTARD</p>
        <p>24 OZ.</p>
        <p>MILLER LITE</p>
        <p>BEER</p>
        <p>12PAK12 0Z. CANS</p>
        <p>MAXWELL HOUSE</p>
        <p>MASTERBLEND COFFEE</p>
        <p>13 OZ. BAG</p>
        <p>49</p>
        <p>NEW KEN-L RATION HEARTY CHUNKS</p>
        <p>DOG FOOD</p>
        <p>ALL 14 OZ. FLAVORS</p>
        <p>HUNT'S</p>
        <p>MANWICH</p>
        <p>SAUCE</p>
        <p>15 OZ.</p>
        <p>C</p>
        <p>CHATHAM 20 LB.</p>
        <p>CHUNK DOG FOOD</p>
        <p>69</p>
        <p>FRENCH'S 1 WOMESTIRSHIRE SAUCE</p>
        <p>49^</p>
        <p>1 GREER FREESTONE</p>
        <p>PEACH HALVES</p>
        <p>29 OZ.</p>
        <p>89*</p>
        <p>DISHWASHINO</p>
        <p>LIQUID</p>
        <p>S H 09</p>
        <p>35 OFF ^ ^ </p>
        <p>KRAFT 8 OZ. FRENCH OR CATALINA DRESSING</p>
        <p>79*</p>
        <p>MARCAL</p>
        <p>TOWELS</p>
        <p>JUMBO C ROLL K MM</p>
        <p>IF</p>
        <p>NABISCO 16 OZ. YRISCUITS, WHEAT</p>
        <p>THINS EM CO</p>
        <p>OR12 0Z. aV RBTTER  CNEDDARS</p>
        <p>BANNER</p>
        <p>BATHROOM</p>
        <p>TISSUE</p>
        <p>$79</p>
        <p>9 ROLL H</p>
        <p>COMET</p>
        <p>CLEANSER</p>
        <p>..3/99</p>
        <p>DOWNY FABRIC</p>
        <p>SOFTENER</p>
        <p>$089</p>
        <p>96 OZ.</p>
        <p>60* OFF LABEL</p>
        <p>CHASE AND SANBORN</p>
        <p>COFFEE</p>
        <p>11.5 0Z. VACUUM BAGS</p>
        <p>$|99</p>
        <p>GLAD 10 a.</p>
        <p>TRASH BAOS</p>
        <p>99c</p>
        <p>GLAD 15 CT. KITCHEN OARBAOE BAOS</p>
        <p>99*</p>
        <p>FROZEN FOODS</p>
        <p>-</p>
        <p>. J</p>
        <p>I ^</p>
        <p>CAROLINA DAIRIES</p>
        <p>BUrTERMILK</p>
        <p>CAROLINA DAIRIES CHILLED</p>
        <p>ORANGE JUICE.</p>
        <p>
        </p>
        <p>Vi GAL. CTN</p>
        <p>PARKAY</p>
        <p>MAR6ARINE</p>
        <p>1 LB.</p>
        <p> t 1/4'i</p>
        <p>PILLSBURY</p>
        <p>BUTTERMILK BISCUITS.....</p>
        <p>KRAFT SLICED</p>
        <p>AMERICAN CHEESE SINOLES</p>
        <p>=99*</p>
        <p>2/*l</p>
        <p>69*</p>
        <p> 12 OZ.</p>
        <p>49</p>
        <p>ALL 12 OZ. VARIETIES</p>
        <p>JENO'S CRISP AND TASTY</p>
        <p>PARTY PIZZAS.</p>
        <p>CITRUS HILL</p>
        <p>ORANOE JUICE CONCENTRATE....... n  oz</p>
        <p>BANQUET 2 LB.</p>
        <p>SUPPERS.</p>
        <p>CRINKLE CUT</p>
        <p>FRENCH FRIES</p>
        <p>LEAN CUISINE</p>
        <p>GLAZED</p>
        <p>CHICKEN.........</p>
        <p>PARADE</p>
        <p>BROCCOLI</p>
        <p>SPEARS  10 OZ.</p>
        <p>ALL VARIETIES EXCEPT BEEF</p>
        <p> 2 LB.</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0144" />
        <p>PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU JAN. 24 AT</p>
        <p>SAV-A-CENTER IN GREENVILLE</p>
        <p>WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES.</p>
        <p>5 lb. bag</p>
        <p>LIMIT ONE WITH AN ADDITIONAL $10.00 OR MORE PURCHASE.</p>
        <p>P&amp;amp;Q</p>
        <p>Ice Cream Has Been Favorite For Years</p>
        <p>Americans did not invent ice cream although one might think so, judging from the quantities consumed. Actually ice cream and its relatives have been favorite foods of famous people and commoners alike for many centuries.</p>
        <p>In the days of Julius Caesar, swift-running slaves were dispatched to the highest mountain peaks to fetch snow and carry it back to Rome.</p>
        <p>There it was mixed with fruit juices to be enjoyed by the royalty.</p>
        <p>From the Orient, Marco Polo brought recipes for flavored milk ice desserts. Ita ians loved the new food and soon after its introduction, milk ice was being served throughout Europe.</p>
        <p>When Charles I reigned in England, the food was known as "cream ice. The king was so fond of this sweet treat that he hired a French chef who was famed for his skill in preparing cream ice.</p>
        <p>Recipes for cream ice traveled to America in the bags and trunks of early settlers. And it was Dolly Mamson who renamed the food. The words Ice Cream first appeared on a White House menu during her term as first lady.</p>
        <p>In the early days of homemade ice cream, it was prepared in a pewter pot. The pot of ingredients was jiggled inside a larger pot of ice and salt.</p>
        <p>The mixture was beaten vigorously until it froze. This method continued until 1846 when an American woman invented the hand-cranked freezer.</p>
        <p>Americans continued to make ice cream at home even with the first commercial production of ice cream in 1851. Some time after the advent of electricity in the early 1900s, electric-powered ice cream makers were introduced.</p>
        <p>Today both crank and electric ice cream makers can be found in homes across America. But most get little use. During the dog days of summer, they are dusted off for the annual work-out.</p>
        <p>The results are enjoyed by all, but everyone knows that it will probably be another year before they taste homemade ice cream again. And that is because making ice cream at home has traditionally been a big, messy production. Until now...</p>
        <p>Today there is a new, easy way to enjoy the old-fashioned goodness of fresh, homemade ice cream. Contemporary ice cream makers eliminate the fuss and mess of rock salt and ice that are traditionally associated with preparing ice cream at home.</p>
        <p>The freeze chamber of modern ice cream makers, which contains a refrigerant, is simply placed in the freezer overnight or for about eight hours. A temperature-sensitive color indicator, which is affixed to the exterior of the chamber, tells the consumer when it is at an ideal temperature for ice cream preparation.</p>
        <p>To make the ice cream, the chamber is removed from the freezer, ingredients are added, and the crank is turned a few minutes until the ice cream is ready to serve.</p>
        <p>Total preparation time is about five minutes per 1 /2 cup servings.</p>
        <p>With such easy, no-mess preparation, Americans can enjoy fresh, homemade ice cream any day of the week, any time of the year. If there is space available, the freeze chamber of the ice cream maker can be stored in the freezer so that it is ready for action whenever there is a request for ice cream.</p>
        <p>Contemporary ice cream makers are specially sized for todays smaller households. Some, for example. make 1 1/2 pints ... just enough fresh ice cream for dessert and perhaps a midnight snack.</p>
        <p>In addition to maxing ice cream, these convenient new freezers can turn out delicious ice milk, sherbet, sorbets, slushes, exotic drinks and more. A variety of dessert recipes are available, siich as the one below.</p>
        <p>This simple combination of ingredients makes ice cream that is wonderfully rich and creamy-smooth ... like the commercialfv</p>
        <p>SAy-i^CENTERESSS^</p>
        <p>The supemiarfcet with</p>
        <p>IVAKI</p>
        <p>Thousands and thousands of prices reduced throughout the store!</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>SEE STORES</p>
        <p>PLusnniiRi F</p>
        <p>ORES FOR DETAILS</p>
        <p>PURE CANE</p>
        <p>A&amp;amp;P</p>
        <p>Sugar</p>
        <p>98</p>
        <p>r REGULAR OR BUTTER FLAVOR</p>
        <p>Crisco W</p>
        <p>Shortening</p>
        <p>J lb. can</p>
        <p>168</p>
        <p>Dairy Charm</p>
        <p>Ice</p>
        <p>Cream</p>
        <p>A&amp;amp;P</p>
        <p>LIMIT ONE WITH AN ADDITIONAL $10.00 OR MORE PURCHASE,</p>
        <p>Shortening 3 lb. 128</p>
        <p>can I</p>
        <p>half</p>
        <p>gal.</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>19</p>
        <p>^ Paper Towels</p>
        <p>^ROU^</p>
        <p>TOWELS</p>
        <p>big</p>
        <p>roll</p>
        <p>38</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>LIMIT TWO WITH AN ADDITIONAL $10.00 OR MORE PURCHASE.</p>
        <p>SAVE ON</p>
        <p>Dukes Mayonnaise</p>
        <p>c</p>
        <p>32 oz.</p>
        <p>LIMIT ONE WITH AN ADDITIONAL $10.00 OR MORE PURCHASE.</p>
        <p>ASSORTED</p>
        <p>A&amp;amp;P</p>
        <p>Vegetables</p>
        <p>3100</p>
        <p>5-16.5  oz. cans H</p>
        <p>^ 15.5-</p>
        <p>r RICH &amp;amp; MELLOW</p>
        <p>Eight Oclock</p>
        <p>Coffee</p>
        <p>2</p>
        <p>69</p>
        <p>100</p>
        <p>12 oz. ctn.</p>
        <p>1 lb.</p>
        <p>SEALTEST</p>
        <p>Cottage Cheese</p>
        <p>ASSORTED</p>
        <p>Dannon Yogurt</p>
        <p>BUTTER TASTIN  BUTTERMILK</p>
        <p>Hungry Jack C A0 Biscuits</p>
        <p>8oz. I ctns.</p>
        <p>SHEDDS</p>
        <p>made</p>
        <p>premium-style ice creams.</p>
        <p>RICH VANILLA ICK( RK.\M 1/2-2/3 cup sugar 2 eggs</p>
        <p>2 cups heavy cream*</p>
        <p>2 teaspoons vanilla Mix sugar and eggs until light in color. Blend in cream and vanilla; mix well. Chill. Follow directions with your ice cream maker.</p>
        <p>Use whipping cream or gourmet whipping cream.</p>
        <p>For the same rich goodness but a slightly less sweet taste, use the lesser amount of sugar noted in the recipe.</p>
        <p>Country</p>
        <p>Crock</p>
        <p>1 lb. tub</p>
        <p>69</p>
        <p>LUNCHEON MEAT</p>
        <p>Armour Treet</p>
        <p>w</p>
        <p>LIMIT ONE WITH AN ADDITIONAL $10.00 OR MORE PURCHASE.</p>
        <p>79* 1 89*</p>
        <p>109</p>
        <p>10 02. pkg.</p>
        <p>12oz.</p>
        <p>can</p>
        <p>ASSORTED</p>
        <p>A&amp;amp;P Pizza</p>
        <p>HOT N SPICY  SNACKIN</p>
        <p>Banquet Chicken x</p>
        <p>HOMESTYLE</p>
        <p>Eggo</p>
        <p>Waffles X</p>
        <p>BANQUET  MICROWAVE  ASST.</p>
        <p>Chicken</p>
        <p>6.5 oz. can</p>
        <p>DOUBLEQ</p>
        <p>IN OIL OR WATER</p>
        <p>Chunk Light</p>
        <p>, Tuna</p>
        <p>LIMIT TWO WITH AN ADDITIONAL $10.00 OR MORE PURCHASE.</p>
        <p>ASSORTED</p>
        <p>Coca-</p>
        <p>Cola</p>
        <p>109</p>
        <p>ASSORTED</p>
        <p>16 oz. btl.</p>
        <p>^49</p>
        <p>Kraft Dressings</p>
        <p>MINI OR BEEF</p>
        <p>Chef Boy-Ar-Dee^Q0</p>
        <p>Ravioli 19</p>
        <p>STRONG  ABSORBENT</p>
        <p>Delta Tewels</p>
        <p>large</p>
        <p>roll</p>
        <p>NEW! AUTOMATIC DISHWASHER</p>
        <p>Cascade Liquid</p>
        <p>40 OZ. btl.</p>
        <p>59*</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>179</p>
        <p>CONVENIENT  DELICIOUS</p>
        <p>Success Rice</p>
        <p>14 OZ.</p>
        <p>pkg.</p>
        <p>Nuggets</p>
        <p>4.5 oz. Phg.</p>
        <p>CRISPY TORTILLA SNACK</p>
        <p>Doritcs Chips</p>
        <p>11 oz. pkg-</p>
        <p>109</p>
        <p>189</p>
        <p>Glad 1- QQ0</p>
        <p>IfashBags</p>
        <p>GALLO PREMIUM WINES 3 LT. BTL. (4.99)</p>
        <p>Miller</p>
        <p>Lite</p>
        <p>ctn. of</p>
        <p>12</p>
        <p>12 oz. cans</p>
        <p>499</p>
        <p>ught</p>
        <p>the Western world from China in the late 13th century. However, chow mein, stir-fried noodles, did not reach the shores of America until the 19th century. The popular Oriental dish was introduced here by Chinese laborers building the transcontinental railroad.</p>
        <p>LOW CALORIE</p>
        <p>too ct</p>
        <p>pkts</p>
        <p>Equal Sweetener</p>
        <p>M  ^  i-iplon</p>
        <p>Li peon.  J"'" Soup yge</p>
        <p>03. .....Mix "kg"</p>
        <p>EQUal  PAMIIVPI7P  *</p>
        <p>FAMILY FIZE</p>
        <p>LIPTON-CHICKEN</p>
        <p>^Lipton Tea Bags ^</p>
        <p>740</p>
        <p>liptOnllDi .i N&amp;lt;krl'    </p>
        <p>LIPTON  _</p>
        <p>^ Chicken -- aa0  24  ct.</p>
        <p>JCup-A-Soup00 .I"?"!*" pi's I</p>
        <p>_____ _ 4 25 02 Lipton IJQUUIp  pkg</p>
        <p>LIPTON  CHICKEN</p>
        <p>Sauce</p>
        <p>703 Greenville Boulevard</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0145" />
        <p>WE Wia MATCH ANY ADVERTISED GRDCERY FEATURE PRICE IN TDWN</p>
        <p>Excluding Meat, Produce, Deli, Bakery &amp;amp;</p>
        <p>Continuity Bonus Items. Bring Current Week Food Store Ad With You. We Will Match Like Items Or Equal Quality.</p>
        <p>SAMpCENTER^</p>
        <p>COUPONS</p>
        <p>WE WIU REDEEM UP TO FIVE MANUFACTURERS' COUPDNS FOR DOUDLE THEIR VALUE UP TO THE RETAIL PRICE</p>
        <p>ANY COUPON EXCEEDING 50&amp;lt; WILL BE</p>
        <p>REDEEMED AT ITS FACE VALUE ONUr</p>
        <p>SEE EXAMPLES BELOW</p>
        <p>WE WILL REDEEM UP TO FIVE MANUFACTURER S COUPONS WITH EACH S10.00 PURCHASE FOR DOUBLE THEIR VALUE UP TO THE RETAIL PRICE.</p>
        <p>MAXIMUM REDEMPTION VALUE OF S0&amp;lt;</p>
        <p>WITH A PURCHASE OF 110.00 OR MORE</p>
        <p>EXCLUDING:</p>
        <p> CIGARETTES. BEER, WINE. FOOD RETAILERS COUPON</p>
        <p>LIMIT FIVE DOUBLE COU-\PONS PER FAMILY WITH ^EACH $10.00 FOOD ORDER</p>
        <p>MFC S COUPON</p>
        <p>ITEM</p>
        <p>RETAIL</p>
        <p>MFG S CENTS OFF</p>
        <p>AP</p>
        <p>ADDED CENTS OFF</p>
        <p>TOTAL COUPON AT AAP</p>
        <p>Coupon A</p>
        <p>69*</p>
        <p>20*</p>
        <p>20*</p>
        <p>40*</p>
        <p>Coupon B</p>
        <p>69*</p>
        <p>40*</p>
        <p>29*</p>
        <p>69*</p>
        <p>CouponC</p>
        <p>$129</p>
        <p>SO*</p>
        <p>50*</p>
        <p>$1 00</p>
        <p>Coupon 0</p>
        <p>$129</p>
        <p>75*</p>
        <p>75* '</p>
        <p>Coupon E</p>
        <p>$279</p>
        <p>$1.00</p>
        <p>SI 00</p>
        <p>i CouponF</p>
        <p>40*</p>
        <p>FREE</p>
        <p>40*</p>
        <p>FRESH  YOUNG N TENDER</p>
        <p>W</p>
        <p>Flesh Cut ^/FtO^</p>
        <p>lb.</p>
        <p>Coffee</p>
        <p>Doesn't</p>
        <p>Muzzle</p>
        <p>Alcohol</p>
        <p>Bv N YU MEDICAL CENTER Making that one for the road a steaming cup of coffee to dispel the effects of alcohol doesnt work, warns a specialist at New York University Medical Center. In fact, driving under the dual influence may be even more dangerous.</p>
        <p>Remember caffeine is also a mind-affecting drug, cautions Dr. Robert A. Maslansky, instructor in clinical medicine and director of the substance-abuse program at Bellevue Hospital Center. And it can be quite deceptive.</p>
        <p>Caffeines effect is to speed and heighten reactions, he notes. We dont have exact words to describe fully the ways in which drugs affect the mind. But the poet Robert Lowell once described the state of mania as irritable enthusiasm. That is a good capsule characterization of the effect of caffeine: putting an edge on responses, subjectively countering the dulled state of having had a few drinks.</p>
        <p>But that effect is strictly subjective. While caffeine will probably make you move faster, it will not enable you to move more skillfully. Caffeine may improve performance of a simple, routine task, but not such a complex one as operating a motor vehicle. And it does not cancel out alcohols effects.</p>
        <p>Alcohol, Maslansky points out, impairs motor skills. It impairs judgment. It impairs such key visual abilities as dark-adaptation, for example, the ability to readjust after passing a pair of high-beam headlights. No matter how capable and alert one may feel, as long as the alcohol remains in the bloodstream, caffeine will not counter these impairments.</p>
        <p>Further, he observes, a second effect of a stimulant such as caffeine is to increase both self-confidence and agression. When these are coupled with alcohols effects, the result may well be even more destructive behavior. Behind the wheel of a car, that can add up to disaster.</p>
        <p>In short, the safety advisories are right: coffee or no coffee, if youve been drinking, dont drive.</p>
        <p>FAMILY PACK  FRESH</p>
        <p>Fryer</p>
        <p>Breast</p>
        <p>;9(F</p>
        <p>THIN TRIM GRAIN FED BEEF</p>
        <p>'THIN TRIM GRAIN THIN TRIM GRAIN W  pED  BEEF</p>
        <p>Rif^FED BEEF. BOTTOM OR M  </p>
        <p>^neless IF RibEye</p>
        <p>Rump RoastI Steak</p>
        <p>FishCut y</p>
        <p>199</p>
        <p>FieshCut</p>
        <p>SELECTED MEDIUM</p>
        <p>Yellow</p>
        <p>Onions</p>
        <p>3 lb.</p>
        <p>bag</p>
        <p>79</p>
        <p>JUICY</p>
        <p>Imported . QQ0 Nectarines 09</p>
        <p>BUTCHER'S CHOICE</p>
        <p>Sliced</p>
        <p>Bacon</p>
        <p>1 lb. phg.</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>FAMILY PACK  FRYER THIGH OR</p>
        <p>M Fryer . QQ0 Drumsticks 99</p>
        <p>PLANTATION  CORED &amp;amp; PEELED FREE</p>
        <p>JUICY</p>
        <p>Ripe</p>
        <p>Pineapples</p>
        <p>RED RIPE</p>
        <p>Plum</p>
        <p>Tomatoes</p>
        <p>CRISP CALIFORNIA</p>
        <p>Romaine Lettuce</p>
        <p>lb.</p>
        <p>bunch</p>
        <p>each</p>
        <p>9SF</p>
        <p>m</p>
        <p>lb.</p>
        <p>Imported</p>
        <p>Peaches</p>
        <p>FRESH SQUEEZED DAILY</p>
        <p>Orange Juice</p>
        <p>half</p>
        <p>gal.</p>
        <p>FRUIT-N-BERRY</p>
        <p>Daily</p>
        <p>Birdseed</p>
        <p>B9^</p>
        <p>THIN TRIM GRAIN FED BEEF  BONELESS</p>
        <p>DOUBLE PRINTS only 25C a pair</p>
        <p>ABSOLUTELY NO DEVELOPING CHARGEII</p>
        <p>DOUBLE PRINT . FILM DEVELOPING</p>
        <p>$3.00</p>
        <p>$3.75</p>
        <p>$6.00</p>
        <p>$9.00</p>
        <p>12 exp 15 exp 24 exp 36 exp</p>
        <p>SEE STORE FOR DETAILS</p>
        <p>Texaco</p>
        <p>Anti-Freeze</p>
        <p>PURCHASE TWO GALLONS 6.98 LESS MAIL-IN REBATE 3.50</p>
        <p>Sirloin</p>
        <p>Steak</p>
        <p>ARMOUR</p>
        <p>Canned Ham b</p>
        <p>MEAT OR BEEF</p>
        <p>Gwaltney Franks</p>
        <p>12 OZ. Pkfl.</p>
        <p>949</p>
        <p>599</p>
        <p>M0 Poik ^ Saus</p>
        <p>COUNTRY STYLE PORK RIBS OR FRESH</p>
        <p>Pork</p>
        <p>Steaks .&amp;gt;</p>
        <p>100% PURE BEEF</p>
        <p>Chopped Steak</p>
        <p>Patties </p>
        <p>JAMESTOWN  HOT OR MILD</p>
        <p>i-Mcan</p>
        <p>59</p>
        <p>169</p>
        <p>Sausage</p>
        <p>1 lb. pkg.</p>
        <p>99</p>
        <p>NABISCO</p>
        <p>BRANDS?</p>
        <p>TEXACO</p>
        <p>Anti-freezi</p>
        <p>Coolant^</p>
        <p>FINAL</p>
        <p>COST</p>
        <p>AFTER</p>
        <p>REBATE</p>
        <p>piocess color pnnl Mm only)</p>
        <p> gal. </p>
        <p>DELICIOUS</p>
        <p>Better</p>
        <p>Cheddars</p>
        <p>CRISPY</p>
        <p>Wheat</p>
        <p>Thins</p>
        <p>TASTY</p>
        <p>Nabisco</p>
        <p>Triscuits</p>
        <p>NABISCO</p>
        <p>Premium</p>
        <p>Saltines</p>
        <p>12 07 pkq</p>
        <p>179</p>
        <p>16 0/ pkq</p>
        <p>179</p>
        <p>1 3 07 pkq</p>
        <p>179</p>
        <p>16 07</p>
        <p>99,</p>
        <p>NORTH ATLANTIC FRESH</p>
        <p>Ocean Perch Fillet</p>
        <p>. 2</p>
        <p>SEA LITE IMITATION</p>
        <p>Crab Meat Blend b 2^</p>
        <p>FARM FRESH  POND RAISED</p>
        <p>Dressed Catfish b</p>
        <p>Flounder Fillets 3,!</p>
        <p>Open 24 Hours, Open Monday 7 A.M., Closed Saturday 11 P.M., Open Sunday 7 A.M.-11 P.M.</p>
        <p>t</p>
        <p>Newcomers</p>
        <p>Influence</p>
        <p>Cookbooks</p>
        <p>ATLANTA (AP) - Newcomers to the Souths booming Sun Belt are crowding schools and highways, bringing more dollars to the regions economy  and adding whipped cream to grits.</p>
        <p>But Nathalie Dupree, a former Social Circle, Ga., restaurant owner who hosts a half-hour cooking show on 160 public television stations, said the changes instigated by immigrants are being matched by innovative natives.</p>
        <p>One native-inspired twist on a staple was to cook butterbeans in champagne, said the Atlanta cooking teacher, whose show is called New Southern Cooking With Nathalie Dupree.</p>
        <p>Accommodations are being made here (for the people moving South from other regions of the country), she said in a recent telephone interview. People dont want everything fried with fatback ... (but) theres definitely an interest in Southern cooking.</p>
        <p>She said some of the changes also are being made to lower the calorie content of Southern food, much of which is fried or served with heavy sauces.</p>
        <p>Georgias population has grown by nearly 12 percent since 1980 to slightly over 6 million, according to the U.S. Census Bureau. Many of the new residents may be learning for the first time of the thousanck of uses Georgia homemakers have developed for peaches, peanuts and poultry, she said.</p>
        <p>Ms. Dupree added that cooks nationwide are developing an interest in Southern cuisine, and that New Yorkers recently gave her rave reviews for cheese grits.</p>
        <p>The interest in Southern food will not be a short-term fad, she said.</p>
        <p>People are tired of French and that precious California food, she said. They want real food. I think it (the interest in Southern food) will continue to grow.</p>
        <p>Southern cuisine is made special by the use of ingredients indigenous to the area, she said, adding were the only real cuisine except New Orleans,</p>
        <p>Ms. Dupree, who was raised in Virginia, said she opened a restaurant in the small Walton County town of Social Circle in 1972, and soon began substituting area products in her French recipes</p>
        <p>I stopped using veal and started using more pork. It was a natural evolution, she said. And why get proscuitto when you can use a good Georgia or Virginia ham?</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0146" />
        <p>Pork Ribs Are Right Any Day Of The Year</p>
        <p>half turn and cook on High for an additional 6 minutes till apples are tender. Serve warm. If desired, top each serving with vanilla ice cream. Makes 10 servings.  . -</p>
        <p>Here is a microwave oven recipe that is certain to be a ^wt family pleaser. Pork ribs are a mouth-watering and illing dish that can be enjoyed any day of the year. This complete meat dish can be quickly and easily prepared in your microwave in less than an hour.</p>
        <p>And for dessert, try the tasty, nutritious whole grain apple crisp topped with ice cream.</p>
        <p>COUNTRY PORK RIBS</p>
        <p>1 cup catsup</p>
        <p>1 tablespoon Worcestershire sauce</p>
        <p>2 or 3 dashes bottled hot pepper sauce  '</p>
        <p>1 cup water</p>
        <p>1/4 cup vinegar a 1 tablespoon sugar 1teaspoonsalt 1 teaspoon celery seed 4 pounds pork loin back ribs</p>
        <p>In bowl combine catsup, Worcestershire, pepper sauce.</p>
        <p>water, vinegar, sugar, salt, and celery seed. Place in microwave oven.</p>
        <p>Cook sauce on medium (50% power) for 10 minutes, stirring occasionally ; set aside. Cut ribs into serving size pieces. Arrange in 13x9x2-inch baking dish, overlapping slightly. Place in microwave oven.</p>
        <p>Cook ribs, uncovered, on medium high (70% power), for 20 minutes, rearranging once. Drain off juices and rearrange ribs in dish. Pour barbecue sauce over ribs. Return to microwave oven.</p>
        <p>Cook ribs, uncovered, on medium high, for 25 minutes till thoroughly cooked (adding more cooking time if necessary), basting and rearranging after 15 minutes. Remove ribs to platter. Skim off fat; spoon sauce over ribs. Garnish with lemon slices if desired. Makes 4 to 6 servings.</p>
        <p>WHOLE GRAIN APPLE CRISP 8 cups sliced, peeled tart apples 3/4 cup apple juice</p>
        <p>1/2 cup raisins 1/3 cup honey</p>
        <p>1/4 cup packed brown sugar 3 tablespoons all-purpose flour 1 teaspoon ground cinnamon 1/2 cup quick-cooking rolled oats 1/2 cup whole wheat flour 1/2 cup wheat germ 1/2 cup sunflower nuts 1/4 cup honey</p>
        <p>1/4 cup butter or margarine, melted vanilla ice cream (optional)</p>
        <p>in 13x9x2-inch baking dish combine apples, apple juice, raisins, 1/3 cup honey, brown sugar, all-purpose flour, and cinnamon; mix well. In medium bowl combine oats, whole wheat flour, wheat germ, sunflower nuts, 1/4 cup honey, and melted butter; mix well and spread over apple mixture. Place in microwave oven.</p>
        <p>Cook apple mixture on high for 6 minutes. Give dish a</p>
        <p>Something Just For Tea In Afternoon</p>
        <p>By NINA KILLHAM</p>
        <p>L.A. Times-Washington Post .News Service</p>
        <p>It is not unusual, these days, to walk past the lobby of a grand hotel at midafternoon and spy businessmen sipping a pot of orange pekoe.</p>
        <p>Afternoon tea is popular for a reason. It represents all the elegance and decorum of the past, simply wrapped in a pale cucumber sandwich.</p>
        <p>According to Michael Smiths The Afternoon Tea Book (Atheneum, 1986), the English would never have started this between-meal tradition if it were not for the greed of Anna, seventh duchess of Bedford (1783-1857).</p>
        <p>It seems this duchess grew very hungry between lunch and dinner. To appease her stomach, but save her face, she would retire to her boudoir and order from her servants plenty of sandwiches, cakes and cookies, or rather, biscuits. Soon discovered, her pigginess caught on and became a symbol of class.</p>
        <p>The Afternoon Tea Book is a highly researched and entertaining account of what seems^at first to be a trivial pastime. Yet few meals evoke such preconceived notions as tea  from representing the very worst of class pomp to symbolizing the very core 01 a nurturing family.</p>
        <p>Half history, half recipes, The Afternoon Tea Book offers recipes for sandwiches, breads, patties, potted meats, cakes and biscuits.</p>
        <p>Smith also includes 23 recipes for butters such as walnut, brandy and lemon, even the inspiring foie gras and artichoke, and tomato curry and orange.</p>
        <p>There are recipes for teas and tea punches, including one Loving Cup with madeira, brandy and champagne that in some circles would give a whole new meaning to the hour of tea.</p>
        <p>Laced throughout the history and recipes are invaluable lessons for the novice for an authentic tea.</p>
        <p>When eating a scone. Smith ex-)lains, one does not spread a whole lalf with the butter and jam at a time. Instead, one spreads on the size one might expect to bite elegantly. The English, he says, have an experienced eye for gauging just the right amount of butter and jam to put on so that there are not leftovers after the last bite of scone.</p>
        <p>To make the perfect cup of tea, Smith insists that you use the finest tea you can afford, warm the teapot by rinsing with boiling water and use one teaspoon per person, plus "one for the pot.</p>
        <p>In fact. Smith notes everything you need to know to enjoy a tea; lore, categories and even paraphernalia. To read this book is to reminisce about a time that, while not socially sound, was really so civilized.  Staples of the English tea are the potted meats and fish; coarse-tex-tured, they are scooped into sturdy pots and sealed under a thick layer of clarified (so it wont become rancid) butter to give them an extended storage life. Below is a creamv version from the book that would be a treat at your next tea party.</p>
        <p>Express-lane List: smoked trout, cream cheese, sour cream, lemon, hot pepper sauce, mace, bread or crackers</p>
        <p>POTTED SMOKED TROUT (Makes about &amp;gt;4 pound)</p>
        <p>10 ounces smoked trout, skinned and boned</p>
        <p>' '4 cup (&amp;gt;2 stick) sweet butter plus V4 cup clarifled butter 4 cup cream cheese 2 tablespoons sour cream Juice of &amp;gt;2 small lemon 2 to 3 dashes hot-pepper sauce 4 teaspoon mace</p>
        <p>Salt and freshly ground pepper to taste</p>
        <p>Toasted fingers of bread or crackers for serving Puree the fish in a blender or food processor.</p>
        <p>Mix in all the remaining ingredients except the clarified butter. Spoon into a pretty pot or dish. Pour over a thin film of clarified butter. Refrigerate to set. Remove from the refrigerator one hour before serving. Serve on toasted bread or crackers.</p>
        <p>Sen. Robert F. Kennedy was born in 1925 in Brookline, Mass.</p>
        <p>THESE PRICES ARE EFFECTIVE WEDNESDAY THRU SATURDAY</p>
        <p>JAN. 21-24,1987 DOUBLE COUPONS EVERY WEDNESDAY &amp;amp; SUNDAY  SEE STORE FOR DETAILS!</p>
        <p>WE ACCEPT ALL OTHER FOOD STORE COUPONS FOOD STAMPS &amp;amp; WIC VOUCHERS</p>
        <p>SHOP EZE</p>
        <p>WOODLAND</p>
        <p>BUYERS MARKET-MEMORIAL DRIVE</p>
        <p>QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED. NONE SOLD TO DEALERS. HOURS: MON.-SAT. 7:00 A.M.-9:00 P.M.</p>
        <p>SUNDAY 7:30 A.M.-6:00 P.M.</p>
        <p>BEST PRODUCE IN TOWN!</p>
        <p>NO KIDDING-IT'S A FACT.</p>
        <p>FOR THE BEST FRESH COOKED COLLARDS IN TOWN VISIT OUR DELI ON TUESDAY &amp;amp; FRIDAY</p>
        <p>OHowci oji  Ojin.  'Ws</p>
        <p>'hckmi Uo iPCMcH Dwiei Ca[[ Q/iiginia kPti^ini</p>
        <p>9oi</p>
        <p>HOUSE OF RAEFORD ' FRYER</p>
        <p>LEG QUARTERS</p>
        <p>SWIFT PREMIUM</p>
        <p>RIB EYE STEAKS</p>
        <p>LB.</p>
        <p>4</p>
        <p>SLICED LEAN &amp;amp; TENDER</p>
        <p>1/4 PORK LOIN...</p>
        <p>3.59</p>
        <p>SALT PORK</p>
        <p>FAT BACK</p>
        <p>FRESH</p>
        <p>PIG FEET OR NECK BONES</p>
        <p>JUS 49</p>
        <p>SWIFT PREMIUM. BONELESS</p>
        <p>^ BEEF STEW</p>
        <p> LB.</p>
        <p>    LB.</p>
        <p>LB.</p>
        <p>STAR KIST</p>
        <p>CHUNK LIGHT TUNA</p>
        <p>FRESH CRISP  _  ^  .</p>
        <p>A LEHUCE 58*</p>
        <p>1  # w  e  Q</p>
        <p>SWIFT PREMIUM FRESH  tm  A A   5</p>
        <p>GROUND CHUCK Ji.o9 ROCCOLI</p>
        <p>m  BEAIES-COUNTRY  LINK  i|  A  FStT</p>
        <p>SAUSAGE... 1</p>
        <p>A</p>
        <p>CAMPBELL'S</p>
        <p>PINEAPPLE</p>
        <p>      LB.</p>
        <p>..-.*1.19</p>
        <p>.^iw.*1.19</p>
        <p>MARCAL</p>
        <p>TOMATO SOUP</p>
        <p>IN OIL OR WATER 6V, OZ.CAN</p>
        <p>Star-Kfet</p>
        <p>fcHUMK light T'I"</p>
        <p>PILLSBURY</p>
        <p>FLOUR</p>
        <p>PLAIN OR SELF RISING</p>
        <p>lO'a OZ. CAN</p>
        <p>4/</p>
        <p>TOWELS</p>
        <p>SINGLE ROLL</p>
        <p>S LB.     BAG</p>
        <p>PERFECTION-LONG GRAIN</p>
        <p>3 LB.</p>
        <p>        BAG</p>
        <p>79</p>
        <p>79</p>
        <p>LIMIT 8 WITH S10.00 ADDITIONAL FOOD ORDER</p>
        <p>MERICO-TEXAS STYLE</p>
        <p>BUHERMILK BISCUITS.</p>
        <p>12 OZ.</p>
        <p>MAOLA Va% LOWFAT</p>
        <p>RICE</p>
        <p>VEG-ALL-MIXED  ^  /  S  1  IIII 1/</p>
        <p>VEGHABLES..-.:Z/ I MILK,.</p>
        <p>1 GALLON</p>
        <p>An</p>
        <p>n.59</p>
        <p>3/M.19</p>
        <p>79</p>
        <p>MINUTE MAID</p>
        <p>LEMONADE OR PINK LEMONADE.noz</p>
        <p>PILLSBURY-MICROWAVE $ V</p>
        <p>PIZZAS I .Ot</p>
        <p>FOODLAND</p>
        <p>laOEAM</p>
        <p>s</p>
        <p> Vz GAL.</p>
        <p>1.29</p>
        <p>A</p>
        <p>DETERGENT</p>
        <p>50 OFF 42 OZ. BOX</p>
        <p>PURINA</p>
        <p>nbM.29</p>
        <p>* DOG CHOW</p>
        <p>  25  LB.  BAG</p>
        <p>^^7.49</p>
        <p>CHOW " "Tw</p>
        <p>Ik COKE, DIET COKE, J OR NEW COKE</p>
        <p>2LIT. BOT.</p>
        <p>^*1.09</p>
        <p>PALMOLIVE</p>
        <p>LIQUID</p>
        <p>PP-1.19  22 OZ. BOT. REG. OR LEMON-LIME</p>
        <p>SOF-PAC</p>
        <p>BATHROOM TISSUE. . . .r</p>
        <p>FOODLAND</p>
        <p>HAMBURGER OR</p>
        <p>89^</p>
        <p>HOT DOG BUNS. .Ti 2/99'</p>
        <p>69*</p>
        <p>CRUNCH N' MUNCH..</p>
        <p>BREAKSTONE</p>
        <p>GOURMET DIPS.....</p>
        <p>BREAKSTONE</p>
        <p>SOUR CREAM</p>
        <p>NABISCO .</p>
        <p>SNACK CRACKERS,</p>
        <p>NABISCO</p>
        <p>NILLA WAFERS.</p>
        <p>8 0Z. aN.</p>
        <p>OLD EL PASO</p>
        <p>V BURRITOS</p>
        <p>MILD, MEDIUM OR HOT</p>
        <p> 16 OZ.</p>
        <p>79</p>
        <p> m dulany-chopped</p>
        <p>It 19 turnip GREENS</p>
        <p>5 0Z.  PKG.</p>
        <p>69' .89'</p>
        <p>12 OZ.</p>
        <p>DORITOS BRAND ^riiDs</p>
        <p>1.59SK:i1.39</p>
        <p>I Aj oreos</p>
        <p>. . 20 ox.</p>
        <p> I</p>
        <p>c</p>
        <p>io</p>
        <p>lU</p>
        <p>p</p>
        <p>to</p>
        <p>N</p>
        <p>DUKE'S</p>
        <p>MAYONNAISE</p>
        <p>32 OZ. JAR</p>
        <p>78</p>
        <p>CmC</p>
        <p>OiiO</p>
        <p>UHU</p>
        <p>pHp</p>
        <p>ojo</p>
        <p>NN</p>
        <p>II</p>
        <p>IK</p>
        <p>WELCH'S</p>
        <p>GRAPE</p>
        <p>JELLY</p>
        <p>32 OZ. JAR</p>
        <p>89^</p>
        <p>LIMIT 1 WITH 810.00 ADDITIONAL FOOD LIMIT 1 WITH 810.00 ADDITIONAL ORDER. EXPIRES 1/24/S7.  ||  ORDER.  EXPIRES  1/24/B7.</p>
        <p>II</p>
        <p>II</p>
        <p>UlS</p>
        <p>piEp</p>
        <p>o"to</p>
        <p>N^ II</p>
        <p>KRAFT</p>
        <p>ORANGE</p>
        <p>JUICE</p>
        <p>64 OZ. JAR</p>
        <p>99</p>
        <p>II</p>
        <p>II</p>
        <p>Ik</p>
        <p>OiA</p>
        <p>ui^</p>
        <p>TWIN PET</p>
        <p>DOG FOOD</p>
        <p>IS OZ. CAN</p>
        <p>FREE!</p>
        <p>II</p>
        <p>FOOD LIMIT 1 WITH $10.00 ADOmONAL FOOD 11 ORDER. EXPIRES 1/24/B7.</p>
        <p>II</p>
        <p>II</p>
        <p>c</p>
        <p>o</p>
        <p>u</p>
        <p>p</p>
        <p>o</p>
        <p>N</p>
        <p>II  food</p>
        <p>II</p>
        <p>ORDER. EXPIRES 1/24/87.</p>
        <p>f.</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0147" />
        <p>U.S.D.A. SELECTED BEEF! TRIMMED THE WAY YOU LIKE IT!</p>
        <p>WHOLE</p>
        <p>SIRLOIN</p>
        <p>TIPS</p>
        <p>Freshest Buys In Town</p>
        <p>6OLDEN RIPE</p>
        <p>U.S.D.A.,</p>
        <p>Ml</p>
        <p>SIRLOIN</p>
        <p>TIP ROAST</p>
        <p>189</p>
        <p>SIRLOIN</p>
        <p>TIP STEAK</p>
        <p>lAHXtMWi SAFETV i</p>
        <p>NANAS</p>
        <p>ALL CENTER</p>
        <p>BEEF LIVER</p>
        <p>79</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>LB.</p>
        <p>PIGGLY WIGGLY</p>
        <p>COOKED HAM</p>
        <p>12 OZ. PKG. 4X4</p>
        <p>269</p>
        <p>PIGGLY WIGGLY</p>
        <p>SAUSAGE</p>
        <p>HOT</p>
        <p>OR</p>
        <p>MILO</p>
        <p>99</p>
        <p>C</p>
        <p>LB.</p>
        <p>PIGGLY WIGGLY</p>
        <p>PIGGLY WIGGLY</p>
        <p>BOLOGNA</p>
        <p>12 02 PKG</p>
        <p>FRESH</p>
        <p>GROUND</p>
        <p>BEEF</p>
        <p>5 LBS. OR MORE</p>
        <p>89</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>LB.</p>
        <p>FAMILY PACK FRYER</p>
        <p>THIGHS r.o9C</p>
        <p>FAMILY PACK FRYER</p>
        <p>DRUiyiSTICKSiBggO</p>
        <p>FAMILY PACK SALE!</p>
        <p>PORK NECKBONES PORK PIG FEET PORK LIVER</p>
        <p>YOUR</p>
        <p>CHOICE</p>
        <p>CALIFORNIA RED EMPEROR</p>
        <p>GRAPES</p>
        <p>59*^</p>
        <p>SNAPBEANS  lb 590</p>
        <p>1 LB. PK6S.  o /1 nn</p>
        <p>CARROTS ......3/1"</p>
        <p>swm  9 ' 1 nn</p>
        <p>POTATOES.....3rl""</p>
        <p>4 lbs.</p>
        <p>FLORIDA TEMPLE</p>
        <p>ORANGES</p>
        <p>FRESH WHOLE</p>
        <p>PICNICS</p>
        <p>OLD TARHEEL</p>
        <p>SAUSAGE</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>LUNDY'S TEE PEE</p>
        <p>BACON</p>
        <p>Bright &amp;amp; Early</p>
        <p>BREAKFAST</p>
        <p>DRINK</p>
        <p>PIGGLY WIGGLY</p>
        <p>ICE MILK</p>
        <p>t/2 GAL</p>
        <p>890</p>
        <p>CHARMIN \ TISSUE I</p>
        <p>C!</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>LIMIT 2 WITH THIS COUPON  AND ASIO ON MORI FOOD ORDER.  EXPIRES JAN. 24.1987 M</p>
        <p>GOLDEN BEST  f</p>
        <p>PEACHES I</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>2/19?</p>
        <p>LIMIT 2 WITH THIS COUPON AND A SIO OR MORE FOOD ORDER. |</p>
        <p>EXPIRES JAN. 24.1987</p>
        <p>MERICO BIG TEXAS BUTTERY FLAVORED</p>
        <p>BISCUITS</p>
        <p>12 02</p>
        <p>3/1</p>
        <p>PIGGLY WI66LT CHICKEN NOODLE OR CHICKEN ARICE</p>
        <p>SOUP</p>
        <p>3/195</p>
        <p>ROLLER CHAMPION OR CREAM FLOUR</p>
        <p>PIGGLY WIGGLY</p>
        <p>MARGARINE</p>
        <p>00</p>
        <p>16 OZ</p>
        <p>2/1</p>
        <p>PIGGLY WIGGLY</p>
        <p>TUNA</p>
        <p>2/l</p>
        <p>PIGGLY WIGGLY</p>
        <p>KETCHUP</p>
        <p>RINSO</p>
        <p>DETERGENT</p>
        <p>990</p>
        <p>42 OZ</p>
        <p>CLOROX</p>
        <p>94'</p>
        <p>50 OFF LABEL</p>
        <p>NABISCO</p>
        <p>If 02 NABISCO</p>
        <p>TRISKET WAFERS</p>
        <p>IB BZ. NABISCO</p>
        <p>WHEAT THINS</p>
        <p>12 02 HAWSCO</p>
        <p>BCTTER CHEDDAR</p>
        <p>TOUA CMOtCf</p>
        <p>1J59</p>
        <p>HEALTH &amp;amp; BEAUTY-^AIDS</p>
        <p>VASELINE INTENSIVE CARE</p>
        <p>REG. 2.19</p>
        <p>ROBITUSSIN</p>
        <p>149</p>
        <p>4 0Z. </p>
        <p>ICE SCBAPEB 2/1.</p>
        <p>REG.99c</p>
        <p>28. 32, 48 AND 68 COUNT PKGS.</p>
        <p>ULTRA</p>
        <p>PAMPERS</p>
        <p>CONVENIENCE PACK ALL SIZES YOUR CHOICE</p>
        <p>8^</p>
        <p>W 1 1 K I N O</p>
        <p>Kick Off the New Year with SAVINGS from</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>KRAFT</p>
        <p>V,KRAFT</p>
        <p>SEALTEST</p>
        <p>SDUR CREAM</p>
        <p>,.1J09</p>
        <p>.&amp;gt;1.9 /  SEALTEST</p>
        <p>Cottage Cheese</p>
        <p>iiml  9  AQ</p>
        <p>24 OZ. I</p>
        <p>GRADE A"</p>
        <p>SMALL</p>
        <p>EGGS</p>
        <p>2/100</p>
        <p>MR. P'S</p>
        <p>PIZZAS</p>
        <p>590</p>
        <p>10 OZ</p>
        <p>PARKAY 1LB</p>
        <p>2/1</p>
        <p>00</p>
        <p>G</p>
        <p>KRAFT PHILADELPHIA a</p>
        <p>CREAM CHEESE oz 99Q</p>
        <p>KRAFT AMERICAN    mg\</p>
        <p>SINGLES  12 OZ 1.49</p>
        <p>KRAFT (GIASSI 64 1 TH</p>
        <p>DRANGE JUICEoz 1.79</p>
        <p>KRAFT BARBECUE</p>
        <p>SAUCE  18 OZ 990</p>
        <p>KRAFT FRENCH. CATALINA OR BACON A TOMATO</p>
        <p>DRESSING 8 OZ 890</p>
        <p>KRAFT  mqq</p>
        <p>VELVEETA LOAFzlbs O^^</p>
        <p>KRAFT</p>
        <p>GOLDEN BEST  \</p>
        <p>CANNED VEGETABLES </p>
        <p>PEAS. CUT GREEN lEANS A CORN | 303 SIZE CANS. YOUR CHOICE! -</p>
        <p>4/1 i</p>
        <p>LIMIT 8 WITH THIS COUPON  AND A SIO OR MORE FOOD ORDER. I EXPIRES JAN. 24. 1987 m</p>
        <p> PLU #33B1BBMM#</p>
        <p>'""i50rTir5iSir"'</p>
        <p>! MEUO vaio A DIT COKE I</p>
        <p>! I</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>69</p>
        <p>2 LITER BOTTLE</p>
        <p>LIMIT 1 WITH THIS COUPON ANO A SIO OR MORE FOOD ORDER EXPIRES IAN. 24, 1987</p>
        <p>MACARONI A CHEESE</p>
        <p>, DINNERS.</p>
        <p>y CARROLL SHELRT</p>
        <p>CHILI MIX</p>
        <p>7 , OZ 2/100</p>
        <p>. .40Z. 1 .19</p>
        <p>KRAFT</p>
        <p>MIRACLE WHIP'</p>
        <p>I  SALAD  DRESSING  </p>
        <p>F!</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>UMin WITH THIS COUPON | AND A SIO OR MORE 1000 OROEA m EXPIRES JAN 24 1907  ^</p>
        <p>COOIIS</p>
        <p>BCEI</p>
        <p>6 PACK</p>
        <p>12 OZ. CANS</p>
        <p>$949</p>
        <p>SNUGGLE</p>
        <p>FABRIC</p>
        <p>SOFTENER</p>
        <p>64 OZ.</p>
        <p>f09</p>
        <p>2105 DICKINSON AVE.</p>
        <p>OPEN 7 A.M. TO 12 A.M. SEVEN DAYS A WEEK</p>
        <p>Shp</p>
        <p>PIGGLY WIGGLYPIGGLY WIGGLY KEEPS AMERICA SHOPPING WITH EVERYDAY LOW PRICES!</p>
        <p>f</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0148" />
        <p>Kids Can Be Helped In Avoiding Fast-Food Hazards</p>
        <p>L.A.</p>
        <p>By ROSE DOSTI</p>
        <p>Tlmes-Washinglon PostC Newt Service</p>
        <p>The road to most fast-food dining is payed with health hazards, especially if you do not know how to control or modify what and how much your children eat.</p>
        <p>Many fast-food meals may be made up of 40 percent to 60 percent fat. Most of them also contain far m(H% sodium than is considered safe while the amount of vitamins A and C and fiber may be seriously lacking.</p>
        <p>lliose could be dangerous signs if your children eat fast foods on a regular basis, according to Evelyn Tribole, M.S., R.D., consulting nutritionist for Consulting Nutrition Services in Irvine, Calif.</p>
        <p>There has been a staggering 52 percent increase in obesity among children and 39 percent among adolescents in the last 15 years. And thats only part of the picture. The New England Journal of Medicine reported that fatty streaks in the blood stream which may lead to heart disease in later years are starting to show up among children as young as 7 years old, Ms. Tribole said.</p>
        <p>Ms. Tribole points out that while snack foods cannot be blamed solely for increases in obesity and early signs of heart disease, parents would be wise to teach children how to modify their intake of snack foods because of their excessively high fat and sodium content.</p>
        <p>We say this in light of the fact that with hectic family schedules and dual working parents who have little time to prepare healthful home meals, its estimated that one-third of all meals are eaten away from home. Thats a 300 percent increase in 10 years, and the trend is here to stay, Ms. Tribole said.</p>
        <p>She also pointed out that because most fast-food hamburger outlets offer little or no choice of vegetables, parents who rely heavily on fast-foods meals for their chilm-en should also consciously include fruits and vegetables in the diet of their children every day, whether at home or carried to the fast-food place. Although some fast-food chains boast about including lettuce and tomatoes on the hamburger, one could hardly consider a lettuce leaf a serving of vegetable, Ms. Tribole said.</p>
        <p>Most nutritionists would agree that the bulk of responsibility in feeding children rests with parents. However, dietitians also urge the industry to help parents do their jobs better by offering more fruits and vegetables with the fast food, because that fast food may be the only food eaten by youngsters for dinner or lunch.</p>
        <p>Some members of industry have attempted to include salad bars, Ms. Tribole said. Thats good, and we hope the trend continues, she said. However, salad bars, too, are fraught with danger if a heavy hand is applied to dressings and cheese sauces, which add excess fat calories to the meal, Ms. Tribole said.</p>
        <p>Chicken outlets often include side dishes such as corn, potatoes and coleslaw that provide necessary nutritional balance to the meal. Pizza, too, may contain vegetables and cheese, making it a self-contained, balanced meal-in-a-dish.</p>
        <p>Watch the fats, Ms. Tribole said. More calories are derived from fat than those from any other food. Fats contain 9 calories per gram compared with 4 calories per gram for fruits, vegetables and grains (carbohydrates).</p>
        <p>Cholesterol content may be higher in some fats than others, as well. Some fast-food outlets fry foods in coconut oil, which contains 92 percent saturated fat compared to 41 )ercent saturated fat for animal ard. Even though coconut oil is derived from plant and not animal, which one usually associates with high saturated fat content, it is extremely hit in saturated fat, Ms. Tribole said.</p>
        <p>Many non-dairy creamers and other products, incidentally, are made with coconut oil, so it is wise to check labels before buying, Ms. Tribole said. Also watch for products made with palm oil, which contain about the same amount of saturated fat as coconut oil.</p>
        <p>Most of the calories in a baked itato topped with cheese can come :rom the cheese alone, so hold the cheese if you are concerned about calories, Ms. Tribole said.</p>
        <p>Fast-food milk shakes are high in calories, about 300 to 400 calories serving. Thats too many calories when vou add them to calories consumed at breakfast, lunch and dinner. In light of increasing obesity in children, it would be better if the child substituted fruit juice or nonfat milk, Ms. Tribole said.</p>
        <p>What should the fast-food diner do to curb intake of excessive fats and sodium and increase intake of fiber, vitamin A and C?</p>
        <p>Here are Tiboles fast-food guidelines for parents and children ;</p>
        <p>- Drink orange juice instead of malts. A glass of orange juice will provide 100 percent of the RDAs for vitamin C.</p>
        <p>- Choose whole-grain buns when p^ible. The whole grain will provide extra dietary fiber.</p>
        <p> Watch out for greasy buns, such as biscuits and croissants, which are higher in fat content than regular breads.</p>
        <p> Choose the salad bar if available. Stick to nutritionally dense vegetables, such as broccoli, cauli-</p>
        <p>po</p>
        <p>fix</p>
        <p>flower, celery, zucchini, tomatoes, spinach, beete and carrots because they contain high levels of nutrients for the amount eaten. Go lighter on lettuce. If you use lettuce, use the dark green varieties such as Ro-maine, which contain higher amounts of iron and other vitamins and minerals than pale lettuces.</p>
        <p>kidney beans and white beans to the salad for an extra protein lift.</p>
        <p>- Go light on bacon bits or skip them all together because they are loaded with sodium and fat.</p>
        <p>- Choose vinegar or lemon and go lightly on oil.</p>
        <p>- Avoid heavy creamy dressings, which are more caloric than lighter</p>
        <p>- Add beans, garbanzo beans, oil-vinegar dressings.</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>- Choose low-fat or nonfat milk over milk shakes. Nonfat milk is relatively low in calories yet high in calcium, protein and other vitamins and minerals.</p>
        <p>- For adults, diet beverages, tea or coffee have less fat and calories than regular sodas and milk shakes.</p>
        <p>- Go for charbroiled meats. Grid-</p>
        <p>died, pan-fried or fried meats require fat for cooking, thus adding calories and cholesterol to the diet.</p>
        <p>- Go for the smallest hamburger size to save on calories, fat and cholesterol.</p>
        <p>- Avoid heavily battered fried chicken, which increases surface area of meat and absorbs more fat.</p>
        <p>- Choose baked potatoes over</p>
        <p>French fried potatoes. Eat the baked wtatoes plain  without excessive )utter, cheese or sour-cream toppings that add fat and calories. ,</p>
        <p> Supplement fast foods with fruits and vegetables. Bring the fast food home and add your own salad and fruit to the menu. Or carry a bag of fruit and vegetables to the restaurant.</p>
        <p>EXTRA LOW</p>
        <p>m</p>
        <p>FOOD LION</p>
        <p>PRICES!</p>
        <p>USDA Choice Beef 10-12 ibs. ^</p>
        <p>ufiini F</p>
        <p>WW 11 LL Sunday, January 18, 1987. i</p>
        <p>SIRLOIN TIPS</p>
        <p>Sunday, January 18, 1987.</p>
        <p>Idaho Potatoes</p>
        <p>29&amp;gt;.</p>
        <p>WHOLE FRYERS</p>
        <p>Lb.</p>
        <p>Holly Farms - Grade A</p>
        <p>TIP ROAST</p>
        <p>RED DELICIOUS APPLES</p>
        <p>49v</p>
        <p>Washington State</p>
        <p>ORANGES</p>
        <p>USDA Choice Beef</p>
        <p>Head</p>
        <p>io</p>
        <p>Each</p>
        <p>California</p>
        <p>California</p>
        <p>Pepsi</p>
        <p>Cola</p>
        <p>$109</p>
        <p>2 Liter - Pepsi-Free, Diet Pepsi, Diet Pepsi-Free</p>
        <p>Miller</p>
        <p>Beer</p>
        <p>$10</p>
        <p>Pkg. of 24  12 Oz. Cans  Reg. &amp;amp; Lt.</p>
        <p>Riunite Wine</p>
        <p>$469</p>
        <p>1.5 Liter  Lambrusco, Bianco. Rosato, D'oro. Peach, Raspberry</p>
        <p>Coors</p>
        <p>Beer</p>
        <p>$269</p>
        <p>Pkg. of 6 - 12 Oz. Cans  Reg. &amp;amp; Lt.</p>
        <p>EXTRA LOW PRICES ... Everyday</p>
        <p>Blended</p>
        <p>Juices</p>
        <p>Salad Dressing/</p>
        <p>Mayonnaise</p>
        <p>99</p>
        <p>Jenos</p>
        <p>Pizzas</p>
        <p>Del Monte - Pineapple-Grapefruit/ Pineapple-Orange</p>
        <p>JFG</p>
        <p>Mayonnaise</p>
        <p>Zesta</p>
        <p>Saltines</p>
        <p>Corn-On-The Cob</p>
        <p>89</p>
        <p>TASTY 6 Ct.  Green Giant Niblets</p>
        <p>Ramen Pride</p>
        <p>Noodles</p>
        <p>3 Oz. - Beef/Mushroom/Chicken</p>
        <p>115 E. Re(d Banks Road South Park Shopping Center</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>Friskies Cat Food</p>
        <p>4/$1</p>
        <p>6 Oz. - Ocean White Fish a Tuna/ ^ Mariners Catch/Seafood Classic</p>
        <p>2430 Stantonsburg Road Stanton Square Shopping Center</p>
        <p>r</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0149" />
        <p>Plus,</p>
        <p>ypii0Wi</p>
        <p>mm syr</p>
        <p>Stock Up Now for Super Sunday,</p>
        <p>Jan. 25th!</p>
        <p>2-LTR. BTL. REFRESHING</p>
        <p>CNEK</p>
        <p>DRINKS</p>
        <p>12-PAK/12 0Z. CANS</p>
        <p>MILLER LITE REER</p>
        <p>499</p>
        <p>24 0Z. JAR PLANTERS DRY ROASTED PEANUTS OR 24 0Z. CAN</p>
        <p>COCKTAIL PEANUTS</p>
        <p>II OZ. BAG DORrros TORTILLA CHIPS i</p>
        <p>TOAtno conn nacmo</p>
        <p>COOL MANCN</p>
        <p>All prices in this ad effective 7-full days.</p>
        <p>SUN,MON TUE WED THU FRI SAT</p>
        <p>21</p>
        <p>22</p>
        <p>23</p>
        <p>24</p>
        <p>25</p>
        <p>26</p>
        <p>27</p>
        <p>MEAT A CHEESE COMBINATION</p>
        <p>V,-LB. COOKED HAM</p>
        <p>^ LB. ROAST BEEF</p>
        <p>V, LB. TURKEY</p>
        <p>Vi LB. SWISS CHEESE</p>
        <p>V, LB. AMERICAN CHEESE</p>
        <p>V, LB. SLICED BEEF STICK</p>
        <p>&amp;gt;^ LB. CHEESf BAU OR LOG</p>
        <p>ALL</p>
        <p>FOR</p>
        <p>19</p>
        <p>50-PC. FRIED CHICKEN</p>
        <p>DRUMETTE</p>
        <p>PLATTER</p>
        <p>19s</p>
        <p>100PC.'  S7.95</p>
        <p>.AVAILABLE IN DELI BAKERY STORES ONLY.</p>
        <p>Americas Supermarket..IbuaCHOKElbRLONPlilCES</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0150" />
        <p>wm</p>
        <p>2A</p>
        <p>%</p>
        <p>Americas Supermarket</p>
        <p>T.M.</p>
        <p>PRICES GOOD WED., JAM 21ST THRU TUES., JAN. 27TH!</p>
        <p>SUN MON TUE WED THU FRI SAT</p>
        <p>21</p>
        <p>22</p>
        <p>23</p>
        <p>24</p>
        <p>25</p>
        <p>26</p>
        <p>27</p>
        <p>With</p>
        <p>over</p>
        <p>10,000</p>
        <p>NONE TO DEALERS *WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES COPYRIGHT 1987, WINN-DIXIE STORES, INC.</p>
        <p>40 OFF/42-OZ. BOX</p>
        <p>SURF</p>
        <p>DETERGENT</p>
        <p>|59</p>
        <p>5^ OFF/1-GAL. JUG</p>
        <p>CLOROX</p>
        <p>BLEACH</p>
        <p>1LB. BAG</p>
        <p>MAXIfELL</p>
        <p>HOUSE</p>
        <p>COFFEE</p>
        <p>12-OZ. JAR MAXWELL HOUSE</p>
        <p>INSTANT</p>
        <p>COFFEE</p>
        <p>299 499</p>
        <p>32 0Z. JAR</p>
        <p>TROPICAL GRAPE JELLY</p>
        <p>99</p>
        <p>MAYONNAlSf</p>
        <p>32-OZ. JAR  _</p>
        <p>DEEP SOUTH  48 oz. btl.</p>
        <p>REAL PURE VEGETARLE MAYONNAISE ASTOR OIL</p>
        <p> msEEm)</p>
        <p>'SwootH</p>
        <p>V.</p>
        <p>|39</p>
        <p>OtOOM*</p>
        <p>r</p>
        <p>18-OZ. JAR</p>
        <p>DEEP SOUTH PEANUT BUTTER</p>
        <p>IO-OZ. BOX CRACKIN GOOD</p>
        <p>TOASTER</p>
        <p>PASTRIES</p>
        <p>1LB. PKG. W D BRAND</p>
        <p>ALL MEAT ROLOGNA</p>
        <p>|19 2109 129</p>
        <p>R CRUNCHY FOR I  I</p>
        <p>Grocery Values</p>
        <p>18-OZ. BOX KELLOGG'S CORN FLAKES</p>
        <p>^tieberrtfh</p>
        <p>12-OZ. PKG. W-D BRAND</p>
        <p>ALL MEAT FRANKS</p>
        <p>99</p>
        <p>lili</p>
        <p>12 OZ. PKG.</p>
        <p>IM-D BRAND SLICED HAM</p>
        <p>(UNEVEN SLICES)</p>
        <p>1-LB. ROLL W-D BRAND</p>
        <p>WHOLE HOG SAUSAGE</p>
        <p>mildmediumhot</p>
        <p>(v</p>
        <p>2 LB. CUP</p>
        <p>SUPERBRAND COTTAGE CHEESE</p>
        <p>3-LB. TUP</p>
        <p>SUPERBRAND</p>
        <p>SPREAD</p>
        <p>FRESH FROM THE DELI' 1-DOZ. JUMBO</p>
        <p>HONEY GLAZED DONUTS</p>
        <p>|98 |39</p>
        <p>64-OZ. JAR /</p>
        <p>MlfHITE HOUSE APPLE JUICE</p>
        <p>24-OZ. CAN CASTLEBERRY'S</p>
        <p>BEEF</p>
        <p>STEIAf</p>
        <p>89</p>
        <p>32-OZ. JAR</p>
        <p>HELLMANM'S</p>
        <p>real</p>
        <p>MAYONNAISE</p>
        <p>Health &amp;amp; Beauty Aids</p>
        <p>JSi: PAu PAt net</p>
        <p>NE</p>
        <p>PAUR</p>
        <p>NET</p>
        <p>16-OZ. BTL. AQUA NET</p>
        <p>SHAMPOO OR CONDITIONER</p>
        <p>EXTRA BODY REGULAR</p>
        <p>OR</p>
        <p>9-OZ. CAN</p>
        <p>AQUA NET HAIR SPRAY</p>
        <p>UNSCENTED</p>
        <p>UNSCENTED SUPER HOLD REGULAR</p>
        <p>REGULAR SUPER HOLD</p>
        <p>2'^-QT. VISION</p>
        <p>COVERED SAUCE POT</p>
        <p>EA.</p>
        <p>tOVa lN. ROUND IRON SKILLET OR</p>
        <p>FRYING</p>
        <p>PAN</p>
        <p>1499 578</p>
        <p>SEDGEFIELO</p>
        <p>KITCHEN BROOM</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0151" />
        <p>mm</p>
        <p>Plus,</p>
        <p>3A</p>
        <p>Hubbermaid</p>
        <p>Super Quality, Super Lew Prices!</p>
        <p>RUBBERMAID</p>
        <p>FOOD STORAGE CONTAINERS ASSORTMENT</p>
        <p>10 CUP SQUARE  10 CUP CYLINDER 12-CUP BOWLS BREAD t ICE CREAM SERVER</p>
        <p>EA.</p>
        <p>RUBBERMAID</p>
        <p>FOOD STORAGE CONTAINERS ASSORTMENT</p>
        <p>2.3 QT. RECTANGULAR 21 CUP DRV FOOD STORAGE PASTA KEEPER</p>
        <p>MICROWAVE</p>
        <p>RUBBERMAID'</p>
        <p>MICROWAVE</p>
        <p>COOKWARE</p>
        <p>ASSORTMENT</p>
        <p>"VOUR CHOICE"</p>
        <p>EA.</p>
        <p>300 23oo</p>
        <p>20-GAL.RUBBERMAID</p>
        <p>REFUSE CONTAINER</p>
        <p>1V,-BUSHEL RUBBERMAID</p>
        <p>CLOTHES HAMPER ..</p>
        <p>IV2 BUSHEL RUBBERMAID ROUND OR RECTANGULAR</p>
        <p>LAUNDRY BASKET ..</p>
        <p>38-QT. RUBBERMAID COVERED WASTEBASKET. 42 QT. SELF CLOSE WASTEBASKET OR 38 QT.</p>
        <p>COVERED</p>
        <p>WASTEBASKET  e. 6.00</p>
        <p>EA. 9.00 EA. 8.00</p>
        <p>EA. 4.00</p>
        <p>10-QT. RUBBERMAID VANITY WASTEBASKET, 11V&amp;gt;-QT. DISH PAN OR</p>
        <p>11-QT. NEAT N TIDY</p>
        <p>BUCKET........  ea.3.00</p>
        <p>22-GAL. GOTT</p>
        <p>REFUSE CONTAINER .. ea. 8.00</p>
        <p>32-GAL. GOTT</p>
        <p>REFUSE CONTAINER . ea. 13.00</p>
        <p>7V&amp;gt;.QT. RUBBERMAID</p>
        <p>VANITY WASTEBASKET ea. 2.00</p>
        <p>U.S.D.A. INSPECTED FRESH FRYERTHIGHS OR DRUMSTICKS</p>
        <p>W-D BRAND U.S. CHOICE WESTERN GRAIN FED</p>
        <p>LONDON BROIL199</p>
        <p>5-LB. POLY BAG HARVEST FRESH U.S. #1 ALL PURPOSEWHITE POTATOES</p>
        <p>10 LB. VENT VuE bag HARVEST FRESH U.S. #1 ALL PURPOSE</p>
        <p>UVNITE POTATOES .... ia. 1.49</p>
        <p>Harvest Fresh</p>
        <p>Quality Meats</p>
        <p>W-D BRAND U.S. CHOICE WESTERN GRAIN FED</p>
        <p>SIRLOIN TIP ROASTS</p>
        <p>!</p>
        <p>W-D BRAND SELECT LEAN FRESH</p>
        <p>CENTER CUT PORK CHOPS</p>
        <p>LB</p>
        <p>W-D BRAND U.S. CHOICE BREAKFAST</p>
        <p>STEAK......... LB.  2.99</p>
        <p>W-D BRAND SELECT LEAN FRESH BONELESS CENTER CUT</p>
        <p>PORK CHOPS... LB. 2.99</p>
        <p>W-D BRAND U.S. CHOICE</p>
        <p>REEF FOR</p>
        <p>STIR FRY  LB. 2.99</p>
        <p>W-D BRAND U.S. CHOICE</p>
        <p>CURED TIP STEAK lb.2.19</p>
        <p>DIET LEAN</p>
        <p>BEEF CUBES .... lb.2.99</p>
        <p>W-D BRAND U.S. CHOICE LOIN</p>
        <p>LAMB CHOPS... LB.5.99</p>
        <p>W-D BRAND U.S. CHOICE VEAL CUTLET . .. lb. 7.99</p>
        <p>1 LB. ROLL JIMMY DEAN MILD OR SPECIAL RECIPE</p>
        <p>PORK SAUSAGE .. 1.79</p>
        <p>Frozen &amp;amp; Dairy</p>
        <p>13 OZ. BOX JENO'S</p>
        <p>CRISP 'N TASTY PIZZAS</p>
        <p>ALL VARIETIES</p>
        <p>89</p>
        <p>8 0Z. BOX</p>
        <p>MADISON HOUSE POT PIES</p>
        <p>CHICKEN TURKEY MAC.  CHEESE</p>
        <p>,12 0Z. PKG.</p>
        <p>RORDEN</p>
        <p>CREESE</p>
        <p>SLICES</p>
        <p>"GREAT FOR PIES" HARVEST FRESH</p>
        <p>ROME BEAUTY APPLES</p>
        <p>v,-GAL. CARTON BRIGHT ft EARLY</p>
        <p>BREAKFAST</p>
        <p>BEUERAGE</p>
        <p>HARVEST FRESH MEDIUM</p>
        <p>YELLOMf</p>
        <p>ONIONS</p>
        <p>CUDDY FARMS</p>
        <p>TURKEY</p>
        <p>BREAST</p>
        <p>ROLL</p>
        <p>27 OZ. SIZE FRESH BAKED</p>
        <p>LATTICE APPLE PIES</p>
        <p>OLD FASHION</p>
        <p>RED RIND NOOP CHEESE</p>
        <p>LB.</p>
        <p>389 199 999</p>
        <p>EA. I  . ClH</p>
        <p>SOUTHERN STYLE</p>
        <p>POTATO SALAD .. lb. .98</p>
        <p>8 PAK 16 OZ. SIZE FRESH BAKED</p>
        <p>FREMCN</p>
        <p>ROLLS...............90</p>
        <p>HALF</p>
        <p>CNOCOLATE CAKE m S.AO</p>
        <p>LB.</p>
        <p>BAKERY FRESH</p>
        <p>CINNAMON</p>
        <p>ROLLS......... 4fob$1</p>
        <p>"CAKE OF THE WEEK"</p>
        <p>2 LAYER FANCY</p>
        <p>CNOCOLATE CAKE ia.8.00</p>
        <p>AVAILABLE IN DELI BAKERY STORES ONLY.</p>
        <p>Fisherman's Wharf</p>
        <p>FRESH</p>
        <p>MEDIUM SHRIMP</p>
        <p>IMITATION</p>
        <p>CRAB MEAT</p>
        <p>ALASKAN</p>
        <p>SALMON STEAK</p>
        <p>LB.</p>
        <p>399 ^2^^ ui4**</p>
        <p>AVAILABLE IN LOCATIONS WITH SEAFOOD DEPTS. ONLY!</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0152" />
        <p>WWIMi</p>
        <p>Americas Supermarket,.</p>
        <p>Kick Off the New Year with SAVINGS from  A</p>
        <p>12-OZ. PKG.</p>
        <p>KRAFT SHARP</p>
        <p>OR</p>
        <p>NEW YORK SHARP</p>
        <p>CHEESE EA.</p>
        <p>Peclcil</p>
        <p>Cooked Shrimp</p>
        <p>6 0Z. BAG SEA PAK</p>
        <p>COOKED SHRIMP</p>
        <p>All prices in this ad effective 7-fuIl days.</p>
        <p>SUN,MON TUE WED THU FRl SAT</p>
        <p>21</p>
        <p>22</p>
        <p>23</p>
        <p>24</p>
        <p>25</p>
        <p>26</p>
        <p>27</p>
        <p>13 0Z. BOX SEA PAK</p>
        <p>SHRIMP'N BATTER</p>
        <p>6-OZ. BOX SEA PAK</p>
        <p>SHRIMP IN A BASKET</p>
        <p>32 OZ. BAG SEA PAK</p>
        <p>ONION O'S</p>
        <p>16-OZ. BOX SEA PAK</p>
        <p>BREADED SHRIMP</p>
        <p>16 OZ. BAG SEA PAK</p>
        <p>HUSHPUPPIES179 2H 19  29  499  7</p>
        <p>Plus,</p>
        <p>Brands across</p>
        <p>America</p>
        <p>Get Up To A</p>
        <p>kk: cash refund</p>
        <p>32-OZ. JAR</p>
        <p>HELLMANN'S</p>
        <p>REAL</p>
        <p>MAYONNAISE</p>
        <p>149</p>
        <p>r</p>
        <p>1 Mueller^.</p>
        <p>1 elbows</p>
        <p>. 16-OZ. BOX MUELLER'S</p>
        <p>ELROIRIS</p>
        <p>MACARONI</p>
        <p>159</p>
        <p>1 ' \ 48-OZ. BTL.</p>
        <p>1 1 100% PURE</p>
        <p>1 N / MAZOLA / y CORN OIL</p>
        <p>P |99</p>
        <p>1 ^ ^ &amp;lt;</p>
        <p>by mail</p>
        <p>When you buy these favorite brands:</p>
        <p>1-LB. PKG./IN QTRS.</p>
        <p>MAZOLA CORN OIL MARGARINE</p>
        <p>REGULAR*UNSALTED</p>
        <p>16-OZ. BOX MUELLER'S REG. OR THIN</p>
        <p>SPAGHETTI</p>
        <p>lilO^</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>a</p>
        <p>5-OZ. CAN MAZOLA</p>
        <p>NO STICK COOKING SPRAY</p>
        <p>139</p>
        <p>and help</p>
        <p>Brands across America</p>
        <p>help the hungry</p>
        <p>pis,n Will Be Donated To Help The Hungry In Your Nome!</p>
        <p>I----------------------------------</p>
        <p>OFFICIAL MAIL-IN CERTIFICATE</p>
        <p>In addition to my refund below, I understand that Best Foods will donate $1.00 in my name to help the hungry and homeless.</p>
        <p>PURCHASE AND CHECK BELOW;*</p>
        <p>Mill by Mail by Fibruaiy28.1M7 JWySI, 1M7 S 2 00 Ralund SI 00 Relund S 5.00 Rahmd S2 SO Relund S10.00 Ralund SS 00 Refund ISkippy* Peanut Butter</p>
        <p>lltwoiiitgtl</p>
        <p>I Niagara* Spray Starch or Siring</p>
        <p>22-OZ. CAN</p>
        <p>NIAGARA</p>
        <p>SPRAY</p>
        <p>STARCH</p>
        <p>99</p>
        <p>3 Diftereni Brand Names tor 5 Ditterent Brand Names (or 8 Ditterent Brand Names (or riHeilmann's* Real Mayonnaise</p>
        <p>I3J 07 w 4igii|</p>
        <p>[Golden Griddle*</p>
        <p>Pancake Syrup ' Marola * Corn Oil</p>
        <p>i3r(uoii&amp;lt;,gii</p>
        <p>Marola* Margarme I Marola* No Stick_</p>
        <p>(Piwil UPC C(N * Airii</p>
        <p>Oil proot'Ol puichasc 1$ toil stal undei cap For Niagjia - and Marola  No-Slick products only naod wnit UPC Code numbci on line provided I</p>
        <p> Send in your compieied cerlihcaie by Ftbraan M. IWT and automaiicaHy aauMt your refund amount (SI 00 Relund gets S2 00 S2 SO Relund gets SS 00 SS 00 Refund</p>
        <p>rSIOOOl Requests musi be poslmarhed by midmoht Februarv 196710 qualiN '</p>
        <p>(l&amp;gt;m,i UPCCndi iwii</p>
        <p>Karo* Corn Syrup IKnorr* Soup Of Sauce Mix</p>
        <p>I Mueller s* Pasta or Noodles jtaiuorUriKii</p>
        <p>'Limit; One product puiehaN per brand name</p>
        <p>iKlMt; UPC Codes *IIBI IWII EH  as proots-ol-purctiase ilM cash register receiptls) nth prices ended To remove UPC code cut peel or soak off from canon or label | For Marola * Com</p>
        <p>Njmr</p>
        <p>Artrtrn^i</p>
        <p>Apl 0</p>
        <p>Cily</p>
        <p>Slate</p>
        <p>7tP</p>
        <p>Mail this compieM ctmiicaie nth UPC Codes and cash register receipt tequiremenis to Brands Across America * Relund PO Box (6058 Hauppague NY 11788 Otter good only m U S A Void There taxed prohdnted or Mhetwise reslncted Your relund rights may not be assigned or Iranslerred ONer expires 7 3117 Limil one relund per name address or oroamralion Mechanical leproductwn ol this cenilicale piohiMed Atkw 6-8 weeks lor dekvery</p>
        <p>A</p>
        <p>16-OZ. BTL. GREEN LABEL</p>
        <p>KARO CORN SYRUP</p>
        <p>97SEE IN-STORE DISPLAY FOR DETAILS</p>
        <p>Vegetable Soup and Recipe Mix</p>
        <p>2.4-OZ. size KNORR DRY LEEK OR DRY VEGETABLE</p>
        <p>SOUP MIX</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0153" />
        <p>Regular Prices May Vary At Some Stores Due To local Competition</p>
        <p>Sale Price Ea. 64-fl.*oz. Tide liquid laundry detergent in</p>
        <p>convenient drain-back bottle. Provides outstanding cleaning in all temperatures, is safe for all machine and hand-wdshables. Unique, no-mess measuring top.</p>
        <p>llniil ?</p>
        <p>Sale Price Pkg. Planters delicious peanuts in 16 oz net-yyt. container. Your choice of regular or unsalted cocktail peanuts, regular dry-roasted peanuts or unsalted dry roasted peanuts. A nutritious treat anytime.</p>
        <p>Rotxilo llmlled lo mti i shpi/lalion</p>
        <p>Your Choice!</p>
        <p>Sale Price Ea. Name brand electric appliances. Choose 8-cup Poly Perk coffee maker, 5-speed hand mixer, automatic can opener with knife sharpener, "Heat And Eat" hot pot. Lightweight steam/dry Iron with 37 vents.</p>
        <p>IK</p>
        <p>m</p>
        <p>99</p>
        <p>^tSUmM3*^ H</p>
        <p>Sale Price Ea. Cadbury candy bars in choice of most-popular flavors. 5-oz. net wt</p>
        <p>86</p>
        <p>Sale Price Ea. Chunk ham or turkey for quick-fix sandwiches, salads. 6.75-oz.-net-wt. can</p>
        <p>limit 4</p>
        <p>Sale Price Ea. Sunlight liquid dishwashing detergent with real lemon juice. 22-fl.-oz size.</p>
        <p>Ilmil3</p>
        <p>Sale Price. Brawny 2-ply paper towels in 70-sheet roll Choice of solid colors, prin^</p>
        <p>llmll 4</p>
        <p>1.24</p>
        <p>Sale Price Ea. Suave condi-</p>
        <p>tionor or shnirifjoo in formula ..Lioice 2-1 fl (&amp;gt;/ 'MO.</p>
        <p>Save 37%</p>
        <p>Our 7.97.6-pr. pkg. mens</p>
        <p>crew socks of cotton/nylon. White or with stripes. Fit 10-13.</p>
        <p>9.88  2.97</p>
        <p>24X42" *Vklllanee* bath towels</p>
        <p>of polyester/cotton terry with dobby border. Solid colors.</p>
        <p>Whil quantille* hiti</p>
        <p>Wall phone or desk phone with redial, high-low ringer switch. Choice ot decor colors,</p>
        <p>SWJb02 SW?b02</p>
        <p>Sale Price. Pkg. of 2 M20 VHS videotapes, each with 2-, 4-, or 6-hr recording time</p>
        <p>Sale Price. Wiper blade or pair of refills to tit many U.S. cars or light trucks Top quality.</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0154" />
        <p>* so..</p>
        <p>29%</p>
        <p>Our 9.97. Boys twill pants of</p>
        <p>polyester/cotton.</p>
        <p>^Sove 29%-39%</p>
        <p>Our4.97-S.77Ea.  Our 7.97 Each.</p>
        <p>Boys pockot toos.  Wbmert%* *, morfs</p>
        <p>Solids, screens. S-M-L.  fleece* shirts or</p>
        <p>pants. Sizes S-XL</p>
        <p>Colton Aoryllc</p>
        <p>Our 1.97 Ea.</p>
        <p>Colorful</p>
        <p>headbands*.</p>
        <p>Acrylte fleece</p>
        <p>Save 33%</p>
        <p>Our 16.69. Jr., missy</p>
        <p>dresses In fresh spring styles; pastels, brights.</p>
        <p>style Ukjtliated it repretentoflve o( group Avoliable onlv In itorei with Dteu Dept</p>
        <p>4.44!;? 5.77</p>
        <p>Our 5.97. Jr. boysJerseys of polyester/cotton, with a/j-sloevos. Sizes 4-7.</p>
        <p>Print may vary Itom iloto to store</p>
        <p>Save 35%</p>
        <p>Our 8.97. Jr. bcyt twill Jeans of polyesfer/cotton; back pockets. Sizes 4-7.</p>
        <p>While quanlHle tost</p>
        <p>2  Save</p>
        <p>For f 41%</p>
        <p>Our 5.97. Toddler boys tops in varied styles; stripes, colors, prints. 2-4.</p>
        <p>Save</p>
        <p>37%</p>
        <p>Our 7.97. Tot boys, girls</p>
        <p>Jeans; emblem pockets. 2-4. Our 6.97, Infant SIzM* ____$5</p>
        <p>*12-24 m08</p>
        <p>16.97 5.97""</p>
        <p>Our 19.97-22.97. Roc- Sale Price Ea. Racquetball quetball rackets by leather gloves or Super</p>
        <p>noted makers; 2 styles. Spec eye protectors.</p>
        <p>*# 42%</p>
        <p>Our 6.97.10" try pan of</p>
        <p>polished aluminum with handy nonstick Interior.</p>
        <p>J</p>
        <p>\ * .# (Qlndiaijilll^g^</p>
        <p>A 07</p>
        <p>33%</p>
        <p>Our 14.97 Ea. Roll bag</p>
        <p>of Cordura nylon: smart colors. For sports, travel.</p>
        <p>12.9711?</p>
        <p>Our 16.97 Ea. 20" travel bags. Top-zipper club bag or shoulder tote.</p>
        <p>Sold In Spofllng Good* Dwpl</p>
        <p>6.97</p>
        <p>Sale Price Set. 24-pc. glassware set. Sea.: 9-, 12-, 16-oz. glasses.</p>
        <p>Hi</p>
        <p>-</p>
        <p>i'</p>
        <p>t' ' i</p>
        <p>y. </p>
        <p>Pi </p>
        <p>e.--</p>
        <p>i)</p>
        <p>9 OA Knxiit * uZf D Sole Price</p>
        <p>7.96</p>
        <p> 1.00 Rebate</p>
        <p>. LeuMtf.'i</p>
        <p>-1.00 Rebate</p>
        <p>A AA Your Net Coil e.9o After Rebate</p>
        <p>A AA YOUfNelCoil 0.96 After Rebate</p>
        <p>pnchor</p>
        <p>Hockng</p>
        <p>Cooking shelf for microwave oven; increases cooking area. 11x9.5"</p>
        <p>Reixsle Vmlted to mir't tllpulatlon</p>
        <p>3-pc. microwave oven steamer and popper. Enjoy steamed vegetables, jIffy-popped popcorn with accessories that expand the usefeulness of your microwave oven.</p>
        <p>Rebate Umited to mfr.'i itlpulcitton</p>
        <p>Sale Price Ea. Olass Jars. I'/^-pt. orl-qt. size. 1'/for2-qt.Jars ....1.97</p>
        <p>Save 43%</p>
        <p>Our Reg. 15.97 Set. 20-pc. set melamlne dishes. Dishwasher-safe, stain-resistant. 4 each: plates, cups, saucers, bread and butters, soup bowls. Choice of lovely p&amp;gt;attems.</p>
        <p>[rayova^-</p>
        <p>3.97!^</p>
        <p>-1.00 Rebate</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>'jj</p>
        <p>A YoutNelCoEt 2.97 AlletRebote</p>
        <p>Rebate Itmlted to mtr.'i ittputotlon</p>
        <p>Nlghthowk lantern with 6-V battery. Weother-and shatterproof: floats.</p>
        <p>Sotd In Sporttng Good! Dept</p>
        <p>6.97</p>
        <p>3.66  4.97</p>
        <p>Sale Price. Rubber soccer ball. Little League size; chevron accent.</p>
        <p>Sale Price Ea. Store *N Carry basket, handy for so many household uses.</p>
        <p>Sale Price Ea.40-qt. covered wastebosket</p>
        <p>with flip-top lid. Colors.</p>
        <p>Sale Price Ea. Choice of Servki Savers. 1 '/r-qt. pitcher, 7-cup rectangle, 10-cup square or cylinder. 2-qt. decanter, bread saver, 1.4-pt. or 1-qt. clear rectangular containers.</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0155" />
        <p>Save 41%</p>
        <p>Our 11.97. Ovrtii polos of polyester/cotton: colors. Sizes S-M-L</p>
        <p>jV ' " </p>
        <p>Mimi</p>
        <p>Save 33%</p>
        <p>Our Reg. 8.97. Mens plaid shirts by Wedge-field, with 1 chest pocket.</p>
        <p>Save27%</p>
        <p>12.97</p>
        <p>Our Reg. 17.97. Mens French terry shirts of polyester/cotton; color stripes.</p>
        <p>Save 22%</p>
        <p>13.97</p>
        <p>Our 17.97 Ea. Mens stretch Jeans; 4 pockets. Our.19.97, X-8lzes* ... 15.97</p>
        <p>Avolloble In most stores</p>
        <p>nRi T )  f-</p>
        <p>12.97</p>
        <p>Save 35%</p>
        <p>Our Reg. 19.97 Set. 7-pc. cookware set of polished aluminum, nonstick Interior. 1- and 2*qt. covered saucepans, 10" fry pan, and 5-qt. covered Dutch oven.</p>
        <p>2  $4  Save</p>
        <p>Pkgs. M 46%</p>
        <p>Our 94e.Pkg. 012 loll cookware. Loaf, cake or deep pie pans.</p>
        <p>3.97 ^ 28.97%.... 36.97</p>
        <p>Id Indiana Glass</p>
        <p>A tenCMItLCOIOAy Comoon*</p>
        <p>t#ocssie^O*ony Compen</p>
        <p>mm</p>
        <p>I Sole Price</p>
        <p>P15S/80R13</p>
        <p>Our 5.47. Whistling tea-  steel belted rodlals.  Our Best Steel belted</p>
        <p>kettle of durable, heat-  Radial tire mileage, trac-  radlals. Radial tire mlle-</p>
        <p>reslstant glass. 2-qt. size.  tlon; p&amp;gt;opular sizes.  age, traction, handling.</p>
        <p>Tires And Service Only In Stores With Service Dept  Open Dally 8 A M.-6 P.M. Closed Sun -month</p>
        <p>mm</p>
        <p>Motorvotor Battery For Many Vcris, Trucks, 54.9</p>
        <p>5.44  11.97  5.971;?  2.37  It?  37.84'  54.97</p>
        <p>Sale Price Set. 6-pock  Sale Price Set. 18-pc. Coke</p>
        <p>Coke beverage glasses,  glassware set with 6 ea.: 6-,</p>
        <p>12-oz. size. Carry pock.  12- and 20-oz. glasses.</p>
        <p>Save 25%</p>
        <p>Our 7.97 M.3-PC.PV' rex mixing bowl set of</p>
        <p>clear crystal glass.</p>
        <p>Save 51%</p>
        <p>Our Reg. 4.87.2-llter juice Jug of clear glass. Durable Pyrex quality.</p>
        <p>Motorvotor 60 battery</p>
        <p>for many U.S. and Import cars.</p>
        <p>*Wrth Chong*</p>
        <p>Jal Price 2-wtteel</p>
        <p>d/um or d(5c brake ipe-</p>
        <p>cinl f Of rr&amp;gt;',jriy U.S. cars.</p>
        <p> I-</p>
        <p>1.47</p>
        <p>Sale Price Each. Household helpers of sturdy plastic. Choose 15-qt. rectangular dishpan, 16-qt. wastebasket or 20-qf. utility tub with many uses. Choice of colors.</p>
        <p>''</p>
        <p>I!'1.1 . 'rv</p>
        <p>TUCKBR</p>
        <p>1.97</p>
        <p>Sale Price Ea. Vanity wostebasket for bedroom, bathroom. Colors.</p>
        <p>3.33  18.971;?  24.88</p>
        <p>Sale Price Ea. 49-qt.</p>
        <p>wastebasket of sturdy plastic. Smart colors.</p>
        <p>Our 28.S5. Arrestor muffler Installed. For</p>
        <p>many cars, It. trucks.</p>
        <p>McMonal porti and wrvici xtr'J Ongin unit (watdad lyilami) ociu'Jed</p>
        <p>Sale Price. Alignment and rotation. Rotate 4 tiros; align front end.</p>
        <p>f'jj rnony coti light Inictu Atiditk.rKji rxirt) and tarvicai ora arto</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0156" />
        <p>y\</p>
        <p>V &amp;lt; Americas Favorite Store</p>
        <p>GleHe</p>
        <p>N&amp;lt;M4'k'\| HIINh</p>
        <p>1q7 Save 9 f 33%</p>
        <p>\rsm</p>
        <p>*25,000</p>
        <p>JplSHiJ</p>
        <p> __^   PRIZE</p>
        <p>Plus a trip Ibr 2 lo SUPER BOWL XXII</p>
        <p>BUY HME nc  ^  JANUARY 31,1988</p>
        <p>ONE Of each OF MUR OlllETTE SPECIAIS</p>
        <p>BET A *4.00 i REFUND!</p>
        <p>1.99</p>
        <p>77</p>
        <p>Our 2.97 Pkg. 3 prs. mens work socks of</p>
        <p>cotton. Fit sizes 10-13.</p>
        <p>Our 2.44 Pkg. 3 prs. misses crew socks in white or colors. Fit sizes 8-11.</p>
        <p>Sale Price Pkg. Cookies.</p>
        <p>Choice of delicious varieties in 12-oz. net wt.</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>2QQ Scive OO 35%</p>
        <p>good news</p>
        <p>^27 5-pack</p>
        <p>Disposable twin-blade razors.</p>
        <p>lubrlcallng sirip</p>
        <p>good news</p>
        <p>^38 lO-pack]</p>
        <p>IWin-blade I razors. Reg.</p>
        <p>or pivot head.</p>
        <p>MM M KnKitl</p>
        <p>ff Sole Pilr.o</p>
        <p>St</p>
        <p>4-^ loss Mir j UU Uebuie</p>
        <p>U- Voui Ntti Cosi # Altor Rubule</p>
        <p>Our 4.17 Ea. lianslucent window shades in white. 37V4" X 5'. For privacy.</p>
        <p>Mit</p>
        <p>Air filter helps remove odors, dust and smoke from air. 2 speeds.</p>
        <p>HH.'iOOO Roble limited lo mli '5 sllpulallon</p>
        <p>57</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>Sale Price Pkg. Popcorn.</p>
        <p>Peanut, 6% oz.*; almond, 7 oz.*; Zonkers, 5 oz.*</p>
        <p>Net wl limil 2 pkgs. Uddle Facldle only</p>
        <p>TTUVCH</p>
        <p>TRAC II</p>
        <p>3.24</p>
        <p>lOlwln-btode cartridges lor</p>
        <p>close shaves.</p>
        <p>10 ATRAS</p>
        <p>3.24</p>
        <p>Vour choice. IWin-biade</p>
        <p>Cartridges.</p>
        <p>Somo with lube strip</p>
        <p>V</p>
        <p>IWASHCU</p>
        <p>WASHCIOIW</p>
        <p>i2i:</p>
        <p>\</p>
        <p>"X..</p>
        <p>2qq Save OO 21%</p>
        <p>'-1#</p>
        <p>Kodak</p>
        <p>1.77</p>
        <p>Our 3.66 Pkg. Bundle of 12 washcloths of cotton in color choice. 11x11".</p>
        <p>Save 55%</p>
        <p>Our 3.97. Trimmer with 8'/2" stainless steel blades, orange handles.</p>
        <p>8.99</p>
        <p>2.27</p>
        <p>37.97</p>
        <p>166</p>
        <p>Sole Price. Pkg. of 10 SVa" diskettes. Single side, double density. 1286558 Pkg. or 10.2-8tded Diskettes. 10.99</p>
        <p>\ ir 1</p>
        <p>Sole Price Pkg. Efferdent cleanser helps remove unsightly stains. 96 tablets.</p>
        <p>I' ? pi&amp;lt;gi</p>
        <p>Sale Price. AC/DC* minimono AM/FM radio with cassette, auto-stop. Colors.</p>
        <p>Ballerlos ato extra QT 5</p>
        <p>Sale Price. Color TV with auto-color control, memory fine tuning, more.</p>
        <p>CMX-4I20/IC3174AVIC3I90MA</p>
        <p>1.52</p>
        <p>4r.,*1</p>
        <p>Sale Price Pkg. Tape caddy with 2 rolls tape.</p>
        <p>1 '/?x450" and y4x300' roll.</p>
        <p>Sale Price Pkg. Saran Wrap.</p>
        <p>Handy tor cooking, leftovers, more. 43.5 yd.xll</p>
        <p>I imll 2 pkuE</p>
        <p>Sale Price. 2V4" scented votive candles in color choice. 15-hr. burning time.</p>
        <p>2^0 Save</p>
        <p>O f 22%</p>
        <p>Our 879 Ea. Spices. Your choice of special seasonings. '/?-9'/4 oz. net wt.</p>
        <p>movvorv</p>
        <p>1.47</p>
        <p>Sale Price Jar. Strawberry</p>
        <p>Jam for sandwiches, snacks, more. 32-oz. net wt.</p>
        <p>limit 2 Jots</p>
        <p>Sale Price. Bath beads</p>
        <p>help leave skin smooth and soft. 24-oz. net wt.</p>
        <p>1.99</p>
        <p>Enjoy our delicious barbecue sandwich plate</p>
        <p>with French fries, coleslaw.</p>
        <p>Availobid otMv in slows wiitt colelww</p>
        <p>M0 Save 50%</p>
        <p>Our 1.48 Pkg. 2-pock night light bulbs in most popular 4-W size. Clear</p>
        <p>1.97</p>
        <p>13.97S7</p>
        <p>Sale Price. Pkg. of 4 alkaline batteries.</p>
        <p>"AA" or "AAA" size.</p>
        <p>Sold in ttome Improvement Dept</p>
        <p>Or 17.88.4-pc. set vinyl floor mots in color choice. Helps protect carpets.</p>
        <p>AAeSave</p>
        <p>32%</p>
        <p>OurI.47Ea.K-SOmulH-purpose spray helps stop squeaks. 12-oz*</p>
        <p>Nolwt Sold m Auto Dept</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0157" />
        <p>Satisfaction guarantaad or your money back</p>
        <p>Saar$, Roebuck and Co., 1987</p>
        <p>SaM pricing poicy: If an Nsm is not detated as raduoad or a apadal purcfMBa. II is at Ms regular prioa. A apadal purchaaa, though not re-duoad, la an axospHonal value.</p>
        <p>Large Name such as fumNuna and applanoaa are irwsnaoriad in our dalributon oanlor and wi be ache-duM for pick-up or dairary. Dalv-ary is not indudsd In aalng prioaa.</p>
        <p>-   - -M -* ----    </p>
        <p>mmfm VOCHiQ WOBr IKiiv OfWy</p>
        <p>ara avaMbla in BarbouravHa, Char-laston, SC (Norihwooda), Ctwlaa-ton, WV, Charlotte, Columbia, Durham, FayeOavia. Qraanaboto,</p>
        <p>IMnslorvSalsm.</p>
        <p>4C4 1/21/87 FLTS. 1 and 2</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0158" />
        <p>20% OFF</p>
        <p>Entire stock of ladies knit nightwear</p>
        <p>^utiful bedtirne In all vour favorite styles and colors are waiting for you at Srars! Come see all the long and short gowns, pajamas, mini-pajamas heignoir sots, scuffs and more! They're all ^ saie^l ^ Womens sizes also on sale!</p>
        <p>Spectacular price! Spectacular selectioni Traditional jeans classic and casual style pants, dosigner-looks and more. All machine washable, easy-care fabrics. Assorted colors, patterns and prints. While quantities last.</p>
        <p>SbssMx...........................................................................</p>
        <p>All styles shown are representative of Sears Assortments</p>
        <p>^3 OFF Boys jeans</p>
        <p>New jeans for 19871 Choose from now, prewashed 12-oz. navy or LMeached !00% cotton lenims or :lorful twills to polyester and cotton All IS sizes tor active boys!</p>
        <p>Sizes 4-7 pants, Reg. $7.99 ..5.88</p>
        <p>20% OFF</p>
        <p>Entire stock of ladies full and half slips</p>
        <p>Start the now year off with a new slip from Sears huge selection! A bevy of styles and colors await you at savings that are rrwre than tempting. Choose your favortios from lacy to elegantly simple styles. All in misses sizes.</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0159" />
        <p>SAVE *5</p>
        <p>famous name in great fitting casuaiiy comfortabie jeans-Levis</p>
        <p>The name says it all - tradition, durability and comfort. Levi's sportswear is made for your active lifestyle and designed with long lasting quality youve come to expect. And with these savings you cant miss. 100% heavyweight cotton denim jeans in mens sizes.</p>
        <p>$25.99 Prewashed jeans  ...............................20.99</p>
        <p>SAVE *2</p>
        <p>Sears Best men's underwear</p>
        <p>10</p>
        <p>IV Reg. $12.99</p>
        <p>T-sNrts and briefs are of polyeeter and Pima cotton for a super 80ft and comfortable fIL</p>
        <p>$3.99 Sears Best hoieery 199</p>
        <p>H5 0FF</p>
        <p>oxfords, shoes and boots</p>
        <p>iVlens spice tan</p>
        <p>Oxford, Reg. $36.99</p>
        <p>Shoe, Reg. $44.99</p>
        <p>29</p>
        <p>99</p>
        <p>Boot, Reg. $46.99</p>
        <p>31</p>
        <p>Rugged fuH grain leather uppers, o-reeistant crepe rubber solee. Goodyear well construction. Cushioned insolBS. Steel shank for added suport. Mens sizes.</p>
        <p>1/2 PRICE</p>
        <p>Men's rugged leather garage oxfords</p>
        <p>Smooth leather uppers, on-resistant mervmade soles. Qoodyeer weN construction. Cushioned insolee. WMequanWeela*</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0160" />
        <p>YOUR CHOICE699</p>
        <p>Twln-size Sheet sets or stcNXksrd pillows</p>
        <p>S  PormchfMtfteeli</p>
        <p>polywlsrplow  lels wNh plowoaiei</p>
        <p>ST"**!!?*.........2  31- Rill- I13J9...tM</p>
        <p>$16.90 Queens------------MO  4ii&amp;amp; Ful. Rtg. flOJO... ISM</p>
        <p>SlOMKing^..............1SJ0  ta CSimriq. $29J0lS</p>
        <p>pa King. Rag. S20J0..20MSAVE 60%</p>
        <p>100% Combed ooHon \ RekJcred Both Tonvel l\ Inleflofs" coleclion</p>
        <p>Ftog. $1300  6</p>
        <p>$7.90 Hand ToMd 490</p>
        <p>$400 Waah doll 3i90</p>
        <p>Matching njga.lani(a idUadao onaala.SAVE 40% to</p>
        <p>OVER 50%Sears-0-Pedc foam or innersprlng beddingFIRM Sears-O-Pedic Luxury bedding</p>
        <p>Tail Each Plaoa</p>
        <p>Riaiza.aachpiaoa.Waa$25000 ISOiOO O OQQ</p>
        <p>M&amp;gt;aQuaan Sat. Waa $60000................340i90</p>
        <p>34&amp;gt;e. King Sat. waa $79000-------------------30000  WW  oSSanfcEXTRA-SUPER-FIRM Elegance</p>
        <p>TMnEachPlaoa</p>
        <p>Ri liza. aachpiaoa.Waa $30000----------14000  ^jOQQ</p>
        <p>24&amp;gt;a Quaan Sal. WOa$80000----------------SOIOO  Vr</p>
        <p>34&amp;gt;a King Sal. waa $129000..................90000  ^  o58</p>
        <p>ULTRA-FIRM SeaisO-Pedic Imperial II</p>
        <p>TMnEachPiaoa</p>
        <p>Ri liza, aachpiaoa.Waa $43000..........21100</p>
        <p>M.Quam Sat. Waa $109000--------------90100  .111  SAVE</p>
        <p>3^&amp;gt;aKino Sal. Waa $1400.90..................74000  \^\/oVBt50%</p>
        <p>AB^Soldl"Sto&amp;lt;^Fatn6dd&amp;gt;iglfl&amp;gt;p(il)^^ oavmgs Daaed on 1966 General catalog. Quantities UmMed Baddvn h rw</p>
        <p>Mcrtchmate Twin Size</p>
        <p>Ftog.</p>
        <p>$20.90</p>
        <p>ColomfKite Twin Size</p>
        <p>Rsg.</p>
        <p>13990</p>
        <p>Colormate Smait Twin</p>
        <p>24</p>
        <p>29</p>
        <p>Rag.</p>
        <p>$4999</p>
        <p>Automatic Mattress Pod</p>
        <p>34</p>
        <p>Rag.</p>
        <p>$29.90 All Sizes on Sale!</p>
        <p>19</p>
        <p>Adiustable steel curtain rods</p>
        <p>28^ inches, Reg. $1.59 WhMe enameled</p>
        <p>99'SAVE 20-40</p>
        <p>"Boyside* Permo-Prest Cope Cod curtains</p>
        <p>059</p>
        <p>244n., Reg. $5.99 O</p>
        <p>364n., Reg. $9.99................600</p>
        <p>Valance, Reg. K99............300</p>
        <p>rSAVE 25-40</p>
        <p>Ruffled Permo-Prest Prisdilas</p>
        <p>63^.. Reg. $16.99  9</p>
        <p>83*81-ln.. Reg. $19.99.... 1400 Valanoe. Reg. ^.99.........440</p>
        <p>"KerT Textured Lined Dropeiy</p>
        <p>48x84Hn.. Reg. $24.997^ 10Qx84-in., Reg. $59.90.4600 125K84ln.. Reg. $6909.5300</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0161" />
        <p>NATIONAL HOME</p>
        <p>APPLIANCE</p>
        <p>Regular $539.99</p>
        <p>Handles big washioads. Dual Acw  agilalor. lo</p>
        <p>maHv Hftnn Setf-deaninQ Hnt fHter. Hurry to Sears and save NATtaTHOME APPLWE</p>
        <p>SALE. Ends Jan. 31.</p>
        <p>Kenmore Fabric Master Dryer</p>
        <p>\ i \</p>
        <p>06701</p>
        <p>26731</p>
        <p>Regular $389.99</p>
        <p>Automatic F^iric Master dryer automalicaly shiAs Haelf olfM dryness level selecled 4 temperature sellings. Endel-cycle signal. Easy ioader* door for convenient ioadtog and un-toadtog. Ends Jan. 31.</p>
        <p>InstaHalion on washers and dryers extra Dryers require connector, extra.</p>
        <p>^240 OFF</p>
        <p>on THIS PAIR!</p>
        <p>Kenmofe 8-cycle Washer</p>
        <p>i98</p>
        <p>^60 OFF</p>
        <p>35</p>
        <p>Ragulw $489.06 Large-capacity. Dual-action agitator*. Self dewiing Ini fMer. Ends Jan. 31</p>
        <p>Kenmore Fabric Matter Diyer</p>
        <p>(98</p>
        <p>88831</p>
        <p>279</p>
        <p>r"</p>
        <p>16641</p>
        <p>RsgulW $389.99 AutomiMcaly shuts laaN off at dryness</p>
        <p>on THIS PAIR!</p>
        <p>Kenmore 6-cyclo Wother</p>
        <p>i99</p>
        <p>299</p>
        <p>leaoi</p>
        <p>Regulw|3399e</p>
        <p>3 pre-set water temperatures. Large-capacNy model, l-speed.</p>
        <p>Kenmore HecMc Dryer</p>
        <p>249</p>
        <p># Regular$28999 CottorVSturdy. permanent press and Sir only cycles. Manual Imsr.ctw4ln^hflael^Brro8^9a^Mya3fiabie^0f8alea8a(^w^</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0162" />
        <p>NATIONAL HOME APPLIANCE</p>
        <p>Lfliiirf</p>
        <p>'V</p>
        <p>77041SAVE H90!</p>
        <p>Kenmore Icemaker Refrigerator</p>
        <p>98</p>
        <p>Regular $889.99</p>
        <p>699</p>
        <p>20.0 cu. fl. refrigerator virith Icemaker. Twin criapw and ad|u8tble haN shelves. Icemaker hook-up Is extra.</p>
        <p>120 OFF!</p>
        <p>l98</p>
        <p>1A0 eu ft. Kmmoi*</p>
        <p>n  ^    wine</p>
        <p>Kwnynumi</p>
        <p>579</p>
        <p>V# # nag.l609S9 Feeluree icemaker.</p>
        <p>2 adjustable shelves and more.</p>
        <p>64801/8066</p>
        <p>'110 OFF!</p>
        <p>KMfwnoiw 15.1 cu. ft. ChottFrMimr</p>
        <p>329..</p>
        <p>Textured lid and cabinet. Adknt^ cold control . Poeer signailght.</p>
        <p>18361</p>
        <p>H30 OFF!</p>
        <p>Kenmore Mid-size Microwave</p>
        <p>199</p>
        <p>H90 OFF!</p>
        <p>Kenmore ULTRA WASH Dishwasher</p>
        <p>Was $329.99</p>
        <p>369</p>
        <p>98</p>
        <p>Regular $559.99</p>
        <p>Electronic touch controls. 100-minute delay-start. Variable power plus much more. Hurry to Sears and Save!</p>
        <p>  wes$46e.9e</p>
        <p>12-hour delay, 5-etage memory, 0(&amp;gt;&amp;lt;ecipe8. Wholemeal cooking. 1.4 cu. ft. capacity.</p>
        <p>87448</p>
        <p>^110 OFF!</p>
        <p>Kenmoito 13.1 cu. ft. UprigM Freezer</p>
        <p>519</p>
        <p>Texfcjred steel door, magnetic door gasket Sale ends Jan. 31</p>
        <p>28231 .</p>
        <p>Feature ULTRA WASH to get your dishes super dean. Adiustable racks. Pols/pans cyde. Water heat control. 6-hour delay.</p>
        <p>TERRIFIC BUY!</p>
        <p>Built-in Range</p>
        <p>399</p>
        <p>Black glass door. 4heatmg</p>
        <p>Each of these adverteed Items is readily available for sale as advertised</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0163" />
        <p>80 OFF!</p>
        <p>80 OFF!</p>
        <p>Kenmore Canister Vacuum</p>
        <p>459</p>
        <p>  Regular  $239.99</p>
        <p>Powermato* wim adjustabte pile height. Tools alore oorrve-niently on top.</p>
        <p>30 OFF!</p>
        <p>Kenmore Upright Vac wHh Tools</p>
        <p>7Q99r^Ssp</p>
        <p># #  PriM $100 .90</p>
        <p>Beater bar action, 4 pite height setting. WHh attach-</p>
        <p>34121</p>
        <p>SAVE ^60!</p>
        <p>Knmore 8-stttch Sewing Machine</p>
        <p>159</p>
        <p>fteg. $219.90</p>
        <p>Built-in bullonholer, select and aew plua more. Sante now at Sears.</p>
        <p>1-year/8-event VMS VCR with Dolby Stereo J</p>
        <p>Remote Control Toble-top Color TV</p>
        <p>^  _  Regular  $529.99</p>
        <p>27-functk)n wireless remote control; on-screen display; 119-channel quartz tuning; HQ for sharper details.</p>
        <p>14&amp;lt;lay/4-event remote VHS/VCR</p>
        <p>107 dml capatil w aynOtsrizwl am tor 2^ clwwaHtori9r.HQtorhWiquayplca.</p>
        <p>Dual Costette SlereoRock</p>
        <p>tea</p>
        <p>S229J90</p>
        <p>149</p>
        <p>SamFeulomalic turntable. 2 apeakars. Rack for storage. AM/FM atareo.</p>
        <p>SAVE 70!</p>
        <p>Dectronic &amp;gt;\ Coireding \ lypmnller</p>
        <p>199</p>
        <p>(tog. $260.00</p>
        <p>Daiay Wheel printer, 40 characters.</p>
        <p>NoiawMtoln9li)r</p>
        <p>i99</p>
        <p>0^0</p>
        <p>Regular $449.99 Electronic quartz tuning.</p>
        <p>Remote control ColorlV</p>
        <p>279!!-.</p>
        <p>t(Hn. dag. maaa. picture. Corwanlanl remota oonbol.</p>
        <p>42002</p>
        <p>1341 PDrtabto ColorlV</p>
        <p>179</p>
        <p>Automatic frequency control for automatic lineWig. 13*. dag maaa. picture.</p>
        <p>53031</p>
        <p>or WBMmon</p>
        <p>34401-n</p>
        <p>Sean</p>
        <p>Memoiy Phone</p>
        <p>d099</p>
        <p>I # (tog. $3400</p>
        <p>lOnumbor memory irim-tlylo dh redd and pouoa. Norseaitoto</p>
        <p>or</p>
        <p>of these advertised items is readily available for sale as advertiBed.</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0164" />
        <p>Craftsman power tools, .built to</p>
        <p>. 3 in. belt sender. 1/2-HP nwlor. 14^^q. in. sanding am. 0 99 . 1-HP router. 25.000 rpm. ring-type dePaj^.</p>
        <p>. 3Hn. variable-speed driB. 2/5^. Reversibte. Reg.</p>
        <p> 7V4-in. drcultf saw. 2Vfc+IP motor. 5.000 rpm. Reg. $79.99</p>
        <p>Craftsman bench-top power tools</p>
        <p> . _ .  ^___ :____mKIa  anH  Kaaa</p>
        <p>99</p>
        <p> Drill Press; 1/6-HP motor Cast-iron head, table and base.</p>
        <p> 4VWn. joirtor/planer planes wood up to 4-In.</p>
        <p>. 1/3-HP beXBC sender Worktable tiMs 45. 436-in. sanjng boH . I6nn. Scroll Saw. induction dirve balhbearing motor. 1700 spm.</p>
        <p>YOUR CHOICE</p>
        <p>|99</p>
        <p>w</p>
        <p>SAVE MOO</p>
        <p>Craflsman 2-HP compressor</p>
        <p>SS 339</p>
        <p>Maximum 125 PSI, 30^. air tank.7.8SCFMal40PSI.15-fthose.</p>
        <p>17684</p>
        <p>SAVE HOOl Clansman professional qucriHy tool storage</p>
        <p>COMFIEIEFOROMY</p>
        <p>499</p>
        <p>98</p>
        <p>12-draMfer sleel tool chest</p>
        <p>Reg. $248.99................199J8</p>
        <p>12-driiier8lBelrolMy Reg. $379.99................299J9</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0165" />
        <p>SAVE *6 Eaiy IMng lO</p>
        <p>Flat or Celling While</p>
        <p>Seml-gloM</p>
        <p>I I</p>
        <p>EoiF Uvmg</p>
        <p>14</p>
        <p>Eaw Uvmg</p>
        <p>16</p>
        <p>On&amp;lt;xMl InMor Mm In  rrin-bow of oolori. Covorago wv-rwMloryMnAowa</p>
        <p>For&amp;lt;</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0166" />
        <p>SAVE 580-H50!</p>
        <p>SAVE '300 EACH!</p>
        <p>HP OR 16-HP SMAN TRACTOR</p>
        <p>** J JAA99</p>
        <p> 1199</p>
        <p>Reg. $1480.99</p>
        <p>Monitor measures speed, distance, trip time, average speed. Energy-use meter measures calories burned.</p>
        <p>Rag. $340.9 In Fall 196 Qanarai Caieog</p>
        <p>SAVE '40-70!</p>
        <p>20-in. side-disdwrge. 5-cutting heigMs, quMc-foM</p>
        <p>.299</p>
        <p>22-in. aeipropeled iwr-dtadMigB mamm. Includes</p>
        <p>SAVE *40</p>
        <p>3apaad ShafflaM</p>
        <p>204nch lOMing M(0 In mens end women's mode. Ron!. re celper brals. Reg.</p>
        <p>$130S0</p>
        <p>SAVE *70</p>
        <p>KMpMd SunbM Rioar</p>
        <p>aSMi laoer bi mens Id womenT modelA ng-$19E90</p>
        <p>YOUR</p>
        <p>CHOICE</p>
        <p>99</p>
        <p>99</p>
        <p>S1*SStoieNIQtCHBB</p>
        <p>150</p>
        <p>frwnmar</p>
        <p>Rotinn.noi'2;22v</p>
        <p>*200 OFF</p>
        <p>31MIPCRTtlllar</p>
        <p>499</p>
        <p>Countar loMIng lav tnee dig I44n. Me 6 in. deep</p>
        <p>SAVE ^40!</p>
        <p>POWER MiSER 5 GAS OR ELECTRIC WATER HEATER</p>
        <p>40l|d.aiis</p>
        <p>40gristis</p>
        <p>5648</p>
        <p>1692.  1892</p>
        <p>nm.S2oeje  Rm.s229.9e</p>
        <p>Need hot Mw fast?</p>
        <p>Call for emergency installation within 24 hours (except Sundays and hoUeys). Instal-lalion extra. Or pick one up and instal it voureelf the same day. A great Sears vahiel</p>
        <p>3144^33443</p>
        <p>I *50 OFF</p>
        <p>Nmvuofs dtapsRisf</p>
        <p>$129feioia</p>
        <p>7999</p>
        <p>SoundMeuleled.</p>
        <p>W)OFF</p>
        <p>Kenmore dehumidifier</p>
        <p>.  299</p>
        <p>48-piid capacity . Ac^ustabie humidistaL 2-speed fan.</p>
        <p>70 OFF</p>
        <p>NMiDMa driunUhi</p>
        <p>W</p>
        <p>HumkSstat 20iJirt daly capaciy.</p>
        <p>Eadi&amp;lt;4thewailtletdawiBliiinr</p>
        <p>Rm $12949</p>
        <p>Hekis premni he bee up ttw chimney when piece ie not in ueei Chooee entique or poiehed txeie, Mack-</p>
        <p>VT</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0167" />
        <p>SAVE 20%</p>
        <p>Vinyl replacement windows</p>
        <p> iitort vkidy8 oirtoiTHnade 10 your measurements.</p>
        <p> Double-hung, sider, casement and pictiro windows available. Chooee from aluminum or vinyl. Bow windows and bays avaK-Md.too.</p>
        <p>. Sears aluminum or vinyl double-hung windows till in for easy cleaning from the inside.</p>
        <p> Most windows include self-storing screens.</p>
        <p>provide dependable econonlcal ^as neat whenever needed.SAVE 20%Decorative security storm doors add beauty to your home</p>
        <p>Tempered glass panels keep your heated air in and the weather outside! Steel frames with ornamental casting protect you while adding beauty to your home. Deadbolt locks.</p>
        <p>SAVE 15%</p>
        <p>SAVE 50%</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>Shingle Roofingsears 256R shingie I Wall Furnace</p>
        <p>!f your old roof needs repladrtg. call Sears vve can replaoe vouroldroofwllhaslaleoftheart system.chooee stylsh shingles, and oomplele. full length ridge ventHallon that prolongs roof Me. Cal Sears today.</p>
        <p>Ideal for room additions, basaments. garages, vacatkw</p>
        <p>cabins, cottages or smal homes. Capacities arid types available lor alrnost any replaoernent or new applcallon in disci</p>
        <p>vent wid upweni modasl. Up to 00% efldarS...</p>
        <p>OtwraiZMalaimNwamlngs</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0168" />
        <p>END OF MONTH SALE</p>
        <p>Serie tarti Wed, Jon. 21; ends Seri, Joa 24 wiiowiiiprtiw</p>
        <p>Sstlsftctlon guaranteed or your monoy back</p>
        <p>CSmt, Roebuck and Co., 1987</p>
        <p>ALL STORES NOW OPEN SATURDAY MORNINGS AT 9 AM</p>
        <p>NC: Burlinglon. Charlone (Eeslland Soulhpark) Concord^rharr^^</p>
        <p>Goidstwro. Greensboro. Greenvtrie, Hchory. H*gh Pont. Jackaorwiw, Rataign. Rocay Mouni,</p>
        <p>WikningKW. WmttorvSaletn ^  ^  tM.  urn</p>
        <p>SC: Charleston (Ciladel. Northwoods). Cohjmtaa. Ftorenw. Myrtle Beach, Rock Hi VA: Danville, Lynchburg, Roanoke  KY:  Ashland</p>
        <p>WV: Barboursvie. Backley, Bluefieid. Charleston</p>
        <p>t.</p>
        <p>L</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0169" />
        <p>V</p>
        <p>J'4-</p>
        <p>. 4A\n</p>
        <p>IV' tYour choiceSave on misses , slacks.</p>
        <p>Pair up these great partners ind comfort. The sweaters include your )f short sleeve styles in a wide selection (rs and textures. Mix and match them with ic-waist twill pants from The Fox". In your ice of several fashion colors.</p>
        <p>. JCPmwyCo. 1966P12W52MSE.</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0170" />
        <p>.' r nWT'J L ^</p>
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        <pb facs="00096520_0171" />
        <p>3/8</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0172" />
        <p>o</p>
        <p>Save 30% to 50% on all winter weight jackets.29.99</p>
        <p>A. Orig. $50. Make sure he stays toasty warm when the cold winds blow with this super-snug insulated jacket by Quail Run. Stylish tri-color design with zip-front, snap-front pockets and elastic waistband.</p>
        <p>Orig. Sale</p>
        <p>B.Towncraft'* hooded jacket ... 39.99 19.99</p>
        <p>Mens slacks.6.99</p>
        <p>C. Orig. $28. The perfect slacks for all dress occasions, these Daks" slacks combine straight-leg styling with tri-blend comfort. Assorted solids in mens sizes.</p>
        <p>D. Orig. 21.99. Just right for those casual occasions; Towncraft  corduroy pants. Soft and comfortable cotton/poly corduroy m your choice of colors. Men's sizes.</p>
        <p>E. Selection of slacks in blends: corduroy and duck at special prices.</p>
        <p>4/8</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0173" />
        <p>oto K)% 0</p>
        <p>A large group of sweaters and shirts at end-of-season prices</p>
        <p>Our V-neck sweater.</p>
        <p>4.99</p>
        <p>Orig. $25. An easy favorite for those comfortable occasions. Choose our Par Four" long sleeve V-neck sweater. Select from several % colors in mens sizes.</p>
        <p>Orig. Sale $32  19.99</p>
        <p>Crewneck sweater</p>
        <p>Woven shirts.</p>
        <p>9,99</p>
        <p>Orig. $18. You cant miss with our big selection of comfortable, colorful long sleeve plaid shirts. Your choice of Classic Directions ' or Par Four" in warm poly/cotton blends in mens sizes</p>
        <p>KTM*</p>
        <p>CPonney</p>
        <p>5/8</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0174" />
        <p>5.99 to 9,99</p>
        <p>Kidsfashion -tops and bottoms.</p>
        <p>Forgirs:</p>
        <p>Sale 7.99 Sale 9.99</p>
        <p>Reg. $10. Bright and colorful is in and we've got it with these pullover tops. Your choice of several exciting prints, all with * ..-length sleeves in girls'sizes.</p>
        <p>Reg. Sale Printed knit top ..... $8  5.99</p>
        <p>Reg. 13.99. Mix and match with these pleated pants of 100o cotton for active kids. Several colors from which to choose.For boys; Sale 7.99</p>
        <p>Great looks for them at great savings for you. Choose from a large selection of boys' sportshirts including colorful prints and sporty stripes.Sale 9.99</p>
        <p>Reg. 12.99. Great pair-ups with these Weeds" casual pants for boys. Rugged, yet comfortable 100% cotton pants feature 3-pocket design and elastic waistband in boys' sizes.</p>
        <p>6/8</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0175" />
        <p>Sale 3.99-rench Toast top for toddlers.</p>
        <p>A. Reg. $6. Poly/cotton knit tops. In pastels for girls and bold solids for boys.</p>
        <p>Reg. Sale</p>
        <p>B. French Toast" pants  S9 6.99</p>
        <p>Sale 3.99 Sale 5.99Tropical print top or ribbed pants.</p>
        <p>C. Reg. $6. Woven camp shirts in fashion brights and pastel colors. Rib knit pants of poly/cotton in novelty prints and solids.Infants 3-piece interlock set.</p>
        <p>D. Reg. 7.99. Keep the little ones warm and comfortable in a cotton/polyester set of jacket, shirt and pants. Features elastic waist and piped trim.</p>
        <p>7/8</p>
        <pb facs="00096520_0176" />
        <p>CPenney</p>
        <p>Sweatshirts or pants.</p>
        <p>Reg. 9.99 ea. When you team up with Track &amp;amp; Court, youre ready for action. Your choice of mens or ladies long sleeve, crew-neck tops or pull-on pants with elastic waist and cuffs. All of comfortable, easy-care polyester/cotton.</p>
        <p>Nike Bravo shoes.</p>
        <p>Sale 16.99</p>
        <p>Reg. 22.99. For all-around sports activities, the Bravo is hard to beat. With nylon uppers for support and durability, rubber outsoles and suede trim. Mens and ladies sizes.</p>
        <p>y, </p>
        <p>EVENT STARTS WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 21 and ENDS SATURDAY, JANUARY 24,1987</p>
        <p>GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA THE PLAZA</p>
        <p>I  Shop  Monday  thru  Saturday  10:00am to 9:00pm</p>
        <p>Sunday 1:00 to 6:00pm ^  Store  Phone  756-1190Catalog Phone756-2145</p>
        <p>Advertising Supplement to THE DAILY REFLECTOR</p>
        <p>Intermediate markdowns nftay have been taken on originally priced merchandise shown throughout this circular. Reductions from originally priced merchandise are effective until stock is depleted. Entire Hne sales do not include JCPenney Smart Values.</p>
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