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        <p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
        <pb facs="00097006_0001" />
        <p>SPORTS TODAY</p>
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        <p>  *'DAILY REFLECTOR</p>
        <p>Greenville. N.C.Friday Afternoon. August 12,1988</p>
        <p>25C</p>
        <p>Pitt Memorial Says Growth</p>
        <p>Forces Need For More Beds</p>
        <p>By STUART SAVAGE ReHector Staff Writer Pitt County Memorial Hospital needs more beds to meet a growing patient load and the demands of educational programs for doctors and other health-care professionals, a PCMH official said Thursday.</p>
        <p>Without them, Dave McRae said, the delivery of health services in eastern North Carolina will suffer, and teaching and research opportunities will be limited.</p>
        <p>McRae, vice president and chief operating officer at the hospital, spirice at a certificate-of-need hearing held in Greenville by the North Carolina Department of Human Resources uivisim of Facilities  Services. The hearing, called by the Certificate of Need Section of that office, was held to discuss the PCMH</p>
        <p>application for 143 new beds. The hospital has 565 beds.</p>
        <p>Plans to renovate 100 beds and to expand ancillary services at the hospital also hinge on the granting of the certificate of need by the N.C. Department of Human Resources division of facility services.</p>
        <p>Hospital officials have estimated that an additional 600 employees would be needed at PCMH after the $50 million expansion and renovation project is completed.</p>
        <p>The states medical facilities plan says new beds will not be needed in Pitt County until 1992. But under the state plan, Pitt and three other academic medical-center teaching hospitals can be granted exemptions.</p>
        <p>This expansion, McRae told the hearing, will allow Pitt Memorial to continue to serve community pa</p>
        <p>tients from Pitt County and tertiary patients... from the 29-county region. In order to fulfill the mission of the hospital and the ECU School of Medicine, we request that this project be approved under the exemption.</p>
        <p>Tertiary services include cardiology and cardiac surgery, cancer diagnosis and treatment, high-risk obstetrical and neonatal and pediatric intensive care, neurology and neurosurgery, rehabilitation, psychiatry and trauma.</p>
        <p>Those at PCMH available to the residents of eastern North Carolina were developed using a partnership between Pitt Memorial and the East Carolina University School of Medicine, McRae said.</p>
        <p>Because of the lack of bed space, he said, there are waiting lists for all these tertiary services.</p>
        <p>More than 60 percent of the i-tients admitted to Pitt Memorial come from outside Pitt County, McRae  said during the hearing. Most of these patients are referred for services unavailable at other hospitals (in eastern North Carolina).</p>
        <p>McRae also said Pitt Memorial is unique among the four academic medical center teaching hospitals because it serves as a regional referral center, and as a community hospital for more than 90,000 residents of Pitt County.</p>
        <p>During the past year, we have experienced many occasions when it has been necessary to postpone admissions, including delay of scheduled surgery, because no rooms were</p>
        <p>(See PCMH. A-3)</p>
        <p>U.S. Inspectors Hide 'Souvenirs'</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP)  Three members of an Energy Ikpartment team taking part in a nuclear testing experiment in the Soviet Union engaged in some unauthorized souvenir collection there, the White House said today.</p>
        <p>Prsldential spokesman Marlin Fitzwater, however, said that based on information available so far to U.S. officials, we dont believe it was intelligence activity of any kind.</p>
        <p>The individuals picked up and attempted to ship on for their personal use some rock samples, a piece of barbed wire, an Allen wrench and a hammer, Fitzwatef told reporters at the White House.</p>
        <p>The individuals involved have been removed from the list of those who might return for the experiment, he said.</p>
        <p>Fitzwater noted that the U.S. Energy Department team was in the Soviet Union under the auspices of an agreement, announced by Pr^i-dent Reagan and Soviet leader Mikhail S. Gorbachev, for a joint verification experiment in the field of nuclear testing.</p>
        <p>We dont believe it was Intelligence activity of</p>
        <p>Fitzwater declined to divulge the names of the three people involved.</p>
        <p>The materials were discovered by Soviets inspecting equipment crates being prepared for shipment back to the United States, said Deputy Press Secretary Roman PqiMdiuk.</p>
        <p>The Washington Post reported in todays editions that Moscow had issued a formal diplomatic protest over the July 17 incident. But Fitzwater said there had been no formal exchanges.</p>
        <p>FIRST GLIMPSE  Britains Dutchess of York leaves a London hospital with her newborn daughter today in the publics frst view of the child, which has not been named but will be the Princess of York. The baby slept as her mothor, &amp;amp;urah, and Prince Andrew carried her home. It is the couples frst child. (APLaseqdioto)</p>
        <p>any kind, but it was a personal mistake on their part, Fitzwater said, adding that we have in</p>
        <p>formed the Soviet Union of this, yes.</p>
        <p>A U.S. official told the newspaper that both the Soviet Union and the United States were trying to resolve the problem in a low-key manner.</p>
        <p>Weit*8 ^lorv Safe</p>
        <p>McCorvey Serving 2-</p>
        <p>Term</p>
        <p>Class Size Plan Won't Affect Pitt</p>
        <p>By JOHN BARE ^ Reflector Staff Writer Former East Carolina University football player Lester Errol Mc-(^rvey, who was convicted Thursday of assault on a female, is serving a twoKlay sentence in the Pitt County Jail.</p>
        <p>Calling McCorveys conduct inexcusable, Superior Court Judge Charles B. Winberry of Rocky Mount gave McCorvey a two-year suspended sentence and ordered him to spend 48 hours in the county jail.</p>
        <p>The sentence began Thursday at noon and McCorvey, 20, of Pi-</p>
        <p>sacola, Fla., is scheduled to be released Saturday at noon.</p>
        <p>McCorvey was convicted of sexually assaulting Michelle Battle, 23, of Rocky Mount last February in a campus dormitory.</p>
        <p>According to a statement from McCorvey that was introduced at the trial on Wednesday, he pretended to be someone else when he entered the dorm room and attempted to have intercourse with Miss Battle. She was at ECU visiting her boyfriend, Lewis Wilson, also an ECU football player, at the time.</p>
        <p>The jury of seven men and five women  including an ECU faculty</p>
        <p>Wa Will Build Plant In Lenoir</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP) - White Consolidated Industries has announced plans for a $75 million appliance facility in Lenoir County, and the General Assemblys agreement to provide $3.5 million to lure industry to the county was a contributing factor, officials says.</p>
        <p>Some 850 people will be employed at the facility.</p>
        <p>Gov. Jim Martin announced Thursday that the money for extending services to the plant site helped White Consolidated pick North Carolina over two competing states. Sen. Harold Hardison, D-Lenoir, took some lawmakers by surprise this</p>
        <p>summer by seeking $4 million to help lure a company to the Kinston area. Hardison declined at the time to say which company was interested, drawing some complaints on the Appropriations Committee.</p>
        <p>A great many people have worked hard to make this project a reality, said Martin. "Local development officials in Kinston and Lenoir County, local legislators, as well as officials of our state Department of Commerce have all been involved in bringing WCl to eastern North Carolina.</p>
        <p>member, a legal secretary and a vice president of the Fountain of Life ministries  deliberated about an hour Thursday before returning a guilty verdict just before noon. McCorvey was held in the county jail until the sentencing hearing at 2 p.m.</p>
        <p>Mr. McCorvey, I belive that this verdict speaks the truth in this case, Winberry said before announcing the sentence. The conduct on this occasion is inexcusable.</p>
        <p>Winberry also placed McCorvey on supervised probation for three years and ordered him to pay a $200 fjne, $239 to cover Miss Battles medical bills, court costs and a probation-supervision fee. Once the fees are paid, Winberry said McCorvey may be placed on unsupervised probation, where he would not have to report to a probation officer.</p>
        <p>Before receiving the sentence, McCorvey stood and addressed the court, apologizing to his family and Miss Battle and promising that he has learned from his error.</p>
        <p>And if 1 caused any harm to the young lady ... Im sorry, said McCorvey, dressed in a dark suit, white shirt and tie. Ill never put myself in a situation like this again.</p>
        <p>His case reached Superior Court on appeal after he was convicted on the assault charge in District Court and sentenced to two years in prison.</p>
        <p>Wilson and another ECU football player were also involved in the incident, but both were acquitted in District Court.</p>
        <p>Both Chief District Attorney Nancy</p>
        <p>Aycock and defense attorney Milton T. Fitch Jr. of Wilson asked the judge</p>
        <p>for leniency in sentencing McCorvey, and both attorneys hinted that the &amp;lt;^er players involved should have shared in the guilt.</p>
        <p>Ms. Aycock said the state was not asking for any jail time, But he did need to be convicted and found guilty for what happened in Scott Dormitory (where the assault occurred).</p>
        <p>She also said she wished McCorvey had chosen to testify in the District Court trial and tell what he knew about the incident. If he had, Ms. Aycock said, there would have been a fairer outcome and tl case may have never reached Superior Court.</p>
        <p>None of the three defendants testified in District Court, but McCorvey took the stand Wednesday and his statements implicated both Ernest L. Pendleton, who was also charged with assault, and Wilson, who was charged with aiding and abetting the assaults.</p>
        <p>If anyone needed to be here, it was probably Lewis Wilson, said Fitch, who represented both McCorvey and Pendleton in District Court.</p>
        <p>(McCorvey) has lived 19 years with a clean record, Fitch said. He has presented no discipline problems to anyone inside or outside the home. This was his first brush with the law ...and the last.</p>
        <p>Fitch also presented Winberry with letters of support from Pamela A. Penland, assistant athletic director in charge of academic affairs, ECU head football coach Art Baker, and McCorveys uncle. Woody McCorvey, an assistant football coach at Clemson University.</p>
        <p>By CHERIE EVANS ReHector Staff Writer</p>
        <p>The General Assemblys decision in the organiza-</p>
        <p>to close the loophole tion of class sizes should not affect the Pitt Cinmty school system &amp;lt;mt the salary of Superintendent Eddie West, the associate superintendent of personnel said.</p>
        <p>The General Assemblys decision will not affect the Pitt County schools, Leek Keeter said. The Basic Education Pribram will continue to help us to reduce class size, and were giving (students) a much broader curriculum opportunity.</p>
        <p>The l^islature this year mandated class sizes for each grade, saying that if class sizes were larger than they should be, the state Board of Education could withhold state funds from the salary of the superintendent. The law says the board must</p>
        <p>decide that the superintendent has willfully failed to comply with the standards.</p>
        <p>We allot our teachers in kindergarten through nine on a 1 to 26 ratio, Keeter said. Then, in 10,11 and 12 we allot on a 1 to 30 ratio..</p>
        <p>But, students dont come in packages, Keeter said.</p>
        <p>The state allows us to exceed 26 and 30 by three students. They do allow some flexibility of thip students per class. Were really snooting to have below 26 if we possibly can. The Basic Education Program  which requires that foreign language, theater arts, dance, visual arts, orchestra, physical education and earth science be offered to kingergarten through high school students  helps control class size</p>
        <p>(See SCHOOLS. A-3)</p>
        <p>Down It Goes</p>
        <p>CHARLOTTE (AP) - The $3.1 million, 40,000-pound scoreboard at the new Charlotte Coliseum crashed to the floor and shattered as it was being lowered from its perch in preparation for tonights inaugural basketball games, police said.</p>
        <p>Charlotte police Maj. J.J. JCelly said there were no injuries in the 9 a.m. accident, which occuri^ after workers heard the 40-foot-wide scoreboard creak and groan.</p>
        <p>Witnesses said the scoreboard made by the American Sign Co. was broken intopieces.</p>
        <p>Kelly said there is a second floor under the wooden floor that was hit, and tonights basketball games should go on as scheduled.</p>
        <p>The U.S. womens Olympic team is set to meet the Cuban national team at 6 p.m., while the U.S. mens team meets a team of NBA players at 9 p.m.</p>
        <p>(See KINSTON. A-16)</p>
        <p>The</p>
        <p>Weather</p>
        <p>Judge Says There Are Limits To Reason</p>
        <p>Fair toDi^ With low in lower</p>
        <p>$Qi and Ught wind. sumqr,</p>
        <p>Saturday with chances</p>
        <p>ByGREGLAUDICK Refector Staff Writer</p>
        <p>liulowDOa.</p>
        <p>Aocu-Weaflter^lorecaet for Saturday ) Conditions and High Tempe</p>
        <p>jpitag</p>
        <p>Thinking about filing a lawsuit? Hoping a judge</p>
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        <p>might grant you a large sum of money tor an injustice against you?</p>
        <p>A recent ruling involving a suit against the city of Greenville indicates that you had Letter be sure you have plenty of legal ground to stand on  or you just mi^Lfind yourself digging deep into your own pockets.</p>
        <p>A District Court judge this week ordered a man who filed a false arrest suit against the city to pay Greenville $3,i^ because the judge believed the suit was unreasonable after it reached a certain point.</p>
        <p>The case originates from the 1984 arrest of DwainTeel.</p>
        <p>Court documents show that Teel, who often used the street name Bobby Wiggins, was arrested by Greenville police wIk) hada warrant issued for</p>
        <p>the arrest of "Bobby Wiggins, a/k/a Bob Wayne."</p>
        <p>Police learned that Teel was not the Wiggins they were looking for, and dropped the charges four days later, the suit says.</p>
        <p>Teel sued the city, saying his constitutional rights were violated.</p>
        <p>The city went to court, being assured by its attorney it was protected.</p>
        <p>The law states that if it was a reasonable mistake, no such claim exists, said City Attorney Mac McCarley.</p>
        <p>McCarley said at a certain point in the case, the city successfully showed the court that facts supported the proposition that no such claim existed.</p>
        <p>Yet, McCarley said, Teel continued to pursue the matter.  '</p>
        <p>Earlier this week. Judge Jamdk C. Fox ruled the city be awarded $3,280 in attorneys fees incurred after the court told Teel there was no longer any reasonable argument of law to support his case.</p>
        <p>"The judge tound the plaintitf's pursuit of the lawsuit after a certain point to be frivolous and groundless under rule 11 of the rules of civil procedure, McCarley said.</p>
        <p>"The story is significant because a U .S. District Court was willing to award attorneys fees to a government defendent. What were talking about here is a rarity, McCarley commented. Normally attorneys fees are awarded just to plaintiffs.</p>
        <p>McCarley said he was surprised by the judges award.</p>
        <p>1 dont know of any other government defendants who have been granted fee awards, he said.</p>
        <p>Part of what this does is send a message to both attorneys and potential plaintiffs that in the Eastern District of North Carolina, the court is not going to tolerate frivolous lawsuits.</p>
        <pb facs="00097006_0002" />
        <p>In The Area</p>
        <p>Thefts Reported</p>
        <p>Police said two thefts were reported to the Greenville department early today.</p>
        <p>Officer J.A. Bartlett said a sign valued at $65 was taken from Professor OCools on Greenville Boulevard in an incident reported at 1:44 a.m., while Officer R.L. Vandiford said the hubcaps were removed from a car parked at the intersection of Farmville Boulevard and Memorial Drive in an incident reported at 3:31 a.m.</p>
        <p>Royal Arrested</p>
        <p>Allen Royal, 32, of 101 Kenwood Lane, was arrested by Greenville police late Thursday on peeping tom charges.</p>
        <p>Officer J.A. Bartlett said Royal was charged in connection with an 11:40 p.m. incident at Eastbrook Apartments.</p>
        <p>Nobles Arrested</p>
        <p>Police arrested Felix Celton Nobles, 23, of 618 Hudson St. on a charge of assault with a deadly weapon about 3 a.m. today in connection with a shooting that was reported at 11:39 p.m. Thursday.</p>
        <p>Officer N.B. Rice said Nobles was charged with shooting another man in the leg at the intersection of Atlantic and Albemarle avenues.</p>
        <p>Smith Arrested</p>
        <p>William Alton Smith Jr., was arrested on first degree burglary and common law robbery charges by Greenville police Thursday.</p>
        <p>Officer S.D. Hilliard said Smith, 20, of 1604 Henry St., was charged in connection with an Aug. 8, incident at 800 Howell St. where a man entered the house, knocked a woman to the floor and took $115.</p>
        <p>Seales Stolen</p>
        <p>Greenville police said a set of scales valued at $2,000 was taken from the Eveready Battery Co. at the intersection of Evans Street and Greenville Boulevard Thursday.</p>
        <p>Officer S.D. Hilliard said the theft was reported at 11:40 a.m.</p>
        <p>Special-Use Permits</p>
        <p>Two special-use permits were granted by the Greenville Board of Adjustment at a special call meeting Thursday in the third floor conference room of City Hall.</p>
        <p>In the first case, the board granted a special use permit to Morco Realty, A.J. Speight and Archie L. Edwards to place up to nine mobile homes in Walnut Ridge Estates north of SR 1421, directly across from the Greenville Utilities Water Treatment Plant. The property is zoned RA-20 (residential/agricultural).</p>
        <p>The board also granted a special-</p>
        <p>COLLISION  Eight persons were reported injured after a collision on U.S. 264 west of Greenville late Thursday afternoon. According to North Carolina Highway Patrol reports, a car driven by Barbara Locust Godley of Greenville was traveling west on U.S. 264 when it turned left, colliding with an eastbound truck driven by</p>
        <p>Thomas Lee McLaughlin of Walstonburg. Six persons in the Godley vehicle were injured as well as McLaughlin and a passenger in his truck. None of the injuries was reported serious. Ms. Godley was charged with a safe movement and child restraint violation. (Reflector Photo by Thomas Forrest)</p>
        <p>use permit to R.W. Hawley, allowing general retail sales at 103 Trade St. The property is zoned CH (highway commercial).</p>
        <p>A public hearing was held regarding both matters.</p>
        <p>Kristi Overton Day</p>
        <p>Greenville Mayor Edward Carter and members of the City Council have proclaimed today Kristi Overton Day in the city.</p>
        <p>Ms. Overton, has won numerous awards in water skiing and was named the recipient of the 1987 High School Scholastic Athlete of the Year award by the Dial Corporation.</p>
        <p>She was given a city plaque of recognition Thursday by Carter at the City Council meeting.</p>
        <p>The elected officials of the city of Greenville are proud to have the honor to recognize Kristi Overton because she has become a community ambassador by promoting Greenville and this area through her state, national and international travels, Carter said.</p>
        <p>I would like to commend you on the efforts that you have put forth, he told her. We are extremely proud of you.</p>
        <p>'Feed A Pirafe'</p>
        <p>T%e Pitt County Chapter U The Pirate Club i$ sponsoring Feed A Pirate for the East Carolina University football team Aug. 21.</p>
        <p>Each volunteer family will feed two players, picking them up at 5:30 p.m. and returning them at 7:45 p.m. Players will be assigned at random.</p>
        <p>For more information call The Pirate Club at 757-6178.</p>
        <p>Survey Planned</p>
        <p>As many as 100 eastern North Carolina well owners will have a chance to have free confidential testing of their wells for pesticides.</p>
        <p>The N.C. Board of Science and Technology has given a grant to UNC-Asheville researchers Richard Maas, Debra Van Engelen and Steven Patch to survey for the presence of agricultural pesticides in well water.</p>
        <p>The study will focus on the Coastal Plain' and the Mountains, which Maas says are especially vulnerable to pesticide well-water contamination.</p>
        <p>The Coastal Plain study will focus on a search for the pesticide aldicarb, marketed under the brand name Temik. The highly toxic chemical is used extensively in this part of the state and has proven ability to leach into groundwater when applied to sandy soils. It has contaminated groundwater in other states where it has been used heavily.</p>
        <p>For a well owner to participate in the study, aldicarb must have been used within 400 yards of his well during the past year. Results will be confidential.</p>
        <p>For information, contact Dr. Richard Maas, Environmental Studies Program, UNC-Asheville, Asheville, NC 28804 or phone 704-251-6441 (days) 704-6454798 (nights).</p>
        <p>Grants Awarded</p>
        <p>Greene Lamp Inc., a service agency for Greene and Lenoir counties, and the Martin County Community Action program have received state grants for anti-poverty programs.</p>
        <p>Greene Lamps grant was for</p>
        <p>$18,195. The Martin County program, which serves Martin, Beaufort and Pitt counties, will receive $40,092.</p>
        <p>The Community Action Partnership Program complements the federal Community Services Block Grant Program, whose major p^ur-pose is to provide services and activities to deal with poverty in local communities.</p>
        <p>Chapter To Meet</p>
        <p>The Pitt-Greenville Chapter of the Greenville Industrial-C.M. Eppes Alumni Associaticm will meet Saturday at 6 p.m. at the home of William T. Atkinson, Studio A, Museum of Fine Arts, 201-B Vance St., Greenville.</p>
        <p>Permits Issued</p>
        <p>Greenville police recently issued two solicitation permits.</p>
        <p>A permit was granted to the Eva J. Lewis Alumni Association of the Elizabeth City State University to raise money for a scholarship fund on Saturday from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. behind an office at 606 Albemarle Ave.</p>
        <p>A permit was also granted to the Ayden Theatre Workshop to sell season tickets through Oct. 13 at the Plaza Mall from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m.</p>
        <p>Doctors Join Medical Faculty</p>
        <p>ECU News Bureau Two assistant professors have joined the East Carolina University School of Medicine cardiology faculty-</p>
        <p>Dr. Jose A. Caceres will specialize in cardiac electrophysiology, techniques which allow physicians to analyze and diagnose potential and known heartbeat irregularities in patients. Electrophysiology helps doctors identify safe and effective drug, surgical or device-based therapy for such patients.  ,</p>
        <p>Before his ECU appointment, he was clinical instructor of medicine and cardiac electrophysiology at the University of Wisconsin and Sinai Samaritan Medical Center in Milwaukee.</p>
        <p>Caceres received his medical degree from the National University of Trujillo in Peru, where he also completed his undergraduate education. After an internship at the universitys affiliated hospitals, he entered an internal medicine residency at Saint Francis Medical Center and the University of Illinois in Peoria. He furthered his medical training through fellowships in clinical cardiology and cardiac electrophysiology at the Jewish Hospital of St, Louis and Washington University Medical Center and at the University of Wisconsin and Mt Sinai Medical Center in Milwaukee.</p>
        <p>n.UYNNT. B.4ENH0P</p>
        <p>Dr. Dalynn T. Badenhop will direct the newly established cardiac rehabilitation program at ECU and Pitt County Memorial Hospital. The program is designed to help patients with recovery from heart attacks, heart surgery or various disabilities associated with cardiovascular disease. Patients will also be shown how to change their lifestyles to avoid further attacks and complications. Before his ECU appointment.</p>
        <p>REFLECTOR</p>
        <p>HOTLINE</p>
        <p>Hotline gets things done Write and tell us about the problem or issue into which youd like for Hotline to look Enclose photostatic copies oT any pertinent information. Our address is The Daily Reflector, Box 1967, Greenville, N.C 27835. Because of the large numbers receivea. Hotline cannot answer or publish every item we receive, but we deal with all of those for which we have staff time. Names must be given, but imty initials will be published</p>
        <p>PIANO REQUESTED The Pitt-Greenville Arts Council has moved into new offices and has a area for arts displays and small performances. A piano is needed to make this space useful for musical pel-for-mance. Anyone who will donate a piano Is asked to contact Brooke McCray, executive director of the Arts Council, 757-1785.</p>
        <p>Schedules Available</p>
        <p>Ayden-Grifton High School students may pick up their class schedules Aug. 23-24 from 12:30 p.m. to 7 p.m., according to the principal. Bill Wig^.</p>
        <p>Plans Are TV Topic</p>
        <p>Long-range plans of the Pitt County school system and their implications will be addressed on a broadcast aired on WNCT-TV Channel 9 Wednesday at 7 p.m., Barry Gaskins, public information officer, said.</p>
        <p>The broadcast will examine programs, personnel and facility needs of the school system for the next 10 years. Guests on the program include George Williams and Donovan Phillips, chairman and vice chairman of the board of education. Dr. Eddie West, superintendent of the school system, and John McKnight, deputy superintendent. Herb Grady, WNCT prciduction director, will host.</p>
        <p>Science Workshop</p>
        <p>A Project MOST, Model Outdoor Science Teaching, workshop will be conducted Aug. 23 for Pitt County teachers.</p>
        <p>The session will be conducted from 8:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. The introduction and production phase will be held at Agties Fullilove School, while afternoon activities will be at River Park North.</p>
        <p>To register, call Jerry Everhart at 7584499.</p>
        <p>Program Featured</p>
        <p>The Pitt County schools art education program has been featured in Spotlight Magazine, produced by the state Department of Public Instruction, Division of Arts Education.</p>
        <p>Dr. Eddie West, superintendent of the school system, received the Spotlight award at the Superintendents Summer Leadership Conference. This issue of Spotlight Magazine highli^ts four outstanding arts education programs in North Carolina that have developed strategies for improving the teaching-learning environment in arts education.</p>
        <p>Scholarships Given</p>
        <p>Several Pitt County students were among 750 minority scholarship recipients this summer, according to the Awards Committee fm* Education, an Asheville-based foundation.</p>
        <p>The scholarships were presented to</p>
        <p>ninth through 11-grade students in the state and were awarded for excellence on national achievement tests and placing in the upper 2 percent of all test participants in the United States.</p>
        <p>Scholarship recipients attended programs this summer at various colleges mid universities.</p>
        <p>Funding for the scholarships was provided by the Z. Smith Reynolds Foundation and the Mary Reynolds Babcock Foundation, The Ford Foundation, RJR Nabisco, The Janirve Foundation, the Alexander and Laurinda Schenck Charitable Fund and a private donor.</p>
        <p>Local award winners are listed by school.</p>
        <p>D.H. Conley  Antoine Bernard, William Brown, Angela Brown, Maria Smith, Tonya Ellison, Lynn Dixon and Lakesha Ruffin; J.H. Rose  Alisa Ingram, Derrick tint, Calvin Stevens Jr. and Demetrius Carter; Farmville Central  Michael Cobb, Vikkie Mercer, Denise Suggs, Derek Brown and Reginald Howard; Ayden-Grifton  Carla Joyner and Marty Mills; N.C. School of Science and Mathematics  Leticia McCotter.</p>
        <p>Jones Recognized</p>
        <p>Jesse Jones, a recently retired city employee was presented a plaque of recognition Thursday from Greenville Mayor Edward Carter and members of the City Council for outstanding service to the community.</p>
        <p>Jones, a mechanic II, worked with the garage division of the public works department for over 14 years</p>
        <p>(SeeIN,A-3)</p>
        <p>The Daily Reflector</p>
        <p>Incorporated 209 Cotanche Street Greenville, N.C. 27834 (919) 752-6166</p>
        <p>107th Year No. 189</p>
        <p>Second Class Postage Paid At Greenville. N .C</p>
        <p>(USPS145-400)</p>
        <p>Advertising Director..........Jerry  Van Nostrand</p>
        <p>Production Director...............J Tim Jones</p>
        <p>Circulation Director.............Nelson Adams</p>
        <p>Director of Administration  </p>
        <p>and Personnel.................Barbara Jarvis</p>
        <p>Published Monday through Friday afternoons and Sunday morning</p>
        <p>Subscription Rates</p>
        <p>Home delivery by carrier or motor route, monthly 00</p>
        <p>Mail Rates</p>
        <p>Pitt and ad)oining counties $5 00 per month</p>
        <p>Ehetwhere in N.C..............$5  50 per month</p>
        <p>Outside N.C................$6  50 per month</p>
        <p>Member Associated Press</p>
        <p>and  '</p>
        <p>Audit Burerui of CirculaUon</p>
        <p>JOSE A. CACERES</p>
        <p>Badenhop directed the cardiac rehabilitation program at Charlotte Memorial Hospitalfor four years.</p>
        <p>His experience in developing and directing programs similar to ECUs includes work at the University of Virginia in Charlottesville, where he directed the adult fitness and cardiac rehabilitation program and the exercise physiolf^y laboratory. Before that, he was cardiac rehabilitation and cardiovascular physiology consultant at Georgia Baptist Medical Center in Atlanta. He has also directed adult fitness programs at Georgia Institute of Technology and The Ohio Stale University.</p>
        <p>The Archbold, Ohio, native is a graduate of Ohio State University, where he received a doctorate degree in exercise physiolo^. He also holds masters and bachelors degrees from Bowling Green State University-</p>
        <p>He is a certified exercise program director and a fellow in the American College of Sports Medicine. He has written extensively on geriatric exercise, corporate health enhancement programs and the effects of at-home exercise on patients who have undergone open heart surgery.</p>
        <p>10 Yr. Warranty</p>
        <p>59</p>
        <p>f* Pe</p>
        <p>TstiiMf*</p>
        <p>*69</p>
        <p>m</p>
        <p>*249</p>
        <p>15 Yr. Warranty</p>
        <p>69*</p>
        <p>b.Pe.</p>
        <p>Turin Un</p>
        <p>r*229*'</p>
        <p>"TS5?Slt""</p>
        <p>15 Yr. Warranty</p>
        <p>79*;</p>
        <p>U.ft. Twin Sin</p>
        <p>99"</p>
        <p>259*'</p>
        <p>349*1</p>
        <p>**?55srf!rSr"</p>
        <p>20 Yr. Warranty</p>
        <p>89</p>
        <p>ta.Pc.</p>
        <p>Twin tun</p>
        <p>95</p>
        <p>En p.. *109*'</p>
        <p>279*'</p>
        <p>379*1</p>
        <p>SEALY POSTUREPEDICS LOWEST PRICES IN TOWN!!!</p>
        <p>Twin</p>
        <p>b.Pc.</p>
        <p>89L-.169tr439=499* K</p>
        <p>_P*MJI#*WNarWTjIAUTY_M^^</p>
        <p>* DAY KDS * OAV BEDS</p>
        <p>DAY BEOS * DI^BEDS * DAY BEC</p>
        <p>Daluxa Whita Iron</p>
        <p>Whita Iron  Brass  Styla</p>
        <p>88 iHa*118</p>
        <p>  aiAIII I LINK ipmwo fWCLUOgP * LABOI 8IL8CTIOW OP DAY BID COVEBS  POP UP UNITS ONLY 8T8.98</p>
        <p>198</p>
        <p>Woodtn StyW</p>
        <p>.'&amp;amp;O. 8</p>
        <p>198</p>
        <p>Brats Bads</p>
        <p>*199</p>
        <p>Whita Iron Haadboards</p>
        <p>Whita Iron Bads</p>
        <p>AnyllM Many MyMt</p>
        <p>PuH</p>
        <p>MMw W HIvwtHail</p>
        <p>omw&amp;lt; urn m</p>
        <p>2x4 Bunk Bads</p>
        <p>88</p>
        <p>Bookcasa Bunk Bads</p>
        <p>178</p>
        <p>1 PC. FOAM auNKIEI MATTRflS 848.H  HWlRaPfUNO ONY 819.88</p>
        <p>Craw Ouartars W/Chest</p>
        <p>288</p>
        <p>FACTORY MATTRESS &amp;amp; WATERBED OUTLET</p>
        <p>355-2626</p>
        <p> 'fO Days Cash </p>
        <p>355-2626</p>
        <p>f tSWAtluu,-</p>
        <p>M DAM ataway  ^ Fmancinq \  &amp;gt;  Delivery  j  !  vim  a  T</p>
        <pb facs="00097006_0003" />
        <p>The Datly Reflector, Greenville. N.C.</p>
        <p>Friday, August 12.1988  /^-3City Council Creates Panel To Preserve Historic Areas</p>
        <p>ByGREGLAUDICK '</p>
        <p>ReHector Staff Writer</p>
        <p>The Greenville City Council approved Thursday the establishment of a Historic Properties-District Commission for the city at its meeting at City Hall.</p>
        <p>The citys department of development will prepare an ordinance sp^ifying the commissions responsibilities of promoting historic preservation for certain structures and neighborhoods.</p>
        <p>The ordinance will be reviewed by the Planning and Zoning Commission 7dr recommendation and submitted to the council for adoption.</p>
        <p>Council members Lorraine Shinn and Nancy Jenkins voted against the establishment of the commission.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Jenkins said althou^ she is in favor of a forming a historical commission, she is concerned about a commission which would be responsible for recommending designation of entire historic districts.</p>
        <p>She said she is worried about constraints property owners might face if their residence is situated in a historically designated neighborhood.</p>
        <p>The Planning and Zoning Commission recommended June 21 that the council set up a 15-member Historical Properties-District Commission with authority to make recommendations directly to the council.</p>
        <p>The planning commission also recommended the commission have a separate budget or a separate line item within the development departments budget.</p>
        <p>Currently the city has a seven-member Historic Properties Selection Committee which operates under the direction of the citys Planning and Zoning Commission. Funding for that committees efforts is allocated by the department of development.</p>
        <p>The Historic Properties Selection Committee has selected 11 properties for historical designation over the last two years, said Haipr Hamilton, city planner.</p>
        <p>Five of those properties have been designated as historical through city ordinance, while the other six will be considered later by the council.</p>
        <p>Historic designation permits a ^rcentage property tax deferral and ^ants particular time periods before a structures demolition can occur.</p>
        <p>In other business at Thursday nights meeting, the council approved a request by Nancy Brown Harris to</p>
        <p>rezone a .48-acre tract on the northwest corner of 10th and Washington Streets from lU (unoffensive industry) to CDF (commercial downtown fringe). The proposal had no opposition at its public hearing.</p>
        <p>Also approved was a grant application to be submitted to the N.C. Housing Finance Agency. The application calls for rehabilitating 13 substandard units in West Greenville and East Meadowbrook. Awards of $75,000 are being offered, with $3,750 being incorporated for administrative costs.</p>
        <p>Under the program, the investor-owner will be expected to contribute half of Uie rehabilitation cost and receive a deferred loan for the other 50 percent. The maximum deferred loans available are $5,000 for an efficiency unit, $6,500 for a one-bedroom unit, $7,500 for a two-bedroom unit and $8,500 for a three or more bedroom unit.  *</p>
        <p>At least 70 percent of the grant must be used to benefit low-income tenants.</p>
        <p>Meanwhile, the council approved a bid of $39,315 to buy winter and summer police uniforms for 1988-89.</p>
        <p>The council also approved the sale of the Disposal Parcel K-4 in the Southside Redevelopment Project for $2,000, and in the South Evans Community Development Project, Disposal Parcels 42-F-2A for $3,000, and 42-H-lA for $5,700; and approved an amendment to the city budget authorizing $20,898 to buy spare engines for the GREAT Bus System; 90 percent of the money will be reimbursed by a state grant. ^</p>
        <p>In other action, the council appointed Dr. Lucy Jones and Dr. Bill Troutman to the Public Transportation Commission. Mavis L. Brown and Sylvia Wheless were appointed one-year terms to the Community Appearance Commission, while Betty B. Fuqua and Cecil Jay Hardee were ap[Minted two-year terms. Adrian Charles Snyder  and Vickie Ogden were named to three-year terms.</p>
        <p>The council also unanimously adopted the close-out of Community Development Block Grant 83-C-6635. No one spoke at a public hearing on the matter.</p>
        <p>The program has provided a total of $1,169,466.50 of improvements in the South Evans Community. The final penormance report detailing the accomplishments of</p>
        <p>performance report detailing the accomplishments ot the program has been approved by the N.C. Department of Natural Resources and Community Development.</p>
        <p>Bureau Seeks OK</p>
        <p>To Put Up Signs</p>
        <p>Schools</p>
        <p>(Continued from A-I)</p>
        <p>By JOHN BARE Reflector Staff Writer The executive director of the Pitt-Greenville Convention and Visitors Authority has contacted a division engin^r for the state Department of Transportation, asking for permission to erect informational signs along state-owned right of way.</p>
        <p>The authority has been working with county planner Jeff Ulma to find a way to put up directional signs for food and lodging that do not conflict with the countys sign ordinance, director A1 Nichols said at the authoritys meeting Thursday night.</p>
        <p>The ordinance bans all billboards from county highways, and if the authority is to erect signs small enough to meet the requirements, they must be placed within the states right of way in order to be readable.</p>
        <p>The authority is concerned that motorists coming to Greenville and following sians for the bypass are being directed away from hotel facili</p>
        <p>ties along Greenville Boulevard. The new signs direct motorists to the new stretch of U.S. 264 running past Pitt (founty Memorial Hospital.</p>
        <p>When travelers come into Greenville by that route, there is no effective directional signs to let them know where lodging facilities are located, and a large percentage of motorists passing through will turn left, away from our hotel facilities, Nichols said.</p>
        <p>The problem is that left turn takes travelers away from our communi-</p>
        <p>In The Area</p>
        <p>(Continued from A-2)</p>
        <p>until his retirement on disability Aug. 1.</p>
        <p>Mr. Jones has proved to be a hard-working, dedicated employee of this city and he will surely be missed by aU, Carter said.</p>
        <p>tys lodging facilities. Nichols wrote in his letter to G.R. Shirley, DOT division engineer in Greenville.</p>
        <p>Thus, travelers with a Greenville destination have difficulty locating their hotels, Nichols said, and travelers who are passing through Greenville but could stay overnight in one of our hotels pass around us and stay in another hotel in another town down the road.</p>
        <p>Under the authoritys proposal, the first sign would be placed at the intersection of U.S. 264 and SR1210 at Branchridge Estates. The sign would indicate there is information three miles ahead concerning food, gas and lodging.</p>
        <p>The second sign would be placed at the intersection of Allen Road, SR 1203, and indicate information is just ahead.</p>
        <p>The third sign, just before Memorial Drive, would direct motorists to turn left for food and gas, and right for lodging, food and gas. No business logos would appear on the signs.</p>
        <p>Authority member Art Thompson, manager of the Hilton Inn on Greenville Boulevard, has been working closely with Nichols to develop the proposal. Area hotels and motels would pay for the signs, he said.</p>
        <p>The authority initially wanted to erect informational signs with logos of businesses like the signs on interstate highways, but the DOT officials said those signs are erected only on interstates. Thompson said at Thursdays meeting that logos are no longer feasible.</p>
        <p>Now, the authority has presented the state DOT with its own proposal. In previous meetings, the authority has discussed asking the state to construct the signs and area hotels and motels would pay the cost and main-tainance.</p>
        <p>But since the signs would be placed on the states right of way, the authority needs permission from the DOT.</p>
        <p>Nichols letter states that Ulma does not feel the informational signs will conflict with the countys ordinance banning billboards.</p>
        <p>because it reduces the amount of time students spend with their regular classroom teachers, Keeter said.</p>
        <p>For example, in a middle school there would be a physical education teacher, a vocational teacher, a music teacher, an art teacher, a band instructor and others involved in teaching the children, he said.</p>
        <p>Every time you put another teacher in the school, if theyve got the students, it reduces size for the regular classroom teacher.</p>
        <p>The countys high school and middle school ratio is more like 1 teacher to 18 students, Keeter said. The lower grades are a little higher because you dont have all of the support people.</p>
        <p>The ratio in those grades is about 1 teacher to 22 students.</p>
        <p>Were in compliance in two ways, Keeter said. Were in the class-size and the teacher daily-load compliance.</p>
        <p>The statute also says that teachers in grades seven through 12 cannot be assigned more than 150 students to teach each day. Schools once were allowed to exceed that number by 10 percent.</p>
        <p>Some classes, such as band, music and physical education, allow for teaching more in students in a day, Keeter said.</p>
        <p>Last year when we filled out our class-size report, 1 think we had maybe three classes that had maybe 30 students in them, he said. We corrected that, and all classes from that first report had been corrected before the second report.</p>
        <p>School systems must notify the state Board of Education when they go over the limits to request teacher allotment adjustments or waivers from the standards, Keeter said.</p>
        <p>College Audit</p>
        <p>WINSTON-SALEM (AP) - A state audit of Winston-Salem State University that was released Thursday revealed some problems with accounting procedures but gives the school a positive evaluation overall.</p>
        <p>The state lists discrepancies in some accounts and notes the lateness of reports for fiscal years 1986 and 1987. But it also says that no money has been lost or intentionally used improperly.</p>
        <p>Alumni To Meet</p>
        <p>The Pitt County Chapter of St. Augustines College Alumni Association will meet on Sunday at 6 p.m. at theEppesGym.</p>
        <p>Banquet Planned</p>
        <p>A banquet honoring former Greenville residents Ernest Brown and his family will be held from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. Saturday at Philippi Church of Christ, 1610 Farmville Blvd.</p>
        <p>Gladys Graves, past president of the North Carolina Association of Educators, is keynote speaker.</p>
        <p>Brown, a Charlotte resident, was a spokesman for the Concerned Citizens for Justice, a member of the Greenville Board of Education, and was active in the NAACP, the SCLC, the Pitt County chapter of the North Carolina Central University Alumni Association and the Scottish Rite</p>
        <p>Masonic Order while living in Greenville. He was a co-founder of</p>
        <p>the Legion</p>
        <p>Pasico-Norfleet American Post 160.</p>
        <p>Tickets for the banquet are available at Scotts Cleaners No. 2 on W. Fifth Street. For information, call 355-2497.</p>
        <p>A social hour before the banquet begins at 5:30 p.m. at the Lake Ellsworth Clubhouse.</p>
        <p>Wtember:</p>
        <p> American Dental Association</p>
        <p> American Association of Functional</p>
        <p>Orthodontics</p>
        <p> N.C. Dental Society</p>
        <p>NIGHT-TIME</p>
        <p>ORTHODONTICS</p>
        <p>\</p>
        <p>\</p>
        <p>752-1337 Children and Adults</p>
        <p>DR. ROBERT CAPPS</p>
        <p>GENERAL DENTIST</p>
        <p>PAYMENT PLANS INSURANCE WELCOME</p>
        <p>Located Behind "Crows Nest"" 1012 Charles Boulevard</p>
        <p>\</p>
        <p>For Evening Appointments Coll 8:00 A.M.-5:00 P.M.</p>
        <p>A copy of the performance report may be reviewed in the Department (tf Development or the City Clerks office. Copies are also available at Sheppard Memorial Library and its branches.</p>
        <p>A request to establish a veterans memorial at the Town Commons and renaming the commons Veterans Memorial Park was referred to the Parks and Recreation Department.</p>
        <p>Service contracts to various organizations were , approved for the following amounts: $1,500 to the Greenville Jaycees; $11,500 to the Pitt-Greenville Chamber of Commerce; ^,000 to the Pitt-Greenville Arts Council; $2,000 to the Mid-Atlantic Farm Show; $40,000 to</p>
        <p>Evergreen of Greenville Inc., and $8,000 to the Greenville Museum of Art.</p>
        <p>Consent Agenda itenis approved Thursday include the release of $174.78 in taxes; changing the by-laws of the Sheppard Memorial Library eliminating specified meeting times for the librarys board of trustees; placing a section of Kingsbrook Road under permanent city maintenance; an ordinance to establish a controlled res-idential-parking zone on the west side of South Library Street from East Fourth Street to east Fifth Street; establishing a no parking zone on the north side of East Fifth Street from Hickory Street and extending 90 feet east, and the establishment of five new stop signs.</p>
        <p>PCMH Will Need 143 Beds</p>
        <p>(Continued from A-I)</p>
        <p>available, McRae said. Patients who are referred to Pitt Memorial for urgent, specialized care, must take precedence over the less critical community patients.</p>
        <p>This situation causes great inconvenience to patients who consider Pitt Memorial their community hospital.</p>
        <p>McRae said PCMH has a unique, three-fold mission to provide patient care, education and research.</p>
        <p>Each year 1,000 students receive valuable clinical experience at Pitt Memorial, he said. The lack of sufficient beds, the inadequacy of educational space near the bedside and the overcrowding of virtually all space for support services have combined to delay  and in some cases block  plans for the East Carolina University School of Medicine to increase its entering medical</p>
        <p>Lightning Death</p>
        <p>WINSTON-SALEM (AP) - A 42-year-old migrant worker was struck and killed by lightning Thursday afternoon in a tobacco field in southeastern Forsyth County, authorities said.</p>
        <p>Gelacio Aquilos Mejia of Kernersville was struck about 5 p.m. in a field about seven miles north of the Davidson County line, said John A. Baker, a paramedic with the Forsyth County Emergency Medical Enrice.</p>
        <p>Mejia was dead when the Forsyth County EMS arrived at the field about 5:10 p.m.. Baker said.</p>
        <p>Several other migrant workers, who were also working in the field when the lightning struck, were not injured.</p>
        <p>student class size from 72 students to 80 and to expand its residency programs.</p>
        <p>Our facilities must be updated so teaching and research can be expanded, McRae told the hearing.</p>
        <p>Dr. William E. Laupus, vice chancellor for health sciences and dean of the medical school at ECU, said the request for expansion are consistent with the growth needs-</p>
        <p>I submit that Pitt County Memorial Hospital is an appropriately classified academic medical center teaching hospital and, as such, is entitled for consideration under the exemption policy, Laupus said.</p>
        <p>The particular needs in this application are ... for the spwific purpose of providing the clinical environment to meet the requirements for education, research and concomitant tertiary care necessary to and for the education and training of health professionals...</p>
        <p>In my judgment, Laupus said, the granting of this certificate of need will have little or no effect on the overall ability of other hospitals operating in the same health service area.</p>
        <p>While a number of area doctors, students, and other health-care professionals endorsed the project, two speakers were opposed.</p>
        <p>We need health care spread through eastern North Carolina and not just Greenville, said Dr. Robert N.AgeeofWilliamston.</p>
        <p>Agee, who said he supports additional beds to provide more soi^ticated treatment, said competition from private physicians in Greenville concerns him.</p>
        <p>We need support, help, from Pitts physicians, he said. We need more outreach into the communities, (more) support.</p>
        <p>Earl Bassett, chief financial officer for two clinics in Wilson, said Wilson physicians need the tertiary care available here.</p>
        <p>But Bassette said he believed the PCHM request for more beds is not related to academics. Instead, he said, he thinks the application represents a call for more beds for Pitt County doctors in private practice.</p>
        <p>A human resources spokesman said a decision of the certificate of need would probably be made by the last of October.</p>
        <p>And PCMH officials said if the certificate of need is forthcoming, it will take a year to design the additions and renovations and the project would not be completed before late 1992 or 1993.</p>
        <p>Censorship</p>
        <p>DURHAM (AP) - Censorship challenges of North Carolinas libraries have increased over the past year, the chairman of a N.C. Library Association committee says.</p>
        <p>But librarians are countering with a censorship hotline and the establishment of more standardized review procedures to help handle the wave of complaints.</p>
        <p>Since this time last year. Id say weve had about a 50 percent increase in overall attacks on all libraries, said Gene Lanier, the chairman of the associations Intellectual Freedom Committee. Most of our complaints, however, have been in primary and secondary schools and public libraries.</p>
        <p>MASONIC NOTICE Morning Light Tent No. 458 will meet today at Mount Hermmi Lodge Hall No. 35 at 8 p.m.</p>
        <p>EMPLOYEE</p>
        <p>DISCOUNT</p>
        <p>SALE</p>
        <p>YDu'd hove to work here to save os much!</p>
        <p>TAKE</p>
        <p>OFF ANY</p>
        <p>REGULAR PRICE NEW FALL ITEMS</p>
        <p>NOW THROUGH SUNDAY</p>
        <p>At Brodys we appreciate our customers so much, we are going to treat you like employees. Now through Sunday, you, our customers, will receive the same 20% discount extended to our staff. Alt you do is walk Into any Brody's, Brodys for Men, or Brody's II for the Fuller Figure, choose whatever regular price items you fancy, and ask for your full employee discount. Just as if you worked here. Your savings will be phenomenal. Shop 10-9 through Saturday; Sunday 1-5:30.</p>
        <p>Carolina Eait Mall  Th Plata</p>
        <p>Thii tola ancludat cotmolici any fall protnoiionally pricod itamt, Swatch Wotchas. hdndbogi by Aignar and Cloiborna. thoat by Soft Spott. Batt, Raaboh. lurt. gifts and man's laathar jackats</p>
        <p>, .-St..W .</p>
        <pb facs="00097006_0004" />
        <p>The Daily BeHector, Qregnvllle, N.C. )  .</p>
        <p>Friday. August 12.1988</p>
        <p>Opinion</p>
        <p>The Daily Reflector</p>
        <p>EttabUshed 1882</p>
        <p>David Juban Whichard. Chairman aithe Board David J. Whichard II. Editor &amp;amp; Co-PubSsher  John  S.  Whichard. Co Pubhsher</p>
        <p>D. Jordan Whichard III, General Manager  Alvin  B.  Taylor, Managing Editor</p>
        <p>Mary C. Schulken, Editorial Page Editor</p>
        <p>*Truth In Preference To Fiction</p>
        <p>Surprise Move</p>
        <p>Vi.</p>
        <p>Strong Action In Election Year</p>
        <p>V</p>
        <p>The Federal Reserve Board may or may not have struck a blow against inflation, but it has surprised some people in an election year.</p>
        <p>An increase in the federal key bank lending rate just three months before a presidential election is a dramatic signal the board, all appointed by President Reagan, is troubled enough by inflation to risk Vice President George Bushs presidential aspirations.</p>
        <p>The move could also be an indication the nations economy isnt as healthy as Republicans would like voters to believe.</p>
        <p>Raising the discount rate^ in theory, is an valid means of curbing inflatioii because it increases the cost of borrowing money. Forcing consumers to pay higher interest on loans can slow debt, which fuels inflation. And raising the fee the Federal Reserve charges for short-term loans to member banks by one-half a percent is the central banks most direct way of pushing interest rates higher as a curb on economic growth.</p>
        <p>But fighting infltion through tightened credit can have economic drawbacks. The last increase came in September 1987 and contributed heavily to the October 1987 stock crash. And both stock and bond markets fell after the increase was announced. Although the initial impact was moderate, the repercussions from another stock market collapse could be worse than the effects of inflation.</p>
        <p>For consumers, the rise in interest rates will be a mixed bag. Those with home equity loans and adjustable rate mortgages, which are tied to rate fluctuations, will feel the impact immediately. In addition, new borrowers will find it less affordable to secure loans.</p>
        <p>Thats bad news for potential homebuyers and purchasers of high-ticket items like automobiles. Its also a bad omen for the building and the real estate industry, two segments of the economy that could find themselves stymied by higher interest.</p>
        <p>But if the move does indeed head off inflation, consumers will ultimately benefit from the frugality forced upon them.</p>
        <p>Adjustments like the rise in the key lending rate are necessary actions in a diverse economy. Such a direct statement is a shock, however, from a Republican-appointed reserve board in an election year when the party will have a tough road to re-election.</p>
        <p>Dry Times</p>
        <p>Water Is Precious Commodity</p>
        <p>- George wm-</p>
        <p>Insurance Not A Civil Right</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON - It sometimes seems that accident insurance covers only improbable eventualities. You get arguments from the insurance company about fend-er-benders but, as a wit has said, indemnity is instantaneous if your ox kicks a hole in your neighbors Maserati.</p>
        <p>However, health insurance covers many volitional illnesses, damage people do to themselves by behavior they should know is harmful. Now the Circle K Corporation, the second largest chain of convenience stores, wants to do something about that.</p>
        <p>Few would argue that someone whose hobby is Russian roulette has a right, let alone a civil right, " to insurance against the risk.'</p>
        <p>//</p>
        <p>Circle K, which operates 4,097 stores in 27 states, notified approximately 8,000 of its employees that health-insurance benefits will be denied to employees who require care because of ailments resulting from certain personal lifestyle decisions. Circle K specifies drug and alcohol abuse, self-inflicted wounds and AIDS proven not to have been contracted from blood transfu</p>
        <p>sions.</p>
        <p>The purpose of insurance is to socialize risk. This can be done over an entire society by means of government programs. (A conservative, Bismarck, pioneered such plans in the 1880s, providing workers with sickness, accident, disability and old-age insurance.) Or insurance can be devised for a voluntary community of people contracting with a private company. In either case, insurance presupposes some consensus about which of lifes risks deserve to be socialized. Many diseases and</p>
        <p>other misfortunes are covered by todays consensus.</p>
        <p>However, the consensus is becoming frayed because of increasing knowledge about the behavioral causes of many ailments. Such knowledge is constantly and often effectively disseminated by public and private agencies. The publics responsiveness to the information is attested by such changes as increased automobile safety-belt use, decreased smoking and changed eating habits concerning, for example, cholesterol. So there is a moral as well as financial reason for refusing to socialize the cost of risky behavior that is, in the face of so much information, clearly willful.</p>
        <p>Few wiKild argue that someone whose hobby is Russian roulette has a right, let alone a civil right, to insurance against the risk. Circle K is saying, correctly, that certain illnesses more closely resemble injuries resulting from Russian roulette than illnesses deriving from the unavoidable lottery of life  illnesses unrelated to risky habits.</p>
        <p>There has been insurance for almost as long as there has been commerce. Merchants with property to lose from fire or maritime disaster have payed others to share their risks. However, as historian Daniel</p>
        <p>Boorstin notes, insurance first became a democratic product when Americans began insuring against something that is not a risk but a certainty: death. Like much of modern America, the growth of the insurance industry was accelerated by the Civil War, which put death on mens minds and caused the business of New York insurance companies to double between 1861 and 1862.</p>
        <p>In an extensive nation of highly mobile citizens who could not rely on community care of widows and orphans, insurance became, as Boorstin says, a substitute for family, neighborhood, community. But as Circle Ks action attests, insurance draws us into particular communities with a stake in other peoples behavior.</p>
        <p>Today, insurance is a large item in the average familys budget  larger than most people imagine. The cost of auto-workers health insurance adds $250 to the cost of an average car. Employees health insurance is part of the cost of operating, and hence of shopping at, convenience stores.</p>
        <p>Circle K is acting on this fact: A huge component of the nations soaring, staggering medical bill derives from behavior clearly identified as risky. Such behavior includes smok</p>
        <p>ing, drinking excessively, exercising too little, eating unwisely, abusing drugs, driving recklessly.</p>
        <p>Because AIDS is on the list of noncovered ailments, some homosexual grou{ have denounced Circle K for violating civil ri^ts. But that debased phrase is today a classification that barely classifies. Civil rights, properly understood, are those central to civic life. They do not include the right to insurance coverage for all of ones behaviorally based ailments.</p>
        <p>However, Circle K and companies that emulate it can minimize civil rights issues by broadening the category of uninsurable behavior. M Boorstin says, modem technologies of work, transportation and play have multiplied insurable risks. Plate glass, gas lines, electrical wir-ing, water pipes in houses, automobiles, boats, skis; snowmobiles  an affluent nation lives with many more health hazards than just rich sauces.</p>
        <p>Circle K should include in its uninsured category injuries sustained in an automobile while not using safety belts, and injuries from certain hazardous recreations, such as sky diving.</p>
        <p>However, let us not go too far. Foi" the sake of the Circle K Corp., as well as those of us who buy the snack foods that convenience stores sell in vast quantities, we should stop short of linking insurance to diets that are severely sensible.</p>
        <p>(c) I9KN. Washington Post Writers Group</p>
        <p>Ocracoke Island, surrounded by water, has a water problem.</p>
        <p>The fresh water system on the island was turned off for as long as 14 hours a day over a period of three days this week.</p>
        <p>GreenviUe had a similar problem. Its water supply was interrupted for some customers Wednesday when a 12-inch water line burst north of the Tar River. Fortunately for the city, repairs were made overnight and alternate mains continued to serve most of its customers.</p>
        <p>On Ocracoke it is different. The water around it is not potable and the pump problems caused trouble for those who live on the island, restaurants, motels and, this time of the year, the all-important visitors to the island.</p>
        <p>The complaints were loud from restaurant and motel owners whose customers were inconvenienced or left because of the water crisis. State officials were drawn into the situation because of the possibility that a protracted water shortage could cause health problems.</p>
        <p>At any rate, both situations made the point of just how essential fresh water supplies are to any community. The predicaments also demonstrate how important careful utilization of water is. Do communities need all the water they use? And can supply keep up with demand?</p>
        <p>Farm families once used water from shallow wells or artisian wells. Now such water is not considered safe for drinking unless it is carefully monitored.</p>
        <p>Thus cities, rural areas and even coastal islands are coming to depend on water treatment systems which provide the water by pipes and mains. Any disruption of service can quickly prove disastrous to the customers the system serves.</p>
        <p>Greenville had a threatening situation and Ocracoke Island was severely affected by its water problem. It tells us that good water systems must be constructed and maintained to meet todays public needs and that the groundwater and rivers which feed these systems must be protected from environmental threats. The water troubles also underscore the need for conservation and thrift where natural resources are concerned.</p>
        <p> William Raspberry Racism Could Cost Japan</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON - Robert Christopher isnt surprised by the latest antiblack insults from Japan: the Sambo manikins in department-store windows; the hot-selling black caricatures  all of it coming after a government officials comments about black irresponsibility and while anti-Semitic books remain on Japanese best-seller lists.</p>
        <p>They really are racists, you know.</p>
        <p>Christoidier is no anti-Japanese bigot. He knows Japan better than mc^t Americans ever wilJ. He was there on the day World War II ended, and he has been back more times than he can count since then. Even Japanese who have read his boirfi, The Japanese Mind (Linden Press, 1983), say he has captured the character and the culture of Japan.</p>
        <p>Their racism extends not just to blacb but to any non-Japanese, he says. They dont grasp the fact that, to Americans, their attitude violates the very principles on which our country was founded. Of course there are plenty who do  certainly those who have spent much time in the States. But the great majority dont.</p>
        <p>Homogeneity is as central to their identity as ethnic diversity is to ours.</p>
        <p>Christo^rs explanation wont make black Americans feel any better. Indeed, it may make some of us more anxious  and vengeance-minded, as the Japanese assume an increasinglv important role in the world economy. He was simply trying to respond, as honestly and as dispassionately as he could, to my questions.</p>
        <p>He believes that is me Key reason postwar Japan was able to turn  virtual</p>
        <p>ly overnight - from its impenal past to Westem-style capitalist democracy.</p>
        <p>They were astounded at the way they were treatecf by the country that defeated them, he recalled. 1 was in Yokohama when the war ended, and there were no women to be seen in the city. They had all fled on the expectation of American ruthlessness. They thought the women wiHild be raped and the population brutalized. They were in awe of us when we set about helping them to rebuild their country.</p>
        <p>So instead of hating America, they set about imitating us. They took the fact that we had beaten them as a demonstration that our system was better than ieirs, so they adopted our system to a very remarkable degree.</p>
        <p>Thats one of the thin^ that Westerners find hard to understand, lliere are certain concepts and attitudes that are inherently un-American. But there is nothing that is inherently un-Japanese; all they require is consensus.</p>
        <p>Just as the Japanese accepted the superiority of postwar American products  and set about copying (and modifying) them, they also accepted the superiority of the American political and economic system and set about copying that, modifying it only to the extent that, given their tribal attitude, they are culturally incapable of embracing American individualism.</p>
        <p>If the Japanese found stark differences between their system and</p>
        <p>Americas, they also found one key similarity; Some elements of the society are outside the family. For Americans, it is the i</p>
        <p>non-European minwities; for the Japanese, it is ethnic foreigners  for instance, Koreans, no matter that they have iiv^ in Japan for generations.</p>
        <p>What they missed is the fact that ethnic discrimination in America is a source of shame and embarrassment, whereas the Japanese take it as an unremarkable fact of life.</p>
        <p>It might occur to them that their anti-black attitude might spark resentment among blacks, but it would never occur to them that white Americans mi^t resent it too, Christopher said. Maybe, he si^ested, they see their anti-black attitude as just another instance of mimickinfl America.</p>
        <p>But if Christopher (who is administrator of the Puntzer Prizes at Columbia University) understands the Japanese mind, he doesn't condone their rac-  ism.</p>
        <p>Whatever their history of racism, he said, he is still surprised that anybody in a high government position would not be smart enou^ - particularly after former Prime Minister Nakasones gaffe about black intelligence  to know that they would get in trouble.</p>
        <p>Nor is it enough simply to apologize after each embarrassins gaffe. If they expect to continue functioning as a world economic power, they have got to knock off their incredible xenophobia, (Hu'istopher believes.</p>
        <p>Hes ri^t. Japan, already a major trader with America, where blacks spend millions of dollars on Japnese automobiles, cameras and electronic products, recently surpassed America as the worlds leading trader with South Africa, whose black majori^ also favors Japanese goods.</p>
        <p>Japans continued racism cwild threaten those markets. For my money, it already has.</p>
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        <pb facs="00097006_0005" />
        <p>Navy Steps Up Beach Trash Hunt</p>
        <p>ATLANTIC BEACH, N.C. (AP) -The 30 bags of trash which washed up on North Carolinas beaches apparently have not put a clamper on the tourist trade, and curious onlookers have been lending a hand to seamen and Marines as they pick up the garbage.</p>
        <p>Theyve been stopping us and thanking us for our efforts, said Lt. Cmdr, John Lloyd, spaceman for the Atlantic Fleet, based in Norfolk, Va. People are collecting trash and asking if its Na\^ debris, he said.</p>
        <p>About 90 Marines and sailors will continue to search Bogue Banks beaches today for medical waste and other trash that has been washing ashore since Saturday after being dumped by Navy ships.</p>
        <p>On Thursday, 40 sailors from Norfolk joined Marines from Camp Le-jeune who have been on beach-trash patrol from Atlantic Beach to Emerald Isle since late Wednesday. The original 26-mile search of the area from Fort Macon to Emerald Isle was widened Thursday to include Shackleford Banks, which is owned by the National Park Service. A cleanup team will also be sent Shackleford Banks, a remote undeveloped island in the Cape Lodi-out National Seashore, to pick up debris there.</p>
        <p>Helicopters flew over the area searching for debris in the ocean.</p>
        <p>Two bags of trash were collected Thursday. Thirty bags of Navy debris have been picked up off North Carolina shores, but less than a bag of that was medical waste, Lloyd said.</p>
        <p>Its definitely less than one bag, he said. Its a very, very small amount.</p>
        <p>Only two of the eight or nine swinges that washed ashore still carrM needles, according to Steven L. Gibson, the civilian director of environmental and safety programs for the naval base in Norfolk. The rest had been clipped off,, in compliance with Navy regulations.</p>
        <p>Most of the debris is discarded clothing, rags and empty toiletry containers such as shampoo bottles, Lloyd said. Thats what were finding in what we believe are the Navy bags.</p>
        <p>Dr. Ronald Levine, the state health director, said waste was not considered toxic under federal or state laws.</p>
        <p>The sailors and Marines also are</p>
        <p>picking up garbage left behind by</p>
        <p>lid.</p>
        <p>others who use the beach, he sai( Theyre out there so why not pick up what they see, Lloyd said. That garbage is not includ^ in the 30-bag count, he said.</p>
        <p>Under Navy regulations, ships can dump biodegradable garbage such as potato peels 12 miles from shore. Trash, such as paper and cloth, can be dumped at 25 miles. Bilge water and oily waste can be dumped at 50 miles out.  ^</p>
        <p>Naval authorities say Navy regulations prohibit disposing of certain debris found this week: drugs, blood, syringes with needles and syringes not crushed or broken. Spokeswoman Lt. Barbara Kent in Washington refused to say whether regulations were violated. Authorities said the investigation would take a month.</p>
        <p>But a naval spokesman, who refused to be identified, told The Charlotte Observer Thursday: There were some violations.</p>
        <p>Steve Reid, a spokesman for the states Solid Waste Management Section, said debris doesnt usually come ashore along the North Carolina coast because the prevailing offshore currents move from south to north, then out to sea.</p>
        <p>We really dont know how it washed ashore, Lloyd said. And thats what were trying to find out.</p>
        <p>Martin Says No Action Needed</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP) - Gov. Jim Martin congratulated the Navy for its "prompt, cooperative response in ckaing up debris from two of its vessels of the North Carolina coast, and said he saw no reason for legal action.</p>
        <p>"Even beyond confession, the contrite heart has led them as a further step to dispatch about 48 Marines</p>
        <p>from Camp Lejeune yesterday, Martin saio at his news conference</p>
        <p>Thursday. They are being joined by representatives of the United States Navy who will continue that clean up operation today.</p>
        <p>Martin said legal action did not appear to be necessary.</p>
        <p>We know they were not within the three-mile limit where states have jurisdiction because they dont come in that far, Martin said. "... Based on the cooperation weve had so far, there is no oasis for an action.</p>
        <p>You could probably cause that (cooperation) to degenerate by creating an armed camp and assaulting the U.S. Navy.</p>
        <p>But Attorney Genera Lacy Thornburg said earlier Thursday he would not hesitate to take the Navy to court if problems continue.</p>
        <p>If we saw ... a pattern developing there would be no question but that we would go into federal court immediately to seek some relief, he said.</p>
        <p>/</p>
        <p>-f</p>
        <p>The Dally Reflector, Greenvllle, N.C.</p>
        <p>Friday, Aupust 12,1988 ^.5</p>
        <p>Carolina east mall greenvllle</p>
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        <p>Underneath fall's woolens and cords remains a secret cache of summers flowers. And other assorted prints In assorted pastels, sizes S-M-L. Choose from the tank, string bikini.</p>
        <pb facs="00097006_0006" />
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        <p>Prtiiiy. August 12.1988</p>
        <p>White House Opposes Ltipibee Recognitin</p>
        <p>CONVENTION ENTERPRISE - Button vendor Scott McKenzie of Asheville shows the display of buttons he has prepared for sale during the Repuhlican National Convention in New Orleans next week. Vice President George Bush, who will be the presidential nominee, has indicated he will not name a choice until the convention is under way. (AP Laserphoto)</p>
        <p>IN THE STATE</p>
        <p>^............</p>
        <p>  Am,,</p>
        <p>Abduction</p>
        <p>HIGH POINT, N.C. (AP) - A woman accused in thcf abduction of a baby from a High Point hospital still believes that Jason Ray McClure is her baby, involuntary commitment papers snow.</p>
        <p>'or the last four months, Brenda J(^ce Nobles has been plagued by cr^, api^tite fluctuation, weight loss and fatigue, the report by Dr. Irving Lugo of High Point Mental Health Center said. The report, which was done on Aug. 4, says that Ms. Nobles is mentally ill and dangerous to herself.</p>
        <p>On Uigo's recommendation, Ms. Nobles has been Uiken to John Umstead Hospital in Butner for further evaluation. ''</p>
        <p>Two days after he was abducted, police found Jason McClure unharmed in a closet at the home of Ms. Nobles boyfriend. Ms. Nobles and her daughter, who police said were also at the house, were taken into custody.</p>
        <p>Lugo examined Ms. Nobles Aug. 4 after Superior Court Judge Richard</p>
        <p>Boner lound her incompetent to stand trial.</p>
        <p>Hof Peppers</p>
        <p>MONROE, N.C. (AP) - The judges say they were prepared for three-alarm fires at the fourth annual Union County Hot Pepper Taste-Off, but ended up putting most of the 36 entries into the salad pile as not hot enough.</p>
        <p>Thats got a bit of a tang to it, but it doesnt pack a wallop, Carolyn Gaddy, this years rookie judge, said as she waded through the entries. Im sorry, but that one goes in the salad pile.</p>
        <p>, Many of the entries sent to radio station WDEX came with warning notes about delayed reactions and the possibility that the distinguished panel of three judges might become the extinguished panel.</p>
        <p>When all was done, the judges finally came up with th^our winning entrees, the top two being tiny green peppers with the infamous delayed reaction.</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP) - Rep. Charlie Rose says an official recognition for the Lumbee Indian tribe is a matter of pride, but a Reagan administration official says the designation would cost the federal government up to $100 million a year, and urged that the recognition be denied.</p>
        <p>The Interior Departments assistant secretary for Inijlian affairs, Ross 0. Swimmer, urged the House Interior Committee on Thursday to reject the legislation sponsored by Rose and let the application process run its course.</p>
        <p>Swimmer said the recognition could lead to unwarranted</p>
        <p>DOT Board To Protect ^ Roadsides</p>
        <p>CHEROKEE, N.C. (AP) - In an effort to curb highway costs, the state Board of Transportation will preserve rights of way al(Hig maj(N* state road projects by halting development along the roads for three years, transportation officials say.</p>
        <p>The process will allow the state for the first time to protect rights of way for projects such as outer loops around Raleigh and Charlotte.</p>
        <p>We think millions of dollars will be saved in right of way costs at a time when they are running at 50 to 60 percent of highway project costs in urban areas, Larry R. Goode, program and policy branch manager for the state Department of Transportation, said during a Board of Transportation meeting Thursday.</p>
        <p>Wed like to get those right of way costs back to where they were a few years ago, 20 to 35 percent of a projects costs, Goode told the News and Observer of Raleigh.</p>
        <p>In 1987 the General Assembly enacted legislation allowing the board to adopt official road corridor mai. Some other states, including Florida and some Western states, have such authority.</p>
        <p>Goode told board members Thursday that the DOT staff would begin proposing maps for adoption this fall, after board members consider regulations for the process next month.</p>
        <p>The maps, which would be adopted after public hearings, would be as close as possible to tfie final corridor for a planned road. The maps will be filed at local tax offices and at register of deeds offices.</p>
        <p>After the board adopts a corridor map for a road project, local governments would not be allowed to issue building permits for property in the right of way for up to tmee years, Goode said. Landowners could seek variances for some uses, such as parking lots, until the road is built.</p>
        <p>During the three-year period, Goode said, property owners only would have to pay 20 percent of the property taxes on the affected land as an incentive not to develop it. At the end of the three years, the DOT would have to buv the land at fair market value or allow development.</p>
        <p>Goode said the maps also would eliminate confusion about exactly where rights of way would be.</p>
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        <p>dependence on the federaf government.</p>
        <p>Official recognition of the Lumbees could cost the Mral government up to $100 million a year in services that include subsidized health care, land management and education, he said.</p>
        <p>Swimmer said the government eventually might grant some form of recognition to the Lumbees, who are concentrated in Robesm County. But he said he would prefer a federal relati(M)ship that is a little differrat from the dependent, ward relation-, ship that has develop^ with some offtdally recognized tribes that are heavily subsimzed by the government.</p>
        <p>Swimmer praised the Lumbees as self-sufficient people who dont</p>
        <p>But Rose, a Democrat from Fayetteville, said the effort to achieve official federal rec&amp;lt;^nition was a matter of pride fw Uiose individuals who cherish their heritage as Lumbee Indians. I feel I have demonstrated the need to circumvent what many will agree is an ineffective administrative process (to obtain federal recognition) in this case.</p>
        <p>About three dozen Lumbees attended the hearing before the House</p>
        <p>Interior Committee. A similar hear-  ing is planned for Friday before the Senate Select Committee on Indian* Affairs. The panels are considering identical bills that would grant fed-eral recognition to the Lumbees,, bypassing an application to the Interior Department that could take years to be decided.</p>
        <p>Rose noted that his bill does not re-; quire spending federal money on th|^ Lumbees until Congress makes separate appropriation. If his bill enacted, he said, he would urge thfe Lumbees and die government fo, draft a list of government prograni^; that the Lumb^ need and deserve. </p>
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        <pb facs="00097006_0007" />
        <p>The Dally Reflector, Greenville. N.C.</p>
        <p>Friday, August 12.1988  ^-7</p>
        <p>Ravaged by the Drought</p>
        <p>Bcause ol the year^ hMt and iKk of rain. 1988 harvMs of com and aoytoMt wi be far short of recent production totals</p>
        <p>Will Slash U.S. Crop Yields</p>
        <p>0.5</p>
        <p>SOYBEAKS</p>
        <p>T~T*""r I i""i</p>
        <p>I"' I ""I I</p>
        <p>1980 1982 1984 1986 1988</p>
        <p>Projected total production for 1988 based on field estimates as of Aug. 1; figures for earlier years are actual production</p>
        <p>Sourc: U.S. DepL of Agriculture ARlPat Lyons</p>
        <p>By DON KENDALL AP Farm Writer ^WASHINGTON (AP) -A^culture Department experts be-liev^ought damage to the nations crops, including an expected 37 percent drop in com production, wilt increase consumer food prices for the next two years.</p>
        <p>For this year, USDA experts continue to believe that the.drought will add only 1 percentage point to consumer food prices, said Assistant Secretary Ewen M. Wilson, the departments chief economist.</p>
        <p>The department now is forecasting a food price increase for this year of 3 percent to 5 percent. Before the heat and dry weather, USDA had expected a 1988 food price hike of 2 percent to 4 percent.</p>
        <p>But the impact might be even bigger in 1989, when food costs could go up an additional 2 percent due to the drought, he said.</p>
        <p>Thats on top of an additional estimated increase in food prices somewhere in the region of 4 percent, Wilson said. So this would bring it up to a total of 6 percent.</p>
        <p>According to a USDA crop production report issued Thursday, tne corn harvest this fall may be about 4.48 billion bushels, down 37 percent from last years harvest and the smallest output since 1983.</p>
        <p>Sharp reductions also were reported for soybeans, wheat and a number of other crops. Cotton, which thrived last month in the hot, humid weather, is expected to increase from last year.</p>
        <p>N.C. Crops May Produce Record Yields This Year</p>
        <p>By Hie Associated Press July rains have produced near-record yields of some North Carolina crops, and farmers can expect to see higher prices at the marketplace - a sharp contrast to the dismal crop projects for their fellow farmers across the country, the state Department of Agriculture reported.</p>
        <p>For those that have it, those that are able to grow it and produce it this year... income for 1988 should be pretty good, Weldon B. Denny, the state s assistant commissioner of Agriculture, told the News and Otover of Raleigh. Except for some counties in the far west... crops in North Carolina</p>
        <p>no  no TifA BAAfl ill mOIIV UAfll*6 *</p>
        <p>are as good as Ive seen in many years.</p>
        <p>The largest increase in prodiKtion will be in cotton, with 130,000 bales ex</p>
        <p>pected to be harvested - 33 percent more than in 1987. Hot, humid weather in eastern counties during recent weeks has helped the crop, officials say. According to the report, released by the state Department of Agriculture</p>
        <p>acres harvested. Apples, measurea in pminos, aisu wui uc uuwu, ucvaiw v* diy weather in the western part of the state during the fruits normal growing</p>
        <p>**DMmy said that though com acreage was down, yields were up. This season also has been particularly good for the states small grain crop, along with tobacco, cotton and soybeans.  .  ,</p>
        <p>Carl N. Cross, who travels the state to collect data for the report, said farm</p>
        <p>ers</p>
        <p>GREENVILLE OBSTETRICS and GYNECOLOGY, P.A.</p>
        <p>ANNOUNCES WITH PLEASURE THE ASSOCIATION OF KEVIN OWEN EASLEY, JD, MD</p>
        <p>IN THE PRACTICE OF OBSTETRICS, OFFICE GYNECOLOGY, PELVIC SURGERY, INFERTILITY AND LASER SURGERY EFFECTIVE JULY 5,1988</p>
        <p>J. EDWIN CLEMENT, MD, FACOQ RICHARD C. TAR, MD, FACOG ROBERT Q. DEYTON, JR., MD, FACOQ EDGAR S. DOUGLAS, JR., MD, FACOQ H ALEXANDER EASLEY, III. JD, MD, FACOQ</p>
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        <p>The grim news from USDA came only hours after President Reagan signed a $3.9 billion disaster relief bill aimed at helping drought-stricken farmers. ^</p>
        <p>This bill isnt as good as rain, Reagan said to the nations farmers. But it will tide you over until normal weather and your own skills permit you to return to your accustomed role.,</p>
        <p>Overall, the departments Agricultural Statistics Board put total U.S. crop production at 88 percent of the 1977 average, a scale used to com</p>
        <p>pare output from year to year. That matched the low 1983 reading, when</p>
        <p>sharp cutbacks in government acreage programs, along with drought, reduced production sharply.</p>
        <p>The corn crop is expected to average 78.5 bushels per harvested acre, down from 119.4 bushels per acre last year, a record year-to-year decline of 34 percent.</p>
        <p>Corn is the largest and most important crop grown by American farmers and, as a feed ingredient, is essential to the production of meat, poultry and dairy products.</p>
        <p>Todays reports confirm that the drought has had a major impact on this years crops, Wilson told reporters. But because of large pre-season stocks, total supplies are enough in most cases to assure an adequate food supply at home, satisfy foreign customers and meet our food-aid commitments.</p>
        <p>Sen. Patrick J. Leahy, D-Vt., chairman of the Senate Agriculture Committee, said in a statement, Todays crop report confirms our fears about the impacts of this summers tragic drought. Fortunately, it appears we will have enough stocks to make it through this marketing year.</p>
        <p>The new USDA crop estimates were based on field surveys as of Aug. 1. In May and June,^before drought had made its biggest impact, USDA projected the corn harvest  based on trends and an assumption of normal weather  at 7.3 billion bushels.</p>
        <p>But those projections were revised downward a month ago to 5.2 billion bushels, assuming farmers got normal weather the remainder of the season.</p>
        <p>The soybean harvest was estimated at 1.47 billion bushels, down 23 percent from 1.9 billion bushels produced last year. Prospects last spring called for about 1.88 billion bushels, and the July projection was 1.65 billion bushels.</p>
        <p>Production of all wheat was indicated at 1.82 billi(m bushels, down 13 percent from 2.1 billion produced in 1987.</p>
        <p>Winter wheat production was estimated at 1.55 billion bushels, down 1 percent from last year. But durum and the other spring varieties, which are produced in the hard-hit northern plains, showed sharp declines.</p>
        <p>Durum was estimated at 54.6 million bushels, down 41 percent from last years harvest, and other spring wheat was shown at 212 million bushels, down 53 percent from 1987.</p>
        <p>Cotton production was estimated at 14.9 million bales, up 1 percent from last year. The crop was projected at 13.7 billion bales in July.</p>
        <p>bushels, also down 45 percent; and sorghum, 561 million bushels, down 24 percent.</p>
        <p>Earlier, at the White House, Reagan praised Democratic and Republican congressional leaders for putting aside partisan differences to speed action on the disaster relief bill.</p>
        <p>Reagan said the legislation, which also provides assistance to dairy cattlemen and ethanol producers, represents the largest disaster relief measure in history.</p>
        <p>The measure, among other things, provides aid for farmers suffering crop losses of more than 35 percent of their expected harvest because of the</p>
        <p>drought or other calamities. The payments would be equal to 65 percent of the lost income. Farmers whose crop losses exceeded 75 percent of the expected yield would receive payments equal to 90 percent of lost income.</p>
        <p>The Agriculture Department said farmers intending to apply for relief under the drought bill should organize all their records and other evidence of their crop losses. The department said, however, that the Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation Service would not be ready to start accepting applications for several weeks.</p>
        <p>Soviet Harvest Declining</p>
        <p>Production of some other spring-planted crops also has suffered, including; oats, 206 million bushels, down 45 percent; barley, 288 million</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP) - Prospects for this years grain harvest in the Soviet Union have declined slightly from earlier indications, the Agriculture Department said.</p>
        <p>Officials said the Soviet harvest is now expected to be around 210 million meMc tons, a decline of 5 million tons from the level forecast in recent months. Yelds were said to be smaller than expected.</p>
        <p>Production of spring-planted grain has been hit hardest, including spring wheat, oats and barley, the USDA report said Thursday. The output of spring wheat could be the lowest since 1984.</p>
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        <p>With the drought, if you look at the rest of the country, were doing pretty well said Cross, a statistician with the state agriculture department. Especially those crops that grow in the eastern part of the state, where there has been plenty of rain. Its still very dry in the west, and that will show in the apples and in the burley tobacco. But overall, it looks pretty good. Very optimistic.  .  ,</p>
        <p>Also showing a healthy rise is winter wheat, with 22.5 million bushels expected at harvest, 25 percent more than last year. Grapes, largely an Eastern North Carolina crop, will show a 22 percent increase in production when 2,200</p>
        <p>tons are harvested.  ,</p>
        <p>Peanuts also should have an exceptional year, according to the report. With 153 000 acres planted - 3 percent more than last year - and the second highest yield ever recorded at 3,100 pounds per acre, growers can expect to see a total of 474.3 million pounds. In 1986, North Carolina ranked 3rd in peanut</p>
        <p>"sSntS'byW drought in Western North Carolina, will show a 15 percent op in production from 1987. Officials expect 330 million pounds.</p>
        <p>Flue-cured tobacco, on the other hand, has done even better than expected. In the past month, generous rain over the eastern part of the state has spruced up the tobacco crop and improved its outlook. Forecasters expect to see almost 517.2 million pounds of flue-cured leaf when harvesting is completed, a 14 percent increase over last year.  j</p>
        <p>North Carolina growers produce about two-thirds of the nation s flue-cured crop, and both acreage and yield-per-acre are up in the state. The yield is expected to average 2,182 pounds on 237,000 acres.</p>
        <p>Burley tobacco has not fared as well. Grown pnmanly in the mountain counties where the drou^it continues to be the most severe, the crop will show only a 5 percent increase in production over 1987, with about 14.9 million</p>
        <p>*^Oat proSwtion is down as well, but primarily because of an 8 percent ^op in the number of acres harvested, the report says. A resulting 7 percent drop</p>
        <p>in production left North Carolina growers with 3,3 million bushels.</p>
        <p>Strong soybean prices this year  attributed to low cn^) production in other more heavUy drought-stricken parts of the country - inspired many growers to add the crop to their rotation or increase the number of acres they normally plant.PRICE</p>
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        <pb facs="00097006_0008" />
        <p>'Temptation' Film's</p>
        <p>Mass Protest</p>
        <p>By JEFF WILSON Associated Press Writer UNIVERSAL CITY, Calif. (AP) -About 25,000 demonstrators, some lugging crosses, threatened mass boycotts of The Last Temptation of Christ upon its release today, and at least one major theater chain has decided against showing the film.</p>
        <p>The movie opens in eight major cities at the height of a nationwide fundamentalist furor sparked by Chris</p>
        <p>tians who say it is blasphemous in its portrayal of a Jesus Christ temptwl to abandon his divinity.</p>
        <p>An estimated 25,000 protesters jammed the streets around Universal Studios Thursday, adding their voices to a chorus of protest that has stretched from the studio lot to the halls of Congress.</p>
        <p>A lot of impressionable people who would see this ... will receive a totally skewed, biased, and blatantly</p>
        <p>false portrayal of the person who is nearest and dearest to our hearts  our savior Jesus Christ, said the Rev. Paul Crouch, president of Trinity Broadcasting.</p>
        <p>Newton, Mass.-based General Cinema Theaters decided against showing the movie after company executives screened it this week. The company  the nations fourth-largest movie chain with 1,338 screens in 318 locations  offered no</p>
        <p>hr?</p>
        <p>planation for its decision.</p>
        <p>In Maryland and Delaware, newsletters and petitions are being circulated in churches urging t^ir members to convince theaters not to book the movie.</p>
        <p>And in Boston, Cardinal Bernard Law urged his archdioceses Roman Catholics to boycott the film because it is morally offensive and repugnant to Christian belief.</p>
        <p>One way to be heard is by not going. Another way is to wttte the producers, Law wrote in the archdiocesan weekly paper.</p>
        <p>The movie, directed by Martin, Scorsese and distributed by Universal, opens today in Los Angeles, Chicago, Washington, San Francisco, Seattle, Minneapolis, New York and Toronto.</p>
        <p>Last week, the studio suddenly advanced the release of the film by six weeks, giving its opponents less time to organize threatened boycotts and, perhaps, taking advantage of the current publicity.</p>
        <p>In Thursdays protest, buses carrying thousands of Christians rolled into the Universal parking lot, backing up traffic for a mile on the nearby Hollywood Freeway and &amp;lt;m roads</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>around the hMdquarters of MCA Inc., Universal^ parent cmnpany.</p>
        <p>Many of the demonstrators lulled wooden crosses. Others, with children in tow, carried hand-printed signs reading Boycott Blasphemy and vThe Greatest Story Ever DistoHed.</p>
        <p>Opponents of the film are enraged by Scorseses portrayal of Jesus as an ambivalent savior. In a hallucination while dying on the cross, Christ imagines abandoning his divinity to live as an ordinary man, and fantasizes about sex with Mary Magdalene. .</p>
        <p>Most of the films antagonists have not seen Last Temptation and base their unity (m reports from the small number of clergy who have viewed it.</p>
        <p>Scorsese has defended his film, saying he wished to create a stoiw that would provoke people to think about Jesus as a man confronting temptation. He said the film should be cmisidered art translated from a novel, not an interpretation of the gospels. The film is based on the 1965 novel by Greek author Nikos Kazant-zakis.</p>
        <p>Wte reactions from clergy across</p>
        <p>the nation have been largely negative, some have been more tolerant.</p>
        <p>Beth Cox, summer minister for the Fairfax Unitarian Church in Virginia, said Christ could have been tempted by the sensual.</p>
        <p>Jesus was man and divine, Ms. Cox said. I would think that the human side of him would have those thoughts.</p>
        <p>Yet other members of the clergy suggested that the best thing to do was not to make much ado about the motion picture.</p>
        <p>We find the film offensive, but were not going to turn out the troops  to march on theaters, Monsignor William Reinecke, chancellor for the Catholic Diocese of Arlington, Va. We dont want to play it up.</p>
        <p>Among the participants in Thurs- ^ days demonstration were the Rev.: Donald Wildmon, executive director 1 of the American Family Association; of Tupelo, Miss., and Bill Bright,  resident of the San Bernardino-  )ased Campus Crusade for Christ. ^</p>
        <p>Bright has offered to raise $10 mil-; lion to buy and burn the film, and; Wildmon has urged a nationwide* boycott of MCA.  ^</p>
        <p>Tar Heels Joining Protest</p>
        <p>STUDIO PROTEST  Some of the estimated 25,000  the showing of a new film, The Last Temptations of</p>
        <p>protesters at Universal Studios stand attentive Thursday  Christ." The movie was to open in eight cities across the</p>
        <p>as they listened to organizers of a demonstration against  country today. (AP Laserphoto)</p>
        <p>By The Associated Press</p>
        <p>A national wave of protest against The Last Temptation of Christ has rolled into North Carolina, with cinema operators reporting a deluge of letters and signatures urging them not to show the film.</p>
        <p>Have I got petitions - phew! said Ron Fomer, assistant manager of Beaucatcher Cinemas in Asheville, the citys largest movie theater.</p>
        <p>About 10 days, two weeks ago, they started coming in. Now were getting six or seven a day.</p>
        <p>The movie, which depicts Jesus Christ tempted to abandon his divinity, opens in eight major cities today at the height of a nationwide fundamentalist furor sparked by Christians who say it is blasphemous.</p>
        <p>If they can show this, all doors will be broken down, said the Rev. Earl Lamm of rural Harnett County, coorganizer of a religious group planning to picket movie theaters should ^ film come to North Carolina. If peo-)le will allow this, every other kind of porn(^aphy will )e minor.</p>
        <p>Spokesmen for Universal Studios and its distributing agents have not said when or whether the film will come to North Carolina.</p>
        <p>But some N(n1h Carolina opponents planned to be ready for it nonetheless.</p>
        <p>In several counties, churches circulated newsletters urging their members to persuade theaters npt to book the movie.</p>
        <p>One church in Asheville, the Merrimon Avenue Baptist Church, collected hundred of signatures on blank petitions mailed bv the county Baptist Association to its 92 member churches, said association secretary Betty Orr.</p>
        <p>In Fayetteville, officials of Cross Pointe Cinema and Cross Credi Mall, both of the Newton, Mass.-based General Cinema theater chain, announced they would not show the film after company executives screened it.</p>
        <p>Petitions are floating everywhere, said the Rev. Jimmy Cox of Naples Baptist Church north of Hender-</p>
        <p>While many have yet to view Last Temptation, opponents say they are enraged by director Martin Scorseses p(trayal of Jesus as an ambivalent savior.</p>
        <p>Most of Um films antagonists base their enmity on reports from the small number of clergy who have viewed it.</p>
        <p>They are reacting to reaction, thats what theyre doing, said BUI Cline, a motion picture distributor in C&amp;amp;lotte.</p>
        <p>Doris Lusk of Fayetteville told of a plan to have protesters form long lines at theater box offies, only to ask the price of the movie, tell the ticket seller No, thanks, and return to the end of the line  thus blocking others from seeing it.</p>
        <p>We are upset about the fact that our Lords name has been blasjUiemed hideously, blatantly, she said.</p>
        <p>U.S. Plans New Space Proiect</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>By FRANK D. ROYLANCE</p>
        <p>L.A. Timrs-Washingtoa Post News Service</p>
        <p>BALTIMORE - Scientists at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif., have taken the wraps off plans to land unmanned spacecraft on the nucleus of a cmnet, and on Titan, the largest moon of Saturn, early in the next century.</p>
        <p>Each of the spacecraft will also buzz asteroids in the region between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter en route to their main targets: Saturn and the Comet Kopff. Their missions are to learn more about the origins of the solar system and to gather clues to the origins of life on Earth.</p>
        <p>The missions are being planned at JPL for the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. JPL officials announced their proposal Wednesday at the 20th General Assembly of the International Astronomical Union here.</p>
        <p>These two missions will reestablish our pre-eminence in outer ^lar system exploration, JPL project manager Ronald Draper said. Its something only the U.S. can do at the moment, and its something wed like to preserve.</p>
        <p>Draper said that he could not disclose the total estimated cost of the missions until it is submitted to Congress next year. But he did say that about $100 million has been spent in seven years of planning and development.</p>
        <p>The project is being carried out in cooperation with West Germany, which is furnishing propulsion systems for at least one of the spacecraft, and the European Space Agency, which is building the landers.</p>
        <p>If Congress provides the money and foreign partners give their final approval, the two missions will expand dramatically the U.S. effort to return to unmanned planetary ex-)loration after a long drought. It has )een more than 10 years since the last U.S. planetary missions. Pioneer voyages to Venus, were launched.</p>
        <p>The Challenger shuttle explosion has delayed until 1989 NASAs unmanned Magellan mission to Venus as well as the Galileo mission to orbit Jupiter and send a probe into its at</p>
        <p>mosphere. A Mars Observer unmanned mission is due for launch in 1992.</p>
        <p>In the meantime, the Soviet Union has announced ambitious plans to place robot and manned landers on Mars, and to explore the outer planets beyond Mars, placing Intense competitive pressures on U.S. scientists.</p>
        <p>The two missions announced Wednesday would fly aboard NASAs Mariner Mark II spacecraft, mating state-of-the-art scientific hardware with an improved generation of the old Mariner planetary exploration craft which began with missions to Venus and Mars in the 1960s.</p>
        <p>Draper said that the use of a single type of spacecraft for both missions will reduce overall costs by one-third.</p>
        <p>Tobias Owen, U.S. chairman of the international scientific group working on the project, described the missions as a sort of celestial archaeology.</p>
        <p>"The atmosphere on Titan will reveal a chemical evolution that may resemble what occurred on the early Earth, forming the complex organic chemicals needed for the beginnings of life, he said.</p>
        <p>Saturns other moons will also be studied at distances far closer than was p^ible during the Voyager flybys in 1980 and 1981, and with more sophisticated instruments.</p>
        <p>Comets and asteroids are also believed by scientists to be bodies little changed since the solar system began, bearing clues to the origins of the solar system and organic chemicals that suggest a rain of comets may have contributed to the beginnings of life on Earth.</p>
        <p>The first of the Mariner Mark II missions, called CRAF (Comet Rendezvous-Asteroid Flyby), is planned for launch Aug. 22, 1995 aboard a Titan IV-Centaur rocket. It would not depend on the Space Shuttle.</p>
        <p>In January 1998, CRAF would fly past Asteroid 449 Hamburga, a 55-mile long chunk of carbon-rich rock discovered in 1899 and orbiting the sun once every four years. Instruments on board the craft will beam back to Earth data on its size, shape.</p>
        <p>spin, craters and the nearby environment before streaking on toward its main target.</p>
        <p>If all goes wel, CRAF would rendezvous with Comet Kopff on Aug. 14, 2000 as the inbound comet nears the orbit of Jupiter. It would then fly in formation alongside the comet for at least three years.</p>
        <p>After photographing and studying the comets nucleus, coma and tail with a variety of instruments for 109 days, CRAF would fire an instrument-packed lander shaped like a five-foot-long golf tee into the icy nucleus of the comet.</p>
        <p>The penetrator is designed to sample and analyze the comets ice, determine its strength and temperature and radio the data back to the mother craft for relay back to Earth.</p>
        <p>As the comet streaks around the sun, heats up and develops its characteristic tail, CRAFs instruments would monitor it and beam the data back to Earth.</p>
        <p>The second Mariner Mark II mission, which has been named for 17th-century Italian astronomer Gian Domenico Cassini, who discovered four of Saturns 21-plus moons, is planned for April 1996.</p>
        <p>Cassini would fly by the 50-mile-long asteroid Maja in March 1997, and later would head further out into the solar system toward a rendezvous with Saturn on Oct. 2,2002.</p>
        <p>Eighty-five days after arriving, Cassini would launch a 10-foot-wide saucer-shaped probe toward the Saturnian moon Titan. The probe would parachute down through the moons dense atmosphere, sending back detailed information on its makeup during a three-hour descent.</p>
        <p>and more if it survives its landing cm the moons surface.</p>
        <p>Titan is believed covered with lakes, if not a global ocean of liquid hydrocarbons, Owen said. The lander is designed to operate on a solid or liquid surface.</p>
        <p>As Cassini continues to orbit Saturn during the succeedii^ four years, it will make at least 40 targeted flybys of as many as 16 of Saturns moons, sending bade futures from as near as 60 miles to the moonssurface.</p>
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        <pb facs="00097006_0009" />
        <p>The Daily Reflector, Greenville. N.C.</p>
        <p>Friday. August 12,1988  A*9</p>
        <p>Republican Party Platform</p>
        <p>Highlights from the proposed platform expected to be approved August 12 by the Republican Platform Committee:</p>
        <p>- V .</p>
        <p>Economy &amp;amp; Budget</p>
        <p>Opposes any tax iricreaae. Cab for two^ ^ budget cyde; proposes raising vMlng needed to raise taxes above 50%. Spppprtt line-hem veto for federal budget.</p>
        <p>, SM^potb Ovbiktg driigdbbrb</p>
        <p>:..iwyqw^ IWDiynyMlVWV  IQf  ofUy</p>
        <p>^iisniee. bppoaea'fsgiAifng any nki drug.</p>
        <p>Defense</p>
        <p>Supports mlltaiy build-up to enhanoe deterrence. Cab for maximum use of armed forces to tight drugs.</p>
        <p>Amis Talks</p>
        <p>; Rejects talks on SOI or other negotiafiona ; that oouM jeopardize security.</p>
        <p>I Women</p>
        <p>^ Opposes public funds for abodton;</p>
        <p>I supports a constitutional amendment to ,j ban abortion: no mention of Equal Rights Amendment.</p>
        <p>Crt^</p>
        <p>^ IvQBmQMnptNHP^^</p>
        <p>pRNibae^tqMfahish U.S, pre^mtrianoe It ipabtpiwbeatiianned tindbtgon</p>
        <p>the year 2000. Cab for SDt deployment. soonaepoaltb.</p>
        <p>ri^tbiiilig.</p>
        <p>piMiib homefefisirkttstm Rfsn^ bn eau$#teenfMcing child support taais, InproviNOb^in shelteta, cuitiig red tape</p>
        <p>lor noii8in9fnaDiiiifi^^</p>
        <p>Child Care</p>
        <p>Promises a toddler tax credr for pre-schoOl children in iower-income families.</p>
        <p>Education</p>
        <p>Endorses merit pay lor teachers; "Clmibe in education; rewards tor merit schools; increased funds for Head Start; tmr-free savings bonds for college costs; prayer In school; required daily rediing of the Pledge of Allegiance in schools.</p>
        <p>CKfHR^</p>
        <p>Promises to apftly dvN rights, health and safsly laws to Gongresa.</p>
        <p>Promlsss vigorous resaarch, atKf to 1&amp;gt;rOfeei those who do not have the</p>
        <p>f*nrinlnn AMotate</p>
        <p>roiaign Aiiairai</p>
        <p>Denounces apsrthskl, bdt opposes sanctions agsinsl South Africa that may harm blacks economically. Rejects Palestinian stale. Supports covert aid to arat^ommurbt guerilas; skeptical about Soviet retorms.  &amp;gt;</p>
        <p>Democratic Party Platform</p>
        <p>AP</p>
        <p>Highlights from the proposed platform approved June 25 in Denver by the Democratic Platform Committee:</p>
        <p>Economy</p>
        <p>Describes a fundamental right to national economic security, including an indexed ; mmimum wage, an adequate social security system and advanced notice of plant closings.</p>
        <p>Dnigs</p>
        <p>Cab tor appointment of a national drug czar, denounces suggestions to legalize aiidi drugs.</p>
        <p>Defense</p>
        <p>Calls for more stable defense budgets and a commitment by U.S. allies to assume greater costs. Criticizes expenditures on dubious new weapons.</p>
        <p>Crime</p>
        <p>Imposes a federal ban on *oop klHer buHets.</p>
        <p>Voting Rights</p>
        <p>i Supports same day and maH-in voter ! registration and backs statehood for i the Dtstricl of Columbia.</p>
        <p>^ Arms Talks</p>
        <p>I Calls for following up the INF Treaty with ; mutual, verifiable and enlorceable ' agreements to reduce strategic weapons.</p>
        <p>f Women</p>
        <p>J Seeks an Equal Rights Amendment to || the Constitution, freedom of ; reproductive choice and full access of ft ^ &amp;lt; V women and minorities to elective offices.</p>
        <p>Housing</p>
        <p>i Cab hometossness a national shame. Cab y for an expansbn of affordable housing and : help for firsi-time home buyers.</p>
        <p>Child Care</p>
        <p>Pledges signiricanl increases in aid lor low-and middle- income families.</p>
        <p>CMI Rights</p>
        <p>Supports equal access to government seivices, jobs, housing, business and education for all.</p>
        <p>Education</p>
        <p>Says the education of all diizens deserves the highest priority. Promises to invest in a National Teacher Corp., to &amp;gt; offer more support for bilingual and black education and to reverse Reagan adminimration aid cuts.</p>
        <p>.AIDS</p>
        <p>I Promises increased research, educatton ' and prevention efforts as ' weR as respect lor the civil rights of sufferms.</p>
        <p>Foreign Affairs</p>
        <p>Denounces the apartheid regime hi</p>
        <p>South Africa as a terrorist state and calls for mainiaining a special relationship with Israel while seeking ^ peace for Israel and b neighbors.</p>
        <p>APGOP Says Platform Will Reflect Bush's Policies</p>
        <p>By EVANS WITT AP Political Writer</p>
        <p>NEW ORLEANS (AP) -Republican platform writers turn to defense and foreign policy today to wrap up their pre-convention work on a platform the party chairman said would be conservative but reflect the new direction proposed by George Bush.</p>
        <p>Pat ty leaders also were trying to avoid a fight over the Star Wars anti-missile system.</p>
        <p>GOP Chairman Frank Fahrenkopf, interviewed on CBS This Morning, said the heart of the platform will not change that much, adding, Were a conservative political party. Were proud of that. Were not afraid of thecword.</p>
        <p>Fahrenkopf said, however, the document will reflect Bushs plans for a new direction in education, in environment, in child care. The vice president came here in an unprecedented event and spoke to thi^ platform committee and tried to give thhm that direction, so that this real-lyi^ill truly be a Bush platform, he said.</p>
        <p>the 106-member platform committee finished with the domestic cKapters of the 30,000-word document Thursday after calling for an expensive loophole for the oil industry to be reopened and engaging in another bitter tangle over AIDS.</p>
        <p>But the more moderate party</p>
        <p>faithful opted not to disturb Bushs plans for a peaceful convention despite their dissent on a variety of issues in what is mostly a cwiser-vative document.</p>
        <p>I doubt very much that there will be any floor fights, said Sen. Robert Kasten of Wisconsin, co-chairman of committee. The moderates in our party have had a significant impact on the newer issues in the platform.</p>
        <p>The committee turns to 60 pages on foreign policy and defense, an area Bush sees as one of his main strengths against Democratic presidential candidate Michael Dukakis.</p>
        <p>Bush has said the nation cannot be trusted to someone as inexperienced in foreign affairs as the Massachusetts governor. Dukakis counters by pointing to the Iran-Contra affair and administration dealings with Panamanian m]pr. Manuel Noriega as black marks on' the Reagan-Bush record.</p>
        <p>' * The GOP platform committef wp&amp;gt; meet again Monday afternoon, after the opening session of the convention, to take a final vote before the convention faces the issues on Tuesday.</p>
        <p>One possible fight today looms over when to deploy President Reagans Star Wars plan, formally called the Strategic Defense Initiative.</p>
        <p>Strong Star Wars backers, led by Angela Buchanan of California, pushed through a change earlier this</p>
        <p>week to make the platform call for rapid and certain deployment of SDI.</p>
        <p>But former Sen. John Tower of Texas, a Bush spokesman on defense, told reporters that the platform would reflect the original draft language, calling for deployment as soon as feasible.</p>
        <p>I dont think we should begin the )rogram by acting too precipitous-y, he said.</p>
        <p>Ms. Buchanan vowed a fight at the committee against any changes.</p>
        <p>My understanding is that the vice president is comfortable with the language, she said.</p>
        <p>Most of Thursdays session was iceful, in sharp contrast to the ated debates earlier in the week on such topics as abortion. Potentially divisive fights were avoided by private compromises in the name of party unity.</p>
        <p>Sen. Lowell P. Weicker Jr. of Connecticut dropped his plans to press an amendment calling upon the GOP to back tough economic sanctions against South Africa. And a possibe floor fight was averted over abortion when moderates dropped plans to challenge a plank that says, We believe the unborn child has a fundamental individual right to life which cannot be infringed.</p>
        <p>Marjorie Bell Chambers of Los Alamos, N.M., had tried to strike the last four words but said Thursday she did not want to cause problems for the Bush campaign with a floor fight.</p>
        <p>The committee also approved another amendment calling for giving a major tax break back to independent oil and gas producers.</p>
        <p>Currently, intangible drilling costs can greatly reduce an independent producers taxes. But the 1986 tax revision is closing that loophole.</p>
        <p>The platform plank calls for reversing that provision, in effect reopening the loophole that is estimate to cost the U.S. Treasury up to $1 billion a year. The change, sponsored by Rick Montoya of New Mexico and backed by the Bush campaign, was approved by a voice vote.</p>
        <p>The committees peaceful atmosphere was shattered late in the day Thursday, when AIDS again was debated.</p>
        <p>A proposal for testing all transportation jjiersonnel for the disease was</p>
        <p>put forward by Porter Davis of Oklahoma.</p>
        <p>When you travel around New Orleans, you will take taxis and buses, he said. When you go home, you will take planes and rely on pilots and mechanics.</p>
        <p>But it was not an idea that drew a lot of support.</p>
        <p>This is overkill, retorted Rep. Guy Molinari of New York. My God, we wont be able to get out of New Orleans if we adopt this.</p>
        <p>Fellow delegates, lets come to our senses.... Why pick on these people? said Bill Graham of North Carolina.</p>
        <p>The amendment was defeated without a formal vote tally.</p>
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        <p>Dukakis Blames Rate Hikes</p>
        <p>On Reagan Spending Plans</p>
        <p>By JOHN KING Associated Press Writer RICHMOND, Va. (AP) - Michael Dukakis placed the blame for rising rates on the Reagan administrations failure to keep government spending under control, particularly in the defense budget.</p>
        <p>The Democratic presidential nominee, campaigning today in Virginia and Florida, said Thursday the increase of the prime rate to 10</p>
        <p>percent would prevent young families from buying homes and farmers and businesses from improving their operations.</p>
        <p>A 10 percent prime rate. Its 3/i in Japan, Dukakis said at a rally in Hartford, Conn. Why? Because we havent been able to ay our bills for eight years in Washington, D.C.</p>
        <p>Dukakis blamed the soaring federal deficit on Reagans failure to make tough choices on spending.</p>
        <p>Prime Lending Rate</p>
        <p>We have to say no to a lot of things wed like to say yes to, Dukakis said. Weve got to decide whether we want Star Wars or star schools in this country.</p>
        <p>Dukakis first blamed the administration for spurring the increase in the prime lending rate in remarks he made Thursday after touring Fort Dix in New Jersey.</p>
        <p>I tnk its regrettable, he said. I think its what happens after eight vears of borrowing and spending, borrowing and spending. </p>
        <p>The Massachusetts governor spent most of Thursday trying to establish himself as a tough leader on military and foreign policy issues  areas Republicans frequently cite as Dukakis greatest weaknesses.</p>
        <p>Dukakis toured Fort Dix, where he had ei^t weeks of basic training after joining the Army in 1955. Earlier, he delivered a speech in New York in which he said the country needed new leadership in the White House prepared to carefully manage the defense budget and negotiate further nuclear arms reductions with the Soviet Union.</p>
        <p>Lyons</p>
        <p>While in Connecticut, Dukakis attended two fund-raisers which raised well in excess of $500,000 for the Democratic National Committees 1988 Victory Fund.</p>
        <p>Thornburgh Wins Confirmation</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP) - Richard L. Thornburgh says hes eager to begin work as the nations 76th attorney general, but is not counting on keeping the job if George Bush becomes president.</p>
        <p>I look on this as a six-month assignment, '^orn-burgh said Thursday after an 85-0 Senate vote confirmed him as successor to the controversial Edwin Meese III.</p>
        <p>The former GOP Pennsylvania governor said in a television interview, aired in Philadelphia, that hell let the future take care of itself even if Vice President Bush is elected.</p>
        <p>. Thornburgh, 56, already has told senators that hes a</p>
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        <p>loyalist to President Reagan, declaring last week, His agenda is my agenda.</p>
        <p>Thornburgh likely will be able to concentrate solely on department programs, unlike Meese, who spent considerable time defending his personal conduct.</p>
        <p>Meeses ethical behavior was investigated by Indepen-</p>
        <p>cluded that</p>
        <p>dent Counsel James McKay, who concluded that the attorney general probably broke the law. Meese consistently denied that, and maintained that the department was running normally despite defections by top aides during his final months as attorney general.</p>
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        <pb facs="00097006_0010" />
        <p>Senate Puts New Limits On Pentagon Consultants</p>
        <p>By TIM AHERN Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON (AP) - The Senate, reacting to the Pentagon bribery in-vestigaon, placed new restrictions on defense consultants as it approved a $282 billion military budget bill designed to win President Reagans approval.</p>
        <p>If the proposal becomes law, consultants will be required, for the first time, to speU out who hires them and whether they have potential conflicts of interests.</p>
        <p>The sad fact is that there is nothing requiring consultants under contract to the Pentagon to disclose conflicts of interest, said Sen. Carl Levin, D-Mich., one of the co-sponsors of the proposal approved Thursday.</p>
        <p>The amendment was adopted on a voice vote shortly before the Senate approved tiie $282 billion bill on a 90-4 vote.</p>
        <p>Levins proposal arose in the wake of the Pentagon bribery case, which involves allegations that private consultants, many of them former Pentagon employes, paid current Defense Department employees for inside details about future contracts. No charges have yet been filed.</p>
        <p>'Sen. David Pryor, D-Ark., a co-sponsor of the propo^l, said the registration is ne^ed because we need some mechanism for finding out who these people</p>
        <p>are working for and whether theyre working both sides of the street.</p>
        <p>Sen. Bennett Johnston, D-La., agreed, saying, This is an increasingly large problem.</p>
        <p>The Senate also added an amendment intenited to send a message to U.S. allies in Japan and Western Europe that they should do more to pay for allied defense.</p>
        <p>The votes came shortly before the Senate passed the bill and followed by one week Reagans veto of the first congressional attempt to pass a Pentagon budget.</p>
        <p>Reagan vetoed that bill because he didnt like its restrictions on arms control policy or its deep cuts into his proposal for Star Wars spending. The measure passed Thursday includes the Star Wars reductions, but none of the arms control limitations.</p>
        <p>Reagan rejected the bill authorizing the Pentagon budget, which is the first half of the congressional budget process. A second measure is needed to appropriate money for the authorized projects, and Thursdays bill was the appropriation measure.</p>
        <p>When Congress returns after Labor Day from its recess, a House-Senate conference committee will meet to resolve differences between the measures approved by each chamber.</p>
        <p>The Itouse approved its defense a(q;&amp;gt;ropriation bill two months ago and it doesnt contain either of the amendments approved Thursday by the SeMte. Althou^ both chambers are controlled by Democrats, Reagans mihtary</p>
        <p>Tro Itenates burden-sharing amendment orders a major review of U.5. . overseas commitments, limits the deployment of American troops to Japan ,, and South Korea, and sets a limit on spending for U.S. military pen^l sto- , tioned overseas. The last provision requires the allies to pay the difference if p. deployment costs of U.S. troops rise above 1988 levels.  i</p>
        <p>The Senate rejected, 59-36, another provision which proposed a 10 percent reduction in tlw number of U.S. military dependents living overseas.</p>
        <p>In the past year, both Democrats and Republicans on Capitol Hill have complained that U.S. allies should pay more for allied defenses. Japan, m par-ticular, has bran a prime target of such criticism.</p>
        <p>Voting against the spending bill were Sens. Kent Conrad, D-N.D.; Marki, Hatfield, R-Ore.; Claiborne Pell, D-R.I. ; and William Proxmire, D-Wis. Not voting were Sens. Joseph Biden, D-Del.; Thad Cochran, R-Miss.; Bob Kasten,' R-Wis.; Larry Pressler, R-S.D.; Lowell Weicker, R-Conn.; and James Exon, D-Neb.</p>
        <p>Emergency Spending Package Wins Quick OK In Congress</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP) -Republican lawmakers say they expect President Reagan to sign legislation that rushes $672 million to the Veterans Administration, the federal prison system and an assortment of other programs said to need the money.</p>
        <p>The Hbqse approved the supplemental spending bill by a 270-32 tally late Thursday, then sent the measure to the Senate, where it passed on a voice vote and was sent to the White House.</p>
        <p>Lawmakers prided themselves on fighting off temptation and refraining from the fr^uent practice of attaching pet projects to the measure, saying they abided by a pact congressional leaders reached with Reagan last fall. The legislation was labeled a dire emergency bill because the measure was supposed to be limited to that type of spending.</p>
        <p>House Majority Leader Thomas Foley, D-Wash., said it was a very stringently conceived bill that is absolutely required for the continuation of many essential services.</p>
        <p>The $672 million bill was a compromise between a $189 million measure approved by the House on July 27 and a $633 million version passed by the Senate on Wednesday. The bill is for the 1988 fiscal year, which ends Sept. 30. In addition to the fresh money, the bill would allow $200 million to be transferred among the budgets of various agencies.</p>
        <p>Eyeing a nearly month-long recess</p>
        <p>that began at the close of the days business, conference committee members worked out the compromise and rushed the bill through final approval in both houses in a single day.</p>
        <p>The few objections in the House came from legislators who complained this measure was no different from other spending bills.</p>
        <p>This is no emergency, said Rep. Bill Frenzel, R-Minn.</p>
        <p>As often happens with spending bills in Congress, the deal was reached by each chamber agreeing to most</p>
        <p>of what the other had proposed, rather than mutually chopping away at each others sought-after projects.</p>
        <p>Thus, the House accepted Senate provisions that would give the Veterans Administration $530 million in new spending to help pay for an increase in some benefits, a burgeoning caseload and medical care.</p>
        <p>The Senate also had sought $23 million to help the FBI keep an eye on Soviet ins^tors monitoring American compliance with the new nuclear arms treaty. The final bill contained $14 million of that amount.</p>
        <p>Congress OKs Hunger Package</p>
        <p>L.A. Times-Washington Post</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON - Congress gave final approval Thursday to the biggest increase in money to alleviate hunger in more than a decade, allocating $1.4 billion for feeding the needy over the next three years.</p>
        <p>The bill, passed with overwhelming bipartisan support in the House and Senate the last day before the start of a three-week recess, was sent to President Reagan. Sponsors said they expected him to sign the measure into law because it did not exceed budget ceilings.</p>
        <p>Under the legislation, basic food stamp benefits would be raised in stages by $4.41 per person each month over the current average monthly level of $50 per recipient.</p>
        <p>The Department of Agriculture would be required to</p>
        <p>spend $112 million during the next three years for commodities that would be channeled to food banks and soup kitchens serving the homeless.</p>
        <p>A temporary emergency food assistance program, serving an estimated 50 million people, would be extended for two more years, and the government would buy $120 million worth of food in the next two years for distribution to needy families.</p>
        <p>In addition, school breakfast and child nutrition programs would be expanded, and restrictions against I armers, farm workers, the elderly and the disabled in the food stamp program would be reduced.</p>
        <p>Another provision would revise the system for imposing penalties on states with high rates of improper food sUimp payments, ending sanctions for states whose record are better than average and targeting enforcement against states with the largest number of errors.</p>
        <p>Miami Financial Planner Skips Town With Millions</p>
        <p>MIAMI (AP)  A financial planner may have fled with as much as $25 million in retirement funds belonging to a group of doctors and other investors, each of whom received an apologetic note explaining, I have run away.</p>
        <p>Henry Gherman, 51, a former self-made millionaire whose career as an ace salesman collapsed in personal bankruptcy, is believed to have fled the Miami area, and sources close to the case say he may have left the country.</p>
        <p>About 50 of Ghermans clients learned of his disappearance when they received copies of the handwrit</p>
        <p>ten note in the mail this week.</p>
        <p>Everybody is pretty much in a state of shock, said Leonard Filhaber, a 61-year-old salesman who says he had total trust in Gherman for 12 years. Were all sort of walking around bouncing off walls.</p>
        <p>My wife and I have worked 17 bloody years, morning, noon and night, and now were broke, Filhaber said Thursday. Now I can understand why old people believe in mattresses.</p>
        <p>In his note, Gherman said he was unable to face the humiliation, disgrace and consequences that would follow once his company. Fi</p>
        <p>nancial &amp;amp; Investment Planning Inc., collapsed. He added that he would try to return the doctors money.</p>
        <p>I have been dealing with financial and emotional problems for the past many months and have been unable to come up with any solution other than running, the note said. By the time you receive this letter, I will be gone.... I have run away.</p>
        <p>Gherman and his companies were being investigated for possible wire fraud, bank fraud, embezzlement and interstate transportation of stolen property, FBI spokesman Paul Miller said.</p>
        <p>Gherman handled pension funds</p>
        <p>for a long list of clients that included at least 20 doctors, many of whom are wondering whether theyll see their money again.</p>
        <p>Im very angry, said Dr. Jack Lubin, a Miami Beach pathologist. But I dont want to talk about it. I might say something I shouldnt.</p>
        <p>A court statement filed Wednesday by 12 clients who are suing Gherman to recover the funds says the financial adviser fled town Monday, leaving behind his wife and two grown children. Gherman worked for some of the doctors for as long as 20 years, even managing their offices.</p>
        <p>A Dade circuit judge on Wednes</p>
        <p>day granted the clients request to appoint a receiver to oversee the finances of Gherman, his family and his companies.</p>
        <p>The investors also filed a $25 million lawsuit accusing Gherman of fraudulently shifting their money to his wife and two children, according to their attorney. Jay Solowsky.</p>
        <p>Ghermans wife said throu^ an attorney that she had no prior knowledge of his intentions to leave.</p>
        <p>Solowsky said Gherman accepted money from clients to invest in certificates of deposit, but banks said they had no record of any CDs being purchased.</p>
        <pb facs="00097006_0011" />
        <p>House Wants U.S. Investments Pulled From S. Africa</p>
        <p>By LAWRENCE L. KNUTSON r Associated Press Writer</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP) - House-passed legislation to withdraw all U.S^ investment from racially segregated South Africa and impose a nea'Motal trade embargo faces a possible Republican filibuster in the Senate and a likely veto by President Reagan.</p>
        <p>Hie House adopted the disinvestment bill Thursday evening on a 244-132yote.</p>
        <p>Si^porters hailed the dramatic measure as a last-chance opportunity to bring strong economic pressure t(y*bear to help end South Africas a^rtheid system of racial separation by expanding the less sweeping sanctions adopted in 1986.</p>
        <p>But Republicans said the bill represents a scorched earth policy that amounts to declaring economic war against South Africa, a war they sa[id would hurt the blacks it is designed to help by causing millions to;lose their jobs.</p>
        <p>GOP members called on the House t reverse course and adopt a policy of black empowerment to increase</p>
        <p>and other sanctions siqqxnrters said that course simply will not work.</p>
        <p>Black economic empowerment in the face of apartheid is an impossibility, Wolpe said as the House voted down a tiio of Republican-sponsored amendments designed to dilute or change the legislation.</p>
        <p>WiUi the House and Senate eager to adjourn for the fall elections, little time remains to push the bill tiirou^ Congress, especially since both houses likely would be faced with</p>
        <p>votes to ovemde a presidential veto.</p>
        <p>In a policy statement, the a ministration said Reagans senior advisers will recommend that he veto the sanctions bill if it emerges from Congress in its present form because it undermines the presidents ability to conduct foreign policy.</p>
        <p>It was likely that Senate opponents of the measure would launch a filibuster, since there is no limit on ^discourse in that chamber. Oppo</p>
        <p>nents have refused in the past to agree voluntarily to limit discussion on such issues, forcing the chamber to a cloture vote to shut off debate, a vote that requires the support of a two-thirds majority.</p>
        <p>Many Republican opponents accused the House Democratic leadership of staging a political vote to score points among black voters for Democratic presidential candidate Michael Dukakis and for political ac</p>
        <p>tivist Jesse Jackson on the eve of the Republican National Convention.</p>
        <p>Some of us wonder if the real purpose of this bill is to be responsive to</p>
        <p>said Rep. William Brooml^d,^R-Mich.</p>
        <p>has nothing to do with presidential politics.</p>
        <p>We are not bringing this bill to embarrass Republicans, said Rep. Ronald Dellums, D-Calif., principal sponsor of the measure. ^We are here to free black South Africa. This</p>
        <p>Dellums said White House officials, citing ongoing peace negotiations in southern Africa, had asked him repeatedly over the last several ' days not to bring up the bill until after Congress returns from its  Labor Day recess.</p>
        <p>He said he agreed to do so, but only if Reagan promised in writing not to veto the bill if it reached his desk.</p>
        <p>Botha Says Sanctions May Delay Peace</p>
        <p>Dellums said that in the end, the White House declined to make such a promise and he decided to go ahead.</p>
        <p>JOHANNESBURG, South Africa (AP) - President P.W. Botha said today that a tough sanctions bill passed by the U.S. House of Representatives will not help South Afncan blacks and might derail a regional peace initiative.</p>
        <p>tl$ economic and political power of 1 the founcfations of</p>
        <p>blpcks and weaken the found the apartheid system, but Rep. Howard Wolpe, D-Mich.,</p>
        <p>"The recklessness of members of Congress who do not care in the least whether their actions adversely affect the search for a peaceful solution to the problems of southern Africa as a whole is astounding, Botha said.</p>
        <p>FIREBOMBER  A South Korean student, wearing a gauze mask, charges toward riot-control police with a firebomb during a protest today in Seoul. Thousands of students held rallies, some of them involving clashes with police, calling for talks leading to unification with North Korea. (AP Laser-photo)</p>
        <p>- *</p>
        <p>iCorean President Appeals For Truce</p>
        <p>SEOUL, South Korea (AP) - President Roh Tae-woo called today for a political truce during the Olympics and warned that violent protests would ex-nose the country to worldwide scorn.  .....</p>
        <p>pose the country to ------------------ ,  ,  ^  j. .. .</p>
        <p>Roh condemned demonstrations by radical students and said dissident groups were trying to spoil the mood before the Sept. 17 start of the Olympic Games in Seoul. He appealed to opposition leaders to support the government in curbing unrest.</p>
        <p>An eruption of demonstrations involving firebombs, stones and tear gas during the Olympics would disrupt the Olympics and our nation would become an object of worldwide scorn, Roh told a meeting reviewing Olympic preparations.</p>
        <p>Later, radical students battled riot police with firebombs and rocks at least three campuses in Seoul after rallies to prepare for a march Monday to the border for reunification talks with North Korean students.</p>
        <p>Riot police fired tear gas to drive students back. Eyewitnesses reported</p>
        <p>ome arrests and injuries, but police refused to give any figures.</p>
        <p>National Police Headquarters in Seoul said today that 2,099 radicals were detained the previous two days for taking part in demonstrations to support</p>
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        <p>$udan Says Floods Razed 83,000 Homes</p>
        <p>t&amp;gt;AlRO, Egypt (AP) - Floods have destroyed about 83,000 homes in Sudan's capital of Khartoum, more than twice the number previously estimated, the Middle East News Agency reported today.</p>
        <p>The floods, which hit over the weekend after torrential rains, caused shortages of electricity, drinking water and food in Khartoum, a city of</p>
        <p>4'million residents. At least 11 people Prime</p>
        <p>were killed, and Sudanese Minister Sadek Mahdi said 1.5 million people were left homeless.</p>
        <p>The United Nations said a lack of boats was hampering relief opera-</p>
        <p>He said the legislation, which was forwarded to the Senate after a vote Thureday ni^t, might obstruct or-make impossible an ongoing initiative to end South Africas 73-year rule over South-West Africa, also known as Namibia.</p>
        <p>embargo. It was approved by the House 244-132, with most Democrats supporting it and most Republicans opposing it.</p>
        <p>Botha said in a statement that the pending bill was being debated for purely internal political aims.</p>
        <p>the Monday march, which the government has prohibited. All but 243 students</p>
        <p>were released.  4  j  *  *  a</p>
        <p>Police officials said 13 police stations were attacked by students nationwide</p>
        <p>this week and several dozen officers were injured.  .  ,  ,  ,</p>
        <p>Radical students have staged scattered protests in Seoul and other cities to prepare for the march and fought riot police in minor confrontations in some places. Turnouts at rallies during the past five days have been low.</p>
        <p>tions for people stranded on piles of rubble.</p>
        <p>Sudanese officials blamed the floods on inadequate drainage systems. Last week, Khartoum and surrounding areas received 8,4 inches of rain, compared with 1.44 inches in all of 1987.</p>
        <p>Officials say the country faces more destruction from the annual flooding of the Nile River in coming weeks They said the river level has risen dangerously after heavy rains in Sudan and neighboring Ethiopia, whose rivers feed into the Nile.</p>
        <p>The sanctions bill, which still needs Senate approval and President Reagans rignature to become law, would halt U.S. investment in South Africa and impose a near-total trade</p>
        <p>00!</p>
        <p>iblican filibuster in the Senate and a likely veto by Reagan. Earlier legislation, which passed despite Reagans veto, bars imports of</p>
        <p>various South African commodities and forbids South African planes to land at U.S. airports.</p>
        <p>It (the bill) has no bearing on the promotion of the interests of black people in South Africa, he said. The members of the House of Representatives are by now fully aware that prominent black leaders in South Africa, as well as governments in certain neighboring states, strongly oppose this legislation.</p>
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        <p>V-.</p>
        <p>i^'v</p>
        <p>\&amp;gt;Sponsors Of This Page Along With Ministers Of All Faiths, Urge You To Attend Your House Of Worship This Week, To Believe In God And To Trust In His Guidance For Your Life.</p>
        <p>GtEENVIUI POOL CONSTMIOiON &amp;amp; SUPPLY</p>
        <p>Visit Our 5000' Pool Center Indoor Pool &amp;amp; Spa on Display Hwy 43 E Bells Fork 355-7121</p>
        <p>WYNNE'S CHEVROLET</p>
        <p>"On The Corner, On The Square Bethel, N.C 825-4321</p>
        <p>PUGH'S TIRE. AUTO PARTS A</p>
        <p>SERVICE CENTERS</p>
        <p>5th &amp;amp; Greene 752-6125 726 Greenville Blvd. 355-6162 814 Dickinson Ave. 830-1071</p>
        <p>TAR LANDING SEAFOOD</p>
        <p>105 Airport Rd. 758-0327 Bob Herring &amp;amp; Employees</p>
        <p>ANNE'S TEMPORARIES. INC.</p>
        <p>The Dependable Temporary Service" 758-6610 1410 S. Evans St.</p>
        <p>Compllniiits of CHUCK AUTRY'S</p>
        <p>LEITH.OLDSMOBILE.NISSAN</p>
        <p>"See Us...Before You Buy"</p>
        <p>991 Greenville Blvd. SW 756-3115</p>
        <p>TAFF OFFICE EQUIPMENT CO.</p>
        <p>For Your Office &amp;amp; School Supply Needs" 569 S. Evans 752-2175</p>
        <p>OVERTON'S SUPERMARKET. INC.</p>
        <p>211 S. Jarvis 752-5025 Charles Overton &amp;amp; Employees</p>
        <p>PAINT A BODY SHOP</p>
        <p>1806 Dickinson Avenue, Greenville 752-3632</p>
        <p>HARGETT'S DRUG STORE</p>
        <p>2500 S. Charles St. Ext. 756-3344</p>
        <p>CYNTHIA'S FLOWERS</p>
        <p>Church Arrangements-AII Sizes 3010-A E. 10th St. 757-1892</p>
        <p>INA'S HOUSE OF FLOWERS</p>
        <p>1935 N. Memorial Dr. Ext. 752-5656 Management &amp;amp; Staff</p>
        <p>GRANT BUICK-MAZDA. INC.</p>
        <p>Bill Grant &amp;amp; Employees Greenville Blvd. 756-1877</p>
        <p>C A K ENTERPRISES. INC.</p>
        <p>Glass &amp;amp; Metal Products 816 Clark 752-6555 Carl Knott &amp;amp; Employees</p>
        <p>AYDEN BIBLE A BOOK STORE</p>
        <p>"For All Your Religious Supplies" 811 N. Lee, Ayden 746-6128</p>
        <p>FARRIOR A SONS. INC.</p>
        <p>General Contractors 753-2005 Hwy. 264 Bypass Farmville</p>
        <p>FOUNTAIN OF LIFE. INC.</p>
        <p>Jim Whittington Oakmont Professional Plaza Greenville 756-0000</p>
        <p>ALDRIDGE A SOUTHERLAND REALTORS</p>
        <p>s 226 Commerce St. Greenville '  756-3500</p>
        <p>SAM'S LOCK A KEY</p>
        <p>Trophies &amp;amp; Plaques 1804 Dickinson Ave. 757-0075</p>
        <p>FREE WILL BAPTIST PRESS</p>
        <p>"For All Your Printing Needs" 811 N. Lee, Ayden 746-6128</p>
        <p>COLONEL SANDERS</p>
        <p>KENTUCKY FRIED CHICKEN</p>
        <p>600 Greenville Blvd. SW 756-6434 2000 Greenville Blvd. SE 752-5184</p>
        <p>JEFFERSON PILOT INSURANCE</p>
        <p>2000 Venture Tower Dr. (BB&amp;amp;T BIdg) 752-2923 Max Joyner, Sr. ChFC, CLU</p>
        <p>PARKER'S BARBECUE RESTAURANT</p>
        <p>S. Memorial Dr. 756-2388 #2 2020 SW Greenville Blvd. 756-9215 Doug Parker &amp;amp; Employees</p>
        <p>HAHN CONSTRUaiON CO.</p>
        <p>Residential &amp;amp; Commercial Building 608-G Arlington Blvd. 756-6815</p>
        <p>WHITE CONCRETE CO.</p>
        <p>699 N. Greene 758-1181 Farmville 753-3712</p>
        <p>PEPSI COLA BOHLING CO.</p>
        <p>Dickinson Ave. 758-2113 Greenville</p>
        <p>C. H. EDWARDS. INC.</p>
        <p>Hwy. 11 S., Greenville 756-8500</p>
        <p>Compliments of</p>
        <p>HEILIG-MEYERS CO.</p>
        <p>518 E. Greenville Blvd. 756-4145</p>
        <p>BILL ASKEW MOTORS</p>
        <p>We Buy, Sell or Trade 3010 S. Memorial Dr. 756 9102</p>
        <p>CURTIS MATHES HOME</p>
        <p>ENTERTAINMENT CENTER</p>
        <p>VHS Tape Club Rent To Own 606 Arlington 756-8990</p>
        <p>WILLIAMS AUTO PARTS. INC.</p>
        <p>"Your Local ALL-PRO Dealer" 1307 W. 14th St. 758-5507</p>
        <p>MIUS COUNTRY STORE</p>
        <p>Lots of NEW Country Items! 3210 S. Memorial Dr. 355-2312</p>
        <p>GREENVILLE ROOFING CONT.. INC.</p>
        <p>Commercial &amp;amp; Residential Roofing Quality Work At A Fair Price" Hwy 264 NE 830-1280 Richard Everett &amp;amp; EmployeesPIGGLY WIGGLY OF GREENVILLE</p>
        <p>2105 Dickinson Ave.</p>
        <p>Rick Jackson &amp;amp; Employees</p>
        <p>JIMMY'S PHILLIPS 66 SERVICE</p>
        <p>All Types Minor Repair Wrecker Service Corner 14th &amp;amp; Greenville Blvd. J.F. Baker, owner 752-2995</p>
        <p>TOM'S RESTAURANT</p>
        <p>The Very Best In Home Cooking' 756-1012 West End Circle Maxwell St.</p>
        <p>FOSDICK'S 1890 SEAFOOD RESTAURANT</p>
        <p>"The Best Seafood Restaurant In Town 2903 S. Evans 756-2011</p>
        <p>HOMESTEAD FUNERAL HOME AND</p>
        <p>MEMORIAL GARDENS</p>
        <p>"The Choice...When It Has To Be Right" Hwy 33 East 830-1113 or 830-0648</p>
        <p>INTEGON LIFE INSURANCE CO.</p>
        <p>The Scales Agency W.M. Scales, Jr. Gen. Agent Waighty Scales, Rep.  756-3738</p>
        <p>HENDRIX BARNHILL CO.</p>
        <p>Memorial Dr. 752-4122 All Employees</p>
        <p>NORTH UROLINA FARM BUREAU</p>
        <p>MUTUAL INSURANCE CO.</p>
        <p>Auto  Life  Hospital  Homeowners 402 Greenville Blvd. 756-3165 Hubert Garris, Agency Manager</p>
        <p>CLIFF'S SEAFOOD HOUSE</p>
        <p>Washington Hwy., 33 East 752-3172</p>
        <p>GREENVILLE CABLE TV</p>
        <p>517 Arlington Blvd. 756-5677 For Inspirational Viewing Watch Channels 2,15 &amp;amp; 24</p>
        <p>JA.LYN SPORT SHOP</p>
        <p>Hwy. 33, Chicod Creek Bridge 752-2676 Grimesland James &amp;amp; Lynda Faulkner</p>
        <p>EAST CAROUNA LINCOLN MERCURY-GMC</p>
        <p>Sales &amp;amp; Service 2201 Dickinson Ave. 756-4267</p>
        <p>KRISPY KREME DOUGHNUT GO.</p>
        <p>300 East 10th St.</p>
        <p>830-1525</p>
        <p>A CLEANER WORLD</p>
        <p>GARMENT CARE CENTER</p>
        <p>622 Greenville Blvd. 355-5710 Pick Up Sta. West End Clr. 355-5810</p>
        <p>JOE PECHELES VOLKSWAGEN. INC.</p>
        <p>Hwy 264 Bypass 756-1135 All Employees</p>
        <p>EARL'S CONVENIENCE MART</p>
        <p>Rt. 1, 756-6278 Earl Faulkner</p>
        <p>ROBERT C. DUNN CO.. INC.</p>
        <p>S. Lee Ayden 746-2042 Roofing &amp;amp; Sheet Metal</p>
        <p>DAUGHTRIDGE OIL A GAS CO.</p>
        <p>2102 Dickinson Ave. 756-1345 Bobby Tripp &amp;amp; Employees</p>
        <p>THE BLIND DESIGN</p>
        <p>Custom Made Window Treatments Drapes Fabrics Towels Linens Gifts 694 Arlington Blvd. 355-6140</p>
        <p>CARQUEST AUTO PARTS</p>
        <p>The Right Parts, The Right Price, The Right Advice 2800 E. 10th St. (Eastgate) 752-1414</p>
        <p>EAST COAST COFFEE</p>
        <p>DISTRIBUTORS</p>
        <p>758-3568 1514 N. Greene St. "A Complete Restaurant &amp;amp; Office Coffee Service"</p>
        <p>PAIR'S ELECTRONIC SHOWROOM</p>
        <p>Electronic Suppliers 756-2291 107 Trade St.</p>
        <p>CompllmMts of PITT MOTOR PARTS</p>
        <p>911 S. Washington St. 758-4171</p>
        <p>V.A. MERRin A SONS</p>
        <p>Downtown Greenville Dealer For GE, Zenith and Roper Products 207 S. Evans 752-3736</p>
        <p>Compllmonts of</p>
        <p>PHELPS CHEVROLET</p>
        <p>West End Circle 756-2150</p>
        <p>, Compllmonts of</p>
        <p>FRED WEBB. INC.</p>
        <p>N. Greene St., Greenville</p>
        <p>SMITH'S HEARING AID SERVICE</p>
        <p>"Your Only-Authorized Beltone Hearing Aid Dealer"</p>
        <p>1716 W. 5th St. Ext. 758-4334</p>
        <p>m</p>
        <p>OMINVILLE MAMNIA SPORTS ONTIR</p>
        <p>264 Bypass NE 758-5938 Joe Vernelson, Owner</p>
        <p>TAPSCOTT</p>
        <p>The Plaza 756-8310</p>
        <p>Kate Phillips, owner "Specialty Gift Shop"</p>
        <p>HOLLOWELLS'S DRUG STORES</p>
        <p>1 911 Dickinson Ave.</p>
        <p>#2 Memorial Dr. &amp;amp; 6th #3 Stantonsburg Rd.</p>
        <p>#4 1631 S. Greenville Blvd.</p>
        <p>WESTERN SIZZLIN STEAK HOUU</p>
        <p>Dine With Us This Sunday 2903 E. 10th St. 758-2712</p>
        <p>f ^ou c^aw cHmiu Of DoOowLn^ CxowJ, &amp;lt;SugsBAl Okt Btii Cxou,A Oo DoCtow t, OfU Cxowd ^oLn^ Do Ckuxck</p>
        <p>-</p>
        <p>ms</p>
        <pb facs="00097006_0013" />
        <p>t~*.' t '.</p>
        <p>Uurch Calendar</p>
        <p>!' PEoHtC'S BAPTIST TEMPLE astSW.GramnrilleBlvd.</p>
        <p>r2822  ^</p>
        <p>I a.m. Sat -&amp;lt; Bus Visitation Tp.m. ^ Radio Program Christian School iDtWCB TiaO^m^^S*  Laymen's Prayer Breakfast</p>
        <p>L wTwja.m.Sunday School t wa.m. Morning Worship r 5:30p.m. ChoirPractice (f 6:30 p.m.  Evening Worship 4&amp;gt;r40s.m. Mon.-Fri.  Radio Program People !lPeople" (WGHB)</p>
        <p>6:^1 p.m. Mon.  Faculty/Staff/Board '^Mwship</p>
        <p>I^Mp.m.  Ladies Prayer Fellowship (Kiddie</p>
        <p>r'O'.OOa.m. Mon. thru Thurs.  Orientation Week fTG(:A Teachers)</p>
        <p>If 7;*0%.m. Wed.  Hour of Power Foundations M Faith</p>
        <p>8;45p.m.  Choir Practice '7;00p.m. Thurs.  Church Visitation -'7^:30 p.m.  Orientation Evening (All GCA Stu-fdehtsS parents)</p>
        <p>(-6:45p.m.  Band Meeting</p>
        <p>p:OO^m. Sat.  Wedding (Gary Parisher &amp;amp;</p>
        <p>I FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH nMOOS.ElmSt.</p>
        <p>I' Paniel C. Wilkers. Pastor I Ijleorgianna Brabban, Associate Pastor ' -RichardGammon, Emeritus 9:45 a.m. Sun.  Church School &amp;gt;11:00 a.m. Worship i 7:30p.m. Deacons Meetings I 7 :po p.m. Mon.  Boy Scouts #452 I ^7:30p.m.  Tar River Civitans L4:00 p.m., Overeaters Anonymous . -9:00a.m.Tue.-Park-A-Tot  -7:30a.m. Wed.-MOCBreakfast-Toms if' :00a.m. Wed. - Park-A-Tot . 7?90 p.m. - GALLERY CHOIR f 9:00 a.m. Thur.  Park-A-Tot 1:00 p.m.  Parkinson Sup. Group n 7:30 p.m.  Overeaters Anonymous !' ..'9:00a.m. Fri.  Park-A-Tot , v10:00a.m. Pandora's Box r ,9:30a.m. Sat.  Overeaters Anonymous r^lO:OOa.m.  Pandoras Box</p>
        <p>IL OUR REDEEMER LUTHERAN CHURCH , 1801 S. Elm St.</p>
        <p>II r R: Graham Nahouse</p>
        <p>It^8:30 a.m. Sun.  Morning Worship with Holy  Communion</p>
        <p>,-,11:00a.m. Morning Worship f' ^:30p.m. Mon.  4-H Club Meeting</p>
        <p>BLACKJACK FREEWILL BAPTIST CHURCH oufe 3, Box 325, Greenville, N.C. 27834 ; &amp;gt;Rev. Daniel Rivers, Pastor ; .IO:OPa.m.Sun Sunday School C 10:00 a.m. - THROUGlf THE BIBLE IN ONE [YKAR Bible Study</p>
        <p>IL, Jr.OO a.m.  Morning Worship, Child Dedica-rtioa^rvice</p>
        <p>I ril:00a.m Children's Church il:00p.m.  Working Committees Meeting ; ..7:00 p.m.  Junior Church f . 7:00 p.m. Evening Worship</p>
        <p> 7:00p.m. Mon.  Boy Scouts 7:06p.m. Tue.  Evangelism Explosion 7:30 p.m. Wed.  Fam% Circle 7' 7:30p.m. Children's Choir</p>
        <p>7^ # .pvu.m. ^ V/iiiiuicii a viiuii</p>
        <p>':30p.m. Youth Choir Practice U'8:00p.m. Thur.  General Board Meeting</p>
        <p>ST. JAMES UNITED METHODIST CHURCH '2000 East Sixth at Forest Hill Circle Greenville. North Carolina 27834 Taswell E. Shaw Sr. Minister !, ^muel W. Loy, Associate Minister I Stephen W. Vaughn. Diaconal Minister v^:3Qa.m. Sun.  United Methodist Men ''8:45a.m.  Worship Service</p>
        <p>9: 40 a.m. - Adult Singing in Fellowship Hall ^ &amp;gt;9:45a.m. Sunday School I &amp;gt; l*.Wa.m.WorshipService {!5.W:00p.m.  Finance Committee nf:00p.m.  Administrative Board I 5;30 p.m. Mon.  Greenville District Inter-pf^tlDn Rally i 6:M p.m. Fri.  Austin/Plueddemann Rehear-H sal '</p>
        <p>ij ',7:00 p.m. Sat.  Austin/Plueddemann Wedding</p>
        <p>FIRST WESLEY AN CHURCH ' Rt. 13, Hw;y 43 South Greenville !l , ..Rev. Lou Hutson il. &amp;gt;:OOp.m.Wed.-BibleStudy *'  9:45 a.m. Sun.  Sunday School</p>
        <p>, "11:00am Sun.-MorningWorship . '6:00 p.m.  Evening Worship</p>
        <p>Il</p>
        <p>If</p>
        <p>u.</p>
        <p>HIMIKER MEMORIAL CHRISTIAN CHURt II 111 Greenville Blvd.</p>
        <p>&amp;gt;r. Stewart LaNeave, Minister I knie Pair, Choir Director Kerry Carlin. Organist 9:45a.m. Sun. Sunday school 11:00 a.m.-Sunday Worship Service 7:00 p.m. Wed. - CAV F Board Meeting</p>
        <p>HOLLYWOOD PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH H # ^Mwy.43South ,  . </p>
        <p>H ' Speaker Rev. Richard (Dick) Gammon r- s!s.SudI. Elsie Evans _ , t , Music Director Vivian Mills -Pianist Jean Haddock |l "'Youth Co-ordinators Steve &amp;amp; Anna Bridgeman I' 9:4Sa.m Sun. Sunday School r -- juooa.m. - Worship Service</p>
        <p> :00p.m. Tue - Deacons Meeting</p>
        <p>:J  -------------</p>
        <p>.,:30a!m!-JOY Fellowship 8:00 p.m. Wed.  Choir Pracuce</p>
        <p>-  CHRISTIAN SCIENCE CHURCH</p>
        <p>' r^ourth and Meade Streete</p>
        <p>II a.m. Sun.  Sunday SchooliSunday Service |f*:45p.m. Wed.  Weaneaday Evening Meeting I rjl;00-4 p.m. Wed.  Reaiiing Room. 400 S</p>
        <p>ARLINGTON STREET /   BAPTIST  CHURCH</p>
        <p>I jjotr? W Arlington Blvd.</p>
        <p>J&amp;gt;r Harold Greene e .^i45a m Sun.  Sunday School &amp;gt;;41:()oa.m. - Miwning Worship 7;30p.m -EveningWorship 8:00 p.m.  liiprcoticB Anonymous</p>
        <p>-Trsop m Wed - Prayer Service  15 p m - Choir</p>
        <p>OOp.m. Sat  Narcotics Anonymous</p>
        <p>UNIVERSITY CHURCH OF CHRIST 100 Crestline Blvd.</p>
        <p>Rick Townsend, Phone: 756545 10:00a.m. Sun.  Bible School 11:00 a.m.  Morning Worship; Junior Church 7:00 p.m.  EveningWorship</p>
        <p>BROWNS CHAPEL APOSTOLIC FAITH CHURCH OF GOD AND CHRIST Route 4, Greenville, North Carolina Bisluq) R. A. Giswould, Pastor 8:00 p.m. Thur.  Bible Study (Sister Ida R. Staton, Teacher)</p>
        <p>8:00p.m. Fri.  Prayer Meeting 12:O0 p.m. 2nd Sat.  Prayer (Missionary Barbara Sharpe in charge)</p>
        <p>10:30a.m. 2nd Sun.  Sunday School (Deacon J. Sharpe. Superint.)</p>
        <p>12:00 p.m. 2nd Sun.  Annual Womens Day Service</p>
        <p>8:00 p.m. 2nd Mon.  Pastor Aid Meeting (Dea. J. Sheppard, Pres.)</p>
        <p>8:00 p.m.  Pastoral &amp;amp; Communion Service (Bishop R.A. Griswould, Speaker)</p>
        <p>PHILIPPI CHURCH OF CHRIST 1610 Farmville Blvd.</p>
        <p>Elder Randy Royal 9:15a.m. Sun.  Sunday School 11:00a.m.  Morning Service 7:00 p.m. Wed.  BiMe Study 7:30 p.m. Thur.  Prayer Meeting</p>
        <p>ST PAULS EPISCOPAL CHURCH 401 East Fourth Street</p>
        <p>The Rev. Lawrence P. Houston, Jr., Rector; The Rev. Middleton L. Wootten, HI, Associate Rector</p>
        <p>7:30a.m. Sun.  Holy Eucharist 9:00a.m.  Choir Rehearsal I0:00a.m.  Holy Eucharist 11:00 a.m.  60tn Wedding Anniversary Reception/Farley</p>
        <p>12:00 p.m. Mon.  Alcoholics Anonymous, 2nd Floor</p>
        <p>7:30 p.m.  Lay Ministry Commission, 2nd Floor</p>
        <p>8:00p.m.  Narcotics Anonymous, 2nd floor 12:01) p.m. Tues.  Alcoholics Anonymous, 2nd Floor</p>
        <p>8:00 p.m.  Narcotics Anomrmous, 2nd Floor 8:00 p.m.  Nar Anon, 2nd Floor 7:00a.m. Wed.  Holy Eucharist 10:00a.m.  Holy Eucharist 11:00a.m.  Bible Study. Friendly Hall 12:00p.m.  Alcoholics Anonymous, 2nd Floor 12:00 p.m.  Narcotics Anonymous, 2nd Floor 3:30 p.m.  Holy Eucharist, Greenville Villa 5:30p.m.  Holy Eucharist 8:00 p m.  Narcotics Anonymous, 2nd Floor 12:00 p.m. Thur.  Alcoholics Anonymous, Upstairs</p>
        <p>1.00 p.m. Thurs.  Crisis International, Parish Hall</p>
        <p>12:00 p.m. Fri.  Alcoholics Anonymous, 2nd Floor</p>
        <p>5:00 p.m.  Wedding rehearsal 8:00 p.m.  Narcotics Anonymous, 2nd Floor 12:00 p.m. Sat.  Narcotics Anonymous. 2nd Floor</p>
        <p>1:00 p.m.  Holy Matrimony, McDonald/ Wilson</p>
        <p>8:00p.m.  Narcotics Anonymous, 2nd Floor I2:(H) a.m. Sun.  Narcotics Anonymous, 2nd Floor</p>
        <p>St. PETERS CATHOLIC CHURCH 2700 E. Fourth St.</p>
        <p>Father Joseph Jones, C.P^ Pastor</p>
        <p>Father Alban Harmon, C.P., Parochial Vicar</p>
        <p>5:30p.m.&amp;amp;tVigil</p>
        <p>8:00a.m. Sun. Mass</p>
        <p>10:30a.m. Mass</p>
        <p>4:30 to 5:00 p .m. Sat.  reconciliation and by appointment</p>
        <p>IMMANUEL BAPTIST CHURCH 1101 S. Elm St., Greenville, N.C.</p>
        <p>Hugh Burlington, Pastor 9:30a.m. Sun.  Library Open 9:45a.m.  Sunday School 10:45 a. m. Library Open 11:00 a.m.  Morning Worship</p>
        <p> " SELVIA CHAPEL ORIGINAL FREE WILL ' '  ;  BAPTIST  CHURCH</p>
        <p>(*^1701 South Green Street 'I "BiklKw A H. Hartsfield. Pastor</p>
        <p>7:00 p.m. Sat.  Will leave the church for White ,ajte sponsored by the Sunday School ^/:45a.m. Sun.  Sunday School c: ;ll:00a.m.  Morning Worship : -4OO p.m.  The Gospel Chorus will meet in the .Fellowship Hall. Hostess Ms Doris Hines ij7:00p.m 'rue Bible Study 11' 7t3Qp.m. Wed.-T Prayer Meeting  9:3() p.m. August 16  Gospel Chorus rehearsal M , Aiigust 20th  Sunday School Convention will II cdhveneatSelvia ., August 21  Church Anniversary *  5;00 p.m. August 26  Junior Choir rehearsal 4:00 p.m. August 28  Carnation Ushers will id^t</p>
        <p>!' 7:30 p.m. August 27  The Conference Ushers will celebrate their anniversary at St. Peter Orig-(inalF.W.B. Church</p>
        <p>|! ';O0 p.m. August 28  Carnation Ushers will . 'sponwrs a pew rally</p>
        <p>},^5:0Q p.m Sept, 11 - Mrs. Jackie H. Gardner appear in concert. Sponsors No. I Ushers</p>
        <p>li' 'i WHITE DAK BAPTIST</p>
        <p>(f P.O. Box41.Grimesland, N.C.</p>
        <p>I  .^bertJ. Rodgers, Minister '' lO:Oa m Sun.  Sunday School r- ' 4:00 p.m.  Annual Fellowship Day Womens  Aux.  .</p>
        <p>C7:00p.m, Fri.  Deacons. Trustees Meeting " -^ll:0(Ja m. Sat.  Church Conference !*  9:45  a.m.  Sun.  Sunday School</p>
        <p>lUOOa.m.SunWorship l .OOp.m. Deacons Meeting !19:00 p m.  Sr Choir Anniversary , - 7:30p.m Wed  Mid-week Fellowship</p>
        <p>FIRST FREE WILL BAPTIST t'HURl II</p>
        <p>Greenville, North Carolina 27834 Harry Grubbs. Pastor</p>
        <p>9:45a.m.  Sunday School; Arlene Lincoln, Superintendent; Alton Stocks, Asst. Superintendent 11 :U0 a.m.  Morning Worship. Guest Speaker, Rev. Harold Jones. Foreign Mission Director NO EVENING SERVICE 7:00p.m. Tue.  Board Meeting 7:00p.m Wed.  Auxiliary Meets 5:00 p.m. Sat.  (Kitchen Shower), Willing Workers go to Jenning s</p>
        <p>MT. PLEASANT CHRISTIAN CHURCH</p>
        <p>Rt. 6 Box 344, Greenville, N.C. 27834 Minister Don McKinney Assistant Ron Roach Phone 75 1830</p>
        <p>8:30a.m. Sun.  Early Worship</p>
        <p>9:30a.m.  Sunday School</p>
        <p>10:30 a m  Morning Worship 4 Junior Church</p>
        <p>6:00p.m.  Mission Committee meets</p>
        <p>8:30a.m Sat Aug Meeting</p>
        <p>UNITARIAN UNIVERSALIST FELLOWSHIP OF GREENVILLE Congregation Bayt Shalom Synagogue 1420 East Fourteenth Street Co-President: Lisa Brenner Telefone: 355658 Minister: Dr. Cynthia Edson 11:00 a.m. Sun,  Summer Brunch and Board Meeting</p>
        <p>HOLY TRINITY UNITED METHODIST CHURCH 1400 Red Banks Road. Greenville. N.C.</p>
        <p>Rev. Ralph A. Brown 9:45a.m. Sun.  Sunday School 11:00 a m.  Morning Worship 6:00p.m.-UMYF 7:30 p.m.  Sunday Night Live 7:40 p.m. Wed.  Bible Study</p>
        <p>cJ PROGRESSIVE F.W.B. CHI Rt II</p>
        <p>II ,4303Cotanche Street</p>
        <p>II ^ Bishop T L. Davis Pastor  ., ,</p>
        <p>;. .7:30 p.m. Fri.  Revival; Closing night of the M .revivafwith the Bishop S.D. Clemons II ' H :00 a.m. Sat.  Mass Choir Rehearsal o.V'*:30a.m.Sun.-SundaySchool   11:00  a.m.    Morning  Worship Service by the</p>
        <p>9ac*Ai&amp;gt; an/4 miieir* hv Ihgi MacK I'hnir ahH lifthpr</p>
        <p>GREENVILLE BIBLE CHI RCH 1348 West Greenville Blvd Tel 355-2822</p>
        <p>9:30 a.m. Sun  Sunday School</p>
        <p>I0:30a.m Morning worship</p>
        <p>6:00 p.m.  EveningWorship</p>
        <p>7:30 p.m. 'Tue.  Ladies Bible Study-Watson s</p>
        <p>7:00 p.m. Wed.  Prayer Meeting</p>
        <p>li.wa.lll. - ITIWIIIMIB  01141/  V  svv  wrv</p>
        <p>' -3&amp;gt;stor and music by the Mass Choir and Usher "'^iMrd #2 will serve I &amp;gt;,^;3opm. Tue.  Bible Study - 7:30 p.m. Wed, - Prayer Meeting 2:30 p.m. Thurs.-P.G.s Rehearsal JUOOa.m. Sat. - P.G.s Rehearsal</p>
        <p>niE SALVATION ARMY 2337 W. Dickinson Avenue Post Office Box 113 Telephone 756-3388</p>
        <p>Greenville. NC 278344)113  ^</p>
        <p>Major and Mrs. Earl Woodard Commanding Officers</p>
        <p>10:00 a.m. Sun. - Sunday School</p>
        <p>11:00a.m.  Morning Worship</p>
        <p>11:30 p.m  Junior Cadets</p>
        <p>4:30 p.m  Corps Cadets</p>
        <p>5:30p.m. Teachers Meeting</p>
        <p>6:00 p.m.  Evening Worship</p>
        <p>7:00 p.m.  Songsters Practice</p>
        <p>7:00p.m. Mon.  Rest Home</p>
        <p>7:00 p.m.'Tue.  Bible Study</p>
        <p>8:00p.m.  Ladies Home League; Mens Club</p>
        <p>7:00p.m. Thur.  Visitation</p>
        <p>7:00 p m. Fri  Family Fun Time</p>
        <p>WINTERVILLE PENTECOSTAL HOLINESS CHURCH</p>
        <p>Main St.</p>
        <p>Rev Berry M House 10:00 a m . Sun  Sunday School 11:00a.m.  MorningPraise 4 Worship 7:00 p.m.  Evening Praise 4 Worship 7:30p.m Wed,  Family Night 7:30p.m.  Youth Ministries</p>
        <p>EASTERN PINES CHIIRCH OF CHRIST Rt. 16, Box 88 (Eastern Pines Road) Minister Harold (Buddy) Turner Phone: 752-8899</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>b</p>
        <p>Unity Free Will Baptist Church</p>
        <p>2725 E. 14th St. Ext.</p>
        <p>;Sunday School................</p>
        <p>MornIng Worship. ........H'OO  a.m.</p>
        <p>.Sunday Evening Service........7:00  p.m.</p>
        <p>'Wednesday Mid-Week Service.. .7:30 p.m.</p>
        <p>' A Warm Weicome Awaits You</p>
        <p>I  Nursery  Provided  At  All  Services</p>
        <p>Sharing Qod't Anawart To Lifea Problama</p>
        <p>Bobby H. Aycock Paotor</p>
        <p>The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.</p>
        <p>Friday, August 12,1988 A-13</p>
        <p>Area Church News</p>
        <p>Conference Planned</p>
        <p>A monthly conference will be held at St. John Baptist Church in Falkland at 7:30 p.m./Friday. Womans Day begins at II a.m. Sunday. The Rev. Vanessa Bell of Havelock will speak.</p>
        <p>YPHA To Convene</p>
        <p>The Eastern District YPHA will convene at Holy Trinity United Holiness Church, at the corner of Spruce and Skinner Street. Services begin Friday at 7:30 p.m.</p>
        <p>Saturday sessions begin at 1:30 p.m., 6 p.m. and 8 p.m.; Sunday, 9:30 a.m. and 3 p.m.</p>
        <p>Eldress Leads Service</p>
        <p>Elm Grove Free Will Baptist Church, Route 3, Gum Road, Ayden, will hold services Sunday at 11 a.m. with Eldress Ann Nobles of Grifton Chapel FWB Church.</p>
        <p>7:(10 p.m.  Evening Worship 4 Youth Meetings  ---"     20  Youth Group Planning</p>
        <p>Women's Day Set</p>
        <p>Womens Day service will be observed at Rock Spring Free Will Baptist Church Sunday at 11 a.m. Eldress Knox of Winterville will be guest speaker.</p>
        <p>Reunion Is Sunday</p>
        <p>The 59th Annual Croom Family Reunion will be held, Sunday at 11 a.m., at the Croom meeting house in Sandy Bottom.</p>
        <p>Family members and friends should bring a picnic lunch. Drinks will be provided.</p>
        <p>Quarterly Meetings</p>
        <p>Mount Shiloh Free Will Baptist Church of Falkland will hold its quarterly meeting services beginning with tonights business meeting.</p>
        <p>Eldress Millie T. Williams and First Timothy Free Will Baptist Church will conduct a holy communion service Saturday at 7:30 p.m. Sunday morning services will be led</p>
        <p>10:00a.m. Sun.  Bible School lUOOa.m. Worship Service-7:00p.m.  Evening Worship 7:30 p.m. Wed. - Bible Study</p>
        <p>FIRST PENTECOSTAL HOLINESS CIIURCH Corner of Brinkley Road and Plaza Dr,</p>
        <p>Rev. Frank Gent^</p>
        <p>8:30a.m. Sun.  Early Worship Service 9:45 a.m.  Sunday School. Daneel l.Houx,</p>
        <p>^'*il^:00a.m. - Morning Worship 5:45 p.m.  Adult Choir 7:00p.m.  Evening Worship Service 7;00p.m. Mon. - Royal Rangers 7; 30 p m. - Circles #14 #3 W M Meeting 7:30p,m. Wed. - Family Night Services 9:30 a.m. Fri.  Sunday School Lsson, WBZQ Radio, 1550 AM  .   .</p>
        <p>7:00 p.m. - Nursing Home Service, University Nursing Home</p>
        <p>FAITH PENTECOSTAL HOLINESS 4HUKCII</p>
        <p>Rt. 16, Box 178</p>
        <p>Rev, Gene Sizemore  _  ^</p>
        <p>10:00 a m. Sun  Sunday School iTommy Riley, Supt.)</p>
        <p>11:00 a m.  Morning Worship 6:00 p.m.  Choir Practice 7:00 p.m  Evening Worship 7:30pm. WedBible Study</p>
        <p>FIRST CHRISTI AN CHURCH 520 Greenville Boulevard. S.E 756'313S</p>
        <p>Glenn H. Evans, Senior Minister Dennis M. Lundblad, Assoc Minister/Youlh Director</p>
        <p>Becky A. Stasavich, Office Administrator Diane B. Hawkins, Choir Director-Organisl 9:00a m Sun Worship 9:45 a.m.  Church School ll.OOa.mWorship</p>
        <p>7: ^ p.m. Mon.  Official Board Meeting 10:0(5 a.m. Tues.  Christian Women s Club</p>
        <p>Nursery</p>
        <p>8:30 a m. Wed  Christian Women s Club Nursery</p>
        <p>7:30 p.m.  Chancel Choir Rehearsal 10'0() a m. Thur.  Worship Bulletin info due 10:00a.m Sat. -CE Dept Workday</p>
        <p>ST. TIMOTHYS EPISCOPALt IIURf H 107 Louis Street Rev. John R. Price</p>
        <p>8:00a m. Sun  Holy Eucharist, Rile II, Guest Celebrant. The Rev. A.C Marble 10:00 a.m.  Morning Prayer, Rile II, Guest Celebrant. The Rev. A C Marble 7:30p.m. Mon  Vestry meeting 7:00 p.m. Tiies.  Jr High 'vouth Planning meeting</p>
        <p>7:30 p.m. Wed.  Lobster Fair committee chairman meeting 7:00 p.m. Tliurs.  Boy Scouts</p>
        <p>ST. GABRIELS CATHOLIC CHURCH 1120W. 5th St. Rectory Pastor Father Xavier Hayes Phone 758-1504 6:00p.m. Sat,  Vigil Mass 8:30a.m. Sun.  Mass 11:00a.m. Mass</p>
        <p>3:00 p.m. - 4:00 p.m. Sat.  Sacrament of Reconcilliation</p>
        <p>UNITY CHRISTCHURCH 204 W. lOthSt</p>
        <p>11:00a.m. Sun.-Worship</p>
        <p>12 15 p m. Wed.  30 Minute Meditation</p>
        <p>THE CHURCH OF JESUS ( IIRIST OF LATTER-DAY SAINTS 307 Martinsbourough Rd. Greenville, N C. 27834 Bishop John Nelson 9:00a.m. Sun. - Sacrament Meeting 10:20 a.m. - Sunday School, Primary 11:10 a.m. - Priesftiood, Relief Society. Voung Women 4 Young Men s Meetings 7:00a.m,Mon Fri.-Seminary ^ ^ . 8:30-9:00 a m Sun.  Music 4 The Spoken Word on 1070 AM</p>
        <p>CEDAR GROVE MISSIONARY BAPTIST CHURCH Route 9, Cherry Oaks Subdivision Rev J.L. Farmer</p>
        <p>7:30 p.m. Fri.-General Conferece 4:00 p.m. Sat.  The Senior Choir will have rehearsal  .   . .</p>
        <p>tO:OOa m Sun-SundaySchool 11:00 a.m. - Morning Worship Service by the Pastor Music will be provided by the Senior Choir. The Senior Ushers will serve.</p>
        <p>7:30p.m Tue, -The Christian Aide will meet 7:30 p m Thur  The Traveling CTioir will have rehearsal</p>
        <p>RED OAK CHRISTI AN CHURt H (Disciples ol Christ)</p>
        <p>2003 Greenville Blvd SW 264 By-pass West Rev. Dexter Wasson, Pastor 9 45a.m Sun. - SUNDAY SCH(H)L 11:00 a.m.  Morning Worship: Toplc-"Lydia-Tbe Woman Who Listened</p>
        <p>7:00a.m. Mon.  Mens Prayer Breakfast</p>
        <p>GREENVILLE CHURCH OF CHRIST 1706 Greenville Blvd at Emerson Road Carl Etchison, Community Evangelisl 752 3734 Michael Ellis. Campus Evangelist 830 1681 10 00a.m. Sun.  Bible Classes; Adult (lasses. Children's Classes 11:00 a m - Worship Service 6 OOP m - Evening Service 7:00 p.m. Wed Bible Classes: Adult Classes; Children's Classes</p>
        <p>by Pastor Horace Joyner at 11 a.m. And Bishop W.L. Phillips and Rock Spring will conduct the Sunday evening service at 3 p.m.</p>
        <p>Services Begin</p>
        <p>Haddock Chapel Free Will Baptist Church will hold its quarterly meeting services beginning Saturday at 7:30 p.m. with Eldress Hattie Cobb and St. Matthew True Born Faith Church conducting holy communion service.</p>
        <p>Sunday morning service will be led by the senior choir and ushers of Haddock Chapel. A fellowship will follow the service. The Rev. James Lindsay and the New Hope Free Will Baptist Church will lead the 3 p.m. service.</p>
        <p>J.L. Wilsons birthday, Saturday at 7:30p.m.</p>
        <p>Elder Frederick Hopkins, the Faith And Truth Christian Center, and Sister Shirley Bonner, minister of music, from Washington will lead the service.</p>
        <p>Services For Fund</p>
        <p>The Rev. Earnest Roberson and Clemton Grove Holy Church, Stokes, will conduct services for the building fund Sunday at 3 p.m. at Mount Moriah Holy Church in Farmville.</p>
        <p>Service Postponed</p>
        <p>The Joy Service featuring missionary Mary Sheppard, Saturday at 7:30 p.m. at the Sycamore Chapel Church, has been postpon^.</p>
        <p>A new date will be announced.</p>
        <p>Services Start</p>
        <p>Gospel Reunion</p>
        <p>Birthday Observed</p>
        <p>The New Deliverance Free Will Baptist Church will observe Elder</p>
        <p>The Class of 59 Homecoming Gospel Reunion will be held Saturday at 7:30 p.m in Zion Chapel Free Will Baptist Church.</p>
        <p>The program will feature The Mack Singers of Cleveland and the Zion Chapel choirs.</p>
        <p>The Guiding Light Temple of Faith, Farmville, will begin quarterly meeting services tonight with Elder Ed Thomas Edwards and Ellis Chapel Church conducting the services.</p>
        <p>Holy Communion will be held Saturday night with Eldress Rosemary Baker as the speaker. After regular 11 a.m. services Sunday, Robert Phillips and St. James Church of Fountain will conduct the 3 p.m. service.</p>
        <p>Women's Day</p>
        <p>Graham Sees</p>
        <p>Spiritual Tone At Sessions</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (AP) - God usually gets some polite nods at American political conventions, but an old-timer of the candidate-crowning powwows says he detects a stronger religious element this time around.</p>
        <p>There was more of a spiritual tone at the Democratic Convention and I think well also see it at the Repblica! Convention, says evangelist Billy Graham, a convention regular since midcentury.</p>
        <p>As he has done at every Democratic and Republican national convem tion over the last 36 years, Graham will be offering prayers at next weeks Republican affair as he did for the Democrats in July.</p>
        <p>I never go to one without the other," he said in telephone interview from Buffalo, N.Y., where he wound up a heavily attended crusade last Sunday in that mostly Roman Catholic city.</p>
        <p>1 always stay neutral politically, and Im going to be neutral this time, he said. 1 wont tell who Im voting for, and Im not endorsing anybody. Thats the reason I go to both conventions.</p>
        <p>Graham, 69, a personal friend and unofficial chaplain to the countrys seven presidents since 1952, attributed the increased spiritual note at the Democratic Convention to the influence of black delegates.</p>
        <p>The black people made a great impression on white delegates as dignified, highly educated and they love the Lord, he said. They came out of the churches. These black people made a spiritual impact.</p>
        <p>He said that unlike some past conventions, when delegates would walk around and talk during prayers, the crowd this time would all stand and it would be so quiet you could hear a pin drop.</p>
        <p>At one point, he said he watched a network television reporter trying to question the Rev. Jesse Jackson on the floor during the benediction, but Jackson deflected the reporters questions, saying, Were praying now.</p>
        <p>Jackson bowed his head while African Methodist Episcopal Bishop Frederick C. James led the benediction, refusing to continue the interview until the prayer was finished, Graham said.</p>
        <p>While Jackson, the second-running Democratic candidate, gave a rousing address in Gospel-preaching style to the Democrats, another also-ran minister, Pat Robertson, was to address the Republicans.</p>
        <p>Im happily surprised for clergymen to be addressing both conventions, Graham said. Its healthy for there to be more recognition of spiritual life whenever people gather.</p>
        <p>At the Republican Convention, Graham is to lead a prayer Monday night when President Reagan fiitishes his address, and will sit with the George Bush family on the closing night when he gives his acceptance speech.</p>
        <p>COME AND WORSHIP</p>
        <p>Peace Presbyterian</p>
        <p>(A New Church Development)</p>
        <p>9:45..............Sunday  School</p>
        <p>11:00..................Worship</p>
        <p>"A New Church Developrneiil 0( Warm Friendly People inviting You To Join With Them In Proclaiming, Celebrating And Sharing The PEACE Of Our Lord."</p>
        <p>BUI Goodnight Pattor 355-2273</p>
        <p>Hwv&amp;gt; 11 acroaa from Pitt Community College</p>
        <p>Mayo Chapel Baptist Church will hold its quarterly meeting and homecoming service on Sunday.</p>
        <p>Walter Chenny will conduct the 11 a.m. service. Dinner will follow at 2 p.m.</p>
        <p>Womens Day will be observed at Little Creek Free Will Baptist Church Sunday at 11 a.m. Eldress Shirley Braxton will be the guest minister.</p>
        <p>^Gloria Dei'"^ \ Lutheran \</p>
        <p>Anniversary Meeting</p>
        <p>Middle Ground Ushers Union will join Roanoke Tabernacle for its 12th Anniversary meeting, Monday at 10:30a.m.</p>
        <p>Evening Services</p>
        <p>Bishop J.N. Gilbert and Arthurs Chapel will conduct services at 7:30 p.m. Sunday at Burneys Chapel Church. The Traveling Choir is sponsoring the program.</p>
        <p>Eldress To Preach</p>
        <p>Eldress Marie Grimes will preach Sunday at 7:30 p.m. in St. Matthew True Born Faith of Christ Church.</p>
        <p>(  Lutheran  \</p>
        <p>I  Church  ]</p>
        <p>^ The Missouri Synod  I</p>
        <p>The Missouri Synod</p>
        <p>The Womens Club 2306 Green Springs Drive Phone 752-0301</p>
        <p>The Rev. James iM. Wonnacott</p>
        <p>9:45 AM Adult Bible Study Sunday School</p>
        <p>" 11:00 AM Sunday Worship</p>
        <p>Holy Communion 1st &amp;amp; 3rd Sundays</p>
        <p>Public is ^,^^Cordially invited.t.^^</p>
        <p>HOLLVUIOOD PRSSBVTEftlAN CHURCH</p>
        <p>PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH (USA)</p>
        <p>New Bern Highway^NC 435 miles south of The Plaza</p>
        <p>SMALL - RURAL - FRIENDLY - CARING 9:45 AM Church School 11:00 AM Morning Worship</p>
        <p>Richard Rhea Gammon, Interim Pastor</p>
        <p>(9at cLixck offtu iomttiiLng sfueUiC fot ifit niix family.  want  you  to  join  us.</p>
        <p>ikis tSunJayf'</p>
        <p>9:45 a.m. - Bible School 11:00 a.m. - Family Worship</p>
        <p>E. T. Vinson, Minister</p>
        <p>The Memorial Baptist Church</p>
        <p>1510 Greenville Blvd. S.E.</p>
        <p>Greenvilles FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST Church</p>
        <p>Organized 1827</p>
        <p>Nursery Provided</p>
        <p>Holy Trinity United Methodist Church</p>
        <p>1400 Red Banks Rd.</p>
        <p>Sunday School.......................9:45  A.M.</p>
        <p>Morning Worship...................11:00  A.M.</p>
        <p>United Methodist Youth...........6:00 P.M.</p>
        <p>Sunday Night Live. .....7:30  P.M.</p>
        <p>Choruses, Films, Testimonies, Scrlptursis</p>
        <p>Word Explosion Wed. 7:40 P.M.</p>
        <p>A New BIUs Study!</p>
        <p>Rslph A. Brown, Psstor</p>
        <p>Nursery Provldod At All Ssnrlcss When the Unglble touch at Jeeue Chrtet le found in Word, Love end Praise.</p>
        <p>You Are Cordially Invited To Attend</p>
        <p>Faith &amp;amp; Victory Church</p>
        <p>Theyre both long-time friends, Graham said, noting that he had spnt a dozen nights at the White House in Reagans presidency, and r jgularly spent part of his vacation in Maine with Bush.</p>
        <p>World Outreach Center Full Gospel Teaching Center Family Church</p>
        <p>Come join us as the Faith &amp;amp; Victory Church Band leads us into deeper levels of worship and praise to our Lord Jesus Christ.</p>
        <p>Pastors:</p>
        <p>John and Deborah Zabawski</p>
        <p>Listen To The Uncompromlsed Word Of God With Pastor John Zahawski Every Monday Thru Friday 9:00 9:15 A M On WBZQ Radio Station-1550 AM</p>
        <p>10:00 A.M........Sunday Morning Worship</p>
        <p>6:30 P.M.  Sunday Night Service</p>
        <p>7:30 P.M.......Wednesday Night Service</p>
        <p>Nuraery and Childraiia Church Avallabla Evary Sarvlcu</p>
        <p>1/4 Mile South Of Pttt Cmnaaunlty College On County Road 170S Off Highway 11</p>
        <p>355-6621</p>
        <p>"Thte le the vfctory thet overcomee the mrorU, even our felth!"</p>
        <p>1 John 5:4</p>
        <p># #.</p>
        <p>idi</p>
        <pb facs="00097006_0014" />
        <p>LifestyleCommunty-Run Centers Pioneer Helping Families</p>
        <p>SARAENGRAM L.A. Times-Washington Post</p>
        <p>News Service</p>
        <p>health and education programs II to them.</p>
        <p>BALTIMORE - Like Humpty Dumpty, families are fragile organisms. Yet the health of familiesthe basic unit of society  is a matter of public concern. This year, its also an issue that presidential candidates hope to capitalize on.</p>
        <p>So far, only one family issue  day care - has gotten much public attention on the campaign trail. But the interest in these issues among voters is so strong that, regardless of who wins in November, the new president is likely to move into the White House next January with family and childrens issues in a prominent spot on the national agmda.</p>
        <p>A year ago, Piter. D. Hart Research Associates Inc. conducted a poll for KidsPac, a group interested in health and education issues affecting young children. In 1987, 47 percent of the voters surveyed said that a presidential candidate who gave special attention to early childhood</p>
        <p>would have special appeal This year, as the election approaches, the proportion has risen to</p>
        <p>60 percent - an increase of 13 points. The</p>
        <p>attention candidates are</p>
        <p>ing to family issues has a lot to with the polte. But it makes sense in</p>
        <p>other ways as well.</p>
        <p>When families crumble, social ser</p>
        <p>vices agencies  the modern equivalent of the kings horses and men - rush into action, trying to repair the damage.</p>
        <p>Gan they? The record of government involvement in troubled and needy families is not reassuring. Proffams such as foster care and welwre are expensive, often ineffective, difficult to administer and, in some cases, increasingly unpopular with taxpayers.</p>
        <p>But the task is one that government cannot abandon. The law and the</p>
        <p>norms of civilized society charge</p>
        <p>afe-</p>
        <p>govemment with protecting the safety and well-being of its citizens  whether the danger is hunger or the</p>
        <p>threat of violent abuse from a member of their own families.</p>
        <p>The question is: Can government agencies, bogged down as they often are in bureaucracy and inefficiency, meet that responsibility?</p>
        <p>If so, it would seem that their best chance of success is to do whatever they can to keep Humpty Dumpty from falling in the first place.</p>
        <p>That is precisely the theory behind Marylands 3-year-old experiment with Family Support Centers, a concept based on community-based organizations funded by a combination of state money and grants from private foundations. Tliat unique public-private partnership has made the Maryland program a national pioneer in new efforts to help American families stay together, rather than rushing in to sweep up the damage after they fall apart.</p>
        <p>In real life, this theory takes on the familiar comfort of a well-lived-in home. At Our House in Chen^ Hill, an inner-city Baltimore neighborhood, toddlers busy themselves with</p>
        <p>Engagements Announced</p>
        <p>NATALIE SUE RUSSELL - is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Wayne E. Russell of Davenport, Iowa, who announce her engagement to Dr. Kenneth Franklin Branch, son of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Branch of Ayden. The wedding is planned for Sept. 3.</p>
        <p>r</p>
        <p>CINDY S. COGHILL - is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jimmy R. Sawyer of Southport, who announce her engagement to Richard L. Parker, son of Kathleen Parker of Southport and the late George Parker. The bride-elect is also the daughter of Raymond E. Coghill of Greenville. The wedding is set for Sept. 3.</p>
        <p>coloring or other art work during a supervised play period. When children cry or misbehave, staff members and volunteers comfort them or provide some gentle discipline  providing an informal lesson in good parenting for young mothers and fathers, some of whom are still children themselves.</p>
        <p>Rosalie Streett, executive director of Friends of the Family, the umbrella group formed in 1986 to oversee the Family Support Center initiative, likens the centers role to that played in earlier years by the extended family. In effect, these places function in much the same way grandmothers and aunts did for previous generations.</p>
        <p>The babys been crying all night? A volunteer sympathizes with an exhausted young mother and offers a suggestion or two.</p>
        <p>I got on the bus and my child started hitting people, a conscientious young mother reports over a cup of coffee in the kitchen. 1 dont know what got into him, but it sure' made me mad. ...  That remark opens an informal discussion on corporal punishment  the kind of casual but important discussion this young woman may not have as easily with her own mother, who lives a hours bus ride across town.</p>
        <p>Family support centers target their programs to teen-age parents, the families that have proven to be the most fragile. But everyone is welcome, and centers make a point of actively recruiting participants</p>
        <p>through door-to-door visits or presen-al com-</p>
        <p>Computer Junkies Need Open Pockets</p>
        <p>DEAR ABBY; We have a computer addict in our office. Hes the office manager. He comes to work at 5 a.m. so he can work on his computer before anyone comes in to interrupt him. Hes here on Saturday and Sunday, too! In the last three years, he has spent a fortune of the companys money on computers, printers, software, etc.</p>
        <p>Before the rest of us have time to learn a program, its been replaced with an updated version. We have an accounting package installed with all the extras, such as report generators, built-in spreadsheets, payroll modules, a network, etc., but nothing ever works right, which gives him a perfect opportunity to spend more time playing with the computer  trying to fix it. He never gets enou^.</p>
        <p>Everyone in this office has a computer on his desk whether he needs it or not. I wont even tell you how much we spend every month on com-</p>
        <p>Dear Abby</p>
        <p>Abigail Van Buren</p>
        <p>use something new.  EAGER BEAVER</p>
        <p>are becoming too dependent upon them. I think they should get off their butts and figure things out for themselves.</p>
        <p>After all, thats why we go to school, isnt it? Its true what you said. Next year there will be more</p>
        <p>computer junk to suck more of your hardea</p>
        <p>I eamed-money up! It stinks! So tell people to use their brains! Thats what God gave us brains for, right? By the way, I love your column. Disgustingly yours, ANGELA ISAACSON OF WASH.</p>
        <p>DEAR ABBY: The letter from the office worker with the computer-crazy boss must have come out of our company. In our 40-person office, we have four separate computer systems  three of which do not talk to each other.</p>
        <p>Why? Because our boss (who talks to no one) buys computers like a 5-year-old would buy toys if he had a credit card with no limit.</p>
        <p>It will be interesting to see who in</p>
        <p>this office is willing to learn how to use them. Some of the old-timers have already threatened to take early retirement. - HAPPY WITH MY TYPEWRITER</p>
        <p>People are eating them up! To order your copy of Abbys favorite recipes, send your name and address, clearly printed, plus check or money order for |3.50 (84 in Canada) to: Abbys Cookbooklet, P.O. Box 447, Mount Morris, III. 61054. Postage and handling are included.</p>
        <p>DEAR ABBY: People who criticize their fellow office workers for playing computer games and doing</p>
        <p>puter paper, ribbons and other supplies to keep all the hardware run-</p>
        <p>useless computer work on company of the fol-</p>
        <p>ning. The owners of this company would be flabbergasted if they knew that their money is being spent on the manager's hobby.</p>
        <p>Well, Abby, I think you get the pic-(tnc</p>
        <p>ture. Im sure there are many other offices just like ours. Compaters are marvelous machines, but for the most part, they are fMdnating toys for people who need to iday. Sign me ... CONTROLC.</p>
        <p>DEAR CONTROL C.: Computers have revolutionized the. business world, but there are many who are intimidated by them. Read on for a teen-agers evaluation:</p>
        <p>DEAR ABBY: Im only 13, but I think I have the right to write to ywi. Im writing about the people who wrote to you saying they think computers are a big waste of time.</p>
        <p>Well, heres my opinion; I think computers are fun, but really, people</p>
        <p>time usually fall into one lowing categories;</p>
        <p>People who hope to hang on until they retire so they wont have to learn how to operate those thii^.</p>
        <p>Administrators who command someone else to learn to use the new computer because they are too busy shuffling paper to learn anything new themselves.</p>
        <p>Workers who are afraid that one of those instruments from outer space will take over their jobs.</p>
        <p>Ninety percent of computer-literate managers would love to have the problem of telling their workers to stop playing computer games. When I go into the office, I see far more useless talking and eating than game-playing. More often than not, the new computer sits unused on a comer of the desk while the electric typewriters type like they did in the good old days  mainly because no training time is given, or people are too lazy to leara how to</p>
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        <p>support center reflects a key ingredient of success for this initiative  the fact that the local community owns the program, that they are not simply being serviced by impersonal government agencies. Once the Department of Human Resources puts out a request for proposals, the action shifts to local communities.</p>
        <p>Both approaches have strengths</p>
        <p>and liabi</p>
        <p>ities, according to Frank Farrow of the Center for the Study of Social Policv in Washington, D.C. Farrow works with private foundations in evaluating efforts to reform services for children and families.</p>
        <p>Through non-profit public or private organizations, members of the com</p>
        <p>munity draw up the proposal, decide who will manage it and must make it work.</p>
        <p>This community involvement makes the program a leading example of one of the two new approaches to providing family services around the country. The other model, largely pioneered in Minnesota, takes a school-based approach, attempting to draw in young parents in a way that will make school a positive influence for families.</p>
        <p>Schools provide a ready-made network, they reach a broad popida-tion and they can allow a new service to expand rapidly. But they already have plenty to do; some critics say that adding programs targeted at families hands them one more social problem to solve.</p>
        <p>Family s(i a more traditional social services approach to aiding families, and many of the people it hope to reach come from the population traditionally served by social services agencies.</p>
        <p>tations at churches or local munity groups. Centers vary in size, as do the groups that sponsor them. In September 1987, a survey found that participation levels ranged from a couple of hundred in some centers to a thousand or more in others.</p>
        <p>In addition to its activities for young parents. Our House serves as a drop-in center for boys and girls in junior and senior high. They come for discussion groups, homework sessions and tutoring  activities designed to help them stay in school and post^ne parenthood until they are physically, emotionally and financially able to handle the responsibility.</p>
        <p>The sense of belonging that neighborhood people feel in a successful</p>
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        <pb facs="00097006_0015" />
        <p>Area Debutantes To Be Presented Sept 9</p>
        <p>ByAMVGAVIGAN and SHANNON HOWARD ReHector Staff Writers Eleven debutantes from Pitt and Martin counties will make their for-ftial bows to society Sept. 9 at the an-pul North Carolina Debutante Ball in Raleighs Civic Center.</p>
        <p>The first ball, The Raleigh Fall Festival, was held in 1923, and was Sponsored by the Raleigh Merchants. Since then, the ball has been held every year with the exception of the World War II years.</p>
        <p>In 1927, the Terpsichorean Club, 'ihade up of Wake County t)usinessmen ages 21-35, sponsored its first ball. And the tradition continues today.</p>
        <p>' Young ladies, who will be presented by their fathers this fall, were chosen from over 200 nominators Statewide.</p>
        <p>; Invitations (to the ball) are given in recognition to the familys con-tribution to the social, cultural and Civic life in North Carolina, said Dorothea L. Bitler, publicity chairman for the 1988 ball.</p>
        <p>The leader of ball, which is an honorary position, is chosen from the Wake County Debutantes, while 14 pther assistant leaders are chosen from outside Wake County, she l^id.</p>
        <p>r Most of the young ladies selected) are very career-oriented 2ind active volunteers in their com-anunities, Mrs. Bitler said. This is gi nice social event, but were not ;grooming them to be socialites.</p>
        <p>- The debutantes are:</p>
        <p>her summer working in a restaurant in Na^ Head and enjoying one of her favorite pastimessiufing.</p>
        <p>I like to surf, Miss Miller said. Ive lived at the beach every summer for most of my life, so I just kind of picked up on it.</p>
        <p>Basketball, softball and playing intramurals at school are oUier things Miss Miller enjoys.</p>
        <p>Miss Millers chief marshal will be her father, while her assistant marshal has not been chosen.</p>
        <p>A white floor-length dress with lace trimming the hemline, short puffed sleeves, drop waist and a sequined neckline was chosen by Miss Miller for the ball.  ^</p>
        <p>I ALISON COX HENDRIX</p>
        <p>r Alison Cox Hendrix graduated from J.H. Rose High School and at-Jeftds East Carolina University, where she is a rising sophomore. Her ininor is in dance, but Miss Hendrix tls undecided in her major.</p>
        <p>Miss Hendrix, the daughter of Mrs. James Curtis Hendrix and the late Mr. Hendrix, has performed in the ^Nutcracker with the N.C. lAcademy of Dance Arts for six years fgmd has taught ballet and pointe glasses for the academy.</p>
        <p> Working as a hostess at An-aiabelles restaurant for a year. Miss !Hendrix enjoys meeting new people ;pveryday.</p>
        <p>Next summer, she plans to spend tone month abroad in various Euro-I^an countries.</p>
        <p>t Other debutantes in Miss Hendrixs family include cousins, Melissa ^essick and Elizabeth Messick, both Hf Wilmington.</p>
        <p>T- Miss Hendrix has chosen her uncle, Uohn Messick of Wilmington, as chief tmarshal, but has not decided upon an assistant marshal.</p>
        <p> Miss Hendrix feels that experi-tnces gained this summer will open tdoors for her.</p>
        <p>t Becoming a debutante has broad-Jiened my horizons, and enhanced my ;^ocial activity, she said. I have really enjoyed meeting people from tacross the state. Any girl given the Topportunity, should become a tdebutante.*</p>
        <p>r CHAMBERLEE RUTH MILLER</p>
        <p>r Chamberlee Ruth Miller of</p>
        <p>* Williamston is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Harrington Miller, tthe granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. I Woodland Finley Ruth Jr. of Wind-I sor, and Mr. William John Miller Jr.</p>
        <p>* and the late Jean Harrington Miller ^of Williamston. She is the great-^ granddaughter of Mary Flanagan r Harrington and the late Walter Lan-I caster Harrington of Greenville.</p>
        <p>* A rising sophomore at Peace Col-^ lege in Raleigh, Miss Miller plans to  major in pharmacy. She spent the</p>
        <p>first part of her summer taking phys-tics at North Carolina State Universi-^ty, required for her major.</p>
        <p>H Miss Miller plans to transfer to Campbell University or to the Uni-f versity of North Carolina at Chapel . Hill after completing her two years J at Peace.</p>
        <p>t She is spending the remainder of</p>
        <p>i</p>
        <p>ELIZABETH DAVIS ALLEN</p>
        <p>Elizabeth Davis Allen, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William Alexander Allen III, of Farmville, attends St. Marys College in Raleigh. She will serve as chief marshal for the 1988-89 school year and as secre-tary-treasurer for her sophomore class.</p>
        <p>Miss Allen hopes to transfer to the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in the fall of 1989 to pursue a career enabling her to work with children.</p>
        <p>Attending summer school at UNC-W, Wrightsville Beach, filled the first part of Miss Allens summer. The remainder of the time has been spent playing tennis, water-skiing and enjoying the beach.</p>
        <p>Miss Allens mother, aunts and sister each made their respective debuts which. Miss Allen says, will add meaning to her experiences.</p>
        <p>It is very special to me that 1 will join my grandmother, (the late) Margaret Davis Allen, my mother and sister in making my debut, Miss Allen said.</p>
        <p>William Alexander Allen 111, who served as his wifes marshal when she made her debut, wilt attend as chief marshal for his daughter. Miss Allen has chosen Tilden White Collier of Kinston as her assistant marshal. Collier is a student at the University of North Carolina Chapel Hill where he is a member of the Zeta Psi fraternity.</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>MARILYN VIRGINIA BROWN</p>
        <p>Marilyn Virginia Brown, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lester Zeno Brown attended Peace College in Raleigh her freshman year but plans to transfer to East Carolina University in the fall.</p>
        <p>It (Peace College) did a lot for me academically, but I wanted to be in a different environment, she said. Peace could be confining.</p>
        <p>A rising sophomore. Miss Brown plans to major in business with a possible concentration in accounting. She spent the first part of her summer taking a course in health at Peace. She is in her third summer working with Overtons Sports Center in the shipping department.</p>
        <p>I run a UPS computer, Miss Brown said. I ship and confirm most of the parcels that go out.</p>
        <p>Miss Brown enjoys the beach, being in the sun and traveling anytime I can. She says her favorite places are the Bahamas, where she traveled for spring break, and Paris.</p>
        <p>Mr. Lester Zeno Brown will be her chief marshal and Chris Coble of Greenville will be her assistant marshal.</p>
        <p>Miss Brown will share her debutante experiences with her mother, who was also a debutante, and says her favorite aspect of the activities is meeting new people from different places.</p>
        <p>CARI ELIZABETH SMITH</p>
        <p>Cari Elizabeth Smith is a rising sophomore at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, where she is a member of the Alpha Chi Omego sorority. She plans to major in business but is not yet sure of her career plans.</p>
        <p>Miss Smith has spent the last two summers and most holidays working for Brodys of Greenville. I may incorporate fashion/retail with my business major somehow, she said. Im not sure yet.</p>
        <p>In her spare time. Miss Smith enjoys sports. I like to play a lot of sports; tennis, water-skiing, and snow skiing, she said. And I love to dance.</p>
        <p>The daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. James Smith, her father will be her chief marshal and her assistant will be David Eidson. Eidson is an accounting major at East Carolina University.</p>
        <p>Miss Smith hopes that experiences gained as a debutante will aid her in later years.</p>
        <p>For one thing. Ill meet a lot of people and that will help me have confidence and to be able to adjust to situations where I dont know many people, she said.</p>
        <p>Miss Smith took a statistics course in the first session at East Carolina University summer school because I was bored when I first got home and I wanted to get it (statistics) out of the way.</p>
        <p>MARY ELIZABETH BECKMAN</p>
        <p>Mary Elizabeth Beckman, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George Edward Beckman III of Farmville, has chosen her father to be chief marshal at the annual ball. Joshua McKinnon Hickman of Greenville, a rising sophomore at Davidson College, will be her assistant marshal.</p>
        <p>A graduate of Arendell Parrott Academy, Miss Beckman was president of her senior class, homecoming queen and the DAR Good Citizen Award recipient.</p>
        <p>Miss Beckman has studied piano for 10 years and violin for 12. She also enjoys playing tennis and water-skiing.</p>
        <p>Miss Beckman, a Benjamin C. Dunford Violin Scholar, is a rising sophomore at Salem College. She will serve as treasurer for her class and plans to continue participating in the 12-member singing group, The Archways.</p>
        <p>Working as a senior counselor at Camp Morehead in Morehead City has occupied most of Miss Beckmans time this summer.</p>
        <p>Miss Beckman will wear the white gown that she wore for her farewell address as Pitt Countys first Junior Miss in 1987 to the Debutante Ball in September.</p>
        <p>Anne Boushell Stoughton, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James Dickson McLean Jr. and the late Mr. Jack Elliot Stoughton, spent the first part of her summer working in the cus-tomer-service department of Overtons Sports Center, Inc., but plans to spend the rest of the summer working on projects of her own.</p>
        <p>Miss Stoughton will be returning for her sophomore year at St. Marys College in Raleigh but plans to transfer to North Carolina States school of design her junior year to pursue an advertising major, possibly graphic design.</p>
        <p>Ive been making T-Shirts at home, some to sell to friends, some to give as gifts, Miss Stoughton said. Most are decorated with summer scenes, but some for my friends are specialized.</p>
        <p>Tommy Stoughton will assist his sister as chief marshal. Tim Clark, a rising sophomore at East Carolina University and a business major, will be her assistant marshal.</p>
        <p>Being asked by the Terpsichorean Club to be in their annual Ball is a wonderful honor, Miss Stoughton said. My fathbr was a member of the club and I feel it is important to keep all the traditions and ideals he believed important for his family.</p>
        <p>ANNE BOUSHELL STOUGHTON</p>
        <p>MARIAH SUSAN EHRICH TAYLOR</p>
        <p>Mariah Susan Ehrich Taylor is a rising sophomore at Vanderbuilt University in Nashville, Tenn., majoring in economics in hopes of pursuing a career in politics.</p>
        <p>I hope that with a major in economics I can pursue law to facilitate a career in politics, Miss Taylor said.</p>
        <p>Miss Taylor interned with both Sen. J^se Helms and Sen. John East while attending Salem Academy in Winston-Salem, which helped to spark her interest in politics.</p>
        <p>Miss Taylor is a member of the Chi</p>
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        <p>In her spare time, Miss Taylor enjoys tennis and snow skiing. She is spending her summer in Atlantic Beach working at the Dock House in Beaufort.</p>
        <p>The youngest of five girls. Miss Taylor will follow her sisters, Lauren, Eliza, Adelia and Martha, in making her debut Sept. 9. She will wear the same dress that each of her sisters wore for their debut.</p>
        <p>The dau^ter of Dr. and Mrs. Allen Taylor, Miss Taylor has chosen her father as chief marshal and Sellers Crisp, a rising sophomore at Randolph Macon College in Ashland, Va., as her assistant marshal.</p>
        <p>marshal and her father will be chief marshal.</p>
        <p>Miss Taylor has toured and per- "j formed in England with violin students in high school, and has studied' dance, piano and violin for eight years.</p>
        <p>MARTHA ANNA T.AFT</p>
        <p>Martha Anna Taft, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Marvin Taft Jr., will follow in the footsteps of her two sisters, Louise Carmen Taft and Camilla Henderson Taft, as she makes her debut in September. The two sisters and an aunt on Miss Tafts fathers side made their respective debutes.</p>
        <p>A rising sophomore at Peace College in Raleigh, Miss Taft plans to major in art. At the completion of her second year, she is considering transferring to East Carolina University.</p>
        <p>Miss Taft enjoys reading and vacationing in the mountains with her family when she is not busy working at Kids World Day Care Center in Greenville.</p>
        <p>Joseph M. Taft Jr. will assist his daughter as chief marshal while Mack Aldridge, an incoming' freshman at Duke University in Durham, will be her assistant marshal.</p>
        <p>Miss Taft believes meeting people is the most rewarding part of her debutante experiences.</p>
        <p>My favorite parts are the parties, getting to know people, and seeing people I havent seen in awhile, Miss Taft said.</p>
        <p>LEIGH HADLEY TAYLOR</p>
        <p>Leigh Hadley Taylor graduated as Valedictorian from Arendell Parrott Academy in Kinston before entering the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill last fall. She is a rising sophomore at UNC majoring in biology. She hopes to attend graduate school in a medically related field.</p>
        <p>A member of Chi Omega sorority. Miss Taylor spent the first part of her summer taking classes at UNC-CH. She is spending the remainder of the summer at her familys summer home near Bath.</p>
        <p>In her spare time, Miss Taylor enjoys photography, water- and snow-skiing and traveling.</p>
        <p>Miss Taylor is the daughter of Vance Bunting Taylor, a native of Bethel, and the former Sue Worthington of Winterville. Several members of Mr. Taylors relatives have been debutantes.</p>
        <p>Lewis Wardlaw Lamar Jr. of Rocky Mount will be her assistant</p>
        <p>ELIZABETH LESLIE WARREN</p>
        <p>Elizabeth Leslie Warren, a rising sophomore at the University at Chapel Hill, plans to major in business.</p>
        <p>Im interested in an MBA-JD which is a four-year program where you get your business and law degr^ at the same time, Miss Warren said. Im thinking about going into corporate law.</p>
        <p>Miss Warren is the daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Alfred Daniel Warren III and Ms. Elizabeth Ross Warren. Ms. Warren and her two sisters were debutantes in Cabarrus County.</p>
        <p>Miss Warren has chosen her father as chief marshal and Burt Aycock, a rising sophomore at Appalachian State University in Boone, as her assistant marshal.</p>
        <p>Miss Warren attended the first session of summer school at UNC-Ch taking business statistics and golf.</p>
        <p>Id never played golf before. I was really bad, but it was a lot of fun, she said.</p>
        <p>Working at Brodys Department Store in the mall takes up much of Miss Warrens time but when shes not busy she enjoys skiing and windsurfing.</p>
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        <pb facs="00097006_0016" />
        <p>Stock And Market Reports</p>
        <p>Obituaries</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (AP) - Stock prices lost more ground today as rising interest rates kept the pressure on the market.</p>
        <p>The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials slipped 7.83 to 2,031.47 in the first half hour of trading.</p>
        <p>Declining issues outnumbered advances by more than 5 to 3 in nationwide trading of New York Stock Exchange-listed issues, with 310 up, 546 down and 490 unchanged.</p>
        <p>Volume on ttie Big Board came to 48.65 million shares as of 10 a.m. on Wall Street.</p>
        <p>Major banks raised their base lending rates by a half-percentage point to 10 percent on Thursday  a more than three-year high  in reaction to the Federal Reserves drive to push all interest rates higher to curb inflation.</p>
        <p>The Fed increased its benchmark discount rate by the same amount, to 6.5 percent, on Tuesday.</p>
        <p>The prime rate increase, the second in a month, puts the key lending rate in double digits for the frst time since June 1985.</p>
        <p>In the credit markets today, prices of long-term government bonds fell by roughly $5 for each $1,000 in face value, putting their yields in the 9.45-9.5 percent range.</p>
        <p>The government said its producer price index of finished goods rose 0.5 percent in July. This was in line with advance inflation estimates, but analysts said some traders were troubled by the 0.6 percent increase in the index after the volatile food and energy components were ex-</p>
        <p>luded.</p>
        <p>Among actively traded blue chips, International Business Machines dropped to 118%; Coca-Cola lost &amp;gt;/4 to 37Vs, and American Express was unchanged at 28.</p>
        <p>The NYSEs composite index of all its listed common stocks fell .41 to 148.19. At the American Stock Exchange, the market value index was down .32 at 296.42.</p>
        <p>Burmese</p>
        <p>President</p>
        <p>Resigns</p>
        <p>BANGKOK, Thailand (AP) - Sein Lwin resigned today as president of Burma and from all his other major posts, state-owned Radio Rangoon said, after thousands of people protested his 17-day rule with violent (temonstrations nationwide.</p>
        <p>Troops have killed at least % people in massive anti-government protests since Sein Lwin became president on July 27, the radio said. The Peoples Assembly elected him to replace Ne Win, who resigned after 26 years in power.</p>
        <p>However, Western diplomats said the death toll may be in the hundreds, and unconfirmed reports reaching Bangkok put the figure as high as 1,000. The broadcast gave no reason for the resi^tion, and no successor was immediately named. The radio said a special meeting of both the central committee of the Burma Socialist Program Party and the Peoples Assembly would meet next Friday.  .  </p>
        <p>Earlier today, a Burmese guerrilla leader called on rebel groups to launch a nationwide offensive against Sein Lwins government.</p>
        <p>Radio Rangoon said the 92nd meeting of the partys central committee today accepted Sein Lwins resignation as the party chairman, by far the most powerful political position in the country.</p>
        <p>MASONIC NOTICE Winterville Masonic Lodge No. 232 will hold a communication at the Masonic Hall tonight at 8 p.m.</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (AP) -Midday stocks;</p>
        <p>ligh Low Last</p>
        <p>4ii.  42-'h  42'.2</p>
        <p>444  44-&amp;gt;4</p>
        <p>AMR Corp AbbottLabs viAllisChal</p>
        <p>viAllis Alcoa AmBrands AmCyan Ameritech AmlntGrp Amer T&amp;amp;T Amoco BellAtlan BellSouth Beth Steel Boeing</p>
        <p>BoiseCascdes</p>
        <p>Borden</p>
        <p>CSXCp</p>
        <p>CaroPwLt</p>
        <p>Champ Int</p>
        <p>Chevron</p>
        <p>Chrysler</p>
        <p>CocaCola</p>
        <p>ColgPalm</p>
        <p>Comw Edis</p>
        <p>ConAgra</p>
        <p>DeltaAirl</p>
        <p>DowChem</p>
        <p>duPont</p>
        <p>DukePow</p>
        <p>EstKodaks</p>
        <p>Eatonti^p</p>
        <p>Exxon</p>
        <p>FPL Grp</p>
        <p>FstWacnov</p>
        <p>FlaProgress</p>
        <p>FordMotrs</p>
        <p>GTE Corp</p>
        <p>GenCorps</p>
        <p>GnDvnam</p>
        <p>GenElct</p>
        <p>GenMills</p>
        <p>Gen Motors</p>
        <p>GnMotr E</p>
        <p>GenuPart</p>
        <p>GaPacif</p>
        <p>Goodrich</p>
        <p>Goodyear</p>
        <p>GraceCo s</p>
        <p>GtNorNek</p>
        <p>Greyhound</p>
        <p>Herculeslnc</p>
        <p>Honeywell</p>
        <p>HCA.</p>
        <p>ITT Corp IngRand IBM</p>
        <p>IntlPaper</p>
        <p>IntlRect</p>
        <p>JamesRivr</p>
        <p>KMart</p>
        <p>Kaisertech</p>
        <p>KanebSvc</p>
        <p>Kroger s</p>
        <p>LoewsCp</p>
        <p>McDermlnt</p>
        <p>McKessn</p>
        <p>MeadCp</p>
        <p>MercantStr</p>
        <p>MinnMng</p>
        <p>Mobil</p>
        <p>Monsanto</p>
        <p>NCNBCp</p>
        <p>Nacco</p>
        <p>Navistar</p>
        <p>NorflkSou</p>
        <p>Nynex</p>
        <p>OlinCp</p>
        <p>PacTelesis</p>
        <p>PenneyJC</p>
        <p>PepsiCo</p>
        <p>Phelps Dod</p>
        <p>PhilipMor</p>
        <p>PhiiipPet</p>
        <p>Polaroid s</p>
        <p>Primerica s</p>
        <p>ProctGamb</p>
        <p>UuakeK)at</p>
        <p>(. uantum</p>
        <p>RJRNab</p>
        <p>RalstnPur</p>
        <p>Rockwel</p>
        <p>SPXCorp</p>
        <p>ScottPapr s</p>
        <p>SearsRoeb</p>
        <p>Shaklee</p>
        <p>Skyline Cp</p>
        <p>Sony Corp</p>
        <p>Southern Co</p>
        <p>SwstBell</p>
        <p>TRW Inc</p>
        <p>Texkco</p>
        <p>TexEastn</p>
        <p>Textron s</p>
        <p>USX Corp</p>
        <p>UnCamp</p>
        <p>UnCarbde</p>
        <p>US West</p>
        <p>Unocal</p>
        <p>WalMart</p>
        <p>WstPtPms</p>
        <p>WeslghE</p>
        <p>Weyerhsrs</p>
        <p>WinnDix</p>
        <p>Woolworth</p>
        <p>Wrigleya Xerox Cn</p>
        <p>Wh 11-16 4d&amp;gt;4 45'4</p>
        <p>AT-'h</p>
        <p>99%</p>
        <p>60&amp;gt;n</p>
        <p>25^ 76 6 40*4 22 59'2 42 52'h 25'a 33'a 32-&amp;gt;h 46'4 22'a 37^'m 42'a</p>
        <p>29 30'4 47^', 84'2</p>
        <p>82h</p>
        <p>43*n 43'4 79 45H</p>
        <p>30 38H 34'a 50' 41</p>
        <p>19'4 50'4 40'k 49'4 75"4 39' 34" 37'i, 46'4 57' 24"4 40"4 31" 45'4 61 33"4 47 36" 118"4 43'2 6*2 23" 4 32&amp;gt; 17"4 2' 32 42" 69 18" 34" 39 39 61' 44" 82"4</p>
        <p>28'4</p>
        <p>30' 5"4 27" 63 44'2 28' 48'4 34 37'2 89', 17', 43 26&amp;gt; T2"4 .54 92'4 49" 76" 19", 32 36- 36' 21</p>
        <p>14',</p>
        <p>52'</p>
        <p>21'v</p>
        <p>37',</p>
        <p>43',</p>
        <p>45"4</p>
        <p>25"</p>
        <p>23</p>
        <p>29',</p>
        <p>:13"</p>
        <p>22</p>
        <p>55</p>
        <p>35'4</p>
        <p>31'</p>
        <p>32"</p>
        <p>51</p>
        <p>24'4 37 48'4 34" 53</p>
        <p>48"4</p>
        <p>45)</p>
        <p>46</p>
        <p>88"4 60'4</p>
        <p>25" 75" 68&amp;gt; 40 21" 59" 41"4 51, 25'4 33'4 32 45"4 22" 37' 41 28", 29 47" 84 82'a 43" 42"4 78"4 45"4 29" 38"4 34" 49" 40 19' 50 39 49 75" 39', 34' 36"4 46 56"4 24" 40'4 31 45 61', 33" 47'4 36" 118 42 6'2 23'2 32', 17" 2' 32' 42 69 18', 34'a 39 38" 60" 43 82'2 27'2 30' S'2 27', 63" 44' 28 47' 34" 37" 88", 17</p>
        <p>42'2 26' 72'2 53' 91</p>
        <p>49' 75", 19" 32" 36'2 35 21 14</p>
        <p>.52'2 21" :17 43 45' 2.5', 23" 28", 32 22' .54", 35' 30 32', 50", 24 :17", 47" 34' 53'</p>
        <p>49 45' 47'4 89' 60" 25"4 75" 68" 40' 21 59" 41"4 51 25" 33'4 32' 45 22" 37' 42'4 28"4 30' 47" 84'4 82" 43" 42</p>
        <p>T8"4</p>
        <p>45</p>
        <p>29"4</p>
        <p>38</p>
        <p>34" '</p>
        <p>49",</p>
        <p>40</p>
        <p>19' </p>
        <p>50'4</p>
        <p>40</p>
        <p>49'</p>
        <p>75'2</p>
        <p>39'</p>
        <p>34'</p>
        <p>36"4</p>
        <p>46'4</p>
        <p>57</p>
        <p>24"</p>
        <p>40"</p>
        <p>31',</p>
        <p>45 61', 33", 47"4 36" 118 43',</p>
        <p>6'2 23" :12'2 17" 2' ;12'2 42 69' 18" :14'2 39'2 38 60" 44 82'2 27" :10'</p>
        <p>*27', 63" 44', 28' 47', :14'2 ;17'2 88 17' 42 26'2</p>
        <p>72'2 54'2 91'2 49' 76' 19" 32" :16'2 36 21 14</p>
        <p>.52'2</p>
        <p>21"</p>
        <p>:i7</p>
        <p>43',</p>
        <p>4.5",</p>
        <p>25'4</p>
        <p>23"</p>
        <p>29'</p>
        <p>:13</p>
        <p>22'2</p>
        <p>55</p>
        <p>35'</p>
        <p>31</p>
        <p>32'4 50 24' 37 48' :14', 53</p>
        <p>Following are selected stock quotations asof llrOOa.m.:</p>
        <p>Ashland Oil...................................33'--</p>
        <p>Unisys................ ..33'4</p>
        <p>Fieldcrest Mills.............................23'4</p>
        <p>Flowers Inds.................................16"</p>
        <p>Hatteras Inc. Securities.................15"</p>
        <p>Hilton Hotel Corp...........................44*4</p>
        <p>Jefferson Pilot...............................36'2</p>
        <p>John Deere.......................................43</p>
        <p>Lowe's Company...........................20"</p>
        <p>Interstate Securities........................7</p>
        <p>Wickes......................  8</p>
        <p>Southmark Corporation...................3'4</p>
        <p>United Telecommunications 33"</p>
        <p>Dominion Resources......................41</p>
        <p>Piedmont Natural Gas...................22"</p>
        <p>OVER THE COUNTER</p>
        <p>Branch Bank..........................l5tol5'2</p>
        <p>Planters National Bank...........14  to 14' 2</p>
        <p>Vermont American..............20  to  21'</p>
        <p>Integon..................................6'4 to 6'2</p>
        <p>Soutiiem National Bank.......16'4  to 16'2</p>
        <p>Peoples Bank..........................14  to  14'2</p>
        <p>North Carolina Natural Gas. ...16'4 to 17</p>
        <p>Cooper LaserSonics.............10'2  to 10",</p>
        <p>Farm Fresh........................11'  to  11',</p>
        <p>Burroughs Wellcome..............8'  2  to  8",</p>
        <p>Johnson &amp;amp; Johnson..............79'  2  to  79"</p>
        <p>Food Lion A............................10  to 10'4</p>
        <p>Food LionB............................llto|l'4</p>
        <p>Come Worship With.</p>
        <p>Grace Church</p>
        <p>New Bern Highway At Bells Fork</p>
        <p>355-3500</p>
        <p>The New Cornerstone</p>
        <p>in</p>
        <p>Gospel Concert Sun., Aug. 14 7:00 p.m.</p>
        <p>Sunday School..........  9:45  a.m.</p>
        <p>Morning Worship....................11:00 a.m.</p>
        <p>Evening Worship.................... 7:00  p.m.</p>
        <p>Family Night....................Wed.  6:00  p.m.</p>
        <p>"A church that la tiding rtaeda and filling tham"</p>
        <p>(OrsGS Church Hour WQHB Radio 1250 AM/11:00-12:00)</p>
        <p>On Thursday the Dow Jones industrial average rose 5.16 to 2,039.30.</p>
        <p>Declining issues outnumbered advances by about 5 to 4 on the NYSE, with 638 up, 811 down and 526 unchanged. Big Board volume totaled 173 million shares, against 200.95 million in the previous session.</p>
        <p>Davenport WINTERVILLE - Mrs. Elizabeth Speir Davenport, 88, died Thursday at her home in Winterville.</p>
        <p>Her funeral will be conducted at 11 a.m. Saturday in the Wilkerson Funeral Chapel by the Rev. Bill Leary. Burial will be in the Winter-ville Cemetery.</p>
        <p>A native of Pitt County, Mrs. Davenport spent m(t of her life in Winterville. She was a 1919 graduate of East Carolina Teachers CoU^e and was a teacher. She was a member of Winterville Baptist (Siurch and had served as president of the Wqmans Missionary Union, a Sunday school teacher, church onanist, as^-worker on the church histoiw and the development of the church library, and in church building programs. She was active in historical and art societies in sevi^al Pitt County communities.</p>
        <p>Surviving are a son, RJE. Davenport Jr. of Farmville, three gjrand-children and two great-grnd-children.</p>
        <p>The family will receive friid at the funeral home from 7:30 p.m. to 9 p.m. Friday and at other times #1 be at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Daveni^rt Jr., 607. E. Wilson;-^:,, Farmville.  o</p>
        <p>Memorial contributions should be sent to the Winterville Baptist Church Library Fund^ Winterville, N.C. 28590.  .</p>
        <p>ne Route 1, in Lenoir</p>
        <p>Foulks KINSTON - Mrs.</p>
        <p>Bryant Foulks, 26, of Kinston, died Tuesday Memorial Hospital.</p>
        <p>Her funeral will be 1:30 p.m. Sunday at Hea Church of Christ (Disciples df Christ) by Elder J.C. McCotter. Burial will be in the Greenville Cemetery.</p>
        <p>Surviving are her husband, Jessie Foulks; a aaughter, Sireca Bryant of the home; her parents, Jack Coward of Ayden and Sarah Brown Bryant of Route 1, Grifton; six brothers, Willie C. Bryant of Grifton, Thomas Earl Bryant of Wilmington, Del., Odell Bryant of Clarksville, Tenn., Wilbert Lee Bryant of New Bern, and James C. Bryant and Michael Bryant, both of Kinston.</p>
        <p>The body will be on view at Norcott Memorial Chapel in Ayden from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. Saturday. The family</p>
        <p>will receive friends at the home.</p>
        <p>Leathers</p>
        <p>DURHAM  Mr. Burdess Leathens of Hobgood died Thursday in the Veterans Atbninistration Hospital. Arrangements win be'announced by Flanagan Funeral Home of Green-vUle.  Vv    ^</p>
        <p>.. - ^</p>
        <p>Moore</p>
        <p>Miss Maude Elizabeth Moore, 81, of 203 S. Eastern St. died Thursday in Pitt C(Hinty Memonal Hospitals Her funeral will be conducted at 2 p.m. Sunday m the Wilkerson Funeral Chapel bjr the Rev John Speight. Bunal will be in Greenwood Cemetery, -v  v r,</p>
        <p>A native of Edgecombe County, Miss Moore spent most of her life in Pitt County, living m GreenviUe for the past 36 years. She was teacher in the Ayden Elementary School until 1970, having been a graduate of East Carolina College. She was a member of Jarvis Memorial United Methodist Church, the Retired Teachers Association and the Greenville Garden Club,  ;</p>
        <p>Amm% survivors is a sister, Mre." Ridiarq R. Forrest of Greenville. ;  *</p>
        <p>The faihily will receive friends at the funeral home from 7:30 p.m. to 9 .m. SaMay and at other times will at the Forrest home, 106 Deer-wood Dr.</p>
        <p>Morpiiy</p>
        <p>AYDEN  A*'- funeral for Mrs. Modener Cox MOrphy will be conducted at 2:30 p.m. Sunday m Poplar Hill Free Will Baptist Church by Bishop 3teph04 J()oe|,^ui:ial will be in the Bhmches Cemetery near Haddocks Crossroads.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Murphy was born in Pitt County and was a member of Poplar Hill Church.</p>
        <p>Surviving are her husband, Roosevelt Murphy; a sister, Sylvia Parker of Greenville, and a brother, Willie Dunn of Ayden.</p>
        <p>The family will receive friends from 7 p.m. to 8 p.m. Saturday in the Flanagan Funeral Chapel in Greenville. At other times, the family will be at 300 King St., Ayden.</p>
        <p>Rasberrv FORT BARNWELL - Mr. Donnie F. Rasberry Jr., 18, of Route 1, Fort</p>
        <p>Kinston Plant Set</p>
        <p>(Continued from A-l)</p>
        <p>Lenoir County officials say they will use the $3.5 million to extend water, sewer and natural gas service to the plant site. They also expect to apply to the Department of Natural Resources and Community Development for a $600,000 grant to support improvements related to the project.</p>
        <p>Lenoir County Community College will provide job skills training for the plant, Martin said.</p>
        <p>Once again we have shown that by working effectively with local economic development agencies, we can bring new jobs and economic opportunity to rural areas of the state, he said.</p>
        <p>Tobacco Market</p>
        <p>By The Associated Press The following are the final gross figures for the Eastern Belt flue-cured tobacco markets for Thursday, Aug. 11,1988, as reported by the Federal-State Market News Service.</p>
        <p>Market:....................</p>
        <p>Daily</p>
        <p>Daily</p>
        <p>Site...........................</p>
        <p>Value</p>
        <p>Avp.</p>
        <p>Ahoskie.....................</p>
        <p>Clinton......................</p>
        <p>...............319,820</p>
        <p>445,350</p>
        <p>139.25</p>
        <p>Dunn.........................</p>
        <p>Farmvl.....................</p>
        <p>...............315,284</p>
        <p>441,241</p>
        <p>139.95</p>
        <p>Gldsboro...................</p>
        <p>...............617,504</p>
        <p>889,921</p>
        <p>144.12</p>
        <p>Greenvl.....................</p>
        <p>.............754,323</p>
        <p>1,043,762</p>
        <p>138.37</p>
        <p>Kinston......................</p>
        <p>1,141,242</p>
        <p>146.57</p>
        <p>Robrsnvl...................</p>
        <p>...............2%,828</p>
        <p>406,948</p>
        <p>137.10</p>
        <p>Rocky mt..................</p>
        <p>................422,511</p>
        <p>617,165</p>
        <p>146.07</p>
        <p>Smithfld....................</p>
        <p>.............780,828</p>
        <p>1,115,264</p>
        <p>142.83</p>
        <p>Wallace.....................</p>
        <p>................184,695</p>
        <p>248,112</p>
        <p>134.34</p>
        <p>Wendell.....................</p>
        <p>Willmstn....................</p>
        <p>,.l....................</p>
        <p>Wilson.......................</p>
        <p>...... 1,241,620</p>
        <p>1,774,354</p>
        <p>142.91</p>
        <p>Windsor....................</p>
        <p>413,236</p>
        <p>135.13</p>
        <p>Total.........................</p>
        <p>8,536,595</p>
        <p>141.85</p>
        <p>Season Total..............</p>
        <p>59,538,536</p>
        <p>144.59</p>
        <p>Average for the day was down $1.81 from previous sale. Subject to revision. Averages do not reflect assessments.</p>
        <p>Renewing a CD?</p>
        <p>At Wheat, First Securities, we have a number of alternatives to help you maintain high yields on your money.</p>
        <p>Tax-Deferred Annuities  8.65 % *</p>
        <p>Certificates of Deposit-Six Months  8.00%  t</p>
        <p>N.C. Tax-Free Bonds  7.95% </p>
        <p>Put your money where the high yields are now. For more information, call today.</p>
        <p>Fkmt^</p>
        <p>Mwntif Nn, V h  mt  SIK</p>
        <p>200 West Third Street Greenville, North Carolina 27834 919/758-6850 or 800/682-6756</p>
        <p>'Available through Wheat Insurance Services, Inc although not in all states. tRepresentatlve yield as of 8/2/88 Subject to change and price fluctuation at sale prior to maturity if sold in secondary market. We act as agent for our clients in obtaining CDs with instituttons Inaurad by FDlC.fYleld is repmentative of current offerings and subject to diaagl.</p>
        <p>Barnwell, died Thursday in Craven County Hospital in New Bern.</p>
        <p>His funeral will be conducted Sunday at 4 p.m. in West Craven Middle School in Spring Garden by Bishop Alfonso Jackson. Burial will be in the Rasberry family cemetery.</p>
        <p>Surviving are his parents, Donnie and Patricia Rasberry of the home; three sisters, Tina Rasberry and Stephanie Rasberry, both of Dover, and Diania Carmon of Grifton; maternal grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Luther Koonce of Dover; paternal grandparents, Mr. and Mi:s. Fred Rasberry of New Bern; maternal great-grandmother, Jennie Everette of Kinston, and paternal greatgrandmother, Katie Patrick of New Bern.</p>
        <p>The family will receive friends Saturday from 8 p.m. to 9 p.m. at Mitchells Funeral Home in Winterville.</p>
        <p>Strong PISCATAWAY, N.J.</p>
        <p>Mr. Clay-</p>
        <p>mond L. Strong of Piscataway died Thursday. Arrangements will be announced by the Norcott and Company Funeral Home of Ayden, N.C.</p>
        <p>Turnage</p>
        <p>NEW HAVEN, Conn. - Mr. Older Buddy Turnage of New Haven died Thursday in New Haven Hospital. Arrangements will be announced by the Norcott and Company Funeral Home of Greenville, N.C.</p>
        <p>Vines</p>
        <p>A funeral for Mrs. Rosetta Reid Vines will be conducted Sunday at 3 p.m. in Browns Chapel Holiness Church by Bishop A.R. Griswould. Burial will be in Greenwood Cemetery.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Vines was born in Greene County and attended the local schools. She was a member of Browns Chapel Church.</p>
        <p>Surviving are two daughters, Mary Jones of Newport News, Va., and Mary Sheppard of Greenville; two sons, James Thomas Johnson of Newport News, Va., and Gregory Johnson of Greenville; a brother, James Reid of Greenville; five sisters, Sarah Hardee of Hookerton, Jessie Sharpe of Rocky Mount, Annie Mae Roberson of Greenville, Gaybertha Isler of Farmville and Josephine Malone of Jersey City, N.J.; 16 grandchildren; nine greatgrandchildren and four great-great-grandchildren.</p>
        <p>The family will receive friends Saturday from 7 p.m. to 8 p.m. at Phillips Brothers Mortuary and at other times will be at the home, 1801 S. Pitt St., Greenville.</p>
        <p>Whitehurst</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON, N.C. - Mra. Maude Bailey Whitehurst, 76, died Thursday in Beaufort County Hos[M-tal.</p>
        <p>Her funeral will be conducted at 3 p.m. Saturday in the Piney Grove Free Will Baptist Church in Beaufort County by the Rev. Norwood Futrelle. Burial will be in the Jackson Family Cemetery in Beaufort County.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Whitehurst, a native of Bear Grass, lived all her adult life in the Leggetts Crossroads community. She was a member of Piney Grove Free Will Baptist Church.</p>
        <p>Surviving are her husband, Sam-mie Whitehurst; three daughters, Mildred Beach and Barbara Perry, both of Williamston, and Lucille Spain of Greenville; three sons, Robert Whitehurst of Winston-Salem, Leonard Whitehurst of Williamston and Carroll Whitehurst of Greenville; a brother, James S. Bailey of Williamston; a sister, Frances Bowers of Norfolk, Va.; 14 grandchildren and five great-grandchildren.</p>
        <p>The family will receive friends from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. today at the Piney Grove Free Will Baptist Church.</p>
        <p>Arrangements are by the Wilkerson Funeral Home of Greenville.</p>
        <p>Wiggins  &amp;gt;</p>
        <p>PINK HILL - Mr. John Rabie Wiggins, 85, of Route 1, Pink Hill, di^ Thursday in Lenoir Memorial Hospital. His funeral will be conducted at 2 p.m. Saturday at the Garner-Howard Funeral Home in Kinston by the Rev. Robert Fader. Burial will follow in Westview Cemetery.</p>
        <p>Surviving are his wife Ethel R. Wiggins; one daughter, Mrs. Franklin Garris of Greenville; one son, William H. Wiggins of Pink Hill; one sister, Fonnie McLawhom of Kinston; five grandchildren and one great-grandchild.</p>
        <p>The family will receive friends from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. Friday at the funeral home.</p>
        <p>Bunk Bed Headquarters</p>
        <p>(Saigo</p>
        <p>ffVMmAt</p>
        <p>Down from Kmart 355^050</p>
        <p>REAL ESTATE FA(^</p>
        <p>J</p>
        <p>by: Rudy Schulte</p>
        <p>QUESTIONS &amp;amp; ANSWERS!</p>
        <p>When you decide to buy a home you can expect a lot of questions and answers. In fact, the more questions your agent asks, the more likely you are to have a pleasant and rewarding homebuying experience.</p>
        <p>But, just as your agent can simplify the buying process with the answers you give, you will be getting answers to your important questions too.</p>
        <p>Expect your agent, to ask you about your income, debts, and the source and amount of your down- -payment. The agent will also want to know about the size home you want, as well as any special features or special neighborhoods you prefer. These questions are not asked out of curiosity, but for the specific purpose of helping you focus your home search in order to find just the right home for you and your family. Make a list ahead of time which highlights the desired amenities and features you would like to find In a home.'</p>
        <p>Then it's your turn to ask questions! In advance, make up a list of important questions to ask your agent. Perhaps you will want to know about the construction of certain homes, who built them, and the annual property taxes on them. Since there are many new mortgage loan programs available, ask about adjustable rates, closing costs and how to qualify.</p>
        <p>Be prepared to ask as well as answer questions. You will be more informed and your home purchase will proceed smoothly.</p>
        <p>As you know by reading these articles, educating buyers and sellers is a major concern of mine. Please call me with real estate questions anytime.</p>
        <p>i.</p>
        <p>BUNCHI rORBES REALH</p>
        <p>2717 South Memorial Drive Qreenvllla, North Carolina 27834 Phone: 756-2121, 756-2230</p>
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        <pb facs="00097006_0017" />
        <p>THE DAILY</p>
        <p>REFLECTOR</p>
        <p>QrMnvIlle. N.C. Friday, August 12,1988</p>
        <p>Sports</p>
        <p>Entertainment</p>
        <p>Comics</p>
        <p>Classifeds</p>
        <p>B</p>
        <p>tiOler Owner Says Gretzky's Ego Was Determining Factor</p>
        <p>EDMONTON, Alberta (AP)  The King finally spoke. As did the Queen. And the Kings old boss. And the Kings new boss.</p>
        <p>And the Wayne Gretzky trade got more confusing amid accusations and denials of all involved.</p>
        <p>Edmonton Oilers owner Peter Pocklington, the man who traded hockeys most celebrated superstar, claimed on Thursday Gretzkys ego was the size of Manhattan.</p>
        <p>I understand that though. If people had told me how great I was day in and day out for 10 years. Im sure my ego would be a pretty generous size, too.</p>
        <p>'Hien Pocklington said his former star faked his tear-filled goodbye at Tuesdays news conference announcing the trade.</p>
        <p>Hes a great ^ctor. I thought he pulled it off beautifully when he showed how upset he was, Pocklington said. I think he was upset, but he wants the big dream.</p>
        <p>Later, Pocklington said the Edmonton Sun, the paper which printed the interview, took the quotes out of context. Further, he would not make any additional public statements about the trade.</p>
        <p>Then Gretzky added his voice. In an interview with the Edmonton Sun from Los Angeles, Gretzky repeated earlier statements that he asked to be traded to the Los Angeles Kings.</p>
        <p>Gretzky said he asked to leave only after he learned Pocklington was shopping among National Hockey League teams to sell him. But he was clearly wounded by his former bosss suggestion that tears he shed were an act.</p>
        <p>Im suiprised and shocked by what he (Pocklington) said, Gretzky, 27, told the Sun. But, the only thing that disappointed me was his statements of me being theatrical. That was totally uncalled for.</p>
        <p>I took that bit as a personal insult, but Im still not going to get into a war of words. Its time to turn the page.</p>
        <p>The multi-player, multi-miUion dollar deal has landed Pocklington in hot water with Edmonton fans and set the sports world buzzing.</p>
        <p>Dismayed fans have been asking who is responsible for their heros departure from the champion Oilers, who have won four Stanley Cups in the last five seasons.</p>
        <p>In my mind a trade was going to happen within four years (prior to his becoming a free agent), so why wait until I was 31? Gretzky said. I figured it was best to make a move now and kind of forced the issue.</p>
        <p>For nine years people have told me Ive been underpaid so...</p>
        <p>Gretzky said he and Pocklington talked in the past about a trade, but it wasnt until after his July 16 wedding in Edmonton to Hollywood actress Janet Jones that it all came to a head.</p>
        <p>With permission from Pocklington, Kings owner Bruce McNall called Gretzky on his honeymoon five days after ^e wedding to discuss a move to Los Abeles.</p>
        <p>While Gretzky maintains the trade was his idea, his bride laid the blame squarely on Pocklington.</p>
        <p>I know the whole story, Jones said in a separate interview with the Sun. I know Wayne didnt deserve any of this.</p>
        <p>He wouldnt let Edmonton fans, Canada and, most important, his teammates down without good reason.</p>
        <p>Jones explained that the phone call from McNall angered her husband.</p>
        <p>Wayne couldnt believe it. He said This is crazy! Thats where it all happened. Wayne saw the writing right there.</p>
        <p>Think about it, said Jones, who reportedly requested the Sun interview. Another owner calls you and tells you that. There was no call from Pocklington. You play for a man 10 years and he doesnt even have the courtesy to can you and tell you what is happening.</p>
        <p>Before the wedding, she said the couple intended to live the rest of our lives in Edmont(Hi* and sp^timein Los Angles during Gretzkys off-season.</p>
        <p>Both denied Thursday that Joness acting career lured them to Los Angeles.</p>
        <p>If we wanted her to have a career, she wouldnt be having a child, Gretzky said.</p>
        <p>He revealed at Tuesdays news conference in Edmonton that Jones is pregnant.</p>
        <p>For his part, McNall is prepared to offer his new center a lifetime contract when the players deal is renegotiated prior to training camp. McNall said he and Gretzky agreed to renegotiate before the trade was made.</p>
        <p>Id like to have as long a deal as 1 can possibly get, McNall said. I think Wayne can be good for me and for hockey long after his playine career is over.</p>
        <p>Thats what Id like, and I think hes amenable to that kind of an idea, too. Its just a matter of getting it done. In the next week or so, well sit down with his ^ple and try to work out a deal.</p>
        <p>Gretzky signed a five-year contract with the Oilers last summer. That deal reportedly paid him about $900,000 last season, when he led the NHL in assists for the ninth straight season.</p>
        <p>Guilder Leads Attack On Oak Tree ReputationPGA Leader</p>
        <p>Bob Guilder lines up a putt during play Thursday in the PGA Tournament at the Oak Tree Golf and Country Club in Edmond, Okla. Guilder fired a five-under-par 66 to take the first round lead in the event. (AP Colorphoto)</p>
        <p>EDMOND, Okla. (AP) - Oak Tree</p>
        <p>k)lf Clubs reputation as the most</p>
        <p>lifficult par-71 in America is in jeopardy after the first round of the $l-million PGA Championship.</p>
        <p>Bob Gilders 5-under par 66 led a record-tying sub-par charge on Thursday over the Pete Dye-designed layout of ravines and treacherous greens.</p>
        <p>Perfect scoring conditions of light wind, soft fairways, short rough, and moist greens set the course up for the target golf on which the professionals thrive.</p>
        <p>Gilder and four other players David Edwards course record 68 at the 7,015-yard layout which the United States Golf Association proclaimed as the harshest in the country.</p>
        <p>Dye defended the courses lack of bite, saying without any wind and having to water the greens to keep them soft Oak Tree is vulnerable. If the greens were faster, they would be having a lot more trouble. </p>
        <p>Dye also said modern equipment made par almost impossible to protect. Oak Trqe was opened for play in 1976.</p>
        <p>With square grooves, metal heads, and the lively balls, the modern player has a lot of weapons, Dye said.</p>
        <p>Thirty-one players broke par, tying the PGA record for sub-par scores in one round, and 13 players matched par.</p>
        <p>The PGA record for sub-par scores in one round is 31, stt at Shoal Creek in 1984 and Cherry Hills in 1985.</p>
        <p>Gilder, who finished eighth in the</p>
        <p>U.S. Open, said the golf course was in perfect shape! and there was no wind. We could fire right at the pin on every hole. Ive always thought the PGA set up courses better than the USGA.</p>
        <p>Gilder had 29 putts in his five-birdie, no-bogey round of 33-33.</p>
        <p>Paul Azinger, the 1987 PGA Player of the Yearn987 British Open champion Nick Faldo, Chip Beck, and tour veteran John Cook each shot 67.</p>
        <p>Faldo said its a tough course, but the thing that saved us was the soft greens. The course normally plays a lot tougher in the wind.</p>
        <p>You dont have to soup up the great courses, Beck said. Its a great test of golf just as it ig.</p>
        <p>Craig Stadler, who double bogeyed the 18th hole to join six other players at 68, said Wed love to play the course like this all week. We like it tike this instead of the wind blowing 25 miles an hour where you have to invent a shot every hole.</p>
        <p>Also at 68 were Greg Norman, Mike Reid, Jay Overton, Australias Peter Senior, Ray Floyd, and Rocco Mediate.</p>
        <p>The round was Normans first since he injured his left wrist in the U.S. Open and he said he was happy and excited about the way he played.</p>
        <p>My wrist felt good on shots coming out of the rough and everything is going to be great for the next three days, he said. I had a few butterflies at first but I got over them. It</p>
        <p>(SeePGA,B-2)</p>
        <p>e</p>
        <p>Hoosier Tires Ousted At Glen</p>
        <p>WATKINS GLEN, N.Y. (AP) -Everybody is back to one brand of tire again this weekend at Watkins Glen International. But this time it is Goodyear.</p>
        <p>It is the latest episode of the NASCAR stock car tire war, which has seen newcomer Hoosier Tire challenge the entrenched Goodyear Tire &amp;amp; Rubber Co.</p>
        <p>As the race teams prepared for the first practice session on the 2.4-mile, seven-turn road course on Thursday, a random check revealed that the Hoosier tires brought in for Sundays Budweiser at the Glen were wider than the rules allow.</p>
        <p>Dick Beaty, Winston Cup competition director, was unable to pass the tire tolerance hoop over several of the more than 1,000 tires brought to the track by Hoosier.</p>
        <p>It was precisely the same infraction that sent Goodyear home with</p>
        <p>more than 1,000 disqualified tires on the weekend of the July 24 race at Pocono International Raceway.</p>
        <p>We were too tight on the hoop, said Ray Hill, stock car field manager for the Hoosier, the small Indiana company which manufactures only racing tires.</p>
        <p>No, it wasnt a new tire, Hill said. It was our Riverside (Calif.) tire. I dont think they ever checked them there; at least I dont recall them ever doing it.</p>
        <p>After measuring several Goodyear tires, with no problem, Beaty went to the Hoosier compound and picked two tires at random for checking. Both were too wide to allow the hoop to slide over them.</p>
        <p>He then allowed Hoosier representatives to go to their truck and pick four more tires for testing. Those also failed inspection.</p>
        <p>Les Richter, vice president of</p>
        <p>competitiion for NASCAR, said he was somewhat surprised that Hoosier hadnt learned from Goodyears problem in July.</p>
        <p>Certainly I would think with the seriousness of the situation of the decision at Pocono, everyone would be aware that we are inspecting tires and that if they dont conform to sj^cifications, were going to deal with the matter, Richter said. I would think that would make people concerned.</p>
        <p>Hill said, as in the case of the disallowed Goodyear tires, the Hoosier tires were barely too wide.</p>
        <p>Marginal is what you would call it, I guess, he said. But the tires will be usually consistent. We checked 12 to 15 tires and they were all too wide.</p>
        <p>Hill said he called company owner Bob Newton to explain the situation.</p>
        <p>There wasnt much he could say,</p>
        <p>Hill said. Really, the least said about it, the better. It would just be stirring up a hornets nest. Well go home and get ready for next week (at Michigan International Speedway).</p>
        <p>A semi-trailer truck carrying all of Hoosiers Watkins Glen tires left the track Thursday, moments before the first stock car practice session of the weekend.</p>
        <p>Phil Holmer, stock car field manager for Goodyear, said his company has plenty of tires available for Sundays race on the 2.428-mile road circuit.</p>
        <p>NASCAR r^uires each (tire) company bring a minimum amount, Holmer said. I think its 500 a side. Weve got 557 rights and 537 lefts. Last year, we were the sole supplier here and only used 657 tires, total.</p>
        <p>P</p>
        <p>i,Two Rejoin Pirates After Suspensions End</p>
        <p>By TOM MORRIS Reflector Sports Writer</p>
        <p>Two of five East Carolina football players suspended because of disciplinary action during the spring 1988 semester have been reinstated to the team, according to head coach Art Baker, as the Pirates opened practice for the 1988 season.</p>
        <p>Ernest Pendleton, a redshirt freshman defensive back, and Shane Hubble, a redshirt freshman defensive lineman, were reinstated by Baker upon arrival at fah camp Tuesday. The two were involved in separate assault incidents this past semester which led to their suspensions.</p>
        <p>Shane Hubble and Ernest Pendleton have met the requirements and have been reinstated to full status, Baker said.</p>
        <p>Baker added that the status of junior defensive end Ernie Logan, who was also suspended last spring for disciplinary actions, is still being examined.</p>
        <p>His evaluation period will end Friday (today), the coach said. 1 have been well pleased with the things Ernie has done (to be eligible for reinstatement).</p>
        <p>Errol McCorvey, a redshirt freshman defensive back, and Lewis Wilson, a reserve defensive back, were also suspended during the past spring semester, but neither has b^n reinstated.</p>
        <p>McCorvey, a redshirt freshman in 1987, was found guilty in April of'* assault on a female and was sentenced to two years in prison. Pendleton and Wilson were also involved in the incident, but charges against Pendleton were dismissed and Wilson was acquitted.</p>
        <p>McCorvey appealed his case to Superior Court, and he was found guilty Thursday and given a two-year suspended sentence, ordered to spend 48 hours in jail, fined $200 and</p>
        <p>ordered to pay $239 to cover medical bills.</p>
        <p>McCorvey said on the witness stand Wednesday that he does not plant to attend ECU this fall.</p>
        <p>Logan was found guilty of assault and inflicting serious injury in Pitt County District Court April 19 and sentenced to 48 hours in the county jail. He was also fined $200 and placed on probation for one year.</p>
        <p>Hubble was sentenced to three years of probation and ordered to pay $700 in damages in connection with an assault and damage to property case on March 31. Hubble appealed the case, buf later decided to accept the District Court judgment.</p>
        <p>Hubble was also found guilty of disorderly conduct April 26 and given a 60-day suspended sentence, placed on probation for one year and fined $50 plus court costs.</p>
        <p>When those players were suspended, they were suspended by the Athletic Department through coach Baker because their actions</p>
        <p>Ernest Pendleton</p>
        <p>misrepresented not only the athletic department and the football program, but also the university, said ECU athletic director Dave Hart.</p>
        <p>"From that point on, they were given a set of guidelines and they were expected to meet them in order to be eligible for reinstatement for the fall.</p>
        <p>In each of th(e cases, especially those with nothing pending, Coach Baker has kept me updated about these players and that they have done what we expected them to do.</p>
        <p>Baker refused specific comment on any individual case because he said it was a matter of privacy for the individual players involved.</p>
        <p>I have 130 football players to administer discipline to, he said. The problem represents 5-6 percent. Every time a young man has a discipline problem, when they set to a certain point, they are jeopardizing their position on the football team. I notify them if there are any further incidents.</p>
        <p>Wilson did not have his scholarship renewed.</p>
        <p>He was (already) on disciplinary probation when that (incident) occurred, Baker said.</p>
        <p>McCorveys status is still undecided. Hart said he could not say anything regarding any cases that are suii involved in litigation. That situation will be reviewed on an individual basis after the matter is decided in the courts.</p>
        <p>In testimony Wednesday, McCorvey said he does not plan to attend ECU this fall.</p>
        <p>Baker said he has tried to deal with the players Ip question on an indi^id-' uahnasis.  {  '  </p>
        <p>Its like my own children, he said. My children have not always done things exactly the way Ive wanted them to do, but when they did something wrong, I never let them</p>
        <p>forget that I cared about them and loved them.</p>
        <p>At the same time, I want people to know that Errol McCorvey, Shane Hubble and Ernie Logan, some of these guys that have been in trouble. Ive been in their homes, I know their parents. There is good in everyone of those young men. They made mistakes, theyre sorry. But it does not reflect in any way that we dont care about them. They can turn these instances into situations where they are positive.</p>
        <p>Hart said the suspensions, as well as the reinstatements, are part of a policy adopted by the university at the beginning of 1988.</p>
        <p>We have delivered a very clear message to our athletes, he said. 1 perceive this as a positive move. These suspensions really had nothing to do with a guilty-not guilty (decision).</p>
        <p>They had to do with misrepresentation. Now being fair to the s*udent-athletes involved, if iey</p>
        <p>Shane Hubble</p>
        <p>have taken appropriate corrective actions to be reinstated, I think a person must also have an avenue to have another chance if he or she proves themselves worthy.</p>
        <p>Joe Holmes, a junior defensive end, was suspended from the team Monday regarding an alleged assault.</p>
        <p>According to Hart, once the matter is cleared up, his case will be treated the same as the other suspended athletes and his status will tnen be reviewed on an individual basis.</p>
        <p>I felt this indeed was a misrepresentation and was not a guilty-not guilty (decision), Hart said. It is a situation our athletes must avoid. As you attempt to be consistent and fair, you must realize (also that) each case is different.</p>
        <p>This policy is not punitive. It is meant to be educational. Were very cognizant of the fact that we want to be fair and consistent.</p>
        <p>We will implement one of four seminars this fall where we have an obligation to educate and orient our student-athletes to the spotlight they are in and make them understand what visible representatives they are to this university. Their actions have to be exemplary.</p>
        <p>Baker said the players have to remember they are public figures.</p>
        <p>Anytime that members of our football team create incidents or react to incidents in way that embarrasses our football program. I'm disappointed. he said. One of the points that I continue to point out to them is that they live in a glass . house.</p>
        <p>They have to learn to react and be aggressive on.the football /iel(j[, but. they also have to barn how to live in society without that. It is tough to discern between the two sometimes, but that is part of the value of football that makes it worthwhile.</p>
        <p>"When they commit a foul on the football field in front ot 5.t)00 people, a flag is thrown and they are penalized. They have to learn to also get penalized in society when they let their tempers get away or whatever.</p>
        <p>After a turbulent off-season. Baker said both the players and coaches are focused on the upcoming season, and not what happened last spring.</p>
        <p>Were going to put it behind us. he said. Hopefully its been a learning experience for us. I always like to turn these things into positives. Were talking about four or five players on a 140 player squad.</p>
        <p>About 85-90 of them took part in last years Special Olympics and if anyone had seen our football team under those circumstances, they would have had a hard time.deciding that they were bad guys. And the way they responded to Terry Paiges illness (a former player stricken with cancer) will be something that I wont ever forget.</p>
        <p>Ernie Logan</p>
        <pb facs="00097006_0018" />
        <p>Touchdown Drive</p>
        <p>Detroit Lion Gary James (33) dashes for a four-yard gain as teammate Kevin Glover blocks Seattle Seahawk Tony Woods (right)</p>
        <p>during Detroits 25-yard drive for a touchdown in the first quarter Thursday at the Pontiac Silverdome. (AP Laserphoto)</p>
        <p>Big Seventh Inning Lifts Kernersville To Title, 10-8</p>
        <p>K:RNERSVILLE - snow Hill gave up four unearned runs in the bottom of the seventh inning as Kernersville rallied to take a 10-8 victory in the final game of the State American Legion baseball championships Thursday afternoon.</p>
        <p>Snow Hill had worked up a 3-1 lead in the best-of-seven series, but Kernersville won the final game played in Snow Hill, then won two more back on its home field to rally and win the state title. The victory earned them a berth in the Southern Regional Tournament which starts next week in Gainsville, Ga.</p>
        <p>Snow Hill went into the bottom of the seventh with a 7-4 lead in the game, but was unable to cut off the Kernersville rally once it began.</p>
        <p>Eric Norris started it off with a solo homer, cutting it to 7-5. Kevin Cockrell then walked and Cameron Browder followed with a single. Both were sacrificed up and Matt Swain singled to score Cockrell That base hit came when Todd Mewborn was late covering first base from the mound. Mike Gordon then reached on an error, loading the bases.</p>
        <p>After two men were out, Dennis Redman struck out. but the ball got away from Tommy Eason and scored Browder with the tying'run. Successive walks to Chad Stamper. Norris and Cockrell brought in three more runs to give Kernersville a 10-7 lead.</p>
        <p>Snow Hill spotted Kernersville a 1-0 lead in the first, then came back to score three in the top of the second. Shay Beaman singled and advanced</p>
        <p>on an error, taking third on an infield out. He scored when Anthony Jones grounded out. Walt McKeel singled and Cedric Collins was hit by a pitch. Both advanced on a wild pitch and George Green singled in McKeel. A throwing error on the relay allowed Collins to score also.</p>
        <p>Kernersville rallied for two in the bottom of the inning to tie it at 3-3, but Snow Hill again moved out. scoring two in the third. Beaman singled and Chris West cracked a two-run homer, making it 5-3.</p>
        <p>Both teams scored single runs in the fifth and Snow Hill added another run in the seventh. In the fifth. Snow Hill scored when Eason walked and</p>
        <p>Beaman doubled. In the seventh. T.J. Johnson singled, moved up on an out and scored on a hit by Beaman.</p>
        <p>Following Kernersvilles eruption in the seventh. Snow Hill scored once in the ninth and had the tying runs on base when the game ended. ' Beaman went 5-5 in the game while Eason and McKeel both were 2-4. Cockrell, Browder and Swain each had two hits for Kernersville.</p>
        <p>Snow Hill closes out its year with a 26-19 record. ;</p>
        <p>Snow Hill 010 101H 14</p>
        <p>Krrnersvillr....l20 010 (iOx10 K :t Greene. Mewborn (7). Vandiford (71. West (7&amp;gt; and Eason; Plaster. Alley (3. Browder (4i. Norris (9). Browder (9i and Hooven</p>
        <p>South Applauds Latest IOC Effort</p>
        <p>PGA</p>
        <p>
        </p>
        <p>(Continued From B l &amp;gt;</p>
        <p>was a great boost for my confidence.</p>
        <p>Floyd joined the chorus of players giving Oak Tree high marks.</p>
        <p>I dont think a course has to be made unplayable." he said. I think the couse was set up perfect. The rough is playable but also penal.</p>
        <p>"We had perfect conditions and you cant really say anybody shot the grass off the course. You have to hit great shots.</p>
        <p>Defending champion Larry Nelson shot 70 and British Open champion Seve Ballesteros shot 71. U.S Open champion Curtis Strange was at 72 along with Tom Watson, seeking to win his first PGA crown.</p>
        <p>Five time PGA champion Jack Nicklaus was at 72. Arnold Palmer. 59, trying to win his first PGA title, was 3-over at 74.</p>
        <p>The weather even did the pros a favor, reaching only 90 degrees. They had been practicing in near 100-degree temperatures.</p>
        <p>SEOUL, South Korea (AP)  South Korea is welcoming the International Olympic Committees latest attempt to persuade North Korea to enter the Summer Games in Seoul.</p>
        <p>We are still very anxious to have their participation, Shin Hyon-ung, director general of international press for the Seoul Olympic Organizing Committee, said today.</p>
        <p>On Thursday, the IOC urged Communist North Korea to demonstrate its desire for Korean unity and reconciliation by entering the Olympics, being staged by its archrival. South Korea.</p>
        <p>In a letter to both Koreas, IOC President Juan Antonio Samaranch proposed that the North and South Korean teams march side by side in the opening and closing ceremonies, each carrying its own flag, while a single Olympic flag preceded the overall Korean group.</p>
        <p>Samaranch described this as a "highly symbolic event that would demonstrate a strong desire for dialogue and reconciliation.</p>
        <p>If .North Korea accepts the IOC offer, it would be a very good idea to march in parallel with North Korea in the opening ceremony. Shin said.</p>
        <p>He added: The most important thing is having their participation. Kim Chong-ha, president of South Koreas Olympic committee, said the side-by-side march proposal completely coincides with the position of the (South) Korea National Olympic Committee as well as the meaning of the Seoul Olympic Games and the national aspiration.</p>
        <p>Kim received the Souths copy of Samaranchs letter.</p>
        <p>North Korea is one of six nations that have not accepted their invitations to next months Olympics. The others are Cuba, Ethiopia^</p>
        <p>Seahawks Rally To Down 'New Attitude' Detroit</p>
        <p>PONTIAC, Mich. (AP) - After two NFL exhibition gaipes, it af^rs that Detroits New Attitucte is only a slogan.</p>
        <p>The Seattle Seahawks, who let their football do the talking, overcame a 13-0 deficit to beat the lions 16-13 in overtime Thursday night.</p>
        <p>Tonight, the only game scheduled is New Orleans at Phoenix. On Saturday, its Dallas at the Los Angeles Raiders; Cleveland at Tampa Bay; Green Bay at Indianapolis; Cincinnati at Buffalo; Kansas City at Atlanta; Washington at Miami; the New York Jets at the New York Giants; San Francisco at Denver; San Diego at the Los Angeles B^ms ; and Houston vs. New England at Memphis, Tenn.</p>
        <p>The two games Sunday are Philadelphia at Pittsburgh;  and Chicago vs. Minnesota at (^oteborg, Sweden, the first NFL contest play^ on the European continent.</p>
        <p>If nothing else, Seattles victory showed clearly the difference b^ tween the NFLs haves and have-nots.</p>
        <p>The Seahawks, one of the NFLs elite teams, has played two struggling clubs  Phoenix and Detroit -and defeated both. The Lions now have played two quality teams, losing both to Cleveland and Seattle.</p>
        <p>We played a lot better than last, wwk, Detroit cOach Darryl Rogers said, What we have to do is sustain. If you cant get it done on offense in the second half, youre not going to last very long.</p>
        <p>I was pleased with the first half but we were stinko in the second half.</p>
        <p>So stinko that Garry James, the games leading rusher with 51 yards on eight carries, including a 16-yard touchdown, was talking about quitting.</p>
        <p>I think between now and next game. Im going to be thinking about what I want to do, James said. I feel like I bust my tail to get the job done, but at game time people are still going to be saying, Hes not tough.enough, because of the injuries.</p>
        <p>Who would care if I retire? Its like Im not here anyway.</p>
        <p>Jaines will probably cool off. So will his coach. But they wont soon forget how the Seahawks were able to turn it on, almost at will at crunch time.</p>
        <p>James scored on a 16-yard run in the first quarter and Eddie Murray kicked field goals of 27 and 35 yards in the second quarter. Then Seattle started to play football.</p>
        <p>Both teams started rookie quarterbacks in the second half - Lee Saltz for Detroit and Kelly Stouffer for Seattle.</p>
        <p>A third-quarter field goal by Norm Joh^on and a 4-yard TD run by Lucius Floyd in the fourth quarter got Seattle back in the game.</p>
        <p>Then, with 2:13 remaining, Knox gave Stouffer the hook and put Jeff Kemp back in. Kemp engineered a 67-yard, nine-play drive that ended in Johnsons 28-yard field goal with 31 seconds remaining.</p>
        <p>Kemp took the Seahawks 21 yards in four plays and Johnson won it with a 43-yarder 4:07 into the overtime.</p>
        <p>Kelly played a good game, Knox said. He did what he was supposed to do and he executed well.</p>
        <p>Stouffer, who had attempted justd one pass against Phoenix, completed 8-of-ll for 123 yards against Detroit. Kemp hit 7-of-16 for 108 yards.</p>
        <p>NOT AGAIN</p>
        <p>Chicago Bears quarterback Jim McMahon injured himself walking across a street in Goteborg.</p>
        <p>I tripped over a curb last night</p>
        <p>and sprained my ankle a little bit, he said. The ankle still hurts, but I it hope will be all right for the game. McMahon thinks he will be able to lead the Bears at the 52,000-seat Ullevi Stadium.</p>
        <p>Hopefully, the people will enjoy the game, McMahon said. I think its good that Europe is starting to get a taste of American football. Its a great game and its nice that the Europeans are taking interest in it. IN GOD WE TRUST The agent for Mike Merriweather, the Steelers most valuable player last season, says the linebacker will sit out the season if Pittsburgh wont increase his salary or trade him to San Francisco.</p>
        <p>He has it in his mind now that he would like to go to theology school and play for the 49ers, agent Mike Blattsaid.</p>
        <p>Merriweather is attending Golden State School of Theology in Oakland, Calif., and wants to become a Baptist minister. He asked Steelers president Dan Rooney to trade him to the 49ers so he can combine football with theology and be near his home in Stockton, Calif.</p>
        <p>COMINGS AND GOINGS Randy McMillan, a 6-foot, 219-pound fullback waived by Indianapolis last week, was signed by the Miami Dolphins. McMillan spent six years with the Colts and gained 3,876 yards on 990 carries with 24 touchdowns.</p>
        <p>The Atlanta Falcons released Curtis Rouse, a 344-pound offensive tackle picked up from San Diego and signed Reggie Camp, a 6-4,280-pound defensive lineman claimed off the waiver wire from Cleveland.</p>
        <p>Reserve linebacker Woody Vann, a special-teams standout during his first four years with the Los Angeles Rams, was put on waivers.</p>
        <p>Pro Football's Injuries Mount As Doctors Worry</p>
        <p>Nicaragua, Albania and the Seychelles. A record 12,000 athletes from 161 nations are expected to compete in Seoul.</p>
        <p>The North has said it will boycott the Games unless it is made a cohost. The IOC rejected formal co-host status for North Korea, but had offered to let it stage five events from the Games. With the Games opening Sept. 17, however, Samaranch has indicated it may be too late for North Korea to organize all of those events.</p>
        <p>The final decision on when it is too late is up to the IOC, Shin said, but technically and logistically, moving events now would not be easy.</p>
        <p>We are very worried that time is running short, he said. We have to wait as long as we can.</p>
        <p>North Korea has proposed that the parliaments of the two Koreas meet to discuss the Olympic issue and other matters, including a non-aggression pact between the two sides, divided since 1945. They fought a bloody war in 1950-53.</p>
        <p>The two sides still are talking about preliminary meetings to set up such a full-scale discussion.</p>
        <p>Samaranchs letter said the Olympic movement spared no efforts to offer all the national Olympic committees conditions which will allow them to accept the IOCs invitation to take part in the Games.</p>
        <p>The IOC wishes to reaffirm its fervent desire to bring the youth of the whole Korea into the Games of the 24th Olympiad, it said.</p>
        <p>By STEVE WILSTEIN AP Sports Writer</p>
        <p>SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Bloodstained and limping, the wounded men troop off the field and line up for the doctors.</p>
        <p>Is this war? No, but its close. Its the NFL, where team physicians jug^e their love of football with ethical dilemmas similar to those of Army surgeons as they cope with the games weekly carnage.</p>
        <p>The American Medical Association has urged a ban on boxing because of the brain damage that can result from repeated head blows.</p>
        <p>The fiery death of an auto racer every so often prompts cries to shut down that sport.</p>
        <p>Complaints about pro football, though, are much quieter, despite long lists after each game of aching players neatly divided among probable, questionable, doubtful and out.</p>
        <p>No sport matches football for the sheer number of injuries, and that is a source of worry for many doctors.</p>
        <p>It is ethically difficult, says San Francisco 49ers consultant Dr. Jeffrey A. Saal. The physicians role, historically, is a healer. This is a mutation of that role. Were not healing, were patching up and sending people back in, knowing they have a risk of repeat injury because theyre in a violent sport.</p>
        <p>It may be easier for battlefield doctors to rationalize fixing up wounded soldiers so they can go to war again, Saal says, because theyre fighting for life and country.</p>
        <p>Pro football players are fighting for their livelihoods, which may be no less important to them but may not justify the toll in wrecked bodies.</p>
        <p>Dramatic injuries, like Joe Theismanns badly fractured leg or Darryl Stingleys paralysis from a broken neck, are in some ways less disturbing than the hundreds of other disabling injuries.</p>
        <p>NFL teams reported an average of 1,450 injuries each year from 1983 through 1986, when the league averaged 1.582 players per season.</p>
        <p>according to a study by the NFL Players Association.</p>
        <p>Twenty percent of the injuries in the weekly post-game reports were among the most serious  out or doubtful, the union says, and another 35 percent were listed as questionable.</p>
        <p>In the NFL, out means the club believes theres no chance the player will play the next game; doubtful means theres a 75-percent chance he wont play; questionable means 50 percent; and probable means 25 percent.</p>
        <p>One of the major roles of team physicians in the NFL is what I term the court soothsayer, Saal says. You have to be the predictor for the coach, to say how long someones going to be out or how healthy a guy is to make a trade.</p>
        <p>The doctor makes an educated guess based on his gut feeling and experience, Saal says, but thats a difficult position to be put in. Where do they teach you that in medical school? What book do you read that in?</p>
        <p>Equipment has improved over the years and the NFL has made rule changes to reduce injuries  barring certain types of tackles, stopping plays when a quarterback is in the defenders grasp, penalizing late hits. Yet the injuries continue to mount.</p>
        <p>Perhaps it is time for doctors, players and coaches to press for much more significant changes, even if it means cutting into profits or sacrificing some of the violence that is part of footballs appeal.</p>
        <p>The players union study found a 19-percent higher overall injury rate on artificial turf than on grass. Among the more serious imuries  those listed as out or doubtful  there were 28 percent more on fake grass.</p>
        <p>Players generally complain about the jarring effects of running or landing on artificial turf, but a detailed study needs to be done to determine. the severity and types of injuries that occur.</p>
        <p>The training camp and exhibition season is the worst of times. Some players show up out of shape, rookies are pitted against veterans and everyone is fighting for jobs with dog-eat-dog ferocity. Preseason injuries would be cut down, Saal believes, if players would report to camp in peak condition rather than try to work themselves into shape.</p>
        <p>However, the players union objects to contract rules requiring pretraining camp workouts and theres no way to enforce fitness.</p>
        <p>Once the season begins, coaches shrug off injuries as part of the game and hope their rosters are deep enough to compensate for lost players. Larger rosters might take some pressure off wounded players to stay in the games.</p>
        <p>Many of the serious injuries occur on kickoffs and punt returns when players are running toward each other at higher spe^. Rules could be amended to address those hazards.</p>
        <p>At playoff time or during a winning streak, a doctors ethics about allowing a player to stay in a game get pressed to the max, Saal says.</p>
        <p>Its easier to decide to pull someone out of the game when youre having a losing season, or its not the playoffs, he says. The only way youre going to keep them out of the Super Bowl is if theyre in a wheelchair.</p>
        <p>No one knows wholl be in the next Super Bowl, but its certain hundreds of players will be hurt before the season ends.</p>
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        <pb facs="00097006_0019" />
        <p>SCOREBOARD</p>
        <p>TANK IFNANARA*</p>
        <p>Major League Baseball</p>
        <p>Detroit</p>
        <p>Boston</p>
        <p>New York</p>
        <p>Milwaukee</p>
        <p>Toronto</p>
        <p>Cleveland</p>
        <p>Baltimore</p>
        <p>Oakland</p>
        <p>Minnesota</p>
        <p>Kansas City</p>
        <p>California</p>
        <p>Texas</p>
        <p>Chicago</p>
        <p>Seattle</p>
        <p>New York</p>
        <p>Pittsburg</p>
        <p>Montreal</p>
        <p>Chicago</p>
        <p>St. Louis</p>
        <p>Philadelphia</p>
        <p>Los Angeles Houston San Francisco Cincinnati San Diego Atlanta</p>
        <p>W</p>
        <p>68</p>
        <p>64</p>
        <p>62</p>
        <p>59</p>
        <p>58 53 37</p>
        <p>W</p>
        <p>73</p>
        <p>64</p>
        <p>59 58 50 50 44</p>
        <p>By The Associated Press All Times EDT AMERICAN LEAGUE East Division L Pet GB LIO</p>
        <p>.602</p>
        <p>.561</p>
        <p>.559</p>
        <p>.509</p>
        <p>.500</p>
        <p>.461</p>
        <p>.327</p>
        <p>4',i 5</p>
        <p>104 114 16 31</p>
        <p>West Division L Pet GB LIO</p>
        <p>z-7-3</p>
        <p>z-3-7</p>
        <p>z-3-7</p>
        <p>z-7-3</p>
        <p>z-6-4</p>
        <p>1-9</p>
        <p>z-5-5</p>
        <p>Lost 2 Lost 3 Won 2 Won 4 Lost 5 Lost 4</p>
        <p>.629</p>
        <p>.566</p>
        <p>.518</p>
        <p>.504</p>
        <p>.446</p>
        <p>.435</p>
        <p>.383</p>
        <p>74</p>
        <p>13</p>
        <p>144</p>
        <p>21</p>
        <p>224</p>
        <p>28'^</p>
        <p>8-2</p>
        <p>7-3</p>
        <p>z-7-3</p>
        <p>z-4-6</p>
        <p>4-6</p>
        <p>z-4-6</p>
        <p>4-6</p>
        <p>Won 3 Won 3 Lost 1 Won 1 Won 1 Lost 2</p>
        <p>W</p>
        <p>68</p>
        <p>63</p>
        <p>61</p>
        <p>55</p>
        <p>50</p>
        <p>49</p>
        <p>W</p>
        <p>63</p>
        <p>62</p>
        <p>61</p>
        <p>57</p>
        <p>53</p>
        <p>39</p>
        <p>NATIONAL LEAGUE East Division</p>
        <p>Pet</p>
        <p>.596</p>
        <p>.553</p>
        <p>.540</p>
        <p>.491</p>
        <p>.439</p>
        <p>.434</p>
        <p>GB</p>
        <p>5</p>
        <p>64</p>
        <p>12</p>
        <p>18</p>
        <p>184</p>
        <p>West Division</p>
        <p>LIO</p>
        <p>z-5-5</p>
        <p>z-4-6</p>
        <p>64</p>
        <p>5-5</p>
        <p>5-5</p>
        <p>z-5-5</p>
        <p>Won 1 Won 1 Lost 1 Lost 1 Lost 1 Won 1</p>
        <p>Pet</p>
        <p>.558</p>
        <p>.544</p>
        <p>.535</p>
        <p>.504</p>
        <p>.465</p>
        <p>.342</p>
        <p>z-denotes first game was a win</p>
        <p>GB</p>
        <p>14</p>
        <p>24</p>
        <p>6</p>
        <p>104</p>
        <p>244</p>
        <p>LIO</p>
        <p>3-7 6-4</p>
        <p>Z-5-5</p>
        <p>6-4</p>
        <p>Z-6-4</p>
        <p>4-6</p>
        <p>Lost 2 Won 2 Won 1 Lost 1 Won 1</p>
        <p>Diego (Rasmussen to-7) a( on iKnepper 12-3), 8:35 p.m.</p>
        <p>I Francisco (Reuschel 15-5) at</p>
        <p>AMERICAN LEAGUE Thursday's Games Milwaukee 4, Boston 0 Toronto^ New York 5, II innings Texas 5, Cleveland 4 Kansas City 6. Baltimore 5,12 in-nii^</p>
        <p>Chicago 4, Seattle 3 Oakland 7, California 2 Only games scheduled Friday's Games Detroit I Alexander 11-6) at Boston (Hurst 12-4),7:35 p.m.</p>
        <p>Texas (Guzman 10-8) at Cleveland (Yett5m,7:35p.m.</p>
        <p>New York (John 8-4) at Minnesota (Lea6-6l, 8:05p.m.</p>
        <p>Toronto (Clancy 5-12) at Kansas City (Bannister 9-9),8:35p.m.</p>
        <p>Baltimore (Peraza 5-4) at Milwaukee (Birkbeck 7-5), 8:35 p.m.</p>
        <p>Chicago (LaPoint 9-11) at Seattle (Powell 1-2), 10:0^.m.</p>
        <p>California (Finley 6-10) at Oakland (Bums 4-0), 10:35p.m. Saturday's Games Detroit at Boston, 1:05 p.m.</p>
        <p>Texas at Cleveland, 1:35 p. m.</p>
        <p>New York at Minnesota, 2:20 p.m. California at Oakland. 4:05p.m. Toronto at Kansas City, 8:0S p.m. Baltimore at Milwaukee, 8:35 p.m. Chicago at Seattle, 10:05p.m.</p>
        <p>Sunday's Games Detroit at Boston, 1:05p.m.</p>
        <p>Texas at Cleveland, 1:35 p.m.</p>
        <p>New York at Minnesota, 2:15 p.m. Baltimore at Milwaukee, 2:% p.m. Toronto at Kansas City, 2:35 p.m. California at Oakland, 4:05 p.m. Chicago at Seattle, 4:35 p.m.</p>
        <p>NATIONAL LEAGUE Thursday's Games Philadelphia l,St. LouisO New York 9, Chicago 6 Atlanta 2, &amp;amp;n Diego 1 Cincinnati 9, Los Angeles 8.10 innings</p>
        <p>Imtsburgh6. Montreal I San Francisco 6, Houston 0 Friday's Games St. Louis (Magrane 1-6) at Chicago (Sutcliffe 9-9), C05p.m.</p>
        <p>Pittsburgh (Smiley 9-8 and Dunne 6-8) at Philadel^ia (K Gross 10-8 and Palmer7-8), 2,5:35p.m.</p>
        <p>Atlanta (Glavine 3-13) at Cincinnati (Armstrong 2-41,7:35 p.m.</p>
        <p>Montreal (Smith 8-6) at New York (Cone 12-2), 7:3^.m.</p>
        <p>San Diego (Ras Houston (</p>
        <p>San</p>
        <p>Los Angeles (Leary 11-8), 10:35 p.i Kalurday s Games Montreal at New York, I; 35 p.m. St. Louis at Chicago. 4:05p.m. Atlanta at Cincinnati. 7:0S p.m. Pittsburgh at iiladelphia, 7:05 p.m.</p>
        <p>San Diego at Houston, 8:35 p.m. San Francisco at Los Angeles. 10:05 p.m.</p>
        <p>Sunday's Games Montreal at New York. 2, 12:05 p.m.</p>
        <p>Pittsburgh at Philadelphia, 1:35 p.m.</p>
        <p>Atlanta at Cincinnati. 2:15 p.m.</p>
        <p>St. Louis at Chicago. 2:20p.m.</p>
        <p>San Diego at Houston, 2 35 p.m. San Francisco at Los Angeles. 4:(6 p.m.</p>
        <p>League Leaders</p>
        <p>By The Associated Press AMERICAN LEAGUE BATTING (341 at bats)-Boggs. Boston, .359; Puckett. Minnesota. 352; Greenwell. Boston. 331; Brett, Kansas City, .330; Winfield, New Yoik, .328.</p>
        <p>RUNS-Canseco. Oakland. 90; Boggs, Boston, 82; RHenderson, New York. 8I-Molitor, Milwaukee. 79; McGriff, Toronto. 74; Puckett. Minnesota, 74.</p>
        <p>RBI-Canseco. Oakland. 90; Greenwell, Boston. 88: I4ckett. Minnesota, 84; Brett. Kansas City, 83, Winfield. New York. 78.</p>
        <p>HITS-Puckett, Minnesota. 163; Boggs. Boa.jn. 151, Franco. Cleveland 141; Brett. Kansas City. 140; Greenwell, Boston. 136. Molitor, Milwaukee 136 DOUBLES-Brelt. Kansas City, 35; Boggs. Boston. 30, Gladden. Minnesoto. 30; Puckett. Minnesota. 30-4 are tied with 28 TRIPLES-Yount. Milwaukee, 9; Reynolds. Seattle, 8. Wilson. Kansas City, 8; Gagne, Minnesota. 6: 7 are tied with 5.</p>
        <p>HOME RUNS-Canseco. Oakland, 31; McGriff. Toronto. 27; Gaetti. Minnesota, 26; JCIark, New York. 22; 4 are lied with 21 STOLEN BASES- RHenderson, New York, 64; Pettis. Detroit. 36; Molitor. Milwaukee, 32; Canseco, Oakland. 30, Wilson. Kansas City,</p>
        <p>^PITCHING (11 decisions)-Viola. MinnesoU. 18-4. .818, 2.43; Hurst. Boston. 12-4. 750. 4 17- GDavis. Oakland. 11-4, 733,3.04, Berenguer, Minnesota. 63, .727. 3.18; Robinson, Detroit, 13-5. 722.2.65 STRlkEOUTS Clemens. Boston. 241; Langston. Seattle, 174; Viola. Minnesota. 135; Higuera, Milwaukee. 129; Hough. Texas. 129.</p>
        <p>SAVES-Eckersley, Oakland, 33; Reardon. Minnesota. 30, Plesac, Milwaukee, 27; DJones, Cleveland. 25, Thigpen, Chicago. 25.</p>
        <p>NATIONAL LEAGUE BATTING (341 at batsi-Dawson. Chicago. .316; GPerry, Atlanta, .315; Galarraga. Montreal, .312; Gwynn. San Diego. 311; Palmeiro. Chicago. .311 RUNS-Butler, San Francisco. 85; Gibson. Los Angeles. 82; VanSlyke. Pittsburgh. 79. Bonds. Pittsburgh. 77; Strawberry, New York, 77.</p>
        <p>RBI-Clark. San Francisco. 87; GDavis, Houston, 78, Strawberry, New Y^ork, 76; Van Slyke Pitt sburgh,73, Bonilla. Pittsburgh, 72 HITS- Galarraga, Montreal. 14u, McGee, St Louis. 140. Dawson, Chicago, 136; Palmeiro. Chicago, 136; Sax. Los Angeles. 135.</p>
        <p>DOUBLES- Sabo, Cincinnati, 34; Galarraga, Montreal. 31; Bream, Pittabuiih. 30; Palmeiro. Chicago. 28:4 are lied with 27 TRIPLES- Van.Slyke, PilUburgh. 14; Coleman, St Ixiuis, 10, Gant. Allanta, 8. Samuel, Philadelphia. 7; 4 are tied with 6 HOME RUNS- Strawberry, New York, 29. Clark, San Francisco. 24; GDavis. Houston. 22; Galarraga, Montreal. 22; Gibson. Los Angeles. 22</p>
        <p>STOLEN BASES Coleman, .St Louis. 58, GYoung. Houston, 57. OSmlth. St lx)uis, 39 McC.ee. St Louis. 36, ONixon. Montreal, 32; Sabo, Cincinnati, 32.</p>
        <p>PI'TCHING (II decisions)-Cane. New York. 12-2, 857. 2.31. Knepper, Houston. 123,  800. 3.28; Scott,</p>
        <p>Houston. 123. 800. 2 65, Parrell, Montreal. 163, 789,2.35; IlJackson. Cincinnati, 165, .750.2 71, Reuschel, San FranclscoM65, 750.3.19 STRIKEOtiTS-Ryan, Houston. 189. Scott. Houston. 142; DeLeon. SI Louis. 140, Rijo. Cincinnati. 139, Fernandez. New York, 137 SAVES Franco. Cincinnati, 24. Worrell, SI Louis, 22; Bedrosian. iiladelphla. 21, D.Smith. Houston, 21; God, Pi|Uburgh. 20</p>
        <p>National League</p>
        <p>STLOl'IS  PHII.A</p>
        <p>abrhbi  abrbbi</p>
        <p>Coleman If 4 0 l 0 Bradley If 4 0 10 OSmith ss 4 0 10 MThmp cf 4 0 2 0 Pndltn 3b 4 0 0 0 Bedrosn p 0 0 0 0 Brnnsky rf 4 0 1 0 Samuel ss 4 0 0 0 McGee cf 3 0 10 Parrish c 4 0 0 0 Oquend 2b 3 0 0 0 CJames rf 3 11 0 Laga lb 3 0 0 0 Jordan lb 4 0 2 1 Pagnozzi c 2 0 0 0 Jeliz ss 2 0 0 0 Terry p 2 0 0 0 Gutierz 3b 3 0 0 0 Costello p 1 0 0 0 MMaddx p l 0 0 0 GGross ri 10 10 Totals 3 0 4 0 Totals 3S I 7 I</p>
        <p>siLouis  m  m  m~4</p>
        <p>Philadelpbia  (MO  (HO</p>
        <p>One out when winning run scored.</p>
        <p>Game Winning RBI - Jordan (2). E-Samuel. DP-StLouis  1.  LOB-</p>
        <p>StLouis 5. Philadelphia 7 2B-Jordan.</p>
        <p>IP H R EK BB SO</p>
        <p>till jy,i-</p>
        <p>Terry  5  2  0  0  2  2</p>
        <p>Costello L.3-1  31-3  5  I  1  I  4</p>
        <p>Philadelphia MMaddux  8  3  0  0  2  3</p>
        <p>Bedrosn W.2-5  I  1  0  0  0  2</p>
        <p>BK-MMaddux</p>
        <p>Umpires-Home. Harvey; First. Crawford; Second, Rippley; Third. David son.</p>
        <p>T-2:32. A-25,607.</p>
        <p>OOl-l</p>
        <p>NEW YORK CIIIC.XGO</p>
        <p>abrhbi  abrhbi</p>
        <p>Dykstra cf  5 2 2 2  Webster  cf  4 1 2 0</p>
        <p>Bckmn 2b  3 12 0  Sndbrg  2b  5 0 3 0</p>
        <p>Teufel 2b 2 0 00 Grace Ib 5 130 KHrndz Ib 4 2 1 0 Dawson rf 5 2 I 0 Strwbry rf 3 0 0 1 Palmeir If 3 2 1 1 McRylds U3 1 25 Law 3b 4 0 2 2 Carter  c  5 111  Berryhll c  3 0 1 1</p>
        <p>HJohsn  3b  4 0 0 0  JDavis c  10 0 0</p>
        <p>Elster ss  4 13 0  Salazar  ss  4 0 11</p>
        <p>Gooden p  2 0 00  Nipper  p  3 0 0 0</p>
        <p>Sasser ph 1 0 0 0 DiPino p 0 0 0 0 Leach p 0 0 0 0 PPerry p 0 0 0 0 Wilson  ph  1110  Gossage p  0 0 0 0</p>
        <p>Myers  p  0 0 0 0  Jacksn ph  10 0 0</p>
        <p>McDwll  p 0 0 0 0</p>
        <p>Totals  39 912 Totals  :tXKII5</p>
        <p>New York  012  000  I0.5-</p>
        <p>Chkags  021  000  ooo-</p>
        <p>Webster reached on catcher's interference.</p>
        <p>^me Winning RBI - McReynoMs (Ui E-Carter, Sandberg DP-New York 2. LOB-New York 6, Chicajgo 7. 2B-Backman, Salazar, Law 3B-Oawson. Ber ryhill, Webster HR-Carler (9i. Dykstra (5). McReynolds (17). SB-Wilson (12), Dykstra (24)</p>
        <p>IP H R ER BK SO</p>
        <p>New York</p>
        <p>Gooden  5    0  6  I  3</p>
        <p>Leach W.61  3  3  0  0  0  2</p>
        <p>Myers  2-3  2  0  0  0  1</p>
        <p>McDwll S.12  1-3  0  0  0  0  0</p>
        <p>Chicago</p>
        <p>Nipper  6  8  4  3  1  3</p>
        <p>Dino  2  2  2  2  0  2</p>
        <p>PPerry L.4-4  2-3  1  2  2  1  1</p>
        <p>Gossage  1-311100</p>
        <p>Nipper pitched to I batter in the 7lh. Di^ pitched to 2 baiters in the 9th HBP-Strawberry by Nipper PB-Carter.</p>
        <p>Umpircs-Home. West; First. Hallion. Second. Runge; 'iird. Williams T-3:I6. A-31.942</p>
        <p>SAN DIEGO ATLANTA</p>
        <p>abrbbi  abrbbi</p>
        <p>Kruk If 4  110  Gant  2b  4  0  0  0</p>
        <p>RAIomr 2b  3 0 I 0 Uberkfl  3b  3  0  0  0</p>
        <p>Gwynn rf  4 0 2 1 GPerry  Ib  3  0  1  0</p>
        <p>Morind Ib  2 0 0 0 DMrphy  rf  3  I  I  I</p>
        <p>Jeffersn If  2 0 o o Thomas  ss  3  o  I  o</p>
        <p>Wynne cf 4 0  10  DJames  If  31  I  o</p>
        <p>Santiago c 4 0  I 0  Benedict  c  2  0  0  0</p>
        <p>Ready 3b 4 0  0 0  Blocker  cf  3  0  I  I</p>
        <p>Tmpltn ss 3 0  10  PSmilh  p  3  0  0  0</p>
        <p>JJones p 3 000 Totals 33  I  7  I  Totals  27  2  5  2</p>
        <p>San Diego  omi ooi mio-l</p>
        <p>Atlanta  NO IN lOx-2</p>
        <p>Game WinningRBI - Blocker (1).</p>
        <p>E-Benedict DP-San Diego 2 LOB-San Diego 6. Atlanta 4.2B-Kruk. DJames 3B-Bk)cker HR-DMurphy i2U. SB-Gwynn(17),Jeflerson(2) S- RAIomar</p>
        <p>IP H R ER BR SO</p>
        <p>San Diego</p>
        <p>JJones L.7 10  8  5  2  2  3  1</p>
        <p>.AtlanU</p>
        <p>PSmith W.5-11  9  7  110  8</p>
        <p>WP-PSmith</p>
        <p>Umpires-Home, Montague, First, Bonin; Second. Brocklander; Third. McSheiry.</p>
        <p>T-2:I5 A-7,053</p>
        <p>LOS ANGELS  CINCINN ATI</p>
        <p>abrbbi  abrbbi</p>
        <p>Andesn 2b 5 12 0 Daniels If 4 110 Griffin ss 4 2 10 Sabo 3b 6 12 0 Gibson If 5 4 4 3 Larkin ss 6 111 Guerrer lb4 0 I I EDavis cf 6 2 4 2 JHowell p 0 0 0 0 ONeill rf 5 3 4 2 Marshal rf 51 2 2 Esasky lb 5 0 3 2 Shelby cf 3 0 0 0 Reed c 5 0 11 Woodsn 3b 3 0 I 0 Collins pr 0 0 0 0 APena p 0 0 0 0 BDiaz c 0 0 0 o Heep pn 0 0 0 1 Tredwy 2b 4 0 2 1</p>
        <p>0 0 0 0 Brownng p o o o 0</p>
        <p>1 0 0 0 Cncpcn ph I I I 0 5 0 10 Dibble p 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 Wnghm ph 1 0 (10</p>
        <p>0 0 0 0 Birisas p 0 0 0 o</p>
        <p>1 0 0 0 FWillms p 0 0 0 0</p>
        <p>2 0 0 0 McCInd ph I 0 0 0 RMrphy p 0 000 Griffey pn I o 0 0 Franco p 00 0 0</p>
        <p>31 8 12 7 Totals IS 9 II 9</p>
        <p>Orosco p Stubbs lb Scioscia c Belcher p Crews p Holton p Sax 2b</p>
        <p>Totals</p>
        <p>Lm Angeles  302 121 IN 6-X</p>
        <p>tinclnaali  ait fio N2 1-9</p>
        <p>Two outs when winning run scored Game Winning RBI -EDavis i I3i LUB- Ln Angeles 6. Cincinnati II. 2B Anderson. Gilison 3, Esasky. ONeill HR-Marshall H7i. ONeill (13), Gibimn i22i SB Daniels (22). Marshall it), Gibson 1211. Guerrero (2i, EDavis i26i S Griffin. Dibble SF-Trea&amp;lt;iway</p>
        <p>IP H R ER BB SO</p>
        <p>Imi Angeles</p>
        <p>Belcher  2 1 3  4  4  4  I  2</p>
        <p>Crews  0  2  110 0</p>
        <p>Holton  213  5  I  I  I  2</p>
        <p>APena  1 1 3  2  0  0  0  2</p>
        <p>Oroico  2  I  0  0  0  I</p>
        <p>JHowell L.23  1 2 3  5  3  3  0  I</p>
        <p>Ciacinaati Browning Dibble Birtsas FWiUiams RMurphy Franco ^,4-5</p>
        <p>Streak Home Away Won 1 38-20 30-25 38-18 26-32 33-24 29-25 33-24 26-33</p>
        <p>28-30 36-28</p>
        <p>29-27 24-35 24-33 13-43</p>
        <p>3  6  5  5  0  3</p>
        <p>2  5  2  2  1  2</p>
        <p>11-3  1  1  1  1  0</p>
        <p>2-3  0  0  0  2  0</p>
        <p>2  0  0  0  0  2</p>
        <p>1  0  0  0  0  0</p>
        <p>Crewspitched to 2 batters in the 3rd. BK-lfolton</p>
        <p>Umpires-Home. Quick; First. Pallone, Second, Gregg; Third. Poncino. T-3:5LA-30.695.</p>
        <p>Streak Home Away Won 4 36-21 37-22</p>
        <p>32-22 32-27 30-25 29-30 26-32 32-25</p>
        <p>28-31 22-31</p>
        <p>29-32 21-33 25-31 19-40</p>
        <p>Streak Home Away</p>
        <p>36-19 32-27 33-26 30-25 32-26 29-26 27-28 28-29</p>
        <p>27-32 23-32</p>
        <p>28-27 21-37</p>
        <p>Streak Home Away Lost 1 27-27 36-23 34-22 28-30 34-25 27-28 28-26 29-30 32-27 21-34 20-38 19-37</p>
        <p>PITTSBURGH MONTREAL</p>
        <p>abrkbi  abrhbi</p>
        <p>Bonds If 5 0 3 2 ONixon cf 4 0 0 0 Lind 2b 5 0 10 Raines If 4 0 0 0 VanSlyk cf 4 2 l 0 Galarrg lb 4 0 l 0 Bonilla 3b 3 2 3 1 Brooks rf 4 111 Bream lb 5 13 1 Wallach 3b3 0 0 0 RReylds rfS 11 2 Foley 2b 4 00 0 LVIIre c 4 0 2 0 Santoven c 4 0 3 0 Pedriqu ss 4 0 I 0 Rivera ss 4 0 2 0 MOiaz ph 0 0 0 0 Holman p 10 0 0 Belliard ss 0 0 0 0 Nettles ph 10 0 0 Drabek p 3 0 0 0 Heaton p 0 0 0 0 Cangels ph I 0 l 0 WJhnsn ph 0 0 0 0 Gotr p 1 0 0 0 McGffgn p 0 0 0 0 Hesketh p 0 0 0 0 DMrtnz ph 1 0 0 0 Totals 46 6 16 6 Totals 34 I 7 I</p>
        <p>Pittsburgh  m m tNH-</p>
        <p>Moalreal  DM 860 OID-I</p>
        <p>Game Winning RBI-Bonilla (10). LOB-Pittsburgh 14. Montreal 8. 2B-Santovenia 2. ^illa, RRnnolds. 3B-Bonilla. HR-Brooks (14). SB-VanSlyke il8i,Riverai2).S-Lind.</p>
        <p>PitUburgh Drabek l^u-5 Gott S.20 Mwtreal Holman L.2-4 Heaton McGffgan Hesketh</p>
        <p>1 2-3  4  3  3  I  2</p>
        <p>52-3  3  I  I  I  2</p>
        <p>0  1  0  0  0  0</p>
        <p>32-3  4  2  1  0  3</p>
        <p>Stieb pitched to 2 baiters in the 3ird. Guante pitched to I batter in the 8th HBP-Gruber by Eiland, Fernandez by Eiland</p>
        <p>Umpires Home. Denkinger, First. Me Clelland, Second. McCoy, "niira. Coble T-4:(17 A-30,347</p>
        <p>TEXAS  CLEVELAND</p>
        <p>abrhbi  abrhbi</p>
        <p>Espy cl 5 0 0 0 Franco 2b 4 0 2 0 Fletchr ss 4 0 10 Francon If 3 0 0 0 OBrien lb 4 0 0 0 CCaslill If 10 12 Sierra rf 4 0 0 0 DJones p 0 0 0 0 Incvgha If 41 I 0 Kiltie ph o 0 0 I Pelralli c 3 10 0 Carter cl 4 0 0 0 See dh 2 0 0 0 Hall dh 4 0 0 0 McDwl dh 21 I 0 Snyder rf 4 0 10 Wilkrsn 2b 4121 Upshaw Ib 4 0 2 0 Kunkel 3b 2 0 0 0 Jacoby 3b 31 I 0 Buechle 3b 21 0 0 Allanson c 41 I 0 Zuvella  ss I  0  u ii</p>
        <p>RWsgtn  ss I  2  I I</p>
        <p>Totals  36 5 5 I Totals  33  I  9 t</p>
        <p>II m W4-5</p>
        <p>m m 1*1-4</p>
        <p>Texas Clevflaad</p>
        <p>Game Winning RBI-None E-l'pshaw. OBrien. HWashington 2. DJones. Allanson LOB-Texas 6. Clev^ land 8 2B-Snyder, CCastillo. Franco SB-Snyder i5) S-Zuvella, Fletcher. Franco SF-Kittle</p>
        <p>IP HR ER BH SO</p>
        <p>Texas</p>
        <p>Hough  6  52122</p>
        <p>McMurtry  111  I  I  u  0</p>
        <p>Williams W.2-4  2  3  1  1  0  1</p>
        <p>Mohorcic S,5  21 0 0 0 0 0</p>
        <p>CIcsrIaMi Farrell DJones L.1-3</p>
        <p>Schu 3b Totals</p>
        <p>47 S 42 S Totals</p>
        <p>IP H R ER BB SO</p>
        <p>McGaffigan pitched to 3 batters in the 9th. Umpires-Home, Davis; First, Hii'schheck; Second. Darling: Third, Tata. T-3:2l.A-33,599.</p>
        <p>SAN FRAN  HOUSTON</p>
        <p>abrhbi  abrhbi</p>
        <p>Butler cf 5 0 2 0 GYoung cf 4 0 0 0 Riles 2b 5 0 2 2 Meads p 0 0 0 0 Clark lb 4 2 11 Doran 2b 3 0 10 Mitchll 3b 31 n BHatchr If 4 0 2 0 MWIms 3b I I II GDavis lb 4 0 0 0 Aldrete If 4 0 11 Bass rf 2 0 10 MIdndo rf 4 0 0 0 Ramirz ss 3 0 0 0 Melvin c 4 0 2 0 Pnkovfs 3b 3 0 0 0 Uribe ss 4 10 0 Trevino c 3 0 0 0 Hamakr p 311 0 Biggio c 0 0 0 0 Ryan p 2000 Agosto p 000 0 Candael cf I 0 I 0 Totals 17 6 41 6 Totals 29*50</p>
        <p>San Francisco  ON  1*2  2IO-6</p>
        <p>HmkIiui  Han  MM  afloo</p>
        <p>Game Winning RBI - Aldrete i4i. E-Pankovils. DP-San Francisco 2, Houston I. LOB-San Franciscos, Houston 4. 2B-Aldrete. Candaele HR-Clark i24i. Mitchellll7l.MWilliamsi4).</p>
        <p>IP H R ER RR ,S4)</p>
        <p>San Francisco Hamaker W.6^  9  5  0  0  2  3</p>
        <p>Hmston</p>
        <p>Ryan L.610  62-3  8  5  5  1  6</p>
        <p>Agosto  n-3  2  I  1  0  I</p>
        <p>N^ds  1  10 0 10</p>
        <p>WP-Ryan.</p>
        <p>Umpires-Home. DeMulh; First. Wendelstedi; Second. Rennert; Third, Marsh T-02:l9.A-29.876.</p>
        <p>American League</p>
        <p>BOSTON  MILWAUKEE</p>
        <p>abrbbi  abrhbi</p>
        <p>Boggs 3b 3 0 2 0 Molitor 3b 3 I I 0 Barrett 2b 4 0 0 0 Leonard II 4 0 0 1 DwEvns rf 4 0 0 0 YounI cf 4 0 11 Grenwl dh 4 0 I 0 Brock Ib 3 0 0 0 Burks cf 3 0 10 Deer rf 3 111 Bnzngr Ib 3 0 0 0 Surhoff c 3 0 0 0 Rice If 3 0 2 0 Meyer dh 4 111 JoReed ss 3 0 0 0 Gantnr 2b 3 0 10 Gedman c 3 0 0 0 Sveum ss 2 10 0 Totals 3* 6 6 a Totals 29 l 5 I</p>
        <p>KosIm  on on *n-</p>
        <p>Milwaukee  N2 2N Nxi</p>
        <p>Game Winning RBI - Leonard (4) DP-Milwauxee 2. LOB-Boston 4. Milwaukee 6. 2B-MoUtor. Gantner. HR-Dcer (14). Meyer (8) SB-Molilor (32). Surhoff (13).</p>
        <p>iP II R ER KK SO</p>
        <p>BosUni</p>
        <p>Gardner L.5-3  7  5  4  4  3  4</p>
        <p>LSmith  I  0  0  0  2  2</p>
        <p>Milwaukee</p>
        <p>August W.7-5  9  6  0  0  1  4</p>
        <p>Umpires-Home, Tschida; First. Hen (fay; Second, Young; Third. Craft. t-2;26.A-32.Kl</p>
        <p>TORONTO  NEW  YORK</p>
        <p>abrhbi  abrhbi</p>
        <p>Fernndz ss I 0 0 0 KHndsn If 4 2 3 0 Liriano 2b 4 0 0 0 Wshgtn cf 5 2 3 0 Whitt C 5 2 3 2 Mtngly Ib 5 134 Mllnks dh 3 12 1 Phe^s dh I 0 0 o Thorntn pr 0 1 0 0 JCIark dh 3 0 0 1 Fielder ph  I  0 0 o  Winfield  rf 5 0 I  o</p>
        <p>GBell  If  5  0 11  Pglrulo  3b 3 0 0  0</p>
        <p>McGriff lb 4 0 1 0 Aguayo 3b 2 0 0 0 Gruber 3b 4 0 0 0 Slaught c 5 0 I 0 Leach  rf  3  0 10  Tollesn  2b 3 o o  o</p>
        <p>Ducey  cf  2  110  Santana  ss 5 0 0  0</p>
        <p>Barfield cf 4 1 I 0 Lee 2b 5021</p>
        <p>Totals 41 6 13 5 Totals 41 Sit 5</p>
        <p>Toronto  211  ON *11  *1-6</p>
        <p>New York  1*2  NO m  m-i</p>
        <p>Game WinniiffiKBI - None E-SlaughI DP-Toronlo 1, New York 2. LOB-Toronto 7. New York 9 2B-Mulliniks. Ducey HR-Whitt 2 (8). Mulliniks 111). Mattingly lit). SB-RHenderson 4 (64). Washington (10). Bar field 14). S-Tolleson. Barfield</p>
        <p>IP H R ER BH St)</p>
        <p>TotmIo</p>
        <p>Stieb  2  3  3  3  3  0</p>
        <p>Cerutli  5  5  0  0  2  2</p>
        <p>Henke  1  2 3  2  2  2  0  0</p>
        <p>DWard W.8I 2 1-3  1  0  0  0  3</p>
        <p>New York Eiland Guterman Guante Righelli L.3^3</p>
        <p>CALIFORNIA OAKLAND</p>
        <p>abrhbi  abrhbi</p>
        <p>DWhite cl  4 0 0 0  Polonia If  2  110</p>
        <p>Ray 2b  3 0 0 0  DHedsn cf  41 2 1</p>
        <p>Joyner  lb  4  0  10  Cansec  dh  3 10 1</p>
        <p>Dwnng  dh  4121  Lansfrd  3b  41 2 0</p>
        <p>CDavts  rf  4  0  10  Hassey  c  3 111</p>
        <p>Bosley If  3 0 2 0  McGwir lb  4  1 2 4</p>
        <p>Howell 3b  3 10 0  Jennngs rf  4  0 0 0</p>
        <p>Boone c  2 0 0 0  Hubbrd 2b  3  0 0 0</p>
        <p>Miller c  1 0 0 0  Weiss ss  3  110</p>
        <p>Schofild ss 3 0 1 I Totals 31 2 7 2 Totals :i* 7 9 7</p>
        <p>California  01*  ON  10-2</p>
        <p>Oaklaad  IN  Nl  05x-7</p>
        <p>Game WinningRBI - Hassey i8) DP-Califom)a I. Oakland I LOB-Califomia 7. Oakland 3. 2B-DHenderson. McGwire, Polonia. HK-Downing (18). McGwire (21) SB-Bosley (1), Lansford 120) S-Schofield. Polonia</p>
        <p>IP HR ER KR St)</p>
        <p>California TClark L.5-1 Buice Oakland GDavis Honeycutt Eckersley W.3-2</p>
        <p>71-3 7 2-3 2</p>
        <p>t.K</p>
        <p>61-3  6  I  I  4  2</p>
        <p>I  0  0  0  0  1</p>
        <p>12-3  1  1  1  0  3</p>
        <p>WP-TClark2 BK-TCIark Umpires-Home. Garcia: First. HirschbMk; Second. Scott; Third. Reed. T-2:34, A-20,195</p>
        <p>Carolina League</p>
        <p>Bi Thr AssM'iaIrd Press SEtll\DHAI.F NOIt rilKKN DIMSION</p>
        <p> I. IM.</p>
        <p>Hagvrslown lOnolsHt  ix  (Vti</p>
        <p>lAiH'hburg I ltd S\i 28  20  ..iKI</p>
        <p>x-Salem i|)ralcsi 24  24  .i))</p>
        <p>Pr William lYnksi 18  32  :9i()  13'.-</p>
        <p>SOl niERN DIVISION x-Kin.s)on i Indians i 28  22  .'oio</p>
        <p>Durham iBravi&amp;gt;i 2(i  24  .V2o  2</p>
        <p>W)nslun-Salin &amp;gt;('bsi 22  2K  440  li</p>
        <p>Virg&amp;gt;n)a iCoiipi 2o  29  4oK  7':-</p>
        <p>x-won l)rsl hull Dllc</p>
        <p>HiurMlai's (allies PrinceWilliam I2.llagerstiiun I Salem at Lsnchhurg. susp. I oinoig. rain Durham 5.\Vinslon Salem 3 Kinstun.i. Vogiiiia o</p>
        <p>11'ida.i s liauies Hagerslounal Prince William Salem ai Lynchburg Winston Salem al Durham Virginia al Kinslon</p>
        <p>Salurdas's (lauirs Hagerslim n al Prince W illiam Salem al L&amp;gt; nehliurg. 2 W inslon-Salem at Durham Virginia al Kinston</p>
        <p>Sunday's (&amp;lt;amrs llagersioun al Irlike William Salem al L\nehliurg W inston Salem al Durham Virginia al Kinstnn</p>
        <p>NFL Preseason</p>
        <p>K( The \&amp;lt;.s&amp;lt;H iaini I'ress VII Times EDT VVIKItK VNt llNFEREM K East</p>
        <p>)t 1.</p>
        <p>TIM PF</p>
        <p>P\</p>
        <p>ludianapolLs</p>
        <p>1 11</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>1 (XXI</p>
        <p>At</p>
        <p>7</p>
        <p>.Muml</p>
        <p>1 1</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>.'.Nl</p>
        <p>44</p>
        <p>41</p>
        <p>Bllalo</p>
        <p>(I 1</p>
        <p>II</p>
        <p>(XI</p>
        <p>9</p>
        <p>13</p>
        <p>Nr England N Y Jrfs</p>
        <p>0 1 I) 1</p>
        <p>u</p>
        <p>II</p>
        <p>IXXI</p>
        <p>IXKI</p>
        <p>:M</p>
        <p>12</p>
        <p>:I4</p>
        <p>23</p>
        <p>Cenlral</p>
        <p>I'Irvrland</p>
        <p>1 I)</p>
        <p>(1</p>
        <p>1 txxi</p>
        <p>l.l</p>
        <p>10</p>
        <p>Huuxtnn</p>
        <p>1 II</p>
        <p>(1</p>
        <p>1 IXXI</p>
        <p>It</p>
        <p>9</p>
        <p>Pittsburgh</p>
        <p>1 U</p>
        <p>(1</p>
        <p>1 IXXI</p>
        <p>44</p>
        <p>31</p>
        <p>Ciniinnali</p>
        <p>1 1 Ursl</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>Hxi</p>
        <p>:f&amp;gt;</p>
        <p>41</p>
        <p>.Sralllr</p>
        <p>2 (1</p>
        <p>II</p>
        <p>1 IXXI</p>
        <p>37</p>
        <p>2(1</p>
        <p>Denver</p>
        <p>1 0</p>
        <p>II</p>
        <p>1 IXXI</p>
        <p>4(1</p>
        <p>31</p>
        <p>Kansas ('il&amp;gt;</p>
        <p>1 0</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>1 IXXI</p>
        <p>.14</p>
        <p>21</p>
        <p>San Diego</p>
        <p>1 0</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>1 IXXI</p>
        <p>24</p>
        <p>21</p>
        <p>L A Raiders</p>
        <p>0 1</p>
        <p>(I</p>
        <p>IXXI</p>
        <p>10</p>
        <p>24</p>
        <p>NITBINAt (IINFEKEM K</p>
        <p>East</p>
        <p>N V Giants</p>
        <p>1 0</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>1 IXXI</p>
        <p>:I4</p>
        <p>3</p>
        <p>Philadelphia</p>
        <p>1 0</p>
        <p>u</p>
        <p>1 IXXI</p>
        <p>23</p>
        <p>12</p>
        <p>Dallas</p>
        <p>0 1</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>IXXI</p>
        <p>21</p>
        <p>24</p>
        <p>Phix'Dix</p>
        <p>0 1</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>IXXI</p>
        <p>7</p>
        <p>21</p>
        <p>Washingiun</p>
        <p>0 1 Crniral</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>IXXI</p>
        <p>.11</p>
        <p>44</p>
        <p>Chicago</p>
        <p>1 0</p>
        <p>u</p>
        <p>1 IXXI</p>
        <p>2(1</p>
        <p>17</p>
        <p>Green Ba&amp;gt;</p>
        <p>0 1</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>IXXI</p>
        <p>t</p>
        <p>Minnesola</p>
        <p>0 1</p>
        <p>(1</p>
        <p>(XXI</p>
        <p>2(1</p>
        <p>23</p>
        <p>Tampa Ha\</p>
        <p>u 1</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>IXXI</p>
        <p>7</p>
        <p>21)</p>
        <p>Delroii</p>
        <p>0 2 Uesl</p>
        <p>II</p>
        <p>IXXI</p>
        <p>23</p>
        <p>29</p>
        <p>Allania</p>
        <p>1 0</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>1 IXXI</p>
        <p>.14</p>
        <p>Xi</p>
        <p>Ne Orleans</p>
        <p>1 II</p>
        <p>II</p>
        <p>I IXXI</p>
        <p>2:1</p>
        <p>20</p>
        <p>San Eranciseo</p>
        <p>1 1</p>
        <p>II</p>
        <p>:xxi</p>
        <p>4.5</p>
        <p>17</p>
        <p>L A Rams</p>
        <p>u 1</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>IXXI</p>
        <p>18</p>
        <p>.VI</p>
        <p>Saliirdai'stianirs</p>
        <p>I I 0 0</p>
        <p>7  2</p>
        <p>2  3</p>
        <p>Hough pitched to2 batten m the 7lh HBf^KWashmglon by Williams Umpires-Hume. Kaiser. Fint, Phillips. Third, Morrison T-2 53 A-10,703</p>
        <p>HALTIMORE</p>
        <p>K ANS AS CITY</p>
        <p>Ailanla34. New England :w Cle\ eland 11 Detroit to Indianapolis 2o faiiipa Bay 7 I hieago.n. Miami 17 Philawlphia II New V ork .lels 12 New Vorktiianis H. Green Bay I Kansas Cil\ 14 CiiHinnali2l San Diego 24 Dallas 21 San Francisio 24. Low Angeles Haiders in Smidai 'sliame New 1 irleans 21 Vfinnesula 20 Tborsdas'stiame SeaiHelo llelroill VoT Friday'stiame New I tricaos al Ploiemx lo kipm Saiiirdas's Games ll.illasal Ijis VnxelesKaiders. 4pm</p>
        <p>The Dally Reflector. Greenville. N.C._Friday.  August 12.1988 8*3by Jeff Millar &amp;amp; Bill Hinds</p>
        <p>ei* umww Fw afieiw</p>
        <p>abrhbi  abrhbi</p>
        <p>BAndsn cf 6 0  I 0  Stilwll  ss  7 14  1</p>
        <p>Orsulak If 6 0  0 0  Seltzer  3b  3 12  1</p>
        <p>CRipkn ss  6 2  2 0  Brett lb  5 0 10</p>
        <p>Murray lb  6 I  3 2  Tabler dh  4 110</p>
        <p>Sheets rf 5 110 Welimn dh 1 0 0 0 Kennedy c  3 0  2 I  Trtabll rf  3 114</p>
        <p>Slanick 2b  2 0  0 0  FWhite 2b  5 0 10</p>
        <p>Dwyer dh  2 0  0 0  BJacksn If  6 1 2 0</p>
        <p>Gerhrt dh  2 10 0  Quirk c  3 0 10</p>
        <p>Gonzals 3b 2 0  0 I  WWilsn  ph  I 0 0  0</p>
        <p>Tettleton c 2 0  1 0  LOwen  c  10 0  0</p>
        <p>BRipkn 2b  3 0  0 0  Capra cf  3 0 0 0</p>
        <p>Traber ph  l 0  11  Bucknr ph  0 0 0 0</p>
        <p>10 10 Pecota If 2 11</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>44 6 14 6</p>
        <p>Baltimore  ON  3N  II  **-5</p>
        <p>KMsas aiy  4W  ON  I*  NI-6</p>
        <p>Two outs when winning run scored Game Winnina RBI-&amp;amp;iuer (51. E-Seitzer, PecoU DP-Baltimore 2 Kansas City t. LOB-Baltimore 8, Kansas City 15.2B-Kennedy 2. CRipken, Hurray. 3B-Murray. HR-Tartabull (18), S-Quirk SF-Gonzales,Seitzer.</p>
        <p>IP H R ER BB SO</p>
        <p>Baltimore</p>
        <p>Morgan  1-3 2 3 3 1 I</p>
        <p>Tibbs  61-3  4  I  1  6  3</p>
        <p>Aase  2  41120</p>
        <p>Thurmond  1 1-3  2  0  0  1  1</p>
        <p>Niednfuer L.1-3  12-3  2  I  I  0  I</p>
        <p>Kansas City Gubicza  7 2-3  8  4  4  I  3</p>
        <p>Gleaton  I  0  I  0  0  l</p>
        <p>Farr  2 1-3  4  0  0  0  2</p>
        <p>Montgmry  W.5-2  I  0  0  0  0  0</p>
        <p>Thurmond pitched lo I batter in the 11th. Umpires-Home, Roe; First. Bremigan; Second, Cousins; Third, Barnett. T-4:21.A-33,920</p>
        <p>CHICAGO  SEATTLE</p>
        <p>abrhbi  abrhbi</p>
        <p>Gallghr cf 5 12 1 Brantly cf 4 0 10 Lyons 3b 3 110 Reynlds 2b 4 0 I 0 Baines  dh  5 0 2 3  Coles  If  3 110</p>
        <p>Pasqua  rf  5 0 0 0  Coito  cf  0 0 0 0</p>
        <p>Boston If 4 0 10 Fields ph 10 0 0 Fisk c 3 0 10 Balboni dh 41 2 I Paris lb 4 110 Buhner rf 4 0 0 0 Guillen  ss  4 13 0  ADavis lb  3 12 0</p>
        <p>Manriq  2b  3 0 0 0  Reed  pr  00 0 0</p>
        <p>Salas ph 1 0 0 0 Presley 3b 4 0 2 0 MDiaz ss 3 000 McGuire c 2 0 0 0 Bradley c 10 0 0 Totals 37 4 11 4 Totals 33 3 9 1</p>
        <p>Chicago  ON  ON  3I6-4</p>
        <p>Seattle  2ie  on  W3</p>
        <p>Game Winning RBI - Gallagher (4i. E-ADavis. I)P-Chicago 3. Seattle 2. LOB-Chicago 10, Seattle 4. 2B-BNton. ADavis, Baines. 3B-Balboni. SB-Reynolds (241.</p>
        <p>IP H R ER BB SO</p>
        <p>Chicago</p>
        <p>Reuss W.8-7  7  7  3  2  0  1</p>
        <p>Thigpen S.25  2  2  0  0  0  1</p>
        <p>Seattle</p>
        <p>Swift  61-3  8  2  2  2  0</p>
        <p>Walter  0  0  I  I  l  0</p>
        <p>MJackson L.6^  22-3  3  1  0  I  0</p>
        <p>Walter pitched to 1 batter in the 7th. HBP-ADavis by Reuss PB-Fisk, McGuire.</p>
        <p>Umpires-Home. Brinkman: First. Welke; Second. Merrill; Third. Cooney T-2:47, A-9.056.</p>
        <p>Cleveland al Tampa Bay. 7 p.m.</p>
        <p>Green Bay al Indianapolis. ^ 30 p m Cincinnali al Bllalo. 7::iup.m Kansas Ciiv at Atlanta. 7::ju p m Houston vs New England at Memphis. Tenn ,8pm Washington al Miami.8p.m New York Jets at New York Giants. 8 pm</p>
        <p>San Franciscoal Denver. 9pm San Diego al Lus Angeles Bams. 11 p m Sundav's Games Chicago vs Minnesota at Goteborg.</p>
        <p>Sweden, ip Philadelp</p>
        <p>fphiaal Pittsburgh. 8pm</p>
        <p>Golf Scores</p>
        <p>EDMOND. Okla. lAPi - Graded scores after Thursday's tirsi round of the 70lh PGA National Championship, being plaved on the par 36-35- 71,7.ui.Vvard Oak Tree Goll Club course:  "</p>
        <p>Bob Gilder John Cook Paul Azinger Nick Faloo Chip Beck Jay Overton Peter Senior Craig Sladler Raymond Flovd Rocco Mediale Greg Norman Mike-Keid Tolhmy Nakajima Bob Vfakoski Jell Sluman Steve Jones Dan Pohl Hal Sutton Mac O'Gradv Dave Stockton Richard Zokol Mark 0 Meara Denis Walson Bruce l.ielzke Payne Slewarl Thomas Brannen David Graham Ben Crenshaw Urrv Nelson Doug Tewell Judie Mudd Corev Pavin Ed Fiori Ronnie Black Seve Ballesteros John Mahaffey Bob Twav Andrew Magtv David Edwards Jim Henepe Steve Pale Dick Mast Jay Don Blake Diinnie Hammond D A. W'eibring Bob Grolt Tim Simpson Jim Hallel Curlis -Strange Gary Kiwh Don Poolev Jack Mcklaus Boherl W'ronn Tom Walson Tom Kilc Kennv Knox Gibbv Gilbert Gary' llalllHTg Dav'id Ishn Blame McCallisler .lav Haas Mike llulU-rl Tom Sux'kmani) Isao .'Voki lairrv Mize Mark McNullv</p>
        <p>:a-33-6</p>
        <p>32-;i- 67</p>
        <p>33-:H-7 36-31-67 M-ti- 67 :l&amp;gt;-:)3- 68 :i.V;i3 68 :tl-:li- 68 ;-3.i- 68 :t6-:l2 68</p>
        <p>34-:t4-68 36-32- 68 :i;l-;t6- 69 :!7 :t2 4i9 ;i.i-:!4 69</p>
        <p>6</p>
        <p>33-36- 69 ;16-:B- 6 ;t7-33-7() 3:-37-7U :-:t2-70 :I6-:14- 70 :l4-36 70 36-34- 711 :l5-35-70</p>
        <p>70</p>
        <p>36-:t4-7ll :t.V3.)-70 :i6-:t4 70 :t.V:l5 70 .8^:74 70 :i-3.V 71 :I8-:B- 71 :i-3.V 71 36-:ii-7l :D-3H-71 ;14-:17- 71</p>
        <p>71</p>
        <p>;i.V.i6 71 :C. :i6 71 ;iv:t6- 71 :i4 :i7 71</p>
        <p>71</p>
        <p>:ib-36- 72 Xy Xi -71 :I6-:I6 72 ;I6-;I6 72 :t7 ;iv 72 ;t7-.- 72 ;17-:iV 72 :I4-:I8- 72 :: 72 36-:t6 72 ;I8-:H 72</p>
        <p>:W:4 72 :t7 :i5 72 :i5-:l 7:1 :I8-:15- 73 ;!8-:i.V 7:i :I9-:14 73 40-:i:t 7:i 4o-:i;! 7:i :I6-;17 7:i :t7-:l6- 73 :IK-:l.V 7:1</p>
        <p>Tom Byrum</p>
        <p>:M-35-73</p>
        <p>Clarence Rose</p>
        <p>38-35-73</p>
        <p>Steve Elkinglon</p>
        <p>:Bt ;l5- 73</p>
        <p>John Inman</p>
        <p>:{7 :i- 73</p>
        <p>Fulton Allem</p>
        <p>;19-;14 7:!</p>
        <p>Jim Carter</p>
        <p>:WXi- 73</p>
        <p>Rodger Davis</p>
        <p>40-33 73</p>
        <p>Dave Kummells</p>
        <p>;ttt-;t.&amp;gt;-7:!</p>
        <p>Peter Jaeobsen</p>
        <p>38-:l5-73</p>
        <p>Sam Randolph</p>
        <p>37-36- 73</p>
        <p>Mark Calravecchia</p>
        <p>:-;t5-7;!</p>
        <p>Hale Irwin</p>
        <p>:l7-;t7- 74</p>
        <p>Calvin Peele</p>
        <p>:t7 :t7 74</p>
        <p>Gene Sauers</p>
        <p>:i9-:3v 74</p>
        <p>Nick Price</p>
        <p>:!8-:i6- 74</p>
        <p>Lanny Wadkins</p>
        <p>t6-:i8 74</p>
        <p>Joev Sindelar</p>
        <p>:i6-38-74</p>
        <p>Dave Burr</p>
        <p>:t8-:i6 74</p>
        <p>Scoll Bess</p>
        <p>:!H-:t6-74</p>
        <p>Jim Dickson</p>
        <p>:r7 :f7 74</p>
        <p>Andy North</p>
        <p>;i8-.!6 74</p>
        <p>Bernhard Langer</p>
        <p>:(9-:l5- 74</p>
        <p>Scoll Simpson</p>
        <p>:l7-;j7-74</p>
        <p>Arnold Palmer</p>
        <p>:i7 :t7 74</p>
        <p>Ken Brown</p>
        <p>:18-36-74</p>
        <p>Fred Couples</p>
        <p>37-;l7-74</p>
        <p>Jav Lumwin</p>
        <p>41K14- 74</p>
        <p>Scoll H(k%</p>
        <p>38 :16- 74</p>
        <p>Ken Green</p>
        <p>:t7 :!7 74</p>
        <p>Fuzzv Zix'ller</p>
        <p>;t4-4(l 74</p>
        <p>Hubert Green</p>
        <p>40-;t4- 74</p>
        <p>Mark Wiebo</p>
        <p>:17-:I7 74</p>
        <p>Woodv Filzhugh</p>
        <p>:l8-:t6-74</p>
        <p>Ralpli Landrum</p>
        <p>:-:r7- 75</p>
        <p>Gene Fieger</p>
        <p>:t8-:t7-75</p>
        <p>Bobbv Wadkins</p>
        <p>:m-;{7- 75</p>
        <p>Hob taislwood</p>
        <p>37-:41 7.5</p>
        <p>James Weeden</p>
        <p>:!9-;16 75</p>
        <p>Mike Donald</p>
        <p>39-;t6-'7.5</p>
        <p>Rav Freeman</p>
        <p>:t7-:t8- 75</p>
        <p>Tom Purlzer</p>
        <p>41-;H-75</p>
        <p>David FrosI</p>
        <p>;t9-36-75</p>
        <p>Bob Lohr</p>
        <p>4U-:l5-75</p>
        <p>Russ Cochran</p>
        <p>4(i :16- 76</p>
        <p>Morris Halalskv</p>
        <p>42-:t4-76</p>
        <p>(iregg Jones.</p>
        <p>Gil Morgan Mark A^umber</p>
        <p>4(v:l6- 76 :l7-:t9-76 :l9-:t7-76</p>
        <p>Wayne Grady</p>
        <p>:)8-;)8-76</p>
        <p>Keilh Clearwater</p>
        <p>4(437-77</p>
        <p>Mike Malaska</p>
        <p>38-39- 77</p>
        <p>Bub Menne</p>
        <p>:t9-:l8-77</p>
        <p>l.ee Trevino</p>
        <p>4o :i7 77</p>
        <p>Scoll Verplank</p>
        <p>:t9-:i8- 77</p>
        <p>Jell Both</p>
        <p>40-37- 77</p>
        <p>Lynn Jansiin</p>
        <p>:I9-:I8 77</p>
        <p>Hick Vershure</p>
        <p>:i8-40-78</p>
        <p>Mark Gurnow</p>
        <p>42-36-78</p>
        <p>Tom Wargo</p>
        <p>:l9-;t9-78</p>
        <p>Hob Mann</p>
        <p>:i8-40-78</p>
        <p>Jim Subb</p>
        <p>4(i-;l8 78</p>
        <p>Izinnif Nielsen</p>
        <p>:!K-4(i- 78</p>
        <p>Hennv Passons</p>
        <p>40-38- 78</p>
        <p>Mike Burke. Jr</p>
        <p>4(I-:I8- 78</p>
        <p>David Thore</p>
        <p>42-36- 78</p>
        <p>Darrell Kcstner</p>
        <p>42-;16- 78</p>
        <p>Andy Bean</p>
        <p>4(4:- 78</p>
        <p>Ian WiHisnam</p>
        <p>:l9-39- 78</p>
        <p>Bob Lendzion</p>
        <p>4I-;17 78</p>
        <p>Mike laiwrencc</p>
        <p>(9-40 79</p>
        <p>Hill Krodell</p>
        <p>42-37-79</p>
        <p>Curt Bvrum</p>
        <p>41-:I8- 79</p>
        <p>David Glenz</p>
        <p>:l8-41-79</p>
        <p>Don Brigham</p>
        <p>40-39- 79</p>
        <p>Dana Quiglev</p>
        <p>4(l-:t9- 79</p>
        <p>lohn Paesani</p>
        <p>:19-I(I~ 79</p>
        <p>Brad Fa.von</p>
        <p>41:18 79</p>
        <p>Curl Poche</p>
        <p>41:19^ 80</p>
        <p>Mark Brooks</p>
        <p>4i :l9- 80</p>
        <p>.Mike .Sanlitippo</p>
        <p>44 :16- 8(1</p>
        <p>Jim .Albus</p>
        <p>40-40-8(1</p>
        <p>Bob Klein. Jr</p>
        <p>42-39- 81</p>
        <p>Dwight Nevil</p>
        <p>41-4(1- 81</p>
        <p>Hdl (ilassun</p>
        <p>41- WD</p>
        <p>Transactions</p>
        <p>B\ The VsMH-ialnl Press RASEKALI.</p>
        <p>Vinrricaii la-ague CHIC AGO WHITE SOX-Recalled Buss Morman, Irom Vancouver ot the Pacilic Coast League Sent James Randall. Iirsi baseman outilelder. to Vancouver MILWAUKEE BREWERS Activated Mark Clear, pilcher. Irom the l,') day disabled list Senl Chris Bosio, pitcher, to Denver ol the American Association NEW VOKK YANKEES Aclivaied Mike Pagliarulo. third baseman. Irom the 15-dav disabled list, and Wayne Tolleson, mlielder. from the 21-day di.sabled list Sent Randv Velarde, infielder. lo Columbus ol the In ternational League and Alvaro Espinoza, infielder. oulright to Columbus SEATTLE M.AKINEK.S Placed Steve Trout, pilcher. on the l.'i-dav disabled list Keealled Hill Wilkinson, 'pitcher, Irom Calgary ol the Paeilic Coast League National l.eague PHILADELPHIA PHIIlIES Named Larry Bowa ihird base coach Announced thal John Vukovich. third base coach, w ill rclurn lo the dugout to assist manager l.ee Elia</p>
        <p>SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS Keealled Matt Williams, inlielder. Irom Phoenix ol the Pacilic Coast League Granted Harry Spilman. Inlielder. his unconditional release.</p>
        <p>FIMITBAM.</p>
        <p>National FiMrtball League ATLANTA FALCONS- Signed Beggie Camp, delenslve lineman Released Curlis Rouse, ollenslve tJckle.</p>
        <p>LOS ANGELES RAMS Waived Sor uood Vann, linebacker, and Phillip Frasch. defensive back.</p>
        <p>MIAMI DOLPHINS- Signed Randv McMillan, lullback NEW YORK JETS Re signed Eric Lewis and DarrvI Pearson, w ide receivers.</p>
        <p>PHILADELPHIA EAGLES-Waived Alan Reid, running back Claimed Alan Dial, satelv. on waivers Irom the Buffalo Bills</p>
        <p>PHOENIX CARDINALS Named Terrv Bledsoi director ol public relations PITTSBIKGH STEELEK.s Signid Ben Thomas, delenslve end Announced ihat Herb Gainer, wide receiver, lell camp ' IHKKEY</p>
        <p>Naliiiiial llockev la-ague NEW YORK RANGEKS Signed Mike Golden, right w ing</p>
        <p>COI.I.EGE NCAA Restored the lootliall eligibility ol Tony Mandarich. Michigan Stale ollensive lineman, lor all but Ihe lirst thret games.</p>
        <p>ARIZONA .STATE-Named &amp;amp; Chadwick men s and women's badminton coach FAIKLEIGH DICKINSON Named Kim Rockev assistant basketball coach Kl'TZTOW'N- Named Uri Dmytrush women's volleyball coach and assislani coach tor women's sw imming and lacrnsse NEW HAMPSHIRE-Named BobDuftlev assistant men s liasketball coach NORWICH- Named Jesse Castro crosscountry and wrestling coach and Michel Sharp women's basketball and softball coach</p>
        <p>SOUTH CAROLINA- Declared Ryan Bethea, w ide receiver, ineligible lor'the 1988 season TENNESSEE- Extended Ihe contract o Johnnv .Majors, loolball coach, through the 1994 season</p>
        <p>N.C. Scoreboard</p>
        <p>Ky The .Assm-ialed Press</p>
        <p>Siiulheni League Charlulte I.OrlandoO Greenville. S C. 2. ChattancHiga I</p>
        <p>South Vllaiilie League</p>
        <p>Myrtle Beach at Asheville, ppd rain</p>
        <p>Columbia at Gastonia, ppd rain (7reensboro7. Savannan 3 Spartanburg 14. Sumterti Charleston. SC. 10. Fa.vetleville 2</p>
        <p>Vppalaehiaii la-ague Burlington 4. Kingsport!</p>
        <p>Rec Softball</p>
        <p>Industrial Touriiev</p>
        <p>Yale........................010  66  0- 15</p>
        <p>Sterling..............I12)ll  222  x-20</p>
        <p>Leading hitters: S - Alonzo Strong 4-4. Kelly Evans 3-4; Y - Dale Merritt 3-4, Dave Joyner 3-3,</p>
        <p>Yale........................(100  (100  5 - 5</p>
        <p>Sterling...................060  910  x-16</p>
        <p>l^eading hitters: S  Emerson liobgood 4-4. Melvin Hines 3-3; Y -Dave Joyner 3-3 Sterling wins West Division lour nament championship.</p>
        <p>Collins &amp;amp; Aikman 220  262  014</p>
        <p>Harris.....................200  000  2- 4</p>
        <p>Leading hitters; CA  Thomas Connor 3-4. Jessie Artis 3-3; H  Chip Davis 4-4.</p>
        <p>Collins &amp;amp; Aikman wins South Division tournament championship.</p>
        <p>Pitt Memorial............030  040  jO-7</p>
        <p>B. Wellcome *1..........302  010  0- 6</p>
        <p>l^eading hitters: BW - Mike Kc-dmond 3-3, Evan Davenport 3-3: PM - Greg Sullivan 2-3.</p>
        <p>Pitt Memorial............200  200  2-6</p>
        <p>B Wellcome #1..........010  101  0- 3</p>
        <p>Leading hitters. PM  Brandi Allen 2-3.Tony Brown 3-3; BW  Bill I^each 2-3, Evan Davenport 2-3.</p>
        <p>Pill County Memorial Hospital wins East Division tournament championship</p>
        <p>Church Tournanienl</p>
        <p>Grace.......................000  000  0- 0</p>
        <p>Blackjack................160  tT20  x-9</p>
        <p>laiading hitters: BJ  Carl Arnold</p>
        <p>2-2 ; G  Parrish Sasser 2-3.</p>
        <p>Blackjack................OUO  ooo  2-2</p>
        <p>Grace.......................401  mxi  x-5</p>
        <p>Leading hitlers: G  Perry Hardee 2-3. Russell Page 3-3; BJ -Curt Spencer 3-3.</p>
        <p>Blackjack................101  202  0--6</p>
        <p>Grace.......................too  1K0  0 3</p>
        <p>Leading hitters: BJ - Dixon Page . 2 2. J T Mills 2  3.  Ben  Wilson 2 3.</p>
        <p>Curt Spencer 2-3;  G  - Larry  Hardee</p>
        <p>3-3. Wayne Bailey 2-3.</p>
        <p>Black Jack wins overall Church I&amp;gt;eague tournament championship.</p>
        <p>Wiiilrrville l.eagurs</p>
        <p>Gum Swamp (lOO 200 23- 7</p>
        <p>Rose Hill/Ballards . too 201 00 4 Leading hitters: GS - Tracy Coggins 3-5. Kent Brown 2-5; RH - U*on Harris 3-4. Robbie Nichols 2-4.</p>
        <p>Church of God.........400  012  100- 8</p>
        <p>Temple..................too  051  101-9</p>
        <p>Leading hitlers; CG - David Ross 3-5, Mike Wingate 3-5; T - Keith Gardner 2-5. Mote Brown 2-5.</p>
        <p>Peoples.........................500  00- 5</p>
        <p>Blackjack.....................251  55-18</p>
        <p>Leading hitlers: P - Gene Lewis 2 3. Mark Ferrell 2-3; BJ - Steve Mills 4-4. Dexter Hudson 3-4.</p>
        <p>Women's Olympic Squad Begins The Real Action</p>
        <p>ByTOMKOKEMANJr.</p>
        <p>AP Sports Writer CHARLOTTE (AP) - No more pickup games for the U.S. Olympic women's basketball team. Tonight, the competition starts to heat up with a game against Cuba.</p>
        <p>When Coach Kay Yows team began its trials in Raleigh, its scrimmage competition consisted of a group of men from the local YMCA. In Colorado Springs, the women had two scrimmages against the U.S. mens handball team. Finally, after two-a-day drills for two weeks, Yows team gets its first major pre-Olympic test.</p>
        <p>its great to play someone other than a pickup team, said Susan Yow, Kay Yows younger sister and an assistant coach on the team.</p>
        <p>The change has been good for us, Susan Yow said. Its another segment in our progress to Seoul. Another positive of the game will be the opportunity to redirect the aggressive play, which Kay Yow said occasionally led to overheated emotions at Colorado Springs.</p>
        <p>Weve had to stop and have a couple of talks every once in a while, Yow said following a three-hour workout, because as time goes by, competing for a position is really tough. We talked about competing with people versus competing against people and tried to get our mental outlook and attitude right. The contests with the Cubans will be the openers of doubleheaders in the Carolinas Invitational, a series of Olympic exhibitions which also will showcase baseball, gymnastics, cycling and boxing.</p>
        <p>The men's basketball team will meet a group of NBA stars Friday night and Sunday afternoon following the womens games. The basketball</p>
        <p>games will be the inaugural athletic events in Charlottes new 23,500-seat arena.</p>
        <p>Theyll be a very aggressive team. They have a very strong post game. They try to do the same things we try to do, Yow said of the Cubans.</p>
        <p>If the Cubans try to emulate the Americans, their defensive pressure will extend the length of the court, and they will attempt to run an uptempo offense with fast breaks at every opportunity.</p>
        <p>The Americans look to speedster Teresa Edwards to lead the attack from the point guard position. But Yow said she will not be a replacement for Cheryl Miller, the 1984 gold medalist who was cut from the roster this week after reinjuring her knee.</p>
        <p>Teresa just needs to be Teresa, Yow said. "She has incredible quickness and speed. She is an outstanding player in her own right.</p>
        <p>The Cubans are little taller along the front line, and they have the ad</p>
        <p>vantage of playing together over several years. But Yow said that wont make the U.S. alter its strate-</p>
        <p>Were going with our game, she said. We re going with our game, do what we do as well as we can possibly do it at this point in time, knowing that in another month, were going to do it better.</p>
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        <p>Sports Notes Questions On Drug Testing Remain</p>
        <p>MT  Mf.QfiinM  Ifsin  ^  AP\_U rAmainc  Damoc  :__  rtAMAviol  fi&amp;gt;t&amp;gt;  t^kA  cfo*GrMnvilU Swimmers Qualify For Tourney</p>
        <p>Four Greenville swimmers qualified to compete in the North Carolina Swinuning Long Course Age Group Championships to be held in High Point Aug. 54.</p>
        <p>Kristy Cain qualified in the Girls 10 &amp;amp; Under division by finishing 12th in the 100 fly with a time of 1 ;29.80 and 27th in the 50 fly with a clocking of 41.34.</p>
        <p>Two boys qualified in the 13*14 division. Josh Glienke placed 17th in the 50 freestyle with a time of 28.46 and 35th in the 100 freestyle at 1:04.05 to be eligible aiid David Kelly placed in the 24th spot in the 50 freestyle with a time of 29.02 and in 32nd place in the 100 freestyle with a clocking of 1:04.05 to qualify.</p>
        <p>The final qualifier from the Greenville Swin Club was Trey Stroud in the Boys 15-18 division. Stroud finished 55th in the 50 freestyle with a time of 28.28 and 45th in the 100 freestyle with a clocking of 1:00.47.Tyson Set To Defend Title Against Bruno</p>
        <p>LONDON (AP)  Heavyweight champion Mike Ty^n is set to defend his crown Oct. 8 against Frank Bruno at Wembley Stadium, British promoter Jarvis Astaire says.</p>
        <p>Astaire, c(H)wner of Wembley, Britains foremost sporting venue, said Thursday that Tyson agreed to the date only two weeks after he announced he was pulling out of a Sept. 3 fight and taking six to eight weeks off.</p>
        <p>The lawyers worked it out last night after Tyson returned home from Los Angeles, Astaire said. We will have a 60,000 capacity, which is the same as we were planning for Sept. 3.</p>
        <p>Bruno has been the World Boxing Councils No. 1 challenger since last October, and tlw World Boxing Association made him a leading contender earlier this year.</p>
        <p>His bout with Tyson was originally scheduled for June, but the 26-year-old British fighter was forced to wait when the American decided instead to meet Michael Spinks on June 27.</p>
        <p>After lyson dismantled Spinks in 91 seconds, the 22-year-old champion became embroiled in a dispute with his manager. Bill Cayton, and stunned the boxing world by announcing his retirement.</p>
        <p>Cayton and Tyson eventually came to terms, leaving Cayton still holding the managerial reigns, but l^son more in control of his own destiny.</p>
        <p>Both Astaire, and British co-promoter Mickey Duff, feared that if the post-l^ment was more^n^ mon^they would have to take the fight indoors</p>
        <p>But Duff received assurances that there was only a 10 percent chance of worse conditions in early October than early September and so Wembley Stadium was kept as a possibility.Washington Loses Bid To Stay In Coastal</p>
        <p>CHAPEL HILL (AP) - Murphy will be allowed to stay in class 1-A and its teams will be eli^ble for the playoffs each year despite its 2-A enrollment, according to a ruling by the realignment committee of the N.C. High School Athletic Association.</p>
        <p>Murphy, the two-time defending state 1-A football champion, could not be placed in a 2-A conference because of its location in the western comer of North Carolina, the committee decided Thursday.</p>
        <p>Then, after a 30-minute discussion, the panel altered its May decision and dropped a restriction that would have made the schools teams ineligible for the 1-A (riayirffs in two coiKsecutive years.</p>
        <p>The other eight appeals to the committee were rejected, although the committee wrestled at length with having a six-team 3-A leagiK, the Mid-State, in the heart of state while other nearby 3-A leagues have eight members. 'Hie Mid-State had asked that another 3-A team be added to the conference.</p>
        <p>The committee, in an 11-6 vote, lifted the playoff restrictions for Murphy after an emotional plea from Murphy principal Robert Hendrix. AlUiough ie school has the enrollment of a 2-A school (460 students), its closest league game in a 2-A conference would be 130 miles throu^ the mountains. Travel time would stretch to four hcnirs each way for some of tlu more distant games.</p>
        <p>Ev^body here knows it is not realistic for us to be in that 2-A league, Hendrix said. You arent going to schedule a Tuesday ni^t baskettiall game 200 miles away from home in the mountains of North Carolina.</p>
        <p> The committee also rejected:</p>
        <p>  Washingtons appeal to be moved from the Tar-Roanoke 3-A Conference to the Coastal 3-A.</p>
        <p>- A request by Burlin^on Williams, which had been placed in the Metro 4-A Conference, to be placed in the Mid-State 3-A.</p>
        <p> Lee Countys bid to join the Capital Area-14-A Conference.</p>
        <p>- Oxford Webbs request to leave the Piedmont Athletic 4-A and join the Mid State 3-A.</p>
        <p>;  The Eastern North Carolina School for the Deafs request to be moved from the Carolina 1-A to the Tobacco Belt 1-A.</p>
        <p>"  Shelby Crests bid to be placed in a 3-A conference, although it is 4-A by enn^inent, because of poor gate receipts in the Tri-Countv Conference.</p>
        <p>- A request by Sun Valley, a member of the South Pieomont Conference, to be placed in a league with fewer than nine members.Charlotte Shows Off New Coliseum</p>
        <p>CHARLOTTE (AP) - Some 20,000 people, wearing everything from fmrmal wear to baseball caps and blue jeans, came to watch Charlotte become the new home of the Southeasts largest arena - a $54 million coliseum won the praise of evangelist Billy Graham.</p>
        <p>This dedication is an historic night in the history of Charlotte, Graham during Thursdays ceremonies. Its one of the finest facilities in the world and Ive had a lot of experience with arenas and stadiums.</p>
        <p>Graham, a Charlotte native who dedicated the citys first coliseum 33 years ago, said the new coliseum was a symbol that (^rlotte is taking its place among the great cities of America... A symbol of diarlottes unity and cooperation.</p>
        <p> A magnificent showplace, Ck)v. Jim Martin said.</p>
        <p>The opening night celebration also featured parades, a laser light show and dozens of musicians, dancers and other performers, including Charlottes Moody Brothers and an appearance by B.J. Thomas, who performed several of his hits, including Rainvops Keep Falling On My Head.</p>
        <p>The coliseums coming out party also attracted Lt. Gov. Bob Jordan, Charlotte Mayor Sue Myrick and Charlotte Hornets owner George Shinn, who received the biggest ovation from the crowd.</p>
        <p>The event was broadcast live by two of the citys television stations.</p>
        <p>Some (rf those who attended the opening shared Grahams enthusiams for the new coliseum.</p>
        <p>Its something we didnt want to miss, said Sherry Hite of Charlotte, who came with her husband and their two young sons. Its something my chidren can say 30 years from now We were here.</p>
        <p>Nancy Smith of n^rby Lucia, N.C., said she had planned to watch the festivities on television but was talked into coming Thursday night by her grandson, Mark Mangum, who had waited for hours to get the free tickets. Im glad he dragged me out, Mrs. Smith said. This is history.</p>
        <p>But outside, things did not run quite so smoothly.</p>
        <p>Despite a new $22 million highway - Tyvola Road Extension - and a computerized system of lights and reversible drivnig lanes, traffic backed up several miles.</p>
        <p>At 6:30 p.m., Fezzi Akbay was a mile from the new coliseums 8,000-car parking lot. It will be over before 1 get there, he complained.</p>
        <p>Cdiseum director Steve Camp said too many drivers clMse the southern route to the new building, which jammed the coliseums tum-in road and parking lot.</p>
        <p>Workers were busy Thursday adding finishing touches to the sprawling, sandstoneHXilored arena, which was financed by a $47.4 million bond issue ,four years ago. The official opening comes nearly three years to the day that ground was broken at the site on the citys west side.</p>
        <p>From the beginning, the new arena has been called the Charlotte Coliseum,, but thats also the name of the citys current sports arena. The city council is expected to vote later this month on a recommendatim by thie coliseum authority to name it Hie Charlotte Crown.</p>
        <p>City officials exp^t the 465,00(&amp;gt;^uare-foot facility and its 25,000 teal-green eats to attract major sports and entertainment events that have not come to the city in recent years Wause of limited seating and parking at the old col--iaeum.</p>
        <p>The new facility will gets its first sports events Friday night, when the 'mens and women's U.S. Olympic basketball teams take on a squad of NBA all-stars, including North Carolina native Michael Jordan, and the Cuban na-*tkmal team. The games are part of the three-day Carolinas Invitational, a tune-up to the summer Olympics.</p>
        <p>On Saturday, the U.S. Olympic gymnastics team will put on an exhibition at the coliseum. On Sunday, the iMsketball teams will go at it again.</p>
        <p>The coliseum also is home to the Charlotte Hornets, who will open play in i the NBA at home Nov. 4 against the Cleveland Cavaliers.</p>
        <p>The Atlantic Coast Conference Tournament which hasnt been held in Charlotte since 1970  already has been booked at th^ coliseum for 1990 and 1991. (Xher tournaments also hiave been booked.</p>
        <p>MISSION, Kan. (AP)  It remains to be seen how mu^h long-range impact a California court may have on the NCAAs drug-testing program.</p>
        <p>But the state judge, ruling the NCAAs program unconstitutional, did re-open the debate in colleges around me natimi on whether  and how  the NCAA can require its athletes to undergo the tests.</p>
        <p>Theres a bit of ambivilance, said Jim Delany, commissioner of the Ohio Valley Conference. Some people wonder how testing fits into university life, when youre testing athletes but not other students.</p>
        <p>That was apparently a key point in the ruling Wednesday by Santa Clara County Superior Court Judge Conrad Rushing in a suit brought by Stanford University and two of its athletes. Rushing declared the program unconstitutional. The ruling applies only to Stanford, and almost certainly will be appealed. But it could be used as a precedent if other legal challenges are raised.</p>
        <p>NCAA schools voted overwhelmingly in January 1986 to test at NCAA championships and football bowl</p>
        <p>games, not during the regular season. Many schools have their own separate testing plan.</p>
        <p>I have seen no evidence that the sentiment of the majority of the membership has changed, NCAA President WilfordS. Bailey said.</p>
        <p>At least one NCAA school, Eastern Kentucky, decided Thursday to suspend its own drug-testing program in the wake of the California ruling.</p>
        <p>NCAA Executive director Dick Schultz said the drug-testing program remains the perview of NCAA members.</p>
        <p>This program to test athletes par-ticipatating in NCAA championships and certified post-season events was adopted by the NCAA member colleges and universities throughout the United States in 1986, Schultz said.</p>
        <p>Such a program was instituted because of the members interest in protecting the health of the student-athletes, reducing peer pressure and the temptation to use drugs, and ensuring fair competition for the student-athletes and the public, educating athletes about drugs and</p>
        <p>deterring drug abuse in sports competition.</p>
        <p>Bailey said the constitutionality of the program has been twice upheld in federal court.</p>
        <p>The right to engage in NCAA competition is not a right guaranteed by the U.S. Constitution, Bailey said. Its a privilege. And if an individual wishes to compete in NCAA championship events, the individual must be prepared to comply with the rules established by the membership.</p>
        <p>In Louisiana in December 1986, a federal court denied the injunction sought by Roland Barbay, an LSU football player who tested positive for steroids and was declared ineligible for the 1^ Sugar Bowl.</p>
        <p>Earlier this year in Seattle, Feder-al District Judge Walter T. McGovern, in a motion for preliminary injunction, ruled the NCAAs program would likely succeed on its merits.</p>
        <p>In other words, it was likely to be proven to be a constitutional program, said Carol Niccolls, an assis-</p>
        <p>Junior Golf Champs</p>
        <p>Greenville Country Club held its Junior Club  Brian Fields, 12-13; Brooks Honeycutt, 14-15;</p>
        <p>Championship Thursday. Age group winners  Seth Holloman, 9; and Will Bowman, 8.</p>
        <p>were, left to right: Jonathan Adams, 10-11;  (Reflector Photo)</p>
        <p>tant attorney general for the state of* Washington.</p>
        <p>Nccolls cautioned against putting too much interpretation on the ongoing court battles.</p>
        <p>At this point, its too early to say where all this is going, Niccolls told The Associated Press. Everything is still in the preliminary stage.  ;</p>
        <p>Eastern Kentucky athletic director* Don Combs decided Thursday to sus-" pend his schools testing pro^am in. light of the legal climate right now. ;</p>
        <p>We were bringing in freshmen^ this week in football and volleyball* and were going to have drug-t testing, Combs said. But the legal; climate does not appear to be favor-|; able at this time. We will continue the&amp;gt; educational part of the program.</p>
        <p>Bailey and other NCAA officials said they knew of no other schools: that had taken similar action.  i</p>
        <p>Rushing said the NCAA test in-^ vades student athletes privacy,^ and that it interfers with the: athletes right to treat themselves: with appropriate over-the-counter^ medications as other students do. ;</p>
        <p>Ironically, it was a resolution five' years ago by the Pacific 10 Conference, to which Stanford belongs, that first urged the NCAA to look into drug-testing.  ,  ;</p>
        <p>After much discussion, NCAA*' schools voted overwhelmingly in January 1986 to begin testing for per-., formance-enhancing substances,  such as steroids as well as street, drugs like as cocaine and marijuana. Many schools have established their  own programs for in-seasing testing.</p>
        <p>Theres no question but that therct is an element of invasion of privacy, Bailey said. And until there are effective ways of testing for drugs that do not require that, this is necessary' in order to have an effective drug-testing program.</p>
        <p>We wish we did not have to invade privacy at all. We wish there was no question of vioaltion of constitutional rights. But we think these issues are so important, it justfies it. Tom Hansen, executive director of the Pacific-10 Conference, said many schools look at this in a different light from Stanford.</p>
        <p>Everybody has some concerns about the intrusion of the rights of the individuals, Hansen said.</p>
        <p>&amp;lt;    sS  s  &amp;lt;</p>
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        <p>For Just $1.00, Give a Child More Insight Into the U.S. Government.</p>
        <p>Federal Facts - a poster designed to increase a childs awareness of the election process and the hierarchy of the Federal Government -has been prepared by The Daily Reflectors Newspaper In Education Department and is being offered to parents and teachers to use with their children during this election year.</p>
        <p>For only $1.00,'"^ you will receive this color poster which includes short definitions of each department of the government, historical information concerning our national emblems, and party affiliation information. PLUS, as an added bonus, lessons for all grade levels will accompany your order.</p>
        <p>For your copy of our Federal Facts poster, please send your check or money order and this coupon to: Federal Facts Poster</p>
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        <p>*Plus $.50 postage and handling.</p>
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        <p>Name</p>
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        <p>(Please encourage your child to look at the Expressions page, published by The Daily Reflector each Wednesday of the school year, for additional information concerning U.S. Government. Our column entitled "Federal Facts" is a wonderful supplement to the poster, and can be clipped out and saved for future reference, or to make a government scrapbook. Together it's a great way to learn!)  *THE DAILY REFLECTOR</p>
        <p>P.0. Box 1967, Greenville, N.C. 27835</p>
        <pb facs="00097006_0021" />
        <p>300 Homert For Carter</p>
        <p>New York Met Gary Carter smashes his 300th career home run in the second inning Thursday against the Chicago Cubs at Wrigley Field. Carter became the 50th player in major-league history with 300 homers. (AP Laserphoto)</p>
        <p>After Three Months Carter Hits 300th</p>
        <p>CHICAGO (AP) - After taking nearly three months to hit his 300th career homer, New York Mets catcher Gary Carter says he is part of a good trivia question.</p>
        <p>Carter hit the milestone homer Thursday in a 9^ victory over the Chicago Cubs.</p>
        <p>*TT1 be a good trivia question, said a relieved Carter, who had gone 225 af-bats between homers. Tn my whole career I never went more than two months without a homer.</p>
        <p>Carter says now he can concentrate more on playing the game.</p>
        <p>The monkey is off my back and we can get on to other things now, he said.</p>
        <p>His manager, Davey Johnson, said the monkey is off the whole team's back.</p>
        <p>' It wiped off some pressure and IOW well be able to wait another three months for 301, Johnson said With a laugh.</p>
        <p>; Carter, 34, has 275 home runs as a catcher. That ranks him fourth on the all-time list for that position, behind Carlton Fisk, Yogi Berra and No. 1 Johnny Beiu:h.</p>
        <p>: Its wonderful that Imr in such good company. I dreamed as a kid to make the majors, so this is really just extra special, Carter said.</p>
        <p>Leadii^ off the second inning. Garter hit a 2-2 pitch into the left-field bleachers off Cubs starter A1 Nipper.</p>
        <p>: I had faced Nipper in the World Series and in spring training, so I kind of knew what pitches he</p>
        <p>Teenagers Want Kimball Out Of Olympic Trials</p>
        <p> BRANDON, Fla. (AP) - A group of teen-agers, disappointed that 1984 silver medalist Bruce Kimball has not withdrawn from the Olympics after killing two of their brethren, is sing a petition aimed at influenc-jhimtoGoso.</p>
        <p>We were hoping for him to withdraw from the Olympics, said Shari Wilson, 18. But he didnt so we had to take action.</p>
        <p>Hillsborough County authorities say Kimballs speeding car crashed into a crowd at a popular teen hangout Aug. 1, killing two teenagers and injuring six others. Kimball admitted drinking at least four beers before the accident, according to investigators.</p>
        <p>The petitioners are friends of the victims.</p>
        <p>Diving trials are scheduled Wednesday through Aug. 21 in In-dianaj^lis to determine who will rep</p>
        <p>resent the United States in the Summer Games in Seoul, South Korea.</p>
        <p>I dont think it would be right for my little brother to see Kimballs picture on the front of a Wheaties box, said Jennifer Beck, 17, who organized the petition drive that started Wednesday.</p>
        <p>The petition, which the teen-agers intend to send to the U.S. Olympic Committee, reads in part;</p>
        <p>We, as Americans, strongly feel he (Kimball) is not the appropriate person to be representing our country, nor does he project the image of respect or admiration. Itie Olympics are a privilege to participate in and we feel, as United States citizens, that he lost the privilege while driving under the influence of alcohol, which resulted in the deaths and permanent maiming of several children.</p>
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        <p>Reds Top Dodgers In 10, 9~8</p>
        <p>throws, said Carter, who connected on a low fastball.</p>
        <p>Nipper had pitched for the Boston Red Sox in the 1986 World Series.</p>
        <p>Carter hadnt hit a homer since May 16 against San Diego.</p>
        <p>I pressed pretty often during that time and it was brought to my attention every day, he said.</p>
        <p>Its a nice feeling. It was a long time coming but very special. But more important, it was nice to come back and win the ballgame. It was a long, hot day and this was a total team effort, Carter said of the three-hour, 16-minute game on a muggy afternoon.</p>
        <p>The veteran catcher had a very mixed day as a batter and behind home plate. Besides the homer, Carter went 84, threw out a Cub runner trying to steal secmid, allowed a batter to reach first when he interfered with his swing and permitted a run to score from third on a passed ball.</p>
        <p>Carter, who broke into the majors in 1974 with Montreal and has been a mainstay on a New York club that has never finished worst than second place in the last four years, had a career-high 31 homers in 1977 and tailed off to 20 last year.</p>
        <p>Despite his homer drought this summer and the whole teams lack of punch in recent weeks. Carter had been hitting fairly well of late  19-of-63 for a .302 average in his last 19 games. He entered Thursdays contest, batting .252 in 107 games, but had only eight homers.</p>
        <p>By The Associated Press It sounded as if the Cincinnati Reds had just won the pennant. They didnt, but they mi^t have taken the biggest step toward making a run in the National League West.</p>
        <p>The Reds entered the bottom of the ninth inning down 8-6 to the Los Angeles Dodgers, who lead the division. Eric Davis led off with a single and stole second. Paul ONeill singled for his fourth tut of the game and Jeff Reed singled home Davis. ONeill scored on Jeff Treadways sacrifice fly.</p>
        <p>In the 10th, Kal Daniels singled, moved up on a groundnut and scored the winmng run on Davis single off Dodgers ace reliever Jay Howell. That prompted the rest of the Reds to rush onto the field to congratulate Davis.</p>
        <p>Cincinnati, which took two of three games with Los Angeles, now trails the National League West leader by six games. The Reds were as far back as 11 gam^ two weeks ago It was a great game, said ONeill, who led the Reds with a solo homer, a double and two singles in five at-bats, giving him nine hits in his last 12 at-bats. He has hit a homer in each of his last three games. Im just happy to be a part of it.</p>
        <p>It was the big^t game weve played all year. BMng six out is a lot different than being out eight... It was fun coming in here after the game. There was a lot of screaming and yelling, a lot of enthusiasm. It was fun to see.'</p>
        <p>Not for the Dodgers, who have not won a series since sweeping Pittsburgh from July 22-24.</p>
        <p>Despite the loss, the Dodgers remaining ih games in front of Houston, which was beaten 6-0 by San Francisco. Elsewhere, it was New York 9, Chicago 6; Pittsburgh 6, Montreal 1; Philadelphia 1, St. Louis 0; and Atlanta 2, San Diego 1.</p>
        <p>Im basically exhausted, Dodgers slugger Kirk Gibson said after hitting a homer and three doubles, stealing a base and scoring four times. It was something we felt we should have won, but didnt.</p>
        <p>Reds manager Pete Rose doesnt think theyll win the division, either.</p>
        <p>I just think theyre going to come back to reality, Rose said. To-ni^ts game is just verifying it in my mind, 'niey used their whole bullpen, and we still got (19) hits.</p>
        <p>The Dodgers used six pitchers. They mrew their best at us, ONeill said. Howells the best in their bullpen. We didnt give up. Giants 6, Astroso San Francisco won a series from Houston for the first time in seven tries, taking two of three, both on shutouts. After Don Robinson one-hit Houston the previous ni^t, Atlee Hammaker pitched a five-hitter. Will Cla^k, who IS 6-for-lO against Nolan Ryan this season, and Kevin Mitchell hit consecutive homers.</p>
        <p>Its a situation where Don and I have risen to the occasion, Hammaker said. We were setup men and now were are in starting roles. To find a staff that can go that way is unusual^</p>
        <p>The Giants play the Dodgers four times in Los Angeles, beginning tonight.</p>
        <p>We feel we can catch them, Manager Roger Craig said. I feel Houston is the team to beat. Everybody is talking about Houston and Los Angeles, but were in there, too.</p>
        <p>Mets 9, Cubs 6 The Mets were in danger of being swept by the Cubs in a three-game series at Wrigley Field for the first time since 1980. Then Kevin McReynolds sent a Rich (lossage pitch over the center-field wall for a grand slam, capping a five-run rally in the ninth inning.</p>
        <p>The Mets trailed 64 entering the ninth, but Len Dykstra singled in a run and, one out later, Pat Perry, 44, walked Keith Hernandez, loading the bases. Perry fanned Darryl Strawberry, then was relieved by Gossage, who allowed McReynolds second grand slam this season.</p>
        <p>Gary Carter hit his 300th career home run leading off the second inning against A1 Nipper. The shot to left was his ninth homer of the season and his first since May 16, a span of 79 games.</p>
        <p>Ill be a good trivia question,</p>
        <p>Replacing The Greek Is Biggest Challenge</p>
        <p>GOTEBORG, Sweden (AP) - Pro Football Hall of Famer Dick Butkus is hardly recognized as he walks the streets iii Europes latest NFL venue.</p>
        <p>Practically no one paid attention to former Chicago Bears linebacker as he walked down the street in downtown Goteborg on Thursday.</p>
        <p>Well, a few people did recognize me, Butkus said. One kid, who told me he plays for the Goteborg Giants (football team), asked for an autograph.</p>
        <p>Butkus likes it that way, not being recognized.</p>
        <p>Hiats one of the reasons why I like it here in Sweden, said Butkus, whose wifes parents came from the Stockholm area. There is no particular attention paid to you here.</p>
        <p>Now 45, Butkus says his new job  replacing Jimmy the Greek on the NFL Today  is one of his biggest challenges off the football field.</p>
        <p>This is a big challenge because of the situation ^at Im put in, said Butkus, who also stars in My Two Dads a TV sitcom.</p>
        <p>Everybody will be watching and see how I do, whether I will pick off where he (Jimmy the Greek) left off or if Im a bust or whatever. Ca-</p>
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        <p>said a relieved Carter of his 225 at-bats between homers. In my whole career I never went more than two months without a homer.</p>
        <p>Pirates 6, Expos 1 Doug Drabek got his sixth consecutive victory as the Pirates stayed five games in back of the Mets in the East. Montreal, which opens a four-game series in New York tonight, is 6&amp;gt;^ behind.</p>
        <p>Drabek, 11-5, whose last loss was on June 21, allowed five hits, struck out five and walked two in seven innings. Jim Gott earned his 20th save even though he yielded a solo home run to Hubie Brooks in the eighth inning.</p>
        <p>But Pittsburgh scored four runs in the ninth. R.J. Reynolds had a bases-loaded double and Barry Bonds added a two-run single.</p>
        <p>Phillies 1, Cardinals 0 Ricky Jordans one-out double in the bottom of the ninth inning scored Chris James with the games only run.</p>
        <p>James walked with one out, then Jordan lined the first pitch to left-center.</p>
        <p>Steve Bedrosian, 2-5, pitched one. scoreless inning for the victory aftein Mike Maddux had shut out the Cards'^ on three hits for the first eight. John Costello, 3-1, took the loss.  .</p>
        <p>Braves 2, Padres 1  .'&amp;gt;</p>
        <p>Rookie Terry Blocker, batting only .130, drove in his first major-league** &amp;gt; run with a seventh-inning triple as the Braves snapped a four-game los-ing streak. Blocker lined the triple in-1 ^ to left-center field off Jimmy Jones,;* 7-10, who had yielded only three hits in the first six innings. Dion James^ had doubled with one out and Bruce&amp;gt; &amp;gt; Benedict flied out, setting up Blockers game-winning hit.</p>
        <p>Rookie Pete Smith, 5-11, retired thej first 10 Padres he faced and turned in his second complete game with a seven-hitter. He fanned a career-high'i* eight and walked none.</p>
        <p>Dale Murphy hit his 21st home run for Atlanta.  '</p>
        <p>Cars And Drivers Equal In Series</p>
        <p>reer-wise its a big move for me also.</p>
        <p>Butkus, who is a color commentator for WGN Radio in Chicago for the Bears preseason game against the Minnesota Viking at this southwestern Swedish city on Sunday, retired in 1973 because of knee problems after nine NFL seasons.</p>
        <p>One of the greatest middle linebackers in pro football history, Butkus was an All-Pro in all but one of his seasons.</p>
        <p>Ive had four operations on mv knee, two when I was playing,  Butkus said. It bothers me sometimes, if I have to stand on something hard or whatever.</p>
        <p>But Butkus doesnt regret playing football.</p>
        <p>No way. Id do it all over again, he said</p>
        <p>A lot of people dont think the Bears will do very well this year, but Butkus doesnt know why theyre saying those things.</p>
        <p>I think they will be right there, he said. Its between them and Minnesota in their (the NFC Central) division.</p>
        <p>Theyll be a contender if (quarterback) Jim McMahon stays healthy.</p>
        <p>WATKINS GLEN, N.Y. (AP) -The cars are equal and so, apparently, are most the drivers in the International Race of Champions series.</p>
        <p>Heading into Saturdays final round of the 12th IROC series, defending champion Geoff Bodine, winner of the IROC race at Michigan, holds a 42-40 led in points over 1986 champion AlUnserJr.</p>
        <p>But no less than eight of the other 10 drivers in the all-star series, featuring identically prepared IROC-Z Chevrolet Camaros, remain at least mathematically in contention for the $200,000 prize that goes to the overall winner of the four-race $739,600 series.</p>
        <p>Bill Elliott, winner of the IROC opener at Daytona, is third with 39 points, followed by Terry Labonte, 38; Dale Earnhardt and Scott Pruett, the Riverside winner, both 37; Chip Robinson, 30; A1 Unser, 28; A1 Holbert, 27, and Bobby Rahal, 19. All entertain at least some hope of overtaking Bodine in Saturdays 30-lap, 72.84-miIerace.</p>
        <p>The other two starters, Roberto Guerrero of Colombia and Chris Cord, each missed one of the three previous 1R(X; events with physical ailments and fell out of the points chase.</p>
        <p>Bodine was in much the same position last year, when he came into this race leading Unser Jr. by two points, and went on to win the race and the title.</p>
        <p>The situation isnt quite the same as last year, Bodine said Thursday after practice. The one big difference is the top five or six drivers have a point difference that is just a</p>
        <p>few points. I expect a much stronger*' race than last year.</p>
        <p>I watched A1 Unser (Jr.) practice* this morning. He ran a whole race out there. You think hes serious? And*! Bill Elliott was out there practicing:* * He never does that. There will be a lot of pressure.  u</p>
        <p>The younger Unser, who won this'' race two years ago to clinch his IROC title, said, Geoff just flat gets around this racetrack very good. just need a good, fair start. Last year was not an ideal start for me and it. was an ideal start for Geoff. He just' got a little jump on me and I couldnt  catch him.</p>
        <p>Pruett, who will start ninth Saturday, said, Its going to be a littl? tougher starting from the back of the ^ pack, but Im just going to have to get some guys at the start, work hard oir | the others, drive a clean race an(i' have a good car.</p>
        <p>The drivers will start in rows of twcf! according to the point standings. Thdj cars, as usual in IROC, will be* selected by each driver in a blind draw just prior to the race.  '</p>
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        <p>Indians Snare Defeat From Jaws Of Victory |</p>
        <p>By The Associated Press</p>
        <p>Grounder to shortstop... error.</p>
        <p>Grounder to pitcher... error.</p>
        <p>Throw home ...error.</p>
        <p>Groumter to shortstoperror.</p>
        <p>. With two outs in the ninth inning lliursday night, the Cleveland Indians treated the baseball like a hand grenade and turned a 3-1 victory over the Texas Rangers into a 5-4 loss.</p>
        <p>Cleveland had a two-run lead with two outs and noiK on. Geno Petrallis fflround ball went through shortstop Ron Washington for Error One. Od-dibe McDowell singled to right and Curtis Wilkerson loaded the bases on a fielders choice grounder to Washington, whose throw to second was too late to force McDowell.</p>
        <p>Steve Buechele then bounced a groiuMler in front of the plate that Jones grabbed and threw past first, letting three runs score on Error Two.! Buechele went to third as catcher Andy Allanson made Error Three.</p>
        <p>Cecil Espys grmmder skipped past Washington for Errw Four, allowing Buechele to score for a 5-3 lead.</p>
        <p>It wasnt off target, Jones said of his throw to first baseman Willie Upshaw. He was just trying to keep from getting his glove into the runner. He pulled away and the ball hit off his glove.</p>
        <p>Im not a bad fielder, Washington said. Im just in one of those spells where your rhythm is off, just like happens to a hitter.</p>
        <p>Oddibes play at second made the whole inning, Texas manager Bobby Valentine said. They draw the curtains with that one. He made an outstanding effort.</p>
        <p>Washington, who made Clevelands second and fifth errors of the game, said he would not allow the sloppy fielding to fluster him</p>
        <p>Im not dropping my head. I dont care if the fans boo me. Im going to</p>
        <p>accept it, just the same as if things were going good.</p>
        <p>Elsewhere in the American League, Oakland beat California 7-2, Toronto beat New Ywk 6-5 in 11 innings, Milwaukee beat Boston 4-0, Kansas City beat Baltimore 6*5 in 12 innings and Chicago beat Milwaukee 4-3. Detroit and Minnesota were off.</p>
        <p>Ron Kittle hit a sacrifice fly in the ninth for Cleveland, which has lost 11 oU2.</p>
        <p>Mitch Williams, 2-4, pitched two innii^ of relief for the victory, d^pite giving up a two-run pinch double to Carmen Castillo in the seventh. Dale Mohorcic got the fuial two outs for his fifth save.</p>
        <p>Texas took a 1-0 lead in the second on Wilkersons RBI single. Cleveland scored three times in me seventh on Washingtons pinch single and Castillos double.</p>
        <p>Athletics?, Angels 2 Mark McGwire hit his first grand</p>
        <p>inning Run</p>
        <p>ito Blue Jay Jesse Barfield slides across le plate as New York Yankee catcher Don inght tries to maKe a tag in the 11th inning</p>
        <p>of Thursdays game at Yankee Stadium. Barfield scored after stealing second and taking two bases on Slaughts overthrow. Toronto won the game, 6-5. (AP Laserphoto)</p>
        <p>podybuilder Bryniarski Gives New Meaning To The Word Big</p>
        <p>^ By Gary R. Blockus</p>
        <p>L.A. Times-Washington Post .News Service</p>
        <p>ALLENTOWN, Pa.  Imposing doesnt seem the proper word to describe Andy Bryniarski.</p>
        <p>Incredible is more apt.</p>
        <p>^yniarski, a Lansdale, Pa., resident, gives new mean-ng to the word big. Tbe handsome brute stands 6-foot-3 and tim the scales at close to 250 pounds.</p>
        <p>Whil^ did play defensive tackle at North Penn High chool.ne hardUy qualifies as a Refrigerator. Still, he</p>
        <p>just starting to heat up with some appliance-size ac-(Hn|riishments in the world of bodybuilding.</p>
        <p>He will be featured as one of the up-and-coming new bodybuilders on an American Muscle Magazine seg-nent, which will air Aug. 28 on ESPN. He won the AAU 'een-Age Mr. USA contest in Des Moines, Iowa, last laturday, and this Saturday, he will compete in the 'oumament of Champions in s Angeles.</p>
        <p>ESPN will carry the Tournament of Champions on American Muscle Magazine, and Bryniarski will be the subject of a feature segment. American Muscle Magazine will also carry the Teen-Age Mr. USA contest later n the year.</p>
        <p>So what makes the finely-chiseled Bryniarski such an attractim? Hes a mere 19 years old.</p>
        <p>1 havent seen any teen-agers that have impressed me that much, the reserved youngster said prior to a workout preparing for the Teen-Age Mr. USA. 1 should )e the biggest guy. Ive never seen a teen-ager bigger than me.</p>
        <p>Indeed, no one was bigger than him ion Iowa. I was the biggest guy in the contest. Now, Im going to compete n the Mr. America and Mr. Universe (both AAU) Sept 24 and Sept. 25 in Tucson, Ariz. I will be the youngest person ever to cinnpete in both contests! </p>
        <p>Bryniarski obviously feels confident going into this weekends contest. The only thing is some small guy</p>
        <p>1, but I feel Im very</p>
        <p>with good symmetry mi{ symmetrical, Bryniarski ac</p>
        <p>He is also optimistic because of the attention he has received from promoters such as Lou Zwick, the president of American Sports Network, the company responsible fcH* American Muscle Magazine.</p>
        <p>He called me a couple of years ago, Bryniarski explained. He heard good thirijgs about me through local promoters and gyms. He asked me to send him some [^tos. He liked what he saw and he kept in touch.</p>
        <p>These last two weeks are the biggest of the teen-agers life, but not the most important. The distinction ol ttw most crucial time in his life came five years ago.</p>
        <p>I was always athletic and was a competitive swimmer for seven years, he said. For a while, though, 1 strayed from tli pack. I hung out in the park and ltened to heavv metal music. I was 5-8,230 when I was 14 and I decided that is not what I wanted to look like.</p>
        <p>Bryniarski had some help. His grandfather took him to a gym, where he met Lveme Schmed, a competitive bodybuilder who talked the youngster into giving the sport a try.</p>
        <p>The more I learned, the more I saw myself change to the point where I thought I could compete.</p>
        <p>He entered his first contest, a local show, when he was 16 or 17, and 1 got killed! 1 was skinny then. Ive gained almost 100 poui^ in the last three or four years. I just stuck with it.</p>
        <p>I used to get discouraged when Id see bigger guys in the gym. I used to say Id never get that big, but then I changed my attitude and knew one day I woidd be better than them. I drew inspiration from the guys who were better than me. The more you team, the more you grow, the more you prepare.</p>
        <p>Id like to thank Mr. America, (Catasauquas) Joe Meeko, for his help. Hes my mentor.</p>
        <p>Id like to give special thanks to the entire staff at Golds Gym Lehigh valley for their help in my cmtest preparation.</p>
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        <p>slam aftmr DeWayne Buice walked in the go-ahead run in the eighth inning as Oakland w&amp;lt;m its fwira straight and 11th in its last 13 games.</p>
        <p>Dennis Eckersley, 3-2, allowed one hit in 12-3 innings, an eighth-inning home run to Brian Downing that tied the score 2-2.</p>
        <p>Walt Weiss singled off Terry Clark, 5-1, to open the eighth. Luis Polonia sacrificed and Buice relieved. Om out later, Jose Canseco was walked intentionally and Carney Lansford got an infield single, loading the bases for Ron Hassey, who walked on a 3-1 pitch. McGwire then hit his 21st homer on a 1-2 pitch.</p>
        <p>' Blue Jays 6, Yankees 5 * Jesse Barfield stole second and .then scored on catcher Don Slaughts throwing error with two outs in the 11th inning as .the Toronto completed a three-game sweep, the first sweep of the Yankees this season.</p>
        <p>Barfield singled with one out off Dave Righetti, 3-3. One out later, with Nel^n Liriano batting, Barfield was safe at second when Slaughts bouncing throw hit him in the leg.</p>
        <p>The ball caromed into shallow left and Barfield kept running, barely beating Rickey Hendersons throw home with a hook slide.</p>
        <p>Duane Ward, 8-1, got the victory, Torontos fourth straight. The Yankees, temporarily rescued on Don Mattinglys two-run homer with two outs in the ninth, have lost seven of nine. They were 2-5 on their homes-tand.</p>
        <p>Henderson stole four bases, tying a Yankees club record for steals in a game.</p>
        <p>Brewers 4, Red Sox 0 Don August pitched a six-hitter for his first major-ieague shutout and Rob Deer and Joey Meyer homered in the fourth inning.</p>
        <p>Boston, which won 19 of its first 20 games after the All-Star break, has lost seven of its last nine.</p>
        <p>August, 7-5, struck out four and walked one. Wes Gardner, 5-3, allowed five hits in seven innings and all four runs.</p>
        <p>Royals 6, Orioles 5 Kevin Seitzers sacrifice fly scored Bill Pecota with one out in the 12th</p>
        <p>inning as Baltimore became the first AL team in 10 years to be swept in I season series. Kansas City won all l| games.  i</p>
        <p>With one out, Pecota singled on Tom Niedenfuer, 1-3. Kurt Stillwell singled Pecota to third for his fourth hit, and Seitzer hit a sacrifice fly to' left. V Jeff Montgomery, 5-2, pitched one inning of hitless relief for the Roya who got a first-inning grand sthm from Danny Tartabull.  *i</p>
        <p>White Sox 4, Mariners 3:;^</p>
        <p>Dave Gallagher singled home KeU ly Paris with the go-ahead run anl Chicago snapped a three-game losii streak.  I</p>
        <p>Paris singled to lead off the ei advanced to second on Bi McGuires passed ball and scored Gallaghers two-out single off Mil Jackson, 6-4.  ^</p>
        <p>Jerry Reuss, 8-7, gave up seve| hits in seven innings. Bobby ThigMg pitched two innings of two-hit relief for his 25th save.</p>
        <p>Harold Baines hit a three-run double to tie the score 3-3 in the seventh.'</p>
        <p>Swimming Records Falling Quickly Af Olympic Trials</p>
        <p>AUSTIN, Texas (AP)  Champion swimmers get no respect  at least from other swimmers who want to be champions.</p>
        <p>Matt Cetlinski, who joiiwd Mike Barrowman and Tracey McFarlane in setting American records at the U.S. Olympic swimming trials Thursday night, shattered the 400-meter freestyle mark with a time of 3 minutes, 48.06 sec&amp;lt;ids. Cetlinski beat the former record holder, Dan Jorgensen of San Diego, who was second in 3:50.10. Jorgensens American record, set in 1986, was 3:49.41.</p>
        <p>Barrowman, of Rockville, Md., equaled the U.S. standard of 2:13.74, wfiich he set earlier in the day in the 200-meter breaststroke. Former re-C(HTd holder Steve Bentley of Fountain Valley, Calif., finished fifth.</p>
        <p>I was just hoping to God that I could maybe make it under 2:15 and squeak in, to the Olympic team, Barrowman said.</p>
        <p>McFarlane, of Palm Springs, Calif., a native of Canada who was granted U.S. citizenship in April, was in 1:08.91 in the womens 100 tstri^e, breaking the American record of 1:09.53 set by Tracy Caulkinsinioei.</p>
        <p>Just because its American makes it a lot nicer, McFarlane said.</p>
        <p>Another American record holder was defeated as Angel Myers of Americus, Ga., beat Mary T. Meagher of Louisville, Ky., in the 100 butterfly in the non-record time of 59.77 second. Meagher was clocked in 59.82.</p>
        <p>ft gives me a little bit more confidence, knowing that she (Meagher) can be beaten, Myers said.</p>
        <p>Meagher, 23, stUl holds the American and world 100 butterfly records, which she set in 1981. She was asked if either would ever be broken.</p>
        <p>Hieres a little tyke wit there that has the build and ttie discipline and mind to put it all together and do it -itll just be a matter of a little while. Im sure, she said.</p>
        <p>Meagher, a 1984 triple gold medal-winner, won a berth on her third Olympic team by finishing second.</p>
        <p>A total of seven American records have been set in four days at the trials. Matt Biondi d Moraga, Calif., has the wily world record, in the 100-meter freestyle.</p>
        <p>Entering the trials, Barrowmans best imvious time was 2:18.56. His two record performances were the fastest in the world this year, surpassing by nearly two seconds the 2:15.54 by Sovi^ Valeri Lozik.</p>
        <p>But Barrowman, coached by Hun-</p>
        <p>man to beat in the Olympics would be Josef Szabo of Hungary, the 1986 world champion.</p>
        <p>I dont think any man alive can touch him, Barrowman said.</p>
        <p>Kirk Stackle of San Diego, with a time of 2:16.49, also grabbed an Olympic berth in the 200 breaststroke, alongside Barrowman.</p>
        <p>ft was the second individual event in which McFarlane, who also won the 200 breaststroke, qualified for the Olympics. Susan Johnson of Boca Raton, Fla., got the second Olympic berth behind McFarlane.</p>
        <p>Both swam this year for the University of Texas, and their coach, Richard Quick, also the Olympic coach, said, Way to go two Longhorns.</p>
        <p>Jorgensens second-place finish in Thursdays 400 freestyle gave him an Olympic berth. Cetlinski, of Lake Wwth, Fla., previously made the</p>
        <p>U.S. team on the 800 freestyle relay by finishing fourth in the 200 freestyle.</p>
        <p>Its always disappointing to lose your American record, but my main coiK!ern coming into the meet was to make the team, and if it was a subpai* performance. Id be happy with it, Jorgensen said.</p>
        <p>He said he has been sick with a sinus infection, which he blamed on air-conditioning.</p>
        <p>Earlier Thursday, Janet Evans of Placentia, Calif., was the top qualifier for tonights final in the womens 800 freestyle.</p>
        <p>Evans, already on the Olympic team in the 400 freestyle and the 400 individual medley, was timed ip 8:30.78. Tami Bruce of San Diegq, second behind Evans in the 400 freestyle, also was the No. 2 qualifier; in the 800 in 8:34.63.  /</p>
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        <p>For complete TV programming Information, ^consult your woekly TV SHOWTIME from Sunday's Dally Reflector.</p>
        <p>Paulsen Will Be Candidate</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (AP) - Comedian-candidate Pat Paulsen kicked off his 1988 presidential campaign - his sixth  by dropping a political bombshell: hes becoming a Republican.</p>
        <p>Im going to New Orleans  I have to, because the Democrats tossed me right out of Atlanta, Paulsen said Thursday after declaring his candidacy. Theyre not very friendly people.</p>
        <p>Paidsen, who made his first run for the White House 20 years ago, announced his election bid on a boat in New York Harbor with the Statue of Liberty in the background.</p>
        <p>The former regular on the Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour didnt have too much good to say about his opponents, Massachusetts Gov. Michael Dukakis and Vice President George Bush.</p>
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        <p>NEW YORK (AP)  Actress Eileen Brennan says anger helped her recover from a car accident that nearly killed her shortly after the success of the movie Private Benjamin, in which she starred with Goldie Hawn.</p>
        <p>1 was no saint, she says in Septembers Ladies Home Journal. I was angry, and anger is a powerful en^otion. It increased my determination not to go under, to get well.</p>
        <p>The accident six years ago left her leffi smashed, the Ixmes on the left side of her face broken, and her left eye socket shattered. She said she fought her injuries with rage.</p>
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        <p>7:00^:45</p>
        <p>2:15^:45</p>
        <p>7:15-9:30</p>
        <p>dieted to* the painkillers she took. Two years after the accident, Ms. Brennan, 50, entered the Betty Ford Center to cure her addiction to drugs.</p>
        <p>We get addicted to dull the pain of life, she says. But once we accept that life is tough and painful, we can move on and grow and evolve.</p>
        <p>Although her television series Off the Rack was canceled in 1986 after only six episodes, Ms. Brennan appeared in the film Sticky Fingers last spring, has plans for a new television series, Off Duty, and stars in the current film The New Adventures of Pippi Longstocking.</p>
        <p>By KATHRYN BAKER AP Television Writer LOS ANGELES (AP) - Candice Bergen is a glamorous film actress married to esteemed French film director Louis Malle. They have a young daughter and an elegant lifestyle divided between New York and Paris.</p>
        <p>Nevertheless, Ms. Bergen this fall will undertake the relative drudgery of starring in a weekly comedy on CBS, Murphy Brown.</p>
        <p>She plays the title character, a hard-driving television reporter who has gone a few rounds with alcohol and nicotine addiction at the Betty Ford Clinic and just been sent back to her high-stress world as a correspondent on the network newsmagazine F.Y.l.</p>
        <p>I wasnt quite ready to do a television series, but then there were whispers about this pilot script, Ms. Bergen told a group of TV critics. Everybody was sort of grabbing it and there were little fingernail marks all over it, and they said, you know theres this pilot script thats as if its been written for you. </p>
        <p>Ms. Bergen was skeptical but finally read the script, by Diane English, during a boring plane trip.</p>
        <p>1 got up, and it was the first time 1 ever made a phone call from an airplane, Ms. Bergen said. I was then so panic-stricken that I might have lost the script, that Id waited too long. And so I called my agent and said, what do I have to do?</p>
        <p>I hadnt read a feature script that was as good as this in a long time. And I hadnt read a character that I thought was any better for me than this, maybe ever. I just was so excited at the possibility of doing this kind of work and doing comedy work.</p>
        <p>The idea of Ms. Bergen doing com</p>
        <p>edy will not surprise anyone who saw her in Starting Over or on Saturday Night Live, and it certainly comes as no surprise to anyone who has seen the pilot of Murphy Brown.</p>
        <p>In that episode, Murphy has just gotten out of the clinic and everybody is taking odds as to whether shell hie her old tough-reporter self without the aid of outside stimuli. Murphy herself isnt certain.</p>
        <p>Her first hurdle is an interview with a young man whose alleged affair with a female politician caused a scandal.</p>
        <p>Murphy also has a home life, so to speak. Her companions are a house painter-in-residence (Robert Pastorelli), who has begun a mural on her kitchen ceiling, and a collection of Motown records to which she caterwauls, a skill Ms. Bergen perfected in Starting Over,</p>
        <p>1 think its hard to sing badly the</p>
        <p>All Seats $2.50 Everyday Til 5:30 PM jj</p>
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        <p>1:00-3:05 5:10-7:15-9:20 YOUNG GUNS</p>
        <p>2:00-4:30-7:00 9:30 MIDNIGHT RUN</p>
        <p>1:00-3:00 5:00-7:00-9:00 DEAD POOL</p>
        <p>-R-</p>
        <p>1:00-3:05-5:10-7:15-9:20</p>
        <p>mmm</p>
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        <p>2:00-4:30-7:00</p>
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        <p>E mi EASTWOOD</p>
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        <p>CLINT</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>first time, and then once you kind of break the bad singing barrier, its like youre supersonic, Ms. Bergenf said.  t.</p>
        <p>Co-starring with Ms. Bergen arq^ Grant Shaud as the new executive' producer of F.YI., who looks 14.^ Charles Kimbrough plays a dead-pan fellow correspondent, Joe RegalbutO; is a crazed investigative reporter and* Faith Ford plays a former beauty^ queen more interested in reliving past triumphs than uncovering new'</p>
        <p>stories.  '</p>
        <p>/</p>
        <p>Because of the writers strike, the premiere will likely not reach the air; until Novermber, said Ms. English., She and her husband, Joel Shukov-i sky, are co-executive producers of the series. Ms. English produced My Sister Sam and previously Foley Square, two critically praised series that failed because of poor time periods.</p>
        <p>m PLAZA CINEMA</p>
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        <p>The Shack is Back!</p>
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        <p>DAILY 2:05-4:10-7:05-9:10</p>
        <p>MurphyS most hilarious</p>
        <p>PERTORMANCE.</p>
        <p>- PWer Travers, PEOPLE MAGAZINE</p>
        <p>The FUNNIEST EDDIE MURPHY PICTURE YET.</p>
        <p> BenYagoda,</p>
        <p>PHILADELPHIA DAILY NEWS</p>
        <p>EDDIE MURPHY .COM|NGTO-</p>
        <p>America</p>
        <p>DAILY 2:00-4:20-7:00-9:20 -R-</p>
        <p>Totally entertaining!</p>
        <p>A glitzy, flashy, tour-de-force for Tom Cruise.</p>
        <p>-SNEAK PREVIEWS, Jeffrey Lyons</p>
        <p>daily 2:10-4:20-7:10-9:20</p>
        <p>w ]Oaxk 'fheatte</p>
        <p>schwarzeneggeh</p>
        <p>BELIISHl</p>
        <p>DAILY 7:00 A 0:10</p>
        <p>i 2:00-8:10 </p>
        <p>7:00-0:10 [RJ  tri STAR RClf asi</p>
        <pb facs="00097006_0024" />
        <p>CmiMwnrH  B EUCEUE SHEFFER  The Family Circus</p>
        <p>tee</p>
        <p>ACROSS</p>
        <p>1 Rides the river 6 Cell dweller 9 Haggard novel</p>
        <p>12 Married kin i</p>
        <p>13 Rink surface</p>
        <p>14 Beige</p>
        <p>15 New Zealand native</p>
        <p>16 Church singer</p>
        <p>18 Dermatologists cases</p>
        <p>20 Pot starter</p>
        <p>21 Kimono sash</p>
        <p>23 Madam's counterpart</p>
        <p>24 Cyclist</p>
        <p>25 Coarse file</p>
        <p>27 Crypts</p>
        <p>29 Regtud</p>
        <p>31 Actors comments</p>
        <p>35 Vote in</p>
        <p>37 Bitja hoy</p>
        <p>38 Russian range</p>
        <p>41 Airport abbr.</p>
        <p>43 Affix</p>
        <p>44 The  of the Rose"</p>
        <p>45 Solution</p>
        <p>47 Nicholass</p>
        <p>supporter</p>
        <p>49Tyuana ta-ta</p>
        <p>52 Actor Chaney</p>
        <p>53 Game piece</p>
        <p>54 Bowling lane button</p>
        <p>55 Historic time</p>
        <p>56 Rowboat need</p>
        <p>57 Dictionary word</p>
        <p>DOWN 1 Border Solution time: 24 mins.</p>
        <p>asara raraa Q0[i@ radii cararari narad nraa nasa dBQiiHd [aradcifira 3R ana</p>
        <p>SBHH dOaSHEBi</p>
        <p>raara nraa raas</p>
        <p>asas aas araaa raasd aaa</p>
        <p>Yesterdays answer 8-12</p>
        <p>2 Collected</p>
        <p>19 Blackiack</p>
        <p>snippets</p>
        <p>order</p>
        <p>3 Bouquet</p>
        <p>21 Mine</p>
        <p>maker</p>
        <p>yield</p>
        <p>4 Scarletts</p>
        <p>22  relief</p>
        <p>home</p>
        <p>24 Air-gun</p>
        <p>5 Like some</p>
        <p>ammo</p>
        <p>chalets</p>
        <p>26 Kitchen</p>
        <p>6 Roman</p>
        <p>tool</p>
        <p>orator</p>
        <p>28 Sleuth</p>
        <p>7 One-time</p>
        <p>Helm</p>
        <p>Times</p>
        <p>et al.</p>
        <p>publisher</p>
        <p>30 High</p>
        <p>8 Beginner,</p>
        <p>trains</p>
        <p>for short</p>
        <p>32 Anais</p>
        <p>9 Noisy</p>
        <p>Nin, e.g.</p>
        <p>protest</p>
        <p>33 Go off the</p>
        <p>slang</p>
        <p>deep </p>
        <p>10 Rashness</p>
        <p>34 Turf</p>
        <p>11 Computer gg Basket-</p>
        <p>key</p>
        <p>bail</p>
        <p>17 Bran</p>
        <p>position</p>
        <p>accom-</p>
        <p>38 Tom or</p>
        <p>panier</p>
        <p>Sam</p>
        <p>Hdwoiqie.</p>
        <p>From The Carroll Righter hutttute</p>
        <p>39 Barbershop need</p>
        <p>40 Iowa society</p>
        <p>42 Cognizant 45 Orient setting 46Blissftil place 48 Altar phrase 50 the ramparts...' 51 Pig home</p>
        <p>K)RBCAStF0RSATURDAYAug.l3  "</p>
        <p>AME8 (Mtech 21 to A|M 19): You fed Ute running ar^</p>
        <p>CopyngMitM ComitM SyndicaM. me</p>
        <p>He mightve lived longet if he didnt smoke that pipe.</p>
        <p>yourmati.  ...</p>
        <p>GEMINI (May 21 tb June 21): You may not be thinking deverly today, so listen to the ideas d femUrmem^ and partnera. your guests do mo^^</p>
        <p>^MMWG&amp;amp;LDREN (JuM22to July 21): Dont mope around the house over something you ean do little about, ustead get to activities that are worthwhile.</p>
        <p>LEO (July 22 to Aug. 21): Avoid that superior who may criticize the work you are doing onfy because he or she is under pressure. Cat esxpenses wherever you can.</p>
        <p>VIRGO (Aug. 22 to Sept. 22): Today handle personal matters, and put aside workfiy affairs that can wait. Be with people you like, and avoid ^t big</p>
        <p>UBR (Sept. 23 to Oct 22): Its not a good day to make new friends, but s fine for impraring present relationships and handling personal dutiews. Be romantic^yoiirmate.    ^</p>
        <p>SCORPIO ((JCt. 23 to Nov. 21): Put aside business matters that can wait, and see your friends. You can gain many personal wishes that have been impossible toget before.</p>
        <p> SAGntARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21): Getoutanddoyour shopping, run important errands, and avoid an overly talkative friend who often takes up a lot of your time.</p>
        <p>CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan.20): Put aside the usual Saturday chores, gnd get into activities that can increase your income and add to your present assite.PUinatrm.</p>
        <p>AOUARICS (Jan. 21 to Feb. 19): Handle practical matters today that are important, and forget recreation. Ckmtact a co-worker who can help with some won. .</p>
        <p>PISCES (Feb. 20 to March 20): Meet with associates and talk over projects that need better planning to make them work out successfully. Then make out reports.</p>
        <p>(01088. The McNau^t Syndicate Inc.</p>
        <p>Bridge</p>
        <p>Qy CHARLES COREN AND OMAR SHARIF</p>
        <p>LONG LIVE THE JACK!</p>
        <p>8-12</p>
        <p>CBYPTOQUIP</p>
        <p>MPDXLEG DSO VEQQY UPFZQF</p>
        <p>WV QVYQLWPSSG UDAO DU,</p>
        <p>VPGWAM:  NPP, EXZNXM!"</p>
        <p>Yestenlays Cryptoqoip: ALOOF PEOPLE PREFER TO PURCHASE DETACHED HOUSES.</p>
        <p>Todays Cryptoquip clue: E equals H</p>
        <p>The CryplM|nip is a simpte substitution cipher in whidi each letter used stands for another.</p>
        <p> 1988 King Fsatures Syn(Rcat. Inc</p>
        <p>Neither vulnerable. South deals. NORTH 4 A54 9  10  9 7 5</p>
        <p>0  Q  J 7 6</p>
        <p>4 65 WEST  EAST</p>
        <p>* 10 6  *9873</p>
        <p>9 2  9 K J  43</p>
        <p>OAK  10 9  0853</p>
        <p>*QJ 10 983*42 SOUTH</p>
        <p>* KQ J2 9 A Q86 0 42</p>
        <p>* A K7 The bidding:</p>
        <p>South  West  North  East</p>
        <p>1 *  Pass  10  Pass</p>
        <p>19  Pass  2 9  Pass</p>
        <p>4 9  Pass  Pass  Pass</p>
        <p>Opening lead: Queen of *</p>
        <p>Some defensive ploys have been around so long they have almost become routine. However, that doesnt mean that they wont still succeed. This one we first came</p>
        <p>across at the Second World Bridge Olympiad, held in New Ym'k in 1964. The East defender then was Benito Qarozzo, one of the greatest players in the history of the game.</p>
        <p>At his second turn South, who was playing five-card majors, had a choice between showing a major or jumping to two no trump. With two good majors and a ruffing value, he elected to introduce one of his suits arid, once the 4-4 fit was located, the heart game became the natural choice.</p>
        <p>Declarer won the opening lead with the king of clubs, cashed the ace and ruffed a club with the ten. Had East overruffed with the jack, declarer would have been forced to make his contract. Since he still would have to concede two diamond tricks, he could not afford to lose another trump trick as well. The percentage play would have been to take a finesse, and all would have been well.</p>
        <p>Consider what would happen if,*'</p>
        <p>instead. East wre to overniff with the king instead of the jack, as Gar-ozzo did. We have yet to find a declarer who would assume that the defends was falsecarding from a four-card holding including the king-jack. The natural way to proceed is to assume that. West holds the jack of trumps, so when declarer r^ns the lead he would automati</p>
        <p>cally cash the ace-queen of the suit, expecting to fell Wests knave. Down one!</p>
        <p>For information about Charles Gorens newsletter for bridge players, write Gorcn Bridge Letter, P.O. Box 4426, Orlando, Fla. 32802-4426.</p>
        <p>Tired Of All That Junk In Your Attic? Then Call Our Classified Department At 752-6166 And One Of Our Friendly Ad-Visers WUl Help You Move It!</p>
        <p>PMMT WUHCmuil</p>
        <p>irs ALLser.HARRv/ AS SOON AS (OE RAPP1HEGAMI5 SIADIArt DATES.,,</p>
        <p>bE'LL TAKE AQDPkE OF DAC.^ OFF.AND THEM FW OVERSEAS</p>
        <p>10 start-ms</p>
        <p>EUROPEAN TOUR /</p>
        <p>TlfSALUlATd PATHETIC WHEN ONE OF EARTH5 CREATURES IS FORCEP TO SIT IN THE RAIN</p>
        <p>ITS EVEN mRE PATHETIC U)HEN ifSAPOG.AHP INFIHI*rELV MORE PATHETIC U)HEN IT'S A BEA6LE..</p>
        <p> ijfr\</p>
        <p>H ' IW fv _aflMuSi</p>
        <p>MmiBJuunr</p>
        <p>JAYT HA5 8KN Up^RAPEP F/?OM PEST To</p>
        <p>Thavcs. e-12.</p>
        <pb facs="00097006_0025" />
        <p>The Dally Reflector. Greenville. N.C.</p>
        <p>Friday, August 12.1988Science And Medicine</p>
        <p>Will</p>
        <p>Into Past</p>
        <p>* By STEVE WILSTEIN Associated Press Writer ' * SUNNYVALE, Calif. (AP) - An optical telescope destined to float next year from a space shuttle or-hiting beyond the haze of atmosphere I will let scientists peer into the oepths of the universe and 14 billion years ' into the past.</p>
        <p>^ In orbit, the Edwin P. Hubble Space Telescope should see seven times as far as the 2 billion light ' vears of the most powerful earth-bound telescopes.</p>
        <p>^  First scheduled for an August 1986</p>
        <p>* launch, it so far hasnt look^ at any-Mng. It sits in a windowless room,</p>
        <p>*' tapped in silvery thermal blankets, hinning up bills.</p>
        <p>After the Jan. 28,1986, Challenger " accident halted the shutUe program,</p>
        <p>* a NASA official told Congress the telescope would be expensive to</p>
        <p>. baby-sit.</p>
        <p>Baby-sit makes it sound like the telescopes sitting there, all ready to go, said Bert Bulkin, director of scientific space programs here at Lockheed Missiles and Space Co. Inc. You put it in the cocoon, and just be-* fore flight take it out of the cocoon 'I and fly it. Well, thats not the case. Beyond $1.5 billion to build the tele- scope, the cost of continuing work . during the first 30 months of delay will reach $400 million, according to NASA project manager Fred S. Wo-- jtalik. Faulty devices installed origi- nally have led to dozens of alerts and ., driven up costs by as much as $10 million a year.</p>
        <p>Thats for a project approved in 1977 at ^72 million.</p>
        <p>The telescope was built to work in the vacuum of space and must be protected from even minute amounts of dust, moisture and noise. Its 94.5-inch primary mirror has been kept virtually free of contamination.</p>
        <p>In the clean room, |iant fans cleanse the air through filters that can screen particles 200 times thinner than a hair. The 350 scientists, engineers, computer experts and others attending the craft must wear uncomfortable white bunny suits, masks and rubber gloves; anyone entering must be covered completely and pass through an air shower.</p>
        <p>The 42-foot-tall, 25,000-pound, alu</p>
        <p>minum-framed spacecraft has been taken apart ana almost put back together in preparation for shipping in November to Cape Canaveral via the Panama Canal. The scientific instruments, designed to be serviced every three to five years in space, have been pulled out more than a dozen times for inspections, repairs and improvements.</p>
        <p>The Hubble got a clean bill of health two years ago after what Bulkin calls 57 nightmarish days of around-the-clock testing using extreme cold and heat to simulate space. The longer it sat on the ground, though, the more problems it developed.</p>
        <p>We had alerts coming out of the bazoo, Bulkin said.</p>
        <p>When a part fails, an alert is signaled and contractors of other devices using that part are notified. Reams of computer printouts have to be analyzed.</p>
        <p>If it s a problem like the thermostats, where six out of about 150 of them were bad, and youre sitting on the launch pad, you repldce the bad ones and go, he said. If you have time, like weve had for the last two years, then you pull the boxes and fix them all.</p>
        <p>Defective thermostats and resistors were replaced and more efficient solar cells and batteries added.</p>
        <p>For its 17-dav trip to Florida, the telescope will be placed in a 27-by-19-by-60-foot, hermetically sealed, steel container, moved by barge to the Oakland Araiy Terminal across San Francisco Bay in Alameda and be loaded on a ship.</p>
        <p>There is a lot of anxiety about the move. The canal is not the safest area, said Bulkin. Every time you lift it up, youre sitting there and your</p>
        <p>The Hubble Space Telescope</p>
        <p>heart goes Boom! Bo(nn! Boom! Im not going to be happy until its in orbit from the time it leaves here.</p>
        <p>In the future, such telescopes will be moved by a specially monied Army transport plane, but the plane wont be ready in time.</p>
        <p>Meanwhile, budget-minded officials arent the only ones concerned about the delay. So are astronomers and the European Space Agency, which paid 15 percent of the building costs and provided the sophisticated faint object camera.</p>
        <p>The International Astronomical Union decided five years ago to hold its 1988 meeting in Baltimore, near the Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, which is managing the Hubble instruments, mission operations and data.</p>
        <p>It was to be the centerpiece of the meeting. They expected to have their first views ready by now, said Lisa Hooker, a spokeswoman for Johns Hopkins University, which was host for the assembly last week.</p>
        <p>Were all frustrated by having to wait so long, but its going to be fantastic fun when its in orbit, said Jim Westphal, professor of planetary science at California Institute of Technology and a principal investigator (HI tte telescc^. I suspect were going to find many amazing things that will thrill the public, not once a year but maybe once a week.</p>
        <p>The Hubble is named after an American astronomer who used the 100-inch Hooker Telescope in Pasadena to examine stars in the Andromeda Galaxy, the first conclusive proof of galaxies other than our Milky Way.</p>
        <p>The space telescope is smaller than many land-based observatories, but should transmit much sharper images because it will be stationed more than 350 miles above the distorting effects of the atmosphere. It also will be able to make images in the ultraviolet or black spectra that cant be made on Earth.</p>
        <p>Telescopes that follow the Hubble into orbit will study X-rays, gamma rays and infrared radiation.</p>
        <p>The new view of the universe scientists for, Westphal said, is similar in impact to the vision a very near-si^ted person would get by putting</p>
        <p>1. The space telescope will be deployed by the space shuttle.</p>
        <p>2. Once in operation it receives stellar light through the aperture.</p>
        <p>3. The light strikes the the primary mirror, is reflected back to the secondary mirror where it is again reflected through a hole in the primary mirror to the focal plane.</p>
        <p>4. The scientific instruments pick up the image.</p>
        <p>5. This information is then transmitted by the Tracking and Data .</p>
        <p>Relay Sateallite.</p>
        <p>6. The satellite, in turn, transmits the information to White SarKis, N.M.</p>
        <p>7. It is then sent to Goddard Flight Center in Maryland where the raw data is corrected.</p>
        <p>8.Rnally, the data is sent to Space Telescope Science Institute.</p>
        <p>Observe potential planets in other solar systems.</p>
        <p> Look deeper into space and therefore further back in time.</p>
        <p>Observe quasars, neutron stars and indirectly black holes.</p>
        <p>View 350 times more volume of space.</p>
        <p>Source: Lockheed IrK. and California Institute of Technology</p>
        <p>on glasses for the first time. Im prejudiced, but I think it is well worth the money because it will help solve some of the puzzles man has wondered about for thousands of years, he said.</p>
        <p>Ill let you know after it sends back some pictures, Bulkin said.</p>
        <p>Astronomers plan to look for evidence of planets in other solar</p>
        <p>systems, study planets in our solar system in greater detail, search for black holes in galaxies and measure the distance between stars more accurately.</p>
        <p>They will try, too, for a better understanding of the origins and possible fate of the universe as they gaze at light that to(^ 14 billion years to get here  close to the beginning of</p>
        <p>AP/Melinda Beck</p>
        <p>time in the universe.</p>
        <p>Scientists will be able to explore a region 350 times larger than they can, said Italian astrophysicist Duccio Macchetto.</p>
        <p>Looking far away means going back in time, Macchetto said. We hope to go back to those periods in which galaxies and quasars were formed.</p>
        <p>THE DAILY</p>
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        <p>errors</p>
        <p>Ptoass fsad your ad carsfuHy me first lima it appears in the paper. If it needs a correction as a resuil of our enor, ptoaaa caN us before 9:30 ajn. td sre wili correct it for you. The Daily Reflector cannot make I low anew for errors altar the tstdayofpuMicallon.</p>
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        <p>Public</p>
        <p>Notices</p>
        <p>INVITATION FOR OlOi</p>
        <p>The Housing Authority of the Cl ly of Aydan will accept sealed bids in frlpllcate until 3:00 P M., September 12, 1988 for all Storm sewer work for Proiect NC 83 1 In accordance with plans 6 specifications.  </p>
        <p>Plans may be obtained at the Housing Aufhorify Field Office, 90S Liberty Street, Ayden, NC (919) 744 2129, tor a Twenty Five Dollar (833.00) deposit, relun dable to bona fide bidders Bids will be opened publicly and read loud-</p>
        <p>The Housing Authority reserves the right to re|ect any and all bids and to accept only those deemed advantageous to it.</p>
        <p>Mr . Jerry Cox Executive Director August 10 September 9,19M</p>
        <p>invitation FO BIDS</p>
        <p>The Housing Authority of the Cl ly of Ayden will accept sealed bids in triplicate until 3 P.M., September 13. 1988 for the ilacemeni of transformers for 'rojecl NC 87 I In accordance with plans 6 specifications Plans may bo Obtained at the Housing Aufhorlty Field Office, 903 Liberty Street. Ayden, NC (919) 744 3139. for a Tvrenty Five Dollar (833 00) deposit, refun dable lo bona fide bidders Bids will be opened publicly and read aloud</p>
        <p>The Housing Authority reserves the righf to re|ect any and all bids and to accept only those deemed advantageous lo If.</p>
        <p>Mr Jerry Co*</p>
        <p>Executive Director August 10 September 9,19tl NORTH CARdl PITT COUNTY</p>
        <p>NOTICE TOCREOITORS Having qualified as Ad minislralor of the Estate of MEREDITH ANNE WALSTON, late of Pitt County, North Carolina, this is to notify all per sons having claims aMlnst the estate of said deceased, lo pres ent them lo the undersigned. ALVIN R WALSTON, on or be fore February 19, 1989, or same will be pleaded In bar of their recovery All persons Indebted lo said estate please make Im mediate payment to the under signed</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>001 Public Notices</p>
        <p>This the 23th day of July, 1918. Alvin R. Walston Administrator of the Estate of</p>
        <p>Meredith Anne Walston MATTOX, DAVIS A NAYLOR, PA.</p>
        <p>Attorneys for Estate of Meredith Anne Walston Post Office Box 484 Greenville. North Carolina 37833 Telephone: (919) 738 3430 July 39; August 3,13,19,1988 NktHARLINA PITT COUNTY</p>
        <p>NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as Ad mlnistratrix of the Estate of VIRGINIA W. WALSTON a/k/a APRIL WALSTON late of PItf County. North Carolina, this Is to notify all persons having claims aMinsI Ino estate of said deceased, to present them to the undersigned, JUDITH L. KORNECAY, on or before Feb^ ruary 19. 1989, or same will be tadedlnbai I persons estan please make Immediate</p>
        <p>ruary 19,</p>
        <p>pleaded In bar of their recovery.</p>
        <p>to said</p>
        <p>All</p>
        <p>rsons Indebted</p>
        <p>payment to the undersigned. This the 33th day of July, 1988. Judith L. Kornegay Administratrix of me Estate of</p>
        <p>Virginia W Walston a/k/a AprltWalslon Post Office Box 484 Greenville,</p>
        <p>North Carolina 27833 Tolephono: (919) 738 3430. July 29; August 3.13,19,1988</p>
        <p>NRtHCAftLIA-</p>
        <p>PITTCOUNTY</p>
        <p>NOTICE Having this day qualified as Administrator of the Estate of Jessie Heward. late of PlH County, this Is to notify all persons having claims against said esfale to preseni them lo the undersigned Administrator or his attorney on or before the 3th day of February, 1989, or this Notice will be pleaded In bar of Iheir recovery. All persons in dabted to said estate will pleate make Immedlafe settlement This the 2nd dey of August, 1988</p>
        <p>Johnnie Richard Howard 313 Suydam Street Now Brunswick, New Jersey 08901</p>
        <p>William I Woolen, Jr..</p>
        <p>Attorney</p>
        <p>(^Oonvtlle.NC. 37834 Aug. 3,13, 19,24,1988</p>
        <p>NORTTARSlA-</p>
        <p>PITTCOUNTY</p>
        <p>88SPII3 NOTICE OF 8AL1 OF REAL ESTATE</p>
        <p>Under and by virtue of the power of sale contained In a car tain Deed of Trust executed by WILTON O TAYLOR and wife.</p>
        <p>deadlines</p>
        <p>ClassiHad Display OdadUnaa</p>
        <p>Mon...........Fri.  Noon</p>
        <p>Tue*...........Fri.  4 p.m.</p>
        <p>Wed........Mon. 4 p.m.</p>
        <p>Thors........Tues. 4 p.m.</p>
        <p>Ft' -1......Wed. Noon</p>
        <p>Sun.........Wed.SpJhi</p>
        <p>ClaaaMied Line</p>
        <p>Mon...........Fri.  4  p.m.</p>
        <p>Tues.........Mon.  3  p.m.</p>
        <p>Wed.........Tues.  3  p.m.</p>
        <p>Thurs........Wed. 3 p.m.</p>
        <p>Fri..........Thurs.  3  p.m.</p>
        <p>Sun........Thurs. 5 p.m.</p>
        <p>001 Public Notkts</p>
        <p>ROSE LEE TAYLOR to GARY A. GOERS, Trustee, recorded August 19, 1987, in Book 143, Page 349, In the Office of the Register of Deeds of PIN Coun ty. North Carolina; and under and by virtue of the aufhorlty vested m the undersigned, as Subsfltute Trustee, default having been made In the paymant ot the Indebtedness thereby secured, and the said Deed of Trust being by the terms thereof sublect to foreclosure, and the Holder of the Indebtedness thereby secured having demanded a foreclosure thereof for the purpose of satisfying said Indebtedness, the under Substitute Trustee will offer for sale at public auction to the highest bidder lor cash at the Courthouse door in Greenville, North Carolina, Pin County, North Carolina, and more par ticularly described as follows:</p>
        <p>BE ING all of Lot No. 13 of the Robert HIM to a map Associates 1971, and recorded In Map Book 30. Page 131, ot the PlH County RMlstry This property Is to be sold sublect to any City/County ad valorem taxes, any special assessments that are a Men against the premises and any prior deeds of trust, or Mens ot record In the PlH County Court</p>
        <p>M Property according p by McDavId and s, dated February,</p>
        <p>The Substitute Trustee, after sale, shall require the highest bidder Immediately to make a cash deposit ot 10% ot the amount of his bid up to and Including 81,000.00 plus 8% of any excess over 81,00(100 The notice ot laig hereby given Is In satistactlen pf the requirements et the aforemen tioned Dead of Trust and the re quiremanis contained In North Carolina General Statute 43 31.17 with respect to posting or pushing notice of sale.</p>
        <p>TIME: 13:00oclock Noon on the 33rd day ot August, 1988. PLACE: Courthouse Door, Greenville. Pitt County, North Carolina.</p>
        <p>TERMS Cash This the asih day of July. 1988 D.W. McPherson.</p>
        <p>Substitute Trustee 131W 4th Street P A Box 3413  I</p>
        <p>Greenville, NC 37834 1433 , fetophone (919)733 7333 August 13,19,1988</p>
        <p>H5BTR</p>
        <p>CHOlIMA</p>
        <p>COUNTY</p>
        <p>PITTCC NOTICE OF DISSOLUTION OF</p>
        <p>DOWN EAST REALTY, INC. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that Articles of Olssolulion Of DOWN EAjST REALTY, INC . a</p>
        <p>classified index</p>
        <p>MSimANEOUS</p>
        <p>Personals *</p>
        <p>002</p>
        <p>InMemonam</p>
        <p>003</p>
        <p>CarddThanks</p>
        <p>'005</p>
        <p>Special Nonces</p>
        <p>. 007</p>
        <p>Trawl t Tours .</p>
        <p>009</p>
        <p>Automotive</p>
        <p>010</p>
        <p>CtHUCaic</p>
        <p>044</p>
        <p>Day Nursery</p>
        <p>045</p>
        <p>HealtliCare</p>
        <p>047</p>
        <p>Employrneni</p>
        <p>055</p>
        <p>For Sale</p>
        <p>067</p>
        <p>Intlruction</p>
        <p>114</p>
        <p>Lost And Found</p>
        <p>^--------</p>
        <p>115</p>
        <p>4fl</p>
        <p>001 Public Notices</p>
        <p>North Carolina corporation, wore filed In the Office of the Secretary of State ot North Carolina on the 24th day ot July, 1988. and that all creditors ot and claimants against the cor poraflon are required to present their respective claims and de mands Immediately in writing to the corporation so that It can proceed to collect its assets, convey and dispose of its proper ties, pay. satisfy and discharge Its liabilities m obligations and do all other acts required to liq uidale Its business atfairs</p>
        <p>This the 4th day of August,</p>
        <p>1988.</p>
        <p>DOWN EAST REALTY, INC. BY: JEAN HOPPER, PRESIDENT Route 9, Box 334</p>
        <p>Greenville. North Carolina 37834 August 13.19,24: Sept. 3,19M</p>
        <p>~WffT6M6ifir"</p>
        <p>Having qualified as Administrator et the Estate of RANDALL KEITH SUTTON, late ot Pitt County, North Carolina, the undersigned hereby authqrlies all persons having claims against said Estate to preseni them to the undersigned, whose mailing ad-dreu Is 203 Guinevere Larw, Greenville, North Carolina 37834, on or before January 29,</p>
        <p>1989, or this Notice will be pleeded In bar ot their recovery. AM persons Indsbtsd to said Estaw will please make Im mediate payment to the under slrnd.</p>
        <p>This the 39th day ot July, 1988. TINA HILL SUTTON 389 Gulnovoro Lane Greenville, NC 37834 W.RIJSSELL OUKE.JR JAMlI HITE. AVERY A DUKE Attorneys at Law P.O. Drawer I3 Greenville, NC 37833-0013 Telephone: (919) 738 4100 July 39; August 3.13.19,1988</p>
        <p>"T8mzmmmT5ir</p>
        <p>Having qualified as Executor of the Esisiteof LILLIAN RUTH KITTRELL aka RUTH SERMONS KITTRELL, late of PIN County, North Carolina, the undersigned hereby authorlies all persons having claims against said Estate lo present them to the underslgfwd, whose IsRt 13.</p>
        <p>mallfng addreM Is bt 13. Box 477, OrednvMlo, North Carollha 37M8, ek or before February 3. 1989, or this Notice wilt be</p>
        <p> leaded In bar of their recovery. II persons Indebied to said Estaw will please make Im mediato payment to the under</p>
        <p>the Sth day of August,</p>
        <p>1988</p>
        <p>TROY KITTRELL Rt. 13, Box 477</p>
        <p>Business Opportumtws</p>
        <p>122</p>
        <p>Teachers 062</p>
        <p>Professional</p>
        <p>124</p>
        <p>Technical 1 Trades 063</p>
        <p>Home Improiwmenis</p>
        <p>125</p>
        <p>Work Wanted 064</p>
        <p>Real Estate</p>
        <p>130</p>
        <p>Wanted i90</p>
        <p>Apprasals</p>
        <p>131</p>
        <p>Roommate Wanted 192</p>
        <p>Loans And Mortgages</p>
        <p>153</p>
        <p>Warned To Buy 194</p>
        <p>Rentals</p>
        <p>160</p>
        <p>Wanted To Lease I96</p>
        <p>Wanted To Rem ige</p>
        <p>WANTED</p>
        <p>RENT/LEASE</p>
        <p>Help Wanted</p>
        <p>056</p>
        <p>Adnumsirative</p>
        <p>057</p>
        <p>Apartment For Rent i6t</p>
        <p>Clerical</p>
        <p>058</p>
        <p>Business Rentals 163</p>
        <p>Medical</p>
        <p>059</p>
        <p>Campers For Rem 167</p>
        <p>Miscellaneous</p>
        <p>060</p>
        <p>Condominiums For Rem 170</p>
        <p>Sales</p>
        <p>061</p>
        <p>Farms For Lease 140</p>
        <p>Houses For Rem</p>
        <p>173</p>
        <p>Lois For Rem</p>
        <p>175</p>
        <p>Merchandise Rentals</p>
        <p>177</p>
        <p>Moble Homes For Rem</p>
        <p>179</p>
        <p>Mobile Home Lois For Rem</p>
        <p>180</p>
        <p>Otiice Space For Rem</p>
        <p>181</p>
        <p>Resort Property For Rem</p>
        <p>184</p>
        <p>Rooms For Rem</p>
        <p>I8F</p>
        <p>SALE</p>
        <p>Autos For Sale</p>
        <p>01tD29</p>
        <p>Bicycles For Sale</p>
        <p>030</p>
        <p>Boats And Motors</p>
        <p>032</p>
        <p>Camping Equipmem</p>
        <p>034</p>
        <p>Cycles Foi Sale</p>
        <p>036</p>
        <p>Jeeps And Vans</p>
        <p>040</p>
        <p>Mobile Homes 'o' Sale</p>
        <p>102</p>
        <p>Trucks For Sale</p>
        <p>041</p>
        <p>Mobile Home Insurance</p>
        <p>103</p>
        <p>Pels</p>
        <p>050</p>
        <p>Musical Insiruments</p>
        <p>105</p>
        <p>Antiques</p>
        <p>068</p>
        <p>Spomnq Goods</p>
        <p>109</p>
        <p>Auctions</p>
        <p>069</p>
        <p>Woodstoves</p>
        <p>112</p>
        <p>Building Supplies</p>
        <p>072</p>
        <p>Commercial Property</p>
        <p>132</p>
        <p>Fuel Wood. Coal</p>
        <p>080</p>
        <p>Condominiums For Saie</p>
        <p>136</p>
        <p>Furniture</p>
        <p>081</p>
        <p>Farms For Sale</p>
        <p>139</p>
        <p>Garage Yard Sales</p>
        <p>082</p>
        <p>Houses For Sale</p>
        <p>144</p>
        <p>Heavy Equipment</p>
        <p>084</p>
        <p>Business tnvesimeni Prooerry</p>
        <p>147</p>
        <p>Household Goods</p>
        <p>085</p>
        <p>invesimem Property</p>
        <p>148</p>
        <p>Farm Equipment</p>
        <p>086</p>
        <p>Land For Sale</p>
        <p>ISO</p>
        <p>Farm Products</p>
        <p>088</p>
        <p>Moble Home Lots For Sale</p>
        <p>151</p>
        <p>Fruits 8 Vegetables</p>
        <p>089</p>
        <p>Lois For Sale</p>
        <p>152</p>
        <p>Livestock</p>
        <p>092</p>
        <p>Resort Property For Sate</p>
        <p>155</p>
        <p>Insurance</p>
        <p>095</p>
        <p>Timberland 8 Timber</p>
        <p>56</p>
        <p>Miscellaneous</p>
        <p>099</p>
        <p>Toxmhouses For Sale</p>
        <p>157</p>
        <p>001 Public NoticM</p>
        <p>Greenville, NC 37838 E. CORDELLAVERY JAMES, HITE. AVERY A DUKE Attorneys at Law P.O. Drawer 15 Greenville. NC 37833 0013 Telephone: (919) 738 4)00 Augusts,. 19,24.1988 NOtlCi</p>
        <p>Having qualified as Executrix of the estate of Lena A. Vincent, late of PItf County, North Carolina, this Is to notify all per sons having claims against the estote of said deceased lo pres 4nt them to the undersigned Ex eculrix on or before February 13, 1989 or this notice or same will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons Indebted to said estate please make im mediate payment</p>
        <p>This m day of August, 1988 Katie Lou v klNrell 2339 Dickinson Avenue Ext. Greenville, NC 27834 E xecutrix of the estate ot Lena A. Vincent, deceased. August 13,19,24: Sept. 3,1988</p>
        <p>-H3TCI-</p>
        <p>Having qualified as Executor ot the estate of William Carroll Goodwin, late ot PIN County. North Carolina, this is lo notify all persons having claims against the estafa of said deceased to present them to the undersigned Executor on or be lore February 13, 1989, or this notice or same will bo pleaded In bar of their recovery. All per ions Indebted to said estate please make Immediate pay</p>
        <p>This 4N day of August, 1988 Dr WilliamC. Gootwln, Jr. Ingfon St i,NC 38333</p>
        <p>909 W. Covington St Laurlnburg.</p>
        <p>E xecutor ot the estate ot William Carroll Goodwin, deceased</p>
        <p>Aug 13,19.34: Sept. 3,1988</p>
        <p>Call</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED</p>
        <p>752-6166</p>
        <p>002</p>
        <p>Ptnonalt</p>
        <p>date to Darryl's, please tdke along some money That's am barrassing to all m us who know you You must have been a good Ui^ tor her Your Roomies. K</p>
        <p>002</p>
        <p>Personals</p>
        <p>FIND YOUR OREAMMATE</p>
        <p>Carolina Dating and Escort Ser vices. 778 3579 anytime</p>
        <p>I. J.B. SURLES, III, will no longer be responsible (or any debts contracted by anyone other than myselt. J B Surles, III</p>
        <p>IF ANYONE WITNESSED OR</p>
        <p>observed a car accident on August 7, aprroximately 1:X) p m., at the intersection 3th and Greene Street in tront of the</p>
        <p>Oil Autos For Sale</p>
        <p>LEOVENTERSAAOTORS AYDEN, N.C.</p>
        <p>1988 FORD Bronco II Factory demonstration.</p>
        <p>1987 FORD Bronco XLT. Full size.</p>
        <p>1984 FORD Bronco II. Excellent condition.</p>
        <p>1987 FORD F 130 Super cab Lariat</p>
        <p>volved. Chevrolet Nova and Chevrolet Camaro. please call 757 1319 or call collect 779 4833</p>
        <p>744 4171</p>
        <p>013 Buick</p>
        <p>37 YEAR OLD white tennale saeking honest, companionship from while, non drinking, non drug using male Reply to OR 1127, c/o Dally Relleclor, PO Box 1947, Greenville, NC</p>
        <p>1981 BUICK REGAL 3 door, air, good condition. $1500. Call 830-4954between 13:00 5:00p.m.</p>
        <p>1901 BUICK Riviera. 71,000 miles, well taken care ot. $3400 744 3137</p>
        <p>1901 REGAL AM FM cassette, cruise, tilt wheel $3,500 nego liable. 753 4091 alter 5:30.</p>
        <p>(M7 Special Notices</p>
        <p>FRESH SHRIMP Thursday, Friday and Saturday. Fresh vegetables, Tuesday, Wednes day, Thursday, F^riday and Saturday aach week.</p>
        <p>Bell's Fork Produce</p>
        <p>1913 BUICK Century. Air, cruise, good condition. $3300. Negotiable. 758 7433 anytime.</p>
        <p>1905 kUICK (Century Custom. 1 owner, 48.000 miles, air condi tionino, automatic, Am/Fm stereo, cruise control, tIN steer ing Call 754 0490.</p>
        <p>Request for proposals</p>
        <p>Slate of North Carolina wishes lo acquire bids on Coin Op Laundry AAathines In Green vllle. North Carolina on the campus property ot East Carolina University Cut oN time for receiving proposals Is 3:00PM on August 18.1988. For specltlcatlons, proposals, and additional Information, contact Greenville, NC 37858 4353. tele phone; 919 7S7 4434</p>
        <p>01S Chevrolet</p>
        <p>1971 MONTE ARLO Im</p>
        <p>maculate condition. Air, cruise, till steering, power seats/win dows. AMFM. new upholstery. 756 4858 or 754 8377</p>
        <p>1978 CHEVROLEt Chevetle 4 door, 5 speed, radio, air, low mileage 355 2441 AAonday Fri day, 754 0452 alter 5 and weekends</p>
        <p>MfE CAilY BATTERIES (Eveready) lor all makes ot walchesi Floyd G. Robinson Jewelers, Downtown Evans AAail. Gratnvllle, 758 3453</p>
        <p>1979 CHEVROLET IMPALA 4</p>
        <p>door. Good condition. $1,000 Call 751 4541</p>
        <p>WlKND SPBCIALI West</p>
        <p>End Laundromat. 1414 W. I4th Street First load ot clothes dryed tree, Seturday and Sun day only</p>
        <p>Itll CltviikOLtT capAi.</p>
        <p>Air, Am/Fm, good condition. Asking $3000 Call 753 4431.</p>
        <p>016 Chrysler</p>
        <p>Oil Autos For SbIr</p>
        <p>1907 hylII Fifth Avenue Fully equipped, like new, 31,000 miles. SI3.N0 Call 754 4104 or 754 8715</p>
        <p>A GCX)DPLAE TO BUY!"</p>
        <p>"Creallve Flnancliig"</p>
        <p>EASTGATE MOTORS,INC</p>
        <p>130 East GraanvllleBlvd Graanvlllfl. 355 2193</p>
        <p>017 Dodge</p>
        <p>1988 OdOOE kAiMih. red. automatic, overdrive, air, AM FM stereo cassette 4 wheel drive, power steering and brakas. rear window wiper and delrosl. more U.OM miles, ex cellent condition $5N and lake over payments ot $303 per month 750 4709</p>
        <p>E,M. HARRIS AUTOSALES</p>
        <p>"The Walking Man's Friend" Pactolus Highway 753 15*3</p>
        <p>018</p>
        <p>Ford</p>
        <p>1981 GRANADA, last chance. $1400 754 2717.</p>
        <p>1981 MUSTANG 4 cylinder. 4 speed, power steering/brakes, sunrool and AM/FM cassette Sl.OOOor best otter. 758 7123</p>
        <p>1987 ESCORT Wagon Air, lilt, cruise, AM FM, charcoal, assume loan. Call after 2:30 758 4994.</p>
        <p>1987 T-BIRD. All extras. 1 owner. 31,000 miles. Perfect condition $10.700. 754 0193 even ings.</p>
        <p>020</p>
        <p>Mercury</p>
        <p>1913 MERCURY LYNX. Air, Am/Fm cassette. 4 speed, 39.000 miles. 754 3749after f</p>
        <p>023</p>
        <p>Pontiac</p>
        <p>1980 LEMANS Stationwagon (kxxl condition $1500. 355 5859</p>
        <p>024 Foreign Cars</p>
        <p>PEUGEOT, 1984. S05S automatic, air, sunrool, heated seats, lully loaded, excellent condition Asking $4.000 nego liable. 343 4080 evenings TOYOTA CONA 1974. Runs good S400 George, 757 3458 or 355 4540</p>
        <p>1970 TRIUMPH TR4, excellent body, good Interior 758 1554 days; night 753 5932 1974 OTSUN 340Z. Call I 937 3337</p>
        <p>1974 Honda Ivie 4 Speed. 47.700 miles, I owner, good condition. $875. 7S4 7098after4pm</p>
        <p>1974 MtRCEOES BENI 34o6, local, 3 owners, all records, ex cellent condition Warranty available Auto Warehouse. 738 2810</p>
        <p>1974 tOYOTA Corolla 4 door, 5 speed. I owner, good condition $450 334 4893</p>
        <p>1979 380 ZX, automatic, clean, dependable Average miles. 758 1554 days night 733 5932 I98 MIBCEDES BEZ MTO Wagon, white, palomino Interl or, Ilka new condition Just ser viced Warranty available Auto Warehouse, 738 3810 1981 Sib ffral 4 wiii drive. Good condition AM FM radio 733 7534</p>
        <p>1981 MW tl8i, black with Ian Interior, sports package, sunroof, air, gold rims, clean Must sell, price negotlalbe 758 1700. leave massage</p>
        <p>024 Foreign Cars</p>
        <p>1983 MERCEDES MOO Turbo 58K miles, excellent condition, all records, light Ivory, $14.300 944 4109</p>
        <p>1984 BMW 3181, automatic, silver blue, 2 door, sunroof, like new Warranty available Auto Warehouse, 758 3810.</p>
        <p>1984 MERCEDES BENZ I98E, burgandy, palomino interior, automatic, excellent condition. Warranty available. Auto Warehouse, 758 3810.</p>
        <p>1984 300 ZX, 35,000 miles, every option except turbo Must sell. 758 1554days; night 753 5932.</p>
        <p>The Daily Reflector Classifieds</p>
        <p>752-6166</p>
        <pb facs="00097006_0026" />
        <p>rrr-mm</p>
        <p>B,1 ft  The Dally Refjec^</p>
        <p>014 Foreign Cars</p>
        <p>\m BMW 73S I, for sale by owner. Call Alvin, AAonday Friday, I S. 753 3169 IftS JAOUAR XJ*. white, red leather Interior, immaculate. Priced to move Warranty available. Auto Warehouse, 758 2110.</p>
        <p>IU NISSAN 300ZX. Extra clean, loaded. 30,000 miles. $11,500.355 7978 anytime.</p>
        <p>1985 S05 COROLLA, 5 speed, air, AM/FM stereo, 2door coupe. Call after 6:30 p.m., 355 3513.</p>
        <p>1988 VOLVO OLE Turbo, 39,000 miles, air, power, 5 speed manual, new tires, stereo, leather, mint;$16,995. 756 1870after 7.</p>
        <p>19U 300 SX Coupe. Red 15.000 miles. Excellent condition 355 5002 after 6 p.m. weekdays.</p>
        <p>1987 ACURA LEGEND L. Automatic, 4 door, leather, sunroof, white, 2 available, both with low miles. 355 3173.</p>
        <p>Greenville, N.C.</p>
        <p>Friday, August 12.1988</p>
        <p>1987 Honda Prelude, Automatic, sunroof, air, 14,900 miles. $12,900.830 1652, after 5 pm.</p>
        <p>1987 MAXIMA WAGON.</p>
        <p>Automatic, sunroof, loaded. Low miles. 752 1414 or 355 7170.</p>
        <p>1987 MERCEDES BENZ</p>
        <p>420SEL. 5,000 miles, never till ed, just like new. Warranty available. Auto Warehouse, 758 2810.</p>
        <p>1987 TOYOTA Supra. White, automatic, with Targa top. Call Don Patrick for info. 355 2258.</p>
        <p>1987 TOYOTA Supra. Burgandy, 5 speed. Low miles. Call Don Patrick for info. 355 2258.</p>
        <p>1987 VW QUANTUM 22,000 miles, fully equipped with power Wnroof. Still under warranty. Kicenegotiable. 752 9726</p>
        <p>1988 ACURA New Car Buyers. Let us show you how an independent broker can save you Money on your next new car rchase. Carolina Auto Buying rvice, 355 3173 All foreign s and models available.</p>
        <p>380 ZX, 1986 2+2, blue, 20,500 miles, $13,900 negotiable. Call 756 6393.</p>
        <p>032 Boats &amp;amp; Motors</p>
        <p>B&amp;amp;KMARINE</p>
        <p>Don't wait til the season's rush -Do your pre season service now.</p>
        <p>Evinrude, Omc, Mariner and MerCruiser service center; PLUS 1987 Evinrude and Mari ner motors and Cox trailers at clearance prices!</p>
        <p>1205 Dickinson Avenue, Greenville 752 2882.</p>
        <p>BAYLINER SKI BOAT. 19', 1984, 85 horsepower outboard and trailer. $3400. Good condi tion. George, 757 3658,355 6560.</p>
        <p>GLASSPAR 14 FOOT, Cabin boat and trailer. Must sell $450 or best otter . 825 7748.</p>
        <p>GREENVILLE MARINE AND SPORTS</p>
        <p>Pitt County's oldest marine dealership. We sell everything at wholesale prices year round. 264 Bypass N.E., Greenville . 758 5938</p>
        <p>18' BABCOCK. Very good condi tion. 135 horsepower. $3,000 firm. From5to9p.m. 752 7406</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>032 Boats A Motors</p>
        <p>18' SOL CATAMARAN. In good condition. $1500 negotiable. Call 756 1516.</p>
        <p>1975 20' CRUISE CRAFT I/O.</p>
        <p>$3000. 524 4632 after 6 p.m.</p>
        <p>1985 GLASSTREAM 15'a' with 70 horsepower Evinrude. Power trim and tilt, BRO, Cox galvanized tilt trailer. Boat fully equipped including skis. New, s only 15 hours. Cost $11,000; wlll sell lor $6,000. Call 795 5277, Robersonville.</p>
        <p>1986 HYDRA SPORT, depth finder, excellent condition, garage kept. Call after 6:00 p.m., 746 2031.</p>
        <p>1987 GALAXY 189, 165 horsepower Mercruiser I/O, closed cooling system, great 18' ski boat, used freshwater only. Includes custom trailer, cover, stereo, skis and more. Like new, 20 hours. $8500 757 0495. fi</p>
        <p>1987 16 CENTER CONSOLE</p>
        <p>Cobia, 70 Evinrude, Power tilt trim, like new, $7500. 756 8126.</p>
        <p>29' CHRIS CRAFT, 1986 Catalina 293. single 230 horsepower engine, sleeps 6, well equipped, on Bath Creek. $33,000. Call 923 6051.</p>
        <p>034Camping Equipment</p>
        <p>NEW 1988 AVALON 39' 2</p>
        <p>bedroom park model. $11,900. No trade. Camptown RV, 602 W. Greenville Boulevard, Greenville, NC. 355 6493.</p>
        <p>NEW 1989 JAYCO DESIGNER</p>
        <p>fifth wheels have arrived. Stand up bedroom, fully inclosed underbelly, solid oak cabinets and many exclusive features. All Jayco Designer and Jay Series travel trailers and fifth wheels have beautiful interior decor. Available in traditional, contemporary or country style decor. 2 locations to better serve you. Camptown RV. 602 W. Greenville Boulevard, Green ville, NC, 355 6493. 402 Highway 70 East, Garner, NC, 779 7800.</p>
        <p>STARCRAFT POPUP, sleeps 6, electric refrigerator, gas stove, water, awning, new tires, excellent condition. Asking $1800. 524 5745.</p>
        <p>1984 SCOTTIE. 22', double bed, full bath with shower, awnings, air conditioning, fully contained, sleeps 4.752 0738 or 746 6433.</p>
        <p>034 Cycles For Sale</p>
        <p>GO-CART FOR SALE. 2 weeks old, 5 horsepower, 1 seater. $395. 752 3174.</p>
        <p>TRAILER FOR SALE and 2</p>
        <p>helmets. Call 752 4520.</p>
        <p>1980 SUZUKI GS750L. Great shape with low mileage. $1000 756 2119or 354 3657.</p>
        <p>1982 YAMAHA Maxim 750. 5500 miles, immaculate condition. $1200. Call 3557200 ask tor Pat Cunningham.</p>
        <p>1982 450 HONDA Custom. Clean, low mileage. Call 746 4439.</p>
        <p>1988 HONDA Hurricane 600cc 3,000 miles, $350 and take up payments or best otter. Must sell. 830-0912 ask tor Phil.</p>
        <p>040  Jeeps &amp;amp; Vans</p>
        <p>1983 FORD Econo line van. customized, loaded. Excellent condition 49,000 miles. $6,900 firm. Call 927 3484</p>
        <p>041</p>
        <p>Trucks</p>
        <p>1M9 GMC 3/4 Ton pick up. $400. 524-4622 after 6 p.m.</p>
        <p>CHEVROLET pick up.</p>
        <p>s. Excellent</p>
        <p>1973</p>
        <p>65,000 actual miles, condition $1,500. 756-8107 days or 757 1695 evenings.</p>
        <p>1973 TOYOTA Landcruiser, good for farm use, hunting, or on the beach. 4-wheel drive, A 1 condition. Call anytime after 4:30p.m., 756 8339.</p>
        <p>1978 FORD One ton with dump body. $4,500 firm. 355 5405 or 757-0122.</p>
        <p>1978 GMC 6500 hauler, 'with Beth</p>
        <p>040  Jeeps &amp;amp; Vans</p>
        <p>JEEP, 1984, Cherokee Chief 4x4. red, low miteage. loaded, very clean, must sell, f</p>
        <p>243-4080 evenings.</p>
        <p>Asking $7,900.</p>
        <p>1975 JEEP TRUCK, $2300 Call 1 244 0723atter 5:00p.m.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>COMPUTER</p>
        <p>PROGRAMMER</p>
        <p>Local company has a part time opening starting Sept. 1,1988 for an IBM Systems/38 Programmer. The qualified applicant will have a degree in O.P. and at least two years experience. A thorough working Knowledge of interactive programming in RPG III is preferred, but RPG II is acceptable. We offer a competitive salary and flexible working hours. For consideration contact. Garner Wholesale</p>
        <p>Human Resources Division 758-1189 Mon.-Frl. 9:00 to 12:00</p>
        <p>ASSISTANT STORE MANAGER</p>
        <p>A leading Greenville department store is looking for an Assistant Store Manager. Strong leadership and communication skills with a background in retail required. Please send resume or letter of application to:</p>
        <p>P.O. Box 592 Winterville, NC 28590-0592</p>
        <p>Stony Creek Knitting Mills LAB MANAGER</p>
        <p>Stony Creek has an immediate opportunity for a lab manager. Position requires an experienced colorist matching shades In cotton and poly/cotton fabrics. Quality control experience will be an asset due to the responsibility of QC lab as well as dye lab.</p>
        <p>Stony Creek offers an excellent salary and benefits package which Includes 2 weeks paid vacation, 5 paid holidays, company-paid life, medical and dental insurance and an excellent 401K tax saver plan.</p>
        <p>Interested applicants should forward resume in confidence to:</p>
        <p>Stony Creek Knitting Mills</p>
        <p>PO Box 2445</p>
        <p>Rocky Mount, NC 27802</p>
        <p>EEO/M/F</p>
        <p>EXECUTIVE SALES POSITION</p>
        <p>WE OFFER:</p>
        <p>New Car</p>
        <p>Complete Training</p>
        <p>Hospitalization</p>
        <p>Life Insurance</p>
        <p>Profit Sharing</p>
        <p>Factory Incentives</p>
        <p>Management Opportunities</p>
        <p>YOU OFFER; College Graduate Preferred Desire Ambition</p>
        <p>HASTINGS FORD</p>
        <p>264 Bypass &amp;amp; 10th Street Greenville. N.C.</p>
        <p>*N0 PHONE CALLS PLEASE!</p>
        <p>itic tank, steel</p>
        <p>body. 355-5405 or 757 0122.</p>
        <p>1979 RANCHERO GT $2,500 ne mtiable. Would also consider trading for small truck in same shape. 355-4653 anytime.</p>
        <p>1981 CHEVROLET Custom Oelux pick up. Automatic, air, power steering and brakes, tilt steering, AM-FM. $2,500 firm. 355 5405 or 757-0122.</p>
        <p>1984 NISSAN KING CAB, $3,950. Call 1 244 0723 after 5:00 p.m.</p>
        <p>I98S ISUZU, excellent condition, 46,000 miles. $3900 or best offer. Call 757-1834.</p>
        <p>1985 NISSAN Sport Truck. Tilt, , cloth</p>
        <p>air, Am/Fm 756 9448</p>
        <p>I seats, S4500.</p>
        <p>1986 TOYOTA Longbed. Auto with overdrive, air, Am/Fm cassette, power steering, bed liner, like new, only 14,000 miles, 3 years left on maintenance warranty. Take up lease tor 38 payments of $172.00 or $7895. Call 746 4912 after 6 p.m.</p>
        <p>1986 TOYOTA, $4,950. Call 1-244 0723 after 5:00 p.m.</p>
        <p>1987 DODGE DAKOTA pickup, air, power steering/brakes, tool box, bedliner, towing package, rear sliding window, 27,000 miles, $9,000 negotiable. Call 825-0277 evenings.</p>
        <p>1987 GMC Sierra Classic. Load ed. 355 5405 or 757-0122.</p>
        <p>1988 FORD RANGER truck. 4 cylinder, take over payments, paid $1849.39. Call 752 3701.</p>
        <p>044</p>
        <p>Child Care</p>
        <p>A RELIABLE PERSON needed to pick up children from school and babysit until 6:00 p.m. Call 752 0370 or 830 9322.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>044 ChlMCare</p>
        <p>AYOEN TEEN desires to babysit. Your home. Days or evenings. After school starts also. 746 3805</p>
        <p>BABYSITTER NEEDED: For 7</p>
        <p>month old infant. 3 days a week in my home. Located in Edward Acres, oft Route 33.758 5693.</p>
        <p>BABYSIT, Day or night In my home, 2 to 6 year olds, Monday Saturday. Good references. Christian home. Stokes Highway. Rt. 11.758 0188.</p>
        <p>ESTABLISHED HOME day care has 2 spaces for newborn to 3 year olds. Full schedule of activities daily. Call 752-2644.</p>
        <p>NEED A RESPONSIBLE</p>
        <p>babysitter? 22 year old mother of one would love to babysit any Monday Friday in own home. Resonable rates. Located in Bells Fork area. Call 756 7724 between 7:00 a.m.-12:00 p.m. or 5:00 p.m. 10.00 p.m., ask for Michelle.</p>
        <p>PROFESSIONAL COUPLE</p>
        <p>seeking daily quality Infant care. Teacher's hours and schedule References required. 756 9202.</p>
        <p>QUALIFIED PERSON Needed Tuesday-Friday, 9-2 p.m. to care for 1 and 3 year old in my home. Salary 560 a week. 830-1464.</p>
        <p>UNIQUE OPPORTUNITY for</p>
        <p>someone who loves kids. Part-time hours, benefits. References required. 756 9822, 756 8341.</p>
        <p>WOULD LIKE to keep children in my home Monday-Frldays. Located near Bells Fork. 756 2592.</p>
        <p>050</p>
        <p>Pets</p>
        <p>AKC BASSET HOUND pups. Champion lines. 7 weeks. Depos its now being taken. 752 2084.</p>
        <p>AKC BASSETT PUPS, born lOth of June. $150each. Call 746-6966.</p>
        <p>AKC BLACK female chow puppy, $125, 752 0606.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>GireMaster</p>
        <p>Cleaning' 5&amp;gt;y!:teinSy Inc.</p>
        <p>SINC196B</p>
        <p>FULL TIME CARPET CLEANER WANTED</p>
        <p>Will train on the job and in the classrooni. Benefits package.</p>
        <p>Call Frank Corey 756-5700, between 9-11 a.m. Monday-Frlday</p>
        <p>MOORING</p>
        <p>MAKER</p>
        <p>For local boat manufacturer. Having 1-2 years experience in canvas or tent and awning fitting will qualify. Top pay and excellent benefits for the right qualified individual. Apply in person to local ESC office if interested.</p>
        <p>BODY</p>
        <p>REPAIRMAN</p>
        <p>We are in need of 3 body-men. Experience is necessary. Plenty of work.</p>
        <p>Excellent pay plan and benefits package.</p>
        <p>All applications will be held in the strictist confidence.</p>
        <p>Contact Danny Powell at 291-6000 or 1-800-682-7906 for an interview.</p>
        <p>EsMm NC  Nmn</p>
        <p>Hoane</p>
        <p>IBOnlyAShortDrtvebABaoerCeal 1-800-682-8523</p>
        <p>Quality Used Cars</p>
        <p>Bob Barbour Inc. invites you to</p>
        <p>Come Grow WhhUs!</p>
        <p>We are currently interviewing to increase our sales staff to meet the tremendous public acceptance of our product.</p>
        <p>The Ideol Condhlote Would Be:</p>
        <p>Appiwas/ve</p>
        <p>PDsaeat Some Sa/as Exp^renc (not noco9MfHy automobile)</p>
        <p>Committed To Eerning In Exceea 01 $35,000 Per Yeer WellQroomed</p>
        <p>If You Are Selected, We Offer:</p>
        <p>An Excellent Pey Plen</p>
        <p>An Opportunity For A Cer Allowence</p>
        <p>Excellent Trelning</p>
        <p> The Opportunity For Repid Advencement A Poeltlae Work Environment Excellent Benefit Peckege To take advantage of this rare opportunity apply in person only; Monday-Frlday, 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. to Mike Morris or Lynn Raynor.</p>
        <p>Quality Used Cars</p>
        <p>Bob Barbour Inc.</p>
        <p>3006 s. Memorial Or.*Qreenvllle, N.C.</p>
        <p>050</p>
        <p>Pets</p>
        <p>AKC REOISTERED Chocolate Labs. R( males, after 5:30.</p>
        <p>Ready to go. 8-19-88. $250 $225 females. 752-3914,</p>
        <p>AKC REGlStEkEO German Shephard pups. Ready August 15,1988.753 3520.</p>
        <p>AKC REGISTERED AAale Collie p^s. $125. Only 2 left. Call 747-</p>
        <p>AKC ROTTWEILER. Friendly, 1 year old. 746-2706.</p>
        <p>NAPPY JACK FLEA TRAP:</p>
        <p>Control fleas in the home without pesticides or exter minator. Results overnight. Money back guarantee!!! Southern States Coop, corner of Line/Chestnut, Greenville, NC.</p>
        <p>BORN JUNE 19, 198$ AKC</p>
        <p>Cocker spaniel puppies. 746-2103 nights.</p>
        <p>CHESAPEAKE BAY Retriever puppies; for field trial, gun dog, show or companion. AKC. All puppies guaranteed. 225-9441 or 225-2051.</p>
        <p>COCKER SPANIEL PUPS</p>
        <p>Blacks, black/white, black/ brown, AKC. Call 752-5676.</p>
        <p>COCKER SPANIEL pups. 3 left. No papers. 746-2222 or 355-2312. $75 each.</p>
        <p>DOBERMAN-SHEPHARO</p>
        <p>Puppies. Very cute. Asking $30 or nest offer. 355-7866.</p>
        <p>puppies. Registered, born May 19, shots, wormed, excellent bloodline. $125.1-927-4928 evenings.</p>
        <p>FOR SALE: Broke deer dogs, rabbit dogs, coon dogs, fox dogs, 2 weeks trial. Money back guarantee. Paris Lunsford, from the</p>
        <p>mountains, will be at Skip Stalins in Greenville, NC. 355-2255. Call anytime. Pen is available to</p>
        <p>run deer, fox, and rabbit dogs.</p>
        <p>registered</p>
        <p>AKC BOXERS. I male pup, 7 weeks old, $150. i female, 8 months old, $100. Call after 5, 752 6979.</p>
        <p>AKC COCKER SPANIEL Pup</p>
        <p>pies. $75. Black/white male, red male and female. 756 0028 or 756 9951.</p>
        <p>AKC COCKER SPANIEL 3</p>
        <p>years old, red female, free. One 9 weeks blonde female, $100. 758 6633.</p>
        <p>AKC LAB PUPPIES. Champion Bloodlines. Call 752-2611 after 7 p.m.</p>
        <p>FOR SALE: AKC</p>
        <p>Basset Hound puppies._</p>
        <p>FREE gray tabby kittens, approximately 4 weeks old, needs a good home. Call 752-3595.</p>
        <p>FREE KITTENS. 10 weeks old, 2 females (1 tan tiger striped and I gray tiger striped. Call 756 6100.</p>
        <p>FREE TO GOOD HOME. 10</p>
        <p>month old Lab/Shepherd/Collie mixed. Friendly and active. Needs a place in the country. 752 2675.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>050</p>
        <p>Pets</p>
        <p>FULL BLOODED Chow Chows for sale. Call 757-1590.</p>
        <p>HAPPY JACK FLEA TRAP:</p>
        <p>Control fleas in the home without pesticides or exter minator. Results overnight. Money back guarantee!!! Southern States Coop, South Fields Street, Farmville, NC.</p>
        <p>ONE FEMALE at Terrier for sale. Call 75+9256.</p>
        <p>REGISTERED Apricot poodle. I year old, spayed. S150 or best offer. 752-4517 after 5 p.m.</p>
        <p>SIAMESE</p>
        <p>-eyed and ready to go. Point and Chocolate Point kit-</p>
        <p>blue-4</p>
        <p>KITTENS. I and ready</p>
        <p>cute.</p>
        <p>Blue</p>
        <p>tens. $50 each. Call 753-2255 nights or weekends.</p>
        <p>WALKER DEER HOUNDS.</p>
        <p>Call 753-2668 after 6:00 p.m.</p>
        <p>FREE KITTENS: 746 2556.</p>
        <p>057 Help Wanted Administrative</p>
        <p>CHIEF ACCOUNTANT</p>
        <p>Individual is responsible for the supervision of the accounting division of the finance depart ment and will assist the director of finance In overall departmen tal operations. Primary duties are professional level accounting and internal auditing work and maintenance of the cities central accounting system. Examples of related responsibilities include the analysis of financial reports and statements, assistance on city in vestments, preparation of a variety of budgetary and financial reports, administration of various grant and reimberse ment programs and recommendation for Improvement in accounting methods and pro cedures. 4 year degree in accounting and 3 years experience in local government accounting or an equivalent required. Master's degree and/or CPA preferred. Individual should also be skilled in the operation of assigned oHIce machines and personal computers. Salary range: $25.126.40 to $31,408.00. Apply by 5 p.m. Monday, August II im to the City of Greenville Personnel Department, 201 West 5th Street, PO Box 7207, Green ville, NC 27835 7207. EOE/AA/ M/F/H.</p>
        <p>057 Help Wanted Administrative</p>
        <p>ENVIRONMENTAL</p>
        <p>PLANNER</p>
        <p>(PLANNER I) Professional Planner to provide environmental reviews related to the city's development standards and ragulations. Assist In city compliance with federal and state environmental rules and regulations. Provide staff assistance to the Environmental Advisory Commission. This position will require considerable contact with the general public. Candidate should have very good interpersonal, organizational and communication skills. Must possess a good understanding of the principles and practices of urban planning. Graduation from a 4-year col lege or university with a major In biology, environmental science, ecology, or a related natural science degree or master's degree In urban or regional planning with an environmental concentration or an equivalent combination of education and experience. Sala ry range $ie,096-$22,630. Apply by 5:00 p.m., Friday, August 16 to City of Greenville Personnel Department, 201 W. 5th Street, PO Box 7207, Greenville, NC 27835 7207. EOE AAM/F/H.</p>
        <p>058</p>
        <p>Help Wanted Clerical</p>
        <p>SECRETARY: IMMEDIATE</p>
        <p>I opening with national company. Excellent fringe benefits. Must have good typing and office skills. Salary commensurate with experience. Send resume to Secretary, PO Box 406, Green ! ville, NC 27835.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>AKC PUPS for sale. Toy Poo dies, chows, cocker spaniels and Cockapoos. 746-4328.</p>
        <p>PERMANENT PART TIME</p>
        <p>Needed Retired Or Semi Retired Individual To Post And Maintain Jr Billboards In The Greenville, NC And 100 Mile Surrounding Area. Work 10 To 12 Days Per Month. Interested Applicants Must Have Pick Up Truck, 24 Ft. Ladder. And Chamsaw Starting Pay Is 4.50 Per Posting, .20c Per Mile Vehicle Reimbursement And $6 00 Per Hour For Maintenance Work Interested Applicants Apply In Person Tuesday August l6th At Employment Security Commission 3101 Bismarck St From 9;00 AM to 1;00 PM, No Phone Calls Please.</p>
        <p>TO BUY... TO SELL... CLASSIFIED 752-6166</p>
        <p>058</p>
        <p>Htlp Wanted Clarical</p>
        <p>SECRETAIS wS</p>
        <p>Y/Recptlonlslt position available for parson with pleasant telephone manners and the desire to do first ratework. Call 355 7161.</p>
        <p>SECRETARY/Receptlonist. A large accounting firm seeks a secretary/raceptionist for Its Greenville office. The position requires a parson who Is motivated, personalble and possesses good communication and technical skills. Job duties include greeting clients, answering phPna, filing, dictaphone trasMcrlptlon and typing. Competitive salary ara benefits. Please send your resume and salary history in confidence to:</p>
        <p>AAcGladrey &amp;amp; Pullen Attn: R. Wooten PO Box 7184  Greenville, NC 27834.</p>
        <p>CUSSIFIED DISPUY</p>
        <p>058</p>
        <p>HolpWanttd Ctorical</p>
        <p>Become the voice and personali- i ty of an expanding fast paced i new business. Be well organized .,</p>
        <p>with good telephone skills, minor tookkeeping and typing. Call for Interview/appointment,</p>
        <p>746 2818.</p>
        <p>059</p>
        <p>Help Wanted Medical</p>
        <p>dIStalTSSIi^ah?^</p>
        <p>Certified, excellent opportunity inafunofflce.7S2-l600:</p>
        <p>ray</p>
        <p>DENTAL HYGIENIST Position available. Full or part-time In. preventive oriented family practice. Send resume to PO, Box 218, Tarboro, NC 2786 or' call 823 0551.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>PITT COUNTY GOVERNMENT EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY</p>
        <p>SOCIAL WORKER III</p>
        <p>Hiring/tanga $21,372*$23,S56</p>
        <p>Protective services, supportive services, and family planning sen vices are the three broad program categories serviced by this worker. Qualifications: masters degree from accredited school of social work and one year of social work or counseling experience, bachelor's degree from accredited school of social work and two years of social work or counseling experience, master's degree in counseling field and two years of social work or counseling, four year degree in human service field or related curriculum including at least 15 semester hours in courses related to social work or counseling and three years of social work or counseling experience, or graduation from lour year college and four years experience in rehabilitation counseling, pastoral counseling, or related human service field providing experience in techniques of casework, group work, or community organization Detailed job description available at Employment Security Commission.</p>
        <p>Apply at; Employment Security Commlasion 3101 Bismarck Drive Greenville, NC 27834 Deadline lor applications is Friday, August 19,1988.</p>
        <p>AN AFFMMATIVE ACTIONAOUAL OPeOHTUNITV EMn.OVEN</p>
        <p>Openings For</p>
        <p>Social Seivices Director WithBSW Fulltime RN tor 7/3</p>
        <p>Activity Director</p>
        <p>Contact:Kayron C. Mason Administrator</p>
        <p>Britthaven of Washington</p>
        <p>120 Washington St. Washington, N.C. 27889 Phone 946-7141</p>
        <pb facs="00097006_0027" />
        <p>Off&amp;gt;</p>
        <p>Help Wanted Medical</p>
        <p>FOwTTI OMtAL Assit tant,i preferably terfifled. Senct resume to OR 11J6, % The Daily Reflector, PO Box 1M7, Green ville; NC 37835</p>
        <p>Mti&amp;gt;ICAL LABORATORY</p>
        <p>Technician (Part time) needed by August 29. Beaufort County Health Department. 948 )902. Salary 18,79) annually/$7.5l per hour. Description of work: Pro vide laboratory tests to patients in family planning, maternity, child health, and communicable dleease control. Work is part time 3 days per week, in the Washington Clinle. Minimum qualifications; graduation from a |i;year cc^lege.or university w;lfh a degree in Medical Technology or graduation from an.assoclate degree program of Medical Technology and ) year eMence. Certification as an or MI by examination. AppUcation preess: Candidates mgiijiAmlt Jheir applications to the Employment Security Commission or to the Beaufort "ty Health Department, PO ,J79, wa^ngfon, NC 27889. are an Equal Opportunity iploy^r and abide by all laled guidelines. tARMACIST. Kerr Drug ^es has position available in Jeenville. We are an expan pg 84-store chain in NC which iphasiies protessional JHhcare services and a clean preenable retail shopping en nenl. Kerr Drugs offers a ....^Itive salary, a lucrative ngs progratp tor management Jd ^ complete benefit package, typo are interested, contact Vkle Gupton at 919 872 37)0 or Jd resume to PO Box 61000, lletgh. NC 27661.</p>
        <p>^EPTIONIST NEEDED for al practice. Duties In  appointment scheduling i.ansviiering the telmhone. pCrlencc preferred (.ollege )ree a plus, excellent salary J benefits. Send resume to Jllt28, c/o The Daily Reflec f. PO Box 1967, Greenville. NC 135.</p>
        <p>K's NEEDED lo provide visits [ Homebound Patients. Full hd part time positions. Aurora Dftie Health Agency. 800 682 H9/E0E .</p>
        <p>yceased N.Q. Oentpl Hygienist I'Washington, N.C. For intor iption contact Washington Dai , News, Box 0, Washington, erth Carolina 27889.</p>
        <p>Help Wapted Miscellaneous</p>
        <p>DRY CLEANING and shirt fesser needed Part or tull fne. Experience required. MblU.</p>
        <p>. AAA EMPLOYMENT</p>
        <p>PERMANENT PLACEMENT FAST!!!</p>
        <p>Low tee personnel service.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>MAHHEWS SEPTIC TANK CO.</p>
        <p>HfW *8T ALLA TOMS .BEPAieS FUMPINO A CLEANtNO Pitt County Permit 4104</p>
        <p>' 14 yeert Eipericnce</p>
        <p>PHONE 753-4097</p>
        <p>8 A.M. To 9 P.M.</p>
        <p>. Rent A</p>
        <p>^EW CAR</p>
        <p>[ ^ As Low As</p>
        <p>: $18.00</p>
        <p>f Per Day</p>
        <p>harpeet Fleet In Town</p>
        <p>RENT WAY ^AUTO RENT</p>
        <p>Brown &amp;amp; Wood</p>
        <p> Downtown I.</p>
        <p>^  752-2882</p>
        <p>PTA</p>
        <p>PIZZA</p>
        <p>Now hiring drivers. 757-1955 or come ,by store on corner of 14th and Charles Street, next to Kash &amp;amp; Karry.</p>
        <p>040 Help Wanted Miscellaneous</p>
        <p>writing service. Cover letters, business letters, reports, greph-ics. C.R. Writing3S5 6390.</p>
        <p>ACCOUNTANT. Large prog ressive real estate company located on the outer banks In N.C., now accepting applications for person with degree In Accounting to . supervise book keeping functions and serve as head of financial management department. Please submit resume by August 10,1988 to; Accountant, PO Box 248, Nags Head, NC 27959.</p>
        <p>AMBASSADOR</p>
        <p>GOLD</p>
        <p>Rapidly growing international corporation Is seeking self motivated representatives to sell our products in national retail chain, $1800 per month minimum plus SIOOO per month. Over night travel allowance. Bonus incentives. Blue Cross medical and life insurance. No experience necessary, part time Christmas applications now be ing accepted. Irtterviews will be held MONDAY, August 22, 6; 30 p.m.. Holiday Inn Medical Center, US 13, Memorial Drive. EOE</p>
        <p>APPLICATIONS NOW BEING</p>
        <p>Accepted tor banquet staff at the Sheraton Greenville. Person able, dependable, and hard workers are encouraged to ^ ly in person only, at The Sheraton, 203 W. Greenville Boulevard.</p>
        <p>ARTISTIC PERSON Needed tor days only. Names A Things, The Plaza Mall.</p>
        <p>AUTO MECHANICS and Body AAan wanted. Salary based on experience. Call between 8-5, Monday Friday 830-^45.</p>
        <p>BECOME ONE OF AMERICA'S BEST*</p>
        <p>Route manager needed tor na tional carpet service company. We will train. Unlimited poten tial. Ground floor opportunity. Call 758 1112 tor more informa tion.</p>
        <p>BEEF BARN</p>
        <p>Lunch time help needed; waitresses and hostesses posi tions. Apply Monday Friday,</p>
        <p>BOOKKEEPER. Cashier expe rience preferred. Salary negotiable. Join a growing company. Apply in person to Donald Barber. Foodiand, Buyer's Market.</p>
        <p>CARPENTERS AND Helpers needed. Laborers also needed. Call 830 1478 from 7;00a.m. 4;00 p.m., ask tor Steve. After 5;00 p.m., 1 731 7701. EOE M/F</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPUY</p>
        <p>060</p>
        <p>HtlpWantod</p>
        <p>Miictllantous</p>
        <p>iLVOIR MAiiFAtlllN6 ne^ sewing operators. Call</p>
        <p>CHEF needed tor a large institu tional contract account in Greenville. High school gradu ate with formal culinary train</p>
        <p>I resmelo; POBox</p>
        <p>2486. Greenville, NC 27836.</p>
        <p>~  5h1?</p>
        <p>Mature and responsible with references. Apply in person at S A S Cafeteria, Carolina East Mall, Greenville, Wednesday Friday, 8;00-9;00 a.m. and 3;00 4:00 p.m. No phone calls.</p>
        <p>CHRISTMAS AROUND TnE</p>
        <p>World. HO! HO! HO! Here we go! Now hiring demonstrators to show Christmas decorations. Representing countries from around the world. No investment. $300 kit FREE. Earn $8 and up per hour. Work your own hours now until December. Call Chelleat7SA6141.</p>
        <p>COASTAL FitNESS CENTER seeks self-motivated female for manager trainee position. Average annual income tor managers S25,000 $36,000. Sales experience necessary. No itu dents please. Call 756-1592 today, ask tor Miss Fitness.</p>
        <p>CREDIT TRAINEE For expan ding financial service company seeks enthusiastic person witn excellent phone and written communication skills. High school graduate with some col legle preferred, previous credit experience helpful. Possibility of relocation. Send resume to Credit Manager, Coastal Leas Ing Corporation. TO Box 647. Greenville, NC 27835.</p>
        <p>DEPENDABLE PAPT-TIME</p>
        <p>young lady wanted. Apply In person at Baldwin's, The Plaza, Greenville.</p>
        <p>00 YOU HAVE AN Outgoing personality, friendly attitude towards people, deal with public well, I week paid vacation after 6 months, medical and dental In surance, advancement within if qualified? II you have these qualifications, we are looking tor you. iteply 8 a.m. 2 p.m., except Tuesday, at waffle House. No phone calls.</p>
        <p>DOWN EAST RN's. Tired of commuting to Greenville? Try us we are prettier, happier, and most important, closer to home! Call Mrs. Lilley for appoint ment, 793 2100, Plumblee Nurs-ing Center. Plymouth, N.C.</p>
        <p>DRIVERS NEEDED For local delivery. Home every night. Heavy lifting and bonding required. Class A License and tractor trailer experience re quired. Call 756 6412 from t 5, J^ce Foods, Monday Friday</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>CNTIPEDE SOD</p>
        <p>Will Deliver 757-1463 or 758-2704</p>
        <p>i 'dii</p>
        <p>SEWING MACHINE OPERATOB NEEDED IMMEDIAmY</p>
        <p>Tom Togs, Inc. needs experienced sewing machine operators immediately. Good benefits including family insurance plan. Apply in person at;</p>
        <p>TOM TOGS, INC.</p>
        <p>Highway 64 East Coiwtoo,NC EOE</p>
        <p>t  ..  - , &amp;gt;.  ^1.</p>
        <p>ATTENTION NURSES $500 BONUS</p>
        <p>Greenville Villa Nursing Home has RN/LPN positions available. Competitive salary, shift differential, full benefits. For information contact.</p>
        <p>Administrator</p>
        <p>758-4121</p>
        <p>Monday-Friday, 8:00-5:00</p>
        <p>We Dare You To Compare</p>
        <p>Any other small truck with all this equipment for this low price!  ^</p>
        <p>$14982*</p>
        <p>^|||[^  per  month</p>
        <p>040</p>
        <p>HelpWanlMl</p>
        <p>Misctllantous</p>
        <p>ooismmsfiviirssst</p>
        <p>2 ywrs experience. Mutt have ICC Card and Chauffeur's Lictnse.</p>
        <p>EXPERIENCED Bull Dozer Operator. Atleast 2 years. Call betwetn9Sat825 991l.</p>
        <p>IXPEIENdEb SHEtROCK hangers, metal Iramars, and finishers. Call 756-0053.</p>
        <p>EXPERIENCED Hairstylist. Benefits ottered and more. Come by, bring resume at Para diseHalr Design. 756 1579.</p>
        <p>HLPWANTOAT CHILDCARE CENTER</p>
        <p>TEACHER. Must have degree in child related field or COA Ccr titication. Must have a loving and caring attitude tor young children.</p>
        <p>TEACHER'S ASSISTANT. Must be high school graduate. Experience working with young children.</p>
        <p>BUS DRIVER. Must be 18 years or older, have valid driver's license and good driving record. Have a caring attitude for children.</p>
        <p>BUS MONITOR. Must be 18 years or older, high school education or experience work ingwith young children.</p>
        <p>COOK. Must have experience in food preparation and record keeping. Have a caring attitude for children.</p>
        <p>Please send resume to Mrs. Brenda Jackson, Rt I, Box 347A, Fountain, NC 27829. Interviews will be schedule tor persons who resumes tits our needs.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPUY</p>
        <p>040 Help Wanted . Miscellaneous</p>
        <p>irpERINtEb Iheet Alletal mechanics tor heating and air conditioning company. Apply 8-9 a.m.. Larmar Mechanical.</p>
        <p>FIRST CLASS Auto AAechanic. 41 days work week. Top pay for Hght person. Apply or calf Chuck Autry's Body Shop, 752 3632.</p>
        <p>FLORAL DESIGNER needed at Julienne's Florist, 1703 W. 6th Street. Apply In person, 3:30 4:30 p.m. daily. No phone calls, please.</p>
        <p>FULL-TIME POSITION ivalT able-tor Mail Clerk/Courier, ^ply at NCNB, 201 W. 1st Street, Greenville. No phone calls please. EOE/AA.</p>
        <p>HELP WANTED for Winterville Grill. Call 756 3920or 756 9406.</p>
        <p>HELPERS WANTED for</p>
        <p>heating and air conditioning company. Apply Larmar Mechanical, 8 9a m.</p>
        <p>040</p>
        <p>Help Wanted Misctllaneous</p>
        <p>IMMEDIATE PfebiNO FOR</p>
        <p>cooks and dishwashers. Apply between 3 and 5 at Fizz, Inc, i lO E. 4th Street, Greenville.</p>
        <p>LP GAS DELIVERY MAN. Must be 21 years of age. Apply in person. Daughtrldge Gas Com pany, 2102 Dickinson Avenue be tween 8-S, Monday Friday</p>
        <p>MAINTENANCE MAN Needed tor too unit apartment complex. Need working knowledge in heating, air, refrigeration, plumbing, electrical, landtcap ing. 355 6302</p>
        <p>LCjCAL OIL COMPANY needs oil truck drivers, local deliveries. Want person that will be stable, looking tor long term employment. Will train right person. Send response to OR 1131, % The Daily Reflector, PO Box 1967, Greenville, NC 27835.</p>
        <p>LOOKING FOR A CAREER?</p>
        <p>Come |oin our team and start an exciting rewarding career in restaurant management We're looking for some highly motivated individuals who are hard working as well as people oriented. We offer Blue ^oss/ Blue Shield, paid vacations, and other benefits. Interested persons should contact our main office at 346 6150 for more intor matlon.</p>
        <p>CUSSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>MACHINIST AND WELDER</p>
        <p>Positions now available in job shop for experienced welders and machinists. Good pay and benefits. Contact:</p>
        <p>S &amp;amp; S Rwpoir Service Inc. Winterville. NC 28590 756-5989</p>
        <p>MANUFACTURING Engineer Wanted. 5 years experience machine sl^. ability to plan manufacturing operation, programs CNC laithes, and machn ing centers, develops cost reduc tions in design and methods. BSME or BSfs preferred. Ex cellent benefits package. Apply local Ernployinent Security</p>
        <p>Commission</p>
        <p>#NCS42S534.</p>
        <p>Office, Request</p>
        <p>NEED LIVE-IN COMPANION</p>
        <p>for ederty lady. Salary negotia ble. 756 0535 between 8 and 5. NEEDED: Experienced plumb-er. Call 758-4106between Sand s.</p>
        <p>NEEDED: Plumber's beipe and heating and air conditionini helper. Call 758-4106 between and 5.</p>
        <p>NEEDED: Responsible, mature person tor Dp.m. 7a.m. shift. Apply at any Kash N-Karry location.</p>
        <p>NEOEO: Part time recep tionist. Good telephone and communication skills. Light lyp ing may be required. Call 355 2477. Evenings: 752 2040 or 752 7552 Monday Friday 3 7 P.M.</p>
        <p>The Dally Reflector, GreenviHe. N.C.</p>
        <p>040 Help Wanted Miscellaneous</p>
        <p>xbtb: Apartment Complex Maintenance person. Should have air conditioning, heating, plumbing, carpentry and electrical skills. Also be willing to do other complex maintenance. Call 752 )557, 9 5, Monday Fri day</p>
        <p>blbllk FbH ALL posi ''4y add night, part time or full tim. Please apply be tween 2:00 p.m. 4:00 p.m., Mon ^y Saturday. No phone calls. Quincy's Family Steak House.</p>
        <p>PART-TIME Handyman. Must know carpentry, plumbing, etec trical work. $5.00 hour. Refer enees. 756-4902.</p>
        <p>YOU CAN SAVE money by shopping tor bargains In the Classified Ads.</p>
        <p>PART-TIME waiters oT waitresses needed Must be neat and dependable. Apply in person al Peppi's Pizza Den, 42i Greenville Boulevard.</p>
        <p>PART-TIME OR FULL TIME</p>
        <p>Positions available. Avon, the /tl wauty company, is now hiring. Call 756 6396.</p>
        <p>040</p>
        <p>HtfpWanlwl</p>
        <p>Misctllanaous</p>
        <p>i**RT-TIMt BREAKFAST</p>
        <p>cook needed. Approximately 3 days a week, 5 00 a.m. I2;30 p.m. Salary negotiable Apply at I*;"* dMli, Comfort Inn Hotel, 344 By Pass.</p>
        <p>frame shop needed immediate ly. Experience and ability to woirk well with customer a must. Apply in person after you call for an appointment, 752 4620 ask for Meg.</p>
        <p>PLUMBEAS AND HELPERS</p>
        <p>with experience, transportation andtools.OX) 1124.</p>
        <p>TeRSONNEL TEMPS.-</p>
        <p>If It's people, we're the pros."</p>
        <p>Suite F, 202 Arlington Boulevard. 355 4636.</p>
        <p>PEST</p>
        <p>-Tontrol route</p>
        <p>Technician. Need mature dependable male/female to ser vice established route in Wilson/Smithfield area. Ex cellent commission pay with un limited income potentials. Full company benefits and vehicle furnished. Call Spencer Pest Control, 8:00 5:00.752 6440.</p>
        <p>DEPARTMENT</p>
        <p>MANAGER</p>
        <p>Exciting position available for a creative person who enjoys the dynamic, fast paced fashion apparel business. Individual must be self-motivated and have the ability to motivate others. Prior salary/benefits package. Apply in person, Brodys, Carolina East Mall, Monday-Wednesday, 2-4 p.m.</p>
        <p>PTA" PliZA NOW HIRING</p>
        <p>Drivers. 757-1955 or come by store, corner of 14th and Charles, next to Kash 8. Karry.</p>
        <p>RETAIL SALES POSITION</p>
        <p>Apparel merchandising, inven tory control preferred, will train. Salary-h. Call 756 8664, after 6:30 p.m.</p>
        <p>RYAN'S FAMILY STEAK</p>
        <p>House now hiring enthusiastic, motivated people tor the follow mg positions: servers, kitchen, dishwasher, front line. Applica tions accepted between 2 and 4, AAonday Thursday.</p>
        <p>CUSSIFIED DISPUY</p>
        <p>040</p>
        <p>Help Wanfatf^ Miscellaneous</p>
        <p>PROFESSIONAL RME </p>
        <p>'"imposi" *   </p>
        <p>(1,355;</p>
        <p>nel, 355 7931</p>
        <p>Atlantic Person</p>
        <p>SALES POSITION available to mature, energetic individual who loves movies and people. Must be able to work mornings and afternoons. Apply in person to Sunshine Video, 212 Arlington Boulevard.</p>
        <p>SCOTCHMAN FOOD STORES</p>
        <p>is now interviewing for the posi lion of Assistant Manager at their location in Greenville. Must have experience in conve nient store business, minimum of 3 6 months. We are looking tor the individual to put on a fast track training program. Above average hourly rate for the right candidate. Benefits tor the full</p>
        <p>hourly rate for the right</p>
        <p> te. Benefits tor the full</p>
        <p>time employee with our company include hospital maipr medical, vacation with pay, ^k leave, retirement program, ad vancement within, arra regular pay reviews.</p>
        <p>ALSO: We are taking applica lions for a Deli employee. Hours tor Deli position will be from 5:30 a.m. 10:30 a.m., Monday Friday.</p>
        <p>Applications may be picked up at: The Scotchman Stores Located at Rt. 3, Highway 33, Greenville. Nr</p>
        <p>CUSSIFIED DISPUY</p>
        <p>^ NO CREDIT? ^ NO PROBLEIM!</p>
        <p>If you are having difficulty in trying to purchase a car because of no credit, or if you are not able to get any credit, come see me, Mark McDonald and Ill help you find a way to drive off the lot In one of our vehicles.</p>
        <p>BROWN &amp;amp; WOOD</p>
        <p>(Downtown)</p>
        <p>1205 Dickinson Avenue</p>
        <p>752-2882</p>
        <p>AT PETE BATTEN OLDS-TOYOTA!</p>
        <p>jJVUE  Dates:  August  4th  Thru  20th</p>
        <p>AUGUST 200</p>
        <p>PUii IT IN, PUSH IT M, 0R DHAU IT IMI</p>
        <p>'Selling price $6,888 00 plus $137.00, $600 cash down, 60 monthly paynoents.</p>
        <p>Standard Bed</p>
        <p>Standard Features:</p>
        <p> Double wall cargo bed  2.3 litre engine  5 speed  Radial tires  Halogen head lamps</p>
        <p> 1680 lb. payload  Cassette holder  Front disc brakes  Dual mirrors  Tinted glass</p>
        <p> Rear step bumper  Knit vinyl upholstery </p>
        <p> Low fuel warning lamp</p>
        <p>JOE ISUZU SAYS...</p>
        <p>Brown &amp;amp; woorx</p>
        <p>ipOT?nAC?C^^  P</p>
        <p>329 Qreenville Blvd. 355-6080</p>
        <p>BE UNDERSOLD miNfi DUIgAUOUS</p>
        <p>ilMf  ei</p>
        <p>will irjy for</p>
        <p>Old</p>
        <p>tW tor</p>
        <p>ANYTllilOR^*</p>
        <p>machineo, tractors, iloves, bocds, or |ust |wnk, etc.</p>
        <p>Bfo'U oer a maxi</p>
        <p>liibjjjiB</p>
        <p>tradmia allewaace on a</p>
        <p>tjO</p>
        <p>'-r "lo</p>
        <p>illsoaable offors</p>
        <p>doriag tMs die.</p>
        <p>We'll ito elewsf eeirtltteB le eWil ewr</p>
        <p>Open til 8:00  night.</p>
        <p>Free Pepsi &amp;amp; Popcorn all wook.</p>
        <p>Ceme te Weahingtea &amp;amp; leek for the BIO TINTSI</p>
        <p>MILLION DOLLAR INVENTORY!</p>
        <p>PETE BATTEN</p>
        <p>oijs-iotm'</p>
        <p>fVa.lllNAlL'</p>
        <p>1208 West 15th Street</p>
        <p>Washington, North Carolina</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <pb facs="00097006_0028" />
        <p>B.*I2 The Daily Rgflector. OraenvlHa. N.C.</p>
        <p>060 Htlp Wanted MisctlIaiMous</p>
        <p>SNIftCST</p>
        <p>ACCOUNTANTCLERK</p>
        <p>Hampton Induttritf hat im-mtdiato oponinp (or Cost Ac countant position. QualKlcationt</p>
        <p>Include J year AA depree In Accounting, -4 years experience In</p>
        <p>Iu3t ' </p>
        <p>Producrlon/Costing environment, knowledge ot personal computers and Lotus 1-2-3. App</p>
        <p>ly in person. Hanrnton In-mistrles. Inc., 3000 Greenville</p>
        <p>Highway, Kinston, N.C., be-tvraen the hours 9-11 and 1-4.</p>
        <p>EOE</p>
        <p>SMITNFIELD CHICKEN A</p>
        <p>Bar-B-Que now taking applica tions lor employment. Need responsible, mature and en thuslastic individuals with restaurant experience preferred.</p>
        <p>Apply in person at oiiir Green ville location, (Memorial</p>
        <p>afterlp.m.).</p>
        <p>Drive</p>
        <p>SNELLING A SNELLIN6</p>
        <p>specializes in sales, manage ment trainee, accounting and clerical positions. Call 758 0541.</p>
        <p>SPECIAL EDUCATION Teach er position available with Howell's Child Care Center, Inc/River Bend Facility. Individual must posses a BS in Special Education with experi ence' in Mental Retardation. Basic function of position is to</p>
        <p>iirovlde a full array of edcua ional service, both indirectly and directly to our residents. We offer comparable salaries.</p>
        <p>educational assistance,</p>
        <p>(unity for advancement terested forward resume to Director of Personnel, Howell's Child Center, Inc., PO Box 2159, New Bern, NC 28561 or call 638-6519.</p>
        <p>TRACTOR TRAILER drivers. High pay. New equipment. 2 years experience or tractor trailer school graduates. Call 800^682 6574</p>
        <p>TRUCK DRIVER. Must be dependable and have a safe driving record. Call L.L. Mur-phrey Hog Company, 753-5361 or 747-8591</p>
        <p>TWO WAITRESSES NEEDED.</p>
        <p>One (or lunches and 1 (or</p>
        <p>weekends. Apply at Szechuan .No phone</p>
        <p>Garden. 3 5.</p>
        <p>! calls.</p>
        <p>WAITERS AND WAITRESSES.</p>
        <p>Full lime and part time positions. 2 years experience helpful. Benefits available. Apply between 9:30-11:30 and 2:30 4:30, Tuesday thru Friday, Greenville Country Club. 756-1237.</p>
        <p>WANTED: Maintenance or ground person. Full-time employment. Good fringe benefits. Apply in person or call 355-5699. Arboroate Inn.</p>
        <p>CUSSIFIED DISPUY</p>
        <p>060</p>
        <p>HtfpWinted</p>
        <p>MisctliaiMein</p>
        <p>WANTeO: Experlencot</p>
        <p>station help Holiday Shell Drive.</p>
        <p>lencad service person. Memorial</p>
        <p>WANtED; Someone to do light Ironing for professional woman. Call3S4m.</p>
        <p>WANTED: Mature, dependable</p>
        <p>males and females, day wnIgM</p>
        <p>work. Some experience Benefits offered. Call Krispy Kreme, 83(nS25 between 9 and 12 for appointment.</p>
        <p>WANTED: LPN'S AND RN'S</p>
        <p>for long term health care facility in Washington. College tuition assistance, paid holidays and group health insurance along with salaries comparable to area hospitals are just a few ot our many benefits. For further information, call Ms. R. Moore or J. O'Neal at 946 9570, AAon day-Friday, 8:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m. An EOE Employer.</p>
        <p>WENDY'S now accepting ap plications for management in Greenville area. Must enjoy working In fast paced environment. Management experience</p>
        <p>helpful, but not required. 5 day work week, benefit</p>
        <p> _____package,</p>
        <p>and competitive salary. Contact Jacksonville office 346-2146.</p>
        <p>061</p>
        <p>Help Wanted Sales</p>
        <p>AMBI</p>
        <p>tITIOUS INDIVIDUAL to sell Real Estate. Must enjoy working with people. Willing to work 40 hours a week, to set goals and achieve them. Train mg programs, leads, and sales tools provided. NC Real Estate License required. Call Ann Bass at CENTURY 21 Bass Realty, 756-6666.</p>
        <p>ATTENTION: Licensed Real Estate Agents. One of Greenville's most aggressive firms seeks full-time, motivated, ambitious sales agents. We have expanded our offices and have room for 4 more agents. Excellent working conditions with a professional atmosphere. Call CENTURY 21 JANET BOWSER AND ASSOCIATES for your confidential interview, 355-7800. An Equal Opportunity Employer.</p>
        <p>AUTOMOTIVE SALES PERSON Due to a tremendous increase in sales, Pete Batten Oldsmobile Toyota, 1308 W.</p>
        <p>iStrh Street, Washington, N.C.,</p>
        <p>ditTc</p>
        <p>has a need for additional sales personnel. If you are looking to increase your income with</p>
        <p>pleasant working conditions, employee's benefits, and</p>
        <p>willing to work hard and long</p>
        <p>hours, then contact Jac Mewborn or Mike Toler, phone 946 9161.</p>
        <p>CUSSIFIED DISPUY</p>
        <p>061</p>
        <p>HGlpWanttd</p>
        <p>SalM</p>
        <p>AftENtlii Homemakers.</p>
        <p>Part-time work, full-time pay.</p>
        <p>your own hours. Very flexible for MOMS. Earn 88 or more</p>
        <p>Set</p>
        <p>an hour with our new expanded, specialised party plan. We have doubled the number ot toys, gifts</p>
        <p>and home decor items. No Investment. Free Kit. No Collecting. No Delivery. 756-6610.</p>
        <p>EXECUTIVE SALESOPPOR TUNITY</p>
        <p>Major southeastern home builder otters career opportunity for motivated Sales Representative. $25K-i- first year potential, no travel, comprehen sive training and benefits package. Guaranteed draw against commission with outstanding bonus and awards I. Future</p>
        <p>program.</p>
        <p>promotion to</p>
        <p>management possible. College ........ilble</p>
        <p>degree of significant tangit</p>
        <p>Soods sales experience a tflnite plus! Call Mr. Whitson,</p>
        <p>Oakwood Homes Corp., for confidential Interview. 756-5434.</p>
        <p>FLOOR COVERING Salesman; draw plus commission. Sales experience necessary. Willing to train. Aggressive growing com-</p>
        <p>nr. Send resume to DR 1120, he Daily Reflector, PO Box 1967, Greenville, NC 27835.</p>
        <p>QUICK-ACTION Classified Ads are the answer to passing on your extras to someone who wants to buy.</p>
        <p>RETAIL SALES POSITION</p>
        <p>Apparel merchandising, inventory control preferred, will train. Salary-t-. Call 756-8664, after6:30p.m.</p>
        <p>THEHUBLtD.</p>
        <p>Needed full and part time salespersons for commission sales. Call Tony at 756 9504.</p>
        <p>WANTED-Inside Salesperson. Must have good written and oral skills and be enthusiastic</p>
        <p>Rewarding job with good company benefits. Send resume to P.O. Box 75, Greenville, NC 37835.</p>
        <p>062</p>
        <p>Help Wanted Teachers</p>
        <p>BIOLOGY INSTRUCTOR.</p>
        <p>Individual will work part-time teaching General Biology and/ or Anatomy and Physiology courses. Master's or 18 graduate hours in Biology. Position avail  able September 1. Accepting :ations.....</p>
        <p>^plications through August 23. Teaching experience preferred. Contact Personnel Department, nmunlty College, PO 7007, GreenviMe, NC</p>
        <p>Pitt Communll Drawer</p>
        <p>27835 7007. 756 3130, Extension 293. AA / EOE</p>
        <p>CUSSIFIED DISPUY</p>
        <p>TAG SALE</p>
        <p>Saturday, August 13, 9 a.m. Until</p>
        <p>404 Evons StracI Moll (Across from Floyd G. Robinson Jowolry)</p>
        <p>Approx. 300 pieces of unclaimed furniture and plus assorted household goods from storage company.</p>
        <p>4 pc. Cherry Bedroom Suite Chino Cabinet</p>
        <p>Assorted Chest of Drawers and Dressers</p>
        <p>Dining Room Tables and Chairs</p>
        <p>Corner Cabinet</p>
        <p>Coffee Tables and End Tables</p>
        <p>Desks</p>
        <p>Beds</p>
        <p>Living room furniture File Cabinet</p>
        <p>Upholstered and Vinyl Sofas Sleeper Sofas Headboards</p>
        <p>Some Semi Antique Furniture Few Appliances and Stereos Lamps and Mirrors and Picture Frames Hundreds of miscellaneous items</p>
        <p>BRING A FRIEND AND A TRUCK</p>
        <p>Terms; ALL SALES FINAL: Cash or good check; items most be moved Saturday, not responsible for accidents.</p>
        <p>it</p>
        <p>Let's Make A Deal At 2 p.m.</p>
        <p>it</p>
        <p>Sole arranged by Michael Cable</p>
        <p>Sale conducted by Woodside Antiques, 756-9929</p>
        <p>IF YOU NEED FURNITURE BE THERE!</p>
        <p>PUBLIC</p>
        <p>NOTICE</p>
        <p>Beginning Monday, August 15 For Your Shopping Convenience New Hours!</p>
        <p>SNOW HILL N.C.</p>
        <p>28580</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>AND</p>
        <p>Monday-Thursday 8 AM - 8 PM Friday 8 AM-6PM CLOSED SATURDAY</p>
        <p>Saturday Appointments Call 747-3758 747-3844 747-8711 1-800-682-6892</p>
        <p>062</p>
        <p>NefpWantMl</p>
        <p>TMcfiers</p>
        <p>CHILDREN'S WORLD Laarn tng Canttr will bt hiring fuH-</p>
        <p>tlma and part-tima taachars (or (all. Must hava 1 year axparl-ply in</p>
        <p>ence or degree. Please I360W.</p>
        <p>parson</p>
        <p>Greenville</p>
        <p>iL.</p>
        <p>iNithucto FOR Physical</p>
        <p>Therapist Assistant curriculum at Nash Community Colige. N.C. Physical therapist license required; 2 years experience in clinical or academic seHlngs ferred. 9 month contract, jlns September 1,1988. Salary commensurate with education and experience. All state benefits. Send complete resume by August 15, 1988 to Betsy B.</p>
        <p>Currin, Nash Community Col-leoe, PO Box 7488, Rocky Mou NC 27804. EOE</p>
        <p>NOW ACCEPTING Applications for teachers and teacher's aides</p>
        <p>full time and part'tlme positions. Apply in person at either Kinder Care location.</p>
        <p>PRE-SCHOOL TEACHER</p>
        <p>needed for 1988-89 school year in a progressive Church Weekday Education program. Must be NC certified and experienced in teaching the pre-school child. For more information call 756-5314 or 355-2127.</p>
        <p>PRE-VOCATION TEACHERS-</p>
        <p>Mlddle grades, 777 Certification needed. 3 positions available.</p>
        <p>LANGUAGE ARTS/Social Studies. Middle grade teachers.</p>
        <p>BEH TEACHER High school position.</p>
        <p>TWO K-5 CHORAL MUSIC Posi tions.</p>
        <p>Contact PIH County Schools, Of flee of Personnel, 1717 W. 5th Street, Greenville, NC 27834. 830 4242.</p>
        <p>TOP QUALITY, fuel-economical cars can be found at low prices In Classified.</p>
        <p>063 Help Wanted Technical &amp;amp; Trades</p>
        <p>BODY SHOP TECHNICIAN. If you are hardworking, energetic and career minded, we have just the position (or you!</p>
        <p>We offer you the opportunity to earn (rom $35,000 to $40,000 per year. We also offer life insurance, hospitalization, vacation and 5 days paid holidays each year.</p>
        <p>We have modern equipment and excellent working conditions. If you think you could meet these qualifications, and are looking for a fulfilling career with an established company, please send a letter with your qualifications to:</p>
        <p>DR 1116, % The Dally Reflector, PO Box 1967, Greenville, NC 27835__</p>
        <p>CUSSIFIED DISPUY</p>
        <p>063 HtlpWantfd TtchnloilATradts</p>
        <p>CAPPiTErAiiSl</p>
        <p>Carpenter Helpers natded. Experienced only. 758-4953.</p>
        <p>DRAFtiMAN NE60 im mediately. Full time salaried position. Eastern NC industrial construction and fabrication</p>
        <p>company needs experienced draftsmar -    -</p>
        <p> iman for sh&amp;lt;v drawings</p>
        <p>and design. Send resume, 3 references and salary requirements to: The Robert's Com-, PO Box 499, Wintervllle,</p>
        <p>IC-</p>
        <p>pany, PO NC285W.</p>
        <p>ELECTRONIC SERVICE</p>
        <p>Technician with jjwd driving</p>
        <p>record. 355 3700 or 355 6688.</p>
        <p>EXPERIENCED PLUMBERS,</p>
        <p>HVAC installers, mechanics and service technician needed. Call Snow Hill Plumbing, 758 8450.</p>
        <p>FOODSERVICE POSITIONS</p>
        <p>Canteen Company, Foodservice Contractor (or East Carolina University, is seeking full and part-time employees for its three on-campus dining facilities. Day, evening, and weekend hours arc available to (It any individual needs. Canteen offers a competitive starting wage and an attractive benefit p</p>
        <p>tractive benefit package</p>
        <p>Positions Available:</p>
        <p>Lead supervisors, waiters, waitresses, stock clerk.</p>
        <p>Apply In person Monday through Friday from 9 a.m.-5 p.m. at our offices located on the ground Hall on</p>
        <p>floor of Jones Residence College Hill Avenue.</p>
        <p>FULL TIME. Engraving</p>
        <p>i. Must be neat.</p>
        <p>and</p>
        <p>locksmith work, dependable, and willing to work and learn. Now taking applications. 757 0075, before 5.</p>
        <p>HEATING AND AIR condition ing service person needed. Experience required. Call 355-7582, 8:00-9:00p.m.</p>
        <p>Immediate Openings rial Position!</p>
        <p>For Industrial Positions</p>
        <p>Heavy lifting, material handling, machine operators and related positions immediately available. Must have industrial</p>
        <p>experience, phone and transportation. A better opportunity with</p>
        <p>excellent benefits. Apply in person at..</p>
        <p>ANNE'S</p>
        <p>TEMPORARIES</p>
        <p>758-6610</p>
        <p>F lowers Office Complex 1410 South Evans Street (Use Evans Street Entrance) M/F/H EOE</p>
        <p>WHEN SOMEONE IS</p>
        <p>bi^, ttay turn to the Classified</p>
        <p>Place your Ad today for quick results.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>063 Htip Wanted Technical ft Trades</p>
        <p>PhGR^SSIV AN6 expm ding manufacturing firm locarad In Research Triangle East Is seeking a highly motivated, energetic, hands-on methods engineer. Successful candidate must be highly organized, have an affinity for accuracy and detail, and be able to work well in a multi-faceted position. Industrial engineering or technology background Is a plus. This high visibility position will (III a key manufacturing/ organizational support role. Send resume, in complete confidence, to: Premier, Inc., PO Box B, Spring Hope, NC 27882.</p>
        <p>ROOFERS-HELPERS (AAale or Female). Excellent possibilities for advancement with growing roofing company. Must be mature and mechanically proficient with dependable work habits. Above average working conditions, salaries, benefits. Call 746 2042.</p>
        <p>SALESMAN WANTED for used auto parts warehouse. Base salary plus excellent commission. Earn big money. Call 752-6838.</p>
        <p>WANTED: ROOFERS, sheet metal mechanics and laborers. Apply in person, 1314 N. Greene Street. No phone calls please.</p>
        <p>064 Work Wanted</p>
        <p>A QUALITY HOME BUILDER</p>
        <p>C.W.C. DEVELOPERS, INC., 752-7634.</p>
        <p>A-1 QUALITY PalntIn on e$tl</p>
        <p>Work guaranteed. 758 4136.</p>
        <p>Ing, minor repairs, mildew control, we wash houses. Free e$(imates.</p>
        <p>ADDITIONS, DECKS, FENCE,</p>
        <p>garages, improvements, repair. HadcKKk Construction. 355-7866.</p>
        <p>AFFORDABLE REIIAODELiNG</p>
        <p>Garages, room additions, hardwood floors, decks, docks and repairs. No job too large or too small. Free estimate.</p>
        <p>752 9915.</p>
        <p>*************</p>
        <p>ALL PHASES OF CONSTRUCTION</p>
        <p>Room additions, garages, hardwood floors, decks, repairs, etc. Steele &amp;amp; Sons "FREE ESTIMATES"</p>
        <p>753 2833</p>
        <p>BRICKLAYER: CAN DD plain or fancy work and ceramic tile. No job to small or too hard. Call 756 9488.</p>
        <p>CLEANING SERVICE. Houses, offices, trailers, apartments. Any size, reasonable price. Call day or night. 758-7350 or 758 1483.</p>
        <p>CLEANING PERSON; houses, offices, trailers, apartments. Any size. Reasonable price. 830-9210 anytime.</p>
        <p>CUSSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>064 WorkWiiitGd</p>
        <p>e5tO PAtloi. walks, and driveways. Also treated decks or repair work. AAax Pollard, 757-0444 after 6:00.</p>
        <p>DO YOU WANT CHANGES or</p>
        <p>additions to your landKape? Also lawn maintenance, plus lots mowed from VS acre to 50 acres. Call 757-1590.</p>
        <p>ETf^ CLEANING iERVICE. Quality home cleaning. Low rates. Bonded. 355-4785.</p>
        <p>EXPERIENCED AND reliable cleaning person. Excellent ref-renwand transportation. Call</p>
        <p>XRCHINO for the right  .....   Ifled</p>
        <p>townhouse? Watch Claul every day.</p>
        <p>EXPERT LAWN CARE</p>
        <p>AND LANDSCAPING Call 756-8300.</p>
        <p>FOR A SQUEAKY CLEAN</p>
        <p>house or office; honest dependable cleaning service. Reasonable rates. Call 355 5452.</p>
        <p>FOR COMPLETE LAWN Care: Mowing, edging and trimming call John's lawn Service, 756-5960, after 8 p.m., for free estimates. Anytime weekends.</p>
        <p>GRASS CUTTING AND YARD</p>
        <p>Maintenance. Quality work, reasonable prices. Mobile home repairs. Call James Falkner, 746 3721.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPUY</p>
        <p>OMWork Wanted</p>
        <p>PiaMiY</p>
        <p>wants (p play for church in Greenville area. 7S8-I36S.</p>
        <p>HOME IMPROVEMENTS</p>
        <p>^ ALL TYPES. ANY SIZE</p>
        <p>Call 756-8200 (or freeestimate.</p>
        <p>r^Ll) LiKt to LIV IN care for the elderly. 746-2680.</p>
        <p>IF WU WANt'A 'OD paint job at reasonable prices, call 758 3598.35 years experience.</p>
        <p>J. McNtiLL; Roofing, carpen-try and sheet metal. All work guaranteed. 830-9001.</p>
        <p>TSWNSCuT</p>
        <p>Pete's Lawn Service. Residential grass cutting. 20 years experience. 758-5618.</p>
        <p>MANNING remodeling.</p>
        <p>Decks and cabinets. Satisfaction guaranteed. 746-4849.</p>
        <p>PAINT YOUR home. Alone, clean, and fast. 25 years of customer satisfaction. Honest satisfaction Is my goal. 524-3396.</p>
        <p>PAINTING, exterior/interior.</p>
        <p>Professional at an economy</p>
        <p>price. Phone 758-0650.</p>
        <p>PAPERING, interior Paint ing and paper removal. All wall papering guaranteed In writing. Insured for your protection. Call Don English, 756-7010.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPUY</p>
        <p>064 wolt Wanted</p>
        <p>#LMfcte6 aIi6 eWAMtt Tile work. Now and repair. _ Liconsod. 3SS-27I7</p>
        <p>Floors, ceilings and walls. Roof-ing and all masonry. 8I0-V3S7.  ^</p>
        <p>"QAlIY tHAf suBils oW^,^ the pickiest." Concrete, Mason-. ^ ry, Commorclal. RosMontlal.. ^ Call; RuHIn Keys, Jr. 752-4833or^ 1 758-3091  '</p>
        <p>RICHAllb'i Wallpapering and^  Painting. New number: 825-7748.  *</p>
        <p>ROOF LEAKS FIXED and J minor repairs. 18 years oxoerl- 4 ence. Work guaranteed. After 6 . I. call 752-5906.  'n</p>
        <p>p.m.</p>
        <p>SHALLOW WELLS drilled. 1st, u 25' $160. Includes pipe and point, u Call 830-6655.  </p>
        <p>TILE LOOSE IN oramic M Shower? Carpet, vinyl Installation In sales. All work guaran?, teed. Call John for free estimate, 355-4749.</p>
        <p>WORK WANTED: Odd jobs.o job too small. Including homo, repair and maintenance. Indoor and outdoor painting, vinyl</p>
        <p>siding pressure washing, deck?'*/ and storage shed building. Plus,'' much more. Call 752-4291 days;-</p>
        <p>746-2538 night and weekends.</p>
        <p>CUSSIFIED DISPUY aw</p>
        <p>Make</p>
        <p>Unemployment</p>
        <p>Temporary</p>
        <p>There probably is a job out there that needs you, and the way to get it is to</p>
        <p>CHECK THE DAILY REFLECTOR</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIEDS!</p>
        <p>Classlfled8...tho road to success!</p>
        <p>The Daily Reflector</p>
        <p>V</p>
        <p>752-6166</p>
        <p>IffiIIE SUSHED PinCES TO SEU!</p>
        <p>'85 HONDA PRELUDE</p>
        <p>Is</p>
        <p>Was ^8,995</p>
        <p>*7,988</p>
        <p>'86 CHEVY CAMARO Z28</p>
        <p>M96</p>
        <p>per month</p>
        <p>Is</p>
        <p>Was M l ,995</p>
        <p>* 10,488</p>
        <p>Automatic, sunroof, air conditoner Stock # RPH-1666A</p>
        <p>T-tops, automatic, loaded. Stock #P680</p>
        <p>$800 down cash or trada, 48 monthly paymanla. 14.00% A P.R.</p>
        <p>'85 CHEVY SILVERADO</p>
        <p>4x4 LONG BED</p>
        <p>'Plus lax and tag* With approrad ciadit</p>
        <p>Is</p>
        <p>Was ^11 ,995</p>
        <p>*10,988</p>
        <p>Slock pogs e.2L Diesel, automatic, power windows</p>
        <p>Hurry, Prices In Effect 'Til 5 P.M. Saturdoy</p>
        <p>Only At...</p>
        <p>uaity Used CarsBob Barbour Inc.</p>
        <p>3006 South Memorial Drive  355-5099 Greenville, N.C.</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>s.</p>
        <p>Y</p>
        <pb facs="00097006_0029" />
        <p>OAa-, Antiques</p>
        <p>ANTIQuf^^ulfiT and sold</p>
        <p>Mity. Woodsldc Antiques. Allen I-W29.</p>
        <p>Road. Please call 7M</p>
        <p>ANTIBES AND OLD THINGS</p>
        <p>AAac'sold Things. Evans Streel</p>
        <p>Street 1 8777</p>
        <p>at Carr Motor Co.. Inc.</p>
        <p>ing!</p>
        <p>EKterision. Phone 756 8777. Locatd</p>
        <p>BUyiNG OLD GUNS, swords, lih*</p>
        <p>milltagy related items. 355 5108 NOW OPEN Hawley's Antiques,</p>
        <p>Highway 43, next to Jarmans Staols, 2 miles south of</p>
        <p>Paljilahd. Cash paid for an tiques.' We buy and sell daily. Phone830 8W0or 758 6518. PUBUC AUCTION: Saturday, August 13.7;30p.m. Highway 24, 2 miles east of Swansboro Highway 24. Oak and primitives Iron 'VA and NC. Civil War maps,articles, engravings to do witn Wilmington, NC and Cape Fear river area. LAZY LYONS AUCTION NCL 1249. Phone 393;2535. PO Box 1037, Swan^ro, NC 28584. M.C. inspect p.m.</p>
        <p>WALL* TO WALL Antiques and</p>
        <p>Stuff. Open Saturday, 12:00 5:00, 818 Dickinson Ave. 6&amp;gt;llectibles.</p>
        <p>069</p>
        <p>Auctions</p>
        <p>WALU TO WALL SALE Satur ist i2t</p>
        <p>day/* August I3th. 11:00 a.m. Open 10:00 a.m. for inspection. Exv# inyenl|ry and business It. Formerly Edwards icy, 2K S. Lee Street. NC, au 753 4409 lor fdrma#|.NCAL4237.</p>
        <p>I Supplies</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>..wwJS. White per board foot. 83.00 per board 81.60 per board ;i.60 per board Tis available, le, and walnut, .ts, 514 E. Ver iton, NC. 1 800</p>
        <p>Computers</p>
        <p>LE lie COMPUTER. Dual : drive, mono chrome play, image writer printer, A pleworks software package, all manuals, less than 5 h urs usage. S1400 tor total ckage 823 4025 or 1 800 336 between 8 and 5 p.m., Mon Friday.</p>
        <p>&amp;lt;1 y</p>
        <p>C 10</p>
        <p>Fuel, Wood, Coal</p>
        <p>( kS LOGS- Peterson Real Fyre mmer Sale is now on!</p>
        <p>Road Antiques 8, Fireside top, 1 mile south Sunshine arden Center. 355 6003.</p>
        <p>Furniture</p>
        <p>ANOTHER TAG SALE by Michael Cable and Woodside Antiques. Saturday, August 13,9 a.m., 404 Evans Street Mall, across from Floyd Robinson</p>
        <p>Jewelry. Approximately 300 pieces of unclaimed furniture.</p>
        <p>plus assorted household goods from storage company. Bring a friend and a truck. If you need furniture, be there!</p>
        <p>BERKLINE LOVESEAT</p>
        <p>Williamsburg blue with small print $300. Call 551 4977 or 756 7718 ask for Rpcky.</p>
        <p>COUNTRY RUST Plaid Sofa, chair, and ottoman, like new. $300. Twin bed $50 Chest $60. Kitchen table with benches $75. Hutch $50. Tole painting books by various artists, prices nego liable. Call 756 5419 or 355 5206, after6:30p.m</p>
        <p>CUSTOM MADE Shelves 3&amp;gt; }X7. $100each. Vertical filing cabirtet 5x6 with 4 shelves $400. Other items.</p>
        <p>LOW</p>
        <p>COST</p>
        <p>SERVICE</p>
        <p>Air</p>
        <p>Conditioning</p>
        <p>and</p>
        <p>Refrigeration.</p>
        <p>355-6645</p>
        <p>TRAIN TOBBA PROFESSIONAL ^ SKMTMT $K./MCimONtn</p>
        <p>momn,</p>
        <p>tsiciirAif</p>
        <p>start locaity. tuN tMMfpart tkna. Laam word proeaaamg mO rataiad aecralBrtai kllte. Home Study and ftaaWent Training Nat'i Haadquart re, Pompano SaaoR, Florid*.</p>
        <p>nmmmamm</p>
        <p>l.tOO-327-7721</p>
        <p>Okdeia*IA.C.T Carp.</p>
        <p>1  iinnr</p>
        <p>Oil</p>
        <p>Furnitur*</p>
        <p>FURNITURE STRIPPING</p>
        <p>Paint and varnish removed from wood or metal. Tar Road Antiques, 1 mile south of Sun shine Garden Center, 355 6003.</p>
        <p>HARDWOOD FULL SIZE Office desk. Excellent condition. $150. 758 1590,</p>
        <p>MATCHING COUCH And thair, coffee tabl, recliner, double bed. All fair condition. 752-2585 or 758 6925</p>
        <p>TWO WING BACK CHAIRS and</p>
        <p>refrigerator. 830-5388.</p>
        <p>IT'S NEARING THE END of</p>
        <p>summer making this a good time to shop for a good buy in</p>
        <p>boats and marine ^^ulpment</p>
        <p>Find them in Classifie</p>
        <p>082 Garage-Yard Sales</p>
        <p>ANOTHER TAG SALE by</p>
        <p>Michael Cable and Woodside Antiques. Saturday, August 13,9 a.m., 404 Evans Street /Mali, across from Floyd Robinson Jewelry. Approximately 300 pieces of unclaimed furniture, plus assorted household goods from storage company. Bring a friend and a truck. If you need furniture, be there!</p>
        <p>BABY CLOTHES, work shelves.</p>
        <p>|lay^^, and other things. Rt. 1,</p>
        <p>Stick Valley. 6 miles straight toward Ayden from Sunshine Gardens. Look for signs. Saturday, 8-2</p>
        <p>BACK-TO-SCHOOL yard sale. Childrens toys, clothes, bicy</p>
        <p>cles, books, darkroom equip ment. Saturday, August 13, 8 12. 511 Winstead Road (Westhaven)</p>
        <p>BACKYARD SALE. 200 Tuckahoe Drive. Name brand children's clothes, toys, house hold items. 7 10:30, Saturday.</p>
        <p>BIG, BIG YARD SALE, Dirt Cheap parking lot, Saturday, August 13, 8:00 a.m. Clothes, furniture, appliances.</p>
        <p>BIG YARD SALE: 314 W. 2nd</p>
        <p>Street, Ayden; baby swing, walker, Snuggli, toys, clothes, curtain rods and much more.</p>
        <p>BIG YARD SALE, August 13, 7 2. Toys, books, clothes, and etc. 43 New Bern Highway, bare off at Bells Fork, past Worthington Woods, take next left, State Road 1736. Blue house on right with wagon in front.</p>
        <p>CLOTHES, BIKES, toys, an</p>
        <p>fique mantel, miscellaneous. 500 Eleanor Street. Saturday,</p>
        <p>August 13. 7:30 11:30 a.m. No early birds please.</p>
        <p>ELECTROLUX IS Celebrating Chrisfmas in August with a fab ulous Sidewalk, Friday August 12 and Saturday August 13. Canister model $599 now $349. D3 Upright $399 Now $249. Shampooers, $349, Now $249. Free Vacation with every</p>
        <p>machine purchased. Come by and see Santa. Free balloons</p>
        <p>and Pepsi. 105 Trade Street, Greenville, North Carolina.</p>
        <p>GIGANTIC 4 FAMILY Yard sale. Furniture, children's clothes. Saturday, 6 11, 114 Wilkshire Drive.</p>
        <p>HIGHWAY 43 NORTH. 6th</p>
        <p>house on left before B's Bar b que. Beside Kingdom Hall. Big sale, including maternity clothes and baby clothes 8 12.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>TRAVEL AGENT TOUR GUIDE AIRLINE RESERVATIONIST</p>
        <p>Met leeMy. hM BmeMift</p>
        <p>Mm*, Mi* n a* MIim en-</p>
        <p>dMil MMiig-FkNuieM M *&amp;gt; ertelM, Mb ptwemeni *ailN*</p>
        <p>Flortde.</p>
        <p>AJC.T.TRAVBL SCHOOL</p>
        <p>1-800-327-7728</p>
        <p>r  T  I  111</p>
        <p>NEED A LOAN?</p>
        <p>OWN A HOME?</p>
        <p>HOME EQUiry LOANS</p>
        <p>$1,000 lo No Limit Mortgage Past Due O K Credit Problems Understood</p>
        <p>Various Rates &amp;amp; Terms Cash For Any Purpose</p>
        <p>WHEN YOUR BANK SAYS NO...</p>
        <p>FAST SERVICE Midstate Financial Services ' Apply By Phone</p>
        <p>1-800-777-3701</p>
        <p>M-F 8 am-10 pm; Sat. 9 am-5 pm</p>
        <p>082 Garage-Yard Sles</p>
        <p>MOVING OUT. Miscellaneous household items. 1004 W. Overlook Drive. Saturday, August 13.9-2.</p>
        <p>MOVING. Tag Sale. 2 families.</p>
        <p>East 4th Streets,</p>
        <p>2004, 2006 Saturday. August 13, 7:30 a.m. Raindate August 14. Usual tag sale items plus young boys</p>
        <p>clothing and toys, stainless steel I, Hoover Rotlsserie and</p>
        <p>wok,</p>
        <p>table, toaster, computer table/ desk, old classical records, cassettes and records from SO's on. Raffia fencing, beer sign lights, etc.</p>
        <p>NEW DRESSES (Large sizes) $10-$IS, children's toys, glasswares (some antique), humidifier, boy's clothes sizes 5-8, all types f odds and ends. Saturday, 8 12. Take Evans Street Extension to Cannon's Crossroads (SR1708K turn left, 4th house on right (grey and white).</p>
        <p>NO JUNK Garage Sale, Satur day. August 13, 6:30, Stratford Arms Apartment, 26A. Children's clothes, toys, fur niture, washer/dryer, kitchen and household items.</p>
        <p>ROUTE 3, WINTERVILLE, one</p>
        <p>mile off Highway It on the road that goes behind PCC. Bicycle, weight bench, picnic table, furniture, clothes.</p>
        <p>SATURDAY, AUGUST 13. Fur</p>
        <p>niture, refrldgerator, washer, dryer, clothes, and more. At Frog Level, off 264, near Jamie's Furniture. 8a.m.-until.</p>
        <p>SATURDAY. AUGUST 13, 7:00^</p>
        <p>11:00; children's clothes, lawn</p>
        <p>mower, toys, lots more. Go past !, torn</p>
        <p>Pitt Community College, right at Robert's Welding, go to stop sign, turn left and follow signs.</p>
        <p>SATURDAY 6:30-NOON. St. Paul PH Church. Highway 33. We have toys, children's books and lots of household items. /Monies will support Bible quiz teams.</p>
        <p>SATURDAY, AUGUST 13. 7</p>
        <p>until. House next to Belvoir General Merchandising.</p>
        <p>THREE FAMILY Yard sale, 215 Pine Drive, Rosewood Subdivi Sion, turn right at Bells Fork get on Fire Tower Road, turn Igft on Road 1709 and go 1/4 mile past Windsor. Baby, children and adults' clothes, toys and house hold items. 7 11 a.m.</p>
        <p>THREE FAMILY Yard Sale. Something for everyone. Bed, dishes, curtains, infants-adults' clothes, sewing machine and lots more. 207 Eleanor Street (Cherry Oaks) Saturday, August 13,7 11.</p>
        <p>TOYS, TOYS, TOYS. Excellent condition. 1304 Gotten Road, Saturday, August 13,8 12.</p>
        <p>WALL TO WALL Antiques and</p>
        <p>Stuff. Open Saturday, 12:00 5:00, 818 Dickinson Ave. Collectibles.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>082 Garage-Yard Sales</p>
        <p>YARD SALE AT HANRAHAN.</p>
        <p>Something for everyone. Bargains galore. Corner of SR 1900 and I no before railroad tracks, mile behind Kash 8, Karry #1 north oi Griffon on Highway 11.7:00 until.</p>
        <p>YARD SALE 812, Saturday, August 13, 127 N. Woodlawn Avenue. Furniture, odds and ends, clothes. No Early Birds!</p>
        <p>YARD SALE at 307 E. 14th Street, Saturday morning.</p>
        <p>YARD SALE. Brittany Ridge, Kathleen Drive. Saturday, 7-12.</p>
        <p>758 4764.</p>
        <p>YARD SALE, 500'Tutor Court, WIntervllle, N.C., Devonshire Square, 8:00. Clothes, fireplace screen, bed frame, odd and ends, 2 families.</p>
        <p>YARD SALE SATURDAY, 2109 E. 4th Street. Furniture.</p>
        <p>YARD SALE. 5 miles from Hastings Ford on Highway 33. Woodsiove, doors and furniture included in sale. Saturday, 9 a.m.</p>
        <p>YARD SALE SATURDAY, 8:00 108 W. Redman Avenue, behind old Parker's Chapel Church.</p>
        <p>YARD SALE, Saturday, August 13, 202 Lindenwood Drive, Belvedere Subdivision, 7 a.m.</p>
        <p>YARD SALE. Cleaning Out At tic. 814 Riverhills Drive, Riverhills Subdivision oft Highway 33 east. Lots of items from 2 housesholds. Drapes, mini blinds, china, kitchenware, lamps, pictures, and lots more. Sale from 8 12.</p>
        <p>YARD SALE, miscellaneous items, video game. South 43, turn left across from Roberson's Nursery, 1st left after 2nd curve.</p>
        <p>117 ANTLER ROAD-Club Pines, Saturday, 8:30-)1:30a.m. Lots of children's toys in good condi</p>
        <p>tion, children's clothes, small kitchen appliances, new golf bag, old records, Cooker/Can ner, sewing supplies and more.</p>
        <p>2206 CHARLES STREET.</p>
        <p>Saturday, August 13. 6:30 12:00. York air conditioner, lamps, coffee and end tables, T-shirts, household items, tennis rackets, womens skirts, size 12, and lots of miscellaneous.</p>
        <p>4 FAMILIES. Collectables, few</p>
        <p>antiques, something for everybody. 8:30 till. 205 N</p>
        <p>Waverly Street, Farmville.</p>
        <p>4 FAMILIES. 2311 Memorial Drive. Clothing and household items. Dirt cheap. 7-1, Saturday.</p>
        <p>092</p>
        <p>Livestock</p>
        <p>COASTAL BERMUDA HAY</p>
        <p>758-8454 after dark.</p>
        <p>HORSEBACK RIDING. Jarman Stables, 752 5237.</p>
        <p>STALLS FOR RENT Close to Greenville, full care, paddock or pasture turn out. 753 5467.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>WILSON RHODES ELEaRICAL CONTRAaORS</p>
        <p>Wishes to announce... We now service and install air condition and heating equipment in addition to our electrical services. Coll 756-0106 for Electrical, Air Condition and Heating Service and Installation.</p>
        <p>AMERICAN</p>
        <p>TRlXaC&amp;amp;AUIO</p>
        <p>SALESLEASING '^RVICE</p>
        <p>Hwy. 11 South, Greenville, N.C.</p>
        <p>(Winterville, N.C.)</p>
        <p>756-3635  1-800-682-2216</p>
        <p>1981 Volkswagen Rabbit</p>
        <p>4 door, diesel, 4 speed, air, light blue, good commuter car</p>
        <p>1982 Dodge D50 Pickup</p>
        <p>Red, white camper cover, 4 speed, air, one owner, economy special</p>
        <p>1982 Toyota Clica Supra GT</p>
        <p>2 door, liftback, 5 speed, air, all options, one owner, good second car</p>
        <p>1979 26' Executive Motor Home</p>
        <p>Fully self contained, all options, one owner, like new, avocado green and white</p>
        <p>1985 Ford Mustang LX</p>
        <p>2 door, 4 speed, air, one owner, dark green.</p>
        <p>^illlllliih;</p>
        <p>1986 Ford focort</p>
        <p>%MS</p>
        <p>1983 Renoult Feugo</p>
        <p>*2,495</p>
        <p>1981 Hondo Accord</p>
        <p>^2,995</p>
        <p>1983 CuHati Suprome</p>
        <p>^3,895</p>
        <p>*0oi Not irMiudo N C Saloi To* And I wont*</p>
        <p>Eastsate Motors</p>
        <p>"Home Of Creative Financing"</p>
        <p>130 {. firawwlle Blvd.  GrMnvillN.C.  355-21930</p>
        <p>099 Miscellaneous</p>
        <p>A RARE Collection, ttth Edition of Encyclopedia Britannica. Excellent condition. 355-0363 after 6 p.m.</p>
        <p>AIR CONDITIONERS-5 32,000, SI50S550. Also have central units. Gas or electric dryers, washers, ranges and refrigerators/freezers, wall ovens, commercial hot dog ro tisserle and bun warmer, Scotsman ice machine, chest drink box, 4-door sliding glass cooler, 2 egg coolers, gondola</p>
        <p>shelving, aHrebuilt like new and guaranteed. Call B.J. Mills at</p>
        <p>Black Jack, 746 2446, nights 753 2878.</p>
        <p>ANOTHER TAG SALE by</p>
        <p>Michael Cable and Woodside Antiques. Saturday, August 13, 9 a.m., 404 Evans Street Mall, across from Floyd Robinson Jewelry, Approximately 300 pieces of unclaimed furniture.</p>
        <p>plus assorted household goods from storage company. Bring a friend and a truck. If you need</p>
        <p>furniture, be there!</p>
        <p>AREA BORDER RUGS custom made. Excellent condition. Forest green, celedn, deep red. Sizes 8'xll' and 8'x8'a'. $300 and $200.355 6558.</p>
        <p>BASEBALL CAROS and sup</p>
        <p>plies sold every Saturday till 4 p.m. and Sunday 2 4 p.m. For rest Lock and Key, 2715 E. lOth Streel 752 3273.</p>
        <p>BEAT THE HEAT. New</p>
        <p>Whirlpool window air condi tioners. 5,000 BTU and up. Call Lawrence Manning Homes 946-0017.</p>
        <p>BRAND NEW, still in the box, king size, Sealy mattress and box spring and frame. Price $750 new, will sell for $550. 757 0075.</p>
        <p>BUNK BEOS, solid oak. 1 year old, with mattresses. Call Dawneafter 7:00p.m., 752-5886.</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>CAMERA, Minolta XGl, Sunpak flash, Vivitar, Zoom lens. Like new, $350; Computer XT Com patible, HD, monitor plus soft ware $800.830 0072, after 6.</p>
        <p>CARPETING, 40 + yards, 5 year old, good, camel color. $175. 355 6032 nights; 756 4560days.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>IMMEDIATE</p>
        <p>OPENINGS</p>
        <p>FOR Our Qualified graduate</p>
        <p>TRUCK DRIVERS!</p>
        <p>NCW 'BA -J NG MEH S vVOMFM</p>
        <p>IN JUST 4 WEEKS</p>
        <p> CX3T CEBIiFirATE</p>
        <p>' F nan::al assistance ' FutL s PAHI Time Classes</p>
        <p> .oe Placement assistance</p>
        <p>BLANTON'S</p>
        <p>lurnoi COLLECT TRACTOR TRAILER TRAILING CENTER</p>
        <p>099 Miscellaneous</p>
        <p>COFFEE AND END TABLES,</p>
        <p>$50. 2 pairs of brown curtains with white trial</p>
        <p>lies, matching double bedspread, $25. Baby sw ing, $20 Call 752 0742.</p>
        <p>DECK LUMBER 5/4 x 6.20&amp;lt; per</p>
        <p>feet. Reject plyboard 1/2, $5.60, 5/8, $6.20: 3/4 $6.90. LaHice $8.85. Down East Lumber,; 6 miles east of Kinston. 522 2400 or</p>
        <p>1-800-522-2400._</p>
        <p>FOR SALE Customed ballooh curtains, 5 windows. Almost new. Call 355-7493 or 756-5709.</p>
        <p>FOR SALE 3 beautiful customed made beige swags. Call 756 6455.</p>
        <p>FOR SALE Kenmore washer/ dryer. Good condition. Call 756-1764 after 5:30 p.m.</p>
        <p>GREENVILLE MOTOR Valet, Inside and out complete job. Special, just $6.00, through September 30.</p>
        <p>GUNS</p>
        <p>LOANS ON BUY, SELL and</p>
        <p>trade. Southern Gun 8, Pawn Inc., 752 2464.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C 099 Miscailaneous</p>
        <p>HOT TUB, SeaH S. 1 year old, $3000.746 3286.</p>
        <p>INSTANT CASH</p>
        <p>LOANS ON 8; BUYING Guns, TV's, gold and silver jewalry, coins, most anything of value. Southern Gun A Pawn Inc., 752-2464.</p>
        <p>KENMORE Washer/dryer, din</p>
        <p>ing room suite, and bedroom suite '</p>
        <p>for sale. Call anytime, 757 1218.</p>
        <p>LIMITED NUMBER OF</p>
        <p>memberships available for Tar River Estates swimming pool. Membership rates reduced to $150 for an individual or lamily up to four. Call 752 4225 for in formation.</p>
        <p>MUST SELLI UTILITY trailer, 8x12 tilt, wired with lights, new tires and wheel bearings. $1500. 758 0237or 756 6081.</p>
        <p>NEW G.E. CHEST freezer. 15.0 cubic feet. $50 down, $25 month. Call Lawrence /Manning Homes 9460017.</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>Fresh From The Garden Frozen VegetaUes</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>(</p>
        <p>Prices Subject To Change Without Notice Call Ahead For Pricaa And Availability</p>
        <p>752-5025</p>
        <p>ALL TEMS, CLEANED BLANCHED, AND READY FOR YOUR FREEZER</p>
        <p>Description  Size Price</p>
        <p>Garden (Green) Pens........20  **.  $13.98</p>
        <p>Petite Garden Pens.........20  h.  $19.98</p>
        <p>Cut Yellow Com............20  ibt.  $14.98</p>
        <p>White Shoe Peg Cora........20  as.  $16.98</p>
        <p>White Cora (Silver Q^)........20lbt.  $21.98</p>
        <p>Cora On The Cob ...nr ton $17.98</p>
        <p>Field Pens With Snaps........20i.  $17.98</p>
        <p>Black Eye Pens..........  .20ibt.  $17.98</p>
        <p>Crowder Pens.............20  at.  $17.98</p>
        <p>Baby Lhnns-AII Green-Medium. 20 as.  $19.98</p>
        <p>Tiny Baby Limns (Pocahontas).20 as.  $21.98</p>
        <p>Speckled Batter Boons.......20 at.  $19.98</p>
        <p>Brooded Okra.............20  at.  $14.98</p>
        <p>Apple Jocks..............70-3  n.  $17.98</p>
        <p>Trout nilets...............10  at.  $14.98</p>
        <p>Friday, August 12,1988 B-13 099 Miscelleneous _ 099 Miscellaneous</p>
        <p>NEW SLATE POL TABLES.</p>
        <p>Over 200 in stock. $895 and up. Game World Leisure Time Equipment. 919 821 3480</p>
        <p>NEW 3 TON TRANE central air for mobile home. $140 down, $72/month. Call Lawrence AAan ning Homes 946 0017.</p>
        <p>RAINBOW VACUUM Cleaner for sale plus attachments and shampooer. Call 746-6614 or 746-6293.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>SHAMPOO YOUR RUGi Rent shampooers and vacuums at Rental Tool Company.</p>
        <p>SHINGLES $9.95 square and up.</p>
        <p>IS lb. Felt $4.95. Reject Plywood</p>
        <p>..... .. ...</p>
        <p>5/8" $6,25. 3/4' $6.95. Hardboard siding $2.89. Builders Bargain Center, Greenville, 758 7061.</p>
        <p>SINGLE BED steel frame, box springs and Inner spring mat tress, excellent condition. $100. 756 3702</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>Cot Green Beans____</p>
        <p>Cut Okra (Revr-Uebreadcd).</p>
        <p>Squash (BreaM)......</p>
        <p>Whole Baby Okra.... French Fried Potatoes. Onion Rings (i</p>
        <p>OVEKTOiS</p>
        <p>PUBLIC NOTICE</p>
        <p>Bayllner Marine Corporation Seattie, Washington</p>
        <p>Bayllner has now completed ail 1988 boat production. No further 1988 product will be produced for any US dealership. Over 40 brand new, slightly scratched or previously displayed boats remain in excess storage.</p>
        <p>FOR THE FIRST TIME EVER,</p>
        <p>by special contracted negotiations, Bayliner Marine Corporation is proud to announce the award of the liquidation" for these final 88 model boats, exclusively to one local dealership;</p>
        <p>B&amp;amp;K Marine 1205 Dickinson Avenue Greenville, NC 27834 919-752-2882</p>
        <p>We emphasize, this is not a "sale. Never in history has this major boat manufacturer authorized liquidation" of close-out inventory in Greenville. Over 40 new boats will be available at used boat prices.</p>
        <p>FULL FACTORY WARRANTY</p>
        <p>In fairness to all, all boats will be available for sale or resen/ation starting Thursday, August 11th.</p>
        <p>SKI, FISHING, CABIN BOATS</p>
        <p>Limited availability on most models, all sales by first come first serve basis. This advertisement is local area only, but past experience in other states prompt us to advise earliest inspection to assure specific model availability.</p>
        <p>JUST A FEW EXAMPLES...</p>
        <p>1903 Center Console</p>
        <p>includes Coast Guard Package will be $0.79S 1950 3 litre inboard/outboard</p>
        <p>includes Coast Guard Package will be...$9,795</p>
        <p>Weve Put Tint Torch To Prices On EveiT Abura In Stock!</p>
        <p>1988 Acura Integra</p>
        <p>Only</p>
        <p>Shop 'Til 10 P.M. Thursday) ^5 And Friday And 'Til The Last Customer Is Served On Soturday!</p>
        <p>Sale #102. 5 speed, rear windshield defroster and wiper, intermittent windshield wipers, 4 wheel disc brakes, adjustable mirrors, reclining front bucket seats.</p>
        <p>Only At</p>
        <p>CO</p>
        <p>\s</p>
        <p>3325 S. Memorial Drive 355-2258</p>
        <p>Coo'</p>
        <p>Itee</p>
        <p>A Oak Tree Acura</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>s. MemonnI Dr. 2</p>
        <p>V c</p>
        <p>BobBarbou. Hw,,llSob</p>
        <p>W 1</p>
        <p>N 2</p>
        <p> Honda</p>
        <p>&amp;lt;</p>
        <p>Plus tax, tags and any additional dealer options With approved credit.</p>
        <pb facs="00097006_0030" />
        <p>099 Miscellaneous</p>
        <p>SMALL JACUZZI S1SOO 524 4422 after 6 p.m.</p>
        <p>SOFA, TABLE with 4 chairs and other miscellaneous Items, call 3S552W</p>
        <p>SUNTANNEft TANNING SCO</p>
        <p>tor sale. 7St-13S9.</p>
        <p>USED HOSPITAL BED, wheel</p>
        <p>chair, and walker. Call evenings 7SS-I523.</p>
        <p>USED STANDARD Pool Table.</p>
        <p>Good condition. 744-3557. WASHERS, DBYElli,</p>
        <p>refrigerators, freezers, stoves S100 up Guaranteed. 744-4929. WEDDING GOWN with hat and</p>
        <p>veil. Brand new with all ac cessories. S1500 value, will sell tor $250.754 4730.</p>
        <p>WOULD LIKE TO BUY used window and central air conditioners that need repair. Call IM78.</p>
        <p>744-2444 or nights, 753-;</p>
        <p>ZENITH COLOR TV $75. Floral sofa, $150.754 7045.</p>
        <p>10* SATELLITE SYSTEM. Must be moved. $800 negotiable. Call 355 0385.</p>
        <p>17.2 CUBIT FOOT Whirlpool refrigerator. 2 years old, toast color, trost-tree with ice maker, like new $450.752 0313 before 4; after 4,355 7052.</p>
        <p>102</p>
        <p>Mobile Homes For Sale</p>
        <p>A CLEAN 12X48 Center Kitchen, 2 bedrooms only $395 down and</p>
        <p>payments under $138 per month, up on your lot. Call Bill</p>
        <p>Jackson at 754-4487. Johnny's Mobile Homes. 314 W. Green ville Boulevard, Greenville.</p>
        <p>A CLEAN 14x70 repo. 2 bedrooms, and 2 baths. Only $395 down and payments under $150 per month. Call Bill Jackson at 754 4487. Johnny's IMobile Homes, 314 W. Greenville Boulevard, Greenville.</p>
        <p>ALL NEW 1989 Doublewides are now on display. Como get one while they last. Luv Homes, 850 Greenville Boulevard, 754-4994.</p>
        <p>ALL 19U Atodels Single and doublewide in stock will be sold at 10% above dealer cost plus set up at Lawrence Manning Homes in Washington. 944 0017.</p>
        <p>ARE YOU TIRED of rent pay ments, high utility bills, and getting nowhere financially? If so, we may help. We have new and preowned homes and finance plans to fit your needs. Cali Greg at Carefree Housing, 355-7893.</p>
        <p>ATTENTION COLLEGE stu</p>
        <p>dent parents, why not purchase a used mobile home and save hundreds of $$ a month on rent. We at Luv Homes want to help you with that investment. 850 Greenville Boulevard. 754-4994.</p>
        <p>BAD CREDIT? No credit? Slow credit, I am the answer for you. New or used AAobile Home, singie or double. We own our own bank. Call now 754 0131. Ask tor Henry.</p>
        <p>BOB, HENRY, RAY AND</p>
        <p>Richard want to say Thanks to past customers and also keep sending those referrals to Luv Homes, 850 Greenville Boule vard, 754 4994.</p>
        <p>CHEAP AS HAMBURGER. 1989 mobile homes tor sale. $1.79 per pound, minimum order, 8300 pounds. Only at Luv Homes, 850 Greenville Boulevard, 754-4994</p>
        <p>CHEAPER THAN RENT va</p>
        <p>cant trailer all ready to move in.</p>
        <p>Take over payments of $234.05 for 14x70, 3 bedroom, 2 bath</p>
        <p>mobile home. Eating bar, china cabinet. Range refrigerator, central air/heat. Call out of town owner at I 240 1751 tor rangeipenttosee.</p>
        <p>CHOCOWINITY, NC. Drive little and save a lot. Used homes as low as $1,500 New U' wides as low as $11,500. Delivery and set up included. Doublewide payments under $200 a month Our overhead is lower, so we can sell tor less. Buy the best for less. Tri County Homes, Chocowinity, NC, Highway 17 beside Channel 7 TV Station.</p>
        <p>DOUBLE WIDE SHOPPERS!</p>
        <p>July is the best month to buy</p>
        <p>Cr new home from Martindale</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>-tomes. Inventory is disappear ing fast. Save SIOOO's like hun</p>
        <p>dreds of our happy customers Martindale</p>
        <p>have.</p>
        <p>Homes,</p>
        <p>Highway 301 South, Wilson, NC. I 800 4.'^</p>
        <p>Friday, Auoust 12.1988</p>
        <p>1437 1228</p>
        <p>DOUBLEWIDE SPECIAL. 3</p>
        <p>bedrooms and 2 full baths, completely furnished for only $19,995. Call Bill Jackson, 754 4487, Johnny's Mobile Homes, 314 W. Greenville Boulevard, Greenville.</p>
        <p>FACTORY OUTLET</p>
        <p>Custom order your Horton or Mansion home. (Colors, camts, wall boards etc) $ave Thou sands. For free literature and information call toll free 1 800-344 4847.</p>
        <p>HAVE YOU BEEN ASKED to</p>
        <p>assume a loan at a low down payment? It may cost you Thou sands! Come to Luv Homes to compare 850 Greenville Boule vard, 754 4994.</p>
        <p>LOOKING FOR a new home, bbt lack enough for a down pay ment? Join our lay away program, and we'll match your dollars. For info, call Gina at Carefree Housing at 355 7893.</p>
        <p>MUST SELL 1978 Titan 14x40. Furnished with washer/dryer. Good shape.758 3904.</p>
        <p>1228.</p>
        <p>102</p>
        <p>MobHo HontM For Sato</p>
        <p>NEW 1988 DOUBLEWIDE HOME 1400 square feet. Spacious bedrooms, country kitchen, separate dining area and large closets. Regular $34,900, Sale price through August b, 1988, $32,995. Don't wait! Call Martindale Homes.</p>
        <p>Highway 301 South, Wilson, NC I 800 437</p>
        <p>NEW 1988 only $189 per month Furnished, delivered, set up. Huge master bedroom with large 2nd bedroom, 2 full baths, giant kitchen, perfect tor cou ptes or students Call Henry at 754 0131 for all the details.</p>
        <p>PRE-OWNED Mobile Homes Large selection Late models. All 14 teet wide 2 and 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, refurbished, clean Excellent financing. No down payment Low interest rate very affordable monthly payments New Horizon Homes, 1233 Lejeune Boulevard, Jacksonville, NC 455 7287</p>
        <p>1984 OAKWOOD 14x45, 2 bedrooms. 1 bath, central air, all appliances, set up in park. Possible owner financing. $14,000. Call 7SA2061.</p>
        <p>1908 &amp;lt;MKWOOD. 14X40. Under-</p>
        <p>pinned, central air, stove, refrigerator, no furniture. Equity and assume loan. Set up In small quiet park. 830-1708._</p>
        <p>1900 14 WIDE, payments as low as $141.84. Greenville volume dealer. Thomas' Mobile Home Sales. Across from Airport. 752-4048.</p>
        <p>1900 MOBILE HOMES. Lowest prices In Eastern NC! Low simple Interest rate. Down payments as low as 5%. Low monthly payment Includes delivery, set-up, steps, sales tax. title fee, and insurance. No hidden charges. Large selection of 2 and 3 bedrooms. 2 baths. All</p>
        <p>types of financing. New Horizon Homes, 1233 Lejeune Boulevard, Jacksonville, NC 455 7287.</p>
        <p>105Musical Instruments</p>
        <p>sax.</p>
        <p>Likemew. Used 4 months. Asking $450. For the student who wants to improve his skills through a professional horn.</p>
        <p>through 830-()^.</p>
        <p>USED GRAND PIANO Com</p>
        <p>pletely rebuilt and refinlshed. Mahogz</p>
        <p>ihogany cabinet and bench Like new. $3.995. Piano &amp;amp; Organ Distributors. 355-4002.</p>
        <p>115  Lost Found</p>
        <p>LOST: ECU AREA. Large Malamute, name: Zeus, (blacl:.</p>
        <p>gray and white). Missing since July 29. Reward. Call David</p>
        <p>758-2308 or 551-4484.</p>
        <p>LOST: STERLING Marcasita</p>
        <p>bracelet, Saturday In vaclnity of Brody's, Penny's or Food Lion. Valued for sentimental reasons</p>
        <p>Call 754 2307, Reward!</p>
        <p>day or night.</p>
        <p>LOST: Yellow Labrador female, beloved family pet. Reward. Call 754 7448 or 756 9844, please leave message.</p>
        <p>118 Business Services</p>
        <p>CREATIVE GIIaPH-</p>
        <p>CS-Corporate images, logs, let heads. Phone 946-1504.</p>
        <p>ter!</p>
        <p>PRIVATE SCHOOL Of Electrolysis. 20 years experience. Call 830-0942 Barbara Venters</p>
        <p>122</p>
        <p>Business</p>
        <p>Opportunities</p>
        <p>A BUSINESS? Buy or sell your business with C.J. Harris &amp;amp; Co., Inc. Financial &amp;amp; Marketing Con-sultants. Serving the Southeastern United States. Greenville, N.C 355 7799, nighte 754-8444.</p>
        <p>BEAUTY SHOP BOOTHS For</p>
        <p>rent. Good parking conditions. Bus route goes by shop. 758-3181 ; nights 754-5050 ask for Christine.</p>
        <p>FOR SALE Lawn maintenance business. Equipment and 50 clients. 355 5819.</p>
        <p>GAN GRILL, Concession stand at Pitt County Fair Grounds. Price negotiable. Owner financ ing available. B.C. Norris 744-3550.</p>
        <p>MACHINE SHOP tor sale. Greenville area. Set up and ready to go. $37,000. Days: 355 2457. Nights: 355 3461.</p>
        <p>124 Professional</p>
        <p>CHIMNEY SWEEPING. Gid Holloman. North Carolina's original chimney sweep, 30 years experience working with chimneys and fireplaces. Fireplace repair, chimney caps installed, screens for chimney lops. Call day or night, 753-3503, Farmville. NC.</p>
        <p>132</p>
        <p>G&amp;gt;mmercial</p>
        <p>Property</p>
        <p>A BARGAIN! 200 x200' for $17,500. Off N.E. Greenville Boulevard. Call Carl at Darden Realty, 758-1983. Nights and weekends, 355-4558.</p>
        <p>CORNER LOT. .4 acre, busy in lersection. Zoned residential but</p>
        <p>RENT BUSTER. 3 bedroom, 1&amp;gt;] bath, fully lurnlshed, delivered</p>
        <p>and set up Excellent condition Perfect for your family</p>
        <p>down payment month Call now As! 754 0131</p>
        <p>Low</p>
        <p>Only $129 per ix for Paul.</p>
        <p>SALE OR RENT; Double wide with nice lot. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, Stokes area. 830-5298.</p>
        <p>WE AT LUV HOMES have sold a large amount of doublewides Need to move nice used homes we took on trade. Come early and get the best pick. Luv Homes, 850 Greenville Boule vard, 754 4994.</p>
        <p>WE FINANCE wells and septic tanks, if you own land, no money down. Call Henry at 754 0131 for all the details.</p>
        <p>WE MAY OOZE, BUT WE don't close Luv Homes, open 7 days a week 850 Greenville Boulevard, 754 4994</p>
        <p>adjoins 0 &amp;amp; I, CN and CS. J.L Harris A Sons. Realtors. 758 4711.</p>
        <p>FOR RENT: Warehouse with 4 oHices and 2 baths with heat and air conditioning. 7,000 siiuare feet, storage, on concrete floor. Fully sprinkled. 752 2807.</p>
        <p>NEW OFFERING. 6.7 acres on N.E. Greenville Boulevard.</p>
        <p>$97,150. Call Carl tor details Darden Realty, 758 1983, nights and weekends. 355 6558</p>
        <p>OFFICE, RETAIL, warehouse and combination space avail able-lease or buy. J.L. Harris &amp;amp; Sons, Inc. Realtors. 758-4711.</p>
        <p>OVER 11,800 SQUARE FEET on</p>
        <p>14th Street. Call Carl for details. Darden Realty, 750 1983. Nights and weekends, 355-4558.</p>
        <p>SPACE AVAILABLE in Univer</p>
        <p>sity Arcade, across street from uni\</p>
        <p>iversity. 2,000 square feet or 400 square feel. Rent approxi-ma^ $4 per square foot. Call</p>
        <p>134</p>
        <p>Condominiums For Sale</p>
        <p>WHY PAY RENT?? When you can own this immaculate 2 bedroom. I'^ .bath condo and make payments that are less than rent. Very convenient and pleasant neighborhood. Call Mary Catherine Spikes at Col dwell Bankers. W.G. Blount 8, Associates Realtors, 754 3000 or 758 5447</p>
        <p>144 Houses For Sale</p>
        <p>A WARM COMFORTABLE</p>
        <p>Home! This lovely 3 bedroom well-maintained home Is larger than It appears. Almost 1W square teet with a large modern kitchen, family room and ItOing room as well. Located in a nice family oriented neighborhood Priced to sell at $57,900. Contact CENTURY 21 JANET BOWSER 8. ASSOCIATES, 355 7800</p>
        <p>BEAUTIFUL Williamsburg home at a reasonable price in a terrific neighborhood! Brick ranch, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, carpet over hardwood Huge</p>
        <p>BREAK OUT OF THE Confines of that small home to the roominess of this 4 bedreem home. Plus finished game room completed with half Iwth and storage. Screened porch.</p>
        <p>storage house, gorgious, wooded yard All for $71,500. Call Sheri Carter 754 3500 or 758-4451</p>
        <p>BELVEDERE Immediate oc</p>
        <p>cupancy may be yours in this brick hoi</p>
        <p>home which otters a huge den with fireplace and built Ins, living room, dining area, three bedrooms, two baths, and car port. Lovely wooded lot In one of the city's finest areas Seller says sell! $45,900 to see, ask tor Sue Dunn, Aldridge Southerland Realtors, 754 3500 nights 355 2588 BELVEDERE. This traditional</p>
        <p>14x74 ONE YEAR OLD 3</p>
        <p>bedrooms. 2 baths, fireplace, utility room, 2 decks, vinyl skir ting. $800 and assume payments of $220,22. 752 2821 or 752 0770 1MI NASH with expanded living room. Need some repair work.</p>
        <p>Must sell Immediately Asking $800 752 2450after 5:30</p>
        <p>1970 MOBILE HOME, 14x52 two bedroom, front kitchen, central</p>
        <p>air, complete set up Ideal for 6.000</p>
        <p>place at river $4.oOo Call 752 4309 after 7:00 p.m. or anytime weekends</p>
        <p>1979 VOGUE 14x40. 2 bedrooms, I bath, central air and deck. Al ready set up on private lot. Call 752 8337</p>
        <p>1983 MARSHFIELD Mobile home, 14x70 Assume loan. Call 753 7355</p>
        <p>1904 14X70 OAKWOOD Assume loan Possible rebate. 355-7134. 198$ REDMAN 14x40.1'/?baths.</p>
        <p>2 bedrooms, assume loan $170 monthly or make payoff 754 0430.</p>
        <p>1904 OAKWOOD Briarclift</p>
        <p>14x74, 3 bedroom, 2 bath, like new, heal pump, unfurnished, kitchen appliances, dishwasher, walk In utility, deck, patio, large wooded rental lot in Santree Equity with loan assumption Shown by appointment 750-7711.</p>
        <p>home offers over 1900 square feet of charm. Large formal areas, also den, eat in kitchen library or office with lovely hardwood floors. Three bedrooms, two full baths screened porch and privacy fenced In yard. Many more ex tras and reduced to $83,250 To see, call Sue Dunn at Aldridge A Southerland Realtors, 754 3500, nights 355 2588</p>
        <p>CANTERBURY. WIntervllle cl ty limits, city water and sewer curb and gutter streets. New bedroom, 3 bath ranch; format dining. Mid 80's. Call tor details Jack Gordon, The Evans Com pany, 752 28I40T 355 5494 CENTRALLY LOCATED this</p>
        <p>brick ranch otters all formal areas, den with lireplace, three bedrooms, two baths, new heat and air, hardwood floors under carpet. Very private, wooded fenced in yard, double carport and more Reduced to $47,500 Make this a must see. Please call Sue Dunn, Aldridge Southerland Realtors. 754 31 nights 355 2588 CHERRY OAKS A proven area</p>
        <p>13500,</p>
        <p>prov</p>
        <p>deserves attention New custom built farmhouse design. Three large bedrooms with master bedroom downstairs. Formal dining, double garage with un finlslMd area overhead. 100s Call Jack Gordon, The Evans Company, 752 2815 or 355-5494 CiiAFT BILT HOMES, Custom</p>
        <p>home builder We build and fl nance Little or no down pay men! No closing cost. Your plans or ours. Call 937 4186 or 180&amp;amp;942 5211 anytime</p>
        <p>144 Houms For Solo</p>
        <p>storage building, great neighborhood. $105,000. Please call</p>
        <p>Anita Worthington, Re/Max Properties, 355^5444.42505 UY TODAY...Protit tommor</p>
        <p>row! Enjoy carefree living in this 2 bewoom, 1 V&amp;gt; bath, 2 story</p>
        <p>townhouse. Priced at $34,900 Contact Janet Bowser at CENTURY 21 JANET BOWSER 8i ASSOCIATES, 355 7800 or 754 8580.</p>
        <p>CAMBRIDGE. Cape Cod lovers.</p>
        <p>look no further. This four bedroom home also offers greatroom, two baths, eat-ln kitchen, fireplace with insert, fenced yard, central heat and air and solar energy features. FHA unqualifying loan assumption. $41,500. Please ask for Sue Dunn, Atdrl(^ &amp;amp; Southerland Realtors, 756 3500, nights 355 2588.</p>
        <p>CANNON COURT. Payments like rent may be yours in this townhome which offers two bedrooms, 1'/ti baths, living room, kitchen and dining area;</p>
        <p>all appliances furnished as well as new carpet and freshly painted. Convenient to ECU. $41,500. Please call Sue Dunn, Aldridge &amp;amp; Southerland Realtors, 754-3500, nights, 355-2588.</p>
        <p>EASTBERRYOff</p>
        <p>highw 43 South. New starter home. Three bedrooms, I bath, plus heat tump. On wooded lot. $49,500. :all Jack Gordon, The Evans Company, 752 2814 or 355 5494.</p>
        <p>Quiet</p>
        <p>ENGAGING RANCH</p>
        <p>tree-lined street features this 3</p>
        <p>bedroom brick home. Fireplace, irdw</p>
        <p>built-in cabinets, hardwood floors, outside storage. Available now. $42,500. Blanche Forbes Realty 756 2121 or Rudy</p>
        <p>Schulte 754</p>
        <p>ilty 7! 2230.</p>
        <p>FIFTH STREET. Scarlett O'Hara would feel right at home in this traditional two story home. Large entry foyer opens to living room and large library, both with fireplaces, spacious dining room, three bedrooms, two baths; also large kitchen with breakfast room, lovely hardwood floors throughout and high ceilings. $129,900. To see, please ask for Sue Dunn, Aldridge &amp;amp; Southerland Realtors, 756 3500, nights 355 2588.</p>
        <p>GREENBRIAR. First time</p>
        <p>buyers, don't despair, you may own this brick home with three</p>
        <p>bedrooms, two full baths, living room, large eat-ln kitchen for only $49,900. Amenities include large woodburning fireplace, hardwood floors under carpet, fenced in yard, built ins, central air. To see, please call Sue Dunn at Aldridge ft Southerland Realtors, 754 3500, nights. 355 2588.</p>
        <p>GREENVILLE BLVD. Conve niently located to all shming this brick ranch offers greatroom with fireplace, three bedrooms, one and baths, dining room, central heat and air, new roof; heavily wooded lot and fenced In yard. Now $41,900. Please call Sue Dunn at Aldridge ft Southerland Realtors, 754 3500, nights, 355 2588.</p>
        <p>HARDEE ACRES. Beautiful full view glass door accents the entrance to this 3 bedroom, l'/4 bath brick home. This home has brand new carpeting, new wallpapers, new floor covering, otters central heat and air, garage and a fenced in yard. An excellent value at $49,900. Owner-Broker. Please call Winnie Evans, The Evans Company, 752 28140T 752 4224.</p>
        <p>HOME FOR SALE By Owner. 2 bedrooms, 2 baths, all appliances. $54,500. Call 754 4511.</p>
        <p>HUD OWNED. $1,000 down to purchase this 3 bedroom, 2 bath home on Winchester Drive in Ayden. $57,000. Hignite Realtors 757-1949 anytime.</p>
        <p>IF YOU LOVE COUNTRY.</p>
        <p>You'll love this home situated on 2 nicely landscaped acres just outside of Farmville. Inside there is over 2300 square feet of living space. And outside there is a double carport plus detached garage workshop. For details call Susan Likosar at</p>
        <p>Aldridge ft Southerland 754 3500 6f4</p>
        <p>or 7567</p>
        <p>144 Houses For Salt</p>
        <p>Finriieidofts:i^tothr</p>
        <p>double garage, wooded lot In Oaks. Call tor price and appointment to see. Hignite Re</p>
        <p>Cherry (</p>
        <p>altors, 757-1949 anytime. iNVEitORS.</p>
        <p>Nice 2 bedroom house with living room, dining room, kitchen, fireplace, porch and amenities. 2 blocks from ECU with 2 addi tional rental units. Outstanding buy at $74,000. Call 752-4287. INVEStollS. Spend a little fix-</p>
        <p>ing this 2 bedroom, 2 bath home</p>
        <p>^and mp the teneflts^Onjy</p>
        <p>i,000. Blanche Forbes Realty 754-2121 or Larry Mozingo 756-4953.</p>
        <p>LARGE COUNTRY ESTATE</p>
        <p>for under $100,000. This unique ranch offers over 2,400 square feet with cathedral ceilings, ex</p>
        <p>posed beams, skylights, huge fireplace, double carport, screened porch, split rail and</p>
        <p>chain link fence, and storage</p>
        <p>galore. All this combined with 3 bli</p>
        <p>Irooms, 2 baths, over 2 acres and much more. All for $95,000. Call Sheri Carter at Aldrld^ ft Southerland 754 3500 or 758 4451.</p>
        <p>LYNNDALE: This elegant new home has It all! Formal areas. Extra Large den, eat-in kitchen, four bedrooms with large master area and an unfinished</p>
        <p>3rd story. It's BOWSER BUILT affordably priced at</p>
        <p>and</p>
        <p>$157,500. Call Janet Bowser at CENTURY 21 JANET BOWSER ft ASSOCIATES, 355 7800 or 754-8580.</p>
        <p>NEAR GREENFIELD Terrace.</p>
        <p>Break the rent habit and put</p>
        <p>your money in your pocket. NIove up to the comforts of own</p>
        <p>ing your own home. Enjoy this spacious living room, 3 spacious bedrooms, and a very spacious kitchen with lots of custom-built cabinets, plus a spacious dining area. NC Housing money avaiP able at 8.75% fixed rate. Please call Winnie Evans, The Evans Company, 752-2814 or 752 4224.</p>
        <p>NEED LOTS OF ROOM? This executive home is sure to please even the most discriminating. Features beautiful winding stairway. Intercom, central vacuum, Jenn-Aire range, screen porch, plus numerous other amenities. More than 4300 square feet In a quiet, country</p>
        <p>setting with almost 1*/i acres of Priced for a quick sale at</p>
        <p>land.</p>
        <p>r priv</p>
        <p>lease call CENTURY 21</p>
        <p>ASSOCIATES, 355 7800.</p>
        <p>NEW HOME IN Summerfield:</p>
        <p>$154,900. For your private show P'</p>
        <p>JANET BOWSER</p>
        <p>ing.</p>
        <p>Comfort and style! That's what</p>
        <p>you'll find in this new 3 bedroom</p>
        <p>Formal dining, targe eat in kitchen, greatroom with fireplace are just a few of it's</p>
        <p>features. And you know it's qual constructed because it's</p>
        <p>ity o BOWS</p>
        <p>SER BUILT. Builder will pay up to $2,000 in closing costs. W Janet Bowser, CENTURY 21 JANET BOWSER ft ASSOCIATES, $81,900. 355 7800 or 754-8580.</p>
        <p>NON QUALIFIED Assumption</p>
        <p>on this two bedroom townhouse. Owner paid $49,000 will sacrifice for $44,100, or pay $5,000 In Equi ty and assume his loan. Vacant and ready to occupy. Hignite Realtors, 757-1949 anytime. PINEBROOK. New in the city.</p>
        <p>but under $50,000. Two bedrooms, 2 full baths, heat</p>
        <p>pump. $48,000. Call Jack Gor don. The Evans Company, 752-2814 or 355 5494.</p>
        <p>PINERIDGE. Minutes from the</p>
        <p>hospital, this brick home is</p>
        <p>spacious and affordably priced. It offers living room, dining</p>
        <p>area, three bedrooms, one full and two half baths, large den or rec room, central air and hard wood floors under carpet. Immaculate condition ano a must see at $59,500. Please call Sue Dunn, Aldridge ft Southerland Realtors, 754-3500, nights 355 2588.</p>
        <p>REDUCED: Lakewood Pines: Feel like the old woman who lived in a shoe? Then spread out In this lovely older home featuring five bedrooms, 3'/z baths and all formal areas. Numerous ameni ties suCh as: two fireplaces, one of them marble, a glassed in back porch, full basement with workshop, extra large lot with camellias galore. A quality home worth seeing! Affordably</p>
        <p>at $I20,0M^ Call at CEN</p>
        <p>JANET BOWSER ft ASSOCIATES. 355 7800.</p>
        <p>The</p>
        <p>Ulingote</p>
        <p>757-3441</p>
        <p>Agencv</p>
        <p>Agent On Call This Weekend</p>
        <p>Audrey Stillwell 758-1280</p>
        <p>Sfl0fU0tN8Cf MitcaMoiVW 19M Sumrtr OVmpict.</p>
        <p>Ontuoi,</p>
        <p>-J  nnl</p>
        <p>TIPTON &amp;amp; ASSOCIATES</p>
        <p>355-7002 On Call</p>
        <p>Rod Tugwell 355-7224</p>
        <p>BLANCHE FORBES REALTY</p>
        <p>ON CALL THIS WEEKEND</p>
        <p>RUDY SCHULTE</p>
        <p>REALTOR, QRI 756-2230</p>
        <p>756-2121</p>
        <p>144 Houms For Solo</p>
        <p>NW homes: the lowcit price In Pitt County I Three bedrooms, two full baths, heat pumps, quiet area outside town</p>
        <p>with city water and sewer. Only  .......... all</p>
        <p>$48,750 and builder will pay</p>
        <p>points and closing costs up to $2,000. Call now to see model.</p>
        <p>Hignite Realtors, 757-1949.</p>
        <p>REDUCED. Only $4.900 needed to assume this 9'/i % VA non-</p>
        <p>qualltylng loan of approximately $93,000. Payments only $900.11 PITI. This 3 bedroom home is located In great selling Oakmont/Drexelbrook area and also features formal areas and (lassed-ln sun porch. AAany ex ra built-ins. and jacuzzi. Call for your appointment! Contact Janet Bowser, CENTURY 21 JANET BOWSER ft ASSOCIATES, 355 7800 or 756 8580.</p>
        <p>REDUCEDtil Lovely 3 bedroom, l'/S bath home in nice</p>
        <p>neighborhood. Wet bar, new gas ......iths</p>
        <p>furnace and ceramic tile baths are but a few of the amenities. Nicely landscaped yard also. Won't last long at $42,900. Call CENTURY 21 JANET BOWSER ft ASSOCIATES. 355-7800.</p>
        <p>REDUCED: Freshly painted and ready tor you to move in. This 3 bedroom, 2'/i bath townhouse at Twin Oaks has It all. An excellent location, alt appliances stay including the washer and dryer; and If you need furniture, it's yours also. $55,500. Please call Gerry Lambert, CENTURY 21 JANET BOWSER ft ASSOCIATES, 355 7800 or 355-7472.</p>
        <p>SO EASY TO OWN-This 3 bedroom, 1 '/2 bath brick ranch in Greenbrlar. This home is conveniently located to schools and shopping and has a living room, family room with fireplace and a large fenced in back yard. You can be the owner for $53,900. Please call Gerry Lambert, CENTURY 21 JANET BOWSER ft ASSOCIATES, 355 7800 or 355 7472.</p>
        <p>STONEYBROOK. Pleasant ranch featuring country charm. Brick, energy efficient, 3 bedrooms, 1/^ baths, manicured lawn. Great family area. Call to see today. $54,000. Blanche Forbes Realty 754 2121 or J.C. Bowen 754-7424.</p>
        <p>TUCKER ESTATES. Lovely</p>
        <p>new 1'/2 story home in classy neighborhood! Custom touches to design and decor you'll ap</p>
        <p>Keciate in this 4 bedroom, 2' i ith brick home ottering 2200 square feet. Solid oak mantle, crown moldings, chairrailing, formal and elegant dining room</p>
        <p>and foyer accented with hard wood floors.</p>
        <p>AAaster bedroom suite Is downstairs. Please call Winnie Evans, The Evans Com pany, 752 2814 or 752 4224 tor ap pointment.</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOM, 2 bath condo. Heritage Village. Can assume VA fixed loan with small equity. Call 754 9107.</p>
        <p>WATERFRONT HOME on</p>
        <p>Pungo Creek, 4 miles South of Belhaven. 2,100 Square feet, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, brick, on nice lot with piers. $129,500. Call Rena 919 752 3943.</p>
        <p>WESTHAVEN 3 bedroom, 2 bath, brick home with living</p>
        <p>room, dining room, foyer, den iple</p>
        <p>with firepiace and built-in bookshelf. Kitchen with eat-ln, extra large screened in back</p>
        <p>porch. New carpet, wallpaper, paint and vinyL $88,000. Lily Richardson Agency, 355-2240 or</p>
        <p>754-2753.</p>
        <p>WHY NOT S-P-R-E-A-0 0-U-TI This spacious four bedroom home in Ayden gives you the room you've been looking for at the price you can afford! Over 2100 square feet of custom-built quality featuring formal areas, eat in kitchen, double-car garage, fenced-in back yard, and situated on a well-tended oversized lot. This traditional beauty is offered at only $79,900. Call Janet Bowser, CENTURY 21 JANET BOWSER ft ASSO CIATES, 355 7800or 756 8580.</p>
        <p>WINTERVILLE SCHOOL</p>
        <p>District. Beautiful glass doors</p>
        <p>gl;</p>
        <p>grace the entry of this immaculate 3 bedroom, 2 bath</p>
        <p>brick home in Camelo!. Parquet hardwood floors accent the (oyer. A huge mantle shelf flanks the fireplace in the spacious greatroom. Nicely</p>
        <p>landscaped and privacy fenced yard all complete this lovely home. Please call Winnie</p>
        <p>Evans, The Evans Company, 752-2814 or 752 4224.</p>
        <p>144 Houmb For Solo</p>
        <p>YOU MAY HAVE</p>
        <p>private country estate with 21 acres of land and a custom built brick home for only $135,000. This home otters country (lair with a large greatroom with fireplace, dining room, kitchen with work Island, three bedrooms, 2 baths, double expert detallini</p>
        <p>garage, expert detailing throughout! Also, large wired worktop. Too many extras to list, for your showing please call Sue Dunn, Aldridge ft Southerland Realtors, 754-3500, nights 355-2588.</p>
        <p>$127,900.2189 Square Feet. 2 car garage, four bedrooms, custom cabinets and bookcases. Wooded lot. Westminster Homes, Call George Jenkins, 355-3558 or 944-1509.</p>
        <p>$48,000. 3 bedrooms. V/i baths. Fairfield neighborhood. Winter ville Schools. Easily assume loan. Fenced yard. 355-4303 days; 754-5743 evenings. No Agents.</p>
        <p>148 Investment Property</p>
        <p>NEW 2 BEDROOM Duplex. $650 month income. $61,500.752-8915. ONE OR TWO BEDROOM</p>
        <p>duplex. Income $335 a month. $20,000.754 0452 after 5:00p.m.</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOM House near ECU. New root and hqt water heater. Excellent investment. Rented continuously lor last five years. Owner selling. Call: 752-5778.</p>
        <p>DON'T THROW IT away! Sell it for cash with a fast-action Classified Ad!</p>
        <p>152 Lots For Sale</p>
        <p>CHERRY OAKS Williams Street, wooded. Call 513-298-7340 collect.</p>
        <p>CITY LIMITS. Residential lots within city limits. Approximately 90'xl40'. Available for only $8,500 each. Blanche Forbes Re ally 754 2121 or J.C. Bowen 754 7424.</p>
        <p>CITY WATER AND SEWER,</p>
        <p>Underground utilities, natural gas available, protected subdivision, cleared or wooded lots, city schools, $24,000 to $30,000. Call George Jenkins at 355-3558 or 944-1509 tor more information. Westminster Homest</p>
        <p>CONTENTNEA CREEK; Star</p>
        <p>ting at $12,500, waterfront lots. AtTD</p>
        <p>ID lots for sale for trailers near Contentnea Creek in Ayden area: $7,500 per lot. Call Hignite Realtors 757 1969.</p>
        <p>HALF ACRE LOTS Located at Frog Level, 5 minutes from Carolina East Mall. Call 944 0017 days; 754-4015 nights. $8,995.</p>
        <p>LOTS FOR SALE with septic system and water, no down</p>
        <p>payment, guaranteed financing. Call 758 5103.</p>
        <p>LOTS FOR SALE- Winterville. Biggest residential lots, 100x300', city water, septic permits in place. Price includes lot clearing, ready to build. $13,500. 758-9210 days; 758 9544 nights.</p>
        <p>MOBILE HOME lots on Stan tonsburg Highway. Prices start at $4,500. Call Bill at Hignite Re altors, 757-1969anytime.</p>
        <p>152 Lots For Sale</p>
        <p>ONE ACRE LOT. water avail able, near Windsor Subdivision. $21,000. Blanche Forbes Realty 754-2121 or 752-1409.</p>
        <p>RIVERFRONT LOT. 210 square teet of water frontage on Tar River, 9 mites west ot Greenville. Private and sparsely wooded. 3.35 acres for $52,500. Call Don MIzelle, Hqarthside Realty 355 3413.</p>
        <p>STATONSBURG ESTATES,</p>
        <p>quiet cul-de-sac, starting at ......Gaddis,</p>
        <p>$11,000. Call Linda Hearthside Realty 355-3413 or 756 3291.</p>
        <p>WOODED BUILDING lots! On ly $4,499 at Pleasant Ridge, Only $10,500 at Forrest Pines, Only $12,500 on the water at Contentnea Creek Estates. Hignite Re altors, 757-1949 anytime.</p>
        <p>IVi ACRE LOT. With all per mits. Ready to build on. Winterville area. $17.500.752-0737.</p>
        <p>155 Resort Property For Sale</p>
        <p>OWN YOUR ACRE LOT on one of North Carolina largest lakes. Perfect weekend get-away. Contract purchase with only $95 down. Complete financing with low payments. Call for mtails, 758 1389.</p>
        <p>WATERFRONT PROPERTY;</p>
        <p>Holly Point Shores. 2.2 acres with 3 bedroom mobile home on water. Can subdivide once. A great buy at $45,000 or purchase half of land with moblile home for just $35,000. See Janet Bowser, CENTURY 21 JANET BOWSER ft ASSOCIATES. 355 7800 or 754-8580.</p>
        <p>157</p>
        <p>Townhouses For Sale</p>
        <p>BEAUTIFULLY decorated Outstanding 2 bedroom. 1 '/r bath townhouse featuring</p>
        <p>Williamsburg Blue countert^s.</p>
        <p>private patio and more cellent loan assumption for qual itied buyer. Call today. $44,000. Blanche Forbes Really 754-2121 or Wil Reid 752 1409.</p>
        <p>INVESTMENT Opportunity Near hospital. 2 bedrooms, IVi baths, .upgrades, pool, tennis, anxious to sell. $39,900. Call (404) 984-1855.</p>
        <p>LAKE ELLSWORTH, Moss Creek, 2 bedrooms. 9&amp;lt;/2% loan assumption, $44,870.  919  778-</p>
        <p>5136or 778-4454, Ask for Danny.</p>
        <p>LEXINGTON SQUARE</p>
        <p>Townhouse; Beautiful three bedroom, 2'/z bath, kitchen-din ing combo and family room.</p>
        <p>Washer and dryer convey along with extras. $54.000. Contact</p>
        <p>Janet Bowser CENTURY 21 JANET BOWSER ft ASSOCIATES. 355-7800 or 754 8580.</p>
        <p>QUAIL RIDGE, PRICED TO</p>
        <p>sell, $58,500. Attractive 3 bedroom, 2&amp;gt;/2 bath, fireplace plus mini blinds, patio and storage building. Pool and ten nis court privileges. Call 758 3928 days or 754 3043 nights.</p>
        <p>Qi/AIL RIDGE. 2 bedroom townhouse, neutral color scheme, in quiet area with trees. Call 355 4229 evenings.</p>
        <p>FOR SALE BY OWNER</p>
        <p>Commercial Investment Property Reduced to $130,000. Was $140,000.</p>
        <p>3 buildings, 2 rented for a restaurant and one for a church and 7 mobile homes 1 Vi acres.</p>
        <p>SIIS  a  year. Investment of</p>
        <p>$25,000 gets a qualified buyer 20% return before taxes.</p>
        <p>75M982</p>
        <p>AHce Moore Realty</p>
        <p>201 Plaza Orive, Suita C. Graaiwilla, NC 27888</p>
        <p>355-6712 Anytime ON CALL</p>
        <p>160 Rentals</p>
        <p>COUR?HOuTPTBU$INlfs</p>
        <p>District. Solid location near courthousa for law otfica. Insurance office, real estate office. etc. Ample parking close at hand. Rent negotiable. Call 758-2111.</p>
        <p>FOR RENT 2 buildings: 1 2,000 square foot, 1-3,000 square foot buildings. 809 and 811 Dickinson Avenue. Call 754-3134.</p>
        <p>=or Rent</p>
        <p>A BEAimFUL 1 or 2 bedroom apartment one mile from hospi</p>
        <p>tal. One year lease, deposit, no pets, washer/dryer hook-up.</p>
        <p>Call Hearthside Realty Property Manager Division, 355-2112.</p>
        <p>A BEAUTIFUL PLACE ALL NEW2 BEDROOMS*</p>
        <p>UNIVERSITY</p>
        <p>APARTMENTS</p>
        <p>2899 E. 5th Street Located Near ECU Near AAaior Shopping Centers Limited 0ffer-$300 a month Contact J.T. or Tommy Williams 754-7815 or 830 1937</p>
        <p>AZALEA GARDENS*</p>
        <p>CLEAN AND QUIET one bedroom furnished apartments, energy efficient, free water and</p>
        <p>sewer, optional washers, dryers, rv. Couples or singles only. $205 a month. 6 month lease.</p>
        <p>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 754-7815</p>
        <p>A Quiet Place</p>
        <p>NEW2BEDR00MT0WNH0USES</p>
        <p>WILLIAMSBURG MANOR</p>
        <p>Beautiful new units located in a quiet residential area. Centrally located near the Hilton Inn. Quality construction with extra features. Ready for occupancy in August. Young professionals desired. No pets. $385 754-7480 355 4542.</p>
        <p>APARTMENT FOR RENT in</p>
        <p>country, 10 miles from Greenville. Available August 1. No children. For more information, call 744 2010.</p>
        <p>ARE YOU LOST. CONFUSED? Let us help! We have affordable, private, unadvertised rentals. 752 1375 HOME LOCATORS Fee.</p>
        <p>AT THE PERFECT TIME and</p>
        <p>location for you- 1 and 2 bedroom apartments on Evans Street Ext., across from TV Station. One year lease with depos</p>
        <p>it. No pets, washer/dryer hookups, brand new. Hearthsii alty</p>
        <p>ups, brand new. Hearthside Re-Property Manager Division, 355 2112.</p>
        <p>ATTENTION STUDENTS 2</p>
        <p>bedrooms, walk, ride bike or</p>
        <p>ECU bus to cam|9us. College</p>
        <p>View Apartments. No kids. $220. J.L. Harris ft Sons, Realtors 758 4711.</p>
        <p>U1</p>
        <p>A^rlmtnts</p>
        <p>For Rtnt</p>
        <p>BEAUTIFUL NEW 2 bedroom</p>
        <p>townhouse. Colonial decor, patio, storage, paddle fan and many extras. Professional area. Sorry, no pets or children. $38i 7480.  \</p>
        <p>75ft7</p>
        <p>BRAND NEW Luxury apart ment filled with special touches. One bedroom with den and 2 bedroom, 2 bath floor plan with your choice of 4 color schemes. Firplaces, washer/dryer hookups, huge walk-ln closets, out</p>
        <p>door storage and private patio  ilted ceilings , flood upper floors with nature light. Ex-</p>
        <p>and bay</p>
        <p>my. Vaul windows.</p>
        <p>cellent location off Hwy 43 North across from AAed School. Call</p>
        <p>830-0441</p>
        <p>TREYBR(X)KE</p>
        <p>APARTAAENTS</p>
        <p>EASTBROOK AND VILLAGE GREEN APARTMENTS</p>
        <p>One, two and three bedroom apartments, featuring cable TV, modern appliances, clean laun-</p>
        <p>applla</p>
        <p>dr^ facilities, swimming pools.</p>
        <p>r carpeted.</p>
        <p>OHIce; 204 Eastbrook Drive</p>
        <p>752-5100</p>
        <p>SDC</p>
        <p>PROPERTIES</p>
        <p>Attractive Lease Arrangements</p>
        <p>AVAILABLE NOW</p>
        <p>2 bedrooms, IVz baths, all appliances. Washer/ dryer hookups in Shenandoah.</p>
        <p>CEDAR COURT</p>
        <p>2 bedroom townhouse, carpeted, all appliances, washer/dryer hookups.</p>
        <p>2 bedrooms al Cypress Gardens E. lOlh Street Appliances. washeridryer hook-ups</p>
        <p>756-6209</p>
        <p>Hearthside</p>
        <p>Realty</p>
        <p>355-3613 Anytime</p>
        <p>ON CALL. . James Gibson 355-2058</p>
        <p>NEW COUNTRY HOME FOR SALE BY OWNER</p>
        <p>Farm style home 1,681 square foot, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths on large acre wooded lot; Winterville School District. Must Sell! Asking $86,000. 758-9210 or 758-9546.</p>
        <p>Own A Luxurious New Eagle Premier LX With Just ^/|QQ</p>
        <p>Down!</p>
        <p>'88 Eagle Premier LX</p>
        <p>Air conditioning, cruise control, power steering and brakes, AM/FM stereo, intermittent wipers, and more.</p>
        <p>Aldridge fir* Southerland</p>
        <p>_ itherland Realtors</p>
        <p>756-3500</p>
        <p>On Call This Weekend</p>
        <p>Sheri Carter</p>
        <p>During non office Hours Please Call 75S4651</p>
        <p>OfflCG Hours: 1:00 -1:00 Sat. 1:00 - 5:00 Sun.</p>
        <p>3 Days Only!</p>
        <p>Till 5 pm Saturday!</p>
        <p>only at...</p>
        <p>BOB BARBOUR INC.</p>
        <p>3303 S. Memorial Dr.</p>
        <p>Greenville, NC</p>
        <p>355-7200</p>
        <p>A ft-i</p>
        <pb facs="00097006_0031" />
        <p>U1</p>
        <p>AjMrtments Fori</p>
        <p>Ront</p>
        <p>- CNAP I bedroom renovated</p>
        <p>- $170 or 3 bodroom S200 Kids OK 752 1375 HOME LOCATORS Fm.</p>
        <p>Cherry Court</p>
        <p>Spacious 3 be&amp;lt;H-oom townhouse with I'T baths. Aiso 1 bedroom  apartments avaiiabie. Aii are carpeted, with modern kitchen  appilances 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>FARMVILLE. 2 bedroom Martment, appliances included. F^atio, cable hook-up, central air, $250 a month. Call 753-4750.</p>
        <p>FOR RENT Duplex apartment, 3. bedrooms, 1 bath, carpeted, for family only neighborhood. Heat and air, stove and refriqerator, 1 y&amp;amp;T'S lease. $275 or $325 redecorated; 108 Stancll Drive. Phone752-6176,3-5p.m.</p>
        <p>FURNISHED 1 bedroom $200 or nice 2 bedroom house $250 Yard 752 1375 HOMELOCATORS Fee.</p>
        <p>; GreeneWay</p>
        <p>Large 2 bedroom garden apart-nients, 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. ($300). 756-6069.</p>
        <p>. KINGS ARMS</p>
        <p>Large I bedroom apartments. Carpeted, modern kitchen appliances, heat pump tor energy efficient heating and cooling. Laundry facilities. 1209 Charles Boulevard, Office Apartment 104. Furnished Apartments Available. Also Renting For Fall.</p>
        <p>752-8915</p>
        <p>KINGS ROW APARTMENTS</p>
        <p>ONE AND TWO BEDROOM</p>
        <p>Garden Apartments. All appliances included plus wall to wall carpeting, basic cable, water, sewage, on-site laundry. 24-hour emergency maintenance, swimming pool and 2 basketball courts.</p>
        <p>Call 752 3519. ECU bus service. Located behind Western Steer and Hardee's on East 10th Street.</p>
        <p>141</p>
        <p>A|Mrtmnfs For Rtnf</p>
        <p>fuRNHHlDT 3, or 4 room apaHment. 752-7212 or 756-0174.</p>
        <p>LOVE TREES?</p>
        <p>Experience the unique In apartment living with nature outside your door.</p>
        <p>COURTNEYSQUARE APARTMENTS</p>
        <p>Quality construction, fireplaces, heat pumps (heating costs SO 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  1-5  Sunday</p>
        <p>AAerry Lane Oft Arlington Blvd.</p>
        <p>756-5067</p>
        <p>NAR ecu 1 bedroom $215 Cen tral air or 3 bedroom duplex $325 752 1375 HOMELOCATORS Fee.</p>
        <p>NEAR HOSPITAL Westhills Condo. 2 bedrooms, 2 baths, no pets. $360.355-6002/756-7541.</p>
        <p>NEW LUXURIOUS two</p>
        <p>bedroom townhouse, energy ef ficient, the right amenities throughout, and the right location lor single or married career IS. $385 per month. Call</p>
        <p>persons.</p>
        <p>756-8444.</p>
        <p>NEW 1 BEDROOM apartments. Washer/dryer, cable TV, carpet, electric heat, air conditioning, appliances. 756-3342.</p>
        <p>OAKMONTSQUARE APARTMENTS</p>
        <p>Two bedroom townhouse apartments.. Fully equipped kitchen, pool, tennis courts, cable TV. 24 hour emergency maintenance. Very convenient to Pitt Plaza and University. Now leasing for September and October.</p>
        <p>Office hours 9-5:30, AAonday-Friday, 1212 Redbanks Road. 756-4151</p>
        <p>ONE AND Two bedroom apartments for rent. Smith In-suranceand Realty, 752-2754.</p>
        <p>ONE AND TWO BEDROOM</p>
        <p>apartments available now. Call 752 3311.</p>
        <p>ONE BEDROOM apartment. Heat, hot and cold water, sewage included, $250 monthly. 301 N. Woodlawn. 756 0545 or 758^0635.</p>
        <p>Owner anxious to sell! Double garage...all formal areas...master secluded from 2 other bedrooms. Fenced backyard. Over 2,000 square feet! An excellent opportunity in Cherry Oaks for only $85,000!</p>
        <p>JEANNEHE COX AGENCY, INC.</p>
        <p>756-1322  ^</p>
        <p>141</p>
        <p>Apartments For Rent</p>
        <p>6l$ OEOROOM, W. Gum Road $180.</p>
        <p>ONE BEDROOM, S. Evans Street. No kitchen, water and electricity furnished, $175.</p>
        <p>ONE BEDROOM, S. Evans Street, upstairs, share bath, water ana electricity furnished $175.</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOM, Forbes Street, $175.</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOM DUPLEX, Azalea Street. Brick, air, $375. J.L. Harris A Sons, Realtors. 758-4711.</p>
        <p>PEACEFUL AND QUIET</p>
        <p>Large, spotless 2 bedroom townhouse. Extra storage, laun dry area, energy efficient, nice decor. No pels. $345.</p>
        <p>Property Atonagements 355-6563</p>
        <p>PETS OK11 bedroom $300 Air or 2 bedroom $270. Others too 752-1375 HOMELOCATORS Fee.</p>
        <p>RINGGOLD TOWERS</p>
        <p>Efficiencies, one bedroom and 2 bedroom apartments tor rent. Also taking leases now for Fall semester. 752-2865.</p>
        <p>RINGGOLD</p>
        <p>TOWERS</p>
        <p>*at ECU Campus Fully Furnished Kitcnen Utensils Air, Carpet Security Laundry Closer to class than some dorms Walk downtown WARD PROPERTY BROKERS</p>
        <p>756-8410</p>
        <p>STRATFORD ARMS APARTMENTS</p>
        <p>Spacious 1,2 and 3 Bedroom Apartments $200 Security Deposit Required CABLE TV.TENNISCOURTS.POOL Convenient to Shopping and ECU</p>
        <p>Office hours 9a.m. to Sp.m. Monday through Friday</p>
        <p>Call us 24 hours a day at</p>
        <p>756-4800</p>
        <p>STUDENTS! Handy Campus I-2-3 bedrooms Don't wait call 752 1375 HOME LOCATORS Fee</p>
        <p>TREETOPS: 2 bedroom upstairs villa, $400 a month. Call 756-3000, ask for Kenny</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOM Duplex, cen tral heat'and air. Colonial Village. $250. J.L. 1 Realtors. 758 4711.</p>
        <p>TWO 1 BEDROOM Apartments 5blocks from campus. Available August 1st. Newly remodeled. Central heat/air. $250 a month, 758 0600.</p>
        <p>UTILITIES PAID 1 bedroom $260 or 2 bedroom $275 Pet OK 752 1375HOMELOCATORS Fee.</p>
        <p>WEDGEWOODARMS</p>
        <p>2 bedroom, 1 '/&amp;gt; bath townhouses. Excellent location. Carrier heat pumps, Whirlpool kitchen, washer dryer hookups, pool, tennis court, draperies. 3SS-6302.</p>
        <p>WILLIAMSBURG MANOR</p>
        <p>One of the nicest townhouse de velopments. Excellent floor plan and super decor. End unit with bay window. $395. 355 6562.</p>
        <p>141</p>
        <p>AMrtmtnts For Rent</p>
        <p>WOOD]? EDGE</p>
        <p>Brand nevr spacious two bedroom duplexes located in a quiet residential community in Heritage Village featuring; Greatroom with cathedral ceiling, fireplace, fully equipped kitchen, washer and dryer connections, energy efficient, outside storage room, private enclosed patios.</p>
        <p>756-4151</p>
        <p>170 Condominium^  For Rent_</p>
        <p>IN QUAIL RID6E, large 3 bedroom, all appliances fireplace, cable TV; swimming pool, tennis courts and club house Included. $525. 752 5167 or 746-6372.</p>
        <p>THREE BEDROOM, 2Vi bath condo with fireplace at Windy Ridge. Available September S. Gall 756 9061 after 7 p.m</p>
        <p>WESTHILL CNOO Near hospi tal, 2 bedrooms, 2.^ baths, professional neighbors; no pets, $360.355 6002 or 756-7541.</p>
        <p>YORKToWN SUARE. 3</p>
        <p>bedrooms, m bath, available after September 21. $460 per month, 1 year's lease required. Please call Aldridge^ 8, Southerland, 756 3500</p>
        <p>YORKTOWN SQUARE Luxury 2 bedrooms, 1V5 baths. Quiet with trees, tennis courts, near Greenville Athletic Club, partially furnished, washer/dryer. $425.355 5928.</p>
        <p>173 Houses For Rent</p>
        <p>ARE YOU LOST, CONFUSED? Let us help! We have affordable, private, unadvertised rentals. 752 1375 HOMELOCATORS Fee.</p>
        <p>AYDEN- 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, heat pump. $425 per month, de posit required. Available now. 746 2134.</p>
        <p>BRICK RANCH, 3 bedrooms, V/i baths, swimming pool, no pets, $500 a month. 752-6390.</p>
        <p>COUNTRY 2T)edroom $160 Air or big 3 bedroom $275 with barn 752 1375 HOMELOCATORS Fee.</p>
        <p>FARM HOUSE Located on 903 south on 2 acre lot. 4 bedrooms, central heat and woodstove, air, $350 plus deposit. 756-3391 or 756-8686 after 6; v</p>
        <p>FOUR BEDROOM, 2 baths, den, office, carport. East Greenville Boulevard. $650. Available about August 15. J.L. Harris &amp;amp; Sons, Realtors 758 4711.</p>
        <p>IDEAL 3 bedroom $385 Big yard or 3 bedroom $425 Fenced yard 752 1375 HOMELOCATORS Fee.</p>
        <p>LARGE 1 BEDROOM Duplex in nice neighborhood 2 blocks from unlversily, 213B Southeastern Street. $240.758 5299.</p>
        <p>MINT CONDITION 2 bedroom, 1Vi bath home in Winterville. September 1, occupancy. Call Myra Day, Realtor, after 6, 355-6652</p>
        <p>NEAR ECU 3 bedroom duplex $325 or 5 bedroom 2 baths $625 752 1375 HOME LOCATORS Fee.</p>
        <p>NEW: 2 BEDROOMS, 2 baths, appilances. Desire professional single or couple, no pets. Avail able now. $500 a month, plus deposit. Close to hospital. Call Mary: Days 3S5 2()I)0; Nights 756-1997.</p>
        <p>173 Houses For Rent</p>
        <p>NICE HOME; 1600 square foot, 3 bedroom, 2 bath, 400 square foot</p>
        <p>deck, serrate 2 car garage. In country 1 mile from Burroughs Wdllcame. $633 a month, (jtll</p>
        <p>757-0444.</p>
        <p>fHkE BEDROOMS, 2 baths, master bath has jacuzzl, fireplace, garage; Devonshire Subdivision, Wnnterville, N.C. $600. Call 756-5419 after 6:30 p.m.</p>
        <p>Ill SPEIGHT, approximately 3 miles from hospital off Stan-tonsburg Road: 3 bedrooms, !'/&amp;gt; baths, greatroom, dining area separate from kitchen, washer/dryer hook ups, central heat and air, outside storage building, year lease and deposit required. Rent $450 a month. Available September 1. Call 355-2961.</p>
        <p>2107 MONTCLAIR; next to Guy Smith Stadium, 3 bedrooms, iva baths, living room, large kitch en, year lease and deposit required. Rent $350 a month. Available September l. Call 355-2961 after 6:00 p.m</p>
        <p>3 BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS, living room with celling fan, den/kitchen with lots of cabinets, plenty of storage inside and out, large yard, close to schools, university, and shopping. Central air and gas heat, carpeting througtraut, single family only. Available after Labor Day. Rent $475 per month with deposit required. Call 752-2630 after 5:30 p.m.</p>
        <p>3 BEDROOM $425 Kids Pet/3 bedroom $550 2 baths garage 752 1375 HOMELOCATORS Fee.</p>
        <p>174</p>
        <p>Townhouses For Rent</p>
        <p>FOR RENT! LEXINGTON</p>
        <p>Square townhome. 3 bedroom townhome available tor $525.00 a month. Please call Janet Bowser atCENTURY2l JANET BOWSER &amp;amp; ASSOCIATES,355 7800 dr 756 8580.</p>
        <p>NEW LUXURIOUS two</p>
        <p>bedroom, energy efficient, the right amenities throughout, and the right location for single or married career persons. $385 per month. Call 756-8444.</p>
        <p>QUIET AREA. Duplex, 2 bedrooms, l/5 baths, appliances, almost new. No undergraduates. 756-3057.</p>
        <p>THREE BEDROOM</p>
        <p>Townhouse. Quiet area, prefer professional people or couple, no pets. $550 a month, deposit re quired. 756 5494.</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOM townhouse with fireplace at Williamsburg AAanor, excellent condition, end unit, $400 per month. Contact Janet Bowser, CENTURY 2i JANET BOWSER 8. ASSOCIATES, 355 7800 or 756 8580.</p>
        <p>2 BEDROOM TOWNHOUSE for</p>
        <p>rent in Williamsburg Manor. $375. Call Janet Bowser at CENTURY 21 JANET BOWSER &amp;amp; ASSOC IATES,355 7800 or 756 8580.</p>
        <p>179 Mobile Homes For Rent</p>
        <p>ACT FAST 2 bedroom $150 de posit $75 or 3 bedroom $225 Air 752 1375 HOMELOCATORS Fee.</p>
        <p>BEHINO Venters Grill on Mum-ford Road. 2 bedrooms ($160 170). 3 bedrooms ($190 200). De posit $100. References No pets. 756-4982, after 7 p.m./a.m.</p>
        <p>EASTBROOK APARTMENTS VILLAGE GREEN APARTMENTS</p>
        <p>752-5100 204 EASTBROOK DRIVE GREENVILLE, NO 27834</p>
        <p>OFFICE HOURS: MON-FRI 8*5:00 SAT 10*3:00 SUN 1*5:00 FEATURING</p>
        <p> FREECABLEVISION</p>
        <p> ECU BUS SERVICE MODERN APPLIANCES LAUNDRY FACILITIES</p>
        <p> ON-SITE MANAGEMENT</p>
        <p> FREE WATER AND SEWER</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>2;-</p>
        <p>WeVe ready to pre-lease super spacious 1,2 &amp;amp; 3 bedroom apartment homes for September 1. Our community of families, professionals and students enjoy our river walk, private patios, clubhouse, pool, picnic area and quiet wooded surroundings. Close to ECU.</p>
        <p>COME CHECK OUT OCR AFEORDABLY PRICED APARTIVIENTS FOR FALL</p>
        <p>752-4225</p>
        <p>I4(X) Willow Street One Hours 9-6 M-F., 1-5 Sat. and Sun.</p>
        <p>Shelter Manuqcmcni (iroup</p>
        <p>ESTATE^^-''</p>
        <p>179 Mobile Homes For Rent</p>
        <p>COUNTRY SETTING. 2</p>
        <p>bedrooms, 1 bath, air on 1 acre lot. $345 a month. 756-3419.</p>
        <p>FOR RENT OR SALE. 12x50, 2 bedroom. 752 1303.</p>
        <p>tWo and THRE BEDROOM</p>
        <p>Trailers, V/2 baths, fully fur nished with washer/dryer, air conditioner; Up front in Shady Knoll. 756 1913.</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOMS, washer/ dryer, furnished or unfurnished. Good condition, good park. No children, no pets. 756 0801 after 5 p.m.</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOM, 1 bath mobile home in nice park. $215 a month tor rent. Call 946 0017 days; 756-4015 nights. $8,995.</p>
        <p>12x60 2 BEDROOM, air condi tioner and washer, $180 a month. Nopets. Call 758 0745</p>
        <p>2 BEDROOMS. Quiet park. Call 830 5528, after 6 p.m. _</p>
        <p>. 2. BEDROOM, washer/dryer, air, no pets. Call 752-6051 aHer 6:00p.m.</p>
        <p>2 BEDROOMS, washer, dryer, air, completely furnished. No pets. Call 756 0792.</p>
        <p>2 BEDROOM $190 Washer/ dryer or Lot $200 Furnished 752 1375 HOMELOCATORS Fee.</p>
        <p>2 BEDROOM mobile home with 1 bath, $250/month, no pets. Nice park. 830 0164.</p>
        <p>3 BEDROOM LOCATED in small park in country. One child OK, no pels. 756 0975.</p>
        <p>180 Mobile Homes Lots For Rent</p>
        <p>COUPLE OF LOTS IN NICE modern park, all conveniences. Call 752-6245.</p>
        <p>MOBILE HOME LOT for rent Call 752-4577.</p>
        <p>SINGLE OR DOUBLE WIDE</p>
        <p>Lots on River Road In Green ville. Call 946-0017 days; 756 4015 nights. $8,995.</p>
        <p>SINGLE AND DOUBLE WIDE</p>
        <p>Lots available; Deer Run Estates, 752 6643.</p>
        <p>SPACE IN Mobile Home Court. On Highway 33 East. Cali 758-0745.</p>
        <p>SPACIOUS LOT located 3 miles south of Greenville, Branch's Estate. 756 0461 or 756-9990.</p>
        <p>181</p>
        <p>Office Space For Rent</p>
        <p>A BARGAIN! 800 square feet for $400 per month. Former dental office. Call Carl at Darden Real ty, 758 1983, nights and weekends, 355 6558.</p>
        <p>A FIRST CLASS 2office suite tor $504 per month at the Charles Centre. Darden Realty, 758-1983, nights and weekends, 355 6558.</p>
        <p>DOWNTOWN LOCATION Con</p>
        <p>venient to courthouse and post office. Janitor and utilities tor nished. Single offices or suites. $8.50 per square foot. 752 1138.</p>
        <p>The Dally Reflector. Greenville, N C.</p>
        <p>Friday. August 12,1988</p>
        <p>181</p>
        <p>OHictSpact For Rmt</p>
        <p>NOW RENTING at 10th Street Centre, new offices or sales ntrances,</p>
        <p>utilities furnished, $150a month. 757 1626.</p>
        <p>OFFICE SPACE available, one</p>
        <p>Public Storage, 1528 S. Evans Street.</p>
        <p>INFICE SPAE: One, two,^ three thousand square feet available now. Call Leon Fornes Insurance &amp;amp; Realty. 355-7373 or 355 7557; Nights 756 3292</p>
        <p>offices in dunnorier</p>
        <p>Building with conference room and copy machine available. 756 1076 or 758 0423. j</p>
        <p>Fittman building. Convenience and elegance at a rea sonable rate. 2 office suites available. Each spacious and light with 3 inner offices, recep tion area, restrooms, and 1 has small kitchen area. Across street from Courthouse. Call le and 4651.</p>
        <p>PRIME SPACE up to 1650 square feet available, road fron tage, ample parking. Located near all major highways. Rent Includes janitorial and utilities. Call Bill, 752 3937.</p>
        <p>iTwm wourinouse. Sheri Carter at Aldridge Southerland 756-3500 or 758-,</p>
        <p>$4.00 A SQUARE FOOT. 1,000 and 2,000 square loot space available. 758 0123 or 756 0765.</p>
        <p>184 Resort Property For Rent</p>
        <p>ATLANTIC BEACH: ocean front condo at Beacon's Reach, 2 bedrooms. Available August 22 September 30. 756 8152.</p>
        <p>MYRTLE BEACH DAYS</p>
        <p>Ocean front condos: 1, 2, 3, bedrooms. 6 pools, jacuzzi, health spas and tennis. $59 a n^lght up. 1 800 872 6634 Smith Realty.</p>
        <p>NEW 3 BEDROOM. 2 bath con do; sleeps lO, 5th floor In Sum mer Winds, Salter Path. 5 i&amp;gt;ools. health club, located on beautiful Atlantic Ocean. Call J.T. Williams, 756 7815 or 1 800 992 8545, be sure to ask tor Unit 541. 'Make your reservation now!'</p>
        <p>PINE KNOLL TOWNS Con</p>
        <p>dominmum on ocean. Beginning August 14. Call 355 5928.</p>
        <p>185 Rooms For Rent</p>
        <p>AYDEN. 7 iniles from PtC. (Older female preferred.) 746-3805, after 8 p.m.</p>
        <p>PIRATES LANDING</p>
        <p>20OW. Eighth street</p>
        <p>Private furnished rooms ^ rent. Utilities included. Share bath and kitchen. REMCO EAST, 758 6061.</p>
        <p>SPACE POR LIA8E</p>
        <p>327 Arlington Boulevard, beside TCBY Yogurt. 2500 square feel. 752*0123 or 756*0765.</p>
        <p>Jin Ifcle</p>
        <p>BASS REALTY Broker On Du^</p>
        <p>Saturday Sylvia Horswood 757-0452 2424 S. Charles Straat</p>
        <p>756-6666</p>
        <p>^ OFFICE OPEN 9*12 SATURDAY AND 1*5 SUNDAY</p>
        <p>On Call This Weekend</p>
        <p>Rebecca Buck</p>
        <p>REALTOR</p>
        <p>During Non Office Hours Please Call 757-0311</p>
        <p>756*5395</p>
        <p>DUFFUS</p>
        <p>REALTYjnc</p>
        <p>Sheraton</p>
        <p>Village</p>
        <p>192 Roommate Wanted</p>
        <p>^1!!Tm?T?o7mmate</p>
        <p>Wanted. Non-smoker, $100 a month plus Vy utilities, near PCC. 756 9488.</p>
        <p>FEMALE ROOMMATE Wanted immediately. $92 a month plus utilities. 756-3722 or 830-9207 FOR ENRGY efficient townhouse. Resldentlally located. Fully furnished. Rent $95 month. For more information call 355 4647. Ask tor Beth or Karen.</p>
        <p>MALE ROOMMATE NEEDED, prefer non smoker, easygoing, $170/rent, Vy utilities, bus ser vice. Reply immediately. Call 522 0146, ask for Brad or leave message.</p>
        <p>NON-SMOKING FEMALE</p>
        <p>wanted to share 2 bedroom, 2 bath garden apartment. Call Denise at 522 6065 days, 756 2089 nights.</p>
        <p>ROOMMATE NEEDED to</p>
        <p>share 2 bedroom trailer, 6&amp;gt;y miles from campus. $9S/mont|i plus &amp;gt;y utilities. Call 752 6433 or 752 0612.</p>
        <p>ROOMMATE AVAILABLE</p>
        <p>immediately. Clean, non-smoking, serious graduate student seeks medical/graduat student or professional with nice apart ment or house who needs someone to share expenses. Call Mike at 1-441-4202, leave message.</p>
        <p>192 Roommate Wanted</p>
        <p>share 2 bedroom, 2 bath house In nice area near hospital and downtown. Grad student or professional preferred. Pets OK-,. $190 a month 83IT8842 evanlngl.  551 5285 days. Ask for Naal.</p>
        <p>HOUSESITTER needs houit: non smoker/no pets, 3 mortflis minimum. References. 756 7119. SOLAFLEX EX'TRCIsI;</p>
        <p>^ Hignite Realtors</p>
        <p>7S7-1969 anytime</p>
        <p>HOMES</p>
        <p>898,800 Allen Drive Three bedrooms, 1 vi baths, living room, aal-in MIchan.</p>
        <p>I4M08 Throe Apartments in one! Excellent localion on Snow Hill SI. Ayden.</p>
        <p>$18l8B8 New Offering! Country location with 3 badrooma, 1W</p>
        <p>MBTlio Reduced $2,400. $5,000 Equity &amp;amp; assume loan on 2 bad-</p>
        <p>mtso New 3 bedroom, 2 bath brick homes with hsat pumps!</p>
        <p>NttSoo'tomer lot with pretty bungalow on Juanita Ave. Three bedroom, pretty patio</p>
        <p>$S3j00 Each bedroom has private bath, W bath downstairs at</p>
        <p>)5ooReduced $3,400 lor Quick Sale. Three bedroom, 2 bath orealioom, heat pump wooded lot.</p>
        <p>Brick ranch in Pleasant Ridge with 3 bedrooms, 2</p>
        <p>$liiw^lrtty salt box on Lee St. in Cherry Oaks, 4 bed.oom, 2vy baths formal areas.</p>
        <p>$11M00 Four bedroom two story with 2Vy baths, new carpeting vinyl and wallpaper</p>
        <p>COMMERCIAL</p>
        <p>$180,000 Churcn tor Sale on Bethel Highway with almost 6,000 square teet. Pews stay.</p>
        <p>$135,000 Restaurant for Sale! Owner financing available. Located on Memorial Dr.</p>
        <p>LAND &amp;amp; LOTS</p>
        <p>Mobile home lots on Slantonsburg Highway Prices start at $4.500.</p>
        <p>Half Acre lots near Conlenlnea Creek Estates Only $7,500.</p>
        <p>Lot in Pleasant Ridge. Only $6.4M. 9 Available. All wr^ed! New lots at Dogwood Ridge near Stick Valley. Cell lor Prices!</p>
        <p>Mobile home lot near Stick Valley Comm Water available.</p>
        <p>Lots on the water at Conlenlnea Creek Estates! Prices start at</p>
        <p>Lots*at*Forres! Pines near Frog Level Wooded '/i Acre *- . Start at $10.600.  ,</p>
        <p>13 Acres on 102 outside Ayden for $28.500.</p>
        <p>18 Acres on Bethel Highway (or $35,000</p>
        <p>SHERTON VILLAGE. New luxury-2 and 3 bedroom townhomes. Excellent floorplans, private patio, storage, fireplace, ceiling (an, all appliances and more! Why pay rent when you can have all the advantages of home ownership for as little as $46,6007 Price includes 3 points and closing costs. Visit our model unit open every Sunday 2-5 p.m. or call our resident agent any evening Don Joyner, 756-8666.</p>
        <p>201 E. ARLINGTON BLVD. GREENVILLE. N.C. 27834</p>
        <p>Phon* 756*3000 &amp;amp; 365-6330</p>
        <p>Hourt:</p>
        <p>Mon.-Frl. 9 am-SzSO pm Saturday, 10 am-3 pm Sunday, 1 pm-9 pm</p>
        <pb facs="00097006_0032" />
        <p>B-16 The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.</p>
        <p>Friday, August 12,1988 </p>
        <p>i*'?</p>
        <p>lieKEflth Experts Americans Still Overweight</p>
        <p>By ROBERT BYRD Associated Press Writer</p>
        <p>ATLANTA (AP) - Despite greater awareness of exercise and healthy foods, many Americans remain significantly overweight, according to federal researchers who say niost government nutritional goals are unlikely to be met.</p>
        <p>Evei7body knows what is required to lose weight, yet the prevalence of overwei^t doesnt seem to change much, said Dr. Marion Nestle of the U.S. Office ofDisease Prevention and Health Promotion in Washington.</p>
        <p>The national Centers for Disease Control, in its weekly report Thursday, reviewed the progress toward the governments 15 top-priority goals for American nutrition in 1990, including raising public knowledge of the effects of salt and lowering average blood-choiesterol levels.</p>
        <p>Substantial progress has been made in several areas, and three of the goals will be fully met, researchers said.</p>
        <p>But despite the prepress, Americans will probably fall short of eight major /goals, including that of getting people to lose weight, said Ms. Nestle, whose office helped prepare the report.</p>
        <p>The research that relates (poor) diet to disease is now incontrovertible, ., ^ said. Its really time now to start looking at ways to implement the rec-^ommendations that everybody is familiar wim  ways to improve the nutritional status of the population.</p>
        <p>The goals that will likely not be met, she said, are:</p>
        <p> Having less than 10 Mrcent of American men and 17 percent of American ^ women over the significantly overweight level, defined as more than 20</p>
        <p>percent over desired weight.</p>
        <p>Theres just been little change on that through the years, Ms. Nestle said. Its still about one-fourth of the country.</p>
        <p>^  Having 50 percent of the overweight population on a weight-loss program . c&amp;lt;Hnbining diet and exercise. The CDC said recent surveys show hau the nations overweight people are indeed trying to lose weight  but only half are using both diet and exercise.</p>
        <p> Cutting the average adult level of harmful serum cholesterol below the 200 count. In a 1976-80 survey, average cholesterol levels were 211 for women and 215 for men, down from 214 and 217 in 1971-74. Hiat rate of decline is not as fast as it should be, Ms. Nestle said.</p>
        <p> Having at least three-fourths of all mothers breast-feeding their babies at the time they leave the hospital. A1984 survey put the figure at 61 percent, up</p>
        <p>. from 45 percent in 1978.</p>
        <p> Having all packaged foods labeled with useful calorie and nutrient in-  ^"ch is the case in 55 percent of packaged foods, up from 42 per-</p>
        <p>formation.^ Suer cent in 1978, Ms. Nestle said.</p>
        <p> Including hutritirm counseling in virtually all routine health contacts with health professionals. A 1985 survey showed the figure at less than 30 percent, the CDC noted.</p>
        <p> Elimination of cases where a childs growth is retarded because of nutritional deficiencies. Although the problem cannot be precisely measured, it persists, Ms. Nestle said.</p>
        <p> Including nutriti(ni education in the required school curriculum in all states. By 1985, only 12 states had such a requirement, the CDC said.</p>
        <p>The three objectives that researchers think will be fully met, she said, are:</p>
        <p>percent in some categories, the CDC report said.</p>
        <p>- Having 90 percent of U.S. adults aware that to lose weight they must eat fewer calories or increase physical activity, or both. The percentage was 73 in 1985 and is rising quickly, Ms. Nestle said.</p>
        <p> Implementation of a comprehensive national nutrition status monitoring system. It is already in place, the CDC reported.</p>
        <p>Aspirin And Blood Clot Dissolvers Can Aid Heart Patients</p>
        <p>By MICHAEL SPECTER</p>
        <p>L.A. Times-Washington Post News Service</p>
        <p>NEW YORK  Heart attack victims treated with a combination of aspirin and the blood clot dissolver streptokinase are nearly twice as likely to survive as those who receive routine hospital care, leaders of the world6 largest study of heart attack treatment reported Thursday.</p>
        <p>In an international trial involving more than 17,000 heart attack patients, people receiving the two drugs within four hours of their first symptoms had 53 percent fewer deaths than patients given neither. Even when the therapy was delayed for up to one day, reductions in deaths were striking.</p>
        <p>These results are as remarkable as you will find in medicine, said Dr. Peter Sleight, chairman of the study and professor of car-diovasc^ar medicine at Oxford University in Britain. The implications for public health are enormous. Every doctor should pay close attention because using these two drugs properly will save tens of thousands of lives each year.</p>
        <p>Preliminary results of the study were presented earlier this year at a meeting of the American College of Cardiology. These expanded findings will be published in Saturdays issue of The Lancet, a British medical magazine.</p>
        <p>In the past two years clot dissolvers such as streptokinase have changed the standard for -treating heart attacks. Another, TPA, or tissue plasminogen activator, is cloned from a protein made naturally in the body. But TPA, approved for sale last year, is almost 10 times as expensive as streptokinase. While many experts assume it will prove at least as effective in preventing death as streptokinase, studies have not been completed so that the two can com-* pared.</p>
        <p>Heart attacks are by far the largest single cause of death in the United States, killing almost 500,000 people each year. A therapy resulting in even a small improvement in survival can save thousands of lives. The streptokinase-aspirin treatment, i^if used widely, would have a greater effect.</p>
        <p>Dr. Richard Peto, chief statistician for the study and a researcher at Oxford, estimated that widespread use ci the combination among the 500,000 heart attack patients who reach U.S. bnpitals each year could save at</p>
        <p>least 25,000 lives. In Britain, he said 5,000 lives could be saved annually.</p>
        <p>The study put patients into four groups at random: Those receiving streptokinase, which dissolves the blood clots responsible for most heart attacks; those receiving aspirin, which has a property that thins certain blood cells and lowers the chance that clots will form; those receiving both; and those receiving neither.</p>
        <p>Researchers found that using either drug alone significantly improved a patients chances of survival but that using them together was far better. To their surprise, the researchers found that aspirin appeared to solve one of the biggest problems caused by streptokinase. Patients arteries often clogged up again not long after receiving the dissolver, in many cases faster than if they l^d received none at all. But when the two drugs are given together, aspirin prevents new clots from developing.</p>
        <p>The study also found mistaken two common assumptions about using thrombolytic therapy, which uses the growing class of drugs that work by dissolving blood clots.</p>
        <p>It had been conventional wisdom that thrombolytic therapy would prove useful only if administered right after a heart attack begins. This study found that, even when streptokinase and aspirin were given up to 24 hours after pain began mortality rates still dropped by 38 percent, although the sooner the arug was administered the better the chances are for survival.</p>
        <p>Physicians have also been wary of giving the drugs to elderly patients, fearing to increase the chance of serious bleeding or strokes. But the study showed that people well into their eighties tolerated the regimen without problems.</p>
        <p>The biggest problem we have now is making sure doctors are aware of these results and what they mean, said Dr. Charles Hennekens, of Harvard Medical School, a leading researcher in heart disease who directed the U.S. arm of the study. The remarkable reality is that fewer than one heart attack patient in five now receives thrombolytic therapy.,</p>
        <p>He and other physicians said this trial provided the most compelling evidence yet that nearly anyone who is having a heart attack should be given aspirin by their physician. Because it prevents clots, aspirin taken over a long period of time has been shown to help prevent heart attacks.</p>
        <p>607 Greenville Blvd.</p>
        <p>BACK TO SGHBDL</p>
        <p>BARGAINS</p>
        <p>Invisible Tape</p>
        <p>1/2^x800 Long</p>
        <p>Caddy Pk. ^</p>
        <p>wm, ^</p>
        <p>$P&amp;lt;&amp;gt; CASH REBATE</p>
        <p>ENERGIZER' (By Mail)</p>
        <p>Our Prices Before Rebate</p>
        <p>A A1 Package (4 Batteries) AAA 1 Package (2 Batteries).. C 2 Packages (4 Batteries). D 2 Packages (4 Batteries). 9V 2 Packages (2 Battries)...</p>
        <p>*2.00</p>
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        <p>Watercolor</p>
        <p>Markers</p>
        <p>10 Fine Line Colors</p>
        <p>00</p>
        <p>120 Ct.</p>
        <p>3 Subject Theme Books</p>
        <p>10%xS'</p>
        <p>88*</p>
        <p>Our Reg. $1.18 Value</p>
        <p>School</p>
        <p>Supplies</p>
        <p>Stock Up Now!!</p>
        <p>ill</p>
        <p>Cotton Viscotch Binders 1% Ring With Clip $000 Print Fashion Colors  m</p>
        <p>$-|00</p>
        <p>Also Poly Binders. Asst. Colors With 1" Rings.</p>
        <p>3  $100</p>
        <p>For</p>
        <p>3$1 00</p>
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        <p>- 70 Ct. Thome Composition_____</p>
        <p>- Pencil Pouch And Carry Alls...</p>
        <p>Envelopes 28 Ct.</p>
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        <p>Home - Office  School Believe This</p>
        <p>3Pks.</p>
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        <p>Also</p>
        <p>Unlined Writing  00</p>
        <p>Tablets so Sheets W For I</p>
        <p>Its That TIAAI!</p>
        <p>Bold II Wh Electric</p>
        <p>Reg. $4.00 Special</p>
        <p>Solid State Digital $C00</p>
        <p>Reg. $8.00.. Special</p>
        <p>Wcstclo.x</p>
        <p>Blue Magic</p>
        <p>CUTEX</p>
        <p>15 Oz.</p>
        <p>Perfect Colors For Nails</p>
        <p>Our Reg. $1.23</p>
        <p>Value</p>
        <p>Our Reg. $2.00 Value</p>
        <p>CHOLESTEROI.</p>
        <p>CONOmONINOiW**</p>
        <p>ee Oi0(e*n* 4e *-</p>
        <p>Memf NCTWT150Z (42S9)</p>
        <p>FREE GffTHISlOE</p>
        <p>1 OZ PHISOOERM* f GENTLE CLEANSlNQl BAR</p>
        <p>Our</p>
        <p>Reg. $2.55 Value</p>
        <p>$000</p>
        <p>5 oz. UNSCENTEO REGULAR PHISODERM'</p>
        <p>Extra Dry</p>
        <p>32 Oz.</p>
        <p>Our Reg. $3.50 Value</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>si</p>
        <pb facs="00097006_0033" />
        <p>UJBIIST13</p>
        <p>"Sears Pricing Policy: if an item is not described as reduced or a special purchase, it is at its regular price. A special purchase, though not reduced, is an exceptional value.40 Pages of Super Savings Starting at 8 A.M.!HURRY! I DAY ONLY</p>
        <p>Sstafteton guaranteed or your money back</p>
        <p>^Sears, Roebuck and Co., 1988</p>
        <p>Items McaM Charleston, SC</p>
        <p>stores only" are available In BaiboursvHe, rt. Charleston. WV. Chartotte. Cdumt^</p>
        <p>  _BltRflUII.  wiioirvsw,</p>
        <p>Dufham,&amp;gt;aye&amp;lt;tevirte. Greensboro. Raleigh, Roanoke, Wilmington and</p>
        <p>UrMtoms sutr as fumlturo and wHances are InvwtOTed in winiis-tfSuon center and wHI be scheduled lor pick-up or delivery. Oelivory is not Included In selHtiQ prices.______</p>
        <p>SEMS</p>
        <p>aBTfl</p>
        <pb facs="00097006_0034" />
        <p>SUPERSATURDAY!Boys short sleeve pique knit shirt</p>
        <p>799</p>
        <p>ff Reg</p>
        <p>Reg. $11.99Boys long sleeve over print shirt</p>
        <p>999</p>
        <p>Reg. $13.994 OFFBoys cotor-cuffed jeans for fun and school</p>
        <p>Roll contrast cuffs upon these 100% cotton pad-dyed jeans. With popular 5-pocket styling. Blue, burgundy or olive denim. In sizes 8-20.</p>
        <p>$15.99 Sizes 4-7......11.99</p>
        <p>12</p>
        <p>99</p>
        <p>Reg.</p>
        <p>$16.998:00 A.M. to 11:00 A.M. I 8:00 A.M. to 11:00 A.M. SATURDAY MORNING ONLY I SATURDAY MORNING ONLY</p>
        <p>SAVE *2</p>
        <p>Sears Best tx)ys underwear</p>
        <p>399</p>
        <p>Reg. $5 99 pKg. 3</p>
        <p>Briefs and T-shirts of polyester, cotton and nylon. White. Packs of 3.</p>
        <p>SAVE 2</p>
        <p>Sears Best boys hosiery</p>
        <p>^99</p>
        <p>" Reg. $6.99.6-pr. pack</p>
        <p>A full terry lining for absorbency and comfort. Cotton and nylon. 0-20.</p>
        <pb facs="00097006_0035" />
        <p>Boys casual Tiger Bay pants are great for back-to-school</p>
        <p>Choose from several styles ^\99 of casual Tiger Bay pants in Reg</p>
        <p>sizes 8-20.</p>
        <p>$16.99 Husky sizes............12.99  pair</p>
        <p>$13.99 pair</p>
        <p>Entire stock of boys</p>
        <p>Rags coordinates</p>
        <p>Choose from tops and bottoms from our Rags u Reg $1299 collection.</p>
        <p>Boys short sleeve striped woven shirt</p>
        <p>399</p>
        <p>8:00 A.M. to 11:00 A.M. SATURDAY MORNING ONLY</p>
        <p>30% OFF</p>
        <p>Entire stock of boys jackets</p>
        <p>For 3-HOURS ONLY, you can SAVE 30% on every boys jacket in our stock! Sizes 4-7 and 8-20.</p>
        <p>8:00 A.M. to 11:00 A.M. SATURDAY MORNING ONLY</p>
        <p>30% OFF</p>
        <p>Entire stock of boys sweaters</p>
        <p>Stock up today on sweaters that will keep him warm and cozy this winter. In sizes 4-7 and 8-20.</p>
        <pb facs="00097006_0036" />
        <p>Assorted girls dresses In several styles 1099</p>
        <p>IWReg. $19.99 each</p>
        <p>Entire stock of E.J. Gitano apparel</p>
        <p>Choose from tops and bottoms in coordinating colors, styles. Girts sizes.</p>
        <p>Girls denim skirt will take her from school to the party scene</p>
        <p>Dark says it all. Made of 100% 099</p>
        <p>Or"</p>
        <p>cotton with fun contrast stitching. Stonewashed.</p>
        <p>$19 99 Pretty Plus sizes..........9.99</p>
        <p>' $17.998:00 A.M. to 11:00 A.M. I 8:00 A.M. to 11:00 A.M. SATURDAY MORNING ONLY I SATURDAY MORNING ONLY</p>
        <p>33% OFF</p>
        <p>Sears Best girls underwear</p>
        <p>329</p>
        <p>Reg. $4.99  ^  .</p>
        <p>Packs of 3 100% cotton vests and panties in girls' sizes.</p>
        <p>33% OFF</p>
        <p>Sears Best girls hosiery</p>
        <p>129</p>
        <p>Reg. $1.49 to $1.99 pair</p>
        <p>Choose from smooth knit or cable knit knee socks in girls sizes.</p>
        <p>98^-1</p>
        <pb facs="00097006_0037" />
        <p>Toddler boys and girls pants sets</p>
        <p>12^. $17.99 each</p>
        <p>Entire stock of diaper bags</p>
        <p>Great for gifts! Choose from several styles.</p>
        <p>Hand crib converts to a dressing table or play yard</p>
        <p>CXir most affordable crib con- Cfk99 verts easily to dressing table  Rag</p>
        <p>or play yard. Folds, too!  s</p>
        <p>30% OFF ALL cribs in stock</p>
        <p>$79 99</p>
        <p>Toddler boys and girls T-shirts 099</p>
        <p>Reg. $4.99 each</p>
        <p>Entire stock of plush stuffed toys</p>
        <p>Choose from a variety of cute and cuddly toys.8:00 A.M. to 11:00 A.M. I 8:00 A.M. to 11:00 A.M. SATURDAY MORNING ONLY I SATURDAY MORNING ONLY</p>
        <p>1/2 PRICE</p>
        <p>Infants sleep n play suit</p>
        <p>349</p>
        <p>Reg. $6.99 each</p>
        <p>Keep baby, warm in terry polyester applique sleeper:</p>
        <p>33% OFF</p>
        <p>Infants and toddlers underwear</p>
        <p>99</p>
        <p>Reg</p>
        <p>$5.49-$5.99</p>
        <p>Choose from vests and panties for girls and T-shirts and briefs for boys</p>
        <p>3-31</p>
        <pb facs="00097006_0038" />
        <p>8:00 A.M. to 11:00 A.M. I 8:00 A.M. to 11:00 A.M. SATURDAY MORNING ONLY I SATURDAY MORNING ONLY</p>
        <p>25% OFF</p>
        <p>Entire stock of ladies handbags</p>
        <p>Great selection at stock-up savings! Choose from our entire stock.</p>
        <p>25% OFF</p>
        <p>Ladies scarves and accessories</p>
        <p>Accessorize with savings during our 3-HOUR SALE. Choose from our entire stock.</p>
        <p>Scarves available In larger stores only.</p>
        <pb facs="00097006_0039" />
        <p>Entire stock of soft activewear in misses and womens sizes</p>
        <p>Choose from tops, shorts and pants for every activity you have and SAVE 20%! Youll find styles and colors galorel</p>
        <p>Entire stock of jeans for misses</p>
        <p>Whether you like the straight and tight or loose and pleated, we have the jeans you love to wear. Choose from a wide assortment of styles and colors in misses sizes.</p>
        <p>Entire stock of sweaters in sizes for misses, Juniors .and women Hurry in Saturday only and SAVE 20% on our entire stock of sweaters. Youll find styles and colors in sizes to fit you.8:00 A.M. to 11:00 A.M. I 8:00 A.M. to 11:00 A.M. SATURDAY MORNING ONLY I SATURDAY MORNING ONLY</p>
        <p>30% OFF</p>
        <p>Entire stock of misses sport tops</p>
        <p>Stock up today on sport tops during our 3-HOUR SALE.</p>
        <p>20% OFF</p>
        <p>Entire stock of Cheryl Tlegs"* apparel</p>
        <p>Choose from coordinates from Cheryl Tiegs famous collection of ladies sportswear.</p>
        <p>Charyl TIegs apparel not available in Roanoke Rapids</p>
        <pb facs="00097006_0040" />
        <p>SUPER SATURDAY!</p>
        <p>Entire stock of dresses in sizes for misses, juniors, petjtes and haif sizes ^</p>
        <p>No matter what your size is or what yotr shape is, we have dresses for your every mood. Hurry in and SAVE 20% on our entire stock of dresses ip styles, colors and sizes galore.</p>
        <p>Use Your SearsCharge!8:00 A.M. to 11:00 A.M. I 8:00 A.M. to 11:00 A M SATURDAY MORNING ONLY I SATURDAY MORNING ONLY</p>
        <p>30% OFF</p>
        <p>Entire stock of maternity dresses and sportswear</p>
        <p>During your special time, you can still dress well and SAVE 30% at Sears.</p>
        <p>20% OFF</p>
        <p>Entire stock of womens sizes sportswear '</p>
        <p>Choose from pants and tops in styles and sizes to. flatter your figure.</p>
        <pb facs="00097006_0041" />
        <p>OPEN AT SAM!</p>
        <p>Get comfortable in our soft gauze lounger</p>
        <p>Soft 100% cotton gauze is machine washable. Choose from a wide assortment of bright, summer colors.</p>
        <p>25% 0^ ALL misses loungewear</p>
        <p>Styles shown are representative of Sears assortment</p>
        <p>Entire stock of maternity intimate apparel and hosiery</p>
        <p>Discontini pantyhose for women</p>
        <p>Choose from a variety of styles and colors. Not</p>
        <p>all colors or styles in all stores Styles shown are representative of Seats assortment8:00 A.M. to 11:00 A.M. I 8:00 A.M. to 11:00 A.M. SATURDAY MORNING ONLY I SATURDAY MORNING ONLY</p>
        <p>25% OFF</p>
        <p>Entire stock of underwire bras</p>
        <p>999</p>
        <p>Shown: Ule 'n Lacey Ah^ Bra (R). Reg. $13.50</p>
        <p>Shown is just one from our huge selection of underwire bras.</p>
        <p>OVER 50% OFF</p>
        <p>Slouch socks for women</p>
        <p>QQc</p>
        <p>WWReg. $2.08 pair</p>
        <p>Wear them up or slouch them down, they look great with casual fashions.</p>
        <pb facs="00097006_0042" />
        <p>SUPER SATURDAY</p>
        <p>Entire stock of Name Brand womens and childrens athletic shoes</p>
        <p>Entire stock of womens and childrens Winner' athletic Shoes</p>
        <p>Womens Winner'" leather court athletic shoes</p>
        <p>97</p>
        <p>Entire stock of womens and childrens spring sandals</p>
        <p>Entire stock of womens spring dress shoes and Walker Comforts</p>
        <p>Be a winner in these rugged athletic shoes. Womens sizes.</p>
        <p>While quantitites last.</p>
        <p>Not available in Ashland</p>
        <p>14</p>
        <p>f ___</p>
        <p>woro $29.99 pr.</p>
        <p>While quantities last8:00 A.M. to 11:00 A.M. SATURDAY MORNING ONLY</p>
        <p>SAVE *5</p>
        <p>McKids  Walker shoes</p>
        <p>1299</p>
        <p>IfcReg. $17.99 pr.</p>
        <p>Hurry in Saturday morning and SAVE $5 on McKids"* walker shoes for kids.8:00 A.M. to 11:00 A.M. SATURDAY MORNING ONLY</p>
        <p>1/2 PRICE</p>
        <p>Softside garment bag</p>
        <p>22</p>
        <p>44</p>
        <p>I Reg. $44.88</p>
        <p>3-HOURS ONLY! Save on a garment bag that will keep your clothes neat.</p>
        <p>Available in larger stores only</p>
        <pb facs="00097006_0043" />
        <p>OPENATKAM!</p>
        <p>Mens canvas deck shoes</p>
        <p>Nows the time to stock up on "^97 your favorite deck shoes. # were$1499 Mens sizes.  </p>
        <p>While quantities last</p>
        <p>Entire stock of mens and boys Winner athietic shoes</p>
        <p>Entire stock of mens work shoes, oxfords and boots8:00 A.M. to 11:00 A.M. I 8:00 A.M. to 11:00 A.M. SATURDAY MORNING ONLY I SATURDAY MORNING ONLY</p>
        <p>*6 OFF</p>
        <p>RMens Winner  jogging shoes</p>
        <p>i99</p>
        <p>13!</p>
        <p>'Reg. $19.99 pr.</p>
        <p>Nylon and sueded split leather upper, rubber outsoles. Men's sizes.</p>
        <p>*13 OFF</p>
        <p>Mens Spice Tan work oxford</p>
        <p>29</p>
        <p>99</p>
        <p>' Reg. $42.99 pr.</p>
        <p>Has flexible full grain leather uppers, crepe rubber soles. Mens sizes.</p>
        <pb facs="00097006_0044" />
        <p>SUPER SATURDAYEntire stock of mens suits</p>
        <p>Fmi n/X I  e  mens  sport  coats</p>
        <p>** "" *''s and suH separates</p>
        <p>Ctwose from a variety of 4 PR. 5 u, solids and prints for men. Orion acrylic, stretch nylon.8:00 A.M. to 11:00 A.M. I 8:00 A.M. to 11:00 A.M. SATURDAY MORNING ONLY I SATURDAY MORNING ONLY</p>
        <p>... ..  .  .  wwvnwjr,  ouliHiyiuil,  wiHMloSiUn,  OO</p>
        <p>(Northwoods), Charleslon. WV, Chariotte. Columbia, Durtwm, FayettevHle. Greensboro, Hickory. Jacksonville, Raleigh. Roanoke. Wilmington and Wtnsfon-Salem.  </p>
        <p>1/2 PRICE</p>
        <p>Mens Store dress shirt</p>
        <p>5-6</p>
        <p>Long sleeve. Reg. $13 Short sleeve. Reg. $11</p>
        <p>Easy-care polyester and cotton blend in business solids. Men's sizes.</p>
        <p>SAVE *4</p>
        <p>Mens lO-pr. bag of sport socks</p>
        <p>e88</p>
        <p>WReg. $10.99 bag</p>
        <p>Over-the-calf length sport socks of cotton and polyester.</p>
        <pb facs="00097006_0045" />
        <p>OPEN AT SAM !</p>
        <p>Entire stock of mens dress slacks</p>
        <p>Hurry in today and save 25% on our huge selection of ntens dress slacks for every occasion. All in mens sizes.</p>
        <p>matched outfits &amp;gt;99</p>
        <p>Shirt Reg. $15</p>
        <p>$17 work pants . .12.99</p>
        <p>'Reg $16.99pair</p>
        <p>$22.99 Bib overalls............17.998:00 A.M. to 11:00 A.M. I 8:00 A.M. to 11:00 A.M. SATURDAY MORNING ONLY I SATURDAY MORNING ONLY</p>
        <p>37% OFF</p>
        <p>Mwia pocket T.eMrt</p>
        <p>3747</p>
        <p>f' SS-d,</p>
        <p>Cool and comfortable polyester and cotton T-shirts are machine washable.</p>
        <p>33% OFF</p>
        <p>Mens white work socks</p>
        <p>2 pkgs.^8</p>
        <p>Non-binding ribbed knit top. Wool, nylon and polyester blend. Package of 2. Reg. $5.99 pkg.</p>
        <pb facs="00097006_0046" />
        <p>SUPER SATURDAY</p>
        <p>Mini Lite Biinds Size 23-in.x42-in</p>
        <p>^99</p>
        <p>WReg.</p>
        <p>ENTiRE STOCK OF CURTAiNS SOLiDS AND PATTERNS</p>
        <p>'Reg. $7.99 All sizes on sale.</p>
        <p>28% OFF!</p>
        <p>OUR LOWEST PRICE THIS YEAR!</p>
        <p>inciudes:</p>
        <p>DraperyCurtainsPrisciiias Paneisand Much More!</p>
        <p>Keri textured drapery machine washable. Backed with acrylic foam.</p>
        <p>1788</p>
        <p>I # Reg. $24.99 m m 50x84 in. pr.8:00 A.M. to 11:00 A.M. I 8:00 A.M. to 11:00 A M SATURDAY MORNING ONLY I SATURDAY MORNING ONLY</p>
        <p>44% OFF!</p>
        <p>Good Quaiity Curtain Rod</p>
        <p>'Reg. $1.59 Limit 6</p>
        <p>Single curtain rod. Extends to 28-in.-48-in. White enamel finish. Standard open back rod.</p>
        <p>Light Filtering ^ Budget Shades</p>
        <p>199</p>
        <p>I Reg. $3.99</p>
        <p>Winter white color shade covers an area width of 36-in. and length of 54-in. Adjustable.</p>
        <p>Limite</p>
        <pb facs="00097006_0047" />
        <p>Open Home Sears Premium Bath Towel</p>
        <p>Hand towel, Reg. $5.99, 3.99 Wash cloth, Reg. $3.49. .2.99 Dress up your bath and stock up your linen closet now!</p>
        <p>4</p>
        <p>99</p>
        <p>BaihUHvel Reg. $9.998:00 A.M. to 11:00 A.M. SATURDAY MORNING ONLY</p>
        <p>inyl</p>
        <p>Shower Curtain Liner</p>
        <p>4</p>
        <p>99</p>
        <p>Reg..99</p>
        <p>Add the finishing touch to your shower with this vinyl liner. SANh GUARD treated to resist mildew.</p>
        <p>Comforters and Bedspreads Soiids and Patterns at ANY SiZE!</p>
        <p>'Reg. $29.99'$39.99</p>
        <p>Stock-up on our Perma-Prest'^</p>
        <p>Sheet Sets</p>
        <p>Full, Reg. $19.99.............12.99</p>
        <p>Queen, Reg. $29.99 ..........19.99</p>
        <p>Theres no need to iron these easy care ^ sheets. Machine wash and tumble dry.</p>
        <p>;99</p>
        <p>riWin8:00 A.M. to 11:00 A.M. SATURDAY MORNING ONLY</p>
        <p>1/2 PRICE!</p>
        <p>ALL Standard</p>
        <p>Size Poiyester-Fiiied Piiiows</p>
        <p>2-6</p>
        <p>49</p>
        <p>Reg. $S.99-$12.99 Standard size</p>
        <p>Queen, Reg. $8.99-$16.99....5.99-12.99 King, Reg. $12.99 19.99 .....8.99-14.99</p>
        <pb facs="00097006_0048" />
        <p>'Rag. $699.99 oaw piMM aiom dM on Mh^ mo</p>
        <p>Riveria 5-piece Dinette Set</p>
        <p>499*</p>
        <p>Rag $999.98</p>
        <p>Concord Queen Sleeper</p>
        <p>Queen-size (X)lonial style sofa sleeper. Covered in DuPont ^</p>
        <p>Antron nylon floral prints. Was $749.99</p>
        <p>Furniture and bedding are not available in Ashland. Beddey. Bluefleld. Burlington. Concord, Danville. Florence, Qastonia. GoMtboro. Qraanvllle. Hickory. High Poinl, Rock HiH, Rocky Mount. She)y and Williamson. While quantities last8:00 A.M. to 11:00 A.M. I 8:00 A.M. to 11:00 A.M. SATURDAY MORNING ONLY I SATURDAY MORNING ONLY</p>
        <p>IRE STOCK OF DISCONTINUED OCCASIONAL TABLE STYLES</p>
        <p>Quantities limited Some styles one ol a Mnd.</p>
        <p>In stock merchandise</p>
        <p>ENTIRE STOCK OF</p>
        <p>DISCONTINUED</p>
        <p>OTTOMANS</p>
        <p>WhHe quantities last In stock merchandise</p>
        <pb facs="00097006_0049" />
        <p>A. Skyline 1-in. mini-blinds come in 6 decorator colors.</p>
        <p>B. Great savings on the 64-in. length blinds also. Easy to clean and install. 31" thru 36" widths available at $9.99</p>
        <p>Reg $9.99 23-in x42-in.</p>
        <p>99</p>
        <p>Reg. $19 99 31-jn.x64-in.</p>
        <p>New Dimensions Queen Sleeper</p>
        <p>European-'Styte sofa-sleeper Plush acrylic, rayon blend velvet.</p>
        <p>399</p>
        <p>&amp;gt;99</p>
        <p>Was</p>
        <p>$849.99</p>
        <p>Some colore and sizes available by special order only.8:00 A.M. to 11:00 A.M. I 8:00 A.M. to 11:00 A.M. SATURDAY MORNING ONLY I SATURDAY MORNING ONLY</p>
        <p>j/2 PRICE</p>
        <p>ENTIRE STOCK OF</p>
        <p>REMNANTS</p>
        <p>Carpet Is not available in Ashland, Concord, Danville, Qastonla, Qreen-vme. High Pomi, Hickory, Rock HHI, ShetoyandWmiamson.</p>
        <p>40% OFF</p>
        <p>ENTIRE STOCK OF ACCENT OR</p>
        <p>DECORATOR</p>
        <p>RUGS</p>
        <p>Available in larger stores only</p>
        <pb facs="00097006_0050" />
        <p>Kenmore heavy-duty 3.9 peak HP canister vacuum</p>
        <p>Kenmore 4-stitch sewing machine</p>
        <p>1^88 Reg</p>
        <p>lOO $169.99</p>
        <p>Kenmore 2-speed upright vac</p>
        <p>QQ88 $199.99 in '68 Annual Catalog</p>
        <p>1.0 HP VCMA motor. 4-pile heights, dirt seeking floor light, fingertip power control,</p>
        <p>Magicord^i^ reel.  $349.99  in  'SS  Annual  Cat.8:00 A.M. to 11:00 A.M. I 8:00 A.M. to 11:00 A M SATURDAY MORNING ONLY I SATURDAY MORNING ONLY</p>
        <p>48% OFF</p>
        <p>Vacuum cieaner bag sale</p>
        <p>128 PKG</p>
        <p>I Reg. $2.49</p>
        <p>Bags fit Kenmore and most competitors models. Pkg. of 3.</p>
        <p>*23 OFF</p>
        <p>Convenient hand vac</p>
        <p>26</p>
        <p>88</p>
        <p>Reg. $49.99</p>
        <p>Convenient and powerful yet it weighs only 3-lbs.!</p>
        <p>Each of these advertised items is readily available for sale as adverti.iflri</p>
        <pb facs="00097006_0051" />
        <p>OPEN AT SAM!</p>
        <p>Electronic typewriter SRiOOO with speii corrector</p>
        <p>Spell Corrector contains elec- IC088 tronic dictionary with 35,000 |i^J%Reg words/phrases! Full-line cor-rection, more.</p>
        <p>9-number memory phone</p>
        <p>$29.99</p>
        <p>Sears cordless telephone</p>
        <p>0088ROS8:00 A.M. to il:00 A.M. I 8:00 A.M. to 11:00 A.M. SATURDAY MORNING ONLY | SATURDAY MORNING ONLY</p>
        <p>4 OFF</p>
        <p>Sears trimstyle telephone</p>
        <p>88</p>
        <p>8</p>
        <p>Rao $t299</p>
        <p>Desk or wall mountable. Great buy!</p>
        <p>7 OFF</p>
        <p>Fire-safe security chest</p>
        <p>22</p>
        <p>88</p>
        <p>__I  Reg $29.99 ^</p>
        <p>Provides fire protection up to 1550 for one-half hour! .2-cu. ft.</p>
        <p>Each of these advertised items is readily available for sale as advertised</p>
        <pb facs="00097006_0052" />
        <p>SUPER SATURDAY!</p>
        <p>25-in. color console TV with remote</p>
        <p>388</p>
        <p>88 Reg $499.99</p>
        <p>Remote control VHS VCR</p>
        <p>l68Sf.</p>
        <p>Watch your favorite movies on this VHS VCR!</p>
        <p>A great addition to anyone's home entertainment center! 14-day/2-event timer. 9-function remote.</p>
        <p>188</p>
        <p>88</p>
        <p>Reg.</p>
        <p>$269.998:00 A.M. to 11:00 A.M. I 8:00 A.M. to 11:00 A.m7 SATURDAY MORNING ONLY I SATURDAY MORNING ONLY</p>
        <p>27% OFF</p>
        <p>Certron T-120 VCR tape</p>
        <p>288Reg</p>
        <p>$3.99</p>
        <p>A great value on a high-quality VCR tape!</p>
        <p>SAVE *1</p>
        <p>SonyHF90 recording tapes</p>
        <p>688Reg</p>
        <p>$7.99</p>
        <p>Package of 6. Cassette recording tapes. Great value!</p>
        <p>Each of these advertised itents Is readi!y available for sale as advertised</p>
        <pb facs="00097006_0053" />
        <p>OPEM AT SAM !</p>
        <p>Musical</p>
        <p>keyboard</p>
        <p>Tabletop stereo with dual tape</p>
        <p>88 Reg $149,99</p>
        <p>f all day Sat</p>
        <p> SAVE I4|</p>
        <p>LXI 50-watt rack stereo system with dual cassette</p>
        <p>Compact disc adaptable! Just plug in any CD player. Equalizer, dual tape, semiautomatic turntable.</p>
        <p>288?</p>
        <p>CD player with remote control</p>
        <p>88 Reg $249.99</p>
        <p>Boombox with CD player</p>
        <p>238'</p>
        <p>$299.998:00 A.M. to 11:00 A.M. SATURDAY MORNING ONLY</p>
        <p>6 OFF</p>
        <p>Personal cassette with headphones</p>
        <p>988Reg</p>
        <p>$15.99</p>
        <p>Slide volume. Headphones included. Batteries extra.</p>
        <p>1688:00 A.M. to 11:00 A.M. SATURDAY MORNING ONLY</p>
        <p>I3 OFF</p>
        <p>Cassette tape player</p>
        <p>188</p>
        <p>21!</p>
        <p>I Rfg. $34.99</p>
        <p>Voice-activated compact tape recorder. Tape counter.</p>
        <p>Each of these advertised items is readily available for sale as advertised</p>
        <pb facs="00097006_0054" />
        <p>SUPER SATURDAY!</p>
        <p>Kenmore electric range*368</p>
        <p>'S46999</p>
        <p>Range connector extra</p>
        <p>Kenmore self-cleaning range</p>
        <p>488^Kenmore compact microwave oven</p>
        <p>0.5-cu. ft. capacity oven features easy operation controls. High, low and defrost power levels.</p>
        <p>129</p>
        <p>98</p>
        <p>Reg.</p>
        <p>S209.998:00 A.M. to 11:00 A.M. I 8:00 A.M. to 11:00 A.M. SATURDAY MORNING ONLY I SATURDAY MORNING ONLY</p>
        <p>*10 OFF</p>
        <p>7-pc. cookware</p>
        <p>88</p>
        <p>19</p>
        <p>Reg. $2999</p>
        <p>Aluminum cookware set. Great value!</p>
        <p>advertised items is read ly availabte for sale as advertised</p>
        <p>7 OFF</p>
        <p>Microwave cookware set</p>
        <p>m</p>
        <p>\T</p>
        <p>Reg. $24.99</p>
        <p>8-piece cookware set.</p>
        <p>Ctrakware not available in Ashland, Danville, Gastonia, Greenville, High Point. Shelby and WWIameon.</p>
        <pb facs="00097006_0055" />
        <p>OPEN AT K AM</p>
        <p>Kenmore built-in dishwasher with Ultra-Wash system!</p>
        <p>3-level cleaning system. Nor- J mal and light wash, pots/pans ^ cycle, rinse/hold, Power Miser, much more.</p>
        <p>Reg. 1569.99</p>
        <p>Kenmore built-in compactor</p>
        <p>^268s99</p>
        <p>Kenmore convertible compactor</p>
        <p>*288^8-00 A.M. to 11:00 A.M. I 8:00 A.M. to 11:00 A.M. SATURDAY MORNING ONLY I SATURDAY MORNING ONLY</p>
        <p>3 OFF</p>
        <p>Compactor trash bags</p>
        <p>4^ Reg $7 99 Pkg.ot12</p>
        <p>12 compactor bags in a package. Plastic-lined.</p>
        <p>Each of</p>
        <p>4 OFF</p>
        <p>Metal canister set</p>
        <p>8</p>
        <p>88</p>
        <p>Reg. $12.99</p>
        <p>4-piece metal canister set. Great buy!</p>
        <p>Cwnialir eel not available biAaMaiKl,Oame,</p>
        <p>readily available for sale as advertised</p>
        <pb facs="00097006_0056" />
        <p>$||PER $ ATU^D AY 1Kenmore large-capacity washerKenmore large-^ capacity dryer</p>
        <p>Kenmore 6-cycle washer288</p>
        <p>Kenmore 2-cycle dryer</p>
        <p>White</p>
        <p>Reg. $339.99248</p>
        <p>Whtte</p>
        <p>Reg. $269 99</p>
        <p>Kenmore extra-capacity laundry team!</p>
        <p>Reg. $499.99 2-speed, 9-cycle</p>
        <p>washer. Dual Action agitator, wf O</p>
        <p>White.</p>
        <p>Reg. $389.99 6-cycle dryer with $OQQ AutoFabricMaster,muchmore.White. dlOO</p>
        <p>8:00 A.M. to il:00 A.M. I 8:00 A.M. to 11:00 A.M. SATURDAY MORNING ONLY I SATURDAY MORNING ONLY</p>
        <p>eISc"</p>
        <p>hot pot 12</p>
        <p>Rag. $19.99</p>
        <p>5-oz. Adjustable control for low to boil.</p>
        <p>Not available hi Ashland, Shey and Williamson</p>
        <p>6i</p>
        <p>Rag. $9.99</p>
        <p>Snooze alarm dial light, uses 1 AA battery.</p>
        <p>Each of these advertised items is readily available for sale as advertised</p>
        <pb facs="00097006_0057" />
        <p>OPENATKAM!</p>
        <p>Kenmore large-capacity laundry teami</p>
        <p>Reg. $469.99 2-speeds, 8-cycles. $OfiQ 3-water levels, more. White  Www</p>
        <p>Reg. $379.99 3-cycle dryer. Top- $07ft mount lint screen. White.  f  O</p>
        <p>Kenmore Ali-in-One system</p>
        <p>Kenmore 24-in. washer</p>
        <p>598</p>
        <p>Whtte.  ^</p>
        <p>Reg $799.99  WW  Reg  $499.99</p>
        <p>Dryer 0 mie p08:00 A.M. to 11:00 A.M. I 8:00 A.M. to 11:00 A.M. SATURDAY MORNING ONLY I SATURDAY MORNING ONLY</p>
        <p>,*50FF</p>
        <p>2-slice</p>
        <p>toaster</p>
        <p>14</p>
        <p>88</p>
        <p>'Reg. $19.99</p>
        <p>2-slice capacity, light to dark setting.</p>
        <p>NotevaHeNein Ashland, Shelby and WWiamson</p>
        <p>Each of th</p>
        <p>.7 OFF</p>
        <p>lO-cup</p>
        <p>coffeemaker</p>
        <p>17</p>
        <p>88</p>
        <p>Reg. $24.99</p>
        <p>Makes great coffee everytime!</p>
        <p>NotavaNabtein Ashland, Shelby and Williamson</p>
        <p>readily available for sale as advertised</p>
        <pb facs="00097006_0058" />
        <p>Kenmore 12.0-cu. ft. chest freezer</p>
        <p>288</p>
        <p>White</p>
        <p>Reg. $389.9</p>
        <p>Kenmore 19.9-cu. ft. refrigerator</p>
        <p>$</p>
        <p>Kenmore 19.9-cu. ft. refrigerator/freezer</p>
        <p>All-frostless convenience. Du- $</p>
        <p>588</p>
        <p>White</p>
        <p>Reg. $799.99</p>
        <p>rabie seamless liner, Power Miser, textured steel doors, much more. White.</p>
        <p>with Icemaker $80 morel</p>
        <p>678</p>
        <p>Reg leeeee8:00 A.M. to 11:00 A.M. I 8:00 A.M. to 11:00 A.M SATURDAY MORNING ONLY I SATURDAY MORNING ONLY</p>
        <p>blender F88</p>
        <p>Reg. $24.99</p>
        <p>44-oz. plastic jar, removable cutter assembly. Kenmore.</p>
        <p>wt available in Ashland, Shelby and Williamson</p>
        <p>processor</p>
        <p>19</p>
        <p>88</p>
        <p>Reg. $29.99</p>
        <p>"Shortie" food chopper. 1-cup bowl capacity.</p>
        <p>Not availabis h Ashland. Shey and Wiltlamaon</p>
        <p>Each of these advertised items is readily available for sale as advertised</p>
        <pb facs="00097006_0059" />
        <p>OPEN AT SAM 1Kenmore 19.8-cu. ft. side-by-side refrigerator/freezer</p>
        <p>All-frostless. Textured steel ^ doors, durable seamless liner. ^</p>
        <p>Meat pan, crisper. Power Miser, much more! White.</p>
        <p>lo* thru door!</p>
        <p>Reg. $999.99Kenmore 21.6-cu. ft. side-by-side</p>
        <p>QAQ98 White.</p>
        <p>Reg. $1199.99Kenmore compact refrigerator</p>
        <p>*128</p>
        <p>White.</p>
        <p>Reg. $149.998:00 A.M. to 11:00 A.M. I 8:00 A.M. to 11:00 A.M. SATURDAY MORNING ONLY I SATURDAY MORNING ONLY</p>
        <p>6 OFF</p>
        <p>Gooseneck</p>
        <p>lamp</p>
        <p>8</p>
        <p>88</p>
        <p> Reg $14 99</p>
        <p>Great desk lamp! Adjusts up to 18-in.</p>
        <p>Awlabto in larger stores only</p>
        <p>20 OFF</p>
        <p>Metai tabie lamp</p>
        <p>188</p>
        <p>29'</p>
        <p>Reg $49.99</p>
        <p>Very affordable metal table lamp. 3-way switch. 31-in. high.</p>
        <p>Available In larger stores only</p>
        <p>Each of these advertised items is readily available for sale as advertised</p>
        <pb facs="00097006_0060" />
        <p>SUPERSATURDAY!</p>
        <p>Craftsman 3/8-HP 2-speecl Sander/ Polisher with Case</p>
        <p>Reg. 7S.99</p>
        <p>Craftsman 19-pc. Screwdriver Bit Set  with Case $Q99</p>
        <p>9 QiMmitlw Limitad</p>
        <p>Craftsman TMn. circular Saw with Extra Blade</p>
        <p>fifi Powerful 2-HP Craftsman motor. 5000 RPMs for fast cutting. Carbide tipped blade.</p>
        <p>Reg. $49.998:00 A.M. to 11:00 A.M. I 8:00 A.M. to 11:00 A.M. SATURDAY MORNING ONLY I SATURDAY MORNING ONLY</p>
        <p>SAVE 55*</p>
        <p>WD-40 IWIn Pack</p>
        <p>244limit 10</p>
        <p>PER CUSTOMER Rag. $2.99</p>
        <p>Two 9-ounce spray cans. Multi-use lubrican!.</p>
        <p>SAVE 30%</p>
        <p>Propane gas Fuel Cylinder</p>
        <p>159 LIMIT 10</p>
        <p>PER CUSTOMER Reg. $2.29</p>
        <p>14-ounce fuel cylinder.</p>
        <pb facs="00097006_0061" />
        <p>OPEN AT SAM !</p>
        <p>Craftsman 12-inch band Saw/Sander</p>
        <p>297</p>
        <p>F00 V2 HP. cuts wood up to 6x12 in. Built-jn worklight. Cast aluminum table 1725 RPM.</p>
        <p>Reg. $499.99  Limited  quantities</p>
        <p>Craftsman 10-inch  Craftsman 2.25-HP</p>
        <p>compound miter saw  i2-gai. vac.</p>
        <p>QQRog.8ep. *5 prices</p>
        <p>total $138.958:00 A.M. to 11:00 A.M. I 8:00 A.M. to 11:00 A.M. SATURDAY MORNING ONLY I SATURDAY MORNING ONLY</p>
        <p>SAVE</p>
        <p>OVER S0%6-ft. Extension Cord</p>
        <p>LIMIT 10</p>
        <p>PER CUSTOMER WW Reg. $1.49</p>
        <p>Triple outlet, polorized. 13-amp. UL listed. Brown.</p>
        <p>1/2 PRICE</p>
        <p>Fluorescent TUbe</p>
        <p>LIMIT 10 VlVI^ PER CUSTOMER W W Reg $1.99</p>
        <p>Ideal accessory for fluorescent shop light or worklight. Indoor use only.</p>
        <pb facs="00097006_0062" />
        <p>SUPER SATURDAY!</p>
        <p>Craftsman 88-pc. mechanics tool set</p>
        <p>Craftsman 16-drawer chest and roll-a-way tool storage</p>
        <p>Craftsman 3-drawer mechanics tool storage chest</p>
        <p>Spedai Purchase QuantWes Umiled</p>
        <p>299</p>
        <p>98</p>
        <p>Reg. Sep. prices total $U1.99</p>
        <p>39</p>
        <p>99</p>
        <p>Reg. sep. prices total 959.99</p>
        <p>Less than $1 per tool. Standard and metric sizes. Includes Vs, %, V2-in. drive tools, sockets, combination wrenches, 3 steel ratchets.</p>
        <p>*11 any Craftsman hand tool lails to give complete satisfaction, return it lor free teplacemeni.8:00 A.M. to 11:00 A.M. I 8:00 A.M. to 11:00 A.M. SATURDAY MORNING ONLY I SATURDAY MORNING ONLY</p>
        <p>SAVE *4</p>
        <p>8-pc. Hair Clipper Set</p>
        <p>I Reg. $16.99</p>
        <p>Set includes clipper, blade guard, 4 cutting guides, Va-in. cut and bending comb, barber comb, oil and instructions.</p>
        <p>Not available In Ashland Shelby and Williamson</p>
        <p>1/2 PRICE</p>
        <p>Sears Rotomatic* Electric Shaver</p>
        <p>19</p>
        <p>&amp;gt;99</p>
        <p>' Reg. $39.99</p>
        <p>Electric shaver has three floating heads with 36 steel blades.</p>
        <p>$49.99 Rechargeable shaver</p>
        <p>SAVE $20 ..............29.99</p>
        <p>Not available In Ashland Shelby and Williamson</p>
        <pb facs="00097006_0063" />
        <p>OPEN AT SAM !</p>
        <p>Weatherbeater* K) Exterior Low-Luster Satin</p>
        <p>99</p>
        <p>9</p>
        <p>'gal. Reg. $19.99</p>
        <p>Our premium quality exterior acrylic latex house arid trim paint. Mildew resistant. One-coat coverage.</p>
        <p>For one-coat results, aH Sears paints must be applied as directed. Limited warranty for years specified. See store for details.</p>
        <p>Easy Living Flat or (filing White</p>
        <p>10^ R9 $19 </p>
        <p>Easy Living Semi-gloss</p>
        <p>Reg. $19.998:00 A.M. to 11:00 A.M. SATURDAY MORNING ONLY8:00 A.M. to 11:00 A.M. SATURDAY MORNING ONLY</p>
        <p>1/2 PRICE</p>
        <p>Ughtweight 2-fft. Wood Step Stool</p>
        <p>Af</p>
        <p>"Reg. $9.99</p>
        <p>Light duty. 200-lb. working load. Ideal for household chores.</p>
        <p>1/2 PRICE</p>
        <p>Light Duty 6-fL Wood Step Ladder</p>
        <p>188</p>
        <p>18!</p>
        <p>4011t</p>
        <p>fReg. $39.99</p>
        <p>Sturdy ladder for household use. Grooved 3-in. wide steps. 200-lb. working load.</p>
        <p> 21</p>
        <pb facs="00097006_0064" />
        <p>SUPER SATURDAY!</p>
        <p>Craftsman 4.0 RP* Power-Propelled</p>
        <p>22-in. cut Reg. $419.99 *RP means reaerve power</p>
        <p>Craftsman 4.5 RP* Power Propelled</p>
        <p>22-in. out TWW Reg. $599 99 *RP means reserve power</p>
        <p>Reg. $1299.99</p>
        <p>Syncro-balanced engine, electric start. 36-inch mowing deck. Twin-blade, side-discharge, 4-speed plus reverse.</p>
        <p>$279.99  Permanex</p>
        <p>ir.............249.99</p>
        <p>rractofs require some assembiy8:00 A.M. to 11:00 A.M. I 8:00 A.M. to 11:00 A.M. SATURDAY MORNING ONLY | SATURDAY MORNING ONLY</p>
        <p>1/2 PRICE</p>
        <p>Craftsman Garden Tools</p>
        <p>A. Lawnrake, reg. $14.99........7.49</p>
        <p>B. Round-point shovel reg. $15.99 ... .7.99</p>
        <p>C.Bow rake, reg. $14.99........7.49</p>
        <p>1/2 PRICE</p>
        <p>Craftsman Wood-spintlng Tools</p>
        <p>899</p>
        <p>as. Reg. $17.99</p>
        <p>D.Maul</p>
        <p>E. 36-in, axe</p>
        <p>F. 8-lb. sledge</p>
        <pb facs="00097006_0065" />
        <p>OPEN AT SAM!</p>
        <p>Craftsman 20&amp;gt;HP 44-in. Garden Doctor</p>
        <p>Reg. $2999.99</p>
        <p>Twin cylinder engine. 44-in. triple blade mowing deck with side discharge. Elecronic package. Deluxe seat. Automotive-type drive system built into heavy duty transaxle.</p>
        <p>Tractors require some assembly</p>
        <p>Sears 4.0-cu. ft</p>
        <p>Wheelbarrow</p>
        <p>9C99</p>
        <p>iLVReg. $39.99</p>
        <p>Craftsman Vac Shredder/Bagger</p>
        <p>299^ $399.998:00 A.M. to 11:00 A.M. I 8:00 A.M. to 11:00 A.M. SATURDAY MORNING ONLY I SATURDAY MORNING ONLY</p>
        <p>1/2 PRICE</p>
        <p>22-ln. Bushwacker* Hedge nrlmmer</p>
        <p>34</p>
        <p>99</p>
        <p>rpeg. $6999</p>
        <p>22-ln. blade length. Ve-HP. 1-year warranty. See store for details.</p>
        <p>1/2 PRICE</p>
        <p>Craftsman 50-ft. Vinyl Garden Hose</p>
        <p>749</p>
        <p>ff Reg. $14.99</p>
        <p>Reinforced vinyl, %-in. X 50-ft. 5-year replacement warranty. See store for details.</p>
        <pb facs="00097006_0066" />
        <p>SUPER SATURDAY!</p>
        <p>Al I PATIO  Kenmore 24,000 BTU</p>
        <p>FURNITURE  *"*</p>
        <p>IN STOCK  IIQ99</p>
        <p>119 Reg. $149.99</p>
        <p>ALL POOL CHEMICALS IN STOCK</p>
        <p>ENTIRE STOCK STOCK OF POOLS</p>
        <p>Kenmore 40,000 BTU 523 sq. in. gas grill</p>
        <p>10099  Upfront dual controls, push-</p>
        <p>lOSJ 9,10 00  ignition.  60/40 porcelain-</p>
        <p> w Reg $249 99  g^eei  g^j^j ^eat indica-</p>
        <p>I  tor.</p>
        <p>Gas grills require assembly 8:00 A.M. to 11:00 A.M. |  8:00  A.M.  to 11:00 A.M. SATURDAY MORNING ONLY | SATURDAY MORNING ONLY</p>
        <p>SAVE *15</p>
        <p>Craftsman</p>
        <p>Spreaders</p>
        <p>A88 ^</p>
        <p>Reg.. $39.99</p>
        <p>Broadcast spreads 4 to 8-ft 24-in. wide drop spreader. Both hi density polyethylene.</p>
        <p>Easy assembly</p>
        <p>SAVE *6</p>
        <p>Craftsman Plastic Sprayer</p>
        <p>999</p>
        <p>Re^!'$15.99</p>
        <p>1.3-gallon size capacity. High density polyethylene tank.</p>
        <p>Each of these advertised items is readily available for sale as advertised</p>
        <pb facs="00097006_0067" />
        <p> 10% OFF ALREADY LOW SALE PRICES ON ALL NEW IN-CARTON MODELS</p>
        <p>.20% OFF ALREADY LOW SALE PRICES ON SELECTED OUT-OF-CARTON, ONE-OF -A-KIND DISPLAY MODELS</p>
        <p>In some stores RETURNED OR DAMAGED models are available at an addltonal 20% OFF already reduced prices.</p>
        <p>Kenmore 30-pt. Capacity Dehumidifier</p>
        <p>OOQ99</p>
        <p>iLWReg. $29999</p>
        <p>Washeriess Bath Faucet |Q88</p>
        <p>19 Reg. $2999</p>
        <p>8:00 A.M. to 11:00 A.M. |  8:00  A.M.  to 11:00 A.M.</p>
        <p>SATURDAY MORNING ONLY I SATURDAY MORNING ONLY1/2 PRICE</p>
        <p>ALL TOILET SEATS IN STOCK</p>
        <p>SAVE *10</p>
        <p>Bath Faucets in 3 Finishes |Q88</p>
        <p>19 Reg $29 88</p>
        <p>Choose chrome, antique or polished brass. 2-year warranty.</p>
        <p>Limited warranty against drips lor the years specified store tot detaile.</p>
        <p>Each of these advertised items is readily available for sale as advertised</p>
        <pb facs="00097006_0068" />
        <p>SUPER SATURDAY</p>
        <p>]</p>
        <p>.Ss'fc'i</p>
        <p>k/A\1</p>
        <p>m -^1^.</p>
        <p>mn^jy</p>
        <p>RoadHandler Radial 45</p>
        <p>34-35% OFF</p>
        <p>199</p>
        <p>11550R13 Reg. $67.99</p>
        <p>&amp;gt; Made by Michelin backed by SEARS!</p>
        <p>ON OUH</p>
        <p>OF W|pf Lufc 40,000-mile</p>
        <p>*8* *11 OFF! Guardsman Response</p>
        <p>Reg $34.99; 155/80R13  ^</p>
        <p>43!</p>
        <p>4S,000-mito raaraul wanaoly</p>
        <p>RoadHandlar Radial 45</p>
        <p>Sala</p>
        <p>Prioa</p>
        <p>RoadHandler Radial 46</p>
        <p>Rag</p>
        <p>Price</p>
        <p>Sale</p>
        <p>Prica</p>
        <p>leseonis</p>
        <p>17S0ni3</p>
        <p>18SD0RI3</p>
        <p>18S7SR14</p>
        <p>19S/7SR14</p>
        <p>574.30</p>
        <p>K.90</p>
        <p>0290</p>
        <p>04.00</p>
        <p>09.00</p>
        <p>540.00</p>
        <p>5340</p>
        <p>50JO</p>
        <p>5149</p>
        <p>0400</p>
        <p>20S/75R14</p>
        <p>20S/7SR1S</p>
        <p>2IS7SR15</p>
        <p>22S/7SR1S</p>
        <p>235^15</p>
        <p>510700</p>
        <p>10000</p>
        <p>114.00</p>
        <p>11800</p>
        <p>11000</p>
        <p>50000</p>
        <p>7800</p>
        <p>7700</p>
        <p>26</p>
        <p>99</p>
        <p>'each</p>
        <p>All-season, 2-steel belts</p>
        <p>40,000-mile weaiwit anaily</p>
        <p>Guardsman</p>
        <p>Response</p>
        <p>2?</p>
        <p>Pnce</p>
        <p>saa</p>
        <p>Ffloa</p>
        <p>Guardsman</p>
        <p>Raaponaa</p>
        <p>Nao</p>
        <p>moa</p>
        <p>5ala</p>
        <p>Pilea</p>
        <p>1S6I80R13</p>
        <p>16&amp;amp;80R13</p>
        <p>17S0OR13</p>
        <p>1850OR13</p>
        <p>20S/7SR14</p>
        <p>534 00 4590 4090</p>
        <p>52.00</p>
        <p>6290</p>
        <p>53000</p>
        <p>3000</p>
        <p>3000</p>
        <p>4200</p>
        <p>5200</p>
        <p>195/75R14</p>
        <p>2067SR15</p>
        <p>21S75R15</p>
        <p>22S/75R15</p>
        <p>235/75R15</p>
        <p>550.00</p>
        <p>62.00</p>
        <p>54.00</p>
        <p>57.90</p>
        <p>5099</p>
        <p>54000</p>
        <p>5100</p>
        <p>5400</p>
        <p>5700</p>
        <p>5000</p>
        <p>8:00 A.M. to 11:00 A.M. I 8:00 A.M. to 11:00 A.M. SATURDAY MORNING ONLY I SATURDAY MORNING ONLY</p>
        <p>HR</p>
        <p>: "m'</p>
        <p>SAVE 3.11!</p>
        <p>Car vac</p>
        <p>f88</p>
        <p>$11.99</p>
        <p>8</p>
        <p>12-ft. cord, lightweight and powerful.</p>
        <p>Save 25%</p>
        <p>ALL Car Waxes and Polishes In Stock!</p>
        <pb facs="00097006_0069" />
        <p>________________</p>
        <p>Heavy-duty Gas Shocks</p>
        <p>  ,  ^  ^  INSTALLED</p>
        <p>Heavy-duty Gas shocks have</p>
        <p>an extra large piston and gas "J Mn30</p>
        <p>charging to provide a better g</p>
        <p>ride.  Reg.  $41.98 pr. installed</p>
        <p>Craftsman</p>
        <p>starter/charger</p>
        <p>Reg $119.99</p>
        <p>50/170 AMP charger</p>
        <p>Sears X-cargo carrier</p>
        <p>Provides up to IS cu. ft. of storage.8:00 A.M. to 11:00 A.M. I 8:00 A.M. to 11:00 A.M. SATURDAY MORNING ONLY I SATURDAY MORNING ONLY</p>
        <p>SAVE 40%</p>
        <p>ALL SEAT Covers in STOCKIi</p>
        <p>Choose from a huge variety of fabrics and colors.</p>
        <p>SAVE II</p>
        <p>i6-ft. 4-gauae Booster cables</p>
        <p>Vinyl-coated copper wires.</p>
        <p>18</p>
        <p>Reg $29.99</p>
        <pb facs="00097006_0070" />
        <p>Sears iO/2-amp battery charger</p>
        <p>All Car Stereos In Stock</p>
        <p>Choose from Sears entire stock of car stereos and SAVE $10-$50.</p>
        <p>ALL MATS INSTOCK</p>
        <p>Lots of colors and styles Reg. $39.99</p>
        <p>all 25% off!  automatically.8:00 A.M. to 11:00 A.M. I 8:00 A.M. to 11:00 A.M. SATURDAY MORNING ONLY I SATURDAY MORNING ONLY</p>
        <p>SAVE 30%</p>
        <p>oil filters</p>
        <p>166</p>
        <p>S2.39 I</p>
        <p>In sizes for most cars.SAVE 40%Spectrum Oil</p>
        <p>Reg. COC $1.14 qt. QqJ;</p>
        <p>Limit 24. In 10W30 or 10W40.</p>
        <pb facs="00097006_0071" />
        <p>OPEN AT SAM!</p>
        <p>ALL Boats and Motors in Stock!!</p>
        <p>Shown: Reg. $469.99 a^^oa 1.VH..I  388</p>
        <p>boat</p>
        <p>Plano Tackle Box</p>
        <p>Reg. $16.99 7</p>
        <p>Has lift-out tray, light-</p>
        <p>Entire Stock off Tents</p>
        <p>Choose from Sears entire stock and save 25% to 50% off I Sporting equipment is not available in Ashland, Shelby, Williamson.</p>
        <p>Basketball back board and pole Goal and neL</p>
        <p>88</p>
        <p>While they lasll</p>
        <p>Nat la extra</p>
        <p>While They</p>
        <p>Gym sets or Blg-T set</p>
        <p>sar* 88</p>
        <p>While they last! WW Larder stores orXy</p>
        <p>8:00 A.M. to 11:00 A.M. SATURDAY MORNING ONLY</p>
        <p>8:00 A.M. to 11:00 A.M. SATURDAY MORNING ONLY</p>
        <p>25% OFF!</p>
        <p>All ffishing LURES.</p>
        <p>In STOCK!!</p>
        <p>Hurry in and save stock-up!</p>
        <p>9!</p>
        <p>25% OFF!</p>
        <p>All Rods,</p>
        <p>Reels, and Fish combos!</p>
        <p>Choose from Sears entire stock and save 25%!</p>
        <p>M.</p>
        <pb facs="00097006_0072" />
        <p>SUPER SATURDAY!</p>
        <p>Motorized treadmill measures time, speed</p>
        <p>O^Q88 Fleg $699.99 Limited Quantity</p>
        <p>Physiofit bike for men or women</p>
        <p>88</p>
        <p>88 Hag. $139.99 single speed</p>
        <p>wtth'32-lb. weight set</p>
        <p>888 Heg. Sep. prices total $199 98</p>
        <p>lie timer</p>
        <p>QQ88 Heg. $199.99 in 87 catalog</p>
        <p>CXI</p>
        <p>Hyaulic shocks.8:00 A.M. to 11:00 A.M. SATURDAY MORNING ONLY</p>
        <p>50% OFF</p>
        <p>ALLICf CHISTS INSTOCK!</p>
        <p>Exam^e;</p>
        <p>55 qt. Ice Chest</p>
        <p>Heg.  $22.99</p>
        <p>Sate  11.49</p>
        <p>Mai-in</p>
        <p>Rebate  S.OO</p>
        <p>Tourney All Terrain bike for function fitness and fun!</p>
        <p>Mens and womens styles A088 featuFe strong steel lugged JfO frame with oversize downtube.</p>
        <p>Heg</p>
        <p>$139.998:00 A.M. to 11:00 A.M. SATURDAY MORNING ONLY</p>
        <p>*30 OFF</p>
        <p>Kids scooter for active fun days</p>
        <p>Reg. $8999</p>
        <p>38</p>
        <p>88</p>
        <p>Simkar to illustration</p>
        <p>Satisfaction guaranteed or your money back</p>
        <p>Sears, Ro^tnk and Co., 40</p>
        <p>AU STOnn NOW OKM BOTUmMV MOmaNQS r t AM</p>
        <p>NC: Burimgon, CtwriotM (Eastland. Southpadi). Concord Ouitiam</p>
        <p>FtyeltovlSa, GMatonla, GoKMoro. Ofoanstoro. Orawivllla. Hickory</p>
        <p>l^^j^^jNckaonville. Raiagh. Rocky Mount. WBmlngton.</p>
        <p>Charlaaion (Cadal. Norlhwooda) Cotumbla. Floronco. Myroa Beach, Rock Hi* DanvHIo, LyncMturg. Roanoke  AY:  Ashland</p>
        <p>BartwursvMa. BecHay, Bluetleld. Chaileslon</p>
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