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        <pb facs="00097037_0001" />
        <p>THE DAILY REFLECTOR</p>
        <p>Greenville, N.C.Sunday Morning, September 18,1988</p>
        <p>75C</p>
        <p>^ 200 Feared Drowned In Monterrey, Mexico</p>
        <p>RAGING WATERS  What is left of a merrv-go-round is dragged by the raging waters of the Santa Catarina River down a normally dry riverbed in IVIonterry, Mexico, that was the site of soccer and baseball fields, and</p>
        <p>basketball courts. Officials said about 2(K) people were feared drowned when passenger buses were trapped in the rising waters and overturned. (AP I.aserphoto)</p>
        <p>Namphy Ousted In Coup</p>
        <p>By MICHAEL NORTON Associated Press Writer</p>
        <p>PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti (AP) -Military ruler Lt. Gen. Henri Namphy was ousted in a military coup Saturday night and escorted under guard to the international airport, a government spokesman said.</p>
        <p>The government reported Nam-phys ouster several hours after shooting broke out at the main plaza</p>
        <p>in front of the presidential palace. The gunshots sent dozens of people fleeing for cover in what appeared to be fighting between army factions, witnesses said.</p>
        <p>Namphy was arrested and escorted to the airport,  at about 8:15 p.m. in a convoy of military vehicles led by a armored personnel carrier, Frantz Lubin, director of information, told The Associated Press.</p>
        <p>Lubin said that possible members of a new military junta are Foreign Affairs Minister Brig. Gen. Herard Abraham, Presidential Guard Commander Gen. Prosper Avril, Infor-</p>
        <p>(See NAMPHY. A-2)</p>
        <p>(Related stories onA-12) ByCAMROSSIE Associated Press Writer</p>
        <p>MONTERREY, Mexico (AP)  About 200 people were feared drowned Saturday after a river swollen by Hurricane Gilberts heavy rains surged over its banks, sweeping away four buses and flooding scores of homes, authorities said.</p>
        <p>The raging Santa Catarina River swallowed cars, crushed houses and flooded large areas of this industrial city of 3 million about 110 miles from the Texas border. Much of Monterrey was without power and drinking water late Saturday and the airport was closed.</p>
        <p>Gov. Jorge Trevino declared the state of Nuevo Leon a disaster area.</p>
        <p>It was a terrible thing, the worst thing that could have happened here, said his spokesman, Geraldo Castro. This disaster is unprecedented in the state.</p>
        <p>The hurricane, the strongest on record, was downgraded to a tropical depression Saturday after leaving 100 othere dead across the Caribbean, Mexicos Yucatan Peninsula and Texas.</p>
        <p>Castro confirmed early police estimates that at least 200 were feared dead in Monterrey alone. There may be even more, he said.</p>
        <p>He said there were at least 200 people aboard the four buses. I dont think many of them could have escaped. he said.</p>
        <p>Castro said at least 20,000 people in the state were homeless, 12,000 of them in Monterrey. In the suburb of San Pedro-Garza Garcia, about 200 houses were swept away.</p>
        <p>We all left with only the clothes on our backs, Victorio Cruz said as he picked through mud, gravel and the cement blocks where his two-room house had stood.</p>
        <p>Red Cross spokesman Adelberto Salas said only 13 of the estimated 200 passengers on four buses overturned by the surging river in Monterrey were saved.</p>
        <p>By Saturday afternoon, at least 32 bodies had been recovered. Twenty bodies were pulled out of the river in Monterrey and another 12 or 13 downstream in Juarez and Cadereyta, according to coroners offices in Monterrey and nearby Guadalupe.</p>
        <p>The current carried more bodies but we dont how many there are, said Guadalupe Coroner Juventio Guerrero. A lot of bodies cannot be recovered because they are in the river.</p>
        <p>Four policemen were swept to their deaths trying to rescue the passengers, said Comandante Antulio Alejo, commander of the Cobra police unit. The National Civil Defense System in Mexico City said two volunteers helping the police officers were missing.</p>
        <p>Alejo also said that at the same spot There are several cars buried there also and we understand that</p>
        <p>some bodies are still in some of the cars.</p>
        <p>As the water began to subside Saturday afternoon the wheels and chassis of one overturned bus could be seen. The vehicle was buried up to the wheels by mud and rocks.</p>
        <p>Nearby and partially buried by mud were construction machines and other vehicles that had been carried by the raging waters into the river.</p>
        <p>Eduardo Pichardo, an employee of Transportes Frontera in Monterrey, said about 64 people were aboard the two buses from his company. He said one bus was en route to Monterrey from the border city of Nuevo Laredo and the other was on a run from Monterrey to Mexico City.</p>
        <p>Police said the buses were coming from the direction of Saltillo, about 55 miles west of Monterrey. Saltillo, a city of about 450,000, is the capital of neighboring Coahuila state. Police said the buses probably had been diverted from their original routes because of flooded roads.</p>
        <p>Sanchez said rising water stranded the buses on a low-lying stretch of road parallel to the river. As a special police unit, the Cobras, tried to rescue the passengers, the current increased, the water rose and the buses overturned.</p>
        <p>Downstream from Monterrey, bodies were being recovered from-the river, police said.</p>
        <p>(See200, A-12)</p>
        <p>Radon No Problem In Eastern N.C.</p>
        <p>By STUART SAVAGE Reflector Staff Writer Radon  a naturally occurring invisible. odorless and radioactive gas - could be causing lung cancer, killing 20,0(X) people a year in the United States, the Environmental Protection Agency and the Public Health Service said last week.</p>
        <p>But Dr. Tim' Monroe, director of the Pitt County Health Department, said Friday that residents of Pitt and other eastern North Carolina counties have little to fear.</p>
        <p>Its not a problem in this state, Monroe said, explaining that radon, gas is a byproduct of the natural radioactive decay of uranium.</p>
        <p>There are higher concentrations in some areas than others. Its much higher in areas where the underlying geology is dense rock formations. In the mountains and Piedmont of North Carolina there is more uranium in the geology.</p>
        <p>But in the eastern Coastal Plains, the underlying geology is primarily marine sediment, Monroe said, resulting in the concentration of radon being very low.</p>
        <p>Citing the results of a survey of all 100 counties in the state 18 months ago, Monroe said radon levels in Pitt County were in the very low risk category, with all levels more than 75 percent below the level at which the EPA suggests something needs to be done.</p>
        <p>There is very minimum concern in this area, Monroe said. The mountains and Piedmont are much more affected by radon that the Coastal Plain.</p>
        <p>The gas, which seeps into homes through water systems, through masonry or woodwork, can be concentrated in closed homes. Those with poor ventilation are especially conducive to radon buildup, Monroe said.</p>
        <p>Radons effects? It increases the incidents of lung cancer. The combination of radon gas and cigarette smoking produces a significantly higher risk, according to Monroe.</p>
        <p>He said the best way to reduce the problem in areas where radon is a problem is by increasing ventilation to reduce the concentration.</p>
        <p>PARACHUTE FUN  Cindy Tetherton finds an open way out as other Girl Scouts get caught by the parachute. The parachute game was just one of many activities Girl Scouts participated in Saturday at the Town Common in</p>
        <p>Greenville, where the groups annual registration drive got was held. (Reflector Photo by Shannon Wolfe)</p>
        <p>Bentsen Focus: Southern Voters</p>
        <p>By JOHN BARE Reflector Staff Writer Democratic vice presidential candidate Lloyd Bentsen tried to lasso</p>
        <p>Southern voters at his campaign rally in Greenville on Friday, delivering a speech campaign staffers say he is to repeat in several key Southern states in an effort to lure conservative Democrats back to the party.</p>
        <p>The South is coming home to the Democratic party, Bentsen said, standing on a stage on the steps of the Pitt County courthouse along with three U.S. flags, two North tTarolina flags and eight red, white and blue banners.</p>
        <p>With staffers handing out miniature American flags and campaign posters. Bentsen, 67. a U.S.</p>
        <p>Senator from Texas, responded with a 30-minute speech pepj^red with patriotic pledges, promising fiscal responsibility and singing the praises of the South.</p>
        <p>Ive been looking for some old friends that kind of wandered away in recent years, he said. Ive talked to Reagan Democrats, asking them to come home, and they are responding.</p>
        <p>We need to win North Carolina ... No Democrat has been elected president in modern times without carrying North Carolina. And we mean to do it.</p>
        <p>The Democratic Party of 1988 is a symbol of Southern success. Were an America working together..., he said, working to restore integrity to government and leadership to this world of ours.</p>
        <p>More than 2,000 people and 10 television cameras set up along Evans Street in downtown Greenville to receive Bentsens message, which began at 1:30 p.m., about an hour behind scheduled.</p>
        <p>About 30 state officials joined Bentsen, his wife, B.A., and Ten-</p>
        <p>(See BENTSEN. A-7)</p>
        <p>MASH Unit To Be Activated</p>
        <p>CRAWLING WITH A PURPOSE - Members of the Army Reserves 312th Medical Evacuation unit of Greensboro set up equipment identical to what the new Greenville-based Mobile Army Surgical Hospital unit</p>
        <p>will use. Some members of the 3I2th are shown laying a field hospital tent floor and securing its sections together in preparation for public viewing Sunday, (Reflector Photo By Shannon Wolfe) w</p>
        <p>.f  </p>
        <p>By CAROL T\'ER Reflector Staff Writer</p>
        <p>Greenvilles new Mobile Surgical Army Hospital (MASH) is set to be activated Sunday in a ceremony at the Brody Medical Science Building at Pitt County Memorial Hospital.</p>
        <p>The 350th MASH unit will be operated by the 120th United States Army Reserve Command and directed by Col. Richard Merrill.</p>
        <p>After a public activation ceremony set for 2 p.m., people will be allowed to tour the unit and hear an explanation of the medical equipment brought in for demonstration purposes by the 312th Medical Evacuation Hospital basecTin Greensboro.</p>
        <p>Col. Jack D. Medlin, commander of the 312th, along with 31 members of his Medical Evacuation unit, spent Saturday and Sunday morning setting up generators, mobile surgery units, mobile X-ray units, mobile pharmacy and laboratory units and hospitaltents.</p>
        <p>The components of the field hospital are identical to those which the 239-member Greenville-based MASH will use. The items are modular units set on tractor trailers, with needed equipment stored inside.</p>
        <p>Recruiters will be present Sunday to talk to anyone interested in joining the new MASH group. Recruiters win consider people with prior military</p>
        <p>service and those with none, and folks with or without medical experience, Merrill said.</p>
        <p>He said doctors, nurses, pharmacists, operating room technicians, emergency medical technicians and other medical specialists will be needed, but so wil cooks, ambulance drivers, radio operators, chaplains, litter bearers and other support personnel.</p>
        <p>The unit is expected to contribute about $1 million per year to the local economy in salaries and other expenditures.</p>
        <p>When completed, the 350th will be</p>
        <p>(See MASH. A-2)</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0002" />
        <p>X-RAY Sl'KVEY  Col. Jack Medlin, left, looks over an X-ray table in the mobile X-ray unit of a Mobile Army Surgical Hospial. .Medlin is the commander of the Army Reserve's ;U2th .Medical Evacuation unit based in</p>
        <p>Lieutenant's WW1 Letter Found After 70 Years</p>
        <p>WILMINGTON (AP) - It was Aug. 5,1918, somewhere in the trenches of World War I Europe.</p>
        <p>A young second lieutenant named Edward Hardin sat in his tent writing his mother in Wilmington about his brush with death just hours earlier.</p>
        <p>"Dearest Mamma, I have had an experience tonight which I dont care to repeat any time soon, for it was the narrowest escape from death I have ever had," he wrote.</p>
        <p>The soldier had come to take for granted the sound of shells bursting</p>
        <p>around the "hole-in-the-ground that was his companys base. But that night, the* explosions came so close that Hardin and his commanding officer, whom he referred to as "Capt. Gause," were literally knocked off their feet.</p>
        <p>Gosh! I thought my last minutes had come, Hardin wrote, still partially deaf from the concussion he received in the attack.</p>
        <p>Somehow, that first-hand account of a soldiers experiences in World War I wound up in a desk at the Cape</p>
        <p>Obituaries</p>
        <p>Drum</p>
        <p>Mrs. Mary Trogden Drum, 78, of 2500 Sunset Ave. died Saturday.</p>
        <p>A graveside service will be conducted Monday at 2:30 p.m. in Greenwood Cemetery by the Revs. Sid Huggins and John Speight.</p>
        <p>A native of North Wilkesboro, she attended the North Wilkesboro schools and East Carolina Teachers College. Mrs. Drum lived in Greenville for 60 years and was a member of Jarvis Memorial United Methodist Church. She was a partner in Drums Hatchery and Feed and Seed Store from 1938 to 1972.</p>
        <p>Survivors include her husband. Bill Drum of the home, a daughter, Mary Dawn Drum Arciprete of Huntington. l^.Y.; a sister, Mrs. John Reitz of Charlottesville, Va.; three grandchildren, and one great-grandchild.</p>
        <p>The family will receive friends from 7:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. Sunday at Wilkerson Funeral Home. Memorials may be made to Jarvis Memorial United Methodist Church, 510 S. Washington St., Greenville, or to a charity of choice.</p>
        <p>Lovick</p>
        <p>FORT BARNWELL - A funeral for Mrs. Viola Harris Lovick, 71, of Route 1, Dover, will be conducted Sunday at 3 p.m. at the Hickory Grove Church of Christ Disciples of Christ Church on Route 6, Kinston, by Bishop C L. Barnes. Burial will follow in Hickory Grove Church Cemetery.</p>
        <p>A native of Craven County, she lived in the Fort Barnwell community for many years. Mrs. Lovick was a member of Hickory Grove Church, Rising Star Knights of Gideon Chapter Four and Chapter 515 Order of Eastern Star</p>
        <p>Survivors include a foster daughter, Eldress Ethel Smith Mills of the home; a foster son, Henry Lee Smith of Medlord, N.Y.; a brother, Willie Buster Harris of New Bern, and eight sisters, Zalpa West of Mount Olive, Esther Webster and Lilly Spacer, both of Baltimore, Rosa White, Ida Charity and Samantha Leonard, all of Brooklyn, N.Y. and Martha Gibbs of Maysville and Lorena Gaskins, both of Vanceboro.</p>
        <p>Arrangements are being handled by Norcott and Company Funeral Home.</p>
        <p>Thompson</p>
        <p>FALCON - The Rev. William Everette Thompson, 79, died Friday in Betsy Johnson Memorial Hospital in Dunn.</p>
        <p>His funeral will be conducted at 3 p.m. Sunday in the Culberth Pentecostal Holiness Church in Falcon by the Revs. Danny Nelson, James Leggett, Eddie Morris and Donnor Lee. Burial will be in Wayne Memorial Park in Goldsboro.</p>
        <p>Mr. Thompson was an ordained minister of the North Carolina Pentecostal Holiness Conference for 40 years, serving as pastor of several churches. A member of the conference board from 1962 until 1969, he had been a resident of Falcon since his retirement in 1976.</p>
        <p>Surviving are his wife, Lillian Smith Thompson; a son, Harold E. Thompson of Kinston; a stepdaughter, Mable L. Norton of Raleigh; a sister, Jewell Jennell of Richmond, Va., and five grandchildren.</p>
        <p>Arrangements were handled by Cromartie-Pearsall Funeral Home of Dunn.</p>
        <p>Fear Chapter of the American Red Cross. Beki Summers, who recently took over as director of services to military families, was cleaning out a drawer when she came across the fragile, yellowed pages.</p>
        <p>Ms. Summers hopes to return the 70-year-old letter to Hardin, if he is still alive, or his family.</p>
        <p>Nobody knows how we got ahold of it, she told the Wilmington Morning Star.</p>
        <p>Written in pencil, the eight-page letter chronicles the different aspects of Army life, from encounters with the enemy to the second lieutenants more mundane duties, which included compiling reports for his captain.</p>
        <p>Addressed to Mrs. John Hardin, the soldiers letter told of the frequent casualties suffered by his unit, and how he looked forward to the much-needed rest his company was expected to receive soon.</p>
        <p>In addition to the horrors of battle, there were other unpleasantries associated with war.</p>
        <p>"Mamma  whisper it  I have had cooties, Hardin wrote, explaining that the dugouts and shelters used by the troops abounded with the pests.</p>
        <p>He also told his mother how much her letters meant to him. If you only knew, my dear, how those letters are appreciated, he wrote. They are the particular bright spots in the otherwise rotten days.    ^</p>
        <p>Part of Hardins letter didnt make it home to the states. Military censors - two of them, identified by the numbers 5113 and 6437 - took the scissors to a paragraph that perhaps hinted at the ocation of Hardins unit or contained other sensitive information.</p>
        <p>Nowhere in the letter was there a mention of where Hardin was, though he had enclosed a sampling of French currency.</p>
        <p>He also talked about his salary, which amounted to about $150 a month. The Army charged him 42 cents a day for rations.</p>
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        <p>Namphy Ousted In Haiti Coup</p>
        <p>Greensboro. Col. Richard Merrill, right, is commander of the 350th Army Reserve MASH unit scheduled to be activated Sunday in Greenville. (Reflector Photo By Shannon Wolfe 1</p>
        <p>(Continued from A-1)</p>
        <p>mation Minister Acedius St. Louis and Dessalines Barracks Commander Col. Jean-Claude Paul.</p>
        <p>Gunfire was still heard' at 10:30 p.m. in the city. An explosion shook the Lalue district about a half-mile from the main plaza.</p>
        <p>A usually reliable source, speaking on condition of anonymity, said an army major told him that a group of officers detained Namphy after preventing him from entering the palace at 4:30 p.m.</p>
        <p>Sources said the fighting involved army factions and members of the Tonton Macoutes, dreaded agents that terrorized Haitians during the 29-year-old dictatorships of the Duvalier family.</p>
        <p>A source close to the military who spoke on condition of anonymity said top army officers had been meeting in the Presidential Palace since noon.</p>
        <p>He said military leaders were considering creating a junta to replace Namphy, who took over after President Jean-Claude Duvalier fled to exile in France on Feb. 7,1986.</p>
        <p>Richard, a 41-year-old car mechanic who refused to give his last</p>
        <p>name, told The Associated Press that around 5 p.m. at Casernes Street, near the plaza, he saw a white pickup truck speed by carrying about 10 men wearing dark sunglasses shooting in the air. scaring people away.</p>
        <p>Tonton Macoutes traditionally wore sunglasses.</p>
        <p>He said when the shooting started there were several automobile accidents on Jean-Jacques Dessalines Boulevard, the main downtown artery, as panic-stricken motorists attempted to flee the area.</p>
        <p>It seems to me and other people I spoke to in the street that they  the different army factions and the Macoutes  want to scare the common people out of the streets and set-tle their business among themselves, he said.</p>
        <p>A French diplomat who spoke on condition of anonymity and Radio Metropole said the shooting, including automatic gunfire, broke out Saturday around 5 p.m. on the Champ-de-Mars Plaza, in front of the Presidential Palace and near the army general headquarters and Dessalines Barracks.</p>
        <p>The French diplomat, in a hotel</p>
        <p>MASH Unit Activated</p>
        <p>(Continued from A-1)</p>
        <p>composed of 239 Army Reserve soldiers who will be trained to provide medical care for soldiers during wartime, Merrill said, including resuscitative surgery, medical treatment, and both pre- and postoperative intensive care for up to 60 patients within a combat zone.</p>
        <p>A MASH is rarely used for natural disasters or any emergency other than a wartime one, he said.</p>
        <p>The Medical Evacuation unit from Greensboro helping with the demonstration of equipment was activated during the Vietnam War. On May 13, 1968, the group received orders for Vietnam and stayed there 10 months, often treating as many as 350 soldiers a day.</p>
        <p>The guest speaker for the activa-</p>
        <p>Guard Reunion</p>
        <p>A reunion of Battery A. 113th Field Artillery of the North Carolina National Guard will be held Sunday at 1 p.m. at the Western Sizzling on East 10th Street.</p>
        <p>The National Guard unit of 132 men. mostly from Pitt County, was activated Sept. 16, 1940, said to be serving a year. World War II began and most served five to six years and were dispersed throughout the U.S. Armed Forces, said Jimmy Davenport, a member of the group.</p>
        <p>He said about 63 people  members, spouses and widows of members - will gather Sunday fqr an annual reunion which began in 1980. Some will come from as far away as Georgia, Ohio and California, he said. Many still live in Pitt County.</p>
        <p>tion program will be Judge Malcolm J. Howard, former civilian aide to the Secretrary of the Army for North Carolina.</p>
        <p>Maj. Gen. Jackson Lee Flake Jr., commanding general of the 120th U.S. Army Reserve Command out of Fort Jackson, S.C., will also speak, as will Merrill. The 108th Division Band will provide music for the program.</p>
        <p>Merrill comes to the 350th from a 1.000-bed Army Hospital based in Durham. He is an associate professor in the East Carolina University School of Medicine and a 26-year veteran of the U.S. Army and U.S. Army Reserves. He has a medical degree from Boston University School of Medicine.</p>
        <p>The Greenville MASH unit will be one of 95 units in a region that includes five Southeastern states and is headquartered in Fort Jackson, S.C.</p>
        <p>Alumni Gathering</p>
        <p>The alumni chapter of Fayetteville State University will meet Tuesday at 6:30 p.m. at the South Greenville School on Howell Street.</p>
        <p>For more information call Roscoe Lock at 830-3746 or Rebecca Oakes at 355-6172. ^</p>
        <p>beside the plaza, said the shooting was still going on by 7 p.m.</p>
        <p>Several dozen jieople were seen running away from the plaza along John Paul II Avenue in the Turgeaq district.</p>
        <p>Residents in Turgeau contacted by telephone said the shooting in the area of the plaza was still going on at</p>
        <p>7 p.m.</p>
        <p>There were no reports of injuries or deaths.</p>
        <p>A speech by Namphy that had been scheduled for Friday was abruptly canceled and replaced with a short evening communique expressing sympathy for the victims of Hur-" ricane Gilbert. It was unknown what was the topic of the speech.</p>
        <p>On Sept. 11, about 20 thugs invaded the St. Jean Bosco Roman Catholid church during a Mass being said bjr the Rev. Jean Bertrand Aristide, a critic of the military government.</p>
        <p>The thugs, armed with guns, machetes and knifes, killed 13 people and wounded 77 and then set fire to the church as soldiers watched from across the street.</p>
        <p>Sunday night five men and a woman boasted on government television that they took part in the massacre and on Monday thugs burned down a second Catholic church.</p>
        <p>Some people in the St. Jean Bosco church during the attack said they recognized several City Hall employees among the assailants.</p>
        <p>Namphys government said it regretted the killings. It has made similar statements after earlaier killings but no arrests were announced.</p>
        <p>Namphy returned to power after ousting the four-month-old elected government of civilian President Leslie Manigat on June 19. Namphy previously ruled for two years following the Duvaliers flight to France.</p>
        <p>Namphy said he removed Manigat and his government because the president illegally ordered the transfers of several officers, including Paul, commander of the feared 700-man unit assigned to the Dessalines Barracks that is located behind the Presidential Palace.</p>
        <p>Manigat had tried to reassign Paul to the army general headquarters.</p>
        <p>Ti</p>
        <p>ara ut Thanks</p>
        <p>The family of Carrie Carmon would like to thank everyone for their cards, food, flowers and sympathy during our recent bereavement.</p>
        <p>The Carmon Family</p>
        <p>The Daily Reflector</p>
        <p>Incorporated 209 Cotanchc Street Greenville. N.C. 27834 (919) 752-6166</p>
        <p>107thYearNo. 220</p>
        <p>second Class Postage Paid At Greenville, N.C,</p>
        <p>(USPS 145 400)</p>
        <p>Production Director  J Tim Jones</p>
        <p>Circulation Director  Nelson  Adams</p>
        <p>Director o( Administration 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 $5 (X) payable in advance</p>
        <p>Mail Rates</p>
        <p>Pitt and adjoining counties  $5  00  per  month</p>
        <p>Elsewhere in N C  $5  50  per  month</p>
        <p>Outside N C  56  50  per  month</p>
        <p>Member Associated Press and</p>
        <p>Audit Bureau ot Circulation</p>
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        <pb facs="00097037_0003" />
        <p>The Dally Reflector, Greenville, N.C. Sunday, September 18.1986</p>
        <p>Balloon Launches Seen As Threat To Sea Life</p>
        <p>WILMINGTON (AP)  Outdoor balloon launches have gotten some folks so stirred up they want them stopped.</p>
        <p>' Releasing balloons is pretty traditional, said Jonathan Washburn, a Wilmington .real estate lawyer who never thought of himself as an environmentalist until he saw a picture of what a sea turtle looked like after it ate a ballon.</p>
        <p>Actually, its littering. The balloons go up. Theyve got to come down and they come down in the wean. The sea turtles eat those and they die. Everybody loves sea turtles, Washburn told The Wilmington Morning Star.</p>
        <p>Washburn said he has been examining littering laws and has begun tlking to local lawmakers and city Officials about curbing the practice of outdoor balloon launches.</p>
        <p>Its not a major political issue, but it could be, Washburn said.</p>
        <p>Plastics in the ocean is becoming a major topic.</p>
        <p>A few weeks ago, a balloon launch marked the official beginning of restorations to City Hall-Thalian Hall in Wilmington.</p>
        <p>On Friday, National POW-MIA Day, 60 balloons were launched in New Hanover County to honor 60 North Carolinians listed as still missing in action. The launch was sponsored by the local Veterans of Foreign Wars.</p>
        <p>Washburn said he called the commander of the VFW to ask whether they could do something else to honor the veterans, say a 60-gun salute.</p>
        <p>Theres nothing I can do about it, Jim Williamson, commanding officer for the VFW chapter, said hours before the ceremony Friday.</p>
        <p>Of Washburns call, Williamson said, I think hes just a wacko on the telephone. Ive never found a fish with any rubber in them.</p>
        <p>Andy Wood, a naturalist at the N.C.</p>
        <p>Aquarium at Fort Fisher, said he has been warning people about the danger of outdoor balloon launches for 10 years, but with little success.</p>
        <p>Virtually every time I walk the beach I find balloons, Wood said. He records and catalogues the trash and debris he finds washed ashore and balloons account for no small percentage, he said. And, like all plastics, they do not go away.</p>
        <p>During last years Beach Sweep, in which volunteers collected and catalogued trash along the beach, balloons had their own category. Wood said.</p>
        <p>Its a problem. Its a real problem. We do know that animals have died eating this stuff, he said.</p>
        <p>Particularly vulnerable are land and sea turtles and some duck species. Theres something about the texture of a balloon that wood ducks like, Wood said.</p>
        <p>When released to the wind, balloons can travel for days, across</p>
        <p>hundreds of miles. Wood said he once found three balloons on North Carolina beaches that had been laun-' ched three days earlier from Terre Haute, Ind.</p>
        <p>Wherever they come down, they are a problem, he said.</p>
        <p>Today, the Naval Fleet Reserve plans to launch 201 balloons from the Battleship North Carolina to celebrate the 201st anniversary of the Constitution  one balloon every minute at the sound of the ships bell.</p>
        <p>. Wood said he will try to have todays 4 p.m. balloon launch canceled.</p>
        <p>Del Herrmann, secretary of the Wilmington Fleet Reserve Association, said he doesnt buy the balloon scare. An animal may die if it swallowed a balloon by freak accident, he said, but that wouldnt stop me from launching a balloon.</p>
        <p>The national bicentennial committee recommended that every town and city across American launch balloons every year to celebrate the</p>
        <p>nation's Constitution. We think thats a mighty fine idea, Herrmann said.</p>
        <p>It flies in the face of common sense, Wood said, who acknowl-edaed that since the balloon industryFilm To Be Shown</p>
        <p>The Greenville Bible Church will screen the film, Jesus, Saturday at 7 p.m. The church is at 1348 Greenville Blvd.</p>
        <p>has its own Washington lobby, nents of outdoor launches are prc bly outspent in getting lawmakers to see things their way.</p>
        <p>The big part is just trying to turn peoples opinion around. Most people oppose litter. These people are receptive, Wood said. The next step would be to convince lawmakers to go along with the public, he said.Missionary Day</p>
        <p>Holy Mission Church will hold missionary day during services Sunday. The guest speaker will be Dr. Shirley Atkinson.</p>
        <p>Holy Mission will also have Bible class graduation ceremonies Sunday at 6 p.m. with Tyrone Green, minister, as the guest speaker.</p>
        <p>ORDY LORDY</p>
        <p>DEBRA D.</p>
        <p>IS</p>
        <p>FINALLY</p>
        <p>40!</p>
        <p>Selected Group Of Afghans</p>
        <p>R*g. 20.00  90.00 g</p>
        <p>25%</p>
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        <p>/U oN</p>
        <p>Choose from a wide selection of patterns, styles r and fashion colors. Available in acrylic, poly cotton or wool.</p>
        <p>Mens Plaid Sport Shirts</p>
        <p>Reg. 15.00</p>
        <p>11</p>
        <p>99</p>
        <p>Long sleeve plaid sport shirts In variety of colorful fall plaids.</p>
        <p>Ladies Shadowline ' &amp;amp; Vanity Fair Panties</p>
        <p>Reg. 3.50  9.00</p>
        <p>25% _</p>
        <p>All styles. Various colors. Sizes 4  7.</p>
        <p>Katie Lewis Dresses</p>
        <p>Reg. 29.09</p>
        <p>2^99</p>
        <p>Choose from a variety of styles in fall fashion colors and prints! Button fronts, elastic waist with 3/4 or long sleeves. Sizes 8-20.</p>
        <p>Selected Group of Pictures</p>
        <p>Reg. Sale ahb m</p>
        <p>ir X 14' 20.00 1 0.00 fl / 4 16* X 20' 25.00 12.50 I I 16'X 20'38.00 19.00 mj wj /11 -aa 22' X 28' 52.00 28.00 ^ # W Off</p>
        <p>Choose from 11' x 14", 16" x 20' or 22" x 28". Available In country prints, traditlonals or English prints.</p>
        <p>Ladles Lee Jeans</p>
        <p>Reg. 21.09</p>
        <p>1799</p>
        <p>Ladies' Junor and Missy size Lee Jeans. 100% cotton 5 pocket western style in indigo. Sizes 3  13,8  18.</p>
        <p>Ladies</p>
        <p>Fall Color Chailis Skirts</p>
        <p>Reg. 20.00</p>
        <p>15</p>
        <p>100% Rayon with pleated front, side 2 button tab! Assorted prints. Machine washable. Sizes 8-18.</p>
        <p>Mel-Lin Sleepshirt</p>
        <p>Reg. 15.00</p>
        <p>1199 ;</p>
        <p>100% poly/satln. Pastel colors.</p>
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        <p> ---  7.</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0004" />
        <p>In The AreaPossession Charge</p>
        <p>Two Connecticut men were arrest^ Saturday in Greenville in connection with the theft of a stolen vehicle.</p>
        <p>Officer A.J. Dennison said Joseph Matthew Velez, 19, of 1 Deerfield St., S. Norwalk, Conn., and Jose Louis Pedrosa, 17, 33 Indian Lane, Stanford, Conn., were arrested at 12:03 p.m. at the Best Value Motel and charged with possessing a stolen 1987 model vehicle.</p>
        <p>Dennison said the vehicle was reported stolen from Wilton, Conn.Vehicle Stolen</p>
        <p>Granville police said two vehicles were reported stolen in the area over the weekend.</p>
        <p>Officer W.T. McCarter said Trudy Barnes of Sycamore Hill, Apartment 8, reported at midnight Friday that her 1985 model vehicle was stolen from her apartment parking lot.</p>
        <p>Officer R.C. Stroud said Bridgette Smith reported at 7:21 a.m. Saturday that her 1977 model vehicle had been stolen from the old Attic parking lot. About $105 worth of clothes and personal belongings were in the car at the time it was stolen, Stroud said.</p>
        <p>[Town Van Damaged</p>
        <p>Police say a Greenville Parks and Recreation van was damaged Saturday.</p>
        <p>Officer R.L. Smith said Jeff Chap-pel reported at 1:02 p.m. that the town-owned van parked at River Park North had been damaged.</p>
        <p>, Smith said a window on the driver ide of the van had been broken, causing $200 worth of damage.Saturday Thefts</p>
        <p>Greenville police said four</p>
        <p>larcenie.s were reported in the area Saturday.</p>
        <p>Officer Alexander Batts said John Ireland of 703 Johnston St. reported</p>
        <p>at 7:18 a.m that a bicycle valued at $250 was stolen.</p>
        <p>Officer R.L. Smith said Eunice Davis reported at 10:25 a.m. that her</p>
        <p>BRACELET MAKING  Laura Glascoff, 10, creates her own bracelet at the Girl Scouts annual registration kick-off held Saturday at the Town Common. Girl Scouts also took part in other activities, such as bubble making, face painting and relay races. (Reflector Photo by Shannon Wolfe)</p>
        <p>Council Workshop Monday</p>
        <p>A council subcommittee recommendation relating to special and permitted uses in the Medical District is one of the items to be discussed by members of the Greenville City Council at a workshop session Monday.</p>
        <p>The workshop is set for 6 p.m. in the third floor council chambers of City Hall.</p>
        <p> At the councils July 25 workshop session, Mayor Ed Carter appointed a four-member subcommittee to study and formulate a recommendation regarding a planning commission recommendation that almost all non-medically related special uses be deleted from the MD-2 zoning district.</p>
        <p>That planning commissions rec-</p>
        <p>Menus</p>
        <p>. Lunch menus for Pitt County schools this week, as announced, are:</p>
        <p>Monday: Toasted pimento cheese sandwich with pickle spear, french fries, catsup, apple and milk.</p>
        <p>Tuesday: Corn dog with mustard, tater tots with catsup, fruit cup and milk.</p>
        <p>Wednesday: Chicken and pastry, candied yams, seasoned green beans, hushpuppies and milk.</p>
        <p>Thursday: Lasagna, tossed salad, garden peas, french bread and milk.</p>
        <p>Friday: Fish on bun, french fries, catsup, coleslaw and milk.</p>
        <p>ommendation suggests the council delete all non-medical related special uses from the MD-2 zoning district with the exception of office building: professional and business.</p>
        <p>The commissions recommendation suggests maintaining the professional office special use in the MD-2 district with the recommen-daton that at least 50 percent of the gross floor area per building to occupied by uses permitted in the MD-2 zoning district. Currently the re-(luirement states that 50 percent of the total operations within a building or project to occupied by those permitted uses.</p>
        <p>The council subcommittee appointed by the mayor to study the planning commissions recommendation consists of Mayor Pro-Tern Lorraine Shinn, council member Nancy Jenkins, planning commission Chairman Dr. Wallace Wooles and commission member Ric Miller.</p>
        <p>In other matters Monday, the council will consider an interim report from the Citizens Advisory Committee on Cable TVi</p>
        <p>The report of the citizens committee recommends the city should hire a consultant to assist in the process of cable TV refranchisement and the city should proceed with a refranchising process with the intent to award a non exclusive franchise to the present franchisee under improved franchise requirements.</p>
        <p>Members of the Citizens Advisory Committee unanimously approved the interim report on July 7.</p>
        <p>The council is also slated to discuss whether to adopt a single, biweekly</p>
        <p>payroll system for all city employees. Currently 163 of the citys workers are paid weekly, while the remaining are paid biweekly.</p>
        <p>A previous audit study indicated that by eliminating the weekly payroll system and switching all employees to a biweekly system would yield a significant savings and data processing cost and create additional time for more effective utilization of accounting department personnel.</p>
        <p>A payroll committee was formed by the council to study whether to implement the transition and to propose a plan to minimize negative consequences caused by any transition.</p>
        <p>That committee included staff of the citys personnel and finance departments, public works and parks and recreation departments and council members Rufus Huggins and Inez Fridley.</p>
        <p>Other items scheduled for discussion Monday include an architectural contract for renovations to Guy Smith Stadium, a computer study proposal, a report from Planning and Zoning Commission members on historic properties; an Agreement for Use between the City and the Greenville Jaycees; a resolution requesting exemption from bidding procedures for acquisition of natural gas; an agreement regarding the Patrick Arthur Homeplace; scheduling of dates for the councils October workshop meetings; a report from council liaisons on boards and commissions, and a report from City Manager Greg Knowles.</p>
        <p>iVTRYOUR Mi  MAINE '</p>
        <p>A Celebration</p>
        <p>St. Timothys on</p>
        <p>October 15</p>
        <p>9 A.M.-2 P.M.</p>
        <p>COURSE!</p>
        <p>...and our great desserts, Franciscan fries, games, crafts and fun activities...</p>
        <p>LIVE M \I.\E LOBSTERS Live - $7.00 Boiled - $8.00</p>
        <p>For tickets or information call</p>
        <p>Dianne Land 756-4835 . Lorraine McNally 756-6480 Church Office 355-2125</p>
        <p>fcllth Annual Lobster</p>
        <p>V^</p>
        <p>car was iteia !.vhilo it was parked at a lutu. iiiiii Simiii i,aid three pair of jeans, valued at $85, were taken from the car.</p>
        <p>Officer Thomas Forrest said Roland Stocks of 102 S. Library St. reported at 12:17 p.m. that flower pots valued at $72 had been stolen from his front porch</p>
        <p>Margaret Perr,v of 1045 E. Rock Spiiiigs Uoad repuiled Lhcit flower pots and flowers valued at $90 were stolen from her home. Officer W.S. Heath said. The incident was reported at 12:56 p.m.</p>
        <p>Smith said Judy Lockemy reported at 1:51 p.m. that a man took four cartons of cigarettes worth $32 from Blount's on Greene Street.AAUW Unit Meets</p>
        <p>The Pitt County branch of the American Association of University Women will hold its first meeting of the year in the conference room of Sheppard Memorial Library Monday at 7:30p.m.</p>
        <p>The organization promotes equity for women, education, self-development and positive societal change.</p>
        <p>Membership is open to any college graduate.Classes Scheduled</p>
        <p>Pitt Community College will start</p>
        <p>adult continuing education classes this week as lollows:</p>
        <p>Oil Painting - (12 weeks) meets Mondays from 6:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. at the Greenville Recreation Department on Fourth and Greene streets.</p>
        <p>Creative Writing - (12 weeks) meets Mondays from 7 p.m. to 10 p.m on PCC campus. Room 10 in the White Building.</p>
        <p>Sign Language - (10 w'eeks) meets Mondays from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. at J.H. Rose High School.</p>
        <p>Interior Decorating - (10 weeks) meets Mondays from 7 p.m. to 10 p.m, at Rose High School.</p>
        <p>Sewing - (12 weeks) meets Tuesdays from 10 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. at South Greenville Recreation Department.</p>
        <p>Calligraphy - (12 weeks) meets Thursdays from 6:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. at the recreation department.</p>
        <p>Drawing &amp;amp; Pastels - (12 weeks) meets Thursdays from 6:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. at the recreation department.</p>
        <p>Investments &amp;amp; Securities - (6</p>
        <p>weeks) meets Mondays from 2 p.m. tu 1 p.m and from 7 p.m. to9 p.m. &amp;gt;La Leche League ^</p>
        <p>Nutrition and weaning will to the topic of the La Leche League meeting Thursday at 7:30 p.m.</p>
        <p>The La Leche League provides in-i formation on breastfeeding to all in i lerested women. In addition, the league has a loan library covering topics of breastfeeding, parenting,-childbirth and nutrition.  '</p>
        <p>For more information call. Kathleen King at 746-4728 or Barbaras Whitehead at 746-3412.  !Fall Revival Set *</p>
        <p>Hickory Grove Free Will Baptist Church will hold its fall revival Mon-^ day through Friday at 7:30 p.m. with the Rev. Joe Griffith as the guest' evangelist. A nursery and music will be provided nightly.</p>
        <p>(SeeIN,A-5)</p>
        <p>GROUP</p>
        <p>EXCURSIONS</p>
        <p>Get To The Ducks And Big Bucks... Paddle A Canoe!</p>
        <p>CANOES</p>
        <p>/ /</p>
        <p>SALES</p>
        <p>&amp;amp;</p>
        <p>RENTALS</p>
        <p>Call us at (919) 946-0580 Washington, N.C.</p>
        <p>COiMIMITMENT</p>
        <p>Webster defines commitment as the act of pledging or engaging oneself. Many people fear a commitment to anyone or anything. Theres too much at risk. Too many times in the past commitments to relationships, a career, or a humanistic philosophy have resulted in disappointment and frustration. It is painful to have faith in someone or something that doesnt meet your expectations.</p>
        <p>At Trinity Free Will Baptist Church we realize that the only safe and satisfying commitment is  commitment to God. We find that in pledging our lives to Gods care we gain an awareness and fulfillment that is unmatched by any vain philosophy or lifestyle. Why not join us this Sunday to learn more about the process.</p>
        <p>264 Bypass and Golden Rd., Greenville</p>
        <p>758-1000</p>
        <p>We lost 98 lbs. without cheating once.</p>
        <p>On the NUTRI/SYSTEM Weight Loss Program you get delicious, flavorful food so you dont have to cheat.</p>
        <p>Most 40 lbs.</p>
        <p>Most 58 lbs.</p>
        <p>The NUTRI/SYSTEM comprehensive Flavor Set-PointiM Weight Loss Program includes:</p>
        <p>A variety of delicious meals and snacks.</p>
        <p>One-on-one personal counseling.</p>
        <p>Behaviour BreakthroughiM</p>
        <p>Program (or lorrg term succesa</p>
        <p>Dont Walt Call Today.</p>
        <p>We Succeed Where Diets Fail You?</p>
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        <p>weight loss centers</p>
        <p>50% OFF</p>
        <p>Mon.-Thurs. 9 to 7 Friday 9 to 5 Saturday 9 to 1</p>
        <p>Program Cost and 1st Weeks Food Free</p>
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        <p>355-2470</p>
        <p>CALL FOR A FREE CONSULTATION</p>
        <p>210 Arlington Boulevard</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0005" />
        <p>In The Area</p>
        <p>(Continued from A-4)</p>
        <p>Kiwanis Kids'Day</p>
        <p>Greenville Mayor Edward E. Carter has proclaimed Saturday as Kiwanis Club of Greater Greenville KidsDayin the city.</p>
        <p>Kiwanis International has set aside the fourth Saturday in September, this year being Sept. 24, as Kiwanis Kids Day for the opportunity to demonstrate the Kiwanis tradition of concern for young people,Carter said.</p>
        <p>The Kiwanis Club of Greater Greenville is supporting this idea through a community balloon distribution project to benefit the Childrens Hospital in Greenville, he said.</p>
        <p>Orchestra Classes</p>
        <p>Free beginning orchestra classes are being offered this year at South Greenville, Sadie Saulter, Elmhurst and Wahl-Coates schools.</p>
        <p>Any interested child in the fourth or fifth grade is eligible for the classes. Students are responsible for providing their own instruments.</p>
        <p>A drop-in registration meeting for parents and students will be held at Wahl-Coafes Wednesday from 4 p.m. to 8 p.m. in the auditorium. During that time, parents may learn about the orchestra program and register iheir child for classes. A music representative will be available to assist parents in leasing and/or renting an instrument.</p>
        <p>Jo Ann Moore is director of the Greenville-area elementary orchestras.</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>Simpson Town Board</p>
        <p>t The village of Simpson monthly town council meeting will be held in the Phillippi Church Education Building on Virginia Street Monday at 8 p.m.</p>
        <p>' Disabled or handicapped persons Wishing to attend should call 757-1430.</p>
        <p>Afterschool Special</p>
        <p>I The Childrens Library of Shepp-jwrd Memorial Library will sponsor .Clownin Around, an afterschool</p>
        <p>Special for children ages 6-12 at 4 p.m. Tuesday.</p>
        <p>; Guest Anell George will explain to children some of the preparation it iakes to become a clown. She will ilso perform juggling and other Clown tricks.</p>
        <p>! For more information call the Childrens Library at 830-4581.</p>
        <p>Christian Singles</p>
        <p> The Greenville Christian Singles will meet Saturday at 7 p.m. at Greenville Church of God fellowship hall, 3105 S. Memorial Drive. A ?overed-dish supper will be served.</p>
        <p>; For more information call 355-2940 after 5 p.m.</p>
        <p>flower Show Set</p>
        <p>I The annual North Carolina Commercial Flower Growers Short Course and Trade Fair will be held Sept. 25-27 at the Mission Valley Inn ih Raleigh.</p>
        <p>Flower production experts from across the nation will offer tips on marketing, management and production.</p>
        <p>I For more information write Joe Love, extension horticultural specialist, North Carolina State Uni-tersity. Box 7609, Raleigh, 27695-7609, or call 737-3322.</p>
        <p>flarvest Ball</p>
        <p>* The Pitt-Greenville chapter of the GIHS-C.M. Eppes Alummi Association will host its third annual harvest ball on Nov. 25 at 9 p.m. at the Amer-man Legion Building Post 39 on St. Andrews Street.</p>
        <p>I Jimmy Jones, chapter president. Said the fund-raising projects supports annually awarded scholarships.</p>
        <p>Teleconference Set</p>
        <p>I Pitt Community College will take part in a statewide teleconference discussion of sickle cell syndrome on ^t. 5 from 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. The topic f the teleconference will be Bridg-ihg the Gap; Comprehensive Care for North Carolinas Sickle Cell Patients Snd Their Families.</p>
        <p>The teleconference is a panel ^scussion of the states sickle cell syndrome program and health care professionals from across the state Will take part.</p>
        <p>: Sponsored by the N.C. Department of Human Resources' Divison of Realth Services Sickle Cell Syndrome Program, it will be televised by the N.C. Agency for Public Telecommunications through the eommunity college system.</p>
        <p>For more information contact the program in Raleigh at 733-0385.</p>
        <p>Support Group</p>
        <p>Judy McLawhorn will conduct the sharing,meeting of the Alzheimers Support Group at noon Tuesday in the Senior Citizens Center behind the Pitt County Office Building.</p>
        <p>Mre. McLawhorn is a caregiver and is facilitator of the group, which is sponsored by the Mental Health Association in Pitt County and the Pitt County Council on Aging. For information call 752-7448.</p>
        <p>Chamber Conference</p>
        <p>Challenges and Opportunities is the theme for the Pitt-Greenville Chamber of Commerces 12th annual out-of-town planning conference set for Nov. 4-6.</p>
        <p>According to Chris McCoy, chairman elect, notices have been mailed to chamber members inviting them</p>
        <p>to explore the role the chamber must play in areas of economic develop--ment, minority involvement, drug control and property revitalization among others.</p>
        <p>The conference will be held at the Grove Park Inn in Asheville. Early reservations are encouraged by the chamber because of the limited number of rooms.</p>
        <p>For more information or to make reservations call the chamber at 752-4101 by Monday.</p>
        <p>ing a two-day, multimedia first aid class from 6 p.m. to 10 p.m. Sept. 27 and Sept. 29. There is a fee for the course. To attend call the Red Cross at 757-0270 bv Friday.</p>
        <p>Pitt Planning Board</p>
        <p>First Aid Class</p>
        <p>The Pitt County Red Cross is offer</p>
        <p>The Pitt County Planning Board will meet Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. at the county office building at 1717 W Fifth St.</p>
        <p>Agenda items scheduled for consideration include preliminary subdivision plats for Crossroads on Secondary Road 1782 in Grimesland township and Cattail Hollow on SR</p>
        <p>1780 in Grimesland township</p>
        <p>Final plats for consideration include: Windsor, section five, phase four, off SR 1709 in Winterville township: Enerald Chase, section two, on SR 1125 in Winterville township; Wexford, off SR 1711 in Winterville township, and River-crest, section one (redivision of lots 11 and 12), off N.C. 33 in Grimesland township.</p>
        <p>Also on the agenda is the election of planning board officers for the coming year.</p>
        <p>Booster Club will meet Monday at 7:30 p.m. in the school cafeteria.</p>
        <p>Rose Booster Club</p>
        <p>The J.H. Rose High School Sports</p>
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        <pb facs="00097037_0006" />
        <p>B.A. Bentsen: Quintessential Candidate's Wife</p>
        <p>By PRISCILLA BROWN Reflector Staff Writer Beryl Ann Bentsen was tucked into a corner office of the Pitt County Courthouse awaiting 15-minute interviews scheduled as tightly as stops on a campaign trip. Staff members hurried from office to of</p>
        <p>fice, herding reporters, photographers and a make-up man into their assigned spots.</p>
        <p>Yet she sat stately in the standard government-issue chair as though it were her own. If she was graceful, those around her were not. Soon, it became too much.</p>
        <p>iCAMPAlGNING COUPLE  Beryl Ann Bentsen accompanied her husband. Democratic vice presidential candidate Lloyd Bentsen, at Fridays campaign rally on the steps of the courthouse in Greenville. (Reflector Photo by Shannon Wolfe)</p>
        <p>In The Area</p>
        <p>(Continued from A-5)</p>
        <p>GOP Fund-Raiser Set</p>
        <p>:Pitt County Republican Womens Club will host a fund-raising barbecue supper for Jim Gardner and local Republican candidates Sept. 29 at the American Legion Building.</p>
        <p>A spokesman said that tickets are available at Susans, Matitas and The Fixture House.</p>
        <p>Department of Greenville has received a $1,992.70 grant form the Rural Volunteer Fire Department Fund, administered by the N.C. Department of Insurance.</p>
        <p>Red Oak has purchased turn-out gear, pagers and hose to help provide further fire protection services to the community.</p>
        <p>How about taking that call somewhere else, she snapped. I cant answer questions and listen to all this at the same time.</p>
        <p>With a turn, she was elegance anew. Despite the flight into Kinston, the drive to Greenville, the hot September sun and a parade of unfamiliar politicians, B.A. Bentsen was the quintessential candidates wife.</p>
        <p>Accompanying her husband, vice-presidential candidate Sen. Lloyd Bentsen, she flw into eastern North Carolina from Memphis, Tenn. She left Greenville, after an hour-long stay, for West Palm Beach, Fla., Panama City, Fla., Kentucky and Washington.</p>
        <p>Pitt County was a blur on the campaign trail. But, she said, she had a strong impression of the area.</p>
        <p>This is a wonderful area, she said, and a beautiful city. I think about coming into places like this and I am struck by how huge our country is, how much there is to be covered. Mrs. Bentsen is used to covering large areas in short amounts of time. She has been at her husbands side since he ran for a county judgeship in Texas in the late 40s. He was 25.</p>
        <p>The race for vice president, she said, is just another stage in his political career.</p>
        <p>Weve been in politics for such a long time that its another step in the process, she said. To me, if its what he was meant to be. Im not going to stand in his way.</p>
        <p>But being a politicians wife means more than stepping t aside while he takes the spotlight. It means pitching in.</p>
        <p>Certainly, I have to like people, Mrs. Bentsen said, and I do.</p>
        <p>I have to have a lot of stamina, and you do have to have lots of patience. Youre given a schedule and you have to go along with it  but thats for good reason. You cant run a campaign without it.</p>
        <p>B.A. Bentsen is not above altering the schedule to fit her need for time alone. She knows when shes had enough of being the candidates shadow.</p>
        <p>Sometimes, I wont make a trip with him, she said. Ill take off somewhere and get away, go antiquing for the day.</p>
        <p>Sharing in the campaign seems to come easy. Mrs. Bentsen said she rarely disagrees with her husbands stance on issues. Theyve been married quite a few years, she pointed out, and they feel very much the same on the questions that have faced him.</p>
        <p>But she wouldnt be shy about disagreeing, she said. What if she did?</p>
        <p>I would say so, she said. I dont * think you have to make that sort of choice when youre a candidates wife.</p>
        <p>You dont have to give up who you are.</p>
        <p>Wintergreen PTO  One  Debate</p>
        <p>Choir Auditions</p>
        <p>The Greenville Boys Choir will hold auditions for membership Tuesday at 6 p.m. in the choir rehersal room of St James Methodist Church. Membership is open to boys ages 8 years and older.</p>
        <p>The Boys Choir has begun rehearsals for the fall and winter programs every Tuesday at 6:30 p.m. at St James Methodist Church.</p>
        <p>For more information about auditions call 355-4540.</p>
        <p>The first Parent-Teacher Organization meeting for Wintergreen Elementary School will be held Tuesday.</p>
        <p>The meeting will begin with visits to the classrooms at 7 p.m. and a business meeting will follow at 7:45 p.m. in the auditorium.</p>
        <p>Nurses Conference</p>
        <p>Kristine Salamon, Cathy Graham and Caroline Ansley, nurses with the</p>
        <p>Eastern School PTA</p>
        <p>Cardiac Surgery Unit at Pitt County</p>
        <p>nd-</p>
        <p>Eastern Elemenentary School will hold its first Parent-Teacher Association meeting for the new school year Tuesday at 7 p.m.</p>
        <p>An open house will follow the general meeting.</p>
        <p>Memorial Hospital, recently attend ed the International Critical Care Nurses Conference in Montreal.</p>
        <p>The conference dealt with issues such as AIDS and the nursing shortage.</p>
        <p>Revival Services</p>
        <p>Fire Unit Grant</p>
        <p>The Red Oak Volunteer Fire</p>
        <p>St. Peter Disciples Church in Christ at Swen Pines in Farmville will hold revival services each night this week, beginning Monday at 7:30.</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP)  There will be only one debate between Republican Gov. Jim Martin and Democratic Lt. Gov. Bob Jordan.</p>
        <p>The Oct. 29 debate in 'Winston-Salem will be sponsored by the N.C. Association of Broadcasters, which had offered to provide facilities and broadcast another televised debate in early October. The Martin campaign wanted two debates, but Jordans campaign notified the association Friday that it would only agree to one.</p>
        <p>John C. Crumpler, Jordans cam-)aign manager, said voters will lave their fill of debates before the election.</p>
        <p>We feel its in our best interest to have one debate, Crumpler said Friday. The reason for that is that the closer to the election that the debate falls, the more likey the voters are to focus on the substance of the debate rather than the spectacle of the debate.</p>
        <p>Martin said Jordan was uncomfortable debating him.</p>
        <p>J. H. Rose High School</p>
        <p>Where Pride Is Rampant and Achievement Abounds</p>
        <p>Ltsli* Brinson</p>
        <p>Judy Coulter</p>
        <p>Blllle Lonnon</p>
        <p>Leslie Brinson, Science</p>
        <p> Sigme XI Research in Science Award 1988</p>
        <p>Judy Coulter, Math</p>
        <p>Woodrow Wllwn Follow Princeton University 1988</p>
        <p>Blllle Lennon, History</p>
        <p> Pitt County Teacher of the Year 1888-1989</p>
        <p>Christine Gantt, Math</p>
        <p> N.C. Presidential Award Excellence In Teaching 1988</p>
        <p>Bud Phillips, Athletics</p>
        <p>N.C. Athletic Director of the Year 1988</p>
        <p>William Morgan, History</p>
        <p> Region I History Teacher of the Year 1988-1989</p>
        <p>Christine Gantt</p>
        <p>Bud Phillips</p>
        <p>William Morgan</p>
        <p>We Take Pride In The Achievements Of Our Faculty.</p>
        <p>She hasnt. A former model, Mrs. Bentsen is a native of Lufkin, Texas, and the only child of Burl and Ann Longino. Though her name is Beryl Ann, friends call her B.A.</p>
        <p>She and Bentsen were married in 1943, while he was in training with the Air Force. They had met in college and, Mrs. Bentsen said, her husband seemed to have it all.</p>
        <p>Even today, you can see that he was a handsome young man, she said, smiling. He was intelligent, popular, president of his fraternity  easy to fall in love with.</p>
        <p>The pair returned to Hidalgo County, where Bentsen was born and reared. He opened his law practice with a friend and soon found himself in politics.</p>
        <p>Now, the couple has three married children and five grandchildren, but their time in Texas is limited because of his campaign and his duties as a senator.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Bentsen said her children have kept things going at home. Theyve picked up the banners I en</p>
        <p>joyed, she said. And Im proud of what they're doing.</p>
        <p>Those banners represented the Houston Symphony, the Museum of Fine Arts and the YWCA. In Washington, Mrs. Bentsen moved into other areas. And one, in particular, will continue to be her cause if Bentsen is elected.</p>
        <p>I am particularly interested in small children. she said, and I have been working with the March of Dimes. They are doing some marvelous research into birth defects.</p>
        <p>Im also concerned about prenatal care for young teen-age pregnant mothers.</p>
        <p>Clearly, though, shes concerned about politics, too. She served on the National Democratic Committee for 3'2 years, and her impressions of Fridays rally went deeper than wondering whether the speeches were well received.</p>
        <p>I hope the people who heard us will remember what was said. My husband and Mike Dukakis cannot do it by themselves.</p>
        <p>Ive heard my husband say that democracy is not a spectator sport, she added. As we move around, I have the concern that people will go home and forget what theyve seen and heard.</p>
        <p>Im hoping it was a lasting meeting, she added. I hope theyll get involved.</p>
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        <pb facs="00097037_0007" />
        <p>1^  The Dally Reflector, Qraenvllle, N.C. Sunday, September 18.1988 ^.7bentsen Appeals For Southern'Voter Support At Greenville Rally</p>
        <p>(Continued from A-l)</p>
        <p>nessee Sen. Albert Gore on the stage.</p>
        <p>1 could remember a time when you d have a national ticket come through and the local officials would nnd a reason to be out of town  Bensten said, citing the importance of party unity.</p>
        <p>Bentsen also threw spears at Republican presidential nominee George Bush.</p>
        <p>(Democratic presidential nominee) Michael Dukakis and I have a message ... a message of</p>
        <p>fiscal responsibility, he said.</p>
        <p>Chairmen</p>
        <p>Named</p>
        <p>Dean Corbett, Katherine Gray, A1 Nichols and Dr. Mike Weaver have been named division chairmen for the 1988 United Way campaign.</p>
        <p>With a $1.1 million goal, the campaign runs until Nov. 9. Contributions will support 35 health and human care agencies in 1989.</p>
        <p>Corbett, city executive of First American Savings Bank in Farm-ville, is chairman of the county campaign. The division includes campaigns in Farmville, Ayden, Bethel, Falkland, Grifton, Winterville, Stokes, Fountain and Pactolus.</p>
        <p>Ms. Corbett was chairman for the county last year and recently completed a term as secretary for the Farmville Charitable Services Board of Directors. She is secretary of the Allocations Committee for Farmville Charitable Services and a Town Steering Committee member for the 1988 Dogwood and Arts Festival.</p>
        <p>She and her husband, Alex, have one daughter.</p>
        <p>Leading the Special Gifts Division is Katherine Gray, loan officer and office manager at NCNB-South Park. She has served as chairman of the division for three previous campaigns. A past president of the Greenville Junior Womens Club, she is a member of the Pitt-Greenville Chamber of Commerce and a past treasurer in the American Heart Association-Pitt County chapter.</p>
        <p>Nichols, executive director for the Greenville-Pitt County Convention and Visitors Bureau, is chairman of the Travel and Hospitality Industry Division. A new division in the United Way campaign, it includes restaurants, hotels and transportation.</p>
        <p>Prior to moving to Greenville six 'months ago, Nichols was executive director for the Williamsburg Convention and Visitors Bureau. He is a board member of the Pitf-Greenville Chamber of Commerce and a member of the N.C. Association of American and International Association of Convention and Visitors Bureaus.</p>
        <p>Weaver, a clinical professor of radiology at the East Carolina School of Medicine, is chairman of the physicians and staff division.</p>
        <p> Weaver is a member of Eastern Radiologists and ehief of the medical staff at Pitt County Memorial H(pi-tal.</p>
        <p>He is a fellow in the American College of Radiology and is a member of the Chamber of Commerce Business/Health Coalition. He is a member of the board of directors of the Pitt County Boys Club and a member of the Chancellors Society at ECU. He served as leader of the physicians United Way campaign in 1984.</p>
        <p>A Knoxville, Tenn., native. Weaver and his wife, Helen, have three children.</p>
        <p>Firefighters Like Snow</p>
        <p>Forecast</p>
        <p>By ELLEN HADPOW Associated Press Writer YELLOWSTONE NATIONAL PARK, Wyo. (AP)  A forecast for up to 6 inches of snow gave firefighters prospects Saturday of reinforcing tttle lines against fires that have burned for nearly three months.</p>
        <p>. This forecast is music to our ears, said Ken Dittmer, one of Yellowstones area commanders.</p>
        <p>But high winds preceded the storm, with more than 40 mph gusts in some areas. Firefighters fought a fire that threatened Roosevelt Lodge because of the winds,</p>
        <p>I hope this thing decides to take a nap soon, said Capt. Ron Goetz-inger, who heads a team of firefighters from Brainerd, Minn. The snow should take care of it. We sure hope so. </p>
        <p>The storm, forecast to swing into Yellowstone sometime Saturday night, was expected to leave much of its moisture on the northern sections of the country's first national park, Dittmer said.</p>
        <p>Fires burning in northern Yellowstone, including the 335,300-acre North Fork blaze, have been the most active in recent days and got the least moisture from a front that passed through the park a week ago, according to the commander. That previous rain represented about the first significant moisture in the park since spring.</p>
        <p>While Dukakis has balanced 10 straight Massachusetts budgets as governor of the state, Bentsen said the Reagan-Bush administration has not balanced one.</p>
        <p>Bentsen criticized Bushs record as vice president, and he also poked fun at Bushs running mate, Indiana Sen. DanQuayle.</p>
        <p>When George Bush talks about a balanced budget, its like Dan Quayle talking about his resume - theres just not much to talk about, he said.</p>
        <p>If you ran your life or your business like this administration has run the country, youd either be broke or in jail, he said.</p>
        <p>Bentsen generated some cheers and some laughs from the crowd when he said he and Dukakis would practice can do economics, not the voo doo economics of Reagan, and he even took a slap at the current administration as he complimented the East Carolina University band, which performed at the rally.</p>
        <p>Thats more harmony than Ive heard out of the White House in eight years, he said.</p>
        <p>Bentsen also criticized Bush for forgetting the correct date of the Pearl Harbor attack in a recent speech and for not voicing opposition</p>
        <p>to Reagans dealings with Nicaraguan leader Manuel Noriega and the presidents arms-for-hostages deal with Iran.</p>
        <p>When it comes to strong leadership, George Bush has got a bad case of laryngitis, he said. ,</p>
        <p>As for defense issues, Bentsen said he and Dukakis support the cruise missiles, the stealth bomber and research into strategic defense possibilities.</p>
        <p>Dukakis has strongly opposed Reagans Strategic Defense Initiative - or Star Wars - but Bentsen did not specifically say he supported more research into Reagans proposed system. He also said the country needed improved tanks, guns and conventional weapons.</p>
        <p>Other top items he said the Dukakis administration would focus on would be ensuring everyone an opiwrtunity to attend college by providing adequate grant and scholarship money, providing adequate health care and day care for low income families and improving environmental management.</p>
        <p>The event was also a time for hand-shaking and back-slapping for many top state Democrats. From Bensten to Greenville Mayor Ed</p>
        <p>Carter, Democrats at the rally took turns endorsing one another and complimenting the party.</p>
        <p>Prior to Bentsens 1:30 p.m. arrival, Carter welcomed the state officials to Greenville, and Pitt Democratic Party Chairman J.B. Spilman introduced local elected officials seated on stage and thanked party officials for helping set up the event with just four days notice.</p>
        <p>When state Democratic Party Chairman Jim Van Hecke introduced Lt. Gov. Robert Jordan, candidate for governor, the crowd let go with chants and applause in support of Jordan.</p>
        <p>Jordan used the opportunity to align himself with the national ticket. Im proud to be running with that wonderful Dukakis-Bush team ... that helps bring the kind of leadership we need at the helm of America.</p>
        <p>Gore, who droped out of the presidential race in March, introduced state Agriculture Commissioner Jim Graham to the crowd. And Graham, who removed his trademark cowboy hat to speak, drew applause with his animated arm-waving speech praising Bentsen.</p>
        <p>he said the senator was born and reared on a farm and has a thorough understanding of the tobacco, peanut and cotton industries, which should be important to North Carolina voters.</p>
        <p>Gore, who campaigned in Greenille in March during his own run for the White House, said he is now working full-time to get Dukakis and Bentsen elected.</p>
        <p>Im back here to pick up where I left off: to end eight years of Bush and Reagan and put a Democrat in the White House this year, Gore said.</p>
        <p>Gore repeated a popular theme from his own campaign, claiming the</p>
        <p>country needs a leader to put government back on the side of working men and women.</p>
        <p>He drew cheers from the crowd when he stated that Dukakis and Bentsen favored a law to require companies to notify workers 60 days in advance of any plant closing, a measure Reagan has staunchly opposed.</p>
        <p>Gore also put in a political plug for Jordans bid to unseat Republican Gov. Jim Martin, saying former Democratic Gov. Jim Hunt helped make the state part of the new South, and Jordan would put the state at the forefront of the country and help build a new America.</p>
        <p>Graham said he enjoyed an intimate friendship with Bentsen. and</p>
        <p>SHAO LESSONS</p>
        <p>Beginner, Intermediate, Advanced &amp;amp; Male Lead Classes Offered</p>
        <p>Registration Tuesday, Sept. 20 at 6 p.m.</p>
        <p>Advanced Ciass at 6 Beginners at 7 and intermediates at 8</p>
        <p>Off The Cuff Lounge at the Sheraton Hotel Greenville Blvd., Greenville Ctesses Every Tusday Night For S Wooks.</p>
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        <pb facs="00097037_0008" />
        <p>RIDE EM, CDVVBOV  Shameka Lewis. 3, isnt quite ready for the rodeo, but wild horses couldnt drag her away from her trusty carousel mount. Joined on the wooden steed bv her mother, Karen, the</p>
        <p>pair spent Saturday at Burlingtons second annual Carousel Festival. The event was nearly rained out, but Shameka and her mom still managed to rustle up some fun on the merry-go-round. (,^F Laserphoto)</p>
        <p>Two New PTL Bidders On Trustee 's Agenda</p>
        <p>FORT MILL, S.C. (AP) - PTL bankruptcy Trustee M.C. Red Benton is considering at least two new bids for the ministrys assets this weekend as he prepares to recommend a buyer to U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Rufus Reynolds.</p>
        <p>"I hope we can finish it up by Monday," Benton said Friday night.</p>
        <p>And in a separate development, ministry officials said they were suspending some outreach programs at the ministry to save money.</p>
        <p>Benton said Peter Thomas, the Vancouver, British Columbia, businessman who had previously offered $113 million, is a possible buyer. I think Peter Thomas is still right in there.</p>
        <p>He said one new bidder is a Toronto. Ontario, businessman, but would not reveal his name.</p>
        <p>Sources told The Charlotte (N.C.) Observer that the man wants an option on the assets until Dec. 31. If he</p>
        <p>then bought the property, he would pay $115 million, of which $50 million would be cash.</p>
        <p>Another bid came from a group of private investors from the New York and Washington areas, Benton said. Sources told The Observer they offered about $200 million, $50 million in cash.</p>
        <p>Benton said that if he could not make a recommendation by Monday, he would request another deadline extension to accept bids.</p>
        <p>PTL has been in bankruptcy pro-' ceedings since June 1987, three months after founder Jim Bakker left amid a sex-and-money scandal. Judge Reynolds has said that if PTL isnt sold by Oct. 1, he will order it closed.</p>
        <p>Reynolds has given Benton until Sept. 27 to choose a buyer or liquidate PTLs assets.</p>
        <p>Benton and Don Edwards, interim president of Heritage Ministries, Inc. also said Heritage Ministries of-</p>
        <p>Hiring Freeze</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP)  The court systems chief administrator said Saturday he has put into effect a special provision that allows him to order a hiring freeze to save money to pay for increasing costs and court programs that the General Assembly approved but did not fund.</p>
        <p>The Administrative Office of the Courts received $6 million of a $6.4 million request for the indigent person attorneys fee fund, said Franklin Freeman, director of the office.</p>
        <p>That money came from the expansion budget, he said. Most of the expansion money had to be budgeted for a 4.5 percent salary increase for state employees.</p>
        <p>They didnt have a lot of expansion left (after paying for the salary increase)," he said. I think they felt $6 million out of $64 million was our share. But 1 knew we had these other needs. So 1 asked the General Assembly for a special provision that would allow for this year to use lapsed salaries to meet these needs that I saw developing in the spring of next year and that special provision was enacted. Historically, we generate $2.5 million to $2.6 million annually in lapsed salaries."</p>
        <p>Freeman said the money was needed to cover witness and jury fees, increased postage and printing costs, and the costs of keeping the libraries of the state Supreme Court and Court of Appeals operating.</p>
        <p>The courts must also find money to pay for higher salaries for emergency judges (retired judges who fill in for regular judges) and an additional district court judge in Robeson County, the memos say.</p>
        <p>The General Assembly gave Freeman the authority to use money saved on unfilled positions to pay for other programs. Freeman says in one memo, all full-time positions  other than those of elected officials  must be left vacant for 45 days after they become open. A second memo says that 65 temporary positions will have to be eliminated at the end of this month. Freeman hopes to save about $800,000 out of the $2.4 million budgeted for temporary jobs.</p>
        <p>The average vacancy is 30 days anyway, he said. All we have done is extend the average from 30 days to 45 days.</p>
        <p>Freeman said he believed that after four months the office would be able to return to normal procedures for filling vacant positions.</p>
        <p>As clerks, assistant district attorneys, secretaries, victims assistance workers, public defenders, juvenile court counselor and others leave, their positions will remain open for 45 days. The economy measures do not affect bailiffs, probation officers or other court workers whose salaries are not paid by the administrative office.</p>
        <p>Complacency A Worry To Coastal Officials</p>
        <p>ficials have suspended the operations of their home for unwed mothers, adoption services and dormitories for homeless, drug-addicted and troubled men.</p>
        <p>The suspension will save the ministry $3,000 a day in operating costs, said Edwards.</p>
        <p>Edwards said he and Benton decided on the suspension earlier this week to save money. Donations to Heritage ministry services, which include the home for unwed mothers, had dropped from about $80,000 a day in April and May to $15,000 to $20,000 a day in recent weeks, Edwards said.</p>
        <p>Edwards attributed the decrease to the IRSs April decision to revoke PTLs tax-exempt status and to Bak-kers attempt to buy back the ministry.</p>
        <p>Thats had a substantial, unfavorable effect, he said of Bakkers attempt.</p>
        <p>The Herald newspaper of Rock Hill reported the cost-cutting decisions would result in layoffs for 17 people.</p>
        <p>The decision to suspend the two services was made in the context of being good stewards and also to show the judge a good faith effort to cut costs and to further tighten our belts, Edwards said. But no one will be put out on the street.</p>
        <p>The ministry had already found homes for the two girls who lived at Heritage Home, which was designed for 24 unwed mothers, Edwards said. The ministry expects it will take 10 to 30 days to find apartments and other treatment programs for the men at Fort Hope.</p>
        <p>Thirteen men are staying in the dormitories, which can hold up to 18, Edwards said. He added that 14 adoptions now in progress will be completed.</p>
        <p>Were not closing our operations, were suspending them, he said Friday night. And assuming we recover the lost income, well come back into these areas</p>
        <p>Edwards also said the last 1988 performance of the Heritage Passion Play will be Saturday, two weeks earlier than scheduled. The end of the plays season will further trim PTLs expenses by 99 workers, he told The Herald.</p>
        <p>Were planning for all activities to resume next year, he said. But we have no idea what the new owner will do.</p>
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        <p>By The Associated Press Long Beach Police Chief Walt Workman knows what would happen if a hurricane the size of Gilbert hit the North Carolina coast.</p>
        <p>We wouldnt survive Gilbert, Workman said.</p>
        <p>Legendary Hurricane Hazel destroyed all but five of 387 homes on Long Beach in 1954, with wind gusts of less than l(X) mph. A hurricane like Gilbert, with winds as high as 175 mph, could level whole coastal communities  and devastate towns for miles inland.</p>
        <p>Carolinas coastal officials say they arent worried so much about the physical damage a hurricane like Gilbert could do  thats beyond their control. But because no major storm has hit the Carolinas coast for 30 years, theyre concerned that coastal residents and tourists have become complacent  that they might not evacuate in time.</p>
        <p>And some worry that because the coast has been so built up, even if people try to leave they might be forced to weather a storm in a traffic jam.</p>
        <p>Its asinine, David Stick, an Outer Banks historian, told The Charlotte Observer. Its as absurd to be talking now about evacuating all tourists from the Outer Banks in a hurricane as it was to talk about putting everyone in shelters to guard against atomic bombs 30 years ago. Its impossible.</p>
        <p>The Outer Banks are low-lying and access is limited to ferries or two-lane bridges. W.A. Hoggard, town manager of Kill Devil Hills, said evacuation has been well-planned and rehearsed. But because of unprecedented development, there likely would be unprecedented destruction, he said.</p>
        <p>If a hurricane popped up quickly, he concedes that Outer Bank residents could be trapped in their cars as some were during the minor Hurricane Charley in 1986.</p>
        <p>Its storms like Charley that have Tom Ditt, spokesman for the N.C. Division of Emergency Management, worried.</p>
        <p>Weve only had three minor storms in the past three years, and a lot of people say, T rode out Charley.</p>
        <p>I rode out Diana. I rode out Gloria, and apathy sets in, Ditt says. And when I look at our maps and see what would be under water in a Category 5 storm, it scares me. The entire Outer Banks, several sections of Hyde and Dare County would be completely under water. Many areas inland would be flooded  Washington and</p>
        <p>Takeoff Concerns</p>
        <p>SUMTER, S.C. (AP)  In the wake of this weeks F-16 crash, a Sumter County Councilman says he expects to meet soon with Shaw Air Force Base officials to discuss changing takeoffs at the base.</p>
        <p>Ed Everett said he wants to avoid quick turns over residential areas and said his discussions with council members and people living near the base indicate a growing concern about safety.</p>
        <p>Ive already fielded six or seven calls concerning jets circling close to residential areas in Cherryvale (the community where the crash occurred), Everett said.</p>
        <p>One person even suggested a petition campaign, he said. "I (lont think we need to go that far - we have a good, close relationship with the base, and I look forward to working something out with them.</p>
        <p>Meanwhile, Shaw officials have expressed their regrets over the death of a man who was severely burned in this weeks crash.</p>
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        <p>A Category 5 storm has winds greater than 155 mph, barometric pressure less than 27.17 inches and a storm surge higher than 18 feet. Gilbert is one of only three Category 5 storms in the Western Hemisphere since weather officials began keeping detailed records. The others were the 1935 Labor Day hurricane in the Florida Keys, and Camille, which hit the Mississippi coast in 1969.</p>
        <p>Hazel is the hurricane by which all other hurricanes are measured in the Carolinas. It hit in mid-October 1954 at high tide. Though winds in the Carolinas were less than 100 mph, it measured 113 mph in New York City and caused $281 million in damage along thEast Coast.</p>
        <p>Tornadoes spawned by hurricanes, capable of winds of 200 to 300 mph, could strike inland cities.</p>
        <p>In uptown Charlotte," said Dr. Charles Mitchell, professor in the UNC Charlotte School of Architecture, there are lots of low, small buildings with flat tops and gravel roofs.</p>
        <p>In storms, the gravel and other debris could become airborne.</p>
        <p>How would you like to be in a glass building with someone throwing rocks at it? asked Mitchell.</p>
        <p>On the ocean side of the Intracoastal Waterway, buildings must be designed for 120 mph wind. The standard drops to 110 mph for areas such as Charleston and Wilmington, slightly inland.</p>
        <p>Farther inland, the standards drop more. For example, it is 80 mph in Charlotte and 75 mph in Greenville-Spartanburg.</p>
        <p>We could come through OK with the 120 mph theyre forecasting for Gilbert, said Willis Stancil, New Hanover County building inspection chief. However, if you get a Category 3,4 or 5 storm, with the 20-foot wall of water it wouW be pushing in front of it, nothing is going to come through it."</p>
        <p>Ultimately, Smits and Mitchell said, cost dictates design.</p>
        <p>You try to predict and be a realist, Smits said. We design for 110 mph. You can rest assured it wouldnt withstand 200 mph. But there have been only two other Category 5 hurricanes this century. You cant design for the extreme.</p>
        <p>Along the coast, weve had tremendous growth and the key in all this is that weve not had a tremendous hurricane since Hazel in 54, Ditt said. All the response people make is based on past action.</p>
        <p>He said the state is more prepared than ever. It has computerized data, based on a three-year coastal study, that can forecast the effect of storms, depending on such factors as size, location and intensity. Officials can now predict such things as what areas will flood and how great the surge of water will be.</p>
        <p>The biggest unknown is the reaction of residents and tourists.</p>
        <p>We did a behavior sampling, Ditt said. We found that there are 20 percent who will evacuate, no questions asked. There are about 20 percent who will stay, and that middle 60 percent are the ones who concern us. You really dont know exactly what theyre going todo....</p>
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        <p>WHERE ARE MY SEA LEGS?  Ralph the dog tries to get his sea legs on an innertube after his master decided to abandon ship. The canine cruiser managed to stay on the craft until he decided to jump back into Jordan Lake in Chatham County. &amp;lt; AP Laserphoto)</p>
        <p>IN THE STATE</p>
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        <p>Injunction Sought Low Lake Levels</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP)  Attorneys representing the state have indicated they will try on Monday to obtain a stay of a preliminary injunction that allows the fired director of the state motor fleet to return to work.</p>
        <p>The ruling Friday allows Rilla M. Woods, who was fired in August, to return to her post until a trial on her lawsuit challenging the dismissal. State attorneys indicated they would take the injunction to the states appellate courts.</p>
        <p>Judge Robert Farmer of Raleigh sharply criticized Ms. Woods dismissal, which followed her refusal to rescind a letter to a prominent state official ordering him to return a state-owned car assigned to his agency.</p>
        <p>But Farmers ruling will not bind the judge or jury at the trial.</p>
        <p>Release Efforts</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP)  Justine Finch Bush of Raleigh has spent the last week talking with Liberian officials in hopes of securing the release  or at least an early trial  for her husband, one of two Americans charged with treason.</p>
        <p>I have been pounding the pavement and sitting in offices, said Mrs. Bush in a telephone interview with the News and Observer of Raleigh from Monrovia, the capital of the west African ntion.</p>
        <p>The Liberian government charges that Mrs. Bushs husband, James H. Bush Jr., 41, was part of a small group of men who crossed into Liberia from the Ivory Coast intending to overthi ow the government of President Samuel Doe. Bush and another American, Curtis Hayes Williams of New Jersey, were ar rested July 13 and charged with treason on Sept . 2.</p>
        <p>I have met with several people. she said. "We are negotiating, but 1 am not a lawyer.</p>
        <p>Although she was not able to meet with Doe, she has met with ministers of justice and defense "We have agreed we will move the trial up as so(Hi as possible,  she said No trial date has been set</p>
        <p>BURLINGTON, N.C. (AP) -Lakes that supply drinking water for Burlington, Mebane and Graham remain well below normal levels, despite substantial rainfall in the past few weeks,</p>
        <p>Officials in Mebane and Graham, as well as those in Chapel Hill, continued Friday to ask residents to conserve water.</p>
        <p>And in Burlington, where the main reservoir contains 60 percent of its normal capacity, officials have discussed asking residents to conserve water voluntarily.</p>
        <p>"What were waiting to see is what the weather pattern will be, said Steve Shoaf, Burlingtons utilities administrator. "Hopefully, well have a full lake again soon.</p>
        <p>At Lake Cammack, the reservoir for Graham and Mebane, water levels this week are 7 inches below the Aug. 17 level, when officials called for voluntary curbs on water use, Graham City Manager Ray Foglemansaid In Chapel Hill, officials still are asking for voluntary curbs on water use as University Lake, west of the Orange County city, hovers at 27 inches below its normal level.</p>
        <p>In Siler City, the Chatham County town that rationed water last month, officials say a new spillway and substantial rainfall have ended chronic water shortages at the Rocky River reservoir.</p>
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        <p>N.C. Poll Indicates Dukakis, Bush Are Running Even Among Voters</p>
        <p>CHARLOTTE (AP)  North Carolina voters are evenly split between Republican George Bush and Democrat Michael Dukakis, a poll by The Charlotte Observer shows, mirroring gains for Bush in national surveys taken since he won the nomination last month.</p>
        <p>"I think his message is getting across, said Steve Schwartz, executive director of Bushs N.C. campaign. Hes fine-tuning his message to targeted groups and he gave one hell of a speech in New Orleans. Hes on his own now.</p>
        <p>battleground state. And I think your poll in fact reflects that this is going to be a tough battle here.</p>
        <p>The telephone survey of 802 registered voters was conducted Sunday through Wednesday by the marketing research division of The Charlotte Observer. The sampling error for such a survey is plus or minus 3 2 percentage points.</p>
        <p>The results were weighted to reflect a "probable electorate based on ques</p>
        <p>tions about the respondents voting history and intention to vote in November. Among the larger pool of registered voters, the poll shows Bush and</p>
        <p>Dukakis each with the support of 46 percent. A similar poll of all registered voters by The Observer in May showed Dukakis leading 46 percent to 40 percent.</p>
        <p>About four out of 10 supporters of each candidate in the new poll of the probable electorate say there is a slight or strong chance they could change their minds by election day.</p>
        <p>The poll suggests that Dukakis has not persuaded N.C. voters that hes the best candidate to create jobs, fight drugs and reduce the deficit - three of his campaigns main themes.</p>
        <p>Bush, on the other hand, apparently has been effective in persuading voters he wont raise taxes.</p>
        <p>By 46 ^rcent to 40 percent, voters believe Bush would be most likely to create jobs. And they give no clear edge to either candidate on the question of reducing the deficit and the drug problem.</p>
        <p>By nearly 2-1, voters believe Bush less likely to raise taxes  and one of every five Dukakis supporters agree.</p>
        <p>However, the poll suggests that Bushs running mate. Sen. Dan Quayle of Indiana, is a potential liability.</p>
        <p>Nearly three of 10 voters say theyre less likely to vote for the GOP ticket because of Quayle, 41, whose background and qulifications have drawn fire. That compares with one in 10 likely voters who sav thevd be less likelv to</p>
        <p>That compares with one in 10 likely voters who say theyd be less likely to vote Democratic because of Bentsens presence on the ticket.</p>
        <p>Jacksonville Weighs Lejeune Annexation</p>
        <p>JACKSONVILLE, N.C. (AP) City officials are considering a proposal to annex inhabited areas of Camp Lejeune  a move that would double the citys population, making it the seventh largest in the state.</p>
        <p>City Manager Jerry Bittner said he was preparing an annexation plan to present to the city council next week.</p>
        <p>"I received directions from the council to look into new revenue sources, Bittner said, "With this proposal, we could minimize and possibly reduce city property taxes.</p>
        <p>The annexation could increase city coffers by $2.7 million annually but would take nearly $1.8 million away from Onslow County government.</p>
        <p>County Manager Rick Leary said Friday that if the annexation occurs, the county Board of Commissioners will have to explore other options for raising revenue or consider reducing some county services.</p>
        <p>Leary said the county would stand to lose money brought in from sales taxes because such tax funds are distributed on the basis of population figures. If Camp Lejeunes population is added to Jacksonvilles figures, the countys share of tax revenues would be reduced proportionately.</p>
        <p>"Whether or not the county can absorb such a loss remains to be seen, he said "Wed have to evaluate our budget to determine whether reduc tion in services can occur. Or, the county would have to consider alter</p>
        <p>natives to raising funds to make up for the loss we would incur.</p>
        <p>Jacksonville Mayor George Jones said the proposal offers significant potential for the city. We owe it to the citizens, not only of this city but the whole county, to look at our options and weigh out the possibilities of this annexation, Jones said.</p>
        <p>The Joint Public Affairs Office at Camp Lejeune confirmed Friday that annexation procedures have been received by military officials.</p>
        <p>The annexation issue has been proposed to the base, and we have forwarded the proposal to Marine Corps Headquarters, where it now resides, said Maj. Stuart Wagner of the Joint Public Affairs Office. We expect guidance on the matter, but I have no feel for the time.</p>
        <p>The annexation proposal would more than double the ^pulation of Jacksonville to nearly 70,000  making it the seventh largest city in the state, Bittner said. If the plan works as presented, it would begin im-meaiately and it would be as late as 1991 before it is complete, Bittner said.</p>
        <p>Cooperative efforts with Camp Lejeune and the New River air station would become even more intertwined to our mutual benefit. Bittner said.</p>
        <p>The City Council will vote on whether to proceed with the plan at its regular meeting Tuesday night.</p>
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        <p>While nearly half the voters surveyed support the GOP ticket, only one in four consider Quayle more qualified than Bentsen to be president.</p>
        <p>The poll shows 48 percent of likely voters supporting or leaning toward Bush and 47 percent supporting or leaning toward Dulcakis.</p>
        <p>Thats a bigger following for Bush than he had in a similar survey in May, while Dukakis support is virtually the same as in May.</p>
        <p>In making his gains. Bush overcame Dukakis lead in the Piedmont, which accounts for more than half the states registered voters. There, he holds a 51 percent-44 percent edge among likely voters.</p>
        <p>Bush also enjoys strong backing among whites and affluent voters.</p>
        <p> Among Dukakiss strongest supporters are blacks and voters in the east and the west. And he also is recapturing many of the so-called Reagan Democrats  a group considered crucial to Dukakis, particularly in the South.</p>
        <p>The poll shows Dukakis winning 32 percent of Democrats who say they voted for President Reagan in 1984. On Friday, the partys vice presidential nominee. Sen. Lloyd Bentsen of Texas, underscored the push for such conservative Democrats with a visit to Greenville in Eastern North Carolina.</p>
        <p>I am encouraged by your numbers that show that Democrats are coming home, said Paul Sullivan, Dukakiss N.C. manager. I think that trend will increase....</p>
        <p>I think this state will probably remain too close to call for several weeks. Both the Bush and the Dukakis campaign have targeted North Carolina as a</p>
        <p>Th6 Doll dlso shows *</p>
        <p>- While 29 percent of likely voters have an unfavorable impression of Bush, one of three hold a negative impression of Dukakis.</p>
        <p>- While Dukakis has a 51 percent to 43 percent edge among women. Bush has a 54 percent to 42 percent advantage among men. That appears to represent a widening of the male gender gap in Bushs favor and a narrowing of the split among women.</p>
        <p>Among registered voters, Bush enjoys an 11-percentage point lead among men  compared with a 1-point edge in May. On the other hand, Dukakiss 12-point advantage among women has shrunk to a 10-point difference since May.</p>
        <p>- While Bush holds a 56 percent to 39 percent lead among whites, Dukakis leads among blacks 87 percent to 9 percent. Dukakis has strengthened his support among blacks since the Democratic convention.</p>
        <p>Open-Meeting Law</p>
        <p>ByJOHNFLESHER Associated Press Writer WRIGHTSVILLE BEACH. N.C. (AP)  North Carolinas open-mieeting law should be strengthened by imposing fines on government officials who conduct public business in private, Lt. Gov. Bob Jordan said Saturday.</p>
        <p>I would favor fines of a magnitude that it would cause them to obey the open-meetings law, Jordan, the Democratic gubernatorial nominee, said in an interview after a speech to the North Carolina Associated Press News Council. You have to have some teeth in the law.</p>
        <p>He said he also would support a law invalidating official actions taken in violation of the open-meeting statute. A bill to that effect was introduced by Rep. George Miller, D-Durham, in 1987 but was not approved.</p>
        <p>The open-meeting law requires state and local governmental bodies  except for the General Assembly, which is exempt  to do business in</p>
        <p>public meetings. But there are more ' than a dozen topics that may be discussed in private, such as personnel matters and property transactions.</p>
        <p>In response to a question, Jordan ' said he would favor tougher sanctions for violators, apparently unaware that the law has no penalties. But when told it did not, he said he ' would favor adding them.</p>
        <p>Jordan, who in his speech accused Republican Gov. Jim Martin of promoting secrecy in the state budget ' process, said the state Senate was ' more open than it had been under Jordans predecessor, former Lt. Gov. Jimmy Green.</p>
        <p>Jordan said if elected governor he would continue pushing the Legislature to be less secretive. The state House rejected Senate proposals to pass laws requiring open budget meetings in 1987, but he said he would not let the issue die.</p>
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        <pb facs="00097037_0011" />
        <p>The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C. Sunday, September 16.1988 A-11</p>
        <p>Groups Work To Make Coast Attractive To Wildlife</p>
        <p>COROLLA, N.C. (AP)  The population of ducks on the Currituck Sound has declined dramatically in recent years, due to international trends and development, but wildlife groups are trying to reverse the trend by giving nature a much-needed boost.</p>
        <p>In the 70s, you could turn up a flock of 500 pintail ducks at any time, said David Greer, a lawyer from Norfolk, Va., and a director of the Back Bay Restoration Foundation.</p>
        <p>Of course, the snow geese just covered the area. A flock of 1,000 would take flight and look like starlings.</p>
        <p>On Thursday, Greer and others sank aluminum pipes into position</p>
        <p>along Big Ferbee Creek on Swan Island to help flood woodland in fall and winter, encouraging the growth of bullrushes, which waterfowl eat. The island is one of the coasts wintering stops for ducks, geese and swans.</p>
        <p>The waterfowl have all but disappeared from Swan Island and the surrounding 9,000 acres of marshes and scrubby woodlands that sprawl into Currituck Sound from back of sand dunes about six miles south of the Virginia line.</p>
        <p>Historically, this is a very, very important waterfowl area, said Bill Hegge, manager of Mackay Island National Wildlife Refuge and a caretaker of the Swan Island tract that is now part of the Currituck Na</p>
        <p>tional Wildlife Refuge.</p>
        <p>It is one of the few remaining naturally productive wetland areas left between Virginia Beach and Currituck Sound, he told The Virginian Pilot and The Ledger-Star of Norfolk, Va.</p>
        <p>The crew, which totaled as many as eight, installed two 600-pound aluminum water-control structures in a drainage way for Big Ferbee Creek.</p>
        <p>This is not a big, expensive project,, Hegge said. It costs only $5,000 or $7,000, but all things being equal, it should attract birds.</p>
        <p>The work was financed and done by a coalition that included the Back Bay Restoration Foundation, a non</p>
        <p>profit group of environmentalists and sportsmen, the Swan Island Hunt Club, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and the U.S. Coast Guard.</p>
        <p>The foundation put up about $1,700. The hunt club helped with labor. The federal agency coordinated three wildlife refuges  Back Bay, Mackay Island and Alligator River  to supply equipment. And the Coast Guard furnished a helicopter and crew to deliver the two drainage pipes into the remote area.</p>
        <p>Such coalitions of volunteers and government agencies are at the heart of the 1986 North American Waterfowl Management Plan, which includes far-ranging plans for reversing the dramatic declines of waterfowl populations and habitats in the United States and Canada by the</p>
        <p>N. C. Cities To Turn Sludge Into Usable Soil, Fertilizer</p>
        <p>year 2000.</p>
        <p>LEXINGTON, N.C. (AP) - New  rules that severely restrict disposing of sludge in landfills has forced some North Carolina cities to turn the sludge into usable fertilizer or potting soil.</p>
        <p>The city of Lexington has applied for a $933,000 federal grant. Last week the city sold $967,000 in bonds to build a $1.9 million composting system that will mix the sludge, which is rich in nitrogen and other nutrients, with sawdust or wood chips and let nature take its course.</p>
        <p>Really, a composting system is probably the most basic of all systems. Its a natural way of controlling the sludge, Donald T. Gar-brick, the citys engineering consultant, told the Winston-Salem Journal. This costs more than taking it to a landfill, but you get a product that can be reused.</p>
        <p>technical problem facing industrial cities such as Lexington is making sure that the sludge is free of heavy metals and other industrial wastes.</p>
        <p>Carl D. Hennessee, the director of utilities in Morganton where he designed a composting system 10 years ago, said; You have to consider that the compost must be usable and not be made toxicTiy industrial discharges. The secret to that is a good pre-treatment process.</p>
        <p>At his plant, workers mix two parts of pine bark from local sawmills with one part of waste, let the mixture sit for 21 days over air vents, age it for</p>
        <p>another 21 days, and push it through , a screen to remove any excess bark.</p>
        <p>Whats left is a fine, dark gray mulch that also adds nitrogen to the soil, smells slightly of pine, and sells for $5.50 a cubic yard. In the spring during planting and landscaping season, there are trucks backed up here, taking it directly, Hennessee said.</p>
        <p>Experts say that the compost cant replace other fertilizers, but can be used to condition soil, to replace lost organic material or as a mu ch.</p>
        <p>This falls migrating duck population will be the second lowest on record, according to predictions by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and the Canadian Wildlife Service.</p>
        <p>The long-range decline of waterfowl populations and habitat has been dramatic. The pintail duck, for example, declined from 10 million in 1955 to 4 million today.</p>
        <p>The plan puts a high priority on preserving habitat in Virginia and North Carolina coastal areas, crucial to the Atlantic path followed by migrating wildfowl. A proposal to more than double the Back Bay refuge is among the most grandiose components of that plan.</p>
        <p>One of our concerns is that once an area is left by waterfowl or loses natural value, you lose the traditional population that came there, Hegge said. Once a species uses an area, it tends to hone ii\ on that area year after year.</p>
        <p>WATERFOWL HABITAT Craig Hughes measures the water depth in a dam area near Corolla in Currituck County in preparation for the dropping of a section of pipe by a Coast Guard helicopter. Hqghes is helping to build a waterfowl habitat in the county. (AP Laserphoto)</p>
        <p>3</p>
        <p>Or as William C. Holtzman, Davidson Countys agricultural extension agent, put it: Its got to be moved someway, and if it can be used as a fertilizer or a soil conditioner, that would be better than not using it.</p>
        <p>Last spring the environmental health section of the states Department of Human Resources pushed cities into recycling their sludge by making it almost impossible to continue dumping it in their landfills.</p>
        <p>Some cities have already found alternative ways of getting rid of their sludge.</p>
        <p>Greensboro burns about 21 tons a day in a special incinerator. Winston-Salem and High Point spread theirs directly* over area farms. Morganton composts. And Hickory is beginning a composting program.</p>
        <p>The new rules say that wastewater-treatment sludge may be used in only the final 2 feet of cover over a landfill, effectively banning its disposal in them.</p>
        <p>Stephen T. Reid, a spokesman for the environmental agency, said that, without the restriction, the sludge could seep into groundwater.</p>
        <p>The sludge is whats left after bacteria have digested the sewage and neutralized most of the bad smells, and the water has been returned.</p>
        <p>Experts say that the biggest</p>
        <p>Day Care Program</p>
        <p>HIGH POINT, N.C. (AP) - Gov. Jim Martin has proposed a pilot pro</p>
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        <pb facs="00097037_0012" />
        <p>A-12 The Dally Reflector, Greenville, N.C. Sunday, September 18.1988</p>
        <p>Monster Hurricane Became A No-Show</p>
        <p>By SCOTT iVIcCARTNEY Associated Press Writer BROWNSVILLE, Texas (AP) -Officials predicted disaster and talked of fingerprinting those who stayed behind to identify their bodies. Gulf coast residents from Grand Isle, La., to this tip-of-Texas town boarded up their windows and fled.</p>
        <p>But in the end, it was Gilbert, "the storm of the century, who stayed away  turning out to be too big to turn north, too gracious to blast the U.S. coast.</p>
        <p>We were waiting for the storm, but it never showed up, said Francisco Garcia as he used a crowbar to pry plywood off his familys barbecue hut. Some people are mad a little bit that they spent money and the hurricane never showed up.  Meteorologists predictions that Gilbert, like past hurricanes, would turn north toward Texas or Louisiana and strengthen after battering Mexicos Yucatan Penninsula proved wrong. Gilbert hardly strayed from its westmorthwest course.</p>
        <p>He was so large it was too hard to veer, said Greg Flatt of the National Weather Service here. It was controlling the weather pattern. The weather pattern wasnt controlling it.</p>
        <p>Said Neil Frank, former director of the National Hurricane Center and now weatherman for KHOU in Houston: This storm was so big it just did its own thing and charged right into Mexico.</p>
        <p>. Gilbert dumped up to 6 inches of rain on areas and spun off deadly tornadoes that destroyed a few homes, damaged roofs and shattered windows. Across the Rio Grande in</p>
        <p>Mexico, as in Jamaica and Haiti, the damage was widespread and severe.</p>
        <p>I dont think anybodys going to feel this was the wrong thing to do, Corpus Christi Mayor Betty Turner said of the evacuation in her town, where thousands of residents crowded into shelters.</p>
        <p>This isnt new to South Texas, said Corpus Christi police chief Robert Olson. People know what hurricanes can do. I think that should another one arise, theyll respond justas well.</p>
        <p>On Galveston Island near Houston, several hundred miles from where Gilbert hit, an evacuation order was under fire. And some in poor neighborhoods of this border town complained about the expense of hurricane preparations.</p>
        <p>But when the sky cleared, most said they held no hard feelings over the no-show hurricane.</p>
        <p>Id rather be safe than sorry, said Rosbel Villarreal, who boarded up the home he recently bought here and took his family, including three young children, to a motel in McAllen. I spent probably $150 but I didnt want to take a chance.</p>
        <p>Sometimes they hit here, sometimes they dont. You never know, said Jeni Hinojosa as she swept up fallen leaves and branches from her yard.</p>
        <p>Guadalupe Longoria remembers more brutal storms here like Allen and Beulah. But she stayed in her home alone, praying, all Friday night.</p>
        <p>I was expecting whatever the dear Lord sends us, she said.</p>
        <p>By Saturday morning, a steady stream of cars and campers returned</p>
        <p>mmm</p>
        <p>NO PARKING  Waves crashed into the seawall along a beach access road in Padre Island, Texas, Friday as Hurricane Gilbert encroached on the Texas coast. (AP Laserphoto)</p>
        <p>to wind-whipped Brownsville and the city that had gone into hibernation returned to life. Lines formed at bakeries, and crews began picking up the fallen palms and branches.</p>
        <p>For five days reports on Gilberts brute force prompted coastal residents to batten down the hatches and prepare for a fierce storm that made its mark on history with the lowest recorded barometric pressure in the hemisphere.</p>
        <p>Thousands of residents evacuated, but most stayed, saying either they</p>
        <p>felt safe in their own homes and would tough it out, or they feared looters.</p>
        <p>Plywood shot up to $15 a sheet in some areas. There were long lines at grocery stores, and hotels hundreds of miles away took in Gilbert escapees.</p>
        <p>Youve got to do it, Garcia said. The meteorologists made a mistake, but anyb(^y can make a mistake. You never know with hurricanes.</p>
        <p>Jamaica Begins Painful Recovery</p>
        <p>By ROBERT GLASS Associated Press Writer KINGSTON, Jamaica (AP) -Tourists are flying out and medicine, plastic tents and food are pouring in at Jamaicas two international airports as this island nation struggles to recover from the fury of Hurricane Gilbert.</p>
        <p>Little by little, Jamaica, home to 2.3 million people, is struggling back from the worst disaster in its history.</p>
        <p>But its going to be a slow and painful process.</p>
        <p>The confirmed death toll of 26 was low in comparison with Hurricane Charlie, which hit Jamaica in 1951 and killed more than 150 people. But Charlie caused less physical damage. Prime Minister Edward Seaga has estimated losses at $8 billion and called Gilbert the worst disaster in the nations history.</p>
        <p>The government say 500,000 peo-</p>
        <p>200 People Drown</p>
        <p>(Continued from A-l)</p>
        <p>The bodies of an elderly woman, a small boy and two men, all unidentified, were found in the town of Juarez 14 miles east of Monterrey, said federal police spokesman Feli^ de Jesus Banda Martinez.</p>
        <p>In Cadereyta, 20 miles east of Monterrey, a police spokesman said another eight or ten bodies have been pulled out of the river. </p>
        <p>At noon EOT Saturday, the National Hurricane Center in Coral Gables, Fla. issued its final advisory on Gilbert.</p>
        <p>It said the center of the storm was near latitude 25.5 north and longitude 101.0 west or about 220 miles west southwest of Brownsville, Texas, and 45 miles southwest of Monterrey.</p>
        <p>Maximum sustained winds were estimated to be near 35 mph and the storm was expected to weaken further. But rainfall of 10 to 15 inches were forecast, with up to 20 inches in some areas.</p>
        <p>It was the second time in three days that Gilbert slammed into Mexico.</p>
        <p>The storm hit the Yucatan Peninsula on Wednesday and killed at least</p>
        <p>29 people after leaving 69 people dead in the Caribbean.</p>
        <p>Gilbert, which turned into a hurricane Sept. 10, killed 26 in Jamaica,</p>
        <p>30 in Haiti, five in the Dominican Republic and eight in Honduras.</p>
        <p>The storm at one point packed sustained winds of 175 mph and had gusts of more than 200 mph. It was the most intense storm on record in terms of barometric pressure, which was measured at 26.13, breaking the 26.35 inches recorded for the 1935 hurricane that devastated the Florida Keys.</p>
        <p>The storm left 500,000 homeless and caused $8 billion in damage in Jamaica. In Haiti, the military government declared a state of emergency in three southern regions, where 50 to 60 percent of the agricul</p>
        <p>tural production was destroyed.</p>
        <p>The storm left the eastern Yucatan resort of Cancn in shambles. About 300,000 people were homeless in Yucatan state and 10,000 more homeless in Campeche, on the west coast of the peninsula, said Notimex, the Mexican news agency.</p>
        <p>Gilbert stranded 8,000 tourists in Cancn and Cozumel, left much of the peninsula without power or communications and caused hundreds of millions of dollars in clam-age.</p>
        <p>Government relief planes began ferrying food and medicine to the stricken resorts Friday and tourists began leaving.</p>
        <p>Gilbert came ashore again Friday afternoon along a sparsely populated stretch of the Gulf of Mexico coast south of Matamoros.</p>
        <p>It quickly began to dissipate into torrential rains and high winds that drenched the northeastern states of Tamaulipas, Nuevo Leon and Coahuila.</p>
        <p>The Santa Catarina cuts through downtown Monterrey near the main business area. The river was straightened and channeled years ago as part of an urban development project and its wide, flat bed became a recreational area with soccer fields, basketball courts, tennis courts and jogging trails.</p>
        <p>The storm passed directly over Santa Rosa and Santa Cruz, two small villages a few miles north of La Pesca, Mexico, where ocean tides coursed over two miles of Hatlands and into the town.</p>
        <p>In Texas, heavy rains fell on Brownsville, with gusts up to 82 mph recorded at nearby Padre Island, but the vulnerable coastal area escaped the worst of the storm.</p>
        <p>A woman was killed Saturday morning when a tornado hit her mobile home in Bexar County, Texas. A second person died in San Antonio when a utility pole crashed into a house.</p>
        <p>pie, or two-fifths of the population, have been left homeless after the hurricane roared down the spine of the 144-mile-long island on Monday. Four out of every five houses were either damaged or destroyed as Gilberts 145 mph winds tore away zinc roofs as if they were plastic sheets.</p>
        <p>Ninety-three percent of the island still had no electricity Saturday, although power was restored in the northern coast city of Montego Bay, the main tourist area.</p>
        <p>The power failure cut off fresh water supplies to most of the island, including Kingston, a city of 750,000 people, because the pumping and filtration plants run on electricity. Power was not expected to be fully restored to the capital for at least two weeks.</p>
        <p>Crowds gathered around water hydrants and burst mains in 90-degree heat, filling plastic buckets and old milk containers. Reports from the countryside said people were taking water from muddy streams, despite the hazard of contamination.</p>
        <p>Radio stations carried a taped message every half hour from the health minister. Dr. Kenneth Baugh, warning people to boil drinking water, and millions of water purification tablets were being airlifted in from around the world.</p>
        <p>Looting of stores, warehouses and supermarkets in the first days after the hurricane forced the government to impose a night curfew, which was</p>
        <p>still in effect at the end of the week. People who failed to stock up before the storm rushed supermarkets and gasoline stations, forming long lines outside both. Armed soldiers were seen regulating the flow of shoppers in and out of a supermarket outeide Kingston.</p>
        <p>On Thursday, Seaga declared a 30-day state of public emergency, ordering stores and gasoline stations to reopen and giving security forces full but unspecified power to ensure that they md.</p>
        <p>The emergency order also gave the government the right to seize transportation and heavy equipment to distribute supplies arriving from around the world.</p>
        <p>The loss to agriculture is severe. Government officials said the poultry industry and this yearss crop of bananas and coffee were wiped out?*</p>
        <p>Seaga told reporters Friday that he would discuss the disaster with world bank officials next week, but had no plan to ask for a rescheduling of Jamaicas $4 billion foreign debt.</p>
        <p>The disaster hit just as Jamaica was showing signs of recovery from economic distress brought on by a worldwide slump in the value of bauxite, sugar and other commodities.</p>
        <p>In addition, tourism  now the nations biggest foreign exchange earner at $550 million a year  had staged a remarkable recovery as a result of an intense campaign to rid the island of its reputation for political violence.</p>
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        <p>Thankful Evacuees Return To Homes</p>
        <p>By DAVID SEDEO Associdtoil Press ^Vrit^r BROWNSVILLE, Texas (AP) - Broken trees and traffic lights littered city streets Saturday, but many residents were just happy to have homes to return to.</p>
        <p>More than 5,000 people left shelters around town early Saturday after the main force of Hurricane Gilbert passed through Mexico about 100 miles to the south.</p>
        <p>Im kind of glad to be back home. I didnt know what I was going to find. My house is 80 years old and I thought it was going to be blown away but it wasnt, said Odilon Gracia, 75.</p>
        <p>He said he waited out the storm at an elementary school with a leaking roof and wet floors. I feel a little better in my house than at that school, he said.</p>
        <p>While the shelters emptied, the city grew congested. Restaurants and food stores closed for two days opened their doors again. Cars lined up at gas stations.</p>
        <p>Residents pried protective plywood from windows and doors and mopped up water that had leaked in. Others cut up fallen trees and hauled them away.</p>
        <p>Despite wind still gusting at more that 30 mph Saturday, work crews were out picking up dangling traffic lights and downed power lines that caused some temporary outages Friday.</p>
        <p>Southern Texas was spared the 120 mph wind that whirled around the eye of Gilbert, but was battered by rain, high wind and tornadoes spun off by the system.</p>
        <p>I thought it was going to be worse, but thank God it wasnt, said Gloria Zapata, 40, while she and her family picked up garbage strewn in their yard by the wind.</p>
        <p>Im thankful it wasnt as hard as it probably could have been or else everything here would have been blown away .</p>
        <p>Rosalinda Delgado and her three children spent the night in a shelter, and were relieved to find their home in good shape.</p>
        <p>I was scared, the children were scared, that we werent going to have any furniture left when we got back. But everything seems to be OK, Ms. Delgado said.</p>
        <p>1 Worst Hurricanes in the 20th Century</p>
        <p>1 By Deaths</p>
        <p>DATE</p>
        <p>STORM</p>
        <p>AREAS HARDEST HIT</p>
        <p>DEATHS</p>
        <p>Sept. 8,1800</p>
        <p>No neme</p>
        <p>Galveston, Texas</p>
        <p>6,000</p>
        <p>Sept. 12-17,1928</p>
        <p>No name</p>
        <p>West Indies and Florida</p>
        <p>6,000</p>
        <p>Oct. 4-8,1963</p>
        <p>Flora</p>
        <p>Cuba and Haiti</p>
        <p>6,000</p>
        <p>Sept. 19-20,1974</p>
        <p>FKI</p>
        <p>Honduras</p>
        <p>2,000</p>
        <p>Sept. 3,1930</p>
        <p>No name</p>
        <p>Santo Oonringo</p>
        <p>^000</p>
        <p>Aug. 30-S^. 13,1970</p>
        <p>David</p>
        <p>Dominican Republic, Dominica and Florida</p>
        <p>1,200</p>
        <p>Sept. 21,1938</p>
        <p>No name</p>
        <p>New England</p>
        <p>600</p>
        <p>Oct. 20,1926</p>
        <p>No name</p>
        <p>Cuba</p>
        <p>600</p>
        <p>Sept. 22-28,1955</p>
        <p>Janai</p>
        <p>Caribbean</p>
        <p>500</p>
        <p>June 27-30,1957</p>
        <p>Audrey</p>
        <p>Louisiana and Texas</p>
        <p>430</p>
        <p>Oct. 31,1961</p>
        <p>Hattie</p>
        <p>British Honduras</p>
        <p>400</p>
        <p>Sept.12-16,1944</p>
        <p>No name</p>
        <p>North Carolina to New England</p>
        <p>389</p>
        <p>Sept. 16-22,1926</p>
        <p>No name</p>
        <p>Florida and Alabama</p>
        <p>372</p>
        <p>Oct. 12-13,1954</p>
        <p>Hazel</p>
        <p>Haiti and eastern United States</p>
        <p>347</p>
        <p>SepL 24-30.1966</p>
        <p>Inez</p>
        <p>Caribbean. Florida and Mexico</p>
        <p>293</p>
        <p>Aug. 4-11,1980</p>
        <p>AHon</p>
        <p>Caribbean and Texas</p>
        <p>272</p>
        <p>Aug. 17-ia 1968</p>
        <p>Camille</p>
        <p>Mtaslssippl and Louisiana</p>
        <p>256</p>
        <p>|NOTEl(MprMriMHeliimlnaliufttombtgnaNaiigtMdMfllor&amp;lt;tWiaiHNan:1iUalh*IMrMrMri&amp;lt;.u,i&amp;lt;titvMd. |</p>
        <p>Toll Mounts In Haiti</p>
        <p>By MICHAEL NORTON Associated Press Writer</p>
        <p>PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti (AP) -Hurricane Gilbert killed at least 30 people when it swept across Haitis southern peninsula last week, the Haiti Disaster Preparedness Office reported Saturday.</p>
        <p>An agronomist said the storm destroyed huge tracts of crops in the south and predicted a faminie.</p>
        <p>Radio stations, which earlier reported 10 pwple died when their boat sank during the storm, broadcast the new government figures Saturday.</p>
        <p>It seems that 50 to 60 percent of agricultural production in the south has been destroyed. This means that we can expect a famine in that region within two months, Jacques Edouard Alexis, an agronomist and former dean of the Agronomy School, said Saturday.</p>
        <p>The military government has declared a state of emergency in the three southern departments, where there is extensive damage to homes and heavy losses in livestock and fruit trees.</p>
        <p>Coastal roads were flooded and</p>
        <p>power lines blown down.</p>
        <p>The Canadian government has offered $50,000 in emergency relief to be channeled through the Roman Catholic Order of Oblate Fathers.</p>
        <p>The U.S. Embassy announced a gift of $25,000 to the Haitian Red Cross for relief work.</p>
        <p>Lt. Gen. Henri Namphy, president of the military government, expressed sympathy for the victims of the hurricane Friday night.</p>
        <p>The military government is conscious of its responsibilities and duties towards the nation and cannot be insensitive and indifferent to the misfortune which has befallen us,. Namphy said.</p>
        <p>At least one (wlitical leader ques-. tioned why Haiti hadnt better spent money it has received in the past for hurricane protection measures.</p>
        <p>After all this time that Haiti has been subject to the possible ravages of hurricanes... and millions and millions of dollars have fallen into the hands of its rulers, with what structures of protection has the country been endowed? Gerard Phillipe-Auguste asked in a statement distributed to the press.</p>
        <p>People own their cars, on average, 4.6 years.</p>
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        <p>acking Urged For Research Using Fetal Tissue</p>
        <p>BvJKRRYKSTILL Associatpd Press Writer</p>
        <p>BETHESDA. Md. (APi - Leap-lirogging questions over the morality lot abortion, a federal advisory panel Ihas concluded that federally backed Imedical researchers should be lallowed to use fetal tissue in their l(|uest for effective treatment for I Parkinsons and other diseases.</p>
        <p>The leaders of a .National Institutes I of Health special panel convened to I consider the. topic complimented their colleagues Friday for focusing on questions put to them by top officials of the Department of Health and Human Services.</p>
        <p>Left unresolved was whether a proposed White House ban on using</p>
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        <p>and legally aborted in such experimental treatments will be upheld during the waning months of the Reagan administration.</p>
        <p>Also unanswered was whether President Reagan is throwing his personal political weight behind the proposal, which was circulated for private review by administration health officials.</p>
        <p>The NIH panel voted late Friday -19-0. with two abstentions  to  recommend that research proceed.</p>
        <p>Retired federal appellate Judge Arlin M. Adams of Philadelphia, the special committees chairman, indicated at a news conference that he and some other panel members per-</p>
        <p>NRA Flexed Muscles Over Gun Control</p>
        <p>By LARRY MMGASAK Associated Prfis Writer WASHINGTON (AP)  Rep. Ken Gray says that in his southern Illinois district, support for the National Rifle Association is almost as strong as for the Pledge of Allegiance.</p>
        <p>So when the NRA told Grays constituents to make sure he voted against a waiting period for handgun purchases, they responded.</p>
        <p>A week ago, they surrounded his car in the district and virtually kept him prisoner inside until he promised to help strip the waiting period from an anti-drug bill.</p>
        <p>They repeated verbatim all the NRA arguments - especially the fear that this was the beginning of the end of gun ownership.</p>
        <p>Last Thursday, the Illinois Democrat was part of the 228-182 majority that voted to eliminate from an anti-drug bill a seven-day waiting period for handgun purchases and an optional background check of the buyer. The House substituted a requirement that the Justice Department develop a system for gun dealers to check whether buyers are convicted felons.</p>
        <p>Grays case, more than almost any other, shows just how powerful the tug of the NRA can be.  </p>
        <p>He has no fear of defeat, because hes not running for re-election due to health reasons.</p>
        <p>He said he personally supports a waiting period and believes his constituents were brainwashed by the NRA.</p>
        <p>And he had an emotional reason to support the waiting period, since two of his longtime friends and former constituents are Jim and Sarah Brady.</p>
        <p>The waiting period is symbolically named after Jim Brady, the presidential press secretary who was shot along with President Reagan in the March 30, 1981, attempt on Reagans life. Sarah Brady is the vice chair of Handgun Control Inc., which joined the nations major law enforcement organizations to lobby hard for the waiting period.</p>
        <p>So why did Gray vote with the NRA?</p>
        <p>In his district. Gray said, after the Pledge of Allegiance, the NRA comes next. If Im their spokesman. I'm not going to pull a holier than thou routine. Im sitting here as a hired hand.</p>
        <p>The tug of the NRA wasnt as direct on all House members, but it was there nonetheless.</p>
        <p>Rep. Helen Delich Bentley, R-Md., isa strong-willed lawmakr who would never be called a wimp by her colleagues. A co-sponsor of the drug bill that contained the Brady language, she said she told NRA backers I supported Brady and leave me alone. </p>
        <p>Ms. Bentley said in an interview she was not pressured by the NRA. But wfn the voting began, shewatched the NRA supporters pile up an increasing margin for their substitute language.</p>
        <p>When the pro-NRA count reached a majority, she decided she couldnt be of help to the waiting-period forces. Bowing to the inevitable, she inserted her electronic card into a slot that cast her vote for the NRAs position.</p>
        <p>I wanted to see what would happen, she said. I told Sarah Brady a long time ago I would support her amendment. But I made a decision to vote depending on what was on the table. When I voted, the Brady amendment was gone.</p>
        <p>It was not the first time the 3-million-member NRA won a gun control fight, though the opposition this time was more formidable.</p>
        <p>The opponents matched the NRAs zeal, but the gun control forces could not match the NRAs financial resources, said Dewey Stokes, the president of the Fraternal Order of Police.</p>
        <p>David Conover, an NRA lobbyist, attributed his groups victory to hard work, good strategy and some last-minute luck.</p>
        <p>The gun group, as it has many times before, mobilized its 21 field representatives across the country and thousands of activist volunteers.</p>
        <p>When the Brady language appeared ready for a vote two weeks ago, the NRA count estimated only a narrow 10-vote victory.</p>
        <p>Then, the vote was postponed for a week.</p>
        <p>We got lucky, Conover said, because the postponement allowed thousands of NRA members to receive their latest issue of either American Hunter or American Rifleman - the NRA magazines. Although prepared in August, the publications contained an ad urging members to call members of Congress to vote against the waiting period.</p>
        <p>People saw in the magazine it still was not resolved, Conover said, and apparently turned a steady stream of contacts with lawmakers into a last-tpinute flood.</p>
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        <p>sonally were opposed to abortion but did not let that enter into their decision to recommend that the government not stand in the way of using legally obtained fetal remains for research.</p>
        <p>Defending the panel against allegations from anti-abortionists that the makeup of the panel was stacked in favor of allowing the research. Adams told reporters that an examination of his opinions as a judge would show that he was very concerned about abortion himself</p>
        <p>I didnt know how I was going to vote until I had heard the testimony.  said Adams, who was one of the 19.</p>
        <p>Dr. Kenneth J. Ryan, head of the department of obstetrics and gynecology at Bringham and Womens Hospital m Boston, acknowledged that the fundamental question of the morality of abortion was a factor.</p>
        <p>It seemed to me that the abortion question was in the background, hovering over us all the time.  .said Ryan, chairman of the scientific issues portion of the committee deliberations. But  thought the panelists were so intellectually honest with themselves that they made every effort to divorce the abortion question ... wherever possible from the ques</p>
        <p>tion of whether you could use the product of abortion.</p>
        <p>1 think that was really the key ol the entire three-day discussion: Could you divorce the two. Some people think you cannot.</p>
        <p>I suspect that most of the people on the panel believed honestly ... that you could, with necessary safeguards, make a cleavage between the two questions.</p>
        <p>Sensitive to those concerns, the committee extensively discussed what type of safeguards should be recommended. Indeed, the discussion ran so long, the panel will meet again before completing its work and forwarding its formal, written recommendations to a standing NIH advisory committee by Dec. 1.</p>
        <p>It did agree that a pregnant woman should not be induced to terminate pregnancy in order to furnish letal tissue for transplantation or medical research.</p>
        <p>It said the mothers decision to have an abortion should be kept separate from her decision to allow the fetus to be used for research and that guidelines must be drawn to avoid commercialization of fetal tissue.</p>
        <p>As part of those fundamental safeguards. it said anonymity should be maintained between the donor and recipient so there would not be a</p>
        <p>temptation for a woman to have what was referred to in discussions as a custom pregnancy and abortion in an effort to provide tissue that might f)e implanted in a relative with Parkinsons or some other disease.</p>
        <p>The committee members responded cautiously to reports that White House adviser Gary Bauer, a staunch opponent of abortion and distributor of the draft executive order that would ban fetal'tissue research, has suggested that Reagan</p>
        <p>might make a decision that ruij^ counter to the committees recom^' mendations. perhaps even before they are finalized.</p>
        <p>"Because its an election year. 1 think its very difficult to comment on why people do what they do.  said Ryan.</p>
        <p>Nonetheless, he said, it would "fly in the face of the usefulness of appointing the committee in the first place if a decision was to be made lie fore it made its recommendations.</p>
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        <p>|T# Dukakis Takes A Swipe At Bush's Claim To Be</p>
        <p>An Environmentalist</p>
        <p>SlRPRISK (iREETI\( Massachusetts (iov. Michael  Hispanic group on the eve of Mexican</p>
        <p>Dukakis. Democratic presidential nominee, reacts with  On the left  is  ( alifornia  I.t.Gov.  1</p>
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        <p>High School in i.os Angeles. Dukakis addressed a largely</p>
        <p>Gallup Firm Is Purchased</p>
        <p>PRINCETON. N.J. (AP) - The Gallup Organization, known for its polls and surveys, has been purchased by a private market research firm in a merger that probably will not bring major changes to Gallup's work, officials said.</p>
        <p>Selection Research Inc. of Lincoln, Neb., bought Gallup for an undisclosed price, officials said.</p>
        <p>' We know that the Gallup name is synonymous with a tremendous amount of integrity, said SRI vice president Gale Muller. It will help ife to get a lot more reliable information.</p>
        <p>; Alec Gallup and George Gallup Jr. will remain co-chairmen of the board 0 the Gallup Organization, which conducts polls and surveys for bpsinesses and institutions.</p>
        <p>SRI, with headquarters in Lincoln, is an employee-owned company with about 1,000 workers.</p>
        <p>The companies have worked together since 1985 on hospital research, and SRI acquired part ownership of Canadian Gallup Poll Ltd. of Toronto in 1986. Those moves led to the merger, said Andrew Kohut, Gallup president.</p>
        <p>The (acquisition) will allow Gallup to be part of a larger network of resources, Kohut said in a telephone interview.</p>
        <p>Independence Day. ,eo !McCarthv. (AP</p>
        <p>By RICHARD L. VERNACI Associated Press Writer</p>
        <p>Democrat Michael Dukakis ridiculed Republican George Bushs claim to be an environmentalist, accusing the vice president Saturday of flip-flops on the issue of offshore oil drilling and comparing him to former Interior Secretary James Watt.</p>
        <p>The Massachusetts governor, speaking to campaign workers in Anaheim, Calif., also said he would elevate the Environmental Protection Agency to a Cabinet-level department.</p>
        <p>The first secretary of the environment is going to be as committed to protecting the environment as George Bush has been to neglecting it, Dukakis said.</p>
        <p>Dukakis was attacking Bush on one of the issues the Republican presidential nominee has staked out for himself, having declared last month at an appearance in Michigan that he was a lifelong environmentalist.</p>
        <p>The next thing you know, we ll be</p>
        <p>CAMPAIGN STOP  Vice President George Bush, Republican presidential hopeful, acknowledges the</p>
        <p>crowd during a stop at the Flag City Festival in Findlav. Ohio. (AP Laserphoto)</p>
        <p>Bush Shook Underdog Label</p>
        <p>By TOM RACM Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON (AP) - George Bush has dropped a line from his stock campaign speech: the one about being the underdog and liking it.</p>
        <p>Little more than a month ago, the vice president was trailing Democrat Michael Dukakis in national public opinion polls by double digits. Now, most polls show Bush has seized the agenda and is either leading Dukakis or is even with him.</p>
        <p>Political professionals offer differing explanations for Bushs rapid rise. But most suggest a combination of factors: his well-received convention address, a series of speeches that put Dukakis on the defensive, and the failure of questions over running mate Dan Quayles military record to stick as a major liability. Some analysts also cite quick damage control on the part of Bushs campaign team, led by campaign chairman James A. Baker III, in minimizing possible embarrassments  such as the quick resignations last week of Bush operative Frederic Malek and six members of an ethnic coalition after allegations of anti-Semitic activities surfaced.</p>
        <p>Bush himself says hes doing a better job now in "getting through to the American people. both in terms of personality and message and that</p>
        <p>theres a good sense the campaign is on the move.</p>
        <p>The speed of the vice presidents rally was welcomed by campaign officials.</p>
        <p>All of us had a lot of confidence in him and a lot of confidence the campaign would start moving in the right direction. But all of us were surprised how fast it did, campaign manager Lee Atwater said.</p>
        <p>Atwater credits Bushs convention acceptance speech  in which he appealed for a kinder, gentler nation and moved out from the shadow of President Reagan  as decisive in Bushs surge.</p>
        <p>Private analysts agree the speech was important but suggest other factors for Bush's rise, including a major miscalculation on the part of Dukakis strategists on the impact of the Quayle controversy.</p>
        <p>There is an old political axiom: never murder anyone when theyre committing suicide. said Norman Ornstein, a political analyst with the American Enterprise Institute. "There was a tactical judgment in the Dukakis campaign to lay tow for a few weeks or play presidential. "But that didnt work very well, since the Quayle episode hasnt done the damage to George Bush that one might have imagined, Ornstein said. Then, they (Dukakis campaign) were flat-footed when Bush</p>
        <p>went aggressively on attack.</p>
        <p>Quayle aside, Bush roared out of New Orleans with a series of speeches that depicted Dukakis as a liberal who is soft on crime and quick to raise taxes. The Dukakis campaign did little to respond.</p>
        <p>Some Republicans said the furor over reports that Quayle used family influence to join the Indiana National Guard during the Vietnam War era may have actually worked to the tickets advantage.</p>
        <p>Republican consultant David Carmen said, People were very sympathetic to Quayle and didnt understand what all the fuss was. They were getting no news about Dukakis and there was a lot of sympathy for this guy.</p>
        <p>Democratic consultant David Garth disagreed and said the selection of Quayle was without doubt the dumbest move the Bush campaign has made. It was dumb to pick him and dumb to stick with him.</p>
        <p>"My feeling is that, had Bush picked anybody else but Quayle, the election woul(i be over today  with Dukakis the loser, Garth said.</p>
        <p>He said Bushs rise in the polls reflected a very good speech at the convention and what he contended were misleading polls that showed Dukakis ahead of Bush earlier in the summer.</p>
        <p>Dukakis appeared to be ahead only</p>
        <p>because of a false bump he got from public attention to his lengthy primary battle against Jesse Jackson. Then the only question left was whether Jackson would cause trouble at the Democratic convention. And when he didnt, it gave another spurt to Dukakis, Garth said.</p>
        <p>Other analysts suggested that Dukakis lack of movement in the polls reflects a common political phenomenon, a problem that in fact affected Bush in his 1980 presidential bid: A relatively unknown candidate gets a big surge in the polls from winning primaries, then sees it evaporate as voters get to know more about the candidate and lose their initial curiosity.</p>
        <p>Athletes Saluted</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP) - President Reagan saluted U.S. Olympic athletes Saturday and urged Americans to "remember, win, lose or draw, how much we have to be proud and thankful for.</p>
        <p>The president devoted most of his weekly radio address, delivered from the presidential retreat at Camp David in Marylands Catoctin Mountains, to the Games that began Friday in Seoul, South Korea.</p>
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        <p>hearing that James Watt and Anne Gorsuch (Burford) and Rita Lavelle are environmentalists too, Dukakis said.</p>
        <p>Watt, who served as President Reagans first interior secretary, was a favorite target for attack by environmental groups because of his support for opening up previously protected land for commercial use. Mrs. Burford was in charge of the EPA until 1983. Ms. Lavelle, who headed the agencys toxic waste pcleanup program, served three months in jail for lying to Congress.</p>
        <p>The sight of George Bush campaigning on the coast and talking about his commitment to clean water reminds me of the old saying from television detective shows: They always return to the scene of the crime, Dukakis said.</p>
        <p>Bush, meanwhile, on Saturday was wooing the immigrant vote often sought by Dukakis, who seldom fails to mention his Greek-born parents.</p>
        <p>The vice president spoke briefly to a group of 174 new citizens from 62 countries at a naturalization ceremony in Washington. Bush stood in for Reagan at the event, staged by the Commission on the Bicentennial of the Constitution to commemorate the 201st anniversary of the signing of the Constitution in Philadelphia.</p>
        <p>We Americans have always thought of ourselves as special, as a light shining out to the world, Bush told the new citizens after they were given the oath of citizenship by former Supreme Court chief justice Warren E. Burger. All of us, from the newest citizen to the oldest, must participate in the running of this country.</p>
        <p>Bushs remarks were low-key and non-partisan, but the event gave him a chance to appear before television cameras flanked by the flag and a replica of the Liberty Bell and to recite the Pledge of Allegiance, which has become a mainstay of his campaign.</p>
        <p>In California, Dukakis accused Bush of standing by and doing nothing while the administration tried to dismantle the Superfund program for cleaning up toxic wastes. He also said Bush supported Reagans veto of the Clean Water Act and has done more somersaults than an Olympic gymnast on the question of offshore drilling.</p>
        <p>Bush also came under attack Saturday for his role in leading the administrations efforts to stem the</p>
        <p>flow of illegal drugs into the United States. He has said that he would ap-' point his vice presidential running mate, Sen. Dan Quayle of Indiana, to a similar responsibility if the* Republican ticket wins the election. </p>
        <p>Speaking to a partisan crowd in the Florida panhandle. Democratic vice presidential candidate Lloyd Bentsen  said Bush wants to pass the torch of failure on to the junior senator from  Indiana.</p>
        <p>Quayle was attending a dinner. Saturday at the home of Sen. John; Warher, R-Va.</p>
        <p>But the strongest attack came from Rep. Ron Coleman, D-Texas; who delivered the Democrats' response to Reagans weekly radio address with pointed references to Quayles decision to serve public in-  formation officer in the Incliana Na-'. tional Guard during the Vietnam war.</p>
        <p>Coleman questioned Quayles, fitness to lead the nations war on  drugs.</p>
        <p>How can he be put in charge of. this war when he wouldnt fight in the last one? We still havent forgotten the last time he was given the opportunity to carry a rifle for his country, Coleman said. This is a fello^ who sat out the last war typing pres j releases in Indiana.</p>
        <p>'Non-Combatant?'</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP)  George Bush has been non-combatant as the Reagan administrations point man in the war on drugs and the grim toll has climbed, with more deaths, more wasted lives, more shattered families, a Texas Democrat said Saturday.</p>
        <p>While George Bush was in charge, he himself said the nation i losing ground in the war on drugs; Thats because hes used only one weapon in the war: hot air, Rep * Ron Coleman said in the Democratic response to President Reagans weekly radio address.</p>
        <p>Coleman accused the vice presL dent of supporting funding cuts to enforcement and drug treatment programs, slashing personnel and. leading an ineffective border interdiction system that even the head of the Drug Enforcement Administration recommended be abolished.</p>
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        <p>The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C. Sunday, September 18.1988 A-1SNASA Sets Sept. 29 Discovery Launch Date</p>
        <p>Bv HOWAKD BENEDK T AP Aerospace Writer</p>
        <p>CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) -More than 24 years after Challenger and its crew of seven disintegrated in a cold, blue sky, America is ready to return to space.</p>
        <p>Discovery, the faults repaired, is poised on shuttle Launch Pad 39B. 'Five astronauts, all veterans of earlier shuttle flights, are trained and eager, aware of the risks.' Launch and flight control teams are set for liftoff Sept. 29.</p>
        <p>Success would take a great psychological burden off the back of the space agency and the countrv. Another failure could devastate the si&amp;gt;ace program.</p>
        <p>We clearly cannot afford to lose another vehicle, much less another crew; I dont think the manned space flight program could withstand ahother Challenger, ' said Frederick  Rick Hauck. the 47-year-old Navy captain who commands Discoverys crew.</p>
        <p>Hauck said he believes everything possible has been done to make the shuttle a safe vehicle.</p>
        <p>Flying into space never will be risk free." he said. Its a matter of reducing the risks to a minimum and balancing the risks that are involved with what we are trying to ac-cmplish."</p>
        <p>The other crew members are Air Force Col. Richard 0. Covey. 42. the pilot, and three mission sf^cialists. George D. Pinky" Nelson. 38. John M. "Mike" Lounge. 42. and Marine Lt. Col. David C. Hilmers. 38.</p>
        <p>During four days in orbit, they are to deploy a SlOO million communications satellite, a twin of one lost in the Challenger explosion; conduct 11 science and technology experiments, and test design changes made to the orbiter.</p>
        <p>NASA on Friday announced the Sept. 29 launch date. The launch was set for 9:.9 a.m. EDT but could come at any time in the following three hours.</p>
        <p>Covey reported the flight will be less complicated than most previous missions because NASA has elected to take a conservative approach. "Were not breaking any new ground." he said.</p>
        <p>But Covey said that because of hundreds of modifications made to the orbiter. "well practically be flying a shakedown flight of a new spacecraft. There probably will be some surprises, but overall well have a safer vehicle."</p>
        <p>On launch day, the crew will remember the Challenger astronauts and in orbit they plan a special memorial.</p>
        <p>"If we ever do forget what happen</p>
        <p>ed to Challenger, its going to be a sad day. because we might just become complacent once again." said Hilmers.</p>
        <p>"But we cant dwell on it." he added. "We have to look to the future. </p>
        <p>More than a half-million people are expected to jam roadsides, river banks and other viewing areas to watch Discoverys fiery departure; more than 3.000 news media representatives from around the world will be here  many of them kept at a spot several miles from the press site because of NASAs new concerns about the possibility of an accident during launch.</p>
        <p>There has not been this much ex-citment over a manned space flight since astronauts rocketed to the moon two decades ago.</p>
        <p>There were large crowds for the first shuttle launches in 1981. but after 24 successful missions, interest had waned. Only 600 news people were on hand for Challenger s launch, and that was more than had shown up for the three previous flights because of passenger Christa McAuliffe. a high school teacher who was to have taught lessons from orbit. Of the national television networks. only Cable News Network carried the disastrous launch live.</p>
        <p>Space flight had become routine, ho-hum. NASA was so confident in its</p>
        <p>machine that it had flown a Saudi prince, a congressman, a senator, civilian sciejitists and industry engineers.</p>
        <p>The bubble burst on that frigid winter day on Jan. 28. 1986, when Challenger erupted into a giant fireball more than eight miles above the Atlantic 7'.} seconds after liftoff.</p>
        <p>Americans were shocked. Before the day was out most had seen the endless television replays of the worlds worst space disaster that had claimed the lives of five men and two women. Millions of schoolchildren who had planned to view McAuliffes lessons were badly shaken.</p>
        <p>Most of the nations citizens had taken space flight and Americas leadership in it for granted. It had. after all. been going on for a quarter century. Though .NASA did lose three astronauts in a launch-pad training exercise in 1967, it had launched 55 manned vehicles with a total of 196 people on board, and all came back, some from the moon, with nary a scratch.</p>
        <p>What had gone wrong?</p>
        <p>The Rogers commission that investigated the accident for President Reagan said the direct cause was a leak at a joint between segments of one of Challengers two solid fuel booster rockets. Superheated gases and flames shot past two syththetic</p>
        <p>Motorists Are Painter's Clientele</p>
        <p>By JOYCE A. V ENEZIA Associated Press Writer ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (AP) -Sam Donovan, ace billboard painter, is juggling paint brushes and cans on a'narrow board that dangles high above a swampy bog.</p>
        <p>'"You wont believe this, but Im scared to death of heights." said Donovan, 36, who has acquired a reputation for creating portraits that loom many times larger than life.</p>
        <p>Donovans life work is art usually seen at a great distance in a fleeting glance from a car window. Instead of an appreciative museum audience, he can hope to impress only the myriad of passing travelers, such as casino tourists and truckers.</p>
        <p>His labors may last only a few days before being covered by the next advertisement. But the affable artist says he doesnt mind.</p>
        <p>I enjoy looking at it for a couple of weeks. If I really like it. Ill deliberately pass it every day on my way to work just to see it," Donovan said Billboard painting requires a com</p>
        <p>bination of the agility to climb rickety planks leading to the billboard, the talent to translate  tiny photograph into a mural hundreds of times larger and the pluck to endure rain. snow, sleet and heavy winds.</p>
        <p>Donovan says he will paint almost anything on a billboard, but he especially enjoys assignments involving portraits.</p>
        <p>One day recently, he spent six hours painting Frank Sinatras face, right down to the famous blue eyes.</p>
        <p>With an older person like him, you have a lot more wrinkles and thats more time-consuming, he said, wiping the paint off his hands and onto his splattered flannel shirt and jeans.</p>
        <p>"When I painted Miss New Jersey last week, her face was a lot easier because its smooth, he said. "But she had all that red hair.</p>
        <p>The job started on a whim. After majoring in biology in college. Donovan grew restless and took a job painting small signs 10 years ago. Eventually, he started painting</p>
        <p>billboards for the R.C. Maxwell Co.</p>
        <p>He began doing portraits slowly, reading art books and practicing with watercolors at home.</p>
        <p>Now an independent billboard painter. Donovan is considered the best. said George Harvey, general manager of R.C. Maxwells office here.</p>
        <p>"He showed great promise early on," Harvey said. "He expanded his talents so well and so quickly. He soon was thirsting for more intricate layouts."</p>
        <p>Donovan acknowledges that good billboard painters are hard to find.</p>
        <p>"Very few people set out to say, Im going to be a billboard painter. he said. "There arent that many of us because you have to be good to get a job, and theres no place to learn this."</p>
        <p>A job begins with Donovan charting out the photograph on a sheet of graph paper, which he then copies in pencil onto his giant "canvas. He next fills in the colors, a tricky pro-</p>
        <p>^CE PAINTER Sign painterSam Donavan stands on a billboard portraits he paints for clients along roadways, jrtatform near an unfinished picture of Frank Sinatra in &amp;lt; AP Laserpholo)</p>
        <p>^lantic City, N.J. Donavan has gained notoriety lor the</p>
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        <p>(;^P) - William L. Mitchell, creator ojf the now-classic Corvette Stingray and a former General Motors executive, has died of heart failure at the 4eof76.</p>
        <p>fRanked as one of the top 10 auto designers of all time by Car and Driver</p>
        <p>including the 1963 Buick Riviera and the 1970 Camaro. His designs were transformed into more than 72.5 million automobiles, according to GM.</p>
        <p>The Stingray was introduced in 1963, when the Corvette was about 10 years old. and quickly became the dream of sports-car lovers.</p>
        <p>njagazine, Mitchell was a winter resident of North Palm Beach, Fla. He (fed Monday in Michigan and was b|iried Friday in Bloomfield Hills.</p>
        <p>JA vice president of design at GM f^r 19 years, Mitchell molded the appearance of hundreds of car models,</p>
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        <p>cess that involves compensating for the changing light at different times of the day.</p>
        <p>During the process, hell climb down the narrow planks quite frequently to walk several hundred yards away and evaluate the billboard through binoculars.</p>
        <p>Unlike billboards that are simply made of paper pasted onto the wo^, a hand-painted billboard can last several years if varnished, Donovan said.</p>
        <p>Donovan recalls only one instance in which he almost fell off a billboard. The pulleys gave way, and he scrambled for a line to catch.</p>
        <p>Sheepishly. Donovan also admitted that a few paint cans have escaped his grip.</p>
        <p>Ive dropped,paint on the Boardwalk on a brand new awning, and Ive even hit a few mink stoles, but they probably never knew where it came from.</p>
        <p>rubber 0-rings and touched off an explosion of the large external fuel tank.</p>
        <p>The commission report said cold weather, 36 degrees at liftoff, contributed to the accident by stiffening the 0-rings, preventing them from sealing the joint properly. Some engineers had argued with lower-level managers against launching in the cold, but their concerns never were relayed to the top managers who made the launch decision.</p>
        <p>The report found troubling lapses in judgment, expertise, communications and management within the space agency. It said some NASA engineers had feared for years that trouble lurked in the rockets, with documents showing prior instances where soot was found on recovered boosters, indicating they had leaked in their two minutes of flight.</p>
        <p>It said agency officials had accepted growing risk "because they got away with it the last time.</p>
        <p>Within months, NASA had a new administrator and other top officials, the directors of three major field centers involved with the shuttle left, and all those involved in the decision to launch were replaced.</p>
        <p>There were wholesale resignations and duty changes at Alabamas Marshall Space Flight Center, which oversees the booster rocket contract, and at Morton Thiokol Inc. in Utah, which builds the boosters. NASA established a new safety and quality control office.</p>
        <p>Astronauts and former astronauts were placed in key decision making positions, as recommended by the commission, to give the flight crews a larger voice in what was happening.</p>
        <p>Rear Adm. Richard Truly, a former astronaut who made two shuttle flights, now heads the shuttle program. Robert Crippen, who has made four flights, now heads a new Mission Management Team and it will be he who makes the final go-no go decision to launch in the waning minutes of the countdown.</p>
        <p>Engineers at Marshall and Morton Thiokol redesigned the rocket joint, adding a third 0-ring, better insulation, a heater and a capture lip to prevent a gap opening under the pressure of ignition.</p>
        <p>NASA also took the time to redesign parts that it said needed improvement on the orbiter, the external tank and the main engines. In all, 56 major changes and more than 400 lesser ones have been made to the vehicle. The program to redesign all three shuttles so far has cost about $2.4 billion.</p>
        <p>Reagan ordered a replacement shuttle for Challenger, at a cost of $2.8 billion, and the new craft is starting to take shape at a Rockwell International facility in California.</p>
        <p>Among the changes to the orbiter is the addition of an emergency escape system featuring a blowout cabin hatch and a 12-foot aluminum and steel telescoping pole. The hope is that in case of a problem during a landing attempt while the shuttle is in gliding flight, the astronauts could slide down the pole and then parachute to safety. The system would not be of use in a Challenger-type accident.</p>
        <p>NASA had hoped to launch Discovery last February, but technical problems and delays in testing new systems slipped the date to June, then to August and September.</p>
        <p>Said Forrest S. McCartney, director of the Kennedy Space Center: "After the Challenger, everyone was encouraged to go back and look at everything they could think of and see what could be done to reduc the risk. They did a very thorough and comprehensive job of that. The stigma of another Challenger is one that everyone is very conscious of.</p>
        <p>So the reason its taking us so long to get back to flying again is that were doing everything we know to reduce risk to the minimum, he said. Weve initiated more checks and balances than we ever had before</p>
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        <p>Aquino Says U.S. Must Respond To Gorbachev's Pullout Proposal</p>
        <p>SPOILS OF WAR  A lone Iraqi soldier stands guard beside the helmets of thousands of dead Iranian soldiers in an exposition of captured military equipment that opened this month near Baghdad, Iraq. The exposition of equipment ranging from rifles to tanks stretches in deep ranks for more than a mile. (AP Laserphoto)</p>
        <p>MANILA, Philippines (AP) . President Corazon Aquino said Saturday the United States must decide whether to accept a Soviet offer and close its bases here in return for a Soviet pullout from a strategic garrison in Vietnam.</p>
        <p>On Friday, Soviet leader Mikhail S. Gorbachev offered to abandon its naval facilities in Cam Ranh Bay if the United States removed its six military installations from the Philippines.</p>
        <p>That is for the two superpowers to discuss and to talk about. Mrs. Aquino told reporters. She gave no indication whether her government will make any recommendation to Washington over the Soviet offer.</p>
        <p>Other Filipino officials also reacted cautiously to Gorbachevs offer, which was part of a seven-point plan for reducing tensions in Asia.</p>
        <p>Gorbachevs proposal came during growing opposition to the bases here and against the backdrop of deadlocked U.S.-Philippine talks over the future of the installations, which include Clark Air Base, Subic Bay Naval Base and four smaller installations.</p>
        <p>Talks between the United States and the Philippines over the final two years of the 1947 Military Bases Agreement have stalled over compensation and other issues.</p>
        <p>On Thursday, U.S. Secretary of State George Shultz said in Washington that the United States wanted to keep Clark, Subic and four</p>
        <p>other installations in the Philippines but that Manilas demands for more money were too high.</p>
        <p>Shultz met this week in Washington with Filipino Foreign Secretary ^ul Manglapus to discuss the impasse but neither side announced any progress.</p>
        <p>The United States pays about $180 million a year for use of the six bases. Manglapus has said the Americans have offered about $502 million in compensation, but he said the Philippine demand for $1.2 billion a year would be a "reasonable figure.</p>
        <p>The agreement expires in 1991, and Mrs. Aquino has refused to ay whether she will allow the bases to remain after that.</p>
        <p>In a statement to reporters. Sen. Leticia Shahani, chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, said Soviet and U.S. military facilities were not comparable and that the Clark and Subic bases were far bigger complexes than Cam Ranh Bay.</p>
        <p>Two other senators, Heherson Alvarez and Rene Saguisag, welcomed the Gorbachev proposal but warned that the issue would require careful study.</p>
        <p>In other developments, the government announced Saturday that Mrs. Aquino ordered the cancellation of the passport of the founder of the outlawed Communist Party of the Philippines after the military claimed he had resumed leadership of the rebel movement.</p>
        <p>The statement released by the presidential palace said Mrs. Aquino issued the order Friday against Jose Maria Sison, whom she freed from prison in 1986. Sison left the country six months later and is believed to be in Western Europe.</p>
        <p>The military said Sison has been soliciting funds for the rebels abroad.</p>
        <p>Sison founded the Maoist party in 1968 and was arrested in 1977. He was among about 500 political prisoners released by Mrs. Aquino in March 1986, one month after a civilian-military uprising toppled Ferdinand Marcos and propelled her to power.</p>
        <p>The party and its armed wing, the New Peoples Army, have been waging a 19-year insurgency to establish a Marxist state in the Philippines.</p>
        <p>Elsewhere, the military said suspected rebels led by a fugitive Roman Catholic priest ambushed a government jeep in the southern Philippines, killing five people.</p>
        <p>Col. Rogelio Villanueva^ regional army commander, said the attack occurred Friday in the coastal town of Cortes in Surigao del Sur province about 510 miles southeast of Manila.</p>
        <p>Villanueva said about 30 guerrillas opened fire on the National Irrigation Administration jeep as it passed by on an isolated strip of the national highway.</p>
        <p>Villanueva quoted the survivors as saying the rebel band was led by renegade priest Frank Navarro, one of the best known clerics who have joined the rebellion.</p>
        <p>Polls Favor Social Party</p>
        <p>U.S. Said Pondering Changes In Its Gulf Convoy Procedures</p>
        <p>, STOCKHOLM, Sweden (AP) -Final pre-election polls indicated Swedens Social Democratic Party stands a good chance to stay in office, but the environmentalist Greens may win seats and a role as a legislative power broker.</p>
        <p>Swedens high taxes and welfare system and the non-socialist oppositions ability to govern were chief issues in a television and radio debate Friday that analyts said could tip the balance in Sundays election.</p>
        <p>Ten percent of voters questioned this week said they were still undecided.</p>
        <p>Young Greens supporters demonstrated outside the television studio hall because their party was excluded from the broadcast debate. Swedish public television said it was open only to incumbent parties.</p>
        <p>The Greens failed to clear the 4</p>
        <p>percent minimum for legislative representation in the two previous elections they contested, but this summers ecological disasters and general discontent among young voters have boosted their chances for seats  and perhaps a role in a coalition government.</p>
        <p>The five parliamentary party leaders all stressed the environment in opening statements, but in the ensuing debate concentrated on calls for more housing and improved retiree, health and child-care benefits.</p>
        <p>A poll by the Swedish Institute of Public Research, or SIPO, forecast that Prime Minister Ingvar Carlssons Social Democrats and the small Communist Party would win a combined 46.2 percent of the vote.</p>
        <p>The three non-socialist parties polled a total 44.6 percent in the survey of 1,094 people taken from Monday through Thursday.</p>
        <p>By NOR.MAN BLACK t AP IVIilitary Writer</p>
        <p>,WASHINGTON (AP) - The Reagan administration has approved in principle its first change in Persian Gulf convoy procedures as a result of the Iran-Iraq cease-fire, (tpfense officials say.</p>
        <p>; Assuming the changes are finaliz-U.S.-flag tankers in the waterway will be kept within a defensive one by American warships and always under surveillance, but wont be accompanied every step of the way as is now the case, the sources said.</p>
        <p>The best way to describe it is in basketball terms, by saying youre going from a man-to-man defense to a zone defense. said one official.</p>
        <p>The change will allow only a slight reduction in the number of warships deployed to the Persian Gulf  prob</p>
        <p>ably one fewer ship  but will increase the flexibility of the task force commander and allow the Navys ships to operate at a lesser alert level, the officials added.</p>
        <p>The sources, who agreed to discuss the matter only if not identified, said the change in procedure had been tentatively approved by the Pentagon and White House, but would not be ordered until allies with warships in the region and certain Mideast countries were consulted.</p>
        <p>The Defense Department declined to discuss details of the plan on Friday but acknowledged in a statement:</p>
        <p>The administration is considering additional steps which ... (could be described as) modest modifications of our present method of providing protection to U.S.-flagged shipping in the gulf.</p>
        <p>The modifications currently</p>
        <p>under consideration do not involve any significant reduction in force levels. We are continuing to consult with our friends and allies.</p>
        <p>The United States has 26 Navy ships assigned to its Joint Task Force Middle East, including 17 inside the Persian Gulf itself. As of Friday, the Navy had conducted 85 convoy operations since the summer of 1987, when the escorts began.</p>
        <p>With the exception of the departure of one cruiser, the USS Vincennes, the naval force has not changed in size despite last months end to hostilities between Iran and Iraq.</p>
        <p>Defense Secretary Frank C. Carlucci has said repeatedly the United States will not reduce its military presence in the region until it is absolutely convinced the cease-fire will hold and that American merchant shi^ arent threatened. According to the sources, Carlucci</p>
        <p>Israeli Troops Conducted A Sweep For Guerrillas</p>
        <p>BEIRUT. Lebanon (AP)  Israeli forces and allied Lebanese</p>
        <p>Summit In Works?</p>
        <p>BEIJING (AP) - Premier Li Peng said today that a Chinese-Soviet summit can be held if lower-level meetings bring the two sides closer together on issues such as Cambodia.</p>
        <p>He also denied that the leadership is split over how to proceed with troubled economic reforms and said that reports of major resistance to reform t,. Groundless.</p>
        <p>The preniier, meeting with The Associated Press board of directors ; nd executives, said improved rela-luns with Moscow were in the interests of China and world peace and would not threaten Chinas ties with Japan and the West.</p>
        <p>It was the most favorable Chinese response yet to the Soviet Unions repeated invitations for a summit meeting to end a quarter-century of estrangement between the communist neighbors.</p>
        <p>Soviet leader Mikhail S. Gorbachev renewed the invitation in a speech Friday in Siberia in which he said he was ready to begin summit preparations without delay.</p>
        <p>militiamen withdrew to the Israeli-occupied security zone today after launching a 24-hour search operation for guerrillas in southern l^banon, pr're said.</p>
        <p>The sweep involved about 250 Israeli troops and militiamen of the South Lebanon Army in 29 tanks and armored vehicles, authorities said. They pulled back to the security zone before dawn after searching a 24-square-milearea for guerrillas.</p>
        <p>The spokesman said the Israelis and their allies did not face any resistance during the operation which was carried out just south of Syrian army lines in the western sector of Lebanons Bekaa valley.</p>
        <p>Five Lebanese citizens were wounded during the sweep and at least 15 houses sustained severe damage from shelling in the villages of Mimess and Ain Ata, the spokesman said. The official, who spoke on condition of anonymity, did not say how the five were injured.</p>
        <p>The search was launched Friday hours after an Israeli army patrol foiled an infiltration attempt inside the security zone, killing three guerrillas.</p>
        <p>Talaat Yacoubs pro-Syrian Palestine Liberation Front claimed responsibility for the attack in a com</p>
        <p>munique released in the southern port city of Sidon.</p>
        <p>The atten ed infiltration Friday was the sc. id abortive attempt in six days to cross the six-to-lO-mile security zone established by Israel.</p>
        <p>A week ago, Israeli soldiers captured four guerrillas after seriously wounding one of them in the zone.</p>
        <p>Israel set up its security zone after withdrawing the bulk of its occupation army from southern Lebanon in June 1985 after a three-year occupation. The zone is intend^ to serve as a buffer against cross-border raids.</p>
        <p>The strip is patrolled by about 1,000 Israeli tr  id an equal number of</p>
        <p>militiam</p>
        <p>In ano., development today, (inidentified  unmen shot and wounded tliree Ghanaian peacekeepers serving with the U.N. Interim Force in Lebanon (UNIFIL) in the southern town of Abbasiyeh, a U.N. spokesman said.</p>
        <p>The U,N. spokesman, who refused to be named, said the gunmen chased the U.N. jeep and opened fire after it had an accident with a civilian car.</p>
        <p>The attackers escaped and civilians evacuated the three wounded Ghanian soldiers to a hospital in the southern port city of Tyre, the spokesman said.</p>
        <p>has approved the idea of providing flexibility to the Navy on convoys.</p>
        <p>You keep your warships nearby, always close enough to act, but drop the continuous, side-by-side presence, explained one source.</p>
        <p>The Navy vessels deploy in what amounts to a picket line up and down the gulf, ready to pick up a merchant as it moves within a particular range, said another.</p>
        <p>The sources said the plan called for the Navy to directly escort merchants through the narrow Strait of Hormuz, the sole entrance to the Persian Gulf, but to use the picket-line approach for the remainder of the trip.</p>
        <p>This is the first important response to the cease-fire, said one source. If this works out OK, then we can consider additional steps.</p>
        <p>The United States mounted its escort operations in 1987 after President Reagan approved a request by Kuwait to reflag 11 of its tankers under the American flag. Kuwait, a key ally of Iraq in the 8-year-old war, had seen its ships become a special target of Iranian forces and wanted to obtain U.S. military protection.</p>
        <p>For more than 40 years before the escorts, the Navys normal Persian Gulf presence consisted of four to six ships.</p>
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        <p>GREENVILLE CITY COUNCIL AGENDA Monday, September 19,1988 - 6:00 PM Third Floor Council Chamber - Municipal Building</p>
        <p>Slowing"''"'  *he</p>
        <p>1. Report of Council Subcommittee on Special and Permitted Uses in Medical District;</p>
        <p>2. Report of Bi-Weekly Payroll Committee;</p>
        <p>3. Interim Report from Cable TV Committee;</p>
        <p>4. Computer Study Proposal;</p>
        <p>5. Architectural contract for renovations to Guy Smith Stadium;</p>
        <p>6. Report from Planning &amp;amp; Zoning members on Historic Properties;</p>
        <p>7. Agreement for Use between the City and Greenville Jaycees*</p>
        <p>8. Resolution requesting exemption from bidding procedures for  acquisition of natural aas-</p>
        <p>9. Agreement on Patrick Arthur Homeplace;  ,  </p>
        <p>10. Schedule dates for October workshop meetings;</p>
        <p>11. Report from Council Liaisons on Boards and Commissions-</p>
        <p>12. City Managers Report.</p>
        <p>The public is cordially Invited to attend.</p>
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        <p>The Daily Reflector, Greenville. N.C. Sunday, September 18.1988 ,  7Soldiers Surrender As Protesters Occupy Building</p>
        <p>BySEINWlN Associated Press Writer RANGOON, Burma lAP) - Arm ed Buddhist monks and students took over a government building Saturday, forcing 24 soldiers to surrender in the Icdest escalation of unrest threatening to topple the authoritarian government.</p>
        <p>The occupation of the Ministry of Trade building in downtown Rangoon was believed to be the first in which a government office in the capital was taken over by protesters fighting to end 26 years of repression under the Burma Socialist Program Party.</p>
        <p>The soldiers first opened fire on the protesters and slightly wounded three people. They later surrendered</p>
        <p>and were disguised as protesters with red headbands and allowed to escape, witnesse.-. said. Mobs outside the building had threatened to behead the guards.</p>
        <p>The shooting was believed to be the first time soldiers fired on demonstrators since the Aug. 8-12 rioting that ousted hard-line President Sein Lwin and left 112 people dead by the government's count. They previously shot only at escaping prisoners and mobs of looters.</p>
        <p>Elsewhere, three people accused of offering poisoned water to protesters two weeks ago were beaten to death by a mob and beheaded after the monks released them from custody, witnesses said.</p>
        <p>Up to 500,000 demonstrators, including striking government workers and policenien, took part in peaceful marches in Rangoon, carying placards that said, If we dont get it (democracy), we will hit out.</p>
        <p>Western-educated lawyer Maung Maung took over Aug. 19 as the first civilian leader since the 1962 military coup, but protesters have rejected his plan for the ruling party to supervise a general eledion under a multiparty system. They have demanded an interim government be formed to conduct the polling.</p>
        <p>Witnesses said the troops guarding the ministry building opened fire after a surging group of protesters surrounded the building and threat</p>
        <p>ened to set it ablaze.</p>
        <p>Clambering over adjacent rooftops, students entered the top floor of the four-story structure. Twenty-four soldiers inside surrendered to monks, who drove them away after seizing a submachine gun and several semi-automatic weapons.</p>
        <p>Protesters also ringed the City Hall and Central Bank buildings nearby ano -.hots were heard, but theie apparently was no bloodshed. After reinforcements arrived, about 100 soldiers were posted at both buildings.</p>
        <p>Security forces have sided with protesters in towns including Victoria Point in the southernmost pro-</p>
        <p>Guerrillas Free Jailed Comrades</p>
        <p>By TOM WELLS Associated Press Writer</p>
        <p>BOGOTA, Colombia (AP)  Left-wing guerrillas firing automatic weapons burst into a federal court building in the town of Buga Friday and freed five of their comrade^ being held for trial, police reported.</p>
        <p>They said a judges administrative assistant was taken hostage by the gunmen and his body was found with a bullet in the head beside a lighway near the town 160 miles southwest of Bogota.</p>
        <p>Two of the guerrillas freed by the attackers were captured after an hour-long pursuit, the police said. They did not report any other casualties or give further details.  '</p>
        <p>In other developments, leftist rebels freed 22 government soldiers and policemen captured in a raid last month and also released two Colombian geologists seized in another attack, the government and military announced.</p>
        <p>The soldiers and policemen freed Friday had been taken prisoner Aug. 23 by guerrillas of the Peoples Liberation Army and the Colombian Revolutionary Armed Forces during a joint attack on the northwestern town of Saiza.</p>
        <p>A statement from the office of President Virgilio Barcos said a one-day cease-fire had been arranged so the captives could be released in the Uraba region, about 300 miles northwest of Bogota.</p>
        <p>Two of the government troopers had been wounded in the rocket and mortar attack on the police station in Saiza, Gen. Jesus Arias said in an</p>
        <p>interview with the radio station RCN. He did not list their conditions or elaborate.</p>
        <p>The two geologists released Thursday were among five who worked with coal companies and were kidnapped Aug. 20 by rebels of another guerrilla group, the National Liberation Army, or ELN.</p>
        <p>Rebels freed the two geologists in an arranged meeting with a group of reporters in the city of Bucaramanga, 200 miles northeast of Bogota.</p>
        <p>An ELN communioue said the three other geologists would be released soon, but declared the guerrillas would launch an offensive against</p>
        <p>foreign coal-mining companies.</p>
        <p>Exxon and the Colombian state company Carbacol are partners In a $3 billion surface mine near Colombias Caribbean coast.</p>
        <p>ELN guerrillas have attacked oil pipelines and oil installations operated by Occidental Petroleum Co., Shell Oil and the Colombian</p>
        <p>state company EcopetroF 46 times this year, according to the govern ment. It placed the damage at $300 million</p>
        <p>A Defense Ministry communique released Friday said 1,174 people have been killed this year in guerrilla attacks and battles between rebels and security forces.</p>
        <p>It listed the slain as 499 guerrillas, 378 civilians and 297 policemen and soldiers.</p>
        <p>The ministry has reported 2,037 people were killed last year in fighting involving rebels, government forces and civilians caught in the violence.</p>
        <p>vince of Mergui. On Sept. 9, 500 servicemen joined protest marches in Rangoon in the first major military defections.</p>
        <p>State-run Radio Rangoon Saturday urged army personnel to return to their duties and work toward consolidating sovereignty, national unity.</p>
        <p>Opposition leaders, who were believed to be negotiating with the government on formation of an interim administration, have tried lo prevent violence.</p>
        <p>On Friday, leading dissident Aung Gyi defused a potentially bloody confrontation between soldiers and 100,000 demonstrators moving on the heavily guarded Ministry of Defense compound with spears, swords and knives.</p>
        <p>Aung Gyi, a former army brigadier, told the crowd, We cannot blame these soldiers for the faults of some of their commanders.</p>
        <p>Street protests have persisted despite a series of concessions by Maung Maungs government.</p>
        <p>The latest, announced by Radio Rangoon Friday, said all military personnel and civil servants must resign from the ruling party and not become members of any future political parties.</p>
        <p>It said the decision was made at the recommendation of the commission that is to supervise the elections, which may occur in October. Two-thirds of the 2.5 million party</p>
        <p>members come from military and civil service ranks.</p>
        <p>Many government workers said Saturday they would not heed a government warning to return to work by Sept. 26 or face punishment. Virtually all the workers have been on strike since Aug. 8, paralyzing the adminstration.</p>
        <p>One effect of the strikes has been the price of rice, the staple food, has tripled in recent weeks. The U.S. Embassy said Saturday it would donate $500,000 to religious organiza-tions'to buy rice for needy residents.</p>
        <p>With the political instability, most embassies have evacuated dependents of their diplomatic staffs and non-essential personnel.</p>
        <p>A number of Japanese were evacuated Saturday to Thailand after the embassy in Rangoon urged the remaining 108 Japanese there to leave. About 100 Americans had left earlier.</p>
        <p>Security forces killed scores of people in quelling student-led protests in March and June. That set the stage for the July 23 resignation of Ne Win, who had ruled since he staged the 1962 coup.</p>
        <p>More protests flared after Sein Lwin succeeded him. The government said security forces killed 112 people in Rangoon before Sein Lwin resigned Aug. 12 after 17 days in power, but Western diplomats said the death toll may have been much higher.</p>
        <p>Bangladesh Fighting Diseases In Aftermath Of Killer Floods</p>
        <p>By HASAN SAEED Associated Press Writer DHAKA, Bangladesh (AP) -Pneumonia and eye and skin diseases have broken out in Bangladesh in the aftermath of floods that claimed at least 953 lives, doctors and officials said Saturday.</p>
        <p>Over 3,500 medical teams working in the flooded areas are not fully equipped to handle these new diseases, said one Health Ministry official. Most of them are not carry</p>
        <p>ing enough medicines for these ailments.</p>
        <p>The governments toll of 953 from the flowing, which inundated about 80 percent of the country, is considered low. Newspapers put the toll in excess of 2,000.</p>
        <p>The governments figures include 211 deaths from diarrhea, caused by the disruption of pure water supplies when floodwaters washed away pumps and inundated wells. Most of the other deaths occurred from</p>
        <p>Iraq Spurns Inquiry</p>
        <p>UNITED NATIONS (AP) - Iraq has rejected a U.N. bid to send a team of experts to Investigate allegations it used poison gas against Kurdish rebels, many of whom have fled to neighboring Turkey.</p>
        <p>The response was negative, Iraqs Acting U.N. Ambassador, Ali Mahmoud Sumaida, told reporters Friday after meeting with Secretary-General Javier Perez de Cuellar. We declined to receive such a mission because there is no basis for evidence (for such a mission).</p>
        <p>At least a dozen nations, including the United States and Britain, have urged Perez de Cuellar to send a team to look into charges that Iraq was using chemical warfare against its Kurdish minority.</p>
        <p>Sumaida said reports by a Turkish team of experts and the Turkish Red Crescent  'Turkeys equivalent of the Red Cross  did not provide sufficient evidence to warrant dispatching a team of investigators.</p>
        <p>Perez de Cuellar did not issue an immediate response to the Iraqi rejection.</p>
        <p>drownings, and a lesser number from bites by poisonous snakes.</p>
        <p>Flooding is an annual disaster in Bangladesh, where the 110 million people earn an average per capita income of $150 per year. Last year, floods during the monsoon season killed at least 1,500 people.</p>
        <p>One doctor in Dhaka said an unusually large number of patients from flood-affected areas are suffering from eye ailments and skin diseases.</p>
        <p>The daily average of such cases has increased four- to six-fold in the last one week, said the doctor, Ab-dur Rahman. A week or 10 days back, the daily average of such patients was about 10. Now it is between 50 and 60 every day.</p>
        <p>At least 51,792 cases of diarrhea have been reported from flooded areas, where victims had little or no way to boil water. A government effort to bring water purification</p>
        <p>tablets to the countryside has been largely unsuccessful.</p>
        <p>The reports of the disease outbreaks come as the levels of major rivers in the low-lying country begin to recede.</p>
        <p>By next Friday, most of the water will recede, except from the low-lying areas close to the rivers, said one official at the Flood Control Center.</p>
        <p>The floods have inundated 53 of the countrys 64 districts. But government efforts to get relief to an estimated 40 million people have been hampered by lack of communications and resources.</p>
        <p>Many outlying areas remain inaccessible by road, and there is little dry land for the few helicopters.</p>
        <p>But resumption last Friday of rail traffic between Dhaka, the capital, and Chittagong, the countrys main port, was expected to boost relief work.</p>
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        <pb facs="00097037_0018" />
        <p>Sunday Opinion</p>
        <p>The Daily Reflector</p>
        <p>Established 1882</p>
        <p>David Julian Whichard, Chairman of the Board David J. Whichard II. Editor &amp;amp; Co-Publisher  John  S  Whichard, Co-Publisher</p>
        <p>D. Jordan Whichard III. C neral Manager  Alvin  B.  Taylor, Managing Editor</p>
        <p>Mai^ C. bchuiken. Editorial Page Euii^i  i</p>
        <p>Truth In Preference To Fiction*Scary MistakeNo Such Thing As Too Careful</p>
        <p>The blood was safe, so why worry?</p>
        <p>Because confusion over whether donated blood is infected with AIDS or hepatitis or any deadly virus is frightening, thats why. And because when blood donors test positive for these viruses, their blood should be discarded. Period.</p>
        <p>It doesnt matter if that result was a false positive or not. The system that keeps the nations blood supply safe demands meticulous adherence to rules and procedures.</p>
        <p>And whats most disturbing about last weeks news that blood from donors who tested positive for AIDS or hepatitis or another virus  blood which according to policy should have been destroyed  is the fact officials dont know exactly how the blood got into recipients veins.</p>
        <p>It probably was not tainted. Likely none of the recipients will get ill, so hysteria is misplaced. But the specter of mistake-making looms larger than the threat of contamination and sickness.</p>
        <p>The nations blood supply is an important resource that must remain plentiful. But as the incidence of AIDS increases, so does the threat to an adequate, non-contaminated blood supply. Not because a real physical danger exists, but because public confidence in the donation process can easily be undermined by incidents like the one last week.</p>
        <p>The system is, for the most part, safe. Stringent testing eliminates the possibility of deadly diseases being spread by blood transfusions. But to remain protected, precautions must be uncompromising. The nation cannot afford any standards but the highest.</p>
        <p>Although the incident reported last week likely did not harm anyone, the implications of a real situation where tainted blood reaches donors are unthinkable. A nationally contaminated blood supply would be a horror.</p>
        <p>The where and how surrounding the improper release of blood should be probed and concrete answers found. A proper explanation of the mishap could ease the public discomfiture prompted by the incident.</p>
        <p>Donors should not be discouraged from giving blood. Neither should recipients worry about the quality of the blood transfusions. But if more incidents where blood is improperly released occur, doubts could grow strong enough to warrant some caution.</p>
        <p>As risks increase, precautions should intensify. Careful handling of the blood supply is the key to a successful donor program.</p>
        <p>Why worry? Confusion over blood screening is serious. It shouldnt happen.Beating CostsEleven Years Of Energy Management</p>
        <p>Creenville Utilities became involved early in load unagement with its Beat-the-Peak program.</p>
        <p>It pioneered with the installation of radio operated switches on home air conditioners and water heaters. When summer electric loads hit a peak  the most expensive electricity  the switches are activated and the units are turned off for a limited period of time. By eliminating the peaks in its own loads GUC saves money. The customer also benefits through a rebate program during the summer months.</p>
        <p>That and other load management projects have saved GUC $5.83 million since 1985. There are now 8,842 switches on water heaters and 9,177 on air conditioners  and there is a waiting list of customers wanting to participate.</p>
        <p>Now GUC sees a way to drop peak loads in the wintertime. It plans to offer a Beat-the-Peak program to households with heat pumps. In this case the switches will be installed on heat strips in the systems. By turning off the switchers selectively by radio for brief periods of time, GUC will be able to reduce the surge of electrical u^ge on a cold night which sends wholesale electric costs skyrocketing.</p>
        <p>Obviously the Beat the Peak programs benefit customer by reducing Greenville Utilities* wholesale electric cost. On a broader scale it means the nations power generating resources are more efficiently used. If this is done on enough electric systems inefficient power plants wont have to be pressed into use during extreme heat or cold. And, while not much is heard about energy shortages these days, we can be $ure the p^sibility is never far away, r The nation must be energy conscious and we can take some pride in the knowledge that Greenville Utilities began its conservation program in 1977.</p>
        <p>What Is Gore Running For?</p>
        <p>A1 Gore woke up some Yallei Dawgs sleeping in the Democratic sunshine Friday, and he roused some window shoppers too.</p>
        <p>A political metamorphosis isnt an uncommon phenomenon, but when a hollow facade becomes an impassioned expositor in six months, eyes blink, ears perk and heads turn.</p>
        <p>Those Pitt Countians who saw Gores Prince-Albert-In-A-Can performance at a campaign stop here before Super Tuesday during his unsuccessful presidential campaign had to be amazed at the vigorous, passionate man that addressed Democrats in Greenville Friday at a rally for vice presidential candidate Lloyd Bentsen.</p>
        <p>Gone were the phrases carefully packaged to please Southern moderates. Gone was the rich boy hesitancy that said 1 dont really know who I am or why Im running for president. Gone was the reserve, the snobbish demeanor of the young, affluent senator from Tennessee. In its place was energy, vitality and a new willingness to roll up sleeves and get to work.</p>
        <p>There was fire in the hole. Here was a Democrat with some desire.</p>
        <p>Gores voice ricocheted off the courthouse steps and the sharp report of his words was exciting. He fired shots at environmental issues, he</p>
        <p>ELECTia</p>
        <p>By Mary C. SchulkenReflector</p>
        <p>Analysis</p>
        <p>took aim at education. He drew a graphic and convincing comparison between a White House dependent on Republican Dan Quayle and one with Bentsen in charge.</p>
        <p>Not that Gore stole the show from Bentsen. But he could have if hed kept on talking. Bentsens rhetoric was competent, predictable and written for the Reagan Democrats, the middle-aged Southern males that strayed from the party. In his words, he was looking for some old friends whove wandered away. His message was safe, without specifics and was delivered like what it was  a soft shoe sales pitch for a party ticket trying to please everyone.</p>
        <p>Yaller Dawgs aside, many in the crowd that came to see Lloyd Bentsen Friday didnt come with minds made up. They were there to make up their mind. Some might have, but there just wasnt much persuasive stuff offered.</p>
        <p>But the crowd might have gotten a glimpse of things to come. A1 Gore was running</p>
        <p>for office Friday, and his campaign was exciting. The Democrats offered Bentsen for Sale in Greenville but the crowd wasnt sure it was buying.</p>
        <p>Gores tub-thumping hit home with the crowd. He woke up the Dawgs, he made the Reagan Democrats pause, and surprisingly, he even drew response from the young professionals (not yuppies, just young professionals) who were window shopping for a message at the rally.</p>
        <p>His seemingly unrehears-ed, extemporaneous remarks delivered with fervor drew a response from those who were quietly tapping their feet to jazz artist David Sanborn and rock group Inexcess before the politics began.</p>
        <p>What happened with Gore? Was his earlier candidacy for president so carefully orchestrated to win Southern moderates his real talent was stifled? Did the primary campaign battles in New York and Michigan suddenly make him a seasoned politician?  Did he have a bad day back | in January when he breezed | through eastern North  Carolina? Does he want a | Dukakis cabinet post very,  very badly?  j</p>
        <p>Or has he reached deep ! down and found some real I leadership, some righteous anger and mixed it with a ! little maturity?  I</p>
        <p>The Democrats better ' hope he has done just that. If ; he has, the party might get a  few window shoppers to | come in the store.</p>
        <p>Who Would've Dreamed It...</p>
        <p>One of the miracles of the last 30 years for audiophiles has been the progress made in sound equipment and recording processes. From records which played at 78 revolutions per minute we went to 45 rpm and 33/3 rpm.</p>
        <p>Then there were eight-track tapes, then cassettes and now CDs (compact disc players, for the uninitiated.) Along with them have come huge strides in stereo equipment and speakers so that more sound is delivered than the human ear can absorb.</p>
        <p>The advancements went right along in the automobile, so that now we have stereo radios that work and cassette players that are reliable. While some may wonder why all this quality is wasted on modern popular music, it should be noted that the new technology has been applied to recordings made many years ago. Not only have many old recordings been transferred from 78s and 45s, but through electronics the original recordings have been enhanced to present day quality.</p>
        <p>All this is to report that your columnist picked up an</p>
        <p>Alvin Taylor</p>
        <p>Sunday Morning Notes</p>
        <p>Andrews Sisters cassette recently. Pop it in the car cassette player and the songs that each once took up a whole side of a 78 record now play endlessly until you stop them.</p>
        <p>It is superb for trips.</p>
        <p>this was at a time when risque words would neyer_ make it in popular music. They would never be played on the nations radio stations ... and without radio there was no hit record.</p>
        <p>Of course there were many other hits like Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy, Bei , Mir Bist Du Schon, Dont ; Sit Under The Apple Tree ' and Beat Me Daddy, Eight . To The Bar.</p>
        <p>The Andrews Sisters were popular during the World War 11 years and after. No trio has been more in harmony before or since. They sang the songs of a nation at war. They brought pleasure to streets in every city and byway of America where most families had someone off to war and more than a few had known the sorrow of receiving that telegram which announced a loved one was dead, injured, captured or missing.</p>
        <p>The Andrews Sisters also didnt project such a visual image as Marilyn Monroe did a decade or so later. They were not, after all, visual. Mostly their music was heard on radio and juke boxes. They were only seen occasionally by the American public in the shorts that followed the movies. So their' sensual projection was due mostly to their voice style which had a way of making any number seem sexy.</p>
        <p>Anyway at that time the -entire nation was being * uprooted by the war. We were seeing the first changes of a Victorian society. Perhaps the Andrews Sisters were at the forefront of the musical and social revolution which swept the nation in the decades following the war.  .  ,</p>
        <p>The Andrews Sisters style was, well ... jivey, and this at a time when most popular music was soft and dreamy to contrast the madness that was going on throughout the world. They had a reputation for being sensuous, but</p>
        <p>Their most explicit lyrics were in Drinking Rum and Coca Cola which had its setting in Trinidad. Even in those uncomplicated times most everybody knew what these words meant: Both mother and daughter, working for the Yankee dollar.</p>
        <p>Certainly no one could ' dream then that their hits, which would have made a  stack of 78 records, would be  compacted on a tape which . could be held in one hand. Nor could it have been -predicted that the cassette  could one day be played in  the automobile  If the</p>
        <p>automobile of today could .</p>
        <p>auiomoDue of today have been envisioned.</p>
        <p>The Andrews Sisters v helped make it possible for a  generation to bear up under ' a war. Their unique style is still available to us in better , form than ever before. ,</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0019" />
        <p>CommentaifyPro-Choice Or Pro-Life: Wobbling On The PlankEllen Goodman</p>
        <p>BOSTON - It was enough to make the anti-abortion shock troops impale themselves on their pickets. George Herbert Walker Bush, the great white hope of the right-to-lifers, was saying that abortion shouldnt be a political litmus test.</p>
        <p>The direct descendant of Ronald Reagan had passed just such a test in the primaries. Hed come out aggressively in favor of a constitutional ban against abortion. The Republican platform itself had passed the same test with flying colors: The unborn child has a fundamental individual right to life which cannot be infringed.</p>
        <p>But now the candidate was sounding dangerously open-minded. Talking about abortion, he said; Nob^y in our party takes a litmus test that says that everybody has to agree on every issue.</p>
        <p>This was anathema to the gang that spends days trying to break up rallies for Michael Dukakis. And many of them were already a touch suspicious of the gentleman from Kennebunkport. After all, his politics were conceived in the days when conservatives like Barry Goldwater didnt believe in government intrusion.</p>
        <p>Bush had gotten on the constitutional bandwagon in 1980. But now, eight years later, he was admitting, perhaps even bragg</p>
        <p>ing, that some of his best friends and key supporters are pro-choice. The campaigns co-chair. Rep. Lynn Martin, is one. So is Deborah Steelman, his domestic policy adviser, ,</p>
        <p>More to the point, the Republican was wobbling on the platform which banned abortion with no ifs, ands or buts; with no dispensation for cases of incest, rape or the health of the mother. In the same interview, Bush suggested that he favored these exceptions.</p>
        <p>Was there a waffle afoot? Should the right-to-lifers insist on a urinalysis to see if George would still pass?</p>
        <p>What we are into is phase two of the Bush campaign. In phase one he whacked; in phase two he welcomed. He went from immolating Dukakis with the American flag to making commercials calling for a gentler, kinder nation. He went from feeding red meat to the right, to proffering a well-balanced meal to the middle.</p>
        <p>The pragmatic patrician can, you see, read numbers. On the matter of abortion, the public attitude is quite clear. Only 10 percent of Americans believe we should ban them all. Even among Republicans, 73 percent believe that abortion should be a private matter between a woman and her doctor. The swing voters both candidates are wooing are solidly pro-choice.</p>
        <p>Bush already has the right-to-life voters in his pocket, no matter</p>
        <p>how itchy they may feel in there. What he wants to do is to appear just moderate enough to appeal to Reagan Democrats. Republican</p>
        <p>pollster Linda Divall once said that the party goal was to have Democrats say, Now theres a Republican I can vote for.</p>
        <p>Is it enough that Bush has retreated from the rigid right? Kate Michelman, the head of the National Abortion Rights Action</p>
        <p>League, says no. We aren't being asked to elect his staff or the majority of Republicans, she says. We are being asked to elect George Bush, who opposes abortion and favors adoption. This~ week NARAL endorsed Dukakis.</p>
        <p>The bottom line is that Bush believes Roe V. Wade, the Supreme Court decision upholding choice, should be overturned. As the President, the man who chooses judges, he could pretty much assure that it would happen. The part of the Republican platform he hasnt criticized calls for the appointment of judges at all levels of the judiciary who respect...the sanctity of innocent human life.</p>
        <p>Under this rubric, Ronald Reagan has appointed half of all the federal judges now sitting. We are beginning to see those results. In one circuit court this year, an ideological bloc of Reagan judges upheld a law forcing pregnant girls to search out and notify both parents before getting an abortion.</p>
        <p>Now the Supreme Court, with three Reagan appointees, hangs uncertainly. The next President will surely have more appointments to make.</p>
        <p>So 1 am delighted that Bush includes pro-choice people in his inner circle. But the question isnt whether there's a litmus test for politicians. It's whether this politician has one  a familiar hand-me-down one for the courts.</p>
        <p>(c) IK. The Boston Globe Newspaper</p>
        <p>C'ompany-Washinglon Post Writers Group</p>
        <p>About NothingWilliam Raspberry</p>
        <p>Tension Due To Strategy, Not PersonalityRon Walters</p>
        <p>The post-convention conflict between Jesse Jackson and the Democratic Party presidential candidate that occurred both in 1984 and 1988 has not been caused by a quirk of Jacksons personality.</p>
        <p>This kind of analysis, all too frequent, not only puts the onus for the conflict unfairly upon Jackson himself, but obscures the more important fact that is the major reason for its recurrence: The two dominant parts of the party coalition at this point have substantially different strategies for winning that undermine any attempt at real unity.</p>
        <p>'Since the adoption of key Jackson campaign staffers by Dukakis wouid symbolicaiiy heip to knit the party coaiition together, their absence is one piece of evidence that the coaiition is in troubie,'</p>
        <p>This tension is of long standing. The Democratic Party has historically had difficulty keeping the white Soum within its coalition because of its adoption of a strong civil rights posture. More recently, its aggressive overtures toward the South have destabilized the partys progressiverase.</p>
        <p>Blacks have been a powerful part of the voting base of the Democratic Party but not of its real leadership, until Jackson mounted credible presidential campaigns both in 1984 and 1988 and further institutionalized progressive politics within the party. The Jackson campaign of 1988 built an effective national political orgamzation that was deployed in every primary and caucus state and that persuaded nearly 7 million people to vote for Jackson. This is a substantial accumulation of political power, which neither Jackson nor his lieutenants want to turn over to Michael S. Dukakis without a quid pro quo. In the normal course of American politics, such alliances wouldnt happen under anv other circumstance.</p>
        <p>Speaking of lieutenants, in building this political force, Jackson has attracted Ae usual cadre of staffers and political advisers, and it is also normal that he should attempt to deliver something to them. The something has traditipnaUy been a role in the presidential campaign or in the new ad-miiiistration, but, thus far, Dukakis has resisted including them at highly visible levels within his campaign. Since the adoption of key Jackson campaign staffers by Dukakis would symbolically help to knit the party coalition together, their absence is one piece of evidence that the coalition is in trouble.</p>
        <p>Another symptom of this problem is the genuine malaise that exists within the black community over the Dukakis campaign. Because black and progressive leaders have not been brought sufficient y into the Dukakis campaign</p>
        <p>to energize the constituencies they represent, Jackson is in danger of not being able to show very much for his efforts.</p>
        <p>This was the logic of the understanding between Jackson and Dukakis that was reached at the Atlanta convention but that is now in considerable disarray. The Dukakis campaign appears not to understand that the means of binding the progressive constituency to the party coalition is fulfilling his )ledge of shared management of the campaign. However, Dukakis may be oath to do this because of the negative signal it would send to Reagan Democrats.</p>
        <p>What this reveals is the fact that the problem of holding together the traditional Democratic Party coalition has come into conflict with Dukakis presidential campaign strategy of competing head-on with the Republicans for the existing electorate in conservative (mostly white) strongholds. The Jackson alternative has been to suggest the strategy of expanding the base of the party through a massive voter registration program among minorities and progressive whites. As the nominee, Dukakis has a right to choose the strategy that he feels could win, but prudence requires that it conform to the polling data and make full use of the partys natural strengths.</p>
        <p>With the black community fully mobilized, an average white vote of about 35 percent would be needed for victory, especially in the South. In 1976, Jimmy Carters average white vote was more than 40 percent in the South, and the blacks who voted Democratic provided the rest of his winning coalition. This new math of Southern Democratic Party politics was validated in 1986 when the same winning coalition returned control of the U.S. Senate to the Democrats. By having previously rejected Jacksons help in registering voters in these states, Dukakis apparently wants to concentrate on increasing the white vote, feeling that the black vote has no option but to go along.</p>
        <p>The conflict between Dukakis and Jackson, then, is no simple rub of personalities, but may be expressed as the difference between the strategies of the dominant parts of the party. At present, the Democratic Partys presidential campaign appears poised to carry out both strategies; to compete for Reagan Democrats at the same time it is gathering a $50 million Victory Fund, most of which will supposedly initiate a national voter registration drive.</p>
        <p>It may work, but the hope of doing so is for party leaders to return to the Atlanta understanding between Jackson and Dukakis and to ado^ shared management of the campaign. If the Democrats lose, what will have caused it, in part, is the attempt of party leaders to follow this schizophrenic strategy - amounting to trying to get the progressive vote for free, while adopting me-too Republicanism. Whether this strategy is successful or not, it should be seen as having a decisive impact on the maturing conflict over the future composition and direction of the Democratic Party coalition.</p>
        <p>Ron Walters, is a professor of political science at Howard University in WasM^ton, D.C., and was an adviser to the Jackson campaigis this year and</p>
        <p>LA Times-WaRhington FmI News Service</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON  The nearer we get to November, the clearer it seems to me: This election isnt about anything.</p>
        <p>It is not about peace. Both George Bush and Michael Dukakis promote a strong national defense as a necessary backdrop for progress toward international peace. Both insist that we ought to be ready to defend freedom wherever it is threatened, but neither advocates military intervention in any particular place.</p>
        <p>Nor is there much evidence that their peace-through-strength programs would differ much one from another. Even on the controversial Star Wars, theres hardly a votes worth of difference between them. Bush is liking it a little less, Dukakis a little more.</p>
        <p>The election is not about prosperity. Both candidates promise more services, decent jobs and a balanced budget, all without a tax increase. But neither has put forward anything that could be called a plan for achieving that miracle.</p>
        <p>Indeed, they seem to agree that the economy is in pretty good shape right now. The difference between them, as far as I can discern, is that Bush (representing an incumbent administration) says its in good shape because of Republican policies, while Dukakis (governor of a state with an unusually robust economy) says things will get still better with him at the helm.</p>
        <p>It is not even about ideology  at least not in any recognizable form. Bushs vague conservatism is hardly distinguishable from Dukakis' vague liberalism, and both are moving toward the moderate middle as fast as they can without alarming their more ideological supporters.</p>
        <p>Both are environmentalists (though their records evoke little evidence of the fact), both adore Hispanics; both respect blacks, though neither seems particularly comfortable around blacks they dont know; both are committed to education, Israel and competitiveness.</p>
        <p>But what do they really stand for that offers a voter a basis for choosing between them? What are the policy proposals that set them apart? Do they have different senses of the limits on what government ought to try to do? Do they have different visions of what America is, and ought tobe?</p>
        <p>I confess that a part of the reason I</p>
        <p>dont know the answer to that question is the way the media (particularly television) cover the campaign. But the more serious reason has to do with the candidates themselves. Instead of trying to force the media to pay attention to real issues, both candidates devote their efforts to trying to score under the present rules of the game.</p>
        <p>As a result, the electorate is titillated by things that make little real difference: the Jesse Jackson problem, the wrong date for Pearl Harbor, Dan Quayles stint in the National Guard, the prison furlough that tragically backfired.</p>
        <p>But are voters expected to believe that Bush who fought in World War II is less aware of its significance because he blew the date of Pearl Harbor? Are we supposed to believe that Dukakis veto of a mandatory pledge of allegiance means that this virtual personification of the American Dream is less than loyal?</p>
        <p>How would these men govern? What sort of people would staff their administrations? What would be their paths to peace or prosperity or fiscal soundness? What are these candidates about?</p>
        <p>The questions may not matter to committed partisans who, unless they are given some reason not to, will always vote for their partys cndidate. But for the rest  perhaps the majority, given the tenuousness of partisan loyalties  they matter a lot. And the candidates are doing precious little to provide us with good answers.</p>
        <p>It is like watching the school-figure segment of an ice-skating competition where the point (or so it seems to me) is not so much to win as to avoid losing. Reporters and pollsters keep track of points, no matter how irrelevant the manner in which they are scored. The competitors surge ahead or fall behind for reasons hardly anyone can fathom.</p>
        <p>When the final tally is taken, someone will be ahead, but it's hard to imagine that it will matter very much which one it is.</p>
        <p>Maybe the whole election will turn less on the candidates themselves than on our assumptions about what sort of crowd each would bring to power, or the sort of federal judges and Supreme Court justices each would appoint.</p>
        <p>Thats important, too. of course. But 1 cant shake the impression that, at its heart, this election isnt about anything.</p>
        <p>ci l!KK, Washington Post W riters Group</p>
        <p>PLN\HlfitSiF(ITURE:</p>
        <p>THl(Xi)-FKHOI)||W ThtKamW</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0020" />
        <p>Report Says Japan Made Chemical Weapons</p>
        <p>By WILLIAM C.HIDLAY Associated Press Writer CHICAGO (AP) - Japan operated a secret chemical weapons factory during World War II, bombed China with poison gas grenades and tested poison on prisoners of war, including Americans, a new report charges.</p>
        <p>The report in the October issue of the Chicago-based Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists also contends the U.S. government knew about Japans use of chemical weapons but failed to prosecute Japanese officers at the Tokyo war crimes tribunal in 1946.  ,</p>
        <p>The reports author, Yuki Tanaka, speculated the U.S. government decided against prosecuting because it wanted to learn from Japans knowledge of bacteriological warfare.</p>
        <p>The use of chemical weapons (by the Japanese) was covered up by the U.S. government," Tanaka said Saturday in a telephone interview from his home in Australia.</p>
        <p>Tanaka, a lecturer in Japanese at the University of Adelaide in Australia, drew on newly discovered Japanese war documents, his own interviews and previously published material to piece together the account, said Len Ackland, the Bulletins editor.  .  </p>
        <p>I think what you have here is the first full story of Japans poison gas enterprise and its grim results both on the Chinese and on the Jpanese workers, he said Friday.</p>
        <p>Tanaka said his research was prompted partly by the Japanese governments long-time insistence that it never used chemical weapons in World War II. Japan signed the 1925 Geneva Convention that banned use of such weapons. Tanaka said his research showed that Japan built a factory for chemical</p>
        <p>weapons on Okunoshima, one of dozens of tiny islands in the Inland Sea. To help keep the factory secret, Tanaka contends, the Japanese government erased the island from maps in 1939.</p>
        <p>The factory operated from 1929 until the end of World War II, when it was destroyed at the direction of Allied officers. The plant manufactured a variety of chemicals, including mustard gas, lewisite, nausea gas and hydrocyanic acid gas for use against China, Tanakas report said.</p>
        <p>Neither the Japanese nor U.S. governments would respond to the report in the Bulletin, a monthly magazine founded in 1945 and supported by scientists concerned about the implications of nuclear weapons development.</p>
        <p>The Japanese foreign ministry would not make an official comment despite repeated calls from The Associated Press. But a Ministry of Education official said, We have not gathered enough evidence to specify it as a historical event.</p>
        <p>The U.S. Defense and State departments also declined comment on the report through several public affairs officers, all of whom refused to be Identified.</p>
        <p>Atrocities committed during the Japanese invasion of China, which began shortly before World War II, have long been a source of controversy between the two countries. Chinese army records allege that at least 2,000 Chinese were killed and 35,000 injured by Japanese chemical weapons, Tanakas report said.</p>
        <p>Tanaka wrote that in 1983,. researchers from Keto University obtained a two-volume report on Japans experiments with bacteriological and chemical weapons on Chinese, Soviet, American and Polish prisoners in the early 1940s.</p>
        <p>The article gave no detail on the tests on Americans but said Chinese were subjected to mustard gas attacks and it quoted research notes on the resulting damage to their skin.</p>
        <p>In another test, Chinese prisoners had to drink a liquid form of the chemical; in a third, some of the liquid was dropped in the eye of a prisoner, Tanaka reported. Documents do not say what happened to the prisoners.</p>
        <p>In his article, Tanaka contends that U.S. Col. Thomas Morrow, a law officer assigned to investigate Japanese war crimes, uncovered evidence of Japans use of chemical weapons and wrote two reports about it.</p>
        <p>But Tanaka said Morrow was summoned home abruptly from Tokyo in the early stages of the war crimes trials, and the issue was dropped, possibly because the U.S. government was interested in keeping information relating to biological and chemical warfare for its own use.</p>
        <p>My intention was to warn of the danger of chemical weapons, Tanaka said. So I hope the U.S. and other major countries which are producing chemical weapons will reconsider.</p>
        <p>The report also said medical specialists from Hiroshima University have tracked nearly 5,800 former employees of the chemical weapons factory who suffered lasting injuries from working with the substances.</p>
        <p>Cancer of the respiratory organs is particularly high, suggesting a direct link with the inhalation of poison gas, the report said.</p>
        <p>One worker recalled in an interview that the factory was so contaminated that workers had to keep an eye on caged parakeets, which dropped dead when gas leakage rose, the report said.Paper Says Government To Seek Marcos Indictment</p>
        <p>LOS ANGELES (AP) - Federal officials have overcome major legal obstacles in their case against Ferdinand Marcos and it is now likely they will ask a federal grand jury to indict the former Philippine president for fraud, the Los Angeles Times reported today.</p>
        <p>However, the indictment is expected to deal only with accusations of wrongdoing after Marcos left office in February 1986, the newspaper said.</p>
        <p>The case was narrowed to overcome doubts about whether U.S. law could apply to the deposed presidents alleged efforts to misappropriate billions of dollars in Philippine taxpayers funds, according to anonymous sources cited by the newspaper.</p>
        <p>The indictment, anticipated for months, has been delayed by a number of circumstances.</p>
        <p>Acting Associate Attorney General Francis A. Keating II expressed res</p>
        <p>ervations at one point about the quality of the case when draft charges were brought before him.</p>
        <p>The investigation is now focusing on allegations thajt Marcos and his wife, Imelda, conspired with Saudi Arabian financier Adnan Khashoggi and others to violate U.S. district court injunctions. They allegedly secretly transferred ownership of hundreds of millions of dollars in stolen art and Manhattan real estate</p>
        <p>Union Head: GovernmentSoftening On Solidarity</p>
        <p>By DEBORAH G. SEWARD Associated Press Writer</p>
        <p>CZESTOCHOWA, Poland (AP) -The government said Solidarity has a future in Poland but refused to lift a 6-year-old ban on the East blocs first independent union federation, a union leader reported Saturday.</p>
        <p>They clearly said, Give us time, said Wladyslaw Frasyniuk, describing a meeting Friday between Solidarity chief Lech Walesa, Interior Minister Czeslaw Kiszczak and 22 other people from the government, Solidarity and the church.</p>
        <p>Walesa meanwhile traveled to this southern city Saturday for an annual workers pilgrimage and to report to other Solidarity leaders about prospects for legalizing the union.</p>
        <p>Walesa agreed to end a wave of strikes last month after the government agreed to talk to Solidarity about legalization. The labor unrest posed the strongest challenge to the communist government since it crushed Solidarity in the 1981 martial law crackdown. The union was banned in 1982.</p>
        <p>Frasyniuk, Solidarity leader in in the southwestern city of Wroclaw, met with a small group of reporters early Saturday.</p>
        <p>He said Kiszczak informed Solidarity members Friday that Solidarity has a future but told union activists that he could not take a decision on legalizing it now because his hands are tied.</p>
        <p>He said alternate Politburo member Stanislaw Ciosek told the meeting the police and army are resisting the push to legalize Solidarity because they fear this symbol.</p>
        <p>Can we call this a great success? I think not. Success will occur when Solidarity has the right to return to legal activity, Frasyniuk said.</p>
        <p>But he said the union cannot involve itself in interminable discussions, because the people we represent expect concrete effects.</p>
        <p>Frasyniuk said Solidarity decided to continue talks even without a firm commitment because it did not want to be seen as being the first to break off the process of negotiation.</p>
        <p>After the meeting. Solidarity members had a feeling of victory, he said. You could see that the problem of Solidarity was the dominant one, and nobody directly attacked Solidarity.</p>
        <p>We now see that the legalization of Solidarity isnt one single act to grant or not. It is a process, said Zbigniew Bujak, a Warsaw Solidarity leader.</p>
        <p>Newspapers on Saturday carried a brief government communique about the meeting and listed those who attended. But there was no confirmation of Frasyniuks account.</p>
        <p>In an unusual move, the Politburo of the Polish United Workers (communist) Party held a meeting Saturday to review the current problems of the socio-political situation of the country, the state-run news service PAP said. It gave no further details. The Politburo normally meets only on Tuesdays.</p>
        <p>The talks at a government villa outside Warsaw marked the first time a national delegation of Solidarity activists met with authorities and the official trade union alliance OPZZ, which was set up after Solidarity was banned.</p>
        <p>Although their union remains illegal, Solidarity members wore union pins during the meeting and were treated with respect by the officials present, Frasyniuk said.</p>
        <p>But Andrzej Stelmachowski, a pro-Solidarity law professor who</p>
        <p>served as a mediator to set up the meeting, said some bitter things were exchanged during the six hours of talks. He did not elaborate.</p>
        <p>The meeting was to discuss terms for large-scale talks on Polands future, including the subject of Solidarity and trade union pluralism. The sides agreed that the talks would convene in mid-October.</p>
        <p>Walesa left Warsaw on Saturday for the Jasna Gora monastery in Czestochowa, site of the Black Madonna painting, Polands most revered icon.</p>
        <p>He was to attend a workers pilgrimage that annually draws tens of thousands of Solidarity supporters. It was begun by the pro-Solidarity priest the Rev. Jerzy Popieluszko before his murder by police agents in 1984.</p>
        <p>In the Soviet Union, manwhile, the state-run media softened their hard-line support of the Polish government. They said officials and protesters must share the blame for many of Polands problems and that the two should compromise.</p>
        <p>Servicemen Stabbed</p>
        <p>GLYFADA, Greece (AP) - Two Libyan workers stabbed three U.S, servicemen in what U.S. officials called an unprovoked altercation outside a bar in this Athens seaside suburb, police and embassy officials said.</p>
        <p>A U.S. Embassy statement said one of the Americans was seriously hurt in the Friday brawl but his injuries were not life-threatening. Another was being kept for obser-</p>
        <p>vaton and a third had already been</p>
        <p>discharged, the statement sail</p>
        <p>I</p>
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        <p>Court records in related civil lawsuits allege that Marcos took control of the funds while he was still in power but used elaborate schemes involving front companies and agents to hide his ownership and liquidate properties after he went into exile in Hawaii,</p>
        <p>The inter-agency Police Review Group, which became more prominent in the wake of the diplomatically embarrassing attempt to prosecute Panamanian strongman Manuel A. Noriega on federal drug charges in Florida, helped settle problems with</p>
        <p>the legal case early in the week, the Times said.</p>
        <p>U.S. Attorney Rudolph W. Giuliani in New York, along with his staff, outlined details of proposed criminal charges against Marcos at a White House meeting of the review group Tuesday, The Times said. President Reagan did not attend.</p>
        <p>Intelligence advisers are expected next week to offer their opinions on how the case could affect foreign relations.</p>
        <p>In a statement issued from the Philippine embassy in Washington, D.C., Sevenna Rivera, general counsel for his governments</p>
        <p>Presidential Commission on Good Governmnt, said:</p>
        <p>There has been considerable skepticism in Manila about President Reagans- willingness to approve the indictment of Mr. Marcos. ... If he approves it, Filipinos everywhere will, applaud Mr. Reagan and the American system of justice that applies the full force of the law to corrupt dictators who violate U.S. laws.</p>
        <p>However, some concern has been expressed that Marcos may flee to Mexico or another country because the indictment is imminent, a source told The Times.</p>
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        <pb facs="00097037_0021" />
        <p>THE DAILY</p>
        <p>REFLECTOR</p>
        <p>Greenville, N.C. Sunday, September 18,1988</p>
        <p>Sports</p>
        <p>Hih School FootbaU Stock Listn^ Business News</p>
        <p>B</p>
        <p>r Missed Chances Doom Bucs, 17-0</p>
        <p>By TIM CHANDLER Reflector Sports Writer COLUMBIA, S.C. - East Carolinas football team did the one thing it couldnt do Saturday if it wanted an opportunity to beat South Carolina - it missed scoring oppor-tiinitipc</p>
        <p>The Pirates squandered chance</p>
        <p>after chance to put points on the scoreboard all game long and, simply put, thats what made the difference as 14th-ranked South Carolina defeated East Carolina 17-0 in a game that turned out to be much closer than the final score would indicate.</p>
        <p>The Gamecocks, unlike the</p>
        <p>Pirates, cashed in on the few scoring chances they were allowed by the ECU defense. </p>
        <p>And early in the third quarter, the Gamecocks, now 3-0 for the season, struck it rich with one big play, courtesy of a Pirate miscue.</p>
        <p>Trailing 3-0 at the outset of the second half, the Pirates, who fell to 1-2</p>
        <p>Up But Not Over</p>
        <p>East Carolinas Reggie McKinney loses the ball as he tries to go over the Univeristy of South Carolinas defensive line Saturday."Na</p>
        <p>tionally-ranked South Carolina slipped past the Pirates 17-0 to remain unbeaten. (AP Laserphoto)</p>
        <p>on the season, drove from their own 12 to the use 6-yard line before Reggie McKinney fumbled on a fourth and one play. Cornerback Stephane Williams jumped on the ball, giving the Gamecocks possession at the 3.</p>
        <p>use quarterback Todd* Ellis, who completed 14 of 24 passes for 235 yards in the game, then connected with freshman Robert Brooks on a scoring pass for paydirt. Collin Mackie added the PAT to give USC a 10-0 lead with 9:25 to play in the third quarter.</p>
        <p>ECU had managed to move all the way to the USC 6-yard line thanks to the running of quarterback Travis Hunter, fullback Tim James and wingback Reggie McKinney.</p>
        <p>James, who gained 82 yards on 18 carries for the day, broke the big play of the drive when he got loose up the middle for 32 yards. McKinney, who totaled 89 yards on 14 carries, added gains of 13 and 12 yards on the drive, while Hunter kept the drive alive with an 11-yard pickup on a third and 5 play at his own 17-yard line.</p>
        <p>I guess (defensively) it was one of those bend, but never break kind of days. South Carolina coach Joe Morrison said. We didnt slow them down much until they got close to the goal line, plus they missed some field goals for us.</p>
        <p>Indeed. In all, sophomore placekicker Robb Imperato came up empty on three attempts for the day, the last of which was a 35-yard attempt at the 13:32 mark of the fourth quarter. The miss negated a 62-yard drive by the Pirates.</p>
        <p>Take away the 97-yard touchdown</p>
        <p>pass by the Gamecocks and the Pirates dominated play in the game. The Pirates racked up 24 first downs and 336 yards in total offense, while USC moved the chains only 14 times and were limited to 284 yards. Other than the 97-yard scoring strike, uses longest drive of the day was a mere 42 yards.</p>
        <p>The Gamecocks managed to tack on an extra touchdown in the waning seconds of the game when Ellis hit Robert Brooks for a 6-yard touchdown with 30 ticks left on the clock. The score was set up after Mike Conway had picked off a pass by ECU backup quarterback Charlie Libretto.</p>
        <p>I wouldnt call it the prettiest win ever, but it was a victory, Morrison said. Going in to the game, we wanted to control the football...it didnt work out that way for us. But were happy to get this one in the win column.</p>
        <p>The Pirates came out seemingly poised to go for an upset when it held the Gamecocks on the games first possession.</p>
        <p>Following a 31-yard punt by USC. ECU started at its own 48. The Pirates moved to the Gamecock 30 before sending in Imperato to attempt a 47-yard field goal. Im-peratos kick came up short leaving the game scoreless.</p>
        <p>The Pirates stymied the Gamecocks next drive and took over at their own 11-yard line. ECU once again drove to the USC 30-yard line before stalling. Imperato was sent in once again and his 47-yarder on the first play of the second quarter came up short.</p>
        <p>The decision to go for the field goals felt good at the time, ECU head coach Art Baker said. But in</p>
        <p>hindsight, it doesnt look so good. It would have been a big plus for us to go up 6-3 at the half instead of being down 0-3. Imperato has his confidence shattered after today. Well have to take a look at our kicking situation next week in practice. Following the second miss by Imperato, the Gamecocks moved in for the only score of the first half as Collin Mackie was true on a 51-yarder with 11:42 to play in the first half.</p>
        <p>Ellis helped get South Carolina in position for the score when he hit Carl Platt for a 25-yard pass reception during the drive.</p>
        <p>USC moved to the Pirates 30 once more in the half on a 16-yard pass reception from Ellis to Platt. Platt, however, coughed up the ball and ECU defensive end Mike Applewhite recovered it.</p>
        <p>East I'arolina  South Carolina</p>
        <p>24...................First Downs .............14</p>
        <p>51-232...........Rushes-Y ardage...........25-49</p>
        <p>104................Passing Yards................235</p>
        <p>8...................Return Yards...................7</p>
        <p>10-22-2................Passing................14-24-0</p>
        <p>3-33.7............Punts-Average............6-36.5</p>
        <p>3- 1.................Fumbles-Lost.................1-1</p>
        <p>4-3 4.............Penalties-Yards.............7-71</p>
        <p>37:02 Time of Possession 22:58</p>
        <p>East Carolina.....................0 0 0 00</p>
        <p>South Carolina....................0 3 7 717</p>
        <p>Scoring:</p>
        <p>SC-Mackie 52 FG</p>
        <p>SC  Brooks, 97 pass from Ellis I Mackie kick)</p>
        <p>SC  Brooks, 6 pass from Ellis (Mackie kick)</p>
        <p>A - 66,000</p>
        <p>Individual Statistics Rushing: ECU  Hunter 10-23, James 18-82, McKinney 14-89. Lewis 3-10, Moody</p>
        <p>2-5, Daniels 2-4. Bynum 1-8, Bennett 1-11; USC  Green 5-21. Bing 6-11, Dingle 2-9, Williams 8-17, Ellis 4-(-9).</p>
        <p>Passing: ECU  Hunter 6-12-0 61, Libretto 4-10-2 43 , USC - Ellis 14-24-0 235. Receiving: ECU  Wilson 4-48, Whiting</p>
        <p>3-28, Harper 2-21, James 1-7; USC  Green 3-11, Brooks 2-103, Piatt 4-67. Watson ;i-40. Bing 1-3, Dingle 1-11.Soviet Woman Wins 1st Gold</p>
        <p>SEOUL, South Korea (AP) - The U.S. mens volleyball team began defense of its Olympic title by rallying to overpower Japan, and the' Soviet Union got rolling Sunday as the Seoul Games offered their first medals.</p>
        <p>Irina Chilova won the Games first medal event, the womens air rifle, as Soviets took the gold and bronze.</p>
        <p>The curtain rose Saturday on Asias first Summer Games in 24 years, and while the Soviets captured the first act, a U.S. medal was almost sure to follow closely.</p>
        <p>.Michele Mitchell of Boca Raton, Fla., and Wendy Williams of Bridgeton, Mo., were in excellent shape to win medals in womens platform diving going into the final round Sunday.</p>
        <p>The leader was a tiny Chinese who boldly chose the most difficult dives of Saturdays preliminaries for her</p>
        <p>three-story plummet to possible stardom.</p>
        <p>Janet Evans of Placentia, Calif., favored to win three gold medals here, won her qualifying heat in the womens 400-meter individual medley in 4 minutes, 43.04 seconds, but she had only the third-fastest time in the preliminary heats.</p>
        <p>Noemi Lung of Romania had the best time of the day, 4:41.96.</p>
        <p>Japan led the favored United States, playing without setter Jeff Stork, rallied from a 10-6 deficit in the first game to beat Japan 15-13, 15-2,15-2. The Americans seemed to take a little time getting used to Storks replacement, Ricci Luyties.</p>
        <p>The winning shot came on a kill by Steve Timmons, one of the most feared spikers in the game.</p>
        <p>Chilova won the womens air rifle with 498.5 points after 10 shots, followed by Silvia Sperber of West</p>
        <p>Germany with 497.5 and another Soviet, Anna Maloukhina, at 495.8. liuni Meili of Colorado Springs, Colo., was sixth with 493.3 points.</p>
        <p>This bustling Asian metropolis of 10 million came to a virtual standstill as the Games were declared officially under way at Saturdays opening ceremonies, a rich blend of Oriental proverbs and high-tech glitz that ushered in the first Oriental Olympics since 1964 in Tokyo.</p>
        <p>There are no people in the streets, Lee Jun-kyu, a student at Seoul National University, said. Theyre all at Olympic Stadium or watching television. Its never been this quiet.</p>
        <p>Arlene Limas of Chicago won a</p>
        <p>gold medal for the United States, albeit in the demonstration sport of taekwondo. Three South Koreans also won golds.</p>
        <p>Platform diving and shooting were two of five events offering medals on Sunday. A mens shooting medal also was up for grabs, along with one each in cycling and weightlifting.</p>
        <p>Also on Sunday:</p>
        <p> The favored U.S. mens basketball team moves into action against Spain, shining the spotlight once again on Danny Manning, who led Kansas to the national collegiate championship last April.</p>
        <p> Americas two best swimmers, Janet Evans of Placentia, Calif., and Matt Biondi of Moraga, Calif., begin</p>
        <p>competition - Evans in the 400-meter individual medley and Biondi in the 200 freestyle. Both are preliminary heats.</p>
        <p> Arthur Johnson of Minneapolis and Kelcie Banks of Chicago are the first U.S. boxers in the ring.</p>
        <p>After eight preliminary dives, 14-year-old Chen Xiaodan of China led the group of 12 into the finals, using the three most difficult-rated (hves of the preliminaries from the 10-meter high platform. Mitchell was second and Williams fourth.</p>
        <p>Chen took over the lead with her' sixth dive, an inward 3*/i sommer-sault from the pike position, and the warning was plain for both Americans to see.</p>
        <p>The Chinese divers are doing a lot harder dives than they did in 84, said Mitchell, a silver medalist in Los Angeles. We have to dive consistently and hope they miss harder dives.</p>
        <p>China, the United States and Soviet Union held the top six spots in the competition. None of Saturdays scores carries over to Sunday. They only served to determine which 12 of the 20 divers would advance.</p>
        <p>In basketball Saturday, Brazil, which beat the United States for the mens basketball gold at the Pan Am Games last summer, beat Canada 125-109 and China defeated Egypt 98-84.</p>
        <p>State Defense Keys 14-6 Win</p>
        <p>\</p>
        <p>Miami Rally Nips Michigan</p>
        <p>By TOM MORRIS Reflector Sports Writer RALEIGH - With inclement weather making it tough on both offenses, North Carolina States defense did something it wouldnt have clone a year ago,  it rose to the occasion against Wake Forest.</p>
        <p>It was a performance which would prove to be the catalyst of the Wolfpacks 14-6 college football win over the Demon Deacons Saturday night.</p>
        <p>i think we are definitely a better defensive team than we were a year ago, said N.C. State coach Dick Sheridan, whose team dropped a 21-3 decision to the Deacons last year en route to a 4-7 season.</p>
        <p>In the first half, the defense bailed out an offense plagued by turnovers and in the closing minutes of the game, strong safety Jesse Campbell saved a touchdown by intercepting a Mike Elkins pass in the end zone with one minute remaining to preserve the Wolfpacks win.</p>
        <p>Were very disappointed, said Wake Forest coach Bill Dooley. 'We had our opportunities to put points on the boaro. Even there at the last, 1 thought Ricky Proehl was open, but its just one of those things.</p>
        <p>I had Proehl man to man, said Campbell, a former West Craven star from Vanceboro. I knew they were going to go to him because hes their money man. 1 knew if I didnt intercept it it was a touchdown.</p>
        <p>And those types of defensive plays were necessary asthe Wolfpack missed on four field goal attempts, including getting two blocked.</p>
        <p>That left only the big play for N.C.</p>
        <p>T</p>
        <p>State and quarterback Preston Poag provided it en route to a career-high 254 yards passing.</p>
        <p>Early in the third quarter, Poag hit Chris Corders with a 63-yard pass that gave the Wolfpack a first and goal at the Wake Forest four, but the Deacons held on three plays. Bryan Carter then missed the first of his three field goals (with one being blocked) in the second half.</p>
        <p>But Poag got the Wolffiack in the end zone with a 70-yard bomb to Danny Peebles with 13:49 remaining in the game. The pass hit Peebles in stride as he beat A.J. Greene, the Deacons All-Atlantic Coast Conference cornerback. Carter added the point after to put N.C. State ahead, 14-6.</p>
        <p>The rain affected N.C. State at the outset as the Wolfpack lost two fumbles in the first halL "We were just concerned about execution, Sheridan said. We were inconsistent throwing the ball because of the weather conditions. Preston (though) made two perfect strikes to Chris and to Dannv.</p>
        <p>Offensively, we were still not able to sustain our blocks long enough to have a running game.</p>
        <p>Wake Forest took the opening kickoff and drove for 58 yards in eight plays for a 41-yard field goal by Wilson Hoyle.</p>
        <p>The drive was keyed by a 40-yard pass from Elkins to Proehl on a second and eight at the Wolfpack 20 on the third play of the march. Mark Young followed that with 13 yards up the middle to put the Demon Deacons</p>
        <p>iSeeSTATE^B-4f</p>
        <p>ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP) -Carlos Huerta kicked a 29-yard field goal with 43 seconds left, capping an incredible 17-point comeback in the final 54 minutes as top-ranked Miami, Fla., beat No. 15 Michigan 31-30 on Saturday.</p>
        <p>The Hurricanes trailed 30-14 after Michigans Michael Taylor threw his third touchdown pass of the game, 16 yards to Chris Calloway with 10:32 remaining. But they rallied behind the sensational passing of Steve Walsh, who completed 11 of 18 passes, including touchdowns of seven yards to tight end Rob Chud-zinski with 5:23 remaining and 48 yards to fullback Cleveland Gary with 2:58 left.</p>
        <p>Walshs two-point conversion pass to Dale Dawkins, after the first of those two passes, made it 30-^. But Michigan cornerback David Arnold intercepted at the goal line when Walsh tried a two-pointer that would have tied the score after Garys touchdown.</p>
        <p>Gary also scored on a 49-yard pass from Walsh in the opening period and on a 1-yard run in the second quarter.</p>
        <p>Trailing 30-28, Huerta linra up to kick off in place of Edgar Benes, Miamis usual kicker. Huerta squib-bed an onside kick which was tipped in the air and recovered by Booby Harden at the Michigan 47.</p>
        <p>After an incomplete pass, Walsh hit Andre Brown for 14 yards and Gary for 18 at the Michigan 15. Three rushes gained three yards and set up Huertas game-winning field goal.</p>
        <p>Miami, 2-0, extendi its winning streak to 14 games, and its regular-season unbeaten run to 34 games, with its 20th consecutive victory on the road. Miami hasn't lost away from home since Michigan beat the Hurricanes 22-14 four years ago.</p>
        <p>Michigan, a 19-17 loser at Notre Dame last week, is 0-2 for the first time since 1959.</p>
        <p>The Hurricanes, who also were</p>
        <p>ranked No. 1 when they committed eight turnovers in their 1984 loss here, coughed the ball up four times on ^turday. Michigan turned the miscues  two fumbles and two interceptions  into a touchdown and two field goals.</p>
        <p>The other turnover, the first of strong safety Vada Murrays two third-period interceptions, halted an 87-yard Miami drive at the Michigan 12 when the Hurricanes were about to regain the lead.</p>
        <p>Taylor, who won the quarterback</p>
        <p>job from incumbent Demetrius Brown in preseason practice, lobbed a 5-yard pass to tight end Jeff Brown with 57 seconds left in the first half to pull the Wolverines within 14-12.</p>
        <p>It came shortly after Taylor had to be assisted from the field following an 11-yard run to the Miami 6. He missed only one play, however.</p>
        <p>Flanker John Kolesar, who injured an ankle against Notre Dame last week and was listed as doubtful for this game, made a diving catch of Taylors 18-yard pass in the end zone</p>
        <p>33 seconds later and Chris Horn ran for a 2-point conversion that gave Michigan a 20-14 halftime lead.</p>
        <p>The go-ahead score came four plays after Michigans Rusty Fichtner stripped the ball from Miami freshman Darryl Spencer on a kickoff return and recovered it at the Hurricanes 34.</p>
        <p>Michigan made it 30-14 on Mike Gillettes third field, a 29-yarder late in the third period, and Taylors 16-yard pass to Chris Calloway with 10:32 left in the game.</p>
        <p>Moving Through</p>
        <p>University of IViianii fullback Cleveland Gary eludes Michigans J.J. (irant (95) and John Milligan CIO) after taking a pass from</p>
        <p>quarterback Steve Walsh Saturday. Miami nipped Michigan, 31-30. (AP Laserphoto)</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0022" />
        <p>B-2 The Daily Reflector. Greenvllle. N.C._Sunday. September 18,1988</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p> /Sports Notes F5(/ Fakes Out Clemson</p>
        <p>Ayden Places Four Golfers</p>
        <p>TARBORO  The Ayden Ladies Golf Association had four of its golfers place high in a tournament at Hilma County Club Thursday.</p>
        <p>Laurie Belangia won the championship flight, the longest drive and closest to the pin. Doris Jenkins won low net for the championship flight and closest to the pin. Donna Skinner won low net for the second flight. Mary Lou Wingate was second low gross in the fourth flight.</p>
        <p>Greenville Christian Tops Wayne</p>
        <p>Greenville Christian Academy captured its first volleyball victory of the season Friday, defeating Wayne Christian, three games to one.</p>
        <p>GCA won the opening game 15-10 and added the second, 15-1. Wayne came back to take a 15-7 win in the third game, but the Lady Knights closed it out with a 15-9 win in the final game.</p>
        <p>Gina Sizemore led in service in the first game, while Melanie May led in bumps and Michelle Maiden led in sets. In the second game, Karen Entzm-inger led in service, Maria Stokes in bumps, Tina Stiltner in sets and Sizemore in spikes.</p>
        <p>May led in service in game three, while Stokes led in bumps, Sizemore in sets and Entzminger in spikes. In the fourth game, Sizemore led in service, Stiltner in bumps and Entzminger in spikes.</p>
        <p>GCA is now 1-3 overall and 1-2 in conference play. The Lady Knights travel to Bethel of Kinston on Tuesday.</p>
        <p>GCA Sweeps To A Pair Of Soccer Victories</p>
        <p>Greenville Christian earned a pair of soccer victories Thursday and Friday, topping Falls Road, 4-0, and Wayne Christian, 5-1, respectively.</p>
        <p>In the game against Falls Road, Kevin Joyner had two goals to lead the GCA attack. Jeff Allen opened up the scoring at 30:55 with a goal and Joyner added the first of his two goals at 33:56 to give GCA a 2-0 lead at halftime.</p>
        <p>In the second half, Joyner scored at the 25:30 mark to make it 3-0. GCAs final goal was scored by Frank Huggins at the 13:00.</p>
        <p>GCAs goalie, Chris Langley, had 10 saves to record his first shutout. Langley also stopped a penalty kick to preserve the shutout in the second half.</p>
        <p>In the win over Wayne Christian, Allen and Joyner had two goals apiece to lead the way.</p>
        <p>JIuggins added the final score.</p>
        <p>I^ngley had five saves in the game. Waynes lone goal came on a shot by Nate Memmelaar.</p>
        <p>GCA outshot Wayne 23-6 for the game.</p>
        <p>GCA moves to 2-2 overall and 2-0 in the conference and return to action Tuesday at Bethel Christian.</p>
        <p>Pirates Win First Soccer Match</p>
        <p>FLORENCE, S.C. - East Carolinas soccer team claimed its first win of the season Saturday in the consolation round of the Francis Marion Soccer Tournament, downing the hosts, 1-0.</p>
        <p>The Pirates were beaten by Campbell on Friday in the first round, 4^).</p>
        <p>{last Carolina went into the tournament without the services of number one goalie Mac Kendall, out with cracked ribs suffered in last weekends James Madison game.</p>
        <p>Chris Wall, moved into the goal against Campbell, allowed four first half gdais while recording four saves. At halftime. Coach Bob Lust put Austin Batse into the goal and he held the Camels scoreless the rest of the way with</p>
        <p>five saves.</p>
        <p>Saturday Batse had nine saves and recorded the first ECU shutout of the year. ECUs lone goal came in the second half on a shot by Andy Britton assisted by Clark Payne.</p>
        <p>The team was physicaUy beat going into the CampbeU game and we pjayed as well as could be expected, Lust said. But Im very happy for the t^am to get its first win of the year. Im also glad to have a weeks rest before playing (nationally-ranlj^ed) American.</p>
        <p>Both Batse and Britton were named to the all-toumament team.</p>
        <p>The Pirates, now 1-5, play host to American on Saturday and Navy on next Sunday.</p>
        <p>Lady Pirates Split Volleyball Matches</p>
        <p>East Carolinas Lady Pirates split a pair of volleyball matches Saturday falling to Georgia Tech and beating Davidson.</p>
        <p>The Lady Pirates bowed to Tech, 15^, 15-5,15-3, then came back to down</p>
        <p>Davidson, 15-13,15-9,15-9.</p>
        <p>; The split left the Lady Pirates with a 4-3 record while Tech climbs to 5-0</p>
        <p>Davidson is now 3-6 on the year.</p>
        <p> East Carolina travels to Virginia Commonwealth on Tuesday at 7 p.m.</p>
        <p>ByRICKSCOPPE AP Sports Writer CLEMSON, S.C. (AP) - The plays called Punt Ruskie and it will live in infamy at Clemson.</p>
        <p>Florida State used the play - a fake punt  to set up Richie Andrews 19-yard field goal with 32 seconds left to lift the lOth-ranked Seminles past No. 3 Clemson 24-21 on Saturday.</p>
        <p>With 1:31 left and Florida State facing a fourth-and-four at its 21-yard line. Coach Bobby Bowden called for the gutsy play.</p>
        <p>The snap came to Dayne Williams, who was one of two up men on the punt. Williams placed the ball between LeRoy Butlers legs and then took off to the right. After waiting 1.5 seconds  he was supposed to wait 3 seconds  Butler went left, racing 76 yards before being tackled at the 1 by Donnell Woolford.</p>
        <p>This was the most pressure that Ive ever had in my life, Butler said. Nervous aint the word. I didnt have butterflies, I had lizards. I had everything in my stomach. I knew the game depended on me. </p>
        <p>Bowden said he put the play in this week and had planned to use it against Clemson.</p>
        <p>We were liable to use it any time in the second half, Bowden said. We were just waiting for the right opportunity.</p>
        <p>All our offensive coaches, we decided that we were gonna use it now, he said. If we miss it, theyre gonna hit a field goal and win. I just wanted somebody to win the game. </p>
        <p>ECU Second In Seahawk</p>
        <p>Dont Put Off Till Tomorrow What You Can Sell Today Call Classified 752-6166</p>
        <p>WILMINGTON  East Carolinas men and women both finished second in the Seahawk Invitational Cross Country meet held at UNC-Wilm-ington Saturday.</p>
        <p>N.C. State won the womens event with 18 points while ECU finished second with 69. Coastal Carolina took third with 82, followed by UNCW with 88 and Baptist College with 117.</p>
        <p>N.C. States Janet Smith was the meet winner in 15:59. ECUs top finisher was Ann Marie Welch in 16:36, taking third place. Other Lady Pirate finishers included Kim Griffiths, 12th in 18:25; Dawn Sweeney, 14th in 18:34; Jennifer Hough, 19th in 19:24; Dawn Tillson, 21st in 19:34; Terri Lynch, 22nd in 19:39; Terri McCall, 23rd in 19:54; Judy Wilson, 28th in 20:43 and Rosie Daniels, 29th in 20:46.</p>
        <p>A total of 40 runners participated in the meet.</p>
        <p>In the mens meet. The Citadel took first with 16 points while ECU was SMond with 69. Baptist was fourth with 76, followed by Pembroke with 111.</p>
        <p>Pat Piper, running unattached, took first in 24:34. Matt Schweitzer led East Carolinas runners, taking 15th place in 27:53. Other Pirate runners included Vince Wilson, 21st in 28:22; Jim Layton, 27th in 28:47; Russell Williams, 38th in 30:07; Peter Sengenberger, 39th in 30:26; Gene Wozny, 40th in 30:45; Rusty Meador, 41st in 30:50; Tim Garriss, 43rd in 31:21; Marty Baker, 44th in 31:53 and Joe Coreley, 48th in 33:10.</p>
        <p>A total of 49 runners participated in the mens meet.</p>
        <p>East Carolina returns to action on Oct. 1, traveling to Lynchburg College.</p>
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        <p>The gamble worked, although Coach Danny Ford said the Tigers were aware the play was in the Seminlesarsenal.</p>
        <p>The fake punt was a nice call  a good gamble and very successful, Ford said. We knew they had it, but Im not sure our people were warned about it this particular time. They were told about it earlier.</p>
        <p>The field goal came less than two minutes after fullback Tracy Johnson carried a Seminole defender into the end zone for a 19-yard TD run with 2:32 left. Rusty Seyle added the extra point to pull Clemson even.</p>
        <p>But moments later the record crowd of 82,500 stood silent and stunned as the Seminles pulled off a bit of razzle dazzle to win the first meeting between two top 10 teams in the 46-year history of Death Valley, The previous attendance high was 82,492 in 1986 when the Tigers took on arch-rival South Carolina.</p>
        <p>Florida State is now 2-1, while Clemson suffered its first loss in three games.</p>
        <p>The Seminles were outplayed in the first half and trailed 14-7 after being held to 71 yards total offense to 232 for Clemson.</p>
        <p>But Deion Sanders, a three-sport athlete, brought the Seminles back. Using the speed that brought him MVP honors at last years Metro Conference track meet, Sanders returned a punt 76 yards to tie it at 14-14 with 11:30 to go in the third period.</p>
        <p>After forcing Clemson to punt again, the Seminles drove 77 yards in five plays to take their first lead on fullback Dayne Williams 1-yard run with 8:27 left.</p>
        <p>Quarterback Chip Ferguson hit three of three passes for 80 yards in the drive, including a 36-yarder to Bruce LaSane. The 6-foot-4 LaSane outjumped 5-10 cornerback Donnell Woolford for the ball at the 1 to set up the go-ahead score on a rainy afternoon.</p>
        <p>Florida State finished with 368 yards total offense, led by Ferguson, who hit 18 of 28 passes for 241 yards and one TD.</p>
        <p>Clemson ended up with 364 yards, but managed just 132 yards in the second half.</p>
        <p>Tailback Terry Allen had a game-</p>
        <p>high 77 yards rushing, but the Tigers were hurt by quarterback Rodney Williams inaccurate arm. Williams hit on just seven of 24 passes for 96 yards, including only two completions in 14 attempts in the second half.</p>
        <p>The Tigers used their running game to control the ball in the first half, putting together an impressive 99-yard, 17-play drive to take a seven-point halftime lead on Williams 7-yard run with 2:45 left.</p>
        <p>In the drive, which took 7:45, Clemson converted four straight third downs and one four-and-one after Butler downed the ball at the 1 for the Seminles following Tim Cor-lews40yard punt.</p>
        <p>In all, Clemson converted eight of 12 third downs in the first half, but it took a hook-up between two receivers to get the Tigers on the scoreboard.</p>
        <p>Wide receiver Chip Davis took what looked like an end around and turned it into a 61-yard TD pass to flanker Gary Cooper with 5:10 left in the opening period. Cooper beat free safety Dedrick Dodge, who fell down on the wet turf. .</p>
        <p>The Tigers gained just five yards on their next two possessions, but it wasnt until early in the second period that the Seminles managed to dent the Clemson defense.</p>
        <p>E'lorida State ........... 7 14 324</p>
        <p>Clemson.............................7  7  0  721</p>
        <p>ClemCooper 61 pass from C. Davis (Seyle kick)</p>
        <p>FSUD.Carter 40 pass from Ferguson (Andrews kick)</p>
        <p>ClemR. Williams 7 run (Seyle kick) F'SUD.Sanders 76 run (Andrews kick)  FSUD.Williams 1 run (Andrews kick) ClemT. Johnson 19 run (Seyle kick) FSUFG Andrews 19</p>
        <p>A-82.500</p>
        <p>FSU</p>
        <p>Clem</p>
        <p>First downs</p>
        <p>15</p>
        <p>17</p>
        <p>Rushes-yards</p>
        <p>29-127</p>
        <p>54-207</p>
        <p>Passing yards</p>
        <p>241</p>
        <p>157</p>
        <p>Return yards</p>
        <p>95</p>
        <p>14</p>
        <p>Pas.ses</p>
        <p>8-25-0</p>
        <p>18-28-0</p>
        <p>Punts</p>
        <p>7-35</p>
        <p>8-40</p>
        <p>Fumbles-lost</p>
        <p>1-0</p>
        <p>4-01</p>
        <p>Penalties-yards</p>
        <p>9-86</p>
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        <pb facs="00097037_0023" />
        <p>The Dally Reflector, Greenville, N.C. Sunday. September 18.1988 5.3Sooners Top Arizona By 28-10</p>
        <p>NORMAN, Okla. (AP)  Quarterback Jamelle Holieway rushed for one touchdown and threw a 43-yard scoring pass to Eric Bross to lead fourth-ranked Oklahoma to a 28-10 victory Saturday over Arizona.</p>
        <p>Holieway completed 3 of 7 passes for 73 yards and rushed for 75 yards to move into second place overall in total offense in Sooners history.</p>
        <p>Leon Perry scored on a 1-yard run</p>
        <p>and Holieway added a 5-yard touchdowp run as the Sooners, 2-0, built a 14-3 halftime lead.</p>
        <p>Arizonas Pete Russell recovered Holieways fumble at the Sooners 45-yard line on Oklahomas first drive of the second half, and the Wildcats scored six plays later on Mario Hamptons 9-yard run to cut the score to 14-10.</p>
        <p>But Holieway, who played most of</p>
        <p>the second half when Charles Thompson left the game with a back injury, scampered 34 yards down the ri^t sideline on third-and-two to the Arizona 45. Two plays later Holieway lofted his scoring pass to Bross, who slipped behind two Wildcat defenders and caught the ball at the 5-yard line.</p>
        <p>The Sooners final score came midway through the fourth quarter when Kevin Thompson intercepted a</p>
        <p>pass from Ronald Veal and returned it to the Arizona 18. Anthony Stafford scored three plays later on a 5-yard run.</p>
        <p>Arizona, 2-1, scored on its first drive of the game on Doug Pfaffs 38-yard field goal.</p>
        <p>Arizona missed a scoring opportunity late in the first half. Reggie McGills 48-yard run brought ttie ball to the Oklahoma 32, but Pfaffs 27-</p>
        <p>ard field-goal attempt moments</p>
        <p>Cavs Rally Past Jackets</p>
        <p>CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. (AP) -Mark Inderlied, who had missed on four of five previous field-goal attempts this season, said the odds finally caught up with him Saturday against Georgia Tech.</p>
        <p>You can only miss so many, Inderlied said after his 35-yard field goal with nine seconds left rallied the Cavaliers to a 17-16 victory over mistake-prone Georgia Tech in the Atlantic Coast Conference opener for l^th teams.</p>
        <p> Thomas Palmer had given Georgia Tech its only lead of the game at 16-14 on his second 47-yard field goal of the game, this one with 47 seconds to play. /</p>
        <p> But the Cavaliers i^turned the ensuing kickoff 41 yards</p>
        <p>Tyrone Lewis cickc</p>
        <p>to the Yellow Jacket 49, and Virginia needed only 38 seconds to go 32 yards in four plays to set up the winning score. Wide receiver Derek Dooley, son of Georgia coach Vince Dooley, had receptions of 18 and nine yards in the brief drive.</p>
        <p>Inderlied, whose previous misses included one from 40 yards late in the third quarter, had to wait to attempt the winning kick after Georgia Tech called a timeout, during which the Yellow-Jackets taunted him from across the line of scrimmage.</p>
        <p>I didnt pay attention to any of that stuff, Inderlied said. I knew it was good as soon as I hit it. But it was probably closer to the right cross bar than it was to the center.</p>
        <p>Virginia coach George Welsh said</p>
        <p>it didnt matter.</p>
        <p>Im not greedy, he said. Id like us to be a little better, but were not</p>
        <p>Quarterback Shawn Moore ran for one touchdown and threw for another and John Ford, Virginias all-time receiving leader, went over the 2,000-yard mark in career yardage as the Cavaliers improved to 2-1 overall.</p>
        <p>Were struggling to get better, Welsh said. This could help us if we use it right.  ^ .</p>
        <p>Georgia Tech, which has not beaten a Division I-A opponent since November 1986, fell to 1-1 with its ninth straight loss on the road. The Yellow Jackets fost two fumbles, had one pass intercepted, missed one field goal and were penalized nine times for 80 yards.</p>
        <p>Coach Bobby Ross said his Yellow</p>
        <p>Tim Chandler</p>
        <p>W. Virginia Rips Terps</p>
        <p>COLUMBIA, S.C.  East Carolina head football coach Art Baker said at the beginning of the football season that he felt the 1988 club had the potential to be as good as the 1983 team that went 8-3.</p>
        <p>Baker may have picked up a believer or two Saturday when the Pirates fell to 14th-ranked South Carolina, 17-0, in Columbia.</p>
        <p>The Pirates beat the Gamecocks nearly everywhere except on the scoreboard. Statistically, the game had ECU written all over it. But as Baker said following the game, statistics dont win ball games, points do.</p>
        <p>The Pirates have shown now that they indeed can play with a team ranked in the top 20, not just for a half, but for an entire game.</p>
        <p>The next goal is to turn the corner and not just be competitive but to win against a nationally-ranked opponent.</p>
        <p>The Pirates of 1983 had the same problem. Although they battled Florida State, Florida and Miami to the wire, they were unable to pull out the victory.</p>
        <p>The first step is to develop consistency within inside the scoring zone. To pile up over 300 yards of offense in a game and come away without any points is almost a sin.</p>
        <p>Once the consistency is developed, the major upset isnt out of the question. And once you get the first upset, the second, third and fourth ones seem all the more easier.</p>
        <p>South Carolinas junior quarterback sensation continued to pile up records in the Gamecock record book. Saturdays 97-yard touchdown not only gained a spot in USCs record book but also in the Pirates.</p>
        <p>The 97 yard touchdown pass from Ellis to freshman Robert Brooks was the</p>
        <p>MORGANTOWN, W.Va. (AP) -Major Harris passed for a touchdown and ran for another score as No. 12 West Virginia, down 14 points only four minutes into the game, rallied to beat Maryland 55-24 in college football on Saturday.</p>
        <p>Maryland, 1-1, stunned the Mountaineers with two Mike Beasley touchdown runs, the first for 11 yards after Anthony Browns fumble on the opening play of the game and the other a 74-yard sprint after a West Virginia punt.</p>
        <p>Tie Mountaineers, 3-0, rallied for 17 straight points while holding Maryland to just five first-half first downs to climb back into the game.</p>
        <p>After taking over at the Maryland 41 after a punt late in the first quarter. West Virginia scored in four plays, the last Undra Johnsons 4-yard run. The Mountaineers tied the game 14-14 with a 66-yard drive in</p>
        <p>nine plays, capped by Harris 20-yard pass that Keith Winn wrestled from</p>
        <p>longest pass completion in South Carolina history. The previous record was 83 yards. 1710 pass completion was also the lor</p>
        <p>Ellis completed 14 of 24 passes for 235 yards and a pair of touchdowns Saturday. He has now surpassed the 200 yard passing mailc in 21 of his ^ career games.</p>
        <p>Ellis also moved into the top position fm* career touchdown passes thrown Saturday. His two against the Pirates gives him 35 for his career, surpassing</p>
        <p>5aturaay. his two against me riraies gives mm the mark of 34 set by Tommy Suggs from 1968-70. For the year, Ellis has completed 50 of 81 pt</p>
        <p>1 passes for 712 yards and five touchdowns. With no interceptions this season, Ellis may finally be turning in</p>
        <p>to a signal-caller worthy of c aiming a Heisman Trophy.</p>
        <p>Marylands Irvin Smith in the end zone.</p>
        <p>Charlie Baumanns 39-yard field goal gave West Virginia a 17-14 lead in the second quarter, but Maryland quarterback Neil ODonnell capped a 72-yard drive with an 8-yard draw for a 21-17 lead with 49 secontk left in the half.</p>
        <p>Harris directed an 80-yard drive in five plays and scored untouched from the three to put West Virginia up for good with eight seconds left in the second quarter.</p>
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        <p>Jackets didnt do everything perfectly, and I thought we stopped ourselves some of the time when we have should have gotten things going.</p>
        <p>Moore capped Virginias second possession of the afternoon with a 5-yard scoring run after a six-play, 45-yard drive.</p>
        <p>Georgia Tech, which began four of its eight first-half possessions in Virginia territory, managed only a 32-yard Palmer field goal and trailed 7-3 at intermission.</p>
        <p>On the Yellow Jackets first possession of the second half, Virginias Ron Carey forced a fumble that was recovered by teammate Phil Thomas, his second of the game.</p>
        <p>On the next play. Ford, a redshirt senior, beat freshman Ken Swilling on a post pattern for a 45-yard touchdown catch.</p>
        <p>Georgia Tech moved 35 yards in four plays later in the quarter, with quarterback Todd Rampley hitting Greg Lester on a 24-vard srnrin^</p>
        <p>ya</p>
        <p>later sailed wide to the right.</p>
        <p>Louisiana State........34</p>
        <p>Tennessee................9</p>
        <p>KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (AP) Tommy Hodson passed for 246 yards and three touchdowns as ninth-ranked Louisiana State downed Tennessee 34-9 in a Southeastern Conference football game Saturday.</p>
        <p>Hodson, who completed a school record-tying 12 passes in a row at the start of the game, hit Alvin Lee for two touchdowns on passes of 27 and 3 yards and also threw 5 yards to Eddie Fuller for another.</p>
        <p>LSU, 2-0 overall and 1-0 in the SEC, extended its regular-season winning streak on the road to 14 games and ended an 0-9-1 jinx with its first victory in Knoxville.</p>
        <p>Tennessee fell to 0-3, the Volunteers worst start since they dropped their first four games of the 1962 season. It was the second SEC setback for the Vols.</p>
        <p>f, The Vols, who crossed midfield only once in the first half, avoided a shutout with a touchdown and field goal in less than two minutes late in the third quarter.</p>
        <p>The touchdown came on Jeff Fran-</p>
        <p>LSUs other scoring came on a 1-yard run by Watkins and field goals of 22 and 31 yards by David Browndyke.</p>
        <p>Hodson, who completed 21 of 31 passes, tied the school record of 12 in a row set by Alan Risher against Tulane in 1981 and tied by Jeff Wickersham against Rice in 1985.</p>
        <p>cis 16-yard pass to Mark Adams with I the I</p>
        <p>3:57 left in the quarter, and Chip Mc-Callum added a 27-yard field goal with 2:08 left after Mark Moore recovered Slip Watkins fumble on the kickoff at the LSU 13.</p>
        <p>Notre Dame............20</p>
        <p>Michigan State..........3</p>
        <p>EAST LANSING, Mich. (AP) -Linebacker Michael Stonebreaker returned an interception 39 yards for a touchdown and quarterback Tony Rice scored on an 8-yard run to lift No. 8 Notre Dame to a 20-3 victory Saturday over Michigan State.</p>
        <p>Reggie Ho kicked two field goals and tailback Mark Green ran for 125 yards on 21 carries to lead the Fighting Irishs option attack.</p>
        <p>Michigan State took a 3-0 lead in the first quarter on John Langelohs 39-yard field goal, but Ho tied the game 3-3 early in the second period witha31-yarder.</p>
        <p>Ho gave the Irish a 6-3 lead at intermission with a 22-yard field goal after Raghib Ismail blocked a Josh Rutland punt.</p>
        <p>Tailback Tony Brooks rushed for 37 yards on Notre Dames first play of the second half. Green carried for 8 and 12 yards, and Brooks added a pair of 3-yard runs to set up Rices 8-yard scoring run.</p>
        <p>True or False</p>
        <p>ireg Lester on a 24-yard scoring pass that made it 14-10 Virginia.</p>
        <p>True FalM</p>
        <p>Palmers first 47-yarder came with 7:50 to play and cut the Yellow Jacketsdeficit to 14-13.</p>
        <p>Diving is inexpensive and requires only a few hours of class and pool training.</p>
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        <p>I told our kids 1 was proud of them, said Ross, who is in his second season at Georgia Tech. I thought they played hard and showed a lot of fight. Thats what I want our kids to show. I think we finally have that now. I want us to be fighters, and we were that.</p>
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        <pb facs="00097037_0024" />
        <p>IIAuburn Blasts KansaSf 56-7</p>
        <p>AUBURN, Ala. ( AP) - The sixth-ranked Auburn Tigers, picking^ up where they left off last year, blasted Kansas 56-7 Saturday night as Reggie Slack threw for 290 yards and four touchdowns.</p>
        <p>The junior quarterback did all of his damage in the first half, completing 12-of-16 passes. He spent nearly all of the final two quarters on the sidelines as Auburn coach Pat Dye emptied his bench.</p>
        <p>The defending Southeastern Conference champions improved to 2-0, while Kansas of the Big Eight fell to 0-2 with their 18th loss in their last 20 games.</p>
        <p>The Tigers domination was complete. They outgained Kansas 680-189, passing for 371 yards and running for another 309. The Jayhawks</p>
        <p>helped out by losing two fumbles and throwing an interception.</p>
        <p>Auburn, which beat Kansas 49-0 last season, wasted little time destroying the Jayhawks again, scoring on its first four possessions.</p>
        <p>On the second play of the game. Slack hit a wide-open Lawyer Tillman down the left sideline and Tillman raced the rest of the way for a 57-yard touchdow n.</p>
        <p>Auburn added three more touchdowns in the opening quarter. Slack threw an 85-yard scoring pass to James Joseph, Alexander Wright hauled in a 35-yard scoring pass, and Joseph ran 76 yards for a touchdown.</p>
        <p>The scoring barrage slowed a little in the second quarter. Vincent Harris went over from the 3 and Slack hit Walter Reeves with a four-yard</p>
        <p>touchdown pass to give Auburn a 42-0 half time lead.</p>
        <p>The Jayhawks' misery continued in the second half. Arnold Snell fumbled the opening kickoff and</p>
        <p>Auburn capitalized quickly as Harris scored from the 8 for his second touchdown of the night.</p>
        <p>In the fourth quarter, freshman Henry Love ran for a 20-vard</p>
        <p>State Defense...</p>
        <p>Dilweg Leads Duke In Romp</p>
        <p>DURHAM (AP)  Anthony Dilweg passed for three touchdown and a career-high 410 yards to lead Duke to a 41-17 victory over The Citadel Saturday in the Blue Devils home opener.</p>
        <p>Dilweg, who completed 19 of 31 psses and threw one interception, broke his previous high of 353 yards set in the Blue Devils season-opening 31-21 victory over Northwestern.</p>
        <p>* Duke led 20-10 at halftime and broke the game open with two third quarter touchdowns after The Citadel pulled to within 20-17.</p>
        <p>Dilweg completed a 5-yard scoring pass to running back Walter Jones to give the Blue Devils a 27-17 lead. On Dukes next possession, Dilweg threw a 65-yard touchdown pass to Keith Ewell with 1:39 left in the period for a 34-17 lead.</p>
        <p>In the fourth quarter, Dilweg added a 17-yard touchdown pass to tight end DaveColonna.</p>
        <p>Citadel had pulled to within 20-17 . after the Bulldogs blocked a Dilweg punt on Dukes first possession of the second half. David Brodsky recovered at the Duke 41-yard line and Vernon Jones completed the drive with a 2-yard touchdown run.</p>
        <p>. Duke is 3-0 while the Bulldogs dropped to 1-2.</p>
        <p>; The Citadel took a 7-0 lead after ^ David Matherly intercepted a Dilweg pass in the end zone. Adrian Johnson : scored on a l-yard run to complete an 80-yard. 14-play drive.</p>
        <p>Duke tied the score after driving 74 yards on four plays, including a 47-yard pass from Dilweg to Clarkston , Hines that kept the drive going. John</p>
        <p>Rymiszewski scored on a 2-yard run.</p>
        <p>The Blue Devils took a 10-7 early in the second quarter on a 24-yard field goal by Doug Peterson. The Citadel tied the score on a 41-yard field goal by Hank Burriss.</p>
        <p>Duke went 91 yards in nine plays after the field goal to take a 17-10 lead on a 2-yard touchdown run by Roger Boone. Dilweg threw a 53-yard pass to Hines to set up the touchdown.</p>
        <p>Peterson added a 22-yard field goal with three seconds left in the half.</p>
        <p>(.'itadel...............................7 It 7 (t17</p>
        <p>Duke..................................7 lit II 711</p>
        <p>CITJohnson 1 run (Burriss kick) DUKERymiszewski 2 run (Peterson kick)</p>
        <p>DUKE-FG Peterson 27</p>
        <p>CITFG Burriss 41</p>
        <p>DUKEBoone It run (Peterson kick)</p>
        <p>DUKEFG Peterson 22</p>
        <p>CITJones 1 run (Burriss kick)</p>
        <p>DUKEW, Jones 5 pass from Dilweg (Peterson kick)</p>
        <p>DUKEEwell f5 pass from Dilweg (Peterson kick)</p>
        <p>DUKEColonna 17 pass from Dilweg (Peterson kick)</p>
        <p>A-12.400</p>
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        <p>4-114</p>
        <p>4-1</p>
        <p>5-45</p>
        <p>29:48</p>
        <p>Duke</p>
        <p>24</p>
        <p>42-195</p>
        <p>412</p>
        <p>7</p>
        <p>20-112-1</p>
        <p>2-19</p>
        <p>0-0</p>
        <p>11-108</p>
        <p>30:12</p>
        <p>I.NDIVIDUAL STATISTICS</p>
        <p>RUSHING-Citadel, Johnson 20-134. Mazyck 10-50, Duke. Boone 20-109, R. Jones 14-71 PASSING-Citadel. Brown 2-7 0-23 Duke. Dilweg 19-31-1-410, Hull 1-1-0-2 RECEIVINGCitadel, Donley 1-13, Mazyck 1-10 Duke. W. Jones 7-139, Hines 3-108. Ewell 2-81</p>
        <p>(Continued From B-1) in scoring position.</p>
        <p>A fumble on its first possession killed N.C. States first drive at its own 35. but the Wolfpack defense was able to stop the Deacons on a fourth-and-two at the 27 as Campbell stacked up Tony Rogers for no gain.</p>
        <p>Later in the quarter. Wake Forest drove into scoring position but lost a fumble, turning the ball over to the Wolfpack at the N.C. State 12.</p>
        <p>N.C. State moved out to the 16, but Poag fumbled after keeping for nine yards on a third-and-eight and Warren Belin recovered for the Deacons.</p>
        <p>Wake Forest took over again but failed to move the ball. The Deacons had to settle for a 51-yard field goal by Hoyle for a 6-0 lead. The kick was a career best for Hoyle.</p>
        <p>N.C. State got its offense going in the second quarter and drove for the only touchdown of the first half.</p>
        <p>The Wolfpack had moved to the Deacon 30 early in the second-quarter, only to lose the ball when Poag was intercepted by Brad Benson, who returned the ball to the Wolfpack 48.</p>
        <p>But again, States defense came through, stopping the Deacons on four plays, including a fourth-and-one situation at the Wolfpack 39.</p>
        <p>Given new life, Poag connected with Worthen for a 39-yard gain on which Worthen picked up the last 15 with three spinning moves.</p>
        <p>Poag eventually got the; score on a keeper on the right side from four yards out with 5:17 remaining.</p>
        <p>N.C. State had another chance to score late in the half, taking over with 1:19 to go at its own 25. Montgomery came in for Poag and drove the Wolfpack down to the Wake Forest 21, but Mark Fowbles 32-yard field goal attempt was blocked.</p>
        <p>"I thought our missed field goals were a factor, Sheridan said. We couldnt pull away.</p>
        <p>Offensively, the Deacons had problems. They rushed for only 41 net yards. Elkins threw for 200 yards, but hit on only 14-34 attempts.</p>
        <p>There were a couple of things that kept us out of the end zone, Dooley said. We just didnt execute at times. But we also did some good things to keep N.C. State out of the end zone.</p>
        <p>Tailbacks Mark Young and Tony Rogers both came into the game</p>
        <p>1988 Football</p>
        <p>Saturday, September 24 (Parents' Day)</p>
        <p>1:30 P.M. Kickoff EAST CAROLINA vs. SOUTHERN MISSISSIPPI</p>
        <p>Aint It Great To Tailgate Day</p>
        <p>Sponsored By</p>
        <p>KENTUCKY FRIED CHICKEN</p>
        <p>*1500 2% Quart Pirate Pitchers &amp;amp; 4 ECU Cups to be given away in the tailgate lots.</p>
        <p>*The Fourth Annual "Ain't It Great To Tailgate" Contest to be held prior to the game.</p>
        <p>TAILGATE WITH THE PIRATES ON SEPTEMBER 24!</p>
        <p>On Saturday, September 24, the Pirates entertain the Golden Eagles of Southern Mississippi. Kickoff is set for 1;30 p.m., yet the festivities begin well before the game. The Fourth Annual "Ain't It Great To Tailgate" Contest will be held from 10;15 a.m, to 12;30 p.m. Come on out early &amp;amp; check out the tailgating action. In addition to the tailgating competition, 1500 2/? Ouart Pirate Pitchers &amp;amp; a set of 4 ECU Cups sponsored by Kentucky Fried Chicken will be given away in the tailgate lots.</p>
        <p>Order Your Tickets &amp;amp; Join The Pirate Club Today! Call (919) 757-6500 or 1-800-HELP ECU</p>
        <p>Tickets Also Available At Any Eastern NC Wachovia Bank</p>
        <p>ECUFOOnUl</p>
        <p>StepfUiUf, 74p.  .  .</p>
        <p>Listen to ECU Football on the Pirate Sports Netbvork-WDLX FM-Originating Station</p>
        <p>averaging over 100 yards rushing. Young managed nine yards on 13 carries while Rogers had 23 yards on three carries.</p>
        <p>Going into the game, we were concerned about their two tailbacks, Sheridan said. We felt we had to hold them to 100 yards between them and not let them run wild.</p>
        <p>The game was the ACC opener for both teams and left the Wolfpack at 2-0 while Wake Forest falls to 2-1.</p>
        <p>N.C. State travels to Maryland next Saturday while Wake Forest is at Michigan.</p>
        <p>W akf Foi'osl  (i 0 i</p>
        <p>.\. Uaroliiia SI.  o 7 0</p>
        <p>WF-FGH()vle41 WF-FG Hoyle 51 NCSFoag 4 run (Fow ble kick). ,\CSPeeoles 70 pas.s from (Carter kick).</p>
        <p>touchdown for Auburns final score.</p>
        <p>Kansas avoided a shutout when Kelly Donohoe tossed a four-yard scoring pass to John Baker with 4:13 left in the third quarter.</p>
        <p>Georgia ...........42</p>
        <p>Mississippi St...........35</p>
        <p>STARKVILLE, Miss. (AP) -Tailback Tim Worley ran for four touchdowns, including a go-ahead score with 17 seconds to play, to let No. 7 Georgia escape Mississippi State 42-35 in a Southeastern Conference football shootout Saturday night.</p>
        <p>Trailing 14-7 after Mississippi State touchdowns on back-to-back possessions, Georgia reeled off 21 straight joints and led 35-21 with 8:40 to play jefore Mississippi State, a 14-point underdog, tied it on the gutsy passing of Tony Shell.</p>
        <p>Georgia improved to 3-0 overall and 2-0 in the SEC, while Mississippi State fell to 1-2 and 0-2.</p>
        <p>Worley, who rushed for 162 yards in 21 carries, rambled 26 yards on a third down play for the winning touchdown as Georgia was trying to set up a field goal attempt.</p>
        <p>Worleyalso scored on runs of 7, |3 and 16 yards and his 30-yard burst to the Mississippi State 3 early in tHe fourth quarter set up a touchdo^^n that gave his team a 35-21 lead.</p>
        <p>But Shell, playing in his first cql-lege game, threw 25 and 16 yards to Jerry Bouldin for touchdowns in a little over four minutes and Mississippi State had a 35-35 deadklock with 3:15 to play.</p>
        <p>In all. Shell finished 17 of 29 passiqg for 266 yards and four touchdowns.</p>
        <p>Georgia went 80 yards in eight plays for the winning touchdown.</p>
        <p>Foag</p>
        <p>See me for ail your family</p>
        <p>insurance needs!'</p>
        <p>A -48.000.</p>
        <p>First downs  11  19</p>
        <p>Rushes-yards  ;-4i  50-140</p>
        <p>Passing  2(K)  317</p>
        <p>Return Yards  55  2:1</p>
        <p>Comp-Att-lnl  14-:14-1  14-25-1</p>
        <p>Punts  -4;{  7.44</p>
        <p>Fumblcs-Lost  2-2  4-2</p>
        <p>Fenalties-Y'ards  :i-29  5-50</p>
        <p>Time of Possession 25::?2  :i4:28</p>
        <p>I.NDIVIDl'ALST.XTI.STICS</p>
        <p>RUSHING-Wake Forest, Rogers 12-23, Johnson 3-19. ,N. Carolina St., Barbour 19-47, Foag i;i-35.</p>
        <p>FASSlNG-VVake Foresl, Elkins 14-;J4-1-2(K). N. ('arolina .St., Foag 10-21 1-2.54. Montgomery 4-4-0-03.</p>
        <p>RECEIVINGWake Foresl, Froehl 0-119, S. Brown 2 14 \ Carolina .Si , Wor-Ihen 0-85, Feebles ;i 88</p>
        <p>Bill McDonald</p>
        <p>East Tenth Street Ext. Greenville, N.C.</p>
        <p>752-6680</p>
        <p>Z-""*X</p>
        <p>STATi FARM</p>
        <p>insurance</p>
        <p>Like a good neighbor. State Farm is there.</p>
        <p>State Farm Insurance Companies  Home Offices</p>
        <p>iton, llltnois</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0025" />
        <p>The Dally Reflactor. QrwtnvUle. N.C. Sunday, September 18.1988 Q-S</p>
        <p>fc/gny ngucw^ivij ^i^iwtvupp,  qBosox Win, Tighten Hold On</p>
        <p>BOSTON (AP)  Dwight Evans homered to lead off the eighth inning and Bruce Hurst outpitched Charles Hudson as the Boston Red Sox strengthened their hold on first place in the American League East with a 3-1 victory over the New York Yan-. kees Saturday.</p>
        <p>The Red Sox increased their lead over New York to S'z games with their lOth victory in 13 game and second straight over the Yankees. Detroit and Milwaukee both started the day five back.</p>
        <p>Huret, who has lost just once in 14 decisions this season at Fenway Park, allowed only three hits, struck out nine and walked two in improving his overall record to 18-5. He had six complete games in 30 starts.</p>
        <p>Evans lined a 2-0 pitch from Hudson into the left-field screen for his 16th homer and 100th RBI of the season.</p>
        <p>Hudson, 4-4, was a last-minute replacement for Tommy John, who had a virus. Hudson had allowed only , Iwo hits before the home run, but ; then gave up a one-out double to Todd ; Benzinger and left with a 3-2 count on ; flllis Burks.</p>
        <p>!: Reliever Dale Mohorcic struck out ; Burks but Larry Parrish drove in an insurance run with a double to</p>
        <p>* ienter.</p>
        <p> After failing to score in a wild iourth that included a walk, two wild pitches and two errors, the Red Sox took a 1-0 lead in a controversial fifth.</p>
        <p>- Jody Reed broke up Hudsons nohit bid with a leadoff double off the Jeft-field wall, took third on Rich Dedmans sacrifice and scored on JVade Boggssacrifice fly.</p>
        <p>* Rickey Henderson made a leaping hatch of Boggs fly in the left-field pomer next to packed stands down jheline.</p>
        <p>; New York manager Lou Piniella was unable to see the catch from the Bugout, but argued that Reed should hot have been allowed to score because third base umpire Ted Hendry had called fan interference.</p>
        <p>When his protests were rejected, Piniella announced he was playing Ihe game under protest.</p>
        <p>New York came right back to tie :;ihe score as Henderson led off the ixth with a double to right-center. He moved to third on Willie Ran</p>
        <p>dolphs sacrifice and scored as Don Mattingly grounded out to first.</p>
        <p>With one out in the Boston fourth, Mike Greenwell fanned, but reached first safely on Hudsons wild pitch.</p>
        <p>Greenwell stole second and continued on to third on catcher Don Slaughts throwing error. Then, with Benzinger up, Greenwell broke for the plate.</p>
        <p>Benzinger stepped back and Greenwell was trapped. He turned, raced back toward third and was tagged, but Slaught dropped the ball for an error.</p>
        <p>Benzinger then walked and took second on a wild pitch. However, Hudson got out of the jam by retiring Burks on a grounder to first and Parrish on a fly to right.</p>
        <p>Oakland..................3</p>
        <p>Kansas City..............2</p>
        <p>OAKLAND, Calif. (AP)  Terry Steinbach hit a two-run homer and four Oakland pitchers combined on a seven-hitter as the Athletics reduced their magic number in the American League West to four with a 3-2 victory over the Kansas City Royals Saturday.</p>
        <p>A combination of four Oakland wins and Minnesota losses will clinch the division for the As, who lead the Twins by 10'2 games.</p>
        <p>Eric Plunk, 7-2, who replaced starter Dave Otto with none out in the fourth, allowed four hits and both Kansas City runs in 3 1-3 innings. Dennis Eckersley allowed no hits and struck out four in two innings for his 41st save, keeping him one head of Minnesotas Jeff Reardon for the major-lead lead.</p>
        <p>The As scored all three runs in the second inning off Kansas City righthander Tom Gordon, 0-1, making his first major-league start.</p>
        <p>Mark McGwire led off with a single and Steinbach connected one out later for his eighth homer. With two outs, Walt Weiss walked, stole second and scored on Luis Polonias single to give the As a 3-0 lead.</p>
        <p>The Royals made it 3-1 in the sixth when Kevin Seitzer tripled and George Brett singled to drive in his 100th run. Brett is the first Royal to have 100 RBI in a season four times.</p>
        <p>Three pinch hitters helped produce a seventh-inning run for the Royals. Jim Eisenreich led off with a single against Plunk and pinch-hitter Frank White blooped a single to right.</p>
        <p>Bill Pecotas sacrifice moved the runners up and pinch-hitter Bill Buckner greeted Rick Honeycutt with a sacrifice fly to center. After pinch-hitter Luis de los Santos walked, Honeycutt retired Gary Thurman on a grounder to second.</p>
        <p>Minnesota  .........3</p>
        <p>Chicago..................1</p>
        <p>MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - Jeff Reardon became the first pitcher in baseball history to save 40 games in both leagues and Allan Anderson won for the 10th time in his last 13 decisions as the Minnesota Twins beat the Chicago White Sox 3-1 Saturday.</p>
        <p>Anderson, 14-9, allowed five hits in eight innings, struck out a season-high eight and walked two. Reardon pitched the ninth for his 40th save in 47 opportunities. In 1985, he saved 41 for the Montreal Expos.</p>
        <p>ClilCA(iO</p>
        <p>ab r h bi Gallghr cf 3 110 Lyons rf Baines dh Fisk c MiDiaz lb Morman If 3 0 0 0 Hairstn ph 1 0 0 0 CMrtnz 3b 3 0 0 0 Boston ph 10 0 0 Guillen ss 4 0 0 0 .Manriq 2b 3 0 0 0 Totals 33 I 5 I</p>
        <p>3 0 2 0</p>
        <p>4 0 11 4 0 0 0 4 0 10</p>
        <p>MIN.NESOTA</p>
        <p>ab r b bi</p>
        <p>Gladden If 4 l l o Herr 2b 2 10 o Puckett cf 4 0 2 1 Gaetti dh 3 112 Larkin lb 3 0 0 0 Harper c 3 0 o 0 Chrsnsn rf 3 0 1 0 Moses rf 0 0 0 0 Lmbrdz ss 3 0 0 0 Gagne ss 0 0 0 0 Newmn 3b 3 0 0 0 Totals 2K 3 .3 3</p>
        <p>NEW YORK '  ab  r b bi</p>
        <p>RHndsn If 3 12 0 Rndlph 2b 3 0 0 0 MtngV lb 4 0 1 1 , Winfield rf 4 0 0 0 UClark dh 3 0 0 0 GWard cf 3 0 0 0 "Slaught c 3 0 0 0 Aguayo 3b 2 0 0 0 Santana ss 3 0 0 0</p>
        <p>BOSTO.N</p>
        <p>ab r h bi Boggs 3b 0 0 0 1 Barrett 2b 3 0 0 0 DwEvns rf 4 1 1 1 Greenwl If 4 0 0 0 Bnzngr lb 3 110 Burks cf 4 0 0 0 Parrish dh 4 0 1 1 Kutcher pr 0 0 0 0 JoReed ss 3 12 0 SOwen ss 0 0 0 0 Gedman c 3 0 0 0 Totals 28 3  3</p>
        <p>000 001 0001 000 010 02x3</p>
        <p>KANSAS CITY</p>
        <p>ab r h bi Thurtnn cf 4 0 1 0 Seitzer 3b 4 110 Brett lb 4 0 2 1 Tabler dh 4 0 10 Trtabll rf 10 0 0 Eisnrch rf 1110 BJacksn If 2 0 0 0 FWhite 2b 2 0 10 Pecota ss 3 0 0 0 Welimn 2b 2 0 0 0 Bucknr  ph 0 0 0 1 Quirk c 0 0 0 0 LOwen c 2 0 0 0 DlSntos ph 0 0 0 0 DOwen ss 0 0 0 0 Totals 29 2 7 2</p>
        <p>OAKLAND</p>
        <p>ab r h bi</p>
        <p>Polonia If 3 0 2 1 UHedsn cf 10 10 Javier cf 3 0 0 0 Canseco rf 3 0 1 0 Parker dh 4 0 0 0 lb 1 1 1 0 lb 2 0 0 0 2b 10 0 0 c 2 0 0 0 3b 3 1 2 2 2b 3 0 0 0</p>
        <p>McGwir</p>
        <p>Jnnngs</p>
        <p>Gallego</p>
        <p>Hassey</p>
        <p>Stenbch</p>
        <p>Phillips</p>
        <p>Weiss ss 2 10 0</p>
        <p>Totals</p>
        <p>28 3 7 3</p>
        <p>Totals 28 1 3 1</p>
        <p>New York ' Boston</p>
        <p>GatneWinningRBI DwEvans(12).</p>
        <p>. ESlaught 2. LOBNew York 4, Boston e. 2BRHenderson 2, JoReed, Benzinger, Parrish. HRDwEvans (16). SB Greenwell (16). SGedman, Randolph. 6F-Boggs.</p>
        <p>.  IP  H  RER  BB  SO</p>
        <p>. New York</p>
        <p>' Hudson L.4-4  7  1-3  4  3  3  4  4</p>
        <p>Mohorcic  1-3 1  0  0  0  1</p>
        <p>Pena  1-3 0  0  0  0  0</p>
        <p> Boston</p>
        <p>JHurst W,18-5  9  3  1  1  2  9</p>
        <p> HBPAguayo  by  Hurst, Barrett  by</p>
        <p>Hudson, JoReed by Mohorcic. WPHud-.sonS.</p>
        <p>'' UmpiresHome, Clark; F'irst, Evans; ^Second, Ford; Third, Hendry.</p>
        <p>. T-2:56. A-35,051.</p>
        <p>Kansas City  000  001  1002</p>
        <p>Oakland  o:iO  &amp;lt;8)0  OOx3</p>
        <p>Game Winning RBI  Steinbach (6).</p>
        <p>EWellman. DPKansas City 1, Oakland 2. LOBKansas City 5, Oakland 5. 3BSeitzer. HRSteinbach (8). SB Javier (20), Weiss (3), Polonia (21). S Pecota. SFBuckner.</p>
        <p>IP  HR ER  BB SO</p>
        <p>Kansas City TGordon L,0-1  6  5  3  3  4  6</p>
        <p>Sanchez  11-3  1  0  o  0  0</p>
        <p>Montgmry  o  1  0  0  0  0</p>
        <p>Gleaton  2-3  0  0  0  01</p>
        <p>Oakland</p>
        <p>Otto  3  3  0  0  1  2</p>
        <p>Plunk W,7-2  3 1-3  4  2  2  0  4</p>
        <p>Honeycutt  2-3  0  0  0  1  0</p>
        <p>Eckersley S,4l  2  0  0  0  1  4</p>
        <p>Montgomery pitched to 1 batter in the 8th.</p>
        <p>UmpiresHome, Barnett; First, Kosc; Second, Cousins; Third, Roe.</p>
        <p>T-2:45. A-48,219.</p>
        <p>Chicago  UUI  (88)  (88)1</p>
        <p>I .Minnesota  (8)1  U02  I8)\3</p>
        <p>Game Winning RBI  Gaetti (12).</p>
        <p>EHerr, Larkin. LOBChicago 7, Minnesota 3, 2BMiDiaz. HRGaetti (28). SBHerr (8).</p>
        <p>IP II R ER BB .SO</p>
        <p>Chicago</p>
        <p>Reuss L.11-9  7  5  3  3  2  0</p>
        <p>McCarthy  1  0  0  0  0  0</p>
        <p>.Minnesota</p>
        <p>AAndeson W. 14-9 8  5  1  1  2  8</p>
        <p>Reardon S,40  1  0  0  0  o  0</p>
        <p>PB-Fisk.</p>
        <p>UmpiresHome, Merrill; First, Brinkman; Second, Cooney; Third, Wilke. T-2;13. A-46,439.</p>
        <p>Cleveland..............12</p>
        <p>Toronio * 3</p>
        <p>TORONTO (AP) - Jay Bells two RBI singles highlighted an eight-run fifth inning as the Cleveland Indians beat the Toronto Blue Jays 12-3 Saturday.</p>
        <p>The Indians hit nine singles in the fifth, two short of the major-league record, and took advantage of two Toronto errors as they chased Blue Jays starter Jimmy Key, 10-5.</p>
        <p>CLEVELAND</p>
        <p>ab r h bi</p>
        <p>Franco 2b 5 13 2 RWillms If 6 2 2 1</p>
        <p>Carter</p>
        <p>Snyder</p>
        <p>RAllen</p>
        <p>DCIark</p>
        <p>Jacoby</p>
        <p>Medina</p>
        <p>cf rf dh dh</p>
        <p>3b</p>
        <p>lb 4 2 1 0 Allanson c 5 2 3 I JBell 2b 5 13 2</p>
        <p>4 10 1 3 2 11 2 0 0 0 2 112</p>
        <p>5 0 12</p>
        <p>Fielder Borders Lee ss Campsn Liriano Totals 41 12 15 12 Totals</p>
        <p>TORONTO</p>
        <p>ab r h bi</p>
        <p>Gruber 3b 2 0 0 0 Infante 3b 10 10 Moseby cf 3 0 0 0 Ducey cf 10 0 0 Barfield rf 4 0 1 0 Leach rf 0 0 0 0 GBell dh 4 0 0 0 McGriff lb 2 0 0 0 lb 10 0 0 c 4 0 1 0 4 12 0 If 3 12 0 2b 4 13 2 33 3 10 2</p>
        <p>Cleveland</p>
        <p>Toronto</p>
        <p>100 181 1(8^12 010 000 200- 3</p>
        <p>Phone 756-5823  W</p>
        <p>OPEN MONDAY-FRIDAY 8:00 TIL 5:30;  p-|</p>
        <p>SATURDAY 8:00 TIL 1:00  JR.</p>
        <p>5th St. &amp;amp; Market St., Washington, N.C.</p>
        <p>Phone 946-9400   )S5|</p>
        <p>We Accept Mastercard. Money Express.  Visa. Discover. Itco. &amp;amp; Dayton  ^</p>
        <p>90 DAYS  '</p>
        <p>SAME AS CASH</p>
        <p>TIRE,</p>
        <p>Brokers^</p>
        <p>layton</p>
        <p>COOPER TRENO SETTER</p>
        <p>COOPER SPORTS MASTER</p>
        <p>COBRA</p>
        <p>70</p>
        <p>COBRA</p>
        <p>60</p>
        <p>DISCOVERER</p>
        <p>16S80R13</p>
        <p>1S5SR12</p>
        <p>* M-M</p>
        <p>17570SRI3</p>
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        <p>* 93.08</p>
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        <p>IM.M</p>
        <p>18WIM3</p>
        <p>*M.n</p>
        <p>18570SR13</p>
        <p>21560SIN4</p>
        <p>* 67.98</p>
        <p>17M0R13</p>
        <p>440.H.</p>
        <p>165SR13</p>
        <p>*S7.M</p>
        <p>19870SR13</p>
        <p> 57.08</p>
        <p>22560SR14</p>
        <p>* 69.98</p>
        <p>18M0R13</p>
        <p>175SR14</p>
        <p>*40.H</p>
        <p>18570SR14</p>
        <p>* 59.08</p>
        <p>23560SR14</p>
        <p>* 70.98</p>
        <p>1857SR14</p>
        <p>*44.&amp;lt;I4</p>
        <p>168SR19</p>
        <p>141.M</p>
        <p>19570SR14</p>
        <p>*81.98</p>
        <p>24660SR14 |</p>
        <p>* 79.98</p>
        <p>19B78RI4</p>
        <p>*.4t.0S.</p>
        <p>17570R13 1</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>EteHTlllHlM</p>
        <p>20575R14 1</p>
        <p>I.47.U.</p>
        <p>nssa</p>
        <p>t42.H</p>
        <p>*84.08</p>
        <p>* 74.06</p>
        <p>21878R14</p>
        <p>tSI.M.</p>
        <p>18570R14</p>
        <p>*48.9S</p>
        <p>* 70.95</p>
        <p>1 245605915</p>
        <p>* 77.98</p>
        <p>*4(.M</p>
        <p>19570R14</p>
        <p>*47.M</p>
        <p>21870SIM8</p>
        <p>* 87.98</p>
        <p>1 27560SR15</p>
        <p>* 88.98</p>
        <p>*B1.M</p>
        <p>^ 70.98</p>
        <p>* 71.96</p>
        <p>22678M8</p>
        <p>l.M-N</p>
        <p>23670SRI5</p>
        <p>*74.08</p>
        <p>33I78RI8</p>
        <p>26870SR18</p>
        <p>* 79.98</p>
        <p>21575P15  ,</p>
        <p>2357SR1S  '</p>
        <p>BRAKE SERVICE</p>
        <p>*49</p>
        <p>Front or Rear</p>
        <p>MOST CARS</p>
        <p>Machine Work Extra</p>
        <p>FRONT END ALIGNMENT</p>
        <p>$-| 795</p>
        <p>Most Care</p>
        <p>Game Winning RBI  Snyder (10).</p>
        <p>E Lee. Gruber, Liriano. DP Cleveland 3. LOB-CTeveland 8, Toronto 8. 2B- Franco, JBell. 3B-Franco, Cam-pusano. HR-Snyder (24). SF-Carter.</p>
        <p>IP II R ER BB 80</p>
        <p>t leveland</p>
        <p>Swindell W. 17-13 6  9  3  3  2  5</p>
        <p>Dedmon S,1  3  1  0  0  2  0</p>
        <p>Toronto</p>
        <p>Key L.10-5  4  7  7  6  1  2</p>
        <p>Stotlmyr  2-3  4  3  3  2  0</p>
        <p>Lichhorn  2  1-3 3  2  1  1  0</p>
        <p>Wells  1  0  0  0  0  1</p>
        <p>Wills  1  10  0  10</p>
        <p>Key pitched to 5 batters in the 5th, Swindell pitched to 2 batters in the 7th.</p>
        <p>HBPCampusano by Dedmon. WP Stotllemyre.</p>
        <p>Umpires-Home, Coble; First, Denk-inger; Second, McClelland; Third. McCoy T-3:08. A-32,067</p>
        <p>Detroit....................7</p>
        <p>Baltimore.................3</p>
        <p>DETROIT (AP)  Alan Trammell, returning to the Detroit lineup after missing five days, snapped a tie with</p>
        <p>a two-run single in the seventh inning Saturday night, leading the Tigers )ast the Baltimore Orioles 7-3 and ceeping their slim hopes alive in the American League East.</p>
        <p>Detroit remained five games behind Boston and moved into second place, one-half game ahead of the New York Yankees, who lost to Boston 3-1.</p>
        <p>Chet Lemon blew open the game with a three-run homer in the eighth off Doug Sisk, Lemons 13th this season.</p>
        <p>BALTIMORE</p>
        <p>ab r h bi Stanicek If 5 0 1 0 BAndsn cf 4 1 1 0 CRipkn ss 4 0 0 1 Murray lb 4 2 2 1 Sheets rf 2 0 11 Stone rf  2 0 2 0</p>
        <p>Kennedy c 4 0 0 0 Traber dh 4 0 0 0</p>
        <p>DETROIT</p>
        <p>ab r h bi</p>
        <p>lb 2 2 0 0 cf 2 1 1 0 SS 4 0 2 3 3 10 0 3 0 0 0 dh 3 0 10 pr 0 10 0 rf 4 2 :i 3</p>
        <p>Bergmn Murphy Tramml Lynn If Nokes c DEvns Lusadr Lemon</p>
        <p>Wthgtn  lb  3 0  10  Brokns  3b  4  0 0  0</p>
        <p>BRipkn  2b  3 0  0  0  Wlwndr  2b  2  0 1  0</p>
        <p>Tettletn  ph  0 0  0  0  Sheridn.  ph  1  0 0  0</p>
        <p>Gerhart  pr  0 0  0  0  Lovullo  2b  10 0  0</p>
        <p>Totals 35 3 8 3 Totals 29 7 8 6</p>
        <p>Baltimore  2(8) &amp;lt;881 (8)13</p>
        <p>Detroit  (88) &amp;lt;8)2 23x7</p>
        <p>Game Winning RBI  Trammell ill) DPBaltimore 1. Detroit l LOB-Baltimore 7, Detroit 5. 2BMurray, Lemon. 3BBAnderson. HRLemon 113), Murray (27). SBWalewander (9). S-^ Nokes.  IP    p pp pp</p>
        <p>Baltimore</p>
        <p>Wllimson  5  3  0  0  1  4</p>
        <p>Aase  0  2  2  2  10</p>
        <p>DIson L,l-1  1 2-3  2  2  2  2  1</p>
        <p>Thurmond  1-3  0  0  0  0  o</p>
        <p>Sisk  1  1  3  3  2  1</p>
        <p>Detroit</p>
        <p>Alexndr W,12-11 8  8  3  3  0  4</p>
        <p>Hernandz  2-3  0  0  0  2  0</p>
        <p>Henneman S,20  1-3  0  0  0  0  0</p>
        <p>Aase pitched to 3 batters in the 6th, Alexander pitched to 2 batters in the 9th. BK-Olson,</p>
        <p>Umpires-Home. Tschida; First, Garcia; .Second, Reed; Third. Hirschbeck T-2:38 A-27,842,</p>
        <p>HMSBM</p>
        <p>H^ASnapWHhASnapptu</p>
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        <p>GOODYEAR </p>
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        <p>729 Oickinton Av*. Phon* 752-4417</p>
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        <p>Mamorlal Orlvt Phono 7S6-M71</p>
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        <pb facs="00097037_0026" />
        <p>Mefs Closing In On East Flag</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (AP)  Len Dykstra hit a leadoff home run in the first inning Saturday and the New York Mets reduced their magic number to five with a 6-2 victory over Montreal that eliminated the Expos from the National League East race.</p>
        <p>Dave Martinez hit two solo home runs and went 3-for-3 against winner Ron Darling, 15-9, but it was not enough as the Mets won despite getting just seven hits off Bryn Smith and Jeff Parre.</p>
        <p>New York has won four in a row overall and seven consecutive games against the Expos. The Mets can win the division with any combination of victories or losses by second-place Pittsburgh totaling five.</p>
        <p>The Expos, using a makeshift lineup that did not include Tim Raines, Tim Wallach or Hubie Brooks, got nine hits off Darting. Raines has an injured shoulder and will miss the rest of the season.</p>
        <p>Smith. 11-1, allowed three hits in six innings.</p>
        <p>Darling walked one and struck out one in eight innings before leaving with a back spasm. He gave up two hits in each of the first three innings but then settled down. Randy Myers closed.</p>
        <p>Martinez, traded from the Chicago Cubs to Montreal in midseason, hit his first two homers for the Expos in 137 at-bats. He connected in the first and sixth innings, giving him six homers this.year.</p>
        <p>Martinez also drew a one-out walk in the eighth as Darling avoided giving him anything good to hit. Martinez stole second but was thrown out trying to steal third by catcher Barry Lyons, ending the inning.</p>
        <p>Dykstra hit several fouls before homering on Smiths 10th pitch. It was Dykstra's seventh homer of the season and seventh leading off the first in his career.</p>
        <p>Wally Backman opened the fourth with a walk and Gregg Jefferies reached on second baseman John Paredes error. Darryl Strawberry singled to center for his 90th RBI and later scored when Dave Magadans grounder resulted in a rundown.</p>
        <p>Kevin McReynolds hit his 23rd homer, a three-run shot, in the eighth.</p>
        <p>won 20 games for the Chicago Cubs in 1977.</p>
        <p>Robby Thompson led off the fourth with a single against Jim Deshaies, 10-13, and went to second on a wild pitch. Clark followed with an RBI double and scored on Candy Maldonados single to give the Giants a 2-0 lead.</p>
        <p>\H\TKK.\L</p>
        <p>ub r h hi</p>
        <p>ONixon cl 4 0 2 0 TJones If 4 0 10 DMrInz rf :i 2 3 2 Galarrg, Ib 4 0 0 0 O.Mally 3b 3 0 10 Hudlei' ph 10 0 0 Fitzgerlcf c 4 0 1 0 Foley ss 3 0 10 Sant'vn ph 0 0 0 0 Pareds 2b 4 0 0 0 BSmilh p 2 0 0 0 WJhnsn ph 1 0 0 0 Farrctt p 0 0 0 0 Totals 33 2 9 2</p>
        <p>\KU YOKK</p>
        <p>ab r h bi</p>
        <p>Dykstra cf 4 1 1 1 Bckmn 2b 3 10 0 Jefleris 3b 4 2 1 0 Strwbrv rf 3 1 2 1 .McKylds If 4 1 1 3 Magdn lb 4 0 1 0 Lyons c 4 0 0 0 EJster ss 2 0 0 0 Darling p 3 0 10 Myers p 0 0 0 0</p>
        <p>SA.\ FRA.V</p>
        <p>ab r h bi Butler cf 4 110 RThpsn 2b 5 1 2 1 Clark lb 3 12 1 Mldndo rf rf If</p>
        <p>3 0 11 10 0 0 3 0 10 10 0 0 0 0 0 0 3b 4 0 0 0  c 4000 Uribe ss 4 12 1 Reuschel p 3 0 1 0</p>
        <p>Aldrete</p>
        <p>CHayes</p>
        <p>Melndz</p>
        <p>DNixon</p>
        <p>MWlms</p>
        <p>Mnwrng</p>
        <p>Totals</p>
        <p>3.1 t 10 4</p>
        <p>IIOI'STO.V</p>
        <p>ab r h bi</p>
        <p>GYoung cf 5 0 10 Doran 2b 3 0 11 Puhl If 4 0 2 0 GDavis lb 4 0 0 0 Bell 3b 4 0 0 0 DSmith p 0 0 0 0 Ashby c Drew rf Ramirz ss Darwin p Caminit 3b 0 0 0 1 Deshaies p20 10 CRenlds ss 2 0 1 0 Totals 3.5 2 112</p>
        <p>again in the sixth for the first multihomer of his career.</p>
        <p>Jeff Pico, 6-7, replaced starter Jamie Moyer with none out in the sixth and shut down the Cardinals on four hits.</p>
        <p>The Cubs scored twice in the sixth to snap a 4-4 tie. Doug Dascenzo led off with a single to left against reliever John Costello, 4-2, and took second on left fielder John Morris fielding error. . </p>
        <p>a 4-3 win over the Cincinnati Reds Saturday night.</p>
        <p>Coupled with Houstons 4-2 loss to San Francisco earlier in the day. the Dodgers reduced their magic number to seven to win the National League West.</p>
        <p>Jesse Orosco. 3-2, was the winner</p>
        <p>4 0 10 4 12 0 3 12 0 0 0 0 0</p>
        <p>Colemn</p>
        <p>Lawless</p>
        <p>RBookr</p>
        <p>Oquend</p>
        <p>Totals</p>
        <p>31 6 7 .5</p>
        <p>.Montreal  kni  (HM  002</p>
        <p>New 5ork  |  200  03x-ti</p>
        <p>Game Winning RBI - Strawberry (12). EParedes. DPMontreal 1. .New York 1 LOBMontreal 6, New York 4. 2B Fitzgerald. HRDaMartinez 2 (6. Dvkstra  7), McReynolds (23). SB- .Strawberry (27), DaMartinez (17).</p>
        <p>IP II It EK BB SO</p>
        <p>.Montreal</p>
        <p>BSmith  L.11-10  6  3  3  2  2  4</p>
        <p>Parrett  2  4  3  3  1  2</p>
        <p>New York</p>
        <p>Darling  W.15-9  8  9  2  2  1  1</p>
        <p>Myers  t  0  0  0  1  1</p>
        <p>umpiresHome, Hallion; First. Davis; Second, Froemming; Third. Darling. T-2:33. A-46,109.</p>
        <p>San Francisco............4</p>
        <p>Houston..................2</p>
        <p>HOUSTON (AP) - Rick Reuschel scattered 11 hits to win his 19th game and Will Clark drove in his 100th run of the season as the San Francisco Giants beat the Houston Astros 4-2 Saturday for their fifth straight victory.</p>
        <p>Reuschel, who has lost just eight times, walked none and struck out two for his fifth complete game. He</p>
        <p>San Francisco  00  210  100i</p>
        <p>Houston  00  IU  012</p>
        <p>Game Winning RBI  Clark (12).</p>
        <p>DPSan Francisco 1. LOBSan Francisco 7, Houston 8. 2BDoran, Clark, CReynolds. 3BRThompson. Drew. HR Uribe (3). S-Reuschel. SF-Doran. Caminiti.</p>
        <p>IP II R ER BB SO</p>
        <p>San Francisco Reuschel W, 19-8  9  ll  2  2  0  2</p>
        <p>Houston</p>
        <p>Deshaies L,10-13  6 2-3  9  4  4  1  4</p>
        <p>Darwin  1  1-3  0  0  0  0  2</p>
        <p>DSmith  1  1  0  0  0  0</p>
        <p>HBPButler by Deshaies. WP Deshaies.</p>
        <p>Umpires-Home, DeMuth; First, Wendlestedt; Second, Marsh; Third. Rennert.</p>
        <p>T-2:16. A-19.593.</p>
        <p>Chicago..................6</p>
        <p>St. Louis..................4</p>
        <p>CHICAGO (AP)  Darrin Jackson drove in three runs with two solo homers and an RBI double as the Chicago Cubs beat the St. Louis Cardinals 6-4 Saturday.</p>
        <p>Jackson, starting in place of the injured Rafael Palmeiro,, hit his fifth homer in the first, and connected</p>
        <p>.STLGIIS</p>
        <p>ab r b bi cf 4110 3b3 1 1 1 2b 2 0 2 0 ss 4 1 1 1 Brnnsky rf 4 1 2 1 TPena lb 4 0 10 Pagnozzi c 4 0 1 1 Morris If 3 0 10 Alicea 2b Guerrr ph Laga lb Magrane i TiJones pi Costello p Quisnbry p 0 0 0 0 McGee *ph 10 0 0 Totals 3 I II I</p>
        <p>3 0 0 0 10 0 0 0 0 0 0 10 10 10 0 0 10 0 0</p>
        <p>(HK.AGO</p>
        <p>ab r h bi</p>
        <p>Webster  If  4  0  1  1</p>
        <p>Sndbrg 2b  4  0  12</p>
        <p>Jackson  cf  4  2  3  3</p>
        <p>rf  2  0  0  0</p>
        <p>10 0 0 4 0 10 c 4 0 10 4 13 0</p>
        <p>Dawson Pico p Law 3b Berryhll Trillo lb</p>
        <p>Dunston ss 4 1 0 0 Moyer p 1 l l o Dascenz cf 2 1 1 0</p>
        <p>L()s a\(;ei,s</p>
        <p>ab r ll bi</p>
        <p>Griffin ss 4 2 10 Sax 2b 4 12 0 JHowell p 0 0 0 0 Gibson If 4 0 11 Marshal rf 5 0 0 0 Shelby cf 4 0 12 Stubbs lb 2 0 0 0 MHtchr ph 1 0 0 0 p 0 0 0 0</p>
        <p>2b 0 0 0 0 3b 3 1 2 0 c 3 0 2 1 pr c</p>
        <p>Orosco</p>
        <p>Shrprsn</p>
        <p>Hamltn</p>
        <p>Scioscia</p>
        <p>Deverx</p>
        <p>Dempsy</p>
        <p>Leary p Horton p APena p Woodsn lb Totals</p>
        <p>0 0 0 0 10 0 0 10 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 10 0 0</p>
        <p>( l.\( I.W.ATI</p>
        <p>ab r h bi Larkin ss 4 0 10 Sabo 3b 3 0 0 0 Daniels If 4 2 2 1 EDavis cf 2 0 11 Winghm cf 1 o 1 o ONeill rf 3 0 0 0 Esasky lb 4 0 0 0 Reed c 3 0 0 0 Oester 2b 4 110 RRobnsn p 0 () 0 0 Armstrn p 1 0 1 o Collins ph Dibble p Griffey ph RMrphy p</p>
        <p>10 0 0 0 0 0 0 10 0 0 0 0 0 0</p>
        <p>33 4 9 4 Totals</p>
        <p>31 3 7 2</p>
        <p>Totals</p>
        <p>34 (i 12 6</p>
        <p>Penn State, Washington Win; Buckeyes, Iowa Bow</p>
        <p>STATE COLLEGE, Pa. (AP) -Eddie Johnsons punt block with 1:46 to. piay set up Ray Tarasis 37-yard field goal a minute later and 16th-ranked Penn State beat Boston College 23-20 in college football on Surday.</p>
        <p>ijohnsons punt block gave Penn Stjiie the ball at the Boston College 2^rd line. After gaining six yards Ol diree running plays, Penn State, 2-0,^alled on Tarasi to kick his third fiel goal of the game. He scored frpm 30 yards in the first period and 2W the third.</p>
        <p>'^ston College, 1-2, an eight-point umterdog, tied the game 20-20 with 6:"45 remaining in the fourth period 0 a 12-play, 72-yard drive capped by Mlark Kamphaus 19-yard pass to Tom Waddle. BCs drive was aided by a pass interference penalty and a personal foul, which allowed the Eagles to retain possession in a punting situation.</p>
        <p>Tom Bill completed passes of 16 and 26 yards to set up Tarasis first field goal. Boston College, 1-2, took the following kickoff and drove 67 yards on six plays, the last 37 coming on a Kamphaus pass to Marcus Cherry with 9:02 left in the first period</p>
        <p>Be boosted its lead to 10-3 on Brian Lowes 43-yard field goal nine seconds into the second quarter. Penn State tied it 10-10 with 7:45 left in the half on a five-play, 64-yard drive, with Gary Brown l)olting 43 yards for a touchdown.</p>
        <p>Washington............31</p>
        <p>Army....................17</p>
        <p>SEATTLE (AP) - Vince Weathersby ran for two touchdowns and Chico Fraley returned a pass interception 72 yards for the clinching score with 1:10 left Saturday as 17th-ranked Washington beat stubborn Army 31-17.</p>
        <p>Fraleys interception came with Army trailing 24-17 and the Cadets facing third-and-6 at the Huskies 33. Receiver Pat Mangin got his hands on the Otto Leones pass at the Washington 28, but it bounced out of his arms to Fraley, a redshirt freshman, who sprinted untouched down the right sideline for the game-clinching touchdown.</p>
        <p>Army, a three-touchdown underdog, cut Washingtons lead to 24-17 with 1:25 gone in the fourth quarter on a 6-yard touchdown run by Calvin Cass. On their next possession, the Cadets, 1-1, had a chance to tie but lost the ball on downs at the Washington 2 when Leone was stopped on fourth-and^l with 11 minutes to play.</p>
        <p>Pittsburgh..............42</p>
        <p>Ohio State..............10</p>
        <p>PITTSBURGH (AP) - Adam Walker ran for 179 yards and three touchdowns, two in the first six minutes of play following Ohio State mistakes, as Pittsburgh routed the 18th-ranked Buckeyes 42-10 Saturday night.</p>
        <p>Walker, a junior who played sparingly last season behind AIL</p>
        <p>American tailback Craig Tronhead Heyward, scored on first-half runs of 4, 23 and 2 yards as Pitt took a 28-3 halftime lead.</p>
        <p>Pitt sophomore quarterback Darnell Dickerson, constantly beating Ohio States defense to the outside on option plays, scored two touchdowns and rushed for 88 yards on 11 carries as the Panthers beat Ohio State for the first time since 1952. The Buckeyes had won seven of the last eight meetings, including three in a row.</p>
        <p>Pitts 42 points were the most scored against Ohio State since the Buckeyes 49-42 victory over Illinois in 1980. The loss was Ohio States worst since a 40-7 defeat to Washington in 1986.</p>
        <p>Colorado................24</p>
        <p>Iowa..............  21</p>
        <p>IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) - Eric Bieniemy rushed for 153 yards and quarterback Sal Anese ran for two scores, including the go-ahead touchdown, to lead Colorado to a 24-21 college football upset of No. 19 Iowa.</p>
        <p>Colorado, 2-0, handed Iowa, 1-2, its first loss in a home opener in six years.</p>
        <p>Iowa led 21-17 and was threatening to score with about six minutes to play when Hawkeyes quarterback Chuck Hartlieb fumbled when blindsided on the Colorado 10. Alfred Williams recovered for the Buffaloes on the 15 and Anese directed his team on an 85-yard, 11-play scoring drive with about 5:30 left to play.</p>
        <p>KtLouis  (HHI i;t (Ml4</p>
        <p>Chicago  IHI 23 (Mix</p>
        <p>Game Winning RBI  Sandberg (9).</p>
        <p>EOquendo 2. Morris. RBooker. DP StLouis 2, Chicago 1. LOBStLouis 8, Chicago 8. 2BTPena. Sandberg. Jackson, Brunansky. Law. 3BLawless. HR Jackson 2 (6), Brunansky (21). S Moyer, Webster. SFOquendo, Sandberg.</p>
        <p>IP II R ER BB .SO</p>
        <p>StLouis</p>
        <p>Magrane  4  7  4  2  1  1</p>
        <p>Costello L,4-2  2  1-3  5  2  2  0  1</p>
        <p>Quisnbry  1  2-3  0  0  0  0  0</p>
        <p>Chicago</p>
        <p>Moyer  5  7  4  4  1  4</p>
        <p>Pico W.6-7  4  4  0  0  1  2</p>
        <p>Umpires-Home. Davidson; First. Pulli; Second, Harvey; Third. Crawford. T-2:32. A-32.043.</p>
        <p>San Diego................9</p>
        <p>Atlanta...................4</p>
        <p>ATLANTA (AP) - San Diego right-hander Eric Show limited Atlanta to five hits over six innings, and Tony Gwynn established a new club career hit record as the Padres defeated the Braves 9-4 in the first game of a twi-night double header Saturday.</p>
        <p>Show, 14-11, struck out one, walked one and got the games first hit with two out in the third inning. The single was the first of four straight hits that produced three runs off Atlanta starter Pete Smith, 7-14.</p>
        <p>'After John Kruk singled, both runners scored on a double by Roberto Alomar who then scored on Gwynns triple.</p>
        <p>Ls .\ngeles Cincinnati</p>
        <p>2(MI (Mil (MU4 101 (MU (HNI:i</p>
        <p>Game Winning RBI  Gibson (9).</p>
        <p>ELarkin. DPLos Angeles 1. Cincinnati 1. LOBLos Angeles 10. Cincinnati 5. 2BHamilton. Scioscia, Daniels. HR Daniels (18). SBSax (38), Winningham (12), Griffin (7). SLeary 2, ONeill. Sax.</p>
        <p>IP II R ER BB SO</p>
        <p>Los .\ngeles</p>
        <p>Leary  5  6  3  3  2  2</p>
        <p>Horton  1-3  0  0  0  0  0</p>
        <p>APena  1  2-3  0  0  0  0  2</p>
        <p>Orosco W.3-2  1  10  0  10</p>
        <p>JHowell  S.20  1  0  0  0  0  0</p>
        <p>Cincinnati</p>
        <p>RRobinson  1-3  3  2  2  2  0</p>
        <p>Armstrong  4 2-3  2  0  0  1  3</p>
        <p>Dibble  2  3  110  2</p>
        <p>RMurphy L.0-6  2  1112  1</p>
        <p>Leary pitched to 2 batters in the 6th. Umpires-Home, Hirschbeck; First. Kibler; Second, Gregg; Third, Quick. T-3:09. A-31,328.</p>
        <p>in relief. Jay Howell recorded his 20th save.</p>
        <p>The loser was Reds reliever Rob Murphy, 0-6.</p>
        <p>The Dodgers, who lost 1-0 Friday night to Tom Brownings perfect game, jumped on Ron Robinson for two runs in the first inning, chasing the Reds starter.</p>
        <p>Alfredo Griffin and Steve Sax singled, Kirk Gibson walked and John Shelby hit a two-run single.</p>
        <p>Kal Daniels retaliated with a solo home run for Cincinnati, ending the Dodger pitchers string of 31 innings without allowing an earned run.</p>
        <p>Cincinnati tied the game at 2-2 in the third when Ron Oester scored on a double play. Oester had singled and took second on Jack Armstrongs bunt single. Barry Larkin then bunted safely down the third base line before Chris Sabo grounded into a double play, allowing Oester to score.</p>
        <p>Los Angeles threatened in the fourth inning with singles by Jeff Hamilton and Mike Scioscia and a sacrifice by Tim Leary.</p>
        <p>^KortiandL</p>
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        <p>SAN DIEGO ab</p>
        <p>Kruk rf  4</p>
        <p>RAIomr 2b 3 Gwynn cf 4 CMartnz If 5 Morlnd lb 4 Santiago c 5 Flannry 3b 4 Tmpltn ss 4 Show p  2</p>
        <p>McCllers p l</p>
        <p>Totals</p>
        <p>38</p>
        <p>First Game</p>
        <p>ATLANTA r h bi  ab r h bi</p>
        <p>1 1 0 Gant 3b 4 0 2 0</p>
        <p>2 2 2 Gregg If 5 0 2 1 2 2 2 GPerry lb 4 1 1 0 2 2 2 DMrphy rf 4 0 0 0</p>
        <p>0 0 1 Thomas ss 3 0 0 1</p>
        <p>1 2 1  Lemke  2b  3  10  0</p>
        <p>0 0 0  Benedict  c  4  1 2  1</p>
        <p>0 2 1  Blocker  cf  4  1 1  1</p>
        <p>1 1 0  PSmith  p  10 0  0</p>
        <p>0 1 0 AHall ph 10 10</p>
        <p>Acker p 0 0 0 0 DJams ph 10 0 0 Olwine p 0 0 0 0 Alvarez p 0 0 0 0 Smmns ph 10 0 0 9 13 9 Totals  35 4 9 4</p>
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        <p>San Diego  (NI:i  IMII  3(129</p>
        <p>Atlanta  (Mil  I  lid4</p>
        <p>Game Winning RBI  RAlomar (9k LOB-San Diego 7. Atlanta 8. 2B-RAlomar 2. Gregg. Gant, GPerry, Santiago. 3B-Gwynn. HR-Blocker (2). CMartinez (15). SB-Sanliago (14). S Show. SF Thomas. Moreland.</p>
        <p>IP II R ER BB .SO</p>
        <p>San Diego Show W,14-ll  6  5  2  2  1  1</p>
        <p>McCllers S. 10  3  4  2  2  2  3</p>
        <p>Atlanta</p>
        <p>PSmith L.7-14  5  5  3  3  1  1</p>
        <p>Acker  2  5  4  4  1  2</p>
        <p>Olwine  11-3  1  1  l  i  o</p>
        <p>Alvarez  2-3 2  1  10  1</p>
        <p>WP-McCullers,</p>
        <p>UmpiresHome, Brocklander; F'irst, McSherry; Second, Montague. Third, Rippley t-2:43</p>
        <p>Los Angeles..............4</p>
        <p>Cincinnati................3</p>
        <p>CINCINNATI (AP) - Kirk Gibsons run-scoring single n the ninth inning gave the Los Angeles Dodgers</p>
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        <pb facs="00097037_0027" />
        <p>mmChargers Race Past Pack, 41-21</p>
        <p>Lifoo ty/</p>
        <p>By TOM MORRIS Reflector Sports Writer WASHINGTON  When Ayden-Grifton went backwards on its first two plays from scrimmage, Charger coach B.T. Chappell was more than a little concerned, but before long his worries were put beside him.</p>
        <p>The 2-A Chargers rolled over 3-A Washington, 41-21, thanks largely to a 34-0 halftime lead, in a non</p>
        <p>conference high school matchup Friday night.</p>
        <p>After taking the opening kickoff, Ayden-Grifton gained nothing on a run up the middle on first down and lost a yard on second down. But quarterback Darryl Moye hooked up with Kelvin Ellison for 14 yards and a first down on the next play and the Chargers proceeded to drive 71 yards in 13 plays to score on a five-yard run</p>
        <p>by Aaron Harper, Mfho also added the two-point conversion run.</p>
        <p>They scared mp those first two plays, ChappeU said. We tried to run a straight powr and they stopped it. Then on thir down we passed the ball (for a first down) and then we went outside and had some success. The outside running game helped us a lot.</p>
        <p>Tony Reeves got around the endBulling For Yardage</p>
        <p>Ayden-Grifton fullback Aaron Harper bulls during first-half action from their game Fri-his way for yardage against Washingtons day. (Reflector Photo by Thomas Forrest) Tyrone Waters (10) and Dwayne Tripp (9)</p>
        <p>twice in the first half, scoring on runs of 65 and 59 yards en route to a 164-yard rushing performance. Reeves also caught a nine-yard scoring pass from Move. His backfield mate. Harper, also scored two touchdowns and had 107 yards rushing.</p>
        <p>Coach (Chappell) told us if the line did a good job blocking and the backs did a good job running that wed do well, Reeves said. The end, Kelvin Ellison, did a good job of blocking (on the two long runs). I have to credit my whole line.</p>
        <p>Harper set the tone for the offense on that first drive, which consumed the majority of the first quarter, by rushing for 36 yards on five carries.</p>
        <p>The key was Coach Chappell psyching us up. He told us we had to play four quarters of football, Harper said. When I saw the ball the first time, I just went off -boom.</p>
        <p>After Washington failed to move the ball on its initial possession, Ayden-Grifton was back in business. On a third-and-two from his own 35, Reeves took a pitch left from Moye and went right down the sideline for the score. The conversion pass failed but Ayden-Grifton still led, 14-0.</p>
        <p>Washington again went nowhere on its next possession and then faked the punt and tried to run for the first down, but Tyron Lodge lost a yard on the play, turning the ball back to the Chargers at the Washington 37.</p>
        <p>Eight plays later. Harper was back in the end zone, this time scoring form three yards out. The conversion run failed leaving the score at 20-0.</p>
        <p>On its next possession. Reeves broke around end for a 59-yard scoring run. The conversion attempt failed to leave the Chargers ahead, 264).</p>
        <p>Washington quarterback Brian Jones was intercepted by Kenny Spruill on the Pam Packs next play from scrimmage and that led to the nine-yard scoring pass from Moye to Reeves. James Woodard ran in the two-point conversion to close out the first half scoring.</p>
        <p>Washingtons first half problems left Pam Pack coach Bob Hanna try^ ing to figure out what went wrong.</p>
        <p>1 wish I knew, Hanna said. We just got beat. They won the line of scrimmage on both sides. That told</p>
        <p>the tale. They sealed the ends and did a good job reading their blocks. Their speed and quickness caused problems for us defensively.</p>
        <p>The Pam Pack had failed to even get a first down until the final two-and-a-half minutes of the half and by then the matter was almost academic.</p>
        <p>But Washington improved its play after halftime, as the Pam Pack took the second-half kickoff and drove 65 yards for a four-yard scoring run by Damien Moore.</p>
        <p>But Ayden-Grifton countered with a long scoring drive of its own on the next possession, with Moye getting the touchdown on a two-yard keeper. George Fuller added the point after to make it 41-7 with 3:07 remaining in the third quarter.</p>
        <p>Moore added a one-yard scoring run midway through the final period and Washington closed out its scoring with a nine-yard touchdown pass from Davis to David Williams with 5:47 remaining.</p>
        <p>Washington tried to get the ball into the hands of speedy wide-receiver Joe Randolph, who had over 100 yards rushing and receiving last week, but other than a 24-yard reception late in the game and a 55-yard punt return for a score that was called back, he was held in check.</p>
        <p>Ayden-Grifton  Washington</p>
        <p>14....................First  Downs....................6</p>
        <p>48-322 Rushes-Yardage 42-86</p>
        <p>23.................Passing  Yards.................67</p>
        <p>51...................Return  Yards...................4</p>
        <p>2-3-0..................Passing..................</p>
        <p>1-35.0............Punts-Average............3-34.0</p>
        <p>1-1.................Fumbles-Lost.................O-O</p>
        <p>6-53............. Penalties-Yards  ........3-17</p>
        <p>Ayden-Grifton................14  20  7  011</p>
        <p>Washington.....................0  0  7  1421</p>
        <p>Scoring;</p>
        <p>AG  Harper 5 run (Harper run)</p>
        <p>AG  Reeves 65 run (pass failed)</p>
        <p>AG  Harper 3 run (run failed)</p>
        <p>AG  Reeves 59 run (run failed)</p>
        <p>AG  Reeves 9 pass from Moye (Woodard run)</p>
        <p>W Moore4run (Curtiskick)</p>
        <p>AG  Moye 2 run (Fuller kick)</p>
        <p>W  Moore 1 run (Curtis kick)</p>
        <p>W  Williams 9 pass from Jones (Curtis kick)</p>
        <p>individual Leaders:</p>
        <p>RUSHING: AG  Reeves 14-164, Harper 17-107, Woodard 7-42; W - Moore 14-42; Williams 13-46 PASSING: AG - Moye 2-2 23; W -Jones 5-15-3 67 RECEIVING: AG - Ellison 1-14, Reeves 1-9; W - Gibbs 2-32, RaiKtolfrfi 2-22</p>
        <p>They were trying to mix it up," Chappell said. You look at whats happened to us. Conley beat us on one long pass play. Wallace-Rose Hill set up a touchdown with a pass play. Maybe they felt we were weak defensively. I thought (defensive backs) David Dixon and Kenny Spruill both did a good job. They had thrown it to him five or six times. Ayden-Grifton, 3-1, returns to action Friday at Pamlico County while Washington, 3-1, takes on East Carteret at home.Students</p>
        <p>In Riot</p>
        <p>SEOUL, South Korea (AP)  Riot police dispersed and beat radical students who staged an anti-Olympic protest in the heart of Seoul Saturclay and about 20 protesters were arrested.</p>
        <p>Students later held a rally at Korea University in the north of the city and burned an effigy painted with an American flag in the shape of a nuclear bomb.</p>
        <p>Oppose dictators Olympics, students chanted at both protests.</p>
        <p>Some 200 students shouting anti-Olympic slogans tried to march through Seouls main shopping district toward Myongdong Cathedral to protest the opening Saturday of the Games. The brief protest was held about 10 miles (16 kilometers) from the Olyinpic venues.</p>
        <p>Scores of riot police charged the march after it had gone about 150 yards and roughly dispersed the protesters.</p>
        <p>Riot police punched and kicked protesters and arrested about 20 who were forced into a bus and taken away. Others protesters fled as police chased them.</p>
        <p>It was the first protest staged in the city center in several weeks. Protesters did not attempt to fi^t police.</p>
        <p>About 300 students later staged an anti-U.S protest at K(m^ University. They denounced the South Korean, and U.S. governments and demanded the Olympics be shared with communist North Korea.</p>
        <p>Tom Morris</p>
        <p>Sunday Notes;</p>
        <p>HTS Is A Valuable Commodity For ECU</p>
        <p>East Carolina will have five of its football games broadcast on a tapenlelay basis this season by Home Team Sports, but the package is more exposure-oriented than financially rewarding.</p>
        <p>And for a team that needs all the exposure it can get, there is no discounting the value of this deal.</p>
        <p>As it is now, ECU gets very little coverage in its own state. Each week, fans of the states ACC teams get to see a game of the week in addition to the national coverage by ABC, CBS, NBC, WTBS and ESPN.</p>
        <p>There is no discounting that the Bucs sub-par record has had a great deal to do with this. But thats what makes the HTS telecast that much more important; teams with not-so-stellar records still get some TV exposure.</p>
        <p>The last time ECU api^ared on a major network was T^nlisgiving evening 1986; the Bucs lost at Miami 36-10. Other than the HTS, the only way to get a glimpse of the Pirates has been to buy a ticket.</p>
        <p>You are talking about 1.2 million subscribers, said Dave Hart, director of athletics at ECTJ. Any realization of dollars would be nominal. We dont see any revenue (from the broadcasts), but we are interested in the exposure.</p>
        <p>ECU also is involved with H'TS through the Colonial Athletic Association. HTS. These games are not on tape-delay. Each broadcast generates approximately $30,000 for the conference. In addition, HTS has allocated six minutes of commercial time on each basketball broadcast to the CAA to sell in tte way it sees fit.</p>
        <p>A Week Off For The Heels</p>
        <p>While most of the area college football teams headed into action Saturday, North Carolina had the weekend off before taking on Louisville at home Sept.</p>
        <p>24.</p>
        <p>The Tar Heels are 0-2, coming off losses to nationally-ranked South Carolina (31-10) and Oklahoma (284)). Its hardly the stuff dream seasons are made of, but the team isnt in bad shape.</p>
        <p>First-year head coach Mack Brown appears to be on the right track after replacing Dick Crum.</p>
        <p>He inherited a team short on experience or depth. Add in a late recruiting start and a tough early-season schedule (Oklahoma, USC and Auburn in the three of the first four weeks) and its clear that the new coach wasnt in the best of situations.</p>
        <p>Still, the Tar Heels aren't in that bad of shape. Their inexperience showed in the two losses, but even in the Oklahoma game, there were encouraging signs.</p>
        <p>First, the offense, when Jonathan Hall is in the game, shows a true option attack. Hall, who ran for 44 yards on 10 carries, is still recovering from shoulder surgery which forced him to miss all of last season, so if his passing comes around the offense could be in good hands.</p>
        <p>In addition, the Tar Heels also showed something that was sorely lacking in years past - innovation. They opened the game against the Sooners in a three-wide receiver formation and also used a one-back set and moved tailback Torin Dorn into a wingback spot.</p>
        <p>Defensively, UNC showed a lot of movement along the defensive line, shifting in and out of the gaps, trying to give the opposition a new look. Sure, they had their problems. They</p>
        <p>suffered a great many missed assignments and often lowed helpless against the Sooners wishbone offense. Theyll have two weeks to</p>
        <p>Mack Brown</p>
        <p>work out some of the kinks. If they can, success is possible.</p>
        <p>If they cant, therell be a lot of empty seats in Kenan Stadium in November.</p>
        <p>Another encouraging site at the game was the high school coaches section. Brown brought it back after it was done away with during the Crum era. Brown has a task trying to re-establish a positive link with the rep coaches. It was an area which haunted Cfrum during the end of his tenure.</p>
        <p>For the last few years, Clemson and USC have been able to consistently sim some of the states top prospects. That seems to be changing now. With Bill Dooley at Wake Forest, Dick Sheridan at N.C. State and now with Brown, the ACC schools are trying to regain the state as its own recruiting pool.</p>
        <p>But all things aside, the real test for UNC lies just ahead.</p>
        <p>With the first two ^ames out of the way, the Tar Heels now have a second season. After Louisville, UA j has a road game at Auburn before starting the ACC season against Wake Forest Get. 8.</p>
        <p>By then, the only determinant of success or failure will be on the field.</p>
        <p>Bama, A&amp;amp;M Postponed</p>
        <p>COLLEGE STATION, Texas (AP)  Texas A&amp;amp;M has agreed to postpone Saturdays game with No. 13 Alabama after the Tide said it would not come tO| Texas, an A&amp;amp;M spokesman said.</p>
        <p>Aggies coach Jackie Sherrill talked with Alabama officials on Friday afternoon after Alabama athletic director Steve Sloan announced the postponement without A&amp;amp;Ms knowledge earlier in the day, citing travel problems caused by Hurricane Gilbert.</p>
        <p>Sherrill was unsuccessful in changing Alabama officials minds.</p>
        <p>During my conversation with coach Bill Curry and athletic director Steve Sloan, they said it was their decision not to bring their traveling party due to advice from experts and the advice of Delta, Airlines, said a prepared statement from Sherrill, who also is A&amp;amp;Ms athletic director.</p>
        <p>But the statement also indicated Sherrill thought the Tide should have made a stronger effort to play the game as scheduled.</p>
        <p>Our experts and our meteorologists have different opiniims than Alabamas, Sherrill said. Im sitting here looking at blue skies, and I tried to take steps to bring Alabamas team into College Station today, and then if the weatter shcmld take a turn for the worse - if the situation should become dangeim  we would cancel the game.</p>
        <p>Officials from Mth A&amp;amp;M and ESPN, which had planned to televise game, were upset at Alabamas decision because chances of rain had greatly diminished when the hurricanes path didnt turn toward the north, said an A&amp;amp;M source, who asked not to be identified.</p>
        <p>Scores of Tide ifans and some Alabama sportswriters, already in College Station, were checking out of hotels and preparing to leave.</p>
        <p>Theyre pretty upset, Killian said. Theyve come all this way and have nothing to do.</p>
        <p>The game has been rescheduled to Dec. 1, a Thursday. ESPN said it would show the rescheduled live.</p>
        <p>game</p>
        <p>There is significant risk involved in getting our people in and out of (Allege Station,Sloan had said in announcing the postponement earlier. As much as we would like to play, we cannot guarantee that the hurricane will not veer in our direction and endanger thii lives of our student-athletes and travel party. </p>
        <p>The storm, which earlier was one of the most i^werfnl on record, was heading toward landfall late Friday.</p>
        <p>The Dec. 1 date is six days after Alabama plays cross-state rival Auburn in Birmingham, and seven days after the Aggies play state rival Texas.</p>
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        <pb facs="00097037_0028" />
        <p>Viking Defense Sparks J 3-&amp;amp;</p>
        <p>Whoa, There!</p>
        <p>Fj^-mville Centrals Mack Davis grabs the il'sey of D.II. Conley runner Tyrone Turnage 4) as Jaguar Reggie Barrett (85) closes in help make the tackle Friday night at</p>
        <p>Farmville. Turnage rushed for 116 yards as the Vikings took a 15-0 victory in the game. (Reflector Photo by Shannon Wolfe)</p>
        <p>panthers Hold Off 'Skins; Williamston Nips Greene</p>
        <p>BETHEL  North Fill scored two ti chdowns in the second quarter to t le the lead for good and then held op a late charge by Roanoke to gain a</p>
        <p>4 non-conference high school ball victory Friday, orth Pitt took the lead early on n Billy Hardison scored from six ^ds out in the first quarter and F ^gie Daniels added the two-point c version run for a 8-0 lead.</p>
        <p>Roanokes Bernard Hudgins one-y^rd scoring run later in the period jlled Roanoke within 8-6. but North It then took control of the game in rd quarter.</p>
        <p>jlardison connected with William Irning on a 17-yard scoring pass Tj Dave Sawyers kick made it 15-6. I'loanoke pulled within 15-14 mid-vwy through the third quarter when hjilfback James Williams lateraled titBob Harris who hit Joseph Floyd f|f a 36-yard scoring pass.</p>
        <p>^orth Pitt added an insurance sC^re late in the period on an eight-ybfd run by Mqlcom Wiggins that provided the final margin. Sawyer again added the point after.</p>
        <p>lloanoke had the ball at the North Fi|t 17 but misfired on three con-sfutive pass attempts in the final minute.</p>
        <p>filichael Blow had 13 carries for 80 yai'ds to lead North Pitt. Pender L|;ke had 81 yards off of nine carries tdjop the Redskins iNorth Pitt moves to 2^2 on the season and returns to action Sept. 30 a^inst Ayden-Grifton. jDarrin Bryant, a defensive end, r^vered three fumbles for the Pan-tiijrs.</p>
        <p>Kv|nok(  .North Pitl</p>
        <p>K l.  First Downs...................1</p>
        <p>Itushcs-Yardage..........43-20.j</p>
        <p>Passing Yards.................12</p>
        <p>Hil  Keturn Yards..................15</p>
        <p>27}  Passing..................4-11-0</p>
        <p>0 Punts Average 5-24 4</p>
        <p>7Fumbles-lxjsl ...............5-4</p>
        <p>j 4a  Penalties-Yards............12-112</p>
        <p>itj4noke...........................H  8  0  (kII</p>
        <p>Niirih Pitt.........................8  II  0  0-22</p>
        <p>Setting:</p>
        <p> Hardison 6 run (Daniels run)</p>
        <p>If  Hudgins 1 run &amp;lt; run tailed)</p>
        <p>Nf  Morning 17 pass from Hardison 1 tiaUyer kick) it  Floyd 3fi pass from Harris t IMugherlN run i ?|P Wiggins 8 run t.Sawver kick i</p>
        <p>Williamston..............7  N. Edgecombe.........52</p>
        <p>Greene^ Central..........6  Chocowinity.............0</p>
        <p>SNOW HILL  Williamston High School, which came up on the short end of the score in its first two outings, upset Greene Central, 7-6, in a non-conference football game Friday night.</p>
        <p>The Tigers scored midway through the second quarter and made good on their extra point, then watched the Rams come right back and have the chance to tie it up, only to fall short.</p>
        <p>After that, it became a defensive struggle.</p>
        <p>Greene Central had the first scoring opportunity in the game, recovering a fumble at the Tiger 19 shortly after the opening kickoff. But the Rams failed to pick up a first down and turned it back.</p>
        <p>Early in the second period, Williamston took over at the Tiger 37 after a punt and drove in nine plays. A holding penalty gave the Tigers one first down and Guy Spruill ran 15 yards on the longest play of the series.</p>
        <p>Finally, with 7:25 showing, Spruill went over from eight yards out and Chris Coudriet kicked the extra point for a 7-0 lead.</p>
        <p>Following the kickoff, the Rams barreled back in just 10 plays, marching 70 yards. Quarterback Kris Radford completed a 25-yard pass to Wes Suggs on fourth and five at the 29 to set up Anthony Duprees four yard touchdown run with 2:30 remaining in the half.</p>
        <p>On the extra point, a bad snap forced a scramble and a pass attempt fell short.</p>
        <p>Neither team threatened again in the game.</p>
        <p>Williumston  CfrrrneiVnlral</p>
        <p>10...................First Downs...................ii</p>
        <p>3&amp;lt;&amp;gt;-10..........Hushes-Yardage..........33-10:1</p>
        <p>5  Passing  Yarcfe.................89</p>
        <p>20...................Return Yards...................4</p>
        <p>1-5-1  Passing..................7-13-1</p>
        <p>5-30.2.......... Punts-Average............5-30.4</p>
        <p>3-2.................Fumbles-Lost.................2-0</p>
        <p>3-20.............Penallies-Yards..........:.. 6-55</p>
        <p>Wimanistun.........................0  7  i)  0-7</p>
        <p>(ireene Central....................0  6  0  06</p>
        <p>Scoring;</p>
        <p>W  Spruill 8 run (Coudriet kick)</p>
        <p>GC  Dupree 4 run (pass failed)</p>
        <p>CHOCOWINITY - North Edgecombe, led by the running of Larry King and the passing of Orlando Whitaker, rolled up a 52-0 Tobacco Belt Conference football victory over Chocowinity Friday night.</p>
        <p>King scored three times while Whitaker passed for two touchdowns as the Warriors established themselves as one of the favorites in the TBC race.</p>
        <p>North Edgecombe completely throttled the Indians, holding them to only eight yards in total offense.</p>
        <p>Whitaker got the action started in the first period with a 25-yard touchdown pass to Duane Underhill. King then added the first of his touchdowns on a 24-yard run. Kelvin Lyons kicked the PAT following each score for a 14-0 lead at the end of the opening quarter.  '</p>
        <p>North Edgecombe added three more scores in the second period, running its lead out to 33-0 at intermission. King scored on runs of three and 12 yards to account for two of them. Martin Williams added the other, returning an interception 51 yards.</p>
        <p>(See INDIANS, B-I I)</p>
        <p>By WOODY PEELE Reflector Sports Editor FARMVILLE - When D.H. Conleys offense couldnt drive the ball into the end zone Friday night, the defense gave it to them up close for a touchdown and two field goals as the Vikings topped cross-county rival Farmville Central, 13-0.</p>
        <p>The Vikings spent a lot of time during the evening on Jaguar ground, but never were able to push the ball in without help from the defense.</p>
        <p>A blocked punt led to the only Conley touchdown, a two-yard plunge by quarterback Scott Seymour, while Andy Fassetts two field goals, of 22 and 32 yards, were set up by a fumble recovery at the Jaguar eight and a pass interception run back to the 18.</p>
        <p>Otherwise, Conley was all over the scoring zone, but just couldnt get past its own mistakes.</p>
        <p>We were in control of the football game for a change, Viking coach Steve Craft said. Farmville Central has a good, solid team that was well-prepared, and Im not taking anything from them.</p>
        <p>But we stopped ourselves. The outcome should have been much different but for our own mistakes. But Im happy with the win. Were young and thats the kind of stuff we have to expect.</p>
        <p>Craft said that the Vikings needed the win.</p>
        <p>Young kids dont take criticism well, the coach said. But when you win, you are able to point out their mistakes easier. I think we improved tonight and thats all I ask.</p>
        <p>Not that Farmville didnt have an opportunity or two itself. Although they penetrated only to the Conley 46 in the first half  their only venture past midfield  the Jags had the ball at the Viking 38 in the final period, trailing only 10-0 with plenty of time left, only to be intercepted. Later, they drove to the Viking 14 before fumbling the ball away.</p>
        <p>I thought we made a courageous effort out there, Farmville coach Dixon Sauls said. Conley played well and took advantage of our mistakes.</p>
        <p>Farmville, which has already been plagued with injuries, added more to its list tonight. Second string quarterback Mack Davis, who started the game, went down early, as did fullback Billy Hardison. Third string quarterback Jeff Tyson was already running at tailback so fourth-stringer Lamont Parker came on to take the reigns, completing three of five passes in the second half.</p>
        <p>Weve got a lot of people hurt but thats no excuse, Sauls said, We just have to try to do the best we can. We still had the chance to win the garne but make mistakes in our protection. Still I have to give Conley credit.</p>
        <p>Craft was upset over Conleys six fumbles, three of them lost, and five penalties that totaled 62 yards, but he blamed that on the youth of the team.</p>
        <p>Nevertheless, they served to kill Conley scoring opportunities.</p>
        <p>Conleys first ^ssession saw the Vikings march from their own 35 to the Farmville 37 before they failed to pick up a first down.</p>
        <p>Then, after getting it back on a punt at their own 38, Conley immediately got into good field position</p>
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        <p>once more when Tyrone Turnage went around his left end for 50 yards to the 15. On the next play, however, Conley fumbled it away.</p>
        <p>Conley held once more and the defense gave it back when Junior Farrow led a charge that blocked Kevin Wades punt, turning it over to the Vikings on the two-yard line.</p>
        <p>On the first play, Seymour sneaked over for the score and Fassetts kick made it 7-0 with 3:47 left in the half.</p>
        <p>A poor punt gave Conley one more chance before halftime. Taking over at the Farmville 38, Conley got 16 yards from Turnage before fumbling it away once more at the 18.</p>
        <p>Conley got the ball back early in the second half on another fumble recovery at the Viking 47. Seymour hit Hal Conger for 35 yards on a quick toss over the middle from the 36 (after a penalty), carrying to the Farmville 29. Turnage added 17 more to the 12 and a penalty pushed it five more to the seven.</p>
        <p>But once again, Conley fumbled it away, only to get it back two plays later on another Jaguar fumble.</p>
        <p>Taking over on the eight, Conley gained four, then was penalized 15 yards for a personal foul. Conley got back to the five on third down, and elected to go with Fassetts foot and he made the 22-yarder good with 3:14 remaining in the third for a 10-0 lead.</p>
        <p>After an exchange of punts, Farmville had the ball in great position at the Conley 38, but Parker was intercepted by Terry Williams who returned it to the Farmville. 18, setting up Fassetts second kick, a 32-</p>
        <p>yards. Conley just missed a touchdown when Seymour hit Conger. all alone, but he was ruled to have stepped out of the end zones side before making the catch.</p>
        <p>Conley then led, 13-0, with 5:54 left in the game.</p>
        <p>Farmville suddenly began to hit on the pass and marched from its own 47 following a 37-yard kickoff return by Ajithony Foreman. But once again, Farmville fumbled it away after reaching the Conley 14.    v  ;  '</p>
        <p>Turnage led the Conley ground at- -tack with 116 yards on 12 carries.</p>
        <p>The victory boosts Conley to 2-1 on. the year while Farmville falls t0 2-2. ^ The Vikings open Coastal Con-* ference play at home against Havelock on Friday, while Farmville travels to South Lenoir to open its conference slate.</p>
        <p>D.ll. Conley</p>
        <p>8</p>
        <p>Farmville C. '</p>
        <p>28-161</p>
        <p>......Rushes-Yardage......</p>
        <p>49...........</p>
        <p>61</p>
        <p>53...........</p>
        <p>...........6</p>
        <p>2-8-0</p>
        <p>5-10-1</p>
        <p>4-27.8</p>
        <p>......Punts-Average........</p>
        <p>.....5-23.6</p>
        <p>6-3</p>
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        <p>3-3</p>
        <p>5-62</p>
        <p>........Penalties-Yards....</p>
        <p>3-15</p>
        <p>D.ll. Conley........................0  7  3  ;i13</p>
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        <pb facs="00097037_0029" />
        <p>Reds' Browning Has Perfect Game</p>
        <p>CINCINNATI (AP)  Tom Browning didnt think about his earlier brush with a noAitter when perfection was within his grasp.</p>
        <p>There was no time to dwell on either the past failMre or future fame.</p>
        <p>The Cincinnati Reds left-hander blocked out the distractions and threw a high fastball past pinch-hit-</p>
        <p>ter Tfacy Woodson to complete the 14th perfect game in major-league history Friday night, a 1-0 victory over the Los Angeles Dodgers.</p>
        <p>The fast-working Browning had come within two outs of a no-hitter in San Diego on June 6, only to have 'Tony Gwynn break it up with a single. It stood as one of six no-hitters</p>
        <p>No. Ones Roll In Friday Games</p>
        <p>By TOM FOREMAN Jr.</p>
        <p>AP Sports Writer Playing its second game in a week, top-ranked Garner grabbed a firmer hold on first place in The Associated Press 4-A football poll with a 25-14 victory over Cap Nine rival and eighth-ranked Raleigh Millbrook Friday night.</p>
        <p>Garners triumph was the closest game of those played by the No. 1 teams in this weeks polls. In the 3-A poll. No. 1 Burlington Cummings outran High Point Central 51-31 Thursday night. Wallace-Rose Hill trounced South Robeson 51-7 to help maintain its hold on the 2-A top spot, and Murphy went out of state to keep its No. 1 position in 1-A, claiming a 24-0 victory over Union Co., Ga.</p>
        <p>Chris Dorman scored three touchdowns and Garner executed the old hook-and-ladder play for another score to lead the undefeated Trojans,</p>
        <p>&amp;lt; also the reigning state chanpions, to their 19th straight victory.</p>
        <p>Dorman scored on runs of 10, 14 and 2 yards and quarterback Levi Beckwith completed eight of 13 passes for 142 yards. Beckwiths pass to Henry Bagwell was lateraled to Robert Hinton for a 41-yard scoring play in the first half.</p>
        <p>A key to the game, however, was a defensive play midway through the fourth quarter, when a power dive by Millbrook's Scott Fuchs was stacked up by Garners Keith Evans at the Garner 20. Evans was considered doubtful for the game because of a shoulder injury.</p>
        <p>To me, that was the biggest play ^ of the game, Garner coach Hal Stewart said. Everybody knows that they have a great passer and if they could have gotten a little, it would have been tough. Stopping them there was the game.</p>
        <p>The game was marked by a lot of penalty flags. Garner was hit with eight unsportsmanlike conduct or personal foul penalties and Millbrook had three. Garner was penalized 16 times for 182 yards and Millbrook was flagged 11 times for 110.</p>
        <p>This team is like their coach, Stewart said. I aint pretty and neither was this game. But the win was a very big one for us. The kids played hard. Millbrook is an excellent team, but we found a way to win. </p>
        <p>Elsewhere in the 4-A, No. 3 Greensboro Page nipped No. 1 Greensboro Grimsley 22-21. Fourth-ranked Richmond County whipped Marlboro County, S.C., 47-0. Seventh-ranked Asheville Reynolds defeated Swannanoa Owen 10-0 and ninth-ranked McDowell defeated .alchell 40-18.</p>
        <p>Mac Stout kicked a 27-yard field goal with eight seconds left to give Page another one of its patented last-second victories. Stout got his chance at the heroics when Chad Southall made a diving catch of Le-mont Cheeks desperation pass, a 39-vard play that helped set up the field goal.</p>
        <p>He said Coach, I know I can do it!</p>
        <p>I know I can do it. I told him I knew he could, too! Page coach Marion Kirby said.  ... I could see he was hitting it pretty well in warmups. I knew he was going to make it. Richmond County scored 27 points in the second quarter to roll to its fourth victory. Mike Thomas scored one touchdown and passed for another, the latter an 82-yard play to Keith Altman.</p>
        <p>Scott Melton threw a 13-yard halfback option pass to Brian Craig 31 seconds before halftime and Jimmy Sziksai kicked a 39-yard field goal in the fourth quarter to help raise Reynolds to 4-0.</p>
        <p>Melvin Smith rushed for 73 yards and three touchdowns to pace McDowell to its fourth victory this ^ season. Smiths 12-yard touchdown run with 4:38 left before halftime helped McDowell rally from an early 12-point deficit to take the lead for good.</p>
        <p>Fayetteville Smith, Greenville Rose and Kannapolis Brown all had the night off.</p>
        <p>In 3-A, No. 2 High Point Andrews defeated Reidsville 35-7, fourth-ranked Havelock knocked off seventh-rated Tarboro 27-14 and fifth-ranked East Rutherford defeated Gastonia Huss 27-20. Washington, which entered the poll for the first time this week, lost a 41-21 decision to Ayden-Grifton.</p>
        <p>No. 8 Central Cabarrus took a 35-0 shutout from South Iredell and the teams tied for ninth split their outcomes  Bertie endangered it spot as it lost to Hertford County 26-12 and East Lincoln strengthened its position as it downed West Lincoln 33-0.</p>
        <p>South Iredell got 112 yards rushing from T.J. Davidson in its victory over Central Cabarrus. A fumble re</p>
        <p>covery for a touchdown by Marcus Moore, and a pair of touchdown runs by Chauncey Harris highlighted a 21-point second quarter. Ayden-Grifton ran away from Washington by taking a 34-0 halftime lead.</p>
        <p>Tarboro dropped to 1-2 as Ledel George returned an interception 52 yards for a touchdown on defense.</p>
        <p>oroken up in the ninth inning in the majors this season.</p>
        <p>That was way back. I didnt think about it, Browning said. I threw the ball much better tonight than in San Diego..</p>
        <p>I knew I had a no-hitter going into the eighth. I just kept talking to myself, saying what I need to do... to maintain my composure, to move the ball in and out.</p>
        <p>He did that all game long, and he did it perfectly.</p>
        <p>His concentration was intense the entire time, pitching coach Scott Breeden said. He had the type of control that he could put the ball where he wanted. As a result, he didnt make any mistake pitches You kind of just want to sit and watch. Its really something to dream about. said Dodger pitcherr Tim Belcher, who threw a three-hitter but lost on an unearned run. Sure I wanted to watch it. Im a great baseball fan and its a part of baseball history.</p>
        <p>Baseball history will show Brownings effort was the first no-hitter in</p>
        <p>the majors since Milwaukees Juan Nieves beat Baltimore on April 15, 1987. The last perfect game was by Californias Mike Witt against Texas on Sept. 30.1984.</p>
        <p>The last perfect game thrown in the National League was by the Diggers Sandy Koufax on Sept. 9, 1965, a 1-0 victory over Chicago. Brownings perfect game was the first in the Reds 119-year history and the first no-hitter since Tom Seavers on June 16,1978, against St. Louis at Riverfront Stadium.</p>
        <p>Browning had trouble grasping the magnitude of his accomplishment.</p>
        <p>It hasnt sunk in yet. Its hard to believe it happened. he said, champagne dripping from his hair. Its hard to believe nobody got a hit. </p>
        <p>Nobody even came close to getting on base on this night, which started ominously.</p>
        <p>The game was delayed for two hours, 27 minutesd by rain. The showers lifted, and Browning opened the game by retiring Alfredo Griffin on a fly out  one of only nine balls hit into the outfield.</p>
        <p>Browning, 16-5, struck out seven and didnt go to three balls on any batter. He threw 21 first-pitch strikes to the 27 batters he faced.</p>
        <p>He had great siuil tonight." Manager Pete Rose said. "He threw it where he wanted, when he wanted. He was in total control</p>
        <p>He didnt need any close plays to save him, either. The only ball that required an out-of-the-ordinary effort was a chopper down the third base line in the fifth by Mike Marshall. Chris Sabo backhanded the ball and threw Marshall out by a half-step.</p>
        <p>It wasnt that close, Sabo said of the play. "I had it all the way. As soon as it was hit, I thought I could get it."</p>
        <p>For a while. Browning was locked in a no-hit duel with Belcher, 10-5 who allowed just one walk over the Barry Larkin doubled into the right-field corner with two out in the sixth and scored an unearned run when Sabo grounded to Jeff Hamilton and the third basemans throw to first was in the</p>
        <p>dirt, eluding Mickey Hatcher for an error.</p>
        <p>It was the first run allowed in threfk games by the Dodgers, who havenH given up an earned run in 30 innings.</p>
        <p>When I lost my no-hitter. I said to myself, Theres a lot of time left, Belcher said.</p>
        <p>Browning wasted no time in nailing down his eighth victory in his last nine decisions. He coasted into the ninth, and got Rick Dempsey on a fly out to the warning track in right field to open the inning.</p>
        <p>Steve Sax then grounded up the middle to Larkin, and the shortstop easily threw him out.</p>
        <p>The crowd of 16,591 stood and screamed as Browning went to a 2-2 count on Woodson, who brought an 0-for-ll streak to the plate. Catcher Jeff Reed then called for an inside fastball. Brownings 102nd pitch of the game.</p>
        <p>He wanted a pitch in. I just let it do," Browning said. I didnt want to get it down the middle.</p>
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        <pb facs="00097037_0030" />
        <p>;B-tO The Dally Reflector. Greenville, N.C. Sunday. September 18.1988Torch Lit; Olympic Games Begin</p>
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        <p>Seoul '88</p>
        <p>CHEDULE OF EVENTS</p>
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        <p>o</p>
        <p>o</p>
        <p>o</p>
        <p>o</p>
        <p>o</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>o</p>
        <p>OCT</p>
        <p>1 2</p>
        <p>o</p>
        <p>Binaaaginnnn</p>
        <p>0000</p>
        <p>00</p>
        <p>O</p>
        <p>O</p>
        <p>O</p>
        <p>O</p>
        <p>O</p>
        <p>O</p>
        <p>O</p>
        <p>O</p>
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        <p>00</p>
        <p>o:o</p>
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        <p>o:# o</p>
        <p>00</p>
        <p>000##</p>
        <p>o</p>
        <p>o</p>
        <p>o</p>
        <p> r</p>
        <p>
        </p>
        <p>SGI*</p>
        <p>010</p>
        <p>o</p>
        <p>o#</p>
        <p>o</p>
        <p>o#</p>
        <p> L...</p>
        <p>Baseball</p>
        <p>Taekwondo</p>
        <p>Demonstration Sports and Events</p>
        <p>SIBIgBIBIgl </p>
        <p>Women's Judo</p>
        <p>Badminton</p>
        <p>Bowling</p>
        <p>Wheelchair Races</p>
        <p>O</p>
        <p>O</p>
        <p>O</p>
        <p>O Day event is held 9 Day event finals are held</p>
        <p>AP/T. Dean Capte</p>
        <p>Outdoors</p>
        <p>Angela Bland</p>
        <p>Striped Bass Future Is Optimistic The future of the Roanoke-Albemarle striped bass fishery is more optimistic this year because the flow of the Roanoke River has been regulated and water quality conditions have improved.</p>
        <p>According to Dr. William T. Hogarth, director of the N.C. Division of Marine Fisheries, The Roanoke River is the principal spawning area for the Albemarle Sound striped bass. Proper river flow and environmental conditions are critical for growth and survival during the early life stages of the striped ball."</p>
        <p>Hogarth said adult strip^ bass spawn near Weldon, then egg and larval fish are totally dependent on river flow for their transport during the 100-mile trip from the spawning grounds to the nursery areas in the Roanoke River delta and western Albemarle Sound.</p>
        <p>Roanoke River flow, which is regulated by three dams (Kerr, Gaston and Roanoke Rapids), affects water quality conditions in the entire western Albemarle Sound, supplying approximately two-thirds of the inflow to this nursery area. Hogarth explained that the magnitude and duration of flow affect the timing distribution, abundance and growth of the young striped bass and their food sources.</p>
        <p>Hogarth added that the planned withdrawal of 60 million gallons of water )er day from Lake Gaston for use by Virginia Beach will have a significant ong-term negative impact on striped ball in the Roanoke River-Albemarle Sound area.</p>
        <p>In a recent letter to the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Hogarth requested a full Environmental Impact Statement to determine the existing, proposed and cumulative effects of water withdrawal on striped ball.</p>
        <p>The Division of Marine Fisheries strongly objects to the withdrawal of the water from Lake Gaston and feels it will severely limit current and future natural resource management options throughout the Roanoke River-Albemarle Sound system. Hogarth said DMF has managed this system as a multi-species fishery to protect the livelihood of the fishermen who use the Albemarle sound Estuary.</p>
        <p>The striped bass population is monitored constantly by DMF and actions are taken to reduce fish mortality. During the 1988 spawning season, the Roanoke River flows were maintained at a more biologically acceptable level. As a result, the July sampling by DMF biologists yielded the highest number of juvenile fish found since 1976.</p>
        <p>Since the Roanoke River is the sole major spawning river for striped bass in North Carolina, it is critical that the flow not be diminished, Hogarth said.</p>
        <p>Earlier this year, DMF participated in a Roanoke River Flow Committee, which recommended a more favorable spring flow by lake management changes. Through cooperative efforts by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers an4 Virginia Power, the recommended flows can normally be maintained.</p>
        <p>Ifatural production of striped bass has remained at historically low' levels forll years before this season.</p>
        <p>*A striped ball stocking program, along with severe restrictions on commercial and recreational harvest, has helpid to maintain the population. Hogarth said. The increased number of young fish this year is evidence that the present striped ball population can provide sufficient reproduction for recovery, if proper river flow and environmental conditions are available.</p>
        <p>Continued harvest restrictions will be necessary to protect the 1988 year class until they spawn or until natural production reaches a consistently acceptable level.</p>
        <p>Quail Unlimited Donated Money The Down East Chapter of Quail Unlimited as donated $1,240 to the N.C. Wildlife Resources Commission for quail research Buck Buckman, chairman of the Washington. N.C.. chapter, said the money is only a portion of the total collected to nelp fund quail research projects across the state and the nation.</p>
        <p>Representing more than l(K) members of the Down East chapter. Buckman said that area farmers are the key to increasing quail populations. Members of the chapter sponsored a farm symposium in W^ashington last February to tMch farmers quail management techniques, such as leaving edges in fields 14 provide excellent quail food and cover,</p>
        <p>We had about 50 farmers attend the symposium, said Robert E. McClure, treasurer and past chairman of the chapter. We encouraged them to leave ditch banks overgrown and to use prescribed burning practices.</p>
        <p>&amp;gt;Hal Atkinson, chief of the Commissions Division of Wildlife Management, shid that Quail Unlimited now has 14 chapters in the state that are contributing part of their fund-raisihg proceeds to the Commission for quail research and management</p>
        <p>SEOUL, South Korea (AP) - First the hosts made the playground sacred, adding a thoroughly modern beat to the bang of the Dragon Drum. Then the nations of the world danced across it as though the party could go on forever.</p>
        <p>South Korea, which little more than four decades ago was freed of Japanese oppression, lit the Olympic torch Saturday, serving to illuminate its own march onto the international stage as well as the competitors who journeyed to Seoul.</p>
        <p>In an opening ceremony embracing the Oriental concept of Yin and Yang - opposite forces coming together - the host nation produced an at-once celebration of past and future. East and West. Greek nymphs performed an ancient dance in sheer white tunics as jets spewed multi-hued contrails overhead. Somehow, it came together.</p>
        <p>Sohn Kee-chung, a 76-year-old Korean who won the marathon at the 1936 Berlin Games but tasted bitter victory because he was forced to accept it under Japans flag of the Rising Sun, carried the torch into Olympic Stadium and passed it to Lim Chun-ae, 19, the nations top female athlete.</p>
        <p>Finally the flame was entrusted to a trio of youngsters who carried it aloft to the soaring Olympic cauldron, igniting huge tongues of fire against an azure heaven.</p>
        <p>"1 m glad the sky is high and so blue. I believe God is blessing my country for its years of hard work and preparation for this Olympic Games, said Yuk Hee-Jin, 17, a student at Sukmyung High School.</p>
        <p>Im really proud of my country, he added. The whole world will now know more about Korea.</p>
        <p>It began with a boat parade down the Han River, a huge Yong-ko-san, or Dragon Drum ship, leading a flotilla of nearly 500 vessels towards the throng of 100,000 filling Olympic stadium.</p>
        <p>Inside, computer-generated pictures tracked its progress on a scoreboard that makes the Astrodomes look like a Watchman.</p>
        <p>Koreans have long believed the site of any ceremony must be spiritually cleansed beforehand, and the open; ing of the Olympics was no different.</p>
        <p>But in contrast to the solemn meditation customary in some regions of this rugged mountain peninsula, the organizers of these Games chose loud music and merry-making.</p>
        <p>It proved infectious. The athletes of 160 nations  the most ever to attend any Olympiad - marched behind 300 women wearing white, knee-high go-go boots and many did so with soul in their step.</p>
        <p>The Soviet men were among the best-dressed, wearing winter-white, double-breasted suits set off by</p>
        <p>scarlet red ties. Those from Swaziland were the least-dressed, showing bare chests and spotted loin cloths.</p>
        <p>The Canadian threw Frisbees, those from the Netherlands carried orange parasols, and everybody" threw kisses. Athletes from the two  Germanys paraded in succession, closer than they have likely ever been save for a boxing ring.</p>
        <p>By sheer numbers, the hatless American delegation, dressed in blue and white, dwarfed them all, with 611 competitors and another 160 officials, one carrying a sign. Hi Mom, Im Here, and countless others mugging for the cameras.</p>
        <p>It was a wonder, a great way to start the Games, said Jody Campbell of Long Beach, Calif., a member of the 1984 silver meidal-winning water polo team who will represent the U.S. again at Seoul. The crowd was a lot quieter than in Los Angeles, but you get the same inspiration coming into the stadium.</p>
        <p>Enveloping the athletes procession, the music and costumes and dancers evoked the 500-year-old Yi dynasty as well as Las Vegas showgirls.</p>
        <p>Parachutists fell from the sky, 2,400 doves took off from the ground and it all came to an end with Saudis in traditional headdress and Americans in square-dancing outfits  60 nations in all  dancing to the</p>
        <p>distinctly Western theme Hand in Hand and waving to the crowd.</p>
        <p>Let the Games begin.</p>
        <p>T</p>
        <p>88 Summer Olympics</p>
        <p>V SCHEDULE</p>
        <p>Sunday, September 18</p>
        <p>n#</p>
        <p>Broadcast Hours (NBC)</p>
        <p>8:00 a.m.-12 noon (EDT) 4:00 p.m. - 7:00 p.m.</p>
        <p>7:30 p.m. -12 midnight 12:30 a.m.-2:30 a.m.</p>
        <p>Prime Time Events</p>
        <p> Two men's and women's swimming finals</p>
        <p> Women's gymnastics team competition</p>
        <p> Boxing prelims</p>
        <p> Men's springboard diving prelims</p>
        <p> Women's basketball prelims</p>
        <p>* Mens volleyball prelims</p>
        <p>Olympics Owe Great Debt To City Of Los Angeles</p>
        <p>By Scott Ostler (c) 1988, Los Angeles Times SEOUL, South Korea - The sun was shining, the sky was falling, doves and Frisbees were flying, and the world finally got its crazy act together in the city where the morning calm meets the midday kong hae (smog).</p>
        <p>Its official: Were rockin in the ROK (Republic of Korea).</p>
        <p>Americas athletes meandered proudly into Olympic Stadium Saturday morning, the most undisciplined marchers in the parade, the most animated characters of the Opening Ceremony of the Olympic Games, with the possible exception of the Frisbee-flinging Canadians.</p>
        <p>The Americans waved and mugged for the TV cameras, held up funny signs and hotdogged it to the hilt.</p>
        <p>Then, some minutes later, the Soviet team marched in. its ranks nicely aligned, its athletes more solemn and subdued than the Americans but no less proud and spirited.</p>
        <p>As soon as the last Soviet athlete emerged from the north tunnel into sunlight. I broke out in goose pimples and a cold sweat. I wanted to jump out of my seat and scream : Somebody slam the gate and lock the lock! We finally got everybody together for an Olympics. Lock everyone in before some government breaks a treaty or invades a neighbor and half the teams here take their javelins and swim goggles and go home inasnit.</p>
        <p>I wanted some big-shot official to grab the stadium public-address microphone and announce, Ladies and gentlemen, nobody gets out of here until the Americans find out what a Sergei Bubka is and the Russians find out what a FloJo is. These Games will not be over till theyre over.</p>
        <p>The world is supposed to come together every four years for an Olympic Games, but some touchy country or bloc always gets its feelings hurt and we wind up with a semi-Olympics, a contest that is about as global as the World Series or the Americas Cup.</p>
        <p>This time. I think weve got it.</p>
        <p>We can thank the Koreans for their generosity, planning, preparation and hospitality. But the world must also tip its hat to Los Angeles, because thats the city that made all this possible.</p>
        <p>Every 50 years or so, the world hands the Olympic Games to Los Angeles, like a broken toy.</p>
        <p>The project seems hopeless, but Los Angeles hammers and saws and adjusts and oils, then hands the Olympics back to the world and says, Here. Try not to screw it up again. Damn thing is hard to fix.</p>
        <p>If the 32 Olympics in Los Angeles hadnt been a surprise roaring success, the Olympic movement would have been laid to rest.</p>
        <p>If the '84 Games in Los Angeles had bombed  literally, figuratively or financially  the concept of an athletic competition among all nations would have died faster than the leisure suit.</p>
        <p>Los Angeles takes its twice-a-cen-tury responsibility in stride. To Los Angeles, the Olympics is just another Shriners convention. Were already on the map; we have nothing to prove.</p>
        <p>In '84, Los Angeles painted the Coliseum, hung some pretty flags and scared everyone into car-pooling for two weeks. We enjoyed the show, marred by the Eastern boycott, made a monstrous profit, reaffirmed the validity and potential of the Olympics, then went back to business of iH'ing a big-time city in a big-time count rv</p>
        <p>The full impact of what Los Angeles did in 84 wasnt felt until Saturday morning, when the Koreans took the torch from Los Angeles, symbolically speaking, and ran with it. It was a smooth handoff, bordering on glorious.</p>
        <p>Seventy thousand proud Koreans sat back and munched the ballpark food  smoked squid and seaweed rice balls, washed down with peanut tea - as a cast of thousands marched, ran, danced, sang, broke boards with their feet and parachuted into the Olympic Stadium.</p>
        <p>I consider myself a messenger from heaven who is coming down with wishes for good luck for the Seoul Olympics, said Chon Myong Sun, one of the few female skydivers among the 76 who filled the sky and</p>
        <p>dropped in on the ceremonies.</p>
        <p>So far her message is getting through. But I wont believe it until I see Jackie Joyner-Kersee settle into the blocks and exchange cool glances with Heike Drechsler, or until I see Danny Manning isolate Arvidas Sabonis out on the wing and their nose-tips touch.</p>
        <p>Monday, September 19</p>
        <p>Broadcast Hours (NBC)</p>
        <p>7:00 a.m. -10:00 a.m. (EDT) 4:00 p.m. - 5:00 p.m.</p>
        <p>7:30 p.m. -12 midnight 12:30 a.m. -2:30 a.m.</p>
        <p>Prime Time Events</p>
        <p> Men's springboard diving final</p>
        <p> Men's basketball prelims</p>
        <p> Men's and women's swimming heats</p>
        <p> Boxing prelims</p>
        <p> Womens volleyball prelims</p>
        <p> Men's and women's rowing heats</p>
        <p>AP</p>
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        <pb facs="00097037_0031" />
        <p>(Continued From B-8)Indians, Bullets In TBC Losses</p>
        <p>Another pair of scores went on the board in the third quarter. Whitaker hit Rodney Conyers for 18 yards for the first while Chris Bryant ran the other in from two yards away. That opened the lead to 46-0.</p>
        <p>North Edgecombe closed out the scoring in the fourth quarter on a three-yard run by Terry Batts.</p>
        <p>N. Kdgecombe  Chocowinity</p>
        <p>....................First  Downs....................2</p>
        <p>40-251............Rushes-Yardage............26-8</p>
        <p>7..................Passing Yards..................0</p>
        <p>135.................Return Yards.................15</p>
        <p>3-8-1..................Passing..................0-10-4</p>
        <p>0-0.0.............Punts-Average.............6-25.5</p>
        <p>3-0 .....Fumbles-Lost.................2-1</p>
        <p>6-35 Penalties-Yards..............4-31</p>
        <p>.North Kdgpcombe..........14 10  i;t 6.12</p>
        <p>Chocowinity....................0  0  0  0 0</p>
        <p>Scoring;</p>
        <p>NE  Underhill, 25 pass from Whitaker (Lyons kick)</p>
        <p>NE  King, 24 run (Lyons kick)</p>
        <p>NE  King 3 run (kicK failed)</p>
        <p>NE King 12run (run failed)</p>
        <p>NE  williams 51 interception return (Lyons kick)</p>
        <p>NE  Conyers, 18 pass from Whitaker (Lyons kick)</p>
        <p>NE  Bryant 2 run (run/ailed)</p>
        <p>NE  Batts 3 run (run failed)</p>
        <p>Bof h ,,,,, 48</p>
        <p>Jamesville..............14</p>
        <p>BATH - Bath High School broke open an 8-8 tie with Jamesville and</p>
        <p>romped to a 48-14 Tobacco Belt Conference football victory Friday night.</p>
        <p>Bath scored three times in the second mriod and added three more in the third before allowing Jamesville one final touchdown in the final period.</p>
        <p>Marcus Lacy got the Bath scoring started in the first quarter, scoring on an 18-yard run. Jay Evans ran over the conversion for an 8-0 lead.</p>
        <p>But Jamesville came right back with Alex Moore racing 60 yards to the end zone. Keith Bassnight ranover the PAT to tie it at 8-8.</p>
        <p>That, however, only served to fire up the Pirates.</p>
        <p>The Daily Reflector, Greenville. N.C. Sunday, September 18,1988 B*11 1</p>
        <p>Bryan Iuten scored on a one-yara run to give Bath the lead again. 14-8, and Bill Ambrose then scored twice, on runs of 29 and four yards to run the lead out to 26-8 at intermission.</p>
        <p>Lacy scored his seconcl touchdown on a 20-yard rip in the third quarter. Keith Boyd added a 17-yard scoring reception from Tuten and Steven Waters scored on a 42-yard run. Evans ran over one PAT and Pooh Woolard took a conversion pass from Boyd for the final Pirate points.</p>
        <p>Jamesvilles Moore took a 26-yard pass from David Bell for the final points in the game in the fourth quarter.</p>
        <p>JaiDPsville  Birtii*</p>
        <p>First Downs....................|6</p>
        <p>Rushes-Yardage..........4l-3|8</p>
        <p>f::-:............Passing Yards.................fi</p>
        <p>f.U'J V ..Passing..................2-^</p>
        <p> Punts-Average 1-35 0*</p>
        <p>Fumbles-Lost.................5.3</p>
        <p>V*'*  Penalties-Yards ......2-15</p>
        <p>Jamesville......................  0  0  6-14  8 18 22 648</p>
        <p>Scoring:</p>
        <p>B  Lacy 18 run (Evans run)</p>
        <p>J  Moore. 60 run (Bassnight run)</p>
        <p>B  Tuten. 1 run (run failed)</p>
        <p>B  Ambrose 29 run (run failed 1 B  Ambrose 4 run (run failed)</p>
        <p>B  Lacy 20 run t run failed t B - Boyd 17 pass from Tuten (Evans run I</p>
        <p>B  Waters 42 run (Woolard pass from Boyd I</p>
        <p>J  Moore 26 pass Irom Bell 1 run tailed t</p>
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        <p>Western Auto Oil</p>
        <p>Quality at one low price.</p>
        <p>09 Quart. Ea.</p>
        <p>s ^ OKU /</p>
        <p>'^tssiwy</p>
        <p>WD-40 Lubricant</p>
        <p>Protects metal.</p>
        <p>STP Gas Tbvatment</p>
        <p>78-1312-6. Ea.</p>
        <p>Radiator Chemicals 00</p>
        <p>Gunk Engine Cleaners Belt Dressing</p>
        <p>16oz Foam 4} SO Stop Slipping.</p>
        <p>nrRAnillar  p  enraw Pa</p>
        <p>Goop Rand Cleaner</p>
        <p>14 oz Re-</p>
        <p>USECmOIT. Local Chock* Woioooiod.</p>
        <p>lAfestern Auto</p>
        <p>119 Red Banks Road  Greenville. NC</p>
        <p>Sale Ends Sat., Sept. 24,1988  355-2341</p>
        <p>WE ACCEPT:</p>
        <p>American Express</p>
        <p>MasterCharge</p>
        <p>Visa</p>
        <p>Total Charge</p>
        <p>7:30 A.M. TIL 8 P.M. MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 8 A.M. 'TIL 6 P.M.</p>
        <p>SATURDAY 1 P.M. 'TIL 6 P.M. SUNDAY</p>
        <p>We reaarv the right to HmH geentltlee. AM rebate afVera euhieet to meimteetMrer'e Hmlte, regetremei</p>
        <p>/</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0032" />
        <p>"^2 Th6 Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C. Sunday. September 16,1986</p>
        <p>SCOREBOARD</p>
        <p>TANK BPNANAlUr</p>
        <p>by Jeff Millar &amp;amp; Bill Hinds</p>
        <p>Major League Baseball</p>
        <p>Bv The Associated Press All Times EI&amp;gt;T AMERICAN LEACl E East Division VV L Pet  (;B I.IO Streak Home Awav</p>
        <p>84  64  . 568  -  7-3  Won  2  52-25  32-39</p>
        <p>79  69  . 534  5  z-4-6  Won  2  45-29  34-40</p>
        <p>78  69  . 531  5'2  z-7-3  Lost  2  42-32  36-37</p>
        <p>79  70  530  5'2  z-7-3  Won  3  44-32  35-38</p>
        <p>76  73  .510  8'2  5-5  Lost  1  39-35  37-38</p>
        <p>71  77  480  13  z-4-6  Won  1  38-33  33-44</p>
        <p>51  95  .349  32  3-7  Lost  5  32-40  19-55</p>
        <p>West Division W  1, Pet  (iB  LIO Streak Home Awav</p>
        <p>94  55  631  -  z-7-3  Won  1  48-26  46-29</p>
        <p>83  65  . 561  11)12  6-4  Won  3  43-31  40-34</p>
        <p>79  69  ,534  14'2  z-6-4  Lost  1  41-33  38-36</p>
        <p>74  74  .500  19'2  3-7  Won  1  34-38  40-36</p>
        <p>64  82  .438  28'2  z-4-6  Lost  2  36-39  28-43</p>
        <p>62  85  .422  31  z-3-7  Lost  5  36-39  26-46</p>
        <p>60  87  .408  33  5-5  Lost  1  32-40  2847</p>
        <p>Boston</p>
        <p>Detroit</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>Pittsburgh</p>
        <p>Montreal</p>
        <p>St. Louis</p>
        <p>Chicago</p>
        <p>Philadelphia</p>
        <p>Los Angeles Houston Cincinnati San Francisco San Diego Atlanta z-dcnotes first</p>
        <p>\ATIO\.\l. I.EAtil E East Division W  L  Pet  OK  LIO</p>
        <p>90  57  .612  -  z-9-1</p>
        <p>78  (Ml  .534  11'2  z-6-4</p>
        <p>74  74  .500  16'2  z-4-6</p>
        <p>72  77  .483  19  z-6-4</p>
        <p>70  78  .473  20'2  2-8</p>
        <p>59  88  .401  31  3-7</p>
        <p>West Division W  L  Pet  OB  LIO</p>
        <p>85  61  .582  -  z-7-3</p>
        <p>78  70  .527  8  4-6</p>
        <p>77  70  .524  8'.  5-5</p>
        <p>77  71  .520  9  7-3</p>
        <p>73  72  .503  11'2  z-5-5</p>
        <p>49  96  . 338  35'2  Z-3-7</p>
        <p>game was a w in</p>
        <p>Streak Home Awav Won 4 49-24 41-33 41-34 37-34 40-34'34-40 40-35 32-42 36-38 34-40 34-38 25-50</p>
        <p>Won 1 Lost 2 Lost 1 Won I Lost 2</p>
        <p>Streak Home Awav</p>
        <p>Won 1 42-33 43-28 42-31 36-39 39-33 38-37</p>
        <p>42-33 35-38</p>
        <p>43-33 30-39 24-44 25-p</p>
        <p>Lost 3 Lost 1 Won 5 Won 1 Lost 6</p>
        <p>AMERICAN I.E.Uil E Friday's t;umrs</p>
        <p>Boston 7, .New York 4 Detroit8. Baltimore?</p>
        <p>Toronto 4, Cleveland 3,10 innings Minnesota 5. Chicago 4 California 7. Texas 2 Milwaukee .5, .Seattle 1 Kansas City 3. Oakland U Saturday's (iames l.ale (tames Not Included Minnesota 3. Chicago 1 Boston 3. .New York 1 Cleveland 12, Toronto 3 Oakland 3, Kansas Citv 2 Detroit?, Baltimore3</p>
        <p>Texas at California, mi Milwaukwat Seattle, m)</p>
        <p>Sunday's (tames New York (Giiidry 12) at Boston I Smithson 8-5). 1:05p.m.</p>
        <p>Baltimore (Milacki 0 0) at Detroit (Tananal4-9),l:35p.m Cleveland (Nichols 1-4) at Toronto iStieb 13-8), 1:35 p.m.</p>
        <p>Chicago (Patterson 0-2) at Minnesota I Straker 2-5), 2:15 p.m Texas (Russell 10-7) at California I Finley 9-14), 4:05p.m Kansas City (Saberhagen 14-14i at Oakland 1 Young 10-8), 4:05 p.m Milwaukee (Nieves b-5i at Seattle (Campbell6-9i,4::i5p m Monday's (tames Ballimoreat N'ew York.7::iOp m Cleveland at Detroit, 7:35 p m Boston at Toronto, 7:35 p m Chicago at Texas. 8:35 p.m Milwaukee at California. 10:05 pm</p>
        <p>Kansas Citv at Seattle, l():05p m Minnesota at Oakland. 10:35 p m</p>
        <p>VA'noNAI. I.E.Utl E Friday's (tames SI LouLs3. Chicago 0 New York 4. .Montreal 3 Pittsburgh 7. Philadelphia 5 San Diego at Atlanta, ppd . rain San Francisco-5, Houston 4 Cincinnati 1, Los Angeles!) Saturday's (tames l.ate (tames .Not Included San Francisco 4, Houston 2 New York 6. Montreal 2 Chicagoti, St Louis4 San Diego 9, Atlanta 4.1st game San Diego at Atlanta, 2nd game, m)</p>
        <p>Los Angeles 4, Cincinnati 3 Pittsburgh at Philadelphia, m) .Sunday's (tames Montreal 1 Perez 11-61 at .New York ((tooden 17-7i, l:'35p m Pittsburgh (Walk 12-10) at Philadelphia iK Gross 11-14), 1:35 p.m</p>
        <p>San Diego (Hawkins 14 Ml at Atlanta (Smoltz2-5). 2:10p m Los Angeles iTudor 9-8) at Cincinnati) Rijo 13-8), 2:15pm.</p>
        <p>St Louts (McWilliams .5-7) at Chicago t Maddux 17-7), 2:20 pm San Francisco 1 Robinson 7-4) at Houston 1 .Scot 113-71,2:35 p m Mondays Games</p>
        <p>Montrealal Chicago, 2:20p m San Francisco al Atlanta, 5:4ii p.m</p>
        <p>San Diego at Cincinnati, 7:35 p m Los Angeles al Houston, 8:35 p in Pittsburgh al St Louis. 8:35 p m Only games scheduled</p>
        <p>Baseball Stats</p>
        <p>B&amp;gt; The \sMNalrd Press Major l.eauue Batliim \serages (omplele lliiuugh games ol t ridas \MKI(I( \\ I.FAt.l t;</p>
        <p>TE\M HmiV.</p>
        <p>R II HR RBI Pet Boston  ,-io.lK 7:i,5  144:!  lit)  m  2H6</p>
        <p>Minnesota  kill 69o  1:171  i4:i  644  274</p>
        <p>Toronto  m.\  i;!5  l.Vi  64t.  267</p>
        <p>New York  .5074 71.i  |:146  i:)2  662  26.7</p>
        <p>Cleveland  5ir2:t 619  i:i22  125  582  26!</p>
        <p>Kansas City  4996 6.74  l.il2  11.1  624  263</p>
        <p>California  51H7 667  1J17  117  616  262</p>
        <p>Oakland  7iio 73o  im  142  684  261</p>
        <p>Milwaukee  .7041 619  I2!H  I07  571  2.77</p>
        <p>Seattle  4&amp;lt;W8 .792  1262  1.16  .748  2.7.7</p>
        <p>Texas  4964 .778  1271  KM  .734  277</p>
        <p>Wroit  4W.I M3  1243  1'27  ,793  271</p>
        <p>Chicagfl  4936 773  1189  123  .722  241</p>
        <p>Baltimore  4828 512  11.72  127  48.!  2:!9</p>
        <p>IVDIVIDCM. K\TTI\(i 375 or more al bats</p>
        <p>\R  li  II HR  RKI  Pel</p>
        <p>.74:1  112  193  7  .7:1  .1,7,7</p>
        <p>794  97  2oti  22  1(1.7  347</p>
        <p>716  81  182  21  11(1  340</p>
        <p>.722  92  17,7  27  106  .(3.7</p>
        <p>4o7  ,')b  1.12  9  61  .124</p>
        <p>7ti2  102  IHII  13  .78  :!2o</p>
        <p>440  69  1.19  1.7  67  .116</p>
        <p>.744  83  170  24  99  313</p>
        <p>49H  74  1.7.7  2.7  76  311</p>
        <p>,Vi9  88  17.7  12  81  08</p>
        <p>740  87  16.7  14  79  306</p>
        <p>460  97  140  24  86  .104</p>
        <p>489  88  148  16  82  OJ.l</p>
        <p>Boggs Bsn Puckett .\hn Greenwell Bsn Wintield Washgln Miditnr Mil rrammll Bet Brett KC Hrbek Mm 7ounl Mil Malinglv NY DHeilson Oak Burks Bsn Canseco Oak Franco Cle Gaeiti Min Seltzer KC DwEvans Bsn Joyner Cal RHendvm NY Rav Cal ADavis Sea Femndz Tor Hall Cle Murras Bit Reynolds Sea McCrill Tor Laoslord Oak Larkin Min Tabler KC Carter Cle Barred Bsn Cniher Tor Snyder Cle Fletcher Tex OBrien Tex GBell Tor Whitaker Del Ganlner Mil Trtahll KC WWilson KC Sames ( hi Salazar I)el CDavis Cal Rice Bsn Brant lev .Sea Gladden Mm DWhile Cal CRipken Bit Guillen Chi Lemon Del Quinones Sea Lyons Chi Bueehle Tex Mctiwire Oak Sierra Tex I'pihaw Cle Incsglia Tex McDwell Tex S(UII KC BJaekson KC Howell Cal Surholl Mil Sehidield ( al AHanxon ('Ir</p>
        <p>571 112 171 39 11.7 .103</p>
        <p>.762 87 170 to 448 67 1,1.7 27 .'i09 82 1.71  .7</p>
        <p>.721 86 I.VI 1.7 .741 77 162 11 498 109 147  6</p>
        <p>.749 141 162  ,7</p>
        <p>410 62 124 18 790 66 170 .7 47.7 64 1:1T 6 .U7 71 1.76 26 .746 .71 156 :l 488 94 l:19 :13 ,728 78 150  7</p>
        <p>4.78 .53 no 7</p>
        <p>4.14 ,7! 123  2 570 84 16U 27 &amp;gt;.79 76 C.6 I 724 68 146 1.7</p>
        <p>466 64 CW 23 515 59 143 0 ,702 49 119 14 .760 72 1,74 22 40 1 74 111 12 490 .78 134  0</p>
        <p>Oio 74 125 22 V77 76 1,51  1</p>
        <p>7.18 48 14.7 12</p>
        <p>4.14 79 117 12</p>
        <p>7.71 76 148 21 446 50 119 12 527 70 140 1.7 .7.14 86 142 II 4.L' 74 114 II 718 84 l:16 22 .712 7:1 1,1.1 0</p>
        <p>467 '01 121 12</p>
        <p>3.71 ,77 11.7 II 327 31 108  ) 373 62.113 16</p>
        <p>519 79 131 28 ,Vi6 69 130 21</p>
        <p>468 58 118 II 415 .78 104 22 ;I86 .70 97  4</p>
        <p>459 (tl 115 10 308 78 102 22 354 M 113 13 3,70 32 112  7</p>
        <p>188 ,'ai 121 6 188 .13 %  3</p>
        <p>.188 .i8 9li ,7 332 62 109 22 177 47 9.3 8</p>
        <p>42.7 'i 103 17 451 75 109 10 467 41 11.1 9 18 99  )</p>
        <p>340 74 106 22 490 46 118  8</p>
        <p>4,kl 75 loH 27</p>
        <p>520 59 125 9 418 48 10,7 I 4.17 M UM 12 418 C 101  9 502 46 113</p>
        <p>:f75 31 82 i;i :t)H 31 84 17</p>
        <p>39 .102 80 .101 .76 :10I 99 299 82 299 38 297 73 29.7 37 2(38 62 288 66 288 79 286 :38 286 79 285 76 284 65 283</p>
        <p>65 281 93 281 .75 279 71 279 71 279</p>
        <p>47 278</p>
        <p>66 277 90 275 Vi *7)</p>
        <p>40 273 88 272 .17 271 71 270 .79 27(1 87 269 62 267 54 266 ,79 266</p>
        <p>48 264 76 263 1,7 260 74 2.79 4ii '2.V7</p>
        <p>31 2.7.1 51 252 90 2.52 84 252</p>
        <p>50 2.72 .74 251 29 251 ,V1 251 6) 2.70 79 249 .1.1 249 H 248 48 237 i 237 76 237</p>
        <p>32 237 si 242 31 242</p>
        <p>51 242 12 242 79 241 41 231 84 28)</p>
        <p>41 281 ,U 281 4.7 2:fii 44 231 60 227 48 219 4.1 219</p>
        <p>Pglrulo M'  423  42  91  13  63  215</p>
        <p>Pedis Del  4.77  64  96  3  :16  210</p>
        <p>BHmken Bit  484  ,70  99  2  :14  .205</p>
        <p>DaEvans Del  :187  41  78  17  .74  . 203</p>
        <p>AMERK AN I,EA(.I E</p>
        <p>TEAM PIT( HIN(.</p>
        <p>ERA H ER HR SOShOSA Milwaukee:! :17 1226  498  393  756  8  44</p>
        <p>Oakland  3 47  12,79  .723  ,703  882  8  .77</p>
        <p>Kanss Cty  3 64  1281  .727  427  800  11  31</p>
        <p>Detroit  3 82  12:17  ,7,77  472  812  8  31</p>
        <p>Toronto  :l 84  1299  ,764  398  829  12  3:1</p>
        <p>Minnesota 3 91 1316  565  313  827  8  47</p>
        <p>Boston  3 01 1289 ,778 4.7,7 987 12 3.7</p>
        <p>Texas  4 14 11816(81.797 82.7 11  29</p>
        <p>Calilornia  4 18  13,79  620  511  748  9  33</p>
        <p>Seattle  4.21  1274  tkJ9  495  881  8  24</p>
        <p>Chicago  4 24  1373  616  476  667  7  :18</p>
        <p>Cleveland 4 28 1376  619  401  743  8  40</p>
        <p>New York 4:101:12  632  431  780  .7  40</p>
        <p>Baltimore 4.74 1381  644  455  627  5  25</p>
        <p>INDIVHH Al. PIT( HIN(i It) or more decisions</p>
        <p>IP H BK SO W L EH.\ Henneman Del  83  65  24  51  8  5  I 96</p>
        <p>Harvey Cal  75  ,78  20  65  6  5  2 04</p>
        <p>Higuera Mil  206  1,70  47  173  13  9  2.27</p>
        <p>\'iola Min  238  207  51  182  22  6  2.35</p>
        <p>MJackson Sea  94  69  41  70  6  4  2.59</p>
        <p>AAndeson Min  177  184  33  71  13  9  2.69</p>
        <p>Gubieza KC  244 213  76  161  18  7  2,73</p>
        <p>Guante Tex  79 64  25  67  5  6  2 86</p>
        <p>Crim Mil  94  79  23  .72  6  6  287</p>
        <p>Musseimn Tor  67 62  22  31  6  4  2 96</p>
        <p>( lemens Bsn  242 198  56  277  16  11  2 98</p>
        <p>Robinson Del  172 121  72  113  13  6  2 98</p>
        <p>.August Mil  132116 32 60 11  6 2 99</p>
        <p>Bankhead .Sea  135115 :l8lir2 7  9 307</p>
        <p>Thigpen Chi  86 91  32  fkl  5  7  3 13</p>
        <p>Ijmp Bsn  77 82  16  36  6  3  3.16</p>
        <p>la&amp;gt;brndl KC  221 219  60 111 12 12  3.21</p>
        <p>Schmidt Bit  126 124  36 62 8 4  3.21</p>
        <p>Nelson Oak  lo:l 89  37 ,78 8 6  3 22</p>
        <p>Key Tor  III  111  26  .76  10  4  3 23</p>
        <p>Swindell Cle  220 210  41 162 16 13  3 24</p>
        <p>Alherlon Min  71 61  22 42 7 .7  3.10</p>
        <p>.Stewart Oak  253 220 103 16.7 18 12  3:10</p>
        <p>Stanley Bsn  92 81  26 ,71 6 4  3 :14</p>
        <p>Candiodi Cle  195 211  47 124 12 8  :i ;i8</p>
        <p>SchiKiler .Sea  43 39  19 49 3 7  :1:18</p>
        <p>Candlaria NY  157 l.To  23 121 13 7  3.18</p>
        <p>DWard Tor  liK W  .78 61 9 2  3 40</p>
        <p>UPoinl Chi  161 151  47 79 10 11  3 40</p>
        <p>Cerudi Tor  113 116  41 .77 6 7  3 41</p>
        <p>llernandz Del  60 48  26 .73 6 5  3 43</p>
        <p>Bosio Mil  173 184  37 75 7 14  3 43</p>
        <p>Hough Tex  3 161119158 13 15 3 47</p>
        <p>(ardner Bsn  1:17 lu.7  62 95 8 4  3.49</p>
        <p>Slieb Tor  Itio 1,71  74 131 13 8  3 49</p>
        <p>GDavis Oak  167 186  82 117 1.7 5  3 51</p>
        <p>Boddicker Bsn  212 217  73 142 12 15  3.60</p>
        <p>Keuss Chi  162 169  40 64 II 8  3.61</p>
        <p>Welch Oak  226 219  73 146 15 8  3 66</p>
        <p>Guzman Tex  204 177  82 154 11 12  3.67</p>
        <p>Langston Sea  235 209  96 211 12 11  3 68</p>
        <p>Toliver Min  lOO 9.7  44 61 7 4  3.70</p>
        <p>HursI Bsn  191 203  ,79 144 17 ,7  3.74</p>
        <p>M.Moore Sea  210 181  59 166 8 14  ,3.77</p>
        <p>Sabrhgn KC  2:17 252  .51 152 14 14  3.87</p>
        <p>RusseB Tex  166 165  55 73 10 7  3 90</p>
        <p>Retry Cal  121 114  46 51 3 7  316</p>
        <p>Wegman Mil  180 184  48 77 12 11  3.96</p>
        <p>Terrell Del  184 173  75 79 7 14  3.97</p>
        <p>J.McDwll Chi  159 147  68 84 5 10  3.97</p>
        <p>MWid Cal  229 238  74 127 13 13  4 00</p>
        <p>.Nieves Mil  91 69  :18 .76 6 5  4 05</p>
        <p>Bautista Bit  162 160  41 71 6 14  4 11</p>
        <p>Perez Chi  174 176  66 124 11 9  4 13</p>
        <p>Ung Chi  162 181  41 72 7 11  4.16</p>
        <p>Finfey Cal  175 175  73 96 9 14  4.21</p>
        <p>Flanagan Tor  196 208  79 93 11 13  4 22</p>
        <p>Herenguer Mm  94 73  56 94 8 4  4.23</p>
        <p>BWid Tex  146 116  87 128 6 10  4 24</p>
        <p>fanana Del  178 186  ,79 109 14 9  4.25</p>
        <p>Rhoden NV  174 183  48 80 11 10  4 29</p>
        <p>Mct a.skill Cal  146 155  61 98 8 6  4 31</p>
        <p>Kilgus Tex  190  178  67  78  11 14  4 31</p>
        <p>Farrell Cle  193  206  58  8)  13 9  4 34</p>
        <p>Ballard Bit  1:16  1,71  34  :18  8 11  4 37</p>
        <p>Morris Del  210 213  77  150  12 13  4 37</p>
        <p>Hudson \\  95  84  31  51  6  5  4 37</p>
        <p>Clancy Tor  18:1  189  45  111  9 13  4 38</p>
        <p>Alexandr Del  201 228  44 110 11 11  4 38</p>
        <p>Cl oung Oak  135 142  42 62 10 8  -4 39</p>
        <p>Banni.sTer KC  172 162  65 104 11 12  4 40</p>
        <p>Filer Mil  102 108  33 :19 5 8  4.43</p>
        <p>MohorciC NY  65 74  26 :16 3 7  4.43</p>
        <p>TCIark Cal  89 KB  30 37 6 4  4 43</p>
        <p>Birkbeck Mil  123 135  37 64 10 7  4 45</p>
        <p>John NY  160 203  40 74 9 8  4 68</p>
        <p>Swift .Sea  161 188  60 44 7 11  4.76</p>
        <p>Horton Chi  109 120  36 28 6 10  4 86</p>
        <p>Balk'S Cle  142 147  46  50 8 13  4 87</p>
        <p>\elt CIc  114  119  .70  61 8 6  4.91</p>
        <p>Lea Min  120  144  48  71 6 7  4 W</p>
        <p>Stollmyr Tor  97 IU4  42  67 4 8  5.20</p>
        <p>Dotson NY  152 164  61  67 10 9  5,27</p>
        <p>Tihbs Bit  141 164  55  68 4 13  5.29</p>
        <p>Blvleven Min  194 223  47  134 10 15  5 30</p>
        <p>Wllimsun Bit  96 110  31  .79 5 6  5,33</p>
        <p>Camptiell Sea  lo3 112  33  58 6 9  5,33</p>
        <p>Fraser Cal  177 184  76  77 12 10  5 34</p>
        <p>Bovd Bsn  i:io 147  41  71 9 7  5,:14</p>
        <p>Hayward Tex  63 (B  :i.7  :17 4 6  5 46</p>
        <p>Smillbon Bsn  1191.16 ;i,7 66 8 5 5.52</p>
        <p>Peraza Bll  86 98  :17  61 5 7  5 ,55</p>
        <p>Power Del  95 11.7  :17  ,74 5 7  6 04</p>
        <p>Trout Sea  ,7,7 87  31  14 4 7  7 97</p>
        <p>WriONAI. I.EM.CE TFWI B\TTIN(.</p>
        <p>IB  R  II  HR  RBI  Pet</p>
        <p>(hicago  ,7094  .-&amp;gt;85  1:129  lOl  743  261</p>
        <p>New lork  4942  621  irB  1:14  587  255</p>
        <p>Los Angeles  4888  ,776  12:l(l  89  .738  252</p>
        <p>Montreal  ,7ll7o  .773  1268  97  523  2.70</p>
        <p>San Francisco 49:oi  619  12:i9  UK)  579  2,70</p>
        <p>SlLoUls  7046  .7:13  livi  87  494  248</p>
        <p>Houston  4943  787  1216  90  544  246</p>
        <p>^n Diem  474,1  710  1167  79  482  246</p>
        <p>Pid,shurih  4893  .-gG  12IK)  lot  .755  245</p>
        <p>Cincinnati  49:17  12(l2  112  ,740  243</p>
        <p>Atlanta  4887  ,702  1187  84  47,7  242</p>
        <p>Philadelphia  496.1.745  1189  9.7  519  240</p>
        <p>INDIVHH VI HVTTIM.</p>
        <p>:177 or more at bals</p>
        <p>AB R II HR RBI Pel Gwynn SI)  472  60  145  7  62  307</p>
        <p>Palmeiro Chi  574  69  170  6  44  W</p>
        <p>GPerry All  486  54  148  6  6.7  .105</p>
        <p>Galarraga Mon .76.7  93  170  27  87  :t01</p>
        <p>Dawson Chi  576  70  166  2 !  74  299</p>
        <p>Gilison LA  512  104  1 53  2,7  72  299</p>
        <p>Butler SF  529  ltd  157  5  40  293</p>
        <p>VanSlyke Pit  532  90  157  '23  91  291</p>
        <p>(iquendo .stl, 4io 351I9 7 44 290 Law (hi  .706  81  146  8  64  289</p>
        <p>Bonds Pit  511  94  147  2.1  .7.7  288</p>
        <p>Grace Chi  4;17  55  l'2K  7  71  288</p>
        <p>MThmpsn Phi  378  ,51  I09  2  .13  288</p>
        <p>McGee Stl.  .719  68  149  3  47  287</p>
        <p>Urkin Cm  '29  79  |,71  it  5i  287</p>
        <p>Daniels Cm  4.7,7  87  129  17  61  284</p>
        <p>Marshall IJV  .kd  .79  141  18  77  281</p>
        <p>McKeylds NY  .ki8  73  143  22  6  281</p>
        <p>Dberklell Pit  454  47  127  .1  42  280</p>
        <p>Brooks Mon  740  .77  150  18  82  278</p>
        <p>Clark .SF  523  90  144  26  99  2Ta</p>
        <p>EDavis Cm  443  78  122  2.7  90  275</p>
        <p>Sabo Cm  .731  74  146  11  44  275</p>
        <p>Bonilla Pit  .729  80  14.7  21  87  274</p>
        <p>Dvkslra NY  4tr2  .72  lio  6  28  274</p>
        <p>GDavis Hin  kll  74  137  28  94  273</p>
        <p>ilSmith SIL  518  7b  147  I  48  27:1</p>
        <p>DNeill Cm  439  ,73  108  13  61  .246</p>
        <p>DaMrlmez Mon :187  42  94  4  40  244</p>
        <p>Dunslon Chi  .740  64  132  9  51  244</p>
        <p>Samuel Phi  .779  60  141  II  64  244</p>
        <p>Cribe SF  442  43  108  2  30  . 244</p>
        <p>Brunanskv SlL 481  81  117  20  75  243</p>
        <p>Carter NY  425  :16  181  11  46  , 242</p>
        <p>HJohson NY  465  75  110  24  64  237</p>
        <p>CJames Phi  516  50  121  16  ,78  234</p>
        <p>DMurphy All  ,751  71  122  23  73  229</p>
        <p>Parrish Phi  388  41  84  15  59  216</p>
        <p>Elster NY  :179  37  81  9  :16  214</p>
        <p>NATIONAL LEAGl E TEAM PITCHING ERA II EH BB SOShOSA New York  2 88 1139  421  370  1004 22  41</p>
        <p>Los Angls  3.06 1181  446  428  930 20  43</p>
        <p>.Montreal 3.08 1207  463  437  831 ll  38</p>
        <p>San Diego 3.31 1175  473  402  781 8  37</p>
        <p>Houston 3 :1.7 1198  492  451  9:14 14  :!9</p>
        <p>Cincinnati 3,40 1163  499  458  839 12  :18</p>
        <p>SILouis 3.42 1257  .713  4.72  794 14  41</p>
        <p>Pittsburgh 3 42 1210  500  427  716 10  40</p>
        <p>So Frncsc  3 46 1212  512  :I95  807 11  41</p>
        <p>Chicago  3 85 1:128  565  447  795 1(1  27</p>
        <p>Philaaelph 417 l:l:iu  608  572  777 6  :i:t</p>
        <p>Atlanta 4 19 1335  602  485  734 4  2:1</p>
        <p>INDIVHH VI. PITCHING 10 or more decisions.</p>
        <p>IP II BB SO VV I. ER.V Myers NY  62 39  15  64 7  3  1 45</p>
        <p>Franco Cin  79 54  24  40 5  6  1.79</p>
        <p>MaDavis SD  90 87  39  90 5  8  l 99</p>
        <p>APena LA  81 72  26  73 5  6  2 10</p>
        <p>Cone NY  207 156  74  186 17  3  2 18</p>
        <p>Magrane StL  144 112  49  90 4  9  2 24</p>
        <p>Tudor LA  186 172  41  78 9  8  2 27</p>
        <p>Agosto Hln  85 70  29  32 10  2  2 .34</p>
        <p>Perez Mon  170 127  :!811611  6  2 :18</p>
        <p>RiJO Cin  1.75  114  63  1.73 13  8  2 43</p>
        <p>DeMrlinez .Mon 227 201  52 114 15  12  2  46</p>
        <p>Parrel! Mon  80 .75  43 .kill  3  2  47</p>
        <p>DRobison  .SF  147  128  45  112 7  4  2.70</p>
        <p>Hershiser  LA  239  195  70  168 21  8  2:72</p>
        <p>Terry SlL  111  99  :IU  52 9  3  2.79</p>
        <p>DJackson  Cin  239  184  81  152 21  7  2 64</p>
        <p>Scott Hln  2(K)  147  45  176 13  7  2 65</p>
        <p>Leary LA  208  177  47  166 17  9  2 68</p>
        <p>Walk Pit  200 172  63  70 12 10  2.70</p>
        <p>Ojeda NY  190 1.78  :  133 10 13  2 88</p>
        <p>Worrell StL  87 81  32  76 5 9  2 90</p>
        <p>Dopson .Mon  1:7,7 i:i7  .74  93 3 10  2 97</p>
        <p>Gooden NY  227 220  52  157 17 7  3.01</p>
        <p>Deshaies Hln  I81 141  65 105 10  12  3  03</p>
        <p>Frndez NY  166 114  62 171 9  10  :i04</p>
        <p>Reuschel SF  213 207  44 77 18  8  3.04</p>
        <p>BSmith Mon  180 166  28 108 11  9  3.05</p>
        <p>Assnmchr All  74 62  31  67 7 6  :l:05</p>
        <p>God Pit  73  .78  21  72 6 6  3 08</p>
        <p>l^lferls SF  86 70  22  51 3 8  3 13</p>
        <p>Drabek Pit  196 172  43 113 14  6  3.17</p>
        <p>Holman Mon  88 85  31 51 3  7  3 17 '</p>
        <p>JRobinson Pit  113 106  :13 78 10  ,7  3 19</p>
        <p>Belcher LA  158 128  47 1:18 10  5  3.20</p>
        <p>Show .SD  211 179  48 126 13  11  3 20</p>
        <p>Smiley Pil  187 167  44 118 11  10  .1.21</p>
        <p>Darling NY  210 188  55 148 14  9  3 26</p>
        <p>Knepper Hln  160 148  63 92 13  5  :1 26</p>
        <p>GMaddux Chi  227 206  74 126 17  7  3 29</p>
        <p>.Alvarez All  90 81  50 71 4  6  3 29</p>
        <p>Hawkins .SD  198 173  73 81 14  11  3.32</p>
        <p>Downs SF  168 140  47 118 13  9  3.32</p>
        <p>McWillms SlL  123 112  42 81 5  7  337</p>
        <p>Browning Cm  227 190  58 113 16  5  :i.41</p>
        <p>.Moyer Chi  186 193  53 111 7  15  3.44</p>
        <p>Krukow .SF  125 111  31 75 7  4  3,54</p>
        <p>Ryan Hln  218 186  86 224 12  11  3.55</p>
        <p>KGross Phi  212 189  81 14.7 11  14  3.61</p>
        <p>Rasmusen SD  172 164  53 96 14  8  3.62</p>
        <p>LaCoss SF  114 99  47 70 7  7  3 62</p>
        <p>Mahler All  226 259 :18I17 9 15 3.66</p>
        <p>DeLeon SlL  201 178  76 189 12  8  3.67</p>
        <p>Garrelts SF  95 77  45 84 5  9  3.68</p>
        <p>Sulclllfe Chi  205 208  65 127 12  13  3.74</p>
        <p>Uncaster Chi  86 89  34 : 4  6  3 78</p>
        <p>Forsch Hln  126 127  43 49 10  ,7  3 80</p>
        <p>Dunne Pit  1,76 143 82 66 ill :181</p>
        <p>PSmilh All  174 166  83 113 7  13  3 82</p>
        <p>Whitson SD  190 186  42 III 12  111  3 84</p>
        <p>Grant SD  91  90  :I6 .79 2  8  3 84</p>
        <p>RRobinson Cin 78 8,7  24  :18 3 7  3.91</p>
        <p>JJones .SD  17.7 184  42  79 9 13  3 91</p>
        <p>Hamaker .SF  128 123  36  61 8 8  3.95</p>
        <p>Cox SlL  86 89  25  47 3 8  3 98</p>
        <p>Rawiev Phi  187 206  72  82 7 1.7  :i.99</p>
        <p>Darwin Hln  175 179  43  121 7 11  4 (Ki</p>
        <p>Pico Chi  106  96  36  53 5 7  4 00</p>
        <p>Hedrosn Phi  67 70  25  49 4 6  4 01</p>
        <p>.Malhews .SlL  64 55  33  26 4 6  4 10</p>
        <p>ZSmith All  140 1,79  44  59 5 10  4.:tO</p>
        <p>.Schiraldi Chi  149 142  38 126 8 12  4 30</p>
        <p>Valenzia LA  135 138  72  60 5 8  4 39</p>
        <p>Carman Phi  173186 63 100 10 11  4  42</p>
        <p>Rulhn Phi  140 146  77  76 6 10  4.45</p>
        <p>Palmer Phi  129 129  48  85 7 9  4 47</p>
        <p>Solo LA  87  88  28  :14 3 7  4 66</p>
        <p>Fisher Pit  141 154  55  63 8 10  4.73</p>
        <p>Glavine All  173 181  62  77 6 16  4 78</p>
        <p>Heaton Mon  97 98  43  43 3 10  4 99</p>
        <p>Gol I p (I  0  0  II Turner  ph  o  o  o o</p>
        <p>Harris p oooo (y  Jeliz ss  0  II  IP 0</p>
        <p>KNMilr  ph  1  0  0 o</p>
        <p>Totals :i:l  7  x  7 Totals  :!  ,7  9 .7</p>
        <p>Pillsburgh  Mil  iHMi (III7</p>
        <p>Philadelphia  :liHi  2wi ihhi.7</p>
        <p>Game W inning KBI Bream'7i E-Fermn. Gulierrez DP Pillsburgh I. Philadelphia 2 LOB Pillsburgh 6, Philadelphia  6  2B Bradlev  2, Jordan.</p>
        <p>Parrish. Lmd.  3B Bonilla ' HR- RJones</p>
        <p>(51 SB- Samuel 21:121. Bonilla 131</p>
        <p>IP II K Kit KK SO</p>
        <p>Pittsburgh</p>
        <p>Smiley  3 2-3  9  ,7  ,7  0  4</p>
        <p>Fisher  21 :i  o  o  o  i  o</p>
        <p>JKobinsn  W',10-7 2  o  o  0  I  4</p>
        <p>God S.:lO  I  0  0  0  0  1</p>
        <p>Philadelphia Freeman  2 1-3  4  .7  7  4  3</p>
        <p>Barojas  12-3  ii  o  o  i  i</p>
        <p>RuHin  2  0  II  0  I  0</p>
        <p>Harris L.4-.7  2  2  I  1  I  I</p>
        <p>Bedrosn  1  2  l  I  o  o</p>
        <p>WP- Freeman BK Barojas, Fisher empires-Home. Runge: First, Engel: Second, Bonin, Third. Wesl T-2 .78 A-17,446</p>
        <p>SAN KRVN</p>
        <p>ah r h hi Buller el 4 0 1 u RThpsn 2b 3 1 o (i Clark lb 4 110 .MIdndfl rl 3 I o o DNixon II 2 0 0 0 Milchei ph 0 0 0 0 Aldrele II 2 112 MWTnis lb 2 o o o Riles ph I I I I Sorensen p o 0 (i o Garrells p 1 i) n 0 Letlerls p o u o ii Mnwrng c 4 0 1 2 Cribe ss 4 0 1 ii Hamakr p (Ml u o ( Haves :ih 2 0 o o Spei'er 3b oooo Totals :12 .7 6 .7</p>
        <p>Hot STON</p>
        <p>ahr h hi</p>
        <p>GYoung el 3 0 o o Doran 2h 4 0 10 .Medw.s pr oooo Bass rl 5 0 0 0 GDavis lb 4 1 I 0 Bell :lh 3 2 I 1 Blialehr II 4 I I I Ramirz ss 4 ii 2 1 Biggio  e  2  1)  0  (I</p>
        <p>AsTiov  c  I  0  0  0</p>
        <p>Knepper p I u o o Andersn p o u o 0 Drew ph  I  ii  ii  I</p>
        <p>Agosio  p  n  II  0  0</p>
        <p>Puhl ph I II I 0</p>
        <p>Totals</p>
        <p>:i3 17 I</p>
        <p>San F'raneiseo  ihmi  li.kl  ikki.7</p>
        <p>Houston  IKK)  103  IKKI-I</p>
        <p>Game W inning RBI - Aldrele i.7i E- MWilliams. Garrelts DP San Eran CISCO 1 LOB-.San Francisco 3. Houston 9 2B-tTark..Manwaring. GDavis, BHalcher HR-Bell '7i SB- Boiler i40i, Bass 2 (29' S- Hammaker. Kne^-r. GYoung (</p>
        <p>IP  HR KR  RK SO</p>
        <p>San Fraiieisro</p>
        <p>Hamaker \V.88  7  2  1  1  2  1</p>
        <p>Sorensen  1-3 2 .1  ;i  i  o</p>
        <p>Garrelts  22:i  3  0  0  I  i</p>
        <p>Lellerls S.lu  I  u  o  0  I  o</p>
        <p>Houston</p>
        <p>Knepper L.13-5  5 2-3  3  3  3  1  4</p>
        <p>Andersen  l-:l 3 2  2  0  1</p>
        <p>Agosto  3  0  0  0  0  1</p>
        <p>Garrells pitched to 2 hatters in the 9th HBP .Maldonado bv Knepper WP-Garrelts</p>
        <p>Impires-Home, Rennert; First. DeMuth: Second, Wendelsledt: Third Marsh T-2:43.A-14,:144..</p>
        <p>American League</p>
        <p>NEW YORK  BOSTON</p>
        <p>abrhbi  abrhbi</p>
        <p>KHndsn II .7 I 2 0 Boggs 3b 4 11 o W'shgin cl  5 2 2 1  Barrel! 2h 4 1  I  I</p>
        <p>Mtngly Ih  4 0 2 1  DwEvns rl 4 1  I  I</p>
        <p>W'intield rl  4 U I 2  Greenwl II 3 2  2  0</p>
        <p>JClark dh  3 0 O o  Burks el 3 2  2  t)</p>
        <p>Pglrulo 3b  3 0 0 0  Rice dh I o  u  o</p>
        <p>Kndlph 2b  4 0 1 o  (Juinlan dh 1 o  u  I</p>
        <p>Skinner e 3 0 0 (i Parrish Ib2 0oo HMorrs ph  I 0 0 (I  Bnzngr lb 10  12</p>
        <p>Santana ss  2 I o o  JoReed ss 2 o  i  |</p>
        <p>Phelps ph I) (10 0 Cerone e j n o o Velarde pr 0 0 I) 0 Tulals 31 I 8 I Tolals 29 7 9 6</p>
        <p>National League</p>
        <p>STI.OITS</p>
        <p>abrhbi</p>
        <p>Coleman II ,7 n o o OSmith ss 5 0 2 0 Oquend 2b 4 1 1 n Guerrer Iblloo Laga lb oooo Alicea 2b 0 U 0 0 Brnnskv rl 4 0 0 0 McGee cl 3 111 RBookr 3b 4 o i i TPena e 3o'21 DeLeon p 4 0 on Worrell p OOOO Tolals 33 3 7 3</p>
        <p>(HKAI.O</p>
        <p>abrhbi</p>
        <p>Daseenz cl 4 0 0 u Sndbrg 2b 4 0 10 Webster 11 2 0 1 0 Dawson rl 4 0 1 0 Berrvhll e 3 0 0 o Law' 3b  3 0 10</p>
        <p>Trillo lb 3 0 10 Varsho ph 10 0 0 Dunslon ss :l 0 0 II Muphry ph I o o 0 Harkev p 3 0 10 Pico p OOOO Tolals 31 0 6 0</p>
        <p>IKIU IIW 2U-3</p>
        <p>New Vork  200  IHHI  U20I</p>
        <p>Boslon  1120  o.kl  IK)\7</p>
        <p>Game W inning RRI Barred i4i DP New Y ork 3. Baslon I LuB New York?, Boslon6 2B- Washington Mailing ly. Winlield. Barred SB Rllender.son '84i .S- JoHeed</p>
        <p>IP H H EH HR SD</p>
        <p>New York</p>
        <p>teller  i  1  2  2  2  0</p>
        <p>Shields L.4-5  3  2-3  7  5  5  1  1</p>
        <p>Mohoreif  13 1 u 0 o o</p>
        <p>Gulerman  3  o  0  0  1  i</p>
        <p>Koslon</p>
        <p>Gardner W,8 4  7  1-3  6  4  4  2  8</p>
        <p>Ump  1-310010</p>
        <p>LSmilh S,26  1  1-3  1  0  0  1  0</p>
        <p>l^iler pitched to 3 bailers in the 2nd HBP-Rice by Leiler. Greenwell by Shields. JoHeed by Mohoreic.</p>
        <p>empires-Home. Hendrv: F'irsl. Clark Second. Evans. Third. Ford T-2:59 A-17,226,</p>
        <p>Alherlon  i 2  0  0  0  1</p>
        <p>Reardon S.:I9  12-3 u  0  0  ii  1</p>
        <p>Hillegas pitched to I baiter in the 7th empires Hume. Welke. First. Merrill: Second. Hripkman, Third. Coonev T-2:49 A 42,310</p>
        <p>TEXAS  CALIFORNIA</p>
        <p>ahrhhi  ahrhhi</p>
        <p>.McDwel el 4  I  I 0  Scholild  ss  4  2 2 o</p>
        <p>Fletchr ss I  o  o o  Dvvnng  dh  3  I I 1</p>
        <p>W'ilkrsn ss I  O  o o  Rav 2b  4  110</p>
        <p>OBrien lb .711! .VleLmr 2b 0 o o o Sierra rl 4  0  1 o  Jovner  lb  2  2 2 2</p>
        <p>Pftralli dh 2  0  0 u  CDavis  rt  4  112</p>
        <p>Garbey  ph  o o (i o  DWhite cl  o 0  0  0</p>
        <p>Reimer  ph  l o o o  Brow n ll  4 0  2  1</p>
        <p>Kreuler  c  3 o 2 o  Boone t  3 o  I  o</p>
        <p>Espy II  4 0 11  Bichette cl  4 o  I  o</p>
        <p>Bueehle  lb  4 o I o  Howell 3b  4 0  0  o</p>
        <p>Brow ne 2b 4 o o o Totals :l:l 2 7 2 Tolals 32 7 11 6</p>
        <p>Texas  iNNi  (Hit  KH4-2</p>
        <p>(alitoriiia  1112  ihhi  Iii\-7</p>
        <p>(iame W mnmg RBI None E Bimne DP Texas :t, Calilornia I L()B Texas to, Calilornia 6 2B Jovner McDowell. Downing HR CDavis (211 SB-McDowell (31 (</p>
        <p>IP H R KR HK SO</p>
        <p>Texas</p>
        <p>Kdgus L.11-14  2-3  4  4  4  1  0</p>
        <p>SWilson  .7 1-3  4  2  2  1  0</p>
        <p>'M  I  2  1  1  I  (I</p>
        <p>Williams  1  10012</p>
        <p>(alifiHiiia</p>
        <p>Fraser W,12-10  6 1-3  4  2  2  4  4</p>
        <p>Gorbelt  1-3  I  0  u  u  0</p>
        <p>.Minton  1 1-3  2  0  0  0  1</p>
        <p>Harvey  |  0  0  0  u  2</p>
        <p>HBP-Scholield bv Kilgus. F'leleher b\ Fraser 2 BK-Kilgus 2 empires- Home. Kaiser; First. Shulock; Second. Reillv, Third, McKean T-241 A-'i7.45:l</p>
        <p>MII.WVIKEE SEVTH.E</p>
        <p>abrhbi  abrhbi</p>
        <p>Molitor 3b 5 2 2  0  Branllv cl  3  0 10</p>
        <p>Gantnr 2b 2 I 1  1  Revnlds 2b  4  0 1 0</p>
        <p>Yount cf 4 112 Coles 11  4 111</p>
        <p>Deer rl 4 0 0  0  ADavis dh  4  I) 0 0</p>
        <p>Leonard If 4 0 2  2  Balboni lb  3  0 1 0</p>
        <p>Brock lb 3 0 0  0  Fields pr  u  t) o i)</p>
        <p>Meyer dh 4 u   o  Bradlev c  4  u 0 u</p>
        <p>Surnoll e 4 I 1 u Preslev 3b 3 (too Sheflild ss 4 0 11) Buhner rl 3 U 1 0 Quinons ss3UU0 Tolals 31 .7 H .7 Tolals 31 I .7 I</p>
        <p>Milwaukee  :iiii  ihhi MHI-.7</p>
        <p>Seadle   ihhi  ihhi  imii-I</p>
        <p>Game W inning RBI - Yount il2i E Shelfield DP Milwaukee 1 LOB Milwaukee .7. .Seallle .7 2B- YounI, Leonard 3B- Molilor HK- Coles '81 SB-Surholl 1191. Shellield Hi. Branllev il4i,Bnx'k'ji.S-Ganlner</p>
        <p>IP II R EK KK .SO</p>
        <p>Vlilwaukee</p>
        <p>AugusI W.ll-6  9  .71124</p>
        <p>Seallle</p>
        <p>Hanson L.1-2  8  8 .7 5 1 11</p>
        <p>Seurrv  |  0 0 u p j</p>
        <p>HBPGanlner by Hanson empires Home! Phillips, First. Palermo: .SiTond. Young; Thirit. Morrison T-2:1.7 A 7,497</p>
        <p>Eriilay's .Sports Yolleybull</p>
        <p>UNC-Greensboroat East Carolina (7p.m.)</p>
        <p>Greenville Christian at Friendship</p>
        <p>14 p.m.)</p>
        <p>E(Hi(ball</p>
        <p>Farmville Central at South Lenoir i8pm )</p>
        <p>Rose at Northern Nash 18 p.m.) East Carteret al Washington (8 pm.)</p>
        <p>Havelock at Conley (8p.m.) Creswell at Jamehville (8p.m ) Chocowinity at Belhaven (8 p.m.) Ply mouth at Roanoke (7:30 p. m.) wniiamslon al .Northamplon East i7:30p m.i Greene Central al C B Avcock iR p.m.)</p>
        <p>Ayden-Grifton at Pamlico 18 p.m.) .Soccer</p>
        <p>Greenville Christian al Friendship (4p.m )</p>
        <p>Saturday 's Sports Football</p>
        <p>Southern Mississippi al East Carolina 11:30p m.)</p>
        <p>Soccer</p>
        <p>American at East Carolina (It</p>
        <p>a.m.)</p>
        <p>Tennis</p>
        <p>East Carolina men and women at UNC-Greensboro 11 ::)Up.m. 1 Sunday's .Sports Soccer</p>
        <p>Navy at East Carolina (noon t</p>
        <p>Bowling</p>
        <p>Burroughs Wellcome Mixed</p>
        <p>W</p>
        <p>li</p>
        <p>Lucky Strikes..........</p>
        <p>.......6</p>
        <p>2</p>
        <p>Thirtysomething</p>
        <p>.......5</p>
        <p>3</p>
        <p>Enforcers</p>
        <p>........5</p>
        <p>3</p>
        <p>Johnny's Angels......</p>
        <p>.......5</p>
        <p>3</p>
        <p>Sweet Peas..............</p>
        <p>........5</p>
        <p>:i</p>
        <p>BMW's....................</p>
        <p>.......5</p>
        <p>3</p>
        <p>3</p>
        <p>Equalizers...............</p>
        <p>Silver Bullets..........</p>
        <p>........5</p>
        <p>.......5</p>
        <p>3</p>
        <p>RedJfols.................</p>
        <p>.......4</p>
        <p>4</p>
        <p>3 Plus 1....................</p>
        <p>.......4</p>
        <p>4</p>
        <p>Pin Heads..............</p>
        <p>.......4</p>
        <p>4</p>
        <p>Pins-R-Us................</p>
        <p>......4</p>
        <p>4</p>
        <p>Shockers..................</p>
        <p>.......2</p>
        <p>(&amp;gt;</p>
        <p>B-Boppers...............</p>
        <p>......2</p>
        <p>6</p>
        <p>Shake-NBake..........</p>
        <p>......1</p>
        <p>7</p>
        <p>Men's high game and series. Steve Baker. 241.566; women s high game, (-'hris Harden. 201; women's high series. Betty Harris, 474</p>
        <p>Sunday Bowlers</p>
        <p>Team h5.........................3  1</p>
        <p>The B-Ser's....................3  1</p>
        <p>Team *7.........................3  1</p>
        <p>Team 10.......................3  1</p>
        <p>Handicapped Rollers......3  1</p>
        <p>Team ol.........................I  :j</p>
        <p>Team 8.........................1  :i</p>
        <p>Team 9.........................1  3</p>
        <p>Spare Parts...................1  3</p>
        <p>Alley Cats......................1  3</p>
        <p>High game and series, Billv Davis. 2:17.618: Cl</p>
        <p>Lumherton 44. Cape Fear6 Manteo 28, Columnia 6 McDowell 40, Mitchell 18 Midway 27, Swansboro 13 Monroe 41, Mon Parkwuod 8 Mount Airy 14, N. Surry 13 Murphy 24, Union CoUnty, Ga. 0 N. Pitt 22, Roanoke 14 N. Nash 39, S. Nash 0 N. Durham 24, S. Durham 14 N Johnston?,Bunn6 .N. Rowan 3, Randleman 0, OT N. Mcxire 30, SW Randolph 6 N. Iredell 7. Alexander (ventral 6 N. LenoirSLC.B, Aycock36 Northampton East 21, Halifax 0 ^^Oxford VVebb 21, Rox Person 14,</p>
        <p>Parkton 40, Pender Academy u Ral Atheas Drive 14, Harnett Triton 13 Ral Enloe 13, Ral Broughton 10 Red Springs 12, Clarkton 7 Richlands34, S. Lenoir 0 Richmond Co. 47, Marlboro, SC 0 Robbinsville 21, Andrews 19 S. Point 27, E. (iaslon 27, tie S Rowan 29, W Iredell 12 S. Iredell 35, Central Cabarrus 0 S. Guilford 24, James Ragsdale 16 SE Guilford 17, NE Guilford 13 SW Onslow 14, White Oak 6, OT Salisbury :35 W Davidson 0 Shelby 34, Rickorv 21 Smithtield-Selma34, Cary 13 St. Pauls 22, Fairmont 2 St. Stephens 33, Bunker Hill 16 Starmount 48, Forbush 6 Statesville 12, C. Davidson 0 Sun Valley 12, Anson Co. 7 Swain 45, Franklin 13 Thomasville 35. E. Davidson 0 Tuscola 52. Sky Koberson 22 Union Pines 8. Northwoods 0 W-S Carver 45. W-S Mount Tabor 7 W-S Parkland 39. N. Forsyth 29 W. Stanly 25. Piedmont 7 W Alamance 36, NW Guilford 10 W Forsyth 18. W-S Glenn 0 W. Craven 36; Pamlico Co 8 W Brunswick 35, Topsail 12 W, Henderson 21, E. Henderson 0 W. Robeson 14. Fay Westover?</p>
        <p>W. Rowan 13, Mooresville?</p>
        <p>W. Montgomery 49, Denton 0 W. Caldwell 13 Morg Freedom 7 Wallace-Rose Hill 51, S. Robeson 7 Warsaw Kenan 39. Lakewood 0 Warren Co. n^^Roanoke Rapids 10 Whiteville 27, Tabor City 0 Wil Beddingfield 12, S Wayne 0 Wil Hunt 18, SW Edgecom^ 15 WilmLaney 30, Clinton 12 Williamston 7, Greene Central 6</p>
        <p>College Football</p>
        <p>Bv Thf AssodHird Press E.V.ST</p>
        <p>Albany, N.Y. 15, W. Connecticut 14 Alfrecl 17, Mansfield 17, tie</p>
        <p>lem.W Va 18</p>
        <p>SiLouis</p>
        <p>Chicago  .............</p>
        <p>Game Winnmg KBI - McGee 19i E-Dunstun. DP-StLouis 2 LOB-SlLouis 9. Chicago8 2B-()Smilh. Webster. TPena. Law :1B-McGee S- Alicea</p>
        <p>IP H It EK BK .SO</p>
        <p>.SlIxNlis</p>
        <p>DeLon W.12 8  7 1 3  5  0  6  4  3</p>
        <p>Worrell S.31  12-3  I  0  ()  0  1</p>
        <p>Chicago</p>
        <p>Harkev L.U-2  8  7  3  2  4  4</p>
        <p>Pico  i  u  0  i)  ij  ii</p>
        <p>HBP-Guerrero bv Harkev WP-Harkey</p>
        <p>empires-Home. Crawford. First, Davidson: Second. Pulli, Third, Harvev T-2::l9 A-15,771</p>
        <p>LOS ANGELS (TNCLW.ATI</p>
        <p>ahrhhi  abrhbi</p>
        <p>Grilfin ss  3 0 0 0 Larkin  ss  3  1  1  o</p>
        <p>MHtchr lb  3 0 0 0 Sabii  3b  3  0  10</p>
        <p>Gibson It 3 0 0 0 Daniels If 3 0 0 0 JGonzIz It 0 0 0 0 EDavis cl 2 0 0 0 .Marshal rl .1 0 0 0 ONeill rl 3000 Shelby cf 3 0 0 0 Esaskv lb :i () u 0 Hamlin 3b 3 0 0 0 Heed c 3 0 0 0 Dcmpsy e 3 0 0 0 Oester 2b 3 0 I 0 Sax 2b 3 11 0 0 Brownng p 3 0 0 0 Belcher p  2 0 0 0</p>
        <p>W'oodsn ph  I 0 0 0</p>
        <p>Totals 27 It 0 0 Totals 26 I 3 0</p>
        <p>BALTIMORE</p>
        <p>abrhbi</p>
        <p>Orsulak If 5 12 0 BAndsn cf 5 2 4 2 CKipkn ss 2 10 0 Murrav lb 5 1 1 4 Sheets rl 3 111 Gerhart If 0 0 0 0 Kennedy c 4 0 1 0 Traber dh 3'0 0 U W'thgin :tb 4 0 1 0 BKipkn 2b 2 I 0 U Slanick 2b I 0 0 0 Tolals 36 7 10 7</p>
        <p>Kallimorr Detroit</p>
        <p>DETROIT</p>
        <p>abr h hi</p>
        <p>Pellis cf 4 2 2 0 Salazar ss 41 I 0 Lvnn If 5 2 3 4 Lemon rl 2 0 0 0 Murphy rl 2 1 1 2 Knight lb 2 11 0 0 Bergmn Ib2UUU Hcrndn dh 4 I 1 1 Heath c 3 11 0 0 Brokns 3b 3 I I u W lvvndr 2b 2 0 1 1 Tulals :i3 XI H</p>
        <p>oil too IMII-7 ltd 220 m2H None out when winnmg run scored (ame Winning RHI - Lvnn 151. E-Salazar i DP Detroit 1 LOB-</p>
        <p>1.0s Angeles Cincinnali</p>
        <p>tHHI IHHI OUO-O IHII IHIX-I</p>
        <p>Baltimore 7, Detroit 7 2B- BAnderson 2, Pettis, Walewander, Worthington 3B-Pedis. Brookens HR- Sheets i9), Murray '261. Herndon i4i. Murphv i3i. Lynn i23i SE- Walewander.</p>
        <p>IP II K EK HK SO</p>
        <p>Kallimure</p>
        <p>Ballard  4  1-3  7  6  6  1  2</p>
        <p>Tibbs  1  2 3  1  0  0  I  0</p>
        <p>Thurmond L.1-7 2  2  2  2  2  1</p>
        <p>Oetroil</p>
        <p>Morris  2  1-3  5  5  5  2  1</p>
        <p>Gibson  5  1-3  4  1115</p>
        <p>Henneman  1  I  I  0  1  I</p>
        <p>Hernandz W',6-5 l-:i 0 0 0 (I 0 Thurmond pitched to2 batters in the 9lh HBP Salazar by Ballard. BKipken bv Gibson WP-Tibbs Impires Home, Hirschbeck; First Tschiiia. .Second. Reed Third. Garcia T 2:54 A 21.(H)I</p>
        <p>Game W'innina KBI - None E-llamillon LOB -Cincinnati 2 2B</p>
        <p>Larkin</p>
        <p>IP H H EK BB SO</p>
        <p>I.os Angeles</p>
        <p>Belcher L.KK) 8  3  10 17</p>
        <p>Cincinnati</p>
        <p>Browning W.16-5 9  0  0 0 0 7</p>
        <p>Umpires- Home, (juick. First, Hirschbeck: Second, Kibler, Third. Gregg T-1 51 A-16.591</p>
        <p>MONTREAL NEW YORK</p>
        <p>abrhbi  ahrhhi</p>
        <p>ONixon cl  3 0  10  Wilson cl  4  I  2  u</p>
        <p>DMrtnz cf  1 0  0 0  Bckmn 2b  31  1  0</p>
        <p>TJones If 312 0 Teufel ph 1 u 0 0 Galarrg lb  5 1  1 0  Jelleris lb  5  0  3  1</p>
        <p>Brooks rl  5 0  11  Sirwbry rl  41  2  I</p>
        <p>Wallach 3b:i I  20  McKylds 114  0  0  I</p>
        <p>Huson 2b 0 u 0 0 Carter c 4 0 u u Sanloven c 4 () 2 u Magadn lb 3 0 0 0 Hudler 2b 3 u u 0 Elster ss 4 u I u Foley ph 0 0 0 u Ojeda p 3 0 0 0 Ptzgrld ph I u 0 0 Leach p oooo OMally 3b 0 0 u u Myers p 0 0 0 u Rivera ss 4 0 0 0 KAMilr ph 1 1 0 0 Dopson p 2 0 0 0 Pareds ph I 0 I 0 Hurkr p OOOO WJhnsn ph 1 0 0 0  p 0 0 0 0</p>
        <p>36 3 10 1 Tolals</p>
        <p>Totals</p>
        <p>36 4 9 3</p>
        <p>RThopson SF  446  62 121  6  4,&amp;gt;  271</p>
        <p>Sax LA  579  65 1.57  5  52  271</p>
        <p>Raines Mon  429  66 116  12  48  270</p>
        <p>Ramirez lltn  509  47 137  j  57  269</p>
        <p>Sandberg Chi  553  7U 149  18  64  269</p>
        <p>Bradlev Phi  .521  72 i:  II  ,52  267</p>
        <p>Moreland SI)  469  18 125  5  61  267</p>
        <p>BHalcher Hln  493  76 1 11  o  48  2&amp;lt;i6</p>
        <p>Bream Pit  429  42 114  8  Jt  266</p>
        <p>GYoung lltn  i2;l  74 137  0  .11  262</p>
        <p>Wallach Mon  .5.54  ,50 15  II  65  '262</p>
        <p>Strawbry N\  'm  H8 I3l  :13  H9  2Ki</p>
        <p>Coleman SlL  587  73 1,52  3  .17  259</p>
        <p>MIdndo SF  Mi  .lO 119  11  61  2,59</p>
        <p>Shelhv U  444  60 115  7  57  2.59</p>
        <p>DJames  All  OH)  4.5  98  3  .10  258</p>
        <p>Scioscia  U  184  27  99  I  M  258</p>
        <p>Bass Htn  497 55 iy7 I I 68 256</p>
        <p>Santiago  .SD  446  te  114  8  M  256</p>
        <p>Thomas  All  574  51  147  II  65  256</p>
        <p>Wetmler  Chi  4.4  62  119  .5  12  ra!</p>
        <p>It Alomar SD  471  W 12o  7  .15  255</p>
        <p>TPena Ml.  I*.I  51 118  9  44  A5</p>
        <p>(lant All  491.  6 126  16  54  2.54</p>
        <p>Mitchell SF  471  119  18  76  253</p>
        <p>I'ndlln Stl.  191  44 99  6  it  251</p>
        <p>Doran Hln  pji  66 118  7  52  252</p>
        <p>l.ind Pit  'o'l  74 145  2  4;  ra</p>
        <p>Sihmidl  Pbi  Wl  'i2  97  12  62  248</p>
        <p>Montreal  912  owi  ooo- l</p>
        <p>New York  :iMi  nm  antI</p>
        <p>Two outs when w inning run scored Game W inning RBI - Jefferies 111 E- Wallach, Rackman. Jelleries. Rivera DP New York 1 LOB- Montreal 10, New York 9 2B -Wallach, Elsler SB- Straw-tierry '26i. Hackman 191. Paredes i4i S \iilson</p>
        <p>IP II K EK HH SO</p>
        <p>Miinlreal</p>
        <p>Dopson  6  6  3  3  2  :l</p>
        <p>Burke  2  2  0  0  p  3</p>
        <p>Hesketh l;l-;l  2  3 I I I) 0 0</p>
        <p>New York</p>
        <p>Ojeda  6  1-3  8  3  2  1  8</p>
        <p>Uach  1  2  0  0  1  1</p>
        <p>Mvers W,7:1  1  2-3  0  0  0  2  1</p>
        <p>Umpires Hume. Darling First. Hailion. Second Davis Third Froemming T 2 59 A 4.mi</p>
        <p>(I.EVEI.AM) TORONTO</p>
        <p>abrhbi  abrhbi</p>
        <p>franco  2b  5 0  0 0  Fernndz  ss4 0  1 0</p>
        <p>KWillms If  3 1  0 0  Mosebv  cl 5 0  10</p>
        <p>Hall If  110 0  McGriif  lb 4 0  1 0</p>
        <p>Carter cf 5 0 4 1  GBell II  4  111</p>
        <p>Snyder rl 4 o 1 1  Whill c  2  I  u o</p>
        <p>Medina lb 4 0 0 0  Fielder ph  0  0  u 0</p>
        <p>Upshaw lb 1 0 0 0  Leach ph  I  u  0 u</p>
        <p>Jacoby 3b 5 0 I (I  Hulera c  0  u  0 U</p>
        <p>CCaslill dh4 01 u Hordrs ph l l l 0 DCIark ph I o I (i  Mllnks dh  3  u  0 0</p>
        <p>Allanson c 3 0 2 0  Barfield rl  5  u  0 it</p>
        <p>Francn ph 1 0 0 0  Gruber :ib  .5  1  :t 1</p>
        <p>Tingley  c  I 0  u 0  Lee 2b  .lull</p>
        <p>JBell ss 4 I 2 0 Kiltie ph 0 0 II 0 Zuvella ss u u u u Totals 12 3 12 2 Tolals 3! I * 3</p>
        <p>( lev eland  m2 (HHl Iihi o-:t</p>
        <p>Toronto  o&amp;gt;l non ihhi i-i</p>
        <p>One out when winning run scored Game Winning KBI Gruber 151 ,  Fernandez, JBell, Franco</p>
        <p>LOB Cleveland 13, Toronto 12 2B-Carier if- 'McGrilf, Gruber 3B-I.ee. Carter HR-GBelli22i SB-Moseby (3I.S-Lee IP H H EH HH SO</p>
        <p>(lev eland</p>
        <p>Candiulli  7  6  :l  3  |  .5</p>
        <p>Bailes  1,1 II  (I  0  2  0</p>
        <p>Gordon L.24  2  3  I  1  I  u</p>
        <p>Toronto</p>
        <p>Flanagan  5'2-3  9  2  1  0  5</p>
        <p>DWard  3  2 113 3</p>
        <p>TCastillo  1-3 0  0  0  0  1</p>
        <p>Henke W.4 4 I  10 0 12</p>
        <p>Umpires-fiome, .McCov, First, Coble Second, Denkingcr Third, McClelland T-:P24.A 10.276</p>
        <p>4 0 I U 2 10 0 2 HlU</p>
        <p>PITTsBf HI,II</p>
        <p>ahrhhi</p>
        <p>Bunds II 2 10 0 Lind 2b 4 2 10 VanSlyk cl 4 2 2 2 Bonilla 3b 5 2 3 3 Bream lb ;i 0 1 1 GWiKori rl 4 0 1 1 I.VIIre ( :i II 0 0 Eermm ss 2 0 u 11 Kedus ph I IIII 0 Belliard ss I 0 0 0 smilcv p 200 0 Fisher p 0 II ll II Cangels ph I I) u 0 JHolinsn p IIIIIIII HRvlils ph I 0 0 II</p>
        <p>PHIL A</p>
        <p>abrhbi Bradlev II 5 12 1 Dernier cl 41 I 0 Hayes ph 10 0 0 UJones rl 41 1 j Jordan lb 4 o I u Samuel 2h 4 0 I u Parrish c 4 110 ( James ib I 0 0 0 Gutirrz ss .111 0 0 ((iross ph I 0 0 II Hedrosn p 0 0 0 11 Freemn p 1 0 I 0 Barojas p 1111 mi Barrett ph I I I I Bullm p IIII11II</p>
        <p>MINNEMITA</p>
        <p>ahrhhi</p>
        <p>Moses ll Herr 2h</p>
        <p>Bush rl .....</p>
        <p>Gaetti ph I o 0 o Davldsn rf 11 u u o Puckell cl 41 I 2 Dwver dh 4 12 2 Larkin Ib 4 1 I 1 Newmn Ih 2 0 1 o l.mbrdz ss 4 0 0 11 Gagne ss 0 u U 0 Nielo c</p>
        <p>Totals</p>
        <p>I II I II 3 i 7 5</p>
        <p>( HK \(.(l</p>
        <p>ahrhhi Gallghr cl 5 2 2 o Lyons rf 5 01 1 Baines dh 4011 Salas c :i 0 I I Fisk c 10 0 0 Iasqua II I u 10 MiDiaz Ib 4 I 111 Guillen ss 3 0 :| 1 C.MrInz lb 4 0 u 0 Manriq 2h I II11 Boston ph I 0 0 0 Hill 2b 0 0 011 Totals 36 1111</p>
        <p>(hifigs Mlnnrsola</p>
        <p>Game Winning KBI Larkin 191</p>
        <p>E Lyons DP Chicago I, Minnesota 2 LOB Chicago 8, Minnesota 6 2R Puckell IB Guillen HR Dwyer i2), lairkin i7i SB Guillen2i22i..Newmani||i S Herr</p>
        <p>(hhago Hillegas I..I2 Rosenlierg</p>
        <p>BJows Minnesota</p>
        <p>HI'leveii W 10 I5ji M h,|i/e(lr</p>
        <p>I3 MW WW-I :tm m2 mix-.'.</p>
        <p>IP</p>
        <p>II</p>
        <p>K KK HH Stl</p>
        <p>6</p>
        <p>7</p>
        <p>5 ( 1 1</p>
        <p>1.1</p>
        <p>u</p>
        <p>U 11 II 0</p>
        <p>12 1</p>
        <p>(I</p>
        <p>11 11 1 1</p>
        <p>6</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>4 12.'</p>
        <p>* 1 1</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>0 0 1 0</p>
        <p>KAVSAStlTY  OAKI.AM)</p>
        <p>abrhbi  abrhbi</p>
        <p>Seilzer  3b  4  0 12  Polonia  II  4  0 u 0</p>
        <p>Pecla  ss  3  0 0 0  DHedsn  If  4  0 0 0</p>
        <p>Brell lb 3 0 0 0 Canseco rf 3 0 0 0 Tabler  If  3  0 0 0  Parker  dh  3  u  I  0</p>
        <p>Eisnrth  II  1  u 0 0  Hassey  c  3  u  I  u</p>
        <p>Triabll  rf  4  12 1  Slenbc'n  Ib  3  0  0  0</p>
        <p>Bucknr  dh  3  U 1 0  Phillips  3b  3  0  0  0</p>
        <p>Thrmn dh 110 0 Weiss ss 2 0 0 0 'While  2b  3  0 0 0  Gallego  2b  2  0 0 0</p>
        <p>BJcksn  cl  3  0 0 0  Jenngs  ph  1  0 0 0</p>
        <p>(Juirk c 2 100 Totals ;m 3 I 3 Tolals 2H 0 2 0</p>
        <p>Kansas t'ilv  m  um  21-3</p>
        <p>Oakland  mhi  whi  inns-</p>
        <p>Game W inning RBI - Seitzer 181 DP Kansas Cily 1  LOB  Kansas Citv  4.</p>
        <p>Oakland 2. 2B-Tartabull.  Seitzer  HR-</p>
        <p>Tarlabull i22i, .SB- Brell 114i.S- FWhite IP II K EK HK SO</p>
        <p>Kansas Citv Gubicza W.18-7 9  2  0 0  0  8</p>
        <p>Oakland</p>
        <p>Welch L.I.V8 9  4  3 3  3  8</p>
        <p>HBP-Weiss by Gubicza Umpires-Home, Roe. First. Barnett. Second. Kosc. Third, Cousins T-2:15 A-:H.881.</p>
        <p>Sports Calendar</p>
        <p>Editor's Note: Schedules are sup plied by schools or sponsoring agencies and are subjtrl to change without notice.</p>
        <p>Todav's .Sports Tennis</p>
        <p>East Carolina at Southeastern Championships, Durham Mondav's Spurts ('.olf</p>
        <p>East Carolina at The Cardinal Invitational</p>
        <p>Vollevbalt Northeastern at Rose 14:30 p m.) Softball</p>
        <p>Fall League Jim's Tires vs. Bridal Boutique (El 7pm.)</p>
        <p>Family Practice vs Holiday Shell (E2- 7 p.m.)</p>
        <p>Winterville Machine vs. Piland (El  8 p.m.)</p>
        <p>TCBV vs. Sub Station 11 (E2  8 pm)</p>
        <p>427 Aulo vs. Cherry's (El  9 p.m.)</p>
        <p>Conger Plumbing vs. Aldridge &amp;amp; Southerland iE2-9p m )</p>
        <p>Tuesdav's Sports Vullevball East Carolina t Virginia Com monweallh I7p m )</p>
        <p>Farmville C enlral at Wesl Craven 14pm.)</p>
        <p>Rose at Northern Nash (4 :10 p m.) North Lenoir at Ayden-Grilton (4:30pm.)</p>
        <p>Greene Central at southern Nash (5pm)</p>
        <p>Greenville Christian at Bethel (4 pm )</p>
        <p>(iuir</p>
        <p>East Carolina at The Cardinal Invitational. Greenslxiro Tennis</p>
        <p>Rosewood al Farmville Central (3:30pm)</p>
        <p>Rose at Beddingfield Plymouth at Williamston (4 p m.) Northampton East at Roanoke North Duplin al Greene Central C.B. Ay cock at Conley UNC-AVilmington al East Carolina (2:30p.m.)</p>
        <p>East Carolian women at Meredith (2:30 p.m.)</p>
        <p>Cross Country Rose at Beddingfield Sox'cer</p>
        <p>Bose at Beddinglield Greenville Christian al Bethel (4 pm. I</p>
        <p>Wrdnrsdavs .Sports Thursdav's Sports Vollvbaf</p>
        <p>North Pitl, Greene Central at Pamlico (4 pm.)</p>
        <p>Farmville Central, Avden Grifton al South Lenoir (4p m.)</p>
        <p>Kose at Rocky Mount 14; 30 p m. 1 Conley at East Carlerel (5p m.) Tennis</p>
        <p>Conley at Farmville Central i3;30 p.m.)</p>
        <p>Rose at Kinston</p>
        <p>Williamston at Northamplon Easl (4pm.)</p>
        <p>Plymouth al Roanoke (rxH'ne Central al C B Aycock Atlantic Christian at East Carolina women 12:30 p m )</p>
        <p>Socrer Rose at Kinston</p>
        <p>Fool bull</p>
        <p>Washington al Wesl Carlerel JV (7</p>
        <p>p III )</p>
        <p>Conley al llavekH'k JV (7pm.) Northern Nash at Rose JV (7 p m )</p>
        <p>Pamlico at Ayden Griffon JV (7 pm 1</p>
        <p>C.B Aycock at Greene Central JV Soliball FallU'ague Piland vH. Family PraiTice 1 El -7pm )</p>
        <p>TCBY VI. Jim's Tires (E2 - 7 pm I</p>
        <p>.Sub .Slation II vs Conger Plumb-</p>
        <p>Connie Sermons, 23. .539</p>
        <p>Prep Football</p>
        <p>By The .Associated Press Following are the results of Friday night's games involving The Associated Press lop 10 high school football teams in each ol the four classifications in the North Carolina High School Athletic Association. l-\</p>
        <p>1 Garner del. Ral Millbrook 25 14 2. Fay Smith did not play 3 Gbo Page del, Gbo Grimsley 22 21</p>
        <p>4. Richmond Co. def. Marlboro Co . SC 47-0</p>
        <p>5. Gnvl Rose did not pla</p>
        <p>6. Kann Brown did not ~</p>
        <p>plav Jlplay lei Sv</p>
        <p>7. Ash Reynolds def. Swannanoa Owen 10-0</p>
        <p>8. Ral Millbrook lost to Garner 25-14</p>
        <p>9. McDowell def. Mitchell 40-18</p>
        <p>10. Gbo Grimsley lost to Gbo Page 22-21.</p>
        <p>3-A</p>
        <p>1. Burl Cummings del HP Central 51-31</p>
        <p>2 HP Andrews def Keidsville35-7</p>
        <p>3. Forest Hills did nut play</p>
        <p>4. Havelock def. Tarlwro 27 14</p>
        <p>5. E Rutherford def GasI Huss 27-20</p>
        <p>6. Washington lost to Ayden-Grifton 41-21</p>
        <p>7 Tarboro lost to Havelock 27 14</p>
        <p>8 C. Cabarrus lost toS, Iredell 35-0 9. diet Bertie lost to Hertford Co. 26-12</p>
        <p>9. (tie) E. Lincoln del. W. Lincoln</p>
        <p>33-0</p>
        <p>2-A</p>
        <p>1. Wallace-Rose Hill def. S, Robeson 51-7</p>
        <p>2 Whiteville def. Tabor City 27-0 :i. Thomasville def. E. Davidson 35-0</p>
        <p>4 Hertford Co del. Bertie 26-12</p>
        <p>5 Newton-Conover did not play</p>
        <p>6. Bunker Hill lost to St. Stephens 33-12</p>
        <p>7. Fuquay-Varina def. Zebulon 46-16</p>
        <p>8. Clinton lost to Wilm Laney 30-12</p>
        <p>9. E. Duplin did not play</p>
        <p>10. Maiden did not play</p>
        <p>1 Murphv def. Union Co., Ga. 24-0</p>
        <p>2 Bath del. Jamesville 48-14</p>
        <p>3. Swain Co del Franklin 45-13</p>
        <p>4. E Montgomery def. Jurdan-Mat-thews 24-14</p>
        <p>5 Elkin def N. Wilkes 7-0</p>
        <p>6 N Moore def SW Randolph 30-6 7. Midway del, Swansboro 27-13</p>
        <p>8 Beaver Creek def Ashe Central 30-7</p>
        <p>9. St. Pauls def. Fairmont 22 2</p>
        <p>10 (tie) Currituck lost to Edenton, 13-9</p>
        <p>10. (lie) Swansboro lost to Midway 27 13  ^</p>
        <p>ingiEl 8pm I Aldridge &amp;amp; .Southerland vs Winterville .Machine 1E2 8 p m</p>
        <p>t  U  IZJ    t,9  </p>
        <p>Cherrx Hvs Holiday .Shell 1 El 9 p m 1</p>
        <p>Bridal ItoulKjue vs 427 Aulo (E2 p m 1</p>
        <p>Here is a list of scores from North Carolina High School football games played Friday night:</p>
        <p>Albemarle 14. Ml Pleasant 0 Alleghany 18. N Stokes 6 Ashe Reynolds lO Swan Uwen U Asheville 15, N Buncombe 0 Asheboro24, W Guilford 6 Avery Co 27, .Surry Co. 6 Ayden-Grifton 41, Washington 21 Bartlett-Yancey 20. Stoneville 8 Bath 48. Jamesville 14 Beaver Creek 30, Ashe Central 7 Brevard 53, Enka 8 Burl Williams 29, Gbo Dudley 14 Burns 34, Cherry vllle 0 Burl Cummings 51, HP Central 31 (Thurs.)</p>
        <p>Canton Pisgah 24. Smoky Min 13 Char Myers Park 10, (Twr Olympic 0</p>
        <p>Char Providence Day 27, Bessemer Cily 24 Cherokee 2^ Try on 15 Cloudland, Tenn 21, NW AsheO Clyde Erwin 25. Madison 0 Concord 28, Char Catholic 6 Crest 34. Chase 7 Davie Co 35. E Forsyth 28 Dixon 30 Union 20 Dur Jordan :15. Durham 0 Dur Hillside 28. Chapel Hill 21 E. Burke 40. Watauga 7 E Carlerel 21, Plymouth 7 E Bla(len2l, BladenboruO E Wakc26,E Alamance 0 E Rowan 21. N Stanly 20 E. Rulherlord 27. Gas'l Huss 20 E Montgomery 24. Jordan Mai thews 14 E Randolph 14. Trinity 10 E Surry 26. Madison-Mayodan 13 E Lincoln 33 W Lincoln 0 Edenton 13, Currituck 9 Elkin 7. N Wilkes 0 Fay 7Ist 14. Hoke Co 13 ^^Fay Sanford 20, Wilm Hoggard 17,</p>
        <p>Fuquay-Vanna 46. Zebulon 16 Garner 25. Rai Millbrook 14 Gasi Ashbrook 19, N (aslon7 Gbo Page 22. GboGrimslev2l GoRLslmro 25, S HrunxwicK 6 Green Conley 1:1. Farmville Ceii IralO</p>
        <p>HP Andrews :I5. Reidsville7 Harrells Academy 68. Mul tumuskeel 0 Harnetl Central 12. Hobhlun9 Havelock 27. Tarboro 14 Hayesville 14. RabunC'o. (Ga. 10 Hendersonvile 27. Min Heritage 19 Hend Vance 25. Hills Orange'/ Herllord Co 26. Berlie 12 Jacksonville 31, Kinslon 13 Jones Sr. 8. RosewiMidO Kings Mtn 14. S, Caldwell 0 Ukeview. ,S&amp;lt;' 13, Orrum 12 Undrum, S,(.',, 34. Polk Central 6 l,ee Co 33, Apex 0 Ujeuneiy.w CarlenM 18</p>
        <p>n</p>
        <p>Unoir Hibnlen 26. Wilkes Central</p>
        <p>tx'XInglon.Ml, SW (uillord 16 l.incolnlon 15, II S Central 20</p>
        <p>RICHMOND, Va, lAP)  Scores Satur-dav afler the second round of the $325,000 54-hole Creslar PGA Senior Golf Classic, played on the par-72,6.644-vard Hermitage Country Club course:</p>
        <p>Arnold Palmer  65^-133</p>
        <p>Wall Zembriski  7086-136</p>
        <p>Bobbv Nichols  6789-136</p>
        <p>6889-137</p>
        <p>Jim Ferree  6989-138</p>
        <p>Gardner Dickinson  68-70-138</p>
        <p>John Frillman  7089-139</p>
        <p>Dale Douglass  70,69- 139</p>
        <p>Tommv Aaron  6970-139</p>
        <p>Urry Mowry  68-71-139</p>
        <p>Ralph Terry  68-71-139</p>
        <p>Gene Liltler  67-72-139</p>
        <p>Don Massengale  67-72-139</p>
        <p>Harold Henning  7288-140</p>
        <p>J.C Goosie  7288-140</p>
        <p>Dick Hendrickson  70-70-140</p>
        <p>Chi Chi Rodriguez  70-70-140</p>
        <p>Dave Hill  6971-140</p>
        <p>Bob Charles  68-72-140</p>
        <p>Roland Staflord  7071-141</p>
        <p>Miller Barber  7389-142</p>
        <p>Bob Goalby  7072-142</p>
        <p>Charles thxens  6973-142</p>
        <p>Bruce Grampian  7588-143</p>
        <p>Joe Jimenez  74-69 ii3</p>
        <p>Ben Smith  7489 143</p>
        <p>Don Bies  73-70- 143</p>
        <p>Ken.Sllll  7589 144</p>
        <p>^ Kawlins  74 70- 144</p>
        <p>Billy Casper  73 71-144</p>
        <p>Jim (ochran  71-73-144</p>
        <p>Hob Boldl  71-73- 149</p>
        <p>(jay Brewer  71-73- 144</p>
        <p>Homero Blancas  73-71-144</p>
        <p>Georw Lanning  71-73-144</p>
        <p>Jim Kmg  71-73-144</p>
        <p>Billy Maxwell  72-73-145</p>
        <p>Chuck Mehok  73-72- 145</p>
        <p>John Brodie  72-73-145</p>
        <p>Lou Graham  71-74 145</p>
        <p>Mike Felchick  71-74 145</p>
        <p>Butch Haird  8976- lii</p>
        <p>DeKav Simon  7070-146</p>
        <p>Bruce f)evlin  7070-146</p>
        <p>Chick Evans  75-71-146</p>
        <p>f.ary Player  74-72-146</p>
        <p>(harles SUIord  74-72-146</p>
        <p>Kel Nagle  &amp;gt;  m- 146</p>
        <p>BobBrue  72-74 146</p>
        <p>Iharlw toody  71-75- 146</p>
        <p>Dick Rhyan  73.7'J- 146</p>
        <p>Doug Daliiel  7072 146</p>
        <p>(ene Horek  m-V-146</p>
        <p>Pe(er Thomson  74.W 147</p>
        <p>Dick Howell  6978 147</p>
        <p>(ofdon Jones  77.71,</p>
        <p>Fr^ Hawkins  74-74  148</p>
        <p>Bill Johnston  7078-  148</p>
        <p>Bob Erickson  6979-  148</p>
        <p>75-74- 149</p>
        <p>Orville Moo(K  74-75-149</p>
        <p>Jimmy Powell  74-76-150</p>
        <p>Pete Brown  73.77  ijo</p>
        <p>Bert Yancey  73-77-  i5o</p>
        <p>JoH-^z  74-77  151</p>
        <p>Doug Ford  75-77-  152</p>
        <p>Jem Barber  74-7  152</p>
        <p>Bob Rosburg  77-76  153</p>
        <p>k Hnggs  73.&amp;gt;4-  157</p>
        <p>Iai Steinnrecher  gi.79,  igu</p>
        <p>Jack Fleck  7#  WD</p>
        <p>Bill ('(illqis  76  WD</p>
        <p>Bowie St. if.CheyneyO Bridgewater,Mass. 6. Mass-Boston 0 C.W Post 31, Kings Point 14 Canisius 63, St. John Fisher 14 Camegie-Mellon 20, Chicagoo Cent. Connecticut St. 42, Sal Clarion 16, Ferris St . 9 Colgate 14. Bucknell 13 Cortland St. 29, Hobart 6 Dickinson 14, Muhlenberg 12 Elizabeth City SI. 20, DisT of Columbia 6 Fordham 27, Catholic U.O Franklin &amp;amp; Marshall 41, Ursinus 3 Frostburg St, 42. Wesley 0 Oallaudef34, Brooklyn Col. 12 Geneva 27, BrockporlSt.3 Georgetown, DC. 51, SI. Francis, Pa. 7 Gettysburg 17, W Maryland 14 Harvard 41, Columbia 7 Hofstra8.StonyBrook3 lndiana,Pa,24.TowsonSl 21 Ilhaca 28. St. Lawrence 14 James Madison 23, Boston U. 13 Juniala 17. Delaware Val. 15 Kean20.RamapoI8 Kutztown 21, Shippensburg 15 Lafayette 28, Holy Cross 20 Lowell 22, Worcester St 19 Lycoming 34, Upsala 14 iAiaine 43, Northeastern 20 Mass. Maritime 35, Maine Maritime 19 Mercyhurst 30, Grove City fo Millersville3l, S. Connecticut 3 Moravian 21. Susiiuehanna 14 New Hampshire 27. Connecticut 20 New Haven 30, Edinboro 14 Nichols'lO, Framingham St 6 Pace29.Marisl7 Penn 33, Dartmouth 27 Penn St. 23. Boston College 20 Pittsburgh 42. OhioSt. 10 Plymouth St. 53, Fitchburg St. 0 Princeton 26, Cornell 17 RPI14. Coast Guardo Rhode Island 23, Delaware 17 SE Massachusetts 23, W. New England 15 Shepherd 20, Glenville St 6 Siena 14, N.Y, Maritime 0 Swarlhmore 10, Johns Hopkins 3 Temple 12. Navy 7 Vanderbilt 31, Rutgers 30 W.Va Weslyn9,</p>
        <p>Vireiniat- ...........</p>
        <p>West (!hester63, Fayetteville St. 21</p>
        <p>W. Vireinia tech 30, llesl Liberty 14 West (!hester63, Fayetteville S'</p>
        <p>West Virginia 55, .Maryland 24 Westminster, Pa. 23, Findlav 17 Widener21, Lebanon Val, 7'</p>
        <p>Wilkes 41, Albright 7 Yale 24, Brown 24, tie SOUTH</p>
        <p>Alabama A4M14, Savannah St 10 Alabama St. 29, Alcorn St 6 Auburn 56, Kansas 7 Carson-Newman 36, Wingate 24 Catawba 25. Mars Hill 17 Centre 42, Maryville, Tenn 14 Cumberland. Ky. 45. Wilmington 17 Duke4l,CiUdell7 Elon 31. Livingston St 23 Emory &amp;amp; Henry 21, Bridgewater,Va 7 Ferrum24,SalisbunrSl 13 Florida 58. Indiana St. 0 Florida St 24. Clemson 21 Furman 21, Presbyterian 0 Georgia 42. Mississippi St 35 Guilford 23, Hampden-Sydney 0 Hampton U 28, Virginia Union 13 HowardU 41,Bethune-Cookman26 LSU 34, Tennessee 9 Lane 33 Clark Col 15 Louisville 29, Memphis St 18 Marshall 34, E. Kentucky 32 Millsaps 17,SewaneelO Morris Brown 12. Tuskegee 0 N Carolina A&amp;amp;T 17, S. Carolina St. 6 N. Carolina St 14, WakeForesie Newberry 33, Gardner-Webb 21 Richmond 14. VMI13 S Mississippi 35. Virginia Tech 13 Sam Houslon St at SW Louisiana, ppd., hurricane South Carolina 17. East Carolina 0 Tenn.-Marlin 13, Valdosta St 9 Union,Tenn 31. CampbellsvilleO Virginia 17, Georgia Tech 16 Virginia St 31, JrtinsonC. Smith 7 Wiiriam4Maiyl4.Lehigh6  ,</p>
        <p>Worcester Tech 35, Ran*l|*-Macon 14 .</p>
        <p>MIDWEST  &amp;lt;</p>
        <p>Adrian 39, Defiance 13  1</p>
        <p>Alma 25, Wooster 22  </p>
        <p>Augustana.III. 45. Lake Forest 6 Augustana^.D.35.NorthDakoU9  '</p>
        <p>Aurora 34, Eureka 10  '</p>
        <p>Baker 34, Wayne, Neb 14  '</p>
        <p>Baldwin-Wallace 34, Heidelberg 21  !</p>
        <p>Ball St. 44. Massachusetts 17 Baylor 35. Iowa SI. 0  ,</p>
        <p>Bemidji St. 30, Northwestern, Minn. 7  .</p>
        <p>Bluffton 39. Urbana 29  </p>
        <p>Buena Vista 31, Coe6  </p>
        <p>CapiUI 23, Marietta 14 Carroll, Wis 27. Carthage 0 Cent Iowa 38, William Penn 0 Cent Michigan 27, Akron 16 Cent.St.,Ohio55,ButlerlO  *</p>
        <p>Cincinnati 52, Austin Peay 7 Coloratk)24.Iowa21 Concordia. Moor 49. AugsburgO (''.cordia, Wis, 18, Lawrence 17 ( iiver-Slockton41, lowaWeslyn2 ; JukoU St. 9, Concordia, SUP  Dayton 23, Georgetown, Ky. 7  '</p>
        <p>Denison 41, Mount Union 27  </p>
        <p>Doane 22, Colorado Mines 3  !</p>
        <p>Drake 24. Cent. Methodist 3  ,</p>
        <p>E Illinois 28, Liberty 27  !</p>
        <p>E Michigan 21, Kent St 14  .</p>
        <p>Emporiast 35, NE Missouri 17  ,</p>
        <p>Evangel 26, SW Baptist 14  </p>
        <p>Franklin 48, Anderson. Ind 7  </p>
        <p>Golf Scores</p>
        <p>SUTTON. Mass. (AP) - Scores Saturday in the third round of the $600,000 PGA Bank ol Boston Classic, played on the par-71, 7.1 lO-yards Pleasant Valiev Country Club: Larry Rinker  '  68-7285- 205</p>
        <p>Steve Pale  688889-205</p>
        <p>D A. Weibring  6888-69-205</p>
        <p>Fuzzv Zoeller  688989-206</p>
        <p>J.C. Snead  72-7184-207</p>
        <p>Bill .Sander  738688-207</p>
        <p>Wayne Levi  71.6789-207</p>
        <p>David Frost  67-7970-207</p>
        <p>Roger Maltbie  71-7186-208</p>
        <p>Wayne Grady  718889-208</p>
        <p>Mark Calcavecchia  7187-70- 208</p>
        <p>John Mahaffey  708970-209</p>
        <p>Dave Rummells  708970-209</p>
        <p>Tom Byrum  708970-209</p>
        <p>Ian Baker-Finch  73-7285-210</p>
        <p>Bill Bntlon  70-7585- 210</p>
        <p>Sam Randolph  71-7386- 210</p>
        <p>Gene Sauers  758788-210</p>
        <p>Ihiify Waldorf  71-7089-210</p>
        <p>Chris Kite  718970-210</p>
        <p>Joey Sindelar  796971-210</p>
        <p>Dan Forsman  72-72-67'-2Il</p>
        <p>Bob Proben  788588-211</p>
        <p>Nick Price  697488-211</p>
        <p>Donnie Hammond  67-73-71-211</p>
        <p>Mike Sullivan  7288-71-211</p>
        <p>Mark Brooks  7187-73-211</p>
        <p>Don Pooley  758889-212</p>
        <p>Rex Caldwell  72-7189-212</p>
        <p>Loren Roberts  72-7189-212</p>
        <p>Blaine McCallister  738970-212</p>
        <p>Clarence Hose  71-7971-212</p>
        <p>Bobby Wadkins  718972-212</p>
        <p>Lennie Clements  6971-72-212</p>
        <p>Mike Blackburn  73-7189-213</p>
        <p>Keith Clearwater  72-71-70-213</p>
        <p>Mark Wiebe  7588-70-213</p>
        <p>David Ogrin  7973-70-213</p>
        <p>Jim Booros  7388-72-213</p>
        <p>Brad Faxon  7488-71-213</p>
        <p>Curtis Strange  71-7972-213</p>
        <p>George Archer  7971-72-213</p>
        <p>Jell Coston  73-7289-214</p>
        <p>Mike Hammond  71-7489-214</p>
        <p>James Hallet  72-7389-214</p>
        <p>Mark Lye  74-7970-214</p>
        <p>Steve Lowery  7787-70-214</p>
        <p>Ed Fiori  72-71-71-214</p>
        <p>Rocco Mediate  7973-71-214</p>
        <p>Ray Stewart  6973-72-214</p>
        <p>Chip Beck  728973-214</p>
        <p>Jim Nelford  758971-215</p>
        <p>Robert Wrenn  7688-71-215</p>
        <p>John Inman  74-7971-215</p>
        <p>Bobby Clampett  73-71-71-215</p>
        <p>Jodic Mudd  71-73-71 H.A</p>
        <p>Jav )on Blake  7;  :i5</p>
        <p>J; lallagher  73-oiz,' ..</p>
        <p>K .iiv Perry  74 "1'  21b</p>
        <p>Lee Ire vino  7; ',1 2i6</p>
        <p>Mike Reid  73,1-72-216</p>
        <p>Chris Perry  74-7972-216</p>
        <p>John Adams  T2-72-72-216</p>
        <p>Curl Byrum  7973-73-216</p>
        <p>Bruce Zabriski  73-72-72-217</p>
        <p>Ben Crenshaw  7975-72-217</p>
        <p>Grant Waite  72-72-73-217</p>
        <p>Brian Mogg  71-71-75-217</p>
        <p>George Bums  7974-75-219</p>
        <p>Brad Bryant  757975-220</p>
        <p>Bruce Soulsby  72-71-77- 220</p>
        <p>Mike McCullough  768977-222</p>
        <p>Gracelandl6.Quincy7 Grand Valley St 45, Winona St M Hamline28. St Thomas. Minn 13</p>
        <p>Hanover 48, Earlham 23  .</p>
        <p>Hastin17,BlackHillsSt 6  *</p>
        <p>HiramCol 52, Oberlin 13 Houston 31, Missouri 7  .</p>
        <p>Illinois 35. Utah 24  *</p>
        <p>IllinoisCol 24.PrincipiaO  *</p>
        <p>Indiana 36, Kentucky 15  *</p>
        <p>Indianapolis 22. Saginaw Val St 21  *</p>
        <p>John Carroll 27, Case Western 10  *</p>
        <p>Kansas Weslyn 31, Sterling 6  *</p>
        <p>Kenyon 28. Kalamazooe  *</p>
        <p>Knox 34. Beloit 14  *</p>
        <p>Lakeland 33. Mount Senario?  ,</p>
        <p>Loras 27, Dubuque 24  ,</p>
        <p>MacalesterU.Sl Dial?  ,</p>
        <p>Mayville St, 27, Dakota Weslyn 0  </p>
        <p>Miami. Fla 31. Michigan 30  </p>
        <p>MichiganTechl7.Hopei4  '</p>
        <p>Millikin 47. North Pars 0  *</p>
        <p>Mo Western 27. NW Missouri St. 26 J Monmouth, III. 32, Mac Murray 10  I</p>
        <p>Moorhead St 18, Kearney St.  17  ;</p>
        <p>N DakouSt S6.S DakoUSI  26  &amp;gt;</p>
        <p>N. Illinois 19. Wisconsin 17  t</p>
        <p>N Michigan24. Minn-Duluth?  e</p>
        <p>Nebraska-Omaha ll South Dakota 0  9</p>
        <p>Northwd.Mich 17,fifrm0  f</p>
        <p>Northwestern, Iowa 37, Nebraska Wetlyrr 14  *</p>
        <p>Notre Dame 20. Michigan St 3  J</p>
        <p>Ohio Northern 23, Olterbein 0  Z</p>
        <p>Ohio Weslyn 25, DePauw I6  I</p>
        <p>Olivet 36, Manchester 14  I</p>
        <p>OlUwa, Kan 20, Friends 7  </p>
        <p>PillsburgSi 31. Missouri Rolla 0  </p>
        <p>Purdue fi Ohio U 10  </p>
        <p>Ripon 23 Cornell, Iowa 20  </p>
        <p>Kos9Hulman 35. Washington. Mo 14  </p>
        <p>S. Illinois 26. Murray St 21  </p>
        <p>Simpson 24. Luther 19  </p>
        <p>SiouxFalls20.Midland6 St CloudSI 24.MankatoSl 10 SI Francis, III 25. St Josephs. Ind 10 St. John's. Minn 38. Gustav Adolphus 7 SI Norberl 30, III Benedictine 12 Taylor ffl. Olivet Nazarene 10 Upper Iowa 17, Warlburg 19 w Michigan 44, Illinois St 14 Wabash, Albion 14 Washburn 28. Cent Missouri 27 Wayne, Mich 48. Valparaiso 17  </p>
        <p>Wheaton 27, Illinois We^yn 10 Wis Stout24,Wis Superiors Wis Whllewaler 20, Wis Stevens Pi 14  Wiiienberg 35, Muskingum 19 SI'TIIAIST AlahaiMat Teus AliM, md, hurricane . NW Mlahoma 20, N Mex flligWands 8  .</p>
        <p>Oklahoma 28. Arizona to  </p>
        <p>SE Oklahoma 32. Ouachita 17  </p>
        <p>Stephen FAuiUn 26, Lamar 14 FAR WEST Air Force 82, Northwestern 27 Brigham YouniSl, Texas El Paso27 ' Callutheran It, Hayward St 6 Carroll, Moot 56, WMonUnaO (ent Washington.W Oregon?</p>
        <p>Colorado Col 17, Pomona-Pitzin'10 Dlrkimon St 21. Montana Tech 10 Fort Lewis 24, Western St .Colo 21 Lewis A Clark 49. Simon Fraser 42 Linlield4l,S ()regon9  *</p>
        <p>NorlhndgeSi 31. Sonoma St 6  </p>
        <p>Oregon 43, Washington St 28 Oregon Tech 45. Pacilic, Ore 7 Rocky MotinUin 37. S Dakota Tech 7 SW Oklahoma 20, W NewMexK-o?</p>
        <p>Santa Barbara 17. Chico SI 18 St Mary s.laf 31. Menlo 0 Stanford 31, San Diego SI 10 Washington 31 Armv 17 Wyoming 38. Izwisiana Tech </p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0033" />
        <p>40'Sbars</p>
        <p>Of ServiceHOME BUIUm</p>
        <p>sumr CO.</p>
        <p>Qualify Products</p>
        <p>P</p>
        <p>Making plans at Home Builders for the next 40 years with future subdivision plans are: Dail, Assistant Manager, JB Surles, General Manager, Bill Blount, President</p>
        <p>: Bob</p>
        <p>For 40 years, Home Builders Supply Company has served the Greenville-Pitt County community with their building supply needs. From a small, ten employee operation in 1948, to our current operation, we strive to give you, our customers, the quality materials and good service that you expect and deserve.</p>
        <p>AAyles Cartrette and Cartrette Construction Company are an integral part of Home Builders growth and success. Since 1981 we have supplied Myles with the service, and quality materials, that his level of craftsmanship demands. We are committed to all of our builders to maintain a high level of quality and service with fair competitve pricing.</p>
        <p>We actively support Myles In his association with the Greenvllle-Pitt County Home Builders Association on both the state and local levels. His leadership and drive as President of the Home Builders Association in 1988 indicate his desire to further the attributes of the building industry.</p>
        <p>Cartrette Construction Company, synonymous with an agressive and challenging style, exemplifies the successful building company of the 1980's. Home Builders Supply Company is proud to be a major supplier for Cartrette Construction and pledge to continue our high level of quall-ty and service to all our customers.</p>
        <p>Quality Building Materials and Lumber.</p>
        <p>f 0 BOX 8?0  2000  DICKINSON  AVE</p>
        <p>GREENVILLE N C 27834 PHONE 758-4151 .</p>
        <p>Quality Wtrkinanshipdaxtzette. doni.txuetion domfian.fj</p>
        <p> Prviwing construction plans at Cartrotto Construction oro: Chris</p>
        <p>: Flowor, dfflco Manager, Mylts Cartrotto, Ownor A Prosidont, ' Jonathan Cartrotto, Flold Supervisor, Previewing construction plans</p>
        <p>- at Cartrotto Construction</p>
        <p>Bedford Subdivision - Residential;</p>
        <p>Cartrette Construction Company, in seven years, has become a well known name in the Greenville-PItt County area. Cartrette penetrates the market In residential, multi-family and commercial construction, handling both custom and speculative work.</p>
        <p>The President of Cartrette Construction Company is Myles Cartrette. A third generation builder, Myles has been actively involved in construction for ten years. He Is active in the Greenville-Pitt County Home Builders Association, having served as State and National Director, Local Board of Directors, and currently as 1988 President. Myles is an East Carolina University graduate and is active In church and local affairs.</p>
        <p>Qualify and detail are bywords of Cartrette Construction Company as seen In the authenticity of Williamsburg design and construction of Parliament Place Office Complex. The same detail and attention con be observed in his other projects, both residential and multi-family.</p>
        <p>Cartrette states, "I feel that we as builders in the Pitt County area have realized how fortunate we are to be in an area where progress is a daily occurance. In this market, which I find to be more and more competitive every day. It pays to be on top of what is occurring in the marketplace. Home Builders Supply, over the last seven years, has been a friend as well as a major supplier for Cartrette Construction Company. I find it a pleasure to do business with Home Builders, and feel that when I need good materials at a fair price the place to go is Home Builders Supply Company."</p>
        <p>Parliamant Plac* - Commarcial ~</p>
        <p>daxtxattz dontxuction domjiany</p>
        <p>Grove - Multi-family ^</p>
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        <p>Home Products For The Disabled Becoming Big Business Resource</p>
        <p>By BARBARA MAYER AP Newsfeatures If youre making do with a chair you cant get out of, a faucet you cant turn on or any number of home iproducts that dont make allowances for an aging body, hang on.</p>
        <p>American industry may be coming to the rescue in the forseeable future, and 1988 may eventually be known as the year attitudes began to change towards physical disability.</p>
        <p>Several recent examples indicate growing interest in harnessing technology to permit an active lifestyle, even for those with disabilities. Products such as sports equipment, wheelchairs, crutches and ingenious utensils were shown this year in a museum exhibition and a product catalog.</p>
        <p>While the current beneficiaries of specialized products are those with disabilities, ultimately there can be substantial benefits for the nondisabled population, says Cara McCarty, curator of Designs for Independent Living, a recent exhibition at the Museum of Modem Art.</p>
        <p>In the meantime, indications are that there is a growing acceptance of an active lifestyle for those with physical impairments.</p>
        <p>The IBM Corp., for example, reports increasing use of a toll-free telephone number offering information on new technology for those with impairments.</p>
        <p>IBM received more than 19,000 phone inquiries in 1987, after setting</p>
        <p>up the clearinghouse at the end of 1985, said Rita Black, a spokesman who added that an estimated 36 million Americans suffer some form of disability.</p>
        <p>While the gradual aging of the American population may be one factor in what some authorities see as a greater acceptance of disabilities, another motive is that businesses have become aware they are losing a tremendous resource by not accommodating themselves to people with disabilities,Black said.</p>
        <p>According to Jordan Bienenstock, co-founder of Maneuverability, a Brooklyn-based retailer of self-help housewares, the number of special home products available for those with disabilities appears to be on the increase.</p>
        <p>Some of the 90 or so products featured in the companys mail-order catalog include a voice activator which works off household current to turn on and off lamps and home entertainment components, easy-grasp cutlery and a variable-height sink.</p>
        <p>Peter Axelson, a designer of wheelchairs and ski equipment, said that many new products and techniques make it possible for even a severely disabled person to live an active life.</p>
        <p>A little over a decade ago when he wanted to renew an active life after an accident resulted in amputation of his limbs, he found he had to design the equipment he wanted.</p>
        <p>In the past 12 years there have been substantial improvements: lightweight wheelchairs made mobility easier; health care techniques made us healthier; computers have enhanced the ability to work and sports equipment has made recreation possible. We are now at the point where the technologies are available, but we need rehabilitation services to assist people, he said.</p>
        <p>The biggest problem of many in-^viduals who want to be more active is gaining access to information and training in the use of the new products and in finding the money to pay for them, added Axelson.</p>
        <p>One indication that this issue is about to enter the mainstream is the recent exhibition mounted at the Museum of Modern Art, Designs for Independent Living.</p>
        <p>Instead of thinking of disabled individuals as people who must lead a sedentary life, the emphasis now is on designing environments to help them be as active and independent as possible, according to curator McCarthy.</p>
        <p>Approximately 45 products for use in the home were shown including mobilty equipment such as wheelchairs and walkers, communication aids, clothing and household items, including sculpted cane handles and eating utensils and gadgets for people with limited hand strength.</p>
        <p>McCarthy said the exhibit was a natural outgrowth of the increase in</p>
        <p>aids for the disabled. There has been a definite change since the early 1980s when products tended to be makeshift and unsuited to mass production.</p>
        <p>Today, bv contrast, professional industrial designers are getting involved in new-product development for this growing market segment, she said.</p>
        <p>One of the most dramatic changes in thinking about disabilities is in the area of mobility, according to McCarthy. Instead of thinking of the wheelchair as a seat, we think of it as a means of transportation.</p>
        <p>The change fegan in the 1970s when-the rules for wheelchair sports were modified to permit greater design latitude in the chairs. Using bicycle technology in some cases and spurred on by athletes who wanted a more competitive vehicle, designers were able to produce faster, lighterweight and more portable and maneuverable wheelchairs which in turn influenced the design of everyday wheelchairs, added the curator.</p>
        <p>McCarthy sees it as a hopeful sign for everyone that d^igners are now studying human needs before they formulate product prototypes.</p>
        <p>(The toll-free phone number for IBMs National Support Center for Persons with Disabilities is 800-IBM-2133. For a copy of the Maneuverability catalog, phone toll-free: 800-522-1213.)</p>
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        <p>On The House</p>
        <p>By ANDY LANG</p>
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        <p>I I saw this house in The Greenville, N.C.DaUy Reflector</p>
        <p>I Name^  ___</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>Address.</p>
        <p>City &amp;amp; State-</p>
        <p>-Zip.</p>
        <p>Make check or money order payable to and send to: UNITED FEATURE SYNDICATE UNITED MEDIA. P.O. Box 5380, Cincinnati, Ohio 45201</p>
        <p>A patio that is provided with a roof is likely to get far more use than one which has no protection from the sun and the rain. The end of the summer is a good time to work on the construction of such a roof because the work need not be done in hot weather.</p>
        <p>There are many building materials which will make a satisfactory roof for a patio. Fiber glass panels are a good choice when it is desired to filter the sunlight but not block it.</p>
        <p>Regardless of the material used for the covering, the framework that supports it is basically the same. Al</p>
        <p>though there are some minor differences, it usually is best to support the main part of the structure with 4-by-4 wooden uprights or vertical posts. It is advisable to use wood that has been treated in some way with a preservative, whether or not the wood is a type that naturally resists decay and insects.</p>
        <p>When the patio floor is concrete, the bottoms of the posts can be secured to noncorroding metal bases. A masonry bit will be needed to drill into the concrete for the setting of</p>
        <p>noncorroding screws. If the patio has a wooden deck, the posts can be anchored directly to the wood. If the floor is brick, enough bricks must be dug out to seat precast concrete blocks for the anchoring of the posts. Concrete footings must be used below</p>
        <p>well as nails. The nails are equipped with leakproof washers. If you are very careful, you can nail into the fiber glass directly. But because of the possibility of chipping or cracking the panels, it is tJest to predrill 'loles in them to accept the nails.</p>
        <p>the frost line in areas where the pro- These holes should be just a fraction blem of frost exists. Where there is of an inch smaller than the diameter</p>
        <p>ByANDY LANG AP Newsfeatures Q.  I read an article you wrote recently about providing extra storage space inside a garage. Which is fine if you have a garage. We dont, but would like to build a carport. Its a job I am sure I can handle. Am I correct in believing that it will cost less than a garage?</p>
        <p>A.  Yes, assuming it will be a simple extension of the house roof. Of course, it is possible to build a spacious carport with all kinds of extras that will make it almost as costly as a garage. If the carport is meant</p>
        <p>mostly to keep your car out of the sun and rain, with perhaps a portion of it devoted to storage and occasional use as an entertainment area, it definitely will not cost as much as a garage.</p>
        <p>Q.  I once repaired a garden hose, but it was made of rubber. The two hoses I have in this house are plastic. One of them looks as though it may need a repair soon. There is a tiny damaged section that I would like to cut out and then bring together the two ends with a coupling. Is this done the same way as with a rubber hose?</p>
        <p>Carden Clinic</p>
        <p>Q: How can I make my garden a haven for wildlife?</p>
        <p>A: Three major things make an area attractive to wildlife - shelter, food and water. Shelter means protection from cold weather, protection from predators or a place for-nesting and raising young. Shelter can be an evergreen in a snowstorm, a birdhouse, a tangle of vines, a hedge, a den tree or a fence row. Food can come from feeders or from trees, shrubs and other plants. Food can also mean grubs, worms and insects. Water in the garden allows wildlife to drink or bathe. If there is not a stream, spring or branch in the area, a birdbath may be an oasis to bring birds and other wildlife to your garden.</p>
        <p>Q: Last fall a neighbor brought home over a dozen plants - some that he could not find anywhere else  from a plant give-away sponsored by the Friends of the N.C. State University Arboretum. He said the plants were given to members of this group. He could not find the mailing address, however. Could you tefi me more about this group and how to become a member?</p>
        <p>A: The Friends of the NCSU Arboretum encourages and supports N.C. State University in establishing a first-class arboretum to enhance teaching and research programs in horticulture, and to serve the public as well as nursery and landscaping industries as a place of learning and inspiration.</p>
        <p>Membership benefits include a newsletter published three times a year with iniormation on plants, new</p>
        <p>acquisitions, plant evaluations, books, news and sources of rare plants. A benefit you have already mentioned is the annual plant distribution of plants propagated from the arboretum. The distribution always includes rare and unusual plants not available in the nursery trade. (The distribution usually takes place,in October, so there is time to become a member and take part in this years give-away.)</p>
        <p>Another benefit is getting to hear evening slide shows and lectures on topics relating to gardening, landscaping and gardens of the world.</p>
        <p>Individual membership in the Friends of the N(^U Arboretum costs $15 per year. Family memberships cost $20 per year. Lifetime memberships cost $250. Make checks payable to the NCSU Agricultural Foundation for Friends of the NCSU Arboretum, Dept, of Horticultural Science, Box 7609, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, N.C., 27695-7609. Memberships and donations are used for construction of new facilitiK, purchasing new plants and maintaining the arboretum.</p>
        <p>A. ~ The same way, but not with the same coupling. Tell the dealer where you buy the coupling that it is to be used on plastic and he will sell you the proper type. There are several different kindis, so you will have to make your own choice after you receive his assurance that it will work on plastic.</p>
        <p>Q. - I am planning to paint the outside of my house in a couple of weeks, but I am completely confused about what I read about using a primer. In one place, it says that a primer must be used, but in another, it says it is not necessary. Which is correct?</p>
        <p>A.  It sounds as though the two statements were taken out of context. It depends on conditions the writers were discussing. If it is an unfinished surface, a primer most certainly is required. If a previously painted surface, the old coat, is still in good condition and without any breaks in it, a primer is not required. But there are</p>
        <p>many ifs, ands and buts to that general advice. For instance, if the old paint has stains on it that might bleed through the paint, a primer is needed. There are conflicting opinions among some authorities as to whether a primer is required if latex paint is used over oil paint. In any case, whether you use a primer or not, remember that the new finish will be only as good as the old. Imperfections eventually will show through, even if the new coat appears at first to have covered everything well. Also, new paint doesnt adhere well to a glossy surface, so some sanding may be in order, especially if you are going to put on only one coat. Textured or rough surfaces are difficult to cover with one coat. And be sure not to spread the paint too much, a common mistake with latex. label on the paint you buy usually will include instructions for controlling the spread.</p>
        <p>(All aspects of painting the interior and exterior of a house are included in Andy Langs booklet, Paint Your House Inside and Out, which can be obtained by sending 75 cents to Know-How, P.O. Box 477, Huntington, N.Y., 11743. Questions of general interest will be answered in the column.)</p>
        <p>no such problem, the posts can be set into the dirt at least 2 feet deep, but the soil must first be impacted to make it very firm.</p>
        <p>Remember that some communities provide specifications for the construction of a patio roof. Check with local authorities to see where there are such restrictions and what they are. For instance, local codes often specify the size and type of the fasteners that must be used to anchor part of the roof framework to the side of the house.</p>
        <p>For most roof frameworks, the 4-by-4 posts will support 4-by-6 beams which, in turn, will support the outer ends of 2-by-6 joists usually 8 feet long. Remember that the joists must have a slight pitch to allow for drainage.</p>
        <p>Select the fiber glass panels you plan to use before you begin putting up anything. The width of the panels will determine how to space the rafters, 2-by-4s running from the house to the front end of the framework. If the panels are 24 inches wide, for example, space tte rafters so that the panels exactly overlap over them. The joints then will be easier to make, stronger and hidden from view. These joints are held t(^ether with special mastic as</p>
        <p>of the nails. When you buy the panels, you should purchase special flashings and other materials to insure tight fits and prevent the passage of water under the seams.</p>
        <p>There are many other interesting roofs that can be used for patios, including those made with plywood, hardboard and almost any other material. One very interesting patio roof recently seen had overhead wooden slats with spaces between them to provide partial shade. Some roofs niade of boards spaced farther apart give a special decorative appearance to patios. In one case, a homeowner constructed such a roof, then decided that too much of the suns rays were coming through. At first, he planned to add extra boards to cut down on the size of the spaces, but after some thought, he placed hanging plants on the structure. Not only did it give a landscape effect to the scene, it provided enough additional shade to accomplish the main objective of blocking some of the sunlight.</p>
        <p>(Do-it-yourselfers will find helpful informatiim on a variety of subjects in Andy Langs handbook, Practical Home Repairs, which can be obtained by sending $2 to this paper at Box 5, Teaneck, N.J., 07666.)</p>
        <p>The trendiest carpet colors this year are white, gray and beige, says Axel Venn, color consultant for ICl Fibres. He says they combine well with soft, cosmetics-influenced hues that he says will be the color palette for the90s.</p>
        <p>Venn says light colors are popular now because of new carpeting resistance to staining and soiling.</p>
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        <p>Business Notes</p>
        <p>Director Named</p>
        <p>Greenville native James L. (Jim) Edwards, manager, DA adjusting at American Mutual Fire Insurance Co., was recently named director of corrorate services.</p>
        <p>The company said that Edwards is responsible for all policy processing at the Charleston, S.C., based insurance firm.</p>
        <p>Edwards attended East Carolina University and received a degree in political science/corrections. He has done graduate studies at The Citadel and University of South Carolina.</p>
        <p>Edwards has earned the Associate in Risk Management and Casualty Claims Law Associate designations.</p>
        <p>American Mutual operates in Alabama, Georgia, Florida. North Carolina, South Carolina and Virginia.</p>
        <p>have had training in color and perm technology and specialize in perms, highlighting and style cuts.</p>
        <p>A native of Jacksonville, Fisher is married to the former Edna Lee House of Sneads Ferry and they have two sons, Michael and Kevin.</p>
        <p>Manager Cited</p>
        <p>ery  A Misunderstood Line.</p>
        <p>For registration information contact Diane Gainey or Mary Parsons at Fickling Insurance Associates in Greenville, or call 756-8300.</p>
        <p>Gene Carden of Route 3, Greenville, district sales manager for Delta Pine Land Co. for North Carolina and Virginia, was recognized at the companys recent national sales meeting in Asheville.</p>
        <p>Carden received congratulations at the meeting from Paul Koch, company president, and Roger Malkin, chairman of the board, for his contribution to the seed companys sales growth in 1988.</p>
        <p>Delta Pine Land is based in Scott, Miss.</p>
        <p>Dividend Declared</p>
        <p>Directors of Fieldcrest Cannon Inc. voted recently to pay a regular quarterly dividend of 17 cents per share of common stock and 15 cents per share of Class B common stock on Oct. 5 to holders of record Sept. 26.</p>
        <p>Staff Addition</p>
        <p>Ken Stallings, vice president of COECO Office Systems Inc., announced the addition of Roslyn F^oreman to the Greenville firms</p>
        <p>staff.</p>
        <p>Stallings said that as account manager, Ms. Foreman will be handling the typing systems for Pitt, Greene, Martin, Washington and Beaufort counties.</p>
        <p>Ms. Foreman is a graduate of East Carolina University and was previously employed as a marketing representative with a local temporary service in Greenville.</p>
        <p>The new staff member is married to Ben Foreman, branch manager for Planters Bank.</p>
        <p>New Facilities</p>
        <p>Caremaster Cleaning Systems Inc. announced the expansion and opening of the companys new cleaning plant and offices.</p>
        <p>Caremaster said the Pitt-Green-ville Chamber of Commerce will conduct a ribbon-cutting ceremony Friday at 10 a.m. The offices and warehouse will be open to the public during the day,</p>
        <p>A spokesman for the firm said the new cleaning facilities will feature in-plant rug cleaning equiprnent, including a 1.5-ton rug vacuum'system and three-ton rug hoist for hanging rugs to dry.</p>
        <p>The new facilities are also for the purpose of cleaning and storing smoke-daniaged furniture and contents, including an ozone deodorizing chamber, Caremaster said.</p>
        <p>The firm has operated in Pitt County for 20 years.</p>
        <p>Travel Trade Show</p>
        <p>Maxine Anderson, manager of Quixote Travels Inc. in Greenville, and her husband. Dale, attended the Travel Agents of the Carolinas convention and travel trade show recently in Grand Cayman Island, British West Indies.</p>
        <p>The convention featured several travel industry speakers and site inspections of Grand Cayman hotels.</p>
        <p>A spokesman said that the meeting will serve as an informational session with certain committee chairmen and officers explaining the functions and duties of their committees and offices.</p>
        <p>New members will be recognized, sworn in and presented mem^rship certificates.</p>
        <p>Daniel A. Hewitt III is president of the organization.</p>
        <p>center included Dr. W. Richard Toler, medical director; Gloria Hutto, acting director of nursing and director of training and education; David Hutto, director of marketing, and Jamie H. Norton, director of the family center and acting clinical director.</p>
        <p>J. DANIEL FISHER</p>
        <p>Architects' Exam</p>
        <p>Dawn Branch King of Greenville was one of 58 candidates for architectural registration in North Carolina who successfully passed the final examination, according to Walter L. Bost, president of the North Carolina Board of Architecture.</p>
        <p>Seminar Participants</p>
        <p>Association Members</p>
        <p>Seven area residents have been accepted as members of the North (Carolina Retail Merchants Association, the organization has announced.</p>
        <p>New members from Greenville are David Evans Jr. of Garris Evans Lumber Co. Inc., George Naoum of Georges Air Designers, Joyce Adams of Hollowells Drug Stores Inc.. Frank Steinbeck of Steinbecks Mens Shop, Jehu Taff of Taff Office Equipment Co., and Edwin Clark of Trade Oil Co.</p>
        <p>A new member from Ayden is Horace Tripp of Edwards Pharmacy.</p>
        <p>The associations primary purpose is to represent the retails concerns to elected officials at the state and federal levels, a spokesman said.</p>
        <p>Purchase Announced</p>
        <p>Chock full o Nuts Corp. announced that it has signed a letter of intent to acquire Jimbos Jumbos Inc., an Edenton headquartered privately held processor and packager of peanuts, for $31.5 million in cash.</p>
        <p>Jimbos and its subsidiaries had combined revenues of $45 million for its fiscal year ended June 30. The company processes peanuts in the shell and markets them primarily to supermarket chains. Approximately 25 percent of its sales are to institutional customers.</p>
        <p>The center is the states newest facility for the treatment of alcoholism and other chemical dependencjps. Located on 52 acres at 1212 Recovery Road in Tarboro, the centers has 66 patient beds.  ^</p>
        <p>Tilmon Keel is chairman and chief executive officer of Jimbos and Robert S. Thomas is president. The companys principal operations are in the northeastern region of the state.</p>
        <p>Chock full o Nuts roasts, packs and markets regular, instant and decaffeinated coffees.</p>
        <p>TOMO. PALMER</p>
        <p>Peoples Senior VP</p>
        <p>New Staff Members</p>
        <p>Earl B. Seay of Premiere Salons, 2510 S. Charles Blvd., announced three staff additions at the Greenville shop.</p>
        <p>Seay said that Linda Tarkington and Scott Pere each have six years experience in the hair business, while Matt Holder has three years experience.</p>
        <p>Seay said the new staff members</p>
        <p>J. Daniel Fisher has recently been promoted to senior vice president by Peoples Bank &amp;amp; Trust Co. in Greenville, the bank announced.</p>
        <p>Fisher, who joined Peoples in 1984, also serves as regional credit administrator in the commercial lending division.</p>
        <p>He received a bachelors degree in business administration from the University of North Carolina in Chapel Hill in 1971. He is a graduate of the mid-management program of the North Carolina School of Banking and a 1985 graduate of the advanced management program. He is a 1979 graduate of the National Consumer Compliance School at the University of Oklahoma.</p>
        <p>Dick Kinley and Steven Goodfield of Greenville Pool and Supply attended a seminar presented recently in Wichita by Sunshine Rooms, a manufacturer of solariums and greenhouses.</p>
        <p>The four-day seminar included sales, sizing and installation of company products.</p>
        <p>Insurance Seminar</p>
        <p>Going First Class in Greenville, a seminar for insurance professionals sponsored by the Pitt County Association of Insurance Women, will be held Nov. 15,16 and 17 at the Hilton Inn in Greenville.</p>
        <p>Discussion topics will include The State of the Insurance Industry, Windstorm and the Pool - How It Works, Personal Profiles, Insurance Fraud and Its Impact On Our Industry, and Boiler Machin</p>
        <p>Company Payments</p>
        <p>The Prudential Insurance Co. said that its payments to policyholders and beneficiaries in North Carolina amounted to $224 million during 1987, with 84.3 percent going to living policyholders and the balance going to beneficiaries.</p>
        <p>Prudential said its life insurance in force in the state was $10.2 billion by 1987 year-end. Admitted assets totaled $970 million.</p>
        <p>In the United States payments to policyholders and beneficiaries totaled $14.7 billion in 1987, Prudential said.</p>
        <p>Centers Names Chief</p>
        <p>Tom 0. Palmer has been named president of the Mary Frances Corp. and executive director of the Mary Frances Center which is opening Monday in Tarboro.</p>
        <p>Palmer was previously manager of the employee assistant program for Owens-Corning Fiberglas, where he was in charge of administration and development of the corporations EAP.</p>
        <p>P. Richard Herring has been named vice president of the corporation and director of operations for the center.</p>
        <p>PCLU Meeting Set</p>
        <p>The first meeting of the fall of the Pitt County Life Underwriters will be held Thursday at 8 a.m. at the Three Steers Restaurant on Memorial Drive.</p>
        <p>He previously served as vice president of finance for Zip Marts Inc., headquartered in Rocky Mount. He is a former member of the board of directors and past president of the North Carolina Association of Convenience Stores.</p>
        <p>Other appointments at the new</p>
        <p>P. RICHARD HERRINGBudget Crunch Could Translate Into OAS Layoffs</p>
        <p>By GEORGE GEDDA Associated Press Writer</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP) - The Organization of American States, facing the worst financial crisis of its history, may be forced to lay off as many as 300 of its 1,000 employees over the next few months, according to OAS sources.</p>
        <p>The crisis is based largely on the Reagan administrations decision to</p>
        <p>reduce its 1988 contribution to the OAS by $10 million and by the same amount next year. Compounding the problem is the failure of several other major contributors, including Chile and Venezuela, to keep their payments current, the sources said.</p>
        <p>The impending layoffs have generated gloom and uncertainty among OAS employees, most of whom are Latin Americans who are faced with the prospect of the immediate loss of</p>
        <p>their U.S. visas if their jobs are eliminated.</p>
        <p>The staff is terribly worried, said Arturo Garzn, a Mexican who is president of the OAS staff association.</p>
        <p>He noted that many of the employees are longtime residents of the Washington area and would have to start from scratch if forced to return with their families to their native lands.</p>
        <p>They are facing a terrible family situation, Garzn said.</p>
        <p>The OAS, whose origins date back 99 years, is designed to enhance cooperation among the United States and more than 30 other countries in Latin America and the Caribbean.</p>
        <p>In its heyday, the OAS was seen by successive U.S. administrations as a vital tool for combatting communism in the hemisphere but the United States has largely ignored the</p>
        <p>Rate Increase Foes Want Tougher Ruling</p>
        <p>COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) - Carolina Power &amp;amp; Light Co. and two opponents of its recent rate increase request /ice Com-</p>
        <p>want the state Public Service mission to render a tougher decision on the cost overruns the utility incurred to build a North Carolina power</p>
        <p>plant.</p>
        <p>The PSC ruled that CP&amp;amp;L had</p>
        <p>Plant near Raleigh, N.C.</p>
        <p>Nucor Steel and the state Department of Consumer Affairs this week petitioned the commission to increase the amount they barred the</p>
        <p>utility from recovering from South Carolir</p>
        <p>lina customers.</p>
        <p>Nucor Steel is the utilitys largest South Carolina industrial user.</p>
        <p>$880 million, Nucor attorney Garrett Stone said.</p>
        <p>Raleigh-based CP&amp;amp;L argues the commission found no imprudence in the construction of the plant and should allow total plant costs to be recouped from customers.</p>
        <p>Commissioners must decide by</p>
        <p>Oct. 3 whether to reconsider their Aug. 16 decision, which allows the utility to increase annual revenues by nearly $25 million.</p>
        <p>CP&amp;amp;L sought an additional $47.8 million, which it said was needed to recover a portion of costs for the 960-megawatt Harris plant.</p>
        <p>organization in recent years. This is partly because the anti-communist consensus among member states has eroded over the years.</p>
        <p>President Reagan bypassed the OAS in October 1983 when he decided to join forces with several other Caribbean countries in toppling the leftist government of Grenada.</p>
        <p>Neither the United States nor Nicaragua has looked to the OAS as an appropriate forum for achieving a settlement to their long-running dispute.</p>
        <p>The United States, with 85 per cent of the combined gross national product of OAS member states, has a quota of about $40 million, or 66 per cent of the organizations annual budget of about $65 million.</p>
        <p>The money is used to pay for programs in such fields as human rights, education and drug abuse, among others.</p>
        <p>But the Reagan administration, faced with its own budgetary woes, informed the OAS last May that it</p>
        <p>was reneging on $10 million of its 1988 quota. The money was reallocated to cover a foreign exchange shortfall that U.S. diplomatic missions in Europe had experienced as a result of the declining value of the dollar.</p>
        <p>The OAS sources said the second blow came more recently when the United States decided to cut $10 million from its 1989 quota.</p>
        <p>We have to decide every month which bills well pay, said one OAS official, insisting on anonymity. He predicted the layoffs would be announced around January 1 after decisions are made on which programs should receive priority.</p>
        <p>Joao Baena Soares, a Brazilian who has served as OAS secretary general since 1984, was unavailable for comment on the crisis. But he told one interviewer recently that the situation is so serious the essence of the organization is in danger.</p>
        <p>Said Garzn, We have dedicated our lives to the benefit of the hemisphere. But we are disposable.    &amp;gt;</p>
        <p>spent $440 million too much to build We felt there was a lot of evidence the Shearon Harris Nuclear Power to support an imprudence finding of</p>
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        <p>H  The  Daily  Reflector,  Greenville,  N.C. Sunday, September 18,1988 Qa^ yFuel Economy A RealGosser For NHTSA</p>
        <p>By TIM BOVEE Associated Press Writer</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP) - The nations automakers, their regulators and their critics agree on this: There is more to fuel economy than saving gasoline.</p>
        <p>On a single mile per gallon, to hear the interested parties tell it. hangs the U.S. trade balance, the ability of the domestic auto industry to compete, the nations energy independence, thousands of highway traffic deaths, even the capacity of the Earths climate to support humankind.</p>
        <p>A welter of comment offered at hearings this past week lead to those assorted conclusions. It now falls to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration to weigh those competing interests and issue a decision on where fuel consumption standards ought to be set in the future.</p>
        <p>In many respects, fuel economy is a 1970s issue hitching a ride on the concerns of the 1980s and the 1990s.</p>
        <p>Beginning in 1972, oil producing nations, mainly in the Middle East, raised oil prices dramatically. Congress in 1975 responded with legisla</p>
        <p>tion to reduce (he nations reliance on foreign oil by forcing Detroit to build more fuel-efficient cars.</p>
        <p>The law phased in a minimum gas mileage each manufacturer on average must attain. The corporate average fuel economy  shortened to CAFE and pronounced like a small eatery - is calculated on the basis of gallons of gasoline used by a makers domestic car production over the estimated life of the vehicles.</p>
        <p>The CAFE standard in 1985 reached 27.5 mpg. The next year it was lowered to 26 mpg by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration after some of the automakers argued that, for technological and commercial reasons, they could not meet the stricter standard.</p>
        <p>The standard was scheduled to revert to 27.5 mpg with the 1989 model year. NHTSA in August proposed setting the CAFE standard through 1990 somewhere between 26.5 mpg and 27.5 mpg.</p>
        <p>mpg standard, but the question is one of trade and jobs.</p>
        <p>To meet a 27.5 mpg CAFE standard, the two largest U.S. automakers said they would have to restrict production of large cars.</p>
        <p>The result, they said, would be layoffs at large-car assembly plants. The job losses would cascade through the manufacturers suppliers and into the general economy, ultimately numbering in the hundreds of thousands.</p>
        <p>Analysts buy the argument that the stricter fuel-economy standard would pinch GM and Ford.</p>
        <p>I think you would have more problems, because Americans want jto buy horsepower and big cars, said David Healy, an analyst with the New York brokerage house Drexel Burnham Lambert Inc. it probably wouldnt be a disaster: it would be more of a pain for the companies than it is now.</p>
        <p>General Motors Corp. and Ford Motor Co. oppose setting the standard at the higher end of the range. They said they could live with a 26.5</p>
        <p>A pain for GM and Ford would be a boon for the foreign automakers, particularly the Japanese, and detrimental to the U.S. balance of trade, both the automakers and analysts said.</p>
        <p>Large and luxury cars accounted for about 19 percent of the 5.2 million domestic cars sold in the United States this year through August, according to industry reports.</p>
        <p>All but one of those piodels were made by GM and Ford. Chrysler makes one big car. Most imported cars are smaller vehicles.</p>
        <p>Even if the U.S. makers restricted big-car production, they would still make some of the high-profit vehicles, thereby diluting the average gas mileage of their fleets.</p>
        <p>To offset that production, they have to have a lower performance (small) car than the importers, because the importers dont have to balance their small cars aginst the higher fuel-usage cars, said Thomas OGrady, president of Integrated Automotive Resources Inc. of Wayne, Pa.</p>
        <p>Therefore, even buyers of small cars would tend to gravitate to higher-performance imported vehicles.</p>
        <p>Against that bread-and-butter question lie other issues, some divorced from the orginal conservation intent of the law.</p>
        <p>Some want CAFE loosened to lower the highway death toll. The Competitive Enterprise Institute, a</p>
        <p>free-market advocacy group, argued</p>
        <p>STATE PORT  The port at Wilmington is seen in a photograph taken in August. Noel Painchaud, state ports director, says his goal is to improve North Carolinas</p>
        <p>ports by bringing in more cargo and more shipping lines. (AP Laserphoto)</p>
        <p>that setting the standard at 27.5 mpg would lead to between 2,200 and 3,900 additional deaths over the life of 1989 cars because people are more likely to be killed in crashes involving smaller vehicles.</p>
        <p>Others want the mileage standards tightened in order to protect the environment. The Energy Conservation Coalition, a group of 20 environmental and conservation grups, argued that loosening the CAFE standard, by putting more carbon dioxide into the atmosphere, would accelerate the greenhouse effect, a warming of the atmosphere caused by a trapping of the suns heat, with disastrous effects for worlds food-growing ability in the next century.</p>
        <p>The Department of Transportation, GM and others point to gasoline prices averaging 97 cents per gallon, far lower than forecast during the height of the oil crunch, and say the law has outlived its original intent and should be scrapped.</p>
        <p>Still others, such as the Center for Auto Safety, a consumers group often critical of the auto industry and its regulators, say the conservation issue is still important, with oil imports standing at 38.1 percent this year, against 36.8 percent when the CAFE law was passed. A new energy crisis, they argue, is something for which the nation should be prepared.</p>
        <p>The CAFE decision, the conflicting comment suggests, is a question of public priorities, a balance between the economic health of the auto industry and broader political, safety and environmental concerns. A ruling is expected within a few weeks.</p>
        <p>In other business and economic news this past week:</p>
        <p>-The government said the U.S. merchandise trade deficit showed the biggest improvement in almost six years in July, shrinking to $9.53 billion from a revised June deficit of $13.22 billion. Another report showed a broader measure of U.S. trade, figured quarterly, narrowed sharply from April through June.</p>
        <p>-Other government economic reports evidenced a slowdown in growth. Industrial production rose a modest 0.2 percent in August, while retail sales declined 0.2 percent during the month. The industrial operating rate for August showed little change, and business inventories were reported up just 0.3 percent in July.</p>
        <p>-Agriculture Department officials held to an earlier prediction that consumer food prices would rise an average of only 3 percent to 5 percent this year, with about 1 percent of the rise attributed to the summer drought.</p>
        <p>Sales of U.S.-made cars and trucks fell 9 percent in early September, but last years incentives continued to color the year-to-year comparisons.</p>
        <p>-Nine personal computer makers declared their technical independence from International Business Machines Corp., with a new standard for how information will be passed around inside their machines. Analysts said the new bus, or data pathway, killed for good the idea that IBM would control the standards for the next generation of PCs.</p>
        <p>Kroger Co., one of the nations</p>
        <p>largest grocery chain, said it was considering a $3.77 billion restructuring plan, which analysts said was designed to ward off a hostile takeover by Herbert and Robert Haft.</p>
        <p>-Management officials at Hospital Corp. of America said they planned a $3.3 billion buyout of the company, one of the worlds biggest hospital chains.</p>
        <p>-Macmillan Inc. agreed to a $2.36 billion takeover by Kohlberg Kravis Roberts &amp;amp; Co., a private investment firm. But British publisher Robert Maxwell responded by raising his offer for Macmillan to'$2.41 billion in cash.</p>
        <p>-Consumer-products giant Colgate-Palmolive Co. accepted a management-led buyout of its Ken-^ dall Health Care subsidiary in a deal that values the business at around $1.1 billion.</p>
        <p>-Playtex Holdings Inc. said it will split into two separate companies under a series of buyout transactions totaling about $1.3 billion. The deal would separate Playtex family products businesses from its intimate apparel operations.</p>
        <p>Ames Department Stores Inc. said it had agreed to buy Zayre Corp.s 388-unit discount store division in a deal it valued at about $800 million.</p>
        <p>-Armtek Corp. accepted a sweetened $561.2 million buyout offer from its once-hostile suitor Mark IV Industries Inc., ending a brief battle for the auto parts maker.</p>
        <p>American Brands Inc. rebuffed a buyout proposal from an investor group led by financier Bennett LeBow, who alternatively requested a chance to buy the companys tobacco businesses.</p>
        <p>Harvard University said it is raising $30 million to start companies to commercialize medical research. Administrators said the plan would raise money needed to supplement Harvard Medical Schools $350 million research budget.</p>
        <p>Hugh Hefner, the jet-setting founder of Playboy magazine, said he would give his ^ughter, Christie Hefner, full command of Playboy Enterprises.Ports' Chiefs Have Shared Common Problem</p>
        <p>(Part One in Series of Three) WILMINGTON (AP) - In the past 10 years, the state ports at Wilmington and Morehead City went from a seemingly endless string of year-end losses to peak in 1982 at a record</p>
        <p>profit of $2.27 million. This past year,</p>
        <p>oil</p>
        <p>the ports returned to the loss column by $116,000.</p>
        <p>Also in the past 10 years, the N.C. State Ports Authority has had three executive directors, each with diL ferent backgrounds, levels of experience and philosophies.</p>
        <p>But all have had to deal with the same problem: How to make the</p>
        <p>NOEL PAINCHAUD</p>
        <p>North Carolina ports more valuable to the state.</p>
        <p>Noel Painchaud, 55, joined the SPA in January as deputy executive director after serving as head of the</p>
        <p>Sort of Providence, R.I. By August, e was in charge of the ports following the resignation of William Edwards.</p>
        <p>In those few months, Painchaud already has become known for his penchant for public relations and particularly for marketing  an area he considers a major weakness in the SPAs overall battle plan.</p>
        <p>He demonstrated his flair during a recent SPA board of directors meeting by using colorful graphics and a laser pointer to brighten the historically dull financial report. The public relations staff has been told to concentrate on getting more stories about the ports into the press, which resulted in a recent release about a shipment of ice cream carts to the Seoul Olympics. And Painchauds staff has put together a series of sales</p>
        <p>pamphlets on the ports  including color aerial photos  that are personalized with the names of the shipping lines the SPA is hoping to lure to the states docks.</p>
        <p>Those are among the most visible signs of the Painchaud difference. What may make his most lasting impression is being formulated behind the doors of the marketing division.</p>
        <p>There has never b^n a comprehensive marketing plan done here, Painchaud told the Wilmington Morning Star. Rather, he said, the effort to bring more cargo and shipping lines to the ports has been more like an unaimed shotgun blast.</p>
        <p>Painchaud said he and marketing director Jack Wilson have taken aim at specific targets for the short term and are working on a long-range marketing strategy. Among those areas in the gunsi^t are both coasts of South America, the Far East and the Mediterranean and at least 13 shipping lines that could serve them through Wilmington or Morehead.</p>
        <p>Word is getting out to other ports that were doing this  like backyard gossip, Painchaud said. They never heard of this kind of thing from us before. When they heard Wilmington, they said, So what?</p>
        <p>Unlike his two predecessors, Painchaud did not come to the ports after retiring from a military career. He has nearly 27 years of maritime and shipping experience and a masters degree in transportation management.</p>
        <p>Painchaud spent a year and a half in Rhode Island as managing director (rf the Narragansett Bay Ports and executive director of the Port of Providence, which make about $2.2 million a year in revenues. Painchaud was in charge of six berths, while a stevedoring company leased the landside facilities.</p>
        <p>Major cargoes there include steel, lumber, automobiles and scrap metal.</p>
        <p>Jo-Anne Call, marketing director at Naragansett Bay, said Painchauds duties included leasing, scheduling ship arrivals and general operation. He handled a little of everything from top to bottom, she said.</p>
        <p>Painchaud also previously worked as general manager of the Niagara Frontier Transportation Authority, a port on the St. Lawrence Seaway. He was executive director of the Cleve-land-Cuyahoga County Port Authori</p>
        <p>ty, president of the Great Lakes International Stevedoring Co., director of harbors and airports for the Port of Cleveland, Ohio, and special assistant to the executive director of the Toledo, Ohio, Port Authority.</p>
        <p>Painchaud has not had much time to become accustomed to his new post at the North Cyolina ports. He often defers to staffers on questions about events that predate him.</p>
        <p>Nevertheless, he has determined his goal is to improve the North</p>
        <p>Carolina ports by bringing in more &amp;gt;hii       </p>
        <p>cargo and more shipping lines. Profit is not a major motive.</p>
        <p>I get the impression there was (pressure) to show a profit at the North Carolina ports, Painchaud said. I wasnt in town long before thats the impression I got. And I dont know where it came from or exactly when, but there seemed to be this syndrome ... to show a profit or else. Never mind servicing the exporters and importers and steamship lines and the hundreds of other things we do for North Carolina businesses.</p>
        <p>Just make a damn profit or hit the road.</p>
        <p>In all my years in this business, no one has ever directed me to make a profit. Our return on investment is to provide a service to North Carolina manufacturers so they can reduce costs. Thats one of our main missions in life. One of the dividends (of having ports) is to make dividends for companies.</p>
        <p>When William Edwards became SPA executive director in 1985, he publicly announced that profits, while important, would be secondary</p>
        <p>to serving the needs of the states shippers.</p>
        <p>Now president of Carolina Atlantic Transportation Services, a barge line offering container service to Puerto Rico, Edwards said he believes that the state ports should be self-sufficient.</p>
        <p>They should pay their own way, but thats all they should do, Edwards said. The state should pay for any expansions or major improvements.</p>
        <p>The ports shouldnt be a burden on the tax^yers, except for those major capital outlays, Edwards said. As the ports expand, business expands and the state benefits.</p>
        <p>It was during Edwards three-year tenure that the General Assembly approved a $36 million development package for the Wilmington and Morehead state ports. About $26 million is being spent to build a 900-foot wharf extension at Wilmington and to buy two new container cranes.</p>
        <p>While thats good news for the port, it could be bad for the SPAs bottom line, Edwards said, because it will mean larger deductions against the ports revenues for higher depreciation costs.</p>
        <p>It was the paper costs for depreciation and other non-cash items that led to the reported loss in the past year of $116,000. The ports actually had a l^itive cash flow of about $2.9 million.</p>
        <p>Edwards joined the SPA in 1975 after retiring as a lieutenant commander with 23 years in the Navy. Ironically, most of his military experience was in air traffic control. It</p>
        <p>wasnt until after he got the job at the authority, he says, that he found it didnt own any airports.</p>
        <p>Nevertheless, by 1978 Edwards was promoted to Wilmington port manager. He was promoted again in 1983 to deputy executive director, moving up to the top slot two years later.</p>
        <p>William M.A. Greene resigned after eight years as executive director under the Hunt administration in 1985. Members of the SPA board of directors, newly appointed by the Republican Martin administration, seemed to think of Greene as a political appointee, he says  a charge he denies.</p>
        <p>They said they wanted me to retire, Greene said. I said I wasnt about to retire, but I had my letter of resignation ready.</p>
        <p>Greene joined the SPA soon after retiring from the Navy as a rear admiral. He has a bachelors degree in business administration and a masters in international affairs, with concentration in foreign diplomacy and commerce. During his 30 years in the Navy, Greene held a command at sea, had various administrative and management positions and was a publisher and editor for the U.S. Naval Institute.</p>
        <p>Greene maintains he was not under pressure from the Hunt administration to show a profit. I didnt feel</p>
        <p>any pressure other than what I put on myself, he said.</p>
        <p>Greene said he believes a port can serve the state and still make a profit. Before he left in 1985, he said, the SPA paid for a third container crane and bought a former Texaco oil terminal in Wilmington out of revenues and still made $1.9 million in profits.</p>
        <p>It should be a pixtfit-making entity, Greene said. It is a corporate business owned by the state. Any other port you talk to would say, Were in here to make money or well change the people. The General Assembly should only appropriate funds to those parts of a seaport that cant make money but are a service to the state.</p>
        <p>Major developments should be handled in-house, Greene said. The current $36 million expansion being funded by the state involves a number of projects - including the berth extension  that would have been handled by a $32 million bond issue proposed in 1982. But the proposal was delayed somewhere in the state government until bond interest rates were too high, he said.</p>
        <p>Whats happening now was my vision of Wilmington. Greene said. But theyre doing it late and with state appropriations rather than bonds. We still could have sold bonds six months ago.</p>
        <p>Paul W. White, JD-CPA</p>
        <p>8 pleaded to announce the opening of an office for the practice of law at 323 Clifton St., Grtenville, N.C.</p>
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        <p>Tune-Up Special *22.50</p>
        <p>Cylinder</p>
        <p> 6 Cyllndr. .*25.80 I 6 Cyllndw. *31.80</p>
        <p>I M Mlly ftMlW Ftll MHl MrOHWII</p>
        <p>When you have your Ford, Mercury. Lincoln or Ford Light Truck fixed, you pay once, and Ill guarantee that, If the covered part ever has to be fixed again. I'll fix It fret. Fret parts. Free labor. Covers thousands of parts. Lasts as long as you own your vehicle. No matter where or when you bought It. So take advantage of my free oil. And my free Lifetime Service Quarantee. Two ways of showing wu tf^t I care about you. Come In with your couponl</p>
        <p>Tse NnMM MrmiNy owtra mWm I mmm hm.  -  -</p>
        <p> SmI nww tnS iwlMMm.</p>
        <p>Ask ut to tM  copy of IN LtfoUfflO Sor-vtooOuaraniM</p>
        <p>7IM114</p>
        <p>TotlfrM</p>
        <p>*"UHM4ma"i*Nwparto</p>
        <p>OlOwnMMpo(MMCuC.</p>
        <p>UnoMn-</p>
        <p>Nwiy or PM U|M TrM.ae</p>
        <p>mmm</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0038" />
        <p>B^18 The Dally Reflector. Greenville, N.C. Sunday, September 18,1988</p>
        <p>J .1</p>
        <p>45'e-</p>
        <p>7 - &amp;lt;1 36  2</p>
        <p>48^4+ '4</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (API  New Vork Stock E change trading tor the week selected issues</p>
        <p>Sales</p>
        <p>PE hds High Low Last Chg.</p>
        <p>AMR  9t678  44'3 45</p>
        <p>ARX  11 416  74#  6'</p>
        <p>ASA  3  2161 37'  36</p>
        <p>AbtLab 120 16 IW87 4919 48'.</p>
        <p>AetnLI 2 76 8 27931 52'4 49'8 51'3 AirPrd 1 20 12 8212 43': 41I4 4244-! AlskAir 16 16 7087 19Sb 19  19&amp;gt;^ 's</p>
        <p>Alcan 5 88 7 I44II 30'4 29  29'sV Js</p>
        <p>AlcoStd .68 11 4889 264 24' 25*b* 'a viAlglnt  1008  2I4  2'3  2'-&amp;gt;4</p>
        <p>AllgPw  3  10  *15644 38  37'a  37^4  a</p>
        <p>AldSgnll 80  11  17017 35*8  33H  34'j.|'a</p>
        <p>viAlhsC  1697  7 14  I,</p>
        <p>Alcoa 1 40 8 13097 5Ma 49^4 51a* 'a Ama* 20 9 12028 21'a 20  20e-l</p>
        <p>AmHes  60  *20508 284*  25'a  28'3 *2'a</p>
        <p>AmBrnd 2 20 9 18611 52'4 474e 5I4a*4'i ACyan 1 20 14 14485 49'e 47&amp;gt;a 48e - &amp;gt;a AElPw 2 32a 10 18044 28  27'a 27'a</p>
        <p>AmE*p  76  22 43418  29'a  28'a  29'.</p>
        <p>AFamly  24  10 4265  I3'b  12'4  13 *14</p>
        <p>AHome  3 60  13 6029  79'a  78':  79</p>
        <p>Amrtch  5 40  10 8191  93'a  91</p>
        <p>AlntGr  40  9 20814  64a  62':</p>
        <p>AmRlty 56e 2 203 4'3- 4',</p>
        <p>AmStor 84  15  6187  55'3  49'</p>
        <p>AT&amp;amp;T I 20  13  78557  26  24'a  25'a -  </p>
        <p>Ametk s 60  16  * 2017  14'a  I3'2  14'a*  'a</p>
        <p>Amoco 3 50  10  18382  75&amp;gt;a  72'a  754b3'b</p>
        <p>AMP 1 17 18247 43'a'4|44 42'a &amp;gt;a Anacmp  12 13388  9'b  8'a  9'3*r3</p>
        <p>Anadrk  30  69 2703  25'a  24'*  ,25'3  'i</p>
        <p>Anheus 72  l4  22217  31's  30a  31'a-  '4</p>
        <p>Anthony 44b  9  64  16^a  16  16'4i  "a</p>
        <p>Anthny s  44  9 I354 u1I'b  lOe  ll'a</p>
        <p>ArchDn lOb  10 39355  19'e  1844  19'.-4  'a</p>
        <p>MARKET REPORT</p>
        <p>2.2S0-</p>
        <p>Activiiy ovf the pa$t 30 tnomg dayi</p>
        <p>a.aoo-</p>
        <p>DOW JONi S AVI HA(il</p>
        <p>2.IS0-</p>
        <p>2.100-</p>
        <p>2,OSO-</p>
        <p>li</p>
        <p>2.000-</p>
        <p>93'a*P4 64'a-  4</p>
        <p>55'3 44'a</p>
        <p>t,9S0-</p>
        <p>7.900-</p>
        <p>HIGH</p>
        <p>2,113.30</p>
        <p>LOW</p>
        <p>2,077.70</p>
        <p>CLOSE</p>
        <p>2,09S.19</p>
        <p>CHANGE</p>
        <p>Up 8.97</p>
        <p>I!</p>
        <p>Ill</p>
        <p>in</p>
        <p>III</p>
        <p>iri</p>
        <p>-JTwTr'MTyyTrMTwTf laTyyTI b Twtr a'Tvyfr J t 22  8 T 12</p>
        <p>Armco</p>
        <p>ArmWI</p>
        <p>Asarco</p>
        <p>AshOil s</p>
        <p>AtlRich</p>
        <p>AlldsCp</p>
        <p>Augat</p>
        <p>AVMCO</p>
        <p>Avery</p>
        <p>Avne!</p>
        <p>Avon</p>
        <p>Aydin</p>
        <p>9'a 33'a 234a 35</p>
        <p>10'3+ 4a 34I4. '4</p>
        <p>23'a- '4 35'4-.ia '784a 82 1-394 37''j 37'b-2'b II'. Il'a- 4, 23a 23'b- 'a 20'a 22'.- 'a I9'a 20'a 24  2414I- 4</p>
        <p>I'e</p>
        <p>BestPd</p>
        <p>BethSti</p>
        <p>Bevrly</p>
        <p>BlackD</p>
        <p>22 8464 10'3 I 10 4888 35 80 3 3982 24 I II 3267 36 4 10 18844 82'4 105 223 3944 40 24 739 1248 34 12 356 24 48 22 6393 22'3 50 14 5352 2048 I 73 12913 25'4 11 94  224b  22'a  22'a</p>
        <p>- B-B -BakrHu  46  15570  13'a  127b  139*</p>
        <p>BallyMf  24 33 17570  234a  21'3  229*</p>
        <p>BaltGE  2 9 5050  3l'a  30'a  30'a</p>
        <p>BncOne  92b 10 6537  26  24'a  257*</p>
        <p>BkNY  1  80 6 4341  355a  34&amp;gt;a  35'2+ 9,</p>
        <p>BnkAm  10 42492  uU'a  14'*  IS's-rl</p>
        <p>Bausch  I  14 3739  44  4294  429*-1'8</p>
        <p>Ba*ter  50  17 53290  217 b  207b  2I's+1'4</p>
        <p>vjBeker 483 15 64 13 64 13 64-1 32 BellAtl  4 08  II 10650  72  70'*  71'b- 'b</p>
        <p>BellSo  2 36  12 27096  40'2  3994  40'a-9s</p>
        <p>BentCp  2  11 2962  53'*  51'*  5294-r '2</p>
        <p>BengtB  12r  10 1476  44 a  4'a  4'a-  'a</p>
        <p>19 5120  159a  149*  15 a-r  9,</p>
        <p>  7 16550  2294  207b  2254-19b</p>
        <p>05j  5135  694  6'4  6'2</p>
        <p>40  15 5796  21'b  20'b  2I'b- 'b</p>
        <p>BIckHR  1 04  16 4873  28'*  27'*  279*- 'a</p>
        <p>Boeing  1 60  17 31906  6294  60'a  61'2 + 1'b</p>
        <p>8oiseCs1 20  8 6050  43'2  429s  43'a- 'b</p>
        <p>Borden 1,56  14 5448  54'-2  53  535ar '*</p>
        <p>BostEd 182  II 4786  15',  149a  I5'a- 'a</p>
        <p>BrislMy  1  68  16  29214  445 a  43'*  437a- 'a</p>
        <p>BritPt 3.l8e  12  5182  509 a  4894  50'*-i-1'2</p>
        <p>BrwnFr  48  19 *25877 275a  26'*  27 -  'a</p>
        <p>Brnwk  44  9 8673  209a  19'b  209a-i-  H</p>
        <p>BrINth  2 20  19 12696 69'2  66'*  69'2-294</p>
        <p>- c-c -</p>
        <p>CBS  3  16  2465 168  163'a  1669* - 19*</p>
        <p>CIGNA  2  96  8  10538  54'2  51'2  549efl'4</p>
        <p>CMS En  66257  22'a  21',  217a+ '*</p>
        <p>CNW  9 6177  28'b  27'!  28'*- 'a</p>
        <p>CPC  1 44  15 24179 51'4  47'b  509*-t-2'!</p>
        <p>CRSS 5  24  10 760 u24'*  21  23'*-2</p>
        <p>CSX  I 24 39 20155 27'a  257a  267* - 9,</p>
        <p>Caesar  9  2716  269a  26'*  269a r  'a</p>
        <p>CamSp s 84 16  10624 30  28  30  -  Pa</p>
        <p>CapCils 20 17  2855 337'!  328  336  -8</p>
        <p>CarPw 2 76 9  4089  35'a  34'i  35 t  '*</p>
        <p>CartHw  9  1591  10'a  9'!  99*-  'a</p>
        <p>CaslICk  13  3081  27',  26',  27'a+  t</p>
        <p>Caterp ,75 10  13900 58'a  56  56',-  '4</p>
        <p>Centel s 172 15  4335 43  42  429a  -  H</p>
        <p>CentEn 1 60  6 16290 13',  13'*  13'*-'*</p>
        <p>CenSoW 2 44  8 4161  31  309*  309*-  9a</p>
        <p>CnIIPS I 76 10 1799 2Pi 2l'e 21'*-'* Chmpin  I 8*l7339 33'a 32  3294 k 'a</p>
        <p>ChamSp 20  32 2178  13  129a  129a-  'a</p>
        <p>ChartC 02e  5 1270  3'e  3a  3'a-  'a</p>
        <p>Chase 2 16  3 9600  29a  289*  299a-h  ',</p>
        <p>ChmBnk 2  72  5 5045 32  3Pa  32  +  9,</p>
        <p>Chevrn 2 60  10 28364  45'  42'a  4494 k!',</p>
        <p>ChrisCr 531  24 1288  21',  19',  20 -I',</p>
        <p>Chrysir 1  4 26189  23'*  2P*  229a-',</p>
        <p>CircleK 28  14 7846  139,  13  I3'a- '.*</p>
        <p>CirCty 12  17 10240  U40  37'  399ekP4</p>
        <p>Citicrpsl 48  4 47178  259  24'*  259k|'B</p>
        <p>ClarkE  140 2366 29'  28',  29',k  '4</p>
        <p>Cloro* 1 04  13 5373  3Pb  309  31'-'</p>
        <p>Coastal 40  15 5304  339  32'*  329- i,</p>
        <p>CotaCI 1.20  16 49129  42'  419  42,*,. ,,</p>
        <p>vjColec  950 2  19  P4-  &amp;lt;</p>
        <p>ColoPal 1 48  41 24387  46'*  43'  44'a k .</p>
        <p>ColGas 2  14 3054  34',  32',  34',k I*</p>
        <p>CmbEn 1  20 3867  32.  31'  32',k '</p>
        <p>Copidre  8  2371  11'  IP  ||',-  ',</p>
        <p>CmwE  3  8  24386  31  30  31 k  '</p>
        <p>Comsat  1.32  8  3377  27  26'*  27 k  '*</p>
        <p>ConsEd  3.20  10  5195  43'  429*  43'</p>
        <p>ConsNG 1 64  15 3390  389  37'*  37*-'a</p>
        <p>Conrail 1.20  8 13137  3P  30'a  3l',kl</p>
        <p>CnStor  19 10202  6'a  5'  6'-  '</p>
        <p>Contel  2.08  27 7065  35',  349*  35 -  9</p>
        <p>CntlCp 2 60 10 6364 40'a 38'* 38'-9, CtData  25 6577  23  22  229*-  'a</p>
        <p>Cooper  1 80  14 4943  539*  529*  539,+  1</p>
        <p>CornGI 1 48  12 4204  59',  579*  58'-</p>
        <p>CrayRs  21 8502  80'*  759a  76'*-4</p>
        <p>CrwnCk  12 318  1159*  112',  II3H-29</p>
        <p>CwnCk wi  17 38',  38'*  38'</p>
        <p>CumEn 2 20 119 6808 509* 46  49'k39*</p>
        <p>CurtW 1 60 9 340 49'* 48a 49'- '</p>
        <p> D0 </p>
        <p>DPL 2 16  10 3179  26',  259*  25'*- '*</p>
        <p>DanaCp I 52  10 2525  369a  34'*  369k I'*</p>
        <p>DalaGn  19 5353  19  I8H  19'- '</p>
        <p>DaytHd I 02  16 17522  39'*  37'a  39',k2</p>
        <p>Deere 80 11 13967 449 42', 44'* k ' OeltaAr 1.20 8 6656 49'i 47a 48'-  OetEd I 68  14 &amp;gt;318397 15', I4a  14'*</p>
        <p>Digital  10 27753  96',  94'a  94'*k 'a</p>
        <p>Disney 40 17 18760 65  62963H-1',</p>
        <p>DomRs 308 9 5442 43  42' 42',-9</p>
        <p>Dover 136 15 2455 6P* 59'* *194k2' Dover wi  4 30',  30  30',</p>
        <p>DowCh2 80  9 30098  87',  85',  87'4kPa</p>
        <p>OowJns 68 13 8438 35'</p>
        <p>Dresr 70 15 6808 30</p>
        <p>Weekly Stocks In Spotlight</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (API - Yearly high low, weekly sales, high low closing pnce and net change ot the 20 most active stocks trading lor more than $T</p>
        <p>High Low I5a 12 OetEd 5Pa 239 Kroger 429 26'* USFG 37  13',2ayre</p>
        <p>10 PhilPet 9'* TWSvc 10a AMI 57 Monsan 33'* Exxon NtSemi</p>
        <p>199b</p>
        <p>239</p>
        <p>189</p>
        <p>100',</p>
        <p>50'.</p>
        <p>22'*</p>
        <p>62'a 389a GenE 34'a 23 AT&amp;amp;T</p>
        <p>AT&amp;amp;T 1629* 100 IBM 54', 30 FordMs 47  23b HCA</p>
        <p>27 AAorgan 16', IllPowr 3 Navistr 15', Baxter 29 CocaCI.</p>
        <p>48'</p>
        <p>27</p>
        <p>7*</p>
        <p>29'</p>
        <p>50'.</p>
        <p>Sales High Low Ust Chg</p>
        <p>31.839.700  15',  14e  I4'a</p>
        <p>19,878,100  5Pa  37'e  51 -13</p>
        <p>19.048.000  319  30'j  309*-  9</p>
        <p>17.198.700  25',  21  25 k  3',</p>
        <p>12.996.100 199 I6'b 19'Bk 2b 12,127,300 239 18'a 23'k 4</p>
        <p>11.082.500  169*  I5'a  IPs-  'a</p>
        <p>10.508.000 79', 73', 77'b-7'a .10,356,100 459* 44', 4594 k </p>
        <p>9.235.000  9',  8'*  9'a-  '</p>
        <p>8.928.000  43',  41'a  43'-  I'</p>
        <p>7.855.700  26  24'a  25'at</p>
        <p>7.720.500 115'a 112', 114'- 'a . 7,024,700  5l'a  50  50'a-  'a</p>
        <p>6.753.500  46  35'a  44-  9'a</p>
        <p>5.760,500  39  37',  38b&amp;gt;  'a</p>
        <p>.5,650.100  20  19',  199*.  '</p>
        <p>5.540.700  5',  5  5 -  9e</p>
        <p>5.329.000  2l'a  20'a  2l'k  1'</p>
        <p>...4,912,900 42'* 4Pa 429 k </p>
        <p>Olin  I  80  II 2910  47'a  45'a  47 k 9</p>
        <p>ONEOK  64j  9 1324 17',  17  17',k  ',</p>
        <p>OrngCo  16 216 9'a  9  9 -  '</p>
        <p>OwenC  n  6 3875  249  331,  234,-9,</p>
        <p>OxIord  .50  167  99*  9'  9b-  '*</p>
        <p>- P-0-PHM  12  123 x2536 9'  8  8k  'a</p>
        <p>PPG  136 II 8102  439*  42  439*kl'</p>
        <p>PSI  5  27291  13',  12'a  13'.* k *</p>
        <p>PacEnt  3 48  12  2452  457*  44',  459* k  'a</p>
        <p>PacGE  1 40  13  40434  17'/*  16'/*  17</p>
        <p>PacTel  1 76  12  25702  299*  28*  299 k  *</p>
        <p>Pacitcp  2.64  9  I 994*  359*  349  35 -  ',</p>
        <p>PanAm  13868  29*  2*  29*-  'a</p>
        <p>PanEC 2 9 14476 24', 239 24 - Patten 12 6 5205  5 4ia 5 k',</p>
        <p>Penney 2 10 16865 48* 47', 48'*k ' PaPL 276 10 3507 359* 34 359 k 9 Penwit  2.40 20 6307  86'*  85  85 -P*</p>
        <p>Penniol  3 90 3343  74'*  739  74'a- 9*</p>
        <p>PepBoy  10 193050  12's  IIb  ll'ek '</p>
        <p>PepsiCo .84 15 26571 38  36'a  38 t *</p>
        <p>PerkEI 60 15 5645 24  239  23'*- 'a</p>
        <p>Pfizer 2 12 17022 54'a 529* 54 PhelpD 80 4 9200 38' 37'*</p>
        <p>PhilaEI 2.20 8 14594 18' 177*</p>
        <p>PhilMr 4 50 11 46128 979* 95 Philpin  52 12 1269  18'*  179*</p>
        <p>PhilPet 72 13 129961 ul99a 16'* 19'*k29a Pnlcorp  277  8'a  8',  8&amp;gt;a-  '*</p>
        <p>PilSbry 1 20 48 31065 399 a 35', 39 k29* PinWst 2.80 9 4715 23  229  22'*</p>
        <p>PitnyBw 92 15 4640 44'* 429* 431,- 1,* Pittstn  5537  159*  14',  159*k  '</p>
        <p>PlcrDgn 20  21545 12'* IP 12 - 'a'</p>
        <p>Polaroid 60 26 23621 42'e 4le 4l'*k '* Portee I 96 14 2141 21* 21'a 219k ' Primea si 60 9 12071 289 27'a 28 -  ProctG 2.80 13 19018 80'* 78  79'* k I</p>
        <p>PSvCol 2 8 3680 21'* 219 2P*- ' PSEG 2 10 14890 23'* 22', 23'k ' PugetP 1.76 9 1854 19  18', I8'*t a</p>
        <p>PulImn 12 24 158  9'a  9  9'ak  'a</p>
        <p>Pyro  1299  6'a  59  6k',</p>
        <p>Oantel 2 2418 1'adl3 l6 'a- 'a OuakrO 1 20 17 *12758 54', 52a 53',k '* QuakSC 80 35 2326 20'* 19a I9a- '* Ouantm 2,20 10 5953 97  94', 94'*- 'a</p>
        <p>Ouestar 1.88 20 856 33', 32', 32*- a  RR </p>
        <p>RJR Nb2 20 10 39650 54', 53'a 54'*k 9* RLC 20 9 1450 lO'a lOa 10',- '/* RalsPur 1 50 14 9458 79', 779 79'*-2</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (API - Weekly Investing Companies giving the high, low and last prices tor the week with the net change from the previous week's last price. All quotations, supplied by the National Association ot Securities Dealers. Inc.. reflect net asset values at which securities could have been sold</p>
        <p>38'akl' 18'/* k 'a 95'* k 9, I8'*k</p>
        <p>High</p>
        <p>Low</p>
        <p>Last</p>
        <p>Clw</p>
        <p>AAL Mutual:</p>
        <p>CapGrq p</p>
        <p>8 79</p>
        <p>8.70</p>
        <p>8.79k</p>
        <p>X</p>
        <p>Income</p>
        <p>9.55</p>
        <p>9M</p>
        <p>954</p>
        <p>03</p>
        <p>MunBd p</p>
        <p>9 77</p>
        <p>9 74</p>
        <p>975+</p>
        <p>02</p>
        <p>AARP Invst:</p>
        <p>CapGr n</p>
        <p>23 31</p>
        <p>22 98</p>
        <p>23 31 </p>
        <p>31</p>
        <p>GinieM n</p>
        <p>15.11</p>
        <p>1506</p>
        <p>15 10+</p>
        <p>02</p>
        <p>(jenfld n</p>
        <p>1482</p>
        <p>14.78</p>
        <p>14 81k</p>
        <p>03</p>
        <p>Grwinc n</p>
        <p>20 85</p>
        <p>20 67</p>
        <p>20 85+</p>
        <p>18</p>
        <p>TxFBd n</p>
        <p>16 03</p>
        <p>15 97</p>
        <p>16,031</p>
        <p>II</p>
        <p>TxFSh n</p>
        <p>1530</p>
        <p>1528</p>
        <p>15 30 +</p>
        <p>02</p>
        <p>ABT Funds</p>
        <p>Emerg p</p>
        <p>8 37</p>
        <p>8.28</p>
        <p>8 37 k</p>
        <p>X</p>
        <p>Gwth In p</p>
        <p>* 10 40</p>
        <p>1031</p>
        <p>10 40 .</p>
        <p>09</p>
        <p>Sec Inc p</p>
        <p>9.04</p>
        <p>892</p>
        <p>903-</p>
        <p>.01</p>
        <p>Utilinc p</p>
        <p>* 1367</p>
        <p>1336</p>
        <p>13 36-</p>
        <p>31</p>
        <p>AddisnCa p</p>
        <p>14 23</p>
        <p>1399</p>
        <p>14 23</p>
        <p>25</p>
        <p>ADTEK n</p>
        <p>9 27</p>
        <p>9.20</p>
        <p>9,27 +</p>
        <p>X</p>
        <p>AdvntG p</p>
        <p>* 938</p>
        <p>9</p>
        <p>9 30-</p>
        <p>05</p>
        <p>AIM Funds:</p>
        <p>Chart p</p>
        <p>5 28</p>
        <p>5 16</p>
        <p>5.28</p>
        <p>13</p>
        <p>ConstI</p>
        <p>7 33</p>
        <p>7 24</p>
        <p>7 33</p>
        <p>09</p>
        <p>ConvYd p</p>
        <p>* 9 24</p>
        <p>9 13</p>
        <p>9.17-</p>
        <p>X</p>
        <p>HiYld 0 LimMtfr p</p>
        <p>* 8 57</p>
        <p>8 47</p>
        <p>847-</p>
        <p>07</p>
        <p>985</p>
        <p>984</p>
        <p>984</p>
        <p>Sumit n</p>
        <p>665</p>
        <p>655</p>
        <p>6 65k</p>
        <p>X</p>
        <p>M/eingEq AMA Funds:</p>
        <p>904</p>
        <p>893</p>
        <p>9 04</p>
        <p>W</p>
        <p>ClassGth np</p>
        <p>8,75</p>
        <p>867</p>
        <p>8 75 .</p>
        <p>X</p>
        <p>Classin np</p>
        <p>8 76</p>
        <p>8 74</p>
        <p>8 76 *</p>
        <p>03</p>
        <p>EMT p</p>
        <p>12 42</p>
        <p>1232</p>
        <p>12,37</p>
        <p>X</p>
        <p>GIbGth np</p>
        <p>19 75</p>
        <p>19 44</p>
        <p>19 75</p>
        <p>32</p>
        <p>GibInc np</p>
        <p>19 X</p>
        <p>19 87</p>
        <p>I9X</p>
        <p>GlobST np</p>
        <p>10.09</p>
        <p>lOX</p>
        <p>lO.M</p>
        <p>GrwPI np</p>
        <p>1826</p>
        <p>1807</p>
        <p>18.26 +</p>
        <p>20</p>
        <p>/MedTc np</p>
        <p>990</p>
        <p>9 83</p>
        <p>9.90+</p>
        <p>X</p>
        <p>AMEV Funds:</p>
        <p>Valw n BairdBICh p BalniCt p BkrUSGv n BirlltttFMMb; BaxVI n Fliwdl n Stralln n BMconHIII n BmdiBC Bnthim GeplM: CalTFL 11 CalTFIn n CalTFH n CalTFI n Catnt n GNMA n NtNITFI NfTFL n Tarim n Tarim n TarlOOO n TanOOS n TarIO n</p>
        <p>16 J9  16.70  16.09+  IS</p>
        <p>11.46  11.32  11.46+  .12</p>
        <p>14.60  14.56  I4.S7+  .16</p>
        <p>15.07  15.06  15.07+  .01</p>
        <p>13.20 13.13 13.20+ .09 9M 9M 9A6+ .02 .97  .97  .97</p>
        <p>25.25 25.00 25.25+ .14 7.76 7.66 7.76+ .11</p>
        <p>T,'</p>
        <p>n.45 10.42 10.45+ .83 0.94 0.09 0.94+ .07 0.51 0.49 Oil+ .02 10.14 10.11 10.13+ .03 9.91 9.09 9.91+ .01 9.10 9.04 9.06+ .03 9.99 9.96 9.90+ .02 10.69 10.65 1049+ .05 04.94 04.64 04.94+ .30 55.75 S.43 55.69+ .37 36.10 35.00 36.13+ .35 23.22 22.99 23.15+ .23 16.17 15.94 16.11+ .10</p>
        <p>0.93 0.90 0.93+ .03 9,34 9.27 9.34+ .07 10.57 10.53 10.57+ .00 8.70  0.67  8.69</p>
        <p>9.07 0.99 0.99- .06 8.50 8.50 8.50+ .01 7.65 7.64 7.65+ .01 982 9.80 9.01+ .02 16.71 16.56 16.71+ 14 17,94 17.00 17 89+ II 0.62  8.59  0.62 k  .02</p>
        <p>9.92  9.82  9.92 +  09</p>
        <p>10.78  10.73  10.78 k  03</p>
        <p>Evcrgrten Fimds;</p>
        <p>Evrgri TotRt</p>
        <p>n n</p>
        <p>Ramad</p>
        <p>RangrO</p>
        <p>Raythn</p>
        <p>ReadBt</p>
        <p>28022 10'a  9'a  10</p>
        <p>50 6894 6  5'*  6  k</p>
        <p>2 10 9794 70  67',  69Hk2'</p>
        <p>3221  1  dll  16  *</p>
        <p>ReyMtl RiteAid vj Robins Rockwl</p>
        <p>Fairfd</p>
        <p>Feders</p>
        <p>FedNM</p>
        <p>FnSBar</p>
        <p>32  33'*-</p>
        <p>289* 76,a</p>
        <p>duPont  3.80 9 25714  829*  80  81'a-9,</p>
        <p>DukeP  2 96 10 4205  44'*  44'*  44',</p>
        <p>DuqLt  1 20 11 3093  15S*  159*  159-  '*</p>
        <p>- E-E -</p>
        <p>ERC  9 321  109*  10',  109k</p>
        <p>EastGF  130  II 1982  23'  23'*  239</p>
        <p>EKodks  2 11 45603  459   44  45'akl'*</p>
        <p>Eaton  3 10 1561  76'a  749  75'- 'a</p>
        <p>Echlin  62 18 10717  16'*  16'a  16'ak ',</p>
        <p>EKCO.  9037  2'*  I'*  2'k  'a</p>
        <p>EmrsEI I  13  14578  30'  29'a  30  +  9,</p>
        <p>Enron 2 48  6157  369*  35'*  36  -  9</p>
        <p>Ensrch  80 36 6709  19  189  189*-',</p>
        <p>Ethyl  44 12 7147  2Pa  20',  2Pk</p>
        <p>Exxon  2 20 12 103561  459*  44',  459*k *</p>
        <p>- F-F -</p>
        <p>FMC  12 6839  359*  339*  349-l'</p>
        <p>FPL Gp 2 20  10  12064  3l'a  29'*  31'*k  9,</p>
        <p>Fairchd 20  1551  IP*  lOH  II  k  '</p>
        <p>566  6'*  5a  6'ak 9a</p>
        <p>32 13 1419  9'a  8'a  9</p>
        <p>72 8 17354 49', 48  49'ak1'a</p>
        <p>10  448  4'a  39*  39*-  '*</p>
        <p>FtBkSy  1 64  8  5618  2P  20',  ,21'-  *</p>
        <p>FCapHd  5 2365  6'*  5'a  6 - '</p>
        <p>FstChic  I 50  9  7573  34a  329a  34'a t  I'a</p>
        <p>Finiste  2 92  2544  53'  51',  53'ak  '.</p>
        <p>FstPa  '12 1626  121,  12'*  12'/*-'*</p>
        <p>FtWach  136 10 2038  399*  399  39s,*.  i,.</p>
        <p>FleelEn  64 10 1681  23  21'*  229k  'a</p>
        <p>Fights s  16  18 3534  25'*  24',  25'</p>
        <p>FlaPrg 2 48  9 1906  349  34  341,k 9</p>
        <p>FlwGen  II 403  69*  69a  6',-  '*</p>
        <p>Fluor  ,02e 10 13840  229.  219*  229. k  9,</p>
        <p>FlhillG  20  8466 u74*  7',  79*k  '</p>
        <p>FordM s2^40  5 70247  51'*  50  50'-  '*</p>
        <p>FrptAAc  2 62e 7 6327  25'*  249.  25 -'</p>
        <p> ci-G </p>
        <p>GAF  10  14 5432  499.  49'a  49*k &amp;gt;a</p>
        <p>GTE  2 68  12 29533  43'*  41',  4I',-I</p>
        <p>Gannett  1  16 x18822 349.  339  34</p>
        <p>GnCrps  60  9 6943 21  209  209*- 9.</p>
        <p>Genetch  25 29495  20' dl8  I8'-I9*</p>
        <p>GnOyn  I  6  3202  51'*  509  51'-  '</p>
        <p>GenEl 1 40 13 89280 43', 4I' 43'kl' GnHo'js  24  15x162 8'  79*  7.-'</p>
        <p>Chlnsl  50  II 14865  3P.  27'  28'*-3</p>
        <p>GnMills  188  16 8720  51'a  SO'a  509*</p>
        <p>GMot  5e  6 31240  76'  739*  759.k2'a</p>
        <p>GM E  68  14 3682  42'  399*  42'ak29</p>
        <p>GPU  1  20  8  1880  34'*  33'*  349* k  1</p>
        <p>CnSignI  I  80  27  1407  47'  469   47'*k  H</p>
        <p>Gensco  8 2113  5',  4'a  5-9,</p>
        <p>GaPac  120  9 9845  38'  37  37a</p>
        <p>GerbPd  1.48 31 2611  49'*  49  49'a-  h</p>
        <p>GibrFn  1053  3'*  2'a  2*-  '*</p>
        <p>Gillete  86  15 33363  359*  33,  35 k '*</p>
        <p>Glaxo  45e  13 26912  179.  17  17'*-'</p>
        <p>GIdNug  4 8966 14  ll't  I3'*+19*</p>
        <p>Gdrich  I 72  12 27818  609*  S2'a  57'k49a</p>
        <p>Goodyr  t oo  6 9621  599*  sgi*  sjr-</p>
        <p>Gould  32683  22'  229  }]4.k '*</p>
        <p>Grace S  140  12 11880  26'  24&amp;gt;*  26 kPa</p>
        <p>GtAtPc  60  15 3264  44'  4H*  43 +1'</p>
        <p>GtNNk  112  81217141'  399  40'*kP</p>
        <p>GIWFn  76  10 20620 159*  15  159*-  9</p>
        <p>Greyh 1 32  124 3143 3U*  30H  31 -'</p>
        <p>Grunin  1  1094 2924 22'*  219.  21'*-  </p>
        <p>GItWst s 70  13 X20426 43  409*  4P-|9</p>
        <p>GlfStUI  7 10207 7',  69*  7',k ',</p>
        <p>MM ^</p>
        <p>1  26 18727  27  25H  26'*kl'</p>
        <p>58  152254  20',  20  20'-'</p>
        <p>8 964 26',  25',  26',k  '*</p>
        <p>88  16 8043  26',  25  25*</p>
        <p>1988  9.  I, +</p>
        <p>HeclaM  05e  17 4296  15',  14'*  14'-  </p>
        <p>Heinz  1 44  15 x13186 45  43*  44'k  ',</p>
        <p>Herculs  192  4 4684  46'  45'*  459* k  '*</p>
        <p>Hrshey  70  14 15034  25',  249  34s, k  I4</p>
        <p>MewlPk 34 15 x24003 499* 4794 49'/- 9,</p>
        <p>JRiver JohnJn Johnind Josten</p>
        <p>- J-J -.48  II 20545  28'T  26'  279kl</p>
        <p>2  16 26589  85',  S3'a  849k  9</p>
        <p>6  19  16'*  169*  169-  'a</p>
        <p>56  7 1607  IS'*  17  I79*k  9*</p>
        <p>- K-K -</p>
        <p>Kmart  1.32  10 40431  369  34',  369kl9*</p>
        <p>Kaisrtc  I5j  7 2487  189  189.  189 k '</p>
        <p>Kaneb 7222 2' 2  2 - '</p>
        <p>KCSou  1 08  18 382  369  36  341,-  i.</p>
        <p>KanGE  148  II 4610  199  189*  I9'ak  'a</p>
        <p>KansPL  1 72  10 700  239.  331,  33,,-  i*</p>
        <p>Katyln  W 299  16'  159  159*-  H</p>
        <p>KautBd  32  7 2350  IP.  109*  I Pa</p>
        <p>Kellogg  1  52  17 9435  61'  59',  60'</p>
        <p>KerrMc  I  10  20 25890  399*  36  389* k 2</p>
        <p>KimbCI  I 60  13 14940  58'a  56/a  589 k Ia</p>
        <p>KnghtR  1 12  15 8740  4IH  399  41',kP,</p>
        <p>Kopers  ,60e  395l32  59',  59  59'*</p>
        <p>Kratt  2 04  7 10373  59'  57'*  58'+ 'a</p>
        <p>Kroger 1.12 22 198781 u5l9 37'* 51 k 13 - L-L -vjLTV I 15934 3'  2',</p>
        <p>LearnI s 48 I* 552 17', 16 LeeEnt  .64  18 377  28'*  28</p>
        <p>Lehmn2.14e 1062 129 12 Lilly  2.30  18 IIIOI  879  859  879k  H</p>
        <p>LincNII  2 36  13 2408  53',  50'*  52!-  '</p>
        <p>Litton  12 34ft  73',  719*  73 -  ',</p>
        <p>Lockhd  160  6 9805  409  39'  40 k  '*</p>
        <p>Loews  1  6 7418  759  729  759,k29a</p>
        <p>LnStar  !.90!5 2025  31  30'  30',-'</p>
        <p>l04St23ul5'*. I3'i 15'tkP,</p>
        <p>I  2844  319  31  31 -  ',</p>
        <p>92b  8 2363  319  389  311*-</p>
        <p>.80  8 771  27',  269  27 -  ',</p>
        <p>29*-- h I6'*-1 28 - ' * 12'*</p>
        <p>I  8 9829  52  50'*  51'*-  '</p>
        <p>74  15 3531  359*  34'*  359*9198</p>
        <p>13 586  259*  25',  259*k 'a</p>
        <p>72  7 18690  219  199*  2l'ak </p>
        <p>RoHaas 1 12  11 2555 34'  33,  33'*-  H</p>
        <p>Rohr  17 4937 3Pa  29'a  3Pak  9*</p>
        <p>Rorers .80  20 3743 369,  35,5  351</p>
        <p>Rowan  9951  6'*  6'a  69ek '*</p>
        <p>RoylD  7,24e  7 23392  111  107'*  110 k29*</p>
        <p>Ryder  .56  15 14161  259  23'*  24'-</p>
        <p> S$ </p>
        <p>SCEcp 2.48  II 13196 329*  32  329* k  '</p>
        <p>SPSTec 1  I7x2l0u44'  43'/*  44 k  ',</p>
        <p>SFeSPs  .10  5 8316  20',  199,  19!-  ',</p>
        <p>SaraLee 1 20  15 14718 429  41  42'*k  ',</p>
        <p>SCANA 2 40  10 883 30'*  29'a  30'a</p>
        <p>SchrPIg I 40 17 18534 55  52', 53a</p>
        <p>Schimb 1 20 13 30601 33'* 3I9* 32'*kl', ScottPs .74 10 5724 37', 36  36',- 'a</p>
        <p>Seagrm 1 20 9 5536 559* 54'a 55ak 9 Sears 2 9 34285 37'/* 36  369*</p>
        <p>ShellT 4.6le 9 8198 699 66', 68'* +19 Shrwin .64 13 5601 309* 299 X k 9 Skyline .48 12 x643 14  139 14 k '</p>
        <p>SmkBck 1.84  II 1781449  47',  47'*k  'a</p>
        <p>Sonat  2  11 2968  28'*  27  27',</p>
        <p>SonyCp  28e34 17ll  519.  X'*  519*kl'</p>
        <p>SouthCo2.l4 9 34711  209*  209  ]oh-1,</p>
        <p>SwBell 2.48 12 17070 399 X' 39',k 9, SwtPS 2 12 II 2673 26' 25', 261* k 9 SquarD 1 92 12 3X3 48' 479,</p>
        <p>Squibb 160 17 11818 659* 63 659* 9* 3 82 5309  58  56a  57'k b</p>
        <p>I X 1517184  M9,  37a  37* k ',</p>
        <p>32 X 3921  359*  34'*  359,+ 9,</p>
        <p>- T-T -1.42 II 1997  23',  23</p>
        <p>1.60 10 5175 44' b  42'-/</p>
        <p>32188 P*d 9,</p>
        <p>X  778  15'  I3'  14 -  'a</p>
        <p>14 15296  I4'a  13',  13+ 'a</p>
        <p>60 12 1X13 43',  4Pb  429b</p>
        <p>24  44  129*  12',  129* k  '</p>
        <p>13  2X  159*  15'*  15'-  9*</p>
        <p>.60  1683  22'  2l'a  22'a+  '*</p>
        <p>9  796 X5'  329',  M2 -  '*</p>
        <p>AstAII Capiti Fiducr Grwth Special TF Nat US Gvt AcrnFd n AlutureFd Advest Advant: Govt np Gwth np Inco np Spci np AlgrGP t Alliance Cap: Aliance p Balan p Canada p Conv p Countpt p Dividend p Govt p HB TxFrp HiTxFr HiYld p Inti p InsCalTx AAonInc p Mortg p MuniU Quasar p Surveyor p Tech p Amer Capital: Comstk CorpBd Enteri</p>
        <p>10 22 II 71 1859 1463</p>
        <p>10 18 10 22+ 05 1162 1171k 04 18 47 18,59 + 08 14,52 14 63k 12</p>
        <p>101 BIgEGv p BlnStGr np BoMmCo:</p>
        <p>saisr.;</p>
        <p>Mgdin np SpGth np BMGrI n Bowser Brndywn n Bruce</p>
        <p>BoHBBwOp:</p>
        <p>CapGrlti np Eqinc np GoMlnv np HIYMd np SpecEqt pn TaxFree np USGvt np Calmos nl CalMun np CalTrst n CalUGv</p>
        <p>17.92 17.71 17.92+ .25 12J6 12.76 12.86+ 12 9.87 9.82 9.85+ .01 9.x 9.26 9.X+ .02</p>
        <p>29.46 29.19 W.46+ .27 11.80 11.78 11J0+ .02 11.48 11.46 11.47+ .02 14.31 M.15 14.31+ .14 11.69 11.51 11.69+ .21 1.60 1.58 1.59-.01 12.11 12.60 12JI+ .26 91.90 90.74 91.02+ .16</p>
        <p>12.98 12.83 12.98k .15 11.54 11 48 11 54 + 07 8.71  8.60  8.71+  .11</p>
        <p>9 68 9 60 9 67 k 08 19 35 19 12 19 35+ .24 9 08 9.05 9.05- 02 12.01 11,99 12.01+ 02</p>
        <p>10.82 10.77 10.82+ .05 9 53  9,32  9 53+  ,15</p>
        <p>.  8.08  7.99  8.08+  .04</p>
        <p>SearsTE np x 1096 10.92 1092+ .01 TaxAd np 9.M  9 X  930-  .05</p>
        <p>10.05 10.02 10.05+ ,03</p>
        <p>10.83 10.79 10.83+ .05 9.62  9 60  9.61+  .01</p>
        <p>10.35 lO.X 10.35+ .01 1212 11.93 12.12+ .16 14.15 14.09 14.15+ .06</p>
        <p>H-p</p>
        <p>ExchFd</p>
        <p>1834</p>
        <p>18.22</p>
        <p>18.33 +</p>
        <p>!ll</p>
        <p>Cilvtrt Gnwp:</p>
        <p>X 9.78</p>
        <p>9.73</p>
        <p>9.75- 01</p>
        <p>Ariel</p>
        <p>* 9 76</p>
        <p>9.67</p>
        <p>9.x-</p>
        <p>03</p>
        <p>Equity p</p>
        <p>X.X</p>
        <p>X.49</p>
        <p>X.Xk</p>
        <p>41</p>
        <p>Inco</p>
        <p>966</p>
        <p>1:</p>
        <p>950</p>
        <p>9,M+</p>
        <p>.23</p>
        <p>Social p SocBd</p>
        <p>8.55</p>
        <p>8.54</p>
        <p>854</p>
        <p>SocEq TxFLM n</p>
        <p>11.55</p>
        <p>11,40</p>
        <p>11.55+</p>
        <p>.12</p>
        <p>9 77</p>
        <p>952</p>
        <p>9.52-</p>
        <p>.24</p>
        <p>TxFLng</p>
        <p>953</p>
        <p>9.47</p>
        <p>9,52+</p>
        <p>.12</p>
        <p>USGov</p>
        <p>10.20</p>
        <p>999</p>
        <p>10 20 +</p>
        <p>20</p>
        <p>WihAm t</p>
        <p>584</p>
        <p>5 72</p>
        <p>5 84*</p>
        <p>II</p>
        <p>12.65</p>
        <p>12,52</p>
        <p>12.62-</p>
        <p>01</p>
        <p>FundSW</p>
        <p>6.57</p>
        <p>6.44</p>
        <p>6.57 +</p>
        <p>13</p>
        <p>Income</p>
        <p>9 07</p>
        <p>9.04</p>
        <p>9.07 +</p>
        <p>.02</p>
        <p>PBHG</p>
        <p>14.87</p>
        <p>14.72</p>
        <p>14.87 k</p>
        <p>.15</p>
        <p>Trend</p>
        <p>296</p>
        <p>844</p>
        <p>293</p>
        <p>843</p>
        <p>2.96+</p>
        <p>8.43-</p>
        <p>X</p>
        <p>.01</p>
        <p>Gamefle Fundi:</p>
        <p>CapSlti p</p>
        <p>9.19</p>
        <p>9.18</p>
        <p>9.18- .01</p>
        <p>CapTotR</p>
        <p>9</p>
        <p>8.44</p>
        <p>926</p>
        <p>8.42</p>
        <p>9 27 k 8.44</p>
        <p>.01</p>
        <p>Govt p Cardinal</p>
        <p>1403</p>
        <p>1392</p>
        <p>14.03+</p>
        <p>20</p>
        <p>CardnlGvt</p>
        <p>11.91</p>
        <p>11.89</p>
        <p>11.89- .01</p>
        <p>CntryShr n</p>
        <p>1184</p>
        <p>11.81</p>
        <p>1183k</p>
        <p>.02</p>
        <p>ChampHY</p>
        <p>9.x</p>
        <p>9,05</p>
        <p>9.U</p>
        <p>Chestnuts n</p>
        <p>9,31</p>
        <p>9</p>
        <p>930+</p>
        <p>.02</p>
        <p>CIGNA Funds:</p>
        <p>17.35</p>
        <p>1724</p>
        <p>17.31 +</p>
        <p>05</p>
        <p>Agresv p</p>
        <p>11.18</p>
        <p>11.10</p>
        <p>11.17 +</p>
        <p>07</p>
        <p>GovSec p</p>
        <p>20 70</p>
        <p>20.37</p>
        <p>20 46k</p>
        <p>18</p>
        <p>Growth p HIYW p</p>
        <p>X 1313</p>
        <p>1297</p>
        <p>12 97-</p>
        <p>,05</p>
        <p>Income p</p>
        <p>7 13</p>
        <p>7.12</p>
        <p>7,13 +</p>
        <p>02</p>
        <p>MuniBd p</p>
        <p>e 10 25</p>
        <p>1012</p>
        <p>10.12-</p>
        <p>05</p>
        <p>Value p OttbM* IRA^n</p>
        <p>64X</p>
        <p>63 09</p>
        <p>XM +</p>
        <p>34</p>
        <p>9. 9.27 9.X+ .11</p>
        <p>11.11 11.03 11.11+ .07 13.22 12.93 12.93- 43 10A9 10.86 10.89+ .05 19.25 18.96 19.25+ .16 17.32 17.27 17.M+ .04</p>
        <p>14.11 14.02 14.02-.06 10. 10.34 10.+ .04 8.89 8.85 8.88+ .03 11.14 11.11 11.14+ .04 9.54 9.51 9.52+ .02</p>
        <p>22. 21.92 22.+ .29 17. 16.95 17.+ . 15. 15.76 15.78+ .08 24.96 24.77 24.96+ :16 15.52 15.46 15J2+ .06 14J3 14.36 14.53+ .14 10.58 10.57 10.51+ .01 15.10 15415 15.10+ .06 14.40 14J3 1428+ . 10.15 17:89 18.09+ .16</p>
        <p>9J2 9.75 9.82+ .05 10.16 10.02 10.16+ .14 5.22 5.21 5.+ .01 10.48 10. 1024+ .03 11. 11.64 11.+ .17</p>
        <p>14.78 14.71 14.74+ .11 9.93 9. 9.92+ .04 9.52 9.48 9.49 1524 15.27 1524+ .16 8. 8. 8.+ .02 17. 17.11 17.28-.02 12.14 12.12 12.13+ 21 7829 77.52 78.59+ .</p>
        <p>1125 1127 1125+ .11 9.91 929 9.+ .02 11.79 1124 11.79+ .13 10.13 N.M 10.13+ . 728 725 726+ .01 725 7.51 725+ .05 13.10 12. 13.N+ .14</p>
        <p>SunCo</p>
        <p>Syntex</p>
        <p>Sysco</p>
        <p>TECO</p>
        <p>TRW</p>
        <p>TacBt</p>
        <p>Talley</p>
        <p>Tandem</p>
        <p>Tandy</p>
        <p>Tndycft</p>
        <p>TchSym</p>
        <p>Tektrnx</p>
        <p>Teldyn</p>
        <p>23'- 'a 43'*kl'a</p>
        <p>'*- ',</p>
        <p>Tennco 3.04  19390  47**  46  46',-  '*</p>
        <p>LILCo</p>
        <p>LaLand</p>
        <p>LaPac</p>
        <p>Lukens</p>
        <p>Tesoro Texaco TexEst Texinst . TxPac TexUtil 2</p>
        <p>284 1344  II',  II  llak  'a</p>
        <p>3 13 3X75  45!  444*  454*+  '*</p>
        <p>I 166X3  25'  25'  25',+  '</p>
        <p>72 13 13689  41'   39h  404-  4,</p>
        <p>40 45 48 304 X'* 304*- 1, 6 12993 ', 28  284-  %</p>
        <p>MCA 68  32 11X1  45',  U  44'^-!'</p>
        <p>MOU 1.42  II X7  184*  18',  18',- '</p>
        <p>Macmil a 35 25662u&amp;gt;, 84 M',k2H MfrHan3  36641  '  '*  '*+  '.*</p>
        <p>vjAAanvl  2961  2  I'*  2</p>
        <p>MAPCO I  7 2318  554*  54  54'A-I</p>
        <p>Marriol .  16 16104  304*  284  294+ 6</p>
        <p>MartM I.IO  9 4061  41'A  1  404+ 4,</p>
        <p>Masco 48  13 12573  264,  25'*  25',</p>
        <p>Maxes  7491  7'*  74  7',+  '*</p>
        <p>MayDS I   13 16748  37  X'*  X'*+</p>
        <p>Maytag s.90 13 14706 234* 224* 23'*+ McOerl I.  3666 18'*  18'a  18*-</p>
        <p>Halbtn</p>
        <p>Harind</p>
        <p>Harley</p>
        <p>Harris</p>
        <p>vjHecks</p>
        <p>Amex Weekly Dollar Leaders</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (API -Theioliowmgisdiisl ot the most active stocks based on the dollar volume</p>
        <p>The total is based on the median price ot the stock traded multiplied by the shares traded</p>
        <p>TotlsiOOO) Saleslhdsi Last</p>
        <p>553.9X 28202 18*</p>
        <p>Name</p>
        <p>Amdahl s</p>
        <p>Dillard</p>
        <p>LorimarTel</p>
        <p>EchoBay</p>
        <p>NY Times</p>
        <p>ImperOil A g</p>
        <p>TexasAirCp</p>
        <p>AizaCp</p>
        <p>GianiFood s</p>
        <p>Organog</p>
        <p>Holidy n 6 5833 27'* 24'* Hmstk s X 9 10598 144, O, Honwell 2 10 11 8579 624 60h HCA 72 13 67535 46  35':</p>
        <p>Hotllnv 2 21 2173 12', ll'a Housint 2 14 9 2X2 5/'* 55 * Houind 2 96 8 12465 29'e 28 . Human 92 12 X770 27', 24 - I-I -96  16  35473  37  34  .</p>
        <p>I 40  12  82  18-n  18</p>
        <p>1 25  6  11047  49',  4:  .</p>
        <p>1 80  21  797  22',  21'a</p>
        <p>2861 2'* 2 IllPowr 2 64 0 56X1 X ITW 48 15 4076 35</p>
        <p>,6 2b</p>
        <p>.'6'at 2*</p>
        <p>1C Ind IRT ITT Cp IdahoP IdealB</p>
        <p>36'a 12 18' '* 48**- ' 21'- ', 2'*</p>
        <p>19', 194* k ' M 34,+ !'</p>
        <p>531.970 7612 42a 529.620 21348 I4'a 528.283 17540 I6'a</p>
        <p>525.356 9311 274* 519,922 4815 4|&amp;gt;* 518.474 14349 124*</p>
        <p>513.970 6244 21' 511 448 5294 22'* 510 960 5694 20'a</p>
        <p>lmpCh 4 20e 7X51  Xa  69  69'1</p>
        <p>ICA  X  4 534  11a  ll'a  ll'i</p>
        <p>INCO  W  7 X312 27',  254  27'3 +1'</p>
        <p>IngerRd  I 04  14 3463  364*  36  M'*+  '</p>
        <p>InfdSII  I  8 7655  38'*  37'.  M'-'*</p>
        <p>Intrlke  I.X  9 xX2  42'a  41'*  41'*+  '</p>
        <p>IBM  4.40 13 77X5  Il5'l  112':  II4'4- '</p>
        <p>IntFlav  IMI5 44II  49  46'*  48!*kl'a</p>
        <p>IntMin I I5 98V5  46 .  ,'*  454*. I'a</p>
        <p>IntPap  IX 92X76  46 ,  44'*  45*+ '*</p>
        <p>Ipalco  1.64 9 1185  22*  22'*  224*</p>
        <p>McOnI  X 15 30379  474*  464,  47'*+',</p>
        <p>Mc0n0  2 X 9 25X  65'a  634*  65'* +1',</p>
        <p>McGrH  184  171  70'*  674  694,k1i,</p>
        <p>McKes  1.44 15X18  344,  34  34,+ ',</p>
        <p>/Mead .76 10.38857 45', 4IH 44'ak34* Atellon l.  I486 27'* 27  27',+ '*</p>
        <p>/Melvill 2.10 13 4161 69'* MV* 69'*+ h /Merest . II 2066 X'* X'., '*+ 4, Merck s 1.48 22 471 S8H 571 584k * MerLyn I 985 27! 254 27 +1 MidSUt 8 24575 14  131* 131+ ',</p>
        <p>MWE I X  to 527  194,  191*  19', r</p>
        <p>MMM 2.12  14 26962  64  614  63'+!</p>
        <p>MinnPL I 72  II 21  24'*  231  23'*-4</p>
        <p>Mobil 2.40  11 38609  45  424  444+11</p>
        <p>Atonsan 3 10 1050 X', 73', 77i-7l MonPw 2.  12 919  X&amp;gt;6  35',  35',- 4</p>
        <p>Atorgan I X  8 57605    37',  XH+ '*</p>
        <p>Morfcn  84 12 5745 '*  374  M'e+i'j</p>
        <p>Motorla  64 14 x22902 43  41'  42',k  '*</p>
        <p> NN </p>
        <p>NCNB 92 13 24340 ', 274* '*+</p>
        <p>NCR I 24 II 13524   X'/* 57H- 4.</p>
        <p>NIPSCO 4X 14 17823 111* II' 11',+ 4 NL Ind  X X4332 71  4,  ;t*+  1*</p>
        <p>NWA  90I84M6 48  46*  48 k  '</p>
        <p>NalCO 1 32 14 1744  34  M'a  M4*+  ',</p>
        <p>NatFGs I.M II 1743  18!  171  18'*k  '*</p>
        <p>Nil I2j 32U  17  I6'  164*</p>
        <p>NtSemi  I1 923X  9',d8!*  9'-'*</p>
        <p>Navistr  7 55407  5',  5  5-4</p>
        <p>NevPw  I 52  10 8  204,  194.  Mk,+  1*</p>
        <p>NEngEl  2 04  3449  23H  22!,  234,+  '*</p>
        <p>NwtMo  60a  13 33  35*  34  344-  H</p>
        <p>NiaMP 1X 13 8484  14  134*  13',</p>
        <p>NtlkSo I 32 31 I52  29',  X',  294,+</p>
        <p>Norlek 10  871  7'b  64*  o4*-  !*</p>
        <p>NoestUt 1,76 II 4298  194*  19'a  194,+  '&amp;lt;*</p>
        <p>NoSIPw 2.12 10 X78  314  3I'*  3I4+  '</p>
        <p>Nortrp  I   6 2953  304,  X  jou_  1,</p>
        <p>Norton 2 14 1532  X',  49,  X'.k  1,</p>
        <p>Norwslsl.34  9 42X  35'*  X4  34 + ,,</p>
        <p>Nynex 4 04  10 157  66',  64'*  6Ak|k|4</p>
        <p>- 0-0 -</p>
        <p>OcciPet 2 X 22 237  26  25',  26 k  i</p>
        <p>OhioEd 1 96 9 76X  18',  18'  I8i+  ',</p>
        <p>OklaGE 2 X 12 2725  32'*  314  32</p>
        <p>Textrns I 9 16064 X'* 24', M!+|i Tigerin 8 10578 I3'A 10! l3'+2 Time I 239723 107  944 I064kl0'</p>
        <p>TmAir$.92l51l228 32  304, 31'*+</p>
        <p>Timkns   23 4692  34  3IAi  34 +1',</p>
        <p>Tokhem .40  11 305  19'*  104  If</p>
        <p>Tosco  7 2944 3  3'*  3 +  '*</p>
        <p>Transm I. 7 4574 354 35  35!- '*</p>
        <p>TranscoLX 3101 M'* 324 32'*-H Travler 2. 63 I35X 35  M! 344- 1</p>
        <p>TriCon 4 S0e lOX 214 2|4, 21',+ '* Tribune .76  17 4773  X  X'*  X +1'/*</p>
        <p>Trinova 64II 43X  26'*  251*  X',+1'</p>
        <p>TucsEP 3 90  11 937  53  52',  524-'</p>
        <p>- -U -UAL Cp  8 8IX  92  894*  9n,t i,</p>
        <p>UGl 2 14  9 348  X  27',  M + 4,</p>
        <p>UNCInc Ole  15 2X5  10'*  9  lO'ak 4,</p>
        <p>USFG  2 64  8 1904M3I4*  X',  304*-  4*</p>
        <p>USG n  3 183 7a  7'*  74,+  a</p>
        <p>USX  1.x  17X1X28',  274*  28 k  '/*</p>
        <p>UCarb H  8 377X 23  22'  224^- ',</p>
        <p>UnElec 1 92  9 6455  234  22*  23',+ ',</p>
        <p>UnPac 3.x  II 14524 X',  554,  574*+2'*</p>
        <p>Unisys I  9M072  M4*  32',  M',+ '*</p>
        <p>UBrnd s X 10 1493 17', 16', 17'/*+ 4 USWest 3 52  9 1X55  55a  54',  ,+ a</p>
        <p>UnTKh I.  8I6498  Xb  Xa  XakI'*</p>
        <p>UniTel 1.92  31 41346  u39',  X  !* + 3',</p>
        <p>Unocal I  18185  X'  X4*  374+2',</p>
        <p>Upjohn 72  18 22777  32',  304  32 + 1*</p>
        <p>USLIFE I. 9 1903 X'* 374, M4,- 1* UtaPL 2.32 11 1875 304* 294* X'</p>
        <p>Varan</p>
        <p>Varity</p>
        <p>- V-V -.X 68 2004 28  27'</p>
        <p>9 7X4  2*  24*</p>
        <p>27'- 4* 2'</p>
        <p>... .</p>
        <p>Wacxhl 60a 14 21 20a X', X!,- ! WalMrt  16  25 32757 324,  X',  32'*+4,</p>
        <p>M/arnC  X  17 206 35!,  X',  35', + !</p>
        <p>WarnrL  2.16  16 9187 744*  72  734-'</p>
        <p>WshWt  2 48  10 567  274  26'*  274 +  4,</p>
        <p>WellsF  2 40  7 7053 u664.  63',  65'* +  !',</p>
        <p>WUnion 998 2' 2  2!</p>
        <p>WstgE  2  10 1X28  52!  5I  51',+  '</p>
        <p>Weyer s  I X  10 25375  25!,  24',  25'*+  ',</p>
        <p>Whrlpl  I.IO  II 7193  25'  24',  25'.+  '*</p>
        <p>Whittak  I  II 7  35!  M-a  35 +  4,</p>
        <p>William 1.40 8II3I0 3I'* a 3I+. + 2 WinDi*  1 92  15 1793 43',  42'a  421+ !*</p>
        <p>Winnbg   25 1577  9b  8*  9 - *a</p>
        <p>Wolwth  1 64  13 19252 54',  49,  42!*+2'*</p>
        <p>Wynns  M 62 211 204* X'* 204+ 'a</p>
        <p>hdMto</p>
        <p>FundAm  ,</p>
        <p>GovSec</p>
        <p>Growth</p>
        <p>Harbor  &amp;gt;</p>
        <p>HiYldlnv MuniBd OTC</p>
        <p>Pace Fnd Providnt  X</p>
        <p>TxE HY TE Venture Ameriun Funds: AmBal p AmcapF p AmMutI BondFd p CaplnBI p CapWld p Eupac p Fundlnv p Govt p GwthFd p HITrsI p IncoFd IntBd p InvCoA p NwEcon p NtwPbr p TaxExpl p TxExCA p TxExMO p TxExVA p WMMul p AmGwth AHrlgi n Amlnv n Alnvl n</p>
        <p>Amir NMI Funds: Growth Income Triftex APITr n AmwyMut Analytic n Armstng n Aguila Funds: Ariz Hawaii Orcg TF Colo AxPIStk AvonG n AnHoMbtan: Funds np IncoFd np Slock np BBAK n BabMn Group; Bond n Entrp n Gwth n Shadow n TaxFrat n UMBSt n UMBB n</p>
        <p>12 79 12 76 12 78 k .03 10 44 10 37 10.37- 01 10II 10 08 10.09+ .01 15 X 15 22 15.22- 10 12 X 12 03 12.03- X 9 17 9.12 9.17+ 05 18.17 18.06 18.17+ 14 6.22 6 17 6 18 + 02 21 35 21 14 21 + .14 4 13  3.89  389-  21</p>
        <p>10 89 10.87 10.89+ .03 10 68 10.64 10.68 + 06 1180 II 70 11.75+ .03</p>
        <p>10 72 10.64 10.72 + 07 10.23 10 13 10 23+ .09</p>
        <p>18.45 18. 18.45+ II 13.49 13 44 13.49+ .06 22.M 22.23 22.M+ 09 15 .15 15 .10 1510- 03 24.55 24.41 24.49- .02 I4.X 14.58 14.70+ .11 13.72 13.68 13.71+ .04 17.99 17.83 17.99+ .15 14.19 14.11 14.18+ .07 11.62 11.52 11.62 + 09 13.90 13.88 13.89+ .01</p>
        <p>13.53 13.40 l3.S3f 14 X.82 X.AI X.82+ .21 W.25 10.19 X.25+ 07 10.83 10. 10.82+ .04 1306 1301 1305+ .04 1309 13.65 1307+ .03 14.03 13.97 13.99+ .03</p>
        <p>12.45 I2.X 12.45+ .16 6.76 6.75 6.76+ .01 1.09 1.08 1.09+ .01</p>
        <p>6.45 6. 605+ .18</p>
        <p>8.53 8.48 8.+ .06</p>
        <p>Balan nl Equl^ nf Incom nf ShtTr nf</p>
        <p>&amp;amp;Fund,.</p>
        <p>AdvGM p CalTE p CorpCih p CrpCsll p Ovsdin  I</p>
        <p>Eqtyinc Fund</p>
        <p>GovMtg p GvtSec p GrwfhSh HighYM p Income p IncPIs  I</p>
        <p>1.72 1.71 1.72+ .01 1.86  1.84  105+  .02</p>
        <p>1.73  1.72  1.72</p>
        <p>106  1.46  1.46</p>
        <p>.58 .13 X.S8+ .54</p>
        <p>IntEq</p>
        <p>Eqt p MIT p</p>
        <p>MnTE p NY TEp OhTE p</p>
        <p>SCfp'</p>
        <p>TxExpt p USGou p US Idxp VIP HI</p>
        <p>2105 21.18 21.18- .79 6.85 6.83 6.85+ .02 4206 42.67 4201+ .03 e01 43.70 43.70- .15 7.35 7.18 7.21-.13 14.81 14.69 14.81+ .13 1802 18.x 18.42+ .13 12.98 12.94 12.98+ .02 11.12 11.06 11.07- .03 12.41 12.x 12.41+ .11 7J8  7.37  7.37</p>
        <p>6.65  6.64  604</p>
        <p>9.15 8.86 8.91- 18</p>
        <p>16.15 16.07 16.14+ .14 6.56 6.53 6.X+ .04 6.73 6.71 6.73+ .03 6J8 605 6.X+ .04 608 604 608+ .04 1208 1206 12.X+ .12 7.47  7.44  7.47+ .04</p>
        <p>13.02 I2.N 13.01+ .03 7.27  7.x  7.x</p>
        <p>13.32 13.12 13.32+ .18 9.95  9.94  9.94</p>
        <p>Managed I TaxEx USGvt t Util t ValAd t WIdWd t CXIaware Group Oectrl Dectrll p Delawre Delcap p DelchI Delchll p GvtInc p Inves np TxFrPa TFUSIns TxFrUS Trend D1T Funds: CapGt p Curnt p  X</p>
        <p>GvtSc p  X</p>
        <p>OTCGr p Destiny I Destll</p>
        <p>Dimensional Fds: DFA Cent OF ASiffall n DFA Fix n OFA Govt OFA Japan n DFA UK n DGOiv n DodgCox n  x</p>
        <p>OodgCox n  x</p>
        <p>ObleExCC ObleTx</p>
        <p>Drexel Burnham:</p>
        <p>Burnhm DSTB nl DSCv I OSTE t OS Gv t . DSTGr t OSTL nt DST Op OSTP t FenEqu t TxFrLtd TFLng p Dreyfus Grp:</p>
        <p>A Bond n CalTx n</p>
        <p>Dreyfus x GNAAA np GwthOp n InsTx lip Interm n Leverge MA Tax n NJ Tax np NwLdrs np NY Tax n NYTEIn n NYlTx np ShllnlTE n SIrAgg p StrtInc p Strllnv p StrWld p TxExpt n ThdCntr n USGvIn n Eaton Vance: EHStk GvObIg p Growth HiYield IncBos .</p>
        <p>Invest MunBd Nautilus</p>
        <p>16.32  16 13  16 32+  18</p>
        <p>11.04  10.91  11.04+. ,15</p>
        <p>1475  14.62  14.75+  15</p>
        <p>13.71  13,54  13.71+  .21</p>
        <p>7.70  7.71 k .01</p>
        <p>7 71 7.71</p>
        <p>9,74</p>
        <p>747</p>
        <p>7.70</p>
        <p>8.66</p>
        <p>9.74</p>
        <p>7,64</p>
        <p>10 43 10 39</p>
        <p>11 18 11.13 7,93 7 87</p>
        <p>7.71+ .01 8 46+ .01 9.74</p>
        <p>7 66 + 02</p>
        <p>10.41 k 03</p>
        <p>11.16+ .04 793+ 09</p>
        <p>Toll ValTm n FBLGth t FPA Funds:</p>
        <p>Capit Newinc Parmnt Peren Fairmt n Federated Funds: CorpCs n ExchFd n FBF n FT Int n Fdlntr n FloalT n GNMA n Gwth n HiYld n Inco n FIMT ri MtgSec n Short n SIGT n StkBd n StockTr n USGov n Fidelity Invest; AgrTF nr Balanc BlueCh CA TFn CA Ins n Canada r CapApp r CongrSi n ConnTF n Contra n</p>
        <p>12.M 12.24 I2.M+ 10 17 38 17 M 17.38+ 09 11.17 1108 11.17+ 08 10.49 10.47 10.49</p>
        <p>1321 13 07 1321+ 07 9 71 947 9.70+ .03 14.06 13.83 I4.M+ .22 1881 I8.X 18.81+ 24 48 29 47.77 48.04+ .02</p>
        <p>9 43  9 35  9 35- 04</p>
        <p>50.41 50 01 50.41+ .37</p>
        <p>8 92 8 89 8 90- 01 15.67 15.x 15.64+ .09</p>
        <p>9 59 9.57 9.57- 01</p>
        <p>9 48  9 46  9X</p>
        <p>10 83 10.79 10.81+ 02 16 83 16 60 16 83 k 26 10 09 10 04 10 08k .03 10 20 10.18 10 18- .01 9.84 9 84 9 86+ .02 9.93 9.91  9.91-  .01</p>
        <p>10.16 10.15 1016k .01 10 00  9 98  9 99</p>
        <p>15.40 I5.M 15 k .05 22 49 22.M 22,49+ 17 9.10  9 05  9.07</p>
        <p>11 24 11.23 11.24 k 01 10.65 10.62 10.65 k .03 10.42 10.30 10.42+ .09 10.84 10.82 10.82+ .01 9 937 9,37 , 12.05 1185 12.04+ .17</p>
        <p>13.70 13.53 13.70+ 18 90 18 89.01 90,18+1 28 10.x 10.M 1035+ .02</p>
        <p>12.70 12.61 12.70+ 10</p>
        <p>12.87 12.66 12.87 k 22 9 69 9 41  9.62-  .05</p>
        <p>9,79 9.71  9,72-  .04</p>
        <p>25 07 24 84 25.07+  11 85 11.73 11.85+ 11 18.15 17,98 18.13+ .16</p>
        <p>JO.I4_JO.06 10.I2-+ 413 -8.06 8.02 8.05+ .04 101.19 101.06 101.19+ .19 103.46 103.23 I03.X+ .06 27 08 26.83 X.87- .01 25.x 25.09 25.16- .08 21.95 21.78 21.95+ ,09 32.31 31.92 32.31- .05 35.70 35.08 35.70+ .23 10.22 10.22 10.22 11.48 11.46 11.48+ .02</p>
        <p>20.59 20.44 20.59+ 14 10.43 10.59 10.42+ .04 8.57 8.52 8.57 k .03 10.71 10.64 10.67 940 9,X 9.38+ .01 12.06 11.91 12.06+ .12 942 9.59 9.60 + 02 9.45 9.x 9.45+ .06 10.53 10.44 10.53+ .13 9.72 9.45 9.69+ .03 10.50 10.48 10.49+ .01 9.M 9.28 9.30+ .02</p>
        <p>13.47 13.40 13.47+ .09 14.x 14.32 14.X+ .02 25.32 25.04 25.08- ,01 8.72 8 68 8.72+ .04 10.58 10.54 10.57- .01</p>
        <p>14.61 I4.X 14.61+ .07 9.84 9.74 9 84+ .10</p>
        <p>17.14 17.12 17.12 13. 13 37 13.M+ .01 14.22 14.14 14.22+ 05 15.40 15.37 15.+ .02 12.01 11.99 12.00+ .01</p>
        <p>23.61 23.44 23.59+ .13 14.64 14.61 14.64+ .03 16 X 16 X 16.28 k 02 10.46 10.43 10.44 k .01 12.M 12.M 12.55+ .01 26 37 26.25 26.30- 07 12.77 12 73 12 76+ .03</p>
        <p>16.15 16 U 16.06- 08 18.74 IB.X 18.74+ .17 12.18 12 16 12.17+02 6 05 5 93 6 05+ 13 12.52 12.45 12.46+ .01</p>
        <p>13.M 13.12 13.34+ .19 11.41 II.X 11.39- .01</p>
        <p>6.B</p>
        <p>5.02</p>
        <p>9.61</p>
        <p>708</p>
        <p>885</p>
        <p>6.</p>
        <p>501</p>
        <p>9.58</p>
        <p>7.02</p>
        <p>8.82</p>
        <p>6 85 + 05 5.02+ 01 9.61+ ,03 7.06+ 04 8.84 k .03</p>
        <p>VS SpecI Eaton V IMarathn: CaIMn t Hilnc t HiMun t EclipEg n EmpBId</p>
        <p>EntprG nt x EntpGrIn I Equitec Siebel: AgGth t HiYld t TolRel t USGvt t EqtySt n</p>
        <p>Flxad Grth n Muni I SpcI</p>
        <p>I2J3 13. 13.M+ .02 21.99 21.77 21+ .10 11.S3 11.50 11.53+ .03 37.22 X.87 37.22+ .X</p>
        <p>4.49 4.45 4.49+ .06 19J7 19.76 19.87+ .18 1S.M 14.99 15.U+ 09 11.01 10.90 11,01+ .12 8.x 8.x S.X+ .05 13.45 12.x 12.45+ .11 7.13 6.97 7.13+ .17</p>
        <p>Govt Growth GroInc Cwlth AB Cwlth CD</p>
        <p>Cemposito Group' BdStk p</p>
        <p>11.05 11.02 11.02- .02 10.61 10.51 10.51+ .08 10.18 10.11 10.15+ 03 1.43  1.42  1.X+  .01</p>
        <p>2.00 1.97 2.00+ .03</p>
        <p>9.M 9.49 9.X+ .M</p>
        <p>10.66 10.63 10.X+ .02</p>
        <p>9.66  9.62  9.66+  04</p>
        <p>9.70  9.67  9.69+  .02</p>
        <p>13.37 13.08 13.37+ .X 9.U  9.80  9.81</p>
        <p>7.97  7.92  7.97+  .05</p>
        <p>5.17  5.15  5.M+  .01</p>
        <p>5.x  5.50  5.X+  .07</p>
        <p>lO.X  10.x  10.X+  .01</p>
        <p>I.x 1.x IX 12. 12.x 12.X+ .01</p>
        <p>II.40 11.x 11.40+ .14</p>
        <p>8.61 8.x 8.61+ .04</p>
        <p>8.x 8.47 8.49+ .02 12.70 12.x 12.70+ .17 10.52 10.49 10.51+ .03</p>
        <p>p</p>
        <p>Growth p IncoFd p NWR p TaxEx p USGov p Value p CncrdUS I CncrdTE f Cann Mutual: Govt Grwth TotRet Canil Egulties Equity t Optinc t USGovt I Copie</p>
        <p>10.12 10.06 10.12+ .06 10.x 10.75 10.X+ .06 8.89 8.H 8.M 14.75 14.M 149+ .05 7.20 7.17 7.19+ .02</p>
        <p>9.95 9.W 9.x 10.94 10.84 10.94+ . 6.91 6.N 6.90+ .02</p>
        <p>6.95 6.95 6.95+ .01</p>
        <p>10.67 10.60 10.62- 02</p>
        <p>17.89 17.69 17.89+ ,24</p>
        <p>7.89 7 72  7 75- 14 1017 1010 10 17+ .05</p>
        <p>9.U 9 79 9.x k .04</p>
        <p>9.37 9 35 9X</p>
        <p>9.57 9  9.57+ .X 10 10 1004 10.10+ .07 1665 1662 16.64+ .02 6.62 6.x 6.57- .04</p>
        <p>13.37 13,25 13.37+ 14</p>
        <p>1197</p>
        <p>8.x</p>
        <p>I3.M</p>
        <p>932</p>
        <p>II. 1197+ X 8X 8M+ 02 I3.N 13.07 k .N 9 30 9 32 + 02</p>
        <p>18.96 18.82 I8.X- .46</p>
        <p>CnvSec n</p>
        <p>9.91 9.87 9M- .W</p>
        <p>Equtinc</p>
        <p>X 25.22</p>
        <p>24X</p>
        <p>25.15- ,X</p>
        <p>Equtlndx n</p>
        <p>X 1045</p>
        <p>10</p>
        <p>1045+ 07</p>
        <p>Europe r</p>
        <p>11.74</p>
        <p>1I.X</p>
        <p>11.72+ 05</p>
        <p>ExchFd n</p>
        <p>67 53</p>
        <p>U76</p>
        <p>67,53 + 86</p>
        <p>FidelFd n</p>
        <p>15.17</p>
        <p>1497</p>
        <p>15.17+ .18</p>
        <p>FlexBd n</p>
        <p>6.75</p>
        <p>6.73</p>
        <p>6.74+ .01</p>
        <p>Freedm n</p>
        <p>12.54</p>
        <p>1234</p>
        <p>12.54+ .12</p>
        <p>GloBd n</p>
        <p>11.13</p>
        <p>11.07</p>
        <p>11.1(7- .02</p>
        <p>GNM n</p>
        <p>lO.X</p>
        <p>IO.M</p>
        <p>IO.M</p>
        <p>GvtSec n</p>
        <p>9.41</p>
        <p>9</p>
        <p>9.- .01</p>
        <p>GroInc</p>
        <p>14.79</p>
        <p>1462</p>
        <p>14.79+ .14</p>
        <p>GroCo</p>
        <p>14.U</p>
        <p>I4.X</p>
        <p>14.66+ .23</p>
        <p>- Hllncm n</p>
        <p>8.69</p>
        <p>ex</p>
        <p>B.X+ .01</p>
        <p>HighYield n</p>
        <p>12.22</p>
        <p>12.18</p>
        <p>12.20+ .03</p>
        <p>InsMun n</p>
        <p>I0.U</p>
        <p>lO.X</p>
        <p>10.x</p>
        <p>IntBd n</p>
        <p>lO.X</p>
        <p>9.M</p>
        <p>9.99+ .01</p>
        <p>IntlGrI r</p>
        <p>10.94</p>
        <p>10.89</p>
        <p>10.94+ .09</p>
        <p>LtdMun n</p>
        <p>9.24</p>
        <p>9.22</p>
        <p>9.23+ ,02</p>
        <p>Magellan MITF n</p>
        <p>47.47</p>
        <p>X.87</p>
        <p>47.47+ ,X</p>
        <p>IO.M</p>
        <p>10.64</p>
        <p>10.U+ .01</p>
        <p>MA TFn</p>
        <p>lO.M</p>
        <p>10.86</p>
        <p>10.87+ .02</p>
        <p>MN TFn</p>
        <p>10.16</p>
        <p>10.13</p>
        <p>10,13+ .01</p>
        <p>MtgeSec n</p>
        <p>997</p>
        <p>9.95</p>
        <p>9 96+ ,02</p>
        <p>MuncpI n</p>
        <p>7.N</p>
        <p>7.86</p>
        <p>7.87+ .01</p>
        <p>Oh TFn</p>
        <p>10.37</p>
        <p>10.35</p>
        <p>10.36+ .02</p>
        <p>NJ HYn</p>
        <p>10.18</p>
        <p>10.16</p>
        <p>10.17+ .01</p>
        <p>NYHY n</p>
        <p>11.42</p>
        <p>11.</p>
        <p>11.41+ .02</p>
        <p>NY Ins n</p>
        <p>10.50</p>
        <p>10.x</p>
        <p>10.49+ .01</p>
        <p>OTC</p>
        <p>18.01</p>
        <p>17.79</p>
        <p>18J1I+ .23</p>
        <p>Ovrsea</p>
        <p>23.93</p>
        <p>23.x</p>
        <p>23.91+ 37</p>
        <p>PacBas r</p>
        <p>13.82</p>
        <p>13.74</p>
        <p>13.81+ .13</p>
        <p>PaTF n</p>
        <p>9.x</p>
        <p>9.x</p>
        <p>9.47+ .02</p>
        <p>Puritan</p>
        <p>12.94</p>
        <p>12.15</p>
        <p>12.94+ .W</p>
        <p>Real Est</p>
        <p>X 9.22</p>
        <p>9.x</p>
        <p>9 .10- X</p>
        <p>ShtTBd n</p>
        <p>9.34</p>
        <p>9.33</p>
        <p>9.33</p>
        <p>ShfTGov</p>
        <p>9,89</p>
        <p>9.87</p>
        <p>9.M+ .01</p>
        <p>Sht TFn</p>
        <p>9.50</p>
        <p>9.50</p>
        <p>9.</p>
        <p>SpecI Sit TexaTF n</p>
        <p>I5.W</p>
        <p>15.35</p>
        <p>15.X+ .13</p>
        <p>991</p>
        <p>9.90</p>
        <p>9.91+ .01</p>
        <p>Trend n</p>
        <p>X.28</p>
        <p>37.67</p>
        <p>M.28+ .56</p>
        <p>Utllinc n</p>
        <p>X 10.78</p>
        <p>10.66</p>
        <p>10.66- .10</p>
        <p>Value n</p>
        <p>25</p>
        <p>24.</p>
        <p>25+ ,76</p>
        <p>FMI Inv Instit:</p>
        <p>CT ARPn</p>
        <p>9.61</p>
        <p>957</p>
        <p>9 57- .05</p>
        <p>EqP Gn</p>
        <p>12.17</p>
        <p>11.99</p>
        <p>12.17+ ,22</p>
        <p>EqP In</p>
        <p>II.X</p>
        <p>10.95</p>
        <p>11.05+ .10</p>
        <p>IP LTDn</p>
        <p>10.27</p>
        <p>10.24</p>
        <p>10.25+ 01</p>
        <p>IPSG n</p>
        <p>9.52</p>
        <p>951</p>
        <p>9.51</p>
        <p>TEP Ltd n</p>
        <p>10.56</p>
        <p>10.54</p>
        <p>10.54+ .01</p>
        <p>QualOv n</p>
        <p>11.W</p>
        <p>11.94</p>
        <p>II.X</p>
        <p>Fidelity Selects:</p>
        <p>SelAir r</p>
        <p>9.26</p>
        <p>913</p>
        <p>9.26+ 12</p>
        <p>SelAGId r</p>
        <p>14.42</p>
        <p>14.02</p>
        <p>14.02- X</p>
        <p>SelAuto r</p>
        <p>11.87</p>
        <p>11.72</p>
        <p>11.76- .10</p>
        <p>SelBio r</p>
        <p>10.32</p>
        <p>10.22</p>
        <p>10.27+ 05</p>
        <p>SelBrd r</p>
        <p>12.19</p>
        <p>11.99</p>
        <p>12.19+ .20</p>
        <p>SelBrk r</p>
        <p>7.M</p>
        <p>7.55</p>
        <p>7.M+ ,07</p>
        <p>SelCap r</p>
        <p>1001</p>
        <p>985</p>
        <p>1001+ ,15</p>
        <p>SelCh r</p>
        <p>21 16</p>
        <p>2IM</p>
        <p>21.16</p>
        <p>SelCom r</p>
        <p>10.90</p>
        <p>10.70</p>
        <p>10.74+ 02</p>
        <p>SelOel r</p>
        <p>11.W</p>
        <p>II.X</p>
        <p>11.80- .01</p>
        <p>SelElec r</p>
        <p>7.21</p>
        <p>7.10</p>
        <p>719+ X</p>
        <p>SelEUIl</p>
        <p>9X</p>
        <p>897</p>
        <p>9.x + X</p>
        <p>felEgy r</p>
        <p>12</p>
        <p>12.M</p>
        <p>12.+ .26</p>
        <p>SelEnSv r</p>
        <p>6.x</p>
        <p>793</p>
        <p>8.K+ 10</p>
        <p>SelFlnS r</p>
        <p>2881</p>
        <p>28.x</p>
        <p>28.81+ X</p>
        <p>SelFood r</p>
        <p>17.x</p>
        <p>17 24</p>
        <p>17X+ .17</p>
        <p>SelHlth r</p>
        <p>34.35</p>
        <p>33 97</p>
        <p>34 35+ .30</p>
        <p>Sellndl r</p>
        <p>13.19</p>
        <p>12.99</p>
        <p>13.19+ .05</p>
        <p>SelLesr r</p>
        <p>23.17</p>
        <p>2267</p>
        <p>23 17+ ,49</p>
        <p>SelMO r</p>
        <p>765</p>
        <p>7.x</p>
        <p>7.X+ 28</p>
        <p>SelMetl r</p>
        <p>11.22</p>
        <p>IO.M</p>
        <p>lO.U- .61</p>
        <p>SelPapr r</p>
        <p>H95</p>
        <p>11.77</p>
        <p>1195+ 05</p>
        <p>SelProp r</p>
        <p>II.X</p>
        <p>IIX</p>
        <p>1109+ 02</p>
        <p>SelReg r</p>
        <p>999</p>
        <p>9.90</p>
        <p>9.99+ .15</p>
        <p>SelRtI r</p>
        <p>12.x</p>
        <p>12</p>
        <p>12.65+ 24</p>
        <p>SelSL r</p>
        <p>9.31</p>
        <p>9.24</p>
        <p>9.30+ ,W</p>
        <p>SelSofI r</p>
        <p>14.17</p>
        <p>13,97</p>
        <p>14 M+ .16</p>
        <p>SelTech r</p>
        <p>16.78</p>
        <p>16.</p>
        <p>16.X+ .13</p>
        <p>SelTele r</p>
        <p>17.13</p>
        <p>16.90</p>
        <p>17.13+ .21</p>
        <p>SelUlil r</p>
        <p>25.62 (</p>
        <p>75  ;</p>
        <p>25.62+ .13</p>
        <p>FidI Plymth:</p>
        <p>989</p>
        <p>9.85</p>
        <p>9 89+ .04 unavall</p>
        <p>GovSec t</p>
        <p>920</p>
        <p>9.18</p>
        <p>919</p>
        <p>GrwOpp p</p>
        <p>14.17</p>
        <p>14.03</p>
        <p>14.14+ ,12</p>
        <p>HI Mun p</p>
        <p>unavail</p>
        <p>incGih p</p>
        <p>10.94</p>
        <p>10.92</p>
        <p>10.93- 02</p>
        <p>10.35 10. 10.33+ .06 IO.X 10.46 IO.X+ .15 I1J9 11.40 11.49+ .09</p>
        <p>Weekly Dow Jones Averages</p>
        <p>(Continued on page B-19)</p>
        <p>^NEW YORK lAP) - The followingjfives</p>
        <p>Lopiey n CorpPfd Caunsallors Fd CapApp n FIxdInc n NY Muni CntryCaG CowcnIGr t CowcnOp Crltorian</p>
        <p>9.19 9.14 9.17+ .n</p>
        <p>8.x 8.36 8X+ .13</p>
        <p>9.11 9.M 9.10+ .02 11.M 11.x 11.N+ .06 X.OO .92  92- .16</p>
        <p>the range of the closing Dow</p>
        <p>averages tor the week ended Sep 16 lOES</p>
        <p>9X  9.24  9.32+  .07</p>
        <p>9.93  9.91  9.92+  .02</p>
        <p>9M  9.x  9.X+  .X</p>
        <p>14.77  14 X  14.77+  .23</p>
        <p>9.73  9.x  9.n+  .11</p>
        <p>9.x  9.31  9.35+  .03</p>
        <p>STOCK AVERAGE First High Lew Ust Chg.</p>
        <p>Ind 2072,37 2100 64 2072.37 2098.15+.4 Trn M7 62 876.94 M7  876 94 + 3.13 Ull 178 52 IN 24 178.52 1M.24+ 0.30 65Stk 774 94 783,87 774,94 783 87+ 7.23 BOND AVERAGES 20 Bnds X94 89.15 88.87 89,15+0.37 Utils  X46 U8I M36 M.81+0.M</p>
        <p>Indus  89 41 89 49 89 29 89 49+O.M</p>
        <p>C066A600ITY FUTURES INDEX 136 81 137 99 135 25 135.25+1.55</p>
        <p>wywie</p>
        <p>stock Market Did</p>
        <p>Tio</p>
        <p>This Prev Year Years Mfeek Week age age</p>
        <p>Advances  1.151  1,144  626  1.047</p>
        <p>Declines  713  668  1,333  937</p>
        <p>Unchanged  293  326  229  210</p>
        <p>Total issues 2,157  2.IX  2,IX  2,194</p>
        <p>New yrly hghs  X    X  37</p>
        <p>New yearly Iws 42  396</p>
        <p>Weekly American Stock Sales</p>
        <p>-X-Y-Z-Xerox 3 10 11824 55', 54'* 54H- ' ZenithE 10442 22! 20to 214*+ 1 Copyright by The Associated Press 19X</p>
        <p>Total tor week</p>
        <p>49,yx,uw</p>
        <p>Mteek agu</p>
        <p>34.9X.0X</p>
        <p>Year ago</p>
        <p>.430,0X</p>
        <p>Jan 1 to date</p>
        <p>1.828.4X.0X</p>
        <p>1987 to date</p>
        <p>2.495.0,OX</p>
        <p>AMERICAN BONDS</p>
        <p>Total lor week</p>
        <p>5IO,4X.OM</p>
        <p>Year ago</p>
        <p>$I2,7I0.0X</p>
        <p>The staff of Wachovia Bd.ik &amp;amp; Trust</p>
        <p>proudly aiinouiices</p>
        <p>TimOCQtinor</p>
        <p>TAX-FREE BOND SPECIALIST</p>
        <p>His experienced assistance is available to help you with tax-free municipal bonds, mutual funds and government and agency bonds at our Raleigh North Hills Banking Center.</p>
        <p>For more information, call Tim OConnor at 919-755-7751 or toll-free 1-800-451-6820.</p>
        <p>w&amp;amp;chovn</p>
        <p>Bank&amp;amp;lhisl</p>
        <p>INVESTMENT</p>
        <p>CLASS</p>
        <p>(In Cooperation With Pitt Community Collage)</p>
        <p>Investment StrategiesTo Play The Money Game And Win!</p>
        <p>With aae-sawing interest ratea and a fluctuating stock market, where can your money work beat for you? Iff the taxes you pay are Increasingly a problem to you, then this Investment course Is a must.</p>
        <p>Course Topics Will Include:</p>
        <p>Tax Free Bonds Tax Shatters Mutual Funds</p>
        <p>Qovernmant Quarantaed Bonds IRAa And Other Retirement Alternatives</p>
        <p>Courses Are Betng Offered By Pitt Community College On Techniques Of Investing</p>
        <p>Hrsti An Aftsrnoon Courss Structursd For, But Not LImltsd To, Ssnior Cttlisns. This Aftsrnoon Courts Will Bs Hsid On Mondays Bsglnnlng Sspt. If nr M.  From 2-4 PM.</p>
        <p>tmo A Rsgular Evsnlng Courss Will Alto Bs HsId On Mondays tspt. If fkni M. 14 From 7-9 P.M.</p>
        <p>_8tlt8g vWH ba on a first ooms  flrit tsnw bstls.</p>
        <p>To Registor Call SSS-SSSS</p>
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        <p>10.9% APS</p>
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        <p>TtaiiiiURiMU^tt^^</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0039" />
        <p>w</p>
        <p>The Dally Reflector, Greenville, N.C. Sunday, September 18.1988</p>
        <p>(6&amp;gt;ntinue(l from page B-18)</p>
        <p>STBd p SpccSit p FiduCap n Financial Prog; Dynamc FiBGv n FSP Eng FSP Eu FSP Fn FSP U FnclTx n Gold HiSci HIYId n Industrl Income Lelsr Pacific Select n Tech FsfEagI nr Fit Investors: BondApr p DIscvry p Govt p Growth p HighYd p Income p IntlSec p NYTxFr p Option p SpecBd TaxExpt p Value FtTrUSGv p Flag Investors: CprCs np EmGwth p IntTr p TellncSh p TotRTsy p</p>
        <p>9.94  9.92  9.92</p>
        <p>15.33  15.24  15.33+  .13</p>
        <p>15.03  14.87  14.96+  .24</p>
        <p>6.91</p>
        <p>6.99</p>
        <p>9.47</p>
        <p>7.71</p>
        <p>8.34</p>
        <p>14.11</p>
        <p>8.02</p>
        <p>3.60</p>
        <p>7.90</p>
        <p>11.52</p>
        <p>11.87</p>
        <p>6.47</p>
        <p>6.91+ .11 6.97+ .01 9.47+ .13 8.25+ .05 7.71+ .06 8.34+ .07</p>
        <p>6.82 6.96</p>
        <p>9.27 8.24 7.64</p>
        <p>8.27</p>
        <p>14.10 14.06 14.08+ .03 5.01  4.86 4.86- .23</p>
        <p>13.73 14.11+ .33 8.00  8.02+  .02</p>
        <p>3.52  3.60+  .07</p>
        <p>7.85  7.90+  .02</p>
        <p>11.40  11.52+  .17</p>
        <p>11.80  11.81-  .04</p>
        <p>6.46  6.47+  .01</p>
        <p>10.43  10.31  10.37-  .01</p>
        <p>11.45  11.37  11.45+  .15</p>
        <p>10.60  10.57  10.60+  .04</p>
        <p>8.84  8.76 8.76- 06</p>
        <p>11.02 10.96 11.02+ .06 5.61  5.56  5.60+  .06</p>
        <p>13.39 13.37 13.39+ .05 5.25  5.23  5.25+  .02</p>
        <p>4.14 4.12  4.12- .03 13.49 13.44 13.44+ .02</p>
        <p>4.14  4.13  4.14</p>
        <p>13.44 13.39 13.44+ .06 9.89  9.86  9.88+  .03</p>
        <p>10.53 10.45 10.47- ,12 10.14 10.11 10.13+ .01</p>
        <p>Fl.jsh| Group:</p>
        <p>GATE p KYTE p MITE p NCTE p OHTE p PATE p TnTE p VATE p Flex Funds: Bond np Growth np IncGrth np RetGr np Fortress Invst: GISI r HIQual t HYTF t 44 Wall Eg 44Wall rn Founders Group: BlueChp np Frntr np Grwth np Incom np Sped n Franklin Group: AGE Fund AdiMtg  X</p>
        <p>Callns  X</p>
        <p>CvtSec  X</p>
        <p>CorpCsh DNTC Equity FedTxFr Gold Growth</p>
        <p>HY TF  X</p>
        <p>IncoStk</p>
        <p>InsTF  X</p>
        <p>MassTF  X</p>
        <p>MIchTxF  X</p>
        <p>MNIns  X</p>
        <p>NY Tax OhiolTF  X</p>
        <p>PATF  X</p>
        <p>OptionFd PuerTF  x</p>
        <p>SI Gov  X</p>
        <p>TA Gov Utilities USGov Sc CalTFr Franklin Mgd Tr: CorpCsh p InvGrade p RIsDiv p Freedom Funds; EqVI t Globl t GIblP t Gold t GvPlus t MgdTE t RgBk t FundTrust:</p>
        <p>Aggres Ip Gwth fp Groin Ip Inco fp Fund Source: EqulTr p GvSec IntlEq Ipn Gabelli nt GabelliGr nt GeicoQO Ipn GIT Invst:</p>
        <p>IncMax n InARt n TxFrVA n GNA Inv GatewyGr n GatewyOp n GT Global:</p>
        <p>Bond</p>
        <p>Europe p i GovInc Inti p</p>
        <p>Japan p ) Pacific p WIdGr p Genitor np ( Gen Elec Inv: Elluninc n EltunTr n EltunTxaE S8iS n S&amp;amp;SLng n GnNYTx np GnSec n GnTxEB np Cintel Group: CapAp np Erisa np GIntlFd n GranGStk np Gradison Funds: EstGrp n Govinc p</p>
        <p>tiWj " Gwthind n Guardian Funds: Bond n ParkAv Stk n HTInsEq HarbEq n HarbGr n HartwllEmG HartwlGth Harvester p HeartGv p Heartland p Heritage p HrtgCnv p Hidaen Strength: Growth p ModAst p USGvt HomeGvSecs HoTKMn n Hummer n Hutton Group:</p>
        <p>Bond t</p>
        <p>9.58</p>
        <p>10.97</p>
        <p>1095</p>
        <p>16.54</p>
        <p>10.14</p>
        <p>9.54  9.58+  .05</p>
        <p>10.90  10.97+  .05</p>
        <p>10.89  10.92+  .02</p>
        <p>16.33  16.54+  .12</p>
        <p>10.12  10.14+  .02</p>
        <p>9.37  9.33  9.37+  ,05</p>
        <p>36.60 36.53 36,53- .09 9.47  9.42  9.47+  .06</p>
        <p>9.52  9.48  9.52+  .06</p>
        <p>9.61  9.56  9.60 +  06</p>
        <p>10.36  10.32  10,36+  ,05</p>
        <p>9.20  9,16  9.20+  .05</p>
        <p>10.23  10.18  10.23+  ,06</p>
        <p>9.23  9.19  9.23+  .04</p>
        <p>9.88  9.83  9.88+  .06</p>
        <p>9,50  9.44  9.50+  .06</p>
        <p>18.83  18.75  18.76-  .03</p>
        <p>10.15 10.02 10.15+14</p>
        <p>18.95  18.88  18.95+  .04</p>
        <p>10.17  10,03  10.17+  .11</p>
        <p>9.27  9.25  9,26+  .02</p>
        <p>11.95  11.86  11,95+  .09</p>
        <p>9.84  9.78  9,84+  .07</p>
        <p>4.11  4.11-  .01</p>
        <p>2,15  2.15+  01</p>
        <p>4.13</p>
        <p>2.16</p>
        <p>6.41</p>
        <p>13,83</p>
        <p>7.65</p>
        <p>6.94</p>
        <p>5.54</p>
        <p>6.32  6.41+  .09</p>
        <p>13.63  13.83+  .13</p>
        <p>7.52  7,65+  .12</p>
        <p>6.92  6.94+  .02</p>
        <p>5.42  5.54+  .11</p>
        <p>3.32  3.32  3.32</p>
        <p>10.15 10.08 10.09- .04 10.68 10.65 10.65- .01</p>
        <p>9.36  9.32  9.32-  .03</p>
        <p>8.09  8.07  8.07-  .04</p>
        <p>11.83 11.70 11,83+ .04 6.38 6.32 6.38+ .07</p>
        <p>11.16 11.12 11.16+ .06</p>
        <p>10.53 10.29 10.29- .33 19.19 18.97 19.19+ .22</p>
        <p>10.49 10.41 10.41- ,03 2.11  2.10  2.11</p>
        <p>11.00 10.93 10.93- 01</p>
        <p>10.50 10,44 10.45- .02 10,78 10.71 10.72- .02 11.15 11.09 11.09- .02 10.71 10.66 10.71+ ,06 10.87 10.81 10.81- .02 9.43 9.37 9.38- .02 5.28  5.23  5,28+  .04</p>
        <p>10.50 10.45 10.45 10.24 10.18 10.18- .04 10.12 10.08 10.12+ .02</p>
        <p>7.37  7.33  7.37+  .03</p>
        <p>6.96 6.94 6.96+ .02 6.81 6.81 6.81+ .01</p>
        <p>21.40 21,28 21.28- 06 8.81  8.77  8.81+  .05</p>
        <p>10.09 10 04 10.09 + 07</p>
        <p>9.98 9.85 9,98+ .16 1019 10,13 10.19+ 04</p>
        <p>10.84 10.77 10.77- 04 14.73 14.60 14.60- .02 9.63 9.56 9.58+ .02</p>
        <p>10.54 10.49 10.53+ .05</p>
        <p>11.57 11.49 11.57+ .07</p>
        <p>11.91 11.83 11.90+ .11</p>
        <p>12.58 12,51 12.55+ .09 12.34 12,26 12.31 + .07 9.76  9.73  9,76+  .04</p>
        <p>Calif e CvSec p Gwth t Optninc r Global r GvtSec t Basic Natl</p>
        <p>NYMun t PrecMet t SpEqt UtilSer t IRIStk p X lAI Funds:</p>
        <p>Apollo n Bond n IntFd n Region n Resrv n Stock n IDS Mutual: lOSAg t IDSBd pf IDSCa tp IDS Dcsp IDSEq p IDSEqP p IDS Exp IDSFdl p IDS Gthp IDS HIYdp IDS Inco t IDS Ins p IDSIntI p IDS NwDm pf IDS NY p IDS Prog p IDSTxEx p MgtRt p MnTE p Mutual p PanPcG t PrecMt p Slock p Select p Util Inc IDEX Group:</p>
        <p>Idex Idex II Idex 3 Tofinc IMGBd Acc IMGStk Ac Integrated Resc: AggGth p CapAp t CnvSec p Growth p HiYld p Home 1 IncPI t Stripes p TotRet p GvtPlus p IntlCash p Inti Heritage: Govt HiYld p Omega p IntslCap p Invst Pbrttolio: Equit 1 GvtPlus 1 HiYld t InPTR Optn I InvPlrInc p ITB Group: HilncPlu p X InvTrBos p x</p>
        <p>10.38  10.35  10.35-  .01</p>
        <p>9.56  9.53  9.56+  .02</p>
        <p>11.36  11.29  11,35+  .07</p>
        <p>8.13  8.04  8 13+  .05</p>
        <p>11.15  11.09  11.15+  .01</p>
        <p>9,01  8.92  8 98+  .01</p>
        <p>12.49  12.37  12.49+  .11</p>
        <p>10.76  10.74  10.75 +  .01</p>
        <p>10.49  10.46  10.48+  ,03</p>
        <p>14.10  13.72  13.72-  .42</p>
        <p>12.20  12,04  12.11+  .07</p>
        <p>12.26  12.20  12.26+  .02</p>
        <p>6.90  6.83  6.85-  .02</p>
        <p>11.50  11.38  11.50+  .11</p>
        <p>9.69  9.64  9.66</p>
        <p>9.83  9.71  9.83 +  08</p>
        <p>17 97  17 88  17 97+  .08</p>
        <p>10.22  10.21  10,22+  .01</p>
        <p>15.25  15.03  15.25+  .22</p>
        <p>9.23</p>
        <p>4.64 4.79 6.52 784 8.42</p>
        <p>4.69 5.01 17.48 4.41</p>
        <p>5.65 4.82 8.17 8.10</p>
        <p>4.70 6.61 3.96 7.55 4.85</p>
        <p>9.11</p>
        <p>4.63 4.78</p>
        <p>6.47</p>
        <p>7.67 8.37</p>
        <p>4.68 5.01 17.21 17,48 + 4.40  4.41  +</p>
        <p>5.64 4.80 8.10 8.03</p>
        <p>4.68 6,52 3.95</p>
        <p>7.47 4.84</p>
        <p>1192 11.86 4 02  3,98</p>
        <p>6.58  6.45</p>
        <p>17.82 17 62 1782 8.46  8.45  8.45</p>
        <p>5.01</p>
        <p>9.23+ .11 4.64+ .01 4.79+ .02 6.51+ 04 7.84+ .14 8.42+ .02 468</p>
        <p>5.01+ .01 19 02</p>
        <p>5.65+ .01 4.81+ .02 8 15+ .04 810+ .05 4 70 + ,03 6.61+ .09</p>
        <p>3 96+ .02 7.55+ 07 4,85+ 02 1192+ 06</p>
        <p>4 02 + 04 6.45- 23</p>
        <p>21 01 501</p>
        <p>11.89  11 75  11 89+  16</p>
        <p>11.26  11,13  11,26+  15</p>
        <p>9.9  9.86  9.99+  14</p>
        <p>9.89  9.84  9.84-  03</p>
        <p>10 59  10 55  10.58 +  02</p>
        <p>12.36 12.30 12.33+ ,02</p>
        <p>14.90 14.57 14.90+ .44 13.45 12.97 13.45+ .46 10.32 10.24 10.30+ .05 13.62 13.30 13.62+ 36 10.81 10.78 10,78 10.02  9.99  10.00 +  02</p>
        <p>9.00  8.98  8.98</p>
        <p>12.06 12.05 12 06+ .02</p>
        <p>14.36 14.12 14.36+ .27 10.70  10.68  10.69 +  02</p>
        <p>13 73 13.63 13.63- 12</p>
        <p>9 29  9.25  9.27+  01</p>
        <p>8,79  8 78  8.78</p>
        <p>13,43 13,23 13.43+ 17 6,55  6.49  6 55+  .05</p>
        <p>10.80 10.71 760 7.58</p>
        <p>9.42</p>
        <p>916</p>
        <p>6.01</p>
        <p>9.83</p>
        <p>10.80+ .08 7.59+ .02 9.42+/ ,03 9.16+ .10 6.01+ 08 9.81+ .03</p>
        <p>11.74 11.61 11.61- 09 10.47 10.40 10.43+ .02</p>
        <p>9.22+ .15 676</p>
        <p>9.22  9.11</p>
        <p>6.77  6,75</p>
        <p>14.37  14.26  14.35+  .06</p>
        <p>14.69  14.56  14.69+  .11</p>
        <p>12.49  12.33  12.49+  .15</p>
        <p>21.74  21.69  21,69-  .02</p>
        <p>15.87  15.79  15.85+  .09</p>
        <p>10.76  10.75  10.75+  .01</p>
        <p>8.29  8.28  8.29+  .01</p>
        <p>10.06  10.04  10.05+  .01</p>
        <p>11.05  11.03  11.04</p>
        <p>9 65  9.62  9.64 +  01</p>
        <p>10.06  9.97  10.00-  .05</p>
        <p>13.35  13.17  13,35+  .19</p>
        <p>11.06  11.05  11.05-  .02</p>
        <p>15.50  14.49  14,64-  .77</p>
        <p>10 82  10.76  10.82+  .07</p>
        <p>18.69  18.49  18.69+  .27</p>
        <p>12.30  12.17  12,30+  .19</p>
        <p>16.92  16.73  16.89+  .08</p>
        <p>9.47 9.43 9 46</p>
        <p>20.74  20,55  20,74-  03</p>
        <p>10.71  10.69  10.69</p>
        <p>27,32  26.97  27.32+  ,31</p>
        <p>10.82  10.77  10.82+  .05</p>
        <p>30.29  29 89  30.29+  .36'</p>
        <p>11.00  10.97  10.98</p>
        <p>18.39  18.36  18.38+  .02</p>
        <p>11.85  11.63  11.85+  .26</p>
        <p>13.31  13,28  13.29+  .01</p>
        <p>12.17  11.96  12.17+  .20</p>
        <p>33.38  32.76  33 38 +  64</p>
        <p>59.21  57,87  59.21 + 1.28</p>
        <p>16.15  16.03  16.10-  .05</p>
        <p>16 56  16.33  16 56+  .23</p>
        <p>12.84  12.79  12 83+  .03</p>
        <p>13.05  12 98  13.05+  .11</p>
        <p>12 02  11.85  12.02+  .31</p>
        <p>8.60  8.46  8.60r  .11</p>
        <p>11.48  II 46  11.48 +  03</p>
        <p>21 60  21 40  21.60 +  20</p>
        <p>19.00  18.79  19.00 +  21</p>
        <p>10 50  10.35  10 49+  15</p>
        <p>11.31  11.21  11.31+  09</p>
        <p>11.09  10.98  1109+  12</p>
        <p>11 59  11 47  11.51+  .13</p>
        <p>14 06  13 81  14.06 +  24</p>
        <p>9 88  9.82  9.88 ^  04</p>
        <p>9.17  9.19+  .02</p>
        <p>14.55  14.58-  .03</p>
        <p>11.00  11.19+  .22</p>
        <p>9.01  9.05+  .06</p>
        <p>MassTx Fr p</p>
        <p>16.06</p>
        <p>16!o2</p>
        <p>16.06+</p>
        <p>.04</p>
        <p>InvResh</p>
        <p>475</p>
        <p>4.71</p>
        <p>4.75+</p>
        <p>05</p>
        <p>IstelFd np</p>
        <p>12,59</p>
        <p>12.43</p>
        <p>12.56+</p>
        <p>.11</p>
        <p>Ivy Funds: Gwth n</p>
        <p>13.16</p>
        <p>1302</p>
        <p>13.16+</p>
        <p>.11</p>
        <p>Inst n</p>
        <p>107 52 106.12 107.52 + 1.45</p>
        <p>Inti n</p>
        <p>14.50</p>
        <p>14.41</p>
        <p>14.46- .02</p>
        <p>JP Growth</p>
        <p>12.07</p>
        <p>11.91</p>
        <p>12.07+</p>
        <p>13</p>
        <p>JP Income</p>
        <p>931</p>
        <p>927</p>
        <p>9.20+</p>
        <p>02</p>
        <p>Janus Fund:</p>
        <p>Fund n</p>
        <p>11.74</p>
        <p>11.58</p>
        <p>11.74 +</p>
        <p>.17</p>
        <p>Value n</p>
        <p>10.17</p>
        <p>10.04</p>
        <p>10.17+</p>
        <p>19</p>
        <p>Venfr n '</p>
        <p>29,28</p>
        <p>28 60</p>
        <p>29.28+</p>
        <p>.81</p>
        <p>JapanFd n John Hancock;</p>
        <p>17.88</p>
        <p>17.76</p>
        <p>17.80+</p>
        <p>.09</p>
        <p>Bond</p>
        <p>14.67</p>
        <p>14.63</p>
        <p>14.65+</p>
        <p>04</p>
        <p>Globl</p>
        <p>14.45</p>
        <p>1437</p>
        <p>14.45 +</p>
        <p>12</p>
        <p>Growth</p>
        <p>13.33</p>
        <p>1324</p>
        <p>13.33 +</p>
        <p>.10</p>
        <p>HIghIn p</p>
        <p>9.26</p>
        <p>924</p>
        <p>9.26 +</p>
        <p>.02</p>
        <p>FedPI p</p>
        <p>942</p>
        <p>940</p>
        <p>9,41 +</p>
        <p>.03</p>
        <p>PacBas</p>
        <p>996</p>
        <p>989</p>
        <p>9 96 +</p>
        <p>.06</p>
        <p>S?,</p>
        <p>490</p>
        <p>1042</p>
        <p>495</p>
        <p>10.37</p>
        <p>4.99 + 10.42+</p>
        <p>04</p>
        <p>.06</p>
        <p>USGvSc</p>
        <p>875</p>
        <p>8.73</p>
        <p>8.74 +</p>
        <p>.02</p>
        <p>GtdMtg</p>
        <p>9.94</p>
        <p>9,90</p>
        <p>9.92 +</p>
        <p>05</p>
        <p>Kaulman nr</p>
        <p>1 18</p>
        <p>1.14</p>
        <p>1.18+</p>
        <p>04</p>
        <p>Kemper Funds:</p>
        <p>BlueChp p</p>
        <p>844</p>
        <p>834</p>
        <p>8 44 +</p>
        <p>15</p>
        <p>EnhGv p</p>
        <p>8,72</p>
        <p>8,70</p>
        <p>8.71 +</p>
        <p>01</p>
        <p>Calif</p>
        <p>7.05</p>
        <p>700</p>
        <p>7 05 +</p>
        <p>05</p>
        <p>Growth</p>
        <p>756</p>
        <p>749</p>
        <p>7.56 +</p>
        <p>.08</p>
        <p>HiYield</p>
        <p>11.01</p>
        <p>10.98</p>
        <p>11.00 +</p>
        <p>03</p>
        <p>Income</p>
        <p>8.53</p>
        <p>8.51</p>
        <p>8.53+</p>
        <p>03</p>
        <p>Inti Fund</p>
        <p>867</p>
        <p>8.60</p>
        <p>6 66 +</p>
        <p>.05</p>
        <p>MunlBd</p>
        <p>945</p>
        <p>939</p>
        <p>9.45 +</p>
        <p>08</p>
        <p>Option</p>
        <p>796</p>
        <p>785</p>
        <p>7 96*</p>
        <p>.11</p>
        <p>Summit</p>
        <p>361</p>
        <p>359</p>
        <p>3.61 +</p>
        <p>04</p>
        <p>Technol</p>
        <p>9.54</p>
        <p>9.47</p>
        <p>9.53 +</p>
        <p>07</p>
        <p>TofRetrn </p>
        <p>7.00</p>
        <p>7,05</p>
        <p>7 09+ ,05</p>
        <p>US Gvi</p>
        <p>0.00</p>
        <p>8.98</p>
        <p>9,00+ .03</p>
        <p>KyTxFr n</p>
        <p>651</p>
        <p>648</p>
        <p>6,51 +</p>
        <p>03</p>
        <p>Keystone;</p>
        <p>CusBI 1</p>
        <p>15.64</p>
        <p>15.58</p>
        <p>15,61 +</p>
        <p>03</p>
        <p>CusB2 t</p>
        <p>1827</p>
        <p>1820</p>
        <p>18 26+</p>
        <p>06</p>
        <p>CusB4 I</p>
        <p>6.72</p>
        <p>6.69</p>
        <p>6 72 +</p>
        <p>03</p>
        <p>CusKi t</p>
        <p>8N</p>
        <p>822</p>
        <p>8.30+</p>
        <p>.08</p>
        <p>CusK2 1</p>
        <p>6.34</p>
        <p>625</p>
        <p>6.34 +</p>
        <p>09</p>
        <p>CusSI t</p>
        <p>19.54</p>
        <p>19.26</p>
        <p>19.54 +</p>
        <p>.26</p>
        <p>CusS3 t</p>
        <p>720</p>
        <p>7.21</p>
        <p>7.29+</p>
        <p>07</p>
        <p>CusS4 I</p>
        <p>4 50</p>
        <p>456</p>
        <p>4.58 +</p>
        <p>02</p>
        <p>Inti 1</p>
        <p>663</p>
        <p>659</p>
        <p>6.61 +</p>
        <p>04</p>
        <p>KPM t</p>
        <p>1626</p>
        <p>1591</p>
        <p>15.91-</p>
        <p>56</p>
        <p>TxETr 1</p>
        <p>10 57</p>
        <p>1054</p>
        <p>10.56+</p>
        <p>02</p>
        <p>TaxFr f</p>
        <p>826</p>
        <p>8.24</p>
        <p>8 25 +</p>
        <p>01</p>
        <p>Keystone America</p>
        <p>Eqinc 1</p>
        <p>0.43</p>
        <p>9.28</p>
        <p>9.43 +</p>
        <p>17</p>
        <p>GovSc 1</p>
        <p>9.87</p>
        <p>983</p>
        <p>9,66+</p>
        <p>03</p>
        <p>GroStk 1</p>
        <p>11.08</p>
        <p>10.97</p>
        <p>11.06 +</p>
        <p>11</p>
        <p>HiYld 1</p>
        <p>030</p>
        <p>9.28</p>
        <p>9.28 +</p>
        <p>.03</p>
        <p>InvGrd t</p>
        <p>9.18</p>
        <p>9.15</p>
        <p>0.17+ .04</p>
        <p>TaxFrea 1</p>
        <p>905</p>
        <p>9.91</p>
        <p>0.04 +</p>
        <p>03</p>
        <p>Kidder Group:</p>
        <p>Gvt 1</p>
        <p>14.45</p>
        <p>14.40</p>
        <p>14.43 +</p>
        <p>.04</p>
        <p>KPE 1</p>
        <p>16.47</p>
        <p>16.31</p>
        <p>16.45 +</p>
        <p>.14</p>
        <p>MktGrd</p>
        <p>14.45</p>
        <p>14.38</p>
        <p>14.45+ .07</p>
        <p>Nall</p>
        <p>15.20</p>
        <p>15.24</p>
        <p>15.27+</p>
        <p>.05</p>
        <p>NY Ser</p>
        <p>14.84</p>
        <p>14.80</p>
        <p>14.83+</p>
        <p>.04</p>
        <p>SpGth nt</p>
        <p>14.70</p>
        <p>14.64</p>
        <p>14.78 +</p>
        <p>.12</p>
        <p>Landmark Funds:</p>
        <p>CapGth n GInInc n</p>
        <p>898</p>
        <p>1.87</p>
        <p>8.99 +</p>
        <p>08</p>
        <p>10.26</p>
        <p>10,10</p>
        <p>10.25+</p>
        <p>08</p>
        <p>NYTF n</p>
        <p>9,51</p>
        <p>0.47</p>
        <p>9.50+ .04</p>
        <p>USGv n</p>
        <p>0.13</p>
        <p>0.11</p>
        <p>9.12+</p>
        <p>.01</p>
        <p>Lm Mason.</p>
        <p>ivtind np Splnv np TolRet np ValTr np LehOpport n</p>
        <p>19.01 18 85 19 01+ 12</p>
        <p>9 94  9 91  9 92+ .01</p>
        <p>10 62 10.49 10.62+ .13 9 23  9,14  9 23+ .10</p>
        <p>25 94 25 69 25.94+ .31</p>
        <p>24.01 23.82 24.01+ .06</p>
        <p>Leverage n Lexington Grp: CrpLead t GNMA n Global Goldfd n Growth n Resch n TEBd n Liberty Family; AmLdr Cnvinc HilncSe</p>
        <p>X'"</p>
        <p>USGvSec LibMutG LIdTrm p LindOv nr Lindnr nr Loomis 5ayles: Capital n &amp;gt; Mutual n Lord Abbett: Atliliated BondDeb Devel Glh FdValu GovtSec p TaxFr TxFrCal p TaxNY ValuApp Lutheran Bro: BroHiYd Fund X .Income Municipal MFS:</p>
        <p>MIT FinlOev GrthStk CapOev Special Sectors p EmgGth TollRet GovGuar p GovHiYd p IntBnd FinlBnd HilncBnd Hilncll MuniBnd TaxFrCA p MuniMA MuniMD MuniNC MuniSC MuniVA MunlWV MuniHiY MFS Lifetime: CapGr t Global t Seclr I EmgG 1 OivPl 1 GovPI t Hilnc t MunBd t MIMLIC Funds: AsstAII Invl</p>
        <p>MtgSecs MSBFd np MacKay Shields CapAp t Conv t CrpBd t Global t GovPlu t TxFrBd t TotRet t Value t Mackeniie Grp: GvtSc p AmerFd Opt Inc MassMutI Fds: Balance p InvGr p USGov p ValStk p AAathers n Meschrt AAeritor Funds: PATF n USGvt n Grwth n Merrill Lynch: BasicVal CalTx I Capital CorpDv EquiBd r EuroFd t FdSecTr p FdTomr t GIbCv t Hi Incom Hi Dually Instlnl np IntHId IntTerm LtdMat MunHiYd Muniinc t Muni Insr NYMu I NIIRes t Pacific f Phoenix f Retire t RetEq I Retine t RetGIB t SciTech Sp Val StrtDv t MelLite StateSt; CapApr p Eqinc p Eqinvst p GovSec p Gvinc np Hilnc p TaxEx p MidAmerica Fds: MidAmer MidAHGr MidAHYId MidasGId p Midwest:</p>
        <p>FI Gwth p FI Govt p FI Treas p IntGv p TFLtd p Monltrnd p MrgKgSo p Morison p MutlBntt</p>
        <p>Mutual ot Omaha: Americ n Growth Income Tax Free Mutual Series: Beacon n</p>
        <p>6.04  5.97  5.99+  .03</p>
        <p>11.53  11.35  11.51  +</p>
        <p>7.65  7 60  7.63  +</p>
        <p>10.70  10.56  10,69  +</p>
        <p>5.02</p>
        <p>1.75</p>
        <p>5.02- 18 8.89+ l4</p>
        <p>14.55 14.24 14 55 + 32 9.93  .90  9 92 +  02</p>
        <p>12 80t</p>
        <p>9.45*</p>
        <p>Il.l7t</p>
        <p>12.80  12.73</p>
        <p>9,45  9  41</p>
        <p>11,17'  11,12</p>
        <p>8.85  8.82  8.84 f  02</p>
        <p>10.25 10.18 10 25+ 07 8.32  8,29  8 30 +  01</p>
        <p>9.64  9 63  9 64 +  03</p>
        <p>2.76 12.75 12 76+ .02 22 10  21 91  22 10-  23</p>
        <p>17,05  16 86  17 04 +  12</p>
        <p>16.19 16 09 16.09- 02 20.15 20.07, 20,07</p>
        <p>9.46 965 7 10 10,00 2.95</p>
        <p>1067 10.64 10.04 10,01</p>
        <p>9,46+ .12 9 65+ 04 7 08+ .05 9 98 + .03 2.94</p>
        <p>10.66+ .03 10,03+ 02</p>
        <p>10.77 10 74 10.76+ .03 10,63 10.54 10 63+ ,05</p>
        <p>963 961 14.64 14.46 8.46  8.42</p>
        <p>8 08 8 05</p>
        <p>9.63+ .04 14.64+ .11 8.46+ 06 8,07+ .03</p>
        <p>12.00 11 85 12.00+ .16</p>
        <p>10.36 10.18 10.36+ 19 8,69 8.56 8.69+ .15</p>
        <p>11.37 11.20 11.37+ .14 9 29 9 21  9.29  + 08</p>
        <p>10.11  9.97  10.11+  .11</p>
        <p>13.27 12.99 13.27+ 35 10.42 10.32 10.42+ .10 9,31  9,28  9,29+ .02</p>
        <p>7.88  7.84  7.85- ,02</p>
        <p>11.71 11.66 11.67- .03 12.97 12.94 12.97+ .05 6 10 6 07  6.10+ .04</p>
        <p>9.11  9.07  9.10+ .04</p>
        <p>10 37 10,34 10.37+ .04 5.01  5.00  5.01+  .02</p>
        <p>10.52 10.50 10.52+ .03 10.61 10.59 10.61+ .04</p>
        <p>11.00 10.97 11.00+ .04</p>
        <p>Oualld n Shares n NtAvTec Ntlind</p>
        <p>Nat Securities: Bond CalTxE Fairtid FedScTr Growth Income Prefered Premln RealEst RE Inc Stock StrAII p TxExmpI TolRet NatTele</p>
        <p>Nationwide Fds: NtBond NatnFd NtGwth TxFre Neuberger Berm: Energy n Guardn n Liberty n LtdMat n Manhat n IMMPIu n Partnrs n NewEngland Fds: Bdlncp p Equity p GlobGv p GvtSec p Growth p RelirEq p TaxExmpt p NY Mun np NewtnGth n Newtnin n Nicholas Group: Nichol n Nchll n Nichinc n NchLd n NodCnvS n NeInvGr n NelnvTr n Nomura nt NovaFd r Nuveen Funds:</p>
        <p>CA SpcI</p>
        <p>23.44 23.22 23,44+ .21 70.90 70 24 70 90+ .65 10.35 10 30 10 35+ .05 11 78 11.72 II 76+ 04</p>
        <p>2.48  2 47  2,48+  .01</p>
        <p>12.52 12.48 12.51+ .04 7,29  7.22  7,28+  .06</p>
        <p>9 24  9.19  9.22+  .04</p>
        <p>10 08 9 94 10.08+ ,17 7 88  7.78  7.88+  .11</p>
        <p>7,50  7 47  7.49+  .02</p>
        <p>10 96 10.80 10.96+ .12 8.61  8.58  8 60+ .01</p>
        <p>10,32 10.29 10.31- .01 7 67  7.58  7.67+  ,08</p>
        <p>10.45 10,41 10.45+ .03 9 7  9 77 9.79+ .03</p>
        <p>7 09  7.00  7.09+  .10</p>
        <p>14 72 14 64 14.72 + .0</p>
        <p>9.31  9 26 9.31 + .07</p>
        <p>13 27 13 06 13.27+ .18 8.36  8 30 8.36+ .06</p>
        <p>9.22  9.19  9.21+  .04</p>
        <p>17 48 17 20 17.48+ .23 39 80 39 48 39 80 + 38 4 26  4 23 4.26+ .02</p>
        <p>9 83 9.84+ ,01</p>
        <p>8 81  8 98+ .14</p>
        <p>9 86 9 87 + 01 16,41 16 57+ 19</p>
        <p>9.85</p>
        <p>8.98</p>
        <p>9.87</p>
        <p>1657</p>
        <p>CA Ins Bd</p>
        <p>0.14</p>
        <p>911</p>
        <p>InsNat</p>
        <p>0.25</p>
        <p>9,22</p>
        <p>MunlBd</p>
        <p>8.57</p>
        <p>8.51</p>
        <p>OhTF</p>
        <p>0.03</p>
        <p>197</p>
        <p>TFNY</p>
        <p>023</p>
        <p>0.16</p>
        <p>Oberweis f</p>
        <p>10.23</p>
        <p>10.16</p>
        <p>OlyEqInc</p>
        <p>11,82</p>
        <p>1174</p>
        <p>OldOomin</p>
        <p>2084</p>
        <p>20 72</p>
        <p>Oppcnheimar Fd:</p>
        <p>AssetA p</p>
        <p>996</p>
        <p>0.01</p>
        <p>BlueChp p</p>
        <p>13.05</p>
        <p>1280</p>
        <p>Direct</p>
        <p>20.17</p>
        <p>20.07</p>
        <p>Eqinc</p>
        <p>8.45</p>
        <p>1.37</p>
        <p>GNMA p</p>
        <p>13.47</p>
        <p>13.43</p>
        <p>Global</p>
        <p>22.76</p>
        <p>22 58</p>
        <p>Gold</p>
        <p>12.01</p>
        <p>11.85</p>
        <p>HighYld NYTax p</p>
        <p>15.04</p>
        <p>15.02</p>
        <p>11.95</p>
        <p>11.00</p>
        <p>9010</p>
        <p>14.48</p>
        <p>14.43</p>
        <p>OTC Fdp</p>
        <p>17.61</p>
        <p>17.43</p>
        <p>OpenhFd</p>
        <p>8.08</p>
        <p>7.00</p>
        <p>Premum</p>
        <p>21.96</p>
        <p>21.60</p>
        <p>Rgncy</p>
        <p>12.28</p>
        <p>12.14</p>
        <p>Special</p>
        <p>16.03</p>
        <p>16.78</p>
        <p>Target</p>
        <p>TaxFree p x</p>
        <p>15.07</p>
        <p>15.70</p>
        <p>9.28</p>
        <p>0.25</p>
        <p>Time</p>
        <p>15.14</p>
        <p>14.87</p>
        <p>TotRI p</p>
        <p>646</p>
        <p>6,30</p>
        <p>USGvt p</p>
        <p>9.54</p>
        <p>052</p>
        <p>OverCountS p</p>
        <p>1668</p>
        <p>16.62</p>
        <p>Pacific Horiion.</p>
        <p>AgGr p CATF p</p>
        <p>13.00</p>
        <p>12.00</p>
        <p>13.51</p>
        <p>1348</p>
        <p>HYBd p</p>
        <p>14.62</p>
        <p>14.50</p>
        <p>PIMITLO n</p>
        <p>9.91</p>
        <p>0.90</p>
        <p>PIMIT TRn</p>
        <p>10.01</p>
        <p>090</p>
        <p>Paine Webber:</p>
        <p>AslAI np</p>
        <p>0.94</p>
        <p>0.80</p>
        <p>Atlas</p>
        <p>13.88</p>
        <p>13.81</p>
        <p>Amer t</p>
        <p>13.77</p>
        <p>13.60</p>
        <p>CalTx f</p>
        <p>10.73</p>
        <p>1070</p>
        <p>GNMA f X</p>
        <p>9.37</p>
        <p>0.34</p>
        <p>HiYld f X</p>
        <p>8.78</p>
        <p>8.77</p>
        <p>9,16+ .06 9 25 + 06 8.57+ .06 9.03+ .05 0.23+ .06</p>
        <p>9.06+ .04</p>
        <p>8.08+</p>
        <p>1108</p>
        <p>936</p>
        <p>11.05 11.07+ .03 9 30  9.34-  01</p>
        <p>11 79 11 74 II 74- 03</p>
        <p>12 05 11 99 12.03+ 03 7 58  7.56  7.56+  .01</p>
        <p>6 12  6.09  6.10+  .02</p>
        <p>7 01  6 98  7.01 +  ,03</p>
        <p>108  1.07  1,08+  .01</p>
        <p>20 64 20 43 20.64 + 30</p>
        <p>8 12 8 10 8 11 + 01</p>
        <p>33 54 33.18 33.54+ .24 18.44 18.28 18.44+ .13 3 81  3 80  3:81+  01</p>
        <p>11 14 1101 11,14+ .0 8.42  8 39  8.41 +  01</p>
        <p>18 78 18.49 18.78 + 21</p>
        <p>12 12 1209 12.12+ 05 18.32 18,22 18,24- 08 12 99 1285 12 93+ 10</p>
        <p>9:38  9,29  9 38+  09</p>
        <p>11.07 11,04 10.67 10.65 10.50 10.48 9.45 9.43</p>
        <p>11.06 + 10 67 + 10.49 + 9.45 +</p>
        <p>9.36  9.26  9,36+  II</p>
        <p>10.78  10.70  10,76 +  07</p>
        <p>8.01  7.90  8.01+  0</p>
        <p>7.83</p>
        <p>6.97</p>
        <p>805</p>
        <p>6.20</p>
        <p>865</p>
        <p>7.78</p>
        <p>6.94</p>
        <p>8.04</p>
        <p>6.25+ .07 8.68+ .05 7.80- .02 6.97+ .04 8.05+ .02</p>
        <p>10.62  10.55  10.62+  .07</p>
        <p>10.59  10.44  10.59+  .12</p>
        <p>10.02  9.98  10.00+  .04</p>
        <p>18.37  18.23  18 28-  .04</p>
        <p>American Stock Exchange</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (API - American Stock Ex change trading for the week selected issues:</p>
        <p>Sales</p>
        <p>PE hds High Low Last Chg.</p>
        <p>10 8  13'2  12H  12+4- '2</p>
        <p>46 6244  23+  21'2  21'6-1'</p>
        <p>s  II 28202  20  18'4  18+4-1</p>
        <p>3.20  9 25  67+4  66+4  67 -1</p>
        <p>965</p>
        <p>8.98</p>
        <p>9.12</p>
        <p>9.4</p>
        <p>9.0</p>
        <p>9.66</p>
        <p>10.40</p>
        <p>9.78</p>
        <p>9.57</p>
        <p>8.89</p>
        <p>9.10</p>
        <p>9.45</p>
        <p>9.06</p>
        <p>9.65</p>
        <p>9.62- .04 8.98+ .08 0.12+ .02 9.45+ .01 9.06- .01 9.65</p>
        <p>10.35 10.30 + 04 9.5 9.78+ .18</p>
        <p>7.57  7.4</p>
        <p>11.67 11.53 6.90 6.87</p>
        <p>7.51- .03 11.67+ ,12 6.87- ,05</p>
        <p>4'2+ H 1+6- ' 6'4- '8 3'A-2'2 1+v  1+4</p>
        <p>6'4  6+8- +8</p>
        <p>1 I - 'e 12'* 13 -1'4 7'4  7+8+116</p>
        <p>6'4  6&amp;lt;4</p>
        <p>12 1882 21+8 20+8 21H+1' 34 11+8 II 11+8+ '</p>
        <p>10.10 10.01 10.10+ .08 10.55 10.52 10.55+ .03</p>
        <p>9.74 9.6  9.71+  .01</p>
        <p>10.47 10.35 10.47+ .11</p>
        <p>15.91 15.77 15.91+ .04</p>
        <p>25.27 J5,13 25.13- .08</p>
        <p>11.96 11 93 1.1.94+ 02 11.94  11.92  11,93</p>
        <p>10 61  10.49  10 61 +  .13</p>
        <p>18.04  17 81  18.04 +  20</p>
        <p>10.92  10.89  10 92+  .04</p>
        <p>21.86 21.70 21.86+ .16 9.83 9.82 9 83- .01 11.74  11 68  11 74 +  06</p>
        <p>8.09 8.03  8.04-  .02</p>
        <p>9.27  9.25  9,27+  02</p>
        <p>15.22 15.00 15.22+ .1</p>
        <p>9.86  9 83  9 86+  .03</p>
        <p>7.93 7.92 7,93+ .01</p>
        <p>11.05 11.01 11.04+ .05 9.42  9.41  9 42</p>
        <p>10.78  10 72  10.78+  .06</p>
        <p>11.01 10.98 11.01+ .04 9.71  9.70  9 71 +  01</p>
        <p>10.06 10.03 10.06+ .04 9.35  9.31  9.33 +  02</p>
        <p>7.75 7.72 7.75+ .05 10.68 10.62 10.68+ .07 12.30 12.0 12.10- 02 17.1  17 09  17.12-  07</p>
        <p>11 76 11.63 11.76+ ,16</p>
        <p>10 86  10 78  10 86+  .09</p>
        <p>9.60  9 47  9.60+  .0</p>
        <p>9.34  9  31  9.33+  .01</p>
        <p>9.87  9 80  9.81-  .05</p>
        <p>10.20 1016 10.19+ .05 11.81 11.66 11.80+ .11</p>
        <p>10.87 10.75 1087+ .11</p>
        <p>10,73 10.65 10.73 + 07 8 81  8 72  8.81 +  .08</p>
        <p>9.53  9 38  9.53+  .14</p>
        <p>6.78  6.76  6.76</p>
        <p>11 56 11.53 11.54</p>
        <p>7.25  7.23  7 25+  .01</p>
        <p>7.13  7.11  7.13+  03</p>
        <p>5.25 5.22 5.25+ ,03 3.84  3 82  3.84+  .03</p>
        <p>10.03 10.00 10.01+ .03 2 61  2.52  2 52-  0</p>
        <p>11,90 11.76 11.90+ ,13</p>
        <p>10.13 10.09 1011+ .01 0.01 9.00 9,01+ .02 10.12 10.08 10.11</p>
        <p>10.13 10.11 10.12+ .01 15.70 15.69 15.70+ .01 11.05 11.00 11.05+ .06 5.04 5.03 5.04+ .01 14 24 14.18 14.23+ .05</p>
        <p>147 2l'/&amp;lt; 11301 2H 14+x 3'v</p>
        <p>6'V 2'&amp;gt; 2'i</p>
        <p>20''4 21 + 'a 2&amp;gt;i 25+ ' 14'a 3+4</p>
        <p>6H- ' 1*- ' 2'i</p>
        <p>14'.</p>
        <p>3+4</p>
        <p>6'U</p>
        <p>1'</p>
        <p>2</p>
        <p>Acton Alza AmdhI APetf</p>
        <p>ASciE  225 179 4&amp;gt;a 4</p>
        <p>Ampal .06  5  112  I+.  IH</p>
        <p>Andal  65  6'.  6'a</p>
        <p>ArizCm  84  3' a d  3'A</p>
        <p>Armtrn  36  2'a  2^a</p>
        <p>Astrt wi  60  r  15</p>
        <p>Atari  101384  6a  6'.</p>
        <p>AtlsCM  328  I'a  I</p>
        <p>Allas wt  98  14'.</p>
        <p>BAT 33e  1758  7 7 16</p>
        <p>Bansir g  22  6+a</p>
        <p>BergB s BowVal 20e Brscn g 96 CMICp</p>
        <p>CarnCr  .40  10 1213</p>
        <p>ChmpEn  190</p>
        <p>ComN  .25  9 806</p>
        <p>Conqst  1538</p>
        <p>ConsOG  451</p>
        <p>Cross  1.12 16 600  32'. 30+.  30+.-</p>
        <p>Damson  18524 3 32 1 16 1 16</p>
        <p>DataPd  16  1268  11'a  I0+  10+.-  '.</p>
        <p>Delmed  1217  1  1316  1316-1  16</p>
        <p>Duplex  68 12 62  18'.  I8'a  18'a+  'a</p>
        <p>EchoBy  07 30 17540  I6+.  15+a  16'-  'a</p>
        <p>Endvco  l Olt 24 233  5+.  5  5++  +a</p>
        <p>ENSCO  11 12058 2'dl+.  2</p>
        <p>EntMkt  768  44a  4  4 -  +</p>
        <p>Fidata  382  8  75  7+.-  H</p>
        <p>FAusPr 1.13  4953  '.  '  '.+  l16</p>
        <p>Fluke  761 43 794  I7H  17  17'.+ 'a</p>
        <p>FruitL  9 6393  6'  6'a  6+.-  '</p>
        <p>FurVIt  05|  416  3'a  3'.  3'.-</p>
        <p>GRI  10  115  9't  9'a  07+  +a</p>
        <p>GnIYI g  300 Il'adlO'a 10+.-  'a</p>
        <p>Glatfltr  70  12 604  34?  33+.  34'a-  '.</p>
        <p>GidFId  261  7 16  +a  +a</p>
        <p>GCda  22j  616  14</p>
        <p>Hasbro  12  17 2701  154.</p>
        <p>Heico 10  14  147  20'a</p>
        <p>HollyC s  8 240  IS'.</p>
        <p>HomeSh  17 2883  3+.</p>
        <p>HrnHar  5 3424  '.</p>
        <p>HouOT  lie  898  I</p>
        <p>Imp0ilgl 80  4815  41+.  41</p>
        <p>InslSy  7 641  l+a  )'</p>
        <p>InlBknl  805  3?  3+</p>
        <p>Kirby lOe  4  353  4+a  4'.</p>
        <p>LdmkSv 30  6  145  7+&amp;lt;  6H</p>
        <p>Lionel  22 1383  4'a  3'</p>
        <p>LorTel  ]4 21348  14'  135  14'e+</p>
        <p>MCO Hd  4 30  l3+  13'.  13+-  '.</p>
        <p>MSR  154  I'a  14  1'/a+  '.</p>
        <p>IMedia  40 21 1607  38+.  37  37 -1+9</p>
        <p>MtchlE 24a  300 464  12'a  1I+.  12 +</p>
        <p>NtPatnt 10  550  6'a  6'a  6+-</p>
        <p>NProc  1.49e1l 345 u36  34+.  35+.+ '</p>
        <p>NY Time 48  14  9311  27?  26'a  274.+</p>
        <p>NCdOg .20  103  15'  14?  15</p>
        <p>Numac  43  7+.  7'a  7'a-</p>
        <p>OOkiep 72e  50  8+.  7'  8+.+</p>
        <p>PallCp  40 19 3684  28+.  27  28+8 + 1</p>
        <p>PhILD  I5i 6 1534  10  +.  9V+</p>
        <p>Pittway 1.80 11 xl9 92' 02  92'+  +</p>
        <p>13'a 13</p>
        <p>14'a 15'- '.. 19+. 20'a+ 'a 14' 15'*+ 5 3'a 3'a- 'a 8?- '. 1516+ 'a 41+a- + I't- ' 3'*+ ' 4'- '* 7++ 'a</p>
        <p>8+a</p>
        <p>5.</p>
        <p>Ransbg Resrt A SecCap IStt</p>
        <p>10.06  10.02  10.04+  .02</p>
        <p>7.50  7.34  7.50+  .16</p>
        <p>9,11  9.07  9,11+  ,03</p>
        <p>11.21  11.17  11 19+  ,02</p>
        <p>23.72  23 58  23.72+  .13</p>
        <p>75 681 ll'i 766 33+. 387 I'a SlerlStt  962  6</p>
        <p>TIE  1219  2'.</p>
        <p>Telesph  15  2290  3.</p>
        <p>TexAir  1434  13'a</p>
        <p>TotlPtg 40  1134  17</p>
        <p>TwCty S 12  489  'i</p>
        <p>TubMex Unicorp UFoodA UFoodB UnvPat WanqB</p>
        <p>lO'a 10 31+.  33 -  +.</p>
        <p>I+  la-  '</p>
        <p>6+1  6'a  '</p>
        <p>2  2'.+  '*</p>
        <p>3'.  3'a-  '/.</p>
        <p>12'. 12+.-15' 17 +1'a 'a  +.</p>
        <p>3'a  4 +  .</p>
        <p>6'a  6'a+  'a</p>
        <p>1+  I'a-  +</p>
        <p>I+.  1+.-</p>
        <p>4  4'a</p>
        <p>'.+</p>
        <p>WshPst I 56 15 397 205 202 204' + 3+a Wlhtrd  345  2'a 2'.  2+ +</p>
        <p>WDigitI 9 2657 14+. 14  14 - H</p>
        <p>Copyright by The Associated Press 188</p>
        <p>1177 30  542</p>
        <p>5 361</p>
        <p>6 30 596</p>
        <p>16 16 11439 9'ad8a</p>
        <p>9,1</p>
        <p>14.62</p>
        <p>11.19</p>
        <p>905</p>
        <p>9.87</p>
        <p>7.44</p>
        <p>989</p>
        <p>9.66</p>
        <p>966</p>
        <p>736</p>
        <p>0,87</p>
        <p>0.64</p>
        <p>0.87+ 12 7.44+ .06 0 88+ .02 0.64- .02</p>
        <p>17 06 16.84 17.06 + 20 13.86 13.66 13.86 + 20</p>
        <p>10.61 10.54 10.50+ 02</p>
        <p>RE/MAX</p>
        <p>426 E. Arlington Blvd. SvitoD</p>
        <p>I'v* been from Oroonvlllo tor ovor 30 yoart and I hava tha knowladvo of thia araa that Is nacaaaary to halp you.</p>
        <p>Call</p>
        <p>Jule White</p>
        <p>i 355-5444</p>
        <p>Independent</p>
        <p>An independent insurance agency isnt committed to anyone but you.</p>
        <p>Were an independent insurance agency. Were not committed to any one companv. Only to you.</p>
        <p>We scout all the quality companies we represent, companies like Aetna. And find the nest insurance programsfor you, your family, and your business. Programs that are comprehensive in coverage and competitive in price.</p>
        <p>Service? Its all available through our agency. Convenient payment</p>
        <p>filans. And satisfaction. Choose the independent agency thats working or you. Not someone else.</p>
        <p>Hooker &amp;amp; Buchanan, Inc. 509 S. Evans Street Greenville, NC 27835</p>
        <p>Tim Nelson 752-6186</p>
        <p>Home-Auto Life-Health-Disability (Individual or Group)</p>
        <p>HYMu f InvGrd f MstEU t MastGI t MasfG np Mast I np Olymps 1 TxExpt t Parnassus PasadenG PalrtCC * PaxWorld n PennSqre n PennMfl nr PermPrt n PermTBill n Phila Fund Phoenix Series; BalanFd CvFdSer Growth HIQual HIYield SiKkFd TotRet p Pilgrim Grp; CrpCsh np FgnCvSec FgnHiInc p GNIWA HIYId p</p>
        <p>^ p</p>
        <p>Preld p RisProt p Pioneer Fund: Pionr Bd PlonrFd Pionr II Pionr III Piper JaHray: Balanc p i Govt</p>
        <p>Sector p  )</p>
        <p>Value p  I</p>
        <p>Price Funds: CalTx n CapApr n Equin n GNM n Growth n Gwth In n HiYld n Income n IntlBd n IntStk n MdTxFr n NwAm n NewEra n NwHrzn n NYTxF n SciTch n ST Bond n SmCapVal TxFree n TxFrHY n TxFrSI n PrimryT n Prncipl Presv: DivAch GovtPI InsTEx PlusPort Retirement SP 100 PI Princor Funds; CapAcc Govt</p>
        <p>Growth X TE Bd PrudSpc np Prudential Bache: CalMu I CorpDIv t Equt 1 EqInc 1 FIxAg t FIxCnn t GNMA t Globl t GIbGA 1 GIbRs t</p>
        <p>0.25- .01</p>
        <p>6.46+ ,07 0.52  1</p>
        <p>0.93+ .03 13.88+ 04 13.77+ .08 10 73+ .04 0.35+ .02 8.78</p>
        <p>0 79 0 75 0.79 + 05 0.57 0,52 0.57+ .06 0 96 9.75 9.96t .10</p>
        <p>10.98 10.90 10.03- .06 10.50 10.51 10.58+ .00 007 9.02 0.03 11.62 11.54 11.62+ .04 11.02 10.98 11.02+ ,05 21.71 21.49 21.68+ 20</p>
        <p>15.98 15,73 15.98+ .21 48 56 48.51 40.53- .03 12.45 12.36 12.45+ .10 9.10 0.02 9.10+ .10 6.68  6.64  6 60+ .04</p>
        <p>14.88 14.00 14.80- .07 53.40 53.43 53.40+ IM 5.51  5.40  5.51+ .11</p>
        <p>12.15 12.07 12.15+ .07</p>
        <p>15.76 15.66 15.76 + 00 15.70 15.66 15.70+ .06 8.96 8 04  8.96+  .03</p>
        <p>8.07 8.86  0.87+  .02</p>
        <p>10.07 10.86 10.97+ 08 12.66 12.56 12.66+ .04</p>
        <p>10.00 10.00 10.00 0.50 0.46 0.40 + 03 0 04 0.87  0.04+  .00</p>
        <p>14.06 14.02 14.04 + 03 7.30 7.28 7.30 + 02 0.21 0.06 0.21+ .14 18 44 18.30 10.41- 08 21.27 21,18 21.27+ .00 8.28 8.17 8.20+ .08</p>
        <p>0.07 0,05 0.06+ ,02</p>
        <p>20.77 20.40 20.77+ .26</p>
        <p>18.07 17.00 11.07+ .15 15.01 t4.8( 15.01+ .14</p>
        <p>0.02</p>
        <p>0.42</p>
        <p>8.56</p>
        <p>9.43</p>
        <p>8.06</p>
        <p>0.30</p>
        <p>0.50</p>
        <p>0.32</p>
        <p>0.02- .07 0.42+ .03 8.53+ .01 0.43+ J</p>
        <p>0.10 0.18 0.10+ .02 10.51 10.35 10.51+ .13 13.45 13.50 13.45+ ,14 0.26  0.24  0.25</p>
        <p>14,57 14.43 14.57+ .14 12.75 12.44 12.75 + 09 10.33 10.30 10.32+ .01 8.47  8.45  8 46</p>
        <p>0.77 0,71 0.73- .03 8.94 0.01  8.03+  .02</p>
        <p>0.24 0.21  9.24+  ,03</p>
        <p>12.30 12.07 12.30+ .17 10.24 10.07 10,25+ .10 10,04 10,73 10.04+ .14 0.54 0.53 0.54+ .04 1.00  1.01  8.05+ .03</p>
        <p>4.07 4.06 4.06- .01 0.01  0.05  8.07</p>
        <p>I.6( 0.66 8.60+ .03</p>
        <p>II.17 11.13 11.17+ .04 5.  5.00  506</p>
        <p>10.02 10.00 10.02+ .00</p>
        <p>0.00</p>
        <p>0.05</p>
        <p>0.34</p>
        <p>0.11</p>
        <p>0.64</p>
        <p>0.70</p>
        <p>0.03</p>
        <p>0.28</p>
        <p>800</p>
        <p>0.50</p>
        <p>10.76 10.61</p>
        <p>0.00+ .10 0.03- 02 0.32+ .05 0.10+ .02 0.44+ .07 10.74+ .15</p>
        <p>17.17 17.01 17.17+ .13 10.31 10.25 10.20+ .04 16.00 16.01 16.02- 09</p>
        <p>10.51 10.46 10.40+ .05 7,40 7.44 7 40+ ,05</p>
        <p>10.65 1042 1045+ .04</p>
        <p>10.52 11.47 11.47- 00 0.03 0.05 0.03+ .03</p>
        <p>0 34 0.20 0.53 0.41 9.46 0.42 14.73 14.68 0.44 0,41</p>
        <p>0.36+ .05 0.S3+ .04 0.46+ .03 14.73+ .05 0.45+ .05</p>
        <p>10.43 10.30 10.30- .01 8 00 8.61  8.78+ .06</p>
        <p>GovPI t CvtPIII t GvtSc np GthOp t HIYId t IncVr t MunArz t MuGa t MunHY t Munin t MuMd t MunMA 1 MuMn 1 MunMI t MuniMod t MuNC t MunNJ MuNY t MuOr t MunOh I MuPa 1 NtMun t OptG f Resch t Util t Putnam Funds: CCsArp CCsDsp CalTax</p>
        <p>CaPres p  &amp;gt;</p>
        <p>Convert  &amp;gt;</p>
        <p>EngyRes GNA8A p George Global p Gro&amp;amp;lnc Health HIghInc p HighYld  </p>
        <p>HIYdll p  X</p>
        <p>Income  x</p>
        <p>InfoSc Inti Equ Invest MaTx t MiTx t MnTx t OhTx t NY TaxEx OTC Emgp Option Option II TaxExpt TFHY t TFIn t USGt Vista Voyage OuestGov np QuestFd RNC Grttup: CvSec p Regency p Westwind Rainbow n ReaGra RchTang n ResEq n RMitimc Group: BlueCh p RTFd ntp GovSec p Growth p Rochester Fds: ConvGr p Cnvinc p Growth p Muni p Tax p Radnty S&amp;lt;|uare: BnchUS n Growth n IntlEq n Royce Funds: Inco f Value t TotRet t Rushniere Group: SMPIdx n OTCIdx n GovLT n US Intn TFLT n TxFrInt n SBSF Cvn SBSFGr n SFT Group:</p>
        <p>Direct p Equity p USGov p S^P IFG Fdi: Divers f IndFd t IntMu f SafKO Sacur: CalTFr n Equity n Growth n Incom n Munic n USGov n SalemGr np SchieldV p Schroder Scudder Funds: CalTx n CapGt n Develop n E^lnc n Gen0O n Glohl n GNMA n Grwinc n Income n Internatl n OAgdMun n NYTx n TxFHY n TxF0O n TxFr03 n TxFr06 n SeaglnGv n Security Fundi; Action n Bond p</p>
        <p>0 35  0.32  9  34+  .01</p>
        <p>8.05  8.01  8  02-  05</p>
        <p>10.04  10.02  10.02</p>
        <p>11.07  11.03  11.07+  ,01</p>
        <p>0 90  0.80  0 90+  .01</p>
        <p>10.28  10.22  10 20+  .05</p>
        <p>10.84 10.81 10.84+ .05</p>
        <p>11.04  11.03  11.06+  ,04</p>
        <p>10.34  10.31  10.34+  .04</p>
        <p>10.35  10.31  10.35 +  06</p>
        <p>10.30 10.27 10.30+ .03 10.62 10.58 10.62+ .04</p>
        <p>10.80  10.85  10 80 +  04</p>
        <p>10.72  10.65  10.72 +  08</p>
        <p>10.14 10.08 10.12+ .05 10.47 10.42 10,47+ .05</p>
        <p>10.08 10.03 10.07+ .05 10.70 10 46 10.70+ .04</p>
        <p>10.81 10.70 10,81+ .02 10.65 10.50 10.65+ .07 958  9.55  9.58+  .04</p>
        <p>14.96 14.01 14.96+ .06 8.07  7.05  8.07+  .09</p>
        <p>12.80 12.66 12.80+ .14</p>
        <p>14.14 14 02 14.14+ ,08</p>
        <p>40.92 40 90 40 91+ 04 41.58 41.48 41.58+ .16</p>
        <p>15.30 15 26 15.28+ .02 11 75  II 66  11.67-  06</p>
        <p>14.18 14.12 14.18- .19</p>
        <p>13.35 13 07 13.35 + 27 9.94 9.90  9.02+  .01</p>
        <p>12.64 12.50 12.64+ 16</p>
        <p>15.80  15 76  15.76-  04</p>
        <p>11.00 10.03 10.99+ .07 10.16  18 89  19,16 +  22</p>
        <p>10.29  10.24  10,25</p>
        <p>14.67 14,53 14.53- 10</p>
        <p>11.36 H.27 11.27- 07 6.86 6 80 6.80- .03</p>
        <p>15.14 14,97 15 14+ 17</p>
        <p>24.38 24 19 24 38+ .21 6.89 6.78  689+  09</p>
        <p>11.91 11.88 11 90+ ,01</p>
        <p>12.05  12.03  12.03</p>
        <p>11.82 11 79 11 79 + 01</p>
        <p>11.80 11.87 11.88 + 02</p>
        <p>16.64  16 59  16.62+  04</p>
        <p>25,07  24 86  25.07 +  20</p>
        <p>8.76  8.67  8 76+ 09</p>
        <p>8.97  8.87  8.97+  .08</p>
        <p>24.96 24.89 24 93 + 07</p>
        <p>13.81 13 79 13,80+ .02 14.03  14.00  14.01+  01</p>
        <p>13.81  13,78  13.81+  .04</p>
        <p>17.46 17.19 17.46+ .27</p>
        <p>19.39 19.15 19 39+ .26 11.44 11.42 11.43+ .01 26.52  26,30  26.52 +  23</p>
        <p>920</p>
        <p>12.06</p>
        <p>0.30</p>
        <p>5.20</p>
        <p>0.00  9.20+  .20</p>
        <p>11.00  12.06+  15</p>
        <p>9.21  0.30+  10</p>
        <p>5,10  5.20+  .00</p>
        <p>14.40 14.38 14.30 15.21 15.00 15.21+ IB 13.80 13.77 13.80+ .03</p>
        <p>26.08 26 08 26.08+ .01 31.42 31.32 31.39+ 05 13.64 13.52 13.56- .03 23.76 23.75 23.76+ .02</p>
        <p>9.33  9.20</p>
        <p>7,01 6.98 7.06 7.02 16.00 15.97</p>
        <p>9,20- .02 6.98- .02 7.04+ .06 16.00+03</p>
        <p>11.49 11.34 11,48+ .19</p>
        <p>6.91  8.84</p>
        <p>0.70 070 10.67 10.61</p>
        <p>8.88+ .01 0.70+ 08 10.66+ .08</p>
        <p>8.71</p>
        <p>8.28</p>
        <p>5.16</p>
        <p>8.70</p>
        <p>8.23</p>
        <p>5.13</p>
        <p>Equity Invest OmniFd Ultra , Selectad Funds AmShs np SplShs np Seligman Group CapitFd CoioTax ComStk Comun FlaTax GrowthFd Income LaTx . MassTx MdTx MichTx MinnTx MOTx NatlTx NJTE p NYTax OhioTx OrTE PaTxO p CaTxHy CalTxO SCTE GovGtd p HiYBd p MtgSec p Sentinel Group: Balanced Bond ComStk GvSecs Growth Sequoia n Sentry Fund Shearson Funds ATIGt Atll n AggrGr Aprectn CalMun Fund Val r Global HiYield LehCap Lehlnv SplGv t SPLL t MngdGv r MgMun SLMOp t NY Muni SLPrcM SLSmCap SplCnv t SpGBd t</p>
        <p>1.', SplPlus t SplSect t SplStr t SpecUtil t SpHIn t SplntI p SpMtg t SpTx t ShrDean np Sigma Funds: Capital p ISIGrth ISITrShs Income p x Invest p SpecI p TrustSh p . USGovt ValShrs p VenturSh p WorldFd p SItNBG n skylineBal</p>
        <p>4.70</p>
        <p>4.63</p>
        <p>4.70+</p>
        <p>07</p>
        <p>8.39</p>
        <p>8.31</p>
        <p>8 39+</p>
        <p> .0</p>
        <p>2.55</p>
        <p>252</p>
        <p>2.55+</p>
        <p>.02</p>
        <p>6.26</p>
        <p>6.20</p>
        <p>6.26+</p>
        <p>.04</p>
        <p>13.42</p>
        <p>13,32</p>
        <p>13.42 +</p>
        <p>.12</p>
        <p>18.85</p>
        <p>18.62</p>
        <p>18.85 +</p>
        <p>,14</p>
        <p>1118</p>
        <p>11.02</p>
        <p>11.18 +</p>
        <p>.16</p>
        <p>686</p>
        <p>6.83</p>
        <p>686 +</p>
        <p>.04</p>
        <p>X 11,6</p>
        <p>11.61</p>
        <p>11.68 +</p>
        <p>01</p>
        <p>1040</p>
        <p>10.28</p>
        <p>10 40 +</p>
        <p>.14</p>
        <p>6.71</p>
        <p>6.66</p>
        <p>6.71 +</p>
        <p>06</p>
        <p>4.42</p>
        <p>4.35</p>
        <p>4.42 +</p>
        <p>.07</p>
        <p>X 12.41</p>
        <p>12.20</p>
        <p>12 24-</p>
        <p> .14</p>
        <p>7,77</p>
        <p>7.72</p>
        <p>7,76+</p>
        <p>.05</p>
        <p>7.63</p>
        <p>7.60</p>
        <p>7.63 +</p>
        <p>03</p>
        <p>73</p>
        <p>7.35</p>
        <p>7 39 +</p>
        <p>05</p>
        <p>795</p>
        <p>7.92</p>
        <p>7 95+</p>
        <p>04</p>
        <p>7.51</p>
        <p>7.47</p>
        <p>7 50 +</p>
        <p>.05</p>
        <p>7 12</p>
        <p>70</p>
        <p>7.12+</p>
        <p>.05</p>
        <p>7.62</p>
        <p>7,58</p>
        <p>7 62 +</p>
        <p>.04</p>
        <p>698</p>
        <p>6.92</p>
        <p>6 98 +</p>
        <p>.07</p>
        <p>758</p>
        <p>7.53</p>
        <p>7.58 +</p>
        <p>.04</p>
        <p>770</p>
        <p>767</p>
        <p>7.70*</p>
        <p>.04</p>
        <p>681</p>
        <p>6 79</p>
        <p>6 81 +</p>
        <p>02</p>
        <p>7,31</p>
        <p>7 27</p>
        <p>7 30 +</p>
        <p>03</p>
        <p>627</p>
        <p>624</p>
        <p>6 27 +</p>
        <p>03</p>
        <p>630</p>
        <p>629</p>
        <p>6 30 *</p>
        <p>02</p>
        <p>721</p>
        <p>7 16</p>
        <p>7 21*</p>
        <p>.06</p>
        <p>7,15</p>
        <p>7 14</p>
        <p>7,14-</p>
        <p>.01</p>
        <p>7,11</p>
        <p>7 10</p>
        <p>7.11*</p>
        <p>.02</p>
        <p>6 76</p>
        <p>6.75</p>
        <p>6 76 +</p>
        <p>O'</p>
        <p>'2 34</p>
        <p>1220</p>
        <p>12 34*</p>
        <p>16</p>
        <p>6 12</p>
        <p>6 II</p>
        <p>6 11 +</p>
        <p>.01</p>
        <p>22 93</p>
        <p>22 63</p>
        <p>22 93 </p>
        <p>31</p>
        <p>9,43</p>
        <p>941</p>
        <p>9 43*</p>
        <p>04</p>
        <p>11.62</p>
        <p>1138</p>
        <p>II 62*</p>
        <p>08</p>
        <p>38 30</p>
        <p>38 14</p>
        <p>38 30 *</p>
        <p>26</p>
        <p>11.60</p>
        <p>11.40</p>
        <p>11 60*</p>
        <p>22</p>
        <p>47 24</p>
        <p>46 75</p>
        <p>47.24 *</p>
        <p>.40</p>
        <p>98,67</p>
        <p>97 15</p>
        <p>98.67*1</p>
        <p>00</p>
        <p>13,99</p>
        <p>13,91</p>
        <p>13.9</p>
        <p>28 52</p>
        <p>28 09</p>
        <p>28 52+.</p>
        <p>44</p>
        <p>15 26</p>
        <p>15.23</p>
        <p>15,24*</p>
        <p>02</p>
        <p>6 15</p>
        <p>6 10</p>
        <p>6 15*</p>
        <p>.06</p>
        <p>23 01</p>
        <p>22.75</p>
        <p>23.01 *</p>
        <p>,22</p>
        <p>1803</p>
        <p>17 98</p>
        <p>18 03*</p>
        <p>10</p>
        <p>1631</p>
        <p>1600</p>
        <p>16 25*</p>
        <p>24</p>
        <p>1599</p>
        <p>15 82</p>
        <p>15 99 *</p>
        <p>18</p>
        <p>11.23</p>
        <p>11.22</p>
        <p>11,22 +</p>
        <p>01</p>
        <p>8 28</p>
        <p>8 25</p>
        <p>8 26 +</p>
        <p>01</p>
        <p>1222</p>
        <p>12 18</p>
        <p>12 20</p>
        <p>14,93</p>
        <p>14 90</p>
        <p>14 92 *</p>
        <p>53</p>
        <p>47,91</p>
        <p>47 24</p>
        <p>47 30-</p>
        <p>.10</p>
        <p>1579</p>
        <p>15.76</p>
        <p>15 79 +</p>
        <p>03</p>
        <p>1645</p>
        <p>16.14</p>
        <p>16 17-</p>
        <p>.41</p>
        <p>14,77'</p>
        <p>14.63</p>
        <p>14 73-</p>
        <p>03</p>
        <p>12.85</p>
        <p>1281</p>
        <p>12,85 +</p>
        <p>,05</p>
        <p>16.64</p>
        <p>16 61</p>
        <p>16 63*</p>
        <p>02</p>
        <p>12.88</p>
        <p>1269</p>
        <p>12,88*</p>
        <p>.18</p>
        <p>1457</p>
        <p>1445</p>
        <p>14 57*</p>
        <p>07</p>
        <p>14.36</p>
        <p>1423</p>
        <p>14.36*</p>
        <p>10</p>
        <p>1054</p>
        <p>10.53</p>
        <p>10 53-</p>
        <p>,01</p>
        <p>1426</p>
        <p>1405</p>
        <p>14.26*</p>
        <p>21</p>
        <p>12.27</p>
        <p>12,21</p>
        <p>12.27*</p>
        <p>02</p>
        <p>14.09  14 06  14.09 +  08</p>
        <p>15,24  15.15  15  24+  10</p>
        <p>10.92  10,87  10  90 +  02</p>
        <p>16 62  16 59  16  61+  03</p>
        <p>6.86 6.65 6 71- .11</p>
        <p>8.33</p>
        <p>6.80</p>
        <p>10.70</p>
        <p>8.47</p>
        <p>10.11</p>
        <p>9.14</p>
        <p>12.01 11.83 12.01+ .19 12.18 12.08 12.17+ 08 0.26  0.20  0.22- 03</p>
        <p>0.75  0.71  0.72-  .01</p>
        <p>1030 10.27 10 30+ .03</p>
        <p>10.17 10.13 10.16+ .03</p>
        <p>10.06 10.02 10.05</p>
        <p>13.17 13.06 13,17+ .10</p>
        <p>10.05 10.84 10 8S- .13</p>
        <p>12.00 11.06 12.06+ .25</p>
        <p>6.67 6 66 6.67+ .01</p>
        <p>11.16 11.00 11.11+ 00</p>
        <p>10.40 10.40 10.48+ .03 10.12 10.10 10.12+ .02</p>
        <p>10.03 10.08 10.03+ .06 0.55 8.33 0.55 + 20</p>
        <p>15.67 15.45 15.67+ .20</p>
        <p>14.43 14.35 14.43+ .10</p>
        <p>13.07 13.02 13.07 + 06 0 07 9.05 0.05- 01</p>
        <p>13.17 13.02 13.17+ .16 11.13 11.05 11.13+ .04</p>
        <p>7.40 7.31  7.40+  .10</p>
        <p>10.18 10.16 10.18+ 04</p>
        <p>15.60 15 45 15 60 + 23 20.57 20.44 20,57+ .21</p>
        <p>11.00 10.04 11.00+ .00 10.27 10.26 10.27+ .01 13.64 13.53 13.64+ .08 14.41 14.37 14.40+ .01</p>
        <p>12.00 12.78 12.00+ .10</p>
        <p>12.73 12.70 12 72+ .04</p>
        <p>31.43 31,31 31.38+ .13 8.50 8.47  8.50+  .04</p>
        <p>10.53 10,40 10.53+ ,04</p>
        <p>10.02 10.07 10 92+ .06</p>
        <p>10.00 10.06 10.08+ .02</p>
        <p>10.61 10.60 10.61+ .01</p>
        <p>10.74 10.72 10.74+ .02 10.10 1007 10.07</p>
        <p>12.53 12.45 12 53+ .08 11.02 10.93 11.02+ 08 9,18 0,17 9 18+ 02 11 98 11,01 11.97^ .05 11.16 1113 11.15+ .02 12.04 12.02 12.03+ .02 12.70 12.72 12.70+ .06 17.41 17 37 17 41+ .01 13.55 13.47 13.53+ .10 10.88 10.70 10.88+ .20 12.82 12.67 12.82+ .14 11.63 11.48 11.48- .10</p>
        <p>6.37  6.20  6 37 +  09</p>
        <p>7.51  7.42  7.40+  .04</p>
        <p>0.02  0.84  0 88+  .01</p>
        <p>10.10 10.11 10.19+ 08 4.84  4.83  4 83 +  01</p>
        <p>18.54 18.43 16.54+ .14</p>
        <p>8.30  8,30-  02</p>
        <p>6,76  6.76-  03</p>
        <p>10.63  10.69*  .05</p>
        <p>8 43 8 43 10.02  1011+  05</p>
        <p>9.11  9 14 -  03</p>
        <p>13.34  13.25  13 34 +  07</p>
        <p>3 20  3 20  3.20*  ,01</p>
        <p>8 99  8.92  8 98 *  06</p>
        <p>8.21  817  817-  01</p>
        <p>14.23  13.80  14.23+  .41</p>
        <p>27.09  26 80  27 09 +  21</p>
        <p>9.45  9 40  9 45 *  06</p>
        <p>10 10  9 99  10 09*  .07</p>
        <p>Gwth n</p>
        <p>1318</p>
        <p>13.08</p>
        <p>13.18+ ,10</p>
        <p>Muni n</p>
        <p>7 7</p>
        <p>7.76</p>
        <p>7.78+ ,03</p>
        <p>StStreet Resh:</p>
        <p>ExchFd n</p>
        <p>134.5 132.40 134 59+3.21</p>
        <p>Growth n</p>
        <p>78.32</p>
        <p>77,26</p>
        <p>78.32+ .7</p>
        <p>Invst r</p>
        <p>78.42</p>
        <p>77.50</p>
        <p>78.42+ ,54</p>
        <p>Steadman Funds:</p>
        <p>AmInd n</p>
        <p>2,13</p>
        <p>2,11</p>
        <p>2.13+ .02</p>
        <p>Assoc n )</p>
        <p>1 .60</p>
        <p>,50</p>
        <p>.59- .01</p>
        <p>Invest n</p>
        <p>1.27</p>
        <p>1.26</p>
        <p>1.27</p>
        <p>Oceang n</p>
        <p>3.27</p>
        <p>3.22</p>
        <p>3,24- .03</p>
        <p>Stem Roe Fds:</p>
        <p>CapOpp n</p>
        <p>21.40</p>
        <p>21 36</p>
        <p>2?.37+ ,15</p>
        <p>Discovr n</p>
        <p>9.14</p>
        <p>9.05</p>
        <p>9.05- .01</p>
        <p>GvtLpu n</p>
        <p>9.58</p>
        <p>0.54</p>
        <p>9.56+ .02</p>
        <p>HyMun n</p>
        <p>1154</p>
        <p>11.52</p>
        <p>11.54+ .02</p>
        <p>HYBds n</p>
        <p>9.60</p>
        <p>9.58</p>
        <p>9 60+ .03</p>
        <p>IntMun n</p>
        <p>1043</p>
        <p>1041</p>
        <p>10.42+ .01</p>
        <p>MgdBd n</p>
        <p>850</p>
        <p>8.46</p>
        <p>8.47</p>
        <p>MgdMu n</p>
        <p>870</p>
        <p>8.68</p>
        <p>868</p>
        <p>PrimeEq n</p>
        <p>8 81</p>
        <p>6.67</p>
        <p>8 81+ 13</p>
        <p>SpecI n</p>
        <p>14.83</p>
        <p>14,63</p>
        <p>14.63+ 19</p>
        <p>Stock n</p>
        <p>14,54</p>
        <p>1433</p>
        <p>14.54* IB</p>
        <p>TotlRet n</p>
        <p>22 55</p>
        <p>22.42</p>
        <p>22,55* .17</p>
        <p>Univrse n</p>
        <p>1307</p>
        <p>13.00</p>
        <p>13.06* .01</p>
        <p>Strategic Funds:</p>
        <p>GoldMn</p>
        <p>503</p>
        <p>4 91</p>
        <p>4.91- 08</p>
        <p>Invst</p>
        <p>2 89</p>
        <p>279</p>
        <p>2.79- 20</p>
        <p>Silvr</p>
        <p>4 22</p>
        <p>4 10</p>
        <p>4 10- 09</p>
        <p>StratD n</p>
        <p>24 26</p>
        <p>24 19</p>
        <p>24,21-* ,02</p>
        <p>StrattnGth n</p>
        <p>19.68</p>
        <p>19 29</p>
        <p>19 68* .37</p>
        <p>Strong Funds:</p>
        <p>Discov</p>
        <p>12,46</p>
        <p>1239</p>
        <p>12.46+.08</p>
        <p>GovSc n</p>
        <p>998</p>
        <p>998</p>
        <p>998</p>
        <p>Inco n</p>
        <p>11.97</p>
        <p>11 94</p>
        <p>11.97+ 02</p>
        <p>Invst</p>
        <p>18,12</p>
        <p>18.09</p>
        <p>18 12* 02</p>
        <p>Opptnly STBond n</p>
        <p>17.69</p>
        <p>10.20</p>
        <p>17,61</p>
        <p>10.19</p>
        <p>17 69* 09</p>
        <p>10 20* .01</p>
        <p>TFInc n</p>
        <p>9 32</p>
        <p>9 31</p>
        <p>9,32* ,01</p>
        <p>Total</p>
        <p>20 00</p>
        <p>19.91</p>
        <p>2000* 11</p>
        <p>TecumsehEq</p>
        <p>984</p>
        <p>969</p>
        <p>9,84* 14</p>
        <p>Tecumsehinc</p>
        <p>9 97</p>
        <p>9 93</p>
        <p>9 95* 02</p>
        <p>Templeton Group:</p>
        <p>F oregn</p>
        <p>19.47</p>
        <p>19 30</p>
        <p>19.47* .16</p>
        <p>Gibll</p>
        <p>4100</p>
        <p>40.69</p>
        <p>4100- 39</p>
        <p>Global II</p>
        <p>12.15</p>
        <p>1208</p>
        <p>12.14* 06</p>
        <p>Growth</p>
        <p>14.02</p>
        <p>1376</p>
        <p>14 02* 19</p>
        <p>Incom</p>
        <p>1003</p>
        <p>998</p>
        <p>10,01* 03</p>
        <p>World</p>
        <p>I486</p>
        <p>1465</p>
        <p>14.86* 19</p>
        <p>Thomson McKinn:</p>
        <p>CvSecs t</p>
        <p>1000</p>
        <p>995</p>
        <p>10.00* .05</p>
        <p>Global t</p>
        <p>995</p>
        <p>9.89</p>
        <p>9.95* 06</p>
        <p>Grwth t.</p>
        <p>13.76</p>
        <p>1361</p>
        <p>13 76* 14</p>
        <p>Income t</p>
        <p>9.68</p>
        <p>967</p>
        <p>9.67* .01</p>
        <p>Opor t</p>
        <p>11.75</p>
        <p>11 64</p>
        <p>11.75* .12</p>
        <p>TaxEx 1</p>
        <p>10.83</p>
        <p>10.78</p>
        <p>10.81* .04</p>
        <p>USGov t</p>
        <p>9.40</p>
        <p>9.36</p>
        <p>9.38* 03</p>
        <p>Trnsatlinc np</p>
        <p>1026</p>
        <p>10 15</p>
        <p>10.17- .07</p>
        <p>TrnsatlGr np</p>
        <p>13,81</p>
        <p>13 68</p>
        <p>13.81* .11</p>
        <p>TreasFst n</p>
        <p>962</p>
        <p>961</p>
        <p>9 61- 01</p>
        <p>TrustFunds:</p>
        <p>Bdldx np</p>
        <p>9.44</p>
        <p>94</p>
        <p>9.42+ 05</p>
        <p>LtdVBd</p>
        <p>987</p>
        <p>9 85</p>
        <p>9 85 * 02</p>
        <p>ShtGv np</p>
        <p>963</p>
        <p>9 62</p>
        <p>9 63+ .01</p>
        <p>IntGvt np</p>
        <p>9 49</p>
        <p>945</p>
        <p>9.45* ,01</p>
        <p>Eqindx np</p>
        <p>998</p>
        <p>982</p>
        <p>9 98+ 14</p>
        <p>Value np</p>
        <p>934</p>
        <p>9.24</p>
        <p>9.32+ 12</p>
        <p>20th Century:</p>
        <p>Gift n</p>
        <p>693</p>
        <p>6.8</p>
        <p>6 90+ .02</p>
        <p>Growth n</p>
        <p>12.10</p>
        <p>12.02</p>
        <p>12 10+ 01</p>
        <p>HerInv</p>
        <p>604</p>
        <p>5.92</p>
        <p>6 04* .11</p>
        <p>LTBond n</p>
        <p>91,61</p>
        <p>91.34</p>
        <p>91,53+ .17</p>
        <p>Select n</p>
        <p>27 25</p>
        <p>26 70</p>
        <p>27.25+ ,53</p>
        <p>TxEInt n</p>
        <p>97.06</p>
        <p>96 95</p>
        <p>96 99+ ,05</p>
        <p>TxELT n</p>
        <p>95.67</p>
        <p>95 40</p>
        <p>95.60+ .15</p>
        <p>Ultra</p>
        <p>694</p>
        <p>6 76</p>
        <p>6.94+ 16</p>
        <p>USGv n</p>
        <p>94.17</p>
        <p>94.08</p>
        <p>94.08- 07</p>
        <p>Vista</p>
        <p>6.09</p>
        <p>605</p>
        <p>6.09+ .02</p>
        <p>USAA Group:</p>
        <p>CornsI n</p>
        <p>16.63</p>
        <p>16.51</p>
        <p>16.56- 03</p>
        <p>Gold n</p>
        <p>840</p>
        <p>821</p>
        <p>8.21- ,35</p>
        <p>Grwth n</p>
        <p>11.65</p>
        <p>11 48</p>
        <p>11.65+ .13</p>
        <p>Income n</p>
        <p>11 13</p>
        <p>11 09</p>
        <p>11 13+ .07</p>
        <p>IncStk n</p>
        <p>10:19</p>
        <p>1008</p>
        <p>10.19* .07</p>
        <p>Snbit n</p>
        <p>1691</p>
        <p>1673</p>
        <p>16 91+ .22</p>
        <p>TxEHY n</p>
        <p>12.67</p>
        <p>1364</p>
        <p>12.66* .02</p>
        <p>TxEIT n</p>
        <p>11 80</p>
        <p>11.78</p>
        <p>11.78</p>
        <p>TxESh n</p>
        <p>10.38</p>
        <p>10.37</p>
        <p>10 37+ .01</p>
        <p>Unified Mgmnt:</p>
        <p>General n</p>
        <p>8.68</p>
        <p>8.65</p>
        <p>8 67* 03</p>
        <p>Gwth n</p>
        <p>18.97</p>
        <p>18,67</p>
        <p>18 97 * 40</p>
        <p>Inco n</p>
        <p>11.40</p>
        <p>11.36</p>
        <p>11.40+ 07</p>
        <p>Indiana n</p>
        <p>892</p>
        <p>889</p>
        <p>8 91+ 02</p>
        <p>MutI n</p>
        <p>14.23</p>
        <p>14.01</p>
        <p>14.23+ .11</p>
        <p>United Funds:</p>
        <p>Accumultiv</p>
        <p>6.43</p>
        <p>6.32</p>
        <p>6.43+ It</p>
        <p>Bond X</p>
        <p>6.05</p>
        <p>603</p>
        <p>6 05- 03</p>
        <p>Confine X</p>
        <p>14.85</p>
        <p>14.71</p>
        <p>14.85- 09</p>
        <p>GoldGvt X</p>
        <p>72</p>
        <p>7.18</p>
        <p>7 18- 25</p>
        <p>GvtSec</p>
        <p>4.83</p>
        <p>4.80</p>
        <p>4.81</p>
        <p>IntlGth</p>
        <p>634</p>
        <p>6.30</p>
        <p>6 34+ 04</p>
        <p>Highinc</p>
        <p>12.08</p>
        <p>12.04</p>
        <p>12.08+ 04</p>
        <p>Hilncll</p>
        <p>4.67</p>
        <p>4.66</p>
        <p>4.67+ .01</p>
        <p>Income x</p>
        <p>16.05</p>
        <p>16.78</p>
        <p>16.95+ .02</p>
        <p>MunicpI X</p>
        <p>6.88</p>
        <p>6.86</p>
        <p>6.88- .01</p>
        <p>(OMitinued on page B-20)</p>
        <p>Cash Registers</p>
        <p>&amp;amp;Compuiers</p>
        <p>Sales Rentals Leasing</p>
        <p>Ceniury Data Systems</p>
        <p>2801A S. Evans St Greenville/756-2215</p>
        <p>omRon</p>
        <p>We predicted insurance premiums would increase in 1985. And they did. We further predicted that premiums would level off in 1987 and begin to decrease in 1988. And they have. The market is now soft. How does this benefit you?</p>
        <p>Firm Benefits In Soft Markets</p>
        <p>The benefits are obvious. The cost of certain classes of insurance is now lower. Additionally, insurance companies are becoming more liberal in underwriting certain risk categories.</p>
        <p>But this will change...i&amp;gt;robably in a year or two. The market for insurance will harden, again. In the interim, many insurance agents will be making many promises. Competition will increase during the next year. The benefits are easy to ^asp. Disadvantages do lurk around the corner, however. What are the pitfalls? How may they be avoided?</p>
        <p>Beware of the smiling, pat-em-on-the-back insurance salesperson, whose only</p>
        <p>ay be jeopardize </p>
        <p>When the market hardens once again, you could discover that the company so</p>
        <p>proposition is lower price. Your insurability may be jeopardized within a year.</p>
        <p>williM to save you a few dollars now, will not even offer to renew your coverage. Their interest being short-term gains, these people play games at your expense. Sound familiar? It should. Its a replay of the 1985 scenario. Who will be looking out for you then?</p>
        <p>Expect your premium to be re-negotiated, while the soft market prevails. Insuring companies recognize enhanced competition and they want to retain present business.</p>
        <p>Firm benefits await you in a soft insurance market, but its easy to be deceived. Look for a knowledgeable representative to guide you.</p>
        <p>Look to Fickling Insurance Associates. In all market conditons, Were Looking Out For You!</p>
        <p>nCKLINQ</p>
        <p>INSURANCE</p>
        <p>ASSOCIATES</p>
        <p>105 Arlington Boulevard Oraonvllle, North Carolina Phone (919)756-8300</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0040" />
        <p>Signs Of Slowing Economy Don't Faze Markets</p>
        <p>ByCHETtLRKIEK AP Business Writer</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (AP)  In the effort to revive the sagging securities markets of Wall Street, the U.S. economy certainly has been doing its part.</p>
        <p>Early this year, when stocks were weighed down by fears of a recession. the economy put on a burst of impressive growth.</p>
        <p>Now. amid worries about inflation and tighter credit, business activity appears to be obliging by slowing down to a safer, more sustainable speed.</p>
        <p>But the traders and money managers who make the markets go still seem unsatisfied. And that has left many observers wondering just what it is the markets want.</p>
        <p>Consider the government's latest report on international trade, which read like a prescription specifically written to cure the markets ills.</p>
        <p>The Commerce Department figures. issued on Wednesday, showed a much larger than e.xpected narrowing in the U.S. trade deficit, to S9.53 billion in July from $13.22 billion in June.</p>
        <p>In the prevailing view of things on Wall Street, the deficit was headed in the right direction for the right reason - an 8.9 percent drop in imports. while exports continued to increase.</p>
        <p>The implication was that the worldwide markets for goods produced in this country remained strong and that domestic demand was slowing enough at the same time to cool inflation worries.</p>
        <p>The stock market did indeed rally on the news, but the advance had a half-hearted ring to it. The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials closed Wednesday with a gain of 17.60 points.</p>
        <p>By the next day, the market was back in the sluggish, drifting pattern that has predominated since midsummer.</p>
        <p>"The initial reports on the economys health in August were unexpectedly weak," said Maury Harris, economist at PaineWebber Inc. "But one month is not a trend.</p>
        <p>"The erratic course of monthly data suggests it is premature to conclude that the economy is registering the slowdown from above-average growth which is a prerequisite br lower interest rates.</p>
        <p>Similarly, Donald Straszheim, economist at Merrill Lynch, said any conclusion about slower growth is "probably premature."</p>
        <p>The latest trend in data on unemployment claims, Straszheim observed, "suggests that employment growth will pick up in September and that the unemployment rate will decline."</p>
        <p>Growth in the gross national product isnt likely to slow until late this year, he said, and even then it will probably be stronger than the Federal Reserve wants to see in its campaign to restrain inflation.</p>
        <p>"Recent indicators have delayed the next tightening by the Fed, he conceded, but the Fed is still likely to tighten further.</p>
        <p>In the face of such restraining</p>
        <p>comments, the Dow Jones industrial average settled for a 29.34-point gain to 2,098.15 in the past week.</p>
        <p>The New York Stock Exchange composite index rose 1.97 to 152.79; the NASDAQ composite index for the over-the-counter market climbed 2.31 to 383.91; and the American Stock Exchange market, value index was up .77 at 298.22.</p>
        <p>Volume on the Big Board averaged 165.38 million shares a day, against 138.17 million the week before.</p>
        <p>Should the economy begin a sustained slowdown that Wall Streeters accept as the real thing, will that mean clear sailing for the markets?  Perhaps, analysts say. But there is  also the distinct possibility that investors will begin to worry in earnest about the possibility of a recession.</p>
        <p>At some point, more and more investors are likely to question whether the Fed and other central banks can engineer an anti-inflationary economic slowdown without bringing on a more serious slump.</p>
        <p>Says Jeffrey Applegate at the firm of Tucker, Anthony &amp;amp; R.L. Day Inc., "The extreme economic risk is recession, not boom.</p>
        <p>Judges OK Higher Fees For Lawyers</p>
        <p>Mutual Funds</p>
        <p>MunHi NvCcpl Retire SciEngy Vanguard Utd Services: GBT n GNMA n GidSh n Growth n Inco n LoCap n NwPro nr Prspct nr RealEst n USTnFr n UST Inte n ValForg n Value Line Fd; Aggrin n ConvFd n Fund n Income n Levrge Gth n . MunB n SpdSil n USGvt n Van Eck: GoldRes p Inlllnv Wridinc p WrIdTrn p VanKampen Mer CATF p Growth p HiY'd p InsTxF p TiFrHi p US Gvt p Vance Exchange: CapExch n DepSst n Divers n . ExchFd n ExchBst n FidjcE n ' SecFidu n Vanguard Group: . BdMkt n  Convt n Eqinc Explorer n Explll n Ntorgan n Naethm n Prmcp n VHYSk n V Pret n  V ARP n Quant n STAR n TCEF In n TCE5US n GNMA n HiY Bd n IG Bond n ShrtTrm n STGvt n US Tr n IndxExt n IdxSOO n MuHiYd n Muniint n MunLtd n MunLng n MulnsLg n MunSht n Cal Ins n NJ Ins NY Ins n PennI n VSPE nr VSPGd nr VSPH nr VSPS nr VSPT nr Weiiesly n Welingtn n Windsor n Wmdll n Wldlnt n WidUS n Venture Advisers: IncPi Muni t NY Ven RPF B I RPF E t VikEqldx n WealthM p Weiss Peck Greer: Tudor n WPG n WPG Govtn WPG Gth n WailSt WellsF IRA. AssetAi nf Bond n (</p>
        <p>CrpStk n t SmallCo nl</p>
        <p>(Continued from page B-19)</p>
        <p>4 83  4 82  ,4  82</p>
        <p>5 22  5 18  5  18-,01</p>
        <p>5 34  5 30  5  33-  ,03</p>
        <p> 84  9  71  9  84 *  h</p>
        <p>5 82  5  76  5  82-  05</p>
        <p>15 70  15 63  15  70-  .04</p>
        <p>9 37  9,33  9  36*  03</p>
        <p>3 24  3  10  3  10-  22</p>
        <p>6 70  6  68  6  69 *  01</p>
        <p>9 75  9  68  9  75-  .06</p>
        <p>6 48  6  43  6  47 -  .03</p>
        <p>I 25  t 21  1  21-  .05</p>
        <p>68  67  67-  .01</p>
        <p>9 56  9  51  9 58-  07</p>
        <p>1106  11,02  1105 -  04</p>
        <p>8 67  8  65  8  67-  02</p>
        <p>10 15  10  11  10.15*  04</p>
        <p>8 11  8 09 8 10 - 01</p>
        <p>10 67 10 52 10 67- 13 13 21 13 08 13 21- .13 5 93  5 89 5 93 - .04</p>
        <p>18 76 18 59 18 76- .17</p>
        <p>10 24 10 21 10 24- 03</p>
        <p>11 38 11,25 11,35* 12 12.02 11 99 12 01- .05</p>
        <p>4 66  4,50  4 50- 22</p>
        <p>11 15 10 74 10 74- 50</p>
        <p>9 39 9 36 9 38 - ,01</p>
        <p>13 07 12,99 13.04 * .04</p>
        <p>150?  15  01  15  07*  10</p>
        <p>14 91  14  76  14,91 *  ,16</p>
        <p>13 54 13.49 13.54- 04 17 26  17,22  I7,25r  .08</p>
        <p>16 13  16.12  16.12*  .02</p>
        <p>15 04  14 98  15.01 1  .03</p>
        <p>97 78  96 33  97.78-1 48</p>
        <p>56.32 55,43 56.32* 78 102 67 101 36 102 67 * 1,13 146 85 145 07 146 85*1 41 131 11 129 70 131 11 - 1,04 84 52  83  51  84  52*  77</p>
        <p>81 62  80  59  81  62 *  86</p>
        <p>920 9 17</p>
        <p>8 76  8  72</p>
        <p>10 59 10,46 29 51 29 41</p>
        <p>19 76 19 62 1125 1109 36 31 35 97 45 94 45 68 14 53 14.38 7 96  7  88</p>
        <p>20 16 20 11 10.83 10 66 11.12 11,06 29 79 29 64 27 24 26 87</p>
        <p>9 46  9  43</p>
        <p>i:50</p>
        <p>10 31 10 29 9 87  9  86</p>
        <p>9 20 9 14 1177 1168 27 06 26 64</p>
        <p>990 9 86 1185 1181</p>
        <p>10 15 10 13 10.18 10 13</p>
        <p>1128 1123 15,24 15,23</p>
        <p>9 71  9  68</p>
        <p>10 01  9  95</p>
        <p>9 28  9  24</p>
        <p>9 71  9  65</p>
        <p>1129 1.105</p>
        <p>9 22 9 00 18 64 18 25</p>
        <p>14 98 14 78 '0 82 10 73</p>
        <p>15 40 15 33</p>
        <p>16 55 16 38 13 59 13 48 12 75 12 63</p>
        <p>10 57 10 50 7 48  7  41</p>
        <p>9 18</p>
        <p>8 76* .05</p>
        <p>10 59* 13 29 41- 05</p>
        <p>19 70- 14 1125* 16 36.09* 16 45 75- 08 14,53* .14</p>
        <p>7 96 * 08</p>
        <p>20 11- .07 10,83- ,15</p>
        <p>11 12- 08 29 66 - 06 27 24- 42 9,44- 02</p>
        <p>8 49 - 01 7 88- 01 10,30- .01</p>
        <p>9 87</p>
        <p>9 15- .03 1177- 10 27,06* 38 9 89- ,05 11.85* ,04 1014 * 02 10.18- 05 1128* 06 15 24- 01 9.71- 05 10 01* 09 9 28 - 04 9 71* 08 1129* 22</p>
        <p>9 00 - 40 18 64- 40</p>
        <p>14 98- 16 </p>
        <p>10 79 - 11</p>
        <p>15 40 * 08</p>
        <p>16 55* ,17 13 59* 13 12 75 * 13 10 55 - 05 7 48 - 04</p>
        <p>8  52</p>
        <p>9  52 7 45 7 05</p>
        <p>8 49 948</p>
        <p>7 35 7 02</p>
        <p>8  52*</p>
        <p>9  52* 7 45 * 7 05*</p>
        <p>19 14  18  81  19 14-  25</p>
        <p>4 29  14  06  14 29 -  21</p>
        <p>6 77  6  71  6  77-  04</p>
        <p>20 79  20  66  20 79*  14</p>
        <p>20 31  20  1 5  20 31 *  .09</p>
        <p>9 84  9  81  9  82-  01</p>
        <p>91 40  90  78  91 35 -  80</p>
        <p>6 29  6  25  6 28 *  03</p>
        <p>11 67  II  59  It 64-  08</p>
        <p>10 92  10  88  10 90+  .05</p>
        <p>18 22  18  03  18 14*  .16'</p>
        <p>14 18  14  05  14 18 *  15</p>
        <p>Ainex Weekly Dollar Leaders</p>
        <p>NEW YORK :APi ThetgiiowingiSd list fll the most active stocks based on the della-</p>
        <p>volume</p>
        <p>The tola is oased on me nteo an pr ce o1 the siocx ir,Idl'd muil-p .vd.By me shares traded</p>
        <p>TotlSIOOOl Saletlhdsl Last &amp;gt;53 916 28202 I8. 3: 9/0 ;6i2 42'.</p>
        <p>529 620 21348 i4&amp;gt;i 528 283 17540 16' 525 256 93 U 27*4 519 922 4815 41!-58 4/4 14349 I2!4 5I3 9,0 6344 ,21'l sr 448 5, 4 32 4 SiO.960 &amp;gt;694 20 .</p>
        <p>Name</p>
        <p>Amdah' ,</p>
        <p>O'Hard</p>
        <p>Lorirna-Te:</p>
        <p>EchoBay</p>
        <p>NY Tunes</p>
        <p>Impe-QilA g</p>
        <p>TeiasAi-Cp</p>
        <p>Al/aCp</p>
        <p>GianiFocd s</p>
        <p>Organog</p>
        <p>Stox Weekly Dollar Leaders</p>
        <p>NEW YORK. AP rhelollowngisalisl o the most active stocks based on the dollar volume</p>
        <p>The total 15 based on the median pnce ot the stock traded multiplied by the shares traded</p>
        <p>TotltiOMI SalesthdsI Last 5117 060 19|7|I 51</p>
        <p>Rame</p>
        <p>Kroger s-IBM</p>
        <p>Monsanto USFG Cp Del Edison Exxon PhihpMor Zayre CenElci FordMoir I Mffck 4 MCA</p>
        <p>DioiMlEo</p>
        <p>5811 102 7/205 114 -5103 162 105010 / 7' 5590 488 190480 30&amp;gt;* 5477.595 x318397 U't 5467 ]I9 103561 4S&amp;gt;&amp;lt; 5444.558 46138 95 1 S399 869 171917 25 5380 556 89210 43 -5357 381 70247 50 5373 690 4/188 58'1 5373 516 67535 44'. 5264 347 27753 94</p>
        <p>9.89  9  87  989- 03</p>
        <p>10.02  9.99 10,02+ .03</p>
        <p>15.11  15.06 15.09* .03 18.21 18 09 18 21* 16 10.07 10.00 10.07+ 08 10 17 10 06 10.17+ 09 11.86 II 76 11 86+ .11</p>
        <p>14 65 14 53 14 65+ 06 11,61 11.49 1161+ .10 10.17 10.04 1017+ 15 973  9  65  9 73+ 11</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP) - A federal appeals court said lawyers who handle so-called public interest cases at low rates can charge the government the higher "prevailing market rate for their work if they win in a suit challenging federal policy.</p>
        <p>The U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia, in an 8-3 decision Friday, ruled that public interest lawyers are entitled to collect fees at the often-higher, prevailing rate when they successfully challenge federal government policies.</p>
        <p>Under federal laws, the government must pay the legal fees of the winning side in a variety of challenges to federal statutes, a system designed to encourage private initiatives to enforce the law. The government, however, has challenged the size of the fees.</p>
        <p>Judges dissenting from the appellate decision asserted that the ruling overturns a rational and efficient method for determining fees, established by a ruling in 1984, and will "create an enormous administrative burden for this court.</p>
        <p>A former assistant U.S. attorney who was involved in establishing the rule that the government would reimburse lawyers at the rate normally charged by their law firms said the ruling would create chaos. How can you determine what the</p>
        <p>market price is? he asked, speaking on condition that he not be identified. Every law firm charges a different hourly fee.</p>
        <p>The case arose after four lawyers successfully sued the Interior Department, challenging laws that they said allowed huge mining com</p>
        <p>panies to skirt environmental standards. The lawyers represented Save Our Cumberland Mountains Inc., a citizens group based in Tennessee.</p>
        <p>A U.S. district judge awarded them just under $200,000 in legal fees for the four-year legal battle, according-to one of the lawyers. The govern</p>
        <p>ment appealed.</p>
        <p>A three-judge appellate panel ruled that the two lawyers should be compensated at a lower rate of $100 an hour, finding that the district court judge had erred in using the prevailing market rate to determine the legal fees.</p>
        <p>TOYS SEIZED  Thousands of hazardous imported toys have been seized nationwide in what it being called "Operation Toyland 88. Federal agents have seized baby rattles, chalkboards and other toys</p>
        <p>at the Charleston, S.C., ports alone. The agents are looking for toys that break easy and could cause choking. (AP Laserphoto)'-</p>
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        <p> SURE-SCRUB MuNI-Lavtl Waahing Sya-lam  Tripla FIHrallon and Soli Collactor Syilam  TriOura* eorcalainenalaal tank and innar door ' "Load aa-jwu-ima" Random I  Complalaly uaabla</p>
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        <p>towar rack  Flo-Thru Drying Syatam  ENERQY-SAVER</p>
        <p>aOoubla Comb Filter Auto Play Synthesized Tuner</p>
        <p>2795</p>
        <p>Tao-traaiar  --------</p>
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        <p>MODEL KTMFtSMS FLM ax Mtata KMahanAM Ixfra Valua Faalurtt</p>
        <p> 221 eu. ft Froal Fraa capacity  Automalic lea Makar</p>
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        <pb facs="00097037_0041" />
        <p>THE DAILY</p>
        <p>REFLECTOR</p>
        <p>Greenville, N.C. Sunday, September 18,1988</p>
        <p>Accent</p>
        <p>Weddings</p>
        <p>Engagements</p>
        <p>Travel</p>
        <p>CLoosey Litter Reminds: Don't Litter</p>
        <p>ByCAROL TVER Reflector Staff Writer</p>
        <p>Loosey Litter Jikes attention. But for all the paper and aluminum she wears, her purposes are sterling. She isnt dressed gaudily just because she likes the limelight  she wears pop bottles and hamburger wrappers to remind us all what our throwaway mentality is doing to our roadsides, our beaches, our planet.</p>
        <p>Shes seeking to raise peoples consciousness about the litter thats marring our lands and seas, killing our wildlife and wasting our resources.</p>
        <p>Once the major component of her body was a castoff  a dress form sold at a yard sale.</p>
        <p>Today thanks to the ingnuity and the sus-* tained enterprise of*menibers of the Greenville Garden Club, shes making frequent public appearances. She was a showstopper at the Pitt County Fair last fall and shell be there again this year, probably accompanied by her friend Sylvia Wheless in whose house she lives between outings. She was a hit at the Community Beautification Seminar held by the Keep North Carolina Clean and Beautiful Seminar in Kinston recently. And shes visited several Pitt County schools and will visit a few more, possibly with Mrs. Wheless or some other member of the Greenville Garden Club along.</p>
        <p>Looseys not an original. Shes patterned after The Littered Lady of Lake Toxaway who made her first appearance in May, 1985. Littered Lady could talk. She was a human  a member of the Toxaway Falls Garden Club dressed in litter. She said, .What you see here is the same stuff that litters our roadsides. It is the kind of growth that only gets better by picking it.</p>
        <p>Many of the roadside growths of the Genus Disgustingalis litteroffal are familiar. There are many of these growth species. They are free. Just stoop over and pick them.</p>
        <p>Loosey gives her address as The Streets and Roads of Greenville and Pitt County, N.C. She poses the question, Did you contribute to my outfit?</p>
        <p>Shes a prize winner, too. The Greenville Garden Club has been cited at the district level with a blue ribbon for its public awareness program centering around Loosey. And she warranted the clubs keeping of a silver bowl from the Garden Club of North Carolina for a year. In engraving on this bowl, the Greenville Club is cited for having received the state organizations Durham Council Litter Control Award.</p>
        <p>The Greenville Garden Clubbers say its fine with them if other groups create their own Loosey or reasonable facsimiles. They want to get the word out  Dont Litter.</p>
        <p>Pitt Is Lagging in State's Adopt-A-Highway Program</p>
        <p>ByCAROLTVER Reflector Staff Writer</p>
        <p>Tomorrow through Friday is one of two weeks each year that the North Carolina Department of Transportation emphasizes roadside cleanup, rgcycling and beautification.</p>
        <p>A locally assigned highway official says he is hoping that Pitt Countians, who have lagged- behind citizens of other counties in enrolling in the DOTS Adopt A Highway Program, will use this week to join in the effort or start looking at whether they would fike to join.    .</p>
        <p>The DOT will this week devote 12-15 people in each of. the state^ counties to litter pickup. And the Greenville Community Appearance Commission has gone on record encouraging the public to enter into the effort voluntarily.</p>
        <p>Gov. Jim Martin has proclaimed September Clean Sweep Month and his wife, Dottie, has urged officials and citizens to organize</p>
        <p>cleanup activities and to adopt highways. The Keep North Carolina Clean and Beautiful organization and the DOT have pledged support, supplies and certificates of appreciation for anyone willing to take part in the effort.</p>
        <p>A major part of this week will be enrollment in the states Adopt-A-Highway Program. So far, in Pitt County, there is zero participation.</p>
        <p>Statewide, more than 250 organizations and businesses have joined the program and pledged to keep 600 miles of highway litter-free for a year. DOT division engineer Rick Shirley said there has been em thusiastic participation within this eight-county district  upwards of 50 miles of highway adopted, so far  but.none is in Pitt. Beaufort, Lenoir, Craven and Carteret county groups have been the most active so far, he said.</p>
        <p>He invites grou( or individuals who would like to join the program to</p>
        <p>contact the office of district engineer Fred Edwards, 830-3142. What is asked of each organization participating is that litter be pickea up for a specified distance (usually.two miles or more) at least four times a year. The group can choose the section of highway it wishes to clean. The DOT will supply training for each group and wi 1 install a sign declaring that the group is the adopter of that section of road.</p>
        <p>Shirley said the DOT has specified safety guidelines for each group and provides trash bags and pickup of those bags at designated times and places.</p>
        <p>Of course, those who wish can separate their aluminum cans and their glass containers and take them to the Bells Fork Recycling Site, be paid for them and know that theyll be recycled instead of added to the glut at the Pitt County Landfill.</p>
        <p>A Clean Sweep is also held each year in April. Mrs. Martin said that last spring more than 32,500 volun</p>
        <p>LOOSEY LlTTER - Adorned with societys castoffs, Loosey Litter greets Harrison Gaskins and Elizabeth Gaskins, both of Greenville. Posing with them is Looseys friend, Sylvia Wheless, right, the Greenville Garden Club member in whose home she lives. (Reflector Photo By Shannon Wolfe)</p>
        <p>teers participated in efforts throughout the state that saved the state $1 million. During April, May and June, she said, almost 1,000 community service workers picked up roadside litter, which could have cost the state $76,500.</p>
        <p>In Pitt County, since April- when</p>
        <p>the Community Service Work Program started supplying five to six workers per weekend to the Department of Transportation, some 526 man-hours have been used for litter pickup, Tammy Kemen, Community Service coordinator said.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Dan K. Moore, chairman of</p>
        <p>the Keep North Carolina Gean and Beautiful organization said, The benefits of beautification lie, not only in the immediate improvements of our roadsides and communities, but in the long-term awareness of the destruction caused by thoughtless people who continue to litter.  Grandparents Often Must Function As Parents</p>
        <p>By DAVID LARSEN</p>
        <p>L.A. Times-Washington Host News Service</p>
        <p> LONG BEACH, Calif. - It was just before Easter, and the voice of the 9-year-old boy rang out in the semidarkness of the apartment bedroom: My mothers never going to get well, IS she?</p>
        <p>The boy was lying on his favorite sleeping place, a pad on the floor near the bed of his grandmother, Patricia Phelps, 75.</p>
        <p>No, honey, shes not, the woman in the bed said. And we have to accept that.</p>
        <p>She and her grandson had just said their prayers together, and had bade each other good night, when the nocturnal conversation began.</p>
        <p>And my father cant take me back either, the boy continued, with resignation.</p>
        <p>No, not as long as hes with the other woman, she replied.</p>
        <p>There was a pause.</p>
        <p>But Ive got you. Grandma? came the hopeful young voice.</p>
        <p>Yes, you do, honey, she assured him.</p>
        <p>At an age when they least expect it, when they had other plans on now to spend their sunset y^rs, an increasing number of grandparents are finding themselves being recycled, finding themselves again rearing young children.</p>
        <p>They dont have the patience, the stamina, the energy they had when they were younger,  Sylvie de Toledo said. But they are all committed to raising these children regardl^s of how difficult the struggle. They love the children too dearly. And sometimes they may feel some guilt as to how their own child turned out.</p>
        <p>De Toledo is a licensed clinical social worker at the Psychiatric . Clinic for Youth, a non-profit clinic in Long Beach. Last* year, partly because of what she had observed there, partly as a result of personal experience an^ partly as a result of an informal survey, she formed a therapy support group. Grandparents as Parents.</p>
        <p>The group has grown to the point</p>
        <p>where about 15 grandmothers par-ticipte for two hours each Monday, and as many as 15 more show up each Thursday, The number on any given day varies because of illnesses, work schedules and lack of transportation.</p>
        <p>Although no grandfathers belong at present, thought is being given to including them. The grandmothers range in age from the early 40s to the late 70s. The majority of the clinic clients are charg^ on a sliding scale based on their income.</p>
        <p>There are many reasons for this surprise responsibility falling on seniors: death, neglect, abandonment, involvement with drugs and-or alcohol, incarceration, physical and-or sexual abuse, mental illness.</p>
        <p>The usual alternative for the kids is foster homes, and none of the grandparents wants that, De Toledo said. The often-sudden situation is occurring in all ethnic groups and at all socio-economic levels.</p>
        <p>Social workers say they detect a trend, when court action is involved, toward placement of young children with grandparents, to keep things in the faipily.</p>
        <p>Acco Martin OConnell, chief of the Fertility Statistics Branch of the U.S. Bureau of the Census in Suitland, Md., statistics show that as of March 1^, the nation had 63 million family households. An estimated 1.7 million of those households containd pmple 55 or older who were possibly living with their grandchildren.</p>
        <p>The stress of the usually unforeseen development on the seniors isnt just emotional and mental. The majority have worked all their lives and nave saved for their retirements, De Toledo said. Now they are ending up having to use this money for food, clothes, shelter, medical bills and so forth for the children.</p>
        <p>Another factor that sometimes is brought up at the therapy support sessions is that these substitute parents "feel cheated out of the traditional role of being doting grandparents. And the children, for their part, are deprived of havini doting grandparents. The wor</p>
        <p>grand has been taken out of the eijpe-rience.</p>
        <p>M(t of the women would prefer being grandmothers, rather than being mothers again. Of concern to them is the fact that things have changed from the time when they raised their own children, or even when they themselves were children.</p>
        <p>Children at the vortex of this unreal whirlwind can find themselves resentful, feeling guilt, sometimes insecure, grasping at hope.</p>
        <p>Sometimes they feel resentful because the person or persons taking care of them is so much older than the prents of other kids, De Toledo said. For example, maybe they dont get taken to the park to play ball.</p>
        <p>The guilt feelings, she went on, sometimes come into the picture when the youngster believes that if he or she had somehow been a better child, the prent or parents would still be with them. Smne feel that it is their fault, and that they are to blame for their present situation, the therapy support group founder said.</p>
        <p>Then there is insecurity. Kids are perceptive. They know. They feel insecure when the grandparent taking take of them becomes sick, De Toledo said. What runs through their minds is; If this grandparent leaves ihe through deatti, who wiU take care of me? This time there might not be another grandmother or grandfather. Its a scary thought for a kid.</p>
        <p>"They become very attached to the trandprent taking care of them. A ot of times the first thing such a child does in the morning is check on the physical presence of that person, to make sure they haven't left during the night.</p>
        <p>With everything else, though, there always is hope. They never give up the fantasy, the hope, that their real parents will change and some day come badk and take care of them, the social worker said. Although they love their grandparents, and</p>
        <p>even if they had been mistreated earlier, there is that tight bond that never vanishes.</p>
        <p>The minute my married daughter walked through my door, I could see that her days were numbered, Sonya Jarred tearfully recalled. She had come out from Wisconsin with her four children, leaving behind a husband who drank, and she said she was sick.</p>
        <p>That was in July 1986. The elder Jarred, a nursing assistant, took the younjg woman to an Orange County hospital, where she was diagnosed fw cancer of the cervix. In February 1987, at age 28, she died.</p>
        <p>Two of her children had been placed in a foster home here, the other two were staying with the grandmother. The next month. Jarred went to court and got custody of all four. Two montte later my best friend died, she said. The next month my husband left me.</p>
        <p>And that same month, now on her own and with four young children to care for, her car gave out. Since then, her limited budget has forced her to travel by bus.</p>
        <p>I have a 10-year-old boy, a 9-year-old girl, an 8-year-old boy and a 4-year-oIa boy. I had to give up working because all my time has been consumed with my grandchildren, the 52-year-oId Jarred said.</p>
        <p>The five of them live in a one-bedroom duplex in Long Beach, niere is hardly any privacy. The oldest boy likes to sleep in the closet with the door open. The other three kids sleep in our bedroom, In the mornings, there is a line outside the bathroom.</p>
        <p>The grandmother makes do on the $753 she receives monthly as Aid to Familia With Dependent Children. Believe me, we cut corners, she said. There are never enough vegetables or fruit in the refrigerator. The clothes are either hand-me-downs or something from a thrift shop.</p>
        <p>At Christmas, there sure wasnt much money, but the Eagles brought us a turkey and some canned fo^,</p>
        <p>and an outfit of clothing for each of the children. Two of the county social workers brought toys for the kids.</p>
        <p>None of them has ever been to Disneyland or Knotts Berry Farm. We can only go to things that are free.</p>
        <p>Jarred tries her best to cope with her new lot in life, but said: I feel Im going backward instead of forward I dont know where I get the energy from any more."</p>
        <p>GRANDMOTHER AS MOM - Sonya Jarred. 52, ig shown with the youngest of the four grandchildren she supports. She became responsible for the four after their mother died. At ages when they least expect It, more grandparents are rearlnw young children. (L.A. Times Photo By Al Selb)</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0042" />
        <p>Wedding Dates Are Announced By Brides- Elect</p>
        <p>\</p>
        <p>
        </p>
        <p>MARGAKKT KIMBKRLY TFIOMAS  is the (laughter of .Mr. and Mrs. Harry Edwin Thomas of North Myrtle Beach. S.C .. who announce her engagement to Dr. Frank Forrest Humbles, son of Mr. and .Mrs. A.T. Humbles of Belhaven. The wedding is planned for Dec. 10.</p>
        <p>THERESA JOAN RUSS - is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Wayne Russ of Route 1, Bath, who announce her engagement to Lloyd Ray Wilson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Wilson of Greenville. A Nov. 20 wedding is planned.</p>
        <p>ANGELA DAWN CANNON - is the daughter of .Mr. and Mrs. Bobby E. Cannon of Route I, Ayden, who announce her engagement to Keith Douglas Worthington, son of Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Worthington of Ayden. The wedding will take place Nov. 19.</p>
        <p>JANICE ANNE WHELESS - is the daughter of Mr and .Mrs. H.W. Wheless of Greenville, who announce her engagement to David Edwards DrVmon, son of Dr. and Mrs. Ben J. Drymon of Lumberton. A Dec. 17 wedding is planned.</p>
        <p>BRENDA MARIE EBRON - is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Steven M. Ebron of Baltimore, who announce her engagement to Thomas Ray Wooten, son of Lottie Wooten of Greenville. An Oct. 15 wedding will take place.Erma Searches For Laughnost In Russia</p>
        <p>MOSCOW  By now. the entire world knows that Russia has been glasnostized and perestroiked.</p>
        <p>It s been summited by the Reagans, invaded by pay toilets and pizza parlors, and dazzled by Donahue and Billy Joel.</p>
        <p>But to really know a country, you have to know what its people laugh about, or cry about. Last March. I joined eight other American women on a seven-day trip to Moscow. It was sponsored by Woman's Day magazine and Peace Links. an exchange program started six years ago by Betty Bumpers (wife of Arkansas Sen. Dale Bumpers) to promote peace.</p>
        <p>Six of us were to engage the Soviets in a dialogue to find solutions to our common problems with respect to our differences. Me? 1 was in search of "laughnost. Was laughter keeping pace with the openness of their new society?</p>
        <p>The Soviet women had requested six "average Americans whom they would match with their professional counterparts. They included: Ellen Levine. Englewood. N.J., editor in chief of Woman's Day; Dr. Ethel Klein. New York, associate professor of political science, Columbia University. Rita Wilson, Barrington. III., regional vice president. Allstate Insurance Co.; Dr. Mary Jo Bane. Cambridge. Mass.. Harvard University. Kennedy School of Government; Ann Huseman. Lenexa. Kan., housewife and mother; and me. Between us we had five husbands and nine children. Observing were Evelyn Grant. New York, executive editor. Woman's Day; Colette Shulman, New York, interpreter, senior staff associate. School of International Relations. Columbia Universitv: and</p>
        <p>At Wits End</p>
        <p>Erma Bombeck</p>
        <p>Mary Lou Weisman. Westport. Conn.. author and reporter for Woman s Day.</p>
        <p>Across the table from us were 16 "average Russians They includeil six Ph.D.s. a poet, a magazine editor and an engineer.</p>
        <p>Just your basic ring-around-the collar seminar.</p>
        <p>I didn't feel well. Someone suggested it was the eight Reese's cups and six Milky Ways I had brought to pass out to Soviet children... and ate myself the first night. It got worse. As I slid out of my coat before the first meeting. I adjusted my hip-length pink wool sweater and pushed up the sleeves on the matching cardigan. As I turn^. I thought I was looking into a niirror. Rita Wilson was wearing the same sweater set. I suggested to her that we test the Russians humor by telling them. "We are twins. Mama always dresses us alike. Rita is beautiful, six inches taller than I am. 20 years younger, and black. She said. Don't push.</p>
        <p>Everyone's counterpart showed up but Russia's Erma Bombeck. I was informed she was out of town, and they promised to produce another humorist. But someone had done a nice story on her in a magazine I could read. Other than the fact that Clara Novikova was not a housewife, or a writer, or a humorist, we did have something in common: She played to women. She was a comedienne who took her protest on the</p>
        <p>"dullness and unhappiness of the lives of Soviet women to concerts around the country. The Soviet women loved it.</p>
        <p>The dialogue opened around a long table in the Soviet Women's Committee offices in Moscow, and we were asked to introduce ourselves. I told them I wrote a humor column about children, housework, and a husband who sat in front of the TV set every weekend watching anything that carried a ball, stick or bat. At that moment. the chairman became excited and interrupted with. Mrs. Bombeck, that is a global problem we all relate to. How do vou solve it?"</p>
        <p>I said, "1 had mv husband declared</p>
        <p>legally dead and his estate probated. and waited for the translator to interpret it. In unison, the entire side of the table fell apart. We had found some common ground. They promised to keep looking for my counterpart.</p>
        <p>Most humor is sired by a father of frustration and carried by a mother of discontent. The cry of their infant is small at first, but becomes bolder and louder as its confidence grows.</p>
        <p>"The basis of most Russian humor, said a magazine editor, "has one theme: The women are beautiful and the men are bad. Translation: Soviet women focus a lot of their humor on men-bashing.</p>
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        <p>We have a new improved Mens Department</p>
        <p>Take 10% off all boys and mens purchases thru Saturday, September 24.</p>
        <p>By CRISPIN Y. CAMPBELL Associated Press Writer</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP) - Television (Mograms fail to showTeen-age girls taking the steps necessary to achieve productive lives, focusing instead on obsessifMis with shopping, grooming and dating, says a womens advocacy group.</p>
        <p>Hiese images create the impression that one can magically jump from an adolescence of dating and shf^iping to a well-paid professional career, said Sally Steenland. author of a repcwrt, Growing Up In Prime Time.</p>
        <p>The study of more than 200 episodes of 19 network television programs featuring adolescent characters was sponsoi^ by the National Commission on Working Women of s for Women. The</p>
        <p>rove</p>
        <p>Week after week, viewers see teen-age girls with no visible skills, no favorite subjects in school, no discussion about college majors or vocational plans, Ms. Steenland said in pre^red comments as the</p>
        <p>i-age girls are portrayed</p>
        <p>careers</p>
        <p>study w.</p>
        <p>TVs</p>
        <p>^as poised for professional and productive adulthoods without clues to the steps necessary to achieve those goals, the report said.</p>
        <p>The report found:</p>
        <p>-Girls looks are shown to count more than their brains. Some episodes p()rtray intelligent teen-age girls as social misfits.</p>
        <p>-Adolescent girls, who outnumber their male counterparts on television, are more passive than male characters.</p>
        <p>Weekly plots are lacking in serious conversations with parents, teachers or peers about school matters, academic interests, career goals or future plans.</p>
        <p>-Ninety-four percent of teen-age girls on television are middle-class or wealthy.</p>
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        <pb facs="00097037_0043" />
        <p>The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.</p>
        <p>Sunday, Spf mber 18,1988 C-3</p>
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        <pb facs="00097037_0044" />
        <p>C-4 The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C. Sunday, September 18,1988</p>
        <p>Couple Marries In Saturday Ceremony</p>
        <p>Wester-Adams Vows Exchanged</p>
        <p>WINTERVILLE - Wanda Sue Pittman and Jerry Lee Smith were married Saturday at 4 p.m. in Pecan Grove, Winterville. The double-ring ceremony was performed by the Rev. George Spivey of Robersonville.</p>
        <p>Parents of the couple are the Rev. and Mrs. Thomas H. Pittman of Hawick. Scotland, and Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Smith of Farinville.</p>
        <p>Kathy Rogerson of Greenville was honor attendant. Pam Pilkington of Griffon, cousin of the bride, Juanita Smith of Deep Run, sister of the bridegroom, and Linda Taylor of Greenville were bridesmaids.</p>
        <p>Crystal Boyd of Bethel was flower girl and the ring bearer was Cody Pilkington of Griffon.</p>
        <p>Kenneth Rogerson of Greenville was best man. Ushers were Carlton Branch of Winterville, Ivey Pilk-in^ton of Grifton, Clifton Smith of Parmville, brother of the bridegroom, and John Roberson of Gteenville.</p>
        <p> Organist Chuck Branch and vocalist Pam Pilkington and Don Sauls presented wedding music.</p>
        <p>Given in marriage by her parents, tht bride wore a formal gown of white embossed roses on silk jac-qwird with a mandarin collar, ac-cMted by tucked pleats across the i^kline. The puff sleeves were erihanced by bows and the flowing sidrt was highlighted by a scalloped ri^le with bows. Her fingertip veil of iDusion was attached to a cap of vfbite roses and pearls. She carried a cascade bouquet of red and white silk rofees.</p>
        <p>rjhe honor attendant wore a floor-lngth gown of red taffeta styled with a'scoop neckline in front and back V4ieckline accented by bows. The cop waistline extended into a peplum skirt and the sleeves were puffed. She carried a bouquet of red and white long-stemmed roses. The bridesmaids were dressed identically and carried long-stemmed white roses. The flower girl wore a floor-length dress of white cotton eyelet and carried a basket of red accented by white eyelet lace filled with Scottish heather potpourri.</p>
        <p>The mother of the bride wore a tea-length dress of royal blue satin and lace. The mother of the bridegroom selected a floor-Iength of</p>
        <p>MRS. SMITH</p>
        <p>pastel blue accented by sheer sleeves and overlay of chiffon.</p>
        <p>Deeanna Bland of Winterville directed the wedding and Karen Roberson of Greenville presided at the guest register.</p>
        <p>A reception followed the ceremony. Rosa Lee Phillips served cake and punch was poured by Frances Carrico. Assisting were Tammy Barnes, Michelle Hales and Faye Best.</p>
        <p>After a wedding trip, the couple will live in Winterville.</p>
        <p>The bride is a graduate of Pitt Community College and is owner and operator of Haircents Beauty Salon of Winterville. The bridegroom graduated from Farmville High School and is employed b^y Multiworks, Inc., in Greenville.</p>
        <p>The wedding ceremony of Linda Sutton Adams and Stephen Michael Wester took place Saturday at 2 p.m in Faith and Victory Church. Paivnts of the couple are David Carrol Sutton of Route 3, Greenville, and Mr. and Mrs. H. Glynn Wester Jr. of Route 1, Wilson.</p>
        <p>Conducting the double-ring ceremony was the Rev. John Zabawski. Pianist Annette Vick, keyboard Sean Park and violinist Steve Vutsinas pic.sented wedding music. Vocal selections were presented by Scotty and Pam Dixon and the bride and bridegroom.</p>
        <p>The bride was given in marriage by her father. Teresa P. Williams of Greenville was honor attendant. Bridesmaids were Kathy Adams and Billie Jo Adams, both of Grimesland.</p>
        <p>Kelly Wester of Wilson, niece of the bridegroom, was the flower girl.</p>
        <p>The father of the bridegroom was best man. Ushers were Ricky Wester and Tim Wester, brothers of the bridegroom of Wilson, and Ricky Sanders and Bill Pinnick, both of Greenville.</p>
        <p>The bride wore a white satin gown styled with a train. Queen Anne collar trimmed in lace, long sleeves with appliques and V-cut waistline. The bodice had an overlay of lace with pearl buttons down the bodice back with a satin bow. Her veil had an overlay of lace. She carried a nosegay of silk roses, daisies, pink carnations and mauve gladioli tied with white, mauve and rose ribbons.</p>
        <p>The honor attendant wore a two-piece, tea-length pastel pink silk ensemble with floral imprint. It was styled with a straight skirt, with top ruffles over the waistline. She carried a silk nosegay of pink and mauve carnations, gladioli and daisies tied with pink and mauve ribbon. Bridesmaids wore silk two-piece</p>
        <p>Ohio Looks Abroad</p>
        <p>COLUMBUS. Ohio lAP) - The state of Ohio ranks second nationwide in export related jobs and is seeking further investment from overseas firms.</p>
        <p>Ohio operates trade offices in Tokyo. Brussels and Lagos. Gov. Richard F. Celeste and a trade delegation recently visited China and West Africa to meet with business leaders.</p>
        <p>mauve dresses with floral imprint. Their flowers were similar to the honor attendant The flower girl wore a mauve lea length dress styled with puffed sleeves trimmed in lace and carried a white basket trimmed with ribbon.</p>
        <p>A reception was held in the church fellowship hall for family and friends.</p>
        <p>After a wedding irip to South Carolina, the couple will live in Greenville.</p>
        <p>The bride attended D.H. Conley High School and is employed by the Burroughs Wellcome Company. The bridegroom attended Fike High School in Wilson and is employed by Daktree Acura in Greenville</p>
        <p>A rehearsal dinner was given b\ the lamily at the Sheralun tneen ville. A bridesmaids brunch and several showers were given for the couple prior to their wedding</p>
        <p>Engagement Announced</p>
        <p>Uf and Mrs W H Mitchel! ai Winterville announce the engagement of their daughter, Mary Eli/abeth, to Ronnie Finch, son of Ruth Finch of Kenly. The wedding will take place Oct. 1</p>
        <p>Hors d'oeuvres for Any Occasion Wedding Receptions  Parties  Meetings  Showers  Call today </p>
        <p>830-0871</p>
        <p>MRS. WESTER</p>
        <p>Area Meeting Place</p>
        <p>.MO.ND.W</p>
        <p>9:30 a m - Overeaters Anonymous meets at South Greenville Recreation Ceenter.</p>
        <p>10 a m.  Pitt County Board of Commis sioners meet in the Pitt County office building.</p>
        <p>Noon  Alcoholics Anonymous meets in St. Paul's Episcopal Church.</p>
        <p>Noon  Greenville Noon Rotary Club meets in Rotary Building.</p>
        <p>12:30 p.m.  Kiwanis of Greenville University Club meets at Holiday Inn.</p>
        <p>6:30 p.m  Rotary Club meets.</p>
        <p>6:30 p.m.  Hosi Lion Club meets at Holiday Inn.</p>
        <p>6:30 p.m.  Optimist Club meets at Three Steers.</p>
        <p>7:30 p.m.  Woodmen ot the World, Simpson Lodge, meets at Community Building</p>
        <p>7:30 pm.  Gamblers Anonymous meets at St. Peter's Catholic Church</p>
        <p>7:30 p m.  Greenville Barber Shop Chorus meets at Jaycee Park Aa-ministrative Building</p>
        <p>7:30 p m  Newcomers ol the Adull Children of Alcoholics Support Group meet at St James Methodist Church.</p>
        <p>8 p m.  The Adult Children of Alcoholics Support Group has its main meeting at St James Methoaist Church.</p>
        <p>8 p.m - Overeaters Anonymous step meeting at First Presbyterian Church. Harvey Webb room. Elm Street</p>
        <p>8 p.m. - Lodge No 885 Loyal Order of the Moose.</p>
        <p>8 p m.  Alcoholics Anonymous closed discussion, AA Building, Farmville</p>
        <p>8 p.m.  Narcotics Anonymous open meeting at St Paul's Episcopal Church</p>
        <p>TIESAY</p>
        <p>6:30 a.m.  Full Gospel Businessmen Fellowship meets at Tom's Restaurant.</p>
        <p>7 a.m.  Greenville Breakfast Lion Club meets at Three Steers.</p>
        <p>10 a.m.  Kiwanis Golden K Clu meets at masonic hall.</p>
        <p>4:15 p.m.  Pitt County Memorial Hospital Board meets in PCMH conterence room near the cafeteria.</p>
        <p>6 p m.  Family Violence Center's Women's Support Group meets. Call 752-3811 lor more information.</p>
        <p>6:30 p.m  Greenville Claims Association meets at Three Steers</p>
        <p>6:30 p.m  Greenville Kiwanis Club meets at Cypress Glen.</p>
        <p>7 p m.  The Steering Committee of the Dispute Mediation Center of Pitt County meets in 0301 Brewster Building. ECU.</p>
        <p>7 p m.  Post No. 39ot American Legion meets at Post Home.</p>
        <p>Greenville Planning and Zoning Board meets in Greenville City Council Chambers.</p>
        <p>8 p m.  Nar-Anon meets at St. Paul's Episcopal Church</p>
        <p>8 p m.  Pill Countv Alcoholics Anoiv mous meets at AA Auilding.</p>
        <p>Highway.</p>
        <p>imily</p>
        <p>group meets at St. James United Methodist Church. Call 758-1491 or 825-1982 8 p.m.  .Narcotics Anonymous open discussion at St. Paul's Ebiscopal Church.</p>
        <p>8 p.m.  Narcotics Anonymous open discussion at St. Peter's Catholic Church.</p>
        <p>8 p.in.  Narcotics Anonymous open discussion at St. James Episcopal Church. Washington. N.C.</p>
        <p>WEDNESDAY</p>
        <p>9:30 a.m.  Duplicate bridge meets at Senior Center to a.m.  Pitt Golden K Kiwanis t-lub meets at Greenville Country Club.</p>
        <p>Noon  Overeaters Anonymous meets at Walter B. Jones Rehabilitation Center.</p>
        <p>Noon  Narcotics Anonymous open discu.ssion at St. Paul Episcopal Church.</p>
        <p>1:30 p.m.  Duplicate bridge meets at Senior Center</p>
        <p>Bridal</p>
        <p>Policy</p>
        <p>A black and white glossy five by seven photograph is requested for engagement announcements in The Daily Reflector. For publication in a Sunday edition, the information must be submitted by 12 noon on the preceding Wednesday. Engagement pictures must be released at least three weeks prior to the wedding date. After three weeks, only an announcement will be printed.</p>
        <p>Wedding write-ups will be printed through the first week with a one column picture. During the second week, a one column picture will be used with a write-up giving less description and after the second week, just as an announcement.</p>
        <p>Wedding forms and pictures should be returned to The Daily Reflector one week prior to the date of the wedding. All information should be typed or written neatly.</p>
        <p>Program Given On Scarf Tying</p>
        <p>A program on scarf tying was presented at the meeting of the Grass Roots Garden Club. Evelyn Spangler, Pitt County home economics extension agent, was speaker.</p>
        <p>The club is celebrating its 25th anniversary this year. Margaret Langley was recognized as still being an active member.</p>
        <p>FACTS YOU SHOULD KNOW</p>
        <p>1 out of 11</p>
        <p>women will develop breast cancer at some time in their lives.</p>
        <p>8 out of 10</p>
        <p>breast lumps are benign (noncancerous)</p>
        <p>fiilfffW</p>
        <p>9 out of 10</p>
        <p>breast tumors are found by women themselves.</p>
        <p>
        </p>
        <p>  &amp;lt;0</p>
        <p>9V2 out of 10</p>
        <p>women treated for early breast cancer will be alive five years later.</p>
        <p>Breast Screening Mammography</p>
        <p>EAS1ERN BRUST CANCER DETECTION CENTER, INC.</p>
        <p>CHARLES CENTRE 2404 S. Charles St., Suite A Greenville, NC'27858</p>
        <p>(Charles Street near Red Banks Road next door to Fire Station)</p>
        <p>APPOINTMENTS NOW AVAILABLE</p>
        <p>752-2847</p>
        <p>lies Anoiiy-Farmville</p>
        <p>Eastern Electrolysis</p>
        <p>205 COMMERCE ST. GREENVILLE, NC PHONE 756-4034 PERMANENT HAIR REMOVAL CERTIFIED THERMOLOGIST</p>
        <p>Kenar</p>
        <p>.things of quality have no fear of time</p>
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        <p>Certain .. .Things</p>
        <p>Arlington Village 652 E. Arlington Blvd.</p>
        <p>10-6 Mon.-Sat. 756-3320</p>
        <p>)</p>
        <p>Fashion Headlines - Fall 88</p>
        <p>A Contemporary Fashion Show</p>
        <p>presented by</p>
        <p>cerollne eesi mtil greenvllle</p>
        <p>and The Amerieaii Cancer Society</p>
        <p> Wefliie.sday, OcIoIht 5, 1088 8:15 p.m. - Wrif'hl AudituriiiiiR KCL</p>
        <p>Tickets:  Kcscrvuiioiis:</p>
        <p>Patron - $30.00*  Belk  - 756-23.S.3</p>
        <p>(renerul Admission  $ 15.00  ACS - 752-2571</p>
        <p>Stmlcnts - $7.00  Mrs.  Hall - 7.&amp;gt;fHI262</p>
        <p>InrlufieH cocktail party with heavy hm irM*uvics</p>
        <p>Carolina East Mall Greenville NC</p>
        <p>Carolina east mall greenvllle</p>
        <p>COMMITMENT</p>
        <p>TO</p>
        <p>Brass Candielamps For Night Glows!</p>
        <p>Brass square lamp with bulb included. Soft and delicate yet very practical. On/off switch, felt covered bottom, perfect for a hallway or bathroom nightlight!</p>
        <p>Shop Carolina East Mall, Greenville Monday Through Saturday 10 a.m. Until 9 p.m^ Sunday 1:30 p.m. 'til 5:30 p.m.</p>
        <p>Phone 756 B E-L K (756-2355)</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0045" />
        <p>Wedding Vows Said In Raleigh</p>
        <p>RALEIGH  Capitol City Church of Christ was the setting for the wedding of Pamela Sullivan and Mac Stokes, both of Raleigh. The doublering ceremony was conducted by Dr. Timothy A. Johnson at 2:30 p.m. Saturday.</p>
        <p>Parents of the couple are Mr. and Mrs. George Sullivan of Washington, N.C., and Mr. and Mrs. Charles Stokes of Greenville.</p>
        <p>Karen S. Schock of Raleigh, sister of the bride, was matron of honor. Sharon Stokes of Greenville, sister of the bridegroom, Jennifer Cox of Washington, N.C., and Robin McGowan of Bath, cousins of the bride, Lelia McConnell, Michelle Beverly, and Teresa Hilton, all of Raleigh, were bridesmaids.</p>
        <p>The father of the bridegroom was best man. Ushers were Chuck Braswell of Rocky Mount, Mike Kasey and Nyle Wadford, Sammy Collins and Robbie McConnell, all of Raleigh, and Curtis Leggett of Greenville.</p>
        <p>Organist Brenda Voetz and soloist Susan Eriksson presented a program of wedding music.</p>
        <p>MRS. STOKES</p>
        <p>The bride, given in marriage by wed-</p>
        <p>employed by L.F. Rossignol Development Corp. of N.C. The</p>
        <p>her parents, wore her mothers .. __ ding dress of silk organza with lace. The bodice featured chantilly lace and silk nylon organza sprinkled with</p>
        <p>lace appiiques. The bouffant skirt was of organza. She wore a circle</p>
        <p>headpiece of ivory silk flowers with two layers of ivory cabbage leaf-edge organza, handmade by Katie Cummings. She carried a hand bouauet of light pink, rose and ivory silk flowers tied with pink ribbon.</p>
        <p>The honor attendant wore a pink satin tea-length dress with a boat neckline with V back to the waist with a bow. She carried silk light pink, pink and ivory mixed flowers. Bridesmaids were dressed identical in fuchsia.</p>
        <p>The reception followed in Jordan Hall in Cary.</p>
        <p>The couple will live in Raleigh after a wedding trip to Acapulco, Mexico.</p>
        <p>The bride attended Athens Drive High School in Raleigh and is</p>
        <p>bridegroom attended J.H. Rose High School and is employed by Neuse Tile Services.</p>
        <p>A rehearsal dinner was given by the bridegrooms parents at the Sheraton-Crabtree in Raleigh. Several showers, cookouts and bridesmaids luncheon were given for the couple before their marriage.</p>
        <p>Broadway Musical Based On Her Life</p>
        <p>Mary Kittrell Gives Program</p>
        <p>Scarf tying was demonstrated by Mary Kittrell at the meeting of the Cherry Oaks Home and Garden Club.</p>
        <p>The yard of the month winners for July were Jeanne and W.J. Clark. Rose and Ronnie Tripp were the August winners and Luby Skinner was this months winner.</p>
        <p>The sunshine committee chairperson for this month is Darlene Nadlonek.</p>
        <p>Cindy Erdin, projects committee chairperson, told of repairs needed for the playground sandbox and entrance signs.</p>
        <p>Meeting hostesses were Marguerite Stephens, Fay Davenport and Sandy Way.</p>
        <p>PATTERSON, Ohio (AP) - Annie Oakley (1860-1926), the celebrated sharpshooter who appeared in Buffalo Bills Wild West Show, was born Phoebe Anne Oakley Mozee.</p>
        <p>She began shooting at the age of nine and became an expert marksman with a pistol, rifle and shotgun. On one occasion, she shattered 4,772 glass balls out of 5,000 tossed into the air.</p>
        <p>Known as Little Sure Shot, the five-foot tall Oakley challenged vaudeville star Frank E. Butler to a shooting match in Cincinnati and won. They were later married and joined Buffalo Bill's show in 1885.</p>
        <p>The Broadway musical Annie Get Your Gun was based on her life.</p>
        <p>A recipe calling for teaspoon of a dried herb requires 1 tablespoon of fresh, chopped herb.</p>
        <p>Parents</p>
        <p>Introduce your child to the entire world by using the newspaper.</p>
        <p>The Daily Reflector Newspaper In Education 752-6166</p>
        <p>Fee for subsequent weeks $6.^^ No Contracts</p>
        <p>Valid in area 112 only.</p>
        <p>WfKiHT WATCHfHS THE AT WORK MWOBAM. tnd QUICK 8UCCEM art aN lagiaiwad irada marka ol Waight Waichara IniamaiMmal. Inc* yVamrii WaicTiaft Iniarnaiional. Inc AH righia raaanrad IMte</p>
        <p>Sowell-Roden Vows Said Saturday In New Jersey Church</p>
        <p>COLTS NECK, N.J. - Barbara Jane Roden and David Clarence Sowell were united in marriage Saturday in a high noon wedding. The Rev. Charlie Morris conduct^ the double-ring ceremony in the Colts Neck Reformed Church.</p>
        <p>Daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Roden of Colts Neck, the bride was given in marriage by her father. The bridegroom is the son of Dr. Katye Oliver Sowell of Greenville, N.C., and the late Jesse Clarence Sowell.</p>
        <p>The maid of honor was Susan E. Roden of Allentown, Pa., sister of the bride. Janet Roden Witcofsky of Harleyville, Pa., sister of the bride, and Mary Kulesz Williams of Toms River, N.J., were bridesmaids.</p>
        <p>Alan N. Cranford of Irmo, S.C., was best man. Ushers were Edwin L. Sowell of College Park, Md., and Dr. Fallaw B. Sowell of Pittsburgh, Pa. All are cousins of the bridegroom.</p>
        <p>Organist Marianna Clowes and the Gramercy Trio including flautist Judy Garland, violinist Floralie Tulgan, violinist, and cellist Amy Garland presented wedding music.</p>
        <p>The bride wore a white satin gown styled with leg omutton sleeves, sabrina neckline and wedding bell skirt with a train trimmed with lace and seed pearls. The Portuguese lace bodice was trimmed with seed pearls and sequins. She carried an oval bouquet of pink roses, stephanotis and babys breath. Her elbow-length veil was attached to a tiara of pearls, lace and sequins.</p>
        <p>Each of the attendants wore a royal blue satin tea-length gown fashioned with a sweetheart neckline, puffed sleeves and trumpet skirt with chantilly lace gores. Each carried a round bouquet of mixed flowers.</p>
        <p>After the ceremony, the brides parents entertained at a dinner</p>
        <p>reception and dancing at The Shadowbrook in Shrewsbury, N.J.</p>
        <p>Engagement</p>
        <p>Announced</p>
        <p>The mother of the bridegroom entertained at a rehearsal dinner at the church for the wedding party and out-of-town guests. The couple was also entertained at a shower and a party in Greenville before their marriage.</p>
        <p>VIVIAN ELIZABETH MARTIN -</p>
        <p>is the daughter of Sgt. Maj. (USMC Ret.) and Mrs. Manuel Martin Jr. of</p>
        <p>The bride attended Marlboro High School in Malboro, N.J., and received a B.S. degree from Lehigh University in Bethlehem, Pa. She is an engineer with AT&amp;amp;T in Atlanta. The bridegroom attended J.H. Rose High School in Greenville and received a B.A. degree from East Carolina University and M.S. from Georgia Institute of Technology in Atlanta, where he is also pursuing a Ph.D. in computer science;</p>
        <p>Jacksonville, who announce her engagement to Jeffrey Lynn Covington, son of Mr. and Mrs. Joe P. Covington Sr. of Edenton. The wedding will take place Oct. 22.</p>
        <p>After a wedding trip to Hawaii, the couple will live in Atlanta.</p>
        <p>Women Need Fewer Calories</p>
        <p>WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. (AP) -Women need fewer calories than men but not fewer nutrients, according to a food industry scientist.</p>
        <p>Years ago, before modern conveniences, women performed more physical labor than they do today, says Dee Graham of Del Monte Foods USA. And, it wasnt unusual for women to require 3,000 calories a day.</p>
        <p>By contrast, Graham said, todays average woman needs only about 2,000 calories a day, but she needs the same amount of other nutrients.</p>
        <p>GREENVILLE OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY, PA</p>
        <p>ANNOUNCES</p>
        <p>PRENATALCARE BY INDIVIDUAL OBSTETRICIAN</p>
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        <p>EDGAR S. DOUGLAS, JR., MD</p>
        <p>KEVIN 0. EASLEY, JD.MD</p>
        <p>**CALL OUR OFFICE AT 758-7380 FOR FURTHER INFORMATION</p>
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        <pb facs="00097037_0046" />
        <p>Book Lists Best Companies For Women</p>
        <p>ByKAYBARTLKTT AP Newsfeatures Writer NEW YORK (AP)  Its not a book an unreconstructed male chauvinist wijl run out and buy, unless perhaps hes a CEO. Its written by women for women, working women, a guide to the companies where they are most likely to succeed.</p>
        <p>Two avowed feminists, one a psychologist and business consultant, the other a journalist and author, spent almost three years in their quest to find the best U.S. companies for women. They came up with a list of 50.</p>
        <p>It is possible that we missed a great company. says the journalist, Lorraine Dusky of Sag Harbor, N.Y., but I doubt it</p>
        <p>The researchers sent letters to 76 executive recruiters, 72 professional womens groups and 15 researchers and asked for nominations. They came up with over 200 nominations. Some companies appeared on every list.</p>
        <p>Dusky and co-author Dr. Baila Zeitz, a psychologist who practices in Nw York City and Teaneck, N.J., thpn sent out a six-page questionnaire to the companies and requested permission for an on-site visit to in-teiwiew female employees.</p>
        <p>They followed that up with private telephone interviews with the women, who were allowed to remain anonymous if what they had to say might jeopardize their jobs.</p>
        <p>The result is "The Best Companies fot Women. published this summer ,by Simon &amp;amp; Schuster. It lists the 50 bqst companies, representing 22 industries. and gives profiles of each, t The authors offer specific pros and !cohs, be it maternity leave benefits ;or. the whereabouts of the much-; discussed glass ceiling that women can only look through.</p>
        <p>We found that often those with tei-rific benefits for maternity leave had a glass ceiling so low that you couldnt stand up straight without bumping into it." Dusky says.</p>
        <p>We also found that the attitude of the CEO had a great deal to do with the way the company treated women."</p>
        <p>In addition, the authors list 60 additional companies worth considering by women in the job market, but which they did not profile, for various reasons.</p>
        <p>"Some companies that maybe should have been on the list refused to see us. because there was some dirt going on, Dusky says. One company who turned them down cold despite recommendations was found to be in the midst of a sexual harassment suit.</p>
        <p>In one of the anecdotes in the book, which reflect the slow progress of the womens movement in the workplace, Sara Dickinson, who got her engineering degree from the University of Illinois in 1976, tells how she had no trouble setting up a jol) interview. But she was appalled that the interviewer did not want to know about her engineering skills. Instead they talked about the climate, the prices of apartments in the city and how long it would take to establish a credit line to buy a car.</p>
        <p>^They must have wanted me for some quota." she told Dusky.</p>
        <p>Only Hewlett-Packard threw a transistor circuit at her and told her iotanalyze it. So she took that job. Nonetheless, she did get a chance toChapter Receives Annual Rating</p>
        <p>A three-star rating has been received by Eta Delta chapter of Beta Sigma Phi.</p>
        <p>Claire Patton, membership chairman, said a breakfast rush will be held Oct. I for new pledges.</p>
        <p>The next social will be a bowling and pizza party Sept. 24 starting at 7 p.m.</p>
        <p>Debbie Minnich was a guest for the meeting.</p>
        <p>President Vickie Marcus conducted the business session which included committee reports and distribution of yearbooks. The next chapter meeting will be held Sept. 27 at the home of Susan Deans.What Does It Cost To Move?</p>
        <p>WILTON. Conn. lAP)  A survey of people recently involved in a company move shows three-quarters of them expressed a need to know beforehand the cost-of-living m the des-'tination area</p>
        <p>, According to a survey made by ;PHH Homequity Inc! of 1,000 employes recently involved in a group move. 75 percent of them strongly preferred getting local cost-of-living information on items such as food and housing before making the decision to move.</p>
        <p>Of the respondents who did get cost-of-living information. 43 percent indicated a high value for this service.</p>
        <p>look at the recruiters summary. It read: "Pretty good for a girl.</p>
        <p>She is still there, has been promoted about every two years, and is currently a research and development laboratory manager.</p>
        <p>, The authors point out that working in an engineering company is really working in a mans world and there is a lot to overcome, but with a little humor, the women say it can be done.</p>
        <p>Wall Street, the authors note, has been notoriously tough on women and the only Wall Street entry is Salomon Brothers. Thats because of one man. John Gutfreund, the CEO.</p>
        <p>If he gets interested in an account, he doesnt care if youre a zebra or someone from a small area of Tibet, youre the person hell call if anything gets screwed up or hes got</p>
        <p>an idea he wants you to think about. said one woman who wished to re-inain anonymous. "And if you need to find him, you just walk over to his desk, you dont have to go through a secretary. He is colorblind and sex blind. Hes not interested in you personally, hes only interested in what you are doing to make money from your accounts."</p>
        <p>Essentially, they say. the old boy networks are too entrenched and women rise for the first eight or nine years and then are told its time to face reality. Thats the end of the trail as far as upward mobility.</p>
        <p>As determined by the authors, the top 50, in alphabetical order, are: American ExpressShearson Lehman Hutton; American Telephone &amp;amp; Telegraph; Avon Products; Barrios</p>
        <p>Technology; Bidermann Industries; CBS; Childrens Television Workshop; Citizens and Southern; Cognos; Conran Stores; The Denver Post; Digital Equipment Corporation; Drake Business Schools; Federal Express; Fidelity Bank; First Atlanta; Gannett; General Mills; Grey Advertising; GTE; Hallmark; Hearst Trade Books.</p>
        <p>Herman Miller; Hewitt Associates; Hewlett-Packard; Home Box Office; Honeywell; International Business Machines; Levi Strauss; Lotus; Manufacturers Hanover Trust; Merck; Mountain Bell; Mount Carmel Health; Neiman-Marcus; Northwestern Bell; Payless Cashways; PepsiCo; Pitney Bowes; Procter &amp;amp; Gamble; Recognition Equipment; Restaurant Enter</p>
        <p>prises Group; The Rowland Company; Saks Fifth Avenue; Salomon Brothers; Simon &amp;amp; Schuster; Southern New England Telephone; Syntex; Time Inc., and U.S. West Direct.</p>
        <p>i8SSSSaS8S888iS&amp;amp;SSSaS8a&amp;amp;SMillies</p>
        <p>Antiques and Crafts</p>
        <p>l,iMk For Mo At Tho Carolina Ka^l Mall Cral'l .Show</p>
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        <p>756-7766 After 7 p.m.</p>
        <p>For Information</p>
        <p>f Jhe percentage of female doctors IfMreasad from 10 percent in 1970 to 18 percent in 1986.</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0047" />
        <p>The Dally Reflector, Greenville, N.C. Sunday, September TB, 1968 (J-7At Drive-In Conjures Up Memories</p>
        <p>By MARIANNE DAY DUBOSE (  The  Sun Herald</p>
        <p>GULFPORT, Miss. (AP) - Randall Wetzel wheels into the Sonic Drive In stall wearing blue jeans and a smile. Shirt and shoes were discarded after class.</p>
        <p>This 24-year-old is one laid-back customer, sitting in his paint-splotched van with the big gray heart on one side.</p>
        <p>Tm gonna jack it up a little bit and paint it blue and put 60s on the back, Wetzel said. Make it like a party van.</p>
        <p>Oh yeah.</p>
        <p>As he shovels down fries smothered in extra ketchup, he trades jabs with a fellow in a metallic blue sports coupe and then continues to check out the scenery.</p>
        <p>Yes, he has noticed that the carhop is a pretty redhead who seemed nice and eager to help. </p>
        <p>He has one suggestion, though: Bring back the skates.</p>
        <p>This opinion is shared by all customers interviewed in their parked cars at Biloxis Sonic one recent afternoon.</p>
        <p>Sure, they love being waited on by cute, bubbly carhops who deliver burgers and shakes on trays and. at the push of the Order-Matic button, return with extra mustard. Thats part of the fun.</p>
        <p>The customers do kind of look you over, says Tracy Mitchell, a 19-year-old in khakis, pearls and bright red lipstick.</p>
        <p>But, remember just a few years back.</p>
        <p>Zoooom.</p>
        <p>How did they do it?</p>
        <p>Id tike the girls rolling around on skates again, Wetzel says, breaking into a bad-boy grin. And short miniskirts or something long and sexy. Thats enough to bring ya back to the50s.</p>
        <p>Richard and Toni Williams, who are dining in their spiffy 72 Nova, pause from their "date to add a word about Sonic skaters.</p>
        <p>I never saw anybody fall, says Williams.</p>
        <p>He turns the radio down and takes a bite of his NiftyFifties special  a burger, fries and a soft drink.</p>
        <p>The carhop is kind of innocent, savs Toni Williams. Like when vou</p>
        <p>think about the simple things in life. I dont think theres enough of it. Customers do say the foot-long</p>
        <p>conevs, homemade onion rings and ; beer</p>
        <p>root beer floats are a trip back to the Annette-and-Frankie era. In fact, a Frankie image in a V-neck sweater stares dreamily from the Sonic menu.</p>
        <p>Still, its the carhops  one of the last remnants of the carefree 50s  that evoke old memories of high school crushes, drlve-in movies, curfews, fast cars and flirting.</p>
        <p>One carhop says flirting is alive and well in the80s.</p>
        <p>Chris Lutkins, an 18-year-old with a ponytail and a spontaneous giggle, can testify to that.</p>
        <p>The guys will start it. she says. They usually say something tike Woo! or theyll whistle or ask for my phone number. I tell them Im married. I play hard to get.</p>
        <p>This method has gotten her roses a few times. From a customer, she says. I dont know who.</p>
        <p>skates, Lutkins says. Id do it, but Id probably fall.</p>
        <p>Debbie Dodd, 36, a Sonic regular from way back, recalls all the talent it required to skate and serve. It took skill coming out on skates with a tray in your hand, she says. They never missed a beat.</p>
        <p>The two Mississippi Highway Department inspectors who arrive for their daily dose of Sonic say skates would bring back adventure, but they have no complaints about tight jeans, shorts and plain ol tennis shoes. And the service is great.</p>
        <p>With carhops, I think its more personal, says Steve Simmons. 23. Its not rush, rush. ... And I like looking at them, the girls.</p>
        <p>Thats our job to notice things, jokes Anthony McFarlin, 25. We work for the state. We take in our surroundings.</p>
        <p>Mitchell, their carhop, isnt too keen on the skate idea.</p>
        <p>Would she trade her white sandals for skates?</p>
        <p>A lot of people expect us to be on</p>
        <p>Me? I walked into a pole, she says. There were a whole bunch of cars here. I was walking, not paying any attention. I was in such a hurry. I ran smack dab into a pole with the</p>
        <p>tray. People laughed like Look at her.</p>
        <p>The Orange Grove Sonic Drive In tried out three skaters last summer fora 50s celebration.</p>
        <p>They did pretty well, said manager Steve Nelson, a former carhop himself. Every now and then theyd slip and get a banana split or a sundae on them. ... The people would laugh; the girls got red in the face.</p>
        <p>Worse things have happened, though, even without the skates.</p>
        <p>Once a woman hurled a dripping milk shake at a carhop, cursed at her and then drove off. Most of it landed on Mitchell, who was just passing by.</p>
        <p>I didnt even know what happened, Mitchell said.</p>
        <p>Sometimes, its the customer's apparel that causes a stir at this old-fashioned drive in spot. Pajamas are regular sights at night. Bare-chested men are pretty common.</p>
        <p>But Mitchells boss, a former carhop, has a story that can outdo either of these.</p>
        <p>One lady who came in, she was topless, said Paula Graczyk. Thats it. Shorts and no top. I couldnt believe it. ... I thought she had a halter top on. It wasnt a halter top.</p>
        <p>Graczyk, manager at Biloxis Sonic, says carhopping is like per</p>
        <p>forming on stage. The minute you</p>
        <p>illo</p>
        <p>leave the kitchen area, all Oyes follow your every move.</p>
        <p>I have been flashed, whistled at and cursed at,she said.</p>
        <p>On skates?</p>
        <p>Not her.</p>
        <p>I heard a lot of stories, though, about how fast they went, she said.</p>
        <p>Tim Esskew, manager of the Sonic in Dlberville, would love to get his carhops back on skates. But he already knows their reaction.</p>
        <p>My girls would probably say No way, because of the fear of falling, he said. A lot are very cute, too self-conscious. If they fell, it would just kill them.To Defend Title</p>
        <p>'Moon Pie' Eater Is In Training</p>
        <p>By HOYT HARWELL Associated Press Writer ONEONTA, Ala. (AP) - The Rambo of Moon Pie eaters made it clear: he is in serious training to try to become the first man to repeat as the world champion Moon Pie wolfer.</p>
        <p>Ive been practicing, said Rodney Frazer, a stockman at an Oneonta discount store. Ive been eating a Moon Pie every time I go on break.</p>
        <p>His boss, John Love, describes him as 270 pounds of rompin, stompin, genuine, 100 percent Alabama Moon Pie-eating country boy who loves Moon Pies like a hawg loves slop. Frazer, befitting a titleholder, will arrive at the fourth annual contest Oct. 8 in a limousine, wearing a tuxedo set off by a Moon Pie T-shirt.</p>
        <p>He ate 15 of the sweet treats within the ,10-minute limit a year agd to unseat  or unstomach - high school football player Michael Carr, who downed 13.</p>
        <p>Moon Pies, made in Chattanooga, Tenn., are composed of a thick slab of marshmallow cream surrounded by soft cookies coated in banana, vanilla or chocolate.</p>
        <p>I like the banana ones best, Frazer said. You could mix em up in the contest but I dont know how good theyd taste.</p>
        <p>A year ago he fasted a couple of days to get ready and consumed a bunch of Rolaids after the Saturday eating bout. I was feeling all right</p>
        <p>by Tuesday, he said. They make you feel like youve got little bricks in you.</p>
        <p>The contestants are allowed soft drinks  organizers will import some RCs  or water to help them down the pies.</p>
        <p>Well go to Spout Springs at the foot of Straight Mountain and get them some g(d spring water, Love said.</p>
        <p>Frazer said if he has to, he believes he can handle 17 pies this time.</p>
        <p>I hope they can find me some competition, he said. Theyre working on it. Some people dont</p>
        <p>want to enter again, for some reason.</p>
        <p>After his victory, he said, he received calls from several states.</p>
        <p>One disc jockey wanted to know whether you eat them, or sit on them or throw them or what, he said, and I said, Well, you eat them. He was one of them Northerners. Everybody in the South knows what they are.</p>
        <p>Oneonta, located in Blount County about 25 miles north of Birmingham, is known as the Moon Pie Capital of the civilized world, Frazer said. Oneonta is to Moon Pies what Wimbledon is to tennis.</p>
        <p>Births</p>
        <p>Langley</p>
        <p>Born to Mr. and Mrs. Marshall K. Langley, Rocky Mount, a daughter, Lauren Elizabeth, on Sept. 3,1988, in Pitt County Memorial Hospital.</p>
        <p>Sikes</p>
        <p>*irrv L.</p>
        <p>Sikes, Grifton, a son, Sean Michael, on Sept. 6,1988, in Pitt County Memorial Hospital.</p>
        <p>Brown</p>
        <p>Born to Mr. and Mrs. William E. Brown, Jamesville, a son, Tony Jer-rell, on Sept. 4,1988, in Pitt County Memorial Hospital.</p>
        <p>Johnson</p>
        <p>Born to Paul and Roberta Johnson, Route 8, Greenville, a son, Daniel Paul, on Sept. 6,1988, in Pitt County Memorial Hospital.</p>
        <p>WOODSIDE</p>
        <p>ANTIQUES</p>
        <p>Jones</p>
        <p>Born to Mr. and Mrs. Walter B. Jones Jr., Ayden, a daughter, Sarah Elizabeth, on Sept. 4, 1988, in Pitt County Memorial Hospital.</p>
        <p>Nobles</p>
        <p>Born to Mr. and Mrs. Michael L. Nobles, Winterville, a son. Brooks Tillman, on Sept. 6, 1988, in Pitt County Memorial Hospital.</p>
        <p>Rt 8 Box 428 Allen Rd. Greenville, N.C, 756-9929 Buying, Selling Daily Open every day, except Wednesday</p>
        <p>Knox</p>
        <p>Born to Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Knox, Washington, N.C., a son, William Ivey, on Sept. 5,1988, in Pitt County Memorial Hospital.</p>
        <p>Payne</p>
        <p>Born to E. Sturgis Payne and Barbara Peoples Payne, 803 E. Third St., a son, Isaac Peoples, on Sept. 6,1988, in Pitt County Memorial Hospital.</p>
        <p>The</p>
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        <p>MacDonald Born to Mr. and Mrs. Brian F. MacDonald, 210 Ash St. No. 5, a son, Phillip Thomas, on Sept. 7, 1988, in Pitt County Memorial Hospital.</p>
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        <p>Singlo Roll ty Memorial Hospital.</p>
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        <p>NOT REDEEMABLE FOR CASH</p>
        <p>V21</p>
        <p>There are two contests, one for people less than 15 years old and one for adults. Three people tied at nine pies each in the younger division a year ago. There were 51 contestants in all.</p>
        <p>First place brings $100, second place $25 and third $15.</p>
        <p>Although a rescue squad was on hand last year and will be again this time, nobody choked, Love said. A few got sick and a few didnt wait until they got away from the table. It got pretty messy right there at the end.</p>
        <p>Frazer, Love said, took the world championship real serious. Hes challenging everybody in the world. He is the Rambo of Moon Pie eaters.</p>
        <p>Love started the contest four years ago after he and another store official both placed orders for Moon Pies without the other knowing it.</p>
        <p>We ended up with 21,000 Moon Pies, he said. We tried all kinds of ways to sell those things and we ended up inventing the contest.</p>
        <p>I started making a lot of crazy announcements, telling people what all they were good for  impressing their neighbors with boxes in the back seat of the car; saying they didnt actually make a person more intelligent or better looking, that they just made you feel that way because they were so good.</p>
        <p>Love said the contest is not the only thing for visitors to Oneonta.</p>
        <p>They will enjoy our colorful covered bridges and perhaps a side trip to Spoonhandle, Blow Gourd, Lick Skillet or a shopping spree in downtown Bug Tussle.</p>
        <p>Frazer said that if anyone dethrones him, I aint going to sit there and pout about it. Ill just try again next year.</p>
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        <pb facs="00097037_0048" />
        <p>M Dly R(lector, Oregnvlile. N.C. Sunday. September 18.1988</p>
        <p>Woman Is Sole Possessor Of Age-Old Atsugewi Language</p>
        <p>* By CHARLES HILLINGER</p>
        <p>L.A. Timrs-Washington Post</p>
        <p>'I  News Service</p>
        <p>MONTGOMERY CREEK, Calif. -Tiny, frail Medie Webster, 87, is the sole remaining possessor of n age-old language.</p>
        <p>She is one of just 200 Atsugewi (at-su-gay-we) Indians, whose ancestors for centuries hunted and gathered food in what is now Lassen Volcanic National Park, 180 miles northeast of San Francisco. And she is the only Atsugewi who speaks fluently the tribal language.</p>
        <p>Sometimes I think about the old days when I was a little girl and all of d* Atsugewis spoke our own lan-fage. We took life for granted and thought we would always be here living as our people did from the beginning of time, sighed the old woman.</p>
        <p>She told how her generation was sent to the white mans school and forced to learn the white mans language and to forget the Indian ways. I only went as far as first grade. As I grew older I learned English but I kept speaking Atsugewi as well.</p>
        <p>Gradually, all the other older members of the tribe who spoke the language, including Medies husband of 60 years, Daniel, have died. Daniel Webster died in 1979 at age 87. Two years ago, when Ramsey Blake, in his late 80s, died. Medie was left as the only Atsugewi fluent in the tribal language, although other tribe members know some native expressions.</p>
        <p>She lives with her grandson, Warren Conrad Jr., 24, in a modest cottage built 50 years ago by her hus-band on the edge of this hamlet at the</p>
        <p>end of a mile-long dirt road. Her home, 61 miles northwest of Lassen Park, is the only dwelling on the road.</p>
        <p>"She talks to me in Atsugewi all the time, Conrad said. I have to interrupt her and say: Gram, I dont understand what you are saying. Please speak English. </p>
        <p>Conrad said that his grandmother is like a person of another time. She tells me stories about the wagon days before cars, about old-time medicine men, about what it was like when she was a little girl, about the old ceremonial dances no longer performed. She sings to me in Atsugewi.</p>
        <p>Meanwhile, other tribe members try to keep their culture alive. For example, every summer for 16 years Medie Websters niece, Lillian Snooks, 61, has presented a program about the Atsugewis twice a day, five days a week, at the natural amphitheater behind the information center at the Manzanita Lake entrance to Lassen park.</p>
        <p>She always mentions the Atsugewi language. Snooks and her sister, Laverna Jenkins, 58, have been National Park Service rangers since 1972.</p>
        <p>The old Indian ways of the Atsugewis are dying fast. That is why I give the programs about my people, a little-known Indian tribe, to help perpetuate what is still known about them before all is lost, Snooks said.</p>
        <p>She said that Atsugewi means pine</p>
        <p>For All Her Bock-To-School Donceweor Needs!</p>
        <p>NATIVE LANGUAGE  Grandson Warren Conrad Jr., 24, has his arm around Medie Webster, 87. the only living Atsuwegi Indian, who can still speak the native language fluently. (Los Angeles Times photo by Charles Hillinger)</p>
        <p>tree people, a name that comes from the forests where the Indians have always lived.</p>
        <p>The lakes and mountains in Lassen park, she says, were the spiritual lakes and mountains of the Atsugewi. There were an estimated 2,000 At</p>
        <p>sugewis when non-Indians first came to this area 150 years ago.</p>
        <p>We are losing our Indian ways so quickly. Another generation or two and the last traces of Atsugewi culture may well vanish from the face of the Earth, Snooks said.</p>
        <p>'tsarre. Ltd,</p>
        <p>644 Arlington Blvd.. Arlington Village</p>
        <p>Betsy Drake Lewis</p>
        <p>DECORATING TIPS</p>
        <p>FACTS ABOUT VENEERS</p>
        <p>Years ago, some people were against using wood furniture with veneer construction. But with improved manufacturing methods and materials, veneered furniture can actually give you more economy, beauty and strength than ever before.</p>
        <p>ing, slices of grained wood are sandwiched together with each ply going crosswise to its neighbor, actually making mger and less apt to warp.</p>
        <p>What Is Remarrying Success Rate?</p>
        <p>In veneering,_____</p>
        <p>the grain of each ply it much stronger and less apt to warp.</p>
        <p>Much veneer used in furniture is five ply, although three and seven ply panels are sometimes used. The must costly woods are often used for veneers. It enables manufacturers to use scarce and beautiful woods in a more efficient and economical way.</p>
        <p>The greatest advance in the use of veneers took place when new glues and adhesives were perfected to produce a more secure bond essential to aircraft and marine construction. This process was then applied to furniture construction.</p>
        <p>Perhaps the greatest advantage of veneers to the furniture user is that it makes possible more beautiful graining of wood at a popular price.</p>
        <p>Meanwhile, to see beautiful furniture of all kinds, we invite you to come in and browse with no hurry and no obligation. Well look forward to seeing you.</p>
        <p>letsy Brake Interiors</p>
        <p>425 Greenville Boulevard  (919) 756-9111</p>
        <p>SOMHTKINi; Bf'.AUTlfTJI. IS ABOUT TO HAPPEN'</p>
        <p>DEAR ABBY: Three years ago I divorced a man who had little time for me and our 2-year-old daughter.</p>
        <p>The one serious relationship I had since my divorce recently dissolved, and now my ex-husband has been avidly pursuing me. He patiently waited for me during my love affair, and was there to pick up the pieces. Now he wants to remarry me. Hes been to counseling and is sure that we can make a go of our marriage if he has another chance.</p>
        <p>My question: What is the success rate of your readers who have remarried the spouses they once divorced? I am very much interested in the response this may draw from your readers. Please inquire. It would mean a lot to me.  PERPLEXED IN BETHLEHEM</p>
        <p>DEAR PERPLEXED: Ill try. Readers, if you remarried your !ex, how did it work out? Please let</p>
        <p>hie hear from you.</p>
        <p>DEAR ABBY: I am engaged to be niarried soon. Irving (not his real name) is 21 and I am 22. He is a virgin, but I dont think I am. We have talked about sex, and Irving confided that he is apprehensive about his performance due to his lack of experience. I have not told him that I may not be a virgin because if he knows this, he will be even more self-conscious about his performance.</p>
        <p>It happened on a band trip when I</p>
        <p>Dear Ahhy</p>
        <p>Abi^il Van Buren</p>
        <p>was in high school. It happened only once, and neither one of us knew what we were doing - thats why I cant say for sure whether Im a virgin or not.</p>
        <p>I feel guilty getting married to a man who thinks Im 100 percent pure, when I may not be. Should I tell him?</p>
        <p>Sign me, Ivory - or ... 99 PERCENT PURE DEAR IVORY: Dont volunteer any confessions  99 percent pure is pure enough.</p>
        <p>DEAR ABBY: You recently praised a father for teaching his young son to save money. This is commendable, but equally important as teaching a child to save is teaching a child to give to charity.</p>
        <p>Giving to others is one of the deeply satisfying experiences we can teach our children. - TAUGHT TO GIVE DEAR TAUGHT: How true. As far back as my memory can take me, every Jewish home had a little blue-and-white box in its kitchen. It was called a "pushkeh, and whenever a family member had good luck, he or she would drop 50 cents or a dollar in the pushkeh  for charity. What a wonderful way to celebrate a happy event or good fortune, and what bet</p>
        <p>ter way to establish the habit of giving!</p>
        <p>DEAR ABBY: Thank you from the bottom of my heart for appearing before the Maryland State Legislature last March to plead for a bill to end the use of live animals for testing cosmetics and household products. Even though that bill didnt make it, it was close, and it got national attention because of your celebrity status.</p>
        <p>Is there a list of companies that use live animals to test their products? Also, is there a list of companies that do not test their products on live animals? If so, it would be wonderful if you could publish both lists.</p>
        <p>These poor, tortured animals need to be spared. - JESSICA BERMAN, BETHESDA.MD.</p>
        <p>DEAR JESSICA: Space in my column is much too limited to publish either list, but both lists are available. Write to: PETA (People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals), P.O. Box 42516, Washington. D.C. 2UUI5.</p>
        <p>Send a stamped, self-addressed, long envelope. PETA is a non-profit organization, so please be a dear, and enclose a buck.</p>
        <p>What teen-agers need to know</p>
        <p>about sex, drugs, AIDS, getting along with their peers and parents is now in Abbys updated, expanded booklet, What Every Teen Should Know. Send your name and address, plus check or money order for $8.50 ($4 in Canada) to: Dear Abbys Teen Booklet, P.O. Box 447, Mount Morris, III. 61054. (Postage is included.)</p>
        <p>(. 1988 Piece Goods Shops Company L P</p>
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        <p>LADIES...</p>
        <p>WHY ARE SO MANY OF YOU</p>
        <p>DYING OF BREAST CANCER?</p>
        <p>Mobile Mammography Unit available to area women</p>
        <p>For Appointment Please Call Toll Free 1-800-456-9998</p>
        <p>Accurdinx to .the American CarKer Socirtv, one out of ten women in the United State will develop hrmt cancer sometime in her lifenmr It is currently esnmated that over 41.000 women die each year as the result of breast catKcr.</p>
        <p>Ninety percent of breast lumps are found by women themselves. Women who are diagnosed with a cancer large enough to feel have a 50 percent five year survival rate For women with tumors detected when leas than one ccnnmeter by manunography, the 5 yaar survival race ia almosi 100% and the 20 yaar turvival rata la 99%!</p>
        <p>A mammo|gam can detect a cancer this small ^ years before n can be felt.</p>
        <p>WmmI dbMM do not lw9tobahfltfl</p>
        <p>The American Cancer Society has caablished guidelines for mammo' pepi in asymptufnatic women. (Wo-men who have no tymptoma of dissMe).</p>
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        <p>A screening mammogram u an x-ray of the breaat using extremely low dosage of radiation and designed to find very early cancers</p>
        <p>A female technolugisi who ts highly trained in mammography will perform the examiruoon</p>
        <p>The Unit accepts cash, check, Visa and MaaterCard</p>
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        <p>Corduroy</p>
        <p>60" WIDE DESIGNER LENGTHS VALUE $5.99 PGS REG.</p>
        <p>$2.99</p>
        <p>KNTirn STOCK ' ^ '</p>
        <p>CRAFT SUPPLIES |j</p>
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        <p>UMlI 20 . * SKtlNS _</p>
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        <p>FROM NORTH CAROLINAS LEADING HOSIERY MILLS</p>
        <p>SOCK SALE</p>
        <p>IF PERFECT VALUES TO $1.99 PAIR</p>
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        <p>SHOP EARLY TO AVOID A SELLOUT!</p>
        <p>SALE $tarts SUNDAY thru SATURDAY</p>
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        <pb facs="00097037_0049" />
        <p>Blue Canoes Serve As Lifelines</p>
        <p>The Dally Reflector. Greenville, N.C.</p>
        <p>By SUE CROSS Associated Press Writer</p>
        <p>ABOARD THE MV LeCONTE (AP) - The tugboat man is in the aft bar, telling tales of giant waves and rolling barges.</p>
        <p>Families are homesteading the port side passenger lounge, staking out seats with backpacks and grocery sacks, sleeping on blankets spread in the aisle.</p>
        <p>Up on deck, a tourist aims her videocam at sea otters splashing in the kelp, as the ferry thrums past them at a steady 14 knots toward the rock-lined passage of Sergius Narrows.</p>
        <p>Its another night on the MV l^Conte, one of the nine blue canoes of the Alaska Marine Highway System. For 25 years the blue-and-white ships have served as taxis and tour boats to the water-bound towns of Alaskas island regions.</p>
        <p>But the system is struggling with increasing demand at all points. Car decks are filling more quickly as passengers come aboard in larger cars, campers, trucks and buses, and the increase in walk-on passengers is even greater.</p>
        <p>George Davidson, director of the Marine Highway since 1986, hopes to persuade the federal government to pay for several high-speed ferries, at a cost of $5 million to $15 million each. A long-term plan for the ferry system is being drafted as part of that campaign.</p>
        <p>The ferries sail around the clock along a 3,500-mile route, from Seattle up Alaskas Inside Passage and out a separate run across Prince William Sound and along the Aleutian Islands chain.</p>
        <p>They carry more than 370,000 people a year and 96,000 vehicles, from tractor-trailer rigs to grocery vans</p>
        <p>and motorcycles, kayaks and bicycles.</p>
        <p>They keep many towns in milk, meat, fresh lettuce and fruit.</p>
        <p>They carry villagers to their doctors in larger towns; high school athletes to their rivals gyms; winter-bound residents on weekend joyrides.</p>
        <p>Babies have been born on board; people have died.</p>
        <p>You never really know what will happen, says Bill Unkel, the LeConte purser. Its basically the same things you have anywhere else  its just concentrated on a ferry.</p>
        <p>The 235-foot LeConte is one of five village boats that serve as lifelines to the smaller logging and fishing towns and carry mostly local residents.</p>
        <p>Four larger sister ships, the mainliners, make the longest runs to and from Seattle and Prince Rupert, British Columbia.</p>
        <p>Together theyre one of Alaskas biggest tourist attractions, a money-saving alternative to the cruise ships that share their scenic routes. The longest trip, a 63-hour voyage from Seattle to Haines, costs $200 for an adult. A P/2-hour run from Homer to Seldovia, the shortest, costs $12.</p>
        <p>On the 408-foot Matanuska, 112 staterooms and hundreds of tourists create the atmosphere of a floating hotel. Outfitted with binoculars, passengers line the windows to scan for humpback and killer whales.</p>
        <p>But their holiday enthusiasm doesnt disguise the no-nonsense nature of this public transportation. Ferry life is one part whale-watching cruise and one part city bus.</p>
        <p>Passengers seeking the gourmet buffets of cruise ships find instead cafeterias reminiscent of school lunch lines. Sailors double as parking attendants when the ferries are in port.</p>
        <p>Chaptei</p>
        <p>r To Observe Annual Women's Day</p>
        <p>; American Business Womens Day will be observed by the Pirate Charter chapter of the American Business Womens Association Tuesday starting at 6:30 p.m.</p>
        <p>; Janice Faulkner, director of the Regional Development Institute, East Carolina University, will be keynote speaker. Her topic will be Aloving In, Moving Up and Moving Out: Leadership in the Corporate etting.</p>
        <p>Ms. Faulkner is chairperson of .C. Humanities Council, vice presi-ent of the state board of the N.C. World Trade Association, and presi-ent of the Coastal Plains chapter of NCWTA.</p>
        <p>Members of other ABWA chapters ave been invited to the buffet which will be held at the Comfort Inn in Greenville. Special guests will in-lude presidents of other business womens organizations in the area. Reservations for the buffet are re-uired. For further information con-act Jean Verdick, chapter president.</p>
        <p>or Nina Redditt, chapter secretary.</p>
        <p>Greenville Mayor Edward E. Carter has proclaimed Thursday as American Business Womens Day in Greenville.</p>
        <p>The days observance is a salute to the 55 million American businesswomen for their contributions to the private and public sectors of the U.S.</p>
        <p>Park Designer Became Famous</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (AP) - Frederick Law Olmsted (1822-1903) was born in Hartford, Conn., and became one of Americas greatest landscape architects and park designers.</p>
        <p>In 1857, Olmsted laid out the 840-acre Central Park in the center of Manhattan, acknowledged as a triumph of urban improvement.</p>
        <p>And amid the stern safety warnings on the car deck, a sign instructs passengers they shouldnt wear their sheath knives on board.</p>
        <p>Some of our back-to-the-future gentlemen come aboard with big Bowie knives, says Matanuska Purser Charles Bredehoft. We do have a dress code.</p>
        <p>The ferries stop at 31 communities, visiting most of them at least every few days.</p>
        <p>They run according to the tides and politics.</p>
        <p>What town gets which ferry and when is a perennial battle at Marine Highway headquarters and within the Alaska Legislature. Lawmakers control the ferry budget, and thus can sway its management.</p>
        <p>As the system celebrates 25 years of service, the state also faces long-range questions about the future of its aging fleet.</p>
        <p>Some want to replace the slow-but-steady diesel ships with speedier catamarans. Others say the fleet should be trimmed, that the state cant keep a $64 million-a-year ferry system afloat.</p>
        <p>Boosters argue that the states subsidy  about half the total cost  is small change compared to tourist business generated by the ferries.</p>
        <p>And yet others say tourism is overshadowing the ferries first purpose: providing a highway where roads cant be built.</p>
        <p>Davidson says basic transportation is the systems most important service.</p>
        <p>It is understandable people would peg tourism development on the ferry schedule, but they stand the risk of losing a crucial ferry if theres more demand elsewhere for local residentsuse, he says.</p>
        <p>Skagway learned that lesson last year. The tourist town has been trying to build its winter business, but was foiled when a weekend ferry from Juneau was canceled so residents on Prince of Wales Island could get to Ketchikan more often.</p>
        <p>Some ferry workers question the life span of the current fleet. Three ships  the Malaspina, Matanuska and Taku  have been in service since the Marine Highways first year of operation, 1963.</p>
        <p>The Chilkat is even older. The territorial government bought it in 1957 to replace the areas first ferry, a war surplus Navy landing craft that was privately run beginning in 1949.</p>
        <p>The youngest ferry is the Aurora, built in 1977.</p>
        <p>Ferry officials also are considering changing the systems southern terminus. Alaska ferries now dock in downtown Seattle, but Bellingham and Tacoma are vying for a new contract to be signed next year.</p>
        <p>One of the big complaints of the systems 850 employees is the lack of doctors on board. Pursers trained as emergency trauma technicians have to handle whatever injuries occur until the ferries can get to port.</p>
        <p>Bill Unkel, the LeConte purser, says his biggest hassle is calming tourists when a ferry is delayed by loading problems or weather.</p>
        <p>The tourists think theyre on a tour boat. They dont understand our main job is to get from point A to pointB, Unkel says.</p>
        <p>No. 2 on his headache list are the ferry runs crowded with children. The ferries sell 10,000 tickets a year to Alaska students bound for Little League games, swim meets, music competitions and other activities in their neighboring towns.</p>
        <p>Most passengers say it is the pleasure of a ferry ride that makes them take the Marine Highway instead of an airplane.</p>
        <p>Weve seen glaciers and weve seen bald eagles and weve seen whales and a lot of things weve never seen before, says Lynette Smith, a Texan traveling on the LeConte with her mother. Its so easy.</p>
        <p>The Unique Shoes</p>
        <p>Of 1989.</p>
        <p>ARLINGTON VILLAGE SHOPS GREENVILLE 355-3069</p>
        <p>PELLETIER HARBOR SHOPS AAOREHEAD CITY 726-7882 HOURS: 10-6 MON.-SAT.</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>DOMBU ESf An AUCTION</p>
        <p>Personal property from local prominent estate plus the estate of the author Ovid Pierce of Greenville, N.C.</p>
        <p>SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 24,1988,10:00 A.M. Preview Thursday, September 22, 2-6 P.M., Friday, September 23, 2-6 P.M. and 2 hours prior to sale</p>
        <p>AUCTION TO BE HELD AT WOODSIDE ANTIQUES</p>
        <p>Allen Road, Greenville, North Carolina</p>
        <p>Bring a chair and a Mand and plan to apand tha day dua to tha larga numbar ot * quality antiguas to ba sold.</p>
        <p>Shoraton chorry butlors cloak with flHod intorlor, C. 1840 FIno quality English roproductlon tMw front Happiawhlte aidaboard, (54) with banding.</p>
        <p>Pair Sharaton tigar mapla country rush bottom chairs, C. 1835 40"x 72 two board top Southarn pina, atratcher basa Ubia, paggad. Pina harvast tabla, 3 board top, pegged.</p>
        <p>2 ovar 3 drawar mahogany Sharaton chest, C. 1840</p>
        <p>Victorian walnut marble top chest. Mahogany barrel secretary with bookcase top.</p>
        <p>Pair matching walnut Victorian loi^ssssts</p>
        <p>Early New England charry</p>
        <p>candlastand, C. 1830</p>
        <p>Ornate gold leaf Chinese</p>
        <p>Chippendale mirror</p>
        <p>Bamboo turnad Windsor aide chair,</p>
        <p>C.1820</p>
        <p>Pina lift top washstand with drawar Ornate high back walnut Victorian bad</p>
        <p>Pair pineapple twin bads</p>
        <p>Four drawer pine chest</p>
        <p>Mahogany candlastand</p>
        <p>Pair nwtching mahogany spictor lag</p>
        <p>tables</p>
        <p>English Windsor arm chair with pierced back</p>
        <p>Small oval oil portrait on board, C. 1800</p>
        <p>Largo English oil portrait of a gentleman, C. 1800 Pina hutch table</p>
        <p>Matching Victorian mahogany ladies and gents chairs Large pine drop leaf dining table 48 round pine table with lazy susan</p>
        <p>Windsor rocker</p>
        <p>Sat 4 balloon back Victorian walnut chairs</p>
        <p>Mahogany 5 drawar chest</p>
        <p>Empire loot stool</p>
        <p>Pina one drawar nightstand</p>
        <p>Four place mahogany bedroom</p>
        <p>suite</p>
        <p>Tudor Joint stool Small oak hanging shelf Clawfoot mahogany secretary Mahogany Duncan Phyfe style table</p>
        <p>Mahogany Drum table</p>
        <p>Mahogany tilt top table with Inlaid</p>
        <p>star</p>
        <p>Pine one-drawer work table</p>
        <p>Small mahogany drop leaf table with drawer</p>
        <p>Small cherry work table with drawer</p>
        <p>Six lagged cherrry drop leaf table, C. 18S0</p>
        <p>Tapered cherry drop leaf table, pegged</p>
        <p>Two country Shoraton Cherry drop leaf table, C. 1840 Seven piece painted wooden bedroom suite</p>
        <p>Carved oak bed with curved footboard</p>
        <p>Pine one-drawer nightstand English oak drop leaf table,C. 1800 Small dovetailed pine box 30* oak roll desk with pigeon holed Interior</p>
        <p>English Tudor Chair Pine grandfather clock English bow back Windsor chair</p>
        <p>Empire lyre base game table Pine pencll-post bed Pine 4 drawer cheat Pine one drawer washstand Oak twist leg drop leaf table One drawer pine nightstand</p>
        <p>arm</p>
        <p>Auction To Be Held At</p>
        <p>Michael 0. Cable, N.C.A.L. 3303</p>
        <p>Route 8 , Box 428, Allen Road</p>
        <p>OnECNVILLE. NC 27S34 tIt-riS-MZS ApprtlMl ScrvlcM, Ttg Salai. Aucllont '</p>
        <p>TERMS Of SALE:No Buyers Premium. Caeh or Good Checke. Mestercerd or Vise with SH surcharge Items sold as It where It. Not retpontlbla tor accldentt RAIN DATE OCT. t</p>
        <p>Early Windsor settee with one board seat</p>
        <p>Chippendale style love seat Pair Currier and Ives prints Japanese wood block prints Early map of N.C.</p>
        <p>Several O.Q. framed mirrors</p>
        <p>Early game prints</p>
        <p>Several English hunt scene prints</p>
        <p>Early print of George and Martha</p>
        <p>Washington</p>
        <p>Two Louis Orr Etchings</p>
        <p>Many other prints and frames and</p>
        <p>mirrors</p>
        <p>5 gallon blue decorated jug 3 gallon blue decorated crock Blue Spongeware pitcher 14* Harvard pattern, brilliant cut glass vase</p>
        <p>Sterling, sevlce tor six - "King Alfred pattern - 73 pieces Matching 16* brilliant cut glass, handled wine and decanter Log cabin quilt and quilt tops Several pieces of sterling flatware and silver plate Pair of carnival glass vases Assorted table and floor lamps Pair cannon balls</p>
        <p>Winchester model 1903 - 22 automatic rifle WW I rifle</p>
        <p>20 pieces of assorted silver plate Early 12* pewter candleetleks Several sets etched crystal ateimvare</p>
        <p>Group of doll collectiblea from the SO's</p>
        <p>Several plecea decorated Nippon *'al ot early pewter measures ^ugtown pot^</p>
        <p>Large Blue willow platter</p>
        <p>English coach scene pottery brandy keg, C. 1870</p>
        <p>Ironston tureen and pitcher Several small oriental rugs Woven coverlet C. 1860 Service for 12 Norltake china -"Milford" pattern English three bottle tantless Ship model of H.M.S. Bounty Copper coal hod</p>
        <p>Several sets of brass candlesticks Pair formal brass wall sconces Decoys</p>
        <p>Assorted brass, Iron, tin, pewter, household goods, linens, upholstered furniture, collectiblea, glassware, decorator items, two sets of lawn furniture, etc. etc. etc.</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0050" />
        <p>( OL(SSli&amp;gt; OF KA.MKSSKS  The Colossus stands tall in the Mint Wiiseum, t'harlolti', wliere part of the ceiling tiles were removed to make 1 &amp;lt;nn lor ilie giant statue. Working on the Colossus, left to right, were Rodney ilioriiton, James ( art&amp;lt;i and Travis Johnston of Acuff Crane and Rigging of Memphis, Tenn. ( ,\P Faserphoto by Jeep Hunter, The Charlotte Observer)</p>
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        <p>Annual Summer Sale</p>
        <p>All Summer Merchandise Selected Jeu/elry &amp;amp; Accessories Some Fall &amp;amp; Winter Merchandise</p>
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        <p>New Stamps To Highlight Expo '89</p>
        <p>919A Red Banka Road</p>
        <p>756-1058</p>
        <p>Open Mon.-Sat. 10 to 6 Thura. 10 to 0</p>
        <p>BySYDKROMSH AP Newsfeatures</p>
        <p>The U.S. Postal Service released its program for next year amid much fanfare and publicity, but with little detail regarding specific designs. The general public, and philatelists in particular, are being teased with only a smattering of information about upcoming issues.</p>
        <p>Lets see whats been announced so you can mark it on your calendar.</p>
        <p>One of the highlights will be World Expo 89, the first stamp exhibition sponsored by the USPS. For this event there will be a new series consisting of stamps and stationery items. The exhibition will be held simultaneously with the November 1989 meeting of the 20th Congress of the Universal Postal Union in Washington, D.C.</p>
        <p>The Expo issues will include a single stamp honoring the exhibition, plus two sets of four designs in different formats, each appearing as a block of four and as a sheetlet. A third sheetlet, several post cards, and an aerogram honoring Montgomery Blair are on tap for the UPU-related series.</p>
        <p>Also on the agenda for 1989 will be a tribute to those famous old chugging steamboats. A commemorative booklet of five steamboat designs will feature the steam-powered ships that plied Americas rivers and the Great Lakes during the nations early expansion of settlement and industrial development.</p>
        <p>And look out for the dinosaurs, the largest land animals of prehistoric time! A block of four 25-centers showing the famed reptiles common to North America mi lions of years ago come to life on the designs of the forthcoming stamps.</p>
        <p>There will be a commemorative in the American Sports Series honoring Lou Gehrig. Another stamp, in the Black Heritage Series, will hail labor organizer A. Philip Randolph. Conductor Arturo Toscanini, maestro of philharmonic orchestras for many</p>
        <p>decades, will be spotlighted in the Performing Arts Series.</p>
        <p>The Constitution Series will recognize the bicentennials of North Carolina, the House of Representatives, the Senate, the Executive branch, and the drafting of the Bill of Rights. The centennials of North Dakota, South Dakota, Montana and Washington state will be duly observed.</p>
        <p>A commemorative will honor Americas letter carriers, while philanthropist Johns Hopkins will 1^ seen on a Great Americans Series stamp. A joint issue with France will salute the French Revolution.</p>
        <p>Of course, the annual Christmas adhesive and the continuing Love series should prove popular again on the stamp parade.</p>
        <p>The USPS has new postal cards honoring Georgetowns Healy Hall, the Land Run and Oklahoma Territory, plus new items in the America the Beautiful Series.</p>
        <p>Some of these upcoming stamps have been previously mentioned, and more will be added to the varied and viable schedule. Well keep you posted as to dates and first-day cancellation opportunites as they become available.</p>
        <p>On the Summer Olympics stamp front, the West Indian island nation of Antigua and Barbuda has issued a set of four stamps.</p>
        <p>The 40-cent depicts a male gymnast; the 60-cent shows a weightlifter lifting a set of barbells; the $1 illustrates a water polo match; and the $5 pictures two boxers in action. A $5 souvenir sheet shows a female track athlete running with the Olympic torch to ignite the ceremonial flame that starts the Games.</p>
        <p>The Marshall Islands, which has no athletes participating in the Olympics, has released its first Olympic set. It features a strip of five vertical 15-cent stamps depicting a young Marshallese male in various stages</p>
        <p>Soviet Gospel Singers</p>
        <p>By JOE EDWARDS Associated Press Writer DICKSON, Tenn. (AP) - Two Russian gospel singers are spreading a message of Christianity and speaking out against communism, which they say drove them from the Soviet Union.</p>
        <p>Nikolai Pankratz and his brother Peter are leaders of the six-member, gospel-rock band Ruscha. The slick, fiara-&amp;lt;lriving group is on the road doing 150 concerts a year, playing mainly for youngsters who hear 90 minutes of rousing music and then 15 minutes of religious and patriotic messages.</p>
        <p>We are cruising across America, gabbing people by the neck and saying, Wake up. Youve got it good but you are taking your freedom for granted and you shouldnt do that. One day you may wake up and be under persecution yourself, said 31-year-old Nikolai.</p>
        <p>People dont believe that will happen, he said. But we grew up under communism, and we have a very great fear of it spreading across the world.</p>
        <p>The brothers said their family was persecuted in the Soviet Union for tne-ing Christians and attending underground churches. In 1963, they said, the Soviet secret police came to their house and took their grandfather away.</p>
        <p>He was dragged out in the deep snow in his pajamas, said 29-year-old Peter. He pointed toward heaven, meaning hed see us again. Thats the last time we saw him. He arrived in a casket two months later. He had frozen to death in Siberia.</p>
        <p>The two said their family of eight, after four years of negotiation, paid $3,000 a person to leave the country in 1974 and relocate in Bonn, West Germany, where an aunt lived.</p>
        <p>Theres no way to leave unless you sell everything you have, Peter said. We sold the only cow we had, the chickens we had, the pigs we had. We sold our house and other people pitched in and helped us financially. From Germany, the brothers came to the United States on student visas, Nikolai in 1978, Peter a year later. Learning English without formal lessons, they studied at the Word of Life bible institute in upstate New York for a year. They then enrolled at Jerry Falwells Liberty University in Lynchburg, Va., where they received undergraduate degrees.</p>
        <p>He really helped us out, Nikolai said about Falwell. We didnt know anything about America. He kind of took us under his wing. Our whole life in this country started right there. We sang in his church and on his TV</p>
        <p>WALLCOVSRINGS</p>
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        <p>show. He tinanced an album and got us into his school.</p>
        <p>The two have since decided to make their home in Dickson, about 40 miles west of Nashville.</p>
        <p>They first began performing under the name Russia but learned that the name had a bad connotation in the United States. Because of the name, their touring bus was vandalized several times.</p>
        <p>We got fed up and did something about it, Peter said. Americans dont realize there could be good Russians.</p>
        <p>They changed the spelling to Ruscha.</p>
        <p>The two-year-old band now consists of the brothers plus Americans Andy Denton, Michael Jackson, Billy Williams and Scott Beck.</p>
        <p>Their debut album, Come Alive, was released earlier this year. Their first single is Come Home, which has been No. 1 on the gospel-rock charts in many cities.</p>
        <p>Their concerts are mostly in auditoriums and some in churches.</p>
        <p>We play some places no one else goes, Nikolai said. People are getting to know us. Thats pretty good.</p>
        <p>"We want to get a message across through our music. Its a vehicle. We try to tell the American people that people dont know what its like under communism. Also, wed like to educate them that its a dangerous thing and that there is an answer to life: God.</p>
        <p>"What we are trying to do is what a</p>
        <p>do: be able to grab kids attention and say, Dont be a lazy bum. Support your government. Support your country. Stand up for the rights of America.</p>
        <p>If were able to change the young peoples attitude toward the country, change their lifestyle away from drugs and alcohol and sex and homosexuality, then I think wevp done a whole lot more good than 99 percent of the churches in America.</p>
        <p>The brothers are not U.S. citizens, but this is a goal. Wed love that more than anything else, Peter said.</p>
        <p>of throwing the javelin. Another strip of five vertical 25-cent stamps pictures a Marshallese female athlete in a track event. Even though the Marshall Islands does not have a team, it calls these stamps a Tribute to Future Olympians.</p>
        <p>The Maldives, an archipelago of tiny islands and atolls in the Indian Ocean, hails the Olympics with a set of four stamps.</p>
        <p>The 15-laura shows a male athlete preparing to toss the discus; the 2-rufiya depicts two men in Uie lOO-meter dash; the 4-rufiya illustrates two gymnastics events  the side horse vault and the rings; and the 12-rufiya features two equestrian competitors in the steeplechase event. A souvenir sheet of 20-rufiya denomination has a male tennis player making a backhand return.</p>
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        <pb facs="00097037_0051" />
        <p>Low Profile Maintained By Noted Canadian Writer</p>
        <p>By JEFFBRADLEY Associated Press Writer MONTREAL (AP) - Hugl) MacLennan secured a place in Canadian letters, and the nations political lexicon, when he explored the cultural schism between French and English Canada in his evocative 1945 novel, Two Solitudes.</p>
        <p>The title became a code word for the linguistic divide, and MacLennan was credited with almost single-handedly creating Can Lit, a new wave of writing set in Canada that also spelled success for Margaret Laurence, Robertson Davies and Margaret Atwood.</p>
        <p>In a conversation at his makeshift office in an old YMCA building, MacLennan, 81, said Two Solitudes is a book a French-Canadian couldnt have written. They couldnt even do it now. Theyre too close to it.</p>
        <p>Questions draw a stream of observations from a man hooked on history and the classics and has Thomas Wolfe and Gabriel Garcia Marquez on his shelves and praises Hemingway as the American Byron.</p>
        <p>In quick succession, he says Canada is a nation founded by losers but thats no bad thing; cites Aristotles maxim that drama depends on the familiar; theorizes that the fall of the Roman Empire was due to currency devaluation, and praises</p>
        <p>Harry Trumans fluency in Latin. Now collecting thou^ts for a book</p>
        <p>of memoirs, MacLennan keeps a suriMrisingly low profile for a man the Readers Guide to the Canadian Novel calls a writer of unique stature.</p>
        <p>The Nova Scotia native lives with his invalid wife. Tota, in a redbrick apartment building just below Mount Royal and takes a cab most after-noms to the small office Concordia University puts at his disposal.</p>
        <p>In a voice retaining the Gaelic lilt of his native Cape Breton, as well as the rasp of a chain-smi^er, MacLennan says he never made much money from Two Solitudes after sacrificing royalties to get it published. I only got 40 percent - still do.</p>
        <p>^Idom interviewed or mentioned on radio and TV, MacLennan has published only seven novels and one book of essays in half a century. I endlessly rewrite, he explains.</p>
        <p>But five of those noyels won the countrys highest literary prize, the Governor Generals Award, and Two Solitudes has been translated into at least eight languages.</p>
        <p>Critics reserve their highest praise for later books such as Each Mans Son and The Watch That Ends The Night, but it is Two Solitudes that stnick the strongest chord in both English and French and was made into a movie.</p>
        <p>Built around French-Canadian aristocrat Athanase Tallard and his</p>
        <p>son, Paul, the novel describes the clash between French Quebec, with its almost medieval Catholicism, and the mercantile English who once ran the province.</p>
        <p>I remember my publisher thought it would be too gloomy a title, but I said no, leave it, said MacLennan, who recently reread the book for the first time in years and concluded, Its better than I thought.</p>
        <p>The title came from a letter written by the German poet Rainer Maria Rilke who said that even in love, there were two solitudes.</p>
        <p>MacLennan met an icy critical reception when he returned to the subject of Quebec in his prophetic 1967 novel Return of the Sphinx, which predicted separatist violence in the province with fathers and sons on opposite sides.</p>
        <p>Three years later, he was vindicated when revolutionary violence erupted, changing Quebc^ politics forever.</p>
        <p>I feel sympathy for these pwple, he says, referring to the one-in-four Canadians who speak French at home. This continent is never going to start sneaking French.</p>
        <p>He didnt anticipate the dramatic advances French-Canadians would make by the 1980s, taking political and economic control of their pro-vince, embracing the entrepreneurial spirit and breaking the shackles of the priests.</p>
        <p>It was like lightning. They started going to college and became more prosperous, says MacLennan, who arrived in Montreal in 1935 to teach Latin and Greek at Lower Canada College boys school and has never left.</p>
        <p>He credits an old Montreal friend, former Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau, with keeping the county together during Quebecs separatist explosion and having the vision to build a more tolerant, bilingual nation.</p>
        <p>Pierre was the only man who could have hanifled that situation when it came. Hes absolutely without peer, he says, adding with a chuckle that Trudeau is also a mysterious fellow who in his youth liked to drive around Montreal on a motorcycle wearing a German helmet.</p>
        <p>The son of a Presbyterian doctor, the young MacLennan knew more about Hitlers Germany and Stalins Soviet Union than he did his own country after going to Oxford as a Rhodes scholar and using the opportunity to travel across Europe.</p>
        <p>It was the best education I could ever have. For about a year I thought I was a Communist but it didnt last long, he says, echoing a theme ex-)lored with great understanding in lis 1958 novel, The Watch That Ends The Night.</p>
        <p>He recalls disillusionment on a</p>
        <p>SURPRISED BY PROTESTS ~ Actor Willem Dafoe poses following an interview at New York's Performing Garage, home of the Wooster Group, an experimental theater company of which he is a member. Dafoe, who plays the title role in the controversial film, The Last Temptation of Christ, says he was a little surprised by the fierce protests the movie has drawn from some religious groups. &amp;lt; AP I.: &amp;gt;rphoto by Wyatt Counts)</p>
        <p>Moscow visit in the 1930s when commissars tried to claim that since the revolution, cows could be milked four times a day.</p>
        <p>MacLennan met his American first wife, Dorothy, on the ship back from Oxford and credits her with shaping his career. She really woke me up to the fact that Canada was a different country than the States.</p>
        <p>Her slow death from heart disease is also the heroines fate in The Watch That Ends The Night, which MacLennan completed as she was dying.</p>
        <p>After his first two novels were rejected by publishers  They said he doesnt write like an American, and he doesnt write like an Englishman  MacLennan found his voice in 1941 with a story set in Canada.</p>
        <p>Barometer Rising is a World War I saga based on a harrowing moment in MacLennans childhood, the Halifax explosion of 1917. He narrowly escapra death when a French munitions ship filled with explosives collided with a freighter in the harbor. It was the largest non-nuclear explosion in history and killed more than 1,600 people.</p>
        <p>I was this far away from being beheaded, said the author, cupping his hands 2 feet apart.</p>
        <p>Its eight years since the book MacLennan swears will be his last novel, Voices in Time, which links Nazi Germany, separatist Quebec and the world after a cataclysmic</p>
        <p>future conflict dubbed the Destruc- 1 spent 12 years writing it. I was sion that the most lethal people in the tions.  lost  in  it.  I  finally came to the conclu- world are politicians.</p>
        <p>WEEPING ICON  Worshipers approach the icon that appears to be shedding tears at St. Nicholas Albanian Orthodox Church on Chicagos northwest side. The painting of the Virgin May first appeared to weep in 1986 and con</p>
        <p>tinued for seven months. Last week a parishOner noted the phenomena had started again and since them thousands have stood in line for hours to see the miraculous sign. (AP Laserphotoby Walter Kale)</p>
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        <pb facs="00097037_0052" />
        <p>Kansas Group Fosters Trees For Life Program In India</p>
        <p>B&amp;gt; DILIP GANGILY Associated Press Writer NEW DELHI, India (AP) - Holy men in their traditional saffron robes will hand over 4 million guava saplings and papaya seeds to Hindu pilgrims at a religious fair in January in a unique effort to get people to plant trees as a way of saving their land and improving their livelihood.</p>
        <p>The idea is that of an American volunteer group called Trees foi:, Life inW'ichita, Kan.</p>
        <p>It is something very new, very original, very challenging, said Deepak Nirula, the Indian representative of the organization, which aims to plant 5 million tress in poor countries to provide food and fuel for needy people.</p>
        <p>The group is headed in Wichita by Balbir Mathur, who was born in India but is now a naturalized American. Mathur plans to raise $15 million in small contributions in the United States to finance the effort.</p>
        <p>The organization is hiring Indian holy men and volunteers to distribute the sarulings and seeds at Kumbh " !el. 1 three-week fair to be held in llaliubad in central India, beginning &amp;lt;an. 14. The religious fair is held every 12 years and attracts more than 10 million Hindu pilgrims who</p>
        <p>bathe in the holy Ganges Kiver during a particularly auspicious configuration of the planets, the sun and the moon.</p>
        <p>We figured out that if we can give it a holy touch to the tree plantation drive, it can work, Nirula said in an interview.</p>
        <p>The saplings and seeds will be part of the holy offering which no Hindu ignores, so we hope when they go back to their respective villages they will plant the saplings and the seeds, said Nirula, who runs a chain of fast food restaurants in New Delhi.</p>
        <p>We may be accused of exploiting the religious sentiments of the people, but it is for a good cause.</p>
        <p>Trees for Life is one of the 175 organizations in India trying to save the fast depleting forests. Each year, the country loses a total of 3.7 million acres of forest.</p>
        <p>It is a very serious problem, said Joyce Shankaran, a director at the National Wastelands Development Board, the official body that oversees the work of the volunteer organizations.</p>
        <p>It is estimated that at the current rate of deforestation, India will lose nearly 10 million acres of woodlands, an area equal to the size of Switzerland, in the next five years.</p>
        <p>Plantation Recreates ; 7 9th Century Life In fhe Mississippi Delta</p>
        <p>By JOE ROGERS Jackson Clarion-Ledger</p>
        <p>'"GREENWOOD, Miss. (AP) -F^orewood River Plantation State Park is a living anachronism. While tlie rest of the world exists in the present, Florewood transports visitors to the Mississippi Delta of the Ips.</p>
        <p>iThis is not only a historical park, iCs living history," said manager Ed I41CC. "Theres no more quite like it in the Southeast.</p>
        <p>A field trip here can not only be recreational, but educational.</p>
        <p>Thats because FloreWood doesnt just show history, it tells it. Seven interpreters, portraying roles from tutor to blacksmith, explain what life was like on a Delta plantation before the Civil War.</p>
        <p>The effect is not unlike what might be achieved with a time machine. Whenever possible, Lucic even has some of the staff cook up an old-fashioned meal to share with the tourists - complete with biscuits, greens, okra, squash, and other goodies from the parks garden.</p>
        <p>It gives a better idea than just saying. This is the kitchen, and this is what they would have done, Lucic said.</p>
        <p>"Visitors love it. Especially those from up North whove never seen any Southern cooking or sampled it. Thats a prime purpose for Florewood  luring those Yankee tourist dollars from folks who missed the good fortune to actually be Southern.</p>
        <p>But it isnt the only aim. Florewood also plays host to thousands of Mississippi school students every year, giving them a glimpse of a way of life long gone.</p>
        <p>A way of life Florewood re-creates. Or replicates. Florewood was not an actual plantation.</p>
        <p>But in 1972 the Legislature provided for the purchase of just over lO acres of land by LeFlore County, which then deeded the land to the state for the park.</p>
        <p>In 197() Florewood opened complete with a planters mansion, smoke</p>
        <p>house, blacksmith shop, grist mill, sawmill, church-school, overseers house and other buildings that would have made up an actual plantation covering about 1,000 acres.</p>
        <p>Visitors can begin their exploration at the main office, which also houses the Cotton Museum, gift shop and snack bar. From there a tram runs to the mansion, where they receive a guided tour, Dont exp^t a Natchez-size antebellum dwelling  people didnt have that kind of money in the Delta back then. But the antique furnishings are real, including a bed owned by Confederate Gen. Nathan Bedford Forrest.</p>
        <p>From there visitors are on their own to walk the grounds at their own pace, assisted by an informational guidesheetandmap.</p>
        <p>About 27,000 p^ple found their way through in the fiscal year just ended, including all those who came for special events. Two of the most special are the annual fall harvest and Christmas tours.</p>
        <p>Fall harvest is the next special event, occurring Oct. 22. It is centered on the making of cane syrup from cane raised on the plantation, and includes cotton-picking and corn-shucking contests, squaredanc-ing and the like.</p>
        <p>In November there is usually a Civil War encampment and mock battle, featuring about 80 mock soldiers. This years is tentatively set for Nov. 12 and 13.</p>
        <p>And the first weekend in December annually marks the end of the fulltime park tours, with the highlight a candlelight tour on Saturday night.</p>
        <p>From then until March 1 the park operates on a limited basis, with only three interpreters and the tour limited to a tram ride through the grounds.</p>
        <p>Argentina seized the disputed Falkland Islands from Britain April 2,1982, triggering the Falklands War. In the course of the fighting, Britain regained control of the islands.</p>
        <p>CITY OF GREENVILLE</p>
        <p>NORTH CAROLINA 27835-7207</p>
        <p>OFFICE OF MAYOR</p>
        <p>My Fellow Citizens:</p>
        <p>This represents a real opportunity for you to join an organized effort against those factors which adversely affect the quality of life in our city.</p>
        <p>I am appealing to each of you to register to join our Community Improvement Association (C.I.A.) in combating drug abuse, illiteracy, poor housing and all other factors which degrade the qua ity of life in our city.</p>
        <p>With your help, we shall win over the forces of evil and destruction. Please fill out the questionnaire below and mail to;</p>
        <p>C.I.A.</p>
        <p>City of Greenville P.O. Box 7207 Greenville, N.C. 27835-7207</p>
        <p>For additional information, please contact the Mayors Office at the above address.</p>
        <p>Sincerely,</p>
        <p>Edward E. Carter, Mayor</p>
        <p>Name_</p>
        <p>Birth Date_</p>
        <p>Home Address_</p>
        <p>Business Address.</p>
        <p>.Place of Birth.  Tel_</p>
        <p>-Tel.</p>
        <p>Until a few years ago, tne Indian government was saddled with misleading statistics from forest guards that all was green. It was thought that 22 percent of the countrys 812-million-acre land mass was under forest cover. Ecologists say that the ideal forest cover should be 33 percent of the land fnass, but 22 percent was considered acceptable in a nation of 800 million people.</p>
        <p>From satellite photographs of India, however, the, government determined that only about 10 percent of the land mass was under good forest cover.</p>
        <p>The entire Himalayan ecosystem is threatened as a consequence, with</p>
        <p>snow lines moving higher and perennial springs drying up because of lack of precipitation.</p>
        <p>Vanishing forests also affect wildlife. Government reports say that some of the 350 species of mammals, 1,200 species of birds and 2,000 species of insects in India are threatened. Some may have been lost already.</p>
        <p>Government alone cant save the forest; it has gone beyond the control of any government, said Akhil Chander, a volunteer working in New Delhi.</p>
        <p>There has to be a massive peoples movement including individuals, voluntary organizations, schools</p>
        <p>and private and public institution, Chandersaid.</p>
        <p>The Trees for Life group is working in five Indian states. The most visible project is in Allahabad where the group is planting papaya saplings.</p>
        <p>Our aim is 700,000 papaya tress in Allahabad; we have already planted 200,000, Nirula said. The group wants tq plant 2.7 million trees and set up 800 beehives in India by the end of 1989.</p>
        <p>This will mean an extra 13.5 million tons of fruit, fuel and fodder; 88,000 pounds of honey, and save 5,000 tons of wood from being used as fuel for cooking, Nirula said.</p>
        <p>The need for firewood and fodder.</p>
        <p>or coarse food for cattle, in India is about 133 million tons a year, but only 36 million tons are available in state-run stores. The rest comes from illegal felling of trees, government investigations indicate.</p>
        <p>The Trees for Life group spends' about $3 for planting a fruit tree.</p>
        <p>Our message is very clear and loud, Nirula said. Plant fruit trees and you will not go hungry.</p>
        <p>A $3 apple tree produci^ 10,000 pounds of apple in its lifetinfe.... Can you imagine going to your glocenand asking him to give you 10,00i[) pounds of fruit for $3?  |</p>
        <p>The grocer cant, but Trees for Life can.</p>
        <p>A FANTASY VINE GARDEN  Kudzu, a tough, fast growing vine often ^ path into shapes that resemble some rather strange sculptures in vivid green, used to help control erosion, has a habit of having its own way in covering  In September, the deep purple flower clusters of kudzu emits a strong,  sweet</p>
        <p>large areas if not controlled. On the outskirts of Snow Hill in Greene County,  fragrance that almost overpowers ones senses. (Reflector Photo by  Jerry</p>
        <p>kudzu has created a fantasy vine garden, transforming bushes and trees in its  Raynor)</p>
        <p>WHOLESALE OUTLET</p>
        <p>SOUTHPARK SHOPPING CENTER</p>
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        <p>YOURCHOICK</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0053" />
        <p>The Pally Reflector, Greenville, N.C. Sunday, September 18,1988  (J-13TAKE A LTITLE ADVICE FROM YOUR</p>
        <p>POWER COMPANY. DONT BUY THIS HOUSE.</p>
        <p>The house is absolutely gorgeous. The craftsmanship, from the foundation to the finest detail of the molding to the wiring, is first-rate.</p>
        <p>But it does not meet North Carolina Powers energy-efficiency standards. So it cant be called an Energy Saver Home."</p>
        <p>That means you could be stuck paying through the nose for utilities for the next</p>
        <p>only an Energy Saver Home guarantees that every part of it must meet these strict standards set by North Carolina Power. If a part of your new home fails to meet those standards,</p>
        <p>then adjustments will be made at no cost to you. AN ENERGY SAVER HOME IS INSULATED</p>
        <p>30 years.</p>
        <p>IF YOI1 FIND A HOME THATS MORE</p>
        <p>FNF.ROY-RFFICIENT THAN AN ENERGY SAVER HOME. THEN BUY IT.</p>
        <p>Chances are, you wont find a home that saves you on heating and cooling bills like a North Carolina Power Energy Saver Home. Energy Saver Home standards are some of the very highest among builders and contractors. Theyre even higher than the original standards set over a decade ago during the energy crisis.</p>
        <p>ONLY A NORTH CAROLINAPOWER ENERGY SAVER HOME COMES WITH</p>
        <p>IN PLACES YOUD EXPECT. AND IN PLACES YOU NEVER</p>
        <p>A GUARANTEE.</p>
        <p>Y)u actually receive a written warranty that spells out what it means to own an Energy Saver Home. While thae are plenty of energy-efficient homes out on the market.</p>
        <p>DREAMED OF.</p>
        <p>An energy-effic.ent home needs a good air infiltration p.^ .age to keep out both airborne contamiu uits and unwanted moisture. This package on an Energy Saver Home is better than mixst. An air infiltration package also seals the cavities surrounding dixirs and windows where inost air leakage occurs. Energy Saver Homes also feature rigid insulating sheathing outside of stud walls to reduce heat transfer.</p>
        <p>IxK)k at it this way, an Energy Saver Home is not unlike a'. nos. It is built to keep the atmosphere; i want insideand the heat, humidity or r 1 vou dont want outside. To do this, it ha  constructed to some very</p>
        <p>exacting sta, iuai ds.</p>
        <p>BUY AN ENERGY SAVER HOME</p>
        <p>AND YOU COULD QIJALIEY FOR A LARGER MORTGAGE.</p>
        <p>Since youll be spending less money on heating and cooling, you can spend more money on a home. Freddie Mac and %inie Mae lending institutions recognize the cost savings of energy-efficient homes and therefore allow for far more flexibility in qualifying' for a mortgage. This is especially important for people trying to get into their first home.</p>
        <p>IMAGINE HOW NICE AN ENERGY .SAVER HOME WILL L(X)K TO PROSPECTIVE BUYERS.</p>
        <p>Prospective homebuyers will appreciate the money that an energy-efficient home will save them. They might, in fact, be willing to pay a little more fm; it. In todays competitive home market, you might need all the help you can get if you decide to put your house on the market.</p>
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        <p>Bringing the fKts to li^.</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0054" />
        <p>China And Russia Move Closer Together In Border Areas</p>
        <p>CRYING DEER RESTAURANT  Soviet railway workers Vadim Evdokimov, left, and Andrev Verdernikov pose outside the Crying Deer Restaurant on the Sino-Soviet road in the Chinese border town of Manzhouii recently. They are among a growing number of Russians coming to China with the increase in border trade. (AP Laserphoto by John Pomfret)</p>
        <p>A Warm Welcome</p>
        <p>By JOHN POMFRET Associated Press Writer MANZHOULI, China (AP) - At the Crying Deer Restaurant on Sino-Soviet Road, chef Sun Zhaomin cracks a toothless grin and runs to the back to grab two plates of his famous salad.</p>
        <p>Soviet friends, youve returned, he shouts. Soviet friends, we welcome you.</p>
        <p>Andrev Vedernikov and Vadim Evdokimov, railway workers in this town on the Soviet border, have come back for another meal.</p>
        <p>Down the street, at the International Guest House, members of the Soviet Friendship Delegation from ' Zabaikalsk dance the night away with their counterparts from the Manzhouii Sino-Soviet Friendship Committee.</p>
        <p>At the close of the evening, under revolving green and red disco lights, Xue Guiyuan, a Chinese trade official, waxes melodramatic.</p>
        <p>Two great nations are becoming friends again, he says. Two peoples are moving closer together.</p>
        <p>On train No. 390, heading east from Manzhouii, Ira Shamrett, 48, and her son, Kostya, 19, are off to see relatives in Harbin, the provincial capital of Chinas Heilongjiang province.</p>
        <p>We come from Siberia, announces Mrs. Shamrett in rusty Chinese, learned in the five years she spent in Harbin as a youngster. Its been more than 30 years since I saw my brother.</p>
        <p>I hope to learn about kung-fu, said her son. Its becoming very popular back home.</p>
        <p>Just as trade has blossomed between China and the Soviet Union, so have contacts between Chinese and Soviets. Since last year, China has allowed Soviets to return to its border provinces to visit relatives who stayed after relations between the two countries deteriorated in the late</p>
        <p>1950s. The Soviets have done the same for Chinese with family in</p>
        <p>Siberia and Soviet Central Asia.</p>
        <p>sia</p>
        <p>0r</p>
        <p>Both countries also have dropped visa requirements for businessmen.</p>
        <p>Vedernikov, 30, and Evdokimov, 29, who work on Soviet freight trains between Manzhouii and Zabaikalsk, studied Chinese for five years at the Chita Pedagological Institute, about 180 miles from the Chinese border.</p>
        <p>Now they handle freight and mail, which have both increased markedly as trade between the countries rises.</p>
        <p>I had a choice between a job as a teacher or work on this train, said Evdokimov, speaking a mixture of Chinese and English. The job is boring, but I wanted to see China. It fascinates me strongly.</p>
        <p>Vedernikov hop to parlay his excellent Chinese into a job as a businessmen.</p>
        <p>I was trained to be a translator, but when I finished school in 1980 things were still bad between our countries so there were no jobs. Now theres much possibility, he said.</p>
        <p>The two men said they were impressed at the economic growth in China, especially at the relative abundance of vegetables and con</p>
        <p>sumer goods. They also noted the in-b(</p>
        <p>creasing number of private businesses, of which the Crying Deer is one.</p>
        <p>"Private or cooperative businesses in the Soviet Union are just beginning, but here theyve been going on for about five years now, said Vedernikov. I think they can teach us very much.</p>
        <p>Sun, a 61-year-old former member of Chinas famed Eighth Route Army and regarded as the best chef in town, agrees.</p>
        <p>I say open the borders wide and well show them how to make money, he said. That would be a twist.</p>
        <p>LEONARDO MODEL  This model of a flying machine designed by Leonard da Vinci 540 years ago is a miniature of one being built for a January exhibition in London about the art and science of the famed painter, sculptor and inventor. The completed model will have a 36-foot wingspan. (AP Laserphoto)</p>
        <p>By JOHN POMFRET Associated Press Writer MANZHOULI, China (AP) - The clatter of freight trains has replaced the crackle of gunfire and the whoosh of combat jets in this town on the Soviet border.</p>
        <p>Criss-crossing the rolling grasslands of Inner Mongolia and Siberia, the trains provide noisy testimony to improving relations te-tween China and the l^viet Union.</p>
        <p>While officials in Beijing and Moscow still haggle over political matters, businessmen in Manzhouii and dozens of other towns along the 5,000-mile border are eagerly cementing closer economic ties.</p>
        <p>The Russians are very easy to deal with, said Zhang Chengbin, a businessman from a state-run firm that sold $31.4 million in meat to the Soviets in the first six months of this year. Theyre like the Americans, they dont worry too much about prices.</p>
        <p>Nows the time to get in on the trade, said Zhang Wei, a private businessman in Harbin, provincial capital of Heilongjiang. In the next couple of years it will explode. The Soviets dont have enough things and they like Chinese goods.</p>
        <p>In Manzhouii, connected to Russia by rail since 1901, Soviet trucks, chemical fertilizer, wood, steel, iron ore, electrical generators and bulldozers cram freight cars, moving south into the Chinese heartland.</p>
        <p>Soviet railway workers and trade delegations walk freely around the town of 30,000, dotted with traditional Russian houses, their log-cabin walls painted yellow and blue.</p>
        <p>Its fascinating to be here, said Andrev Vedernikov, a Russian railway worker, as he strolled down Sino-Soviet Road, the towns main street. Manzhouii is like a small museum of Russia 50 years ago. Across the border in Zatoikalsk, freight cars packed with Chinese meats, fruit, vegetables, grains, television sets, radios and thermos bottles fill the station.</p>
        <p>You think there are many trains here? said Vadim Evdokimov, another railway worker, as he looked out over Manzhouiis cluttered freight yard. Zabaikalsk is even busier.</p>
        <p>Chinese press reports say that in</p>
        <p>the first six months of this year, trade between the Soviet Union and China reached $1.3 billion, a 32 percent jump when compared to the same penod last year. But Chinese businessmen said the real amount could rival Chinas trade with the United States, which hit $10 billion last year.</p>
        <p>Indeed, on Aug. 29, the official Xinhua News Agency reported that combined trade in the border provinces of Heiloi^iang and Xinjiang had hit $707 million in the first half of 1988, or about 800 percent above their total for all of 1987.</p>
        <p>After two decades of tense relations, China and the Soviet Union started trading again in the early 1980s. It began with barter. This</p>
        <p>A'</p>
        <p>year, it expanded to include pur-</p>
        <p>third</p>
        <p>chases with currency from a third country, usually American dollars, and the export of Chinese labor to the Soviet Union. In a further twist, Chinese officials in Heilongjiang sai(l privately they expect Soviet technical advisers to return soon to China.</p>
        <p>In the 1950s, we traded because we were friends, said Xing Wen-zhao, an official in Heilongjiangs Bureau of Foreign Trade. Now, we do it because we need to. That is a healthy development. </p>
        <p>Chinese officials say labor export could become the* most important part of Sino-Soviet trade. Several said that China could easily supply the manpower to develop Siberia.</p>
        <p>In its report Aug. 29, Xinhua said about 10,000 Chinese workers were expected to head to the Soviet Union over the next year for construction and farming.</p>
        <p>Labor export began in July when more than 100 Chinese construction workers went to Zabaikalsk to build a gymnasium, several dormitories and a dining hall. Earlier in the year, 77 Chinese peasants were given 1,071 acres to grow cucumbers and watermelons in the Soviet Union north of Vladivostok across the border from Suifenhe, another important trading post.</p>
        <p>We gave the Russians half and then sold them the rest, said a Chinese official in Harbin who worked on the contract. Were looking at it as a model for future deals. It makes perfect sense because we</p>
        <p>have "a huge work force and they have a lot of land.</p>
        <p>For their part, Soviet officials in Manzhouii said they were interested in China for its consumer goods and food.</p>
        <p>Our agriculture and our light industry are weak, said a Soviet businessman, who spoke on condition of anonymity. China for us is like a big sMpermarket. Their stuff is generally good and inexpensive.</p>
        <p>In the early 1950s, the Soviet Union sent thousands of Soviet technical advisers to China to help set up factories.</p>
        <p>But relations soured in the late 1950s as China embraced a development model that emphasized people over machines, radically different from the Soviet plan.</p>
        <p>By 1962, all Soviet advisers had left China. Several years later, as China moved farther left in its Cultural Revolution, firefights broke out periodically along the border. In 1969, Soviet and Chinese troops fought pitched battles on Damansky Island, or Zhenbao in Chinese, on the Ussuri River. Clashes spread to Inner Mongolia.</p>
        <p>At night, gunshots would echo all around me valley, said Wen.He, a 59-year-old railroad worker, who sent his three sons south for a year to protect them. In the daytime, their jets and ours would fly above the town. We were all scared.</p>
        <p>Ties began improving slowly in the late 1970s, after Deng Kaoping took power and instituted a series of reforms to open China to the West. They have improved further since Mikhail S. Gorbachev became Soviet Communist Party chief in 1985 and began to reform his country.</p>
        <p>Now all you hear at night in Manzhouii are train whistles, said Guan Lancheng, a 54-year-old coal miner, as he strolled to his house on a bluff overlooking the hills of Siberia. It is very peaceful.</p>
        <p>Economic relations have not proceeded without glitches. The Chinese complain that the Soviets give them only their worst timber and charge that Soviet business practices are not flexible enough.</p>
        <p>road network are hampering trade growth.</p>
        <p>Soviet officials have provided some help to the Chinese transportation system, floating Beijing a $180-million loan earlier this year to recommence work on a railway to connect Chinas far west to Soviet Central Asia.</p>
        <p>Both countries have moved to further relax trade restrictions.</p>
        <p>As of Aug. 13, the two countries dropped visa requirements for businessmen. More border trading posts have opened. And in July, China announced that local governments - not only those in border provinces  would be allowed to cut deals withtheir Soviet counterparts.</p>
        <p>From that point on its been very busy in Manzhouii, said Xue Guiyuan, vice chairman of Manzhouiis Committee for Foreign Trade. Everyone is coming here to talk to the Soviets. Our hotels are</p>
        <p>Ecked. Were a hot spot, which is id(</p>
        <p>I of odd for such a little town.Trio Changes Concert Site</p>
        <p>BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. (AP) -Hurricane Gilbert stole the show from Frank Sinatra, Liza Minnelli and Sammy Davis Jr. in Texas this weekend, and the trio announced they will begin their national concert tour in Arizona instead.</p>
        <p>The three had been scheduled to open Saturday at Houstons Summit Arena but uncertainty over the storms direction forced them to shift to a show Sunday at Arizona State University in Tempe, spokeswoman Susan Reynolds said Thursday. The Houston appearance was rescheduled.</p>
        <p>Sinatra has performed with Miss Minnelli and Davis, but all thre have never performed together, Ms. Reynolds said.</p>
        <p>The trio have been rehearsing at Davis California home for several days.</p>
        <p>Theyre having a lot of fun together, she said.</p>
        <p>The Soviets accuse the Chinese of trying to cheat them. They also complain that Chinas poor railways and</p>
        <p>History, said Henry Ford, is more or less bunk.</p>
        <p>ssVs's  s</p>
        <p>s'</p>
        <p>s-N</p>
        <p>For Just $1.00, Give a Child More Insight Into the U.S. Government.</p>
        <p>Federal Facts -  poster designed to increase a child's 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 deflnitions 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>
        <p>NIE Department, The Daily Reflector P.O. Bos 1967 Greenville, N.C. 27835-1967</p>
        <p>*PIus $.50 postage and handling.</p>
        <p>I Enclosed is $1.50 per poster ordered;</p>
        <p>Name</p>
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        <p>I</p>
        <p>I Number of Posters Ordered</p>
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        <p>encour^w your child to look at the Sxpreuiont page, published bv The Daily Reflector each Wednesday of the school year, for additional in. formation concerning U.S. Government. Our column entitled "Federal Facto IS a wonderfol supplement to the poster, and can be clipped out and saved for future reference, or to make a government scrapbook Toaether It s a great way to learn!)  'er.</p>
        <p>THE DAILY</p>
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        <p>P.O. Box 1967, Greonville, N.C. 27835mm</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0055" />
        <p>Of The Orient</p>
        <p>The Dally Reflector, Greenville, N.C. Sunday, September 18,1968 C*15</p>
        <p>By MONIKA JAIN Associated Press Writer</p>
        <p>uTOKYO (AP)  Step aside noh and kabuki, and make way for the Metropolitan Opera, Zubin Mehta and 42nd Street.</p>
        <p>j Those familiar names in such Western culture capitals as London and New York are finding homes in Tokyo. A Japanese people are internationalizing, said theater critic Kenichiro Shirahama. From the destruction of war, the country has rebuilt itself and now become a glittering show business market.</p>
        <p>);The lineup of summer goodies lends weight to the claim, with I^dolf Nureyev, La Scala and the New York City Ballet among the many heavyweights bound for Tokyo to appease local hunger pangs for foreign theater.</p>
        <p>3 Its event heaven here, said Shirahama, who has also published several books on Japanese theater. For star performers, a Tokyo</p>
        <p>engagement'usually is more than just stage appearances. Many are given plum TV spots plugging sponsor products in their contracts.</p>
        <p>We even get requests from foreign artists to sponsor them in Tokyo, said Norio Takahashi of the J^an Performing Arts Corp. Theyve recognized the clout Japan holds and the need to succeed here.  </p>
        <p>For giant corporations, doubling as sponsors for the eager artists is a way of polishing the company name, Takahashi said, though they rarely make profits because of the astronomical costs and heavy taxes involved. *</p>
        <p>Asahi Breweries paid dearly when it sponsored a recent Met tour: It picked up a tab of $3 million to put the company on stage. But the amount is sma 1 compared to the estimated $17 million needed to transport Milans 500-member La Scala opera in September.</p>
        <p>Hefty door prices are inevitable to offset the production costs. But for</p>
        <p>the yen-strong Japanese, who still buy if the price is high, money is no obstacle.</p>
        <p>Peter Brooks The Mahabharata, for example, was sold out months in advance despite the $270 ticket price for the nine-hour play. Choice box seats for two were tagged at $615 each.</p>
        <p>Japan is an affluent society; said Toshiko Kuronuma, director of Japan Arts Corp. People can afford the high prices for the tickets.</p>
        <p>She also said the Japanese people are no longer satisfied with home productions of opera and ballet and now want to see the real thing.</p>
        <p>Their tastes have gone up, Kuronuma said.</p>
        <p>Language is also no handicap for the Japanese audience. The shows make sure to cater to every need.</p>
        <p>During its tour, the second to Japan but the first in 13 years outside North America, the Met projected Japanese subtitles on a small screen</p>
        <p>Kingsley Returns To The Theater</p>
        <p>"  By BOB THOMAS</p>
        <p>. ' Associated Press Writer ,"LOS ANGELES (AP)  After his once-in-a-lifetime role as the saintly Indian leader in Gandhi, Ben Kingsley faced the issue of what to do with the rest of his career.</p>
        <p>fHe solved it by returning to his roots in the theater. Now, five years after his Academy Award, he has cnmpleted five film projects in a year. The roles range from Shostakovich in Testimony to Lenin in an Italian miniseries to Dr. Watson in ^Without a Clue (with Michael Caine as Sherlock Holmes). Kingsleys current release, Pascalis Island, has drawn crit-ieal praise for his carefully shaded portrayal of an informer on a Turkish-held island in the Mediterranean early in the century.</p>
        <p>The British actor was here for the opening of Pascalis Island. He is a slight, semi-bald man whose diffident manner belies the onstage electricity he can generate as Hamlet or</p>
        <p>in his one-man show about the English actor Edmund Kean.</p>
        <p>'The character of Basil Pascal! is full of complexities  loyalty vs. betrayal, sexual ambiguity. How does Kingsley explain him?</p>
        <p>Wow, he exclaimed. I hope I have explained him in my performance. Im always hesitant to explain. Its like an artist who paints a portrait, and then he bores you by saying how he painted it and why. The painting should speak for itself.</p>
        <p>Pascal! is a very complex character; hes hard to talk about. He exists on several levels: hes a spy; he loves a woman, and that love is unrequited; hes a man who thinks in Turkish and speaks in English; hes a man who has a very private ambition and a private dream that no one knows about. Thats four levels already.</p>
        <p>It was easier to play the whole, composite man. You know the story of the ant and the centipede? Where the ant says to the centipede: How</p>
        <p>i</p>
        <p>THE HUMAN SIDE  Actor Tom Berenger, who starred in the film Platoon and others in which he plays a bad guy, says he enjoys bringing out the human side of the bad-guy roles hes play^. (AP Laserphoto)</p>
        <p>do you walk with all those legs? Ana the next day the ant finds the centipede on his back, counting his legs. Hed never thought about it before. I think acting is a bit like that. Kingsley researched his role with customary thoroughness. That included the Turkish language.</p>
        <p>Apparently it is impeccable. Im happy to say. There were some Turks around the location (on Simi, near Rhodes). Between takes they would come up to me and speak fluent Turkish. I had to apologize and say, Im sorry but I can only speak the 17 lines that are in the screenplay, he said.</p>
        <p>I had a very good teacher in England, and I had eight lessons of one-hour long and learned it by ear, like a musical score. I did know what I was saying, but I learned it phonetically.</p>
        <p>Pascalis Island is directed by James Dearden, the man who wrote Fatal Attraction, and co-stars Charles Dance (The Jewel in the Crown) and Helen Mirrin (Mosquito Coast). It was a reunion for Kingsley and Dance.</p>
        <p>When I was in the Royal Shakespeare Company 12 years ago, Kingsley recalled, I did a play called Hamlet, and I played Hamlet and Charles played Fortinbras. We became good friends. Theater com-)anies do bind people together. Its ike a little army of people, and we go over the top every night.</p>
        <p>Born in Lancashire, Ben Kingsley started in the theater at the top, in the Royal Shakespeare Company. No spear-carrying, no repertory. He found himself performing among Hie most distinguished actors of the English theater. After four years, he moved to the Royal Court, then the National Theater. In 1980, Richard Attenborough chose Kingsley, who is part Indian, for the epic Gandhi. After the Oscar, Kingsley devoted himself to Kean and other plays, declining some heavy offers from Hollywo^.</p>
        <p>When I won the Academy Award, I was not too well acquainted with the community here, he explained. Im a little bit more so now, and Im very fond of it. But it does have an energy of its own that can rush you down a certain path, and you can get stuck.</p>
        <p>I have very good advisers in London, New York and Los Angeles who work for the same company. They field most of the things, and they advise me very carefully. So I find that I didnt burn myself out, that five years later I can still present a variety of work.</p>
        <p>I think what keeps me less crazy  because its all relative  is my life in the theater and going out on the stage night after night after night and being dependent on concentration, a loyalty to the play and a loyalty to my fellow actors, without whom you can achieve nothing.</p>
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        <p>above the stage. 42nd Street, meanwhile, made do with simultaneous interpretation.</p>
        <p>But The Phantom of the Opera went one step further and was both translated and adapted for a local theater group, as were other musicals, including Cats, La Cage aux Folies and Les Miserables.</p>
        <p>As for The Greatest Show On Earth, which made its international debut last month in northern Sapporo, the singing American ringmaster is pulling in crowds with shouts of subarashii zoo-san, okashii piero (amazing elephants, strange clowns)  after a two-month Japanese-language crash course.</p>
        <p>In order to accommodate the flood of imported productions, concert and theater halls have been sprouting up all over Tokyo. In less than three years, more than a dozen have opened their doors, while about eight more halls will be inaugurated next year.</p>
        <p>Probably the most ambitious to date has been the Tokyo Globe Theater, a pinkish gray 650-seat structure built at a cost of $15.4 million. It was inaugurated with a performance by the Royal Shakespeare Company in April. Across town, the Casals Hall, dedicated to the late cellist Pablo Casals, opened last December.</p>
        <p>The sleek, new Suntory Hall was the site for the Israeli Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by Mehta. Seating over 2,000, it was among the first of the modern music halls to open its doors to imported artists two years ago.</p>
        <p>The rise in foreign theater has definitely influenced interest for new halls. Its a good feeling to listen to music in pleasant surroundings, Kuronuma said.</p>
        <p>She dismissed criticisms that the Japanese interest in foreign productions was merely a boom, and said it was even likely to replace noh and kabuki as the major theater form.</p>
        <p>Noh and kabuki appeal to the older generations, Kuronuma said, but opera, ballet and the like attract a bigger group of people, including the young crowd.</p>
        <p>With them the trend is toward internationalizing. Japanese theater, she added, is too traditional.</p>
        <p>KOREAN TRADITION  A young man wears traditional clothing and car-^ ries flowers during a Budhist ceremony at Bongum Temple in Seoul. Although^ Seoul is rapidly changing and modernizing, most Koreans cherish their heritage and the ways of the past. (AP Laserphoto Photo by Ed Reinke)</p>
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        <pb facs="00097037_0056" />
        <p>Dreams Of ^ Manmade River To Water Arid Libya</p>
        <p>By FRANCES DEMILIO Associated Press Writer</p>
        <p>BREGA, Libya (AP)  Despite sagging oil revenues, Libya is</p>
        <p>pushing ahead with Col. Moamtnar Gadhafis dream of piping fresh water from deep under the Sahara Desert to the shores of Tripoli and other thirsty coastal areas.</p>
        <p>A REASON TO SMILE  Biba Abdou carries one of her children while inspecting the crops on their farm in Karma, 35 miles northwest of Niamey, the capital of the African country of Niger. The drought weary people have reason to smile. All across West Africas Sahel, abundant rains promise the best harvest in two decades. (AP Laserphoto by Axel Schulz-Eppers)</p>
        <p>Nile River Floods</p>
        <p>Break Severe Drought</p>
        <p>ByNEJLASAMMAKIA Associated Press Writer</p>
        <p>CAIRO, Egypt (AP)  Nile River floods that brought death and devastation to neighooring Sudan have flowed into Egypt but in more benign and beneficial ways. They have broken a severe drought and removed a threat of power blackouts and water shortages for 54 million Egyptians.</p>
        <p>Egyptian officials who had been considering urgent measures to curb (rawer consumption now talk optimistically of bringing electricity to 20 percent of Egyptian villages that still dont have it.</p>
        <p>Desert develo()ment experts look forward to greening more fields and growing more crops.</p>
        <p>Not so fortunate were the Sudanese to the south. Floods triggered by more than 8 inches of rain there Aug. 4-5 kilH at least 96 people, displac 1.5 million in the Khartoum area alone and inundated tens of thousands of acres of some of countrys richest farmland. Some experts have estimated damage at about $200 million.</p>
        <p>But the Egyptians have the Aswan High Dam on its section of the Nile, and so far it has done its job of harnessing floodwaters that in past times washed wastefully over the land.</p>
        <p>Before the floods hit Sudan, however, Egyptians were worried.</p>
        <p>They watched with concern as the level of the dams Lake Nasser steadily dropped. In July the water level was just over 495 feet at the dam, 46 feet below full operating ca</p>
        <p>pacity. The generating capacity of its 12 turbines were cut in ha f. A dr</p>
        <p>iropof</p>
        <p>10 more feet would have shut them dpwn.</p>
        <p>But the waters have risen since the floods upriver, and by mid-August, Maher Abaza, the minister of electricity and power, was able to report: .We are well on our way out of the (^isis. It would have been a disaster had the level dropped to 147 meters (482 feet).</p>
        <p>At the end of August, the Lake Ilasser level was close to 525 feet at the dam, enabling the turbines to operate at 75 percent capacity. Full turbine performance is possible at</p>
        <p>541 feet, and the highest level ever recorded was 577*2 feet, in 1977.</p>
        <p>Abaza and other officials stress that Egypts fortunes will not be clear until October, after the rainy season upstream, by which time the waters would have stabilized along the Nile.</p>
        <p>Under normal conditions, the dam 590 miles south of Cairo is supposed to supply 30 percent of Egypts power.</p>
        <p>Since its completion with Soviet help in 1970, the High Dam already was credited with saving Egypt from drought in 1972 and flooding three years later.</p>
        <p>The current drought, which began in 1979, parched the entire Nile River Valley and starved thousands of Ethiopians and Sudanese upriver.</p>
        <p>Thanks to the 1,335-square-mile Lake Nasser, however, Egypt had enough water stored to irrigate the 6.4 million acres in its Nile Valley agricultural heartland and to supply an electricity demand increasing by 20 percent a year.</p>
        <p>Then, as unusually heavy rains came in Ethiopia and Sudan for the first time in nine years, the 333-foot-high, rock-filled High Dam prevented the floods in Sudan from spreading through Egypt.</p>
        <p>The rising Nile now means officials wont have to restrict the planting of crops like rice and sugar cane that require a lot of water.</p>
        <p>Egypts share of the Nile waters is restricted by treaty, and government ralicy is that irrigation needs must )e met. Since generating electricity consumes more water than required for irrigation and drinking, electricity proauction would have suffered had the drought continued.</p>
        <p>In his May Day speech. President Hosni Mubarak warned that hundreds of Egyptian villages might be plunged into darkness. Government television jingles and newspaper campaigns urged cautious use of water and electricity.</p>
        <p>"If there had been no flood, the effect would have been on the electricity supply next May, June and July, .said Es.sam Radi, the minister of ir-</p>
        <p>(See Nile Flood C'.|8)</p>
        <p>Have You MissedYour Daily Reflector?First Call Your Indoptndont Carrior. If You Aro Unablo To Roach Him Call Tho</p>
        <p>Daily Rofloctor.752-3952Dotwoon 6:00 P.M. And 6:30 P.M. Woolcdayi And 8 A.M. 7il 9 A.M. On Sundays.</p>
        <p>Gadhafi maintains his Great Manmade River Project will transform a nation that is 95 percent desert into a Garden of Eden abloom in fruits, vegetables and grain.</p>
        <p>One underpinning of the project is U.S. technology, reportedly in place before January 1986, when the Reagan administration ordered American companies to stop doing business in Libya on grounds that Libyans were behind terrorism aimed at Americans and other Westerners.</p>
        <p>Gadhafi, riding in a beat-up Range Rover behind Bedouins on horses, came here Aug. 26, 1986, to inaugurate the factory that makes the con-crete-and-steel pipes for the river. Since then, about 280 miles of the planned 12,500-mile pipeline have been laid in a trench cut through sand and underlying rock.</p>
        <p>The first stage, estimated to cost $4.5 billion, calls for 1,180 miles of pipeline to carry half a billion gallons of fresh water daily from wells in east central Libya to a reservoir at Ajdabiya near the coast on the Gulf of Sidra for distribution to areas near Sirte and Benghazi.</p>
        <p>In 1986, officials predicted the first stage would be completed in 1989. But factory manager Osman Jaouda estimated recently it would be finished in 1991.</p>
        <p>The South Korean construction company Dong-Ah is cranking out the pipes and digging through the desert to lay them down. Jaouda said the Koreans inexperience with desert terrain and weather caused the delay.</p>
        <p>Its not (a problem of) financing," said Jaouda.</p>
        <p>With current lower market prices, Libyas oil revenue is sharply down</p>
        <p>from the boom years of the late 1970s and early 80s. In 1980, oil revenue was $22 billion; by 1987, it had plunged to $6.6 billion.</p>
        <p>Diplomatic and business sources in Tripoli say Libya has cut back drastically on such projects as highway, school and hospital construction and is concentrating its resources on its oil industry, the military and the Great Manmade River.</p>
        <p>Every single Libyan is waiting for water, Jaouda said, leading a tour for foreign journalists flown on a government plane from Tripoli to Benghazi to see the project.</p>
        <p>The pipelines first part slices through bleak terrain, broken only occasionally by brush and date palms near oases, where camels and goats graze.</p>
        <p>Gadhafi comes to the desert frequently to check on progress, Jaouda said.</p>
        <p>The U.S. order against American operations in Libya caused a few hectic months without consultants but did not delay the project, Jaouda claimed.</p>
        <p>The firm of Root and Brown Inc. of Houston, Texas, turned over its duties to its subsidiary in England, and Britons and Canadians have taken the place of the estimated 300 Americans who were working on the project, Jaouda said.</p>
        <p>He added that the first water to flow will irrigate 247,000 acres of farmland near the Mediterranean city of Benghazi, Libyas second largest city.</p>
        <p>Other stages call for water to be tapped from wells in central west Libya and be delivered to Tripoli and for a pipeline to connect the Libyan capital, Tripoli, with Sirte. Eventually a pipeline is to run out to wells in</p>
        <p>Kufra, deep in the south, and the final phase will pipe water as far east as Tobruk, near the border with Egypt.</p>
        <p>Jaouda declined to give even the roughest estimate for completion of the entire project but that contracts will be awarded for stage two by the end of this year, a few months behind an earlier timetable.</p>
        <p>Businessmen and technicians here, including those who have worked on irrigation projects, express doubts that the project will guarantee that Libya can grow all it needs to eat.</p>
        <p>They cite the competing demands by major cities, where most of</p>
        <p>Libyas population lives, for more and better drinking water. They</p>
        <p>predict political pressures will die tate that more and more water transported by the pipeline will be diverted from agricultural to urban use.</p>
        <p>They also say that the project is counting on enthusiastic cooperation</p>
        <p>from farmers to see that the irrigated land is most efficiently farmed. But they add that state cooperative farms generally yield much less than possible because the workers wont make any more profit if they work harder or better.</p>
        <p>As an example, a European con-, struction executive, who is directing a small-scale irrigation project in the"! desert, said the project failed;'! because the farmers preferred to put ^ in their extra work into private lands,'  not the state-run irrigated fields.</p>
        <p>Jaouda said water from the project will be used for both state and private' ' lands.  ;</p>
        <p>He estimated that the Great Man- ^ made Rivers water, pumped up''; from natural wells 1,150 feet below ' the ground, will last 50 years.</p>
        <p>The pipe segments, each weighing"' 72 tons, and measuring 23 feet long and 13 feet in diameter, will probably ' outlast the water, he said.</p>
        <p>County of Pitt City of Greenville</p>
        <p>Attention -</p>
        <p>PUBLIC NOTICES</p>
        <p>NOTICE OF HEARING BY BOARD OF ADJUSTMENT OF THE CITY OF GREENVILLE</p>
        <p>* "i*"'*  *&amp;gt; Orwnvlll. Board of Ad|uatm.nt upon a raquatt by Pltl m t n  whereby  the  petitioner desirea to obtain a tpeciai use per-</p>
        <p>st.ntni! t! *  '*  *  Siwf* Shopping Center at 2430</p>
        <p> ?  J".*  '  ^hopping Center).</p>
        <p>ihJrh  *  September 22.1988, In</p>
        <p>the City Council Chambers of the Municipal Building.</p>
        <p>NOTICE OF HEARING BY BOARD OF ADJUSTMENT OF THE CITY OF GREENVILLE</p>
        <p>A public hearing will be conducted by the Greenville Board ot Adjustment upon a request by Eddie Varre whereby the petitioner desires to obtain a special use permit In order to operate the Eddie Varrell Trucking Company on the north side of William Tlngen Road (SR 1420) approilmately 230 laet</p>
        <p>fno will be at 7.00 PM, Thursday, September 22.1988 In the City Council Chambers of the Municipal Building.</p>
        <p>Lola D. Worthington City Clerk</p>
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        <pb facs="00097037_0057" />
        <p>A Tajl Obelisk Monument to A California Skinflint</p>
        <p>By CHARLES HILLINGLR L.A. Times-Wathlngton Post NewsServlM</p>
        <p>TUTTLE, Calif. - A 68-foot obelisk rising out of fields of tomatoes and bell peppers on a huge farm in this Central California hamlet is a mystery to hundreds of motorists who pass it every day The granite shaft stands on a massive concrete base containing 13 steps on each of four sides. Carved in the side of the obelisk are two decorative scrolls and the inscription: George Hicks Fancher. Bom New York State February 9,1828. Died in California March 30,1900.</p>
        <p>Who was Fancher? Is he buried under the obelisk? Why is a monument out there in the middle of the tomatoes and bell peppers?</p>
        <p>Jo get the answers to these questions and more, motorists on their wpy to and from Yosemite National Park on California Route 140 often turn to Janice Brooklin. Brooklin, 53, who runs Jans Market, a country stbre across the highway, has lived in this community (population 20) east of Merced all of her life. Her mother, Jennie Earl, who died last year at age 99, knew Fancher.</p>
        <p>.This is what Brooklin says about the mystery monument;</p>
        <p>;Mr. Fancher was a wealthy banker and farmer who owned all the laind for miles around. Mom told us that when Mr. Fancher died all kinds of stuff he valued as part of his life was buried with him under his monument, like the limbs of fruit tres, books and his favorite furniture.</p>
        <p>.Catherine Julien, 38, historihn and (jrector of the Merced County Courthouse Museum, maintains a file of dki newspamr clippings reporting Ranchers death and the 10-year cburt battle over the $25,000 he left for proper interment of my remains in a suitable monument.</p>
        <p>George Hicks Fancher was not a big spender during his lifetime, ribted Julien. He had a reputation of heing a skinflint who scrounged awav 1^ money and spent little on himself. The obelisk is his monument to %nself. _ _</p>
        <p>Rancher moved to (California from Untate New York in 1850 to [M'ospect f^* gold. He was a gold mimr for six yoars, farmed in Stockton for 13 ypars, then moved to Merced in 1869, vriiere he amassed a fortune as a farmer and banker.</p>
        <p>CNever married, Fancher left an ektate valued at $606,000 when he died at age 72. Except for the money fff his memorial, he left it all to 17 heirs  brothers, sisters, nephews and nieces.</p>
        <p>CAfter Fanchers death, a local schoolteacher, Robert Gracey, filed spit to stop erection of the monument</p>
        <p>and calliM for using the $25,000 instead to build a public library in Merced. The teacher saw a library as a more fitting tribute to the pioneer.</p>
        <p>But Fanchers heirs said no  the money had to be used to build the monument he requested.</p>
        <p>It took 10 years and two trips to the appellate courts before tiie heirs were finally granted permission to build the obelisk. When completed in 1911, Fanchers fanciful legacy was re^rtedly the largest tomb for an individual in California.  _</p>
        <p>' Fancher established a $1,000 trust in his will, the earnings of wWch were to be used for the care and maintenance of the monument.</p>
        <p>The remaining descendants of Fanchers brothers and sisters have no interest in maintaining it, so the task of administering the trust fund</p>
        <p>has fallen to an attorney in San Jose, Calif., Robert Loehr, '40, who tod[ over the job from an attorney friend who died.</p>
        <p>Loehr would just as soon do without the honor. He would like to present the trust to an individual or group in Merced County to take care of the tomb. Sc he has no takers.</p>
        <p>The earnings fromthe $1,000 trust fund are only enough to pay the annual property taxes for the acre on which the mon^ent stands, explained the attorney.</p>
        <p>The monument is a big mystery to -most people, said Julien. We get calls all the time askii^ what it means. It would be nice if there was a plaque on it explaining who Fancher was and that he left a big chunk of money to build the monument to himself.</p>
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        <p>MEMORIAL  Janice Brooklin, owner of a nearby store, fields questions about the memmial honmring Gewge Hicks Fancher in Tuttle, CaUf. Fancher, a banker, was a skinflint who bequeathed the obelisk as a monument to himself. (L.A.Times Photo by Jose Galvez)</p>
        <p>Lb.</p>
        <p>Cuban Immigrant Created Engraved Sfate Seals As His Thanks To America</p>
        <p>By KEVIN McGlLL Associated Press Writer NEW ORLEANS (AP) - F^ty shimmering squares of glass sit in a display case on the ground floor of the federal budding here, ea^ delicately engraved with the official seal of one ofue United States, beginning with Alabama, ending with %om-</p>
        <p>*liighteen years of research and labor went into the project, said Joseph Medina, the Cuban-lxNm artisan who crafted the squares as a  on</p>
        <p> _________________ fled</p>
        <p>Fidel Castros Cuba in 1961, he explained, with nothing but the clothes on their backs. A mi^e class family frightened by the suppression of Castros dictatorship, they were allowed to bring none of their possessions with them when they asked to join thdr son in the United States.</p>
        <p>They decided to leave everything behind,^ Medina recalled.</p>
        <p>Medina, who learned to encave glass in i!uba in the 1940s, had immigrated in 1948, honing his skills in New York before heading south and eventually setting up sh^ in New Orleans with his wife Lesbia in 1959.</p>
        <p>The federal government helped his parents immigrate two years later. They lived in a federally funded hoiking project and, becaise of their advanced age, the government paid some d tmir medical expenses.</p>
        <p>His parents woe evm* miodfiil, Medina said, that they were being helped by federal tax dollars paid by pec^e all over the country. They asked their son to find a way to express their gratitude.</p>
        <p>To thank everybody, Medina said, you had to do something that would be recogniublehy everyone in each state.</p>
        <p>In 1970 the Medinas set to work trying to find pictures of each state seal. They found that some reference materials had innacurate reproductions, so they wound up writing to the secretaries of state m many capital cities seeing official copies of the seals.</p>
        <p>As they acquired accurate copies, Medina began etching the patterns on squares of glass measurmg 26^-by-26^ inches. Each weighed about 16p(Mmds.</p>
        <p>m the engraving process described by Medina, the gl^ is held against a a sand wheel, a thin brick-colored disk made of stone-like material. It whirls at spe^ on an electrically driven machine resembling a smaUlatbe.</p>
        <p>The meticulous work progressed slowly but surely. But mere were disappointments along the way.</p>
        <p>Medinas father and mother died in the early 1970s. They never saw the finished product</p>
        <p>couples shop after her husbands accident.</p>
        <p>When the state seals were cometed in 1987, Medina said. Rep. Boggs helped the couple donate the glass seals to the federal government.</p>
        <p>Now, in a custom-made case of black granite, brass and chrome, the seals are on permanent display (m the ground floor of the New Orleans federal building named after Mrs. Boggs late husband. Rep. Hale</p>
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        <p>raise his right arm high enough to do the work. He had to abandon the task with almost 90 percent of the work done.</p>
        <p>Lesbia Medina, a Dominican RepuMic native who had learned the craft from her husband after they married in 1961, took over the project.</p>
        <p>It is painstaking work, Mrs. Medina said as she demonstrated the process by engraving letters and desigm on a drinking gmss.</p>
        <p>H you are troubled, you make mistakes. So you must block it out, said the woman, who took over the bulk of the engraving work in the</p>
        <p>Medinas are esc of the centeroiece of the display, the Great Seal ol the United States etched into a very old piece of pink glass, slightly smaUer than all the others. Medina acquired the rose-tinged glass square many years ago when a woman broi^t it mto his shop.</p>
        <p>I saved mat glass, he said, for something special.</p>
        <p>Show Goes On</p>
        <p>NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) -Whether on crutches or in a wheelchair, Steve Sanders of the Oak Ridge Boys will go on with the show despite having broken a bone in his right foot while playing touch football, a spokeswoman said.</p>
        <p>Sanders, lead singer on the Nashville groups new single, Gonna Take a Lot of River, broke his right foot-</p>
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        <p>Pursuant to (^eral Statutes and Federal Regulations, sealed pro-posois ore invited and will be received by the Greenville Housing Authority, 1103 Brood Street, Post Office Box 1436, Greenville, North Carolina 27839, until 11:00 o.m. September 30, 1988, ot which time the sealed proposals will be publicly opened for the following:</p>
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        <p>FROM OUT OF THE PAST  Two rural storage buildings, one of weathered wide planks and a second of large hewn logs, stand on the grounds of an abandoned home site between Kinston and Snow Hill, The owners ap</p>
        <p>parently care for the preservation of these structures, as weeds and other growth have been kept mowed and sturdy tin covers them. (Reflector Photo by Jerry Raynor)</p>
        <p>hi.</p>
        <p>Artifacts Storage Area _ At Harvard Is Upgraded</p>
        <p>By BRIAN MURPHY Associated Press W riter CAMBRIDGE. Mass. (AP)  75-567847 is quite comfortable at Harvard University.</p>
        <p>For nearly six centuries, the wool doll fashioned in the form of a weaver rested in a cool and dry Chanchay Indian crypt on the central coast of Peru.</p>
        <p>It now bears a catalog number and sits on a metal shelf in the climate-controlled attic of the Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology.</p>
        <p>Although the nearly 2 million artifacts that fill the Peabodys back rooms are rarely viewed by the public, museum curators from around the world have become fascinated by the transformation of the storage areas from musty chaos to a state-of-the-art sanctuary.</p>
        <p>This is the way it used to be, said assistant ethnology collections manager Kathy Skelly, gesturing toward a rack of boxes containing an unrelated assortment of relics. It was a mess.</p>
        <p>The boxes, however, are the final link with the Peabodys cluttered past.</p>
        <p>A nearly completed 10-year project to renovate and modernize the museums storage areas has led to precise and innovative preservation tactics.</p>
        <p>Large artifacts are kept in rooms where temperature and humidity are tailored to protect various materials. Small items are encased in acid-free mounts, which allow researchers to view but not touch objects. The tile floors are spotless. Motion alarms and sprinklers hang from the ceilings.</p>
        <p>People have the impression that the back rooms of museums took like their attics at home, said collections manager Una MacDowell. That was somewhat true in the past, but 1 think .what you see at the Peabody will be the trend in the future.</p>
        <p>In mid-October, about 30 curators and executives with the New England Museum Association toured the P^.ibodvs storage facilities, said y ' Curators from around id 1 ogularly inquire about its : civation efforts, she added.</p>
        <p>I tell them the key is funding, said MacDowell. "A lot of developing countries are interested in trying to improve the way they store artifacts they see as an important part of their national heritage.</p>
        <p>wares of a rug merchant, are now layered between specially treated paper.</p>
        <p>Very few museums have anything close to this, said Bruce. Its something that the public doesnt see, but I its a vital part of what a museum should be about.</p>
        <p>In a nearby room, with a climate modified for wood and leather objects, Skelly walked up an aisle studying the collection.</p>
        <p>She passed Plains Indian feather headdresses and clubs from South</p>
        <p>Pacific islands. Across the aisle, dozens of 85-year-old Chinese figurines were arranged to depict a funeral procession.</p>
        <p>And here is one of our treasures, said Skelly, stopping at a carved wood stool beaten by New Guinea tribal leaders during important decrees.</p>
        <p>MacDowell later banged on a metal table top.</p>
        <p>Were finally moving into the 20th century, she said. Its exciting.</p>
        <p>Charlotte Literary Contest</p>
        <p>CHARLOTTE - The Charlotte Writers Club will offer first, second and third prizes of $100, $50 and $25 to the winning entries in its annual statewide nonfiction article contest.</p>
        <p>The contest is open to all North</p>
        <p>Enclose name, address, phone number and title article on a separate sheet of paper attached to the entry. For return of entry, enclose a self-addressed stamped envelope.</p>
        <p>Carolina writers. Manuscipts must be original, unpublished and from 750 to 2,000 words. Contestants must</p>
        <p>submit three copies of their manuscript. Copies should be typewritten, double-spaced and on one side of 81/2 x 11 paper. The authors name must not appear on the manuscript, but the number of words should be place in the upper right-hand corner of the first page.</p>
        <p>Non-members of the Charlotte Writers Club must include with their entry a $5 check, payable to the Charlotte Writers Club. Only manuscripts may be submitted. Contest deadline is October 25.</p>
        <p>Mail entries to Victor Kirkman, 4550 Wedgewood Drive, Charlotte, N.C., 28209. For further information call 704-523-1769.</p>
        <p>New Curator At Duke</p>
        <p>DURHAM  Dorie Reents-Budet, Ph.D., has been named new curator of pre-Columbian art at the Duke University Museum of Art. She is an adjunct professor in the art history department.</p>
        <p>Reents-Budet received her BFA from the University of Northern Colorado and her PhD from the University of Texas. During her work as a graduate student four years ago, she studied the hieroglypic inscriptions on pottery in the Duke museums collection.</p>
        <p>Before returning to Duke this fall, she worked at the University of California at Santa Barbara, Harvards Dumbarton Oaks Center, and Johns Hopkins University.</p>
        <p>The museums Mayan pottery collection, which comprises the pre-Columbian collections largest single group from one culture, is one of the largest outside Mexico and Guatemala, according to Reents-Budet.</p>
        <p>Nile River Flood</p>
        <p>Its just not possible if you do not laine.</p>
        <p>commit the funding The approximate $2.5 million upgrading of the Peabodys storage rooms, funded by Harvard and the National Science Foundation, is one of the most comprehensive efforts at artifact preservation, said assistant director Rosemary Joyce.</p>
        <p>Joyce said similar programs have been sjwnsored at the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C. and the Bernice Bishop Museum in Honolulu.</p>
        <p>In a building older than some of the objects it houses, the problems of preservation were compounded at the Peabody, said MacDowell.</p>
        <p>In the summer, the attic was stifling. Objects stored in the basement levels were plunged into a chill throughout the winter, she added.</p>
        <p>We finally achieved a stable environment for our collection and that is very important, said MacDowell.</p>
        <p>Put it this way, said assistant archaeology collections manager Susan Bruce, Were happy and the artifacts are happy.</p>
        <p>Bruce led a team of experts which examined the Peabody's collection of nearly 1,00() pre-Columbian Andean textiles.</p>
        <p>The textiles, once stacked like the</p>
        <p>(Continued From C-16)</p>
        <p>rigation. It would have made no difference to irrigation.</p>
        <p>It can happen again. We must be ared.</p>
        <p>Egypts early summer marks the eriod v </p>
        <p>prepar</p>
        <p>My worry is that the first area affected would be the desert. ... If</p>
        <p>)eriod when the Nile is at its lowest, )efore the arrival of runoff from Ethiopias summer rains that provide 84 percent of the Niles flow.</p>
        <p>Faced with a possible disastrous shortfall in electricity, the government scrambled to build four thermal and gas-fired power stations at a cost of about $250 million.</p>
        <p>Mubaraks government, however, isnt letting Egyptians forget how close they came to disaster this year, partly through advertising campaigns urging water and electricity conservation.</p>
        <p>Starting in August, each apartment had to have a water meter rather than relying on a collective one for a building. The idea is that a more accurate reading of usage will increase water bills, thereby inciting families to keep down consumption.</p>
        <p>Additionally, the government has been considering a fee for irrigation water, so far distributed without charge.</p>
        <p>We should not forget the drought, said Adly Bishai, head of the Desert Development Center at the American University in Cairo.</p>
        <p>theres a power cut, or if theres weak electricity, pumps cant function.</p>
        <p>The government has reclaimed 1.5 million to 2 million acres of land, mostly in the desert between the Nile and Libya, and it plans to cultivate an additional 750,000 acres.</p>
        <p>But officials also have their eye on a new possible threat  locust swarms.</p>
        <p>There is more vegetation in the desert now, said &amp;amp;mir Nessim, head of the Agriculture Ministry department responsible for locust control. This will increase locust breeding, but we dont know by how much.</p>
        <p>SPORTS ARE FAVORED NEW YORK (AP) - Busy execu-tives would rather dance than watch. The Reebok Aerobic Information</p>
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        <p>percent of polled businessmen said that partici^ting in sports was their favorite way of spending leisure hours.</p>
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        <pb facs="00097037_0059" />
        <p>The Dally Reflector, Greenville, N.C. Sunday, September 18,1988 (J-IQCrickets And Worms Bait Farm Supplies Many Fishermen</p>
        <p>By J. MICHELLE YONCE Rome News-Tribune</p>
        <p>ROME, Ga. (AP) - Barbara Burnes plunged her well-manicured hand into the black soil and pulled out a clump of tangled, writhing worms.</p>
        <p>Its business, she said. You cant afford to be squeamish when its how you make your living.</p>
        <p>She and her husband, Charles, own Tuggle Bait Farm with his three brothers and do most of the managing of the farm. It is the largest such operation in northwest Georgia and keeps fishermen supplied even in adjoining states.</p>
        <p>Lee Tuggle, who founded the farm, and Burnes father were good friends. When Tuggle got ready to sell the 25-year-old bait farm, Burnes and his three brothers, David, Meredith and Woody, bought it.</p>
        <p>So seven years ago, the couple moved to the bait farm from Auburn, Ala., where Burnes had just finished up his chemical engineering degree at Auburn University and Mrs. Burnes was working in real estate.</p>
        <p>Their friends in Auburn were baffled, Burnes said.</p>
        <p>They looked at us like wed just bought the Brooklyn Bridge, he said.</p>
        <p>The Burneses raise crickets  millions upon millions of them. Tuggle Bait Farm also buys ni^htcrawlers, pinkworms, redworms, jumpers and mealworms in bulk for sale as fish bait. And, the farm buys and sells a special kind of carp used for gobbling up unwanted plant life in ponds.</p>
        <p>When they arrived, Mrs. Burnes said, We didnt know much about it. ^ow, Burnes manages the bait farm while Mrs. Burnes takes orders and coordinates the delivery routes.</p>
        <p>The best way to get into a business, Burnes now believes, is "whether you know anything about it or not, just jump in and try. Burnes said his brother, David, also works at the farm, helping run it and also han</p>
        <p>dling the jobbers, who buy from Tuggle Bait and resell to bait shops.</p>
        <p>Woody and Meredith Burnes opted not to work there, but instead build houses - Woody in Rome and Meredith in Florida.</p>
        <p>The farm consists of five buildings on about 300 acres of land. It has 12 delivery trucks and seven employees, most of whom deliver the bait and work in the crickethouses, ' Burnes said.</p>
        <p>Four of the five buildings are used to raise crickets from eggs to gnatsized babies to adult crickets, some of which are sold and some of which are used for reproduction to replenish the cricket crop, he said.</p>
        <p>Crickets die a couple of weeks after reaching maturity, and reproduction further shortens their life span to a week or five days afterward.</p>
        <p>Usually all five of the buildings are used as cricket houses, Mrs. Burnes said, but the droughts hurt us so bad that we shut down one building.  Its been a rough year, very rough, she said. Theres not enough water and the fish never started biting. Its too hot for people to sit out on a lake and fish. When Southerners dont fish, they dont use crickets and worms.</p>
        <p>Said Burnes, Well wait and see if its going to be better,</p>
        <p>Tuggle Bait has had up to 25 employees in the spring and summer, but with the drought this year, fewer were needed, Mrs. Burnes s^id.</p>
        <p>FAILING COMPANIES NEW YORK (AP) - When a com-&amp;gt;any seems doomed to failure )ecause of economic factors beyond its control, it can adopt an orderly plan for liquidating its assets to pay off creditors or it can file a voluntary petition for bankruptcy reorganization, says Marvin A. Blumenfeld.</p>
        <p>Blumenfeld is president of April-Marcus Inc., a firm which has helped many companies liquidate their assets. Blumenfeld says:</p>
        <p>Adopt-A-Pet</p>
        <p>The Pitt County Humane Society Pet of the Week is this si tabby declawed cat named Thinker. She is litter-trained anc Call the Pitt County Humane Society, 756-1268. </p>
        <p>Also being sought homes are the following:</p>
        <p>A spayed female long-haired calico cat, a spayed female orange cat, a spayed female black cat and a neutered male black cat. All have shots started and are dewormed. Humane Society 756-1268.</p>
        <p>Puppies  mixed Labs, collie-shepherds; a mixed huskey, shepherd-Labs. All have shots started and are dewormed. Humane Society, 756-1268.</p>
        <p>Two spayed female mixed terriers, three spayed female mixed Labs, a spayed female Lab-shepherd, a spayed female Lab-birddog, a spayed female mixed pointer, a spayed female mixed retriever, a spayed female mixed Doberman, two male mixed Labs - one black, one yellow; a neutered male mixed sheepdog, a male mixed German shepherd, a male mixed huskey and a male cockerpoo. All have shots started and are on heartworm prevention. Humane Society, 756-1268.</p>
        <p>A gray tabby and white spayed female cat, litter-trained, good indoors or outdoors, and a gray tabby kitten. 758-2232, leave message.</p>
        <p>A black male kitten, litter-trained. 758-0274. </p>
        <p>Six 7 week-old kittens - three black and white, two gray tabby and one black. 825-0425.</p>
        <p>Two 1-year-old spayed female mixed Labs - one black, one yellow. Both on heartworm prevention and having all shots. 355-3498, leave message.</p>
        <p>Three collie puppies, with shots, dewormed. At foster home. 355-5998.</p>
        <p>An iguana. At foster home, Grifton, 524-4330.</p>
        <p>Two 6-week-old female mixed Labs. 758-4257 or 355-4661.</p>
        <p>A spayed female calico declawed cat and a neutered male black declawed cat, both with shots. 758-1750 or 756-7807.</p>
        <p>A brown male Boykin spaniel that likes outdoors. Has shots and is dewormed and on heartworm prevention. 756-3325.</p>
        <p>A male Pug and a spayed female Pug. both housetrained, with shots and on heartworm prevention. 752-2025.</p>
        <p>Lost in Country Squire area - a 3-month-old smoky gray male kitten. 756-3543</p>
        <p>Found in Cherry Oaks - a cocker spaniel puppy. 756-7715</p>
        <p>Lost on Library St. - a 4-month-old female black and silver German shepherd. 758-5031.</p>
        <p>Lost in Winterville - a mate black and brown rat terrier. 355-6795.</p>
        <p>Lost in Riverbluff area - a neutered male tortoiseshell cat with some white. 752-9219</p>
        <p>Lost in D.H. Conley area - a male black and white poodle-Pekingnese. Last seen with Rabies tag. 756-2932.</p>
        <p>Lost in Club Pines area - a mate brown and white Brittany spaniel. 756-7026.  1</p>
        <p>Found nar Falkland Elementary School - a small female dog with medium long hair, black with white on chest. 752-2701.</p>
        <p>Found near Simpson about a month ago - a black and white young adult cat with blue nylon cofiar with bell, 752-1509 or 756-1268.</p>
        <p>To list an animal in this column, published free of charge each Sunday, call Elizabeth Savage, 756-4867, Bobbie Parsons, 756-1268, or Carol Tyer, 752-6166. Humane Society hours are 2 to 5 p.m. Saturday, Sunday and Monday and the remainder of week, by appointment, 756-1268. To request a Humane Society investigation, call Barbara Haddock, 752-9922. To request assistance for wild animals and birds, call Grifton, 524-4.330. To become a member, call 756-1268. Donations to the Humane Society may be sent to P.O. Box 8121, Greenville, N.C.27835.</p>
        <p>Editors note: The deadline for entries In each Sundays column Is Thursday at 4 p.m.</p>
        <p>Burnes said the cricket-growing business is extremely competitive, because each farm in Georgia and surrounding states has its own hush-hush methods of raising crickets, involving matters such as feeding them and allowing some to reproduce while preventing others from reproducing so they can be sold as fish bait.</p>
        <p>Its the most secretive bunch youve ever seen. Theyre petrified someone will find out what theyre doing, Burnes said of the older generation of cricket growers. Theyve done such things as cutting holes in the tops of each others cricket houses to see how their competition grows the insects, he said, and have</p>
        <p>been known to run their trucks early on their competitions routes.</p>
        <p>Burnes has even heard tales of cricket growers hiring their competitions help away so they can learn the enemys methods of cricket-growing. Someone offered a cricket grower in Tennessee $10,000 to share his secrets, he said.</p>
        <p>When a cricket-grower in Mississippi was asked to share the methods he had worked for years to perfect, Burnes said, the grower replied, Its cost me about $350,000 to learn how. If youre interested, come on over, bring your pocket-book, and tell me how much you want toknow.</p>
        <p>There are many tricks of the trade,</p>
        <p>Burnes said, that can be learned only by years of raising the chirping insects, such as the right temperature and humidity, changing feed at the right time, and finding the right mix of feed.</p>
        <p>Very few make it that try it, he said. Lee (Tuggle) did all the scrat-chwork. We still try some different things. Some work, some dont.</p>
        <p>The crickets, which take from 28 to 60 days to raise, are grown in cardboard boxes, about 5,000 to 6,000 per box, with a strip of slick tape placed just inside the edge so they cant escape.</p>
        <p>However, Burnes remembers the day about 3 million did. It happened after they had run out of room at the</p>
        <p>farm and rented a building closer to Rome to grow a houseful of crickets. They threw up make-do racks to hold the cardboara boxes of crickets.</p>
        <p>As the crickets grew, the boxes got heavier, Burnes said, and the make-do racks collapsed. We had more than 400 boxes, close to 3 million crickets, on that floor, he said.</p>
        <p>With crickets going for about $14 per thousand, that was about $42,000 in crickets running free in the house. So, everyone from the cricket farm went over and worked well into the evening scooping up crickets.</p>
        <p>In a good year, Tuggle Bait sells from 25 million to 30 million crickets, Burnes said, but it varies so much depending on the weather. </p>
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        <pb facs="00097037_0060" />
        <p>C-20 Thq Dally Reflector. Greenville, N.C. Sunday, September 18.1988</p>
        <p>Sharp Division On The Fate Of Pandas</p>
        <p>EDITORS NOTE  A new survey</p>
        <p>suggests there may be more giant pandas in the wilds of China than previously thought, but wildlife experts say they are becoming increasingly endangered by humans encroaching on their turf. An international debate is also raging over Chinas practice of loaning the animals to American zoos.</p>
        <p>By KATHY WILHELM</p>
        <p>Associated Press Writer WOLONG, China (AP)  Scientists and conservationists who rallied to save the rare giant panda when its favorite food ran out are sharply divided over what to do next.</p>
        <p>The World Wildlife Fund, a conservation group and Chinas main foreign partner in panda research, recently turned to the U.S. courts to determine if Chinese panda loans to American zoos are exploitative, as it says, or educational, as China says.</p>
        <p>Some Chinese and Western experts say China should do more to breed captive pandas, while others say the on y solution is to move humans from panda reserves.</p>
        <p>Even the size of the panda population is under debate. The World Wildlife Fund is preparing to release survey results that put the number of pandas in the wild at 1,100 to 1,500, startlingly higher than previous estimates.</p>
        <p>A 1977 Chinese survey put the figure at 1,000. and the population is known to have dropped since then due to poaching and a shortage of the pandas favorite food, bamboo.</p>
        <p>Ken Johnson, a University of Tennessee zoologist who led the survey, says the earlier count was sloppy and too conservative.</p>
        <p>But Zhou Shoude, the deputy director of Chinas largest panda reserve, the 800-square-mile Wolong Nature Reserve near Chengdu in Southwestern China, discounted Johnsons figures. which were based largely on a count of panda nesting areas and droppings.</p>
        <p>The experts agree, however, that the panda is steadily decreasing in number and that five years after an international alert went out to save it, the outlook is grim.</p>
        <p>There are more pandas than we expected, Johnson says, but they are more critically endangered than we expected."</p>
        <p>Pandas, black-and-white bear-like animals that some say are related to the bear and some say to the raccoon, are native only to China. Experts believe their ancestors lived 20 million years ago, contemporaries of the mastodon and other extinct species.</p>
        <p>A few hundred years ago, pandas still roamed the lowlands. But humans gradually pushed them into the mountains of western Chinas Sichuan, Gansu and Shaanxi provinces, the only places they now live in the wild.</p>
        <p>World attention was drawn to their plight in 1983 when their dietary staple, arrow bamboo, flowered and died as it does every 40 or more years. The World Wildlife Fund collected more than $4.1 million toward saving the animal, and the Chinese government and citizens contributed millions more.</p>
        <p>More than 62 animals starved before the bamboo began growing again a few years later.</p>
        <p>That crisis over, experts are looking more critically at Chinas conservation program. They acknowledge Chinas limited resources, praise its good intentions and press for more action  without agreeing on the best course.</p>
        <p>Except for the pandas, theres not a lot thats black and white about it, Ken Cook, a spokesman for the World Wildlife Fund, said in a telephone interview from Washington.</p>
        <p>China is dealing sternly with one obvious problem  poaching. Its highest court last year ordered panda killers be given long prison terms or even the death sentence.</p>
        <p>China has been less decisive, however, in dealing with another human problem - ordinary peasants. Their encroachment on the rare animals turf, including inside Chinas 12 panda reserves, advances steadily.</p>
        <p>More than 4,(KK) peasants live in Wolong, which became a showcase for panda conservation in 198 when the World Wildlife Fund helped build a breeding center there. The peasants' terraced corn and potato crops climb high up the slopes ot mountains roamed by [)atidas Johnson believes the peasants must be moved -- if not from Wolong, then from other reserves.</p>
        <p>They've already destroyed Wolong. essentially, he says. Human settlements have marooned the pandas in small groups on mountain tops, preventing them from mingling in the mating season and creating the danger of localized in-breeding, he says.</p>
        <p>Johnson dismissed breeding centers, artificial reproduction and Chinese efforts to develop test-tube pandas, saying, We dont have that much time.</p>
        <p>However, other scientists believe wild pandas cannot be saved in adequate numbers, and that breeding centers are needed to re-populate the forests. Here, too, Chinas program falls short.</p>
        <p>You need one person who knows exactly where all the pandas are and their histories, says Devra Kleiman, assistant director of research at Washingtons National Zoo.</p>
        <p>Captive pandas, kept mainly in pairs in zoos, should instead be kept in large breeding centers where they would have greater chances of finding compatible mates, she says. At a minimum, she adds, zoos should cooperate in breeding their pandas.</p>
        <p>William Conway, director of the New York Zoological Society and designer of the Wolong breeding center, agreed on the need for two or three national breeding centers where pandas could be carefully managed in an accelerated propagation program.</p>
        <p>But Chinese zoos cooperate little. The Forestry Ministry, in charge of conservation, said it does not even keep count of how many pandas are in captivity in China. Official media reports say there are more than 80.</p>
        <p>Wolong, with eight captive pandas, puts males and females together only for the brief spring mating season, as do many zoos. Then, relative strangers and unable to act out their elaborate mating rituals of the wild, the pandas are notoriously uninterested in romance.</p>
        <p>According to Chinese count, captive pandas worldwide have produced fewer than three dozen surviving cubs.</p>
        <p>I dont think anyone is pleased with the progress that has been made in captive breeding, Cook says. He said the fund was disappointed that the breeding facility it helped build in Wolong had only produced one panda, born in 1986.</p>
        <p>Wang Menghu of the Forestry Ministry says breeding has suffered from too little equipment and trained staff.</p>
        <p>But he says Chinas efforts compared well with other countries, noting that few Western zoos with pandas have been able to produce surviving offspring.</p>
        <p>It was breeding and money that dragged the panda into the U.S, courts.</p>
        <p>In a suit still pending, the World Wildlife Fund and American Association of Zoological Parks and Museums accused the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service of allowing commercial exploitation of pandas on loan to U.S. zoos from China.</p>
        <p>Six U.S. zoos have borrowed separate pairs of pandas for short periods, paying China up to $500,000 and in turn reaping millions in ticket and concession sales. Dozens of other zoos are hotly competing for pandas.</p>
        <p>Our concern was that the number of loans was increasing sharply, Cook says.</p>
        <p>Hie lawsuit failed to stop the loan of two Wolong pandas to the Toledo, Ohio, zoo in May. However, the Fish and Wildlife Service refused to let another panda pair be shown at the Michigan State Fair, saying it would disrupt their breeding in China.</p>
        <p>It also suspended consideration of future panda loans, including one planned for the Atlanta Zoo for September, while it works out a new policy. Among other things, the service said it wants proof China uses the fees it gets for conservation.</p>
        <p>Chinas government has not responded, but its Association of Zoological Gardens announced a ban on panda loans where foreign organizations might profit, implying the commercialism was on the other side.</p>
        <p>Wang, of the Forestry Ministry, said the halt in panda loans was Americas loss. It makes no difference to us, he says. Its not as if China goes around saying, Will you take a panda?</p>
        <p>But Cook says he hopes the suit will make a difference, by ending Chinas loans of breeding-age pandas and requiring U.S. zoos to use panda revenues for conservation.</p>
        <p>We are not optimistic about the species right now, he says.</p>
        <p>Johnsons solution is to move humans from critical areas and plant corridors of trees and bamtioo tie-tween panda habitats so they can roam freely and mate naturally  something he said pandas have no trouble doing in the wild.</p>
        <p>Chinese officials, while agreeing in theory, show no signs of acting. Wolongs deputy director, Zhou, says he tries to 'educate the peasants in the hope tliey will leave voluntarily, but he has no fallback plan if they dont.</p>
        <p>A</p>
        <p>WOMEN IN BUSINESS NEW YORK (AP) - Women are starting and operating their own businesses in growing numbers.</p>
        <p>The most recent government statistics show that women now own 3.7 million businesses, generating $65 billion a year. That is almost one-third of all firms in the United States. A decade ago. women owned 700,000 companies.</p>
        <p>Traditionally, women-owned businesses were mainly in retail services. But this is changing. In a Women of Enterprise awards program- organized by Avon Products Inc. and the U.S. Small Business Administration, the winners included female owners of a construction company, janitorial service, oil pro duction'company, management con suiting firm and a sausage-making firm.</p>
        <p>1988 Lowe's Companies, Inc.</p>
        <p>Louie's</p>
        <p>SALE ENDS SEPT. 23</p>
        <p>6" Thick X15" R-1? Unfaced</p>
        <p>Thick X15" R-1lFace| Fiberglass insulation</p>
        <p>$H 199</p>
        <p>.Facing</p>
        <p>19,000 BTU</p>
        <p>Kerosene</p>
        <p>Heater</p>
        <p>$10999</p>
        <p>L   )  Convection heater</p>
        <p>' Eic *J/  *Auto ignition</p>
        <p>Auto extinguish Stainless steefbumer Fuel gauge Meets new UL requke-ments #30488</p>
        <p>Woodchief</p>
        <p>Heater</p>
        <p>$24999.</p>
        <p>Burns wood up to 2 feet in length Firebrick-lined Cast iron grates #37370</p>
        <p>4'xSO'</p>
        <p>Ctear Plastic Sheeting</p>
        <p>INSULATE</p>
        <p>. NOW</p>
        <p>AND GET A</p>
        <p>FREE NFL TEAM JACKET</p>
        <p>24"x3r</p>
        <p>Clear</p>
        <p>Styrene Sheet</p>
        <p>Electric Yard Blower</p>
        <p>Vs HP universal motor Extension tube and 30 concentrator nozzle Lighhweight and compact #91551</p>
        <p>CPO&amp;amp;</p>
        <p>T</p>
        <p>AS LOW AS..-</p>
        <p>099</p>
        <p>$6999</p>
        <p>Aluminum Storm Window</p>
        <p>23Vx38V Helps save heat &amp;amp; air conditioning losses Reduces outside noises Protects your homes windows from the elements #13132 Other Sizes Of Storm Whtkmm At Lome Low Price!</p>
        <p>36"</p>
        <p>Bronze</p>
        <p>Fullview</p>
        <p>Storm</p>
        <p>Door</p>
        <p>r thick Extruded aluminum frame Safety glass panel Push-button latch with anti-lockout Vinyl bottom sweep Wather-stripped Right-hand or lefthand model #1568839</p>
        <p>Aluminum And Vinyl Door Sweep</p>
        <p>Silver</p>
        <p>rxlO YU. Roll Duct Tape</p>
        <p>88</p>
        <p>#41002</p>
        <p>$12999</p>
        <p>Vi" pipe #244n; 'fisulation for</p>
        <p>16" Chainsaw With Carrying Case</p>
        <p>2 cu. in. engine IS" sprocket tip bar Automatic and manual chain oilers Solid state ignition Safety trigger Wraparound chain brake/handguard Throttle latch Chain catcher #91614</p>
        <p>P.C 99^</p>
        <p>fiwiKIno* 12' ^ Wpe Wrap Heat Tape With</p>
        <p>Thermostat</p>
        <p> *999</p>
        <p>Water Heater</p>
        <p>insulation</p>
        <p>Blanket</p>
        <p>Fits most water heaters Save 05 energy bills Top available extra #24414 '</p>
        <p>Loiui^^</p>
        <p>up TO *1,000</p>
        <p>instant Credit!</p>
        <p>Need Credit? JUttASkI</p>
        <p>2728 Memorial Dr. Greenville 756-6560</p>
        <p>With Everyday low Prices!</p>
        <p>&amp;lt; AiCustomer Service " TisOur #1 Priority!</p>
        <p>cmoe  'th  T  p.m.</p>
        <p>Sat. 8 a.m. 'til 5 p:m.</p>
        <p>HOURS:</p>
        <p>Sun. 1 p.m. 'til S p.m.</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0061" />
        <p> I</p>
        <p>%&amp;gt;^</p>
        <p>\ ^)y</p>
        <p>J\</p>
        <p>\</p>
        <p>L!</p>
        <p>i</p>
        <p>m</p>
        <p>\Vt</p>
        <p>\\^ \</p>
        <p>\w</p>
        <p>'.cn</p>
        <p>Li</p>
        <p>eiS</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>A</p>
        <p>\</p>
        <p>t</p>
        <p>7</p>
        <p>k</p>
        <p>When you want tQ reach as many people as you can and spend the least amount of money doing it, classified is your answer! Whether placing an ad or checking classified for that unique something buyers, sellers, collectors and employers all agree - classified is a real bargain!</p>
        <p>CALL OUR aASSIFIED DEPARTMENT!DAILY REFLECTOR</p>
        <p>m</p>
        <p>Itn</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0062" />
        <p>0^22 Th Dally Reflector. Greenville, N.C. Sunday, September 18,1988</p>
        <p>THEDAaY</p>
        <p>JCTOR</p>
        <p>52-6166classified</p>
        <p>'M</p>
        <p>rates</p>
        <p>TRANSIENT RATES Minimum 3 Lines</p>
        <p>1 Day 90* per line per day</p>
        <p>2-3 Days.. .68* per line per day 46 Days.. .61* per line per day 7-14 Days. .55* per line per day</p>
        <p>CUSSIFIED DISPUY $4.15 Per Col. Inch Contract Rates Available</p>
        <p>office hount</p>
        <p>Monday thru Friday 8:30 a.m,-5:00 p.rn</p>
        <p>thoauyueflectob</p>
        <p>rMsnas the rigM to wM or re leet any aArortlsamant tubml^ lad.</p>
        <p>errors</p>
        <p>Plaasa raed your ad carefully the first time it appears in the paper If it needs a correction as a result of our error, please call us before 9:30 am. and we will correct it lor you. The Daily Reflector cannot make allowance^! *or errors after the 1st day of :&amp;gt;ublicatlon.</p>
        <p>cancellations</p>
        <p>It you wish to cancel an ad. ptease call before 9:30 am on the day that is is scheduled to run and we will remove it. We cannot cancel ads after 9:30 am.</p>
        <p>deadlines</p>
        <p>ClassHiml Display Dsadllnas</p>
        <p>Mon...........Fri.  Noon</p>
        <p>Tues...........Fri.  4p.fn</p>
        <p>Wed........Mon.  4  p.m</p>
        <p>Thurs........Tues. 4 p m</p>
        <p>PTi...........Wed._Noon</p>
        <p>Sun........-VVed.ap.m^.</p>
        <p>Classifisd Lins Ossdlinss</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>classified index</p>
        <p>MISCELLAWEOUS</p>
        <p>Personals  %  002</p>
        <p>In Memonam ......003</p>
        <p>CardOIThanks...............005</p>
        <p>Special Notices .......007</p>
        <p>Travel 4 Tours.............009</p>
        <p>Automotive . .  010</p>
        <p>Cfiik) Care.........044</p>
        <p>Day Nursery  045</p>
        <p>HeailtiCare ' .......047</p>
        <p>Employment  055</p>
        <p>For Sale...........067</p>
        <p>Instruction ........... 114</p>
        <p>Lost And Found  tt5</p>
        <p>Business Services............ttS</p>
        <p>Business Opporlunmes .</p>
        <p>122</p>
        <p>Teachers .............</p>
        <p>062</p>
        <p>Professional</p>
        <p>124</p>
        <p>Technical i Trades.......</p>
        <p>. 063</p>
        <p>Home Improwmenis</p>
        <p>125</p>
        <p>Work Wanted......,. . .</p>
        <p>064</p>
        <p>Real Esiaie.....</p>
        <p>.130</p>
        <p>Wanted.............</p>
        <p>190</p>
        <p>Appraisals</p>
        <p>131</p>
        <p>Roommate Wanted.....</p>
        <p>192</p>
        <p>Loans And Mortgages</p>
        <p>153</p>
        <p>Wanted To Buy.........</p>
        <p>.....194</p>
        <p>Rentals</p>
        <p>160</p>
        <p>Wanted To Lease.......</p>
        <p>. 196</p>
        <p>Wanted To Rent.........</p>
        <p>198</p>
        <p>WANTED</p>
        <p>Help Wanted</p>
        <p>056</p>
        <p>Adminislrative</p>
        <p>057</p>
        <p>Apartment For Rem.</p>
        <p>161</p>
        <p>Clencal</p>
        <p>058</p>
        <p>Business Rentals.......</p>
        <p>163</p>
        <p>Medical</p>
        <p>059</p>
        <p>Campers For Rent......</p>
        <p>167</p>
        <p>Miscellieous</p>
        <p>060</p>
        <p>Conioiifeums For Rent.</p>
        <p>...170</p>
        <p>Sales.......</p>
        <p>061</p>
        <p>Farms For Lease........</p>
        <p>.. 140</p>
        <p>RENT/LEASE</p>
        <p>Houses For Rent</p>
        <p>Lots For Rent......</p>
        <p>Merchandise Rentals Mobile Homes For Rent Mobile Home Lots For Rent Office Space For Rent Resort Property For Rent Rooms For Rent</p>
        <p>173</p>
        <p>175</p>
        <p>177</p>
        <p>179</p>
        <p>180 181 184 18?</p>
        <p>SALE</p>
        <p>001 Public Notices</p>
        <p>specified in the technical portion of the specifications. See plan for site locations. Bids will be received until October 11,1988 at 3:00 PM in fhe Council Chambers, third floor of the</p>
        <p>Municipal Building, Greenville, NC. (Note: Time of Day shall be as Determined by the Executive</p>
        <p>i Housing Authority of the Ci ty  Greenville, North Carolina WiH receive bids for the fur nisbing of all labor, materials, et|uipment and services re (ilred for construction of Pro-ifcaNC 19 P022 009, which con sTsts of five (5) buildings con-tgining thirty-two units and a general maintenance building. She work is to include certain uAilities, site improvement and landscape work as</p>
        <p>Director of the Housing Author! fy.)</p>
        <p>Proposed forms of Contract Documents, including plans and specifications, are on file at the office of the Housing Authority of the City of Greenville, 1103 Broad Street, Greenville, North Carolina, and af the office of Dudley, Shoe, Ellinwood and Associates, 200 East First Street, Greenville, North Carolina 27834.</p>
        <p>Bid Proposals will be received under one proposal from the General Contractor. General Contractor's proposal shall in</p>
        <p>classified display classified DISPUY</p>
        <p>NUTFVnOIM SWRVIC6S</p>
        <p>RENAL DIETITIAN</p>
        <p>Challenging full time position with a dynamic organization offering dlaly-Is services in several locations In eastern North Carolina. Please sub-fTiit resume and salary history to Linda Koscianski. All inquiries will be confidential.</p>
        <p>Wr INTERNAL * RENAL MEDICINE ASSOOATES. Ud</p>
        <p>6D0CT0BSIWmaittNVIUiNOOTHCAIWUMA27*34(#W| 752^</p>
        <p>nncouNTY GOVERNMENT EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY SOCIAL WORKER II Hiring Range $19,396-21.372</p>
        <p>, Responsibilities of this position are to co-</p>
        <p>- ordinate day care services for eligible .'Children of Pitt County and to also to conduct -investigations of cases of child abuse and : neglect.</p>
        <p>. Minimum Training and Expsrienoe Requlf-ments; Bachelors degree from an accredited "school of social work and one year of social -work or counseling experience; or a four year I degree in a human senrice field or related cur-</p>
        <p>- riculum including at least 15 semester hours rin courses related to social work or counseling and two years of social work or counselling experience; or graduation from a four-year ; college or university and three years of expe-Irience in rehabilitation counseling, pastoral ;counseling, or a related human service field</p>
        <p>- providing experience in the techniques &amp;lt;of casework, group work, or community -organization; or an equivalent combination of 1 training and experience.</p>
        <p>r PD-107 State Applications and college</p>
        <p>- transcripts are required.</p>
        <p>^ Apply: Employment Security Commission 3101 Bismarck Drive :  Greenville, N.C. 27834</p>
        <p>: Deadline for appllcatione Is Seplsmber 23,1968</p>
        <p>- AN AFFIRMATIVE AaiON/EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER</p>
        <p>imnE SUES lUSSHD JUnDI^</p>
        <p>l;The Dally Reflector has an Im-pmedlate opening In Its 'Classified Advertising Depart-rment for a fulMlme telephone isalesperson.</p>
        <p>liResponslbllltles will Include isaleting customers In placing Lads both by the phone and (over-the-counter, telephone lies, proofreading, typing and tgeneral clerical duties.</p>
        <p>you have good typing and lling skills, a pleasant tele-peraonallty, and are In-In entering the field of Using sales, please send isume to:</p>
        <p>Barbara Jarvis</p>
        <p>I THE DAH-Y REFLECTOR</p>
        <p>PO Box 1967 CroMivilb, NC 27835 NO PHONE CALLS</p>
        <p>001 Public Notices</p>
        <p>dude all construction. Including the elecrlcal, plumbing, heating and ventilation, site work and landscaping.</p>
        <p>Copies of the documents may be obtained by depositing $100.00 with the Housing Authority of the City of Greenville, North Carolina, for each set of documents so obtained. Such deposits shall be refunded to each person who returns the plans, specifications, and other documents hi good condition within ten (10) days after bid opening.</p>
        <p>A certified check drawn on bank or trust company insured by fhe Federal Savings &amp;amp; Loan Insurance Corporation (FSLIC and FDIC) payable to the Authority, or satisfactory Bond executed by an acceptable sure ty on the Bid.BQnd.form contain</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>001  Public Notices</p>
        <p>ed in the specifications and in accordance with the Instructions to bidders set forth herein, in an amount equal to five (S) percent of the Bid shall be submitted with each bid.</p>
        <p>The successful Bidder will be reauired to furnish and pay for satisfactory Performance and Payment Bond or Bonds. Attention Is called to the provisions tor Equal Employment Opportunity and payment of not</p>
        <p>less than the minimum salaries and waMS set forth in the specifications must be paid on this project. Affirmative action plans are required of successful bidder</p>
        <p>The Housing Authority of fhe City of Greenville, North Carolina, reserves the right to reject any and all bids or to waive any in formalities In the bidding.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>TEXTILE</p>
        <p>SCREEN</p>
        <p>PRINTERS</p>
        <p>Now hiring oxporioncod Production Porsonnel. Cail Printox Amorica, 752-0633, Mondayfrlday, 8:384:30. Com-patnive wagaa plua banofH packago.</p>
        <p>An Equal Opportunity Employer</p>
        <p>C . I . 1 1 \ KKIs \\|) C</p>
        <p>!N  \  \Kkl  I  l\(,  t  ()\S(  I  I  \\  1  s</p>
        <p>ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT</p>
        <p>TO: 1. AsaistthaPrasidont</p>
        <p>2. AiaiftinaHphaaaaoftha oparaUona for tha company.</p>
        <p>Strong admlnlstratlv akillt ara raquirad. Soma accounting experience and/or education In Buainaaa/Accounting a mucL Exparlanea on PC ncocMary. Candidate muft be aggraaalva, eaiaar orlcniadanddaairlngtogrow.</p>
        <p>Inquire In writing to:</p>
        <p>..Human Rmurces Manago* &amp;gt;</p>
        <p>CJ. Harris and (^mpany, Inc. Financial &amp;amp; Marketing Cmisnltants 202 Arlington Boulevard Greenville, North Carolina 27858</p>
        <p>Pin COUNTY GOVERNMENT EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY PUBLIC HEALTH EDUCATOR II</p>
        <p>Hiring Range $20r358-$22.^ ~</p>
        <p>Retponsibillties Include developing, implementing and evaluating health promotion activities throughout ttie county, including a Wellness Progrwn for Pitt County Employees. A master's degree In public education or In public health with a major In public health education; or graduation from a four-year college or unhrefBlty with a major In health education and two years experience in public health education or  related field; or graduation from a four-year college or university &amp;lt;nd three years experience In public health education; or an equivalent combination of training and experience. A valid N.C. drivers license and proof of RuMla Immunity Is required.</p>
        <p>Apply: Efflptoymem Security Commleeion 3101 Msmeick OrNe QreemHle, NC'27S34</p>
        <p>Deadline for applications Is Friday, September 23, 1888.</p>
        <p>AN AFRRMATWE ACTI0N(3UAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER</p>
        <p>I)vici(cJ To hxcvllencv</p>
        <p>FINANCE</p>
        <p>OPPORTUNITIES</p>
        <p>ADMISSIONS SUPERVISOR  Ad</p>
        <p>mitting and outpatient testing center. Requires 4 progressive hospital pstlsnt accounting experience 2 of which must have been managing admissions office of major medical center. Associate or BA degree in Business Administration or related preferred.</p>
        <p>FINANCE DEPARTMENT SUPERVISOR-EMERGENCY ROOM  Requires 3 years progiesslve hospital accounting experience, to Include 2 years experience supervising personnel of an emergency room. Associate degree or related business courses preferred.</p>
        <p>INTERNAL AUDITOR-One year</p>
        <p>experience In accounting or auditing required, preferably in health care, with knowledge of spreadsheet software. Requiree BA degree In accounting, business management or related field, plus CPA, CIA or candidate.</p>
        <p>Please forward resume to:</p>
        <p>Human Resources Department</p>
        <p>Wake</p>
        <p>Medical</p>
        <p>Center</p>
        <p>3000 Ntw Btrn Avnu Riltigh, NC 27810</p>
        <p>*n Equli Opportumly Employ!</p>
        <p>001 Public Notices</p>
        <p>No bid shall be withdrawn tor a period of thirty (30) days subse quent to the opening of bids without the consent of the Housing Authority of the City of Greenviiie, North Caroiina.</p>
        <p>THE HOUSING AUTHORITY OF THE CITY OF GREEN VILLE</p>
        <p>BY: Ken E. Noland Executive Director DATE: September 9,1988 Sept.9,11,18,25,1988</p>
        <p>NORTHCAROLINA PITT COUNTY  6</p>
        <p>FILE NO. 88 E 409 FILM NO.</p>
        <p>. IN THE GENERALCOURT</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPUY</p>
        <p>mm</p>
        <p>AmosFofSaie Bicycles For Sale Boals And Molors Camping Equipmeni Cycles For Sale</p>
        <p>011029</p>
        <p>030</p>
        <p>032</p>
        <p>034</p>
        <p>036</p>
        <p>Jeeps And Vans</p>
        <p>4</p>
        <p>040</p>
        <p>Mobile Homes For 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>Sponmg Goods</p>
        <p>109</p>
        <p>Auctions</p>
        <p>069</p>
        <p>Woodsloves</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 Sale</p>
        <p>136'</p>
        <p>Furniture</p>
        <p>081</p>
        <p>Farms Foi Sale</p>
        <p>139</p>
        <p>Garage-Yard Sales</p>
        <p>082</p>
        <p>Houses Foi Sale</p>
        <p>1U</p>
        <p>Heavy Equipment</p>
        <p>084</p>
        <p>Business Invesimeni Property</p>
        <p>147</p>
        <p>Household Goods</p>
        <p>085</p>
        <p>Investment Property</p>
        <p>148</p>
        <p>Farm Equipment</p>
        <p>086</p>
        <p>Land For Sale</p>
        <p>150</p>
        <p>Farm Products</p>
        <p>088</p>
        <p>Mobile Home Lois For Sale</p>
        <p>151</p>
        <p>Fruits 8 Vegetables</p>
        <p>089</p>
        <p>Lots For Sale.</p>
        <p>152</p>
        <p>Livestock</p>
        <p>. 092</p>
        <p>Resort Property For Sale</p>
        <p>155</p>
        <p>Insurance</p>
        <p>095</p>
        <p>Timbertand i Timper</p>
        <p>156</p>
        <p>Miscellaneous</p>
        <p>099</p>
        <p>Townhouses For Sale</p>
        <p>157</p>
        <p>001 Pliblic Notices</p>
        <p>East Coast</p>
        <p>eating and Air Conditioning Co;</p>
        <p>ervice-Repairs-Replacements oi Iheating/air conditioning equipment,! water heaters, and ventilators.</p>
        <p>Over 15 yeors exp.</p>
        <p>Donold (Dondi) Dixon Jr. owner 975-6880 Woihingtonp NC</p>
        <p>Enjoy A Set, Less Hectic Third Shift Schedule In A Plant Environment</p>
        <p>Consolidated Diesel is a growth company involved in the manufactureof small (50-250hp) diesel engines. At our facility in WhHakers, located 10 miles north of Rocky Mount, youll have a great deal of independence and a set schedule, including weekends and paid holidays off.</p>
        <p>In conjunction with the plant physician, you will be responsible for. managing the medical department; providing medical and emergency care to employees;supervising and implementing a wellness program; supervising and directing WorkersComp cases; and assisting with site safety programs.</p>
        <p>Vbu must be an LPN. Experience is preferred. Familiarity with an industrial setting is helpful, but not required. We offer a competitive salary and comprehensive benefits. For consideration, send your resume to: CONSOLIDATED DIESELCOMMNY, Ra Box67DA, MC5220, NURSE, GR918, HigiwraydOI. Whttakers, NC27891.</p>
        <p>"Delivering Ex^tlence To</p>
        <p>Meet Customers Needs</p>
        <p>ConsoGdated Diesel</p>
        <p>An Equal Opportunity Einptoyor MI/fWrH</p>
        <p>RNs and LPNs</p>
        <p>IfYdwre Lodftfmy For FLEXIBLE SCHEDUUNG lofnPCMHI</p>
        <p>We deliver excellent opportunities as wdl as excellent health care. That's because PITT COUNTY MEMORIAL HOSPITAL &amp;amp; MEDICAL CENTER, our 600-bed teaching facility, appreciates the contributions of the professional nurse.</p>
        <p>If you'd like to apply your skills and expand your alitles while delivering the best possible care loin us In one of these Important areas;</p>
        <p>MEDICAL SPECIALITY UNITS</p>
        <p> Cardiac</p>
        <p> Oncology/Hcmatolofy</p>
        <p> Pulmonary</p>
        <p>Renal</p>
        <p>Urology</p>
        <p>General Madkfaw</p>
        <p>SURGICAL SPECIALITY UNITS</p>
        <p>Neuroeurgery</p>
        <p>Unriogy/Plaatke</p>
        <p>lYanepIant</p>
        <p>Orthopaadks Ear/Noea/Throt General Suiiery</p>
        <p>CRITICAL CARE UNITS OB CYN UNITS PEDIATRIC NEONATAL UNITS</p>
        <p>PCMH offers competitive salaries and an excellent benefits package. Tb And out more about our flexible staffing options and new salary scale which offers unprecedented potential, please send your resume, or call:</p>
        <p>Unda Bitfhana RN, BSN DIractor, Nurafaig RaaourcM (TOLL FREE) I -900-342-91 (COLLECT) (919) 331-4943</p>
        <p>Pin COUNTY MEMORULHOSPIT/U. &amp;amp;MEDKM. CENTER</p>
        <p>200 Itantonaburg Rd.</p>
        <p>Qreentriito. NC 27914 fefewfemiiuiinu ........Hull,II</p>
        <p>001 Public Notices</p>
        <p>OF JUSTICE SUPERIOR COURT DIVISION NOTICE TO CREDITORS AND DEBTORS IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF GENE AUTRY STACK, Deceased Having qualified as Ad , mlnstrafrix of the Estate of Gene Autry Stack, late of Pitt County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons, firms and corporations having claims against Gene Autry Stack, Deceased, to present them to the undersigned or her At</p>
        <p>or before the 28th day of February, 1989, or this Notice will be</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>pleaded In bar of their recovery. All persons, firms or corporations indebted to the Decedent or his estate are requested to make Immediate payment to the undersigned Administratrix or her Attorney.</p>
        <p>This the 24th day of August, 1988.</p>
        <p>CATHERINE BENNETT STACK</p>
        <p>Administratrix of the Estate of Gene Autry Stack 1309 Rhondo Drive Greenville, North Carolina 27834 HDRNE, SMITH AND SIGMDN, P.A.</p>
        <p>Michael C. Sigmon PD Drawer 755 Greenville, NC 27835 (919) 758 4333</p>
        <p>August 28, Sept. 4,11,18,1988</p>
        <p>NOTICE</p>
        <p>Having qualified as Executor of the estate of Jimmie Marie Moye Leggett, late of Pitt Coun ty. North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of said deceased to present them to the</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>001 Public Notices</p>
        <p>undersigned Executor on or before February 28, 1989 or this notice or same will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate please make immediate payment.</p>
        <p>This 24th day of August, 1988. Thomas Graham Leggett 1715 S. Elm Street Greenville, NC 27834 E xecutor of the estate of Jimmie Marie Moye Leggett, deceased.</p>
        <p>Aug.28,Sept.4,11,18,1988</p>
        <p>NOTICE</p>
        <p>Having qualified as Executrix of the estate of Lucinda Atkinson, late of PIH County, North Carolina, this is to notify all per sons having claims against fhe estate of said deceased to present them to the undersigned Executrix on or before March 11, 1989, or this notice or same will Oe pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate please make immediate payment.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>001 Public Notices</p>
        <p>This 8th day of September, 1988.</p>
        <p>Geneva Atkinson Route 6, Box 301 Greenville, NC 27834 E xecutrix of the estate of Lucinda Atkinson, deceased. Sept. 11,18,25, Oct. 3,1988</p>
        <p>NOTICE</p>
        <p>Having qualified as Ad-ministrafrix of the estate of' Robert Lee Edwards, late of Pitt County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against tne estate of said deceased to present them to the undersigned Administratrix on or before AAarch IB, 1989, or this (notice or same will be pleaded In bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate please make Immediate payment.</p>
        <p>This 14th day ot September, 1988.</p>
        <p>AAary Alice Edwards Route 2, BOX256H Greenville, NC 27834 Administratrix ot the estate of Robert Lee Edwards, deceased. Sept. 18,25; Oct. 2,9,1988_</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>BURGER KING IS NOW HIRING FOR AYDEN</p>
        <p>Do you want to grow with an exciting and aggressive company?</p>
        <p>HOURLY POSITIONS NOW OPEK APPLY IN PERSON TO AYDfN COMMUNITY CENTER EAST SECOND STREET AYDEN</p>
        <p>Monday, September 19 Tuesday, September 20 Wednesday, September 21 2:00 pm to 7:00 pm each day</p>
        <p>PITT COUNTY GOVERNMENT EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY</p>
        <p>INCDME MAINTENANCE CASEWORKER II</p>
        <p>Hiring Range $16,770  $18,460</p>
        <p>The purpose of this position is to determine eligibility of persons applying for Aid to Families with Dependent Children. This person must also initiate Food stamp applications where applicable and conduct at least semi-annual face to face interviews to determine a recipients continued eligibility. One year of experience as an Income Maintenance Caseworker (Social Services Eligibility Specialist) is required.</p>
        <p>MEDICAL LABORATORY TECHNICIAN I Hiring Range $14,482 - $15,964</p>
        <p>This employee will perform a variety of routine laboratory testa which are ordered for patients attending clinic. This employee is responsible for proficiency testing, quality control, and is held accountable for all test results performed. Completion of a certified laboratory assistant course in medical technology is required. A valid North Carolina Drivers' License and a good driving record are required.</p>
        <p>ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH SUPERVISOR III Hiring Range $28,626-$31,564</p>
        <p>The responsibilities of this position include planning, developing. Implementing, and directing the activities of the Pitt County Environmental Health Program. Registration as a Sanitarian by the N .C. State Board of Sanitarian Examiners, a valid North Carolina Drivers' License and a good driving record are required. Four years of experience In professional environmental health work at the Sanitarian level or above In a health department, with two years of administrative management or supervisor experience Is required.</p>
        <p>Apply: Employment Security Commleeion 3101 Biwnerck Street Qreenville, N.C. 27834 Deedllne for epplicetlons is Septembor 30,1088.</p>
        <p>AN AFFIRMATIVE ACTIONfEOUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER</p>
        <p>CENSUS ENUMERATORS WANTED IN PITT COUNTY</p>
        <p>Must be;</p>
        <p>18 years of age (or 16 with high school diploma).</p>
        <p>US Citizen.</p>
        <p>Have car and home telephone.</p>
        <p>Able to take a short written test.</p>
        <p>PAY: $5.50 per hour and 22.5* a mile for use of car while on assignment.</p>
        <p>TESTING LOCATION: Pitt Community College, Everette Building, Rm 141, Highway 11 south, Greenville, N.C.</p>
        <p>DATE/TIME: Wednesday, September 21 at 10 a.m. or 1 p.m.</p>
        <p>US CENSUS BUREAU</p>
        <p>T</p>
        <p>l9 An Equal Opportunity Employor</p>
        <p>-1:</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0063" />
        <p>The</p>
        <p>Daily</p>
        <p>Reflector</p>
        <p>Classifieds</p>
        <p>752-6166</p>
        <p>002</p>
        <p> Personals</p>
        <p>Carolina Dating and Escort Ser-vices. 778-3579 anytime.</p>
        <p>PASTORAL COUNSELING</p>
        <p>^ritaj, Family, Individual. Donald T. Bradshaw, 355-5196. Confidential.</p>
        <p>f"J SJATE ASSOCIATION OF SINGLE PROFESSIONALS,</p>
        <p>NC- Fw Information: Suite 8;! 127 S. Stratford Road, Winston NC 27104. (704) 543 6911 or (919) 760-2546.</p>
        <p>007_Speclal Notices</p>
        <p>Floyd G. Robinson Jewelers, 407 Evans Mall, Downtown Green ville.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPUY</p>
        <p>Oil</p>
        <p>Autos For Sale</p>
        <p>TO BUY i</p>
        <p>"CREATIVE FINANCING"' EAST6ATE MOTORS,INC</p>
        <p>130 East (Jreenvllle Blvd. Greenville, 355-2193 INSURANCE-lf you have 5 to 12</p>
        <p>- TfSi</p>
        <p>points, we can save you lots ofl money. Call Leon Fornes Insurance, 2408 South Charles Boulevard, 355-7557 or 355-7373.</p>
        <p>1980 MONTE CARLO, wrecked, engine and transmission runs good. 752 9324after 5:00p.m.</p>
        <p>1983 BUICK Skylark, 4door, blue/gray, 4 good radlals. Make otter</p>
        <p>1971 MGB GT, needs restoration. Make offer</p>
        <p>1980 MGB, blue, 4 good radlals, new Weber carburetor, stan</p>
        <p>dard distributor. Asking $2800.</p>
        <p>753-2W7</p>
        <p>)avs, 830 2766, 6:00 p.m.</p>
        <p>after</p>
        <p>1986 MAZDA TRUCK. Low miles, good condition. $6,295.</p>
        <p>1973 TOYOTA Stationwagon. $495.</p>
        <p>1965 MUSTANG. $3,500. Call 756 4788.   _</p>
        <p>TO BUY... TO SELL... CLASSIFIED 752-6166</p>
        <p>REGISTERED NURSES</p>
        <p>Part-time and Full-time positions avaiiable for Registered Nurses to work our Medical/Telemetry Unit.</p>
        <p>Flexible schedules available. Heritage Hospital is an employee-owned facility, offering an excellent benefits package, including:</p>
        <p>Competitive base rate and $1.25 2nd shift differential.</p>
        <p>$2.00 3rd shift differential $1.50 Weekend differential Superior company paid retirement, education tuition reimbursement, flexible paid days off plan. Medical denial, and disability insurance. Company paid life insurance. Much morel Call the Personnel Department, Hd^itage Hospital, 111 Hospital Drive, Tarboro, NC at 919-641-7140 for more information or to arrange for an interview.</p>
        <p>An EEO/AA Employer M/F</p>
        <p>CUSTOM INJECTION MOLDING</p>
        <p>Highly innovated and progressive manufacturer of custom plastic components is looking for dynamic, enthusiastic individuals to join our winning team. Great benefits package and competitive salary. Resumes will be accepted for the following positions:</p>
        <p> Technical Molding Supervisors</p>
        <p> Process Technicians for Injection moldings</p>
        <p> Set-up Technicians for Injection moldings</p>
        <p> Technical Hotstamp and Assembly Supervisors</p>
        <p> Industrial Engineers</p>
        <p>Send resumes to;</p>
        <p>P.O. Box 2791 Rocky Mount, NC 27801</p>
        <p>COST ACCOUNTING TECHNICIAN</p>
        <p>Two years Accounting degree and 12 months manufacturing experience. Computer experience with Cost and MRP Systems. Salary DOE. EEO Employer. Apply be resume to Employment Security Commission, Order #NC8425596.</p>
        <p>RN/PA NEEDED</p>
        <p>For a challenging career In organ pro--curement In the Greenville area. Must possess excellent Interpersonal skills. Excellent benefits, which include employer-paid life, disabiiity, hospitalization, and pension. Salary commensurate with experience. Send current resume to: Carolina Organ Procurement Agency, Attention: Executive Director, 702 Johns Hopkins Drive, Greenville, NC 27834. No phone calls please. EOE.</p>
        <p>HOUSEWARES PRODUCT</p>
        <p>MANAGER</p>
        <p>The worlds leading manufacturer of cleaning products is looking for someone with at least 2 years of sales and marketing experience In the supermarket, discount or drug channel.</p>
        <p>Must be a self-starter with at least a bachelors degree in marketing or business related field. If you have creativity waiting to come out and have the desire to grow In a challenging enviomment, send your resume with salary history and requirements in confidence to;</p>
        <p>Empire Brushes, Inc. tt: Employee I</p>
        <p>Att:</p>
        <p>&amp;gt; Relations P Box 1606 Qreenville, NC 27836 An Equal Opportunity Emptoyer</p>
        <p>" pmr COUNTY</p>
        <p>GOVERNMENT EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY PUBLIC HEALTH EDUCATOR II Hiring Range |20.3Sa-$22.438</p>
        <p>Responsibllltlee include serving as a prenatal educator for maternity clinic and as a patient educator of the various other health services provided. A master's degree In public health education; or graduation from a four-year collage or university with a major In health education and two years experience In public health education or related field; or graduation from a four-yaar college or university and three years experience In public health education; or an equivalent combination of training and txperlance. A valid N.C. drivers llcenea and proof of Rubella Immunity.</p>
        <p>Apply: Employment Security Commleslon 1101 Blsmerck Drive QrMnvllle,N.C. 27134</p>
        <p>DeedUfw lor eppHcetkme Is September 23,1066</p>
        <p>AN AFnmMTIVE ACTI0N1EQUAL OFFOHTUNfTY EMFLOYER</p>
        <p>mTaBirSmS??</p>
        <p>Loadtd, Mata 8. MWb. 7^1^ 1917 CENTUhY llMitO</p>
        <p>Buick, whita, axcallent condl-</p>
        <p>3SS-6636attar 5:00. TNtuRV lifAt</p>
        <p>Wajnn, all options, $15,000. 355-</p>
        <p>tP QUALltV; fuol-conomlcol cars can ba found at low pricas In Classlflad.</p>
        <p>014</p>
        <p>Cadillac</p>
        <p>1982 CADILLAC FLEETWOOD</p>
        <p>Brougham  charcoal gray with gray leather interior, 56,000 miles. Local car. Call Eastgate Motors at 355 2193.  ______</p>
        <p>015</p>
        <p>Chevrolet</p>
        <p>19M CHEVROLET Imp</p>
        <p>------- Impala.  4</p>
        <p>door, new tires. Call after 6, I-747 3805.</p>
        <p>1979 MONTE CARLO, excellent condition. Call 756 9137 after 6:00p.m.</p>
        <p>1981 CHEVROLET Citation. Below average miles, needs work. $1200.830 9504.</p>
        <p>1984 CHEVROLET Corvette, 66,000 miles, white with red interior, (uliy ioaded, $14,500 or best otter. Call Vicki at 756 8830; 746 3491 after 7:30j.m.</p>
        <p>018</p>
        <p>Ford</p>
        <p>on</p>
        <p>OMsmobile</p>
        <p>1982 pone EXP. Automatic with only 50,000 tnllot. 8995. 746-3930 or 746-4633.</p>
        <p>9M PRo l$Rr</p>
        <p>heigt</p>
        <p>with tan cloth Intarior, 4 spaad, AM/FM radio, 16,000 mllos. Call Eastgato Motors at 355 2193.</p>
        <p>1976 CUTLASSTliFhiMf, runs 00^ but needs work. $350. Goldsboro, 778-0339.</p>
        <p>1986 CUTLASS lera brougham for sata by ownar. 36,000 milas.</p>
        <p>white with blue Interior, spotless 885W. Call</p>
        <p>1986 FORD Taurus. Low mile age, $8700. Call 825-0070.</p>
        <p>condition, all extras. 756^4484.</p>
        <p>1986 MUSTANG LX - white with red cloth interior, automatic, air, power steering, power brakes, cruise, stereo with cassette. Cali Eastgate Motors at 355-2193.  __</p>
        <p>1987 OLOSMOBILE 98 Regency Brougham. 4 door, 9,000 miles, all power equipment, blue exte . rior and interior. $14,995. Call 756-3209 aHer ^.m.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>019 Lincoln</p>
        <p>iw^^ _</p>
        <p>Series, mint condition</p>
        <p>N Wi ^nature</p>
        <p>355i</p>
        <p>5406.</p>
        <p>020</p>
        <p>Mercury</p>
        <p>II9B2 MERCURY LN7. Excellent condition. Motor has 23,000 miles. $1800.758 1742.</p>
        <p>021 Oldsmobile</p>
        <p>1975 OLDS REGENCY. 66,00li</p>
        <p>miles, garage kept, excellent condition. 75 2088.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>018</p>
        <p>Ford</p>
        <p>We Do</p>
        <p>1968 FORD MUSTANG, air, automatic, 289 V-8, $3,500 or best otter. Call 1-923-3121.</p>
        <p>1978 LTD FORD.</p>
        <p>Automatic, power steering, power brakes, air conditioner, Am/Fm, cruise, 83,000 miles, excellent condition. $1500.757-0231.</p>
        <p>1979 MUSTANG. Straight 6, auto, with many new parts. $2200. 355 2194.</p>
        <p>1981 LX MUSTANG. Power steering, power brakes, Am/Fm cassette, sunroof, 4 speed $2700. 752-3471.</p>
        <p>Renovations, Additions, Decks And</p>
        <p>Outside Work.</p>
        <p>For a Job well done calf i</p>
        <p>752-3739 Lancaster &amp;amp;i</p>
        <p>Associates J</p>
        <p>aiMttl(Mkle')</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>BUILDING SUPPLY COMPANY</p>
        <p>Is opening a new branch in the Greenville area and has openings for the following positions:</p>
        <p>DispatcherA/Varehouse Manager Truck Drivers  Class A License preferred Fork Lift Operators Material Handlers</p>
        <p>Top pay and benefits for qualified indivi-duais. Send resume and salary requirements to:</p>
        <p>PO Box 3156 Greenville, NC 27836</p>
        <p>REGISTERED</p>
        <p>DIETICIAN</p>
        <p>The N.C. Dept, of Correction Is seeking 2 R.O.s for Clinical Dietician II positions. These persons will plan, implement, and maintain master in Theurapetic Diet menus for the Division of Prisons, will perform Nutritional assessments, plan diet programs, and develop nutrition in dietetics course for Statewide Food Service Supen/isors. The candidate should have a Baccalaureate Degree in Food/Nutrltidn and current registration with the A.D.A. as a Registered Dietician. Excellent benefits and salary. Contact;</p>
        <p>Richard Panek</p>
        <p>831 W. Morgan Street Raleigh, NC 27603 919-733-6220 EOE</p>
        <p>EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY QREENVILLE UTILITIES COMMISSION</p>
        <p>WATER TREATMENT PLANT OPERATOR Salary Range $13,062 - $25,418</p>
        <p>Position available for responsible person to perform skilled work in the operation of the Water Treatment Plant on a rotating shift basis. Entry level status and starting salary will be commensurate with education, training, experience and/or level of state certification. Trainee appointment possible. Applications accepted through September 30,1988.</p>
        <p>Employment is contingent upon passing a physical examination including a drug screen urinalysis. Interested persons should contact the Personnel Office, Greenville Utilities Commission, P.O. Box 1847, Greenville, NC 27835-1847.</p>
        <p>An Equal OppwtunHy Emptoyer"</p>
        <p>MEDICAL RECORDS DIRECTOR</p>
        <p>Full-time position available for Medical Records r. RRA or ART required. Previous experience In</p>
        <p>Director.</p>
        <p>management position preferred. Working knowledge of Quality Assurance and Utilization Review helpful. Heritage Hospital Is an employee-owned facility offering excellent company-paid retirement. Benefits Include education tuition reimbursement, flexible paid days off plan, dental, medical and disability insurance and much morel Salary negotiable based on experience.</p>
        <p>Interested eendWates sliould submit e resume to:</p>
        <p>Parsonnal Dpartmnt Harltaga Hospital 111 Hospital Driva Tarboro, N.C. 27886</p>
        <p>Resumes will be accepted through Friday, September 23.</p>
        <p>EEO/AAE Emptoyer M/F</p>
        <p>AUTOMOTIVE</p>
        <p>SALESPERSON</p>
        <p>NEEDED</p>
        <p>Experience not necessary. Individual must have willingness to work, a good personality and be committed to making money. Benefits Include dental and health Insurance, management potential within one year, paid vacation and eaminga in excess of $30,000 per year for the right Individual. Call or come by Quality Used Cars, 3006 South Memorial Drive, Qreenville N.C. or call 355-5000. Ask for Mike Morris.</p>
        <p>023</p>
        <p>Pontiac</p>
        <p>1979</p>
        <p>$400</p>
        <p>752</p>
        <p>Stationwi I naqotlobta. Call r.</p>
        <p>1654 loavtmauaga</p>
        <p>wagon.</p>
        <p>56orp</p>
        <p>1979 PONTIAC ttn LaMan 2 door, V^. 8750.752 3290.</p>
        <p>1900 LEMANS Vtatlon wagon Good condition. $1500.355 58^</p>
        <p>1983 PONTIAC 6000. Clean and In good condition. 752 2007.</p>
        <p>19M PONTIAC'MOO LT ex</p>
        <p>cellent condition, low rnileage.</p>
        <p>6 2514</p>
        <p>blue 4 door, $4,500. Call 746; nighta.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>PERMANENT-PART TIME</p>
        <p>Needed retired or semi retired individual to post and maintain Jr Billboards in a 100 mile radius of Greenville, NC. Interested applicants must have pickup truck or van. Apply in person at the Employment Security Commission, 3lOr-Bismarck Street. Sept. 19th &amp;amp; 20th from 9 am 'til 1 pm. No</p>
        <p>Apply at Carawan Oil Company, Inc. 2100 Dickinson Avenue. Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday, 9-11 a.m. or 2-4 p.m. Must be at least 18 years old.</p>
        <p>IIFESTYU OPTIONS FOR</p>
        <p>North Carolina Memorial Hospital, at the University of North Carolina, compliments its strength in nursing with a new compensation package.</p>
        <p>New Ray Scale in September Weekender Plan With Full Py and Benefits</p>
        <p>Terrific New Differentials for Evening, Night and Weekend Shifts Working Parent Option Part Time and Part Time Plus Option</p>
        <p>Call or write Patricia L Jones, RN, today. 1-800-433-7559 OR (919) 966-2012 (Outside NC, 1-800-331-6327).</p>
        <p>Univei</p>
        <p>NorthCarolina Memorial Hospital Department of Nursing</p>
        <p>r^y of North Carolina  </p>
        <p>Chapel Hill, NC 27514  U</p>
        <p>EOE/AAE</p>
        <p>ThGDaJI^^Rsrisctoi^reenvl^^  18,1968 04</p>
        <p>023</p>
        <p>Pontiac</p>
        <p>M7 iFVrr, white, "nt condlffon, 'flOftobta. 757 1392 or 756 3000, ask for Kanny.</p>
        <p>024 Foreign Cars</p>
        <p>1973 MGB-AM?rX^r7h cassafta.royalblm. 757-1134. _</p>
        <p>CUSSIFIED DISPUY</p>
        <p>M4 Foreign Cars</p>
        <p>1977 DATSUN 2S0Z. 73,000 mllas, blue with white interior, air, Panasport</p>
        <p>Koni, CIBIE, Quicktrip header, concord tape, good condition. II757 3310.</p>
        <p>$4,000. Cali;</p>
        <p>CUSSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>624 Foreign Cars</p>
        <p>ah', blua, sunroof, fog llghta,-</p>
        <p>CUSSIFIED DISPUY 'f</p>
        <p>NBiP WANTID</p>
        <p>Metal and wood stud framers, sheet rock hangers and finishers. To apply call 756-4593.</p>
        <p>Top pay for top workers -</p>
        <p>Get The Facts.</p>
        <p>gpngltl HillignI</p>
        <p>SALES CONSULTANT</p>
        <p>Bob Barbour, Inc.</p>
        <p>3303 S. Memorial Drive Greenville, N.C. 27834.</p>
        <p>Bus.: (919) 355-7200 Res.: (919) 830-1276</p>
        <p>VOLVO  BMW  JEEP/EAGLE</p>
        <p>Wide Variety of Late Modei Used Automobiies Also Available</p>
        <p>WITH THESE</p>
        <p>^fisJ</p>
        <p>SUPER SPECIALS</p>
        <p>ms WEEKS SKOALS</p>
        <p>NOW</p>
        <p>1983 Ford Escort</p>
        <p>Automatic with air........</p>
        <p>1979 Ford Thunderbird</p>
        <p>Power Steering, power brakes, cruise control, excellent condition.......</p>
        <p>2,495 2,495</p>
        <p>1981 Ford Thunderbird..... 2,495</p>
        <p>2,995</p>
        <p>1976CadiHM!$erill</p>
        <p>Extra clean car!................</p>
        <p>1980 Honda Prelude  $o OOC</p>
        <p>Sunroof, 5 speed, air conditioning............ fcgwww</p>
        <p>1983 Nissan Sentra</p>
        <p>Automatic, air conditioning....</p>
        <p>2,995</p>
        <p>WE ARE THE FWANCINQ SPECIALISTSi</p>
        <p>Brown &amp;amp; wootv</p>
        <p>I JOWNIOWri I p</p>
        <p>1205 Dlcklim Ave.</p>
        <p>752-2882</p>
        <p>mnrlJnnnmj</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0064" />
        <p>C*24 The Dally Reflector, Greenville, N.C. Sunday, September 18,1968</p>
        <p>Skip the resumes, the endless interviews and all the knocking on doors.</p>
        <p>Just knock on our door.</p>
        <p>When you do well get you into some great companies  as a Manpower Temporary. Youll meet people, make some great contacts and</p>
        <p>youll earn good money while you do.</p>
        <p>Because well get you into those companies and others, pronto. As our paid temporary. While youre making some money, youll be making contacts.</p>
        <p>Well treat you with the respect youj 'fi deserve as a qualified applicant. "  </p>
        <p>Find out more. Call us. Well tell you all about the advantages of working as a Manpower office temporary in todays working world.</p>
        <p>OMANPOW</p>
        <p>118 Reade St. Greenville, N.C.</p>
        <p>TEMPORARY SERVICES</p>
        <p>024 Foreign Cars</p>
        <p>lf7 VW GOLF. 21,000 miles, loaded $8,000. Call 752 6859 after S 30p m.</p>
        <p>1985 MAZDA RX7 GSL. Mint condition. CaM 756 5541.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>024 Foreign Cars 024 Foreign Cars</p>
        <p>1916 200SX COPE Red. 15.000 miies, ilke new. 355 5002 after 6 p.m. weekdays</p>
        <p>87 HONDA ACCORDTxTl door, automatic, power sunroof. $12,300 752 1357,3p m 5pm</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>Sigmon Chevrolet Buick-Pontiac-GMC Truck now has openings for automotive sales personnel. Experience is preferred, but will consider qualified, aggressive individuals who are looking for a secure career and an opportunity for advancement. Outstanding earnings potential. Excellent benefits package. Please apply in person. Highway 264 Bypass, Farmville, N.C.</p>
        <p>lASIE IT, YOUU lOVE II FOR GOOD-</p>
        <p>Applications now being accepted for part-time positions.</p>
        <p>Apply in person,</p>
        <p>Carolina East Mall No phone calls please.</p>
        <p>MAHHEWS SEPTIC TANK CO.</p>
        <p>HPH IMSTALUTIOM REPAAS PUMPIAK) 1 CLEANINO Pin Cunty Pprmll 1104 14 Yttr$ CiAartPnc*</p>
        <p>PHONE 753-4097</p>
        <p>8 A M To 8 P.M.</p>
        <p>CONTROLLER</p>
        <p>Controller/accountant with hotel accounting background. Degree plus 3 to 5 years minimum experience. Salary commensurate with experience. Send resume to;</p>
        <p>Warren, Beakley, Garrett A I Associates ' 1901 University Suite 401-B Lubbock, TX 79410</p>
        <p>PART TIME WORK FULL TIME PAY</p>
        <p>To start immediately with rapid advancement.</p>
        <p>FANTASTIC</p>
        <p>PAY</p>
        <p>Call</p>
        <p>3SM0T8</p>
        <p>TODAYI</p>
        <p>SERVICE</p>
        <p>manager</p>
        <p>Progressive Eastern North Carolina dealership has immediate opening for Service Manager. GM experience preferied. Excellent earnings potential and benefits package. Please send resume to GM Service Manager, PO Box 776, Greenville, NC, 27834.</p>
        <p>COASTAL</p>
        <p>HOME</p>
        <p>INSPECTIONS</p>
        <p>Radon Testing Eastern N.C.</p>
        <p>Rcprtunlalive</p>
        <p>of Radon Testing Corp.</p>
        <p>f America</p>
        <p>1-800-533-5751</p>
        <p>Serving All of losfvrn N C</p>
        <p>OPPORTUNITY IN FINANCE MANAGEMENT</p>
        <p>coMmmvitTjumNesAuuir</p>
        <p>UCBUNTIMHOrHHNffin</p>
        <p>MIDVACknONSANOMOM</p>
        <p>Our training program will give you the opportunity to move up the ladder to Branch Manager in 2 years. College or finance background preferred, but not required. Contact:</p>
        <p>SAFEWAY FINANCE CORP.</p>
        <p>3SS-2314</p>
        <p>An Equal Opportunity Employor</p>
        <p>Find That Extra Money You Need With An Ad In The Classifieds</p>
        <p>The Daily Reflector 752-6166</p>
        <p>1988 Isuzu TF-Tnick</p>
        <p>SMZJh/nmlli StMng Price $8888</p>
        <p>12.95 APR; 60 months with approved credit; plus tax and tags 5 speed transmission; double wall cargo bed; 1680 payload; halogen headlamps; 2.3 liter engine; dual sport mirrors; steel belted radial tires</p>
        <p>1988 Isuzu X8 l-IVIark</p>
        <p>$199.73/montli Selling Price $9388</p>
        <p>12 95 APR; 60 months with approved credit; plus tax and tags Automatic transmission; AM-FM stereo cassette; air conditioning: intermittant wipers; tilt steering: electric outside mirrors: rear window defogger; power steering: locking gas door; steel belied, radial tires: aluminum wheels</p>
        <p>i</p>
        <p>1976 DATSUN B210 $800 or best otter Must sell 756 6691.</p>
        <p>979 HONDA CIVIC 4 SMe'd air. Call Eastgafe Motors at 355 2193</p>
        <p>1979 HONDA CIVIC 20 CVCT High mileage. Needs some repair $651). Call 758 8358</p>
        <p>1979 TOYOTA COROLLA hat</p>
        <p>ch back, 5 speed air $850 Call 752 9249</p>
        <p>1981 HONDA Civic 1500 Hal chback. Good condition New rear tires $1,600 Call 752 7396</p>
        <p>1984 HONDA Prelude, 5 speed, dark blue, sunrool, 68,000 miles $6.950 Call 355 2788.</p>
        <p>1984 HONDA CRX Excellent condition. Call 946 6812 or 830 6905.</p>
        <p>1984 MAZDA AX7 gC'Tow mileage, sunroof $7800. 756 9271 or 757 3536</p>
        <p>1984 NISSAN 200SX Silver with gray cloth trim loaded Call Edstgale Motors at J55 2193</p>
        <p>1984 Taab~9oo~T0ro~e7</p>
        <p>cellent condition Must sell. $7,000 or best otter 756 3980</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>SPECIAL ,Safe</p>
        <p>Model S-1 Special Price</p>
        <p>J*122</p>
        <p>Reg. Price $177,00</p>
        <p>TAFF OFFICE EQUIPMENT</p>
        <p>569 S, Evans St. 752-217</p>
        <p>AHNTION! LICENSED HAIR DRESSEM</p>
        <p>Why not try a better way, come rent a booth and work with us, Barbara, Lou and Grace at THE NEW IMAGE BEAUTY SHOP. Added feature is the NEW SILVER SOLARIUM TANNING BOOTH which can work for</p>
        <p>Phone 75D-4I4f4</p>
        <p> PERMANENT EMPLOYMENT f</p>
        <p>WELDING/FABRICATION/MANUFACTURING DAYTIME POSITION WITH REGULAR OVERTIME WILL TRAIN QUALIFIED PERSONS APPLY IN PERSON</p>
        <p>*</p>
        <p>CRAFT STEEL INDUSTRIES. INC. SOUTH FIELDS STREET FARMVILLE, NC 919 7S3-3I52</p>
        <p>Robin Little, General Manager of B &amp;amp; K Marine of Greenville, North Carolina is pleased to announce that Ernest (Boo) Hayes of Kinston, North Carolina is now associated with B &amp;amp; K Marine as our new Service Manager.</p>
        <p>Boo has 22 years experience with Johnson-Evinrude outboards and is ranked as a certified Johnson-Evinrude master technician. Boo would like to invite all his friends and acquaintances to stop by and see him at B &amp;amp; K Marine in Greenville.</p>
        <p>Corner of Dickinson Avenue &amp;amp; 14th Street</p>
        <p>YINTIAL  CADILIuAC  ISUZU</p>
        <p>Greenville Blvd. 355-6080</p>
        <p>1984 Cadillac Fleetwood Brougham</p>
        <p>4 door, (tib^urn gieen.</p>
        <p>$7.980</p>
        <p>1979 Mercury Zephyr Wagon</p>
        <p>AutomatK, beige.</p>
        <p>$980</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>1.981 Cadillac Fleetwood Brougham D'Elegance</p>
        <p>4 door dark blu*. on* ownar</p>
        <p>$3.480 1986 Isuzu Pickup</p>
        <p>Dork blu. good work truck</p>
        <p>1982 Toyota Clico GT Coupe *</p>
        <p>5 sped. uit, one owner, while, blue cloth interior.</p>
        <p>$3.980 1986 Isuzu Trooper II</p>
        <p>4 wheel drive 5 $peed. oir. on* owner, whit*, beige cloth interior.</p>
        <p>$7.980 1985 Jeep Renegade CJ7</p>
        <p>4 wheel drive, medium blue, black hard top.</p>
        <p>SPECIAL!</p>
        <p>1984 Mazda Pickup</p>
        <p>4 &amp;amp;ped white, good work truck.</p>
        <p>$2,280</p>
        <p>$3,980 '</p>
        <p>'ontloc 6(</p>
        <p>int^riot oli uptionk</p>
        <p>SPECIAL! Nissan Si</p>
        <p>groy cloth tnlertor</p>
        <p>$6.980</p>
        <p>Mustang</p>
        <p>eed OH dark gret</p>
        <p>$5,480</p>
        <p>198S Pontiac 6000 STE</p>
        <p>4 doot block gray cloth int^r lot oliuptionk</p>
        <p>1987 Nissan Sentro</p>
        <p>2 door white gray cloth tnlertor one ownei</p>
        <p>1985 Ford Mustang LX Coupe</p>
        <p>4 speed H dark green</p>
        <p>1976 Olds 98 Regency</p>
        <p>4 dooi, UN opiion medium biue. dark oiua vinyftop /  43.000  octuai  miies</p>
        <p>$1.980 1985 Chevrolet Silverodo Pickup</p>
        <p>Automotic, V'8 oli options, extra riice.</p>
        <p>$8.480</p>
        <p>0 1987 GMC Jimmy 4 x 4s</p>
        <p>ic. V 6. oir. on* blue and whit* and one red and silver.</p>
        <p>1981 Peugeot 505</p>
        <p>4 dooi 5 speed on 51 000 miles whit* on* owner blue .cloth inteiior</p>
        <p>$3.980 1985 Chevrolet 1 Ton Dually</p>
        <p>Sliver burgundy striping Silverado package fully equipped with r Cobrolet Conversion package 454 engine.</p>
        <p>SPECIAL!</p>
        <p>, 1979 Ford Ranchero Pickup</p>
        <p>J  blue,  outorrtatic,  oir  V  8</p>
        <p>ha</p>
        <p>$2,480</p>
        <p>Visit our lot today! We have many more cars and trucks to choose from!</p>
        <p> Bank Rate Financing </p>
        <p>TRUCK &amp;amp;AIJTO</p>
        <p>SALES fmsi G  SERVICE</p>
        <p>Hwy. 11 South</p>
        <p>Greenville, N.C. (Wintervilie, N.C.]</p>
        <p>756-3635</p>
        <p>1.800-682-2216</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0065" />
        <p>-2 * i:-1  ^  ^</p>
        <p>.    5  i  '  4,,  tiffItscxjr intent iDsave you nrKxiey! This Thursday, Friday and Saturday you can shop til 9pm during our 1988Close-Out Tent Event We have the best deals anywhere on new or usedused cars and trucks and the senrice that keepsem running! And our brand-newToyolasare backed bya3year/36,000mile warranty. All at incredible all-out 88 dose-out prices!</p>
        <p>Choose From Our Great 88 Toyota Selection!</p>
        <p> 1988Toyota Clicas</p>
        <p> 1988Toyota Camiys</p>
        <p> 1988Toyota Corolla 4-Doors</p>
        <p> 1988Toyota SR5</p>
        <p>2-Door Copes</p>
        <p> 1988Toyota Tercels</p>
        <p> 1988Toyota Tercel EZs</p>
        <p> 1988Toyota MR2s</p>
        <p> 1988Toyota VSans</p>
        <p> Toyota 2WD Trucks</p>
        <p> Toyota 4WD Trucks</p>
        <p>1988 Suzuki Samurai</p>
        <p>perrrxxKh!</p>
        <p>&amp;lt;8,099</p>
        <p>We Have 17 To Choose From!</p>
        <p>#P9750</p>
        <p>Try this fm, 4-wheel drive vehicle orice and youll never warit to drive anytNrig etee! (^pletely eQuipp^ vvith a punchy 1.3 liter engine, chrorne wheete and rnore, this sporty Sariur  y(Xi inte all kinds of pls^..and gets you 01^</p>
        <p>This new Samurai is being sold as "used at a low, used car prioel 60 months tBTTTi at 11.99% APR with approved credit and *1,100 down, cash or tade. Tax and tags are extra</p>
        <p>&amp;lt;8,450</p>
        <p>We Have 20 To Choose From!</p>
        <p>Thfe easy-IOKlrive, low niileage cornpact conies equipped vvith autornatic transnriission, air corxJilloning, radial tires, power steering, AM/FM stereo plus a 5 year, unfirnited rnil^ige warranty!</p>
        <p>60 rnoftBlBfioat11S9% APR with approved credit arid *1,100 dowT, cash or trade. Tax arid tags are extra</p>
        <p>From Our Premier Selection Of Previously-Owned Models!</p>
        <p>Because our new car sales have been so successl, weve got an over-stock of late model, tow-mileage trade-ins! Shop now for the best selection and save!</p>
        <p>MaitMModal</p>
        <p>Stock IT</p>
        <p>1964 HondaPrekxte 1966 DodgeCok 1963 Toyote Corolla 1966 Toytela Tercel</p>
        <p>4456A</p>
        <p>4463A</p>
        <p>4464A</p>
        <p>4487A</p>
        <p>1966 Toyota CoroHaSRS 4512A</p>
        <p>1964 Buick Regal</p>
        <p>1965 Toyota Camry 1963 Olds Cudass Cierra 1965 Ford Bronco II 4x4</p>
        <p>4512F P7601 P7604A .P9456B</p>
        <p>Oaacrtptlon</p>
        <p>Blue. 5-speed, air oorxiboning, AM/FM stereo.</p>
        <p>Blue, 4-speed, low miteage Blue, 4-speed, AM/FM stereo.</p>
        <p>Blue, 5-speed, air oondilionng, AM/FM slareo, low mileage.</p>
        <p>Whee, 5-speed, air condloning, AM/FM atareo, sunrool</p>
        <p>Blue, autorrialic. air corxlboning. loadecL Silver, autornabc, ax coridkoriiig, AM/FM stereo VVhis, autorrialic, ar oondkorwig, AMiFM stereo Btue/Whle, aulornac, airoondilionirig, AM/FM stereo</p>
        <p>1^66 S!d(^mited</p>
        <p>stock#</p>
        <p>P9783</p>
        <p>1964 OldsDella86Royaie 1967 PonliaceOOOLE</p>
        <p>P9784</p>
        <p>P9785</p>
        <p>1962 PondacBonnevie 1967 ToyoteCeScaGT</p>
        <p>P9826</p>
        <p>P9840</p>
        <p>1966 HyundExcd 1964 ToyotaCamryLE</p>
        <p>1967 Nissan Sentra</p>
        <p>P9865</p>
        <p>P9066</p>
        <p>P9668</p>
        <p>1965 Olds Della 68 Royale P9487 1987 Pontiac Grand Am</p>
        <p>P9502</p>
        <p>1984 Chevy Blazer Tahoe 4x4 P9515 1987 Chevy Corsica  P9708</p>
        <p>1967 Chevy Berelta  P9709</p>
        <p>Sliver, power wvidows and locks. M vvheel, low mileage.</p>
        <p>BlacK autorrialic, ar oorxiioning, loaded Goto, autorrielto, ar ooncMiorvig, AM/FM stereo Blue, autornafc, ar oondiionlng, AM/FM stereo</p>
        <p>1966 FofdTaums 1986 Ford Tempo 1968 Nissan Sentra</p>
        <p>P9871</p>
        <p>P9872</p>
        <p>P9875</p>
        <p>DNcrtption</p>
        <p>Whie. automate, ar condiDonng, AM FM stereo, baded</p>
        <p>Brougham, WhSe. automaftc, ar corxteomng, loaded</p>
        <p>Bugundy.autornac,arcondilonrig. AM/FM stereo.</p>
        <p>Dove gray, automakc, ar oondMonng, loaded Convertbte, white, autorrieac, ar oondlonrig, loaded</p>
        <p>Goto. 5 speed, ar condionrig, AM/FM stereo. BlacK autorriatc, ar ooncftoning, sunrool. loaded Bronze, 5 speed, ar conciioniig, AM&amp;lt; FM stereo lowmieage</p>
        <p>Gray, autorriatc, ar condionrig loaded White, automate, ar axxJIoning AM/FM stereo. Red, 5 speed, ar condloning AM/FM stereo</p>
        <p>1966 1966 Mazda</p>
        <p>1987 ChevyCelebrity</p>
        <p>P9676  Bronze, automate, aroondtonng AM/FM stereo</p>
        <p>P9681 Gray, automate, ar, AM/FM Stereo, sunroof P9682 Ughl blue, autorriatc, aroondloriing AM/FM stereo.</p>
        <p>Express Lane Oil Change</p>
        <p>Just</p>
        <p>11688</p>
        <p>No appointment necessary! Takes only 20 minutes! Includes 5 quarts of oil and agenuinelbyota doublefiltering oil filter!</p>
        <p>Minor Tune-Up</p>
        <p>Just</p>
        <p>$9088</p>
        <p>Includes genuine Ibyota spark plugs plus timing and idle adjustment! (6 cylinder and other special plugs win cost a bit more.)</p>
        <p>i</p>
        <p>Thursday, Friday &amp;amp; Saturday:</p>
        <p>A Sigmon Company</p>
        <p>Authorized Mercedes-Benz DealerTOYOTA EAST109Trade StreetGreenville756-3228 Call UsToll Free1 -800-682-5437</p>
        <p>T</p>
        <p>T</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0066" />
        <p>C^26 The Dally Retlector, Greenville, N.C.</p>
        <p>ftM Foreign Cars</p>
        <p>HONDA ACCORD LX,</p>
        <p>4 ikjor, 5 spMd. liK n*w TJ.OOO miles Call 756 8583</p>
        <p>029.</p>
        <p>Iraz^</p>
        <p>Auto Parts &amp;amp; Service</p>
        <p>JDE'S now has a three year warranty on starters, alternators, water pumps, and etc Call 752 1123.</p>
        <p>032 Boats &amp;amp; Motors</p>
        <p>B&amp;amp;KMARINE</p>
        <p>Evinrode, Omc, Mariner and MerCruiser service center. All Evinrude and Mariner motors and Cox trailers at clearance pricesi</p>
        <p>1205 Dickinson Avenue. Greenville 752 2882</p>
        <p>CHECKMATE Ski boat Power tilt trim, ski pylon, 2 props, ex tras, Johnson 85 V4 runs like new. 752 5872</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>ONE MAN BASS TRACKER</p>
        <p>Boat Price negotiable Call 752 3409</p>
        <p>13' SAILBOAT with trailer, sail and rigging - Asking $450 Days 630 2766; 753 2997 after 6 00 p m</p>
        <p>14' BASS BOAT 35 horsepower Evinrude, depth finder, foot con frol trolling motor and live wells, $1800 757 3956</p>
        <p>16' BAY BOAT. Center console, 55 horse power, tilt and trim, galvanised trailer, excellent condition $4500 Call Harry, 756 8356 9 6p m</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>032 Boats &amp;amp; Motors</p>
        <p>Sunday, September 18.1988 03 Cycles For Sale</p>
        <p>1*71 SPORTS CRAET 18 , open bow, 8S horsepower Evinrude outboard motor. Deep V with equipment In good condition $1695 Call 752 3537</p>
        <p>1*78 17' RIVER OX. Center con sole. 18 gallon fuel tank. 1986 85 horse power Force engine, stainless steel prop, long galvanized trailer, excellent condition $4,300 Call 757 3310</p>
        <p>1*84 I*' SEA LION Center con sole, 115 horsepower, float on, perfect for fall fishing $6,900 758 6925</p>
        <p>1*8* WINCHESTER, center console, 1986 Cox galvanized drive on trailer, 135 horsepower Evinrude, Johnson 28 poynd thrust trolling motor, lots ot ex tras $5.000 Call 746 3687 .</p>
        <p>1987 COBIA BOAT 20' galvaniz ed trailer. 90 horsepower Evinrude, center console, built in ice chest, tackle box and live wells. $7900 830 1134, 355 6462.</p>
        <p>1*88 BAYLINER 19 footer Call 752 2867 after 5p.m.</p>
        <p>DON'T THROW IT away! Sell it for cash with a. fast-action Classified Ad!</p>
        <p>034 Camping Equipment</p>
        <p>1979 COACHMAN camper, 25' Cadef, very, very clean, sleeps 8. bathroom in rear with tub and shower, lots of storage space. Call 795 4537 after 6; weekends anytime.</p>
        <p>036 Cycles For Sale</p>
        <p>HONDA 250 Elita Scooter, 1985 Low mileage. Am/Fm stereo, good condition. Most sell. 746 4456or 757 1278</p>
        <p>1982 YAMAHA Sega 550, 4 cyl inder, 6 gears and helmet. Low miles, good condition, $875 firm. 757 1436</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>1*83 HONDA CUSTOM 250, refails for $565, selling for $395 355 7085 or 756 3705</p>
        <p>1*83 KAWASAKI Spectra with trpiler. $2100 757 1367 ask for Maft.</p>
        <p>1*83 YAMAHA 175 3 wheeler Very good condition. Asking $350 752 4841</p>
        <p>1*87 HONDA Helix $2000 or best offer 830 1308 ask for Chris</p>
        <p>040 Jeeps &amp;amp; Vans</p>
        <p>1*85 DODGE CARAVAN SFI</p>
        <p>passenger mini van. Loaded, many extras musf be seen to be appreciated $7495. Call 10 00 5:00, Tuesday Friday. 756 1174</p>
        <p>1*8* FORD 1/2 Ton Conversion Van. One owner, deceased Estate most sell Blue/grey, back ladder, chrome wheels, CB radio, front and rear air condi tioning units, Am/Fm stereo cassette, captain seats, new steel belted radial tires, above head light control panel and more 42,000 actual miles. You may assume payments of $343. Amount owed $14,500. 756 2022 or 758 4413 ask Teresa DeLong</p>
        <p>041</p>
        <p>Trucks</p>
        <p>1*53 FORD truck: Excellent condition. Call Eastgate Motors at 355 2193.</p>
        <p>1*73</p>
        <p>Good condition</p>
        <p>CHEVROLET</p>
        <p>Nights, 758 8413</p>
        <p>TRUCK</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>041</p>
        <p>Trucks</p>
        <p>1*73 FORD Pick up for sale. Engine trouble, asking $450 ne gotiable Call after 6 30 p.m., 355 5169</p>
        <p>1*81 WHITE EL CAMINO V 6,</p>
        <p>auto, air, high mileage, for sale or trade for car. 355 2340.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>galleria</p>
        <p>FULL TIME</p>
        <p>Positions Now Open!</p>
        <p>We are looking for responsible individuals who enjoy RETAIL SALES. You must be willing to work hard! Desire a career, not just a job? Galleria offers the chance for advancement!</p>
        <p>Caii for Appt. 756-0700</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPUY</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY CUSSIFIED DUILAY</p>
        <p>The Daily Reflector Classifieds....752-6166</p>
        <p>CAR</p>
        <p>UPHOLSTERY</p>
        <p>Headliners for most cars as low as $79.95 Vinyl tops replaced, most cars - Low as $179.95. Truck seat covers -Low as $69.95 (Broken Spring Extra), Molded Carpets - Most cars. Installed $179.95. All furniture upholstery -20% off ail fabrics and vinyls.</p>
        <p>Earl Radford &amp;amp; Monk Farmer, Owners Greenville Upholstery 756-5977</p>
        <p>Find That Extra Money You Need With An Ad In The Classifieds The Daily Reflector 752-6166CAREER OPPORTUNITYCHEMLAWN</p>
        <p>LAWN SPECIALIST-seeking outgoing individual who desires working outdoors and meeting people. Minimum qualifications require good driving record and high school diploma, turf experience desirable. Full time year round position with seasonal hours. Starting salary, $2.75 per week with hospitalizaton, dental and life insurance; paid holidays and vacation. For those interested in a rewarding career, send resume to: 120 E. 14th Street, Greenville, NC 27858.</p>
        <p>311</p>
        <p>Farm Equipment &amp;amp; Modular Home Auction</p>
        <p>Eitot* of Roy ftowortz Jr.</p>
        <p>Soturdoy, Soptombor 24 9:30 A.M.</p>
        <p>Spood, NC (Closo to Oak City i Tarboro)</p>
        <p>Diroctioni: From Spood toko SR-1508 oast .9 mi., turn right on SR-1510, go 2 mi., solo on loft. From Torboro, toko Hwy. 44 oast 9 mi. watch for igni.</p>
        <p>PARTIAL LISTING</p>
        <p>JD 4340 1374 hf</p>
        <p>JO 4050 1560 hr</p>
        <p>J D 4030 J 0 40 JO B MF 1105</p>
        <p>83 Chev Custom 30 63 I H Loodtor 1600 63 Buick limited. 4l .30t mil 75 Chev Impola J O 4430 groin combine 560 hr</p>
        <p>J D 444 corn heoder Roanoke Huitler peonut combtn* long 393 peanut combine (8} long peonut trailer ir$gl# f tandem oiie CT #570 botch dryer liliitton OSi BlOO 3 row peonut plow (3) long digger invertors (5) ApproM 150 bu gravity llo groin boaet on wogon</p>
        <p>(3) long groin ouger 648 long #1084 44 blode di*c JO #t to 33 blode disc</p>
        <p>Blanton 30-blode disc 3-pf Boyol Oonish tine 4 row cultivator (3) J.O. RC6 4 row cultivator</p>
        <p>(3) J O 4x16 bottom plows Blanton 11 tir&amp;gt;e chisel plow Johnson 1000 gol tonk (nice)</p>
        <p>JB 150 gol opplicotor</p>
        <p>Oiodem spin spreoder</p>
        <p>6x30 steel Mot bed troiler</p>
        <p>J O 410 lorge round hoy boler</p>
        <p>J O. 34T tq hoy baler</p>
        <p>J O 640 hoy roke</p>
        <p>M F. 12 sq hoy boier</p>
        <p>M F to tq hoy boier</p>
        <p>lod sq. hoy bole iooder</p>
        <p>JO 148hontend Iooder w bucket</p>
        <p>Double II lorklift ottochment</p>
        <p>long II99A bcKkhoe, 3-pf</p>
        <p>J O 71 4 row plcsrster</p>
        <p>J O 115 9 heovy duty blode</p>
        <p>Woods ditch bonk cutter</p>
        <p>Several fuel tonks</p>
        <p>Lilliston 4 Long cutters</p>
        <p>Plolform scoles (collector s item)</p>
        <p>To B. Sold at 12:00 NOON 19B7 56'x2*'B- modular ham#. Thii homt i Ilka naw, hot only bon llvod In for opprox, 4 montht. Will bo told complololy fumlthod.</p>
        <p>For lurfhor Information or brochuro w/doloilod litling S picfuroi contad:</p>
        <p>AnytliM 019)257.2140 Mobil* (019) 449-1072</p>
        <p>cs, ftf Inc. / Auclioneers NCAL 1468 Rl. 3, Box 107</p>
        <p>Warrtnton, N.C. 27589</p>
        <p>  "The Complete Auction Service</p>
        <p>NC'C 4264</p>
        <p>REAL ESTATE AUCTION</p>
        <p>9 Building Lots A. T. Venters, Ayden, N.C.</p>
        <p>Soturdoy, November 5, 1988 11:00 A.M.</p>
        <p>Dlraction8; From Ayden, N.C; take Hwy. 102 East for approx 5 miles. Turn left on rural paved road 1746 and back right on rural paved road 1751. Property is 2 tenths mile on the left. Watch for signs.</p>
        <p>9 Beautiful Building Lots</p>
        <p>Mostly cleared with some woods land on each. Each lot fronts rural paved road 1751. Approx. 5.5 miles from Ayden, Approx, 15 miles from Oreenvllle. Eastern Pines Community water only 2 tenths mile from property</p>
        <p>Lol 81-4.41 Acrt*228' rood Ironlog*.</p>
        <p>LM 82-4.81 Acrot218' rood Ironloo*.</p>
        <p>Lot 1-8.71 Actoo220' rood Irontogo. Alto hot 8 room wood Iromo houM on* lorgo pock houoo.</p>
        <p>Lot 4-8 31 Acroo-380' rood Ironloeo. lol 8-3 81 Acr-380' rood Ironlogo.</p>
        <p>Lot 8-J.71 Acrot-190' rood Irontogo.</p>
        <p>Lol 7-4.81 Acroo360' rood Irontogo.</p>
        <p>Let 8-8.81 Acrot388' rood trontogo.</p>
        <p>Lot -6 71 Acro-38S rood IrontOflO.</p>
        <p>Solotno</p>
        <p>All loll hovo bion ourveytd ond maps art avtllable Perk lasts htvo boort dono</p>
        <p>Owner llnoncing ovtlltblo Terms 25% down ond 14% Inlerost lor 5 years</p>
        <p>NOTE: II you oro Intoroslod In owner llnencing please notify the Auction Go at loal 15 dayi prior to solo dote</p>
        <p>Cortflrmotlon day of solo</p>
        <p>Tormo: 10% down bolanco In 30 deys</p>
        <p>For Information call John Tugwoll at (91S) 444-0514, L F Wor thlngtonat|9l91758 3337,orA T Vonlors ot (910) 7484175</p>
        <p>The Auclion/Roolly Co rooorvos the right |o ollar Iho property In soporato loto, combination iharoof, and/or at a whole</p>
        <p>Announcomonit day of talo toko proianco over any printed manor.Audton: The Sound ThdSeNa NCAL34M</p>
        <p>SSSL</p>
        <p>For a very limited time, were pleased to offer our best price ever on OkJsmobiles! Just *1.00 over invoice on selected mocfels!</p>
        <p>Wbil Show Vbu The Invoice!</p>
        <p>When we say .00 over factory invoice total, thats all youll pay! You can \ook at the invoice and see for yourself! Buying ycxjr new car will never be so easy! Or so affordable.</p>
        <p>Hurry In For Best SelectionI</p>
        <p>Dont wait another minute! Nowthe wordsouton how much you can save, our terrific OkJsrrxfoiles will be going, gping, gone! Shop now for very best selection ofOldsmobiles!</p>
        <p>TV//,</p>
        <p>IS</p>
        <p>'ATS</p>
        <p>is</p>
        <p>&amp;lt;</p>
        <p>LsJ</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>1988 Nissan Sentras</p>
        <p>IB</p>
        <p>1988 Nissan Pulsar XE</p>
        <p>V\fe are pteased to announce Nissans new purchase program, good for alimitedtimeonly,justforpeoplewhoveneverboughtacarbefore!Mxjsee,we believe yourfifsl car-buying experience should be as exciting (and as easy) as possible! If you;</p>
        <p> Have a permanent job,</p>
        <p> Have li\^ at the same address fori year,</p>
        <p> Have an income sufficientto make your payments,</p>
        <p> Have no credit (or a satislactory rating),</p>
        <p> A valid drivers license, and</p>
        <p> A social security number,</p>
        <p>then you 're,eligible to buy one of the cars above! Perhaps with no cash down!</p>
        <p>Most Nissan dealers dont have these models. Through a special  .eithOWsNlssanhj .............</p>
        <p>I theyre selling fastso hurry!</p>
        <p>The requirernenis, as you can see, are quite basic and easily rnel In tact, we re willing to bet ydire eligible and didnt even know H!</p>
        <p>Just think, you could be cruising down the hi^ay in your brand-new Nissanmuch sooner than youve ever dreamed possible! And by beginning with</p>
        <p>Smply cut out the credit application weve provided below. Rll it out and</p>
        <p>1988 Nissan Stanza E</p>
        <p>1988Nissan Ihjcks</p>
        <p>[0]</p>
        <p>Credit Application</p>
        <p>1988 Nissoi 200 SXXE .</p>
        <p>Name,</p>
        <p>Address</p>
        <p>Social Security ft. Employer</p>
        <p>Driver's License If</p>
        <p>\</p>
        <p>How Long?.  State,</p>
        <p>.How Long?</p>
        <p>Credit References (if any).</p>
        <p>/ errncMifUsm</p>
        <p>991 Greenville BoulevatdSWGreenville756-3115Call Us Tol-Free1-800-553-92t8</p>
        <p>The Deal Kings</p>
        <p>We Deal in Volume...Not Price!</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0067" />
        <p>041</p>
        <p>Trucks</p>
        <p>M** *llent condition,</p>
        <p>i^pOWBiSZEOid^</p>
        <p>wwte stripes, excellent condi</p>
        <p>c2ii&amp;gt;;i?2nV</p>
        <p>W7 MAZDA 2400 LX, loaded warranty ttsts tor $11,600, pay</p>
        <p>otf loan at $7800. 746 2741.</p>
        <p>187 MA2DA CLUB CAB, 4</p>
        <p>whMl drive, SE5, $9,300. 355</p>
        <p>Child Care</p>
        <p>JTER/Housekeeper 5''.** dependable, to 8 month old child. Full time Hours will vary. Must have own transpor tation. Call atter 6 p.m. 756 8899, ask for Mrs. Stewart.</p>
        <p>BABYSITTER REQUIRED In</p>
        <p>my home. Full time post, Mon day Friday, 7a.m. 6pm Ret erences required 355-7779. ESTABLISHED HOME playschool has 3 opp."ings tor newborn to 3 years old Full learning experience. 830 1009.</p>
        <p>NTERESTEO in keeping</p>
        <p>children in my home, reason able rates 758 5605.</p>
        <p>050</p>
        <p>Pets</p>
        <p>AKC GERMAN SHEPHARD</p>
        <p>Female puppy. Black and tan, 4 months. Large bone quality dog. $250. Wormed and shots. Dr. Charles Boyette, Belhaven, 943 2550.</p>
        <p>B puppies, excellent hunting and tield trial. Yellow and black. 355 4831.</p>
        <p>AKC LONG HAIRED miniature dachshund puppy, male; beautiful and lovable. $150. Pleasecall 757 0311.</p>
        <p>AKC REGISTERED Boxer bull dogs. 8 weeks old, $100 each. 756 4340</p>
        <p>AKC REGISTERED Bassett hound puppies. 6 weeks old. 1 751 2624</p>
        <p>need BABYSITTER Call 752 6173 after 7:00p.m.</p>
        <p>WILL CARE FOR CHILD or in</p>
        <p>tant in my home, Monday Fri-day. Fenced play area. 752 1517</p>
        <p>WOULD LIKE TO BABYSIT in</p>
        <p>my home, Belvoir Highway. $6 per day 758 5076</p>
        <p>050</p>
        <p>Pets</p>
        <p>AKC Basset Hound puppies. 5 male, 1 female. $150 each. Call 752 5874</p>
        <p>AKC BOX E R 6 months old.</p>
        <p>Ears cropped, all shots, and wormed. $250. Call 752 2991.</p>
        <p>AKC CHAMPION SIRED Pek</p>
        <p>ingese. Male and female. Call 758 7143 after 6.</p>
        <p>AKC CHESAPEAKE BAY Re</p>
        <p>trievers. Beautiful pups. Available October 22nd $300. 756 4765.</p>
        <p>AKC COCKER SPANIELS,</p>
        <p>wormed and shots, 7 weeks old. Buff, black and red. $100 each. 927-4870 after 8 00 p m.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>BLUE CROWN Conure with cage $90. Call 752 3647 or 757</p>
        <p>0133.</p>
        <p>050</p>
        <p>Pets</p>
        <p>CHIHUAHUA PUPPY, AKC, 8 weeks old, male long haired, $150. Shots and dewormed. 4:all 795-4537 after 6; weekends anytime.</p>
        <p>CHINCHILLAS $35 and up. Call 756 9440.</p>
        <p>DALMATION PUPPIES for</p>
        <p>sale No papers. $80 each Call 746 3703</p>
        <p>FOR SALE German Shephard</p>
        <p>Oies. Championship ine. 792 3568 after 5 p.m., Jamesville, N.C.</p>
        <p>FOR SALE AKC Registered Basset hound puppies. Call after 5 p.m., 946 1907</p>
        <p>FOR SALE; Springer spaniel puppies, 6 weeks old, AKC registered $150. 753 4022.</p>
        <p>FREEII MIXED LAB retriever</p>
        <p>7 weeks old.</p>
        <p>8358, evenings</p>
        <p>puppies 7 weeks old. Females only 758 83</p>
        <p>FREE KITTENS; litter trained. Call 746 2556</p>
        <p>FREE MIXED LAB puppies to a</p>
        <p>?lood home with responsible amlly. Ready to go. 756-8768.</p>
        <p>GERMAN SHORTHAIRED</p>
        <p>pointer puppies, 10 weeks old, solid liver and liver and white ticked. AKC, all shots, hunting stock, championship bloodlines. Call atter 6:00,1 585 1146.</p>
        <p>LAB PUPS, pure breed, intelligent and gorgeous, $75. Call 752 9532 or 355 4976.</p>
        <p>LOIS'S PAMPERED PETS.</p>
        <p>Small dog grooming, $12.00. Call 3555754.</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. Call 756-0106 for Electrical, Air Condition and Heating Service and Installation.</p>
        <p>Win</p>
        <p>lakes</p>
        <p>Sale Inland Harbour *Tilad Bathhouse Convenient Store Gameroom Marine Gas</p>
        <p>Washington, NC</p>
        <p>Pamiico River Live Entertainment Swimming Pooi Sandy Beaches Tanning Deck</p>
        <p>946-5700</p>
        <p>BMW Sales Representative</p>
        <p>RON CLARY</p>
        <p>Ask About 7.35% Financing on BMWs!</p>
        <p>Hwy. 258 North &amp;amp; 70 By-Pass Kinston 1-800-682-4226Bob Barbour Honda</p>
        <p>invites you toCome Grow With Us!</p>
        <p>We are currently interviewing to increase our sales staff to meet the tremendous public ^acceptance of our product.The Ideoi Gmdidote Wouid Be:</p>
        <p>AggressivePossess Some Sales Experience (not neeeeurlly eutomobllee)</p>
        <p>Committed To Earning In Excess Of $35,000 Per Year Well QroomedIf You Are Seiected, We Offer:An Exeelient^ey Plan  ^An Opportunity For A CarAJIowance Excellent Training The Opportunity For Rapid Advancement A Positive Work Environment Excellent Benefit Package Both men end women may apply.</p>
        <p>To take advantage of this rare opportunity apply in person to Hayden Butts,Bob Barbour Honda3300 S. iVl0morianr. Greenville, N.C.</p>
        <p>PEKiNGESE pups; 3/4 Pek Ingese, Ui Shlh-Tru 7 week old pups. Call 756 8664 after 7:00 p.m. weekdays.</p>
        <p>REGISTERED SQUIRREL</p>
        <p>dog, 5 year old red bone, $350. Call 746 2514 nights.</p>
        <p>REGISTERED ABYSSINIAN</p>
        <p>female kitten, 2 months old. Looks like mini-cougar. $500 ne gotiable. Call 753 5467</p>
        <p>SHIH TZU PUPPY. AKC male, 2 months, gold and white, wonderful ball of fluff. Ideal family pet. $300. 752 4742.</p>
        <p>SHIH TZU. AKC male, 1&amp;lt; i years old, gold and white, beautiful in every way. Needs loving home. $200. 752 4742.</p>
        <p>SIX WALKER HOUNDS for</p>
        <p>sale. 752 8703 or 752 9123</p>
        <p>WALKER DEER HOUND for</p>
        <p>sate. Guaranteed with trial. 752 6029 or 756 7315.</p>
        <p>3 ADORABLE KITTENS free to good homes. Call 752-6314.</p>
        <p>057 Help Wanted Administrative</p>
        <p>JTPA FISCAL MONITOR/</p>
        <p>Contract Manager. Regional (5 county) organization is seeking a qualified individual with experience and expertise in perform Ing a variety of governmental accounting functlns, contract monitoring, obligations control, cost documentation, special reporting requirements as well as provide technical assistance to operators concerning SDA fiscal operations. Excellent tr Inge benefits. Salary range $17,842 to $23,409 depending on experience and education. Minorities are encouraged to apply as we are an Equal Opportunity Employer. Deadline tor receiving resumes is 5:00 pm on Wednesday, October 5. Send resumes to Executive Director, Mid East Commission, P.O. Box 1787, Washington, NC 27889</p>
        <p>The Dally Reflector, Greenville, N.C.</p>
        <p>Sunday, September 18,1988 C-27</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>CUSSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>Whether Youre Cleaning House Or Looking For That Special Something You Can Find It In</p>
        <p>The Daily Reflector</p>
        <p>Classifieds</p>
        <p>752-6166</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>FOR SALE</p>
        <p>Complete Tl E Electronic telephone system with 36 phones, 12 trunk line capability, power supply and cards with control panel. Purchased new from Carolina Telephone. Perfect for small business-$3,000. Please telephone Steve Grant, 756-3228.</p>
        <p>Rent A</p>
        <p>NEW CAR</p>
        <p>As Low As</p>
        <p>$18.00</p>
        <p>Per Day</p>
        <p>Sharpest Fleet In Town</p>
        <p>RENT WAY AUTO RENT Brown &amp;amp; Wood</p>
        <p>Downtown</p>
        <p>752-2882</p>
        <p>roR SALE</p>
        <p>1978 Chevrolet wrecker, Electric wench, dollys, emergency light. Completely rebuilt, engine and transmission with shift kit for towing. Great for small operation-$6,000. Call Slave Grant 756-3228.</p>
        <p>We are pleased to announce that driving the very best just became moreafbrdable. Fora very limited time, take advantage of special leasing programs on our premier selection of Mercedes-Benz automobiles.</p>
        <p>And when selectingany of our world-class, previously-owned modelsydoso with confidence.Our technicians have been trained to service every car we sell And every one passes our exacting standaids!</p>
        <p>Whenonly thebestwilldoMercedes-Benz &amp;amp; Worid Classics.</p>
        <p>Choose From Our Great Sdectidh Of Wnrid Classics?</p>
        <p>1968 Mercedes-Benz 560 SL</p>
        <p>We have 5 to choose from Slip behind the wheel of this V-8 en^ed lux^ roadster for the ride of your Kfe. For all its power, it's extremely agile through the turns. And on the open road.</p>
        <p>YearMake/Modd 1988 Mercedes-Benz 560 SL</p>
        <p>Description</p>
        <p>Very low mileage, astral liver metallic with burgundy leather interior, call for detail*.</p>
        <p>1988 Mercedes-Benz 300E Black with tan interior, only 13,000 mile*.</p>
        <p>1987 Mercedes-Benz 190E 2.3 Automatic, light ivory with palomino interior, only 23,000</p>
        <p>mile*.</p>
        <p>1987 Mercedes-Benz 190E 2.3 1987 Mercedes-Benz TDT</p>
        <p>1987 Mercedes-Benz 260E 1986 Mercedes-Benz 190E 1986 Mercedes-Benz 420SEL</p>
        <p>1986 Mercedes-Benz 190D2.5 1986 Mercedes-Benz 420SEL 1985 Mercedes-Benz 380SL 1985 Mercedes-Benz 300TD-T 1984 Mercedes-Benz 300SD</p>
        <p>1084 Merced^sOraz 300SD a983 Mercedes-BedraOODT 1983 Mercedes-Benz i 1982 Mercedes-Benz 300SI</p>
        <p>1981 Mercedes-Benz 380SL</p>
        <p>1988 BMW 7351</p>
        <p>Arctic white with blue leather interior.</p>
        <p>Wagon Smoke silver metallic with palomino interior.</p>
        <p>Artie white with gray Interior, extra nice.</p>
        <p>Artie white wtth blue interior, only 13,000 miles.</p>
        <p>Black pearl metallic wHh grey leather interior, only 30.000 miles.</p>
        <p>Anthracite grey metallic with cream beige interior.</p>
        <p>Black with palomino interior.</p>
        <p>Smoke silver metallic with cream beige interior.</p>
        <p>Turbo Diesel Wagon. Diamond metallic with blue interior.</p>
        <p>Champagne metallic wHh palomino interior, only 51.000 miles, MB Tex interior.</p>
        <p>Manilla beige with palomino Interior,</p>
        <p>Midnight blue with palomino Interior.</p>
        <p>Biscaync Blue with blue interior, low miles, must see.</p>
        <p>Dark anthracite grey metallic with grey leather interior,</p>
        <p>84.000 mile*.</p>
        <p>Signal Red with palomino Interior.</p>
        <p>Luxor Bdge metallic with wheat interior.</p>
        <p>YearMake/Modd</p>
        <p>1987 BMW M-6 1987 BMW 325C 1987 BMW 325S</p>
        <p>1987 BMW 325S</p>
        <p>1985 BMW 325e</p>
        <p>1984 BMW 318i</p>
        <p>1988 Porsche 928 S-4</p>
        <p>1987 Porsche 91 ITarga</p>
        <p>1986 Porsche 944</p>
        <p>1983 Porsche 91 ITarga</p>
        <p>1988 Jaguar XJ6 1988 Jaguar XJ6</p>
        <p>1987 Jaguar XJ6</p>
        <p>1986 Jaguar XJS1985 Jaguar XJS</p>
        <p>1988 Cadillac Fleetwood</p>
        <p>1983 Aurora Cobra1987 Acura Legend L</p>
        <p>Descriptkm</p>
        <p>Black with linen interior, only 21,000 miles.</p>
        <p>Convertible, black with tan interior, only 14,000 mile*.</p>
        <p>Red with beige interior, only 12.000 miles.</p>
        <p>Dark grey metallic with burgundy leather interior.</p>
        <p>Burgundy metallic with cream interior, only 48,000 miles</p>
        <p>Light blue metallic with beige interior.</p>
        <p>Cassia metallic red with linen burgundy interior, only 5300 miles.</p>
        <p>Guards red with linen interior, only 16,000 miles, many extras.</p>
        <p>Light blue metallic with cream interior, only 29,000 miles, many extras!</p>
        <p>White with mahogany interior, only 49,000 miles.</p>
        <p>Artie blue with barley interior.</p>
        <p>Black with Ian interior, only 8,600 miles.</p>
        <p>Burgundy metallic with black leather interior, only 15,000 miles, chrome moulding and wire wheels.</p>
        <p>Dark grey metallic with tan leather interior. Beautiful car.</p>
        <p>White with dove interior, only 30,000 miles.</p>
        <p>Brougham model. Dark blue metallic with blue leather interior, only 7,100 miles.</p>
        <p>Only 920 miles, never titled!</p>
        <p>Slate blue with grey leather interior.</p>
        <p>Mercedes-Benz kVMd Classics</p>
        <p>109Trade Street Greenville, NC919/796-3228 Call Us ToU-Free 1-809^-5437</p>
        <p>BY TOYOTA EAST</p>
        <p>GrmwiUe's ort V mtlhmtd Mavaks-Bem sales and sewkedeakr.</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0068" />
        <p>JTheDaHyReflec^ Greenville.N.C. Sunday,September 18,1988</p>
        <p>^U</p>
        <p>ri</p>
        <p>m</p>
        <p>Hlp Wanted Clerical</p>
        <p>With Eastern North Carolina's</p>
        <p>Dependable Temporary Service.</p>
        <p>f</p>
        <p>Advance Into new opportunities Witti Anne's Temporaries, Our (Career Advancement Program prepare you for word pro ^^'"9 or tram you on the most ]JI|dely used computer software gwy. Anne's has been serving Bdstern North Carotina tor 10 itoArs and we need dependable PJ^le like yourselt. Businesses wi over Greenville need office nblp and they turn to Anne's Temporaries</p>
        <p>Consider Your Benefits: YOo'l* work with one of fhe iftost well-known and respecfed ^porary services in the area ^You'll have the opportunity to learn new skills and be better pr^ared for today's business, tarn excellent pay with health dnd life insurance.</p>
        <p>Earn vacation and holiday Bonuses,</p>
        <p>^ork flexible hours in a variety qf places and meet new people</p>
        <p>' ^Tea(n Up With Anne's Today.</p>
        <p>' It's An Advancing (^portunity</p>
        <p> Call 758 6610</p>
        <p>:  ANNE'S</p>
        <p>i&amp;gt; TEMPORARIES</p>
        <p>J i  EOE/M/F/H</p>
        <p>I 1410 S. Evans St.</p>
        <p> Greenville, NC 27834</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>1-800-327-7728</p>
        <p>OmA HOME?</p>
        <p>HOME EQUITY LOANS</p>
        <p>$1,000 to No Limit Mortgage Past Due O.K Credit Problems  Understood i*Various Rates &amp;amp; Terms Cash For Any Purpose</p>
        <p>WHEN YOUR BANK  SAYS NO...</p>
        <p>WE SAY YES!!!</p>
        <p>* FAST SERVICE Midstale Financial Senricaa r Apply By Phone</p>
        <p>t-800-777-3701</p>
        <p>I M-F 8 am-10 pm;</p>
        <p>; Sat. 9 am-5 pm</p>
        <p>The Daily Reflector Classified Advertising Department;</p>
        <p>It</p>
        <p>works.</p>
        <p>'  It sells ^ p It buys</p>
        <p> It networks ,  It employs</p>
        <p>I Dlt informs</p>
        <p> It locates</p>
        <p>I Dlt connects</p>
        <p> It saves</p>
        <p>People ; everywhere  find that F classified :  is</p>
        <p>; effective</p>
        <p> advertising.</p>
        <p>*  They</p>
        <p>:  agree:</p>
        <p>'It</p>
        <p>I Works!' I-</p>
        <p>The Daily Reflector i Classifieds.</p>
        <p>752-6166</p>
        <p>OSI</p>
        <p>Htip Wanted Clerical</p>
        <p>ARE YOU A MATURE hard working self nnotlvafed individual, then we have the perfect job for you Office setting, salary plus commission. Call 7S 1195 lor application information. Equal Opportunity Employer,</p>
        <p>RECEPtlONIST/TYPIST</p>
        <p>requires experience dealing with public. 50 WPM typing. Start salary $10,753.60. Test will be administered Apply Employment Security CommtS: Sion, 3101 Bismarck Drive, Greenville. NC 27834 Deadline lor accepting application is September 28, 1988. 8440577 An Affirmative Action/Equal Op portunify Employer and comply with Immigration Reform and Control Act of 1968</p>
        <p>OM</p>
        <p>Help Wanted Clerical</p>
        <p>PERMANENT FULL TIME</p>
        <p>Secretary to work in local engineering/surveying firm Career opportunity. Experience preferred. Excellent fringe benefits, including retirement plan. Reply to Olsen Associates, Inc., PO Box 93, Greenville, NC 27835 919 752 1137</p>
        <p>0S9</p>
        <p>SECRETARY/Receptionist. In dividual will work with rural ag ricultural assistance center Temporary position available October 1988 through June 1989 AAS in Secretarial Science preferred. Word processing, memory typewriter, public con tact, small PBX System experi ence preferred. Available Oc tober 3. 1988 Applications ac cepted through September 29, 1988 Contact Personnel Department, Pitt Community College, PO Drawer 7007, Greenville. NC 27835 7007, 756 3130,extension289 AA/EOE.</p>
        <p>SECRETARY: full time. Must enjoy working with people, in volved in general office work as well as receptionist. Excellent opportunity, good benefits Please apply at Greenville TV &amp;amp; Appliance.</p>
        <p>SWITCHBOARD OPERATOR.</p>
        <p>filing and light typing Good benefits and starting pay Reply to DR 1158, c/o The Dally Reflector, PO Box 1981. Green ville, NC 27835.  i-</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>Help Wanted Apical</p>
        <p>HABILITATION SPECIALIST</p>
        <p>needed lor ICF/MR facility Re qauires BS in MR with A certiti cate or BS in Education with certification in MR One year experience pretered, but not re quired Send resume to Howell's .Child Care Center, 100 Howell Drive, LaGrange, NC 28551. Personnel Office: 566 9181, EOE/M/F</p>
        <p>IMMEDIATE OPENING for</p>
        <p>Registered Radiology Tech for weekend coverage Low volume work Contact Chowan Hospital, PO Box 629, Edenton, NC 27932 or call 482 8451, Ext 211 Alice or Lou Ann. EOE</p>
        <p>HABILITATION Specialist III needed to supervise residential services component tor the Men lal Retardation Unit Must have 4 year degree in Human Service Field and 2 years of professional experience working with the population served Prefer some one with supervisory experi ence Preference given to quali tied mental retardation protes sional and individual willing to live in the Edgecombe Nash</p>
        <p>County area. Appiy on slate ap</p>
        <p>Plication form. Good salary and enetits EOE. Contact Person</p>
        <p>059 Help Wanted Medical</p>
        <p>ASSISTANT DIRECTOR OF</p>
        <p>Nursing Long-term care tacili ty has position available RN license required with prior ex perience in nursing home setting essential. Monday Friday, flex ibie hours with full benefits package including health, den tal, stock, tuition reimburse ment. Excellent salary comen surate with experience Contact Kim Smith, RN, DON, 758 4121, Monday Friday. 8:00 5:00 EOE M F/H/V.</p>
        <p>COME JOIN OUR TEAM Ex</p>
        <p>plore the unique nursing oppor tunilies of hi tech home care. Must be registered with no less than 2 years ol experience. Top salary, car allowance, flexible hours, paid medical benefits and more Pick your location in NC, part time and full time positions. Baylor positions available. Ca reer oriented respond to: Nurs ing Personnel Department, PO Box 30485. Raleigh. NC 276^2 0485</p>
        <p>FULL OR PART TIME Dental hygienist Call I 795 3137</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>059</p>
        <p>Help Wanted Medical</p>
        <p>LICENSED DENTAL Hygienist full time or part-time, in Washington. NC Send resume to DR 1163. c/o The Daily Reflec tor, PO Box 1967, Greenville. NC 27835</p>
        <p>MEDICAL ASSISTANT or LPN</p>
        <p>needed tor private physician's office. Experience preferred. Please send resume to: 300 Academy Drive, Greenville, NC 27834</p>
        <p>NURSE/RNImmediate</p>
        <p>P'T challenging opportunity tor R N's with nationwide health care cost containment company to perform hospital bill reviews in Greenville  area hospitals. Self starter, available 2 days per week, Monday Friday, day hours, 3 4 years recent hospital experience necessary. Audit ex perience a plus No part time care or weekends Send resume to</p>
        <p>Eastern Regional Manager American Claims Evaluation, ic</p>
        <p>375 North Broadway Jericho, N Y 11753</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>nel Department, Edgecombe Nash Mental Health/MR/SAS. PO Box 4047, Rocky Mount, NC 27803 0047</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>PLASTIC SLIP COVERS</p>
        <p>For a limited time only, you can get a sofa and chair covered in clear plastic</p>
        <p>OHIY ^90</p>
        <p>One Day Service  j'</p>
        <p>We Also Clean Furniture</p>
        <p>JENKINS UPHOLSTERY</p>
        <p>576 N. Raleigh Street Rocky Mount, N.C. 27801</p>
        <p>977-0688</p>
        <p>0S9</p>
        <p>HtlpWantMi</p>
        <p>Mtdical</p>
        <p>NUR$Ea^o5SHNE0ED</p>
        <p>part time or full time, daytime hours, venepuncture required. Salary plus bonuses Medical Weight Loss Systems, 756 2611</p>
        <p>OCCUPATIONAL THERAPIST needed for ICF/MR facility. Re qauires BS in OT and North Carolina Licensure. Experience in MR setting helpful, but not required. Send resume to Howell's Child Care Center, 100 Howell Drive, LaGrange, NC 28551. Personnel Office: 566 9181, EOE/M/F.</p>
        <p>OCCUPATIONAL</p>
        <p>THERAPY</p>
        <p>*1</p>
        <p>Inspeech, Inc., currently has  career opportunity available tor an OTR/L in the Greenville/ Rocky Mount/Tarboro area. We otter an excellent starting sala ry, incentive bonus program and comprehensive benefits package. For more information call Kathy Vershinski at 1 800 331 8840, Human Resources or send resume to P O. Box 928, Valley Forge, PA 19482 0928 EOE</p>
        <p>059</p>
        <p>Help Wanted Medical</p>
        <p>PART-TIME receptionist neei ed for busy surgical practice. Includes general office duties Hours 9:00 2 :00 Send resume to DR 1156, C O The Daily Reflec tor, PO Box 1967, Greenville, NC 27835</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>Pharmacists</p>
        <p>Full or part time</p>
        <p>Reveo is actively seeking pro fessional Pharmacists tor WILSON, GOLDSBORO, and MT OLIVE</p>
        <p>We otter a salary and benefits package unequaled by any other chain. It you are a Pharmacist looking to join a solid company with definite goals of success, please call Bob Bartlett at 919 483 6531 or 919 731 7105 Equal opportunity employer, m/t/h/v.</p>
        <p>REVCOD.SJNC</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>059</p>
        <p>Help Wanted Medical</p>
        <p>REHABILITATION Therapist position in cycle Social Rehabilitation Program. 2 year Associate degree in Human Ser vice field with I year experi ence. Send application and resume to Personnel, Pitt Coun ty MH/MR/SAS, 2310 Sfafonsburg Road, Greenville, NC 27834 AAE/EOE</p>
        <p>THERAPIST SUPERVISOR</p>
        <p>Position in day hospital pro gram. Working primarily with adults with severe and persis tent mental illness. Focus is on resolution of accute psychiatric crisis. Prefer RN or MSW with psychiatric supervisory experi ence. Send application and resume to Personnel, Pitt Coun f y M H M R . S A S , 23 10 Statonsburg Road, Greenville, NC 27834. AAE,'EOE</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>0S9</p>
        <p>Help Wanted Medical</p>
        <p>RN's/LPN's. Would you like every weekend ott, competitive salary based on experience, ex cellent benefits with alternate pay options? It so, you may be fhe person we are looking tor to compliment our staffing needs on3:00 II OOp.m shift.</p>
        <p>NURSE MANAGER. Are you dedicated to quality care of the elderly? Do you have manage ment skills necessary to guide and direct other nursing person nel in giving quality nursing care? II so, you could be the per son we need in a nursing management slot.</p>
        <p>We otter a professional en vironment with individualiied orientation and growth opportu nity Contact DNS, Triad Health Care Center of Greenville, Mon day Friday, 9:00 am 5:00 pm, 758 7100 for interview appoint meni</p>
        <p>ADVANCE</p>
        <p>MECHANICAL</p>
        <p>Needs persons experienced in sheetmetai and duct instaiiing.</p>
        <p>355-6011</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>INDUSTRIAL MECHANICS</p>
        <p>America's leading manufacturer of cleaning aids is seeking to add a few technically skilled mechanics for our expanding 2nd and 3rd shifts. 2 years pneumatic, mechanical, electrical, or CNC experience or equivalent training preferred. Be fairly paid for those skills you have and be trained for those you don't. Attractive benefits. For information or interview, contact:</p>
        <p>EMPIRE BRUSHES, INC.</p>
        <p>ATTN; EMPLOYEE RELATIONS PO Box 1606 Hwy. 13 N p"</p>
        <p>Greenville, NC 2783S '</p>
        <p>AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER &amp;gt; </p>
        <p>Notice: Public Sale!</p>
        <p>Lowest New Subaru Prices Ever!</p>
        <p>GL Sedan</p>
        <p>Stock #1207</p>
        <p>4 door, automatic, cruise control, power windows, power locks, power steering. AM-FM stereo, etc.</p>
        <p>Dealer List Price........^14,330</p>
        <p>Subaru Discount.........^2,533</p>
        <p>Subaru Factory Rebate .....$700</p>
        <p>Sole Price....</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>GL Stationwagon</p>
        <p>7</p>
        <p>Stock *1144</p>
        <p>Air, roof rock, mots, rear window defroster, AM-FM stereo, etc.</p>
        <p>Dealer List Price....... .M3,688</p>
        <p>Subaru Discount.........^1,891</p>
        <p>Subaru Factory Rebate......^700</p>
        <p>Sole Price.. ..</p>
        <p>M1,097</p>
        <p>XT 6 Full Time 4 Wheel Drive</p>
        <p>GL Turbo Stationwagon</p>
        <p>Stock 1274</p>
        <p>Air, cruise control, power windows, power locks, power steering, AM-FM stereo/cossette/equolizer, etc.</p>
        <p>Dealer List Price........^19,273</p>
        <p>Subaru Discount ........^3,097</p>
        <p>Subaru Factory Rebate... .^1,000</p>
        <p>Sole Price....</p>
        <p>15,176</p>
        <p>Automatic, power sunroof, cruise control, power windows, power steering, power locks, loaded.</p>
        <p>Dealer List Price........^17,809</p>
        <p>Subaru Discount.........^2,868</p>
        <p>Subaru Factory Rebate.. . .^1,000</p>
        <p>*Prct OO not mcluOt lt RnO tlQt</p>
        <p>Sole Price T...</p>
        <p>c^oe CuHM&amp;amp;i S U 6A</p>
        <p>#</p>
        <p>W'- a605 W. Greenville Blvd. * Greenville, N.C * -r -  756-8885  ^</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0069" />
        <p>mm</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY CUSSIFIED DtSPUY</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>ATTN: SPORTS CARS &amp;amp; TRUCKS</p>
        <p>1988 MERCURY COUGAR LS</p>
        <p>V-8 engines; (3) in stock</p>
        <p>1987 FORD MUSTANG GT</p>
        <p>Sunroof; 9,000 miles</p>
        <p>1987 FORD THUNDERBIRD TURBO COUPE</p>
        <p>automatic, 12,000 miles</p>
        <p>1987 FORD BRONCO XLT</p>
        <p>full size, full power</p>
        <p>1987 BRONCO II 2 WHEEL DRIVE</p>
        <p>Eddie Bauer edition. Factory Demo</p>
        <p>1989 MODELS IN INVENTORY</p>
        <p> TEMPO</p>
        <p> PROBE</p>
        <p> CROWN VICTORIA</p>
        <p> MUSTANG AEROSTAR</p>
        <p> TAURUS</p>
        <p>Help' Miscellaneous</p>
        <p>writing service. Cover letters,</p>
        <p>business letters, reports, graph ICs C.R. Writing 355 6390</p>
        <p>ALTERATIONS PERSON</p>
        <p>needed. Morning hours. Call 756 9782.</p>
        <p>ARE YOU EAGER TOoperate a Fresh Way Food Store snitt? We will hire and train you! Part time and tull time hours are available, with tiexible schedule to include weekends and nights. Apply in person at the nearest Fresh Way in Greenville or Winterville today.</p>
        <p>ASSISTANT MANAGER, retail sales. Salary negotiable. Allan tic Personnel Service, 355 7931.</p>
        <p>040 Htip Wanted Miscellaneous</p>
        <p>ACCOUNTANT Nation's largest real estate syndicator needs</p>
        <p>property management field ac to perfor</p>
        <p>countant to perform full charge accounting responsibilites at an investment property location in Rocky Mount, North Carolina. Bachelor's degree required (</p>
        <p>Accoounting, management or</p>
        <p>finance preferred) No experi ence necessary. Duties include accounts payable, accounts re ceivable, monthly financial statement analysis, budheting and use of IBM PC and Lotus 1,2,3 to maintain the tor going Send resume to: J.M B Proper</p>
        <p>ty Management Company, 180</p>
        <p>"" -liiTV -  -</p>
        <p>AVON CAN EARN YOU Extra money. You set your own hours Call Nancy, Assistant Manager 1746 3065.</p>
        <p>CABLE TV Contractor Installer needed Must have truck or van. Five days training required. 756 9243.</p>
        <p>CHILDREN/YOUTH Director (Part time) at Winterville Bap list Church, Winterville, N C. Only committed Christain who enjoy relating to the younger sect- (Grades K 12)- need apply. Respond to PO Box 434, Winter ville, NC 28590</p>
        <p>CHURCH ORGANIST/PIANIST</p>
        <p>wanted, part time paid position, in Bethel Call 825 0790 or 825 7541 for more information.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>Leo Venters Motors, Inc.</p>
        <p>Sales</p>
        <p>746-6171</p>
        <p>Service</p>
        <p>'46-6172</p>
        <p>510 N. Lee Street, Ayden, N.C,</p>
        <p>"Where Service Is A Fact, Not A Promise!"</p>
        <p>New Car Prices Are High.</p>
        <p>Loufer Your Payment With The Best Lease Available</p>
        <p>Cati Us For Details ALL MAKES-ALL MODELS OF VEHICLES New t Used Wi will apply the faetory rebate to your lease.</p>
        <p>9o^e CmIoiii'^ou QetD1ie*^e9t&amp;lt;Tyelt(cCeSea9eT^itogiw &amp;lt;j4ooiPaWe ^atCot,^oele Uto ^ouiet ieose ^*o9t}oiifie ^ou* o\leeds</p>
        <p>9Tiuifc  J ieasiwg.  J SPeosc</p>
        <p>LEASING PROFESSIONALS, INC.</p>
        <p>3101 S. Evans Street Greenville, N.C. 27834 Call: 355-2788</p>
        <p>IMMEDIATE</p>
        <p>OPENINGS</p>
        <p>FOR Ot'R Q(,ALifiED ORArtUA^t</p>
        <p>TRUCK DRIVERS!</p>
        <p>NOW TRAINING MEN &amp;amp; WOMEN</p>
        <p>' C&amp;gt;CT f.t hTi If ATf  f NANCiAI ASSiSTAN-T Fua A PAf^f liMF r.LASSf s .C&amp;gt;R ^"LAC^^^T assist AM'f</p>
        <p>BLANTON'S</p>
        <p>imnOR COLLEGE TRACTOR TRAILER TRAINING CENTER</p>
        <p>Holly HilT Mall, Burlington, NC 27215, Attention John Elmore.</p>
        <p>WANT TO SELL LIVESTOCK?</p>
        <p>Run a Classified ad for quick response.</p>
        <p>COOKS' ASSISTANT, part time. Call Mrs. Flanagan, Guardian Care of Farmville, Monday Friday, 8 30 4 30, 753 5547</p>
        <p>COSMETOLOGISTS</p>
        <p>Hair stylist needed tor busy salon. Guarantee hourly pay</p>
        <p>plus commission, bonus, paid vacation, benefits and more Experience not required. Must have current cosmetologist's license. Call 1 800 872 6630 EOE COUNTER HELP needed App ly 2105 Charles Street. Koreti/ ing Cleaners. Full time. Pre employment polygraph re quired.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>040</p>
        <p>Help Wanted Miscellaneous</p>
        <p>CRUSTY'S PIZZA</p>
        <p>Now hiring 10 delivery person nel. Earn S4 00 per hour starting wage Earn up to $9 00 per hour. Flexible hours. Must have own car and insurance Apply in per son at 1414 Charles Street.</p>
        <p>CUSTODIAL SERVICES 12 15</p>
        <p>hours per week Call 753 7111, 8 5, Monday Friday.</p>
        <p>CUSTOMER SERVICE  MANAGER</p>
        <p>Seeking person with experience in operating cash register and supervising sales people This is an entry level management position. 35-40 hours per week, full company benefits, some evenings and weekends work required Apply in person, Mon</p>
        <p>day, September 19, 10 5, Circus rIdToi</p>
        <p>World Toys, Carolina East Mall DENTAL HYGIENIST, Experi ence, motivation, and exceptional communicative skills necessary. Send resume to; Dr. Kenneth Holton, 245 Medical Dental Center, New Bern, NC</p>
        <p>DOCTOR'S ASSSISTANT Need ed for busy practice Computer experience a must. Must be energetic, self confident and willing to learn. Call Chris, 355 5612</p>
        <p>DRIVERS NEEDED to trans port straight trucks and some tractors Must be 25 and DOT qualifiable. 753 5143 or 752 6724</p>
        <p>DRY CLEANING Counter Sales. Excellent benefit package. Apply in person. Bowen Cleaners, t Carolina East Center</p>
        <p>CAN I SOLVE my credit problems? Without investigation or credit check? Yes, Even if you have declared bankruptcy, just moved, are divorced, have poor credit, or no credit at all! Now there is an easy solution to your problems. No tricks or gimmicks. Simple and 100% legal. You can have your credit repaired In weeks! Also you can obtain a Visa, Mastercard, Recover Card comes interest free or Home Equity Lpans...regardless of your current income. 1100% guarantee It!! For more information call:</p>
        <p>Fast Service Credit Repair Services, 919-355-9196 Monday-Friday 10:00 a.m.-9:00 p.m.</p>
        <p>060 Help Wanted Miscellaneous</p>
        <p>060 Help Wanted Miscellaneous</p>
        <p>060 Help Wanted Miscellaneous</p>
        <p>CAB DRIVERS AND dispatcher needed immediately. Apply in person at Dependable Cab Com pany, 1001 S. Evans Street, Greenville.</p>
        <p>COMPUTER PROGRAMMER</p>
        <p>S25S30K Industrial manulac turer. Fee paid Excellent benefits Atlantic Personnel Service, 355 7931</p>
        <p>CONSTRUCTION LABORERS</p>
        <p>needed Apply in person only to Greenville Paving and Contrv ting. Old River Road, 752-8642. EEO/AA/M/F</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>Swimming Pools!</p>
        <p>6 Good Reasons Why We Buiid 9 Out Of 10 Poois in The Area...</p>
        <p>1. Pool Construction U Experience</p>
        <p>2. Affordability</p>
        <p>3. Quality Control</p>
        <p>4. Service</p>
        <p>5. Product Knowledge</p>
        <p>6. 11 Years And Over 500 Pools Installed</p>
        <p>Greenville Pool</p>
        <p>and Supply, Inc.</p>
        <p>100% HNANANONG</p>
        <p>Highway 43 East. Greenville. N.C.</p>
        <p>Visit our complett pool center today.</p>
        <p>Hours:</p>
        <p>Mon.-Fri., 9-5 Sst., 9-3</p>
        <p>"(919) 355-7121</p>
        <p>phc are what^N find in this anenliorv</p>
        <p>Cor Sole</p>
        <p>Our Misfortune Is Your Gain.</p>
        <p>These units will be sold at wholesale or below.</p>
        <p>1985 Dodge D-50  ***</p>
        <p> .......$4,495 3,500</p>
        <p>19S5 Chrysler LeBoron  ^  ^ - aw</p>
        <p>4 docK. block matoIlK,  OOC  VHll</p>
        <p>fully aqulppMl. 47,000 mllM ..........</p>
        <p>1985 Ford Mutfong LX</p>
        <p>Automatic, air, 4 cyllmttr, powr  A.  OCll</p>
        <p>loafing, lunroot, S3.000 mllot  fWwS  g W V</p>
        <p>SiR-',39s *2,450</p>
        <p>1983 Ford Muftong GL</p>
        <p>XlrJ.nr7t0a.mil.. ' $3,395 ^2,450</p>
        <p>1984 Olds Cutloss Supreme Coupe</p>
        <p>AM FM coiiatlo, lilt whool. cruita  AAW  HOdh</p>
        <p>conffol, whita, 68.000mil#.   W</p>
        <p>1984 Chevrolet Chevette</p>
        <p>4 cylinder, auiomolic. powor (taoring.  VAV  vl  O C ^1</p>
        <p>air AMFMiteroo. 50 000milet,whila  _____^7,/VS  I  fOvV</p>
        <p>1982 Chevrelet CHotiea</p>
        <p>4 door, automatic pow .tearing  CAAAC  A CffI</p>
        <p>power broke, oir, blue................................p2,4C79  I</p>
        <p>1980 Toyota CencoGTLIfftback d.  $1  CTC</p>
        <p>s .pMd Olr, chorcool ..   $2,295  a  gDs D</p>
        <p>Frwe. do not IflcMo io. otHl iog. f</p>
        <p>110,599</p>
        <p>dtagsareexta S</p>
        <p>1988 Buick Regal I</p>
        <p>This Strikingly stylish coupe coiid be tfie startof your love affair with the open road</p>
        <p>H2,399</p>
        <p>diagsareetfa w</p>
        <p>1988 GMC Jimmy 4166 Ideal for off-road or on, this 2-wheel drive Jimmy takes you and your friends wherever you wantstyhshly, comfortatjly and allordably.</p>
        <p>Dail Motor Co.</p>
        <p>Hwy. 264 AltanMrta Wait GrMNvHIa, N.C.</p>
        <p>355-4949</p>
        <p>Aertis Frew lagioMl Auto Parta</p>
        <p>J12,999</p>
        <p>Tax and tags are exla #</p>
        <p>This week and this week only, our88cars and trucks havedrama-tically reduced prices! Our 1989 mcxJels are coming in, so weve priced everything to move!</p>
        <p>Beat the price increase. Buy smart! Cometo Sigmon and buynow!</p>
        <p>1988 Pontiac LeMans toiae</p>
        <p>Perfectly practical and wonderfully equipped, this dependable LeMans comes with lots of open-road excitementfor less!</p>
        <p>From Just ^8,899</p>
        <p>H75</p>
        <p>Only    parmonth!</p>
        <p>60 morths torrn at 119'. APB Mti approved cred* and *996 down, cash or kade Taxandtagsveexba</p>
        <p>Sale pnces m*sct manuNctxer s rebates where appic48ke</p>
        <p>Our Best Selection Of Previously-Owned Models Ever!</p>
        <p>Stock*</p>
        <p>sa---aa-  ^</p>
        <p>mmmu^rmOOet</p>
        <p>Oaacrtptlon</p>
        <p>2094A</p>
        <p>1966 Nissan Senlra</p>
        <p>2-dox local. Ofowner, 36,000 rmlea</p>
        <p>8181A</p>
        <p>1986 Chrysler Fifih Avenue</p>
        <p>1 ncal. one^Mner, batter, W(8 new. only 34,000 milee</p>
        <p>8183</p>
        <p>1986 Chevrolet Celebrity</p>
        <p>4&amp;lt;toor. white Witt red xtenor, 44.000 miles</p>
        <p>8188</p>
        <p>1986 Chevrolet Caprice Classic</p>
        <p>V-&amp;amp; Ml power, new tres, 40,000 mites</p>
        <p>8116</p>
        <p>1987 OWsnxjbile Firenza</p>
        <p>Ax condkonxtg, atomatc, 2-door, 10,000mtes</p>
        <p>7009</p>
        <p>1987 F&amp;gt;onliac Sunbird GT</p>
        <p>I oral. onebtMW. autornitc. ax condioning 16,000 mtes</p>
        <p>8152</p>
        <p>1987 Chevrolet Astro Van</p>
        <p>8 passenger. CL modeL 19.000 mites</p>
        <p>6185</p>
        <p>1967 OWsmobile Cutlass Ciera</p>
        <p>2-doa.lo(idet1,24,000 mtes "</p>
        <p>5009A</p>
        <p>1987 GMC Jimmy</p>
        <p>2-wtwel drive, local, one owner, loeded. only -29,000mtes</p>
        <p>8191</p>
        <p>1987 Chevrolet Nova</p>
        <p>Autontakc, ax concMonxtg, very dean. 27.000 mtes</p>
        <p>8179</p>
        <p>1987 Pontiac 6000</p>
        <p>4-doa. automate. Ubteenno, cnaae,26000mtes</p>
        <p>0151</p>
        <p>1967 Chevrolet Corsica</p>
        <p>Tk-steerwtg cnxse, 4doa, only 13,000mtes</p>
        <p>8156</p>
        <p>1967 Chevrolet Cavalier Z-24</p>
        <p>6 cytnder, automate, ax oonrtlortxig. 16000 mtotUHjpersharp</p>
        <p>8162</p>
        <p>1987OWsmobile Calais</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>2-dox, automtoc, ax condaonxtg, 29.000 mtes</p>
        <p>8175</p>
        <p>1967 Chevrolet Blazer</p>
        <p>2-wtteel drive. 6 cytridar. automate</p>
        <p>8176</p>
        <p>1968 CadWac Sedan deViHe</p>
        <p>Ful power, at tootier. Ike new</p>
        <p>Stock*</p>
        <p>8189</p>
        <p>233SA</p>
        <p>8167</p>
        <p>8184</p>
        <p>8187</p>
        <p>8154</p>
        <p>2206A1</p>
        <p>8161</p>
        <p>1983 Buck LeSabre Cusfom</p>
        <p>1984 Pontiac 6000 LE 1984 Okte Cutlass Supreme 1984 Pontiac Sunbird '</p>
        <p>1964 Buick LeSabre (JmitBd</p>
        <p>1965 Chevrolet Cavalier</p>
        <p>1965 Buick LeSabre Limiled</p>
        <p>OHCflpUon</p>
        <p>4-doof, very nea, 58.000 mtles</p>
        <p>Loal one owner , very dearv 36,000 mtos</p>
        <p>4-door, (un power. 49.000 mtles</p>
        <p>Aaomatc. ax oondeonmg 4-door, 56.000 miles</p>
        <p>4-doa, Ml powor, 36.000 miles</p>
        <p>Aitomaec, ax condeorxng, 4-door, 50,000 miles</p>
        <p>IJKal one owner. 58,000 mries. very nice</p>
        <p>3204A</p>
        <p>8182</p>
        <p>8186</p>
        <p>1985 Oidsmobtle Calais Supreme 2-door.aulomabc.axcondeomng. loadwl^</p>
        <p>if 46000mi(es Q  *  </p>
        <p>1985 Mercury Lyrix 1985ChevrolelCamaro  1965 Buick Century</p>
        <p>l-ocal one owner. 58,000 miles, very nee Sporty i-kips. baled. 43.000 miles</p>
        <p>6 cylinder. 4-door, automate, ax condeorxng 50.000 mtos</p>
        <p>8192 1965MondaCRX</p>
        <p>Oie owner, automate, ax condeonxig. 34.000 miles</p>
        <p>8193</p>
        <p>8115</p>
        <p>8124A</p>
        <p>8158</p>
        <p>1985 Chevrolet Monte Carlo SS T tops,bad0d veivtasi54 ooomi(e6</p>
        <p>1986 OWsmobile Cutlass 1906 Buick Century Umited 1906 F&amp;gt;onliac Grand Am</p>
        <p>Loaded. 4-door only23.000 miles Local, 4-door, toaded. only 41,000 rmtes</p>
        <p>Automate, ax oondeonxig. 4-door only 20,000 miles</p>
        <p>8169 1906 OWsmobile Calais</p>
        <p>Local, one-owner, M power, 29.000 milee</p>
        <p>Chevrolet  Buick  Pontiac GMC Truck</p>
        <p>7 Highway 264 Bypass, Farmviiie 753-7103</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0070" />
        <p>C-30  N.c.  Sunday,  September  18,1988</p>
        <p>10</p>
        <p>-r</p>
        <p>The</p>
        <p>Daily</p>
        <p>[efiector</p>
        <p>752-6166</p>
        <p>Help Wanted Miscellaneous</p>
        <p>#</p>
        <p>AAA EMPLOYMENT</p>
        <p>GOTADEADENDJOB?</p>
        <p>BORED?</p>
        <p>NO FUTURE CALL THE PROFESSIONALS!!</p>
        <p>TRANSPORTATION Manager</p>
        <p>It yoy ve got experience sctieduling and dispatching, we ve got the job lor you! Cus totner service a must!</p>
        <p>LOAN ORIGINATOR S20K up Unlimited income potential it you ve got teal estate or len ding biKkgiound! Ready tora change?</p>
        <p>SOCIAL WORKER S18K to S40K depending on experience Private tacilily will accept straight out ot school or ex tremel/ experienced! Ex ceilent benefits!</p>
        <p>PARTS to SJSO Dealership ex perience first choice but will I unsider other' Great boss'</p>
        <p>SECRETARY S2S up Polished pi olessional w ith good clerical ,kills needed lor busy lirm!</p>
        <p>ACCOUNTS PAYABLE CLERK to s6 00 plus Basic bookkeep liiq skills and a "willing to It.,nil' altitude gives you the etiqe Progressive office with loom to grow!</p>
        <p>RECEPTIONIST to $5 00 Very 'ight typing and people skills put', you III tlie front spot! En</p>
        <p>try ,i.vel!</p>
        <p>ELECTRONIC TECHNICIAN</p>
        <p>i 00 up if you want a career not lust a |ub Hurry in!</p>
        <p>RETAIL SALES $160 up Good .. i|ii publii  Start today'</p>
        <p>PLUMBERS HELPER SJ 00 up Miisi lidve driver's license!</p>
        <p>I I .11 n a liade'</p>
        <p>MANAGER TRAINEE $250 up Territic company will train 'asl learner! No experience veded' Here's your chance!</p>
        <p>CASHIER to $4 50 Part time and toll time positions open! Bi ing your bright smile!</p>
        <p>101 W t4lh Street , Suite 203 Low Fee Personnel Service</p>
        <p>##</p>
        <p>060</p>
        <p>Help Wanted Miscellaneous</p>
        <p>DUMP AND BACK HOE Opera tors Only qualified operators with no driver's violations should apply. Permanent posi tion Pay commensurate with experience. Apply in person Boyd Associates. 306 Raleigh Avenue, Greenville.</p>
        <p>ELECTRICAL ENGINEER Pitt County Memorial Hospital is currently recruiting tor an Elec trical Engineer Qualified can diddles must have a BS in Elec trical Engineering and be eligi ble tor PE Licenses within 4 years Primary responsibilities includes design of electrical distribution systems throughout the tacilify including 480 volt and 4160 volt systems. Com petitive salary and excellent benefits For consideration send resume to dr apply at Employ meni Ollice, Pitt County Office Building, Room A405, Green ville. NC 27834 551 4556. EOE/ AA</p>
        <p>ELECTRONICS TECHNICIAN</p>
        <p>Salary negotiable. Atlantic Per sonnel Service, 355 7931</p>
        <p>FASHION/APPAREL manu lacturer seeking merchandising assistant Full lime position available to assist merchandis mg manager Send resume to: Merchandising Manager, 309 Anderson Avenue, Farmville, NC 27828</p>
        <p>060 Help Wanted Miscellaneous</p>
        <p>ENGINEERING ASSISTANT</p>
        <p>Trainees Up to $5500 CASH BONUS upon completion ot our training program. Positions available for high school diploma grads with good math. science Must be between 17 24 and willing to relocate at our ex pense. 1 800 662 7231 to apply.</p>
        <p>FIREFIGHTERSNEEOED. No</p>
        <p>experience necessary. All train ing provided High school grads to age 26 c^ll 1 800 662 7419 We pay relocation</p>
        <p>FIRST CLASS Auto Mechanic 4' a days work week Top pay for right person Apply or call Chuck Autry's Body Shop, 752 3632,</p>
        <p>FRAME SHOP needs part time or lull time mat cutter Must be able to work 9 1 Monday Friday or full time and 10 5 every other Saturday. II you qualify for this position Mply in person at Art &amp;amp; Camera Frame Shop 8. Gallery. 752 4620</p>
        <p>FULL AND PART TIME</p>
        <p>weekend waitresses and host esses needed Apply at Szechuan Garden, 3 5 No phone calls</p>
        <p>FIRE/RESCUEOFFICER</p>
        <p>TRAINEE</p>
        <p>FIRE/RESCUEOFFICERI</p>
        <p>Responsible positions with prog ressive lire department requir ing thorough working knowledge ot modern firefighting and rescue principles, practices, and procedures. Night and shift work High school diploma or GE D, excellent physical/mental health, and valid N.C driver's license required Pre employ men! testing required. EMT cer tificalin preferred Starting salary range $13,062 $18,595 depending on qualified lions and experience.</p>
        <p>Apply by 5 00 p.m . Friday, Oc tober 14, 1988, to the City ot Greenville, Personnel Depart ment, 201 W. 5fh Street, P.O. Box 7207, Greenville, N C 27835 7207</p>
        <p>'Minorities and women are en c' uragedtoapply.</p>
        <p>ECE'AA M/F/H 9/14/88</p>
        <p>SPACES FOR LEASE</p>
        <p>327 Arlington Blvd. (Beside TCBY Yogurt) And Greenville Blvd. (264 ByPass)</p>
        <p>757-0123 or 756-0765</p>
        <p>New Home Buyers Realtors Property Owners  '</p>
        <p>HOME OWNERS INSURANCE</p>
        <p>For Low Rates and Superior Coverage</p>
        <p>Call  Local  Mrt  lor</p>
        <p>^  Inturanca  Agancy  Santeaa</p>
        <p>SUE CASTELLOW  n.wgi.</p>
        <p>355^339  1-800-862-6731</p>
        <p>GET PAID to learn a trade or earn a GED. After as little as 26 weeks of FREE training, you can gel the |ob of your choice You will have hundreds ot dollars put away in your name when you graduate If you are 16 21 years old, we may hold the key to your future Don't wail! Call Job Corps today 1 800 662 7030</p>
        <p>GOLF DRIVING RANGE</p>
        <p>located on Highway 43 south Call 355 6745 for information</p>
        <p>060 Help Wanted  Miscellaneous</p>
        <p>GOT THE "BILL BLUES"?</p>
        <p>Want an extra job now until Christmas that lets you set your own hours, averages $9 00 per hour, provides a $300 sample kit tree, with no Investment that's tun to boot? Show "Christmas Around The World " at home parties and turn your "bill blues" into "Christmas green"! Must be over 21. have own car and phone Party plan experi ence helpful. Call Robin 756 3826 or Vicky 752 0576atter6p m HAIR DRESSER wanted to work on booth rent in well esiab lished shop. Experience prefer red Call and qsk lor owner, 752 7910or 752 9706.</p>
        <p>HAIRSTYLISTS</p>
        <p>Great Expectations is now ac cepting applications tor full time hair stylists Good com pensation package, paid vaca tion. Advanced training, other benefits</p>
        <p>Apply in Person Great Expectations Carolina East Mall (Next to Sears)</p>
        <p>HOUSEKEEPER AND COOK</p>
        <p>with dependable transportation, 29 hours per week References required Please send reply to DR 1160, c'o The Daily Rctlec tor, PO Box 1967. Greenville, NC 27835</p>
        <p>IMMEDIATE NEED Material handlers for several long term assignments Musi have fork lift experience, must be able to pass a drug lest If you're dependable and willing to work, want good pay and excellent benefits call Manpower Temporary Services, 757 3300 We need you!</p>
        <p>CNTIPCDE $00</p>
        <p>Will Deliver 757-1463 or 758-2704</p>
        <p>y? aRa&amp;amp;iuat in</p>
        <p>Janet Bowser and Associates</p>
        <p>FOR SALE BY OWNER</p>
        <p>TWO MILES OUT ON BELVOIR HWY. Brick 3 bedroom home with large greatroom, 2 baths, 2 fireplaces on an acre lot.</p>
        <p>HERITAGE VILLAGE</p>
        <p>Townhome. Many extras. 7M-5453</p>
        <p>^ _Y1 Zl.</p>
        <p>Imtapwidwitly Owned And Opantad</p>
        <p>...Welcomes Parvin Khani to our team of Real Estate agents. Call Parvin at 355-3144 for all your real estate needs.</p>
        <p>Parvin Khani 221 Commerce St., Suite A</p>
        <p>355-7800</p>
        <p>mlK</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>I \/1</p>
        <p>355-7653 fCs</p>
        <p>We re SOLD ON SERVICE!"</p>
        <p>OPEN HOUSE SUN. 2 until 4 pm</p>
        <p>I FARMVILLE- Route 2 Box 1666 - Olds I Stanionsburg Road 3 mrles west of 1258 Crossroads. Country Living at I It's best! This brick rartch home is Isuitounded by large trees Features I include 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, eat-in I Kitchen, hardwood floors, and newly I pdinted inside and out Ready to oc-Icupy $44,000.00. Your Hostess, jMdi'y Clay. 756-9939 or Mavis Butts I Really , 355-7653</p>
        <p>Millbrook</p>
        <p>Wak* up to boautHul living in this lovely brick home. Features include 3 bedrooms, 2Vi baths, Eat in kitch en with breaktast bar, hardwood floors in kitchen and foyer Nice greatroom with fireplace, screened porch and deck. $119.500.00.</p>
        <p>Speight Subdivision</p>
        <p>n-</p>
        <p>I Just right lor the growing family I Features include greatroom with Ititeplace (lining looni, kitchen with |l/dy winUijw in eat m area, pantry land desk 3 bediooins. 2 baths Ibtaits leads to large game room/ I bedroom, on 2nd floor Lots of walk III) storage $102.900.00.</p>
        <p>Greenwood Forest</p>
        <p>I All you need to do is move in Your family will love this 3 bedroom, bath rancher which has just been Ipainted inside New carpet throughout and new kitchen floor I Greatroom and dining room Wooded lot $54.500.00.</p>
        <p>ON</p>
        <p>ICALL</p>
        <p>New Construction in peaceful courftry setting This great plan features bedrooms, 2 ceramic tile baths, greatroom with fireplace, formal din ing room and separate breakfast room with french doors leading to the deck Choose your own decor $78,800.00.</p>
        <p>Farmville</p>
        <p>Excellent taste and quality Construc-j tion can be found throughout th. lovely 2 story home. Features in-| elude 3 bedrooms, 2'/? baths, formall dining room with hardwood floors.l Large spacious kitchen with lots of| storage Small study on second! floor 8105,000.00.</p>
        <p>Tuckahoe</p>
        <p>Rerely will you get another chance onl a home like this Non-qualifying FHA Loan Assumption. Wooded lot with! fenced back yard. Detached storage Screened porch. Features also in-, elude 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, den with fireplace, formal living room andl eat-in kitchen. Carport and storage I room $77,900.00</p>
        <p>Country</p>
        <p>Enjoy the peace and quiet of the country and only be minutes from the city Immaculate 2 bedroom, 1 bath home with carport and outside storage Living room and eat-in kitchen with built-in china cabinet. 148.500.00</p>
        <p>Miles from rwlts and minutes from I shopping. Large farm house with 3| bedrooms and 1 bath, 2 car detach ed garage and workshop Fruit trees] on lot $45,000.00.</p>
        <p>Nalda Malinowski, Realtor 756-9285</p>
        <p>Mary Clay. Trudy Quiley Jell Allen Shirley ktorrlaon Mavis Butta Salas Associate Sales Associate Broker Realtor, QRI lealtor, QRI, CRS 756-9939  825-7101  752-2490  756-6343  782-7073</p>
        <p>060 Help Wanted Miscellaneous</p>
        <p>HEADS UP IS NOW taking ap plications tor licensed hairstylist. Apply In person. 318 S Evans Street. 758 8SS3.</p>
        <p>uvan  730 oaXi.</p>
        <p>IMMEDIATE OPENINGS</p>
        <p>GENERAL LABORERS FOR INDUSTRIAL ASSIGNMENTS, NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY</p>
        <p>We have jobs now tor male or females with transportation, phone and a desire to work.</p>
        <p>Also accepting applications tor experienced data entry and cler ical personnel</p>
        <p>Personnel Temps, Inc,</p>
        <p>355-4636</p>
        <p>202 Arlington Blvd.</p>
        <p>Suite F Greenville. NC</p>
        <p>060 Help Wanted Miscellaneous</p>
        <p>060 Help Wanted Miscellaneous</p>
        <p>INDUSTRIAL PURCHASING</p>
        <p>Officer. Salary negotiable. Atlantic Personnel Service, 355 7931.</p>
        <p>LOCAL OIL COMPANY needs oil truck drivers, local deliveries. Want person thal will be stable, looking for long term employment. Will train right person. Apply at Blount Pel roleum, 1110 N. Memorial Drive.</p>
        <p>LICENSED LIFE Insurance Sales. No prospecting. Weekly commission advance on submis Sion of apps. If you are aggressive, disciplined and want to earn SSOO SIOOO per week send resume to DR 1162, c/o The Daily Reflector, PO Box 1967, Greenville, NC 2783S</p>
        <p>LP GAS DELIVERY MAN.</p>
        <p>Must be 21 years of age. Apply In person, Daughtrldge Gas Company, 2102 Dickinson Avenue be tween 8 5, AAonday-Friday.</p>
        <p>MACHINING SUPERVISOR</p>
        <p>Manufacturer. $25-$3SK. Excellent benefits. Fee paid Allan tic Personnel Service, 355 7931. MAINTENANCE Superintend ent needed immediately for 180 unit apartment complex! Re quires good working knowledge of HVAC, plumbing, electrical, carpentry! Call 355 2198 be tween9:00a m and 12 00p m.</p>
        <p>LIVE-IN NANNIES</p>
        <p>$175 S3S0/Week</p>
        <p>Busy N Y and DC families need you. Receive salary, room and board, airfare, health insurance, car and more. Over 21? Call The Caring Tree. 803 271 2289.</p>
        <p>060 HelpWanttd Miscellaneous</p>
        <p>MAINTENANCE HELPER, full time! Responsible for cleaning, painting, maintenance on apartments! Call 355 2)98 be-tween 9:00a.m. and 12:00p.m.</p>
        <p>MANAGER TRAINEE. Entry level. Mortgage company. College (^ree not required. Salary negotiable. Atlantic Personnel Service, 355 7931.</p>
        <p>MANAGER TRAINEE Food service, up to S20K. Fee paid. Atlantic Personnel Service, 35S 7931</p>
        <p>MATURE HARDWORKING</p>
        <p>person needed part timp, flexible hours (mostly nights and weekends). Apply in person at Zack's Frozen Yogurt, 5 p.m., Monday Friday, 1898A Green ville Boulevard.</p>
        <p>COUAl. NOUSINO OWlllTUNinf</p>
        <p>3103 s. Memorial Dr. 355-6300</p>
        <p>Sidney Harris - Owner/Broker 746-4869</p>
        <p>NEW LISTING</p>
        <p>yr</p>
        <p>FEATURED HOME OF THE WEEK</p>
        <p>COUNTRY ATMOSPHRRE in small quiet subdivision, lo-coted conveniently to Greenville and Kinston is afforded you by this lovely home. Featuring living room with fireplace. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, large kitchen/dining combination, utility room, carport. Comes equipped with swimming pool built to bock deck and 8 x 10 utility building. See this today.</p>
        <p>SPACIOUS VERSATILITY. 4 bedrooms. 2 baths, den with fireplace, dining With fireplace, formal living room, kitchen, utility closet. Central heot and air. Has lorge 1.-216 square foot outside building with 26 x 26 ottoched shelter. In ground fuel tank for convenient fillings at home. All situoted on well landscaped lot. Coll todoy to</p>
        <p>HOMES</p>
        <p>GRIFTON - Living room, 3-4 bedrooms or den, corner lot $44,900. Reduced $41,900. MECHANIC'S DREAM BELLS FORK AREA . 3</p>
        <p>bedrooms, 2 baths, dining room, eat-in kitchen, garage plus detached 24 x 24 garage or workshop. Winterville Schools. Must see inside to appreciate! Reduced! $62,000. $57,000.</p>
        <p>CHEROKEE DRIVE - 3 bedrooms, 1 Vt baths, brick veneer, carport, good neighborhood. $48,000.</p>
        <p>INVESTMENT PROPERTY</p>
        <p>ONE UNIT OF 8 One bedroom apartments near University. 4 Duplexes in various oreos.</p>
        <p>SEVERAL QUADRAPLEXES -Consist of 3 two bedrooms and 1 one-bedroom in each unit.</p>
        <p>COMMERCIAL PROPERTY</p>
        <p>MUMFORD ROAD  12.13 acres. Water and sewage available. $100,000 or will lease for $700 per month.</p>
        <p>LOTS IN FRONT OF HOSPITAL. 310 front feet, $1,200 per front foot.</p>
        <p>LAND AND LOTS</p>
        <p>WOODED AND CLEARED LOTS  DiHerent sizes and prices from $3,000-$10,000. Only minutes from Greenville on NC 11 South.</p>
        <p>LOFTIN ACRES - /&amp;gt; to 1 acre lots of residential home sites. Near Industrial Pork.</p>
        <p>BRIHANY RIDGE SUBDIVISION - Several lots available.</p>
        <p>BRASSFIELO SUBDIVISION - Several lots</p>
        <p>available.</p>
        <p>ONE LARGE TRACT of land consisting of approximately 20 acres, many uses.</p>
        <p>2 LOTS ON STANTONSBURG ROAD. FHA approved. Bell Arthur water. $11,000 each.</p>
        <p>FARM - 38 ACRES -f Stontonsburg Rood. Water available, $125,000.</p>
        <p>9 LOTS APPROXIMATELY Vi acre each, Old River Rood. $7,500 each.</p>
        <p>159 acres. $125,000.</p>
        <p>10 ACRES near Bell Arthur. $15,000.</p>
        <p>796-im</p>
        <p>TAKE</p>
        <p>pamsUkittg atteniioa tradittpflally tyied.wo trtorv in BedTord,' forthal twire wlthG^ steiTway, ail forl arm. handwaftd woodwiidii I family room, t^pstalrayou. wHI find a ham room above douN Bttraga.Alj tbat'sieftfo lor an</p>
        <p>appoW^ i&amp;amp;y. 1238.999,</p>
        <p>t.voriog voiBBELr with</p>
        <p>(tf tbis 3 or 4 bedroMa Meswria} mv on a ptm troe4ined hardwood Ooom tbraughont, m V2 ram. Dm with Sopiaoe,. wdl Me ftm braaOt awavi j .  In  ba&amp;lt;  too!</p>
        <p>' twyard. Jmtafawtd oniCioa oL this oaai areoKorodloyoalM'li</p>
        <p>NEW iAmsti m otjdo aiy bt^tHinronadod by boamiitil homos, wa offar you Ilua oxo^lonal almost bonm with from port* and J^wlda room. Inside tbts brtck bomo you wtli ad terto den with fireplace, eomlotiabie eat-in ktttdam atid^^ beautiful masler bedroom and bath iHe kteated m the firat UpstfH are 3 addittonat bedrooms and a rdereatwn mm for fbe Hidsf Ctrcular drtve, double ladage. m many custom featurea yoo will appreciate an tbw otrn has to $mm.</p>
        <p>Tins fkADITItkNAL iiTVLE of lhl$ home nco^att dbrmer windows and iuW Wp-roof lines making UPS plan an eyampte of elegao^ The contempomry interior features a tmcond story balcony over the spaciou Itvmg room and famify room. U-sbaped kitchen has a pantry and serves the formal dmt&amp;amp; room with ease Siasier bedroom suite oa the mt itoor hasa large dressing area, (uti bath and separate shmier stall Master bedroom on 2nd flowr has raised Jacuzzi with oversized itle and skyltghta. tiS3,ao9,</p>
        <p>MM-.ltED is this lovob family orumted home in lynndaie. 5 bedrooms 3tz baths weU-</p>
        <p>better not tarn out on this great opperfunlty. mfxFAV</p>
        <p>WMM mm mo tbb #taml leval,</p>
        <p>ivate tmuimce. two'bwbwma. , ,</p>
        <p>'.-jom,encio^pafioandj^ romn^wtth flmdaet are a few the amentias are ^fered. m One also comes with a brand new wasbttf mtd dryr and mbtrowave Owning fownhmae doesnT mean havitw to give tm ^ stt^family onvemence. Offered at tsIM IVeiKt^i</p>
        <p>MK ITED NEzLB  WO  Offer  yoM  tMs 3</p>
        <p>and ready for ocmipancy so call now for your showing'</p>
        <p>iandscftp^ yard, terraced deck alt formal areas Morated in latest ealors. Familv room haa pwed ^hardwood floors, fireplace and built ins Targe playroom downstair With hobby room pnvatelv located, eat-in kitchen with buiU-m microwave Jennaire range Offered at $is.m</p>
        <p>EIFtEEV MlSVYEb Vmm GHEEWIM.E. located in FartnviMe. is tbi NEW hem all the rom you need tlao .f. incHi^ tlwe# or 4 bedroom*. 2'j bath#, cathedrai ceilings in gieatroom wMb bmlt-ln bookcaae. cedar lined closets., master bedroom is dowisitaini also with separate .shower ^Jafu*v&amp;gt; Ith mt. Must see this wondcriul new addiilm m Famiville Offered on a ftrgelot lor8Hi,iaa. y</p>
        <p>KOI H BEUIKKi^ IN I.VN\o..E all on one level with oversiied double garag_e. m home be har^'o^ rWm thrdai^t and two cewmic baths The baekyai^  L'oipatety fenced m and be* an tb-ground pool fer^y|iMwnd enjoyment Nkeiv landscaped and m 8l2S.3e.</p>
        <p>VEH UNTlsti in the I oiversiii area on iwb Street used as oifK-es. ibis iradltnmal brick bwtie fuis lantf rodouL  basemem with hreplace.</p>
        <p>\Vlh P,l V KENT when yi can own tN* attractive t bedrnmn, 2 bath home in Roilinwood, Flfi4ice and ceiitng fan m greatroom. well eouiwed k^hen With microwave, refrlgeralor. range and d shw-asher. wasber/^yer hookups and ample</p>
        <p>&amp;lt; W bvinglfl Rdbnwood and only offered at Ui.aite.</p>
        <p>|,EXI\&amp;lt;iTO\ .stil .vRE Offers i)n$ attractive two bedroom townhome with new carpet and new refrigerator and m blinds Offered at |49.S9, itito iayeur oi^tunity te affordable home buying!  '</p>
        <p>xp' EIBTING in Robinson Heights. Wiidar-' ^  At  in kitchenwHb</p>
        <p>la^ and psdhru. large fenced back M Immaculate mside and outside and uftinsa fv 84l.Me. Cali to see today! Thi* one won t lat^eig!</p>
        <p>.LTIII.KTK f U B F.4X. we trffer this lUce end ktHt at Lexing^ ^uare with two bedrooms. I'i- bath. Conm wTfb refngwator. bay window, private pittio</p>
        <p>.YS'ttar""'</p>
        <p>I.W EKTMEXT tiFPtmTt'XmES at ShtmaodMb we t^er yw 2 duplexes and we've got 4 two^ .'Atr tnveatflMiit</p>
        <p>WE'VE fitiT I..LXD. from Mis m tb* Countrv for Tfiidential homes to Hilbwa.v-Commercfal acreage</p>
        <p>t^FtCE Bt iunv. one &amp;gt;er old located-eif Charles Boulevard with 1.300 sq ft and tm  *</p>
        <p>KFTlll, BL'If.IHXG with .*HOD $g ft far Siltf^Sg lease Arliogtw) Village.  ,</p>
        <p>ZMMMttteM</p>
        <p>eu,au&amp;gt;a</p>
        <p>etrHMrzr</p>
        <p>lOnHtAiie SaiUttlf Virrrin tlifi ni</p>
        <p>m*m mn</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0071" />
        <p>OO Hlp Wanted Miscellaneous</p>
        <p>MERCHANDISER</p>
        <p>Permanent part time position, merchandising fashion jeweiry in the Greenviiie area; retail stores. Good hourly wage plus mileage. Flexible hours. Need good transportation with full coverage.-Call Monday September I9th from 9:00 a m. to I 00 p.m. or 5:00 p.m. to 7 00 p m . Call collect 0 2 0760</p>
        <p>MOBILE HOME SERVICE</p>
        <p>helper needed. No previous ex perience necessary Must be dependable with own transpor tation. Apply in person at Calva ry Mobile Homes, 729 W Green vllle Boulevard.</p>
        <p>MOTOR GRADER Operator 2 years experience. Must be able to fine grade Call between 9 00 5:00,825 9911.</p>
        <p>MUSIC DIRECTOR/Organist</p>
        <p>Part time position tor 500 family parish. Working knowledge of postVatican II liturgy prefer red. BA in music necessary. Salary commensurate with education/experience. Position currently available. Send resume/references to: St. Peters Catholic Church Search Committee, 2700 East 4fh Street, Greenville, North Carolina 27858.</p>
        <p>NEED HEAD CARPENTER</p>
        <p>and crew to frame and box I story house. Call 756 3597 lor details.</p>
        <p>NEED SEWING MACHINE Op</p>
        <p>erators Apply at Personnel Ot fice, Belvoir Manufacturing. 758 9710.</p>
        <p>NEED TRUCK DRIVER nd</p>
        <p>warehouse person to deliver local and work around warehouse. Apply at Whichard's Produce, 310 W. 9lh Street, Greenville.</p>
        <p>NEEDED: Attractive females. Velvet Touch Massage. Earn $250 $500a week. Call I 972 9082.</p>
        <p>NEEDED; FULL TIME honest, dependable counter person, 4:00 11:00 p.m. Apply at Ace Cleaners, Bells Fork</p>
        <p>OCCUPATIONAL THERAPIST</p>
        <p>and physical therapist vacan cies with school system. Posi tions include full state benefits Call 830 4242 ext 263 tor applica tion information.</p>
        <p>00</p>
        <p>"OPPORTUNITY</p>
        <p>TRI COUNTY HOMES, INC , is expanding its sales force throughout eastern North Carojina If you are energetic, enthusiastic, honest and in need o1 income of $25,000 per year here is your chance. If you are looking for a company that of fers benefits like life insurance, health and dental insurance, disability insurance, as well as a retirement program call 1 800 672 4503 and ask for Karen Lambert. A confidential inter view will be arranged.</p>
        <p>ORGANIST/CHOIR Director for church in Goldsboro, N.C Send resume to Choir Director, PO Box 87, Goldsboro, NC 27530</p>
        <p>ORGANIST tor adult choir, Winterville Baptist Church. Contact church office for infor mation and application 756 5955.</p>
        <p>PART-TIME OR FULL TIME</p>
        <p>Positions available Avon, the 1 Beauty company, is now hiring. Call 756 6396</p>
        <p>PART-TIME POSITION avail able for person to service news paper machines in Greenville. Must have own car and be bon dable. References required. Contact Circulation Director, The Daily Reflector, 752 3952</p>
        <p>POLISH YOUR Interviewing Skills through our Professional Evaluation Program. Video taped simulated interviews and written evaluation of skills. Call Personnel Profiles, Division ot Atlantic Personnel Service, 355 7931.</p>
        <p>POSITION AVAILABLE lor</p>
        <p>Public Health Educator I to work in Health Promotion pro gram at the Bertie County Health Department. College degree required in Health related field. Submit state ap plication to Employment Securi ty Office, 1102 N King Street, Windsor, NC 27983 Closing date October 1,1988</p>
        <p>PROFESSIONAL RESUME</p>
        <p>Composition Atlantic Person nel, 355 7931.</p>
        <p>PRFESSIONAL DRIVERS if</p>
        <p>you want 80% no touch freight, 11 full service terminals, 24 hour dispatch, company paid entire family medical Insurance, com pany paid dental and vision in surance, permanently assigned late model tractors, $25 paid per day additional after 2 weeks out, referral bonuses. 2': days off affer 2 weeks out, 18' per mile starting pay loaded or empty 2t per mile potential and safety bonus, 2{ per mile potential fuel bonus, 22'2&amp;lt; potential starting package with periodic in creases, then Harold Ives wants you. To qualify you must have a good driving record, be afleast 24 years old, pass company physical drug screen and have recent verifiable over the road experience. Call 919 972 9911 or 1-800 634 6293.</p>
        <p>RELIEF WORK in group home for mentally retarded adults. Requires weekends, evening and overnight hours. Responsi ble for clients and group home in absence of group home manag er Apply on state application form EOE Contact Personnel Department. Edgecombe Nash MH/MR/SAS, PO Box 4047, Rocky Mount. NC 27803 0047</p>
        <p>RETAIL SALES Manager Trainee up to $I8K. Atlantic Personnel Service, 355 7931</p>
        <p>S A S CAFETERIA, Carolina East Mall, is now accepting ap plications for full time positions in all areas. Apply in person, Monday Friday, 8 10 am and 34pm Nophonecalls</p>
        <p>Help Wanted Miscellaneous</p>
        <p>RIDERS NEEDED for free lance, non fiction assignments. Some advertising writing Williams 8i Simpson Inc., 2409 S. Charles Street, 756 8617</p>
        <p>SALES/SERVICE Technician Will train. Atlantic Personnel Service, 355 7931.</p>
        <p>SECRETARY CONTINUING</p>
        <p>Education Division Individual will work with various ad minislrative, secretarial and part time faculty personnel.</p>
        <p>AAS degree preferred but not required 2 3 years secretarial experience. Applications ac</p>
        <p>cepted through September 23. Contact Personnel Department, Pitt Community College, PO Box 7007, Greenville, NC 27835. 756 3130ext 289 AA/EOE</p>
        <p>SMALL ENGINE MECHANIC</p>
        <p>lawn mowers, chain saws, etc. Must have experience Call 756 6058 or 756 2557</p>
        <p>040 Help Wanted Miscellaneous</p>
        <p>WANTED: Live in companion for elderly lady age 79. Room, board, salary. Musf drive auto. Call 746 3409after 5p.m.</p>
        <p>WANTED; Managers for fast food restaurant. Send resume to East Coast, Inc., 2709 Shawnee Place, Greenville. NC 27834.</p>
        <p>WANTED; MAID 3 days a week for sorority house Call 355 3071.</p>
        <p>WANTED: Receptionist and dental assistant. Experience preferred but not necessary. Send resume to DRI16I. c/o The Daily Reflector. PO Box 1967, Greenville, NC 27835</p>
        <p>WESTERN SIIZLIN accepting applications for day cashier and salad prep. Apply after 2pm</p>
        <p>SOCIAL WORKER needed for ICF/MR facility Requires BSW from accredited school. One year experience preferred, but not required. Excellent written and verbal communication Skills required. Send resume to: Howell's Child Care Center, 100 Howell. Drive, LaGrange, NC 28551 Personnel Office: 566 ?I81,E0EM/F.</p>
        <p>TELEPHONE SOLICITOR</p>
        <p>needed Immediate opening, Monday Thursday and Satur day Salary plus bonus. Call Monday morning, 830 1113 for appointment for interview.</p>
        <p>TRACTOR TRAILER Drivers High pay, new equipment, 2 years experience or Tractor Trailer School graduate. Call 1 800 682 6574</p>
        <p>UTILITY WORKER</p>
        <p>Spartan Equipment Company has an opening for an utility workr in the Ayden Branch of fice. Experience in cleaning heavy equipment required. Duties will include steam clean ing equipment and vehicles and other service related work Will be responsible tor cleaning and maintenance of building and yard Good work record, good attitude, mechanical aptitude and valid driver's license re quired. Apply in person only, be tween 8 a.m. and 5 p.m., at office on Highway 11 South, Ayden. N.C. No phone calls please. EOE.</p>
        <p>WINGS OF FAITH Southern Gospel Group is looking a bass player to play on weekends. Call after 7 30 p m , 975 6717</p>
        <p>061</p>
        <p>Help Wanted Sales</p>
        <p>AMBITIOUS INDIVIDUAL to</p>
        <p>sell Real Estate Must enjoy working with people Willing to work 40 hours a week, to set goals and achieve them. Tratn ing 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 Green ville's most aggressive firms seeks full time, motivated, am bitious sales agents. We have expanded our offices and have room tor 4 more agents. Ex cellent 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>LICENSED COMMODITIES</p>
        <p>Broker or experienced com modifies trader Apply in con fidence. Call 355 7932 for con fideniial interview. </p>
        <p>LICENSED INSURANCE Rep</p>
        <p>resentatives to market our life and Medicare Supplement Programs. We provide leads and training vested commissions. All responses confidential In vestors Network and Security Services, 355 3794</p>
        <p>NEW LISTING 8.3% NCH LOAN</p>
        <p>GREAT loan assumption. Save $116 per month if you qualify. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, garage, beautiful landscaping and lawn. $66,800.</p>
        <p>QUINN REALTY</p>
        <p>3106 South Memorial Drive 355-6258</p>
        <p>Carolina East Realty. Inc.</p>
        <p>2192 S. Evans St. Greenville, N.C.</p>
        <p>355-7774</p>
        <p>^W^frivejobejh^est^no^</p>
        <p>59,900 Just outside City Limits. Truly Special is the way to describe this home, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, with lots of pretty wallpaper. Only one year old and priced to sell.</p>
        <p>55,700 Clean and neat! 4 years old, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, greatroom with rock firelace, eat in kitchen.</p>
        <p>42.500. Can be made into a mobile home park.</p>
        <p>Over 17 acres of land, plus a mobile.</p>
        <p>35.500. ECU students will love to have a place of their own. 1 bedroom, 1 bath, completely furnished, except for linens.</p>
        <p>31,900. Owners want a offer on this 3 bedroom, 1 bath home, eat in kitchen, with screened in front porch.</p>
        <p>Bill Barnes, Broker.............83(W)543</p>
        <p>Arline Barnes, Realtor..........830-0543</p>
        <p>JMIS.</p>
        <p>tat</p>
        <p>The following lenders can help make one oi%e lar^st single purchases of your life even laiger.</p>
        <p>ILuclayiAnuTcan/lVl()rtg:igeG)rp()rati()n</p>
        <p>GmwilJc</p>
        <p>First Citizens Bank Greenville First Citizens Bank &amp;amp; Trust Washington iMi-st Citizens Mortgage Coiniiiiny Elizabeth City I'irsi Wachovia Mortgage Company ElizalH'th City I lome Icderiil Savings &amp;amp; Loan of Eastern NC Edenton/Greenville/Bethel/Willianiston/Plynioiith I ^Millies Bank &amp;amp; Trust Compny RinkyMonnt/ElizalH'thUty Pioneer Savings I^ink RiH'ky Mount I'laiUers National Biink &amp;amp; Trust Co.</p>
        <p>Rtynionth/RcHky Mount/Alu)skie</p>
        <p>__________^_________^  I  EikBTgySa'</p>
        <p>buyer comes to them, they tend to be far more flexible about helping the buyer qualify for a larger mortgage. And that can be especially important for people buying their first home. For complete details, call one of the^ lenders.</p>
        <p>a</p>
        <p>MOTHCAROUliA POWCR</p>
        <p>lllltlKIIlK H. liKlHtU lltclt.</p>
        <p>hktththtyuffht Ji hi h immir tulm* di h rmim d fry Iht kitdrr o uh ihJii iJhuI tmm Cimi Mm Iht aiuliHu  ^  O  XU</p>
        <p>041 Hsip Wanted Salas</p>
        <p>SALES</p>
        <p>MAINTENANCE</p>
        <p>CHEMICALS</p>
        <p>There is a career opportunity for you</p>
        <p>A great company for grea pie with great sales ability</p>
        <p>We are Drummond American Corporation, a subsidiary of a AAAAA 1 rated, publicly traded, 33 year old corporation looking tor one great person to sell a broad line-of maintenance specialty chemicals directly to industry, institutions and municipalities.</p>
        <p>This is a career position in our recession proof industry. Doors to management are wide open</p>
        <p>We offer complete training with the highest commissions in the industry, total security, benefit package and complete recogni tion for your accomplishments.</p>
        <p>Noovernite travel.</p>
        <p>Whether you're in our field now or would like tobe, if you are one otfhe great ones in the Green villeareacallMr. Rich Kirk</p>
        <p>Drummond American Corporation</p>
        <p>1700 Sherwin Avenue Des Plaines, Illinois 60018</p>
        <p>Toll Free (800) 323 5922 Mon.&amp;amp;Tues.9to5CDT</p>
        <p>Our company is not affiliated with any other chemical company.</p>
        <p>All replies totally confidential &amp;gt;rtunity Employer</p>
        <p>for greaf pM</p>
        <p>All replies toi Equal Oppor</p>
        <p>041</p>
        <p>Help Wanted Sales</p>
        <p>SALES</p>
        <p>INDUSTRIAL</p>
        <p>We are Cronatron Welding Systems, Inc , the fastest grow ing supplier of welding and bra; ing alloys, equipment and sup plies for the maintenance and repair fields. This is an excellent opportunity tor a great salesperson to join a leading subsidiary of an AAAAAI rated. 30 year old, publicly traded cor poration.</p>
        <p>This career position offers un limited opportunities for per sonal and professional qrowth. You'll sell our complete line to all industrial, transportation and rrruniclpal accounts</p>
        <p>We offer complete product education, unlimited commis sions. an excellent benefits package and account protection boors to management are wide open.</p>
        <p>For immediate consideration, send your resume, in complete confidence, to</p>
        <p>Jim Burdick</p>
        <p>CRONATRON WELDING SYSTEMS</p>
        <p>PO Box 9494 Hanahan, SC 29410</p>
        <p>Equal Opportunity Employer M/F</p>
        <p>041</p>
        <p>Help Wanted Sales</p>
        <p>ENERGETIC, selfstarter, ex perienced sales person tor specialty shop Flexible hours up to 30 No evenings Call 756 4560, days; 355 6032 evenings</p>
        <p>FOOD SERVICE SALES,</p>
        <p>Morehead City area Full line food service distributor seeks applicants for its well estab lished Morehead City route Ap plicants must have food service sales or restaurant manage ment experience Commission plus car and excellent fringe package including health in surance and ESOP Apply in writing to Pale Dawson Co , PO Box 1065, Goldsboro, NC 27530 All replies confidential</p>
        <p>APARTMENTS</p>
        <p>1,2&amp;amp;3</p>
        <p>Bedrooms</p>
        <p>WITH FIREPLACE</p>
        <p>Call US about 2 bedroom special!</p>
        <p>5 Hours: 10-6 M-F 12-4 Sat.</p>
        <p>- 1-4 Sun.</p>
        <p>355-2198</p>
        <p>a CEILING FANS LocMmI oN Hoohar Road an</p>
        <p>HaraaaliaaOrhta.</p>
        <p>ARE YOU HAPPY</p>
        <p>With your present career? Dec orating Den, a national inferior decorating franchise company would like fo meet those people who love decorating. We offer years ot expertise, national name recognition and a system which has been proven in the Carolinas If extensive training, flexible scheduling and ex cellent income potential are im portant to you, then we urge you to call Presently interviewing tor franchise owner in the Greenville area. If interested please call our regional office at 919 833 3305, Extension 1000</p>
        <p>DESIRE A NEW CAREER in</p>
        <p>the insurance field? Guaranteed salary of $25,000 to start plus all company benefits Must be licensed 355 34l0or830 5414</p>
        <p>The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C. Sunday. September 18,1988  031</p>
        <p>Help Wanted Sales</p>
        <p>HELP WANTED AS manager of children's furniture. Apply at The Youth Shop, Carolina East Center, Monday. September 19, 10:00a m 2 OOp.m</p>
        <p>HI LITES ALWAYS $7. Part time sales position In our ladies' clothing store Need to be able to work morning and afternoon hours Outgoing personality a plus. Apply in person at Hi Lite, Buyers Market</p>
        <p>y</p>
        <p>T^~ TffZI,</p>
        <p>Independently Owned And Opertled</p>
        <p>...Welcomes Kay Preston Stine to our team of Real Estate agents. Call Kay at 758-0693 for all your real estate needs.</p>
        <p>Janet Bowser and Associates</p>
        <p>Kay Preston Stina</p>
        <p>221 Commerce St., Suite A</p>
        <p>355-7800</p>
        <p>IF YOU ENJOY WORKING</p>
        <p>with people, have great com munialion skills, like a friendly, last paced fashion environment, we would like to visit with you Full time positions available. Good guarantee salary, benefits plus commission Apply at Brody's, Carolin.i East Mall, Monday Wednesday, 2 4</p>
        <p>041</p>
        <p>Help Wanted Sales</p>
        <p>PERMANENT POSITION</p>
        <p>Two openings exist now for goal oriented person in a local branch of large international firm This is an impressive opportunity tor an ambitious person who wants to get ahead To qualify you need self confidence, pleasant personality We provide com plete company benefits, major medical, dental plan, profit sharing, optional pension plan second to none Also complete training plan Previous experi ence not necessary Income range $20 $30,000 depending on qualifications Only those who Sincerely want to get ahead need apply Call Monday and Tues day,9 00 5 00,830 5414</p>
        <p>041</p>
        <p>HtlpWantod</p>
        <p>SalM</p>
        <p>SALES- Earn $315 a day (gross/commisskm per sale), leads/appointment En--cyclopaedia Britannica. 1 NO-822 2907</p>
        <p>SALES REPRESENTATIVE</p>
        <p>Distributor seeking person to sell Industrial equipment in eastern N C Pay based on experience Excellent benefits and future earning potential. Send resume to PO Box 1888, Elizabeth City, NC 27909.</p>
        <p>SALES CLERK for Shirley's. 3-4 days a week Call 753 3170 be tween fhe hours od 8:30 and 2 p.m for an appointment Bring written resume</p>
        <p>Building A Future</p>
        <p>When you're ready to invest in a new home, Scarborough is o neighborhood with o lot of possibilities. Located in the city with oil the conveniences close at hand.</p>
        <p>...Quality constructed two and three bedrooms with your choice of color schemes and floor plans to custom fit your lifestyle...Priced to accommodate your budget starting at $65,950.</p>
        <p>Christine Nease</p>
        <p>Broker</p>
        <p>OPEN</p>
        <p>Mon.. Tues., Thurs.. Fri. 10-6 Closed Wednesdays Saturday 12-6 Sundoy 2-5</p>
        <p>REALTORS WELCOME!</p>
        <p>Information Center 355-5786</p>
        <p>GREENVILLE</p>
        <p>EASTERN NORTH CAROLINAS HOMEBUILDER</p>
        <p>IQUUHWUN</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0072" />
        <p>C-32</p>
        <p>061</p>
        <p>Help Wanted Sales</p>
        <p>ULEMARKETING opportuni &amp;amp; Must have friendly voice and gpntident attitude. Immediate Wening Call David Moore, 753 AK1</p>
        <p>^  $35,000+</p>
        <p>:3N COMMISSION YOUR HOME JOWNOR TRAVEL</p>
        <p>win rapidly expanding enter ginmenf company celebrating 23 years of providing family en nrtainment throughout eastern ()nited States. Supervise sales projects in top 100 US markets iPSS growth projected at over 50%. Ideal tor couples Call tor appointment, 1 800 247 2871, Mr yhite._</p>
        <p>S YEAR OLD Mid western manufacturer has an unique toles opportunity tor a highly motivated person Coriege degree or HVAC filter sales t^ckground required Chemis tfy knowledge a plus. Position will require some traveling Ex oellent salary plus benefits. Send resume to 0R11S9, c o The Daily Reflector. PO Box 1967, Greenville, NC 27835</p>
        <p>061 Help Wanted Sales</p>
        <p>J y   W*  WW</p>
        <p>062 Htip Wanted Teachers</p>
        <p>TELEPHONE SALES person needed to work 4 nights per week, 3 hours per night. Must be energetic and have pleasing telephone voice. Reply to OR 1157, c/o The Daily Reflector, Greenville, NC 27835.</p>
        <p>day care teacher needed</p>
        <p>Must have 2 year child devel opment degree or one year ex perience working in day care. Call 758 3641; 758 7331 after 6:00.</p>
        <p>SPECIAL EDUCATION Teach er needed at Child Development Center for 3 and 4 year old multi handicapped children. Need 4 years certification in Special Education. Send resume to Beaufort County Child Devel opment Center, 1109 Respess Street, Washington, NC 27889 by September 21,1988</p>
        <p>062 Help Wanted Teachers</p>
        <p>AA DAYCARE POSITIONS</p>
        <p>Available. Full time teacher position /Must have 4 or 2 year degree in Child (^velopment or directly related tield. Part-time teacher aide position Must be 18 years old and have 1 year expe rience in daycare Contact Di Worthy, Apec, 756 2600</p>
        <p>063 Help Wanted Technical &amp;amp; Trades</p>
        <p>DRYWALL HANGERS and fin</p>
        <p>ishers needed with over 3 years experience Call 752 5849.</p>
        <p>DUMP TRUCK DRIVER and</p>
        <p>laborer needed Cali atter 6 p.m. 756 0267,</p>
        <p>AA DAYCARE POSITIONS</p>
        <p>Available. Part time and full time Teacher's Assistants. Please contact Di Worthy at Apec Inc., 756 2600,</p>
        <p>EXPERIENCED SIDING crew needed. $50 a square. $20 Million in collections. Business is . always strong throughout the year. Come to work for the best Goldsboro, Kinston, Greenville and Wilson areas. 1 800 822 6476.</p>
        <p>CHILDREN'S WORLD Learn ing Center has an immediate opening for a pre-school teacher Must have 4 year degree Please contact Donna Harris at 355 6898</p>
        <p>063 Help Wanted Technical &amp;amp; Trades</p>
        <p>CABINET MAKER and</p>
        <p>millwork position available Ex cellent opportunity for chosen individuals to learn hand build ing technics in fine cabinetry, furniture and architectural millwork. Apply in person to The Joinery Company, 820 Fountain Street, Tarboro, NC 27886 CARPENTER'S HELPER Must have own transportation and hand tools. 746 2639 or 752 0461</p>
        <p>CONSTRUCTION COOR DINATOR: Temporary ex ployment as a construction and remodeling manager. Must have 5 years experience in gen eral contracting and associated trades. Must be able to work with public and other employees. Previous demon strated coordinator employment as asset. 2 year technical school with emphasis on construction trades desired. Must be sched ule conscientious, capable of maintaining records, capable of reading blueprints and be people oriented. Applications being taken until S OO p.m. on 23 September, 1988 at 1103 Broad Street, Greenville, North</p>
        <p>HUGHES HOME INSPECTIOHS</p>
        <p>Are you looking to purchase a new home?</p>
        <p>If so, why not have it inspected by a licensed building contractor with over 11 years experience?</p>
        <p>Why not find out from a pi'ofessional what condition your potential purchase is in.</p>
        <p>063 Help Wanted Technical &amp;amp; Trades</p>
        <p>EXPERIENCED Electronics Technician. Excellent opportunity, good benefits Please call Greenville TV at 756 2616 for in terview.</p>
        <p>^ 105 W. Greenville Blvd.</p>
        <p>355-7627</p>
        <p>QnliHic, Janet Bowser [I_nni fcl.  &amp;amp; Associates</p>
        <p>221 Commerce St., Suite A</p>
        <p>I 355-7800 CALL TOLL-FREE 1-800-525-8910 EXT. 9980</p>
        <p>OPEN HOUSE 2-4 PM</p>
        <p>222 Beth St., Cherry Oaks</p>
        <p>OPPORTUNITY IS KNOCKING. Are you there to open the door? Fantastic buy in this 3 bedroom, 2V4 bath home in Cherry Oaks Extra large greatroom, large master bedroom downstairs and bonus room to be used as work or play area S110.000. Hostess: Adrienne Harrington #359</p>
        <p>OPEN HOUSE 2-4 P.M.</p>
        <p>816 Sur^merfield</p>
        <p>NEW HOME C0MF0I1T AND STYLEI Thats what youll find in this new 3 bedroom home. Formal dining, large eat-in kitchen, greatroom with fireplace are just a few of it's features And you know its quality constructed because it's BOWSER BUILT. Builder will pay up to $2,000 in closing costs Hostess: Kay Preston Stine. #145.</p>
        <p>OPEN HOUSE 2-4 P.M. 114 Ravenwood - Westhaven II</p>
        <p>3#  ^  ^</p>
        <p>THIS YOU VE GOT TO SEEI Excellent buy in neighborhood of much higher priced homes This 3 bedroom home In Westhaven otters the amenities expected. There s formal living &amp;amp; dining rooms, family room with beautiful hardwood floors, eat-in kitchen, new deck, PLUS double car garage Add a below market non-quali-fying loan assumption and youve got a great buy at 179.900. Hostess: Parvin KhanI #326</p>
        <p>REDUCED!</p>
        <p>101 Jay Circle. Edwards Acres</p>
        <p>ik</p>
        <p>NON-OUALIFYINO LOAN ASSUMPTION makes this 3 bed room. 1'/} bath brick ranch even more attractive Added features Include a nicely landscaped corner lot and a fenced back yard tor only S56.S00. Call Gerry Lambert</p>
        <p>OPEN HOUSE 2-4 P.M.</p>
        <p>209 Singletree</p>
        <p>- . igi</p>
        <p>is one of the nicest houses to come on the market in a long time. From the manicured lawn to the fresh country Interior to the 24' x18' surprise in the back yard. This 3 bedroom, 1V4 bath home on a beautiful comer lot is worth the ride just to see It! SSB.900. Host; Ben Singleton 362</p>
        <p>OPEN HOUSE 2-4 P.M.</p>
        <p>101 Roanoke Place, Cambridge</p>
        <p>Immediate Ownings For Industrial Positions</p>
        <p>Heavy lilting, material ban dling, machine operators and related positions Immediately available. Must have industrial experience, phone and transportation. A better opportunity with excellent benefits. Apply in per son 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/HEOE</p>
        <p>INDUSTRIAL ENGINEER</p>
        <p>Degree in Industrial Engineer ing with 2 3 years experience in manufacturing systems Primary responsibilities will in elude the development and maintenance of labor and assembly standards for an in ternationally recognized power boat manufacturer. Experience with IBM S/36 Mapics environ ment and marine industry expe rience are highly desirable Ex cellent starting salary and benefits. For confidential inter view forward resume complete with salary history to: Person nel, PO Box 457, Washington, Norht Carolina 27889.</p>
        <p>LOOM FIXER</p>
        <p>Jacquard experience a must IWER loom experience a plus. Mill-located in Miami, FL. Top pay and mill will help with relocation and housing for right person. 305 758 3665.</p>
        <p>MACHINIST NEEDED in job</p>
        <p>shop Good pay and benefits. 756 5989.</p>
        <p>MAINTENANCE MECHANIC</p>
        <p>Repair equipment with small motors. $250 starting. Atlantic Personnel Service, 355 7931,</p>
        <p>MECHANICS and truck drivers needed. 25 years or older. Expe rience only. Minimum 2 years over the road, good driving record. Insurance and uniforms are available after 90 days. Call 823 2182</p>
        <p>NEED EXPERIENCED mobile home service man. Call or come by Lawrence Manning Homes, Washington, 946 0017</p>
        <p>ROOFING PERSONNEL. Need construction knowledge, mechanical ability, driver's license and good driving record. Will train Call 757 3355</p>
        <p>SURVEY INSTRUMENT man</p>
        <p>I year experience required. Call Donna or Bo with McDevitt &amp;amp; Street Company, 830 4700.</p>
        <p>SWIMMING POOL service technician needed. Willing to train career minded person. Mechanical aptitude necessary. Training period with excellent opportunity for advancement. Phone 355-7121, ask for Lonnie.</p>
        <p>TOOL AND DIE PERSON Min</p>
        <p>Imum 5 years experience in die maintenance and repair. Cold Point Corp, Box 405, Chad bourn, NC 28431.</p>
        <p>WANTED ROOFERS, sheet metal mechanics and laborers. Apply in person, 1314 N Greene Streef. No phone calls please.</p>
        <p>WANTED; CARPENTERS and</p>
        <p>helpers Call 756 0063.</p>
        <p>064 Work Wanted</p>
        <p>A-l QUALITY Painting, minor repairs, mildew control, we wash houses. Free estimates. Work guaranteed. 758 4136.</p>
        <p>ADDITIONS. DECKS, FENCE, garages, improvements, repair. Haddock Construction. 355-7866.</p>
        <p>064 Work Wanted</p>
        <p>OAT FIBERGLASS Repair.</p>
        <p>795 3681.</p>
        <p>DAISY CLEANING Service, residential or commercial cleaning. Free estimates. Bond ed. Call 756 4S09or35S 5S24</p>
        <p>DAVENPORT WOOD Services. Landcscaping, land clearing, tree service, topsoil/sand Buil dozer, backhoe and dumptrucks tor hire 756 1339</p>
        <p>EXPERT LAWN CARE AND LANDSCAPING Call 756 8200.</p>
        <p>GAIL'S CLEANING SERVICE</p>
        <p>Janitorial, carpet cleaning, attic cleaning, wall cleaning, garage cleaning, hardwood floors wax ed and butted, window cleaning, commerciAl tile floor</p>
        <p>maintenance, upholstery clean ing, smoke damage cleaning exterior cleaning, decks, patios, aluminum or vinyl siding, ce</p>
        <p>iTient stripped and sealed Call 830 0177</p>
        <p>GRASS CUTTING AND YARD</p>
        <p>Maintenance. Quality work, reasonable prices. Call James Falkner, 746 3721.</p>
        <p>HOME REPAIRS</p>
        <p>Additions, renovations, garages, storage buildings, or any home improvement large or small. We wectalize in saving you money. For tree estimate, call Gary at 758 3215 or 756 1788</p>
        <p>HOUSE CLEANING Reason able rates. References. Call 746 2682.</p>
        <p>IF YOU NEED YOUR pants, skirts and dresses hemmed in a hurry call 752 1418.</p>
        <p>IF YOU HAVE BLOCKS, bricks that are ready to be laid, call us. We do patios, porches, houses, underpinning and more. Contact James or Willie at 830 9339 or 752 3540.</p>
        <p>INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR</p>
        <p>painting, general carpentry, guttering and root repair. 29 years experience. Free estimates. 752 4171.</p>
        <p>J McNEILL A SONS: Roofing, carpentry and sheet metal. All work guaranteed. 830 9001.</p>
        <p>JOSEPH PADLEY Paint Com pany - Highest quality work, dependable, thorough, neat. Customer satisfaction is our goal. References gladly provid ed Call 756 8561 after6p.m LANDSCAPING And lawn renovation. Seeding and weed control. Call 757 1590.</p>
        <p>LAWN MAINTENANCE Grass cutting, including lots plus shrubbery and tree trimming. Call 757 1590</p>
        <p>MANNING'S REMODELING.</p>
        <p>Interior trim, decks, cabinets and countertops. 746 4849</p>
        <p>PAINT WORK wanted Inside and out. Root tops and trailer tops, trailer bodies. Call anytime after 6: 752 5448</p>
        <p>PAINTING, professional work. Reasonable rates. References. 756 0627</p>
        <p>PAINTING; 25 years of customer satisfaction. Honesty is my goal. 524 3396.</p>
        <p>PAINTING, NEW work or re paints. Interior and exterior. No |0b too big or too small. Free estimates. Call Mike Boswell, 355-2111 or Bill Vanlandingham at 830 9051 after 5 00</p>
        <p>PAPERING, INTERIOR Paint ing and paper removal All wall papering guaranteed in writing, Insui^ for your protection. Call Don English, 756 7010.</p>
        <p>REPAIR WORK of all kinds. Pickett fences, additions, i, turn key job. Call 753</p>
        <p>064</p>
        <p> _ WorkWirt&amp;lt;|</p>
        <p>WINUUW WASHING Jiler clal and residmtfal. Call Sun d^Thursday, 57 p.m., 757</p>
        <p>treated decks and fences. /Mate rials or installation. Lifetime warranty. Guaranteed low prices tor quality wood. Call for ' estimate, 752 2736 or I 800 682 6555.</p>
        <p>WOULD LIKE TO CLEAN your home. Quality work, reasonable rates. Call 524 5820anytime</p>
        <p>WOULD LIKE TO CLEAN</p>
        <p>Muses. Reasonable prices Have references. Call 758 2060 from 9-8p.m.</p>
        <p>stump</p>
        <p>orinder. Sowing grass and fix Contact D.E Jones, Griffon, 524 4565, 7a,m. 9p.m</p>
        <p>068 Antiques</p>
        <p>ANTIQUES AND OLD THINGS</p>
        <p>Mac's Old Things, Evans Street Extension Phone 756 8777. Located at Carr Motor Co.. Inc.</p>
        <p>075 Computers</p>
        <p>ATARI I30XE. disk drive, print er/plotter, 19" color tv and over $700 worth of software, $450 746 6412atter7:30p.m</p>
        <p>080 Fuel, Wood, Coal</p>
        <p>GAS LOGS. Largest selection in Eastern NC of fireplace items. Glass doors, grates, tool sets, chimney pipe, reconditioned woodstoves from $199 and up. Chimney sweeping Tar Road Antiques &amp;amp; Fireside Shop, 1 mile south of Sunshine Garden Center, Winterville. 355 6003</p>
        <p>081 Furniture</p>
        <p>W9 Miscellaneous</p>
        <p>CENTRAL AIR. 3 ton. Call after 5:30 weekdays and anytime weekends: 752 9899.</p>
        <p>DECK LUMBER 5/4x6 20c per foot.</p>
        <p>Reject Plywood: |'.V'$5.60), (5/8"$6.20), (3/4"$6.90).</p>
        <p>Pine Lumber 2x8x16: $4.98.</p>
        <p>Down East Lumber, 6 miles east of Kinston 522 2400or 1 800 522 2400</p>
        <p>DON'T GIVE YOUR SILVER</p>
        <p>coins away when you can get top dollar Call 746 3550</p>
        <p>ELECTRIC STOVE for sale Avocado. Call 746 4974 atter 6</p>
        <p>F A J SALVAGE - 258 North, Kinston, N.C. New and used items arriving daily. Hundreds of cabinets, doors, windows, water heaters. Lots more, 522 0806 Monday Friday, 9:00 5:00, Saturday. 9:00 1:00</p>
        <p>FOR SALE; large dog house, playhouse; toddler car seat; Lee wood burning inserf with blower, $300 Red barn storage building, 8x12, $800, you move. Call 756 3897</p>
        <p>FOR SALE; color console TV, 25 , $250, Bassett sofa bed, $300, computer desk outfit, $150. Call 756 7435.</p>
        <p>FOR SALE Double size mat fress and box spring $40 TV/ VCR stand $30. Call 355 2753</p>
        <p>fridge for sale. Rebuilt. ?5Tw94 *  '</p>
        <p>,?T0VE good condition, $100 Gas heater, 50,000-BTU's in good condition, $200 Call 758 0185 alter 5 p.m</p>
        <p>COUCH Green/gold, good condi lion, $50, 756 3669.</p>
        <p>DARK OAK ANTIQUE dining room suite. Table/4 chairs, mir rored buffet and glass paned china cabinet Excellent condi tion. $1,000. 756 5410.</p>
        <p>DINING ROOM GROUPING</p>
        <p>table, 4 cloth bottom chairs, china cabinet, buffet dated ear ly '40'S. Call 795 4073, leave message.</p>
        <p>FURNITURE STRIPPING</p>
        <p>Paint and varnish removed from wood and metal All items returned within 7 days Tar Road Antiques 8, Fireside Shop, 1 mile south of Sunshine Garden Center, Winterville 355 6003.</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>HORSES FOR SALE and board ed. Thoroughbred 8 year old mare, 1st level dressage. Evented hunter, jumper. Morgan, 14 month old filly Pleasure driving and English pleasure prospect.</p>
        <p>2 year old stud colt. Ready to be trained. Sired by Adoniss. Call tor appointment at 753 5467</p>
        <p>garages,</p>
        <p>3869.</p>
        <p>BOOKKEEPING-20 YEARS ex</p>
        <p>perience in full charge manual/computer systems Avail able short or long term 830 4729</p>
        <p>CAROLINA TREE Service All types done. Stump removal. Free estimates. Fully insured. 752 6420or 757 0117.</p>
        <p>CONSCIENTIOUS, hardwork ing lady wants to do houseclean ing on a regular basis. 758 0189.</p>
        <p>RICHARD'S WALLPAPERING</p>
        <p>and Painting new number 825-7748.</p>
        <p>ROOF LEAKS FIXED and</p>
        <p>minor repairs. 18 years experi ence. Work guaranteed. After 6 p.m. call 752 5906.</p>
        <p>SHALLOW WLLS drilled 1st 25$160. Includes pipe and point. Call 830 6655.</p>
        <p>SILVERTHORNE HAULING</p>
        <p>Small loads of top soil, fill sand, pine bark and small clean up jobs. Mowing, planting shrub bery. 758 3296.</p>
        <p>WANT YOUR HOUSE cleaned? Call 355 5545 after 3:00 Good references.</p>
        <p>099 Miscellaneous</p>
        <p>AIR CONOITIONERS-S 32,000, SI50-$550. Also have central units. Gas or electric dryers, washers, ranges and refrigerators/freezers, wall ovens, commercial hot dog ro tisserie and bun warmer, Scotsman ice machine, chest drink box, 4 door sliding glass cooler, 2 egg coolers, gondola shelving, all rebuilt like new and guaranteed Call B.J Mills at Black Jack, 746 2446, nights 753 2878_</p>
        <p>Bar And Counter Stools Galorel</p>
        <p>Beside Waccamaw Pottery, Raleigh The Bar Stool Outlet 872 9325,</p>
        <p>CALL CHARLES TICE, 758</p>
        <p>3013, tor small loads sand, top soil, stone, pine bark. Also backhoe and driveway work.</p>
        <p>CASH for glass and other recyclables, Glisson Enter prises, phone 758 2548 and Greenville Recycling Project, phone 752 7151.</p>
        <p>CASIO KEYBOARD, cover and over $60 worth of music, $165. 746 64l2after 7:00p.m.</p>
        <p>GE FREEZER, $80 Frigidaire refrigerator, $150 Both in ex cellent condition. Call 825 0070</p>
        <p>Gl DUFFEL BAGS, backpacks, canteens, mess kits, tents, sleeping bags, hammocks, map cases, compasses, lanterns, flashlights, cots: 2700 different HENRY'S ARM/E NAV/E, IMI s. Evans Street</p>
        <p>099 Miscellaneous</p>
        <p>FOR SALE: exercise bicycle? Sears model, $100. 756 4472.</p>
        <p>NEW 2-PIECE living room suit, $189.95.</p>
        <p>NEW 4-DRAWER Chest for only $39.95.</p>
        <p>, ? NEW 252 COIL Mattress ancT foundation. Twin:$89.95 set;' Full: $99.95 set; Queen: $138 95 set.  1</p>
        <p>Compare our prices before you. buy, we will save you money. Jamie's Furniture 756 6027. -</p>
        <p>PLANTS Cabbage, collards and broccoli. Wholesale or retail. Call Roy White. 1 527 1707.</p>
        <p>PUMPKINS: large $4.00, med' urn $2.00, small $1 00 Gourds 504' each 752 5874.</p>
        <p>SECRETARIAL DESK 30x60&amp;lt; with left return 20x40. Nature oak finish, 4 drawers include file drawer. Like new condition:' $800. 355 5464 or 355 7530.</p>
        <p>SHAMPOO YOUR RUGI Rent, shampooers and vacuums ah Rental Tool Company.</p>
        <p>SHINGLES $9.95 square and up,. 15 pound Felt $4,95. Reject Plywood 5/8" $6.25; 3/4" $6.95.. 8"x16 Hardboard siding $2.89., Builders Bargain Center;) Greenville. 758 7061 TANDEM AXLE CAR trailer,' good condition $475 negotiable. Call I 798 1881 after 4:00p.m .</p>
        <p>THEATER SEATS for sale,'</p>
        <p>cheap. Call 757 3119anytime.</p>
        <p>TUXEDO SOFA, light plaid, ex cellent condition Call 756 5544 .</p>
        <p>GUN repair. Expert Gunsmith. Guns Unlimited of Ayden. Buy, Sell, Trade, Pawn, Repair.</p>
        <p>GUNS</p>
        <p>LOANS ON BUY, SELL and</p>
        <p>trade Southern Gun 8. Pawn Inc , 752 2464</p>
        <p>INSTANT CASH</p>
        <p>LOANS ON 8. BUYING Guns, TV s, gold and silver jewelry, coins, most anything of value. Southern Gun &amp;amp; Pawn Inc , 752 2464.</p>
        <p>JC PENNEY WEDDING dress, never worn. Original price, $250. 2 mauve bridesmaid dresses, original price, $88 each. Best ot ter. Call Cindy at 756 7385 or 758 1215.</p>
        <p>JENNY LINO CRIB with mat tress for sale, excellent condi tlon,$lOO. Call 756 1240.</p>
        <p>KARASTAN RUGS, excellent condition. Kirman multicolor, 8 x10' ($800), 8x)2 ($900), $1600 for both. Water fountain, $100, Century car seat, $45.355 3716. KENMORE Portable dishwash er. White, I year old, had no problems, $250. Call Amy, 756 3833.</p>
        <p>WASHERS. DRYERS.</p>
        <p>refrigerators, freezers, stoves $100 up Guaranteed. 746 6929 WATERBED WITH FRAME, $125. Antique dresser, $150' Table and chairs. $25. Sofa bed and chair, $225 Recliner, $20. 2 end tables, $20 758 1914.</p>
        <p>WOOD SPLITTER PTO Drive with 3 point hitch commercial pump. Call after 6 p.m., 752 7850.^ WOULD LIKE TO BUY used window and central air condi tioners that need repair. Call 746 2446 or nights, 753 2878.</p>
        <p>10' UNIDEN SATELLITE dish with receiver, 200' connecting wire $700. You move Call 752 2540 or 355 0364</p>
        <p>10 SPEED BIKE, like new $50. 3 speed bike with baby sit $15, 756 6444</p>
        <p>19 CUBIC FOOT frost free retrigerafor with ice maker. Whirlpool continuous clean 30" electric range. $300 each 551 S117or 753 2565atter6 00.</p>
        <p>1974 FORD MAVERICK Farm trailer. Call 756 9256.</p>
        <p>200 GALLONS at $2 00 per gallon, Pittsburg red paint,-surplus Can be used on roots, barns, wood or metal A B Whitley, Inc.</p>
        <p>LANDSCAPING TIMBERS:</p>
        <p>$2,69 each. 4x8 Lattice; $8 25. Down East Lumber. 522 2400 or I 800 522 2400</p>
        <p>MAG TAG WASHER AND</p>
        <p>Kenmore dryer. Like new. Washer 5 years old, dryer 2 years old. Used very litte. Both for $600 756 9000 ask for Don.</p>
        <p>MATCHING SOFA and recliner, brown plaid, best offer. Call 355 2627after 5:00p.m.</p>
        <p>MOBILE HOME STEPS, 3 steps with landing and railing, all steel, freshly painted, $150. 13" double edge hedge trimmer, Black 8i Decker, $15.45. Sunbeam 12" single edge hedge trimmer, $12. Both In good shape. 752 3951</p>
        <p>MOBILE HO/ME on leased land on Pamlico River. Great weekender. $6.000. 355 5044</p>
        <p>6' SATELLITE SYSTEM.</p>
        <p>Uniden receiver and drive. ISO' ot cable and mast included $650. 758 5054 after 4 p. m</p>
        <p>7' i' WOOD BOAT $75 6 horse power Johnson outboard motor, needs carburetor work $150 Gogart frame $100. 16 horse power Briggs 8, Stratton engine $75. Riding lawnmower $50, needs to be put together. Honda 185 3-wheeler $150, needs repair. Grimefighter steam cleaner $100 for parts only Foosball table $150. Snap On Tool chest $100 General selection of used lawnmower parts $50. Call 752 2484 anytime</p>
        <p>102</p>
        <p>/Mobile Homes For Sale</p>
        <p>NEW BROYHILL Couch and loveseat and coffee table. $300. Call 756 8692.</p>
        <p>NEW SLATE POOL TABLES.</p>
        <p>Over 200 in stock. $895 and up. Game World Leisure Time Equipment, 919 821 3488.</p>
        <p>'A HOME YOU CAN LIVE</p>
        <p>With a 1989 Fleetwood 70x14, 2 or 3 bedrooms for an incredible price ot $13.500. Includes deluxe refrigerator, sheetrock walls, cathedral ceilings, storm win dows and much more. Delivery set up free! Martindale Homes, Highway 301 South, Wilson, N C 1 800 637 1228.</p>
        <p>A 1989 14X80 FLEETWOOD</p>
        <p>home with 3 bedrooms and 2 full baths, cathedral ceiling, frost free refrigerator, stereo, totally electric, and fully furnished tor only $15,995.00 plus tax and title. Call Bill Jackson at 756 4687, Johnny's /Mobile Homes, 316 W. Greenville Blvd., Greenville.</p>
        <p>PRICE REOUCEOI Excellent Buy for 1st time buyer Owners anxious to sell, make an offer! Nice 3 bedroom, 2 bath home in Cambridge. Aiso has den with wood-stove, 2 car garage and located on a large corner lot with fenced-in back yard. Priced to sell at $62,900. Hostess: Pragna Mehta #336</p>
        <p>NEW LISTING</p>
        <p>111 S. Jefferson, Fountain</p>
        <p>80 MUCH ROOM for so little money! Over 1900 square feet in this 3 bedroom, 2 bath home. New exterior sid ing. Located In a peaceful family neighborhood Please call Jamie Brown. Home priced at 861,500. #363.</p>
        <p>203 S. ELM STREET</p>
        <p>University</p>
        <p>UNIVERSITY AREA'Nice Older home with 3 or possibly 4 bedrooms offers a great deal of potential. Large back yard &amp;amp; screened-ln back porch are but two of its amenities Priced to sell at 656.900. Call Pragna Mehta #316</p>
        <p>ON CALL</p>
        <p>Qrry Lambfrt, Raaltor 355-7422</p>
        <p>Janft Bowsar. Raaltor, Brokar.....................756-8580</p>
        <p>Alls Irwin, Brokar...................... 355*7744</p>
        <p>Jamla Brotan, Raaltor, QRI.......... 752-2690</p>
        <p>Ann Moora, Brokar.......................753-3594</p>
        <p>Adrlanna Harrington, Brokar .......355*2098</p>
        <p>Teraaa Walnwrlght. ..............'748*2931</p>
        <p>Kay Praston Stina........................... 758*0893</p>
        <p>................ 355*8064</p>
        <p>D   to  .748-2624</p>
        <p>RobartOaan...............................^..756-1147</p>
        <p>Ban Singlaton.........  355*7800</p>
        <p>Parvin Khanl..........................................</p>
        <p>StthJonaa....................................753*6676</p>
        <p>Hearthside Realty</p>
        <p>355-3613</p>
        <p>300 E. Arlington Blvd.</p>
        <p>James Gibson On Call 355-2058</p>
        <p>Linda Gaddis....................756-3291</p>
        <p>Don Mizelle......................355-6092</p>
        <p>Ken Edwards....................746-3255</p>
        <p>Ann Davis.......................752-9529</p>
        <p>Chris Flower ..............752-9698</p>
        <p>William Lewis...................758-5598</p>
        <p>OPEN HOUSES 2-4 PM</p>
        <p>NEWLISTINGLYNNDALE</p>
        <p>203 Queen Anne Road</p>
        <p>CLUB PINES</p>
        <p>405 Middlebury</p>
        <p>WOODRIDGE Loan Assumption</p>
        <p>Entertain with pride in this special home in Lynn-dale. Formal areas include living room with marble fireplace, den with fireplace and built-ins. study with buill-ins, kitchen/6reakfast room looking out onto screened porch and a beautiful view of the well-landscaped yard. Upstairs are 3 bedrooms, master also with fireplace, 2 baths, additional playroom or storage, hardwood floors throughout, double garage, sprinkler system, brick walks, all on a corner tot. f IW.MM. Hostess: Linda Gaddis</p>
        <p>(^ner is ready to move! This lovely brick ranch is ^uated on a beautifully landscaped wooded lot Three bedrooms, 2 baths, formal areas, den with recM^ lighting, garage, deck, immaculate Host. Don Mizelle</p>
        <p>Great VA loan assumption - low equity. Three bedrooms, 2 baths with master bedroom downstairs. Bonus room upstairs great for nursery or office. Less than one year old Host: Ken Ed wards.</p>
        <p>NEW LISTING Woodridge</p>
        <p>NEW LISTING Grimesland</p>
        <p>NEW LISTING Stoneybrook</p>
        <p>The excellent floorplan in this home under construction offers a large kitchen/dining room with hardwood floors, greatroom with fireplace, dowiLstaim bedroom. 2&amp;gt;t baths, and deck Unarming exterior style with a bay window and front porch ready for your rocking chairs and swing. IM.8M). Call Linda Gaddis</p>
        <p>NEW LISTING Woodridge</p>
        <p>Trutiriul</p>
        <p>rjill^oio</p>
        <p>A nice family home In country setting. Brick ranch with large wooded lot Three bedrooms, fireplace and gas logs. Large utility room. MM |M'i. Call William Lewis</p>
        <p>HIGHWAY 264 Large lot-Pooi</p>
        <p>Peace and Quiet is what youll find in this 3 bedroom/2 bath home. Located a few miles from Greenville, this home offers a spacious kitchen, vaulted ceilings in living room and dining area, and a large yard with a deck Nice home nice neighbors! Call James Gibson</p>
        <p>GARDERSVILLE</p>
        <p>5+ Acres</p>
        <p>Almost I8UU square feel in this two-story home under construction Three bedrooms, 3&amp;gt;i batlu.</p>
        <p>kitchen with island and pantry, large greairoomi dining room with hardwood f priced at IM.-tM.</p>
        <p>floors Affoi^biy</p>
        <p>Enjoy the view from vour sunroom looking oul on the pool in this 3 bedroom counti^ home Recreation room with flrei^ce, dinlng/llving combina I fire </p>
        <p>tlon with hardwood floors and . baths. Nicely decorated and situai acres ti2S.8N.</p>
        <p>rice, 2 large on approx 1.3</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0073" />
        <p>mm</p>
        <p>102</p>
        <p>Mobilt Homts For Sal*</p>
        <p>af!^</p>
        <p>and payments under tt 38.00 per ith set up on your lot. Call</p>
        <p>mon _  , _  .  ____</p>
        <p>Bill Jackson at 758 4087, Johnny's Mobile Homes, 318 W Greenville Blvd.. Greenville. ARE YOU TllfEb of rent pay ments, high utility bills, and get ting nowhere financially? If so, we may help. We have new and pre-owned homes and finance plans to tit your needs. Call Greg at Carefree Housing, 355 783</p>
        <p>ATTENTION APARTMENT</p>
        <p>dwellers. Have you had an in crease in your monthly rent? If so, did you just stand there and take it? Let me help you. Buy your own nice mobile home at a fixed rate and maximize the tax breaks while enjoying your brand new mobile home. Luv Homes, Greenville, NC.</p>
        <p>BRAND NEW 198 NORRIS</p>
        <p>double wides now on display. Hardwood floors, loaded with extras. Norris, the leader in quality homes See at Luv Homes, Greenville, NC.</p>
        <p>DOUBLE-WIDE SHOPPERSI</p>
        <p>July is the best month to buy your new home from Martindale Homes. Inventory is disappear ing fast Save SlOOO's like hun dreds of our happy customers have. Martindale Homes, Highway 301 South, Wilson, NC 1 800 837-1228.</p>
        <p>DOUBLEWIDE SPECIAL 3</p>
        <p>bedrooms and 2 full baths. Com pletely furnished for only $19,995.00. Call Bill Jackson at 758 4887, Johnny's Mobile Homes, 316 W Greenville Blvd.,. Greenville.</p>
        <p>ENJOY THE SERENITY of</p>
        <p>country living in this 14'x70' mobile home. It features 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, an eat in</p>
        <p>kitchen and a large living room Having a large deck and situat</p>
        <p>ed on .8 of an acre makes it a steal at $21,500. For more details, please call Gerry Lambert at CENTURY 21 JANET BOWSER 8. ASSOCIATES, 3557800 or 355 7472.</p>
        <p>FACTORY OUTLET</p>
        <p>Custom order your Horton or Mansion home. (Colors, carpets, wall boards etc) Save Thou sands. For free literature and inlormation call toll tree 1 800 348 4847.</p>
        <p>FOR SALE Mobile home 12x60,2 bedrooms on rented lot. Short walk to ocean and piers. Rent paid thru April 15, 1989 Phone 752 2196.</p>
        <p>JUST DIVORCED MUST SELL</p>
        <p>14x70 Fleetwood mobile home. Lived in 1 year. Extras include; island kitchen, dishwasher, 3 ton central air unit, vinyl underpinning plus more. Located in very nice park, 5 minutes from Greenville. Days, 758 9874, after 8,830 I860.</p>
        <p>ONE OF A KIND 1989 Clayton 1,880 square feet. 2 fireplaces, utility with wash basin, loaded with all extras. Duke Power Pac insulation. Probably the most beautiful home you have ever seen. See it at Luv Homes, Greenville, NC.</p>
        <p>THREE BEDROOM trailer, 1981,1 bath, very good condition. Set up in trailer park $800 equi ty and take up payments of $173 | month. 1 497 8737 after 5 p.m.</p>
        <p>WE AT LUV HOMES have sold | large amounts of double wides. Need to move nice used homes | we took in on trade Good selec</p>
        <p>tion. Come early and get the best , Gr</p>
        <p>pick. Luv Homes, Greenville,</p>
        <p>WHAT IS IT? Maintenance tree, superior constructiori, cozy and</p>
        <p>comfortable, quality builder, I . The ar</p>
        <p>money saver. The answer: Clayton Mobile Home only at I Luv Homes, Greenville, NC</p>
        <p>WHY PAY RENT! 12x55, ex cellent condition. $8500. Owner | will consider partial financing.</p>
        <p>1 975 8839</p>
        <p>12x80 BRIDGIDARE 2|</p>
        <p>bedrooms; set up at Branches Estates. $8000. Call 758 38881 after 8.</p>
        <p>12X80 MOBILE home for sate. Furnished, 2 bedrooms, I bath. Call 757 1021.</p>
        <p>14x70 FLEETWOOD, stereo.</p>
        <p>washer, dryer, air conditioning,  Only $18,041 25</p>
        <p>loaded Only $18,041 25 '31 bedrooms, 2 baths See at Luv | Homes, Greenville, NC.-</p>
        <p>14x78 COMMODORE, 3|</p>
        <p>bedrooms, 2 baths, fireplace, 21 ^decks, vinyl skirting, $800 and assume payments $2X&amp;gt;.22. 355 3)737 or 752 0770.</p>
        <p>&amp;lt;4970 CONNER MOBILE home, | furnished, $5,000 firm. Call 752 1^295. 758 9258 or 752 3349</p>
        <p>*979 MARSHFIELD 24x52 Loaded with lots of extras. Call 752 0358 after8:00p.m.</p>
        <p>981 OAKWOOD 14x85, 3</p>
        <p>jMroom, 1 bath, air condition Jno, washer and dryer. Ex ecellent condition. $10,500. Call 948 I3l7or 975 2849atter6:00</p>
        <p>983 OAKWOOD 14x80. 21 jwdrooms, central air, assume! ^yments 748 4715.</p>
        <p>^988 14 WIDE, payments as low Js $141.88. Greenville volume I Jealer Thomas' AMbile Home| gales Across from Airport. 752</p>
        <p>^5Musical Instruments</p>
        <p>5LT0N -TRUMPET tor sale, 5250 negotiable Call 748 87371 JfteraOOp.m.</p>
        <p>MUSICAL AND PA equipment. We install church PA, ouy, sell, trade and rent all types of Ynusical Instruments including JEAVEY Mac Stewart Music, TOO East Ash Street, Goldsboro</p>
        <p>510120.  _</p>
        <p>ENT A NEW Wurlitzer Plano | *or $20 a month. Call now Pear Jon Music Comapny, 355 7575.</p>
        <p>liPRIOHT PIANO with bench. tOood condition. $450 negotiable. *52 9189, after 5.</p>
        <p>SfPRIOHT PIANO with mirror. Excellent condition. $400 Call | MS098.</p>
        <p>JISED ORANO PIANO Com xletely rebuilt and refinished. SAahogany cabinet and bench. Xike new, $3,995. Piano &amp;amp; Organ distributors, 355 8002 fiSEO TRUMPET, 4 months | Id. Call Mrs Winberry at 758</p>
        <p>yoc</p>
        <p>12</p>
        <p>ida^tlme^</p>
        <p>Woodstoves</p>
        <p>AFT WOOOSTOVE Insert, tB-speed fan. $375 negotiable. Call * 798 1881 alter 4:00p m ipifEROY SAVER Gas heater!</p>
        <p>3or sale. $200. Call 757 1851 after |</p>
        <p>tppm</p>
        <p>,nrpA 'If'AR FISHER</p>
        <p>Vfoodstove. 9250 negotiable. 752 3809; nights 758 75117</p>
        <p>jiUfiAUlNinT'wlthg-i^ Jtoors and Mower. Asking $2501 JtejMlaWrCall^^</p>
        <p>IS Lost ii Found S^wMTMacaler</p>
        <p>dieward Please 0011758 3948</p>
        <p>111 Buiiness Srvios |?Srao^Sler$!^^</p>
        <p>*nd storage, local and long (distance moving. McCotter's j llnl Storage, 9M 2148.</p>
        <p>4Mln^fora||e^</p>
        <p>J22</p>
        <p>Busintst</p>
        <p>Opporlunitits</p>
        <p>iE YOU Hpi^Y</p>
        <p>NIth your present career? Dec J^ating Den, a national interior I adecoratlng franchise company</p>
        <p>eould like to meet those people I We offer</p>
        <p>Neho love decorating.</p>
        <p>eyeart of expertise, national!</p>
        <p>ilflon</p>
        <p>hame recognition and a system I Aehich has been proven in the! Carolinas II extensive training, [ flexible scheduling and ex</p>
        <p>allent income potential are im , then w</p>
        <p>rtant to you, then we urge you I         viewli</p>
        <p>call. Presently Interviewing I franchise owner in the I nvllle area. If interested please call our regional office at | WI9 833 3305, E xtenslon 1050: DEEPSOUTH : SNOW BALLS, INC ,</p>
        <p>. Producer of old fashion shave</p>
        <p> ^ product in over 30 incredible j Wresh flavors Exa</p>
        <p>.   Exanw...  ,</p>
        <p>Beuth snow balls and Deep Soutl Jnow shakes now has licenses | oreement available for Green nie and surrounding areas Trevan Mgh returns on low In , vesfments Call 9I9-423 2034 for Info</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>BuSiMSS</p>
        <p>Opporhinitits</p>
        <p>122</p>
        <p>A CLEAN 12X45, center kitchen, 2 bedrooms. Only $395.00 down</p>
        <p>^ YOUR OWN BOSS!</p>
        <p>Join dynamic International service company. Excellent In come. Complete training and ongoing management assistance. Exclusive territory. Ambitious individuals only. 1 800-824 7813 Ext 1108 or collect 817 758 2122 Ext 1108</p>
        <p>Business Opportunities</p>
        <p>rSsiNSS? 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, nights 758 8444.</p>
        <p>PUT EXTRA CASH</p>
        <p>^ J*!,  your "don't</p>
        <p>needs with an Inexpensive</p>
        <p>Classified Ad</p>
        <p>in yo r "doi</p>
        <p>The Daily Reflector Classifieds 752-6166</p>
        <p>/Bn</p>
        <p>BLANCHE FORBES REALTY</p>
        <p>NEW LISTING</p>
        <p>BABY FOR SALE</p>
        <p>Thats right, this baby is a 1 Vz year old 3 bedroom, 2 bath brick ranch. Energy efficient, fireplace, patio, carport and large lot. Like new condition. $61,000.</p>
        <p>Listing Agent J.C. Bowen REALTOR, GRI 756-7426</p>
        <p>LEISURELY LIFESTYLE</p>
        <p>Brookhill features this 2 bedroom, IV2 bath townhome. Family room, fireplace, private patio. Pool and tennis facilities. Assumable loan for qualified buyer. $44,500.</p>
        <p>THIS ONE IS A DANDY For pleasing lifestyle see this beautiful decorated 2 bedroom, 1V2 bath townhome with private patio. Excellent loan assumption for qualified buyer. $44,000.</p>
        <p>READY FOR OCCUPANCY Brick 3 bedroom home features fireplace, built-in cabinets, hardwood floors, outside storage. Quiet tree-lined street $42,500.</p>
        <p>FIRST HOME DELIGHT</p>
        <p>Country location makes this lovely 2 bedroom, TVz bath starter home a must to see. With 3 ceiling fans, carport plus Farmers Home financing possible. $41,000.</p>
        <p>EASY-TO-LOVE Pleasing 2 story townhome with 2 bedrooms, IV2 baths, fireplace, private patio, nicely decorated. Plus - near shopping and convenient to hospital. $40,900.</p>
        <p>STARTER HOME Or Investment property. 2 bedroom home in Meadow-brook. Only $22,000. Please call for more Information.</p>
        <p>RESIDENTIAL LOTS Approximately 90'x140'. Available for only $8,500. Call for location today.</p>
        <p>CRAFT WINDS</p>
        <p>Residential lots. Wlnterville school district. City water and sewer. Many lots to choose from. Please call today. WHITEHALL</p>
        <p>iResldential lots, up to one acre In size. Water available. tWIntenrille School district. Call for details.</p>
        <p>BLANCHE FORBES, REALTOR, GRI, CRS 756-3438 J.C. BOWEN, REALTOR, QRI ........ . .756-7426</p>
        <p>STAN ARMSTRONG, BROKER........  355-2863</p>
        <p>RUDY SCHULTE, REALTOR. GRI  .756-2230</p>
        <p>On Call This Weekend</p>
        <p>Wil Reid</p>
        <p>REALTOR</p>
        <p>752-1609</p>
        <p>m</p>
        <p>ms.</p>
        <p>756-2121</p>
        <p>2717 S. Memorial Drive</p>
        <p>OFFICE OPEN MON.-FRI. 9-5 SAT. 9-1 SUN.1-5</p>
        <p>The Dally Reflector, Greenville, N.C. Sundey, September 18,1988 C-89</p>
        <p>CLARK-BRANCH, INC., REALTORS</p>
        <p>Measure Our Service By Results .....</p>
        <p>New Offerings</p>
        <p>WESTHAVEN</p>
        <p>CHERRY OAKS</p>
        <p>$154,600. YOU ASK for all the extras, well here they are Over 2,400 square feet, large rooms and walk-in closets, Jacuzi tub In master plus shower. Double garage with extra storage, extra moldings, wooded privacy and formal areas for special entertaining. It's brick for low maintenance and spacious rear deck for cookouts. Enjoy convenience and luxury in this fine home, #324. Westhaven Call Clark-Branch Realtors, 355-2000</p>
        <p>$80. CHERRY OAKS. Owner relocating out of state and needs quick sale, 2,200 square foot brick home priced under market value. Excellent closet space, 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, large, glassed Florida room, double garage, beautifully landscaped See it now! Call Jean Hopper. 756-9142</p>
        <p>SANDLEWOOD</p>
        <p>$88,300. NEW home in Sandlewood, behind Cherry Oaks, in developing area. This two story brick has plenty of molding in the Winfergreen School District, traditional style and walk-in closets means it's sure to please. Call now and select your decor. #321. Call Clark-Branch Realtors, 355-2000,</p>
        <p>WE CHALLENGE you to find a home to compare with this one below $200,000 Four bedrooms, large den, formal dining room, living room, Florida room with 2 skylights, security system, huge eat-in kitchen, loaded wiih caoineis and storage areas. Bonus room or attic over the 2 car garage, sprinkler system, beautifully landscaped Belter than new and conveniently located GRAYLEIGH. Call Pat Terry, 355-6426</p>
        <p>Orrtuni- Realty</p>
        <p>2424 S. Charles Street 756-6666 or 355-BASS</p>
        <p>1-800-525-8910, Ext. AF92</p>
        <p>On Call Sunday:</p>
        <p>Shirley Little 756-6666</p>
        <p>1:00 until 5:00 For all real estate needs. Call 756-6666 Anytime</p>
        <p>Greenvilles Top Producing Century ZVt 'SiSirOPEN HOUSE 2:00-4:00 Lot 358, Field Street, Cherry Oaks</p>
        <p>Fabulous naw construction in Cherry Oaks. Four large bedrooms with convenient laundry area on second floor. Wet bar off Greatroom, formal dining room with gracious bay window. Gleaming hardwood floors and extra molding In foyer and dining room. Please call Ann Bass for your appointment, C21 Bass Realty, 756-666. #916. Hostess. Sharon Vaughn. $119,900.OPEN HOUSE 2:00-4:00 Lot 72D, Brittany Ridge</p>
        <p>EXPECT TO BE IMPRES8E0II New custom built 3 bedroom, 2 story homo on large comer lot. Home has many extras throughout. Call today for your privatt showing of this lovely home in popular Brittany Ridge Listed at an affordable price by Rita Quinn. 756-1640. #848. IM,iOO. Hoat: Laon Hardee, Jr.NEW LISTING!</p>
        <p>Spacious</p>
        <p>Do you need space to stretch out? This lovely older home featuring 5 bedrooms and 3V5 baths hat more than 3500 sq. ft. plus a lull basement Ideal for a workshop or rec room. Nice nelghbomood, large lot. Priced to sell quickly at $120,000. Pleasa call Mable Savage at C21 Bass Realty, 75641666. #943 $120,000.OPEN HOUSE 2:00-4:00 208 Baytree, Baytree</p>
        <p>Charming Williamsburg in exciting family neighborhood. Reduced to sell for owners have relocated. Delightfully decorated and waiting for just the right family. Three bedrooms and two baths, bright palladium windows. Call Ann Bass at C21 Bass Realty, 756-6666 or 355-2277. #823. Will rent w/option! Hostess: Sylvia Horswood. $79,900NEW LISTING OPEN HOUSE 2:00-4:00 1828-C Quail Ridge</p>
        <p>OWT MIM TH ONEII Three bsdrooms and 2Vi baths In Quail Ridge for only $S7,M0l Once In a llfe-hna opportunity. Excellent location and condition, tastefully decorated, extra large patio area. Please call</p>
        <p>756-6666. 939.</p>
        <p>SS7,M0. Hostess; Rita Quinn.NEW LISTING</p>
        <p>Existing Construction</p>
        <p>All you could ashl NEW CONSTRUCTION. Eye catching</p>
        <p>blend of glass and atone featured In this attractive bedroom, 2 bath open floor plan. Cathedral calling family room with stone fireplace, formal dining room, large kitchen with breektast araa, double car garage on over 3(4 acre wooded lot. WIntervill* school Con tact Lory Johnston at C21 Bass Raaily, 7564666 lor fuildetaiis 936 $106.100.OPEN HOUSE 2:00-4:00</p>
        <p>109 Queen Anne's Road, Lynndale</p>
        <p>Exceptional value for your money: Custom brick ranch In prestigious and sought-after area Four spacious bedrooms and all formal areas Beautiful lawn and private rear. Double garage. Please call Marty Cooper, C21 Bass Realty for your private showing. 756-6666 #917. Hostess; Mable Savage.$i 45,000.OPEN HOUSE 2:00-4:00 809 McCotter, Grifton</p>
        <p>Come ewey Irom It all to a secluded, tree-lined street only minutes from schools and shopping Large corner lot, shade trees, private yard. Tastefully decorated with step-down den with fireplace Two baths 3 bedrooms, remodeled kitchen with ceramic countertops Reasonably priced at $09,900. Call Century 21 Bass Realty at 756-6666 or 355-BASS #873. $90,900. Hoaltse: Ann Base.NEW LISTING</p>
        <p>Rental/Investment</p>
        <p>An axcellem opportunity for Investment/rental property Located only minutes Irom Qreenville Growing area for resale and rental. Pleasa call Mable Savage at C21 Bass Realty, 7564666 887 $29,900.OPEN HOUSE 2:00-4:00' 218 Woodstock, Belvedere</p>
        <p>Dream homo waiting for you in Belvedere! Lovely 3 bedroom, 2 bath home in quiet neighborhood Excellent school disirici Too many extras to list' $79,900. Call Tony Mallard at CENTURY 21 Bass Realty, 7564666 or 830-5231 #930 $76,900. Hostess: Nor-,ma WelchNEW LISTING!</p>
        <p>Custom Built</p>
        <p>Why Is IMS house llko peanut buttor? cause sticking to the payment la so easy! Immaculate home In established neighborhood, tiowing floor plan, garage, and private lot Please call Marty Cooper at C21 Bass Realty. 7564666 #942 $98.000.</p>
        <p>SPECTACULAR!</p>
        <p>H you expect and deserve the unusual, the unique, and the distinguished, treat yourself to this one-of-a kind home in Westhaven Sparkling white stucco exterior, 9' ceilings and all formal areas Elegant expanse of glass ovsriooks private wooded lot Please call Ann Bass at C21 Bass Realty. 7564666 $179,000. 944. Hostess Ann Bass</p>
        <p>m</p>
        <p>lOML NOVSMnl EHNITIMITV</p>
        <p>Lory Johnston Kathy Wobstor 9%'yLHtls Marty Coopsr Laon Hards* lyMs Norsivood Q&amp;gt;-s Waldrop TenyMotlord MaMoSavoge 7594030  355-5712  759-7543  830-1173  7894453  717-0452  7S54242  UO-ltll  TIMSOBB</p>
        <p>DoborahHeiM</p>
        <p>Retocattae</p>
        <p>BpecMtat</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0074" />
        <p>C^3j4^^^J|#^||j^^f|6Ctor^^gnvll^^^X^__^uadaj_Segternber 18,19M 122 Business  144  Houses  For  Sale  iai  Maima*  cnr  c&amp;gt;i.</p>
        <p>Business Opportunities</p>
        <p>BEAUTY SHOP BOOTHS For</p>
        <p>nights 7S6 5050 ask for Christine</p>
        <p>FAMOUS SHOT CLOCK basketball game*. Great business opportunity, will pay for itself. Already In place and can be seen Old Rockerfeller's downtown. Aksing price $2000 or best offer. For further Informa tion call 1 778 8712 ask for Tony Harper</p>
        <p>FOR SALE: CHILD DAY CARE</p>
        <p>facility. Folly equipped, within 35 miles of Greenville Call Sparrow Realty. 795 4418</p>
        <p>FOR SALE: GROWING</p>
        <p>distribution company. Reasonably priced, excellent opportunity</p>
        <p>PROGRESSIVE Supermarket, eastern North Carolina Ex cellent price.</p>
        <p>Foursite Inc., 355-7300.</p>
        <p>ILLNESS FORCES SALE</p>
        <p>Extremely profitable local ven ding route. Work only 2 4 hours/week. No selling. Fan tastic returns! Call now:</p>
        <p>1 (305) 475 7994</p>
        <p>NEED A PERSONAL LOAN or</p>
        <p>have all those monthly pay ments got you down? Call Harlon, 355 3M6</p>
        <p>RESTAURANT On Ocracoke Island. Excellent location, ma or furnishings and equipment convey: also home with 3 bedrooms, 2 baths. Package deal. Ask for Sue Dunn at Aldridge 8, Southerland at 756 3500, nights 355 2588,</p>
        <p>TURNKEY</p>
        <p>Local route for sal, no selling, collecting only. Requires $13,050 cash investment'investment secured by equipment. Net earn ings on existing routes averar $252 $378 per week Call I 8( 347-8552 tor more information.</p>
        <p>124 Professional</p>
        <p>CHIMNEY SWEEPING Gid Holloman. North Carolina' original chimney sweep, 30 years experience working with chimneys and fireplaces. Fireplace repair, chimney caps installed, screens tor chimney tops Call day or night, 753 3503 Farmville. NC.</p>
        <p>125  Home</p>
        <p>Improvements</p>
        <p>QUALITY REMODELING, ad</p>
        <p>ditions, garages. Folly insured reasonable prices. Heartland Builders, Inc. 747 8439.</p>
        <p>132</p>
        <p>Commercial</p>
        <p>Property</p>
        <p>APPROXIMATELY 25,000 square feet available for lease or possible purchase Location in prime shopping area. Lots of parking. May subdivide for desired fenanfs. $4 50 per foot Call Mary, Clark Branch Real tors: days 355 2000, nights 754 1997.</p>
        <p>FOR RENT 1400 square feet retail space available on Highway II across from Carolina East Center. Call Oebra at 830 0002</p>
        <p>SPACE AVAILABLE in Univer sity Arcade, across street from university. 2,000 square feet or 400 square feet Rent approxi mately $4 per square loot. Call 758 0491.</p>
        <p>136 Condominiums For Sale</p>
        <p>INVESTMENT: CANNON</p>
        <p>Court, 2 bedroom, I'l bath condo. Now Rented! Call today 919 724 5904</p>
        <p>139 Farms For Sale</p>
        <p>APPROXIMATELY41 acres, 40 cleared with good crop allotments. Located around venters Crossroads Price $59.500. Call Worley Warren at Aldridge &amp;amp; Southerland 754 3500, nights 795 3222</p>
        <p>ONLY $471.04 PER ACRE will buy this 82 acre farm in Beaufort County. 50 acres cleared with good road frontage. Near the new East Beaufort High School Contact Liz Samsel. 919/944 8847 Clark Branch Realtors, 355 2000</p>
        <p>144Jtouses_For^al^^</p>
        <p>ASSUMPTION! Attention first time home buyers! Be sure to see this 3 bedroom, brick ranch with new carpet and new heat pump. 9'2 loan assumption with $5,000 equity Your payments will only be $391 per month. This will not last long! Hillsdale. Call Mary Ward, Clark Branch Real tors, 355 2000</p>
        <p>SDC</p>
        <p>PROPERTIES</p>
        <p>Tlw FIrwst In Apartnwnt Rontalt.</p>
        <p>Cedar Court</p>
        <p>2 bedroom townhouse, carpeted, washer/dryer hookups</p>
        <p>Call</p>
        <p>756-6209</p>
        <p>A BEAUTIFUL home (or sale by owner in the Lynn dale/GrayleIgh area 3,700 square leet. 4 bedrooms. 3'? baths, large toyer. Sunporch. Master bedroom up or downstairs. Call 754 7815, days 754 9344, nights</p>
        <p>ABSOLUTELY A DREAM come true! Gorgeous ranch with style and grace on 1.13 acre wooded lo* Over 2500 square feet ot lux ury Priced to sell! Call today, Deborah Jones, Aldridge &amp;amp; Southerland, 754 3500 or 754 7640</p>
        <p>ACT NOW and decorate this home to your taste Formis, 3 bedrooms, 2'j baths, bonus room over garage $104,000 Call Stan Cherry 222 Coldwell Banker W G Blount &amp;amp; Associate Realtors 754 3000or 355 6330</p>
        <p>COASTAL HOMI INSPECnONS</p>
        <p>Pre-purchase and warranty inspections of new and existing homes.</p>
        <p>1-800-S33-57S1 Now Born</p>
        <p>PUBLISHER'S NOTICE</p>
        <p>AVAILABLE SEPTEMBER I.</p>
        <p>Month to month 2 bedroom, I' 2 bath townhouse. with fireplace $365 per month. Blanche Forbes Realty 756 2121</p>
        <p>144 Houses For Sale</p>
        <p>BY OWNER IN CHERRY Oaks</p>
        <p>Custom built ranch home with over 1900 square feet includes formal areas, 17'xl9' den, 3 bedrooms, 2'2 baths, double garage and 16'x20' workshop SnO.OOO. Call 754 1250.</p>
        <p>CANNON COURT Don't rent when you can own this two bedroom. I'2 bath townhome with payments like rent Living room, kitchen/dining combina tion, privacy patio, new carpet and paint $41,900 Ask tor Sue Dunn at Aldridge &amp;amp; Southrland at 756 3500, nights 355 2588</p>
        <p>bedroom ranch, 2 tulibaths, ap proximately 3 years old, 1900 square teet, lormal dining room (11'9' xl4'x8'I, Wintergreen School, double garage. $112.900 Call 355 6908</p>
        <p>AYOEN REDUCED, MUST</p>
        <p>sell! 3 bedroom ranch, new paint, den with fireplace Out side building, big fenced lot Priced below apartments Value will appreciate 746 2685</p>
        <p>BEAUTIFUL Williamsburg home at a reasonable price in a terrific neighborhood! Brick ranch, 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, carpet over hardwood Huge storage house, qorqious, wooded ard All (or $71,500 Call Sheri larler 754 3500or 758 4651</p>
        <p>CHERRY OAKS! Beautiful. 4 bedroom home with lovely wood moldings, 2'2 baths, living room, toyer, garage A real eye catcher. $125,900  &amp;lt;26 Call</p>
        <p>Carolyn Erwin at Erwin Realty 355 7878 or home, 355 6016,</p>
        <p>BETHEL - Immediate occupan cy and lease purchase are avail able with this remodeled home Formal areas, den and study, also 3 bedrooms, fenced in cor ner lot Detached garage and more $40's Ask for Sue Dunn at Aldridge &amp;amp; Southerland at 756 3500, nights 355.2588.</p>
        <p>BROOK VALLEY This lovely brick traditional home is on a wooded lot and otters tive bedrooms, three baths, formal areas, den with fireplace and double garage For the discriminating buyer at $144,900 Ask tor Sue Dunn at Aldridge &amp;amp; Southerland at 756 3500, nights 355 2588.</p>
        <p>CAMBRIDGE Reduced tor quick sale. FHA Non qualiting loan is available on this 4 bedroom home with 2 full baths, qreatroom with fireplace and fenced yard Now $59.900 Please ask tor Sue Dunn at Aldridge 8i Southerland Real tors, 754 3500, nights 355 2588.</p>
        <p>CAME LOT Seller transferred and says sell! This traditional ranch is immaculate and a must see at $78,900 Entry toyer opens into large greatroom with fireplace, three bedrooms, two baths Single garage, deck and detached storage building To see ask tor Sue iJunn at Aldridge 8. Southerland at 754 3500. nights 355 2588</p>
        <p>CHERRY OAKS! New brick home under construction. Four bedrooms, 2'2 baths. All formal areas plus family room with fireplace. Double garage with unfinished room over garage C37. Call Carolyn Erwin at Er win Realty 355 7878 or home, 355 4016</p>
        <p>144 Houses For Salo</p>
        <p>REDUCED $$000t Assume this low, low interest rate loan on this attractive 3 bedroom home with approximately 1400 square feet and garage on corner lot in great neighborhood This is your chance to buy the hoe you need and will love and save money too. C31. Call Carolyn Erwin at Erwin Realty 355 7878 or home, 355 4016</p>
        <p>REDUCED. $57,700. Quail Ridge. 3 bedroom townhouse has nearly 1,500 square feet, large kitchen nook area. 2*2 baths, landscaped patio and is very clean Reasonable priced. Seller has moved Unique floor plan. Near pool and tennis courts Call now, it won't last long. Call Clark Branch Realtors, 355 2000.</p>
        <p>REDUCED AGAINI! Now of</p>
        <p>fered at $10,000 below the origi nal listing price, bwner says sell Make us an offer we can't refuse .3 bedrooms, l'2 baths near downtown Farmville now only $44.500 Call Bill Woodard 223 Coldwell Banker W G. Blount &amp;amp; Associate Realtors 756 3000 or 355 6330</p>
        <p>THIS THREE BEDROOM, two</p>
        <p>bath, contemporary ranch features a huge master bedroom, spacious great room with woodstove insert, large deck and garage 907 B Call Roger Davenport, J.L.Harris &amp;amp; Sons, Inc 758 4711 or 524 5432.</p>
        <p>COUNTRY HOME. Approxi mately 16 miles from Greenville in the Calico section. 5 acre lot, t'2 story Williamsburg home. Recently redecorated Includes formal areas 3 bedrooms, 2'2 baths, family room with fireplace. 2 car garage. $145.000. The Wingate Agency, 757 3441 or 744 3106.</p>
        <p>CRAFT BILT HOMES, Custom home builder. We build and fi nance. Little or no down pay ment No closing cost. Your plans or ours Call 937 6184 or I 800 942 5211 anytime</p>
        <p>DUPLEX IN UNIVERSITY</p>
        <p>area. FHA assumptio. Brick, 2 bedroom each side C33 Call Carolyn Erwin at Erwin Realty 355 7878 or home. 355 6016 tor more details</p>
        <p>ECONOMICAL STARTER: 3</p>
        <p>bedroom, two bath home near university area Needs lots of "tender loving care" A great way to gel started! Bargain priced at $32,000 Call Janet Bowser at CENTURY 21 JANET BOWSER 8. ASSOCIATES, 355 7800 or 754 8580.</p>
        <p>REDUCED $2,000. $71,900. Owner anxious to sell this lovely country home. New gas furnace, 4 bedrooms, 1' ; baths, modern kitchen, new paint, 2,800 teet Large lot Cali today This one must move soon 240 Call Pat Terry at Clark Branch Realtors, 355 2000.</p>
        <p>PRICE REDUCTION</p>
        <p>#48 Lexington Square</p>
        <p>REDUCED TO $48,700 This lovely townhouse has a greatroom with a fireplace. Beautifully appointed with chair rail and crown molding, kitchen, dining area with large mirror. There are 2 nice bedrooms and a bath and half. Wont you let us show you this one? We think your will like it.</p>
        <p>Aldridge &amp;amp; Southerland</p>
        <p>756-3500 Nights call Ray Spears 758^362 Dick Evans 758-1119</p>
        <p>THIS WINDY RIDGE Condo is perfect tor you! Two bedrooms, living room with fireplace, private patio, convenient to pool and tennis. $46,900. (lall Aldridge 8, Southerland 754 3500. ask for Katherine Vinson, or 752 5778</p>
        <p>THREE BEDROOM house in Winterville, living room, den, dining room, $4,000 down and assume purchase money mort gage of $23,000. No closing costs, no personal liability for mort gage 355 0300 or 756 5217</p>
        <p>SEDGEFIELD. Only one unit left in this outstanding complex. 3 bedrooms. 2' 2 baths, beautiful detail. Builder pays $1.000 of your closing costs. HOW war ranty excellent location across from the Beef Barn. Call Clark Branch Realtors, 355 2000</p>
        <p>144 Houses For Sale</p>
        <p>REDUCED TO $155,800. lrook Valley. Now is the time to make the decision. This could be your dream home, featuring (our bedrooms wifh one downstairs, formal rooms plus den and an all purpose room over garage Just me beginning of fhe list of ame nities Aihich Include hardwood floors and crown molding throughout, three ceramic baths and a wired workshop what more could you ask tor in a 3100 square toot brick home Call Ella McGowan, Clark Branch Realtors, 355 2000</p>
        <p>SO EASY TO OWN This 3 bedroom, 112 bath brick ranch in Greenbriar This home is con veniently 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 tor $U,900.</p>
        <p>ase call Gerry Lambert, CENTURY 21 JANET BOWSER 8. ASSOCIATES, 355 7800 or 355 7472</p>
        <p>SUPER CLEAN and ready to occupy! Custom home features foyer and dining room with hardwood floors, cozy breakfast room in large kitchen with bar, fireplace in greaf room, 3 bedrooms. 2 bafhs, deck. Yard afford bofh a fenced area for children/pets and room to park additional vehicles/boat. Atfor dably priced at $73.900. Call Elaine Troiano 275, Coldwell Banker W.G Blount 8, Associate Realtors 754 3000 or 355 4330</p>
        <p>RINGGOLD TOWERS Before</p>
        <p>you rent, let me show you how easy it is to buy! We have all styles ot condos available (or sale, for 1 to 4 occupants Priced from the upper $20 s to the $70's, excellent financing available. Invesfors, don't overlook the value here Call Clark Branch Realtors, 355 2000</p>
        <p>SIXTIESI Over 1600 square feet includes all lormal areas, den with fireplace, three bedrooms, two baths, hardwood floors under carpet, extras include large porch, double carport and fenced in wooded lof. $47,500. Ask for Sue Dunn at Aldridge 8, Southerland at 754 3500. nights 355 2588</p>
        <p>144 Houms For Salt</p>
        <p>fUCKER estates and this 4 bedroom traditional has much to pffar your family. 2'j baths, formal living room, dining room, kitchen with nook and family room with fireplace. C34. Call Carolyn Erwin at Erwin Realty. 355 7878 or home, 3554014.</p>
        <p>TWJNTY ONE acres surround this custom built brick ranch. Open floor plan includes qreatroom with fireplace and bay window, kitchen with work Island, dining area, three bedrooms and (wo baths Extras include workshop and deck. $135,000. Call Sue Dunn at Aldridge 8, Southerland at 754 3500, nFghts 355 2588</p>
        <p>WEATHERINGTON HEIGHTS.</p>
        <p>Just listed Excellent starter home is brick with three bedrooms, P2 baths, living room, kitchen dining combina tion, window air. and carport. Large corner lot. $47,900. To see, please call Sue Dunn, at Aldridge 8, Southerland 754 3500, nights 355 2588.</p>
        <p>WEATHINGTDN HEIGHTS:</p>
        <p>brick house with 3 bedrooms, I' 7 baths, living room, den with fireplace (real chimney), klfch en dining combination, screen and glassed in porch Heat pump and central air. Large corner lot with fenced In back yard, storage building and well. W.H. Robinson School district. FHA assumption, 9.5% $50's. Call 756 3897</p>
        <p>WHAT A HOUSE. New home in ^autiful secluded Clevewood. Quality characterizes this 3 bedroom, 2'2 bath plan Other features include large family room with fireplace, kitchen with eat in area and formal din ing room. Pick your own colors. Call today tor more information 225 Coldwell Banker W.G. Blount &amp;amp; Associate Realtors 756 3000 or 355 4330</p>
        <p>WOULD YOU LIKE TO live just outside the city limits? This cute three bedroom home offers a country setting plus numerous other amenities Owner relocating and wants to sell. At fordably priced at $45,900 Please call CENTURY 21 JANET BOWSER 8. ASSOCIATES, 355 7800.</p>
        <p>144 Housm For Salt</p>
        <p>V&amp;amp;LTLL Mt iiVk (hit! Bui Isr tS9,900 you can havt 3 bedroom brick home wIfh living room, den with fireplace, spacious kllchen with dining area, extras such as crown molding, ail in mint condition. Centipede lawn on a corner lot makes this normally typical ranch a show place. Call Aldridge A Southerland 754 3500. ask for Katherine Vinson, or 752 5778</p>
        <p>YOUR FAMILY WILL LOVE this spacious 4 bedroom. 2 bath contemporary style home. It is situated on a beautiful wooded lot. An excellent value priced in the low $90's. Call Robert Dean, CENTURY 21 JANET BOWSER &amp;amp; ASSOCIATES. 355 7800 or 754 1147</p>
        <p>$107,800. VICTORIAN ranch with over 1,700 square leet and double garage. You want brick and all the trimmings including some trees tor just over a $100,000. It's under construction for you. Call now lor minor changes and select your decor. Double walk in closets in master bath and a whirlpool tub. For mal dining and separate utility room. Call nowl. Windsor. Call Clark Branch Realtors. 355 2000.</p>
        <p>$119,500. THIS COLONIAL one Story otters style, plenty of storage, double garage, nearly 2.200 square leet, master suite with walk in closet, large breakfast area and formal din ing, playroom over the garage and spacious deck tor spring cook outs. Select your own decor. Large wooded lot. 40C Duke Road, Windsor, Call Clark Branch Realtors, 355 2000.</p>
        <p>$124,900-LOVE AT FIRST</p>
        <p>sight when you see this COM PLETELY remodeled southern style home. 3,114 square leet, 5 bedrooms. 2'j baths, 3 fireplaces, hardwood floors, custom made drapes, heat pump with central air, double car garage covered in carefree vinly siding, privacy fence, proles 1  </p>
        <p>TOO</p>
        <p>sional landscaping, jusf MANY EXTRAS to list. You must see this home it you need extra room and appreciate perfection. Call Clark Branch Realtors, 355 2000</p>
        <p>144 Housts For Salt</p>
        <p>$ioi,oookeTucky style liorie farm and estate in the making. 3 plus acres, custom built from the ground up woth obvious care for detail Having 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, also there is land and woods to enjoy even if you don't raise horses. Near the hospital. Call Clark Branch Re altors. 355 2000.</p>
        <p>$34,500. THE BUCK STARTS</p>
        <p>here! I Start to put the bucks in your own pocket instead ot the landlords. 3 bedroom home on lovely treed lot. Remodeled with new carpet and log burning fireplace. 15 minutes from Greenville. Call Clark Branch Realtors, 355 2000.</p>
        <p>$35,500. ATTENTtON! Investors or home buyers looking tor lots of room In a central area. Four bedrooms, 2 baths, nice backyard, den, living room, laundry room, plus vinyl siding tor low maintenance. Hurry, owner has slashed the price (or a quick sale. On Fifth Street. Call Clark Branch Realtors. 355 2000.</p>
        <p>144 Housm For Solo</p>
        <p>$140,00-LOOKINO FOR wooded, privacy? This home In Windsor, offers all the extras! Large kitchen with island, sunken den plus separate parlor or music room, dougle garage, large (oyer area with contemporary flair. Master bedroom suite with jacuzzi tub, shower and walk-lit closet. An open balcony accent^, the contemporary feeling of this unique home Call and see lor yourself. You select the decor! Call Clark Branch Realtors, 355 2000</p>
        <p>$I44,000-ONE OF BRDOft</p>
        <p>Valley's finest. This brick, two story home has four bedrooms, 3 ceramic baths, large deck and patio tor outside entertaining Overlooking 2 fairway. Don t forget the double garage and storage. New kitchen applF anees. Low utilities with extra insulation, bay windows, small office and more. Definitely for the discriminating buyer. Clark Branch Realtors, 355 2000.</p>
        <p>Independently Owned And Operated</p>
        <p>Congratukitionsl</p>
        <p>Gerry Lambert</p>
        <p>Top Producor</p>
        <p>For Tho Months July and August!</p>
        <p>Janet Bowser and Associates</p>
        <p>355-7472</p>
        <p>221 Commerce St., Suite A</p>
        <p>355-7800</p>
        <p>THE REAL ESTATE CENTER OF GREENVILLE, INC.</p>
        <p>NEW LISTING</p>
        <p>RAGLAND ACRES. Three bedroom brick home in Winterville School District offers fenced back yard, nice landscaping and is freshly 0ainted Priced in the fifties. Call Tim Smith for details.</p>
        <p>Tim Smith, GRI. Edgar Wall .. Richard Allen.. Ray Holloman.. Ricky Langley..</p>
        <p> 3S5-6460</p>
        <p> 83IMI878</p>
        <p> 756-4553</p>
        <p> 757-1877</p>
        <p> 752-6004</p>
        <p>ON CALL SUSAN WILLIAMS 757-1798</p>
        <p>Mis.</p>
        <p>GILEAD SHORES-New home in Blount's Creek area on the water offers picturesque view, 4 bedrooms, large deck and lots of privacy.  SI  75,000</p>
        <p>GILEAD SHORESOne block from the river. Two story home under construction with 1400 square foot heated and 1400 square foot garage and shop area. Located on an acre lot with access to river. Call office for details.  $100,000.</p>
        <p>BRITTANY RIDGE. New traditional home offering great floor plan, including 3 bedrooms, formal dining room, eat-in kitchen with bay window, fireplace and many other features. Call today for your exclusive showing. $2,000 closing paid. Reduced $2.000  $93,600.</p>
        <p>SR 1126. Try this brick, 4 bedroom, 2Wt bath with over 2,200 square feet on 3.98 acres with a double ga' in thn winterville School District. Act'fast, this wont last  $92,500.</p>
        <p>NEW CONSTRUCTION-ln the country over 1,900 square feet. Three bedrooms, 3 baths, has a master bedroom upstairs and a master bedroom downstairs. Greatroom with cathedral ceilings and formal dining room. All on 1.25 acres. Only $87,900.</p>
        <p>3,000 SQUARE FEET ranch with 2 acres of land. Located approximately 25 miles from Greenville near Chocowlnlty. Spacous rooms with lots of closets. Call office for details.  $80,000.</p>
        <p>EXCEPTIONALLY well maintained 3 bedroom, 2 bath ranch In the Winterville School District. Many extras Including deck, fenced backyard, outside storage buildlnq and carport. Call today. 967,900</p>
        <p>NEAR QRIMESLAND-Three bedroom home on 1 acre lot with over 1,300 square feet. LOW monthly payments for a homeowner or GREAT return for an investor. Additional rental property that generates $435/mo. conveys. All for only $66,900</p>
        <p>ENJOY country living lust outside Farmville. This 1,680 square toot, 3 bedroom, 2 bath home Is situated on a 3.2 acre lot minutes from town. Call today for more information.  $62,500</p>
        <p>PINE RIDGE. Three bedroom contemporary home offers good floor plan, greatroom with fireplace and patio overlooking large wooded backyard. Assumable FHA loan</p>
        <p>159,000</p>
        <p>FHA ASSUMPTION with a small down payment on this now 3 bedroom, 2 bath Willoughby Park Unit. Especially well decorated with many extras. $55,250</p>
        <p>HARDEE ACRES-Recently painted inside and outside. Features Include 3 bedrooms, IVi baths, kitchen and dining room combinations and a fenced In backyard. Assumable 8%% VA loan. Converted garage can be used as a 4th bedroom  $53,900</p>
        <p>UNIVERSITY AREA. Great location for this comfortable 3 bedroom home within walking distance of campus. Home is In excellent condition.  940,900.</p>
        <p>HANDYMANS SPECIALI The possibilities are unlimited for this 3 bedroom farmhouse with detached garage on 2.34 acre wooded lot. Convenient to mall and to the hospital.  $$8,900.</p>
        <p>REDUCED $2,000</p>
        <p>52KAYROAD</p>
        <p>BRITTANY RIDGE. Come home to luxury in this 3 bedroom, 2Vi bath, traditional with over 1900 square feet. Enjoy your bay window at breakfast. Custom crafted with pride by Judson Porter. $2,000 closing paid. REDUCED $2,000. $95,500</p>
        <p>Jimmy Cowan. Kathy Harrell. Paul Pisonl... Todd Ramsoy. OFFICE......</p>
        <p>.753-4383 .355-4637 . 756-5777 .752-6656 355-6666</p>
        <p>$$$$$$$</p>
        <p>COASTAL N.C. MOBILE HOME PARK. Excellent fcr retirement or investment. Should return owner-manager 20% before taxes. Listing Broker Richard Allen.  </p>
        <p>More buyers trust us with their dreams.</p>
        <p>Rod Tugwell On Call 355-7224</p>
        <p>Annette Parker-Butler  .355-7009</p>
        <p>Barbara Tipton............  756-2421</p>
        <p>Corinne Whitehurst............835-1937</p>
        <p>Ed Meyer, GRI................830-1038</p>
        <p>Joan Crane..................756-5408</p>
        <p>Nancy Griffith................756-8590  -I</p>
        <p>NEW LISTING BRITTANY RIDGE</p>
        <p>NEW LISTING GREENFIELD TERRACE</p>
        <p>UNIVERSITY 4TH STREET</p>
        <p>NEW LISTING POPULAR DRIVE, CRYSTAL BEACH</p>
        <p>T</p>
        <p>NiW HOUSf W0 cortlully plonnwl (or tulur* xponiloni 3 lorg. b#dtoomt, J both ov.rtiitd fircplocv with woodbox highlight, family room ocr cornar lot only $69,000. Aik about xponiion pol.niiol Contoct Ann.tt. Park.r Bull.r 333-7003 er 333 7009</p>
        <p>NEW LISTING 1005-A WESTOVER DRIVE</p>
        <p>2 MINUT1$ niOM BUROOUOH: WILLCOMI end hoH lot. thii jewel iperklet. Speclel hizlurei ore Iree-ilending tlreploce. ikylloht In metier beth, |-jrquet lleorlng. lunroem. weeded let. $42,000. Fer full por&amp;lt;i:ulori coll NOWI Annette Porker-Sutler 333-7002 er 333-7009</p>
        <p>NEW LISTfNG MAURY</p>
        <p>TAKI YOUR LANDLORD off your peyrelM Fretly. refwr-Whed 2 Mery Mill box Myle with no upkeep, vinyl tWIng. 4 bedroom* (1 down). 2 both*, fornMl dining, economice! gee hoot, centre! oir, hordwood flooring. $70,000. Don't welt, tee It ledoyl Annette Forker-Sutler, 339-7002 or 399-7009.</p>
        <p>NEW LISTING CLAYROOT</p>
        <p>HIDl-AWAV PROM HOMI, or permoneni reldence  lo</p>
        <p>cofed three block* from the Pamlico River on four heavy weeded lot*. Seech end Soaf Acce** to the River. Heme feature* 3 bedroom*. 2 large both*, large living room, control olr, end o n' x3l' (creened porch. The I9S3 medulor home I* In excellent condition. Mly fumlihed Including refrlgeraler. we*her end dryer. Coed re*erl locotlon., Flee*# cell Id Meyer Century 21 end A**ec. el 322-7002 or S30-I03S.</p>
        <p>NEW LISTING REDOAK</p>
        <p>/</p>
        <p>EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY</p>
        <p>AH reel aetoie adyoHleing in iMa neeregeper le Mb|acf to to Ftonl Fair Heuiing Ad of 1SSS aditoh mekee H lltogel to adieniae any prefaranee. Nmitotton or dlicrlmlnalton baaed an race, eotor, raHgton, aai ar nallonal origin, or an In-tonlton to mafca any aueh pra-toronea, RmHalton or *crimt-Mton."</p>
        <p>TMe nawipagar *riH nd knatdngly aaoagi any advor</p>
        <p>MM AttlMla</p>
        <p>WRwTv wVvtton</p>
        <p>la In MetoUan of lha tow. Our raattora ara haraby Intonnad fftot a# dwawnga adnartlaad In NHa naangagir ara atMllabto an an aqual oggariunliy ato</p>
        <p>Ta eomgtoln of diacrlmlna-Nan saM NUO toiMraa 1-SOO-41A9aO ar MeaHy 7I7-1U2 (Cammunliy Nouting</p>
        <p>LOCATION, CONVINIINCI end axiramaly eftordeblo</p>
        <p>daacriba* (hit 3 bedroom townhome locolad 3 minute* tram the ho*pltol Why rant whan thi, tanlo*tlc buy i* avollebla for only $$ ,500. Fteturti include lorge living room, hoot pump. overMied tot (60 xt67 ), tpoclou, mailer badreom. loHofcIO' Mti ond on ice makr relrlgaralor Fleoi# cell id Meyer Century 21 Tipton and Aiuk ot 333 7002 or R30-I09S.</p>
        <p>LIVI IN STYll with Ihl* luiurioui 2 bedroom homa. Thli oria otfari the Motu* you delire. Hordwood flooring In kit-chen/dlnlng oreo, double garage, icreened perch, end lo much mere, leoullful lelllng with peaceful terenlfy. Coll lodoy tor your pertonel ihowlng. lIMIng Agent: Rod 333-7224.</p>
        <p>PRIIDOM tram the cHy. S.79 acre* lurreund thi* leve iquore hot home. 3 badreom*. 3 bath*, only Iryaar i farad ot only $19,000. Call far datolli; LIMIng Age Tugwall 339-7234.</p>
        <p>Our CENTURY 21' office is a good place to start looking for a home. Were part of the largest real estate system in the world, the one that finds homes for more people than any other. We can offer you experience, resources, and a knowledge of this market that can help bring you closer to your dream. Give us a call today.</p>
        <p>Put your trust in Number One:</p>
        <p>OnlUQi</p>
        <p>L ltMKCt'iiiiiii ki'.il Li'iitiiiiiiMiii .1'iiti'ic'iiirilic N\l-  .tml irutleniirkxfrfCt'iiUtry 21 Hi'.tl KM.'iu Ctitpiir.ili&amp;gt;m Kquiil lliiiixiiiji llitimriiiiu.j E.UH OFFICE IS I.NDr.PLNDF.NTI.V ()\\ Milt \M)OIKKATKIK</p>
        <p>YOU WON'T PINO mara hema (er the money in o* fine e lo-f1.400  ceftonenywhere. H you era dubleu*. come *0# for yeuneH. Fer</p>
        <p>Id. Of-  exomple. 3 bedroom*, 3 both*, corpori, beautiful lof. Quiet</p>
        <p>if: Red  friendly lecoHen. $$7,900. lining Agent: Red Tugwell.</p>
        <p>TIPTON &amp;amp; ASSOCIATES</p>
        <p>355-7002</p>
        <p>234 Greenville Blvd.</p>
        <p>i</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0075" />
        <p>144 Houm For Salt  144 Houm For Solo</p>
        <p>/yiinutes from Greenville 1344 square feef, 4 bedrooms, 2 bafhs with many extras. Double car port, wood heater, ceiling tans, alarm system. All on a large, immaculately landscaped lot. you must see'this one today call Clark Branch Realtors, 355 2000,</p>
        <p>$40,500-BROOKHILL This two bedroom townhome is very clean l'2 baths, fireplace and over 1,000 square feel. It'soneof hie best buys in the area. Ott 264 By pass. Available this sum mer. Call now! Call Clark  yanch Realtors, 355 2000</p>
        <p>ECONOMICAL Starter home ot lered at $45,500 and now has a 3 bedrooms and I ^ baths ol warmth and comfort are yours in this well kept'brick ranch Fenced in yard and iust minutes from Greenville in a mce residential neighborhood opportunity! Call loi^y .285. Sherwood Greens Call Clark Branch Re altors, 355 2000</p>
        <p>$41,000-COUNTRY SQUIRE</p>
        <p>This home is so affordable yi can't afford to pass it by! F only $41.000 you can own a brick home with 2 bedrooms, on , large lot. Conveniently located Call Clark Branch Realtors 355 2000</p>
        <p>ling wheels. This prize 1 home with 3_^bedrooms, large</p>
        <p>wocksl^p,. fenced ckyard. IbhdScaped with fruit es and rosebushes. Come _ and ca.lli.today! Sherwood keens Call Clark Branch Re rs, 355 2000</p>
        <p>,fOO. EASY LIVING</p>
        <p>lliamsburg Manor. Thi vnhome is convenient to the spital and shop^ng centers itures 2 bedrooms, I'a baths "ge kitchen, family room and epiace. Perfect for an siment or starter home. Call grk Branch Realtors. 3i5 2000</p>
        <p>1,300. FmHA LOAN assump n. Excellent condition. Great ;ation. heat pump, central air, yattrative landscaping and cor This home won t last ig. So cpil today! Clark anch Realtors, 355 2000</p>
        <p>,000. CHiJiRM RIVER proper Beautiful maintained '</p>
        <p>idioom home with access mlito River New carpet. 5st furnishings, all appliances d many more exlras can be urs! Over 1600 square feet 'II Clark Branch Realtors 2000.</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>you</p>
        <p>^,500 VoU'ttE A WINNER! If</p>
        <p>'Ou buy this 3 bedroom home</p>
        <p>^ith deck, beautifully land icaped yamS and workshop Country area, .but convenient to</p>
        <p>B.yerything Jbsf north of Green Vine Priced tdsel'l last! Country Vquire Call Clark Branch Real tars, 355 2000</p>
        <p>f46,000-BRICK RANCH with npw paint and wallpaper await ypur inspection This home features 3 bedrooms, 1' i baths spacious kif^hen dining com bihation plus a garage Perfect heme tor tirsf- time buyers Mbrdee Acres Call Clark Btanch Realtors, 355 2000</p>
        <p>^,750.</p>
        <p>- COUNTRY SQUIRE</p>
        <p>qst started! Brick 3 bedrooms, J full baths. Sellr pays closing and points. Built by Reynolds May. Perfect tor first time home</p>
        <p>buyer with djitly 3% down. Cail Cibrk BrancWlealtors, 355 2000</p>
        <p>$,900. NEAT BRICK ranch on twiet street. Three bedrooms, two baths, heat pump, large kilred workshop New carpet and fresh paint Carolina Heights. Call Clark Branch Re jtfors, 355 2000</p>
        <p>, 9,000. SINGLETREE</p>
        <p>Beautiful things come in small packages! This 2 bedroom, i'; Wh ranch is beaulilully deco jated. Gas logs, blinds and ceil</p>
        <p>lh fans complete the package fhd you will love the small</p>
        <p>rice Call Clark Branch Real s. 355 2000</p>
        <p>IS$,900. ROWNETREE WOODS,</p>
        <p>5ust a little cash will move you H^ght into one ot these lovely vnhomes. Seller pays max bum allowed by lender toward Bur costs, furnishes all appli ^es. including washer and dr/er, and will pay up to $500 toward your moving expenses! Mo. you can't find a better deal Onywhere 3 bedrooms, 2'a ths, no fireplace 3 bedroom, baths, with fireplace. 6,900. Hospital area Call ark Branch Realtors, 355 2000</p>
        <p>1,900. WINDY RIDGE Cham gne living on a beer'budgel! 3 drooms, 2'a baths, excellent cation plus pool, lennis Seller, fill consider lease purchase all Clark Branch Realtors 2000.</p>
        <p>5,900. A LITTLE DOUGH witi do you. This new 3 bedroom, 2 bath home under construction is reasooobly priced lor the ydung ,wst Sfarting out Located ij^ul de sac in a quiet sub lion just minutes from</p>
        <p>nville. Builder will pay 3</p>
        <p>100 PRICE REDUCTION tier motivated country bckout! Cedar home boasting uhtiful space on 3'a acres ur bedroofhs, 3 baths, top ot line appliances in Ihe kitch family room, screened In rch, detached two car garage, my extras throughout this hne $I60I0, Call Stan Cherry n Coldv^ll Banker W G unf &amp;amp; * Afsociate Realtors 3000 or 355 6330.</p>
        <p>MOO. SHHHHHHHHHHII</p>
        <p>n't tell anyone before you see bargain! Three bedrooms, lace, large laundry room. 'Y patio, screened porch and rage Lovely landscaped lot! II Clark Branch Realtors, 2000</p>
        <p>Vm. NEED TO BE near ,y? Hers fhe house for you Easternfikfeet 2 bedrooms. 2 ths with possible third iroom. Large'fjorch with sw living room, dining room, n, 1546 square feet. Call i( Branch Realtors, 355 2000</p>
        <p>r&amp;gt;oy</p>
        <p>,nts. Country Place Call rk Branch,Realtors, 355 2000</p>
        <p>mo EVERYTHING SO w,</p>
        <p>.wonderful, so near the hospi and medical park area 1250</p>
        <p>of cheerful living is home presenlly ruction 3 bedrooms center hall lor IrdHIc pattern No Comfortable dining</p>
        <p>cient</p>
        <p>Hing 3 bath greatroom and im only a step to the kitchen I for yourself. Pinerldge. Call I trk Branch Realtors, 355 2000</p>
        <p>fLM HUiTST, 1715 S. Elms atreel. 3 bedrooms, 3 baths, large family room, formal din mg, 2 car carport, 2,306 square leet living area, top location tor</p>
        <p>school and shopping; also, many extras. Bill Williams Real</p>
        <p>Estate, 752 2615.</p>
        <p>^^CELLENT LOAN Assump tion makes this 3 bedroom, 2 bath home in the suburbs a super deal. Large fenced backyard, nice wired shed, big lot and much more make this Borne a very attractive proper ly Call Bill Woodard 279 Col dwell Banker W:G. Blount &amp;amp; 35563M ^ fiealfors 756 3000 or</p>
        <p>EXCELLENT'</p>
        <p>.7  ---- LOAN assump</p>
        <p>lion! 9'2% v.A, loan ApproxL malely $3.500 needed to own this 6 month old, 2 bedroom, 2 bath condominium in Willoughby Park Perfect for investor or</p>
        <p>. -..vvi twt IMVC3IUI ur</p>
        <p>owner/occupant Too many features to list. Call for them</p>
        <p> I T  lUl  IllCif</p>
        <p>  last</p>
        <p>Willoughby Park. Call Clark Branch Realtors, 355 2000,</p>
        <p>FIFTH STREET  Colonial ele ' lance abounds! Tall columns.^</p>
        <p>tigh ceilings, unbelievable nd</p>
        <p>moldings and hardwood floors are just the beginning. Large, spacious formal areas. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths and mucIT more. $129,900 Ask tor Sue Dunn at Aldridge &amp;amp; Southerland at 756 3500, nights 355 2588</p>
        <p>FOUR BEDROOM, two bath brick home in immaculate condition that features formal areas, den with fireplace, hard wood floors, and large kitchen PLUS a large in ground pool for 'our summer fun 904 A Call loger Davenport at J.L. Harris, &amp;amp; Sons, 758 4711 or 524 5632.</p>
        <p>GREAT BEGINNERI Don't throw away your money. Invest in this very affordable three bedroom, 2 bath brick ranch. Assumable VA loan Call Aldridge &amp;amp; Southerland 756.3500, ask tor Katherine Vinson, or 752 5778</p>
        <p>GREAt 11% FHA LOAN</p>
        <p>assumption on this scrumptious, 2 bedroom, 2 bath beautifully decorated, contemporary home. Large loti and private court yard Payments better than rent. Call for information on this non qualilying loan Rollinwood. Call Clark Branch Realtors. 355 2000</p>
        <p>144 Houms For Solo</p>
        <p>EXCEPTIONAL VALUE in</p>
        <p>Tucker Estates Beautiful home with large living room with fireplace, foyer, formal dining with hardwood floors Roomy kitchen' with pantry and breakfast room with bay win dow Detached garage, fence, everthing you could want for sale by owner broker, Carolyn Erwin. Call Carolyn Erwin at Erwin Really 355 7878 Or home, 355 6016. C35.</p>
        <p>GREENBRIER This excellent starter home is brick and atfor dable at $49,900 It offers living room with fireplace and built ms, large eat in kitchen with brand new stove and dishwash er, three bedrooms and two full baths Mint condition! To see call Sue Dunn at Aldridge &amp;amp; Southerland at 756 3500, nights 355 2588</p>
        <p>GREENVILLE BOULEVARD.</p>
        <p>This brick ranch is nestled on a wooded lot and offers three bedrooms. I'2 baths, living room with fireplace, dining room and carport with storage Affordable at $61,900 Please call Sue Dunn at Aldridge &amp;amp; Southerland at 756 3500, nights 355 2588</p>
        <p>GREENWOOD FORREST</p>
        <p>This new listing has a FHA non qualifying loan assumption so don't delay Immaculate ranch with three bedrooms, two baths, laundry room, carport.</p>
        <p>and greatroom. Deck and patio on larg^ wooded lot. Only</p>
        <p>$64,900 For further information ask for Sue Dunn at Aldridge &amp;amp; Southerland at 756 3500, nights 355 2588</p>
        <p>GRIMESLAND. 1900 square loot, 2500 square toot butler building Well landscaped 3 bedroms, 2 baths Beautiful Assumable loan with possible owner financing Call Morco anytime, 355 3045, 758 3887</p>
        <p>IMMACULATE BRICK RANCH</p>
        <p>that features family room with fireplace, three bedrooms, two baths on well landscaped lot 403 B Call Lib Harris at J.L Harris &amp;amp; Sons, 758 4711 or 752 1729.</p>
        <p>IMMACULATE CONDITION</p>
        <p>and less than two years old This three bedroom, two bath home features formal dining room, eat in kitchen, large great room with built in desk and</p>
        <p>bookcases. La^ country lot. Fav </p>
        <p>506 A. Call Faye Stewart, J.L.Harris &amp;amp; Sons, Inc. 758 4711 or 753 2080</p>
        <p>IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY</p>
        <p>and a possible lease purchase may be yours in this country home on one acre ot land. This brick traditional otters tive bedrooms, 3'2 baths, greatroom. kitchen with all ap pliances, double garage. $94.900. Ask for Sue Dunn at Aldridge 8, Southerland, 756 3500; nights, 355 2588</p>
        <p>LOUISE MOSELEY REALTY INC.</p>
        <p>Office 746-2 1 66 ()|&amp;gt;en Sal 11 rtf ays 9 to Noon</p>
        <p>Sunddvs C dll Vlilliams Harris 746-4228  1 jrm to 5 pm</p>
        <p>RELAX AND FISH -You will love this Brick Ranch sitting on the Lake. Features all formal areas, 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, family room, fireplace, detached office. Beautiful landscaping and more. $99,500.</p>
        <p>ALL YOU NEED TO DO IS MOVE IN. Your family will love this 3 bedroom rancher which has recently been painted Inside and out. Boasts living room with fireplace, 2 baths, kitchen with large dining area, heat pump and carport Great neighborhood. $56,500.</p>
        <p>GREAT LOCATION. Located in a quiet neighborhood this immaculate rancher boasts over 1500 square feet ot living area. Features 3 bedrooms, living room with dining area, eat-in kitchen, family room, hardwood floors and heat pump. Fenced yard with 20x20 workshop. A great buy at $55,500.</p>
        <p>LOOKING FOR A RENOVATED OLDER HOME. Come see this spacious 1 Story Colonial Home with central heat. 3 spacious bedrooms, living room, dining room, convenient kitchen and enclosed porch. Renovated in 1977. $49,900.</p>
        <p>DO YOU WANT LOTS OF SPACE? This Brick 3 bedroom Ranch Home features a formal living and dining room, kitchen. 1,17*, baths, huge family room with 2 bonus rooms and fenced back yard $49,500.</p>
        <p>RENT WITH OPTION IN FAMILY ORIENTED NEIGHBOR-HOOD-This 3 bedroom Brick Ranch merits your inspection. Features all formal areas, kitchen, family room, heat pump, detached workshop and fenced yard. $49.600.  ^</p>
        <p>'ryfiBii 44  4pacioua iot.^-4n</p>
        <p>trees, and great neighborhood. This ranch home features 3 bedrooms, central air, living room, large eat-in kitchen, garage and outside storage. Ready to move in and only $48,000</p>
        <p>REDUCED $13,000-Great opporturuty for investors or potential home owners in this vinyl siding, l'/4 story oider home. Features 5 bedrooms. tVi baths, living room, dining room and spacious kitchen? WhereCan you buy a livable home lor only $20,000.</p>
        <p>COMMERCIAL BUILDING DOWNTOWN AYDEN. Call for details</p>
        <p>COMMERCIAL BUILDING-FORMER MEDICAL CLINIC. Downtown Ayden. over 4,000 square feet. Many use applications Call for details</p>
        <p>COMMERCIAL PROPERTY-11 ACRES^JREAT LOCATION.</p>
        <p>Fronts on Hwy. #11 and SR1105 midway between between Grifton and Ayden next to Spartan Equipment Company. Will sell all or part</p>
        <p>EXCLUSIVE SUBDIVISION. "THE PINES". Beautiful wood ed lots with curb, gutter, city water, sewer, police and lire protection.</p>
        <p>1.48 ACRE LOT. South of Ayden. Ideal tor trailer or home. $8,500.</p>
        <p>.7 ACRE LOT. (150x200). Six miles east ot Ayden Perfect for home or trailer $6,000.</p>
        <p>LOT ON CREEK-Located in Contentnea Creek Estates Excellent home site. $14,000.</p>
        <p>1 ACRE AND 1V5 ACRE LOTS-(Approx Size) South of Ayden. Great Location. $6,000 to $8,000.</p>
        <p>MINI FARM-Approx. 13 plus acres Located south of Ayden. 2 Septic Tanks and Deep Well. Some Woodsland Perfect for the horse lover and great home site. Call for details.</p>
        <p>OVER 90% OF OUR LISTINGS SELL - WE WORK HARDER, LIST WITH A PROVEN PERFORMER.</p>
        <p>Louise Moseley 746-3472</p>
        <p>Doesnt CKIer The Expensive Townhome in Greoiviile.</p>
        <p>But You Uke A Cardidly Planned PHvaioSeciiri^ Wooded NeighborhoodFlri^ Yoi^fil Our iVices SufprisNdv</p>
        <p>1  rModri open aBfiiy toOto Houn By AppdinminM</p>
        <p>144 Houses For Sale</p>
        <p>ACRES; three bedrooms, P2 baths, 8 3/4% loan, $52,900. 758 1914</p>
        <p>IF YOU LOVE COUNTRY.</p>
        <p>you II love this home, situated on 2 nicely landscaped acres just outside of Farmville Inside there is over 2300 square loot ot living space, and outside there is a double carport and a de ached garage workshop For details, call Susan LIkosar, at Southerland at 756 ISOOor 756 7984</p>
        <p>IT'S APPEAL IS REAL on thi</p>
        <p>inside loo! Family room with fireplace, three bedrooms Ex tras: Screen porch, patio, underground sprinklers, garage with automatic opener and more! Immaculate condition! This is a must see home! Ed wards Acres Call Clark Branch Realtors, 355 2000</p>
        <p>LARGE COUNTRY ESTATE</p>
        <p>tor under $100,000. This unique ranch otters over 2,400 square teet with cathedral ceilings, ex posed beams, skylights, huge fireplace, double carport screened porch, split rail and chain link fence, and storage galore All this combined with 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, over 2 acres and rtiuch more All for $95,000 Call Shen Carter at Aldridge &amp;amp; Southerland 756 3500or 758 46sI</p>
        <p>LOW, LOW LOAN Assumption! On a nice starter house in a nice neighborhood in Ayden Priced in the low $40's It won't last</p>
        <p>long Call Ben Singleton LtN TURY 21 JANET BOWSER 8.</p>
        <p>ASSOCIATES, 355 7800</p>
        <p>LOW $40's. WARM'AND'friend" ^ Walk to the park and Ihe Pamlico river Living room with fireplace, formal dining room and three bedrooms on two lots Updated bath new roof wiring and plumbing Vacant and ready for you Call Clark Branch Realtors 35S 2000</p>
        <p>144 Houses For Sale</p>
        <p>LOW SSO'S. GREAT investment tor home or rental in this 3 bedroom bungalow next to the University. Hardwood lloors, tormal living room and dming room Priced to sell Jarvis Street. Call Clark Branch Real tors, 355 2000 ,</p>
        <p>LOW $70s. Foxchase is here with over 1,350 square feel, single garage and 10 year buyer protection plan Great room, separate dining room, rear decK and walk in utility room Large lot. South ot Greenville on Highway 11 Call now 10 select your decor Call Clark Branch Realtors. 355 2000</p>
        <p>LOW $70s. Just south of Green ville. Over 1,300 square teet plus a garage, greatroom, deck and separate dining room, separate utility room and plenty of closets You select the decor To</p>
        <p>be complete in September Cal now. Foxchase Just behind</p>
        <p>Brendle's, about 1' 2 miles on the right Call Clark Branch Real tors, 355 2000</p>
        <p>LOW $90's Investors! Triplex available on a wooded lot in a professional neighborhood All have 2 bedrooms, I' 1 baths, private patios and under home owners association All units are fully rented with excellent rent al history Ridgeplace &amp;gt;915 Call Clark Branch Realtors, 355 2000</p>
        <p>LOW DOWN PAYMENT!</p>
        <p>Monthly payments based on in come lor qualitied buyer Sec this 2 bedroom, 1 bath, brick ranch in Country Squire $45.500 Call Teresa Wainwnght at CENTURY 21 JANET BOWSER 8 ASSOCIATES, 355 7800 or 746 2931</p>
        <p>NEW CONSTRUCTION, custom built cabinets, masonry fireplace 3 bedrooms 2 baths HiqhSO'S Betty Hardesty Realty. /46 .1/88</p>
        <p>IM Houses For Sale</p>
        <p>LOWEST PRICED new brick homes in Put County! Only $48.750 for three bedrooms, two baths, living room, heal pumps, and builder will pay up to $2.000 in points and closing costs Hignite Realtors. 757 1969</p>
        <p>NEED ROOM? This home features UOO square feel on cor ner lot Family room with fireplace with wood insert, three bedrooms, P; baths Extras screened back porch, central air that is only 2 years old, master bath has new flooring and fix tures and plenty of storage area plus garage 402 B Call Lib Harris at J L Harris &amp;amp; Sons. Inc 758 4711 or 752 1729</p>
        <p>The Daily Reflector, Greenville. N.u 144 Housgs For Sale</p>
        <p>NEW BRICK Traditional in beautilui county subdivision. Four bedrooms, 2'2 baths, living room, dining room, foyer, and double garage $l'29,500 Call Carolyn Erwin at Erwih Realty 355 7878 or home, 355 6016 C3S LOW</p>
        <p>$40's GOOD LOAN</p>
        <p>assumption on this 2 bedroom duplex in excellent location Blinds, all appliances and ceil ing tan tor your convenience Heritage Village Call Clark Branch Realtors, 355 2000</p>
        <p>non qualifying FHA loan</p>
        <p>assumption! Low equity re quired; immediate occupancy possible on this 3 bedroom, 2 bath ranch with large lot, den with fireplace and carpet 2713 60s Call DeDe Carney. RE MAX PROPERTIES, 355 5444or 757 3759</p>
        <p>NON QUALIFYING FHA</p>
        <p>assumable loan is available on this one bedroom loft al Green ville Manor on the east side ot town Pay less than $6,000 and assume payments of only $238 94 per month Don't miss this op porlunily! Greenville Manor Call Clark Branch Realtors. 355 2000</p>
        <p>WANTED....</p>
        <p>Apartment complexes and land. Size does not matter. I have buyers ready to purchase! Call for a private consultation if you are thinking of selling.</p>
        <p>NEW CUSTOM D^ESIG'kTth en with expanded cabinets and counter space highlight this immaculate 3 bedroom. 2' 2 bath townhouse m popular Windy Ridge Living room with fireplace, formal dmmg room with bay window Two extra large bedrooms plus third with built ins that could be a cozy den Large patio with lush plan lings Move in condition $65,000 Call Aldridge 8 iouiheriand 756 3500, ask for Katherine Vin son, or 752 5778</p>
        <p>NEW LISTING. Country Estate Seven acres surround this Iradi</p>
        <p>tional home with approximately 3500 square leet Formal areas</p>
        <p>open into a huge den with fireplace and built ins, four bedrooms, three baths, double garage. Extras include slate patio, intercom, barn possible for horses, fenced yard $199,000 To see. call Sue Dunn at Aldridge 8 Southerland al 756 3500, nights 355 2588</p>
        <p>144 Houses For Sale</p>
        <p>.viiuerie, 1988 C-35</p>
        <p>PRICE REDUCTION!' Reduc ed to $95.900 Cherry Oaks Over 2000 square teet with loads of personality Sunken den wet bar, torinal living room, cheer ful kilrhen with glassed breakfast area. Ieneed backyard and good location to pool and club area REDUCED to $95,900 , 263, Call Betsy Ray, Coldwoll Banker W G Blount 8 Associate Realtors 756 3000 or 355 63J0</p>
        <p>PRICD~TO SELL!~Whether you re an indoor or an outdoors person, you II enjoy the comfort of this 3 bedroom 2 bath home An extra large eat in country kitchen overlooking your deck and tenced in back yard Let me show you what all you can get lor $47,500 Call Gerry Lambert at CENTURY 21 JANE r BOWSER 8 ASSOCIATES, 355 /800ur 355 7472</p>
        <p>THE REAL ESTATE GUIDE</p>
        <p>Call 830 0871 tor tnformFition</p>
        <p>Brian K. Jones, GRI</p>
        <p>RE/MAX</p>
        <p>Properties</p>
        <p>426 E. Arlington Blvd., Suite 0 Greenville. N.C.</p>
        <p>Res. 757-1967 Bus. 355-5444</p>
        <p>144 Houses For Sale</p>
        <p>OPEN HOUSE</p>
        <p>Sunday, September' l8lh, i 4.. p m 315 Sprinqhill Road Hardee Acres. By Owner Im maculate brick ranch, J-bedrooms, 2 toll baths, great room with fireplace, large kitchen with bar. lull size dining area, laundry room wall to wall carpeting, central air rear car port and screened deck $58.000 , 758 5053</p>
        <p>OWNER ANXIOUS to sell bnck ranch has three bedrooms, two baths living room den and large kitchen Enclosed sun porch, dll appliances convey Fenced back yard Conveniently, located near Mall 503 A Call Faye Stewart J L Harris 8 Sons, Inc 758 4711 or 753 2080</p>
        <p>RED OAK. 3 bedrooms 2 full baths, beautiful landscaped lot Owner anxious to sell. House idy to move into Assumable loan with possible owner linanc g Call Morco anytime 355 3045</p>
        <p>ItlsEasyToBdl</p>
        <p>Into</p>
        <p>Livii^At</p>
        <p>Ireetops</p>
        <p>It sure is easy because weve made Treetops a neighborhood wherel you can choose a home design that fits your lifestyle. The spacious townhomes and single family homes with varied floor plans and excellent utilization of space have been designed to make living comfortable. The pool, tennis court, and the natural surroundings of the neighborhood for biking, jogging or just a quiet walk combine to make living at Treetops relaxing. Its a neighborhood for all seasons as you can sit back in your easy chair by the warmth of your very own fireplace. Treetops gives you the opportunity to really enjoy home ownership without going out on a limb since the prices are surprisingly affordable. Come see for yourself...lts easy to fall into living at Treetops.</p>
        <p>A Neighborhood For All Seasons.</p>
        <p>Ball 752-0025 or</p>
        <p>Alxane 355-5370</p>
        <p>Rraltorsix*</p>
        <p>OPI N SI NDAV</p>
        <p>2-5</p>
        <p>' Located off South Lians Street LMension</p>
        <p>Townhomes from $60,400  Single Family Homes from $76,900</p>
        <p>jn:Harris</p>
        <p>OcSons, Inc.</p>
        <p>200 W. Tenth 7584711 i</p>
        <p>Mac Harris, General Manager... .355-6078 Julian Vainwright,</p>
        <p>Property Manager.............756-5818</p>
        <p>Elizabeth Modlin..................753-3967</p>
        <p>Roger Davenport..................524-5632</p>
        <p>Don Austin On Duty 746-3370</p>
        <p>Faye Stewart................ 753-2080</p>
        <p>Jeff Jones..........  757-1353</p>
        <p>Jan Cox.........................830-5311</p>
        <p>Lib Harris.........................752-1729</p>
        <p>Myra Day, Brokerage Manager 355-6652</p>
        <p>AYDEN This three bedroom, 1 /i bath home in established neighborhood on corner lot features hardwood floors, new fixtures and flooring in master bath and screened back porch. Fireplace with wood insert and ceiling fans. Very affordable. 402-A</p>
        <p>OWNER ANXIOUS to sell-brick ranch has three bedrooms, two baths, living room, den and large kitchen. Enclosed sun porch, all appliances convey. Fenced back yard. Conveniently located near Mall. 503-A</p>
        <p>MAINTENANCE FREE brick ranch with three bedrooms, carpet over hardwood, spacious utility room and large fenced yard. 902-A.</p>
        <p>SPARKLING CLEAN is this 3-bedroom, V/2 bath, under $50,000. New vinyl siding, extra large lot, and workshop in basement. 908-A.</p>
        <p>IMMACULATE CONDITION and less than two years old. This three bedroom, two bath home features formal dining room, eat-in kitchen, large great room with built-in desk and bookcases. Large country lot. 506-A.</p>
        <p>NORTHWOODS located in a country setting that is just minutes from the Industrial Park and convenient to the city. Large wooded lots with city water, underground utilities, and restrictive covenants. 006-A.</p>
        <p>BUSINESS</p>
        <p>aftEnbrooke</p>
        <p>r</p>
        <p>ASHENBROOKE: A new and prestigious development for Farmville. Ashenbrooke is conveniently located and attractively priced with value-enhancing restrictions. Ashenbrooke is a family-oriented community with an excellent school system, city water, and underground utilities. 005-A.</p>
        <p>L0TS...L0TS...L0TS</p>
        <p>SUPERMARKET, GRILL AND GAME ROOM.</p>
        <p>Includes stock, equipment and 9Vi year lease. Well established business in a good location. 507,AVAILABLE NOW-10-F acres on SR 1110 near Woodland Acres, can be divided. Owner will finance. 924-B.Windsor Subdivision. PricednTI?.  Restrictive  covenants, Winterville School District. 552.ELLWOOD PINES-Beautiful wooded lots with restrictive covenants. Bell Arthur water, convenient to hospital. Owner financing available. 420.</p>
        <p>APPROXIMATELY SO ACRES off Hwy 33across from Proctor &amp;amp; Gamble. Ideal for de velopment, zoned RA-20. Owner financing available. 555.</p>
        <p>PIZZA DELIVERY BUSINESS with proven record of over one million doiiars In sales per year. Owner financing available. 002</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0076" />
        <p>1*4 Housm For Sait</p>
        <p>eomw lot with thrao iMdrooint, wamic bath, larga livlng/din-Ing combo, Florida room, orlck *nd raducad tor quick Mia. Hignlta Raaltors, 757 1W9.</p>
        <p>MI.0M-YOU GET yastardav's prica and room galore with 1,534 aguara laat. Builder pays $1,000 ot your closing costs. Three</p>
        <p>bedrooms, 2*/s baths, dining area, private patio. Similar MIts already priced higher. Come out today and see for yourself. Contemporary decor. Its new In Quail Ridge. Call Clark Branch Realtors, 355 2000.</p>
        <p>Located In Rosewood Subdivision near Windsor. This contemporary will delight the modern home owner. Three bedrooms, 2 baths, sunken greatroom, stone fireplace, deck</p>
        <p>and more. Call today tor your</p>
        <p>private showl Terry al 355 2000</p>
        <p>.--------------a' " Call Pat</p>
        <p>erry at Clark Branch Realtors,</p>
        <p>$74,000 ARBOR HILLS is grow Ing and offers the best location in new construction in the $70's. This house has nearly 1,500 square feet. E 300 and full ten year buyer protection plan available. Call for more details. 1139. Call Clark Branch Real tors, 355 2000.</p>
        <p>144 HousGt For Sal* 144 Houms For Salo</p>
        <p>i^oo. WANtBfrtender,</p>
        <p>lov</p>
        <p>br?ck ^ 'tradltlwil</p>
        <p>ranch with over 1,096 square feet. $76,900 will give your family 2 baths, 4 bedrooms, formal living room, dining *f"Hy room and kitchen with breakfast nook. The large ^tached garage is an added at traction for dad. Call today! Drexelbrook. Call Barbara Briley, Clark-Branch Realtors, 355-3000.</p>
        <p>MO'S AT LAST. Elegance and Economy blends perfectly in this unique home. From the vaulted cypress celling with</p>
        <p>tinted skylights to the plushly farpeted floors...you'll know that this home is Special. Natu-</p>
        <p>gas furnace for economy and ' built-in speakers, bookcases.</p>
        <p>$9S,900 FOEST HILLS-Gorgeous neighborhood, great location lust two of the many fine points this home offers. Over 2,600', 3 or 4 bedrooms, 3 baths, fenced backyard, plus a 9V5% VA loan which can be assumed by anyone. Owner anx ious to sell means a good deal for some lucky buyer. Call Jean Hopper, Clark Branch Realtors, 355 2000.</p>
        <p>fabulous dress!</p>
        <p>  ing room, designer wallpaper and huge backyard acy fence make</p>
        <p>with new privacy this new listing a must to see Call Clark Branch Realtors, 355-3000.</p>
        <p>$09,900-0ver 1900 square feet, 4 grooms, 3 full baths, brick home. Newly painted inside, new carpet, fenced backyard. Pinewood Forest 4233 Call</p>
        <p>Sblfley Herald Coldwell Banker W.G. Blount &amp;amp; Associate Real-</p>
        <p>tors 756 3000 or 355 6330</p>
        <p>$96,900-BRITTANY RIOGE.</p>
        <p>Isn't new nice? Come see this delightful 3 bedroom, 2V5 bath, traditional two-story In one of Greenville's fastest growing areas. Complete with breakfast room, screened porch and dual heatpumps. It's year round comfort. Call Jean Hopper, Clark Branch Realtors, 355 2000.</p>
        <p>144 Houses For Solo</p>
        <p>ONE r"06m with Private ^</p>
        <p>trance, front office. $200 month. Call Janet Bowser, CENTURY 31 Janet Bowser &amp;amp; Associates, 355^7800or 756 8580.______</p>
        <p>148 Investment Property</p>
        <p>INVESTMENT PROPERTYI</p>
        <p>Duplex generating $600 per month. Each unit has 2 bedrooms, V/i baths, living room, dining room and kitchen. Nice deck with lots of trees. $64,000. Call Pragna AAehta, CENTURY 21 JANET BOWSER &amp;amp; ASSOCIATES, 355 7800 or 355-6054.</p>
        <p>150 Land For Sale</p>
        <p>A?PS^lSSTEL^l?REf</p>
        <p>Off Hwy. 33 across from Proctor</p>
        <p>&amp;amp; Gamble. Ideal for deveiop-)wner fl-</p>
        <p>ment, zoned RA-20. Owner nanclira available. 555. Call Faye Stewart at J.L. Harris &amp;amp; Sons, 758-4711 or 753 3080.</p>
        <p>NEAR HOSPITAL-Excluslve</p>
        <p>150 Land For Sale</p>
        <p>$99,500. DELUXE 2 bedroom flat with formal areas and den in 2,205 square feet. Amenities included are built-in microwave, three celling fans, window treatments, extra mouldings and chairrail, two walk-Tn closets in master bedroom, utili ty room with office. Quail Ridge. Call Clark-Branch Realtors, 355-2000:</p>
        <p>WILL NOT LAST LONG, 6.5</p>
        <p>acres, Farmville Industrial. Fenced. $17,500. Call Morco anytime, 355-3045 or 758 3887.</p>
        <p>10 ACRES, BELL ARTHUR.</p>
        <p>Will perk, good buy. $15,000. Call Morco anytime, 355-3045, 758-3887.</p>
        <p>privacy with small creek and shade trees, sloping terrain. 1'/i acres. $16,500. Call Clark</p>
        <p>Branch Realtors at 355-2000 or John Moye, Jr., 756-0604.</p>
        <p>OFF HIGHWAY 33 WEST. 8</p>
        <p>miles of Greenville. 3 acres, 4 septic tanks, and 2 wells. $24,500. Call Morco anytime, 355-3045, 758 3887.</p>
        <p>278 ACRES, 38 cleared with good road frontage and hunting area. Located in Stokes area. Price $85,000. Call Worley Warren at Aldridge &amp;amp; Southerland 756-3500; nights 795-3222.</p>
        <p>5 ACRES ON RIVER ROAD. 2</p>
        <p>miles of Greenville. 341 feet on rtver. Perked and ready to go. Call Morco anytime, 355-3045 or 758 3887.</p>
        <p>1 Und For Silt</p>
        <p>Wiln^plfAl/medlcal district.</p>
        <p>152 Lots For Sale</p>
        <p>3.5 acres</p>
        <p>zoned MO-1. IOmI for doctors of-</p>
        <p>flee or other medical facility. 801</p>
        <p>and 851-B. Call Don AustL. J.L. Harris &amp;amp; Sons, Inc. 758-4711 or 746 3370.</p>
        <p>AVAI^BLE NOW10+ acres m SR 1110 near Woodland Acres, can be divided. Owner will finance. 924. Call J.L.Harrls &amp;amp; Sons, 758-4711.</p>
        <p>BEAUTIFUL WOODED LOT in</p>
        <p>irlme Lynndaie subdivision. WII not last longl Call Pragna Mehta for more Information at CENTURY 21, JANET ER,."</p>
        <p>BOWSE R, 355 7800or 355 6054.</p>
        <p>'** WINDSOR Sob</p>
        <p>SI^'SOO *0</p>
        <p>$22,m. Restrictive covenants, Winterville School District. 552. Call Faye Stewart at J.L. Harris &amp;amp; Sons, 758-4711 or 753-70R0</p>
        <p>1S2 LotsForSale</p>
        <p>LOTSavallal</p>
        <p>iniat</p>
        <p>Frog Level off M4 By Pass. Cali 946^17 days; 756-4015 nights.</p>
        <p>hAMS CROSSROADS. State Road 1780.100 X 200 on Eastern Pines water. $5,500.</p>
        <p>STOKES. On State Rood 1588. 1/2 acre lot. Owner financing with $500 down payment. Payments as low as $80.57 a month.</p>
        <p>THE EVANS CO.</p>
        <p>752-2814</p>
        <p>Jack Gordon, Broker 355-5494</p>
        <p>Winnie Evans, Broker...752-4224</p>
        <p>Bxan</p>
        <p>^cAIej!</p>
        <p>c^fiaxmn...</p>
        <p>(JLli a touc of cHoa!, ONE BEDROOM WITH DEN AND TWO BEDROOM TWO BATH Spacious, elegant floor plans  -  </p>
        <p>Four gorgeous color schemes Ideal location next to medical park</p>
        <p>Extras like bay windows and vaulted ceilings</p>
        <p>Model by</p>
        <p>?ajt</p>
        <p>Furniture Co.'</p>
        <p>1630 Treybrooke Circle Greenville (Off Hwy 43 N) 83(M)661</p>
        <p>JONES PLANTATION. Nice</p>
        <p>sized lots from 2-6 acres with community water. Aldready perked, prices ranging from $11,500-$16,500. Located m miles from fairgrounds. Call Worley Warren at Aldridge &amp;amp; Southerland 756-3500; nights 795-3222.</p>
        <p>MILLBROOK- 3 miles from</p>
        <p>Greenville. Quiet family neigh-Jlb</p>
        <p>borhood. Call James Gibson at Hearthslde Realty 355-3613 or 355-2058.</p>
        <p>1S2 LotsForSale</p>
        <p>LLWb TMl-beautlfut wooded lots with restrictive covenants. Bell Arthur water, convenient to hospital. Owner financing available. 420. Call Lib Harris at J.L. Harris &amp;amp; Sons,, 758-471 lor 752 1729.  __</p>
        <p>NORTHWOODS located In a country setting that Is just minutes from the Industrial Park and convenient to the city. Large wooded lots with city water, underground utilities, and restrictive covenants. 006-A. Call J.L. Harris &amp;amp; Sons, Inc. 758-4711.</p>
        <p>ON ALBEMARLE SOUND near 1.038</p>
        <p>Plymouth. Approximately 1.038 acres, wooded sound frontage. Asking $27,500. 050-A. Call Don Austin at J.L. Harris 8, Sons, Inc. 758-4711 or 746 3370.</p>
        <p>RIVERFRONT LOT. 210 square feet of water frontage on Tar River, 9 miles west of Greenville. Private and sparsely wooded. 3.35 acres for $52,500. Call Don Mizelle, Hearthslde Realty 355 3613.</p>
        <p>1S2 Uts For Solo</p>
        <p>and I, suitable for office or</p>
        <p>^Nx. $16,900. Call Aim Bass at</p>
        <p>1-6966 or CENTURY 21 Bass Realty 7564666.</p>
        <p>SANDsiNE SliTiblVISION.'</p>
        <p>Lots with water and septic. F-ilabla.</p>
        <p>nancing terms available. No down payment required. Call 758-5103.</p>
        <p>STATONSBURG ESTATES,</p>
        <p>quiet cul-de-Mc, starting at  ..... Gaddis,</p>
        <p>$11,000. Call Linda Hearthslde Realty 355-3613 or 756-3291.</p>
        <p>STATONSBURG ESTATES,-quiet cul-de-sac convenient to hospital. Starting at $11,000. Call&amp;lt; Hearthslde Realty 355-3013.</p>
        <p>STERLING TRACE- Exclusive subdivision within sight of. Carolina Easf Mall. All over an. acre starting at $50,000. Call Hearthslde Realty 355-3613 or Linda Gaddis, 756-3291.</p>
        <p>STOKES AREA - Beautiful acre wooded lot. Call James Gibson, Hearthslde Realty, 355-3613 or 355 2058.  _</p>
        <p>ANNCiUNCING THE NEW ASSOCIATION OF</p>
        <p>JIM HILL, CREA</p>
        <p>CoHMBercHil Broker</p>
        <p>WITH</p>
        <p>OaRen Realty</p>
        <p>The Cluurles Centre SUITE F</p>
        <p>Bus. (919) 758-1983 Bm- (919) 524-5786</p>
        <p>brokerage,</p>
        <p>h</p>
        <p>2404 s. Charles SiT~] Greenville, N.C. 27835</p>
        <p>CONNER^</p>
        <p>DEVELOPMptT,</p>
        <p>LEASING</p>
        <p>Amembo'ofthe j Scare financial Network I</p>
        <p>COLDUieiL</p>
        <p>BANKORQ</p>
        <p>W.G. Blount &amp;amp; Assoc. Realtors</p>
        <p>Ejqject the best</p>
        <p>Offlco Hours: Mon.-Frl., 9-5:30 Sat 10-3; Sun. 1-5 201 E. Arilngton Blvd. Qraanvlllo  756-3000 or 355-6330</p>
        <p>COLDWELL BANKER 756-3</p>
        <p>Contrary To the Qoqrn And Gloom Projected By Some Forecasters, Now Is A Good Time To Purchase A Home. Interest</p>
        <p>Rates Are Actually Lower Today Than A Year Ago. ForPosi-tive Information Call Coldwell Banker.</p>
        <p>When attending any of our Open Houses, be sure to register hr our monthly giveaway. Ask any Host or Hostess for detailsOPEN HOUSE SUN. 2-5 PMOPEN HOUSE SUN. 2-4 PMOPEN HOUSE SUN. 2-4 PMOPEN HOUSE SUN. 2-4 PM</p>
        <p>H PJL atOITON VUAOS. Nw&amp;gt; luxury 2 and 3 DadrDomTownhomMTlExcWlani floor additional laaturaa audtVs tlraptacaa, all appNancM, calling lana,</p>
        <p>2-4</p>
        <p>outalda aloraga and a pilvatt patio. Aa an added MNUS tea art adding aootchguaidt ataln mm carpal at no additional axpanaa. Add lha tact that the bulldar arts pay up to 11,300 cloaing axpanaa and up to 3 loan diacouni polnta plua qualinaa lor N.C. Hooting monay through bulldar and WBIATON WUAOS bacomaa OREENVILLE'S PnEMIER HQUSINO VALUE. VWt our modal umi my Sunday Irom 24 p.m. or cm our otilee M;30 Watkdtya. wf ikLSO havi A nesBBir AoniT for yow coNvmeHCi. Piioaa aiar-Hng anas.60e.Call Don Joyner my evening Of weekend al 7068068.</p>
        <p>pm NEW 4 BEDROOM with master bedroom down-almost f inished-6 weeks to go. At great buy at P East-right at Pineridge Cemetary on-to SRI 726 left at Fast Fare. Go about 1 mile left Into Brittany Ridge. 1st cul-de-sac on left. Your Hostess Mary Catherine Spikes. #306.</p>
        <p>OPEN HOUSE SUN. 2-4 P.M.</p>
        <p>OPEN HOUSE SUN. 2-4 P.M.</p>
        <p>A CUT ABOVE THE ORDINARY TOWNHOME. We have a beputiful 2 bedroom, 2 bath Cypress Creek unit many special amenities, (^ntrally located, brick walk, large privacy fence, enclosed patio...much more make this a super opportunity. Turn onto Clifton St. off of Arlington Blvd. #1 Palmetto Place. Cypress Creek. Your Host Bill Woodard. #302.</p>
        <p>2-4 pm DUPLEX WITH ADDITIONAL RENTAL unit in back yard. Live in one side collect rent from the other unit. Owner will consider paying some of closing costs. Price negotiable. Take 264 North turn left on Hwy. 33 go less than a mile look for signs on right. Your Host Ray Everett. #295.</p>
        <p>OPEN HOUSE SUN. 2-4 p.</p>
        <p>OPEN HOUSE SUN. 2-4 P.</p>
        <p>J</p>
        <p>2-4 pm BRICK STORY &amp;amp; Vi with 2 car garage. Over 2000 square feet. Overlooks the entire 5th hole of Brook Valley golf course. A very unique home with appeal and personality. Fourth bedroom or office 8118,800. On back side of Brook Valley State Rd. SR 1726. Your Hostess Shirley Herald. #253.</p>
        <p>^  LOT  IMOr'ei  (3ver</p>
        <p>16(W square feet and* 2 stories of custom built features. Three bedrooms and room to spare. Sum-mertield entrance on Memorial Drive across from Parkers s BBQ. Your Host Stan Cherry. #286.</p>
        <p>FEATURE OF THE WEEK</p>
        <p>FEATURE OF THE WEEK</p>
        <p>PRIVACY A PEACE are just 2 of the advantages you'll find in this great starter retirement home conveniently located In town. 3 bedrooms, IVi bath, kitchen with dine-in area, attractive lot. Affordably priced at just $44.800 Your Hostess Elaine Trolano. Take Hooker Rd. to Pendleton St. Take 1st left. Look for signs. #293.</p>
        <p>BEAUTIFUUY SET AMONG tail hardwoods and pinas, this</p>
        <p>al^wt now home In Ciavawood will ba a homa to ba pro-.. -  iflniahad</p>
        <p>FEATURE OF THE WEEK</p>
        <p>ud of. Full size attic with walk-up stairoasa can bo u.....rau for 4th bedroom or playroom. Complatlon data la oroiactad for Christmas '88. Taka Evana St. Ext. or Tar Rd. Go IVi mllas paat Sunahlna Qardana and look for Ciavawood an-tranca of laft. Your Hoataaa Betsy Ray. #303.</p>
        <p>NEW LISTING</p>
        <p>fon.</p>
        <p>with carport on large woodea loi priced to sell at $49,900. Will consider rent with option to buy and will consider paying some closing cost. Call Rav Everett. #268.  ^</p>
        <p>UNDER $30,000-Thl8 maintenance free ranch is cute as can be-features 3 bedrooms, den, kitchen, utility room, large yard, and is located in a nice convenient neighborhood in Qrlfton. Call Mary Catherine Spikes. #239.</p>
        <p>Bill Blount I RaalkN^Srokar, ORVCRS, ' Prasidsnt</p>
        <p>100 QARNER RD. 2 yrs. old In excITf7 youngf neighborhood. Spacious m story Williamsburg home on large lot features 3 bedrooms with Master Bedroom suite downstairs, living room with cathedral celling, 9 closets plus 10x12 floored eave storage, deck, fenced and concrete dogpen. All yours for only $76,800. Call Shirley Herald. #287.</p>
        <p>  square feet brick home,</p>
        <p>central gas heat and air also $ detached rental that generates income. Payments on this homa could be lower than rent. Priced at 176,800. Call Kenny Fisher. #315.</p>
        <p>rrolanoL RayEroroii RMHw4roher 787-0680</p>
        <p>Tripathi</p>
        <p>(Trip)</p>
        <p>I Associate,</p>
        <p>TomH^  I</p>
        <p>AMoetoto I 788-848r |  AtiooiM*  I  Assoelate  I  Ataocltte</p>
        <p>~ RMltoHNokerl  780074$  |  7860868  |'  7944840</p>
        <p>758-2580</p>
        <p>7i$-7721</p>
        <p>ON CALL</p>
        <p>Knny"</p>
        <p>Fisher</p>
        <p>Associate</p>
        <p>355-6330'mUi</p>
        <p>UIkmIIMMMi</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0077" />
        <p>tS2 Lots For Salt</p>
        <p>WESTHVN</p>
        <p>Devaloping datSJi.SOO.</p>
        <p>Fully 1/3 acre Of</p>
        <p>100'</p>
        <p>woodad.</p>
        <p>area.</p>
        <p>lereda)</p>
        <p>REO OAK SUBDIVISION.</p>
        <p>lot. Wooded. S8.S00.</p>
        <p>14 ACRES NEAR Simpson Wooded surroundings. On paved road $21,000.</p>
        <p>CLEARED LOTS east of Qreen ville IOO'x2SO' $9.000 each.</p>
        <p>CLARK BRANCH REALTORS</p>
        <p>355 2000,</p>
        <p>WINDSOR. Nice corner lot in second phase of Windsor. $18,400 75-9726</p>
        <p>WOODED LOtS for sale.</p>
        <p>Winterville. Bigdest residential lots, I00'x300', city water, septic permits In place. Price includes lot clearing. Ready to build $13.400. 748 9310 days, 748 9446 nightv_</p>
        <p>WOODLAND ACRES SubdivI Sion. 10+ acres can be yours with owner financing. 923 A. Call J.L Harris &amp;amp; Sons, Inc. 748 4711 or 746 3370.</p>
        <p>2.84 ACRE Homeslte, Winter ville. owner will assist in build inga home. I 7294)381</p>
        <p>153 Loans &amp;amp; Mortgages</p>
        <p>need money? Loans on or buy anything ol value. Guns Un limited of Ayden Buy. sell, trade, pawn, repair.</p>
        <p>155 Resort Property For Sale</p>
        <p>OCRACOKE ISLAND - An</p>
        <p>island retreat will be yours in this contemporary home with 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, greatroom</p>
        <p>with cathedral ceiling, major sf vi</p>
        <p>furnishings, great view! $234.000. Ask for Sue Dunn at</p>
        <p>Aldridge &amp;amp; Southerland at 746 3500. nights 344 2488.</p>
        <p>OWN I WEEK Per quarter in a condominium at exclusive Point Emerald Villas in Emeraid Isle. This is a private ownership not time share For details call 355 7429 (evenings)</p>
        <p>155</p>
        <p>Resort Property For Sale</p>
        <p>gS5?Tira""!"ov,rT</p>
        <p>Lakefront Jots. .Free Lake Map STBuyer^s uide. Call or write Tanglewood Realty (804) 636</p>
        <p>2204. P.O. Box 116, Bracey, Virginia 33919.</p>
        <p>LARGE WATER FRONT LOT</p>
        <p>located on Bath Creek at Pecan Grove. Priced in the 60's. Call 756 0046  _</p>
        <p>157</p>
        <p>Townhouses For Sale .</p>
        <p>ATHLETIC CLUB FANS; nice end unit at Lexington Square, 2 bedrooms, I'&amp;lt;2 baths, washer and dryer connection, refrigerator, bay window and private patio $44,900 Call Dell Little at Jeannette Cox Agency. 746 1322 or 746 1976.</p>
        <p>BUY TODAY...Profit tomor row! Enjoy carefree living in this 2 bedroom, 1 ' 2 bath, 2 story townhouse Priced at $34,900 Contact Janet Bowser at CEN TURY jrJANET BOWSER A ASSOCIATES, 344 7800 or 756 8480</p>
        <p>FOR SALE BY OWNER;</p>
        <p>Townhouse. Must sell. Will pay $1.000 closing costs. 355 6983</p>
        <p>INVESTMENT Opportunity 2 bedrooms, )'2</p>
        <p>near hospital baths, upgrades, pool, tennis, anxious to sell $39.900 Call (404) 984 1844 please leave message</p>
        <p>LEXINGTON SQUARE</p>
        <p>Townhouse: Beautiful three bedroom. 2'2 bath, kitchen din ing combo and family room. Washer and dryer convey along with extras $56,000 Contact Janet Bowser CENTURY 21 JANET BOWSER &amp;amp; ASSOCIATES. 344 7800 or 746 8580</p>
        <p>MOSS CREEK Townhouses: Luxurious townhouses around Lake Ellsworth. Five different tioor plans...most with unfinish ed 3rd lloors Prices start at $61,500 for two bedrooms Two and three bedroom styles avail able Call Janet Bowser CEN TURY 21, JANET BOWSER &amp;amp; ASSOCIATES 354 7800 or 756 8580.</p>
        <p>161</p>
        <p>Apartments For Rent</p>
        <p>^IauTiPUl 1 or 2 bedroom</p>
        <p>apaHment one milt from hospi</p>
        <p>tal. One year lease, deposit, pets, washer/dryer hook up.</p>
        <p>Call Hearthside Realty Property Manager Division, 355 2113</p>
        <p>A BEAUTIFUL PLACE ALLNEW2BEDR00MS*</p>
        <p>UNIVERSITY</p>
        <p>APARTMENTS</p>
        <p>2899 E.5lh Street Located Near ECU Near Major Shopping Centers Contact J T or Tommy Williams 746 78l5or 830 1937</p>
        <p>AZALEA GARDENS*</p>
        <p>CLEAN AND QUIET one bedroom furnished apartments, energy etticient, free wafer and sewer, optional washers, dryers, cable TV Couples or singles on ly. $205 a month 6 month lease. MOBILE HOME RENTALS Couples or singles. Apartments and mobile homes in Azalea Gardens near Brook Valley Country Club</p>
        <p>Contact J T or Tommy Williams 756 7815</p>
        <p>AN AIR CONDITIONED single bedroom apartment with appli anees. $210 a month Located at 426 W. 5th Street 756 7285</p>
        <p>ARE YOU LOST, CONFUSED?</p>
        <p>Let us help! We have affordable, private, unadvertised rentals. 752 1375 HOMELOCATORS Fee</p>
        <p>AT THE PERFECT TIME and</p>
        <p>location lor you ) and 2 bedroom apartments on E vans Street Ext, across from TV Sta tion One year lease with depos It. No pets, washer/dryer hook</p>
        <p>X, brand new Hearthside Re I Property Manager Divi Sion, 355 2112</p>
        <p>BAILEY LANE Apartments, Vanceboro. One bedroom vacancy available for elderly, handicapped, disabled Need 2 3</p>
        <p>bedroom applications Hud sub sidized, full carpeting, drapes.</p>
        <p>range, refridgerator. central heat and air, cable TV available E HO 244 1324</p>
        <p>161</p>
        <p>ApartmBntt For Rent</p>
        <p>ATTENTION STUDENTS 3</p>
        <p>bedrooms, walk, .ride bike or ECU bus fb campus. College View Apartments. No kids. $220. J.L. Harris &amp;amp; Sons, Realtors 748 4711.</p>
        <p>luxury ed</p>
        <p>BEAUTIFUL NEW</p>
        <p>apartments now leasing In met ical park area. Classy, spacious, I and 2 bedroom floor plans with loads of closet space. 4 color schemes, fireplaces, washer &amp;lt; dryer hook ups, private patios and balconies. AM I bedrooms have additional dens and )'2</p>
        <p>baths Call 830 0661</p>
        <p>TREYBRCX)KE</p>
        <p>APARTMENTS</p>
        <p>BILLS PAID I bedroom $205 or 2 bedroom $294 Near downtown 752 1375 HOMELOCATORS Fee</p>
        <p>BRYTON HILLS 2 bedrooms, deck, $275 Call 752 4131 after 5 p.m</p>
        <p>161</p>
        <p>Apartments For Rent</p>
        <p>COIY 3 BEDROOM duplex near Simpson. 756 1889 or 752 4200</p>
        <p>OUPLIEXV j bedroom, 1 bath, washer and dryer hook ups. $350 a month. Deposit required. Call 344 5248after 4:00p.m</p>
        <p>EXTRA LARGE 1 bedroom apartment! Tile bath, central vacuum, individual air and heal, carpeted, drapes, nicely furnis ed throughout. Part utilities fur</p>
        <p>lugh</p>
        <p>nished 1 block campus Avail</p>
        <p>able October 1st. 752</p>
        <p>ipus</p>
        <p>2691</p>
        <p>FARMVILLE. 2 bedroom apartment, appliances included. Patio, cable hook up. central air. $250 a month Call 743 4750.</p>
        <p>HOUSING FOR THE PROFESSIONAL</p>
        <p>Cherry</p>
        <p>:ious 2 bedrc</p>
        <p>Court</p>
        <p>Spacious 2 becfroom townhouse with 1' 3 baths. Also 1 bedroom apartments available. All are carpeted, with modern kitchen appliances including compactor and dishwasher Central heal 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>EASTBROOK</p>
        <p>AND</p>
        <p>VILLAGE GREEN APARTMENTS</p>
        <p>One, two and three bedroom apartments, featuring cable TV, modern appliances, clean laun dry facilities, swimming pools, fully carpeted</p>
        <p>Office: 204 Eastbrook Drive</p>
        <p>752-5100</p>
        <p>BROOKHILL. Three bedroom townhome available. 2'2 baths, all energy efficient appliances, fireplace, outside storage/ private patio</p>
        <p>AYDEN. Two bedroom duplexes available on 2nd Street Dish washer, range, and frost tree refrigerator. Pets unjder 20 pounds.</p>
        <p>SHENANDOAH VILLAGE.</p>
        <p>309 C Tobacco Road Two bedroom townhome available October I'z baths, appliances, washer/dryer hook ups, and outside storage</p>
        <p>WILLIAMSBURG MANOR. Two bedroom townhome avail able October. Fireplace, appli anees, washer/dryer hook ups, 1'2 baths, and outside storage. Protessionalarea.</p>
        <p>WEST HILLS. Two bedroom townhome available October 2'2 baths, appliances, washer/ dryer hook ups, outside storage. Close to hospital.</p>
        <p>REOEAST,INC. (919) 758 6061</p>
        <p>Ask for Jo Ann</p>
        <p>161</p>
        <p>ApertmBnts For Rent</p>
        <p>FUllNISHEO 2 3. or 4 room apartment 742 7212 or 756 0174</p>
        <p>FURNISHED ONE bedroom Martment, I'l blocks Irom ECU. Call 758 2628anytime.</p>
        <p>FURNISHED I bedroom $200 or I bedroom $345 Both well kept 752 1375 HOMELOCATORS Fee</p>
        <p>GreeneWay</p>
        <p>Large 2 bedroom garden apart ments. all with 7 closets, carpeting, kitchen appliances including dishwasher, central heat and air Free basic cable TV, water and sewer Laundry rooms, spacious grounds, playground and pool, abundant parking Pets allowed Adjacent to Greenville Country Club ($300 ) 756 6869</p>
        <p>KIDS OKI Clean 2 bedroom duplex SI95 or 2 bedroom $300 752 1375HOMELOCATORS Fee</p>
        <p>KINGS ARMS</p>
        <p>Large I bedroom apartments. Carpeted, modern kitchen ap pliances, heat pump tor energy etticient heating and cooling Laundry facilities 1209 Charles Boulevard. Otiice Apartment 104. Furnished Apartments Available. Also Renting For Fail</p>
        <p>752-8915</p>
        <p>KINGS ROW APARTMENTS</p>
        <p>ONE AND TWO BEDROOM</p>
        <p>Garden Apartments All appli anees 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 lOfh Street</p>
        <p>NEW I BEDROOM apartments Washer,dryer, cable TV, carpet, electric heat, air condi lionmq, appliances 756 3342</p>
        <p>The Daily Reflector.  j,. gunday^Sgetember^^</p>
        <p>161</p>
        <p>A|artmBnts</p>
        <p>For Reot</p>
        <p>NtCE CLEAN ) bedroom $230or 3 bedroom fownhouse $320 Yard 752 1375 HOMELOCATORS Fee</p>
        <p>OAKMONT SQUARE APARTMENTS</p>
        <p>Two bedroom townho(/se 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 4:30, Monday Friday, 1212 Redbanks Road</p>
        <p>756 4151</p>
        <p>ONE AND TWO bedroom apartments tor 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 201 N Woodlawn 756 0545 or 758 0635</p>
        <p>ONE BEDROOM furnished apartment 3 blocks from univer sity Heat, air, and water tur nished No pets Call 758 3781 or 756 0889.</p>
        <p>PET LOVERS t bedroom $200or 2 bedroom house $325 Fenced</p>
        <p>752 1375 HOME LOCATORS Fee</p>
        <p>STRATFORD ARMS APARTMENTS</p>
        <p>Spacious 1,2 and 3 Bedroom Apartments</p>
        <p>$200 Security Deposit Required .TNNikouRTS.POOL</p>
        <p>CABLE TV Convenient to Snoppmg and E C U</p>
        <p>Officehours9a.m. toSp.m Monday through Friday</p>
        <p>Callus 24 hours a day at</p>
        <p>756-4800</p>
        <p>161</p>
        <p>Apartments For Rent</p>
        <p>ONE BEDROOM, S vans Strtet No kitchen, wafer and</p>
        <p>electriaty furnished, $t7S-----</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOM. Forbes Street, $175.</p>
        <p>J L Harris 6 Sons. Realtors. 758 4711</p>
        <p>STUDENT HOUSING</p>
        <p>PfRATES LANDING.</p>
        <p>LIMITED OFFER; SIGN ONE YEAR LEASE BYCKTOBER I, AND RECEIVE FIRST MONTH FREE!! Furnished room with semi private bathroom. Microwave ovens. Laundry fa cilifies Utilities included Short term lease available</p>
        <p>REGENCY HOUSE. Two</p>
        <p>bedroom condo available Oc lober. Completely furnished Hot/cold water, sewer included Corner of 5th and Reade Streets Walk across street to campus.</p>
        <p>REMCO EAST, INC. (919) 758 6061</p>
        <p>Ask for Patti</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOM Apartment lor rent. Hospital area Contact F L Garner. Owner'Broker, 757 1445</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOM, central heat and air Large yards Colonial Village S250</p>
        <p>J L Harris 6. Sons, Realtors 758 4711</p>
        <p>WON'T LAST Heated ) bedroom $225/2 bedroom duplex S275 752 1375 HOME LOCATORS Fee</p>
        <p>WOOD'S EDGE</p>
        <p>Brand new spacious two bedroom duplexes located in a quiet residential community in Heritage Village featuring Greatroom with cathedral ceil ing. fireplace, fully equipped kitchen, washer and dryer con neclions, energy etticient. out side storage room, private enclosed patios</p>
        <p>756 4151</p>
        <p>161</p>
        <p>A^rtment</p>
        <p>For Ront</p>
        <p>WEDGEWQODARMS </p>
        <p>3 bodroora,  fownhou*.</p>
        <p>Excellent location, CarTTirTWlf pumps. Whirlpool kitchen, washer dryer hookups, pool, tennis court, draperie 355 6302.</p>
        <p>2 BEDROOM TOWNHOUSE at</p>
        <p>University Condominiums. $300 per month. 2 bedroom, 1 bath at Cheyenne Court $285 per month Pinehurst Apartments m Winterville 2 bedrooms, 1 bath. $240 per month. Lease and de posit required Duffus Realty, Inc 756 2675</p>
        <p>2 BEDROOM, bath and</p>
        <p>apartment for rent. Call 355-2474 or 355 6016 alter 6 00 p.m</p>
        <p>170 Condominiums For Rent</p>
        <p>AVAILABLE IN September 3 bedroom. 2 bath flat with 1300 square feet Fireplace, $tove, dishwasher and (tisposal, pool and tennis courts. I year lease</p>
        <p>and deposit required No pets cTldrfi Branch Realtors,</p>
        <p>Cail 355 2000</p>
        <p>ROLLINWOOO: 2 bedrooms, 2 baths Partially furnished Hof tub $600 per month, lease and deposit required Duffus Realty. Inc 756 5395 .</p>
        <p>SHERATON VILLAGE: 2</p>
        <p>bedroom townhouse, 1'j baths, fireplace, washer, dryer. $450 Call 756 6323</p>
        <p>two BEDROOMS. 2 baths, flat, Upton Court, washer and dryer, microwave, extra nice. $475 per month Call 756 8085</p>
        <p>YORKTOWN SQUARE. 3</p>
        <p>bedrooms, 1'} bath, available after September 21  $460  per</p>
        <p>month. I year's lease required Please call Aldridge 8, Southerland. 756 3500</p>
        <p>173 Houses For Rent</p>
        <p>ARE YOU LOST, CONFUSED?</p>
        <p>Let us help! We have attordable, private, unadvertlsed rentals 752 1375 HOMELOCATORS Fee</p>
        <p>DUFFUS</p>
        <p>REALTYinc</p>
        <p>TWiHoiJiSg201 Commerce Street</p>
        <p>756-5395</p>
        <p>t=i</p>
        <p>IC-^At nOVM</p>
        <p>omMnjuiif</p>
        <p>CLUB-AREA FANTASY</p>
        <p>Luxurious Brook Valley Traditional home. Mrs. Clean care. Electronic door opener, central air, solar hot water, automatic sprinkler system, 5 bedrooms, 3 baths. Fireplace, some carpet, slate foyer, liv-ina/dining combination.</p>
        <p>OFFERING REAL COMFORT Lovely 2 story offering real comfort. Central air, patio, 2 bedrooms, 1 baths. Plus close to amenities. Brick exterior, refrigerator conveys, end unit. See now! Priced at $33.500.</p>
        <p>REDUCED $4,000</p>
        <p>imumi</p>
        <p>$34,000</p>
        <p>Cannon Court</p>
        <p>REAL VALUES</p>
        <p>Congenial 2 story for family living. Central air, carpeting, thermal glass, 2 bedrooms, 1 Vz baths. Plus near bus. Excellent investment property. Priced so right!</p>
        <p>COZY 2 STORY</p>
        <p>Excellent University Condos residence with exquisite upkeep. Quiet street, central air, electric heat, carpeting, foyer, family room, bay windows, patio, storm windows, 2 bedrooms, 1V2 baths. Brick exterior. $35,500.</p>
        <p>TOWNHOMES Buy one of these great townhomes. Wonderful for couples, singles or retired or for your student. Two bedrooms, 1baths, living room, dining area, modern. $39,500.</p>
        <p>ROOMY KITCHEN</p>
        <p>Attractive Country - Stokestown ranch featuring real charm. On a full acre. Space tor expansion, hardwood floors, greatroom, well water, easy-care landscaping, 2 bedrooms, garage, brick exterior. $39.900.</p>
        <p>TRADITIONAL HOME COMFORT Inviting 2 story packed with values. Central air, carpeting, patio, thermal glass, 2 bedrooms, 1baths. Also near bus. Brick exterior, Association Dues $25.00 - Swimming pooll $41.500.</p>
        <p>CHEERFUL RANCH Engaging Country home with genuine charm. Carpeting, family room, deck, storm windows, city water, 3 bedroonjs. Carport, air condition unit, EBB heat, brick exterior. $42,500.</p>
        <p>OFFERING REAL COMFORT Regency House Condos home with price appeal. Rehabbed. Central air, kitchen appliances included, 2 bedrooms. Also near shops - bus. Located across the street from the University. $43,500.</p>
        <p>SMALLER HOME CHARMS Ringgold Towers home that provides socia ble living. First owner. Carpeting, 2 bedrooms. Plus convenient to everything. Furnished condo on ECU campus! Call now! Priced at $44.500.</p>
        <p>A REAL CUTIE PIE Snug University residence for equity builder. First owner. Heat pump, city watei, 2 bedrooms. Also near schools  shops Ground floor E unit. Completely furnished, except linens. $45,000.</p>
        <p>FOR JUST-MARRIEDS</p>
        <p>Super-sharp Regency House Condos homo with pleasing flair. Rehabbed Central air.</p>
        <p>kitchen appliances included, 2 bedrooms Plus near shops-bus. Furnished, Across-from the University. $46.000.</p>
        <p>OFFICE OPEN 1-5 Sunday</p>
        <p>OnCaU This WMlMnd:</p>
        <p>Francis</p>
        <p>Harris</p>
        <p>REALTOR</p>
        <p>756-5659Two Names You</p>
        <p>Can Trust</p>
        <p>2 STORY DELIGHT</p>
        <p>'Bright Twin Oaks home radiating comfy charm. Just one owner. Quiet street, heat pump, French doors, eat-in kitchen, 2 bedrooms, 1 Vz baths. Also close to all amenities. Fireplace, brick exterior. $46,900.</p>
        <p>PLEASING TRADITIONAL HOME Welcoming 3 story for relaxed living. Central air, carpeting, finished basement, patio, 3 bedrooms, 3^/z baths. Good value at this price! Priced at $48,000.</p>
        <p>INFORMAL CHARM Discover the warmth of this bright Country Squire ranch. Just built. Quiet street, great family area, heat pump, thermal glass, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths. Seller will pay up to $1,800 in Points and/or Closing Cost. $48,500.</p>
        <p>COUNTRY APPEAL</p>
        <p>Pleasantly cozy Bethel ranch that's spruce &amp;amp; trim. Quiet street, great family area, central air, gas heat, hardwood floors, family room, eat-in kitchen, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, woodburning stove. Brick exterior. $48,500.</p>
        <p>RANCH PEACH</p>
        <p>Welcoming Ayden home with charming ways. Quiet street, family room, city water, multi-purpose room, 3 bedrooms, 1 Vz baths. Also near recreation. Fireplace, interior just painted and new kitchen floor. $49,900.</p>
        <p>BIG BONUSES Super-sharp Windy Ridge home highlighting comfort. Heat pump, carpeting, greatroom, patio^^n^g_3^edrooms, 216 baths. Also r^BCclfSorvFwplace, brick exterior, two^fll^MLiolB# $50,900.</p>
        <p>PLANNED FOR COMFORT</p>
        <p>Discover the warmth of this super-sharp ranch. Heat pump, carpeting, greatroom, formal dining room, eat-in kitchen, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths. Fireplace, garage. Unusual value. Priced at $79.000.</p>
        <p>foyer, family room, eat-in kitchen. Fireplace, large corner lot. $105.000.</p>
        <p>TRADITlOl^AL HOME LIVABILITY</p>
        <p>Lovely 2 story offering real comfort. New. Quiet street, great family area, central air, greatroom, new kitchen, 4 bedrooms, 2Vi baths, thermal glass. Fireplace, Ellis Woods Subdivision. $79,500.</p>
        <p>LONG-TERM VALUES</p>
        <p>Engaging Club Pines split level Traditional boasting master suite. Great family area, paddle fans, crown mouldings, formal dining room, den, eat-in kitchen. Fireplace, brick exterior, treehouse &amp;amp; workshop. $107.900. Possible lease/option.</p>
        <p>BRIGHT &amp;amp; BEAUTIFUL</p>
        <p>Westhaven V 1story Tudor with price appeal. Nearly new. Great family area, central air, thermal glass, 3-4 bedrooms, 3Vz baths. Plus patio. Fireplace, approximately 1,200 unfinished square feet upstairs is heated and cooled. $148.000.</p>
        <p>MATCHES FAMILY NEEDS</p>
        <p>Lovely Hillsdale bungalow with nice features. Quiet street, central air, paddle fans, study, eat-in kitchen, 3 bedrooms, storm windows. Fireplace, beautiful yard, mature shrubs - well maintained. $52,500.</p>
        <p>WILLIAMSBURG HOME PLEASURES Welcoming 2 story with lots of warmth. Frenph doors, carpeting, greatroom, eat-in kitchen, 3 bedrooms, 2Vz baths, thermal glass, patio. Fireplace, pool and tennis court privilege w/Homeowners Dues. $54,900.</p>
        <p>2 STORY COMFORT</p>
        <p>Discover the coziness of this bright Windy Ridge residence. Quiet street, great family area, central air, 3 bedrooms, 2V2 baths. Plus near recreation. Fireplace, hot tub, possible loan assumption. $55,500.</p>
        <p>FLASHI PRICE REOUCTIONI Value-wise Kingston Place brick home featuring poolside pleasure. Single-owner care. Central air, carpeting, kitchen appliances included, 2 bedrooms, 2 baths. Condominium. Great for your student. Ground floor unit. $58,000.</p>
        <p>PLEASANT &amp;amp; CHEERY Enticing University rambler promising happy days. Wood. 2-car garage, hardwood floors, formal dining room, family room, den, eat-in kitchen, 3 bedrooms, side drive, storm windows. 2 fireplaces. $59,900.</p>
        <p>FULL OF POTENTIAL Hudson's X Roads ranch featuring country kitchen. Family room, side drive, pecan trees, manicured lawn, well water, 3 bed rooms, 116 baths. Fireplace, brick exterior, over V4 of an acre. $64,500.</p>
        <p>PERSONALITY-PLUS</p>
        <p>Enjoy the convenience of this attractive Elmhurst Traditional ranch. V/z story. Hardwood floors^4P^QMl  family</p>
        <p>room, new  VPlow maintenance brick  kilrw$68,900.</p>
        <p>CATERS TO FAMIY LIFE</p>
        <p>Engaging Eastwood ranch with such nice features. Family room, eat-in kitchen, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, built-in microwave, fencing, easy-care landscaping, screened porch. Fireplace, double carport, 5 ceiling fans. Carpet over hardwood, outside storage. $69,900.</p>
        <p>LIVE ENJOYABLY IN THIS RANCH</p>
        <p>Welcoming Country home promising happy days. Central air, fencing, deck, family room, 3 bedrooms, 2V^ baths. Fireplace. Ideal tor Savvy Buyer. Priced at $76,000.</p>
        <p>TRADITIONAL HOME CHARM</p>
        <p>Treetops home with price appeal. First-owner pride. Carpeting, formal dining room, walk-in closets, built-in microwave, easy-care landscaping. Deck joins greatroom with fireplace and master bedroom. $81,500.</p>
        <p>PUTS COMFORT FIRST Cherry Oaks ranch with special flair. Great family area, central air, carpeting, greatroom, formal dining room, fencing, deck, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths. Fireplace with wood-stove. $81,500.</p>
        <p>CORDIAL &amp;amp; COMFY Friendly Lake Ellsworth ranch with such nice features. Great family area, central air, carpeting, formal dining room, foyer, storm windows, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths. Fireplace, brick exterior, tool shed. $86,000.</p>
        <p>PACKED WITH VALUES Discover the warmth of this congenial Stratford 2 story farmhouse. New. Greatroom, formal dining room, modern kitchen, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, thermal glass. Fireplace, baywindow, front porch, large deck. $86,700.</p>
        <p>EXPERT LANDSCAPING Cheerful Cypress Creek 1 Vi story Contemporary with nice features. Cul-de-sac privacy. Formal dining room, foyer, patio, thermal glass. Fireplace, master bedroom downstairs, garage, HOW Warranty. $89.700.</p>
        <p>LUXURIOUS &amp;amp; LIVABLE Lake Glenwood ranch for family living. Central air, paddle fans, formal dining room, foyer, den, eat-in kitchen, 4 bedrooms, 3 baths, fencing. Plus carpeting. Old brick fireplace, master bedroom has full bath. $89,900.</p>
        <p>NEAT EXTRAS</p>
        <p>Enticing Club Pines ranch features woodsy lawn. Mrs. Clean care, first-owner pride. Carpeting, formal dining room, family room, eat-in kitchen, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, deck. Fireplace, low maintenance brick exterior. $89,900.</p>
        <p>OFRERING SMART VALUE Club Pines ranch for carefree living. Great family area, central air, foyer, greatroom, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths. Fireplace, brick exterior. Priced to move! Priced at $89,900. $1,500 Seller Contribution towards closing cost.</p>
        <p>OFFERING TOP VALUE For quality choose this Cherry Oaks ranch. Foyer, den, walk-in closets, gourmet kitchen, 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, woodburning stove, fencing, shutters Fireplace, living room, family room, dining room, double garage. $91.900.</p>
        <p>RANCH LIVABILITY Inviting Cherry Oaks residence offering such value. Only one owner. Custom blinds, manicured lawn, mature plantings, deck, storm windows. Fireplace, formal living room, low maintenance brick exterior $94.900.</p>
        <p>ENTICING TRADITIONAL HOME Friendly 2 story with real appeal. Quiet street, great family area, central air, formal dining room, foyer, family room, 4 bed rooms, 2V^ baths. Fireplace, new I6xl6 wood deck, Club Pines Subdivision. $97,000.</p>
        <p>RIVERFRONT LIVABILITY River view enhances this stand-out. Contemporary. Central air, deck, thermal glass, pier, fishing, greatroom, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths. Fireplace, cedar exterior. A splendid home buy. Priced at $99,900.</p>
        <p>CLASSY COMFORTS</p>
        <p>Discover the joys of this Westhaven VII 3 story Traditional. Brand new. Great family area, heat pump, 3 bedrooms, 21^ baths. Also near recreation, carpeting, fireplace, brick exterior, unfinished 3rd floor. $159.900.</p>
        <p>Club Pines  $112.500</p>
        <p>QUALITY PROPERTY</p>
        <p>Custom elegance 1V^ story Williamsburg, just one owner. French doors, crown mouldings, hardwood floors, greatroom, foyer, multi-purpose room, side drive. Ceramic tile floor in kitchen, old brick fireplace. $1,500 Decorating Allowance.</p>
        <p>DELIGHTFUL CONTEMPORARY RANCH</p>
        <p>Fabulous Forest Hills residence. Central air, formal dining room, many built-ins, eat-in kitchen, 3 bedrooms, IVz baths, built-in microwave. Plus patio, foyer, fencing. Beautiful yard with mature trees, fireplace. $115.000.</p>
        <p>ON VERY PRIVATE SITE Space aplenty on 3.36 acres adds to this McGregor Downs 2 story cedar Contemporary. Energy features. Washer/dryer included, main-level laundry. Fireplace, includes a detached 1 bedroom, 1 bath studio. Possible lease. $126,900.</p>
        <p>SPECTACULAR CONTEMPORARY Dazzling showcase home. Brick 2 story on 3.8 acres. Beamed ceilings, crown mouldings, wood paneling, family room with wet bar, 5 bedrooms, 3 baths. Double carport. Dog pen. Four horse barn, tack and hay room. $135.000.</p>
        <p>LYNNDALE TOWNES/</p>
        <p>LUXURY ESTATE $175.900. Dazzling Traditional home. Central air, crown mouldings, walk-in closets, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, bay wiruJows. Plus vaulted ceilings, carpeting, eat-in kitchen, one year old, pro landsc^ing, patio, gas heat. Fireplace, brick exterior.</p>
        <p>SPLENDID ESTATE Grayleigh 2 story Georgian distinction. Central air, thermal glass, 4 bedrooms, 2Vz baths. Also 2-car garage, patio, great family area, one owner, hardwood floors. 2 fire-*| places, recessed lighting, central vac, brick exterior. $225.000.</p>
        <p>CONSUMMATE ESTATE Holly Hills 1story Contemporary magnificence. Central air, formal dining room, thermal glass, 4 bedrooms, 2Vz baths. Plus 2-car garage, family room. Fireplace, wet bar, brick exterior, approximately 1 acre lot. $225.000.</p>
        <p>STATELY HISTORIC FARMHOUSE</p>
        <p>Impressive gentry home. Restored, Vh story. Central air, family room with wet bar, formal dining room, multi-purpose room, 3 bedrooms, 3 baths. Five (5) fireplaces, house was originally built in 1840. $137.000.</p>
        <p>LOTS AND ACREAGE</p>
        <p>GREENWOOD FOREST $10.000</p>
        <p>PUNGO RIVER</p>
        <p>(WATERFRONT)...........$25.000</p>
        <p>GILEAD SHORES</p>
        <p>(Blounts Creek area)........$12,900</p>
        <p>CANDLEWICK ESTATES</p>
        <p>(Owner may finance)  ...$12,950</p>
        <p>14 ACRES  SR 1522........$19.000</p>
        <p>(2) 10-F ACRE LOTS</p>
        <p>(Woodland Acres S/D) ea. $25.(M)0</p>
        <p>(Owner may finance)</p>
        <p>19-F ACRE TRACT (Between Ayden</p>
        <p>&amp;amp; Grifton).................$27.500</p>
        <p>(Owner may finance)</p>
        <p>112 ACRES-TAR RIVER</p>
        <p>(3,000 ft. River Front)........$88.900</p>
        <p>39-F ACRES-TAR RIVER----$120.000</p>
        <p>OPEN HOUSE</p>
        <p>INVESTMENT PROPERTY RENTAL HOUSES</p>
        <p>Excellent investment opportunity! 4 houses, 3 in Edwards Acres and 1 in Hardee Acres All have 3 bedrooms, 1V: baths. Total monthly income Is $1,675. All are presently rented and have an excellent occupancy rate. Some Seller financing possible. $196,000.</p>
        <p>Lynndale  $174,900</p>
        <p>307 KENILWORTH ROAD HOSTESS: SHIRLEY TACKER</p>
        <p>MEETS THE FAMILYS NEEDS</p>
        <p>Cherry Oaks ranch with plus values. Great family area, 2-car garage, electronic door opener, carpeting, formal dining room.</p>
        <p>For sensibility see this attractive Traditional home. Family room, walk-in closets, eat in kitchen, 4 bedrooms, 2^/z baths, custom blinds, manicured lawn. Large play room Finished study/office upstairs. Fire place.</p>
        <p>CEDAR COURT</p>
        <p>Seven great condominiums. Each two bedrooms, 1 Vz baths, living room, dining area, modern kitchen, patios. Stoves, refrigerators, dishwasher. All seven units for $259,000.</p>
        <p>AYDEN</p>
        <p>Commercial Property reduced $17,000! Owners ready to sell successtul Body Shop/Garage business in prime location in Ayden, only 10 minutes from Greenville. Property consist of 4,040 square feet, brick and metal building with many extras Corner location ol approximately 1 acre, fenced storage and paved road on 3 sides. Priced to move at $129,800.</p>
        <p>MEMORIAL DRIVE Attention Investors! Looking for commercial property with a postive cash flow? WENDY'S on Memorial Drive near the Medical Center is currently leasing the property on a 20 year lease, with 16 years remaining. Annual rent is $51,600 payable in twelve equal installments, plus percentage rent of gross sales. Owners of property and lease say sell at $450.000.</p>
        <p>THE HOME MARKETING SPECIAUSTS</p>
        <p>TMIm WMUiluiial RtALTOII.GRI.CBS SSStfM</p>
        <p>Maiy Scuddai REALTOR. URI 355-4898</p>
        <p>CadMilM Craack REALTOR 355-6834</p>
        <p>Ltlaa Stoll REALTOR /5S4141</p>
        <p>AmOoHoi REALTOR. GRI 764-8444</p>
        <p>JwhDoflo*   .</p>
        <p>REALTOR. GRI. CR6 REALTOR. Rra*ai%| H4-S89S  RaaaaaaMa</p>
        <p>7m57S</p>
        <p>Lmm</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0078" />
        <p>ai. ^^Dajly^Reflector, Greenville. N.C.  SundawSejptenr^^</p>
        <p>Houses For Rent</p>
        <p>|fH7 4 or 5 bedrooms, 2 ohj, new gas furnace, fireplace, all formal areas, nice yard, U4S/month 823 282 after 6|&amp;gt;m.</p>
        <p>yi J oeoroom *250 Fridge, S3''*  * le'lfoom 2 baths *375</p>
        <p>?Sj f3?5 HOME LOCATORS Fee</p>
        <p>BLACK JACK 5 room house with 1 bath for rent. 756 3435.</p>
        <p>BRICK HOME WITH three bedrooms. 2 full baths.</p>
        <p>refrigerator and stove furnish ed. Fenced back yard</p>
        <p>, _ _ Just minotes to Hospital $500 c month. Call Mavis Butts, 752 7073 or Mavis Butts Realty, 355 7653.</p>
        <p>EXECUTIVE HOME IN Bed</p>
        <p>ford: 4bedrooms, 2'jbaths Liv ing room, dining room, den, large kitchen and screened porch. Double garage $1,300 00 per month Lease and security deposit is required Duttus Real fy, Inc 756 2675</p>
        <p>FOR RENT House, story and a half. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths nursery or office room, large kitchen, living room, dining room or den Located 2 miles west of Ayden of Highway 102 Family desired $425 monthly Deposit required Call 746 6289 FOR RENT OR FOR SALIS 3 bedroom, I'v bath houses I house in Hardee Acres, I house in Pineridge Rent $425 per month 757 0257 or 923 1711</p>
        <p>NICE EXECUTIVE 3 bedroom 2 bath $500 or big 3 bedroom $600 752 1375 HOMELOCATORS Fee</p>
        <p>NICE FOUR BEDROOM. 2</p>
        <p>baths, den, office, carport, $650 Family only 3 L Harris &amp;amp; Sons, Realtors, 758 471 1</p>
        <p>OAKDALE 3 bedrooms, I'j baths, garage, heal and air, ap pliances. $360 plus deposit Call 756 5706</p>
        <p>ONE BEDROOM, available now. W Ward Street, $165 3 L Harris 8, Sons, 758 4711</p>
        <p>ONE EXECUTIVE HOME 3</p>
        <p>bedroom, 2 bath. Call 757 1345, 10 00 a m 6 00 p m Monday Saturday Ask for Gill</p>
        <p>START HERE 2 bedroom $325 Fenced tor pet or 3 bedroom $400 752 1375 HOMELOCATORS Fee.</p>
        <p>THREE BEDROOMS, 2 baths, convenient to hospital. Avail able October I Call DG Nichols Agency, 752 4012</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOM BRICK in</p>
        <p>Simpson, *325 month, Cali 757 1392or 756 3000, Kenny Fisher</p>
        <p>173 Houses For Rent</p>
        <p>3 BEDROOM HOUSE in Ayden Days. 830 1124, nights, 355 6462.</p>
        <p>3 BEDROOM 2 baths *375/huge</p>
        <p>4 bedroom *425 Both in Ayden 752 1375 HOMELOCATORS Fee</p>
        <p>174</p>
        <p>Townhouses For Rent</p>
        <p>A 2 BEDROOM, 2 full bath flat available October i at Breckenridge Square. $400 lease required No pets. Call 756 9070 after 5</p>
        <p>LEXINGTON SQUARE</p>
        <p>Townhome 3 bedroom townhome available for $525 a month Please call Janet Bowser at CENTURY 21 JANET BOWSER 8. ASSOCIATES, 355 7800 or 756 8580</p>
        <p>TREETOPS. 2 bedrooms. 2 baths Fireplace. $500 per month Lease and deposit re quired Duttus Reaity. Inc. 756 2675</p>
        <p>TWIN OAKS: 2 bedrooms, I's baths, fireplace, all appliances, some blinds Available October 1st $400 Call Jule White at RE MAX PROPERTIES, 355 5444 or 756 6886</p>
        <p>179</p>
        <p>Mobile Homes For Rent</p>
        <p>ACT FAST 2 bedroom $150 Kids or 3 bedroom 2 bath, $275 Others 752 1375 HOME LOCATORS Fee.</p>
        <p>ATTRACTIVE 14x70 Havelock Mobile Home on drivate lot on Route 4 Fenced in yard. 2 bedrooms, partially furnished, washer, dryer, refrigerator, stove Pines in front yard. Fruit trees centered in backyard. 2 storage houses. 4 miles from hospital, north of Greenville, $250 month, negotiable 758 8568, after 5p m</p>
        <p>NEW 14X70 2 BEDROOM</p>
        <p>mobile home tor rent. Call 756 1050. No pets, no children</p>
        <p>ic^E MOBILE HOMES tor</p>
        <p>rent 2 and 3 bedrooms 830 5596 belore 5 or 830 1895 after 5</p>
        <p>179</p>
        <p>Mobile Homes For Rent</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOM, furnished in eluding air condifioner, *150 month No pets. 758 0745.</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOMS, 3 miles east dh Highway 33, private lot, 1 person preferred, no pets. Call 752 6215</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOM, furnished, electric heat, central air on private lot at Bells Fork. Call 756 3821.</p>
        <p>WHY PAY RENT! 12x55, ex cellent condition. $6500 Owner will consider partial financing. I 975 6639</p>
        <p>14x72 MOBILE HOME 2</p>
        <p>bedrooms, ceiling tan, laundry room with washer/dryer, fur nished, central air and heat,, underskirting, privacy fence on private lot in country. No pets. 756 3329, 756 8195or 524 4687.</p>
        <p>2 BEDROOM $185 Washer/ dryer/3 bedroom $225 Private 752 1375 HOME LOCATORS Fee</p>
        <p>3 BEDROOM 14x70' located in country on private lot. $275. $150 deposit 756 0975</p>
        <p>180</p>
        <p>Mobile Homes Lots For Rent</p>
        <p>LARGE SHADY LOT in mobile home court Call 758 0745.</p>
        <p>PRIVATE LOT Belvoir Highway, city water. Very nice. 756 4156 night only.</p>
        <p>SINGLE AND DOUBLE WIDE</p>
        <p>Lots available; Deer Run Estates, 752 6643.</p>
        <p>SINGLE OR DOUBLEWIDE</p>
        <p>Lots available Call 946 0017 days. 756 4015 nights.</p>
        <p>1/2 ACRE LOT, Winterville area, new trailer only, excellent for doublewide 756 8278</p>
        <p>181</p>
        <p>Office Space For Rent</p>
        <p>MINGS OFFICE BUILDING</p>
        <p>Several suites available Up to 2,700 square feet</p>
        <p>$7 per square foot</p>
        <p>Freeutillfies Free janitorial Call</p>
        <p>CLARK-BRANCH</p>
        <p>REALTORS</p>
        <p>355-2000</p>
        <p>2 and 3 year fixed lerms available!</p>
        <p>OFFICE SPACE available, one</p>
        <p>to five room suites, ample park ing, storage also available. (919)</p>
        <p>355 7443 Evans Street Center 8, Public Storage, 1528 S. Evans Street.</p>
        <p>OFFICE SPACE; One, two, or three thousand square feet available now Call Leon Fornes Insurance &amp;amp; Realty. 355 7373 of 355 7557, Nights 756 3292</p>
        <p>OFFICE SUITE FOR lease: 3 offices, reception room, file storage room and bathroom. 1192 square feet $6 80 per square foot Call Ollie Harr ington 8. Son Builders at 752 5086</p>
        <p>PITTMAN BUILDING. Conve nience 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 Sheri Carter at Aldridge and Southerland 756 3500 or 758 465)</p>
        <p>181</p>
        <p>Office Space For Rent</p>
        <p>THREE BEDROOMS, appli anees furnished. No kids or pets. 3556803</p>
        <p>THREE BEDROOMS, com</p>
        <p>pletely furnished. No pets. Call 756 0792.</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOMS, Furnished or unfurnished, washer/dryer, good condition in good park No children, no pets. Call 756 0801 after 5 p.m.</p>
        <p>DOWNTOWN LOCATION, con</p>
        <p>venient to courthouse and post office Janitor and utilities fur nished Single offices or suites $8 50 per square toot 752 1138;</p>
        <p>OFFICE SUITES For rent Janitorial and utilities included. Chappin Little-Building, 3106 S. Memorial Drive. 756 1234.</p>
        <p>NEW AND FURNISHED 375</p>
        <p>foot with good exposure and high traffic. East 10th Street. Utilities furnished. *275 per month. 757 1626.</p>
        <p>PRIME SPACE up to 1650 square feet available, road Iron tage, ample parking. Located near all major highways. Rent includes janitorial and utilities. Call Bill. 752 3937.</p>
        <p>SINGLE OFFICE, utilities in eluded, 1902 S. Charles, $125. Call 355 0364</p>
        <p>SINGLE OFFICES available *125 a month Call Jeannette Cox Agency, 756 1322</p>
        <p>1700 SQUARE FEET Brick with onsite parking. Different size of</p>
        <p>tices, *8 50 per square feet in eluding utilities. Available im</p>
        <p>ily.</p>
        <p>Court House. Call Connally Branch, Clark Branch Realtors 355 2000.</p>
        <p>SAVE MONEY this winter .. shop and use the Classified Ads every day!</p>
        <p>Alice Moore Realty</p>
        <p>201 Plaza Drive, Suite C, GreenvHie, NC 27858</p>
        <p>355-6712 Anytime</p>
        <p>OPEN HOUSES SUNDAY 2-4</p>
        <p>EVERYTHING ABOUT THIS love-I! ly new home is done in exquisite taste. The quality builder has put in many added touches. It has 4 bedrooms and I ^ 2V2 baths and much, much more. Located in Westhaven. $138,900.</p>
        <p>THIS HOME HAS 3 bedrooms and 2 baths, over 1,900 square feet and a lovely country kitchen. It also features a cathedral ceiling and a very attractive yard. Recently reduced to $86,500.</p>
        <p>THIS RECENTLY LISTED home is in the hospital area. It has a fenced yard and 3 bedrooms and 2 baths. $65,900.</p>
        <p>509 WINSTEAD RD. WESTHAVEN</p>
        <p>214 ABBEY LANE CANDLEWICK EST.</p>
        <p>SR 1759, RT. 1 NEAR CANDLEWICK</p>
        <p>WALDEN SUBDIVISION</p>
        <p>This prestigious and picturesque area is in the initial stages of development and is now ready for the discriminating buyer. Its country location and beautiful setting are impressive. The lots vary in size from under one acre to more than an acre and are priced from $50,000 to $79,000.</p>
        <p>FEATURED PROPERTIES</p>
        <p>COUNTRY LIVING and lots of Space give this home appeal. It has 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, garage and separate workshop. Located in Grimesland. $59,900.</p>
        <p>CONTEMPORARY STYLING,</p>
        <p>decks, built-ins and over 1,800 square feet give this 3 bedroom house a unique look. Located in Westhaven. $120,000.</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOMS AND 2Vi BATHS and a gorgeous country location make this home very desirable. It has 1,600 finished square feet and almost 1,200 square feet Unfinished but rea-dy for expansion $87,900.</p>
        <p>CONTEMPORARY STYLING,</p>
        <p>decks, built-ins and over 1,800 square feet give this 3 bedroom house a unique look. Located in Westhaven. $120,000.</p>
        <p>LOCATED IN LOVELY LYNN-DALE, this home js perfect for your family It  s 4 bedrooms and 2 baths, a jvely yard and large kitchen 114,000.</p>
        <p>THREE BEDROOMS AND 2 BATHS with over 1,600 square feet. Its large front porch and pretty yard make it a good buy at $85.000.</p>
        <p>IF YOUD LIKE TO LIVE on the</p>
        <p>water this home has lots of acreage and much more for you! It has 3 bedrooms, 2/i baths, solar panels, docks, decks and a barn. $155,000.</p>
        <p>WITH ITS GRAND STYLE this home can be yours for $175,000. The owner has recently reduced it. It has a large lot. 4 bedrooms, 2 fireplaces and much more.</p>
        <p>HMS</p>
        <p>REFNET</p>
        <p>We can sell your present home and we can put you in touch with one of approximately 15,000 real estate office locations throughout the United States, qualifed to help you find the right home.</p>
        <p>QUIET NEIGHBORHOOD, lovely yard and 4 bedrooms enhance the charm of this lovely home. It has 1,900 square feet and is listed at $95,000.</p>
        <p>THIS LOVELY GRIFTON HOME is</p>
        <p>ready for you to move into. It has 3 bedrooms and 2 baths, a large mature yard and almost 1,900 square feet. $61,900.</p>
        <p>LOCATED in Windy Ridge this 2 bedroom, 2 bath flat has much to offer With almost 1,500 square feet. $74,500.</p>
        <p>184 Resort Property For Rent</p>
        <p>NEW 3 BEDROOM, 2 bath con do: sleops to, 5th floor In Sum mer Winds, Salter Path. 5 pools, health club, located on beautiful Atlantic Ocean. Call J.T. Williams, 756 7815 or I 8(XI 992 8545, be sure to ask tor Unit 541. "Make your reservation now I"</p>
        <p>185 Rooms For Rent</p>
        <p>115 Rooms For Ront</p>
        <p>192 Roommate Wanted</p>
        <p>BEDROOM, Alr/heat, Private entrance. 2 blocks from ECU campus. Suitable lor male. 752-3069</p>
        <p>FRNISktb OR unfurnished: . share with 2 male medical students; luxury townhouse, pool and tennis, washer/dryer. siM. Call Ronnie at 7S7-1653.</p>
        <p>FEMALE ROOMMATE *95 a month lor private bedroom, 1/3 utilities, 5 blocks from campus. 758 6830.</p>
        <p>SEARCHING for the right townhouse? Watch ClassifM every day.</p>
        <p>ROOM AVAILABLE Prefer</p>
        <p>F8MLE ROOMMATE. Non smoker, 2 bedroom townhouse with pool. $160 plus I/I utilities. 830 6870 or 756 9526 before 9 p.m.</p>
        <p>192 Roommate Wanted</p>
        <p>752 5805* P'^'vlledges. CaJI</p>
        <p>FURNISHED HOUSE just minutes from Greenville *150 and '-5 utilities. 757 1050</p>
        <p>NON-SMOKING FEMALE</p>
        <p>desires same to share 2 bedroom house with seif and 2 cats. Caii after 5:00p.m., 758 7536.</p>
        <p>1W Roommate Wanted ^</p>
        <p>ROOMMAtf</p>
        <p>bedroom condo, all appliancat, i miles from-</p>
        <p>pool, tennis court, 1.5 Hospital. Nonsmoker red.7SMS3.</p>
        <p>prefer-*.</p>
        <p>194 Wanted To Buy *:</p>
        <p>WANT TO BUY pine and hard -wood timber. Pamlico Timber^ Company, Inc. 756 8615, nights </p>
        <p>The Evans Company of GreenviUOf Inc.</p>
        <p>Jack Gordon, Broker 355-5494 752-2814 Winnie Evans, Realtor, ghi 752-4224</p>
        <p>r</p>
        <p>Nww Homes Available Now With NORTH CAROLINA HOUSING MONEY Financing At 8.75%</p>
        <p>JUST OFF HIGHWAY 43 SOUTH - New starter home with 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, energy eHicient E-300 home with heot pump for central heot and central air. On wooded lot. $49,500.</p>
        <p>NEAR GREENFIELD TERRACE - This new home can have your custom touches - 3 bedrooms.3 bothi, cathedralled ceiling in the living room. On wooded lot.</p>
        <p>PATIO HOMES IN QUIET AREA - 2 bedroom, 2 both or 3 bedroom, 2 both potio homes on pinetreed lots. Conveniently located to PCMH and shopping. Greot storter home or excellent investment oooor-tunity.</p>
        <p>HARDEE ACRES - Like new and worth your ottention. Brick home with 3 bedrooms, 1'/, baths, large kitchen and dining, heot pump, garage and fenced in yard. Nicely landscaped.</p>
        <p>Jock Gordon, Broker 355-5494</p>
        <p>Call now for details 752-2814</p>
        <p>Winnie Evans, Realtor, GRI 752-4224</p>
        <p>TUCKER ESTATES</p>
        <p>THIS QUAIL RIDGE HOME offers 2 bedrooms and IVi baths. It has much to offer the discriminating buyer interested in quiet condominium living. $52,000.</p>
        <p>A LARGE CORNER lot, 3 bedrooms and 2 baths, sunroom and over 2,500 square feet make this home a good buy. It is ready for you to move into now and is listed at $95,000.</p>
        <p>TOWNHOUSES</p>
        <p>BUILDING SITES AND ACREAGE</p>
        <p>GREAT LOCATION and price on this 2 bedroom, 1/! bath townhome that has been freshly painted and carpeted $33,000.</p>
        <p>SHENANDOAH  Well maintained and ready for your inspection Two bedrooms, baths. Reduced to $33,900.</p>
        <p>KINSTON PLACE  This condo has 2 bedrooms and 2^h baths It is fully furnished and has an assumable loan Great floor plan for students $53,000.</p>
        <p>RINQQOLD TOWERS-$45,000. Two bedroom, all housewares included. 2nd floor UNIQUE Windy Ridge flat offers formal rooms, den, 2 bedrooms and 2 baths. $74,500.</p>
        <p>GREAT BUY in popular Quail Ridge. Two bedrooms, I/i baths and greatroom $52,500.</p>
        <p>mis</p>
        <p>ixm</p>
        <p>(il</p>
        <p>TROTTERS RIDGE  Country living at its best. Exclusive location with privacy plus. Lots priced from $42,000 up.</p>
        <p>WATERFRONT wooded lot 90' x330' located between Wshington and Bath. Restricted area. $60,000.</p>
        <p>CAMP LEACH ESTATES. Resort living off the Pamlico River. Two lots. $25,000 each.</p>
        <p>BEAVER DAM. Wooded lot 140'x279'. $20,000. TUCKER ESTATES - 85' x 176'. $33,000.</p>
        <p>IMPERIAL ESTATES - Lots 7 &amp;amp; 8. $4,500.</p>
        <p>20 ACRES AVAILABLE and can be divided into 10 acre parcels if desired. Mobile homes allowed. $55,000 each. 10 acre parcel.</p>
        <p>'</p>
        <p>*hg sites ava lahfi # institutional build-</p>
        <p>COMMERCIAL LOT. Hiaza urive  ,/u acre parcel, perfect retail sitel $69,900.</p>
        <p>MCAU MAMITMAV</p>
        <p>;P$4*99</p>
        <p>YOUR SATISFACTION IS OUR SUCCESS!!</p>
        <p>lAUTAMAnMIM</p>
        <p>7S9.144I</p>
        <p>ciAfuiroRats</p>
        <p>9iy.yffi</p>
        <p>7S447M</p>
        <p>auuMaAitna</p>
        <p>MVaBmNTOI</p>
        <p>7IM$li</p>
        <p>UiUTM</p>
        <p>I OUR STAFF OF PflOFESSIQNALS IS READY TO SERVE YOU BETTER</p>
        <p>ONE AND A HALF STORY traditional brick home offering 4 bedrooms, 2 baths. Full of custom features and softly decorated.</p>
        <p>CHERRY OAKS</p>
        <p>PROVEN AREA. Form House design with double garage, unfinished area above. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, 2,058 square feet heated.</p>
        <p>NEW HOMES</p>
        <p>Th Evan$ Company of Groon-</p>
        <p>ipa</p>
        <p>viilo, Inc. also has othtr oroas ond subdivisions in Groonvillo and surrounding areas available for building. Tho Evans Company of Greenvillo, Inc. will build according to your custom plans or you may choose from our extensive selection of house plons.</p>
        <p>CANTERBURY</p>
        <p>WINTERVILLE SCHOOL DISTRICT-</p>
        <p>New brick home offers 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, greatroom with cathedralled ceiling. 1.629 square feet offered in this beautifully decorated home.</p>
        <p>Call now for dotoils</p>
        <p>The Evan* Company</p>
        <p>Of Gieenville. Inc</p>
        <p>752-2814</p>
        <p>Builders, Developers, Realtors</p>
        <p>Jack Gordon, Broker 355-5494 Winnie Evans, Broker 752-4224</p>
        <p>OPEN HOUSE</p>
        <p>OPEN HOUSE</p>
        <p>1-5 PM OPEN HOUSE</p>
        <p>1-5 PM</p>
        <p> 5.900  Lo.29  1925  Square  Feet  $110.900</p>
        <p>4 Bedrooms, 2V2 baths, family room with brick fireplace, 2 car garage, built in microwave, deck, dishwasher, central air and gas heat. 10 Year HOW Warranty.</p>
        <p>4 Bedrooms, 2^/z Baths, Living Room/Dining Room, Family Room with Fireplace, Breakfast Nook, 2 Car Garage, Built In Microwave, Custom Cabinets Throughout, Deck, Gas Heat, 10 Year HOW Warranty.</p>
        <p>OPEN HOUSE 1-5 PM OPEN HOUSE</p>
        <p>1-5 PM</p>
        <p>inMp n</p>
        <p>PhMm iBri</p>
        <p>Lot 69  1958  Square  Feet  $126.900  Lo  43  2443  Sq.  Feet  $144.900</p>
        <p>2 Story Brick, 4 bedrooms, 2 car garage, wooded lot, living room, dining room, kitchen with custom cabinets built In microwave and breakfast area family toom with fireplace, hardwood floors In living room, dining room and foyer. Skylight In master bedroom bath, 2Vi baths. Gas heat. 10 Year HOW Warranty.</p>
        <p>2 Story Brick Double Garage, 4 Large Bedrooms, 2Vi Baths, Skylights In Upstairs Baths, Living Room, Dining Room Kitchen with Breakfast Area, Family Room, Built in Microwave, Custom Cabinets Throughout, Large Deck, Wooded Corner Lot, Gas Heat. 10 Year HOW Warranty.</p>
        <p>Brokers Welcome</p>
        <p>Model Open Daily 10 am - 6 pm Sunday 1-5 pm</p>
        <p>mJmm</p>
        <p>OBOrgo JtoRli VostminstBf Co.</p>
        <p>Directions: From Greenville Blvd. go South on 14th Street Extension past Brook Valley exit.  .</p>
        <p>For more information call 355-3558</p>
        <p>AWEStV/IINSTER HOMES</p>
        <p>t\ VM-yrrhurusri C&amp;lt;Mii(Mny</p>
        <p>i</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0079" />
        <p>/ I r</p>
        <p>RE/MAX Properties</p>
        <p>The Daily Reflactor, Greenville, N.C.  Sunday,^ptembgr 18.1968  (J.39</p>
        <p>OPHN HOUSE SUN 2-S P M 3305 TUCKEf^ DRIVE</p>
        <p>W fp!</p>
        <p>426 Arlington Blvd.,</p>
        <p>On Call</p>
        <p>From</p>
        <p>Suite D</p>
        <p>1-5 P.M.</p>
        <p>355-5444</p>
        <p>Sunday</p>
        <p>Don</p>
        <p>Edmonson</p>
        <p>OPf N H()SE^N. 2-5 pKPJJSITS l3imN2^.TUCKRESTAJES 11 ^05 GA^AhLTaME. OT</p>
        <p>t T    1  ..</p>
        <p>TUCKER ESTATES. Your most importarrt appointment in years may be to see this value-packed brick home in Tucker Estates. Double garage, 3 bedrooms, dramatic sunken family room with cathedral ceiling big enough for your comfortable chairs and sofas. Act now to see this new listing-it won't last long! $112,000. Hostess: Anita Worthington, GRI Agents welcome</p>
        <p>WORTH BRAGGING about! Hand crafted kitchen cabinets, pine floors and beautiful sunroom are the pride of this beautiful two-story home. Features bedrooms, 2 baths, family room with built-ins, spacious breakfast area, formal dining room. Youll be proud to call home. Save thousands of $$$ Price re duced. Low SlOO's. Hostess: Anita JAforthingi^^</p>
        <p>TAKE A CLOSE look at this brick home and you'll see why owners are brokenhearted. This home is in perfect condition to move right in and your family will love the 3 bedroorhs, 2 baths, very nice great-room area, spacious deck for entertaining. Wintervllle school district. #2129. $73,500. Host; Vic Corey.</p>
        <p>OPEN HOUSE SUN. 2-5 P.M. 301 PEARL DR.. RED OAK</p>
        <p>FOUR BEDROOMS. A lot of house for only $69,900. Over 2,000', 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, formal areas. Convenient location &amp;amp; owners are anxious to sell. Nevriy redecorated. Host: Brian Jdnes. #2628.</p>
        <p>OPEN HOUSE SUN. 2-5 P.M! MAPLE RIDGE</p>
        <p>THE BEST OF BOTH WORLDS. Enjoy the beauty of the country in city-style comfort in this new 3 bedroom, 2V2 bath home Just a few minutes from town, it's cradled in one of the newest and most popular areas. Offers the finest in craftmanship and decor. Drive out today! Call Karen -758-8618.</p>
        <p>CHERRY OAKS. New construction is now underway for this SINGLE STORY brick home in Greenville's fastest growing area. Featuring over 2,300 square feet, 3 bedrooms, 2/i baths, hardwood floors, large kitchen and greatroom, double car garage with bonus room above Plans and specs in office. Choose your own colors Call Vic. $135,900. #2136.</p>
        <p>OPEN HOUSL SUN 2 5PM L(JT151B(CKINGHAM V^INDSOH</p>
        <p>Ml</p>
        <p>JUST completed in Windsor. This IVi story home of nearly 2,000 square feet is ready for you. Featuring a wrap around porch, 3 bedrooms, 2&amp;gt;/2 baths, deck In rear, beautiful kitchen area, garage plus a bonus room A real deal in the wTnterville school district. $104,500. #2111. Host: Vic Corey.</p>
        <p>KING. QUEEN, Prince and Princess size! Over 2,350 square feet of room in this thoughtfully designed, new, brick home, with garage, in Cherry Oaks. Sunken family room with high ceiling, formal dining, large master bedroom with whirlpool and showers, screened porch. Win-tergreen School District. $133,000. Please call Anita.</p>
        <p>NEW LISTING</p>
        <p>CHERRY OAKS. This beautiful new construction will be in Greenvilles most desirable neighborhood. This brick home offers an impressive exterior, over 2,500 square feet, 3 bedrooms, 2Vz baths, double car garage, formal areas, bonus room and more. Situated on a corner lot within the Winterville school district. For more details call Vic. #2133. $139,900.</p>
        <p>tops. A community of prestige homes. You must see this stunning, 3 bedroom, 2 bath ranch home. You will appreciate the Builders attention to craftsmanship and detail. Vaulted ceilings in the greatroom and master suite, fabulous kitchen, plus there is storage galore and a garage. $90s. Call Karen.</p>
        <p>YOULL be impressed with all the room your family will be able to enjoy in this brick two story, traditional home. Situated on a nice corner, featuring over 2,800 square feet, 4 bedrooms, 2Vz baths, beautiful cherry cabinets in the kitchen, massive greatroom with triple atrium doors to deck. Plus a bonus area and double car garage. For your appointment call Vic. $139.500. #2117.</p>
        <p>WINDSOR. Broken hearted owners must sell this beautiful home of only six months. Located in Greenvilles fastest appreciating area. Featuring over 1,600 square feet, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, large greatroom, formal area, deck, patio and storage building in the rear. For more details call Vic. #2134. $90,000.</p>
        <p>ROLLINWOOD. Easy living and ideal location - close to the shopping malls and hospital enable this home to fulfill your needs. Featuring 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, loft area, excellent storage space, skylights, private courtyard. With a touch of class separating it from the others. OWNER will help with FINANCING, is ASSUMABLE. Call Vic Corey. #2135. $65,000.</p>
        <p>TUCKAHOE. BRICK. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, garage, fenced-in yard, over 1,400 square feet. Whats the price $69,500? $64,000? $59,900? This home is in excellent shape and the BARGAIN price is $59,90011 Call Don immediately! #2312.</p>
        <p>WHY RENT when its so easy to own? When you consider how rents re rising, owning a home makes a lot of sense. You can own this 4 bedroom brick home close to town and enjoy all the conveniences most rentals dont. Spacious yard with a covered deck, quiet street, great designed kitchen, utility and plenty of storage. Monthly- payments are surprisingly low. Offered in the $50s. Call Karen.JUST COMPLETED!</p>
        <p>$44,000. AYDEN. 4 bedrooms, 1 % baths, carport, central air, excellent condition, over 1,300 square feet. Call Rhonda.</p>
        <p>* </p>
        <p>iiiTriigijS'aIIo.i.MU</p>
        <p>HORSE LOVERS. Unspoiled natural beauty surrounds this stunning 6-f acre country home. Like new. this home fea tures formal areas. 3 bedrooms, delight ful greatroom. plus 2 baths, parquet Tiooring ana a sKyiignt. your horses will love the 3 sjall barn with tack room, loft, and 2.75 acres of fenced pasture. You will also find all the amenities needed for training and grooming your horses. A must to see! $101,500. Call Karen.</p>
        <p>WINTERVILLE AREA. The quality of this home is beyond compare. With over 2,239 square feet, heated, large master si'**^/ith mirrored jacuzzi,  70  oz.  stain-</p>
        <p>master carp^P^iid insulated walls, acrylic fixtures, central vacuum and intercom, brick quoin corners. Alt on a spacious acre lot. For many more details call Vic. $135,000. #2115.</p>
        <p>ENJOY DOWNSTAIRS PRIVACY</p>
        <p>in master bedroom and bath, kitchen with sunny breakfast area, powder room for guests, built-in cabinets and display shelves. 2 large bedrooms up, ceramic tile baths. Brand new, construction location. Reduced to $89,900. Please call Anita. 355-6661.</p>
        <p>NOTICE! PCMH. Vz acre. A beautiful private wooded lot frames this 3 bedroom, bath and a half ranch style house. Step saving central vacuum and a spacious walk-in closet aid in making this one a buy at only $54,600. Call Jule for more details.</p>
        <p>HOOKER ROAD. This 3 bedroom brick ranch, with a very attractive yard, nice fenced-in rear with lots of flowers and trees, needs your loving and attention. PRICED LOW at $41,500 to sell quickly. For more information call Vic. #2125.</p>
        <p>JUST COMPLETED and ready to move into. This 4 bedroom home will charm and delight you with its wonderfully arranged floor plan. Large greatroom, lots of storage and closet space. Available now for less than $110.000. 2629. Call Brian.</p>
        <p>NEW LISTING</p>
        <p>SPECIAL FINANCING offer from bank-owned home in Tucker Estates. $127,900. Custom 3 bedroom home, formal areas, beautiful kitchen, bay-windowed breakfast area, quiet street. Please call Anita, 355-6661.</p>
        <p>$87,000. DELLWOOD  Popular, convenient neighborhood. Brick ranch with 1,885 square feet, 3 beds, 2 baths, formal areas, garage. Large</p>
        <p>THIS 3 bedroom brick home has been well maintained and will be missed by its present owners. A Bargain at $54,500. Please call Don. #2304.</p>
        <p>UNIVERSITY AREA. ECU students do not have to commute off campus. Being offered is a great buy on this 1 bedroom, 1 bath furnished unit in Ringgold Towers. Located on the end of the third floor for plenty of privacy. Call Vic. 2132. $28,500.</p>
        <p>Its The Best Single-Family Home Value Greenville Has Ever Seen!</p>
        <p>Expect To Be Impressed</p>
        <p>FLOOR PLANS MAY BE CUSTOMIZED TO MEET YOUR INDIVIDUAL NEEDS</p>
        <p>THE RE/MAX TEAMHOMESITES</p>
        <p>HOUSE MAJORITY RULES! Let</p>
        <p>the family vote on this something-for-everyone" in Club Pines. Three bedrooms, beautiful screened porch, permanent stairway to 3rd story for expansion, fenced yard, garage, spacious kitchen. At $124,900 this home will have your vote too! Please call Anita. 355-6661.</p>
        <p>WHY QUALIFY when you dont have to? Assume this FHA loan and move into this all-brick home in Belvedere. Three bedrooms, 2 baths, family room and living room, carport. Please call Anita for details immediately. $77,500.</p>
        <p>NEW LISTING</p>
        <p>EXECUTIVE ROW. Its the lifestyle you deserve...new and stunning brick 3 bedroom, 2V2 bath home in an elite area. Entertainment size greatroom, and formal areas with hardwood flooring. The kitchen is an absolute dream and you must see the grand entry foyer! $119,000. Call Karen.</p>
        <p>$112,000. TUCKER ESTATES. Sellers have drastically reduced the price of this Victorian style home in popular neighborhood. Special features such as skylights, bay windows, exquisite moldings, hardwood floors, etc. Features 3 bedrooms, 2Vz baths, formal dining room, deck, fenced-in backyard, walk-up third floor. Call Rhonda.</p>
        <p>3 BEDROOM. 2 bath ranch on wooded, private lot offers fenced backyard, screened porch, formal areas and FHA loan assumption. Call DeDe for an appointment. $69,900. #2723.</p>
        <p>PRICE REDUCED!</p>
        <p>CLUB PINES. Youve found a special home when you see this unmatched 3 bedroom home. Living room and dining room for entertain-ng, work-saving kitchen with separate breakfast bay, den for relaxing. 2Vz baths, lounge-about deck. Professionally decorated and destined to steal your heart at $105,000. Please call Anita.</p>
        <p>HIDDEN ACRES. New neighborhood of fully restricted homesites. Lake for fishing, gazebo, 38 foot pier and Cable TV. 1,900 square foot minimum. $25,000 up. For details, please call Anita Worthington, 355-6661.</p>
        <p>MODEL OPEN DaUy 1 p.m. until 7 p.m.</p>
        <p>from</p>
        <p>5 ACRE residential wooded lots. $20,000 each. Owner financing available. Call Jule White, 756-6886.</p>
        <p>*59,625</p>
        <p>CLEARED LAND. 20 acres. Owner will finance. Sale price is $30,000. Call Jule White, 756-6886.</p>
        <p>Another Quatty Community Created By CEM Enterprises</p>
        <p>Tw Rond  WiateiviUe, N.C.  7568485 RE/NAX PROPERTIES  Kam Rogm  7588618 or 355-5444</p>
        <p>CaU alMMl tpacUl Haaactag avaUaUa. Baildarl</p>
        <p>PERFECT LOCATION for that estate in the country. Approximately 4 acres. $30,000. Owner will consider some financing. Call Karen-758-8618 or 355-5444.</p>
        <p>FANTASTIC BUY!</p>
        <p>CANTERBURY. Move into the Winterville School system. Very nice neighborhood and growing for years to come. $18,900. Call Vic.</p>
        <p>WINDSOR Subdivision. 1,600 square foot minimum. $16,900. Call Vic Corey, 355-6404.</p>
        <p>Vic Corey  Brim Jom$, 6RI</p>
        <p>355-6404  757-1967</p>
        <p>Cv, 3SS4U7. El. 01214  Car,  7S24000. Cil. IN</p>
        <p>Don Edmonson 756-7583</p>
        <p>JdoWhht</p>
        <p>756-6116</p>
        <p>Anita Worthingtan, GRI Rhonda Bailey 355-6661  756-8003</p>
        <p>Cm. 7SMSN. Eit. 0S1</p>
        <p>DoDo Comoy 757-3759</p>
        <p>Knron Rogort 75S-8618</p>
        <p>ALTONS TRAIL. Beautiful, wooded area, located down a private road. Lot has already been cleared and ready to build on nearly one acre in overall, site 140'x282. $16,000. Call Vic.</p>
        <p>A FANTASTIC buy in Greenvilles fastest appreciating neighborhood. Featuring approximately 1,800 square feet, 3 large bedrooms, excellent closet space, hardwood floors in foyer and dining room, cathedral ceiling in spacious greatroom. Extra wood trim plus large deck In rear. Call Vic. #2126. $9S,900.</p>
        <p>READY TO MOVE INTO!</p>
        <p>$139,800. WESTHAVEN VI. Popular brick Williamsburg. Custom built with many extras! Over 2,200 square feet, 4 bedrooms with master downstairs, formal dining room with hardwood floors, screened porch, unfinished fifth room. Beautifully landscaped. Excellent neighborhood. Call Rhonda.</p>
        <p>QUALITY FAMILY HOME. If your family needs more room, consider this new 4 bedroom Williamsburg home in the Oaks. Convenient kitchen, formal areas, and the family will love the greatroom, and this home features the very popular downstairs master suite. Call for details. Offered in the Low $100s. Call Karen.</p>
        <p>corner lot with fenced-in yard. New roof, heat &amp;amp; air systems. Hardwood floors. Call Rhonda.</p>
        <p>PRICE REDUCED!</p>
        <p>$92,000. PARAMORE FARMS.</p>
        <p>New construction. Buy now and choose colors. Large corner cul-de-sac lot in popular new neighborhood. Quality construction with 10 year warranty. 3 bedrooms, 2V^ baths, formal dining room, deck, greatroom. Call Rhonda.</p>
        <p>HOW much home can you get for $81,500? You get 4 bedrooms, 2 stories, front porch, large back deck, large fireplace, heavily wooded yard and a great neighborhood. Please call Don for all the details.</p>
        <p>LOAN ASSUMPTION at 8Vz. This brick home, located at the end of a dead end street offers not only affordable payments, but is in excellent condition. New paint and new stainmaster throughout. Three bedrooms, 1 '/2 baths, large deck plus detached garage with possible 4th bedroom or apartment. For more details call Vic Corey. $54,000. #2131.</p>
        <p>WINDSOR - Owners are very anx ious to sell - perfect locations for your new dream home $17,500 Make an offer. Call Karen - 758-8618 or 355-5444.</p>
        <p>GREAT COUNTRY LOCATION-</p>
        <p>Just a short distance from the city. 2 lots-$10,000 and $7,500 each Owner will consider some financing A great buy. Call Karen 758-8618 or 355-5444.</p>
        <p>NEW CONSTRUCTION In Woodridge featuring nearly 1,800 square feet, brick, 3 large bedrooms, excellent closet space, hardwood floors in foyer, dining room and kitchen, Jenn-Aire range, walk-in pantry plus screened-in porch in rear. To know more call Vic. $91,500. #2127.</p>
        <p>STYLE LOVERS, PLEASE READ!</p>
        <p>This home is set on an almost 2 acre lot at the end of the road. It has 2 large bedrooms with a huge cathe-draled greatroom. It has a sunroom that is glass from the floor to the top of the cathedral ceiling. It overlooks a sloping, heavily wooded lot that is unbelievable during the coming fall season. To stir your curiosity further the brick BBQ pit is large enough to grill a pig on and the house has new siding, an almost new roof and all of this and more for only $78,500. Call Jule.</p>
        <p>THIS 2 bedroom, 2 bath flat has fresh paint and freshly cleaned carpet. Its vacant and ready for occupancy yesterday! Its convenient to school, shopping, the Athletic Club and its only $52,500. Call Jule.</p>
        <p>EMERALD CHASE. Behind Carolina East Mall. 1,800 square foot mini mum. $13,200. Call Vic Corey, 355 6404.</p>
        <p>BRICK RANCH with almost 1,500 square feet, only 6 years old, 3 bedrooms, 1V^ baths, central air, large family room, den. Situated on 2 large lots. No city taxes. A deal! $54,000. Call Rhonda.</p>
        <p>THIS 3 bedroom, 1 Vi bath ranch offers great location plus an assumable VA loan with very low equity. Priced In the Mid $50e. Call DeDe for details. 2708.</p>
        <p>$90,000. IVi STORY new construction. Near Brittany Ridge. Spacious 4 bedrooms. Acre lot. Country porch and deck. Enjoy the escape from the city. Call Rhonda.</p>
        <p>COMFORT IN THE OAKS at Tree-</p>
        <p>NEW construction almost completed in one of Greenvilles up and coming neighborhoods. Featuring 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, unique floor plan, garage and nice deck area in rear. Youll be impressed plus it is priced to sell at $67,000. #2123.</p>
        <p>fOUAl HOUSINC OPPORTUNITY</p>
        <p>NEW CONSTRUCTION</p>
        <p>AYDEN</p>
        <p>PARAMORE FARMS. New construction almost completed. You will appreciate the different look this home has to offer. Master bedroom down, 2 bedrooms up, nice greatroom with cathedral celling, custom cabinets In kitchen. You will quickly recognize the quality and the appreciation potential. Call Vic. $112,500. #2112</p>
        <p>YOU'LL LOVE the landscaping both in be</p>
        <p>the front and back of this 3 bedroom brick ranch with a garage. You ii meet rour new friends In inis quiei neignoor-lood as they walk and jog by in the late afternoon. Cisll Don. $79,900. #2315</p>
        <p>NEWCONSTRUCTIONii NEAR HOSPITAL</p>
        <p>THIS 3 BEDROOM, 2'4i bath farmhouse should be ready by October 30th Over 1,400 square feet, wrap around porch, deck, Vi acre-f lot, gas pack, central air and fireplace for only $67,900. Please call Don Youll LOVE IT! #2314</p>
        <p>THIS 4 year old brick ranch Is on a large comer lot In popular Greenwood Forest. Please call Don to find out why thle home Is a bargain at $54,000. #2303</p>
        <p>CHERRY OAKS</p>
        <p>LESS than $45 a foot In Cherry Oaks! Call Don about this 4 bedroom home with a double garage for only $99,9001</p>
        <p>CAN'T BEAT THIS PRICE</p>
        <p>$44,500. LOVELY brick ranch with 3 bed rooms, carport, wooded lot, excellent condition New root, heating system Sellers say seill Call Rhonda.</p>
        <p>ALL THE QUALITY you would expect Is in this new 1,800 home In Brittany Ridge Large greatroom with fireplace. Wonderful kitchen with breakfasf area. Formal dining room. 3 roomy bedrooms and 2Vi full baths Only $92,500. #2623. Call Brian.</p>
        <p>AFFORDABLE!</p>
        <p>OH SO NICE and yet so affordable describes this new listing In Bayfree Beautiful salt box design with large greatroom</p>
        <p>and kitchen Formal dining, 3 bedrooms,</p>
        <p>On'------</p>
        <p>2'/} baths. Fantastic yard Only $87.900. Call Brian #2638</p>
        <p>CAMP LEACH ESTATES</p>
        <p>ONLY 1 river front lot left at $60,000 ONLY 6 river view</p>
        <p>lots left at $25,000 each.</p>
        <p>Large residential lots Some owner financing possible</p>
        <p>Please call Jule White I for more details</p>
        <p>re/max PROPERTIES RE/M A X PROPERTIES RE/M A X PROPERTIES RE/MAX PROPERTIES RE/M A X PROPERTIES  RE / M A X  PROPERTIES RE/MAX PROPERTIES RE/MAX PROPERTIES</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0080" />
        <p>OFFICE HOURS AMcmbtrCM f  ^  .  |  jl^</p>
        <p>^sundT W'S-756-3500</p>
        <p>OPEN HOISE EXTH.WAG ANZA - BROOKGREEN AREA 2 -1</p>
        <p>1107 E. FOURTEENTH STREET - Brookgreen home with over 2300 square feet built by Johnny Edwards Deceptively large lour or live bedroom, two bath home with private wooded yard Hardwood floors in foyer, living-dining room combination All new kitchen and breakfast room. Two bedrooms up and two down. Fireplace in den and built-in desk in study A bargain in as is ' condition for $75,000. Your hostess: Sheri Carter, GRI.</p>
        <p>1208 KINGSBROOK ROAD  You have to see this home for yourself! Four bedrooms, three baths only begin this fantastic Dutch Colonial complete with swimming pool and beautifully landscaped fenced back yard All formal areas, wet bar, exposed beams and built-ins in den plus exciting new well equipped kitchen. All this and great neighborhood for $169,500. Your hostess: Deborah Jones</p>
        <p>FRESH ON THE MARKET</p>
        <p>EVANSWOOD  A rare find! Well kept three bedroom, 2 full  UNIVERSITY AREA - One block from ECU  This 3 bedroom</p>
        <p>balh ranch with new carpeting, solar hot water, 2 car garage,.  home is a steal and is steel loo! Almost 1300 sq It of low</p>
        <p>fenced m yard on a large corner lot which has been the  maintenance termite-free living. Terrific  investment at</p>
        <p>Yard of the Month" Low 90'. Listing agent: Jim Burhans.  $39,900. Listing agent: Jim Burhans.</p>
        <p>BROOK VALLEY - 528 Westchester Drive  Impressive colonial home in prime area Elegant formal areas include gorgeous hardwood floors, impressive foyer with half bath, handsome den with fireplace and built-ins Large master bedroom and three bedrooms with two additional baths. Vinyl siding and natural backyard maintenance free. Huge bonus playroom affords everyone privacy A must see for only S13,SN. Listing agent Sheii Carter, GRI.</p>
        <p>TUCKAHOE  Located in a quiet area Large well landscaped lawn, three bedrooms, two baths, family room with fiteplace and cathedral ceiling, single garage $72,500.</p>
        <p>TURN YOUR HANDY-MAN SKILLS INTO PROFIT. This three bedroom, two bath spacious older home needs lots of attention Located on a huge .8 acre corner lot. Great buy at $19.000! Listing agent: Deborqh Jones</p>
        <p>BETHEL - IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCYl Lease purchase is available on this remodeled home with 1700 square feet. All formal areas, den. three bedrooms, fenced yard, detached garage, all appliances furnished $44,500. Listing agent Sue Dunn, GRI</p>
        <p>BRMRWOOO  112 RoWn Road - Custom built Tudor on 2 3 acre wooded lot. 18x36 in-ground pool, lush landscaping. Interior is lit for the King &amp;amp; Queen! Four bedrooms. 3/i balhs, prolessionaliy decorated, kitchen is unbelieveable! Call for yflyBfiYatutBwiiWittTaiimi  ..........................</p>
        <p>BROKER ON CALL Ray Spears During Non Office Hours Please Call 758-4362</p>
        <p>THE RESALE SPECIALISTS</p>
        <p>Olane Barnes Deborah Jone John Conway Worlay Warraii 757 1552  750-7000  385-2452  715-3222</p>
        <p>FARMOfLANO</p>
        <p>Don Seelherland  Malani Bunch</p>
        <p>COM, CRB, CR9 7$B.$200  Omu Managar</p>
        <p>Commercial</p>
        <p>21,00&amp;lt;)-COyirrRV  leeutMul custom built home m tbe WInlervllle tttmi dietrlct Is only i miles from Carolina Eaet Mall on R hoBvily woodttf 4 ai M. You11 l|M Mm fhnei bM epMlowntBe of Hile 4 btdroom Iwmo wHh boMw, 2 fIroplMot, dolaolMiigerago iMeli two Moon NiiMliodBMi ! Maol lor ployroom amlolfloo. 20t,IOO-IEDPORD  DOUtLE tTAW TRApmONAL. ThN aftltndid lour bodMOR) IrtdHlonai Iwt two atalrwBye, eno foodlng to gMyrooffl am douMo gerago. All tomwl  too*"-  Compllmonting Iho kMelMit a boy</p>
        <p>window Iremos a ploturaariue and prvalo bacVWrBilr 1*8,000FOR THE DISCRIMINATING BUYERI A aevtn ecr* country estate eurrounda tilla 3400 square foot brick traditional Homo. Enter all tarnwl arooa, apacloua dan, four bodrooma, (maaMr aulit fma 2 balhs), lour botha total, doubla garage, largo barn area for horaoal</p>
        <p>195.000BROOKGREEN  Pleluro porfoetl Our ngw Hating la In abaoluto movo-in condition. Eloganeo throughout and taatoful daeer In the 4 badrooma. gracioua living room, apacloua family room, formal dining room, oaHn kllchon with 8ul&amp;gt;Zoro rolrigorator and built-in microwavo, racroatlon room, and more. Slate porehoa, buiIMn bookcaaoa.^y|M art Jual a try low of the special laaturoa In ItVpRUVhomo.</p>
        <p>179.900BRIARWOOD-104 Wistoria. The homo youvo boon waHing for la this beautiful custom built hpme on an acre lot in Briarwood. Its 2800 squars faot includa formal areas, largo family room, spacious kitchan, laundry room, upstairs bonus room, 2Vk baths and 4 badrooma, two of thorn down. All rooms are taalofully docoratad and loadod with extras. Out back Ihoro Is a largo scroonod-ln porch and doublo garage. Must soo to approciato.</p>
        <p>170.000BROOK VALLEY  Spacioua fivt badroom homo on the golt course offers formal living and dining room, family room with firoplaco, playroomAgMI Much,  baths and a baautlful wooded lot.</p>
        <p>169,750-LYNNDALE. This 4 bedroom, 3 bath Olllo Harrington bulH homo awaits your growing lamily to onjoy its many spoclal fsaturoa. Spacious room throughout including huge playroom, family room with tiraplaca, living and dining rooms, largo oat in kitchen with many built ins. Large well landscaped lot. On quiet, tree lined stroot.</p>
        <p>165.000BROOK VALLEY. Freshly dacorstod Interior will turn your head in this 3500 sq. ft. 5 badroom custom homo on the golf course. Paneled doublo garage, glassed sun room, lush landscaping. Its beautiful. Call us today!</p>
        <p>159.900MACGREGOR DOWNS. Exceptional custom built home on ntarly three wooded acres, faaluros throe bedrooms, spacious bathrooms; Jacuzzi, groat room with cathedral calling, study with built-ins, beautiful kitchan with all appliances, huge utility room, 28' x18' workshop, double garage and many more extras and custom teaturas. You really must sea this home to approciato the quality, comfort and privacy that it offers.</p>
        <p>144.900BROOK VALLEY. Traditional alogance may bo yours in this Immaculate home featuring five bedrooms, throe baths, formal areas, den with firsplaca, doubla garage and lovely hardwood floors. Well landscaped wooded lot Is a bonus!.</p>
        <p>136.000BROOK VALLEY - Expect to be impressed when you enter this 3 bedroom custom built brick homo. Cathedral celling, double french doors, island kitchen, rocossed lighting-theso are but a few of Its special features. Enjoy relaxing on the largo scrtoned porch or the lovely deck. Only 4 years young. Don't wait till its gone, act now.</p>
        <p>135.900tUCKER ESTATES - NEW CONSTRUCTION - 4 bedroom, 2Vt bath,</p>
        <p>2 story on corner tot. All formal areas, family room with fireplace, many special features. Call for dotails.</p>
        <p>135.000COUNTRY ESTATE - Twenty one acres of land surround this immaculate brick ranch. Home offers greatroom with fireplace and exposed beams, dining room, kitchen, three bedrooms, 2 baths, garage; Large detached workshop. A must soo.</p>
        <p>129.900 UNIVERSITY AREA - Colonial splendor can be yours when you enter this lovely home. There are three bedrooms, 2 baths, large formal areas, den or library, breakfast nook and kitchen. Many extras as hardwood floors, and high ceilings. A must see!</p>
        <p>129.900TUCKER ESTATESElegant four bedroom home offers a formal dining room, kitchen with breakfast nook, great room with built-ins, screened porc|j|^^2||||tl^walk-up attic, and a beautiful</p>
        <p>128.000KlNGSBROOK-Quality custom built four bedroom home offers spacious family room with firoplaco, dining room with three piece crown molding, kitchen with breakfast area, utility room, living room or study and a private fenced in yard.</p>
        <p>125.000COUNTRY FRESH - Adjacent to Brittany Ridge on SR 1728. Drive up to gracious living along tree-lined circular drive on acro-plua lot. Open the door to spacious living and dining rooms, largo family room, Florida room, great kitchen, 2 fireplaces, 3 bedrooms, and 2V^ baths. Extras include double garage with automatic opener, intercom system throughout and more.</p>
        <p>125.000TUCKER ESTATES - Brand new home In Iho newest section of Tucker Estates is ready for you to move in! Spacious floor plan offers three bedrooms, 2V^ baths, great room with fireplace, formal dining room with hardwood floors, roomy kitchen with breakfast area, study or sowing room and an unfinished third floor.</p>
        <p>123.900TUCKER ESTATES - Brand new construction offers family room with buiIMn bookcases, kitchen with breakfast area, formal dining room with hardwood floors, three bedrooms, study, and an unfinished third floor.</p>
        <p>123.900CHERRY OAKS - Truly a home for a family with kids to raise and projects to work on! 4 bedrooms, 3 full baths, living room, family room, den, sunroom, workshop over kHchon, double garage. On a largo and lovely wooded lot. Its priced to please.</p>
        <p>122.500WINTERVILLE - Entertain the way youve always wanted: Your guests will enjoy the recent professional landscaping. And the improsaivo interior will allow thorn to reflect its brightness and warmth. 2300 aq. ft. on 1.4 acres, 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths.</p>
        <p>119.900TUCKER ESTATES - Spacious four bedroom homo offers formal living and dining room, kitchen with breakfast area, family room wHh firoplaco, 2V3 baths, utility room and a nicely landscaped wooded lot in this groat neighborhood.</p>
        <p>114.900TUCKER ESTATES - Now 3 bedroom, 2% bath, 2 story In this dasirabia area. Great room with fireplace, formal dining room, and beautifully decorated kitchan with custom finishing.</p>
        <p>112,000FOREST HILLS. Every detail of this traditional homo bespeaks of quality. In established neighborhood of prestige homes. Dignified 5 bedroom homo within waljiing distance of schools, playgrounds, and shopping. Over 3,000 square foot of living space.</p>
        <p>109.900CHERRY OAKS  From the moment you enter this 4 bedroom farmhouse you will realizo you have discovorod something special. All bedrooms boast ampio ctosot space. Groat room is ontortalnmant slzod. Front porch is porfoct for rocking chairs. Lovely wooded lot.</p>
        <p>109,300-1793 PARAMORE ROAD - This qualHy built homo in Paramoro Farms Is sura to ploaao. Special foaturas include a nicely organizad kitchan wRh braakfaat araa, dining room and foyar with hardwood tioora, spacious groat room wHh firoplaco, 3 bodraoms, and iVt balhs.</p>
        <p>99.900-WEBTHAVEN, 202 RAVENWOOD DRIVE - Stately Williamsburg homo with 4 boihooms, one down, 2 baths, all formal araaa, firaplaco in dan and acraonod porch. Custom homo features lots of storage, utility room wHh sink, dog kennel and basketball goal. One of doopost wooded lots In nice area. Over 1900 square fast.</p>
        <p>95.000DO YOU LIKE wide open spaces? Land for horsos, this contemporary ranch hat lots of room Insldt too. Hugo living aroas, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, one wHh sunken Roman tub with one way window. Nino miles past Bolts Fork, walking dlatanco to school.</p>
        <p>A must aao.</p>
        <p>94.900-LOT 1-A - BRIHANY RIDGE - Compart thia nowly constructed 1,908 square foot home. Thro# bedrooms, two and one half baths, haalad playroom, heated ctosots, parquot dining araa, custom cabinets, boaullful extra moldings and chairrall, extra aidowalk, alactrical wiring that axcoods code and more.</p>
        <p>94.000COUNTRY LIVING. This spacious brick ranch offers 2800 square feat, greatroom, five badrooma, 3W baths, doublo garagol.</p>
        <p>03.000UNIVERSITYWonderful homo wHh oxcollont floor plan. The height of gracious living with 10 fool colllnga, all formal araaa,</p>
        <p>2Vt baths totally radono. 5 bedrooms, wtth mastor downstairs. Enjoy tho wrap around porch yoarround. Carport, garage, two firaplacas, hardwood floors.</p>
        <p>92.500EASTWOODNew 2 story with wrap around porch and over 1900 square foot. Largo groat room wHh firoplaco, formal dining room,</p>
        <p>3 badrooma, 2Vi baths.</p>
        <p>89.900PAMLICO PLANTATION. This contomporary townhouaa Is meant for living. Commanding view from tho scroonod porch and deck. Exclusive community offora pool, tennis courts, private boat slip, clubhouao, socurityAMiM Perfect for buslnoas coupit who want time tor roSMMUHd of yard work.</p>
        <p>80.900THE OATES  Boautlful townhomo offora a family room with firoplaco and calhtdral calling, dining room, kitchen wHh lots of cabinets, breakfast area, 2/3 bedrooms, 3 full baths, garage and a apacloua prvala patio. Practically brand now this home comes complata with rafrigarator, microwavo, dishwasher, and beautiful custom curtains.</p>
        <p>89.500BRITTANY RIDGE  Relax sHhor on the front wrap-around porch or tho scroonod porch and deck In tho back of this now homol</p>
        <p>' Custom bultl faaturas Includa greatroom with fireplace, thro# bedrooms (on# do^AtgUj MMbatha, dining araa and large corner lot.  9 wlalP</p>
        <p>89.000THIS COUNTRY HOME alta on two nicely landscaped acres Just outside of Farmvlllo. Its 2360 squire foot Includo formal araaa, 3 or 4 bedrooms, 3 baths, and huge family room. Outside Ihora Is an attached doubla carport and a datachad workshop/hobby room.</p>
        <p>8S,600-WOOORIDQE - A COUNTRY DREAMI This Victorian haa II all. Bay-wlndowad dining room, brtakfasi area, and master bedroom. Largo family room with franch doors. Maalor bath wHh tub and shower. Single,garage, porch and more. Now undor construc-llon.</p>
        <p>'87,500BUILT IN THE GOOD OL' DAYS when homos had foyora, formal living rooms, formal dining rooms, largo oaHn kHchona, dans wHh firoplacos, big bodrooma, eoramio baths, double car garagaa and rtlca yards.</p>
        <p>88.900BRITTANY RIDGE  This recently completed homo has country flair. Large great room has llraplaco and opens onto scroonod porch and dock. Three bedrooms, (masltr downstairs), two and on# half balhs,  laundry room. Located on a large lot and pri9llwklw</p>
        <p>81,3994 STAR RATING  VIclorlat) exterior with wondorful floor plan: separate master auha, bright and chaory home. Throe bedrooms, two full baths In WIntergretn Mhool district.</p>
        <p>79.900-YOU MAY NOT BaiEVE THIS, but you csn Hava 4 barhooms, 2Vt balhs, your own 20x40 wirtd workahop, living room, dining room, family room, all located on nearly an acra of land.  *</p>
        <p>78.900CAMELOT - This asilar has bean transfarrad; hla teas will ba your gain in this trsdltienal ranch. Entry foyer opona Into spacious groslroom with tiraplaca, aat-in kitchan, ihraa bedrooms, two baths. Extras Includa, garage, deck, datachad sloraoa building.</p>
        <p>74.900CAMELOTThrao bedroom ranch with doubla garage offora ^at room with firtplaoo, spacious fancacHn yard, 2 full batba and a great floor plan in thia popular area.</p>
        <p>74.900-CAMELOT-100 KINO ARTHUR-lrIck, dolallad landscaping, crown, molding and chairrall add up to custom buM. Location la another reason youll want to aao this wall maintelntd 3 badroom, 2 bath homo. Alao offara 12 x 12 formal dining room, larga groat room wtth llraptaco, fenced play araa tor ehWdran, and 14 x 19 datachad atorase building.</p>
        <p>72.900100 QRIINBHIAR DRIVE * Spacioua briok ranch, I bedrooms, 2 full baths, Oroatroom vHth flroplaea, garage with automatic door oponar.</p>
        <p>AH window traatmairt, ratrtgaralor, waahor and dryar ramain wHh the property.</p>
        <p>70.900-RIVIR HfLLt-EifJoy lha paaoa 8 quiet on the edge of town In thia popular araa. 3 badrooma, 2 full baths, groat room wMb catbadral callings, only 3 years old and In axcallani condition.</p>
        <p>69.900-WINDY RIDQE-&amp;gt;-Fabulout llatl 9 badrooma, 2 lull baths, flroptooa, sHIc spaoo and mora. Spraloua Interior docoratod to parteotlon. One of a kindl</p>
        <p>08,800-ROBERiONVILLE. Beautiful brick ranch on waH landseapad, fancad</p>
        <p>lawn. 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, formal Hving room, family room wtth</p>
        <p>fllSHlSCB. IMAratA Kiataw feu|tti|l||A.</p>
        <p>69,SOO-ROU,mQ MEADOWS - AFFORDABLE CHAMII Traditional two4lory, 3 badroom home on bugs id. Largo living roohi. Flroplact, dock, gsrago. Under construction. Buy now and chooaa your carpaL</p>
        <p>waHpaaor, etc. Great valual i-BRENTWOO</p>
        <p>69.500BRET\llfOOO. Modern design  right in tlw Iwart of a lot naslted wHh tail trass in this 3 bedroom, 2 bath home that haa a family room and* dining room that sparfcte with sunlight from akylighls.</p>
        <p>67.500GREENVILLE BOULEVARD - Lovely wooded lot surrounds this brick ranch which offers 1660 aquaro fast. Largs Uvlng/dining combo. Don wNh tiraplaca, kHchon, throe badrooma, two baths, doubla carport and</p>
        <p> largo porob for relaxing.</p>
        <p>65.900BELVEDEREImmadiata occupancyl Spaclout brick ranch offora large den with firoplaco, living room, throo bodrooma, two baths, carperti Wooded tot.</p>
        <p>65.900OFFICES FOR SALE. Upstairs condo featuring 4 officaa and central rocoptlonlal araa. Approximataly 1,000 square fool; all window traaf monta convey. Baautlfully dscoratod. Balh, kHchan wHh microwava androfrtgorator.</p>
        <p>65.000WINDY RIDGENew custom doaign kitchen with expended cablnata and eountsr space highlight this immaculate 3 badroom, 214 bath townhouaa In popular Windy Ridge. Living room with llraplaco, formal dining room with bay window. Two extra large bedrooms plus third with bullMns that could be a cozy dan. Largo patio with lush plantings. Movo-ln condHlon.</p>
        <p>65.000SHENANDOAHDuplex, currently ranted with annual gross rant of . 37,560.00. Buy as an invailmont, or llvo in one aids and rant'IN</p>
        <p>other! Each side has 2 tedrooms, Nth, and tiraplaca.</p>
        <p>64.900STANTONSBURG RD. Hit lots It your gain wHh this FHA nonn|uallfylng loan assumption. Homo foaturas three Ndrooms, 2 lull NIht, great room, dining aros and drport. Extras Include deck, patio and wooded lot minutas from IN hospHal.</p>
        <p>61.900. PINERIDGE .This 3 todroom, 2 Nth home retlacis tN owners prida In Its tastofutly dacoratad great rmm with soaring cathedral calling, charming kitchan and utility room. Open floor plan with dining arra adjacent to great room.</p>
        <p>61.900. GREENVILLE BOULEVARD  No naad to rant, affordabte living is hate in this three todroom, 114 bath brick homo; living room has firsplaca, dining room, carport and patio; Spacious vvoodad fenced in yard convenient to schools and shopping.</p>
        <p>61.500CAMBRIDGE. This darling Capa Cod home offers four bedrooms, two baths, cozy grsatroom with fireplace, arid built Ins. ThSre Is also a larga fancad in yard. Non qualifying FHA loan assumption is a bonus!</p>
        <p>60.000SIMPSON AREA - Thought has bean put into this quality conalructad home. Boadad vinyl siding and vinyl facia prevent you from having to perform the unwantod Job of painting. Master badroom has bean located on lha opposite sida of the home from Iho childrens badroom. Cathedral calling in fnflMU flB tiraplaca, located on over 2/3 of an acre lot.  9raWBiW</p>
        <p>59.9002616 CHEROKEE - YOULL NOT BELIEVE THISI But for you can have a throo bedroom brick house with living room, don with firoplaco, spacious kitchen with dining araa, extras auch as crown molding, all In mint condHlon. Contlpe^ lawn on a corner lot makes this normally typical ranch a show place.</p>
        <p>59.900RT. 4, BOX 97M - FALKLAND AREA - three bedroom brick ranch on a larga lot in the county offers living room, spacious kHchan wHh sating area, 2 full baths, and workahop.</p>
        <p>57.500GREAT BEGINNER! Dont throw away your money. Invest In this very affordable 3 bedroom, 2 balh brick ranch. Assumable VA</p>
        <p> loan. Call for details.  &amp;gt;</p>
        <p>56.500E-4 KINGSTON PLACE - Investors take note! Taka advantage of this 2 badroom, 214 bath condominium. Loaaed through July 31, 1989. A super offer.</p>
        <p>54.900GREENBRIAR - Neat three bedroom homo offers a formal living room with hardwood floors, den with fireplace, sunny kitchan wHh dining area. 2 full baths, now'central air, carport and a private foncotFin yard.</p>
        <p>54.900COUNTRY PLACE - Its affordabte, Hs practical. Its conva-- nlont....to schools, shopping, and malls. Excellent starlor home</p>
        <p>with 3 bodrooma, 1V4 baths, top grade appliancos, energy saving dishwasher, and located on a larga corner lot.</p>
        <p>54.500GREAT STARTER HOME. - Beautiful large corner lot. 4 bedrooms and 2 full baths, FHA non-qualifying loan, hardwood lloort downstairs, carpel upstairs. Ready for now owners.</p>
        <p>53.90053 BARNES ST. In Windy Ridge - This racantly painted townhomo features 3 bedrooms, and 214 baths. Salter will help by jwying up to $2,000 in closing costs or a money saving buydown.</p>
        <p>53.900UPTON COURTImmaculate three badroom townhouso offora spacious family room, airy kHchon with dining area, private patio, 214 baths and a great location near Groanvllla Athletic Club.</p>
        <p>51.899-UNIVERSITY AREA  Walk to ECU and save 3s on car expensa. This 3 bedroom, 114 bath brick ranch home has central air condoning to keep yfjj|j||djp pack to warm your loos. New</p>
        <p>49.900-ORCHARD HILLS  Brand new construction offora thrao bedrooms, family room, spacious kHchon with dining area and a nice family neighborhood. Groat buy for first time buyers  low payment. Builder will pay closing co'sts!</p>
        <p>49.900-GREENBRIAR. Break the rant habit! You can own this brick raqch which has a living room, large eat In kHchon, now stove and dishwashor, throo bedrooms, 2 full baths, alaetric heat, heat and air. Fenced in yard.</p>
        <p>49.900-UNIVERSITY, 106 N. ELM. The perfect homt for first-tlmo homo buyers, this 3 bedroom brick ranch faaturas living room and dining room wHh btdHtofoMrafoco, control air, carport and foncod-ln back yard.9 whir</p>
        <p>46,700-LEXINQTON SQUARE  Just right for your nowlywodsi Two bodrooma, 114 bath condominium oftoring apacloua doa wHh boautHul firaplaeo, and an aHrocthro kHchon and Anlng aroa.</p>
        <p>47.900-WEATHERINGTON HEIGHTS  Graal stertar homo In Wlntarvilla arM offara tbrao bodrooma, 114 baths, living room, kHchon-dln-ing combination. Extras Include air oondHlonlng, carport, and largo corner lot.</p>
        <p>47.900-WILDWOOD VILLAS - 6 - Townhomo wHh 3 bedrooms, 214 balhs. Largo maator badroom with private ontranco, patlo. Loeatad In tha unlvaralty araa and la convanlani to ECU.</p>
        <p>46.900-BflNDY RIDGE  Cozy townhomo. Excoltent condHlon. Two bedrooms, private patlo and firaplaca in graat room.</p>
        <p>44.900-UNIVERSITY AREA. This bungalow la convanlont to moat avorythlng. Ovar 1200 square foot with 3 bedrooms and 114 baths. Assumabla FHA loan. Parfact for Investor or Student. Call Today.</p>
        <p>42.900-WILLIAMSBURG MANOR - 102D Concord  Excoltent invostmont cipportunHy In this 2 bedroom, 114 bath town house wHh approx-Imatoly 1084 square foot.</p>
        <p>40.000RINGGOLD TOWERSOtio bedroom unH located In this focllHy bosldo ECU. Owner will carry not or 2nd (food of trust.</p>
        <p>39.900-OUT IN THE COUNTRY  Why not build tquHy up with homo ownorship In this affordsbla 3 badroom, briefc ranch. Carport, frashly painted, now roof and carpet. Start owning todayl</p>
        <p>39,900. SHENANDOAH  Attontlon tonantsi Why rant wban you can buy this 2 bedroom, 114 bath townhomo wHh graat room, kHchan/ dining araa, privacy lanca, and moro. Many axtraa ara Included. Now is tha time for you to build up oquHy, not rant recoipts. Priced Will below tho compatHlon.</p>
        <p>39.500CANNON COURT. Dont pay rant whan you can own thia hn$ bedroom, 114 bath unH. Nice living room, oat-ln kHchon with all appliances, privacy patlo, now carpet and paint.</p>
        <p>30.500CYPRESS GARDENS  Groat rontal property. 2 bedrooms, 1 bath. Rofrlgarator, dishwashor, disposal all includod. AHantlon In-voatorsl</p>
        <p>37.900-QUIET COUNTRY sotting to kick back and rofox. IkEnJoy this pretty 3 JMdroom, 2 bath rotroat loeatad on 14 acra lot wHh fruH trees and pinos. Exj^JWIg x 20 dock, dotactod storaga, window troafnwnia, wlWMHrsppliancoa.</p>
        <p>36.500CANNON COURTInvoators! Qraat invoalmont opportunHy with ' this 2 bedroom, 114 both unH. Cornos complete with refrigerator,</p>
        <p>waahor A dryer. And pricod thousands below tho compotHlon.</p>
        <p>35.500RINQGOLD TOWERS CONDOMINIUM - 137,500 will buy Ihit offF ctency condo fully furnished and a parfact location for ECU stu-donta. Investors call for dotalla.  .</p>
        <p>34.900-RINQQOLD TOWERS  B unit proaontly ranted. Pricod below markot for quick aalol</p>
        <p>34.500VILLAGE GROVE  Neat 2 bt(hoom home offara living room wHh firoplaco, hardwood tkKwa, malntonanco fro# vinyl aiding and a nloa lot wHb traas. Graat starter home or Invaatmant property.</p>
        <p>31.500CYPRE88 GARDENS -1 badroom, 1 bath, all tha axtraa. Ideal for student. Attontlon InvoatorsI</p>
        <p>29.000-RINGQOLD TOWERS. InvosI in tor your child. This Is so convo-nlont to Iho ECU campus. Glva ua a call for detalla.</p>
        <p>28.500RINQQOLD TOWERSOn# badroom unH locatod in ECU arta. Compfololy furnlshod unH.</p>
        <p>27.900-HOP, SKIP AND A JUMP TO ECU from this 3 year oldcondo. Complotoly furnlshod.</p>
        <p>RESORT LISTINGS</p>
        <p>660.000OCRACOKE ISLAND - Own your own homo and rastaurant on this Island galaway. Noma offers ihraa bedrooms, two baths, greatroom with major furnlahlngs convoying. RostauranI offara contemporary dining and moral</p>
        <p>295,600.-BALOHEAO ISLAND  Luxurloua ocaanfroni home. 4 bedrooms,</p>
        <p>4 batha, vaulted calling in living room wHh firoplaco. Scroonod daekadroff cHnlhg room and open daek ovarto&amp;lt;dilng ocean. Com-pfolaly furnlahad Including goH cart. MsgnHloant vlawl</p>
        <p>235.000OCRACOKE laland. This brand new contomporary home la a must aaol Lower level offara two bedrooms and bath, upper aval has huge greatroom with cathedral colling, mastor badroom, balh and kHchan. Enjoy tho vlow of tho water from aeroonod porth and deck. Major furnlahlngs convey.</p>
        <p>LOTS</p>
        <p>9,725BEAUTIFUL wooded building lots. Loeatad on SR 1764 beyond Simpaen. Thia lot la over M of an aero.</p>
        <p>JONES PLANTATION Located 114 mites northeast of Highway 264 Bypass, tots 1 thru 11. Lot 41,2.02 Acraa, 911,500.</p>
        <p>Lot 2,2.13 Aoras, 911,500.</p>
        <p>Lot 3.4.13 Acraa, 916,000.</p>
        <p>Lot #4,4.90 Acraa, 915,500.</p>
        <p>Lot 5,2.19 Acraa, 911.000. IMiMl Lot 9.3.27 Aeraa. 913,600.</p>
        <p>NIca rural aaml Raatrlctad Lota: 1400 square toot minimum, double widoB and eonvontion housing accaplad, community water, aubjocl to rastrlcUona. Contact: Worlay Warron.</p>
        <p>Lol 7,5.39 Aeras, 119,500.</p>
        <p>Lot 9,2.98 Acroa, 915,000. IBM) Lot 9,4.20 Acraa, 911,01.</p>
        <p>Lot 410.4.78 Aeros, 912,000.</p>
        <p>Lot 411,9.11 Aoroa, 914,000.*</p>
        <p>FARMS FOR SALE</p>
        <p>8929</p>
        <p>709</p>
        <p>359</p>
        <p>279</p>
        <p>212</p>
        <p>228 as</p>
        <p>190</p>
        <p>109</p>
        <p>1.000,000</p>
        <p>700.000</p>
        <p>400.000 85,000</p>
        <p>225.000 la 200.000</p>
        <p>226.000 135,000</p>
        <p>LOCATION</p>
        <p>TyrollCo. BladonCo. Sampson Co. Slokoa PHlCo. Craven Co. Beaufort Co. Btokos</p>
        <p>IZI/</p>
        <p>ACMI</p>
        <p>191 I</p>
        <p>155</p>
        <p>99</p>
        <p>97</p>
        <p>90 aw 97</p>
        <p>8^ as</p>
        <p>ion</p>
        <p>40</p>
        <p>50.000</p>
        <p>215.000</p>
        <p>100.000</p>
        <p>95.000</p>
        <p>95.000 75,000.</p>
        <p>48.000</p>
        <p>39.000</p>
        <p>30.000</p>
        <p>Btokos</p>
        <p>Raborsonvllfo</p>
        <p>Btokos</p>
        <p>tokos</p>
        <p>Wintorvlllf</p>
        <p>Btokos</p>
        <p>Btokos</p>
        <p>Btokoa</p>
        <p>Blokat</p>
        <p>Other tracts also avallablo. Contact Worlay Warron for Buying or Soiling.</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0081" />
        <p>V</p>
        <p>THE DAILY</p>
        <p>REFLECTOR</p>
        <p>Greenville, N.C. Sunday, September 18,1988</p>
        <p>Comics Art Entertainment</p>
        <p>D</p>
        <p>- ''c</p>
        <p>'r ^*</p>
        <p>/*    </p>
        <p>* Nt. 1 ,  </p>
        <p>I   .  -</p>
        <p>X J V/.*' A</p>
        <p> \</p>
        <p>' -.#1* </p>
        <p>% . N</p>
        <p>%  f</p>
        <p>When a little moisture makes a big difference</p>
        <p>cniuE'wuATiTvrniMMnv I u u J- ij r   TRANSFORMED The downy white heads of ragweed is transformed by a</p>
        <p>SOMEWHAT UNCOMMON - In the byways and fields of rural Pitt County, coating of dew into shapes that could easily inspire designers of contemporary the beautiful purp ish flowering heads of iron weeds are not seen as frequently jewelry. When sunlight dries the ragweed fruiting filaments, they will soon be as other species of wild flowers. The showy flowers grow on a tall, rank tough dispersed either by a breeze or a bird or insect alighting on the supporting plant that likely accounts for Its iron weed name.  stem.  f  &amp;amp;  yy  s</p>
        <p>Revelations Of Pitt County Nature On A Dew-Laden Morning In September</p>
        <p>Text And Photographs By Jerry Raynor</p>
        <p>BEAUTY IN BERRIES  Poke (or poke berry) plants are bountiful in Pitt County, often growing to a height of six or seven feet. A mature plant is generally heavily festooned with clusters of shiny deep burgandy colored berries beneath leaves that have turned pale yellowish-green.</p>
        <p>An early morning excursion into ditch areas and field borders of weeds, wild flowers and last summers overgrown gardens is something everyone should try at least once on a misty September morning in Pitt County.</p>
        <p>Its an amazing experience, incredibly lovely, unexpectedly revealing, an echo of what the songwriter had in mind when he penned words to the hymn, I come to the garden alone, while the dew is still on the roses.</p>
        <p>Other than in an exceptional circumstance, roses in September will not be encountered in these areas of fully matured weeds and autumn wild flowers.</p>
        <p>Nevertheless, the rewards of venturing into these places soon after sunrise on a misty or foggy early autumn morning are many.</p>
        <p>Slanted sun rays bring to glittering life a mantle of temporary watery gemstones in nature: necklaces of dew drops on the fern-like fronds of dog fennel; the transformation of snowy white heads of ragwood into crystal clusters; the decoration of open cups of morning glory flowers with globular droplets of moisture, and rivulets of moisture gliding down the curves of unharvested peppers and tomatoes half hidden by tall grasses.</p>
        <p>The colors of Septembers wild flowers, berries, butterflies and other winged insects are spectacular, as brilliant as Josephs legendary cloak of many colors.</p>
        <p>There are stands of lady fingers (also called knotweek and pinkweed) with delicate pink spikes of tiny flowers; bouquets of golden evening primroses  in full display despite the evening name; sprays of early goldenrod; the first modest show of pale lavender gerardia flowers, and the blossoms of jewel weed in orange and its close cousin, the yellow pale jewel weed, both nearly hidden beneath dense green foliage.</p>
        <p>The most prevalent, and for many the most glorious of all September flowers are morning glories. These range from</p>
        <p>DEW ON DOG FENNEL  Dewfall in the night and early morning hours brightens the dark ferny fronds of dog fennel in the first morning hours of sunshine. A rank weed, dog fennel nonetheless has a pleasant pungent odor, sways gracefully in each breeze, and after frost ripens in color to a lovely golden tan.</p>
        <p>thumbnail size white or tangerine flowers through much larger flowers in an astonishing palette of sky blue, i&amp;amp;rk blue, white, pale and deep purple, rose  interwoven around and atop weeds as well as in surrounding fields of corn and soybeans.</p>
        <p>In drier areas, one might discover rough tall stalks bearing sprays of purplish iron weed flowers. Where they have escaped cultivation, there may be a few spikes of obedient plants, a great favorite of bees and larger butterflies.</p>
        <p>Ditch banks and relatively open moist areas are the best habitats for clumps of golden flowers that enliven September green  ox-eye, wild sunflower and coreopsis.</p>
        <p>Where summer gardens planted in the borders of fields have been abandoned after harvesting, overtaking grasses and weeds surround the last wrinkled tomatoes and smooth peppers, green and ruby. The yellow flowers of remaining cantaloupe and cucumber vines summon battalions of small yellow, white, orange, pale purple and multicolored butterflies, dancing from flower to flower.</p>
        <p>Green jeweled grasshqipers, their late-in-life colors burnished with touches of bronze, mate to perpetuate their population in the coming year. Moths, wasps and a whole catalog of smaller insects can be seen, sometimes entrapped in spider webs that sparkle with a network of dew diamonds.</p>
        <p>The most arresting fruit of autumn wild plants is the dark burgandy clusters of poke berries festooning plants that are often six or more feet high. These are said to be suitable for making pokeberry wine  although that seems to be a lost art.</p>
        <p>While some of Septembers wild flowers and insects can be viewed as the day advances, many of the flowers close their bright petals as the day warms, as the moisture of dew or mist burns away.</p>
        <p>Nothing quite compares with the revelation of nature at its most fascinating in the early hours of autumn daylight, when the dew adds its special dimension of silvery beauty.</p>
        <p>BACK IN FLIGHT  A gcvgeously patterned butterfly. In colors of deep orange veined with black markings and a scattering of white dots, takes flight after alighting for a moment on a spray of pink lady fingem.</p>
        <p>SURVIVAL RITUAL  During September, grasii|ioppers can be seen in the mating ritual to ensure the survival of their species. At this time of year, the emerald colors of these insects take on a touch of bronze coloration.</p>
        <p>GATHERING NOURISHMENT  A small creamy-yellow tetterfiy (perhaps a moth) gathers a tiny hit of nourishment clinging in an upside down position to a thumbnail-sized tangarine-hued morning glory.</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0082" />
        <p>Crossword By eucene sheffer</p>
        <p>ACROSS</p>
        <p>1 Pounded 6 Confuse</p>
        <p>12 Buck</p>
        <p>13 Arthur's resting place</p>
        <p>14 Long race</p>
        <p>15 Decorative bow</p>
        <p>16 Tears partner</p>
        <p>17 Cacao containers</p>
        <p>19 Soldiers; short</p>
        <p>20 Tower setting</p>
        <p>22 CIAs predecessor</p>
        <p>24 Invite</p>
        <p>27 Chinese cookers</p>
        <p>29 Sailing cry</p>
        <p>32 Navy vessel</p>
        <p>35 Auld Lang "</p>
        <p>36 Kermit, e.g.</p>
        <p>37 Corral</p>
        <p>38 Guys date</p>
        <p>40 Return of the Jedi" critter</p>
        <p>42   Miserables 44 Frosted 46 Tide type 50 Wise goddess 52 Marmalade base</p>
        <p>54 As 1 was going to</p>
        <p>55 Less flat</p>
        <p>56 Landlords employees</p>
        <p>57 Prerequisites</p>
        <p>DOWN 1 Fish eating And</p>
        <p>2 A New Life star</p>
        <p>3 Finish a shake</p>
        <p>4 Audience</p>
        <p>5 Falls asleep</p>
        <p>6 Poet</p>
        <p>7 Dispatch boat</p>
        <p>8 Ai^jective for the Beatles</p>
        <p>9 Most important</p>
        <p>10 WKRP actress Anderson</p>
        <p>11 Football linemen</p>
        <p>Solution time: 27 mins.</p>
        <p>Yesterdays answer 9-17</p>
        <p>12 Grass moisture</p>
        <p>18 Symbol of might</p>
        <p>21 Jima</p>
        <p>23 Actor Mineo</p>
        <p>24 Dunderhead</p>
        <p>25 Bashful</p>
        <p>26 Royal power</p>
        <p>28 Poker variety</p>
        <p>30 Singleton</p>
        <p>31 Longing</p>
        <p>33 Princess perturber</p>
        <p>34 Conceit</p>
        <p>39 The</p>
        <p>Titanic, for one</p>
        <p>41 Scoundrel</p>
        <p>42 Girl</p>
        <p>43 Famous last</p>
        <p>words?</p>
        <p>45 One Mama</p>
        <p>47 Oklahoma city</p>
        <p>48 Long times</p>
        <p>49 Apiece</p>
        <p>51 December 31, e.g.</p>
        <p>53 Actress  Dawn Chong</p>
        <p>32</p>
        <p>16</p>
        <p>!4  25  26</p>
        <p>36</p>
        <p>42</p>
        <p>50</p>
        <p>54</p>
        <p>56</p>
        <p>43</p>
        <p>38</p>
        <p>20</p>
        <p>33</p>
        <p>w</p>
        <p>39</p>
        <p>44</p>
        <p>36</p>
        <p>45</p>
        <p>40</p>
        <p>13</p>
        <p>28</p>
        <p>22</p>
        <p>34</p>
        <p>53</p>
        <p>23</p>
        <p>29</p>
        <p>41</p>
        <p>46</p>
        <p>10 11</p>
        <p>30</p>
        <p>47</p>
        <p>48</p>
        <p>31</p>
        <p>49</p>
        <p>9-17</p>
        <p>CRYPTOQUIP</p>
        <p>FDE GSGVQUNM IIJRAURA AEFDVI NGBGQUFR SMI-QURGQUFR; GR UIYGRS</p>
        <p>U R</p>
        <p>QZM BZFEGY IMG.</p>
        <p>Yesterdays Cryptoquip: TO GET A ROOM AT THE OASISS HOTEL, GREASE THE PROPRIETORS PALM.</p>
        <p>Todays Cryptoquip clue: R equals N</p>
        <p>Horoscope___</p>
        <p>FORECAST FOR MONDA Y Sept, 19</p>
        <p>ARIES (March 21 to April 19): Still flirting with chance? Its exciting, perhaps, but associations that go against your moral fiber are never going to be worth the cost.</p>
        <p>TAURUS (April 20 to May 20): Going along with change today is the best course of action. Your ideas and concerns will impact at a later date with positive results.</p>
        <p>GEMINI (May 21 to June 21): Things may seem to be heading in a new direction, but they arent too different. Wait for the dust to settle before you take action.</p>
        <p>MOON CHILDREN (June 22 to July 21): You will need to handle others feelings very delicately now, as some individuals close to you are thin-skinned and anxious this week.</p>
        <p>LEO (July 22 to Aug. 21): An almost worn-out, sentimental tie still exerts its pull today, and you feel a troubling response which you need to try to control.</p>
        <p>VIRGO (Aug. 22 to Sept. 22): Your penetrating analysis comes to your aid today. A colleague may place you in an uncomfortable position that taxes your social abilities.</p>
        <p>LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22): Though tempted otherwise, stick with a positive method to regain a personal aim. The evening is best used for repaying social debts.</p>
        <p>SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21): A pragmatic view of your circumstances today seems to indicate that hard work will pull you from your present circumstances.</p>
        <p>SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21): A new spirit of cooperation with others continues to offer you an opportunity to move forward witn the blessings of an influential observer.</p>
        <p>CAPRICORN-(Dec. 22 to Jan.20): Making some needed changes at work will solve some of the problems you are facing today. Others are likely to resist change.</p>
        <p>AQUARIUS (Jan. 21 to Feb. 19): Extra care at this time will prevent the possibility of an accident. Sidestep that hassle at work. Dont allow yourself to be drawn in.</p>
        <p>PISCES (Feb. 20 to March 20): Have a serious talk with a new associate who you are slightly out of step with. Dont attach too much significant to protests.</p>
        <p>(c) 1988, The McNaught Syndicate Inc.</p>
        <p>SSBBSSBSBBBSaSS^</p>
        <p>Fiwn The Carroll Rlghter ImtitiiiUit</p>
        <p>FORECAST FOR SUNDAY Sept. 18</p>
        <p>ARIES (March 21 to April 19): You will be faced with a situation where you' must decide between several new projects, but dont base your decision soley on intuition.</p>
        <p>TAURUS (April 20 to May 20): A friend may be urging you to get into some risky financial venture, but rely on your intuition instead. Drive with the utmost care tonight.</p>
        <p>GEMINI (May 21 to June 21): A business affair has you confused, but it re-, ally isnt worth all the trouble it is causing. A friend can help you finish this up quickly.</p>
        <p>MOON CHILDREN (June 22 to July 21): Be sure that any new projects you' have in mind will not backfire. Listen to your mates opinions, as they can help.</p>
        <p>LEO (July 22 to Aug. 21): You will have the opportunity to deepen relationships and improve understanding today, so get together with your good-friends.</p>
        <p>VIRGO (Aug. 22 to Sept. 22): Avoid hurrying from one place to another today. Take your time instead, and enjoy the scenery. Do some entertaining to-~ night at home.</p>
        <p>LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22): Indulge yourself with some favorite recre-' ational activities, and improve your mood immensely. You can make some great contacts now.</p>
        <p>SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21): Even if it is a bit difficult to handle, do a favor for a friend who is in a tight spot. You will be repaid in spades for your effort.</p>
        <p>SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21): A person who is too often apt to go off on crazy tangents could deter your progress if you allow it, so avoid this person.</p>
        <p>CAPRICORN (pec. 22 to Jan.20): Dont be overly critical of a friend who is in an argumentative mood, as this person has problems. Put yourself in his or her place instead.</p>
        <p>AQUARIUS (Jan. 21 to Feb. 19): Dont take any foolish risks today, or you could lose a bundle. If your mate asks you to do a difficult chore, acquiesce cheerfully.</p>
        <p>PISCES (Feb. 20 to March 20): Your energy level will be unusually high today, so use it to get ahead with work on your home. Later relax with your good * friends.</p>
        <p>(c) 1988, The McNaught Syndicate Inc.</p>
        <p>Bridge</p>
        <p>Bj, CHARLES COREN AND OMAR SHARIF</p>
        <p>North-South vulnerable, deals.</p>
        <p>NORTH  K97 9 KQ9 0 98 5  A K JS EAST 832 9 J 7643 0 A 10 2 62</p>
        <p>SHOOT THE MAXIMLWRITERI North</p>
        <p>WEST </p>
        <p>9 0</p>
        <p>Q6 10 8 5 K J6  10 9 7 4 3</p>
        <p>SOUTH  A J 10 5 4 9 A 2 0 Q743  Q8 The bidding:</p>
        <p>North  East  South</p>
        <p>1   Pass  1  </p>
        <p>1 NT  Pass  2  0</p>
        <p>2   Pass  4   Pass</p>
        <p>Pass  Pass</p>
        <p>Opening lead; Five of 9</p>
        <p>West</p>
        <p>Pass</p>
        <p>Before reading on, cover the East-West hands and decide how you would play four spades after the lead of the five of hearts. Then see how a world champion handled this problem in the Spingold Team Championship at the recent Summer North American Championships in Salt Lake City.</p>
        <p>If the bidding seems a little strange, it is because North-South were playing weak no-trump opening bids. Norths flrst two bids, therefore, described a balanced hand of 15-17 points.</p>
        <p>Theres a bridge maxim that states: Eight ever, nine never! In other words, with eight trumps missing the queen, you should always finesse. The first problem is that you can take the finesse either way. If you do finesse, which defender are you going to play for the queen? Secondly, the one thing we</p>
        <p>have learned in a long career of writing about bridge is never to use the words never or always.</p>
        <p>Suppose you take a losing finesse for the trump queen. The defenders will almost surely be able to score three diamond tricks for a one-trick set. Is there a better line? Yes, by combining your chances. Cash the ace-king of trumps in an attempt to drop the queen. As the cards lay, and as the hand was played, that resulted in two overtricks.</p>
        <p>Switch the queen and eight of spades, so that the lady does not</p>
        <p>appear. Now play two more rounds of hearts, discarding a diamond from hand. Then start on the clubs. As long as the player with the long trump has at least three hearts and two clubs, you will get two diamond discards from hand and can lose no more than two diamond tricks and a trump.</p>
        <p>For information about Charles Gorens newsletter for bridge play&amp;gt; ers, write Goren Bridge Letter, P.O. Box 4426, Oriando, Fla. 32802-4426.</p>
        <p>Tired Of All That Junk In Your Garage? Then Call Our Classified Department At 752-6166 And One Of Our Friendly Ad-Visers Will Help You Move It!</p>
        <p>niNKT WINKIBBMN</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0083" />
        <p>The Daily Reflector. Greenville, N.C.</p>
        <p>Sunday, September 18,1988  D-3</p>
        <p>IN NEW SHOW  "Spring Garden, a painting by Bettie B. Cooper, is on view in a new exhibition at the Beaufort County Arts Council and Washington Civic Center in Washington, N.C. The show also features work by Ben Goodman of Wilson, Dianne Ford of Raleigh and a display of shells by Jerrny Frye Worrall of Washington.</p>
        <p>%</p>
        <p>An article for new adult readers</p>
        <p>F-14 Jet Goes Down In The Atlantic</p>
        <p>An F-14 jet fell into the Atlantic Ocean off the North Carolina coast Tuesday, September 13. The crew of the jet was practicing combat movements when the accident happened. One</p>
        <p>crew member was found dead and the other</p>
        <p>missing.</p>
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        <p>Ask a pal to help!</p>
        <p>Find and circle the new words for this week in the word search.</p>
        <p>missing movements crew'  practicing</p>
        <p>combat  accident</p>
        <p>coast</p>
        <p>which will complete the sentence.</p>
        <p>The puzzle has one piece jn__</p>
        <p>The _was  made up of two people.</p>
        <p>The troops were ready for _</p>
        <p>The dancers practiced their l We visited the _</p>
        <p>for a week.</p>
        <p>The visitors were in a car ^ The boy is _</p>
        <p>for the game.</p>
        <p>A literacy service of* The Daily Reflector NIE Department.</p>
        <p>For additional literacy information: Literacy Volunteers of America-Pitt County 752-0439</p>
        <p>Pitt Community College 750-3130 Ext. 318</p>
        <p>Four Featured In New Washington Show</p>
        <p>By WANDA JOHNSON Beaufort Countv Arts Council</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON, N.C. -Washington artist Bettie B. Cooper is one of three artists featured in a new exhibit at the Beaufort County Arts Council and Washington Civic Center, the old train depot on Main and Gladden streets, downtown Washington.</p>
        <p>Exhibiting with Mrs. Cooper are Ben Goodman of Wilson and Dianne Ford of Raleigh. The show also includes a display of shells collected by Jenny Frye Worrall of Washington.</p>
        <p> Mrs. Coopers interest in painting began after she received the B.S. degree in vocational home economics from East Carolina University. While teaching in the Charlotte schools, she studied with Esther Skeen.</p>
        <p>Her paintings have won several awards and are represented in private collections.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Coopers art reflects a love of landscapes, of familiar local scenes and wildflowers in watercolors and oils.</p>
        <p> Ben Goodman moved to Wilson from the Midwest where he was active painting, teaching and exhibiting art in Missouri, Illinois, Texas, Arkansas and Tennessee.</p>
        <p>After early retirement in 1967, Goodman begain painting full time. His oils and watercolors are in private collections and galleries from coast to coast. In the Washington show, his work includes landscapes, boats, old buildings and wildlife.</p>
        <p> Ms. Ford, a largely self-taught textile artist, has created quilts since 1979. Her work has progressed from traditional patchwork to contemporary, original design which are</p>
        <p>hand dyed using cold water procion dyes on cotton muslin.</p>
        <p>She received a B.S. degree in biology from Wake Forest University. Her work has been shown in many shows. Her quilts are in private collections and she has received numerous awards.</p>
        <p> An avid shell collector, Mrs. Worrall has collected from varied sources for the past 50 years, through trading and in correspondence with collectors in Guam, England, the Philippines and Greece. Another favorite source of her shell collecting is along the east coast of the U.S. She is a charter member of the N.C. Shell Club.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Worrall donated a collection of North Carolina and international shells to the A.C.D. Noe Library in Bath in memory of her husand, Wallace R. Worrall. She is a retired school teacher who taught at Bath High School for 24 years.</p>
        <p>A reception for the artists, free and open to the public, will be held from 4 p.m. to 6 p.m. on Oct. 2.</p>
        <p>For more details on this and other events of the council, call 975-6993. '</p>
        <p>f</p>
        <p>TUSCAN DRAWINGS</p>
        <p>DETROIT (AP) - A loan of 100 rare drawings from the Uffizi Gallery of Florence, Italy, will be on view at the Detroit Institute of Arts Oct. 16,1988-Jan.8,1989.</p>
        <p>The museum says "16th Century Tuscan Drawings is a "panoramic view of a supreme movement in Italian art, when drawing was considered the parent of architecture, sculpture and painting The drawings also "offer an insight into the passionate collecting of the Medici dynasty, which ruled Tuscany for more than two centuries."</p>
        <p>THE UNIVERSE  .Mexican artist Rufino Tamayo poses in front of his stained-glass mural titled The Universe. The 600-square foot, 3.8 ton window is the lone work of art in a specially designed museum, the Universe Pavilion in .Monterray, .Mexico. The work took Tamayo nearly a year to complete. (APLaserphoto)</p>
        <p>Its been over200 years since ttie ^ of a red jacket caused ttiis much emtement</p>
        <p>They're coining. Tlwyre wearing red. And theres definite^ cause for excitement.</p>
        <p>Theyre The Red Phone Books'* from Carolina Telephone. The GreenvUle directories are filled with more calling, shopping and community information than erer before.</p>
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        <pb facs="00097037_0084" />
        <p>A Modern Israeli Battleground Reveals Old Biblical Conflicts</p>
        <p>By NICOLAS B.TATRO Associated Press Writer AFIQ, Israeli-Annexed Golan Heights (AP) - With the thud of modern artillery in the background, archeologists are uncovering evidence that the Golan Heights was as</p>
        <p>fierce a' battleground in biblical times as it is today.</p>
        <p>The battles between the Ara-means (of ancient Syria) and Israelis were governed by the same geopolitical considerations as today; Whoever holds the high ground has a</p>
        <p>IN WORKSHOP  Blanche Kammer-Monroe is shown teaching techniques of the art of marbling to public school teachers. The instructional workshop was held Saturday at the Greenville Museum of Art.</p>
        <p>Demonstration In Marbeling For Area School Teachers</p>
        <p>A marbeling workshop for art teachers in the Pitt County/Greenville public schools was presented by artist Blanche Kammer-Monroe Saturday at the Greenville Museum of Art, 802 South Evans Street.</p>
        <p>Marbled paper has been traced back to at least as early as the beginning of the 12th century in Japan. Until well into the 19th century, the craft of marbeling was a mystery to most artists and precautions were taken by practictioners that its secret remained in the hands of a select few.</p>
        <p>Due to the learning process which involves considerable time and the difficulty of obtaining materials and</p>
        <p>t(xHs, few artists today practice this craft.</p>
        <p>Ms. Kammer-Monroe studied the techniques of marbeling at the Penland School of Crafts.</p>
        <p>The Saturday workshop was geared to public school teachers in hopes that they can in turn learn and teach some of the techniques to their students.</p>
        <p>The workshop is a part of the Greenville Museum of Artss teacher-training education program. It was made possible with the help of a grant from the North Carolina Arts Council.</p>
        <p>Wildlife Photographs Show</p>
        <p>BEAUFORT - The top l photographs from .National Wildlife magazine's 1986 Photo Contest are on exhibit at the North Carolina Maritime Museum through October 8th. The museum is Icated at 315 Front Street in Beaufort.</p>
        <p>Over 8,000 entries were submitted by almost 2,300 amateur photographers in the contest.</p>
        <p>National Wildlife editors selected first-place winners in five catagories; wildlife, people in the outdoors, landscapes and plant life, humor in nature, and underwater life. In addition, six photographs received merit awards and 89 others were selected to round out the exhibition.</p>
        <p>The exhibition was organized by the Leigh Yawkey Woodson Art Museum. Wausau. Wisconsin, in cooperation with the .National Wildlife Federation.</p>
        <p>The showing at the N.C. Maritime Museum is part of a two year national tour funded in part by the Wisconsin Arts Board. Following the national tour, these photos will be added to the wildlife art collection of the Woodson Art Museum.</p>
        <p>The Friends of the North Carolina Maritime Museum are sponsoring the exhibit.</p>
        <p>The maritime museum is open weekdays from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., Saturdays 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., and Sundays 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. There is no admission charge.</p>
        <p>MAJOR DEGAS EXHIBITION NEW YORK (AP) - The first major retrospective exhibition in 50 years of the work of Edgar Degas (1834-1917) will be on display at the Metropolitan Museum of Art Oct. 11, 1988-Jan.8,1989.</p>
        <p>Degas will include paintings, pastels, drawings, monotypes, prints, photographs and sculpture representing every aspect of the career of the versatile artist.</p>
        <p>The museum says, Degas lively depictions of racetrack scenes and jockeys, his ballet pictures and his series of laundresses, milliners, brothel scenes, landscapes and bathers will all be represented.</p>
        <p>The exhibition first opened at the Grand Palais in Paris and then traveled to the National Gallery of Canada in Ottawa.</p>
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        <p>strategic advantage, said ar-cheologist Moshe Kohavi, head of a Tel Aviv University expedition excavating four sites in the Golan Heights with the help of American, Japanese, Finnish and Israeli volunteers.</p>
        <p>The sites are the Leviah Enclosure, a wedge-shaped promontory over the Sea of Galilee with gorges on three sides and high walls on the fourth; Tel Hadar, where a large royal winter palace has been unearthed on the eastern shores of the Sea of Galilee; Tel Soreg, a hilltop town on the Ein Gev river; and Rogem Hiri, which has been nicknamed the Stonehenge of the Golan.</p>
        <p>Afiq, a kibbutz where the archeologists are based, preserves the name of the biblical Aphek, the 9th century B.C. battleground where the Israelite King Ahabs chariots and foot soldiers defeated the army of Ben Haddad, the Aramean king, who had conquered much of Israel after sweeping across the Golan.</p>
        <p>Ahab fought for the same advantage as we do, said Kohavi, alluding to Israels battles with Syria for the Golan in 1967 and 1973. Israel annexed the 42- by 15-mile territory with its</p>
        <p>20,000 residents in 1981.</p>
        <p>Although ancient sites dot the map of the Golan, most are unexplored. The Syrians put the area off limits as a military zone and foreign exj^di-tions have for the most part avoided it since 1967 because it is still disputed.</p>
        <p>There are more ancient sites than modern ones, said Matti Zohar, a Hebrew University of Jerusalem ar-cheologist working with Kohavis expedition.</p>
        <p>Evidence to support the Golans historical status as a battlefield</p>
        <p>comes mainly from the cities construction, especially the high walls.</p>
        <p>An iron arrowhead was found at Tel Hadar and a dog-shaped bronze finial, the top of a standard, was found at Tel Soreg.</p>
        <p>Weapons and armor were precious because they were made of metal, Kohavi said. It was very expensive and was not left lying on the battlefield. What is found is usually discovered in caches or in tombs but this is rare.</p>
        <p>City walls, the main entrance, private houses and public buildings at Leviah indicate it was a city spread over 20 acres rather than a fort or large cattle pen as previously believed. The emphasis on walls and natural defense gives insight into life during the Bronze Age, 3,000-2,000 B.C.</p>
        <p>The people lived in large cities, probably war-like ones, and they chose their sites for strategic reasons, Kohavi said of a half-dozen similar sites in the Golan. There was apparently no major power to pacify the area.</p>
        <p>These were large fortified cities that probably fought each other like the Greek city states, he said, standing on the ancient citys stone gate and sweeping his hand toward three large squares stretching across about 100 yards, where Israeli students from the Technion University in Haifa were digging out rows of stone that were the walls of ancient houses.</p>
        <p>Leviah was an exciting find, Kohavi said, because it proves that the Golan was a thriving population center as early as the 4th century B.C. and not a fringe area as had been believed. The pottery and building style also indicated links with ancient Lebanon.</p>
        <p>Only a few miles from Syria, the distant rumble of tank and artillery could be heard as Israeli troops conducted maneuvers. We cant escape from whats going on in todays Golan, said Kohavi.  *</p>
        <p>Throughout the Old Testament period the Golan Heights, a volcanic plain 1,650 feet above the Sea of Galilee, was the focus of a power struggle between the Kings of Israel and the Arameans who were based near modern-day Damascus.</p>
        <p>Its importance was recognized by King David, who sought to neutralize the power of the ruler of the Land of Geshur, as the Golan was known, by marrying his daughter Maacah. Their son Absalom later led a rebellion against David.</p>
        <p>Kohavi, seeking the first archeological evidence to confirm the biblical stories, believes one seat of Geshur government may have been Tel Hadar, which was in a no-mans land between Israeli and Syrian armies before 1%7, and sits on a rise surrounded with weeds and barbed wire near a crowded summer resort.</p>
        <p>Archeologists have unearthed a large royal winter palace there on the eastern shore of the Sea of Galilee. The palace, which covered two acres next to what is now an amusement park, was destroyed by fire at the end of the 11th century B.C. The most visually striking aspect of the dig are granaries in the palaces basement. An archaeologist bent and picked up pieces of burnt grain more than 25 centuries old to show a reporter.</p>
        <p>A bullclozer helped remove large basalt stones from around the entrance to the ancient palace. Among the finds were two de icately carved legs to a basalt stoneware pot and a perfectly preserved long-necked beer</p>
        <p>jug that was twisted and partially melted by the intense blaze.</p>
        <p>At Tel Soreg, midway between the Sea of Galilee and Afiq, volunteers sifted the remains of the settlement that was continuously inhabitated for</p>
        <p>2,000 years and is believed by some to have been the biblical Aphek, a possibility Kohavi discounts because it was too small to match the biblical descriptions.</p>
        <p>The Golans battles even touched Tel Soreg, though it was out of the path of armies marching across the; plateau two miles away. When the Arameans and Israelites were fighting, the residents of Tel Soreg built a high wall for defense, in the 9th and 8th centuries B.C., he said.</p>
        <p>Zohar is trying to unravel the' mystery of Rogem Hiri, which the Druse Arabs have named the stone heap of the wild cat.</p>
        <p>The four concentric circles of stone walls with a 6'/2-yard-high mound of stones in the middle has been likened to Stonehenge, the Neolithic stone circle in England. Like Stonehenge, it may have been an astronomical observatory; the entrance marks the point of sunrise on the longest day of the year.  1I CiispeCC's I I CoviT to Cover |</p>
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        <p>WeVe opened New Doors for Healthcare in Eastern North Carolina</p>
        <p>September IS, 1988 marks the opening of a new admission entrance to tt G)unty Memorial Hospital. All inpatients and ()utpatients will use the new entrance, and will have easy access to the facility with ample parking adjacent to the building. Visitors will continue to use the existing main entrance.</p>
        <p>The new admisskins area is loated more ainveniendy to the areas where many patients receive diagnostic tests during the admitting pnicedures. Also included in the expaaskin is a new Laboratory Medicine Department and a new Medical Records Department.</p>
        <p>The emeiy^ncy entrance to tt County Memorial Hospital will remain in its previous location on Emeigency Ditre off of Stantonsbuig Road Emeigency patients, obstetrical patients and patients with appointments at the Magnetic Resonance Imaging Center will continue to use the emergency entrance.</p>
        <p>This projea is a part of the multi-phase development at tt G)unty Memorial Hospital which represents the misskm of the hospital as an academic medical teaching center</p>
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        <p>PITTCOUNTY MEMORIAL HOSPITAL</p>
        <p>200 Slantonsbufg RoadRO. Box 6028Greenvill^ 27835(919)551-4100</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0085" />
        <p>A PLACE OF TFIKIR OWN  Children have a way of finding a place of their own-away from adults. These two unidentified youngsters, attending the recent'reunion at Somerset Place in Washington County, discovered a place of retreat in the shade,of a large tree to enjoy a lunch on the grass. (Reflector Phofo by Jerry Raynor)</p>
        <p>Ay cock Harvest Day</p>
        <p>FIIEMONT  Herb preparation, herj^l teas and samples lor all will be jjmong highlights of the annual Haavest Day at Aycock Birthplace Staft Historic site near Fremont on SepB?mber 25. Admission is free.</p>
        <p>F^mont is located nine miles norfii of Goldsboro. From Greenville IheShortest route is via U.S. 264 to Sarjjtoga. then via N.C. 222 to Fremont, a distance of of about 45 miles. Th^ite is one-half mile off U.S. 117 jusCSsouth of Fremont.</p>
        <p>Flom 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. staff and volunteers in period dress will demon-str^e mid-19th century farm activi-tieasuch as opea-hearth cooking, natflral dyeing, gardening, rope mal^ng, candlemaking and spinning.</p>
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        <p>Roanoke Museum In Plymouth Is Planned</p>
        <p>PLYMOUTH - The Washington County Historical Society, in cooperation with the Town of Plymouth, has announced details of its plan to develop the Port 0 Plymouth Roanoke River Museum here.</p>
        <p>The State is predicting that travel and tourism will be North Carolinas number one industry within the next decade, said Michael Swearingen, president of the historical society.</p>
        <p>We want to attract and project more of this visitor traffic into</p>
        <p>Plymouth and all of the Roanoke River counties on a mutual promotion basis.</p>
        <p>The overall scope of the project is to enhance local and regional economic development and historical preservation. Plymouth is near the center of the Historical Albermarle Tour area. The group also plans for the museum to become a part of that mutual promotion organization.</p>
        <p>The Roanoke River Basin in North Carolina extends from Lake Gaston</p>
        <p>A Reflector Review</p>
        <p>west of 1-95 near Roanoke Rapids to the Albermarle Sound. Counties along the river include Bertie, Halifax, Martin, Northhampton and Washington.</p>
        <p>The museum will highlight regional historical attractions, people, business and industry and the rivers environmental system.</p>
        <p>Exhibits will include Native American, Colonial, Civil War and African-American historical artifacts,</p>
        <p>A Look At Naval History In WWII</p>
        <p>SOUTH TO JAVA. By William P. Mack and William P. Mack Jr. Baltimore. The Nautical and Aviation Publishing Company. 460 pages, $19.95.</p>
        <p>(Available locally at Waldenbooks)</p>
        <p>Vice Admiral William P. Mack, former Commandant of the U.S. Naval Academy, contributed to this account of Navy action in Southeast Asia early in World War II. His son, William P. Mack Jr., wrote the book. For a first effort at writing, he did a credible job.</p>
        <p>The Pearl Harbor attack found the United States Asiatic Fleet totally in-* capable of holding back the Japanese move south. This story is based on the experiences of a* dozen Navy destroyers as they courageously fought a holding action from the Philippines to the Dutch West Indies.</p>
        <p>Vivid descriptions of night actions against the Japanese along with the personality traits of its officer and enlisted crews bring the events close home to the reader.</p>
        <p>The personalities are fictional, but for those who have served in the armed forces, they prove to be similar in many respects to the real men who served their country in the Pacific during World War II.</p>
        <p>The ships themselves were mostly outdated and ill-equipped to resist the onslaught of the more modern Japanese fleet.</p>
        <p>Lt. (JG) Ross Frazier is portrayed as a better than average career naval officer whose encounter with the daughter of a Dutch captain adds suspense and needed distraction from an otherwise day by day life of operating and trying to keep afloat a small ship built for action in World War I, not for World War II.</p>
        <p>Aycock is the birhplace and boyhood home of Charles B. Aycock. failed the Education Governor." During his term in office. 1901-1905. accomplishments included the building of almost 3.500 schoolhouses. the lengtening of the public school term, the increasing of teachers salaries and declining illiteracy in North Carolina.</p>
        <p>The birthplace, a typical 19th century family farm and homesite. includes the modest house, a separate open-hearth kitchen, corncrib and smokehouses.</p>
        <p>An 1870s one-room schoolhouse on the ground underscores Aycocks lifeling dedication to edcuation.</p>
        <p>For more details, call 242-5581.</p>
        <p>AYDEN  The names of winners in the annual Festival ol Arts and Crafts of the Ayden Collard Festival have been announced. The winners in various categories, listed in first and second places, were:</p>
        <p> Wood furnishings  Will Tripp, D.J. Freeman.</p>
        <p> Woven baskets  Pauline Owens. Terry Riggs.</p>
        <p> Flower arranging  Brenda Wilson. Mattie Pearson.</p>
        <p> Wood items  Will Tripp. Terry Riggs.</p>
        <p> Painting and drawing  Karen Robbins, tie for second by Lana Hardee and Lea Lamb.</p>
        <p> Framed needlework - H.D. Freeman. Bonnie Rogerson.</p>
        <p> Assorted crafts  Mattie Pearson, Terry Riggs.</p>
        <p> Needlework  Bertha Johnson. Dixie Braxton.</p>
        <p> Best in show award. Karen Robbins.</p>
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        <p>Admiral Mack and his son have, for those surprisingly large number of persons interested in World War II history, created an enjoyable reading experience particularly in an area about which relatively little has been written.</p>
        <p>JAMES T. CHEATHAM (Editors Note: Cheatham, a Greenville attorney, is a Commander, USNR, retired.)</p>
        <p>and displays on agriculture, forest )roducts, fishing, shipping, ship )uilding and other aspects of Roanoke River heritage.</p>
        <p>The museum will be located on a 3.3 acre site owned by the Town of Plymouth, and will include more than 6,000 square feet of space when completed. The town has recently built public access parking and a covered pier into the river at the site. A boardwalk boatdeck will be completed there this fall.</p>
        <p>The exterior scene of the museum is being designed to resemble a train at the station in a landscaped riverfront park. An on-site 1920s brick railroad depot is to be renovated into exhibit space.</p>
        <p>Donated railcars will be renovated into museum and Chamber of Commerce offices, interpretive center, open-air concert deck, gift shop, public restrooms and museum workshop/storage space.</p>
        <p>The final phase of the project will be acquisition and renovation of the 1887 Roanoke River Lighthouse, now a private residence in Edenton.</p>
        <p>Persons interested in more information are to call Mike Swearingen at 793-5745.</p>
        <p>SUNDAY LUNCNION SPiCI ALS</p>
        <p>Book News</p>
        <p>FROM SHEPPARD MEMORIAL LIBRARY</p>
        <p>By Mj DAUGHTRY Young children feel understandably proud when theyve learned to recite and recognize the alphabet. And so do their parents! As a parent reading the alphabet to your child, youve probably already discovered that there are a host of alphabet books on the market. But have you ever felt that you might scream if you saw one more ABC book that began with A is for Apple?</p>
        <p>At the Sheppard Memorial Library, we come to your aid with a large assortment of clever and^ unusual alphabet books that will challenge and entertain both your child and vou.</p>
        <p>Lots of silly, good-natured fun comes your way in Susan Gretzs Ted-dybears ABC. Here we find those irrepressible bears finding fleas in their fur, keeping kangaroos in the kitchen, or tickling in a tent.</p>
        <p>Have You Ever Seen?: An ABC Book by Beau Gardner uses silly combinations of objects and animals to pwe questions like Have you ever seen an alligator with antlers?, a spaghetti sandwich?.</p>
        <p>Also guaranteed to raise a smile is the book Certainly, Carrie, Cut the Cake, by Margaret Moore. This book of funny and sweet poems each features a letter of the alphabet.</p>
        <p>Norma Farbers This Is The Ambulance Leaving The Zoo takes the alphabet into the city with a cummulative tale introducing city scenes in alphabetical order from Ambulance to Zoo. Another book that captures the very pulse of city life is Rachel Isadoras City Seen From A to Z.</p>
        <p>For a change of scenery, try Hullabaloo ABC, by Berverly Cleary. This ABC book chronicles the adventures of two children having a wonderful time on a farm in the country.</p>
        <p>Sometimes the letters of the alphabet themselves come to life in 26 surprising anf unusual ways. In Action Alphabet, by Marty Neumeier, the letters drip, fall, jump, and orbit off the pages. Alphabatics, by Suse MacDonald, was awarded a Caldecott Honor medal. Each letter of the alphabet magically transforms itself into the object it represents. Thus, A tips over the water to become an Ark, M melts to become a Moustache, and so on. Chris Van Allsburgs highly creative The Z was Zapped depicts how A was caught in an avalanche, B was badly bitten, C was cut to ribbons and the other letters of the alphabet suffered similar mishaps.</p>
        <p>A, B, See! is another of Tana Hobans highly successful ABC concept books for children. In stunning black and white photographs of familar objects in silhouette, Tana Hoban proves once again that wonder and beauty are all around us.</p>
        <p>We end our tour of ABC books with an offering by Anita and Arnold Lobel. You can buy almost anything from the peddlers On Market Street. But have ou ever bought gloves from a peddler made of gloves?, or noodles from a ty made of noomes? Or even, yes, apples form a man made of apples?</p>
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        <pb facs="00097037_0086" />
        <p>The Moscow Circus Arrives In The U.S.</p>
        <p>THE CIKCL'S IS IN TOWN  Moscow Circus bear trainer Zolkin holds up Masha, a two and one-half-vear-old Russian brown bear, at Bostons Faneuil Hall. The Boston appearance was a preview of five days of performance in Worcester, Mass. (AP Laserphotob by Carol Krancavilla)</p>
        <p>N.C. Events In Brief</p>
        <p>Appearances By Architect At ACC, Wilson</p>
        <p>WILSON  M. Kent Brinkley, landscape architect for the Colonial Williamsburg Foundation, will make two presentations on the campus of Atlantic Christian College on Tuesday and Wednesday. He will give a lecture-slide presentation, The Gardens of Colonial Williamsburg on Tuesday at 8 p.m. At 10:30 a.m. Wednesday, Brinkley will present a*workshop, "Applications for the Local Gardener in Replicating Colonial Revival Landsacpes.</p>
        <p>Both events will be held in Hardy Alumni Hall on campus and both are free and open to the public.</p>
        <p>Concert At Jacksonville On Saturday</p>
        <p>JACKSONVILLE - Paul Morton, trumpeter, will make his recital debut as the new artist-in-residence at Coastal Carolina Community College at 8 p.m. Saturday in the auditorium of the college.</p>
        <p>The program will additionally feature Susan Gatzy, cello; Lorie Smith, piano, and Lucia Wooley, dance,*The concert will offer music from many different time periods performed by several combinations of instruments and a piece for solo trumpet and dance. The concert is free and open to the public.</p>
        <p>Quilt Project Discussion In Wilmington</p>
        <p>WILMINGTON - At 2:30 p.m. on Sept. 25, Ruth Roberson will present an update on the North Carolna Quilt Project at New Hanover County Museum of the Lower Cape Fear, 814 Market Street, Wilmington. The program is free and open to the public.</p>
        <p>The quilt project was conducted tetween 1985 and 1986 to locate and record significant quilts throughout North Carolina. It resulted in the publication of North Carolina Quilts, a book published this month which presents some of the finest and most historic quilts in the state.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Roberson will be available lor questions following her lecture. Visitors are invited to bring their quilts for examination and discussion.</p>
        <p>Journalism Workshop For Students</p>
        <p>GREENSBORO  The Greensboro Youth Council is taking registrations for the day-long Piedmont Journalism Workshop to be held Oct 15 at Guilford College. Registration deadline is Sept, 30.</p>
        <p>The workshop will provide students with suggestions and advice from professional journalists. The Greensboro News and Record is co-sponsoring the workshop</p>
        <p>To register, students are to complete a registration form ancTpay a $7 fee which includes the workshop and lunch. Students can get forms from high school journalism teachers or by calling 373-2173.</p>
        <p>By DANAKENNEDY Associated Press Writer WORCESTER, Mass. (AP) -Backstage at the Worcester Centrum, a few hundred yards from the hastily constructed ring where in a few hours the Moscow Circus was to begin its first American tour in a decade, Slava Zolkin leaned near a ^ cage and kissed one of his 12 dancing ' brown bears between the eyes.</p>
        <p>Immediately, the other bears emittedjealous growls of protest until Zolkin came by and stroked each one.</p>
        <p>I love them a lot and they love me, said Zolkin, 39, a former tightrope artist who began teaching bears to perform after he fell off the wire and broke his back in four places.</p>
        <p>Zolkin, who wears a bear keychain around his waist and hands out bear pins to visitors, said through an interpreter that he never uses force to tram his bears to dance and juggle with their feet. He chooses his bears as cubs and they live with him, his wife and daughter in their three-room apartment in the Soviet Union, until they grow too big.  ^</p>
        <p>Zolkins dedication to his bears is typical of the members of the Moscow Circus, considered on a par with the finest theater, opera and ballet in the Soviet Union.</p>
        <p>Its not your typical American circus: its an art form, said Steven E. Leber, the U.S. producer of the Moscow Circus. These people have dedicated their entire lives to it. Leber traveled to the Soviet Union to choose 11 of the best circus acts from the hundreds of performers associated with the state-run circus, a revered institution in the country. The first professional circus school</p>
        <p>Bird Club To Meet Monday</p>
        <p>The September meeting of the Greenville-River Park North Bird Club will be held at 7:30 p.m. Monday. The meeting will take place in the Parks and Recreation Building, Jaycee Park, 2000 Cedar Lane.</p>
        <p>Featured speaker for the meeting will be John Fussell of Morehead City. A life-long resident of the North Carolina coast, Fussell is widely known as one of the top birders in the state, and as the single best source of expertise on birds of North Carolians coastal fringe.</p>
        <p>He has authored a wild life book, Finding Birds in Carteret County, an informative compilation of Carodina bird life based on his knowledge of birds in his home county-</p>
        <p>In other activities, early morning bird walks are scheduled at 7 a.m. on two dates next week, on Wednesday and again on Satuday. Both will take place at River Park North.</p>
        <p>For more information, call Howard Vainright at 830-4560.</p>
        <p>METROPOLITAN ENDOWMENT NEW YORK (AP) - The Sherman Fairchild Foundation Inc. has given the Metropolitan Museum of Art $1.5 million to endow a chair in the Department of Paintings Conservation.</p>
        <p>The first recipient is John M. Brealey, chairman of the department. His position will now be known as the Sherman Fairchild Chairman of Paintings Conservation.</p>
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        <p>was established in the late 1920s. Students are trained for four years in different fields and also create their own acts. Once their act has been approved by the Circus Board, students graduate to professional careers and are guaranteed 20 years employment plus a full pension upon retirement.</p>
        <p>The Moscow Circus last performed in the United States in 1978 and just began a 15-city tour that will wind up at the Cow Palace in San Francisco Jan. 1.</p>
        <p>These are the superstars of the circus in the Soviet Union, the real headliners, said Leber.</p>
        <p>Included in the circus are the bears, Sumatran tigers, clowns, jugglers, aerialists, trapeze artists and horsemen.</p>
        <p>One of the most spectacular acts is called The Flying Cranes, which consists of 10 aerial artists who combine a quadruple somersault and other daring acts with the choreography of a ballet as their movements tell their story of the soldiers who died in World War II, their souls becoming like those of cranes. When I appear in the arena, I immediately forget about everything else, said Lena Golovko, 24, who with her husband, Vilen, is a star of The Flying Cranes.</p>
        <p>Our life is in the circus where we work. But one cannot say that it is... that it is just work. It is our way of life. Because all of our thoughts are with our work.</p>
        <p>The Cranes had its premiere in 1985, and creator Petro Maestrenka said it will be performed until we are absolutely sure there will be peace.</p>
        <p>Another notable performer and trainer is Tamerlan Nugzarov, who oversees the 12 horses and horsemen who perform breathtaking stunts. Nugzarov, a short, powerfully-built man with a fierce demeanor, is from a circus family. He comes from the Caucasus mountain range in the Soviet Union where both men and the horses they ride are known to be fearless.</p>
        <p>Nugzarov and the other Cossack riders need courage. At times, all 12 horses gallop at full speed in the ring. Sometimes the riders are on the top of the horses, at other times they are beneath them. Sometimes they are beside them, with their arms and torsos dragged on the ground, both men and horses jumping through hoops surrounded by knives.</p>
        <p>A lot of the tricks have a method to it, said Nugzarov, speaking through an interpreter a few hours before the show. There is this myth and legend to everything we do.  </p>
        <p>The act is dangerous but Nugzarov said there have been few injuries.</p>
        <p>They have hot been major, he said. After all, the hardest injuries are those to the soul.</p>
        <p>Equally daunting to watch is Nikolai Pavlenko as he steps into the cage with his 17 wild Sumatran tigers</p>
        <p>and coaxes them into performi| without ever using a whip.</p>
        <p>My attitude about my work is dfe tated by my attitude toward them J he said. Animals should be allowM to show their character. They shouK not be oppressed nor made to thiiflt: like we think.  </p>
        <p>POSTWAR ART WORKS Z</p>
        <p>LOS ANGELES (AP)  A group Qf 21 postwar American art wor^ selected from the Norton Simo Museum are on view at the Lo Angeles County Museum of Art.</p>
        <p>The long term loan includes su^ early works as three paintings by Richard Diebenkorn and Sam Francis monumental canvas Basel Mural.</p>
        <p>Several important works by pop artists are on view, among them Roy Lichtensteins Big Modern Painting, Claes Oldenburgs soft sculpture Giant Soft Ketchup Bottle, a still life by Tom Wesselman and Andy Warhols Brillo boxes. *</p>
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        <pb facs="00097037_0087" />
        <p>Farmville Arts Coiuhcil To Present 'Wizard Of Oz</p>
        <p>A favorite to be on stage for four performances</p>
        <p>WIZARD PRINCIPALS - Performers with major rles in the Farmville Community Arts Councils production of The Wizattf of Oz are shown here. From left to right are Jay Brpibleloe, the,Scarecrow; Eric Shine, tl^ Tin Woodmafiiikd Michael Culp, the Cowardly Lion.</p>
        <p>In the forefront is Annessa Cotterman, who has the role of Dorothy. Productions will be given in the auditorium at Farmville Central High School Wednesday through Saturday, and again on Sept. 25.</p>
        <p>FARMVILLE - This week the Farmville Community Arts Council will present The Wizard of Oz. a musical dramatization by Frank Gabrielson of L. Frank Baums classic story.</p>
        <p>Performances will be presented Wednesday through Saturday at 8 p.m. and on September 25 at 3 p.m. in the Farmville Central High School Auditorium.</p>
        <p>Tickets are $6 and can be purchased at the door or in advance in Farmville at Williams Jewelers, Charles Joyner Clothier, BB&amp;amp;T, Farmville Furniture, and the Art Council office, and in Greenville at the Golden Gull.</p>
        <p>Annessa Cotterman will be seen in the role of Dorothy. She is accompanied on her quest by three faithful companions, Jay Brumbleloe as the Scarecrow, Eric Shine in the role of the Tin Woodman, and Michael Culp as the Cowardly Lion.</p>
        <p>Along the way they meet both the benevolent Sorceress of the North, played by Mary Morrison Dixon, and the Wicked Witch, played by Etsil Mason.</p>
        <p>Willa Bullock plays Aunt Em; Dillon Watson is Uncle Henry; and Jim Hinson is the Wizard.</p>
        <p>According to director Kenneth Ginn, one of the interesting challenges to this production was utilizing the strengths of both the play and the movie versions, which differ slightly.</p>
        <p>In some respects the play is better. More comedy is displayed and several dance sequences and vocal</p>
        <p>fOnePerformance Of 'Evita' Set At ECU</p>
        <p>numbers are added. Illusions and special effects are in abundance.</p>
        <p>Only a live performance can capture this kind of excitement, Ginn said.</p>
        <p>The talents of Sue Ann Culp as the musical director, and Dot Dee Slaughter, the productions choreographer, aid Ginn in successfully materializing the magical land of Oz.</p>
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        <p>ECL NEWS BUREAU le national touring production of Vita, the Tony Award-winning ical by Andrew Lloyd Webber Tim Rice, will be presented for a</p>
        <p>single performance at East Carolina University Thursday at 8 p.m. in Wright Auditorium.</p>
        <p>The performance is a special added attraction to ECUs 1988-89 Per-</p>
        <p> EVITA STARS  Madeleine Homan and Steven Snow are starring in the l|88 National Tour presentation of the musical, Evita, to be presented for (jie performance only at 8 p.m. Thursday in Wright Auditorium on the ECU campus. Tickets, now available, are priced at $20 for adults and $15 for youths.</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>j Carolina Today Listing</p>
        <p>The calender for ipe coming week on Carolina Today is given below. All tmes listed are a.m.A|</p>
        <p> Monday  6:40, Sl. Tii</p>
        <p>Timothys lobster fair; 7:15, Laura Eubanks, singer; , pet of thweek;s7 :40, N.C. Pickle Festival.</p>
        <p> Tuesday  6:40,, Healthbreak; 7:15, Mt. Olive Singers; 7:25, Robert Idwell, president of N.C. Grange; 7:40, Don Powers, assistant head coach, view of Southern hlississippi game.</p>
        <p>5* Wedtsday - 6:4o, Education Spotlight; 7:15, Wizard of Oz, Farmville (immunity Arts Council; 7:25, Pitt Memorial Hospital volunteers; 7:30, arah Friday, Beach Sweep clean up; 7:40, Lib Griffin, author of Mjdh and Misery of Marriage.</p>
        <p>; Thursday - 6:40, Wildlife protector Milton Jones; 7:15, Mt. Olive Pickle lackers, square dancers; 7:25, ECU Parents Day Weekend and activities; 7*40, all around the house.</p>
        <p> Friday - 6:40, Pettigrew State Park; 7:15, N.C,Pickle Festival, The Fab-iJous Four, singers; 7:25, Camp Lejune report; 7:,|0, Eddie Harrington, the p{ant doctor.</p>
        <p>Tickets On Sale Now!</p>
        <p>EVITA</p>
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        <p>Thursday, September 22nd</p>
        <p>8 pm - Wright Auditorium East Carolina University</p>
        <p>) </p>
        <p>For Tickets Call or Writo:</p>
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        <p>forming Arts Series.</p>
        <p>Tickets to Evita are on sale at the ECU Central Ticket Office in Mendenhall Student Center for $20 each for adults and $15 for youths. Telephone ticket orders may be placed with major credit cards by dialing the ticket office at 757-6611 on weekdays from 11 a.m. until 6 p.m.</p>
        <p>Based on the life of Eva Peron, second wife of Argentine dictator Juan Peron, Evita is a romanticized biography of the young girl from the Argentine backwater who succeeds in her determination to get to Buenos Aires and gain power and position.</p>
        <p>As mistress and later wife of the military dictator Juan Peron, Evita was noted as the most powereful woman ever known in Latin America. She was tremendously popular  almost regarded as a living saint - by the Argentine masses, the descamisados, shirtless ones, at the time of her death in 1952.</p>
        <p>It is unlikely that even the beloved and glamorous Eva Peron could have sustained her level of popularity for long had she not died at age 33; Juan Peron himself lasted only a further three years in power. He did make a brief comeback from exile in Spain as president in 1973, a remarkable achievement which unfortunately did little to solve Argentinas serious economic and political problems.</p>
        <p>His third wife, Isabel, succeeded him as president after his death in 1974, but she is not part of the Evita story, which ends with Evas death.</p>
        <p>The traveling company presenting Evita includes a 15-member cast and live orchestra. The musical received seven Tony Awards, including best musical and was voted best musical by the New York Drama Critics Circle.</p>
        <p>The shows collaborators  Webber and Rice  are also noted for their musicals Cats and Jesus Christ Superstar.</p>
        <p>Pont mluagoMlthirf^</p>
        <p>^6</p>
        <p>^6</p>
        <p>To Kill A Mockingbird Oct. 13,14,15 a 16</p>
        <p>Arsenic &amp;amp; Old Lace</p>
        <p>Dec. 1, 2, 3 &amp;amp; 4 $12.50 lndlvidual/S25.00 family</p>
        <p>Subon ticLeb' |)uirchabk. thouc^ Ocloberit</p>
        <p>a night of one acts Fb. 9,10,11 a 12</p>
        <p>The Sound Of Music</p>
        <p>April 20, 21, 22 a 23</p>
        <p>Mbkb chtcks payablb to ATW and land to: ATW</p>
        <p>I.  PO  Box  293  ....r.t.  niwii _ _-</p>
        <p>Aydon, NC2M13 524-5552 Qrittonj^   g AX6</p>
        <p>For moro info call: 746-2270 day 746-2193 nigM 5244552</p>
        <p>6</p>
        <p>4</p>
        <p>6</p>
        <p>4</p>
        <p>4</p>
        <p>4</p>
        <p>4</p>
        <p>4</p>
        <p>4</p>
        <p>4</p>
        <p>4</p>
        <p>4</p>
        <p>4</p>
        <p>4</p>
        <p>4</p>
        <p>4</p>
        <p>4</p>
        <p>FRWAY, MON.-THURS.</p>
        <p>7:054:30 ONLY (NO COUPONS ACCEPTED) SATURDAY 5 SUNDAY 2:054:45-7:054:30 (NO COUPONS ACCI</p>
        <p>Tom</p>
        <p>Hanks m</p>
        <p>FRIDAY, MON.-THURS.</p>
        <p>7:204:25 ONLY SATURDAY a SUNDAY 2:204:20-7:20-0:25</p>
        <p>BRUCE</p>
        <p>WILLIS</p>
        <p>DIE HARD</p>
        <p>yi4144</p>
        <p>FRIDAY, MON.-THURS. 7:004:30 (NO COUPONS ACCEPTED) SATURDAY a SUNDAY 2;004:30-7;00-9:30</p>
        <p>Friday, Mon.-Thurs. Saturday A Sunday 7:16-9:20  2:16-4:16-7:16-9:20</p>
        <p>ThE NEwAdvENTURES of</p>
        <p>Pippi loNqsiockjNq</p>
        <p>SAT.-SUN. 2:00 &amp;amp; 4:00 ONLY</p>
        <p>Scream now, while there^s still room to breathe.</p>
        <p>THE</p>
        <p>Terror has no shape.</p>
        <p> NIGHTLY 7:10 a 9:05</p>
        <p>MOVIEGOING VALUE</p>
        <p>AT ALL LOCATIONSI</p>
        <p>NIGHTLY</p>
        <p>7:00 &amp;amp; 9:15</p>
        <p>SAT.-SUN. MATINEES 2:00 4 4:15</p>
        <p>NIGHTLY 7:05 &amp;amp; 9:20 SAT.-SUN. MATINEES 2:05 &amp;amp; 4:20</p>
        <p>UPTOWN GREENVILLE</p>
        <p>CLINT EASTWOOD is Dirty Harry</p>
        <p>A TU C</p>
        <p>$1.50) I n c</p>
        <p>*DEAD POOL</p>
        <p>WEEKDAYS 7;00 i 9:00 SAT.-SUN. 2:00-4:00-7:00 t 9:00</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0088" />
        <p>Q.8 The Daily Reflector, Greenviile, N.C.</p>
        <p>Seeking New Plays</p>
        <p>MARS HILL - The Southern Appalachian Repertory Theatre (SART) is looking for new plays. Having premiered 23 new works in its first 14 seasons. SART, aided in part by a grant from the N.C. Arts Council, Theatre Arts Section, wants to establish a continuing source for new plays by assisting playwrights to develop scripts.</p>
        <p>To be considered for the conference, a playwright must: (1) Have had at least one major play produced by a recognized theatre, professional, college or university, or community; or (2) have had at least one major play published by a recognized publishing company, and (3) submit an example of his work. It may be the script of a play previously produced or published, or a play-in-progress.</p>
        <p>Playwrights who meet the above requirements are invited to submit the script they wish to explore at the conference no later than January 1, 1989 to: Ms. Jan W. Blalock, Assistant Managing Director and Business Manager, Southern Appalachian Repertory Theatre (SART), P.O. Box 53, Mars Hill, N.C., 28754.</p>
        <p>Up to five playwrights will be selected and invited to attend the Southern Appalachian Playwrights Conference. In addition to the participating playwrights, the conference will include the managing director of SART, other directors and producers, actors, and invited guests.</p>
        <p>It will be held on the campus of Mars Hill College, 20 miles north of Asheville.</p>
        <p>Travel Films At ECU Usted</p>
        <p>"Armchair travel to six exotic locales will be available to patrons of East Carolina Universitys 1988-89 Travel-Adventure Film Series.</p>
        <p>The film itinerary is as follows;</p>
        <p>"Norwegian Saga, Oct. 13; "Americans in Paris, Oct. 25; "Italy  Places in Between," Nov. 21; Safari, Jan. 19; "Bermuda Is Another World; Feb. 6 and Nova Scotia, Newfoundland, Labrador. March 23.</p>
        <p>Each film will be narrated by its maker and will be screened at 8 p.m. in Hendrix Theatre. Season tickets are now on sale with general public tickets priced at $18 each for the six-film season.</p>
        <p>Tickets may be purchased at the Central Ticket Office in person, or ordered with major credit cards by telephoning the ticket office, 757-6611, ext. 266, on weekdays from 11 a.m. until 6 p.m.</p>
        <p>Auditions For Local Ploy</p>
        <p>Actors Theatre Southeast will hold auditions for a new play, Figment, on Monday and Tuesday at 7:30 p.m.</p>
        <p>The auditions will take place in the Willis Building on the corner of Reade and First streets, downtown Greenville.</p>
        <p>Figments is a new\ original play by local playwrights Brett Hursey and Jeff Jones,</p>
        <p>Needed for the production are three men and four women, ages 20 to 65.</p>
        <p>Also, persons interested in theatre, whether in acting, simply observing or taking part in the technical phases of production, are encouraged to at-* I he auditions.</p>
        <p>more details, call 758-7019.</p>
        <p>School Of Musk Events Scheduled</p>
        <p>Two events in music are scheduled by the School of Music, East Carolina University, during the remander of September. These are:</p>
        <p> Friday  The Phi Mu Alpha Musicale, 7 p.m., A.J. Fletcher Recital Hail on campus. Admission free,</p>
        <p> Sept. 25  Concert on the Lawn, 3 p.m., an event of the Friends of the School of Music members and their guests. For more information call 757-6851.</p>
        <p>Remember</p>
        <p>TOP TIXKS .'HI VK.VKS \(iO Your Hit Parade Sepleniber 17, IJCIX</p>
        <p>1. A-Tisket. A-Tasket</p>
        <p>2. You Go To My Head</p>
        <p>3. I've Got A Pocketful Of Dreams</p>
        <p>4. Now It Can Be Told</p>
        <p>5. Im Gonna Lock My Heart</p>
        <p>6. Stop Beating Round The Mulberry Bush</p>
        <p>7. I've Got A Date With A Dream</p>
        <p>8. So Help Me</p>
        <p>9 Alexander's Ragtime Band 10. Tulie Tulip Time</p>
        <p>Sunday, September 18, 1988</p>
        <p>SI37 YourEckord Pharmacist has important news for d  men  wtth  thinning hair.</p>
        <p>A new product has been developed that can prevent hair loss, and may actually promote hair growth This product is manufactured by a leading pharmaceutical company, and only available with a prescription from your doctor As a special service to you, prescriptions for this product are now being accepted at your Eckerd Pharmacy and you will be contacted upon its arrival So bring in your prescription today To an ickord Pharmacist, nothing'* mom Important than four health.</p>
        <p>The next time your list includes milk or snacks, think Eckerd. We're right on your way home...the perfect stop when you need:</p>
        <p>Ice cold milk  Soft Drinks Nuts Candy Snacks Count on us to have the foods you need...make a quick stop and save time...you'll save yourself a trip.</p>
        <p>SYSTEM</p>
        <p>Get our quality, even at their special price.</p>
        <p>When you find a lower locally advertised coupon for photo processing, just bring in the coupon with your order. Well match the price.</p>
        <p>limit 1 coupon per roll or disc This otter excludes mail order processing otters.</p>
        <p>We reeerve the right lo tlmtt ciuanmiee. AN monutacturen' rebotet ore HmHed to one per customer. Seasonal merchandise ovallobto while limttod quanHNes last (sorry; no rainchecks). N an adeerttsed Item Is out of stock, we'll ghte you a ra incheck or equivalent savtocM on a comparable brand.</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0089" />
        <p>SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER IK 1 AKS</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0090" />
        <p>WALTER SCOTT'SPersonality Varade</p>
        <p>Want thifacU?Opinion?Tnrtb?WritcWaHr Scott Boa 5573, Bovcrly Hills. Calif. 90210, or phone 12131651*3375. FbH nams wilt be used imieu oUieiwlse requestod. VMmie of mail makes personal repUes impossible.</p>
        <p>Q Jackie Onassis is still going around with e Maurice Tempelsman, the jeweler. But what has happened to her kid sister, Princess Lee Radzi-will? Who is she dating?Yvonne L.. Passaic, NJ.</p>
        <p>A Interior decorator Lee Radziwill, 55, has been o dating choreographer and director Herbert Ross (The Hirning Point, California Suite). )^idower of ballerina Nora Kaye, Ross, 63, recently finished directing Sally Field, Dolly Paiton, Shirley MacLaine and Olympia Dukakis in the film Steel Magnolias, shot on location in Natchitoches, La.</p>
        <p>JacMo's kM slater and date, director Herbert Ross</p>
        <p>Q During the Democratic National Convention 0 in July, Gov. Bill Clinton of Arkansas gave a 32-minute speech nominating Michael Dukakis for President. Four of us were watching on TV when one friend, weary of listening to Clinton, blurted out, Someone shouldtellBillClinton what happened to President William Henry Harrison. What did happen to Harrison?C.D., Tulsa, Okla.</p>
        <p>A Prior to Ronald Reagan, the oldest man to be  elected President was William Henry Harrison (1773-1841), Despite his 68 years, Harrison insisted on delivering his inaugural address outdoors. March 4,1841, was a cold and blustery day, but Harrison declined to wear a hat, gloves or overcoat. He spoke for one hour and 40 minutes, giving the longest inaugural speech in Presidential history. Subsequently, he came down with a cold that developed into pleurisy. On April 4exactly one month after his inauguration^President Harrison died. He was succeeded by Vice President John Tyler.</p>
        <p>ll Is Liz Taylor by chance a hypochondriac?</p>
        <p>Every few months, it seems, shes in some hospital recoveringfrom obesity, drug abuse, pneumonia or something.T. Mills, Lawrence, Kan.</p>
        <p>\ In her 56 years, Elizabeth Taylor has been XjLwhospitalized for a variety of illnesses. Last month, she spent time in St. Johns Hospital in Santa Monica, Calif., recovering finom a compression fracture of a vertebra. As to possible hypochondria, there is no evidence that she is abnormally concerned about her health or obsessed by fears of succumbing to one ailment after another.</p>
        <p>QOn July 17, you wrote that Princess Di had  never posed as a centerfold model for a mens magazine. You may be surprised to learn that in a Playboy magazine called The Parody,  Di appears in thefoldout, exposing more than her pearly white teeth.Mike Belk, Indian Trail, N.C,</p>
        <p>A To the many readers who have writtra us about X^wthat nude photo of Diana in Playboy magazine, here are the facts: In the winter of 1983, a magazine titled PlayboyThe Parody was published by Taylor/Shain Inc., which is not the company that publishes Playboy. It carried the cover line Our Reigning PlaymateLady DiA Right Royal Spread. Moreover, the centerfold revealed Di as Miss Wales, in all her pristine nakedness. What it did not reveal was that the photo was a composite, consisting of Dianas head superimposed on some other young ladys curvaceous body.</p>
        <p>Top tMrd 0f''Min WUm''CMrtwMd in Pbtrboy pwiNly</p>
        <p>Zoniwk and GraMo: Incomplete paosos iBdat faao bhn</p>
        <p>QDid Darryl Zanuck, head cf 20th Century- Fox studios, try to force Alice Faye and Betty Grable out of the movies because they refused to succumb to his sexual advances? Isnt that why he secretly destroyed nearly all the master negatives of their films, so that the Betty Grable and Alice Faye motion pictures are not available on videocassettes?Jack Biringer, Berkeley, Calif.</p>
        <p>A Daiiyl Zanuck (1902-79) was a womanizer \.m of insatiable sexual appetite. He made a pass at virtually all the actresses under contract to his studio, including Alice Faye and the late Betty Grable. When rebuffed, however, he took the rejection in stride and moved along to the next possible conquest. He never blacklisted Grable or Faye or destroyed the master negatives of their films. Few of them currently are available on videocassette, but Fox says it does plan to market its older films.</p>
        <p>QOn a recent TV talk show, the host and his</p>
        <p> guests were unanimous in contending that the warmth andfriendliness which Oprah Winfrey projects on her talk show are spurious. They said that when the TV cameras are off, Oprah becomes Miss Iceberg. Truth or sour grapes?Burns Whitaker, Valparaiso, Ind.</p>
        <p>A In our opinion, a modicum of both. Oprah Winftieys talk show may lack the chemistry of newnessand Oprah may not generate the warmth and enthusiasm she once didbut spurious and Miss Iceberg do not accurately reflect her behavior pattern.  emaascoiTimPARADE</p>
        <p>THE SUNDAY NEWSPAPER MAGAZINE</p>
        <p>SEPTEMBER 18, 1988</p>
        <p>mW cMrtrlbdiMw to: Articin,  7M TIM</p>
        <p>An.. NmIM, N.Y. 10U7. AWNVgli raatMrtI* mm win to takM, Panto b Ml mtoMlMa tor immN^ MtofW.</p>
        <p>PURie{,CbVKtMW EOITDR. Writer AitoanM PKSIDOiT, Frwik McNrity SOflOR VMX imiOENT. MBtoa Lbtofana MANASMGEDmM,l.anySiriifc DWECTOR OF MSMN, ha VMIt EIMTOR XT LARGE, UndStoam</p>
        <p>SaMMEDml,SMaBrawilir.tovM Cantar, HMtortKMtoitoig, Bari McCaiUV NNMCOnrEDmM,ltoitfciTtolM SKOAL COmESraNOO(r,EMt Atoan AnCUSEDm*,FmiCnpnRtor MOCIAIE EDITOR, Santo SL Clair PHOTO EDIIOR. Bnai Manaa</p>
        <p>GONTRMITHM EDITORS, DtaM Aefctnaaa, OanlaaA Aannr, Ltaa BMaeh, JaaiM Bnto, laaa ClatollaH, NaataN Cotoa, Rak Calaarita, DM Damaita, BamaiH Oanar,</p>
        <p>DarM Maltonlan, Lany L Mag, ERaor Rtaia. PMar Rtoaa, Maniaa Mritar, Uaa matea, WMta Manta, Mefcaal (PStoa, DatoM Rator, Mtafcaal Ryaa, Cart Stoaa,</p>
        <p>AISaatoH, Manta Scan, tow SaMffa%BaRStoato,toA Sato. IHrimHtaHRialaa.DarMWallacltorio.LaRyWiyaieMlli UFESTnEEDnOR,ERtatoHiQtoa8r</p>
        <p>SPRORDESIOHASSOCIAIE.ArtaMPaatctol ART ASSOCIATES, lav JacfcaaaCIMt.JaaapliDMIari,AI1Maai EOITORIAlASSISIAinS,iaoMaRaaBana,llatoitaOartoAr,</p>
        <p>AaRa Oaaa, Daiid Hagaana, RaaaM M. NManr. OMa lasnaria. Uato Maktar, Btmly Patorat. tontM Platt, MMan WMIa, PaMela ItoM</p>
        <p>WASmWCTOW, iaafc Aatonaa, taraaa Mtt; Ogri Gtaa CONSUURIOEDnDRS, Sag Ctoaalar, lato Fntk SPORTS EDITOR, Mok Sckaaa</p>
        <p>FOOD EBHDRS, Ikaia Lafctaa aaSlalaa Rwm HEALTH EDITOR, lart Otoi CARTOON EDITOR. DM Heari PUBUSHEREMERmiS, WarraaJ. RayaaUt</p>
        <p>vnaA toan Maaaian kH, nanw to,RniMi, aut laatT. aaa to ri Rm Mk,*tot ton la IMa Uh I</p>
        <p>I I I</p>
        <p>PMC2*SEminn II, lMt*MIUOEMMMZME</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0091" />
        <p>.mf</p>
        <p>i</p>
        <p>if/.</p>
        <p>THENM)NAL</p>
        <p>NowyoucmsaveaanaiNtable Of course, with savings Ute these, amount (ni the most comfortable  these genuine La-Z-Boy redlners will</p>
        <p>place to watch the big game.  disappear faster than you can pop your</p>
        <p>Whats brand new, filled with savings,  So  if  you  really  want  to  save</p>
        <p>and makes it even more fiin to be an ^ a  the big game, armchair quarterback? It's the U-Z-Boy  youd better get to the La-Z-Boy National</p>
        <p>Natitmal Homecoming &amp;amp;de. Where you  Homecoming Sale on the double,</p>
        <p>can pick up the redinii^ version of fifty-yard-line seats withwt having to 0 plunk down a whole lot of fifties.</p>
        <p>And that means all you have to do to save a omdbrtable amount on a comfcrtable chair is visit one of the dealers listed below.</p>
        <p>, a</p>
        <p>11LA-Z-BOf HOMKXMNG SALE</p>
        <p>Montgomery Ward All Retail Stores Ahoskie</p>
        <p>Carters of Ahoskie 116 East Main St.</p>
        <p>Cary</p>
        <p>Cooper's Furniture House 820 E. Chatham</p>
        <p>Greenville</p>
        <p>Bostic Sugg Furn.</p>
        <p>2037 West 10th</p>
        <p>Hertford</p>
        <p>Phillips Furn.</p>
        <p>Hwy. 17 Bypass Jacksonville Furniture Fair BellforkRd.</p>
        <p>Kinston</p>
        <p>Highland Furniture Shop Vernon Park Mall</p>
        <p>New Bern</p>
        <p>Tolsons Factory Furniture 2724 Neuse Blvd.</p>
        <p>La-Z-Boy Showcase Shoppe Hwy. 401 S.</p>
        <p>La-Z-Boy Showcase Shoppe Hwy. 70 W.</p>
        <p>Robersonville</p>
        <p>Robersonville Furniture Co. 120 S. Main</p>
        <p>Rocky Mt.</p>
        <p>Joyners Furn.</p>
        <p>Hwy. 301 Bypass S.</p>
        <p>Wiliiamston</p>
        <p>Courtney Furn. 112 E. Main</p>
        <p>Wilmiiigloni ILP</p>
        <p>Peoples Furniture Co. 414 S. College Rd.</p>
        <p>Zebulon</p>
        <p>Whitley Furniture Co. 101 Vance St.</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0092" />
        <p>SPECIAL REPORT</p>
        <p>Wff DO SOME PEMUSURVIVE Al DS?BY BERNARD GAVZER</p>
        <p>STEVE CALLAHAN ARRIVED HOME in the Castro district of San Francisco on the evening of Jan. 13, 1983, and found that the door locks had been changed. No one would answer his knock. A few days later, he discovered that everything he had ever touched had been thrown out-</p>
        <p>clothes, books, bedsheets, toothbrush, curtains, carpeting. Even the wallpaper. Trashed.</p>
        <p>Only a few days earlier, Callahan had told his housemateswhom he also regarded as his friendsthat the sickness hed had since October 1982 h^ been diagnosed as Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome, or AIDS. Tests had showed that he suffered from Kaposis sarcoma, a form of cancer which is one of the disorders used to define AIDS.</p>
        <p>People were hysterical, says CaUahan.AlDS was equated with instant death. Overnight, 1 had nofriei^. Islqit on paric benches. 1 stole food. I passed bad checks. I was literally the first person in San Francisco, maybe in the entire country, living on the streets with AIDS that winter. No one would come near me. 1 was told that 1 had 14 weeks to live.</p>
        <p>Nearly six years have passed, and Callahan, once a high school English teacher, still ambles the same streets where he was scorned. But he is no longer isolated. He is now the co-director of New Friends of San Francisco, a nonprofit support group. The feisty Colorado-born Irishman has beaten the odds.</p>
        <p>The odds: Once an individual is diag-</p>
        <p>BH1hnls,24Vlhnliiiigton, D.C. AIDS-Rdatod Gomplex diapefd-.lDBS.</p>
        <p>"I comaotrate M tlw iNDuibililiM of IMiig ratlMr tim tto prabaM^ uyt CiMofer SbUMr, 37, of Lot Angolet, who has biofl in rMdsaloii tfaico 1984.</p>
        <p>marl(F(Blo|KNilot,32,</p>
        <p>NowYot1i,N.Y.</p>
        <p>AIDS dagMtoil: 1985.</p>
        <p>nosed with AIDS, his or her probability of surviving for one year is 50 percent, according to a study done in New York City |</p>
        <p>Department of^</p>
        <p>Health.</p>
        <p>And so die portrait of die AIDS qxdemic has been one of doom and gloom. No question about it: The toll has been devastating. Since the start of the qiidemicin 1981,</p>
        <p>^,366pers(M)sin the United States have been replied with AIDS (as of Aug. 1,1988).</p>
        <p>Almost39,000of themmore than halfhave died.</p>
        <p>Then there ate those like Steve Callahan. In mid-1985, there were only 14,603 documented cases of AIDS in tlu United States. Fifteen percent of them, or about 2000 Americans altogether, remain alive and active today. These individuals, and any others who have survived at least three years, are classified by the federal Centers for Disease Control (CDC) in Adan-ta as long-term survivmrs.</p>
        <p>How have Cal lahan and the others managed to survive?</p>
        <p>Frankly, we do not know how or why theyve survived, says Dr. Ann Hardy, the CDC epidemiolo^st who is tracking long-term survivors. It may be something we just cant measure. But it is important fcM* us to find out.</p>
        <p>The survivors de^ribed in this report have had AIDS or ARC (AIDS-Related Complex) for at least three years. They are not being kept alive on respirators or by some heroic means. They are active, appear to be in good health and, in some cases, claim to be in reniission. Some woe</p>
        <p>COVEKHiOrOOMHSBrANDrUm(ASISreNT). MNBOMISUOrt. BOB NElSONinCTVBEGKOVP (KISH). EAKLUCHAKDSON&amp;lt;BIIOmi) AND ED KASHI (7VBNE&amp;gt;</p>
        <p>MfiEA'SEPTEMBER If, 198S*MRMIE MMMZINE</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0093" />
        <p>diagnosed with eidier AIDS or ARC four, fve or six years ago.</p>
        <p>They are iK)t cured. There is no known cure for AIDS.</p>
        <p>But they are living with AIDS.</p>
        <p>These long-term survivcxshave a number of diings in common, according to Dr. Ge&amp;lt;geF. Solomon, apioneerinthe feld of i^ychoneuroimmunology at UCLA. His research investigates how the mind and emotions impact on the immune system. Dr. Solomon and researchers at the University of Califor</p>
        <p>nia at San Francisco have found these characteristics among long-term AIDS survivors:</p>
        <p> They are realistic and accept the AIDS diagnosis but do not take it as a death sentence.</p>
        <p> They have a fighting spirit and refuse to be helpless-hopeless.</p>
        <p> Ttey have changed lifestyles.</p>
        <p> They are assertive and have the ability to^out of stressful and unproductive situati(His.</p>
        <p> They ate tuned in to dieir own psychological and physical needs, and diey take care of them.</p>
        <p> They ate able to talk openly about their illness.</p>
        <p> They have a sense of personal responsibility for their health, and they look at the treating physician as a collaborator.</p>
        <p> They are altruistically involved with (^r persons with AIDS.</p>
        <p>Changing risky behavior is one of die keystones of a monumental edu-catitm program un-dotakenbytheUS.</p>
        <p>Public Health Service in the hope of stemming the spread of the mfec-tion. Under the direction of Dr. Robert ^mdom, U.S.</p>
        <p>Assistant Seottary for Health, Understanding AIDS ^ an easily understood brochure aimed at everyone in the nation, was onnpiled. Dr. C. Everett Koop, the U.S. Surgeon General, wrote the introduction. Millions of copies were put into the mail. Part of the brochures no-nonsense message is:</p>
        <p>There are two main ways you can get AIDS.</p>
        <p>First, you can become infected by having sexoral, anal or vaginalwi someone who is infected with the AIDS virus.</p>
        <p>Second, you can be infected by sharing drug needles and syringes with an infected person.</p>
        <p>Most researchers say AIDS begins widi the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) entering the body through semen,SPECIAL REPORT</p>
        <p>nee an individual is diagnosed with AIDS, his probability of suiviving for one year is 50 percent, according to the most recent study</p>
        <p>blood or vaginal fluid. Its the rst stage in a spectrum illnessthat is, having no symjHtHns at all on oiM end and deathly illne^ on the other. The virus attacks die immune system, the bodys defense against most disease. It can progress from an HIV infection to AIDS-Related Complex, with such symptoms as i^rsistent diarrhea, swollen glands, fetigue and thrush.</p>
        <p>The Centers for Disease Control says it becomes AIDS when the immune system breaks down and creates an opportunity for other infections. It is AIDS when any one of many opportunistic diseases or of several cancers develops. The</p>
        <p>NHchad LMMHd, 42, New Ynrfc,N.Y.AID$-IMntMl CcmplcxdtagnnMd: 1985.</p>
        <p>most common of the opportunistic dis-|. eases is pneumocystiscariniiiH^-I monia, which is the most life-I threatening AIDS disease. The most common cancer is Kaposis sarcoma, whose sufferers have a longer survival history than those witii pneumonia.</p>
        <p>The battle against AIDS is being waged on three major fronts: (1) die search for an effective treatmoit to kill or at least neutralize the human immunodeficiency virus; (2) efforts to find some way to protect or rebuild die bodys immune system, particularly in raising the number of white blood cells; and (3) the search for a way to protect die nervous system and the brain from attacks by HIV.</p>
        <p>Only one drugAZT, also known as zidovudinehas been approved by the Food and Drug Administration fOTtieating AH and ARC.</p>
        <p>It is an antiviral drug, but it can cause anemia.</p>
        <p>The long-term survivors PARADE talked with have explored every way of combating AIDS.</p>
        <p>Some created guerrilla clinics to get unapproved drugs from Japan, Mexico and France; some endured chemotherapy and radiation; some opted for acupuncture, some for macrobiotic diets, some for vigorous exercise and health regimens; some turned to religion or to ancient healing. Whatever</p>
        <p>9lmCaltoliafl,34, San Francisco, Calif. MDSdia8Msad:1983.</p>
        <p>they did, in whatever combina-</p>
        <p>titms, those who survived beyond expectations had one compelling trait: grit.</p>
        <p>I was abandoiKd, but I didnt abandon myself, says Steve Callahan, who de^bes himself as Case 91 in San francisco Health Department records. I told myself the disease would not kill me. 1 made up my mind to live with the disease.</p>
        <p>CristoferShihar, 37, of Los Angeles, was diagnosed with Kaposis sarcoma in 1982. He remembers a time when all 1 would hear was that 1 was ^ing to die. He adds: I ju^ behaved like a kid who is told to wear his joshes or put on a hat. Id do just the opposite. Spite is what made me hang on at die beginning, says Michael Lronard, 42, a floral designer in New York City who was diagnosed as having ARC in August 1985. That came about when I first told my father that I was gay, and he said to me, I h^ you get AIDS. I hated him for that. Then, when I did get AIDS, 1 hated him even mrae. Butlma^ up my mind to live just to spite him. There is more to it than just grit and determination, of course. There is a lot of pain and misery and worry too. There is dealing with public hysteria and, for gays, with powerful prejudice against them. It makes staring alive awfully hard.</p>
        <p>You felt like you wanted to die because there was so much hysteria, says George, a young Southerner who doesnt want his family name used. My God, police in Washington, D.C., wore rubbergloves to arrest gays at a demonstration. And what about the lit</p>
        <p>tle AIDS baby in that California town? The baby was choking, and the volun-te^fire department wouldntcome. And those three Flcdda kids, the brothers with heipophilia who were kept out of school for testing positive?</p>
        <p>I dont think firemen or police or the I^ple in that Fltmda town were inten-ticmally cruel. Theyre victims of die hysteria too. That hysteria has made a lot of us crazy. Wed run everywhere looking for a cure, for some kind of miracle drug or miracle answer. Sometimes you felt you should die so that the poUce and firemen wouldnt have to act that way. One of the early drugs employed to rebuild die immune system was alpha-interferon, an antiviral compound that I I had smnetoxk side effects. I LouieNassai^y,33,ofLos 3 Angeles, was part of a UCLA program exploring its use. He was diagnosed with Kaposis sarcoma in I 1983.</p>
        <p>I was on alpha-inter-feron for seven months, says Nassaney, and had a lot of bad side effects loss of hair, fevers, sleeping all the time.</p>
        <p>LoH*NassaiN)f,33, LosANgtln,Cdif. AIDS diagMMd: 1983.</p>
        <p>taking 16 to 24 Tylenol ev-^ day. My b(^ was wasting away. 1 didnt want to stay alive this way. Then 1 learned about Louise Hay and attended her therapy sessions. I read her book You Can Heal Your Ufe. I stopped hating myself for being gay. I started deep meditation for two to duee hours. I started praying to God. 1 began body-building. He has built himself up by pumping iron.</p>
        <p>As Nassaney talks, he moves a pencil eraser back and forth across a lesion on his well-muscled leg. This is the way I get rid of my lesions, he explains. Its part of visualizing making tnem disappear. Does it work? WeU, in 1984, UCLA did a biopsy of an old lesion, and it was nothing but scar tissue. Louise Hay conducts workshops that attract up to 7(X) persons at a time. She is celebrated as a person who allegedly rid herself of a cancerous tumor by a healins process of, as she puts it, learning to love myself.</p>
        <p>Cristofer Shihar also was in an alpha-interferon program at UCLA, getting intravenous doses of 93 million units a day and enduring dreadful side effects for most of 1983 and part of 1984. I dealt with it by doing cocaine, he says. Evciy-one knew, but they couldnt stop me. Tli^ I quit M pro^am. I stM^ ev^ thing. Everything. Soon after, Shihar learned that he was in remission.</p>
        <p>Shihar says his spiritual turnaround began when he met Srily Fisher, a woman developed AIDS-mastery workshops continued</p>
        <p>nUIMIEIMAAZME*SEP1IMBai If, 19W* PACES</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0094" />
        <p>k\l^/continued</p>
        <p>in conjunction with a New York support group. Northern Lights Alternatives. Shihar is now Western regional director of Northern Lights. He still gets checked at UCLA every six months and says there has been no recurrence of Kaposis sarcoma. I learned how to concentrate on the possibilities of living rather than the probabilities of dying, he says. Ive been in remission longer than Ive had AIDS. Isnt that nice?</p>
        <p>George R. Kish, 54, a senior program analyst for IBM in Atlanta, says that part of staying alive lies in doing constructive things such as appcaimginiepi&amp;amp;yHigher Ground: Voices of AIDS, which had a brief mn. Many of the 28 persons in the play had AIDS.</p>
        <p>I was gay and in a seminary studying for the priestho^, Kish told audiences in Higher Ground. I was urged by the clergy and psychiatrists to forget the priesthood and get married. They said that would cure my illness of homosexuality.</p>
        <p>Then he told more of his own story.</p>
        <p>Kish did get married, became a father and now has three grown sons. In 1979, his marriage ended and he came outthat is, he revealed himself as gay. At about the same time, he fell ill. In 1982, he was diagnosed as having a condition called Gay-Related Immune Deficiency, or GRID (later labeled ARC). I had three devastating bouts of parasites, he says. In 1987,1 got tuberculosis. He was treated with AZT and otherexperimental antiviral compounds. Lately, he has been using aerosol pentamidine to prevent lung infections.</p>
        <p>But you know what else keeps me alive? he asks. Its my volunteer work. 1 just know Ive got to stay alive to help others. Also, being able to be open about being gay has mrde me the happiest in my life. And my boys, he says proudly, all live down hereand all accept me.</p>
        <p>Kish was featured in a recent article in IBMs employee publication. Think, praising him for his tireless zeal in making hospital visits and woiidng in AIDS support groups.</p>
        <p>No therai^utic drugs for Gary Brown, 41, of Wichita, Kan. Diagnosed as having Kiwis sarcoma in September 1984, he decided fipom the first day that Ik would shun medications, chemotherapy and radiation. He is on a modified macrobiotic diet, which means that, in addition tomealsofvegetablea, grains and beans.SPECIAL REPORT</p>
        <p>hose who've survived still have to deal with public hysteria and the powerful prejudice against gays. It makes staying alive awfully hard.</p>
        <p>Kenny Taub, 37,</p>
        <p>New York, N.Y.</p>
        <p>AIDS diagnosed: 1985.</p>
        <p>he occasionally eats chicken or fish. He runs two miles every other day, lifts weights and exercises regularly. I have only one small lesion, on my toe, he says. Andwould you believe t it?Ive gained 15 pounds.</p>
        <p>All of those mentionedCallahan, Leonard, Shihar, Kish, Nas-saney and Brownare in die high-risk group of gay or bisexual males. The Centers for Disease Control says 63 percent of all its adult AIDS cases are from this group.</p>
        <p>The second-largest AIDS group is the intravenous (IV) drug users, those who inject heroin or cocaine into their veins. Many are black or Hispanic. Very few were found among the long-term survivors tracked by PARADE. Other risk</p>
        <p>  groups include people who got</p>
        <p>AIDS through blood transfusi(Mis or treat-mentfor hemophilia, heterosexuals who had infected partners and infants who were infected by their mothers as embryos or at birth.</p>
        <p>One reason youre not going to find many black or Hispanic IV drug users among long-term survivors is b^ause, by the time our people get to the doctors or clinics, they are ucky if they can just hang on to life, says the Rev. Carl Bean, head of the Minority AIDS Project and pastor of Unity FeUowshlp Church in Los Angeles. So many Latinos are undocumented^hey are non-people and are afraid of the system. All of them use over-the-counter pills when they get sick. You can have fine brochures, but what good does it do if people cant read?</p>
        <p>The fact is, among our people, treatment for AIDS begins when they reach the emergency room in the county hospital, when its already too late.</p>
        <p>The survival rate of infuits who became infected as embryos or at birth is probably the worst among all groups. Dr. James Oleske of Childrens Hori-tal in Newark, N.J., was one of the nrst to identify the tiniest of people with AIDS, establishing that they got the disease from their mothers.</p>
        <p>The wdf is at the door, siqn Dr. Oleske. Infiuits who are infected at birth frex|uent-</p>
        <p>ly develop pneumocystis carinii pneu-mtxiiaanddie. Not many survive. I wmild say that 10 percent of our children have survived five or six years with this disease. It doesnt mean theyre cured, just that they're functioning. Weve had to work very hard to accomplish that.</p>
        <p>Another group of children is under the special scrutiny of Dr. ThomasMundy of Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles. These are children who were infected with AIDS by transfusions during the period fixrm 1980to March 1985, after wUch the nations blood supply reportedly became much safer.</p>
        <p>About one-third of our children who were infected during the 1980-85 period are doing quite well, says Dr. Mundy. Anotherthird could be described as a little sicker dian odm6-year-olds, with more colds or fevers. And the other third are significantly ill. AZT has been the mainstay of Mundys therapy.</p>
        <p>Heterosexu^s who are not IV dnig users form another small-risk group. The case of Niro Asistent, a 43-year-old Belgian-born blrde who lives in East Hampton, N.Y., typi^ the heterosexual experience.</p>
        <p>Asistent fell ill in August 1985 and subsequently was diagnosed as having ARC. Ho-male companion also became ill, and she discovered that he had been bisexual and was the source of her infection. He was treated with many of the drugs and nostrums available but died.</p>
        <p>When I was first tested, and it was positive, Asistratrecalls, Icouldnt believe it and demanded another test. It also was positive. I was very sick. I had a terrible urinary infection, candida, extreiiK diarrhea, exhaustion, night sweats and terrible mood swings. Believing that 1 was under a death sentence, I decided to lead a richer, fuller life until the end. I began eating natural, healthy food. I made new friends and began walking every day. 1 am happy to say I tested negative in May 1986.1 am tested every three months,</p>
        <p>RmGImr, 38,/manta, 6a. AlOS-IMated Conplex dfaiwted:198S.</p>
        <p>and I am still negative.</p>
        <p>While the rqxtrts of long-tmm irviv(HS are encouraging. Dr. James Curran, director of the Onters for Disease Controls AIDS pro^am, says AIDS remains an extremely important health problem because there are at least 1 million and possibly 1.5 million people who have the human immunodeficiency virus. We do not have precise figures," says Dr. Curran, but those are our best estimates. Studies indicate tfiat up to half of these people will develop AIDS within 10 years of the infecti(Mi, arid a inajority of the odKis will have symjptmns of other related diseases. Still, diere is a sense among people with AIDS and others associate with them that long-term survival for many, rather than just the exceptional few, is within reach.</p>
        <p>I think credit must be given to gay activists, says Dr. Alan S. Levin, a San Francisco immunologist who heads Bosi-tve Action HealthCare, the nations first private miqiatient AIDS clinic dedicated to early intervention.</p>
        <p>The gay activists really forced the government to pay attention to this crisis. They did a masterful job of nuu^haling information and of making an undeniable case for relaxing federal restrictions on new drugs and profrfiylaxes. Theyve pi-tically stopped the spread of the HIV infection in the gay commu-I nities. And dmy have in-I vented hotlines that provide people with very solid, reliable information. That has never hrqipened with diabetics or arthritics or people with heart conditions. Indeed, the Gay Mens Health Crisis in New York City epitomizes the kind of edircation and service oiga-nization that has mushroomed as our society has begun todevelopaconcem and compassion for those with AIDS. There are dozens of such ^oups (see next page). Their services range from providmg low-cost dmgs to helping a person with AIDS pay the rent to providing suppmt by energetically spreading the message that AIDS is not an automatic death sentence.</p>
        <p>People are still being constantly told, You get AIDS, youre going to die,  says Tom OCkinnOT, 42, ^ autiiorofLtV-ing With AIDS: Reaching Out, who was diagnosed with ARC in November 1980. I say: Look lU me. Ive had AIDS-Related Complex for iKariy eight years. There are other people doing as well, if not better. I wont say its a hu^e number, but its like doing the four-minute mile. People said no man could do it. But one did. Now there are probably tens of thousands whove done it. Therell be tens of thousands of survivors too. Q</p>
        <p>nMiEf*SEPTEMBER 18,1988&amp;gt;PARAKIIMMZINE</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0095" />
        <p>WHERE THE NUMBERS GOME FROM</p>
        <p>ShrtfaMct iSMi h tUs report are flroM the Centers for Disease Control (CDC), the federal afenqf in AUanla. 11m fignree are based en reperted ^ cases, rather than hrierpoWions or speariiihie er esitaated namhen.</p>
        <p>There b centreierqf regarding ahnost ewiy aspect of the ADS ephhnnic. for example, the COC statistics on MDS tdclinM do net inchide persons farfhcled llh the haman hnrannsdsilf Isn ry rhns IHIV) eriMPR Releted Cewphw QUtC). Wt deaths hare eccurrad</p>
        <p>^---&amp;gt;------ mtmm      e-A_   L</p>
        <p>iiOTi iMiv iiHwiwip 10 no MHO ngomp oonocioQQrp VO im coinpooiOa no om k csrtahi sf the trae nnniber of dead or farfectod or longderni snrehmrs, except as reflected bp the CDC case reports.</p>
        <p>RMMDE has fawhided sonM persons wRh ARC amongthe fanvterni snrvivors because ill they regard thsMSsims as haring AIDS and/er (21 they cnnsidsrthattbeir status as</p>
        <p>a --- AIM IkA  Aa.   -OS-   0-  ----0--     *-</p>
        <p>MMgMllpf MO HOC MWy lOOf DO OOP n OIMOr OOfy flllgliolll Of OOny WHOimiilOHoAIDS HOfUNE: 1-80O-342-AIDS</p>
        <p>TMsbthe free national betHhennndberfsr anyone nithniinestienabontlW&amp;gt;Swj|t fnnctiens 24 honra a day, erety day, in eretp state as wol as ILSb terrttorfes.</p>
        <p>The hdhnnatien spedalsts are iielMnined and conrteens, respect ptiiaQf and cieadiF are attanad Is the naads of Calais. They can dhnct calets to approprbAe eenraes anMpg the HMre tbw 8000 eatibs h the hotbM data base. The hoUne b opsndad andhrthe dbectfan eftha Anrerban Secbi NaaRh AseocfaibA headgnaiterad hDnrhani,CL, nadara contract oRh the Centers tar Dbease CentralTHE PEOPLE WHO ARE HEinNG</p>
        <p>The ADS ephtenric has gbsn rbeto nrany grass*roott eohnrteor nwreinentt, which angoMirt state, connty and nanriclpal depaitsf etf and ^gwcif - hi**Ty of the vohntser, nonprollt, prbato organizations focas on dhoct services to those abo irave been dtagnoeed as having MDS or who are ARC* er HRHMsWie. Thqr range freni gnervHa cflnbs that snpphftherapenUc drng^~4MPi*oeed and nnapproved, generb and piroftif, byiii</p>
        <p>tbn. ta al, nNre than 3000 agencies and orgaidzations mey be involved. Here are senM of the maier groups (al are nonproflt):</p>
        <p>OoylMHsaRhCrbb iploneor service eiganiialien} 129WL20th8L,DepLP NevrTiMh,N.X10QU</p>
        <p>The ADS HeaRh Project</p>
        <p>IMMMIfM lOr liOnilOni MHRUnMII</p>
        <p>Bok0884&amp;gt;DopLP</p>
        <p>Son FMncbco, CaM. 04143*0884</p>
        <p>MHD nppKI tHiRMI IHfMlp IDHMN9DI</p>
        <p>S25NoMndSL,DapLP San nancbco,CaM. 94106</p>
        <p>ADAtbntaianillbervice)</p>
        <p>1132 A Ploochtree 91, N.WL, DepL P Rtanla, On. 30300</p>
        <p>ADSFonndaltanHonsbo (edncaUen, dhect dent servlcesi 3827 Emm Lane, DopLP Henston, Tex. 77027</p>
        <p>ADS Prelect LMAiebs (nnllbervicel 3870 WIshIre Blvd., SnRe 300, DepL P Lm Areebs, CaD. 90010</p>
        <p>ADS Actbn ConanMee Boeton</p>
        <p>061 Boyblen SL, 4th Fbor, DopL P</p>
        <p>American featMbiion for ADS RMoarch iroaeorcb edneatbn) BoxADS,DeptP No T!orh,N.1C 10018</p>
        <p>TheNnponaNsAvierh (blach conmnmRy oirtreach) 401S.EHsAve.,DeptP Chbo,D. 60653</p>
        <p>nUMDMiDI</p>
        <p>Itaformarina on niiiitbnnnlolfrrahnini! 347 Dotares 91, SnRe 3(U, DopL P San Rancboo,Cdi. 94110</p>
        <p>National Aaoadalion of Phepb WRh ADS (a ratmal and advocacy penpi 202SI9L,N.WL,DopLP Whohbglon,D. 20006</p>
        <p>NerthoraUghbARornatheo (andttsorvice^ hMhidfaig an in*hospRal prapambrchldranviRhADSl 79 WSSIhSL, SnRe 5E, DopL P New VDrh,N.Y 10024</p>
        <p>ACT UP (acthiilffenp prooonrtagbr hear acceratetherapontlc dragii 486A Hndaen SL, SnRo 04, DopL P New Thrh,N.t 10014</p>
        <p>PMMDEIIMilZmE*SEFIEMKR It, 19t8*PIMC7</p>
        <p>I THESE LETTERS PROVE WHAT I ALREADY KNOW; 2ND NAIL GIVES MY NAILS A</p>
        <p>I SECOND CHANCE TO GROW."</p>
        <p>- JACLYIM SMITH</p>
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        <p>MAX BCrOR BONUS OFFER</p>
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        <p>e WlMlVweCfc FwduaswlWinCimA j</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0096" />
        <p>Kent.</p>
        <p>The choice is taste.</p>
        <p>The</p>
        <p>low-tar</p>
        <p>fhmily</p>
        <p>with</p>
        <p>taste.</p>
        <p>RiCHIUTING</p>
        <p>UMM</p>
        <p>UHOUOIM</p>
        <p>LOWDU)</p>
        <p>WHAT'S Up</p>
        <p>This Week</p>
        <p>BY LYNN MINTON</p>
        <p>MOVIES</p>
        <p>Sigourney's Gorillas</p>
        <p>Adventure, animal story, romance, character study.. .GoriNas in the Mst is a great-lookhig, terric movie about Dian Fossey, a fiercely determined Kentucky woman who spent close to 20 years in Central Africa studying the mountain gorilla anddespite revolution, witchcraft, poachers and a reluctant governmentdevoted her life to saving them from extinction. We watch Sigourney Weaver develop and change in an astonishing perfonnance as the single-minded anthropologist whose sometimes violent obsession with {HX)tecting her gorillas earns her dangerous enemies. Fossey was murdered in 1985.</p>
        <p>Hanks Gets Mean</p>
        <p>S' ^</p>
        <p>^ ''m</p>
        <p>FMd ami HmIis: TIwm ara cooMdiaM?</p>
        <p>Tom Hanks daringly risks his Mr. Nice Guy persona and hits big playing a bitter and angry comic who doesnt give a hoot for the other struggling performers at a New York City club in hmclilM. Its an offbeat daric comedy with virtuoso turns by Hanks and Sally Field, whowhile shes not so willing to risk not being liked isnt afniid to look frumpish and sometimes foolish as a housewife who uses her $500 cookie-jar stash to buy jokes and defies her husband to go after her dream.</p>
        <p> And check out DMdnigen, about identical twin gynecologists (played by Jeremy Irons) who become involved with the same actress (Genevieve BujokO, with fii^iteniitg consequences. AldKHi^ inspired by the real-life stoiy of twin doctors, this is fiction.</p>
        <p>PAGE8&amp;lt;SEP1EIIIBER],I9aS*nWA0EIMGAZmE</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0097" />
        <p>A fairy tale princess liakes Christmas even more magical</p>
        <p>Magical dry tale doll by an award-winning artist.</p>
        <p>In hand painted bisque porcelain, costumed in satin, velvet and gold lam.</p>
        <p>Her long silken hair, braided with njx pearls, cascades in folds of shimmering gold to her feet This isJ&amp;amp;t^nze/of the classic fidry tale. Portrayed in an exquisite heirloom doll by the talented fentasy artist Gerda Neubacher.</p>
        <p>Rapunzels gown is lustrous lavender satin with large puffed sleeves, bordered with gold trimming and faint pearls. A cape of rich velvet lined with gold lam. And a cap of white satin</p>
        <p>accented with a glittering jewel.</p>
        <p>Each feature is sculpted in imported bisque porcelain and hand*painted.</p>
        <p>The wistful expression. The blush cff anticipatitHi. The glowing violet eyes. No detail is overlooked, from the poli^ on her nails to the dainty slfopersonherfeet. Rapunzel. A legend come to life. Priced at 1245, with its own di^lay stand. Guaranteed Christmas Delivery. To receive foqninzel in time to present as a Christmas gift, you must mail your order no later than October 31,1988.</p>
        <p>ctuai size of doll i^roximately 19.</p>
        <p>OrderForm  PleasemailbyOctober31,198&amp;amp;</p>
        <p>Franklin Heirloom Dolls Franklin Center, Pennsylvania 19091</p>
        <p>Yes. I wish to order Rsqninzel by Gerda Neubacher. Please bill me in advance for a deporit (tf S49.* and for the balance in four monthly installments of S49-* each, after shipment *Mus my state sales tax.</p>
        <p> AM MMCT TO AOOfMANM</p>
        <p>HUH MIMT CIMl,</p>
        <p>OTY/STATB/ZIP.</p>
        <p>11050-114</p>
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        <p>^Stt !</p>
        <p>L.  \</p>
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        <p>ftfifinylte</p>
        <p>Lynn's Hallmark Shop Carolina East Mall 75&amp;amp;8910  (</p>
        <p>JffiteQDYilte</p>
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        <p>Gloria's Haknark Shop Morehead Plaza 726^</p>
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        <p>Matthews Hallmark Shop Twin Rivers Man 638-1585</p>
        <p>975-2^</p>
        <p>'sHaRmarkShop Square Mali</p>
        <p>Get your sweatshirt while supplies last only at one of the participating Hallmark shops feted in thfe ad. 3 ftin designs in lar^ and extra lar^ sizes. Youll find lots of other Shoebox products too-come in soon!</p>
        <p>$19.95 Retail Value. Only</p>
        <p>WITH ANY $5</p>
        <p>HALLMARK</p>
        <p>P6IRCHASEmr H1KSE UlUIUK UrMBSK</p>
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        <p>Lmigh Varade</p>
        <p>**WlMt we need is a good push/</p>
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        <p>B</p>
        <p>y eating too many foods with high cholesterol you may inaeaseyour risk of disease, cancer or stroke. But what does this mean? As you can see in the drawing below, cholesterol can build up In your arteries and slowly, unknown to you, cause serious risk of major disease.</p>
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        <p>Cholesterol is a waxy fat-like substance that Is part of every cell in your body. Cholesterol is needed 1^ the body, but when there is too much it can be depc^ited on the artery wall, narrowing it and interfering with the blood flow.</p>
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        <p>Societys attitudes on sex are overly permissive. So declared 68% of the50,000 women recently surveyed by Vlfonuaia Day magazine. About 30% of the respondents admitted, however, that while single they had *</p>
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        <p>Preferably Oxford</p>
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        <p>embers of the Japanese royal Ihmily apparently prefer British to American universities. Prince Ayaa grandson of Emperor Hirohito</p>
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        <p>BY LLOYD SHEARER  1988</p>
        <p>PUE U'SEPTEMKRIi, UM^PRmOEIIMUZINE</p>
        <p>.J</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0101" />
        <p>The Status of Women</p>
        <p>V*. 'LC</p>
        <p>w%</p>
        <p>Uf it best for Aaoika Oavidssoi, Mbs SMwdM (I), aoi food fMrCoiflMy Gibbs, Miu ULSA, bet essfiilisiis for a mmaa in Bangiadetb (r) were rated tbe werst in tbe world</p>
        <p>^Pie ve best countries in</p>
        <p>T which a female can be bom, reared, educated, employed, married and spend her Ufe are:</p>
        <p>1) Sw9den,2) Finland, 3) the U.S., 4) East Germany and 5) Norway.</p>
        <p>The five worst, in order of tinfvorability: 1) Bangladesh,</p>
        <p>2) Mali, 3) Afghanistan, 4) North %men and 5) Pakistan.</p>
        <p>These are some of the findings of a major new study that ranks the status of women in 99</p>
        <p>countries, representing 2.3 billion women (92% of aU the worldsfemales). Titled "Country Rankings of the Status of Wsmen: Poor, Powerless and Pregnant, it was conducted by the Population Crisis Committee, a private, Washington-based organization that advocates voluntary family planning.</p>
        <p>Herewith statistical extracts comparing the status of women in the highest and lowest ranked countries and the U.S.:</p>
        <p>WBMeab slatM in Smdm</p>
        <p> Female life mcpectancy:</p>
        <p>81 years</p>
        <p>a One in 167 girls dies before her fifth birthday</p>
        <p> One in 53 nowage 15 wont survive childbewing years (1% of these deaths relate to pregnancy/childbirth)</p>
        <p> Fewer than 1% of women 15-19 already have married</p>
        <p> W^men bear one or two children on average</p>
        <p>n Over 3/4 of married women use contraception</p>
        <p> Virtually all school-aged girls are in school</p>
        <p> Female college enrollment is 37%ofwomenaged 20-24</p>
        <p> Three of five women 15 or over are in paid work force</p>
        <p>n 49% of the paid work force is female</p>
        <p> Two of five women are professionals</p>
        <p> W)men live an average of seven years longer than men</p>
        <p> Vbmen and men have similar literacy rates</p>
        <p>I In 1988, women held 113 seats in Swedens 349-member parliament</p>
        <p>totheULS.</p>
        <p> 79 years for females</p>
        <p> One in 91 dies</p>
        <p> One in 38(1% of deaths due to pregnancy/ childbirth)</p>
        <p> 8% already have married</p>
        <p> Less than two children</p>
        <p> Over 2/3 use</p>
        <p>' contraception</p>
        <p> VirtuaUyall are in school</p>
        <p> Enrollment 59% of women 20-24</p>
        <p> Half of women 15 or over</p>
        <p> 45% of paid workforce</p>
        <p> About one in seven women</p>
        <p> Seven years longer than men</p>
        <p> Slightly higher rates than men</p>
        <p> 24 seats in 535-member Congress</p>
        <p>taBangladedi</p>
        <p> 49 years for females</p>
        <p> One in five dies</p>
        <p> One in six (33% due to pregnancy/ childbirth)</p>
        <p> 69% already have married</p>
        <p> Five or six children</p>
        <p> Only 1/4 use contraception</p>
        <p> One in three is in school</p>
        <p> Enrollment less than 2%</p>
        <p> One in 15 women</p>
        <p> 14% of paid work force</p>
        <p> Three in 1000 women</p>
        <p> Two years less than men</p>
        <p> 24% fewer men are illiterate</p>
        <p> Four seats in 302-member parliament</p>
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        <p>In bodeball'if mdio day, he wcut the voice of the Brooklyn Dodgero. Now, at 80, Red Barber ooundo...</p>
        <p>BetterThan Ever J^DAVJM</p>
        <p>M Befew taHtt abMrt cats, flMNn aad tpoflB frsa hit hMM ill TalahassM, Fla.</p>
        <p>ED BARBER IS 80 and still broadcasting. Next year will maik the S(Hh anniversaiy of the moment when he first arrived in Brooklyn and began broadcasting in a style that seemed utteily foreign to its citizens. He began slowly but steadily, converting the recess natives to his vision of both baseball and its language. All of that is now history. The Brooklyn Dodgers have long since fled to Lx)s Angeles, and there is a housing development where Ebbets Field once stood. New York is a different city, and baseball is a different sport. But t^ memoiy of Barbers voicedistinctive, with its sharp, clear cadence and his Southern</p>
        <p>aphorisins--ieiiiains reinarkably fresh: Because of him, and because of radios im-</p>
        <p>portancethen, weremember themessenger as distinctly as the message.</p>
        <p>In s(ne wa^, his voice sounds better than ever. Each Friday, about 3.5 million people hear his conversations with Bob Awards, the host of National Public Radios Morning Edition. The segnwnt is the shows most popular feature, drawing by far the most niail. People respond to him, says Edwards, because he is real, because there is nothing faked. Most personalities ^u see and hear these days in broadcast-mg are plastic &amp;lt;meshyped-up personali-tiM worthy of game-show hosts. Whatpeo-ple understand immediately about Red is that it would be impossible for him to be anything but what he is.</p>
        <p>Hie connectitm to Nm came about somewhat by accident. In December 1980, Elstrai Howanl, the first black to play for the Yankees, died. A young woman at NPR named Ketzel Levine was l(x^g for s(Hne-one to (k) a brief essay on Howard. Her father had grown up listening to Barber in Broc^yn, and she felt steeped in his legend, knowing her basic Barbmsmsthat whoa all the ducks were on die pond, for example, the bases were loaded. She located Barber in Tallahassee, Fla. Barber himself takes great delight in telling the rest of die story: She called and said that Elston Howard had just died and asked if I could pve my in^iression of him. 1 told her that</p>
        <p>give it to her rig^die^ They d^d, and it was a success. So much so that Barber was asked to become a regular commentator. In 1981, at age 72, he went back to work.</p>
        <p>He broadcasts om his house. He has insisted that the tnoadcaste be live, because he thinks they are imxe human. On Fridays, Iw gets up at 6 a.m. and dresses carefully because, home no, it seems wrong to Inoadcast in his pajamas. Then he feeds the Barber Abyssiman cat, Arwe (the iiaine, he notes, means wild beast in the ancient Ethiopian language), has a cup of tea and a glass of juice. The Tallahassee paper is delivered at 6:30, and he quickly scans the sports pages to make sure that nothing transcending has happened overnight. Then he saysas he said every day before he went to work in his broadcasting life (he is a lay preacher and, in his own words, '*aBookqf Psalms man)the last verse of the 19A Psalm: Let die w(ds of mv mouth, and the meditation of my heart, be always acceptable in thy sight, O Lord, my strength, and my redener.</p>
        <p>Th^ are not so much sports repcxrts as visits with Red Barber. Often, he begins widi a report on the flora and fauna of Tallahassee.</p>
        <p>Robert, he began once, the crepe myr-de is blooming, and there is an old adage around here diat when the crepe myrtle blooms, the watmmelons are ri^.</p>
        <p>Ive never heard that saying, says the bemused Edwards, perfect in his role as straight man. Another time. Barber mentions a story he has seen in The New York Tmej about an Abyssinian cat who has (kme some kind of heroic deed.</p>
        <p>Not again. Red, says Edwards.</p>
        <p>Robert, that is a fiunous cat, says Red.</p>
        <p>MaU'SEFIEMBERia,</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0103" />
        <p>Sometimes, Edwards tells his listeners, we even talk about sports.</p>
        <p>Red BarberWalter Lanier Barber, to be more exactwas as much the reflection of an era as any politician, writer, actor or, fordiatmatt^, baseball player.</p>
        <p>The country was diflierent then. The home as theater was as yet unimaginable: Iblevision was in its emb^nic years, and diere were few possibilities (at entertainment, particularly free entertainment, fOT young people and grownups alike. As such, baseball seem^ to hold an inqxxtance that defled k^c. Itieigned suprnne in the world of sports, more real than Ufe itself. It was the place to which ordinary people could escape.</p>
        <p>Barber covered die Broc^dyn Dodgersa flinky, occasionally erratic, always exciting and increasingly tainted team, e most prized possession of a community in search of itself.</p>
        <p>Some ofhis phrases made it into the language. A rhubarb was a violent verbal confrontation between players and umpires.</p>
        <p>Someone, in a fli-voredpositirmwas 'm)/e catbird seat.</p>
        <p>Many of his most faithful listeners were the chUdren of immigrants, raised in homes where in the beginning diere was no knowledge of the vill^e green flom which the game had come. Their descendants were using baseball as the most elemental part of the pioc^ of amalgainization; as they listened and cheered, they became more American, less fcneign, more a part of the whole.</p>
        <p>The city changed, of course. The neighborhoods changed. Walter OMalley todc his team West. Baseball was played more and more at ni^t. Red Barber left the Dodgers and did a tour with the Yankees, hi dine, that powofiU (gsuiization weakened and, like his longtime colleague, Mel Allen, Barber seemed to take die blame for tte weak teams. Some 22 years ago, Ik left New York and daily sprnts broadcasting.</p>
        <p>Recendy, I went to Tallahassee to see Red Barber. 1 am flnishing a book about baseball in the late 1940s, and I wanted</p>
        <p>'onot</p>
        <p>be deceived, My a friend. Red id a very tou^ num. ifyoudefinetoucfmeM cu) a factor (f will and dpirit.</p>
        <p>M Barber hrttfvim the DedftnauuMfrnv Leo DnroclMr, at BiMk|rii*b EMato FiaM ia 1B39, diiftiv RCftt lint tdea^ BMiar laagM batabiA gaaia.</p>
        <p>to interview him. I told him over the phone how much I had enjoyed his broadcasting when 1 was younger. It sounds like youre going to ask for something, he said, not unpleasandy and not even</p>
        <p>warily. He was right, but I had caught somediing immediatelydiat rare combination of old-fashioned courtliness mixed with the flintiness of the utterly independent man. In some people, more aggressive, that manifests itself as territory. With Barber, because he is so civilized, it manifests itself as dignity. He does not Ughdy bend to fiuhion. If fiuh-ion is important, he seems to be saying, it wiU come my way.</p>
        <p>Do not be deceived, says one old friend. Red is a very tough manif you define toughness as a factor of wUl and irit. He has a sense of his own value lat is absolute. He once knowingly walked away flpom the most cherish^ job in sportscasting, that of broadcasting the World Series.</p>
        <p>He and Mel Allen had done it regularly, befltting (he nations two top toiad-casters. The problem was that Gillette, continued</p>
        <p>Cats remember. Cats communicate. Cats learn. And cats think ...as every devoted cat-owner knows. And cats can make known their thoughts and feelings to anyone who cares enough to observe their behavior.. .and knows what to look for.</p>
        <p>Here, in an absolutely fascinating book, the author shares his insights and observations, and most delightful anecdotes from over four decades of cat-watching. Behind their charming antics, he reveals, cats are surprisingly similar to us...and are fully capable of experiencing all the emotions we are. As proof, he shares example after example of intelligent behavior he has personally observed in the many cats he and his femily have lived with over the years.</p>
        <p>What is ybur Cat TVying to Tbll You?</p>
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        <p>Every cat-lover who has ever sat watching his or her pet and wondered what the cat was thinking will want a copy of this delightftiUy entertaining book. Order your copy of DO CATS THINK? today.</p>
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        <p>which owned the taoadcasting rights, also had the right to pick the broadcasters. Craig Smidi, who handled broadcasting for Gillette, took ^at delight in paying sportscasters minimal fees because he knew how badly they wanted the job. In 1953, though, Barber announced that he would negotiate die fee through his agent, knowing that it was an act of suicide as to his ability to do any future Series. Craig Smith was furious. Youll get what you got last yeartake it or leave it and thats it, he said. Barber came back home that night and turned to his daughter Sarah, whose 16th birthday it was, and said, Sarah, Ive just given you the greatest present I can give. 1 gave you back your Others self-respect.  He never did another national network World Series. But Im prouder of that than the 131 did broadcast, he says.</p>
        <p>So one approaches him carefully. He does not want to be flattered, or flattered too quickly, by someone he does not know. The terms will be his. I arrived at his and Lylah Barbers house on an early Sunday aflemoon, ready to listen but not to presume.</p>
        <p>He is smaller now, and what remains of the famous red hair is more of a fringe on the sides of his head. But the voice, the voice has not changed. It is still magical, as vibrant and controlled and authoritative as ever.</p>
        <p>With Barber 1 phrase my questions</p>
        <p>carefully. I watch my adverbs. 1 do not pretend that I was a bigger fan of his and the Dodgers dum I was. But if 1 is guarded at first, he is also wonderfully courteous. The season I am writing about is 1949. He challen^ me on this. Thegre^ season, he says, is 1947, because that is the year diat Jackie Robinson entered the major leagues. Robinson was a luminescent presence, a man whose physical abilities were matched by his intellectual and spirinial ones. Ba^rbom in Columbus, Miss., raised in Florida-had been told of Branch Rickeys intention to sign a black player long before almost anyone else. He had been jolted by die news, for he was a product of his background, and that was a completely segregated world. Rickey, he decided much later, had told him so early on because he knew Barber would need time to become accustomed to the idea. The flrst night he had gone home, wondering whether be should quit or not. Well, said Lylah Barber, even if you quit, you (kint have to quit tonight. Lets have a martini and think about it.</p>
        <p>The m(e I thought, Barber recalls, the more I saw myself clearly, and the more I realized that I had no more control over being white than he had over being black. And I thought to myself: Why am I so proud of something over which I have no control and was in no way a matter of achievement? It was all a matter of chance. With that, the fog cleared. Do you know that I never said</p>
        <p>he was black? Never once. He was a baseball player, and I reported on him as a baseball player, which was my job.</p>
        <p>We talk f(M: a moment (tif die manager, LeoDurocher. He is oddly fond ofDmo-cher. I say oddly, because Barber is in all things proper^ligious, civil and courtlyand Durocher was, in almost all things, the very opposite of that: violent and coarse, seeking the most primi-tivekindofconontation. Whatintrigues Barber about Durocher is his elemental sense of justice, based on the laws of baseballwhoever was better should play, regardless of his background. Rickey wanted Durocher to be R^insons first ipanager, because he would have fought to^ (Did toenail for Robinson.</p>
        <p>ITieie had been a taste of what mi^t have been. The Dodgers were training in Panama, and Durocher got wind of a Dodgerplayers strike against Robinson. The news reached Durocher after he had undressed to go to bed, Barber says, and he understood immediately what it meant. He lay in bed thinking about it for a while, and he did not decide as others might haveto deal with it the next day, which might have been one day too late. Instead, he got dressed immediately and called a team meeting. If you do this, if you have this strike, hetoldthon, you can...There is a moment of silenceforDurochersunuttered expletives. Hes a ne ballplayer, and hell put money in your pocket and in my pocket, and hes going to play. And fiir-</p>
        <p>themKxe,he said, and Barber adds em-"he'sjustthefirstJustthefirst.</p>
        <p>/re all goiitg to come, and theyre _ ing to be hungry, damn hungry, and if you dontput out, theyll take your jobs. Then, of course, Durocher was suspended for other reasons, and BurtShotton, one of the least confrcmtational men in baseball history, took over. If Leo had done it, says Barber, barely able to control his glee, there would have been a lot more singing and slow walking. There would have been a lot more brushbacks, a lot more confrontation.</p>
        <p>Then Barber is back to the present. The 80th birthday thing, as he puts it, was very demanding. It brought all sorts of ceremonial tilingslunches, honors ftom petle in the state govmment. There was not a lot of contact fiom the world of baseballa phone call from PeeWee Reese and ftom PleterOMalley. But tiiere was a special Ixoadcast on NPR with tributes ftom announcers Vin Scully, Ernie Harwell and Mel Allen.</p>
        <p>Near tiie end. Bob Edwards had asked if Barber had any secrets to leading so full and rich a life, and he answered, ing his cousin Eula from Boston, Do a little plowing every day because, if you stop, youre a goner. Thai, just as Edwards was about to end the segment. Red Baiter said he would like to add one more thing, tiie last line of the 39tii Psalm. He did: 0 spare me a little that 1 may recover strengtii before I go hence and be no more. QGreat Deodorants^ Shave Creams For a Lot Less Moneyiarbasoi</p>
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        <p>1988 LEE NUTRtTKW</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0106" />
        <p>IN STEP WITH:*</p>
        <p>BY JAMES BRAmrVictoria Principal</p>
        <p>OES PAM EWING MISS DALLASl How can you miss getting up at 4 or 5 every morning? said Victoria Principal, the sleek, sexy star who left Dallas a year ago at the top of her celebrity in what some people thought was a mistaken anempt to broaden her acting career.-Larry Hagman was not one of those critics. I dont worry about that girl one bit, he told me. Whatever she sets her mind to do, shell do. You watch. Maybe Larry was right. Victoria has two big TV movies coming up, boUi delayed by the long writers strike. In Inadmissible Evidence, she plays what she calls a Jagged Edge kind of role and will coproduce (which means she shares both the cost risk and the potential profit). Then comes Obsession, which shell also co-produce. This sounds like a steamy one. Im obsessed by another woman, she told me. No overt homosexuality, but women can get crushes on other women, just like b(^s do at school with other boys, star athletes. But when it crosses the line into obsession, it gets dangerous. She also has written two screenplays, one of which she sold to CBS, then bought back. She was asked to star inNutson the London stage, doing the role Barbra Streisand did in the filtn, but cant clear the dates. And last year she did a one-woman show in Spain. I wanted to be Ann-Margret for a week, Piincipal said. I think I had more fun than the audience.</p>
        <p>But how does she really feel about Dallas! I miss the people, she told me. We were like family. I was closest, I guess, to Ken Ker-cheval. From the day we started filming, we bonded. I admire Lindas [Gray] woric. 1 saw Larry recently. Theres a man who has run the gamut in show-biz.</p>
        <p>Hes so thoughtful, so generous. I dont want this to sound like sour grapes. I dont miss being on Dallasjust the people. I was ready to leave. Like a divorce, long before you go, youre emotionally gone. Id already mourned before 1 left.</p>
        <p>But would she go back? Wait a minute, said Victoria. I cant believe this. Just last week, they asked me to come back. I was flattered, but the answer is still no.</p>
        <p>One last thing. Did she ever really believe the dream sequence in the shower, where husband Bobby Ewing [Patrick Duffy] was brought back to life? Victoria laughed. 1 never for one minute believed it. You know, to maintain tension and secrecy, we always shot</p>
        <p>BORN: Jan. 3, 1950, in Fukuoka, Japan. PERSONAL: Married to Christopher Skinner, 1979-81; married Harry Glassman in 1985.</p>
        <p>FILM DEBUT: The Life and Times of Judge Roy Bean, 1972. FILMS: Include The Naked Ape, 1973; Earthquake, 1974; Vigilairte Force, 1976.</p>
        <p>TV SERIES: Dallas, 1978-87. AUTHOR: The Body Principal, 1983.</p>
        <p>VktoriaPrmcq^ pmvmtihmismdeed RJeqfkrDaBai Since she stopped</p>
        <p>acreeiplays,</p>
        <p>pmducmgtmdwiU</p>
        <p>soonbebackonTV</p>
        <p>multiple endings. That was just one of them. I never thought it was serious. And Ill tell you why. They hadnt even arranged for wardrobe. That nightgown 1 wore was one of my own.|i</p>
        <p>MOEli*SEPIEMBER 18,1988  PARADE MAQAZBC</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0107" />
        <p>Ask</p>
        <p>Siaryn</p>
        <p>BY MARILYN VOS SAVANT</p>
        <p>AfrogfeUlnto aiidl32fok deep.EachdaY be Jumped tivo</p>
        <p>K SiSdM*</p>
        <p>INIIIMOSIM</p>
        <p>backdoivBone foot each Bight. How Biany days did it take the frogto lump out of the weii?</p>
        <p>irisD. Girolamo, South Orange, NJ.</p>
        <p>Tm aware that my answer is going to drive everyone crazy, but Im going to risk it anyway: It will take him 30 days. To explain, lets suppose that die well is only 2 feet deep. How many days will it take him to jump out? Less than one, because he can land at the bottom, then jump up to the edge and climb right out widiout sliding back at all. If the well is 3 feet deep, however, hell jump up 2 feet and slide down one during the first 24-hour period, then jump out when the next day arrives, with only one full day behind him. If the well is 4 feet deep, itll take him two days, and so on...the number of days always being two less than the feet.</p>
        <p>I fhiiik wcra a bunch of kypocritBs! If not, why do people ahraiff soy, "Money isn*t evw^hig, when, in leaMy, nMMoy is an that seems to concern todoys soclofy?</p>
        <p>N. Stevens, Youngstown, Ohio</p>
        <p>I think people who dont have money say it because they hope its true, and people who do have money say it because they know its true.</p>
        <p>Why arent the worlds ablest people in leadership positions?</p>
        <p>If s dismaHy glooniy to witness so many countries governments, including onrs, composed of persons of mediocre mentality.</p>
        <p>AT. Chinn, Oakland, Calif.</p>
        <p>Many countries dont have an alternativeleadership is determined by force. Here, however, where we do have a choice, elections often become popularity, notability, contests.</p>
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        <p>us some of its most memorable moments.</p>
        <p>With the richest purse on the Senior PGA TOUR, this yrarsSl.OOO,000%itage Championship wl not o^ rnalse history again, but also establish its place as golfs newest tradition.</p>
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        <p>STATE</p>
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        <pb facs="00097037_0109" />
        <pb facs="00097037_0110" />
        <p>tv-2 The Daily Reflector, Qreenvllle, N.C.  Sunday, September 18,1988</p>
        <p>r 1</p>
        <p>Cover Story:...</p>
        <p>i</p>
        <p>The Best Of SCTV</p>
        <p>By Robert DiMatteo</p>
        <p>Fans of SCTV know that the late-night series from Canada lovingly lampooned the cheesiest aspects of television and was the haven for the most consistently sharp, off-the-wall comedy ever to reach the tube. Now fans as well as the uninitiated will be able to see SCTV regulars John Candy, Eugene Levy, Martin Short, Catherine OHara, Andrea Martin, Joe Flaherty, Rick Moranis and Dave Thomas in tbeir classic sequences as well as a wraparound segment reintroducing some of the original characters in The Best of SCTV (ABC, Sept. 21), a two-hour compilation special offering highlights from the TV series. For those fans who cant get enough, cables Nick at Nite is rebroadcasting episodes of SCTV weeknights.</p>
        <p>The cast of SCTV (for Second City Television) was a Toronto-based offshoot of the original Chicago improvisa-tional comedy troupe. The original (and lasting) format of SCTV took us behind the scenes of a down-on-its-luck TV station in fictitious Melonville - the sort of low-budget, low-inspiration operation that limits itself to lousy imitations and rip-offs of other peoples TV shows. While showing us this fake stations poor excuses for local programming, the SCTV troupe  all of whom played a variety of charac-</p>
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        <p>ters - came up with brilliant parodies of existing TV programs. The station was populated by a variety of miscreants, lowlifes and neer-do-wells.</p>
        <p>There was slimy station owner Guy Caballero (played by Joe Flaherty), wheelchair-bound for effect because he could stand when he needed to. His assistant, Edith Prickley (Andrea Martin), was a vision in her leopard-skin jacket and hat and rhinestone glasses. The news was delivered by the dumb EarkCamembert (Eugene Levy) and alcoholic Floyd^ Robertson (Flaherty), who moonlighted as Count Floyd, host of a grade-Z horror-movie show.</p>
        <p>SCTV (which aired from 1977 to 1983) was the first TV show to be about television  sort of a meta-TV show. The physical center of the SCTV troupe was Candy, a rotund comedian who used his prodigious range to skewer the medium, whether it was as Johnny LaRue, the hustler who coulijl just as easily host a kiddie show as an exercise program, or as William B, the fawning sidekick on The Sammy Maudlin Show, a Merv Griffin sendup.</p>
        <p>As one watches some of the great moments ABC hah culled from SCTV, one is left with the dispiriting feeling that none of the troupe has been as brilliantly funny on his or her own since the series ended. OHara had a few terrific moments in this years Beetlejuice, but they were only moments, and she deserves better. So does her equally invenl-tive colleague, Martin, who failed last year with Roxie, &amp;amp; short-lived C^ sitcom. Even Candy and Short, argqably the most successful of the troupe on their own, have not fulfUlejd their comic genius in recent film roles. What seems to hayie happened with SCTV is similar to the spontaneous coniic flowering that took place on Sid Caesars Your Show of Shows and the original Saturday Night Live cast, right comic talents were brought together at the right ti! resulting in a collaboration greater than any of the partib^ pants. That confluence of genius is only reinforced by watching this ABC special and the Nick at Nite repeats. Its clear that SCTV s playfully irreverent scrutiny of the medium was  and remains  timelessly refreshing.</p>
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        <p>Michele Will T</p>
        <p>By Michele Marks</p>
        <p>Dear Midiele: rm a big fan of Mdissa Gilberts. Please list her date of birth, age and any other credits besides Uttle House on the Prairie. - KRISTI HOOK, OLATHE, KANS.</p>
        <p>Gilbert was bom May 8,1964, in Los Angeles. She was 9 years old when she landed the part of Laura Ingalls in the TV movie that launched the long-running Little House series (1974-83).In 1979, she received an Emmy nomination for her role as Helen Keller in the NBC TV-movie remake of The Miracle Worker. Gilbert has appeared on stage in Bus Stop, The Glass Menagerie and A Shayna Maidel, and was also featured in the theatrical film Sylvester (1985). But she is best known as a small-screen star whose TV-movie credits include The Diary of Anne Frank (1980), Splendor in the Grass (1981), Choices of the Heart (1983) and Blood Vows: The Story of a Mafia Wife (1987).</p>
        <p>Dear Michele; During the period of Rita Hayworths illness and death, I read much about the care and concern of her daughter, Yasmin. I recaU when Hayworth was married to Orson Welles, she had a daughter, Rebecca. I have never seen her mentioned in connection with her mother. Why not? Is Rebecca living? - B. GROSSMAN, DALEVHXE.ALA.</p>
        <p>Rebecca Welles, born in 1944, is the daughter of Hayworth and Welles. Yasmin, born in 1950, is the product of Hayworths marriage to the late Prince Aly Khan. During her mothers lengthy illness, Rebecca lived in Tacoma, Wash. Meanwhile, her mother lived in a New York City apartment with adjoining quarters to Yasmin. Rebecca, far removed from the day-to-day care and decisions concerning her mother, virtually left total responsibility to Yasmin. Rebecca did, however, visit her mother whenever she was in town, and attended her 1987 funeral.</p>
        <p>Dear Michele: Charlton Heston is stUl one of my favorite actow! What Is he doing these days? - FRAN KNIPL-ING, VICTORIA, TEXAS</p>
        <p>i Heston has just finished filming a new production of A Man for All Seasons, which will air later this year on TNT, Ted Turners new basic-cable service.</p>
        <p>Dear Michele: I recently saw the movie Mamie with Tippi Hedren, and thought her performance was ezcel-leut I havent seen Hedren in anything since, and was wondering what happened to her? - MARIA READ, ARCADIA. CALIF.</p>
        <p>Hedren, a former fashion model whose career was launched by Alfred Hitchcock in his films The Birds (1963) and Mamie (1964), was bora Nathalie Hedren in 1935 in Lafayette, Minn. Her other films credits include A Countess from Hong Kong (1967), Tiger by the Tail (1970) and The Harrad Experiment (1973).</p>
        <p>More recently she appeared in the 1985 NBC movie, Alfred Hitchcock Presents, which updated classic episodes from the old Hitchcock series. Hedren, married and divorced twice, is the mother of actress Melanie Griffith (Something Wild). Since 1971, she has resided at Sham-bala, a 180-acre California ranch and animal preserve, where she raises lions and tigers. She has written about her hobby in the book The Cats of Shambala.</p>
        <p>Dear Michele; I think I might have seen Cheers bartender Woody Harrelson in the movie WUdcats with Goldie Hawn. Am I right? - ELLEN SANTOS, BEN-SALEM.PENN. .</p>
        <p>Cheers to you - youre right on target! Harrelson appeared as Krushinski in this 1986 feature, which marked his professional acting debut. Before the film wrapped, Harrelson had auditioned for, and won, the role of bartender Woody Boyd on the hit NBC series CHieers. 'Dear Michele; Will you kindly tell me what became of Peter Hreck and Ridiard Long, the two acton who were so convincing in "The Big Valley? - REBECCA HARTMAN, KNOXVHXE, TENN.'</p>
        <p>Long died of a heart ailment in 1974 at age 47. Breck runs Uie Breck Academy, an acting institute in Vancouver, British Columbia.</p>
        <p>Ptoaae address quesUoos to Michele Will Tell, c/o this newqiaper, P.O. Box 2815, Grand Central Stattoo, New York, NY 10168. Because of the volume of mail received, personal replies cannot be aeoL</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0111" />
        <p>5:00 O Movie V; Saddles and Sagebrush" (1943)</p>
        <p>(NIG() Rowan &amp;amp; Martins Laugh-In Continues (USA) Night Flight 5:05 (WTBS) Night Tracks 5:30 (ESPN) SportsLook (MAX) Movie Eight Iron Men (1952)</p>
        <p>(USA) Night Flight 5:55 (TMC) Movie Sweet Lorraine" (1987)</p>
        <p>6:00 O NewSight Eighty Eight d) Dr. Janies Kennedy O Dallas  Little Rascals (BET) Video Vibrations (DIS) You and Me, Kid (ESPN) Triathlon (NICK) Curious George (SHOW) Movie *V2 The Adventures of Mark Twain" (1985) (USA) Night Flight (WTBS) World Tomorrow 6:15 O Post Five Reports 6:30 O Introduction to Life O Spiritual Awakening 19 Whats Happening Now!! (ARTS) Oscar Peterson and Friends  &amp;lt;</p>
        <p>(BET) Fellowship of Faith (DIS) Mousercise (NICK) Spartakus and the Sun Beneath the Sea (USA) Night Flight (WTBS) It Is Written 6:35 (HBO) Which Mother Is Mine? 7:00 O Oliver North: Fight for Freedom</p>
        <p>O Sesame Street Q O Robert Schuller dl Oral Roberts O Hour of Freedom O World Vision International 19 Focus (ARTS) Lovejoy</p>
        <p>(BET) Mount Olive Baptist Church</p>
        <p>(DIS) Welcome to Pooh Comer (ESPN) SportsCenter (LIFE) Investment Advisory (MAX) Movie hVi China Venture" (1953)</p>
        <p>(NICK) Adventures of the Little Koala</p>
        <p>(USA) Calliope</p>
        <p>(WTBS) Tom &amp;amp; Jerrys Funhouse 7:30 O World Tomorrow (d Frederick K. Price O Calvary Pentecostal Tabernacle</p>
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        <p>Boys" (1975)</p>
        <p>8:00 O James Kennedy O Sesame Street Q O Duke Football Highlights O Summer Olympics 0 Robert Schuller (ARTS) Twentieth Century (BET) Frederick K. Price (DIS) Good Morning Mickey! (ESPN) Running and Racing (HBO) Adventures of Tom Sawyer</p>
        <p>(LIFE) World Tomorrow (NICK) Sharon, Lois &amp;amp; Brams Elephant Show (USA) Cartoons 8:05 (WTBS) Flintstones 8:30 O Dick Sheridan Show GD Capital City Magazine O Oral Roberts (ARTS) Between the Wars (DIS) Wuzzles</p>
        <p>(ESPN) Inside the PGA Tour (HBO) Movie **V2 Mr. Mom" (1983)</p>
        <p>(LIFE) It Is Written</p>
        <p>(MAX) Movie *** Sahara"</p>
        <p>(1943)</p>
        <p>(NICK) Mr. Wizards World 8:35 (WTBS) Tom &amp;amp; Jerrys Funhouse</p>
        <p>9:00 O Our Sunday Best O This Old House g</p>
        <p>Sunday Daytime</p>
        <p>B O Sunday Morning g d Portrait of the Soviet Union g 0 Movie * The Death of Ocean View Park (1979)</p>
        <p>(ARTS) James at 15 (BET) Bobby Jones (DIS) Donald Duck Presents (ESPN) Magic Years in Sports (LIFE) Investment Advisory (NICK) Dennis the Menace (TNN) Inside Winston Cup Racing 9:05 (WTBS) Flintstones 9:30 O Frugal Gourmet (DIS) Raccoons (ESPN) Lighter Side of Sports (NICK) Looney Tunes (SHOW) Movie Rustlers Rhapsody" (1985)</p>
        <p>(TMC) Movie My Science Project (1985)</p>
        <p>(TNN) Celebrity Outdoors 9:35 (WTBS) Andy Griffith 10:00 O Lloyd Ogilvie O Mystery! g d DJ Kat Show (ARTS) A Walk Through the 20th Century With Bill Moyers (BET) Pleasant Grove Church (DIS) Movie V2 Ludwigs Think Taiik (1985)</p>
        <p>(ESPN) Sportraits</p>
        <p>(HBO) Movie w* Big Trouble in</p>
        <p>Little China" (1986)</p>
        <p>(NICK) NICK Rocks: Video to Go (TNN) Performance Plus (USA) He-Man and Sbe-Ra: Secret of the Sword 10:05 (WTBS) Good News 10:15 (MAX) Movie ** Twelve OQock High (1949)</p>
        <p>10:30 B Oral Roberts B Assignment Sunday:</p>
        <p>B Jerry Falwell</p>
        <p>(BET) Don Stuart</p>
        <p>(ESPN) This Week in Sports</p>
        <p>(LIFE) Cooking With Australian</p>
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        <p>(NICK) You Cant do That on Television</p>
        <p>(TNN) Hidden Heroes 10:35 (WTBS) Movie *** The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance" (1962)</p>
        <p>11:00 OGerbert O Masterpiece Theatre g B First Presbyterian Church d Movie Forbidden Love (1982)</p>
        <p>0 First Baptist Church (ARTS) Mountbatten: The Soldier and the Statesman (BET) Breath of Life (LIFE) Cardiology Update (NICK) Dont Just Sit There (SHOW) Movie *** The Night of the Iguana" (1964)</p>
        <p>(TNN) Inside Winston Cup Racing 11:30 0 Lone Ranger O Dick Sheridan Show 0 This Week With David Brinkley g</p>
        <p>(BET) Paid Programming (DIS) Grimms Fairy Tales (ESPN) NFL Gameday (LIFE) Family Medicine Update (NICK) Kids Court (TMC) Movie ** Born in East LA." (1987)</p>
        <p>(TNN) Motoworld 11:45 (HBO) Movie "Cat Ballou" (1965)</p>
        <p>^Ko O Rifleman O McLaughlin Group B Mack Brown O Meet the Press g O UNC Coaches Show (ARTS) Movie a*/2 The Stranger" (1946)</p>
        <p>(DIS) Superman</p>
        <p>(LIFE) Physicians Journal Update</p>
        <p>(NICK) Count Duckula (TNN) Rodeo</p>
        <p>(USA) All-American Wrestling 12:30 B Cimarron Strip O Firing Line B O NFL Today O NFL Live 0 Art Baker Show (DIS) Zorro (ESPN) Auto Racing (MAX) Movie -kit-kVi 'The Dirty Dozen" (1967)</p>
        <p>(NICK) Inspector Gadget 1:00 O Science Journal B O B NFL Football d Movie V2 Somebody Killed Her Husband (1978)</p>
        <p>0 Movie * The Domino Principle (1977)</p>
        <p>(DIS) Videopolis Superstar Special  *</p>
        <p>(LIFE) Internal Medicine Update (NICK) Lassie</p>
        <p>(SHOW) Movie *'/2 Three Oclock High (1987)</p>
        <p>(TMC) Movie *V2 Flashdance (1983)</p>
        <p>(TNN) Motor Mania (USA) Master 1:05 (WTBS) Andy Griffith 1:30 O Tony Browns-Joumal (HBO) Movie The Whistle Blower (1987)</p>
        <p>(LIFE) Orthopaedic Surgery Update</p>
        <p>(NICK) Zoo Family 1:35 (WTBS) Beverly Hillbillies 2:00 B Wagon Train O Campaign 88 (ARTS) Horowitz in London: A Royal Concert (DIS) Cinderella</p>
        <p>(LIFE) Obstetrics/Gynecology Update</p>
        <p>(NICK) The Electric Grandmother</p>
        <p>(TNN) Outdoor News Network (USA) Movie **V2 Rollover"</p>
        <p>(1981)</p>
        <p>2:05 (WTBS) Major Uague Baseball</p>
        <p>2:30 O Shadows In the Sunbelt (BET) Paid Programming (LIFE) Cardiology Update (TNN) Motoworld 3:00 O Painting With Pittard d Mother-Daughter International Pageant 0 Dukes of Hazzard (LIFE) Physicians Journal Update</p>
        <p>(MAX) Movie **Vi Ice Station Zebra (1968)</p>
        <p>(NICK) Hand-Me-Down Kid (SHOW) Movie h*** Gandhi"</p>
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        <p>(TMQ Movie 2010" (1984) (TNN) American Sports Cavalcade 3:30 B Rifleman O Joy of Painting</p>
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        <p>4:00 B Gu^moke O Rod and Rbel B B NFL Football B Summer Olympics 0 Southern Sportsman (ARTS) Handmade in America (DIS) Movie A Friendship in Vienna (1988)</p>
        <p>(LIFE) Internal Medicine Update (NICK) You Cant do That on Television 4:30 O Motorweek 0 Wheel of Fortune g (ARTS) Story of Fashion (BET) Catch the Spirit (LIFE) Assessing the Risks (NICK) Out of Control (TNN) Inside Winston Cop Racing (USA) Check It Out!</p>
        <p>4:50 (WTBS) Three Stooges 5:00 B Big Valley O American Caesar g d Wonderful World of Disney 0 Best of the National Geographic Specials (ARTS) Footsteps (BET) Victory Tempie (ESPN) Horse Racing (HBO) Movie House II: The Second Story" (1987)</p>
        <p>(LIFE) Impression: Insights for Management</p>
        <p>(NICK) Amy and the Angel (TMC) Movie **  Under Cover  (1987)</p>
        <p>(TNN) Performance Plus (USA) Riptide 5:05 (WTBS) Comer Pyle, USMC 5:30 (LIFE) Obstetrics/Gynecology Update</p>
        <p>(MAX) Movie  Kellys Heroes" (1970)</p>
        <p>(TNN) Auto Specialty Magazine 5:35 (WTBS) New Leave It to Beaver</p>
        <p>Tricks Of The Trade</p>
        <p>SUNDAY</p>
        <p>ROCKABYE</p>
        <p>Valerie Bertlnelli (r.| plays a young woman whose child is kidnapped from her in broad daylight in the drama "Rockabye." Rachel Ticotin co-stars. The rebroadcast airs Sunday, Sept.</p>
        <p>18, on CBS.</p>
        <p>iSioiions reserve the right to make lost mmute changes.!</p>
        <p>Cindy Williams and Markie Post are the stars of  Tricks of the Trade, a CBS movie now in production in Los Angeles. Williams, once the star of Laverne and Shirley, plays the wife of a murdered man; Post, who stars on the NBC comedy Night Court, plays a prostitute who was having an affair with him. The two women team up to find the murderer.</p>
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        <pb facs="00097037_0112" />
        <p>Sunday Evening</p>
        <p>SUNDAY EVENING</p>
        <p>7:00  7:30</p>
        <p>Bonanza: The Lost Episodes</p>
        <p>Metropolitan Opera Presents</p>
        <p>60 Minutes</p>
        <p>21 Jump Street</p>
        <p>News</p>
        <p>8:00</p>
        <p>Rin Tin Tin</p>
        <p>8:30</p>
        <p>Snapshots</p>
        <p>Infinite Voyage</p>
        <p>Murder. She Wrote</p>
        <p>Most Wanted</p>
        <p>With Children</p>
        <p>9:00  9:30</p>
        <p>In Touch</p>
        <p>Masterpiece Theatre</p>
        <p>10:00</p>
        <p>Ben Haden</p>
        <p>Neight)ors</p>
        <p>10:30</p>
        <p>J. Ankerberg</p>
        <p>Fresh Fields</p>
        <p>Movie:  Rockabye</p>
        <p>G. Shandling</p>
        <p>Tracey UNman</p>
        <p>Ouet</p>
        <p>Summer Olympics</p>
        <p>60 Minutes</p>
        <p>MacGyver</p>
        <p>News</p>
        <p>Olym, Cont.</p>
        <p>Murder. She Wrote</p>
        <p>Movie: Rockabye"</p>
        <p>National Geographic 100th Anniversary Special</p>
        <p>Movie: "The Man Who Came to Dinner"</p>
        <p>NFL Primetime</p>
        <p>Movie: Mr. Mom Cont d</p>
        <p>Family Med. Imaging</p>
        <p>"Kelly s Heroes Cont d</p>
        <p>NFLSaapbook</p>
        <p>Legend of Marilyn Monroe</p>
        <p>NFL Theatre: Crunch Time</p>
        <p>Movie: "Friday the 13th - the Final Chapter"</p>
        <p>Physicians' Journal Update Cardiology</p>
        <p>ABC News Doseup</p>
        <p>Movie: 'Bus Stop"</p>
        <p>NFL Primetime</p>
        <p>Louie Anderson Show</p>
        <p>Body Double</p>
        <p>Internal Med. Obstetrics</p>
        <p>Movie: Platoon</p>
        <p>lovie: Mannequin Cont d Move: Tough Guys Don't Dance"</p>
        <p>Move Stakeout</p>
        <p>Tales of the Gold Monkey Mike Hammer</p>
        <p>Move HighSerra</p>
        <p>Family Med.</p>
        <p>Movie: "The Dirty Dozen"</p>
        <p>Movie: "Aliens"</p>
        <p>Move: Flashdance</p>
        <p>Cover Story Hollywood</p>
        <p>Robert Klein Time</p>
        <p>National Geographic Explorer</p>
        <p>6:09 O Bonanza: The Lost Episodes</p>
        <p>O North Carolina People CD Too Close for Comfort  ABC News g (ARTS) Our Century: The Hungary Giants</p>
        <p>(BET) Heaven on Earth (DIS) Danger Bay g (LIFE) Internal Medicine Update (NICK) Kids Court (TNN) Motoworld (USA) Airwolf 6:05 (WTBS) NWA: Main Event 6:30 O Metropolitan Opera Presents</p>
        <p>(S Family Ties g</p>
        <p>19 Small Wonder g</p>
        <p>(BET) Breath of Life</p>
        <p>(DIS) Animals in Action</p>
        <p>(ESPN) Auto Racing</p>
        <p>(HBO) Movie a*Vz "Mr. Mom"</p>
        <p>(1983)</p>
        <p>(LIFE) Orthopaedic Surgery Update</p>
        <p>(NICK) Looney Tunes</p>
        <p>(SHOW) Movie ** "Mannequin</p>
        <p>(1987)</p>
        <p>(TNN) Hidden Heroes 7:00 O Bonanza: The Lost Episodes</p>
        <p>O O 60 Minutes g d) 21 Jump Street ONews O MacGyver g (ARTS) Living Dangerously (BET) Christian Lifestyle Magazine</p>
        <p>(DIS) Movie The Man Who Came to Dinner" (1941) (ESPN) SportsCenter (UFE) FamUy Medicine Update (NICK) Inspector Gadget (TMC) Movie *** Stakeout" (1987)</p>
        <p>(TNN) American Sports Cavalcade</p>
        <p>(USA) Tales of the Gold Monkey (WTBS) Movie  "High</p>
        <p>Sierra" (1941)</p>
        <p>7:15 (ESPN) NFL Primetime 7:30 B Summer Olympics (BET) Gospel Magazine (UFE) Modem Dtagnostk Imag-</p>
        <p>(NICK) Count Duckula</p>
        <p>8:00 O Rio Tin Tin K-9 Cbp In this updated version of the 1950s show, Rin Tin Tin is a member of the canine corps in a big city. Stars Jesse Collins and Cali Timmins.</p>
        <p>O Infinite Voyage Remotely located scientific research projects in Tibet, the Hawaiian and Galapagos Islands, a tropical rain forest and the Arctic's Ellesmere Island. (R) (In Stereo) (Part 2 of 12)g(l hr.)</p>
        <p>B O Murder, She Wrote g (1</p>
        <p>hr.)</p>
        <p>d) America's Most Wanted (In</p>
        <p>Stereo)</p>
        <p>19 National Geographic 100th Anniversary Special (2 hrs.) (ARTS) Kerouac Jack Coulter portrays beat-generation author Jack Kerouac (1922-69) in a biography that begins with the writer's impoverished boyhood. Included are TV appearance clips by Kerouac in 1958 and 1968 and insights by fellow writers Allen Ginsberg, Lawrence Ferlinghetti and William Burroughs. (1 hr.) (BET) Frederick K. Price (1 hr.) (HBO) Movie Friday the 13th -the Final Chapter (1984) Crispin Glover, Kimberly Beck. (1 hr, 30 min.)</p>
        <p>(UFE) Physicians Journal Update Topics: the resurgence of syphilis; breast cancer therapy; hyponatremia. (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>(MAX) Movie "Platoon" (1986) Tom Berenger, Willem Dafoe. (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>(NICK) Rowan &amp;amp; Martins Langk-In</p>
        <p>(SHOW) Movie "Tough Guys Dont Dance" (1987) Ryan ONeal, Isabella Rossellini. (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>(USA) Mike Hammer 8:15 (ESPN) NFL Scrapbook Men Who Wore the Star. History of the Dallas Cowboys.</p>
        <p>8:30 B American Snapshots Trisha Springer and Don Jacks seek out</p>
        <p>September Frenzy!</p>
        <p>Complete satellite system with 10 antenna installed and remote control-to-the-chair.</p>
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        <p>the people and places which make up our American heritage, d) Married... With Children Peggy and Marcy go to an exotic-dance club. Guest: Bill Hufsey. (R) (In Stereo) g (TNN) Inside Winston Cop Racing A behind-the-scenes look at auto racing, including interviews, highlights and late-breaking news. Host; Ned Jarrett. (In Stereo)</p>
        <p>9:00 e In Touch (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>O Masterpiece Theatre By the Sword Divided, H" Hugh Brandon's promotion to the position of castle steward adds to his already unhappy personal life. (Part 4 of 7) g (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>O O Movie Rockabye" (1986) Valerie Bertinelli, Rachel Tico-tin. (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>d) Its Garry Shandlings Show Garry meets the girl of his dreams on the Love Connection show. Guest star; Chuck Woolery. (R) (In Stereo) (Part 1 of 2) (ARTS) Vanity Fair Still unmarried after her first social season, Becky becomes a governess. (BET) Bobby Jones (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>(DIS) Legend of Marilyn Monroe The life of Norma Jean, who was raised in foster homes and grew up to be a legendary actress. Narrator; John Huston. (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>(ESPN) NFL Theatre Crunch Time. (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>(UFE) Cardiology Update Topic: hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. (TMC) Movie "Flashdance" (1983) Jennifer Beals, Michael Nouri. (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>(TNN) Motoworld Featured: the Springfield Mile Dirt Track Nationals, from Springfield, 111. (In Stereo)</p>
        <p>(USA) Cover Story (WTBS) National Geographic Explorer</p>
        <p>9:30 d) Tracey Ullman Show Sketches, greedy treasure hunters; a woman trying to make travel plans to see her lover; a dying artist's last days. (R) (In Stereo)</p>
        <p>(ARTS) Jane Eyre Jane is sent to the Lowood Charitable School as punishment for her rebellious behavior. (Part 2 of 11)</p>
        <p>(HBO) Louie Anderson Show The lighter side of life from the comic who calls himself "one of two fat people in California. (In Stereo) g(l hr.)</p>
        <p>(LIFE) Internal Medicine Update</p>
        <p>Topic: upper respiratory infection.</p>
        <p>(TNN) Hidden Heroes Featured: owner Rick Galles of Galles Racing. Super Vee and Can Am national champions. (In Stereo) (USA) Hollywood Insider</p>
        <p>10:09 e Ben Haden O Good Neighbors QD Dnet A visit from Bens _ former girlfriend (Jamie Rose) puts his relationship with Laura in jeopardy. (R) (In Stereo) (Part lof2)g</p>
        <p>19 ABC News Uoseup Beyond the Shuttle Correspondent Lynn Sherr examines the currrent and future status of the U.S. space program, g (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>(ARTS) Hollywood: The Golden Years The chaotic operation of RKO under the direction of Howard Hughes, and the eventual sale of the company to Lucille Ball. (Part 6 of 6) (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>(BET) Victory Temple (1 hr.) (DIS) Movie Bus Stop (1956) Marilyn Monroe, Don Murray. (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>(ESPN) NFL Primetime (1 hr.) (LIFE) Obstetrics/Gynecology ' Update Topic, use of lasers. (MAX) Movie The Dirty Dozen (1967) Lee Marvin, Ernest Borg-nine. (2 hrs., 30 min.)</p>
        <p>(SHOW) Movie Aliens (1986) Sigourney Weaver, Michael Biehn. (2 hrs., 20 min.)</p>
        <p>(TNN) Celebrity Ontdoon Featured; country musics T. Graham Brown goes bonefishing off the coast of South America in Islas Los Roques. (In Stereo)</p>
        <p>(USA) Robert Klein Time Scheduled: Sandra Bernhard, Tony Roberts, pianist Mitchell Zeid-wig. (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>10:30 O John Ankerberg O Fresh Fields Hester is alarmed to find that she is expected to entertain Williams client from the Middle East. dD News</p>
        <p>O Sommer Olympics Continu (1</p>
        <p>hr., 30 min.)</p>
        <p>(HBO) Movie Body Double (1984) Craig Wasson, Melanie Griffith. (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>(LIFE) Family Medicine Update Topic; health maintenance.</p>
        <p>(TNN) Americas Horse Featured: the Blue Ribbon Derby, from Blue Ribbon Downs in Salli-saw, Okla. (In Stereo)</p>
        <p>11:00 O To Be Announced O Bnlman Q  News d) Sports Extra O CBS News g (ARTS) Blackadder II Balckad-der is imprisoned, but even this wont prevent him from saving the day. (Part 6 of 6)</p>
        <p>(BET) Victory Temple (1 hr.) (ESPN) SportsCenter (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>(LIFE) Orthopaedic Surgery Update Topic; ankle fractures.</p>
        <p>(NICK) Rowan &amp;amp; Martins Laugh-In Continues</p>
        <p>(TMq Movie Wish You Were Here (1987) Emily Lloyd, Tom Bell. (1 hr., 35 min.)</p>
        <p>(TNN) Rodeo Mesquite Championship Rodeo from Mesquite, Texas. (In Stereo) (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>(USA) Financial Freedom (1 hr.) (WTBS) All in the Family 11:15 O CBS News g O Dick Spurrier Show O ABC News g 11:30 e Ed Young O M*A*S*H</p>
        <p>QD Movie Straw Dogs (1971) Dustin Hoffman, Susan George. (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>OChecng</p>
        <p>(ARTS) Police Squad</p>
        <p>(UFE) Internal Medicine Update</p>
        <p>Topic: upper respiratory infection.</p>
        <p>(WTBS) Jerry Falwell (1 hr)</p>
        <p>11:45 O Siskel &amp;amp; Ebert The criUcs look at movie scenes or situations which have become cliches.</p>
        <p>12:00 O Larry Jones O Southern Sportsman O News</p>
        <p>O Entertainment This Week Actress Teri Garr (In Stereo) (1 hr.) (ARTS) Kerouac Jack Coulter portrays beat-generation author Jack Kerouac (1922-69) in a biography that begins with the writers impoverished boyhood. In-clutfed are TV appearance clips by Kerouac in 1958 and 1968 and</p>
        <p>insights by fellow writers Allen Ginsberg, Lawrence Ferlinghetti and William Burroughs. (1 hr.) (BET) Paid Programming (3 hrs.) (DIS)  Lawrenceville Stories</p>
        <p>Prodigious Hickey Based on Owen Johnsons tales about young William Hicks (Zach Galli-gan) and his antics at the prestigious Lawrenceville prep school in tum-of-the-century Princeton, N.J. Also stars Edward Herrmann. (Part 2 of 3) (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>(ESPN) NFLs Greatest Moments Wake Up the Echoes. (R) (1 hr.) (LIFE) Physicians Journal Update Topics: the resurgence of syphilis; breast cancer therapy; hyponatremia. (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>(TNN) Performance Plus Featured: record-breaking tires in motor sports; ground effects for trucks; a car wax that guarantees the wet look. (In Stereo) (USA) Keys to Success 12:15 O World Vishm International (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>12:20 (SHOW) Movie Three OOock High (1987) Casey Siemaszko, Anne Ryan. (1 hr., 45 min.)</p>
        <p>12:30 e John Osteen O Face the Nation B Sommer Olympics Scheduled; U.S. vs. Korea in Baseball. (Live) (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>(HBO) Vietnam War Story "Home Three soldiers recuperating in a Veterans Administration hospital deal with reality in different ways. (In Stereo) g (MAX) Movie Stripes (1981) Bill Murray, Harold Ramis. (1 hr, 50 min.)</p>
        <p>(TNN) American Sports Cavalcade Featured: the 34th Annual NHRA U.S. Nationals Championship Drag Races, from Indianapolis. (In Stereo) (I hr., 30 min.) (USA) European Hair Secrets (WTBS) World Tomorrow 12:35 (TMC) Movie Sunshine Boys (1975) George Bums, Walter Matthau. (1 hr., 55 min.)</p>
        <p>1:00 B Conversations O Assignment Sunday: "Elder Abuse What are the causes of the growing tragedy of elder abuse, and where can senior citizens turn for help. (R)</p>
        <p>C9 Whats Happening Now!! (ARTS) Vanity Fair Still unmar- . ried after her first social season, Becky becomes a governess.</p>
        <p>(DIS) Cinderella A degraded girls (Lesley Ann Warren) wish to attend a lavish ball comes true with the help of her fairy godmother (Celeste Holm). Also stars Ginger Rogers, Walter Pidgeon, Pat Carroll, Stuart Damon, Jo Van Fleet. Music by Rodgers and Hammerstein. (In Stereo) (1 hr.,</p>
        <p>30 min.)</p>
        <p>(ESPN) NFLs Greatest Moments</p>
        <p>Best Ever Runners. (R) (1 hr.) (HBO) Movie Hellraiser (1987) Andrew Robinson, Gare Higgins.</p>
        <p>(1 hr., 35 min.)</p>
        <p>(LIFE) Investment Advisory (3</p>
        <p>hrs.)</p>
        <p>(USA) b There Love After Marriage</p>
        <p>(WTBS) Christian Childrens Fud 1:15 O Dallas 1:30 8 Cable Kitchen ( Friday the 13th: The Series A cursed cradle gives deadly orders to parents desperate to save their baby. (R) (In Stereo) (1 hr.) (ARTS) Jane Eyre Jane is sent to the Lowood Charitable School as punishment for her rebellious behavior. (Part 2 of 11)</p>
        <p>(USA) Financial Fr^om (1 hr.) (WTBS) James Robison 2:00 e 700 Gob (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>O Nightwatch (4 hrs.)</p>
        <p>(ARTS) Hollywood: The Golden Years The chaotic operation of RKO under the direction of Howard Hughes, and the eventual sale of the company to Lucille BaU. (Part 6 of 6) (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>(ESPN) SportsCenter</p>
        <p>(NICK) Rowan &amp;amp; Martins Langh-</p>
        <p>InCoatinnes</p>
        <p>(TNN). Rodeo Mesquite Championship Rodeo from Mesquite, Texas. (In Stereo) (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>* (WTBS) Fletcher Brothers 2:05 (SHOW) Movie Naughty Stewardesses (1973) (1 hr., 55 min.) 2:20 (MAX) Movie Kellys Heroes  (1970) Gint Eastwood, Telly Sav-alas. (2 hrs., 30 min.)</p>
        <p>2:30 (DIS) Legend of Marilyn Monroe The life of Norma Jean, who was raised in foster homes and grew up to be a legendary actress. Narrator; John Huston. (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>(ESPN) College Football Ala</p>
        <p>bama at Texas A&amp;amp;M. (R) (3 hrs.) (TMQ Movie The Subject Was Roses (1968) Patricia Neal, Jack Albertson. (1 hr., 50 min.)</p>
        <p>(USA) Discover (WTBS) Urry Jones 2:35 (HBO) Movie Rosemarys Baby (1968) Mia Farrow, John Cassavetes. (2 hrs., 20 min.)</p>
        <p>3:00 B Movie Web of Evidence (1959) Van Johnson, Vera Miles. (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>(ARTS) Blackadder II Balckad-der is imprisoned, but even this wont prevent him from saving the day. (Part 6 of 6)</p>
        <p>(BET) Video Vibrations (3 hrs.) (USA) Is There Love After Marriage</p>
        <p>(WTBS) Save the Children 3:30 (ARTS) Police Sqnad (DIS) Movie Bus Stop  (1956) Marilyn Monroe, Don Murray. (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>(USA) Perfect Diet (WTBS) Movie Home of the Brave (1949) Frank Lovejoy, James Edwards. (1 hr., 45 min.) 4:00 (ARTS) Movie The Stranger (1946) Orson Welles, Loretta Young. (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>(LIFE) Investment Advisory (2</p>
        <p>hrs.)</p>
        <p>(SHOW) Movie The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (1978) Kurt Ida, Forrest Tucker. (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>(USA) Weight Loss Made Easy 4:20 (TMC) Movie The Man Who Came to Dinner (1941) Monty Woolley, Bette Davis. (1 hr., 55 min.)</p>
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        <p>Monday - Friday Daytime</p>
        <p>5:00 O Movie (Mon) Western Code (1932)</p>
        <p>O Bring Em Back Alive (Tue-Fri)</p>
        <p>O Success-N-Life (ARTS) Skag (Wed)</p>
        <p>(ARTS) Lovelaw (Fri)</p>
        <p>(DIS) Walt Disney Presents (Thu-Fri)</p>
        <p>(ESPN) Action Outdoors With Julius Boros (Wed)</p>
        <p>(ESPN) Golf: Story of the Junior Tour (Fri)</p>
        <p>(MAX) Fats Domino &amp;amp; Friends (Thu)</p>
        <p>(NICK) Rowan &amp;amp; Martins Laugh-In Continues (Mon)</p>
        <p>(USA) Investment World (Mon) (USA) Perfect Diet (Toe)</p>
        <p>(WTBS) Green Acres (Tue-Fri) 5:10 (MAX) Movie (Wed) **Vz The Gypsy Moths (1969)</p>
        <p>(SHOW) My 17th Summer (Tue) 5:15 (HBO) Verdict: The Wrong Man (Tue)</p>
        <p>(TMC) Movie (Fri) '/z A Question of Honor" (1982)</p>
        <p>(WTBS) Three Stooges (Mon)</p>
        <p>5:20 (TMC) Movie (Tue)</p>
        <p>The Grapes of Wrath (1940) 5:25 (HBO) Movie (Wed) *** Raising Arizona (1987)</p>
        <p>5:30 O On Trial (Tue-Fri)</p>
        <p>(S Morning Stretch 19 Business This Morning (ARTS) Twentieth Century (Tue) (ARTS) Amandas (Thu)</p>
        <p>(DIS) Scheme of Things (Mon, Wed, Fri)</p>
        <p>(ESPN) Getting Fit (SHOW) Movie (Thu) I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings (1979)</p>
        <p>(USA) Keys to Success (Mon) (USA) Easy Way to Lose Weight (Tue)</p>
        <p>(USA) Is There Love After Marriage (Wed)</p>
        <p>(USA) Discover (Thu)</p>
        <p>(USA) Perfect Diet (Fri)</p>
        <p>(WTBS) Green Acres (Mon) (WTBS) Gomer Pyle, USMC (Tue-Fri)</p>
        <p>5:35 (HBO) Movie (Fri) aVz Last Resort (1986)</p>
        <p>5:40 (HBO) Warning: Food May Be Hazardous to Your Health (Thu) (TMC) Movie (Wed) ** The Concorde  Airport 79 (1979)</p>
        <p>6:00 O Today with Marilyn O CBS News CD SilverHawks S Jimmy Swaggart O Carolina Today .</p>
        <p>O First Edition</p>
        <p>(ARTS) Story of Fashion (Mon)</p>
        <p>(ARTS) Buffalo Bill (Tue)</p>
        <p>(ARTS) American Architecture Now (Wed-Thu)</p>
        <p>(ARTS) Guggenheim Works and Process (Fri)</p>
        <p>(BET) Success-N-Life (DIS) Mickey Mouse Gub (ESPN) Aerobics.</p>
        <p>(LIFE) Prescribing Information (MAX) Movie (Thu) Roxanne (1987) (Fri) "Seven Brides for Seven Brothers (1954) (NICK) Curious George (SHOW) Movie (Mon) Vz "Something for a Lonely Man (1968) (Tue) *wyz Evil Under the Sun (1982) (Wed) /i Three OClock High (1987) (Fri) "Just Me and You (1978) (TMC) Short Film Showcase (Thu) (USA) Love After Marriage (Mon) (USA) Youth Secrets of the SUrs (Tue)</p>
        <p>(USA) Keys to Success (Wed) (USA) Perfect Diet (Thu)</p>
        <p>(USA) Is There Love After Marriage (Fri)</p>
        <p>(WTBS) Headline News 6:10 (MAX) Movie (Tue) **** Les Miserables (1935)</p>
        <p>6:15 O ABC News (HBO) A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthurs Court (Thu)</p>
        <p>(TMQ Movie (Mon) nnVi Parole (1982)</p>
        <p>6:30 O James Robison S News (I) Fllnlilonn</p>
        <p>O NBC News O First Edition (ARTS) A&amp;amp;E Preview (DIS) Mousercise * (ESPN) Nations Business Today (HBO) The Muppet Musicians of Bremen (Mon)</p>
        <p>(HBO) Survival (Tue)</p>
        <p>(LIFE) Cardiology Update (Mon) (LIFE) Physicians Journal Update (Tue)</p>
        <p>(LIFE) Family Medicine Update (Wed)</p>
        <p>(LIFE) Obstetrics/Gynecology Update (Thu)</p>
        <p>(LIFE) Internal Medicine Update (Fri)</p>
        <p>(NICK) Little Prince (TMC) Movie (Thu) Vz Three Oclock High (1987)</p>
        <p>(USA) Perfect Diet (Mon, Wed) (USA) All-American Kitchen (Tue)</p>
        <p>(USA) Is There Love After Marriage (Thu)</p>
        <p>(USA) Outdoorsman (Fri)</p>
        <p>(WTBS) Scooby Doo 6:45 O A.M. Weather O ABC News 7:00 e Superbook O French in Action (Mon)</p>
        <p>O Innovation (Tue)</p>
        <p>O Joy of Painting (Wed)</p>
        <p>O Science Journal (Thu)</p>
        <p>O Open Mind (Fri)</p>
        <p>O This Morning ( Real Gbostbusters O Summer Olympics 19 Good Morning America (ARTS) Signature (Mon, Wed, Fri) (ARTS) Handmade in America (Toe)</p>
        <p>(ARTS) At the Met (Thu)</p>
        <p>(BET) Greater Bethel Temple (Mon)</p>
        <p>(BET) Victory Temple (Toe, Fri) (BET) Don Stuart (Wed)</p>
        <p>(BET) Mount Olive Baptist Church (Thu)</p>
        <p>(DIS) Good Morning Mickey! (HBO) Encyclopedia (Wed, Fri) (LIFE) Obstetrics/Gynecology Update (Mon)</p>
        <p>(LIFE) Internal Medicine Update (Wed)</p>
        <p>(LIFE) Family Medicine Update (Thu)</p>
        <p>(LIFE) Cardiology Update (Fri) (MAX) Movie (Mon) **'/2 Apartment for Peggy (1948) (Wed) Vi "A Woman of Distinction (1950)</p>
        <p>(NICK) Dr. Snuggles (USA) Cartoons</p>
        <p>(WTBS) Tom &amp;amp; Jerrys Fonhouse 7:30 O Adventures of Dry Gulch O Body Electric (Mon, Wed, Fri) O Homestretch (Tue, Thu)</p>
        <p>CD (NICK) Dennis the Menace (ARTS) Golden Age of Television (BET) Paid Pn^mming (DIS) Welcome to Pooh Comer (HBO) Adventures of Tom Sawyer (Mon, Wed, Fri)</p>
        <p>(HBO) Tales of Little Women (Tue, 'Thu)</p>
        <p>(UFE) It Figures</p>
        <p>(SHOW) Do Me a Favor... Don't</p>
        <p>Vote for My Mom (Thu)</p>
        <p>(TMC) Movie (Tue) ** Twelve O'clock High (1949)</p>
        <p>7:40 (MAX) Movie (Fri) A Lawless Street" (1955)</p>
        <p>8:00 O Fatter Knows Best O GED-TV (Mon, Wed)</p>
        <p>O Learn to Read (Tue, Thu)</p>
        <p>O Another Page (Fri)</p>
        <p>X) Woody Woodpecker O CBS News</p>
        <p>(ARTS) Man From Moscow (Mon) (ARTS) Romantic Spirit (Tue) (ARTS) Freud (Wed)</p>
        <p>(ARTS) Lovelaw (Thu)</p>
        <p>(ARTS) Bluebell (Fri)</p>
        <p>(DIS) Donald Duck Presents (HBO) Movie (Mon) "Big Shots (1987) (Tue)  Rad (1986) (Wed)  Sweet</p>
        <p>Dreams (1985) (Thu) ** Winners Take AH (1987) (Fri) **V2 The 500-Pound Jerk (1972) (UFE) It Figures (MAX) Vinuge Performances (Tue)</p>
        <p>(MAX) Movie (Thu) V'z Stranger on the Run (1967)</p>
        <p>(NICK) Lassie</p>
        <p>(SHOW) Movie (Mon) "Love with a Perfect Stranger (1986) (Tue) Dark Side of Love (1979) (Wed) *** Bill Cosby - Himself" (1982) (Fri) *Vz Julia (1977) (TMC) Movie (Mon) The Grapes of Wrath  (1940) (Wed)  Lolly Madonna XXX (1973) (Fri) Vz Valley of the Kings" (1954)</p>
        <p>(USA) She-Ra: Princess of Power 8:05 (WTBS) Beverly Hillbillies 8:30 O Hazel O Community Bulletin Board (Mon)</p>
        <p>O Instructional Programming (Tue-Fri)</p>
        <p>(S My Little Pony  To Be Announced (DIS) Dumbos Circus (ESPN) SportsCenter (LIFE) Motterworks (Mon, Wed, Fri)</p>
        <p>(LIFE) What Every Baby Knows (Tue, Thu)</p>
        <p>(MAX) Movie (Tue) Bill Cosby Himself (1982) (Wed) ** Pat and Mike (1952) (NICK) Todays Special (SHOW) Movie (Thu)  Rustlers Rhapsody (1985)</p>
        <p>(TMC) Movie (Thu) Go for Broke (1951)</p>
        <p>(USA) Cartoons 8:35 (WTBS) Bewitched 9:00 O Father Murphy O Sesame Street O Geraldo (D I Love Lucy 19 Donahue (ARTS) Skag (Tue)</p>
        <p>(ARTS) Jazz at tte Smithsonian (Thu)</p>
        <p>(ARTS) Spyship (Fri)</p>
        <p>(DIS) Movie (Mon) * The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (1978) (Tue) My Dog the Thief (1970) (Wed)  Snoopy. Come Home (1972) (Thu) Poor Little Rich Girl  (1936)</p>
        <p>(DIS) Fuzzbucket (Fri)</p>
        <p>(ESPN) Auto Racing (Mon) (ESPN) Volleyball (Tue)</p>
        <p>(ESPN) Hydroplane Racing (Wed)</p>
        <p>(ESPN) Bowling (Thu)</p>
        <p>(ESPN) Windsurfing (Fri)</p>
        <p>(LIFE) Nurse (Mon, Wed, Fri) (LIFE) Marcus Welby, M.D. (Tue, Thu)</p>
        <p>(MAX) Movie (Mon)  Come to the Stable (1949) (Fri)</p>
        <p>The Dolly Sisters (1946)</p>
        <p>(NICK) Pinwheel (TNN) Fandango 9:05 (WTBS) Little House on tte Prairie 9:30 (S Andy Griffith (ARTS) Buffalo Bill (Mon)</p>
        <p>(ARTS) Amandas (Wed)</p>
        <p>(HBO) Movie (Mon) Charlottes Web (1972) (Tue)  Blind Date (1987) (Fri) ** The Man Who Saw Tomorrow (1981)</p>
        <p>(TMC) Short Film Showcase (Fri) (TNN) You Can Be a Star 10:00 O 700 Gub O Instructional Programming e O Family Feud GD Bewitched O Sale of tte Century  Live - Regis &amp;amp; Kathie Lee (ARTS) Movie (Mon)  The</p>
        <p>Little Princess(1939) (Tue)  Blunt (1986) (Wed)  "Mur</p>
        <p>der My Sweet (1944) (Thu) * Carnival Story (1954) (Fri) Day After the Fair (1987)</p>
        <p>(DIS) Kids Make Films Too! (Fri) (ESPN) Jet Ski Championship (Tue)</p>
        <p>(ESPN) Dog Show (Wed)</p>
        <p>(ESPN) Fishing (Thu)</p>
        <p>(ESPN) Australian Rules Football (Fri)</p>
        <p>(HBO) Movie (Wed) Mr Mom (1983) (Thu) * Mannequin (1987)</p>
        <p>(LIFE) Regis PhUbiu Stew (MAX) Fau Dmhm A FrkwAi</p>
        <p>(Wed) "  -  * " ' </p>
        <p>(MAX) Movie (Thu) *Vz Made in Heaven (1987)</p>
        <p>(SHOW) Movie (Mon) Vz Speedway (1968) (Tue) Vz Heaven Can Waif (1943) (Wed) Vz One-Eyed Jacks (1961) (Thu) Vz Summer of 42"</p>
        <p>(1971) (Fri)  More Than a Miracle (1968)</p>
        <p>(TMQ Movie (Tue)  Cross Creek (1983) (Wed)  Death of a Salesman (1985) (Thu) Vz A Question of Honor (1982) (Fri) Vz Parole (1982)</p>
        <p>(TNN) Crook and Chase (USA) Movie (Mon)  Shall We Dance (1937) (Tue)  The Gay Divorcee (1934) (Wed)  Flying Down to Rio (1933) (Thu)  The Story of Vernon and Irene Castle (1939) (Fri)</p>
        <p>'  Carefree (1938)</p>
        <p>10:05 (WTBS) Movie (Mon) Vz "Pillow Talk (1959) (Tue) Vz Tomorrows Child (1982) (Wed)  "Sweet Hostage (1975) (Thu) Vz Widow (1976) (Fri)  Youll Like My Mother</p>
        <p>(1972)</p>
        <p>10:30 O O Card Sharks (S I Dream of Jeannie e Gassic Concentration (BET) Paid Programming (DIS).Animals in Action (Tue) (DIS) Heres Boomer (Wed) (ESPN) Motorweek Illustrated (Thu)</p>
        <p>(MAX) Movie (Mon)  The Dolly Sisters (1946) (Tue)  I Was a Male War Bride (1949) (rMG Movie (Mon)  The Turning Point (1977)</p>
        <p>(TNN) VideoCountry 11:00 O O Price Is Right (I) Love Boat O Wheel of Fortune  Sally Jessy Raphael (DIS) Yon and Me, Kid (ESPN) Getting Fit (HBO) Movie (Mon) */? Three Oclock High (1987)</p>
        <p>(HBO) How to Raise a Street-Smart Child (Fri)</p>
        <p>(LIFE) Attitudes (MAX) Movie (Wed) Vz The Killer that Stalked New York (1950) (Fri) A Woman of Distinction (1950) .</p>
        <p>(NICK) Sharon, Lois &amp;amp; Brams Elephant Show (TNN) American Magazine 11:15 (HBO) Movie (Tue)  The Living Daylights" (1987)</p>
        <p>11:30 O Straight Talk O Win, Lose or Draw ID Ryans Hope (BET) Urban Scene (Mon)</p>
        <p>(BET) On tte Line With... (Tue-Fri)</p>
        <p>(DIS) Walt Disney Presents (ESPN) Basic Training Workout (HBO) Coming Attractions (Wed) (HBO) Movie (Thu)  Jesus (1979)</p>
        <p>(NICK) Maple Town (Mon-Tue) (NICK) Adventures of tte Little Koala (Wed-Fri)</p>
        <p>(TNN) New Country 11:35 (SHOW) Movie (Mon) Olivers Story (1978)</p>
        <p>12:00 O Instructional Programming</p>
        <p>O O O O News (S Hour Magazine (ARTS) Great Detective (BET) Video LP (Mon-Wed)</p>
        <p>(BET) Movie (Thu)  Swing (1938)</p>
        <p>(BET) Gospel Magazine (Fri) (ESPN) Aerobics (HBO) Movie (Wed)  The Whistle Blower (1987)(Fri) </p>
        <p> The Living Daylights (1987) (LIFE) Mothers Day (MAX) Vintage Performances (Thu)</p>
        <p>(NICK) Pinwheel (SHOW) Movie (Tue) Vz "Man. Woman and Child (1983) (Thu) Out of the Shadows (1988) (Fri)  "Mannequin (1987)</p>
        <p>(TMQ Movie (Tue)   The Concorde - Airport 79 (1979) (Fri)  Crocodile Dundee (1986)</p>
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        <p>9 8.m. to 6 p.m.</p>
        <p>Tues. A Thurs. 9 a.m. to 8 p.m.</p>
        <p>back-toschoo</p>
        <p>SPECIALS I</p>
        <p>'Child Cut * Stylo</p>
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        <p>(Continued From Page 5)</p>
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        <p>(Please Turn To Page 10)</p>
        <p>Soap Scoop</p>
        <p>TV Chatter</p>
        <p>By Frank Sanello Tim Dalys sister "Ty! co-starred in Cagney &amp;amp; Lacey, and his father, the late James Daly, starred in Medical Center. This fall, the 32-year-old actor will finally get his shot at series stardom. In CBSs Almost Grown, Daly and Eve Gordon play a couple viewed over a 25-year span. The pilot shifts between the 60s and 70s, then back to the present. The passage of time is depicted-by changing the music and hairdos of the actors. Daly says the time traveling isnt confusing. When we were shooting, they tried to have only one time period per day;' he says. That helped. We werent doing the 60s one scene then jumping into the 80s in the next.</p>
        <p>Of the three periods dramatized in the series, Daly says his favorite is the 70s. I like the middle period, the long hair. Its the only period Ive experienced. The 60s were too early for me, says the 32-year-old actor. "In the early 70s I was a foot off the ground the whole time because the music was so great.</p>
        <p>Kristy McNichol, who made a splash as teenager Buddy Lawrence in the Iate-70s drama Family, returns to series TV this season as the co-star of NBCs Empty Nest. In this Golden Girls spinoff, she plays a policewoman and daughter of a newly widowed pediatrician (Richard Mulligan). McNichol says she was nervous doing her first comedy series. "Its the first time before a live audience, she says. But I was so excited I realized there was nothing to be scared about.</p>
        <p>McNichol says she was happy to be back on the small screen. I missed the closeness of being with the same people week after week, she says. You dont get that on films A TV series gives you a very secure feeling in such an insecure business.</p>
        <p>Also returning to series TV is Lou Gossett Jr., who will star in Gideon Oliver, one-third of the new ABC Saturday Mystery Movie. (The other two series feature Peter Falk reprising his Columbo role, and Burt Reynolds in a still-untitled detective drama.) But when ABC first asked Gossett to do another series, he said No way. I'd been burned in the past, he says, referring to his shortlived 1979 medical series, The Lazarus Syndrome and the 1982 sci-fi flop The Powers of Matthew Star. Gossett agreed to risk the vagaries of episodic television one more time when ABC told him he would only have to do the show once every three weeks.</p>
        <p>Gossett says he was intrigued by the character of Gideon Oliver, a globe-trotting, adventure-seeking anthropology professor not unlike Indiana Jones. Gossett isnt denying the similarities. What are the differences? My last name is Oliver, he jokes. Gossett says Oliver will be a thinking person with enormous curiosity </p>
        <p>The Nicolas Coster plot will thicken on 'AMC'</p>
        <p>By Connie PassiUcqna_</p>
        <p>All My Children originally signed Nicolas Coster for only-the summer to play Andrews, the kidnapper of Travis Montgomery (played by Larkin Malloy). But an additional 13 weeks were recently added to the contract, and hell return to the show as Dave Gillis, who is really Andrews in disguise. Gillis will turn up in a Pittsburgh boarding house living across the hall from the recently separated Mrs. Travis Montgomery, a.k.a. Erica Kane (played by Susan Lucci). Erica, of course, is hiding out from Andrews, who kidnapped Baby Montgomery, a.k.a. Bianca, as well as daddy.</p>
        <p>(Foster is an all-time soap favorite, having played romantic leads on at least eight soaps. Most recently, he played Lionel Lockridge on Santa Barbara, and he was nominated for Best Supporting Actor this year for that role.</p>
        <p>For months, the conventional wisdom at AMC has been to keep Erica and Travis peacefully together because the audience loved the pairing. But theres an old soap opera adage that a happy soap couple is a boring soap couple. Yes, La Erica did deserve a bit of happiness after 18 years of man-chasing. But enough is enough! Break em up and let us watch them act.</p>
        <p>This is a particularly good opportunity for Malloy, a strong actor (as he proved for years as Sky Whitney on Edge of Night), whose business mogul characters tend to turn wishy-washy in the face of the strong female characters they are usually paired with. Remember how Kim Zimmer's Reva Shayne emasculated Malloys Kyle Sampson on Guiding Light? (The characters last name said it all.)</p>
        <p>Because soap operas are a womens medium, Malloys talent has often been wast</p>
        <p>ed. An acting match-up with (^ster is just what the doctor ordered.</p>
        <p> Hillary Bailey Smith, who ostensibly left soaps and her role as Margo Hughes on "As the World Turns with the birth of her second child early this summer, has decided to return after all. Also returning is Daniel Pilon, who has been signed for 20 appearances as Max Dubigak on Ryan's Hope. That will strengthen the newly revived love triangle of Max, Siobhan (played by Barbara Blackburn) and Joe (played by Roscoe Bom). But wait, hasnt that b^n Pilon, sans his French-Canadian accent, subbing for an ill Chris Ber-nau as Alan Spaulding on Guiding Light? For now, hell be doing both roles.</p>
        <p>FRIDAY</p>
        <p>OLYMPICS</p>
        <p>American runner Carl Lewis (above) faces a showdown with long-time rival Ben Johnson, the Canadian runner, at the mens 100-meter final. It airs Friday, Sept. 23, as part of NBCs Olympics coverage.</p>
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        <p>(ARTS) Changing West Tom Bro-kaw profiles the ranch families of Stillwater Montana. (1 hr.)</p>
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        <p>(LIFE) Cagney &amp;amp; Lacey (MAX) Movie Ryans Daughter (1970) Sarah Miles, Robert Mit-chum. (3 hrs., 30 min.) i (NICK) Mister Ed (TMC) Movie The AUnighter  (1987) Susanna Hoffs, Dedee Pfeiffer. (2 hrs.)  '</p>
        <p>(TNN) Nashville Now Featured: Susan Norfleet; Charlie Daniels. (In Stereo) (1 hr., 30 min.) , (USA) Tales of the Gold Monkey 8:20 (WTBS) Movie  Smash-Up on Interstate 5 (1976) Robert. Conrad. Buddy Ebsen. (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>8:30 O O The Cavanaughs iWhen Kit attempts to quit smoking, members of the family agree to give up their own vices for support.</p>
        <p>d) Current Affair Extra i (NICK) Patty Duke Show 9:00 O McUugUin Group Special-Is This Any Way to Elect a President? Examines the electing of a president, including the primary/ caucus process, campaign costs, the medias role and the importance of polls and debates. (1 hr.) 0 O Movie A Stranger Waits (1987) Suzanne Pleshette, Tom Atkins. (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>(D Cousteaus Rediscovery of the World</p>
        <p>(ARTS) Our Century: All the King's Horses and All the Kings Men Narrator Steve Allen examines atomic power, from the Manhattan Project to today's debate on arms and testing. Host: Edward Herrmann. (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>(BET) Video Soul (2 hrs)</p>
        <p>(DIS) Movie Auntie Marne (1958) Rosalind Russell. Forrest Tucker. (2 hrs., 30 min.)</p>
        <p>(ESPN) Swimsuit '88 (R) (1 hr.) (UFE) Movie "Tp Kill a Cop (1978) (Part 1 of 2) Joe Don Baker, Louis Gossett Jr. (2 hrs.) (NICK) My Three Sons (SHOW) Movie Stakeout "(1987) Richard Dreyfuss, Emilio Es- ^ tevez. (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>(USA) Movie "Midsummer Nights Sex Comedy" (1982) * Woody Allen, Mia Farrow (2 hrs.), 9:30 (HBO) Movie  Three OCTock  Hi^" (1987) Casey Siemaszko, Anne Ryan. (1 hr, SO min)</p>
        <p>(NICK) Doona Reed</p>
        <p>(TNN) f New Country Featured; Nanci Griffith. (In Stereo)</p>
        <p>10:00 O 700 aub (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>O Capada: True North Margaret Atwood, Mordechai Richler and Robertson Davies are among the authors who analyze Canadas geogrpphy/culture connection for the KHith anniversary issue of the quitural/literary magazine , Saturday Night. (Part 2 of 4) g (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>I ($ News (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>(ARTS) Shortstories A business-woman is faced with an unwanted pregnancy in Joni &amp;amp; the ' Whales; in Least Likely a car-I toonist settles some scores at a  high-school reunion. (1 hr.) (ESPN) American Muscle Magazine Special Mens Pro World Championship. From Columbus,</p>
        <p>I Ohio. (R) (1 hr.) i (NICK) Bt of Saturday Night Uve</p>
        <p>' (TMC) Movie  Crocodile Dun-I dee (1986) Paul Hogan, Linda I Kozlowski. (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>I (TNN) Crook and Chase 10:20 (WTBS) Movie A Case of Rape (1974) Elizabeth Montgomery, Ronnny Cox. (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>^9:30 9 Summer Olympics Con-I tinue (1 hr., 30 min.)</p>
        <p>(NICK) SCTV (TNN) VideoCountry 11:00 9 Remington Steele</p>
        <p>O Bill Moyers World of Ideas "Mexamerica Mexican author Carlos Fuentes discusses the boundary between the United  States and Latin America.</p>
        <p>00 9 News (S Current Affair (ARTS) Evening at the Improv (BET) Soft Notes (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>(ESPN) NFL Trivia (HBO) Movie Meatballs III  (1987) Sally Kellerman, Patrick Dempsey. (1 hr., 35 min.)</p>
        <p>(LIFE) Cagney &amp;amp; Lacey (NICK) Rowan &amp;amp; Martins Laugh-In</p>
        <p>(SHOW) Gleason: Hes the Greatest</p>
        <p>(TNN) You Can Be a Star (USA) Alfred Hitchcock Presents 11:30 O EastEnders 0 (El M*A*S*H O Hunter A man, out to avenge his brothers death, stalks Hunter. (R) (1 hr., 10 min.)</p>
        <p>9 Nightline g</p>
        <p>(DIS) Movie Jeremiah Johnson (1972) Robert Redford, Will Geer. (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>(ESPN) SportsCenter (MAX) Movie Private Investigations (1987) Clayton Rohner, Ray Sharkey. (1 hr., 35 min.) (NICK) Car 54, Where Are You? (SHOW) Movie Bom in East L A. (1987) Cheech Marin, Paul Rodriguez. (1 hr., 30 min.)</p>
        <p>(TNN) American Magazine (USA) Riptide 12:00 O Paper Chase 0 9 Entertainment Tonight Don Johnsons new movie "Sweet Hearts Dance. (In Stereo)</p>
        <p>S) Late Show Host: Ross Shafer. Scheduled: Dr. Joyce Brothers; Gene Simmons and Paul Stanley from the rock group Kiss; former umpire Ron Luciano. (R) (In Stereo) (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>0News</p>
        <p>(ARTS) Changing West Tom Bro-kaw profiles the ranch families of Stillwater Montana. (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>(BET) Video LP (UFE) MacGruder &amp;amp; Loud (NICK) Make Room for Daddy (TMC) Movie Rustlers Rhapsody (1985) Tom Berenger, G.W. Bailey. (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>(TNN) Nashville Now Featured; Susan Norfleet; Charlie Daniels. (In Stereo) (1 hr., 30 min.)</p>
        <p>12:15 (ESPN) SportsCenter Extra 12:20 (WTBS) National Geographic Explorer 12:30 0 Wipeout 9 Summer Olympks Scheduled: Tennis (Mens First Round Singles). (Live) (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>9 Sweethearts (BET) Charlie &amp;amp; Company (ESPN) NFL Yearbook 1987 Geveland Browns-No Apologies Necessary. (R)</p>
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        <p>12:40 O Movie Under the Influence (1986) Andy Griffith. Season Hubley. (1 hr., 20 min)</p>
        <p>1:00 O Straight Talk (1 hr.)</p>
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        <p>(ARTS) Our Century: All the Kings Horses and All the Kings Men Narrator Steve Allen examines atomic power, from the Manhattan Project to today's debate on arms and testing. Host: Edward Herrmann. (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>(BET) Video Soul (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>(ESPN) NFLs Greatest Moments Profiled: Vince Lombardi. (R) (1 hr.)</p>
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        <p>(NICK) Mister Ed (SHOV^ The Boys A group of old-time comedians try to revitalize The Excalibur, a once-prominent mens club, by recruiting new younger members. Stars Norm Crosby, Norman Fell, Jackie Gayle and Michael Lerner.</p>
        <p>(USA) Search for Tomorrow 1:05 (MAX) Movie Something Wild (1986) Jeff Daniels, Melanie Griffith. (1 hr.. 55 min.)</p>
        <p>1:30 0 News (R)</p>
        <p>(DIS) Movie The Blue Bird</p>
        <p>(1976) Jane Fonda, Elizabefll Taylor. (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>(NICK) Patty Duke Show (SHOW) Elayne Booster: Party of One Taped coverage of Elaynes stand-up routine, with guest appearances by Dr. Ruth Westhei-mer, funnyman Brother Theodore and David Letterman. (In Stereo) (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>(TNN) Movie The Singing Cowboy (1936) Gene Autry, Lois Wilde. (1 hr., 30 min.)</p>
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        <p>0 O Nightwatch (3 hrs., 30 min.) d) The Saint</p>
        <p>(ARTS) Shortstories A businesswoman is faced with an unwanted pregnancy in Joni &amp;amp; the Whales; in Least Likely a cartoonist settles some scores at a high-school reunion. (1 hr.) (ESPN) SportsLook (NICK) Donna Reed (TMC) Movie "The AUnighter  (1987) Susanna Hoffs, Dedee Pfeiffer. (1 hr., 35 min.)</p>
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        <p>; n: ; i J    .  .  r  :  ,i  f  -  .</p>
        <p>Sunday, Septemtwr 18,1988</p>
        <p>Tuesday Evening</p>
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        <p>7:00  7:30</p>
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        <p>Lose or Draw</p>
        <p>8:00</p>
        <p>?:30</p>
        <p>9:00  9:30</p>
        <p>The Blue and the Gray</p>
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        <p>One Village m China</p>
        <p>10:00  10:30</p>
        <p>700 Club</p>
        <p>Global Rivals</p>
        <p>Bugs Bunny Movie: White Nights</p>
        <p>Current Affair Movie: Secrets of a Married Man</p>
        <p>News</p>
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        <p>Olym. Cont.</p>
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        <p>Movie Chapter Two Contd</p>
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        <p>Masters of the Universe</p>
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        <p>Bugs Bunny Movie: White Nights</p>
        <p>Gro Pams Head of Class Movie: The Man With One Red Shoe</p>
        <p>Lawrenceville Stones</p>
        <p>Conversation With Carol Ashford &amp;amp; Simpson</p>
        <p>Surfer Mag Classic Summer</p>
        <p>Movie: Rad</p>
        <p>Cagney S Lacey</p>
        <p>Women s Pro Volleyball</p>
        <p>Water Sknng</p>
        <p>Movie The Living Daylights</p>
        <p>Movie To Kill a Cop</p>
        <p>Movie: Martin Mull in Portrait of a White Marriage</p>
        <p>Movie Man. Woman and Child</p>
        <p>Movie: The Color of Money</p>
        <p>Tales of the Gold Monkey WWF Prime Time Wrestling</p>
        <p>I Major League Baseball Giants at Braves Movie, The Magnificent Seven</p>
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        <p>6:00 O Bonanza; The Lost Episodes</p>
        <p>O MacNeil/Lebrer Newshour O O O O News CE Gimme a Break!</p>
        <p>(ARTS) Golden Age of Television (DIS) iMovie "Professor Poppers Problems" (1988)</p>
        <p>(ESPN) SportsLook (LIFE) Cover-Up (NICK) Dennis the Menace (SHOW) Movie ik*V2 "Evil Under the Sun" (1982)</p>
        <p>(TMC) Movie "Masters of the Universe" (1987)</p>
        <p>(TNN) Fandango (USA) Fat Albert 6:30 O O CBS News g  Too Close for Comfort O NBC News g O ABC News g (ARTS) Brush Strokes (BET) On the Line With... (ESPN) Inside the PGA Tour (HBO) Movie wVz "Haunted Honeymoon (1986)</p>
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        <p>(NICK) You Can't do That on Television</p>
        <p>(TNN) Crook and Chase (USA) Airwolf 7;.30 O Raising Americas Children oo Win, Lose or Draw  Current Affair O Summer Olympics 0 Jeopardy! g (ARTS) World of Survival (BET) Video LP (DIS) Superman</p>
        <p>(ESPN) Major League Baseball Magazine</p>
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        <p>8:00 O The Blue and the Gray The</p>
        <p>events of the Civil War are dramatized through the experiences of a combat artist from Virginia. Based on the writings of historian Bruce Catton. Stars John Hammond and Stacy Keach. (Part 1 of 4) (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p> Nova Tissue and organ transplants. (Part 3 of 4) g (l hr.)</p>
        <p>O O Bugs Bunny; All-American Hero (Animated) When his nephew asks for help in studying for a history exam, Bugs tells a few whoppers about America's past</p>
        <p>(R)g</p>
        <p> Movie Secrets of a Married Man" (1984) William Shatner, Cy-bil Shepherd. (2 hrs)</p>
        <p>0 Growing Pains Ben traces the Seavers' roots and discovers what he believes to be a dark secret from his father's past. (R) g (ARTS) Movie "The Eleanor Roosevelt Story" (1965) (Part 1 of 2) Narrated by Archibald Ma-cLiesh. (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>(BET) This Week in Black Entertainment</p>
        <p>(DIS) Lawrenceville Stories</p>
        <p>Hickey (Zach Galligan), Doc Mac-. nooder and the Tennessee Shad join forces to outsmart an obnoxious freshman (David Orth) trying to buy popularity at Lawrenceville. (Part 3 of 3) (1 hr.) (ESPN) Surfer Magazine (HBO) Movie "Rad" (1986) Bill Allen. Lori Laughlin. (1 hr., 30 min.)</p>
        <p>(LIFE) Cagney &amp;amp; Lacey (MAX) Movie "Martin Mull in Portrait of a White Marriage" (1988) Martin Mull. Mary Kay Place. (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>(NICK) Mister Ed (SHOW) Movie "Man, Woman and Child" (1983) Martin Sheen. Blythe Danner (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>(TMC) Movie "The Color of Money" (1986) Paul Newman, Tom Cruise. (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>(TNN) Nashville Now Featured: the Forester Sisters. (In Stereo) (1 hr. 30 min.)</p>
        <p>(USA) Tales of the Gold Monkey 8:20 (WTBS) Movie "The Magnificent Seven" (1960) Yul Brynner, Eli Wallach. (2 hrs., 45 min.)</p>
        <p>8:30 O O Movie "White Nights (1985) Mikhail Baryshnikov, Gregory Hines. (2 hrs. 30 min.)</p>
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        <p>student. (R) g (BET) Charlie &amp;amp; Company (ESPN) Gassic Summer Highlights of summer sports including surfing, jet skiing and beach volleyball. (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>(NICK) Patty Duke Show 9:00 O One Village in China Medical and religious practices in Long Bow are examined in this profile of Dr. Shen Fasheng. (R) (Part 2 of 3) g (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>0 Movie The Man With One Red Shoe" (1985) Tom Hanks, Lori Singer. (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>(ARTS) Movie "Naming the Names (1987) Sylvestra Le Touzel, Michael Maloney. (2 hrs.) (BET) Video Soul (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>(DIS) Conversation With Carol Starring Carol Brunett Comedian Carol Burnett enterains an audience with her one-woman show at Walt Disney World in Florida. (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>(LIFE) Movie To Kill a Cop (1978) (Part 2 of 2) Joe Don Baker, Louis Gossett Jr. (2 hrs.) (NICK) My Three Sons (USA) WWF Prime Time Wrestling (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>9:30 (ESPN) Womens Volleyball Pro Beach Tournament. From Zuma Beach. Calif. (Taped) (1 hr.) (HBO) Movie The Living Daylights" (1987) Timothy Dalton, Maryam dAbo. (2 hrs., 15 min.) (NICK) Donna Reed (TNN) New Country Featured: Mason Dixon. (In Stereo)</p>
        <p>10:00 O 700 Club (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>O Global Rivals (Premiere) International experts examine the Soviet-American conflict and possibilities for change, beginning with why both superpowers now recognize the necessity of detente. Hosts: Bernard Kalb. Professor Seweryn Bialer. (Part 1 of 4)g(l hr.)</p>
        <p>( News (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>(DIS) Ashford and Simpson: Going Home The husband/wife songwriters reflect on their careers and family life, and perform hits with guests including Stevie Wonder, Patti LaBelle and Paul Shaffer. (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>(MAX) Movie "Born in East L A." (1987)Cheech Marin, Paul Rodriguez. (1 hr., 30 min.)</p>
        <p>(NICK) Best of Saturday Night Live</p>
        <p>(SHOW) Movie  The Bedroom Window" (1987) Steve Gutten-berg, Elizabeth McGovern. (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>(TMC) Movie Witchboard" (1987) Tawny Kitaen, Todd Allen. (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>(TNN) Crook and Chase 10:30 O Summer Olympics Continue (1 hr. 30 min.)</p>
        <p>(ESPN) Water Skiing International Tour. From Wichita, Kan (Taped) (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>(NICK)SCTV (TNN) VideoCountry 11:00 Q Remington Steele O Bill Moyers World of Ideas Choosing Life or Death ' Guest: bio-ethieist Willard Gaylin OO0 News ffi Current Affair (ARTS) Yes, Prime Minister With the government in a financial crisis. Sir Humphrey tries to convince Jim Hacker that top civil servants should not have to make monetary sacrifices like ever</p>
        <p>yone else. (Part 5 of 8)</p>
        <p>(BET) Soft Notes (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>(DIS) Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet</p>
        <p>(LIFE) Cagney &amp;amp; Lacey (NICK) Rowan &amp;amp; Martins Laugh-In</p>
        <p>(TNN) You Can Be a Star (USA) Alfred Hitchcock Presents 11:05 (WTBS) Movie The Savage Is Loose (1974) George C. Scott, Trish Van Devere. (2 hrs., 30 min.)</p>
        <p>11:30 O EastEnders e  M*A*S*H O Night Heat When a murderous prostitute goes on the prowl, OBrien and Giambone enter the seamy nightlife of the city. (R) (1 hr, 10 min.)</p>
        <p>0 Nightline g (ARTS) Comedy Break (DIS) Movie  The Karate Kid (1984) Ralph Macchio, Noriyuki Pat Morita. (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>(ESPN) SportsCenter (MAX) Vintage Performances From the 1967 Monterey Pop Festival, featuring Shake," I've Been Loving You Too Long  and "Satisfaction. (In Stereo)</p>
        <p>(NICK) Car 54, Where Are You? (TNN) American Magazine (USA) Riptide 11:45 (HBO) Why Did Johnny Kill? A profile of three teen-age boys who committed murders, g (1 hr.) 12:00 O Paper Chase O 0 Entertainment Tonight Actor Ken Olin (thirtysomething ). (In Stereo)</p>
        <p> Late Show Host: Ross Shafer. Scheduled: actors Marsha Warfield (Night Court") and Jack Weston; former Hugh Hefner companion Carrie Leigh and husband Cory Margolis. (R) (In Stereo) (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>O News</p>
        <p>(ARTS) Movie The Eleanor Roosevelt Story" (1965) (Part 1 of 2) Narrated by Archibald Ma-cLiesh. (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>(BET) Video LP (LIFE) MacGruder &amp;amp; Loud (MAX) Movie  The Morning After (1986) Jane Fonda, Jeff Bridges. (1 hr., 45 min.)</p>
        <p>(NICK) Make Room for Daddy (SHOW) All-Star Tribute to Woody Guthrie &amp;amp; Leadbelly Artists including Arlo Guthrie, Bruce Springsteen, Little Richard and Emmylou Harris honor the two American folk legends (In Stereo) (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>(TMC) Movie Born American  (1986) Mike Norris. Steve Durham. (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>(TNN) Nashville Now Featured: the Forester Sisters. (In Stereo) (1 hr., 30 min.)</p>
        <p>12:15 (ESPN) SportsCenter Extra 12:30 O Wipeout O Summer Olympics Scheduled; U.S. vs. Australia in Baseball: Equestrian (Cross Country). (Live) (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>0 Sweethearts</p>
        <p>(BET) This Week in Black Entertainment</p>
        <p>(ESPN) Running and Racing (NICK) Ann Sothern (USA) Edge of Night 12:40 O Movie Love. Mary ' (1985) Kristy McNichol, Piper Laurie. (1 hr, 20 min.)</p>
        <p>12:45 (HBO) Movie Trading Places" (1983) Eddie Murphy. Dan Aykroyd (2 hrs)</p>
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        <p>(ARTS) Movie Naming the Names (1987) Sylvestra Le Touzel, Michael Maloney. (2 hrs.) (BET) Video Soul (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>(ESPN) Scholastic Sports America Special Summer in Germany. (LIFE) Investment Advisory (3 hrs.)</p>
        <p>(NICK) Mister Ed (SHOW) Movie Heartburn (1986) Jack Nicholson, Meryl Streep. (1 hr, 55 min.)</p>
        <p>(USA) Search for Tomorrow 1:30 O News (R)</p>
        <p>(DIS) Movie Quarterback Princess (1983) Helen Hunt, Don Murray. (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>(ESPN) Lighter Side of Sports Host; Jay Johnstone.</p>
        <p>(NICK) Patty Duke Show (TNN) Movie Man From Music Mountain (1943) Roy Rogers, Ruth Terry. (1 hr., 30 min.) (USA) Hollywood Insider 1:35 (WTBS) Movie The Philadel-' phia Story (1940) Katharine Hepburn, James Stewart. (2 hrs., 30 min.)</p>
        <p>1:45 (MAX) Movie "No Mercy"</p>
        <p>(1986) Richard Gere. Kim Basinger. (1 hr, 50 min.)</p>
        <p>2:00 O 700 Club (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>OO Nightwatch(3 hrs., 30 min.)  The Saint (ESPN) SportsLook (NICK) Donna Reed (TMC) Movie The Color of Money (1986) Paul Newman, Tom Cruise. (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>(USA) Oh Madeline 2:30 (ESPN) SportsCenter (NICK) Best of Saturday Night Live</p>
        <p>(USA) Riptide 2:45 (HBO) Twelfth Annual Young Comedians Show Comics Haywood Banks. Paul Dillery, Richard Jeni, Cathy Ladman and Rick Reynolds headline the show from the Storyville Jazz Hall in New Orleans, La. Host: Paul Rodriguez. (In Stereo) g (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>2:55 (SHOW) Movie Down Twisted (1987) Carey Lowell. Charles Rocket. (1 hr , 35 min.) 3:00 O To Be Announced (1 hr.) (ARTS) Yes, Prime Minister With the government in a financial crisis. Sir Humphrey tries to convince Jim Hacker that top civil servants should.not have to make monetary sacrifices like everyone else. (Part 5 of 8)</p>
        <p>(BET) Soft Notes (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>(ESPN) Golf NFL Back-to-Camp Classic. From Jacksonville. Fla. (R) (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>(NICK)SCTV 3:30 (ARTS) Comedy Break (DIS) Conversation With Carol Starring Carol Brunett Comedian Carol Burnett enterains an audience with her one-woman show at Walt Disney World in Florida. (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>(NICK) Rowan &amp;amp; Martins Laugh-In</p>
        <p>(USA) Movie Olympia; The Festival of the People" (1938) (Part 1 of 2)(2 hrs)</p>
        <p>3:35 (MAX) Movie "Emmanuelle" (1974) Sylvia Kristel. Alain Cuny (1 hr. 35 min.)</p>
        <p>3:45 (HBO) Movie Blind Date</p>
        <p>(1987) Bruce Willis, Kim Basinger. (1 hr., 40 min)</p>
        <p>4:00 O To Be Announced (1 hr) (ARTS) Romantic Spirit How the behavior of Romantics is reflected In the politcal and social uphevals of the 20th century. (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>(BET) Video Vibrations (2 hrs.) (ESPN) Auto Racing SCCA Escort Trans-Am Championship From Elkhart Lake, Wis. (R) (1 hr.)</p>
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        <p>(NICK) Movie That Uncertain Feeling" (1941) Merle Oberon. Burgess Meredith. (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>(TMQ Movie Witchboard" (1987) Tawny Kitaen. Todd Allen (1 hr, 40 min)</p>
        <p>4:05 (WTBS) Honeymooners</p>
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        <p>8:30  9:00  9:30</p>
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        <p>10:00  10:30</p>
        <p>700 Club</p>
        <p>Live From Lincoln Center</p>
        <p>Live' Dick Clark Presents Equalizer</p>
        <p>Wiseguy</p>
        <p>News</p>
        <p>Summer Olympics</p>
        <p>Lose or Draw</p>
        <p>Jeopardy'</p>
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        <p>Big Trouble in Little China</p>
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        <p>Movie: Mr. Mom</p>
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        <p>Movie: Mind Over Murder</p>
        <p>Movie: Death Wish</p>
        <p>Brothers Super Dave Movie The Killing Machine</p>
        <p>Movie: Stripper</p>
        <p>Movie The Survivors</p>
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        <p>Movie: The PiCk-Up Artist</p>
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        <p>Major League Baseball Atlanta Braves at Houston Astros</p>
        <p>6:00 O Bonanza; The Lost Episodes</p>
        <p>O MacNeil/Lehrer Newshour OOOfD News d) Gimme a Break!</p>
        <p>(ARTS) Golden Age of Television (DIS) Movie A* The Mouse and His Child" (1977)</p>
        <p>(ESPN) SportsLook</p>
        <p>(HBO) Movie a* Big Trouble in</p>
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        <p>(ARTS) Mountbatten: The Soldier and the Statesman Germany surrenders and Mountbatten attends Potsdam, where he learns of the atomic bomb. (Part 7 of 12) (1 hr ) (BET) Video LP (LIFE) MacGruder &amp;amp; Loud (NICK) Make Room for Daddy (T.NN) Nashville Now Featured: Moe Bandy (In Stereo) (1 hr. 30 min.)</p>
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        <p>(TMC) Movie (Tue) Haunted Honeymoon (1986) (Thu) *% Three OClock High (1987) (USA) Check It Out!</p>
        <p>4:35 (WTBS) Brady Bunch 5:00 e Big Valley O Mister Rogers 0 Sanford and Son  Fall Guy O Benson O Love Connection 0 Gimme a Break!</p>
        <p>(ARTS) Great Detective (BET) Video LP</p>
        <p>(DIS) Kids Incorporated (Mon-Thu)</p>
        <p>(DIS) Videopolis Superstar Special (Fri)</p>
        <p>(ESPN) Baseball Bunch (Mon-Thu)</p>
        <p>(HBO) Movie (Tue) *Raising Arizona (1987)</p>
        <p>(LIFE) Marcos Welby, M.D. (Wed)</p>
        <p>(NICK) Looney Tunes (SHOW) My 17th Summer (Mon) (TMQ Movie (Fri) The Apprenticeship of Duddy Krav-itz (1974)</p>
        <p>(USA) Dance Party USA 5:05 (WTBS) Monsters 5:15 (HBO) Movie (Fri) The Skys No Limit (1983)</p>
        <p>5:30 O Square One Television . i O News  *</p>
        <p>O Jeffersons O Peoples Court 0 Cheers (BET) Soft Notes (DIS) Edison Twins (Mon-Thu) (ESPN) Sportraits (Mon)</p>
        <p>(ESPN) Speedway America (Tue) (ESPN) Thoroughbred Sports Digest (Wed)</p>
        <p>(ESPN) Scholastic Sports America (Thu)</p>
        <p>(HBO) Tina -- Live - From Rio (Thu)</p>
        <p>(MAX) Movie (Thu) *** Funny Girl (1968)</p>
        <p>(MAX) Max Movie Show (Fri) (NICK) Inspector Gadget (SHOW) Do Me a Favor... Dont Vote for My Mom (Thu)</p>
        <p>(SHOW) Kings Road (Fri)</p>
        <p>(TMQ Movie (Wed) Ma-tewan (1987)</p>
        <p>(TNN) New Country (USA) She-Ra: Princess of Power 5:35 (WTBS) Major Uague Baseball (Mon-Tue)</p>
        <p>(WTBS) One Day at a Time (Wed-Fri)</p>
        <p>5:45 (MAX) Movie (Tue) aaVz Chapter Two (1979)</p>
        <p>Around The World</p>
        <p>Several actors have joined the cast of Around the World in 80 Days, a six-hour miniseries that will air later this fall on NBC. Jack Klugman, Patrick Mac Nee, Sir John Mills, Pernell Roberts, David ^ul and Simon Ward have signed to play roles in the miniseries, which is based on Jules Verne's 19th century novel about an aristocrat who travels around the world to win a bet. Pierce Brosnan, Eric Idle, Robert Wagner, Jill St. John and Peter Ustinov are the stars of the production.</p>
        <p>THURSDAY ALL OF ME</p>
        <p>In All of Me, an idealistic lawyer (Steve Martin) discovers that his body has been taken over by the spirit of a crotchety millionairess. Lily Tomlin co-stars. It airs Thur^ay, Sept. 22, on ABC. (Rebroadcast)</p>
        <p>Fun For All Carpet Sale.</p>
        <p>ARMSTRONG TIMESPAN a CAMBRAY IN STOCK</p>
        <p>wm ^^0/</p>
        <p>SAVINGS 25%</p>
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        <p>Red Banb Rd. 6t Arlington Blvd.</p>
        <p>TclephoiM 756-7611</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0119" />
        <p>FRIDAY EVENING</p>
        <p>7:00</p>
        <p>7:30  8:00  8:30  9:00  9:30  10:00  10:30</p>
        <p>Remington Steele</p>
        <p>Business Rpt. Cuba. Castro</p>
        <p>USA Today</p>
        <p>3 s Company</p>
        <p>Benson</p>
        <p>USA Today</p>
        <p>Lose or Draw</p>
        <p>The Blue and the Gray</p>
        <p>Wash. Week Wall St. Week Theban Plays: Oedipus at Colonus</p>
        <p>Beauty and the Beast</p>
        <p>700 Club</p>
        <p>Movie: Stillwatch</p>
        <p>Current Affair Movie: Sunset Limousine</p>
        <p>News</p>
        <p>Summer Olympics</p>
        <p>Lose or Draw Beauty and the Beast</p>
        <p>Wheel-Fortune Jeopardy' Strangers Full House</p>
        <p>Movie: A Friendship in Vienna</p>
        <p>SportsCenier Target Shoot NFL s Greatest Moments Top Rank Boxing: From Atlantic City, N.J</p>
        <p>Inside the NFL</p>
        <p>E/R</p>
        <p>Easy Street</p>
        <p>"Absence of Malice Cont d</p>
        <p>(mas Story Gleason Movie Mannequin</p>
        <p>Olym Cont</p>
        <p>Movie: Stillwatch</p>
        <p>Mr Belvedere Just Ten</p>
        <p>20/20</p>
        <p>Cinderella</p>
        <p>Animals</p>
        <p>Movie: House</p>
        <p>Cagney &amp;amp; Lacey</p>
        <p>Movie House II: The Second Story</p>
        <p>Movie 11th Victim.</p>
        <p>Movie: The Concorde  Airport 79</p>
        <p>Movie Crocodile Dundee</p>
        <p>Airwolf</p>
        <p>I to 5</p>
        <p>Movie: Matewan</p>
        <p>Comedy Club The Boys Super Dave</p>
        <p>Movie Death Wish</p>
        <p>Movie Superbeast</p>
        <p>Darkroom</p>
        <p>Major League Baseball: Cincinnati Reds at Atlanta Braves</p>
        <p>Portrait Amer</p>
        <p>6:00 O Bonanza: The Lost Episodes</p>
        <p>O MacNeil/Lehrer Newshonr O B O  News CD Gimme a Break!</p>
        <p>(ARTS) Golden Age of Television (DIS) Any Friend of Nicholas Nkkleby is a Friend of Mine (ESPN) SportoLook (LIFE) Cover-Up (MAX) Movie Vi Absence of Malice (1981)</p>
        <p>(NICK) Dennis the Menace (SHOW) Movie  A Christmas Story (1983)</p>
        <p>(TNN) Fandango (USA) Fat Albert 6:05 (WTBS) Lveme &amp;amp; Shirley 6:30 e O CBS News g d) Too Qose for Comfort O NBC News g 0 ABC News g (ARTS) Comedy Break (BET) Video LP (ESPN) Running and Racing (NICK) Dont Just Sit There (TNN) Yon Can Be a Star (USA) Cartoons 6:35 (WTBS) Andy Griffith 7:00 B Remington Steele 0 Nightly Business Report I USA Today</p>
        <p>d) Threes Company B Benson</p>
        <p> Wheel of Fortune g (ARTS) Dining in France (BET) Urban Scene (DIS) Movie A Friendship in Vienna" (1988)</p>
        <p>(ESPN) SportsCenter (HBO) Inside the NFL (UFE) E/R</p>
        <p>(NICK) You Cant do That on Television</p>
        <p>(TMC) Movie  Crocodile Dundee (1986)</p>
        <p>(TNN) Crook and Chase (USA) Airwolf 7:05 (WTBS) 9 to 5 7:30 B Cuba, Castro, Christianity BB Win, Lose or Draw (XI Current Affair B Summer Olympics  Jeopardy! g (ARTS) World of Survival (BET) News</p>
        <p>(ESPN) Gay Target Shooting (LIFE) Easy Street (NICK) Double Dare g (SHOW) Gleason: Hes the Greatest</p>
        <p>(TNN) VideoCountry 7:35 (WTBS) Major League Baseball</p>
        <p>(Mm</p>
        <p>EMns</p>
        <p>Serving the Area Since 1919.</p>
        <p>UimberCOvlnL</p>
        <p>Doors Windows Flooring Plywood Ceiling Tile</p>
        <p>Siding Lumber Power Tools Hardware Roofing Insulation</p>
        <p>701 West 14th Street Store Hours; Mon.-Fri. 7:30-5:00 Greenville, N.C, 27836  Sat.  8:00-12:00</p>
        <p>We</p>
        <p>Deliver!</p>
        <p>g^Ummm</p>
        <p>rnXeiktmam</p>
        <p>8:00 B The Blue and the Gray The events of the Civil War are dramatized through the experiences of a combat artist from Virginia. Based on the writings of historian Bruce Catton. Stars John Hammond and Stacy Keach. (Part 4 of 4) (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>B Washington Week in Review g B B Beauty and the Beast Paracelsus returns to seek vengeance on Father and Vincent by kidnapping Catherine. (R) g (1 hr.) ^</p>
        <p>(X) Movie "Sunset Limousine" (1983) John Ritter. Susan Dey. (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>B Perfect Strangers Balki feels certain that a psychic has predicted Larrys demise. (R) g (ARTS) Twentieth Century Events leading to the invasion of Austria Host; Walter Cronkite (BET) This Week in Black Entertainment</p>
        <p>(ESPN) NFLs Greatest Moments Best Ever Teams. (R) (1 hr.) (HBO) Movie House (1986) William Katt. George Wendt. (1 hr.. 30 min.)</p>
        <p>(LIFE) Cagney &amp;amp; Lacey Racial tensions explode when a black youth is shot and the weapon is traced to Detective A1 Corassa. (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>(MAX) Movie "The Concorde --Airport 79" (1979) Alain Delon. Susan Blakely. (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>(NICK) Mister Ed (SHOW) Movie "Mannequin (1987) Andrew McCarthy. Kim Cattrall (1 hr.. 30 min.)</p>
        <p>(TNN) Nashville Now Featured: Livingston Taylor (In Stereo) (1 hr.. 30 min)</p>
        <p>(USA) Movie "Superbeast (1972) Antoinette Bower. Craig Littler (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>8:30 O Wall )lreet Week Did the Drought Hurt Farm Stocks Guest: George Dahlman. Piper,. Jaffray, Hopwood vice president 0 Full House Jesse moonligh's as an Elvis Presley look-alikt. to earn monev for a demo record (R)g</p>
        <p>(ARTS) Victor) at Sea (BET) Charlie &amp;amp; Comp iny (NICK) Patl) Duke Show fiiOO O Theban Plays "Oedipus at Colonus" Now blind. 0&amp;lt; dipus (Anthony Quaylej is led by his daughter Antigone (Juliet Sti venson) to Colonus; the Theban and Athenian kings are at war. both claiming Oedipus' body as a {fto-tective talisman (2 hrs)</p>
        <p>B O Movie "Stillwatch (1987) Lynda Carter Angie Dickinson (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>0 Mr. Belvedere Heather and Wesley accidentally run into</p>
        <p>Thu Daily Rufluctor, Qruunvillu, N.C.</p>
        <p>^    *; V I s. 1</p>
        <p>Sunday, SoptumtMr 18,1988  TV-11</p>
        <p>their parents in Atlantic City, while Belvedere and Kevin, trying to stop the two youngsters, hitch a ride with a celebrity. (R) (Part 2 of 2) g (ARTS) Movie "Escape (1987) Shaun Scott. Edita Brychta. (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>(BET) Video Soul (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>(DIS) Cinderella A degraded girls (Lesley Ann Warren) wish to attend a lavish ball comes true with the help of her fairy godmother (Celeste Holm). Also stars Ginger Rogers. Walter Pidgeon. Pat Carroll, Stuart Damon, Jo Van Fleet. Music by Rodgers and Hammerstein. (In Stereo) (1 hr.. 30 min.)</p>
        <p>(ESPN) Top Rank Boxing From Atlantic City. N.J. (Live) (2 hrs.) (LIFE) Movie 11th Victim (1979) Bess Armstrong, Max Gail. (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>(NICK) My Three Sons (TMC) Movie "Death Wish ' (1974) Charles Bronson. Hope Lange. (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>9:30 0 Just the Ten of Us J R tells an outlandish lie about his father, the coach, to impress his classmates. (R) g</p>
        <p>(HBO) Movie "House II; The Second Story  (1987) Arye Gross. Jonathan Stark (1 hr.. 30 min) (NICK) Donna Reed (SHOW) Comedy Gub Network (TNN) New Country Featured: Moe Bandy. (In Stereo)</p>
        <p>10:00 B 700 Gub (1 hr.)</p>
        <p> News (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>0 20/20 g (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>(MAX) Movie Matewan (1987) Chris Cooper. Will Oldham. (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>(NICK) Best of Saturday Night Live</p>
        <p>(SHOW) The Boys A group of old-time comedians try to revitalize The Excalibur. a once-prominent mens club, by recruiting new younger members. Stars Norm Crosby. Norman Fell. Jackie Gayle and Michael Lerner.</p>
        <p>(TNN) Crook and Chase (USA) Darkroom (1 hr)</p>
        <p>10:20 (WTBS) Portrait of America "Alaska" A profile of this states people including a high-school teacher, a bush pilot, a railroad conductor and skipper Sylvia Lange. (1 hr)</p>
        <p>10:30 B Summer Olympics Continue (1 hr.. 30 min.)</p>
        <p>(DIS) Animals in Action Featured: how different species use their legs.</p>
        <p>(NICK) SCTV</p>
        <p>(SHOW) Super Dave A Super Dave Confidence-Building Program participant demonstrates his progress. Guests, the Nylons (In Stereo)g (TNN) VideoCountry 11:00 B Stand-Up Comics Take a Stand A comedy competition among six finalists to benefit Cerebral Palsy, with appearances by Mike Farrell, Fred Travalena. Emma Samms. Marion Ross and John Ratzenberger. (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>B Bill Moyers World of Ideas "The First 'Tb.ree Minutes" Nobel Prize-winning physicist Steven Weinberg discusses creation, physics research and thermonuclear war</p>
        <p>B B 0 (BET) News  Current Affair (ARTS) Evening at the Improv (DIS) Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet</p>
        <p>(ESPN) Horse Racing Pegasus Slakes. A 1 adn 1 8 miles race for 3-year-olds, from East Rutherford. N.J (Live)</p>
        <p>(HBO) Louie Anderson Show The lighter side of life from the comic who calls himself "one of two fat people in California." (In Stereo) gtl hr )</p>
        <p>(LIFE) Cagney A Lacey (NICK) Rowan &amp;amp; Martins Laugh-In</p>
        <p>(SHOW) Movie A Nightmare on Elm Street 3: Dream Warriors" (1987) Heather Langenkamp. Pa-trina Arquette (1 hr.. 45 min.) (TMC) Movie "No Mans Land</p>
        <p>(1987) D.B. Sweeney. Charlie Sheen. (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>(TNN) You Can Be a Star (USA) Night Flight "Rick Shaws Take-Out Theater. "Kung Fu &amp;amp; Eight Drunkards (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>11:20 (WTBS) Night Tracks (In Stereo) (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>11:30 B EastEnders  M*A*S*H</p>
        <p>B Movie "Educating Rita (1983) Michael Caine. Julie Walters. (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>0 Nightline g (BET) Video LP</p>
        <p>(DIS) Movie Flower Drum Song  (1961) Nancy Kwan. James Shi-geta. (2 hrs.. 30 min.)</p>
        <p>(ESPN) SportsCenter (NICK) Car 54, Where Are You? (TNN) American Magazine 11:35 BM*A*S*H 12:00  Late Show Host: Ross Shafer. Scheduled; comic Bob Goldthwait: author Missy Laws; "welfare queen Dorothy Woods (R) (In Stereo) (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>B News</p>
        <p>0 Entertainment Tonight Actress Donna Mills ("Knots Landing ). (In Stereo)</p>
        <p>(ARTS) Twentieth Century Events leading to the invasion of Austria. Host: Walter Cronkite. (BET) Midnight Love (1 hr.) (HBO) Movie "The Living Daylights (1987) Timothy Dalton. Maryam d Abo. (2 hrs.. 15 min.) (LIFE) Dr. Ruth Show Guests: Dr Richard Erlich. Dr. Al Baraff Topic: the male sexual response (Part 1 of 2)</p>
        <p>(MAX) Movie "Baby Cat  (1983) Julie Margo. Jean Francois Gar-reaud. (1 hr.. 35 min.)</p>
        <p>(NICK) Make Room for Daddy (TNN) Nashville Now Featured: Livingston Taylor. (In Stereo) (1 hr, 30 min.)</p>
        <p>(USA) Night Flight "Night Flight Goes to the Movies &amp;amp; Coming Attractions </p>
        <p>12:05 0 Entertainment Tonight Actress Donna Mills ("Knots Landing). (In Stereo)</p>
        <p>12:15 (ESPN) SportsCenter Extra</p>
        <p>12:20 (USA) Night Flight "Director Profile. Schlesinger </p>
        <p>(WTBS) Night Tracks (In Stereo) (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>12:25 (ESPN) Australian Rules Football Grand Final, from Melbourne. (Live) (3 hrs., 5 min.) 12:30 B Sommer Olympics Scheduled:  Track and Field</p>
        <p>(Heptathlon and other events); Men's Gymnastics (Individual Finals). (Live) (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>0 Friday the 13th: The Series Micki and Ryan fall victim to an antique urns deadly gas. causing them to relive their worst nightmares. (R) (In Stereo) (1 hr.) (ARTS) Victory at Sea (LIFE) Easy Street (NICK) Ann Sothern 12:35 B Wipeout</p>
        <p>12:45 (SHOW) Movie "Nana (1981) Katya Berger. Jean-Pierre Au-mont. (1 hr.. 30 min)</p>
        <p>12:50 (USA) Night Flight 1:00 B Straight Talk (1 hr)</p>
        <p> Kojak</p>
        <p>(ARTS) Movie "Escape" (198Ti Shaun Scott. Edita Brvchta (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>(BET) Video Soul (2 hrs)</p>
        <p>(LIFE) Investment Advisory (3</p>
        <p>hrs.)</p>
        <p>(NICK) Mister Ed (TMQ Movie "KGB - The Secret War  (1985) Michael Billington. Denise DuBarry (1 hr. 35 min.) (USA) Night Flight "Video Profile: Elton John 1:05 B Sweethearts 1:20 (WTBS) Night Tracks (In Stereo) (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>1:30 (NICK) Patty Duke Show (TNN) Movie "Indian Territory " (1950) Gene Autry. Smilev Burnette. (1 hr. 30 min)</p>
        <p>(USA) Night Flight "New Sounds  1:35 B News (R|</p>
        <p>(MAX) Movie Valet Girls  (1986) Meri 0. Marshall. April Stewart.</p>
        <p>(1 hr, 25 min.)</p>
        <p>2:00 B 700 Club (1 hr)</p>
        <p> Movie "The Long Goodbye</p>
        <p>(Please Turn To Page 14)"^'</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0120" />
        <p>TV-12 -Tlw Dally RtlMtor.GrMnill,N.C. Sunday, Saptembar 18.1988</p>
        <p>&amp;lt;v</p>
        <p>Tele-Puzzle</p>
        <p>ACROSS</p>
        <p>1 Shown, with 10 Down. "Murder She Wrote" star 7 M for Murder"</p>
        <p>11  Navratilova 13 Archive item</p>
        <p>15 First night</p>
        <p>16 A White</p>
        <p>17 "The Forsyte "</p>
        <p>18 Comedian Johnson</p>
        <p>20 Trenton time</p>
        <p>21 "I came. "</p>
        <p>22 Ruth of baseball</p>
        <p>23 Campus org.</p>
        <p>26 Alone, on stage</p>
        <p>27 Luge and pung</p>
        <p>28 Motionless</p>
        <p>29 Played Jolene</p>
        <p>30 Blue"</p>
        <p>31 Molecule member</p>
        <p>32 Ad award</p>
        <p>35 New Deal program</p>
        <p>36 Entreated</p>
        <p>37 Common ailment 41 Comedian Chevy 43 Steber or</p>
        <p>Powell</p>
        <p>45 In a dither</p>
        <p>46 Helmond role</p>
        <p>47 Cara or Dunne</p>
        <p>48 "Lassie" co-star</p>
        <p>DOWN</p>
        <p>1 John  of</p>
        <p>22 - fide</p>
        <p>"Good Times"</p>
        <p>23 Jack of "The</p>
        <p>2 California</p>
        <p>Bob Crane Show'</p>
        <p>wine valley</p>
        <p>24 Move</p>
        <p>3 Played BJ</p>
        <p>25 Take--view</p>
        <p>4 Sicilian</p>
        <p>26 Granger's</p>
        <p>spouter</p>
        <p>milieu</p>
        <p>5 Caesar's deck</p>
        <p>27 Actress Greta </p>
        <p>6 Moffo and Sten</p>
        <p>32 Leachman ID</p>
        <p>7 Brubeck or</p>
        <p>33 - Cobb</p>
        <p>Brinkley</p>
        <p>34 Do-nothing</p>
        <p>8 Actress Claire</p>
        <p>36  le Pew</p>
        <p>9 Hardened by</p>
        <p>37 The actors</p>
        <p>heating</p>
        <p>38 Step--</p>
        <p>10 See 1 Across</p>
        <p>(hurry)</p>
        <p>12 Taj Mahal city</p>
        <p>39 Places.</p>
        <p>14 Most current</p>
        <p>mathematically</p>
        <p>19 Played Luke</p>
        <p>40 Kind of race</p>
        <p>Duke: init.</p>
        <p>42 "The - Also</p>
        <p>21 "--</p>
        <p>Rises"</p>
        <p>Wonderful Life</p>
        <p>44 Sudan follower</p>
        <p>Anawera On Page 14</p>
        <p>Sports This Week</p>
        <p>''li  OI)TOi&amp;gt;ic^  ^</p>
        <p>lights of various events. (Tapied)</p>
        <p>(1 hr.)</p>
        <p>Sl'NDAYS SPORTS</p>
        <p>SEPTEMBER 18,1988</p>
        <p>8:00 O Duke Football Highlights O Summer Olympics Scheduled: Boxing; Men's and Women's Swimming; Basketball and Volleyball. (Live) (4 hrs.)</p>
        <p>8:30 O Dick Sheridan Show</p>
        <p>12:0HO Mack Brown University of North Carolina football report. 12:30 O NFL Today NFL pregame hosted by Brent Musburger with Irv Cross. Will McDonough and Dick Butkus</p>
        <p>O NFL Live NFL pregame show hosted by Bob Costas, with Ahmad Rashad. Paul Maguire. Frank Deford and Gayle Gardner.</p>
        <p>1:00 O NFL Football Philadelphia Eagles at Washington Redskins. (Live) (3 hrs.)</p>
        <p>O NFL Football Regional Coverage. Bills at Patriots. Bengals at Steelers. Broncos at Chiefs or Oilers at Jets. (Live) (3 hrs.)</p>
        <p>4:00 e NFL Football New York Giants at Dallas Cowboys. (Live) (3 hrs.)</p>
        <p>O Summer Olympics Highlights of various events. (Taped) (3 hrs.)</p>
        <p>7:30 O Sommer Olympics Scheduled: Swimming, Women's Gymnastics Team Competition; Preliminaries in Boxing; Women's Basketball and Men's Volleyball. From Seoul. Korea. (Live) (3 hrs.) 12:00 O Southern Sportsman 12:30 O Summer Olympics Scheduled. U.S. vs. Korea in Baseball. (Live) (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>MONDAYS SPORTS SEPTEMBER 19,1988</p>
        <p>7:00 O Summer Olympics Scheduled:  Women's  Gymnastics</p>
        <p>(Team Compulsories); Men's Diving (Springboard Preliminaries). From Seoul, Korea. (Live) (3 hrs.)</p>
        <p>4:00 O Summer Olympics Highlights of various events. (Taped) (Ihr.)</p>
        <p>7:30 O Summer Olympics Scheduled: Men's and Women's Swimming; Rowing; Boxing; Men's Basketball and Women's Volleyball. From Seoul. Korea. (Live) (3 hrs.)</p>
        <p>12:30 O Summer Olympics Scheduled: Tennis (Men's First Round Singles). (Live) (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>TUESDAYS SPORTS SEPTEMBER 20,1988</p>
        <p>7:00 O Summer Olympics Scheduled: Men's Gymnastics (Team Finals); Cycling. From Seoul. Korea. (Live) (3 hrs.)</p>
        <p>4:00 O Summer Olympics Highlights of various events. (Taped) (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>7:30 O Summer Olympics Scheduled: Mens and Women's Swimming; Cross-Country Equestrian; Men's Basketball; Water Polo; Cycling. From Seoul, Korea. (Live) (3 hrs.)</p>
        <p>12:30 O Summer Olympics Scheduled. U.S. vs. Australia in Baseball; Equestrian (Cross Country). (Live) (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>WEDNESDAYS SPORTS</p>
        <p>SEPTEMBER 21,1988</p>
        <p>7:00 O Summer Olympics Scheduled; Women's Gymnastics (Team Finals); Cycling (Sprints). (Live) (3 hrs.)</p>
        <p>4:00 O Summer Olympics Highlights of various events. (Taped) (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>7:30 O Summer Olympics Scheduled: Mens Gymnastics; Boxing; Men's Volleyball; Womens Basketball; Men's and Womens Semifinals in Rowing; Cycling. (Live) (3 hrs.)</p>
        <p>12:30 O Summer Olympics Scheduled: Mens Gymnastics (All-Around Finals); Equestrian (Three-Day Jumping Finals). (Live) (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>THURSDAYS SPORTS</p>
        <p>SEPTEMBER 22, 1988</p>
        <p>7:00 O Summer Olympics Scheduled: Swimming (Freestyle and Relays); Cycling (Sprints). (Live) (3 hrs.)</p>
        <p>4:00 O Summer Olympics Highlights of various events. (Taped) (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>7:30 O Summer Olympics Scheduled: Track and Field (Womens Marathon and Men's 100m First Round); Womens Gymnastics (All-Around Finals); Boxing; Mens Basketball; Mens and Womens Swimming. (Live) (3 hrs.)</p>
        <p>12:30 O Summer Olympics Scheduled: Track and Field (Heptathlon and other events); U.S. vs. China in Men's Basketball. (Live) (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>FRIDAYS SPORTS</p>
        <p>SEPTEMBER 23,1988</p>
        <p>7:00 O Summer Olympics Scheduled: Swimming (Freestyle and Relay Finals); Cycling (Sprints and Team Pursuit). (Live) (3 hrs.)</p>
        <p>7:30 O Summer Olympics Scheduled: Track and Field (Mens 100m Finals); Rowing; Mens Gymnastics; Mens Volleyball; Men's and Womens Swimming. (Live) (3 hrs.)</p>
        <p>12:30 O Summer Olympics Scheduled; Track and Field (Heptathlon and other events); Mens Gymnastics (Individual Finals). (Live) (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>SATURDAYS SPORTS SEPTEMBER 24,1988</p>
        <p>6:30 O Southern Sportsman</p>
        <p>12:00 O College Football Virginia at Duke. (Live) (3 hrs.)</p>
        <p>O Summer Olympics Highlights of various events. (Taped) (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>1:00 O Major League Baseball Teams to be Announced. (Live) (3 hrs.)</p>
        <p>3:00 O College Football Tennessee at Auburn. (Joined in Progress) (Live) (3 hrs.)</p>
        <p>4:00 O Summer Olympics Highlights of various events. (Taped) (3 hrs.)</p>
        <p>7:30 O Summer Olympics Scheduled: Track and Field (Womens 100m Finals and Mens 400m Hurdles Finals); Womens Gymnastics (Apparatus Finals); Finals in Mens and Women's Rowing; Womens Diving (Springboard Finals); Women's Basketball. (Live) (3 hrs.)</p>
        <p>11:15 B Sports Saturday</p>
        <p>11:30 B NWA Pro Wrestling (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>12:30 B Summer Olympics Scheduled Track and Field (Womens 800m, 3000m and other events); Women's Gymnastics (Individual Finals). (Live) (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>Sports Roundup</p>
        <p>SUNDAY, SEPT. 18 Olympics (NBC)</p>
        <p>NBCs coverage begins in earnest with about 13 hours today, interrupted for the NFL and the news. Todays action will include mens gymnastics, basketball, baseball, weightlifting, diving and boxing, mens and womens swimming finals, womens gymnastics and basketball.</p>
        <p>Olympic boxing is quite different from what American fight fans are used to seeing. We asked Dr. Fer-die Pacheco, NBCs "Fight Doctor," to elucidate. The quickest way to characterize the difference is that its the difference between fencing and bludgeoning with a broadsword, saysU-REN-CO</p>
        <p>750 38622803 EVANS ST. GREENVILLE, NC 756-3862</p>
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        <p>Pacheco. Amateur boxing is predicated on tapping or punching with the white part of the glove landing-flush. The intensity of the punch doesnt matter. As a result, he explains, Olympic boxing can go either way; a man can forfeit the obvious possibility of landing a lot of tippy-tap punches andgamble on going for the knockout to win so that the judges dont have anything to say about it."</p>
        <p>NFL Football (CBS, NBC)</p>
        <p>Week 3; CBS has the doubleheader.</p>
        <p>MONDAY, SEPT. 19 FRIDAY, SEPT. 23 Olympics (NBC) MONDAY, SEPT. 19 Football (ABC) Indianapolis Colts at Cleveland Browns. Some folks think this game might be a preview of the AFC title matchup. However, with problems on the Colt offensive line, even Eric Dickerson might have trouble running the ball. If Chris Hinton is back and Ron Solt is happy, the Colts have a shot.</p>
        <p>SATURDAY, SEPT. 24 Olympics (NBC)</p>
        <p>We spoke recently with Abel Kiviat, the oldest living American medalist. At the 1912 Games in Stockholm, Kiviat won a silver</p>
        <p>in the 1500 meters. He painted a vastly different picture of the Games of 76 years ago. We went over on a small boat, only 19,000 tons, he recalls, laughing, Imagine what that is today  a rowboat! There was no Olympic Village; the Americans lived on the boat itself. "They laid a track on the</p>
        <p>boat, says Kiviat. You couldnt race on it and only at certain hours could we use it. At other times, the athletes gave way to the boat's paying customers. "They had to take on other passengers to defray the cost of our passage, Kiviat explains. Compare that to the heavily subsidized U.S. team now.REDSKIN FOOTBALLRedskins-Last GameFor 4 Wynnes Redskins Vs Saints</p>
        <p>November S and 6 (oiy a smi* muaM*)</p>
        <p>(Includes Bus Ticket-Sightseeing-Lodging)</p>
        <p>(Lodging Omni Shoreham -DC)</p>
        <p>Snow Skiing Jackson Hole-Wyoming February 2-9 Weekly, Day Trips And Overnight Trips</p>
        <p>Trips For Clubs/Organizations^^all For Information4 Wynnes Tours &amp;amp; Sports 355-5611</p>
        <p>Jimmy Wynne - Owner Winterville. N.C.</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0121" />
        <p>Movie-Breakout</p>
        <p>MONDAY</p>
        <p>SEPTEMBER 19.1988</p>
        <p>9:00 O "Western Code (1932) 8:00 (SHOW)  Something for</p>
        <p>a Lonely Man (1968)</p>
        <p>6:15 (TMQ aV Parole (1982) 7:00 (MAX)  Apartment for</p>
        <p>Peggy (1948)</p>
        <p>8:00 (HBO)  Big Shots (1987)</p>
        <p>(SHOW) Love with a Perfect Stranger (1986)</p>
        <p>(TMC) *** The Grapes of Wrath" (1940)</p>
        <p>9:00 (DIS) ** The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (1978)</p>
        <p>(MAX) *** Come to the Stable</p>
        <p>(1949)</p>
        <p>9:30 (HBO) *** Charlottes Web (1972)</p>
        <p>10:00 (ARTS)  The  Uttle</p>
        <p>Princess (1939)</p>
        <p>(SHOW)  Speedway (1968)</p>
        <p>(USA) "Shall We Dance (1937)</p>
        <p>10:05 (WTBS)  Pillow Talk</p>
        <p>(1959)</p>
        <p>10:30 (MAX) The Dolly Sisters (1946)</p>
        <p>(TMC) *** The Turning Point"</p>
        <p>(1977)</p>
        <p>11:00 (HBO) **V2 Three OClock High (1987)</p>
        <p>11:35 (SHOW) /2 Oliver s Story </p>
        <p>(1978)</p>
        <p>12:00 (TNN) The Singing Cowboy (1936)</p>
        <p>12:30 (MAX) *** Western Union" (1941)</p>
        <p>(TMC) ** Rustlers Rhapsody (1985)</p>
        <p>1:00 (DIS) *ay2 Top Kids (1987) 1:05 (SHOW) *** Men of the Fighting Lady  (1954)</p>
        <p>(WTBS) Winchester 73 </p>
        <p>(1950)</p>
        <p>2:00 (HBO) ***V2 Local Hero (1983)</p>
        <p>(MAX) Dead Reckoning (1947)</p>
        <p>(TMC) V'2 Baby" (1985)</p>
        <p>2:30 (SHOW) The Pick-Up Artist (1987)</p>
        <p>3:00 (ARTS)  Blunt (1986)</p>
        <p>4:00 (LIFE) ** For Love or Money (1984)</p>
        <p>(MAX)  Stranger on the</p>
        <p>Run (1967)</p>
        <p>(TMQ *** The Great Catherine (1968)</p>
        <p>TUESDAY</p>
        <p>SEPTEMBER 20,1988</p>
        <p>5:20 (TMQ *** The Grapes of Wrath (1940)</p>
        <p>6:00 (SHOW)  Evil Under the</p>
        <p>Sun (1982)</p>
        <p>6:10 (MAX) **** Les Miserables" (1935)</p>
        <p>7:30 (TMQ ** Twelve OClock Higb (1949)</p>
        <p>8:00 (HBO) * Rad  (1986)</p>
        <p>(SHOW) Dark Side of Love</p>
        <p>(1979)</p>
        <p>8:30 (MAX)  "Bill Cosby -</p>
        <p>Himself (1982)</p>
        <p>9K10 (DIS) My Dog the Thief (1970)</p>
        <p>9:30 (HBO) *** Blind Date  (1987)</p>
        <p>10:00 (ARTS) *** Blunt  (1986) (SHOW) Vi Heaven Can Wait (1943)</p>
        <p>(TMQ  Cross Creek (1983) (USA)   The Gay Divorcee" (1934)</p>
        <p>10:05 (WTBS) Vi Tomorrows Child (1982)</p>
        <p>10:30 (MAX)  I Was a Male War Bride (1949)</p>
        <p>11:15 (HBO)   The Living Daylights (1987)</p>
        <p>12:00 (SHOW) /^ Man, Woman and Child (1983)</p>
        <p>(TMQ   The Concorde - Airport 79 (1979)</p>
        <p>(TNN)  Man From Music Mountain (1943)</p>
        <p>12:30 (MAX)  Hangman's Knot (1952)</p>
        <p>1:00 (DIS)  Quarterback Rrin-. cess (1983)</p>
        <p>1:05 (WTBS)  Bend of the River (1952)</p>
        <p>1:30 (HBO)  The Man Who Saw Tomorrow (1981)</p>
        <p>2:00 (MAX) 14 Criminal Code (1931)</p>
        <p>(SHOW)  Streets of Justice (1985)</p>
        <p>2:05 (TMQ  Kellys Heroes (1970)</p>
        <p>3:00 (ARTS) Vi Murder My Sweet (1944)</p>
        <p>4:00 (LIFE) Vi The Amazing Mr. Blunden (1972)</p>
        <p>(MAX)  Sahara (1943)</p>
        <p>4:30 (SHOW)  Pied Piper of Hamelin (1957)</p>
        <p>(TMQ *V2 Haunted Honeymoon (1986)</p>
        <p>5:00 (HBO)  Raising Arizona (1987)</p>
        <p>5:45 (MAX) '/z Chapter Two (1979)</p>
        <p>WEDNESDAY</p>
        <p>SEPTEMBER 21,1988</p>
        <p>5:10 (MAX) /? The Gypsy Moths (1969)</p>
        <p>5:25 (HBO)  Raising Arizona (1987)</p>
        <p>5:40 (TMQ  The Concorde -Airport 79 (1979)</p>
        <p>6:00 (SHOW) V2 Three OClock High (1987)</p>
        <p>7:00 (MAX) /i A Woman of Distinction (1950)</p>
        <p>8:00 (HBO)  Sweet Dreams" (1985)</p>
        <p>(SHOW)  Bill Cosby -Himself" (1982)</p>
        <p>(TMQ  Lolly Madonna XXX (1973)</p>
        <p>8:30 (MAX)   Pat and Mike (1952)</p>
        <p>9:00 (DIS)  Snoopy, Come Home (1972)</p>
        <p>10:00 (ARTS) Vz  Murder My Sweet (1944)</p>
        <p>(HBO) Vz Mr. Mom (1983) (SHOW) Vi One-Eyed Jacks (1961)</p>
        <p>(TMQ   Death of a Salesman (1985)</p>
        <p>(USA)  Flying Down to Rio (1933)</p>
        <p>10:05 (WTBS)  Sweet Hostage (1975)</p>
        <p>11:00 (MAX) Vz The Killer that Stalked New York (1950)</p>
        <p>12:00 (HBO)  The Whistle Blower (1987)</p>
        <p>(TNN)  The Last of the Pony Riders (1953)</p>
        <p>12:30 (MAX)  A Lawless Street (1955)</p>
        <p>(SHOW)  Gandhi (1982) (TMQ  Sweet Lorraine (1987)</p>
        <p>1:00 (DIS)  Benji the Hunted (1987)</p>
        <p>1:05 (WTBS)  Thunder Bay</p>
        <p>(1953)</p>
        <p>2:00 (HBO) I Want to Live (1983) (TMQ Vz Kim (1950)</p>
        <p>2:30 (MAX)   The Legend of Lizzie Borden (1975)</p>
        <p>3:00 (ARTS)  Carnival Story</p>
        <p>(1954)</p>
        <p>4:00 (HBO) Vz A Hero Aint Nothing But a Sandwich (1977) (SHOW)  I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings  (1979)</p>
        <p>(TMQ Vz Revenge of the Nerds (1984)</p>
        <p>4:30 (MAX) Vz Tokyo Joe (1949)</p>
        <p>5:30 (TMQ Vz Matewan (1987)</p>
        <p>THURSDAY</p>
        <p>SEPTEMBER 22,1988</p>
        <p>5:30(SHOW)  1 Know Why the Caged Bird Sings (1979)</p>
        <p>6:00 (MAX)  Roxanne (1987) 6:30 (TMQ Vz  Three OClock High (1987)</p>
        <p>8:00 (HBO)   Winners Take All  (1987)</p>
        <p>(MAX) Vz Stranger on the Run' (1967)</p>
        <p>8:30 (SHOW)  "Rustlers Rhapsody (1985)</p>
        <p>(TMC)  Go for Broke (1951)</p>
        <p>9:00 (DIS)   Poor Little Rich Girl  (1936)</p>
        <p>10:00 (ARTS)  Carnival Story  (1954)</p>
        <p>(HBO)  "Mannequin  (1987) (MAX) Vz "Made in Heaven</p>
        <p>(1987)</p>
        <p>(SHOW) Vz Summer of 42' (1971)</p>
        <p>(TMC) Vz A Question of Honor  (1982)</p>
        <p>(USA)  rhe Story of Vernon and Irene Castle  (1939)</p>
        <p>10:05 (WTBS) Vz Widow (1976) 11:30 (HBO)   Jesus  (1979)</p>
        <p>12:00 (BET) Swing  (1938)</p>
        <p>(SHOW) Out of the Shadows</p>
        <p>(1988)</p>
        <p>(TNN)  San Fernando Valley (1944)</p>
        <p>12:30 (DIS)  All About Eve" (1950)</p>
        <p>(MAX) Vz Decision at Sundown (1957)  /</p>
        <p>(TMQ   My Science Project (1985)</p>
        <p>1:05 (WTBS)   The Rare Breed" (1966)</p>
        <p>1:30 (HBO)  Death of a Salesman (1985)</p>
        <p>2:00 (MAX) nn'/z  Million Dollar Mermaid" (1952)</p>
        <p>(SHOW)   Six Weeks (1982) 2:30 (TMQ  J.O.E. and the Colonel' (1985)</p>
        <p>3:00 (ARTS)  Day After the Fair (1987)</p>
        <p>3:55 (MAX) Vz "In a Lonely Place (1950)</p>
        <p>4:00 (HBO)  A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur s Court (1949)</p>
        <p>(LIFE)  Embassy  (1985) (SHOW) Vz "Bon Voyage Charlie Brown (1979)</p>
        <p>4:30 (TMQ Vz  Three OClock High (1987)</p>
        <p>5:30 (MAX)   Funny Girl" (1968)</p>
        <p>FRIDAY</p>
        <p>SEPTEMBER 23,1988</p>
        <p>5:15 (TMC) /? "A Question of Honor (1982)</p>
        <p>5:35 (HBO) Vz Last Resort</p>
        <p>(1986)</p>
        <p>6:00 (MAX)   Seven Brides for Seven Brothers  (1954)</p>
        <p>(SHOW) Vz Just Me and You  (1978)</p>
        <p>7:40 (MAX)   A Lawless Street (1955)</p>
        <p>8:00 (HBO) Vz  The 500-Pound Jerk (1972)</p>
        <p>(SHOW) Vz  Julia  (1977) (TMC) Vz Valley of the Kings (1954)</p>
        <p>9:00 (MAX)   The Dolly Sis-ters" (1946)</p>
        <p>9:30 (HBO) * The Man Who Saw Tomorrow (1981)</p>
        <p>10:00 (ARTS)  Day After the Fair</p>
        <p>(1987)</p>
        <p>(SHOW)   More Than a Miracle (1968)</p>
        <p>(TMQ Vz  Parole" (1982) (USA)   Carefree' (1938)</p>
        <p>10:05 (WTBS)   You ll Like Mv Mother (1972)</p>
        <p>11:00 (MAX) Vz A Woman of Distinction" (1950)</p>
        <p>12:00 (HBO)  The Living Daylights (1987)</p>
        <p>(SHOW)   Mannequin (1987)</p>
        <p>Some Chdoe Programs For P^leV^o Can't Get Group Coverage.</p>
        <p>Blue Cross and Blue Shield of North Carolina offers a choice of ^eat health coverage plans for anyone who needs them. We have Medicare Supplement Plans for people over 65, plans for people under 65, and even plans for people with medical problems.</p>
        <p>So sold us the coupoa And our agent will contaa you with information about our really choice plans.</p>
        <p>Tell me more about your health care coverage.</p>
        <p>Name_ Address. City_</p>
        <p>State.</p>
        <p>Zip.</p>
        <p>Telephone.</p>
        <p> Age (check one):  Over 65  Under 65</p>
        <p>BhwCTOM' Mai] To: Nongroup and Rural Sales Blue Cross and Blue Shield of North Carolina PO Box 2291</p>
        <p>BkwSIMd.</p>
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        <p>TheChok3eOf&amp;gt;Jeariy  jsm Durham, nc 27702-2291</p>
        <p>TVVOMillkXlbkXtnCailm  ci8WuQottndWueShiddo&amp;lt;NlhCirolin</p>
        <p>(TMQ  Crocodile Dundee (1986)</p>
        <p>(TNN)  Indian Territory  (1950)</p>
        <p>12:30 (MAX)  Eight Iron Men (1952)</p>
        <p>1:00 (DIS) '/^ Colour in the Creek (1987)</p>
        <p>1:05 (WTBS) % Night Passage" (1957)</p>
        <p>1:30 (SHOW)  The Adventure of the Action Hunters  (1987)</p>
        <p>2:00 (MAX)  I Was a Male War Bride (1949)</p>
        <p>(TMQ Vz  KGB ~ The Secret</p>
        <p>Hollgj^ f</p>
        <p>War (1985)</p>
        <p>3:00 (ARTS) </p>
        <p>Triumph (1948)</p>
        <p>3:30 (TMQ  "Improper Channels (1981)</p>
        <p>3:50 (MAX) Vz "In a Lonelv Place" (1950)</p>
        <p>4:00 (LIFE)  "Mafia Princess" (1986)</p>
        <p>(SHOW) Vz The Adventures of Mark Twain" (1985)</p>
        <p>5:00 (1MQ Vz The Apprenticeship of Duddy Kravitz" (1974) 5:15 (HBO)   The Sky's No Limit" (1983)</p>
        <p>Two Hours Of News</p>
        <p>; ABC has moved  The Health Show" from Saturday to Sunday mornings, creating a Sunday-morning lineup comprised of  The Health Show.  This Week with David Brinkley" and "Business World." The schedule change, which went into effect last Sunday. Sept. 11, gives ABC two hours of public-affairs programming that includes news, health and business. NBC's 90-minute  Sunday Today. with a similar</p>
        <p>blend, has drawn strong ratings on Sunday mornings.</p>
        <p>PBS</p>
        <p>OEDIPUS</p>
        <p>Anthony Quayle plays Oedipus in PBSs Oedipus at Colonnus, based on Sophocles' powerful tale of the tragic king. This episode of The Theban Plays" airs Friday, Sept. 23. (Check local listings.)</p>
        <p>ID'S TV FREEZER SALE!</p>
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        <pb facs="00097037_0122" />
        <p>_^IONDAY(Continued From Page 7)</p>
        <p>(SHOW) Movie Warrior Queen" (1987) Sybil Danning. Donald Pleasence. (1 hr. 15 min.)</p>
        <p>(USA) Discover 3:00 O To Be Announced (1 hr) (ARTS) Evening at the Improv (BET) Soft Notes (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>(ESPN) Golden Link; Great Olympians Bob Richards and Payton Jordan. (R)</p>
        <p>(MAX) Movie ' Desert Hearts"</p>
        <p>(1986) Helen Shaver. Patricia Charbonneau (1 hr . 30 rain.) (NICK)SCTV</p>
        <p>(USA) Youth Secrets of the Stars 3:20 (WTBS) Gunsmoke 3:30 (DIS) Movie "Auntie Marae' (1958) Rosalind Russell. Forrest Tucker. (2 hrs., 30 rain.)</p>
        <p>(ESPN) Top Rank Boxing Pedro Dcima vs. Louie Espinoza. A junior feathwerweight bout scheduled for 10 rounds, from Las Ve-'gas. Nev. (R) (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>(HBO) Movie "Hunter s Blood"</p>
        <p>(1987) Sam Bottoms. Kim Delaney. (1 hr, 45 min )</p>
        <p>(NICK) Rowan &amp;amp; Marlins Laugh-In</p>
        <p>(USA) Weight Loss Made Easy 3:35 (TMC) Movie 'Crocodile' Dundee" (1986) Paul Hogan. Linda Kozlow'ski. (1 hr. 45 min.)</p>
        <p>3:45 (SHOW) Movie The Pick-Up Artist " (1987) Molly Ringwald. Robert Downey. (1 lir.. 25 min.) 4:00 B To Be Announced (1 hr) (ARTS) Man From Moscow Wynne goes to Moscow, planning to help Penkovsky get out of Russia before the leak in Soviet security is discovered (Part 2 of 3) (Part 2 of 3) (1 hr. 30 min )</p>
        <p>(BET) Video Vibrations (2 hrs) (LIFE) Investment Advisory (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>(NICK) Movie "Scarlet Street" (1945) Edward G Robinson. Joan Bennett (2 hrs)</p>
        <p>(USA) European Hair Secrets -i:20 (WTBS) Three Stooges 4:30 (MAX) Movie Love Circles" (1984) Marie France. Lisa Allison (1 hr. 40 min.)</p>
        <p>(USA) Perfect Diet (WTBS) All in the FamilvTHURSDAY(Continued From Page 10)</p>
        <p>Dawson. Nick Buoniconti. (In Stereo)(1 hr)</p>
        <p>(LIFE) Cagney &amp;amp; Lacey (NICK) Rowan &amp;amp; Martin's Laugh-In</p>
        <p>(SHOW) Movie "Tough Guys Don't Dance (1987) Ryan O'Neal. Isabella Rossellini. (2 hrs)</p>
        <p>(TNN) You Can Be a Star (USA) Alfred Hitchcock Presents 11:15 (WTBS) That War in Korea Documentary utilizing archival footage and analysis by Western</p>
        <p>journalists to examine the impact of the Korean conflict on those who were involved. Host: Kirk Douglas. (Part 2 of 2) (1 hr.. 30 min.)</p>
        <p>11:30 O EastEnders O  M*A*S*H O Night Heat A Columbian detective helps the Mid South precinct bust open a cocaine ring, but O'Brien and Giambone suspect his motives. (1 hr. 10 min.)</p>
        <p>B Nightline g (ARTS) Comedy Break (DIS) Movie "The Teahouse of the August Moon" (1956) Marlon Brando. Glenn Ford. (2 hrs,. 5 min.)</p>
        <p>(ESPN) SportsCenter (1 hr.) (MAX) Movie " Made in Heaven" (1987) Timothy Hutton. Kelly McGillis. (1 hr.. 35 min.)</p>
        <p>(NICK) Car 54, Where Are You? (TMC) Movie "Cold Steel" (1987) Brad Davis. Sharon Stone (1 hr.. 45 min.)</p>
        <p>(TNN) American Magazine (USA) Wired From London, Eng and New York, performances by rock musicians. (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>12:00 O Paper Chase O B Entertainment Tonight Actor Danny DeVito. (In Stereo)</p>
        <p>CE Late Show Host: Ross Shafer. Scheduled: Jeopardy" host Alex Trebek: jazz saxophonist George Howard; songwriter Allee Willis (R) (In Stereo) (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>O News</p>
        <p>(ARTS) Edge and Beyond Skiing down the Grand Jorasses; female climbers in the Italian Alps. (BET) Bobby Jones (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>(HBO) Movie Hellraiser" (1987) Andrew Robinson. Clare Higgins (1 hr.. 35 min.)</p>
        <p>(LIFE) MacGruder &amp;amp; Loud (NICK) Make Room for Daddy (TNN) Nashville Now (1 hr.. 30 min.)</p>
        <p>12:30 Q Wipeout O Summer Olympics Scheduled: Track and Field (Heptathlon and other events): U.S. vs. China in Men's Basketball. (Live) (2 hrs.) B Sweethearts</p>
        <p>(ARTS)Ourselves and Other Animals The Durrells explore the world of myths and monsters. (ESPN) Australian Rules Football Preliminary Final. (Taped)</p>
        <p>(1 hr.)</p>
        <p>(NICK) Ann Sothern (USA) Edge of Night 12:40 O Movie Who Is Julia"</p>
        <p>(1986) Mare Winningham. Jameson Parker. (1 hr.. 20 min)</p>
        <p>12:45 (WTBS) Movie " Custer of the West" (1968) Robert Shaw. Mary Ure. (3 hrs.)</p>
        <p>1:00 B Straight Talk (I hr.)</p>
        <p>O Sweethearts X Kojak</p>
        <p>(ARTS) Movie "An Evening With the Royal Ballet" (1964) Dame Margot Fonteyn, Rudolf Nu-reyev. (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>(BET) Video Soul (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>(LIFE) Investment Advisory (3 hrs.)</p>
        <p>(NICK) Mister Ed</p>
        <p>(SHOW) Movie "Hamburger Hill"</p>
        <p>(1987) Anthony Barrile, Michael</p>
        <p>Family Re*Unions Seminars, Banquets &amp;amp; Private Parties</p>
        <p>Up to 175 People Special Rates</p>
        <p>Patrick Boatman. (1 hr., 55 min.) (USA) Edge of Night 1:05 (MAX) Movie "Shaft (1971) Richard Roundtree. Moses Gunn. (1 hr.. 40 min.)</p>
        <p>1;5 (TMC) Short Film Showcase 1:30 e News (R)</p>
        <p>(ESPN) Truck and Tractor Pull (NICK) Patty Duke Show (TNN) Movie " San Fernando Valley" (1944) Roy Rogers. Dale Evans. (1 hr. 30 min.)</p>
        <p>(USA) Search for Tomorrow 1:35 (DIS) Movie "All About Eve" (1950) Bette Davis. Anne Baxter. (2 hrs.. 25 min.)</p>
        <p>(HBO) Movie "Once Upon a Time in America" (1984) Robert De-Niro. James Woods. (2 hrs.. 25 min.)</p>
        <p>2:00 B 700 Club (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>BO Nightwatch(3 hrs.. 30 min.)  The Saint (ESPN) SportsLook (NICK) Donna Reed (TMC) Movie "Friday the 13th. Part VI: Jason Lives" (1986) Tom Mathews, Jennifer Cooke. (1 hr., 30 min.)</p>
        <p>(USA) Search for Tomorrow 2:30 (ESPN) SportsCenter (NICK) Best of Saturday Night Live</p>
        <p>(USA) Riptide</p>
        <p>Satur(3ay Daytime</p>
        <p>CALL 756-2792</p>
        <p>FRIDAY(Continued From Page 11)</p>
        <p>(1973) Elliott Gould. Sterling Hayden. (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>(DIS) Movie "Colour in the Creek " (1987) Denis Miller. Judy Morris (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>(NICK) Donna Reed (USA) Night Flight "Cartoon Carnival" (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>2:05 B USA Today "The Television Show" Scheduled: actor Robert Inch ( Spenser: For Hire): shopping for pasta. (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>2:15 (HBO) Inside the NFL Hosts: Len Dawson. Nick Buoniconti. (In Stereo) (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>(SHOW) Movie "Maximum Overdrive" (1986) Emilio Estevez. Pat Hingle. (1 hr. 40 min.)</p>
        <p>2:20 (WTBS) Night Tracks (In Stereo) (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>2:30 (NICK) Best of Saturday Night Live</p>
        <p>2:35 (TMC) Movie " Caged Heat </p>
        <p>(1974) Juanita Brown. Erica Gavin. (1 hr. 25 min.)</p>
        <p>3:00 a Praise the Lord (2 hrs) (ARTS) Evening at the Improv (BET) Soft Notes (1 hr)</p>
        <p>(MAX) Movie "Private Investigations" (1987) Clayton Rohner. Ray Sharkey. (1 hr., 35 min.) (NICK) sav</p>
        <p>(USA) Night Flight Rick Shaw's Take-Out Theater: "Kung Fu &amp;amp; Eight Drunkards"" (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>3:05 B Headline News (2 hrs., 25-min.)</p>
        <p>3:15 (HBO) Movie Friday the 13th - the Final Chapter" (1984) Crispin Glover. Kimberly Beck (1 hr., 30 min.)</p>
        <p>3:20 (WTBS) Night Tracks (In Stereo)(1 hr)</p>
        <p>3:30 (ESPN) SportsCenter (NICK) Rowan &amp;amp; Martins Laugh-In</p>
        <p>3:55 (SHOW) Movie Such Good Friends " (1971) Dyan Cannon. James Coco. (2 hrs., 5 min)</p>
        <p>4:00 X Laurel and Hardy</p>
        <p>SOLUTION</p>
        <p>goDagg mmm HDSBiia BraaBC] mSlClCailDE] BSQOg] {IDRR GIPIDB</p>
        <p>BDflR CQGOOQ</p>
        <p>mmm</p>
        <p>HfflHHHrrnnniR RFinni mm mm Pinnn nraranra ratiinraPiFira iinmmn nrannnnm finncii nepiiijcin</p>
        <p>5:00 B Bring Em Back Alive (USA) Night Flight 5:20 (WTBS) Night Tracks 5:30 B On Trial (DIS) Scheme of Things (USA) Night Flight 5:45 (TMC) Movie Vz Parole</p>
        <p>(1982)</p>
        <p>6:00 B Boat Owners Corner B U.S. Farm Report X Jimmy Swaggart 0 Telestory (BET) Video Vibrations (DIS) You and Me, Kid (LIFE) Prescribing Information (NICK) Curious George (SHOW) Really Rosie (USA) Night Flight (WTBS) Gomer Pyle, USMC 6:30 B Consumer Challenge: Blub-locker</p>
        <p>B Southern Sportsman</p>
        <p>B A Better Way</p>
        <p> Little Rascals</p>
        <p>(DIS) Mousercise</p>
        <p>(ESPN) Speedweek</p>
        <p>(HBO) Movie Vz 'Big Shots"</p>
        <p>(1987)</p>
        <p>(MAX) Movie *Vz "Million Dollar Mermaid" (1952)</p>
        <p>(NICK) Spartakus and the Son Be-</p>
        <p>(SHOW) M^vle **Vz The Pick-Up Artist" (1987)</p>
        <p>(WTBS) Between the Lines 7:00 B To Be Announced O GED-TV B Frog Hollow X Tom and Jerry O Kidsongs B Bullwinkle  Jem</p>
        <p>(ARTS) Bluebell</p>
        <p>(BET) Paid Programming</p>
        <p>(DIS) Welcome to Pooh Comer</p>
        <p>(ESPN) SportsCenter</p>
        <p>(LIFE) Family Medicine Update</p>
        <p>(NICK) Adventures of the Little</p>
        <p>Koala</p>
        <p>(USA) You Can Be Successful 7:05 (WTBS) Gunsmoke 7:30 B Hope On the Ragged Edge O Write Course B Adventures of Raggedy Ann and Andy</p>
        <p>X Sybervision Weight Control</p>
        <p>O Silver Spoons</p>
        <p>0 G.I. Joe</p>
        <p>(DIS) Dumbos Circus</p>
        <p>(ESPN) Thoroughbred Sports</p>
        <p>Digest</p>
        <p>(LIFE) Investment Advisory (NICK) Maple Town (TMC) Movie  "Howard the Duck' (1986)</p>
        <p>8:00 B Adventures of Dry Gulch O Write Course 0 Sparks X Batman O Kissyfur g</p>
        <p>B Adventures of Raggedy Ann and Andy</p>
        <p>0 Beany &amp;amp; Cecil g (ARTS) Ourselves and Other Animals</p>
        <p>(DIS) Good Morning Mickey! (ESPN) Outdoor Life (HBO) Movie *t#Vz "Cat Ballou" (1965)</p>
        <p>(NICK) Sharon, Lois &amp;amp; Brams Elephant Show</p>
        <p>(SHOW) Movie *irVz "All the Brothers Were Valiant" (1953) (USA) Financial Freedom 8:05 (WTBS) Bonanza 8:30 B Superbook O Economics U$A B B Superman X Batman</p>
        <p>O Disneys Adventures of the Gummi ^ars g 0 New Adventures of Winnie the Poohg</p>
        <p>(ARTS) World of Survival (DIS) Wuzzles (ESPN) Sports man Series (MAX) Max Movie Show .</p>
        <p>(NICK) Mr. Wizards World 9:00 B Gerbert O Economics U|A BB Jim Hensons Mnppet Babies g</p>
        <p>X Comedy Hour B Smurfs g</p>
        <p>(ARTS) Triumph of the West (BET) Video Soul (DIS) Donald Duck Presents (ESPN) Fishin Hole (MAX) Movie "My Favorite Brunette  (1947)</p>
        <p>(NICK) Dennis the Menace (TNN) Weekend Gardener (USA) Is There Love After Marriage</p>
        <p>9:05 (WTBS) National Geographic Explorer 9:30 B Kidsworld O Business File 0 Slimer! And the Real Ghost-bnsters g (DIS) Raccoons (ESPN) Motorweek Illustrated (NICK) Turkey Television (TMC) Movie Vz "Baby" (1985) (TNN) Joy of Gardening (USA) Discover 10:00 B Rin-Tin-Tin O Business File BB Pee-wees Playhouse g X Andy Griffith B ALF g</p>
        <p>(ARTS) Journey to Adventure (DIS) Movie "Professor Poppers Problems" (1988)</p>
        <p>(ESPN) Truck and Tractor Pull (HBO) Inside the NFL (LIFE) Creative Living With Aleene</p>
        <p>(NICK) NICK Rocks: Video to Go (SHOW) Movie Vz "Million Dollar Mermaid  (1952)</p>
        <p>(TNN) Remodeling &amp;amp; Decorating Today</p>
        <p>(USA) You Can Be Beautiful 10:30 B Sky King O Business of Management B B Garfield and Friends X Leave It to Beaver 0 Pup Named Scooby Doo g (ARTS) World of Photography (ESPN) Action Cycle Sports (LIFE) WomanWatch (MAX) Movie The Dirty Dozen" (1967)</p>
        <p>(NICK) You Cant do That on Television</p>
        <p>(TNN) Country Kitchen (USA) Proline 11:00 B Roy Rogers O Business of Management B B Hey, Vera, Its Ernest!</p>
        <p>X Fall Guy</p>
        <p>O Alvin and the Chipmunks g 0 Bugs Bunny &amp;amp; Tweety Show g (ARTS) Hollywood: The Golden Years</p>
        <p>(BET) Video LP</p>
        <p>(ESPN) Scholastic Sports America</p>
        <p>(HBO) Movie **Vz "Nadine"</p>
        <p>(1987)</p>
        <p>(LIFE) Mothers Day (NICK) Dont Just Sit There (TNN) Wish You Were Here (USA) Perfect Diet 11:05 (TMC) Movie **Vz "Flashd-ance (1983)</p>
        <p>(WTBS) Championship Wrestling 11:30 B Lone Ranger O Personal Finance and Money Management B Flip!</p>
        <p>B Completely Mental Misadventures of Ed Grimley g B Awaken</p>
        <p>(BET) Paid Programming (DIS) Great Moments in Disney Animation g (ESPN) College Gameday (LIFE) What Every Baby Knows (NICK) Kids Court (TNN) SWe/Side (USA) College Outlook</p>
        <p>12:00 B Rifleman O Personal Finance and Money Management B B College Football X WWF Wrestling Challenge B Summer Olympics 0 WWF Superstars of Wrestling (ARTS) Movie "Escape" (1987) (BET) Sports Report (LIFE) Motherworlu (NICK) Double Dare g (SHOW) Movie *i&amp;lt;Vi "Adventures in Babysitting" (1987)</p>
        <p>(TNN) Celebrity Outdoors (USA) Rockfile</p>
        <p>(WTBS) Munsters 12:30 B Cimarron Strip O New Literacy (BET) Sports Profiles (DIS) Zorro (ESPN) Auto Racing (HBO) Movie *Vz "Mr. Mom"</p>
        <p>(1983)</p>
        <p>(LIFE) Attitudes (NICK) Inspector Gadget (TNN) This Week in Country Music</p>
        <p>(WTBS) College Football 12:55 (TMQ Movie  Wish-ou</p>
        <p>Were Here" (1987)</p>
        <p>1:00 O New Literacy X Movie "Cooley High"</p>
        <p>(1975)</p>
        <p>B Major League Baseball 0 Movie *Vz "Countdown to Looking Glass" (1984)</p>
        <p>(BET) Boxing</p>
        <p>(DIS) Movie  "Auntie</p>
        <p>Marne" (1958)</p>
        <p>(MAX) Movie Vz The Stranger" (1946)</p>
        <p>(NICK) Lassie (TNN) Peabody Alley Alive (USA) Hollywood Insider 1:30 O Compnterworks (ESPN) Senior PGA Golf (LIFE) Sneak Previews (NICK) Zoo Family (USA) Cover Story 2:00 B Wagon Train O Doctor Who (ARTS) Shortstories (BET) Paid Programming (HBO) Movie * A Fine Mess  (1986)</p>
        <p>(LIFE) Foley Square (NICK) Movie *wVz The Fabulous Baron Munchausen" (1959) (SHOW) Really Rosie (TNN) CountryOips (USA) Movie "Night Fiend  (1977)</p>
        <p>2:30 (LIFE) Easy Street (MAX) Movie Western Union" (1941)</p>
        <p>(SHOW) Movie Vz Evil Under the Sun" (1982)</p>
        <p>(TM() Short Film Showcase 3:00 B B College Football X Movie *** Piranha (1978) 0 Whats Happening Now!! (ARTS) Movie Naming the Names" (1987)</p>
        <p>(LIFE) Cagney &amp;amp; Lacey (TMC) Movie w*Vz Black Widow (1987)</p>
        <p>(TNN) Remodeling &amp;amp; Decorating Today 3:30 B Rifleman 0 College Football (DIS) Swiss Family Robinson (ESPN) Golf</p>
        <p>(HBO) Verdict: The Wrong Man g (NICK) Miss Peach of the Kelly School; Back to School (TNN) Country Kitchen 4:00 B Gunsmoke O Victory Garden g B Summer Olympics (ESPN) College Football (LIFE) MacGruder &amp;amp; Loud (MAX) Movie **Vz Absence of Malice (1981)</p>
        <p>(NICK) You Cant do That on Television</p>
        <p>(TNN) Wish You Were Here (USA) Cartoons (WTBS) Andy Griffith 4:30 O French Chef g (DIS) Movie "My Dog the Thief" (1970)</p>
        <p>(HBO) Movie **#Vz Whats Up, Doc?" (1972)</p>
        <p>(NICK) Out of Control (SHOW) Movie w* Streets of Justice (1985)</p>
        <p>(TNN) Side By Side (WTBS) New Leave It to Beaver 5:00 B Big Valley O Woodwrights Shop X Small Wonder (ARTS) Variety Tonight (BET) Paid Programming (DIS) Movie **V^ "The Boat-niks" (1970)</p>
        <p>(UFE) Movie The Killer Who Wouldnt Die (1976)</p>
        <p>(Please Tmn To Page 15)</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0123" />
        <p>Saturday Evening</p>
        <p>SATURDAY EVENING</p>
        <p>o</p>
        <p>o</p>
        <p>o</p>
        <p>ESPN</p>
        <p>HBO</p>
        <p>MAX</p>
        <p>SHOW</p>
        <p>1MC</p>
        <p>USA</p>
        <p>WTBS</p>
        <p>7;00  7;30  8;00  8:30  9:00</p>
        <p>Rin Tin Tin</p>
        <p>Crosstxw</p>
        <p>Wild America World/Ammals</p>
        <p>Lilestyles of Rich S Famous</p>
        <p>9to5</p>
        <p>News</p>
        <p>3 s Company Reporters</p>
        <p>9:30</p>
        <p>Movie: Dakota Incident</p>
        <p>Discover: Science</p>
        <p>Impression Frank s Place</p>
        <p>First Among Equals</p>
        <p>Bodywatching</p>
        <p>Beyond Tomorrow</p>
        <p>10:00  10:30</p>
        <p>Remington Steele</p>
        <p>Austin City Limits</p>
        <p>West 57th</p>
        <p>News</p>
        <p>Summer Olympics</p>
        <p>USA Today</p>
        <p>Star Trek: Next Gener.</p>
        <p>Impression Frank s Place Bodywatching</p>
        <p>Best of Nat Geographic</p>
        <p>Movie: The Undergrads</p>
        <p>Rodney Dangerfield Special</p>
        <p>Olym Cont</p>
        <p>West 57th</p>
        <p>Garry Shandling Alone</p>
        <p>Movie: Superman II</p>
        <p>College Football: Michigan State at Florida State or Arizona State at Nebraska</p>
        <p>Movie; Big Shots Cont d Move: Naline</p>
        <p>Move; GkJget s Summer Reunion</p>
        <p>'The Subject Was Roses Move:' Spring Break</p>
        <p>The Hitchhiker</p>
        <p>Partners in Crime</p>
        <p>The Pick-Up Artist Cont d Move: Adventures in Babysitting </p>
        <p>Move: Firewalker</p>
        <p>A. Hitchcock</p>
        <p>Wrestling</p>
        <p>College Football Scoreboard</p>
        <p>Robert Townsend s Crime I</p>
        <p>Cagney S Lacey</p>
        <p>Movie Extreme Prejudice</p>
        <p>Elayne Booster: Party of One</p>
        <p>Move: No Man s Land</p>
        <p>Tennis: Volvo Tournament</p>
        <p>Maior League Baseball: Cincinnati Reds at Atlanta Braves</p>
        <p>PUSH Bsktbll</p>
        <p>6:08 B Bonanza: The Lost Episodes</p>
        <p>O One by One</p>
        <p>BNews</p>
        <p>SD Silver Spoons</p>
        <p>(ARTS) Vanity Fair</p>
        <p>(DIS) ^pennan</p>
        <p>(HBO) d&amp;gt;ming Attractions</p>
        <p>(MAX) Movie The Subject</p>
        <p>Was Roses (1968)</p>
        <p>(NICK) Kids Conrt (TNN) Peabody Alley Alive (USA) Airwotf</p>
        <p>(WTBS) World Championsbip WrcsUing</p>
        <p>6:30 e O CBS News g GD Too Gose for Comfort (ARTS) Jane Eyre (DIS) Heres Boomer (HBO) Movie Big Shots (1987)</p>
        <p>(NICK) Looney Tones (SHOW) Movie **'/2 The Pick-Up Artist (1987)</p>
        <p>7:00 B Rin Tin Tin K-9 Cop O Wild America g a Lifestyles of the Rich and Fa-</p>
        <p>QD9to5 a News a USA Today</p>
        <p>a SUr Trek: The Next Genera-tiong</p>
        <p>(ARTS) World of Snrvival (DIS) Movie **V2 The Undergrads (1985)</p>
        <p>(ESPN) College Football (UFE) Movie Gidgets Summer Rennion (1985)</p>
        <p>(NICK) Inspector Gadget (TMC) Movie * Firewalker (1986)</p>
        <p>(TNN) Country Kitchen (USA) Alfred Hitchcock Presents</p>
        <p>7:30 a Crossbow a Wild, Wild World of Animals d) Threes Company a Sommer Olympics (ARTS) Secrets &amp;amp; Mysteries (BET) News (NICK) Connt Dm:kula (TNN) Rock N Roll Palace (USA) Tennis</p>
        <p>7:35 (9HRS) Major League Base-baU</p>
        <p>8:00 a Movie Dakota Incident (1956) Dale Robertson, Linda Darnell. (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>a Discover. The World of Science Topics include; man-powered water vehicles; advances in stress tests that predict heart disorders; a Sonora Desert Museum exhibit of a new mountain habitat; scientific attempts to solve the mystery of the Incan pwamids. g (1 hr.) a a First Impressloos Dave has second thoughts about running against a corrupt city councilman after he digs into Daves private life. (Postponed from an earlier date)</p>
        <p>d) Reporters (In Stereo) (1 hr.) a Best of the National Geographic Spe^b Some of the most intriguing people, places and animab are featured. (1 hr.) (ARTS) Living Dangeronsly The history of boxing with Marvelous Marvin Hagler, Sugar Ray Leonard, Jake LaMotta and Boom Boom Mancini. (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>(BET) Video Sool (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>(HBO) Movie Nadine (1987) Kim Basinger, Jeff Bridges. (1 hr., 30 min.)</p>
        <p>(MAX) Movie Spring Break (1983) David Knell, Perry Lang. (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>(NICK) Mbter Ed (SHOW) Movie Adventures in Babysitting (1987) Elisabeth Shue, Maia Brewton. (2 hrs.) (TNN) Grand Ole Opry Uve</p>
        <p>8:30 8^ Franks Place Prank comiders an invitation to vuit an elite mens social club with a fellow Brown University alumnus.</p>
        <p>(R)g</p>
        <p>(NICK) Patty Duke Show</p>
        <p>n Grand Ole Opry Uve First Among Eqoab Simons promotion in the Home Office forces him to sever his business ties; an affair threatens Raymonds law career; Charles wife looks elsewhere for affection; Andrew becomes a father; Simon unwisely asks his rival Otarles for help. (1 hr.) a a Bodywatching A look at body language based on the book by behaviorist Dr. Desmond Morris. Narrated by Burgess Meredith. (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>d) Beyond Tomorrow Scheduled; a train which maintains speeds of</p>
        <p>130-170 mph; a theatre in which participants can manipulate vision and sound; a group of scientists exploring the inner earth. (In Stereo)(1 hr)</p>
        <p>a Rodney Dangerfield Special</p>
        <p>Its Not Easy Bein Me Variety. The comic who dont get no r^-pect is joined by stars Bill Murray, Valerie Perrine and Aretha Franklin. (R) g (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>(ARTS) ShorUtories (DIS) Movie Superman H (1980 (^to|ffier Reeve, Margot Kid der. (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>(LIFE) Patinen in Crime (NICK) My Three Sons (TMC) Movie No Mans Land (1987) D.B. Sweeney, Charlie Sheen. (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>(TNN) Peabody Alley Alive A concert special with the Sweethearts of the Rodeo and New Grass Revival, from the renowned Peabody Hotel in Mem-phb. (In Stereo) (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>9:30 (HBO) The Hitchhiker Robert Vaughn stars as a plastic surgeon dangerously obsessed with beauty, g</p>
        <p>(NICK) Donna Reed 10:00 8 Remington Steele'</p>
        <p>O Anstin Oty Limits Multiaward winner Ronnie Milsap performs "It Was Almost Uke a Song, Happy Happy Birthday Baby and Pure Love. (In Stereo) (1 hr.) a a West 57th (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>CD News (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>a Garry Shandling Alone in Las Vegas Garry Shandling stars in comedy sketches created from his personal experiences, g (1 hr.) (ARTS) Miss Marpie: The Moving Finger Jane Marpie refuses to</p>
        <p>/tiearthside Rcalt3i\</p>
        <p>355-3613</p>
        <p>Enjoy mo sumnrar In your rKking wraparound front porch of this homo under construction in Chorry Ooks. Excoiiont floor plon with on unfinishod third floor for futuro expansion. Four bedrooms, 2'A boths, large kitchen and breakfast area with lots of</p>
        <p>V cabinets, greatroom and formal dining room, deck, lorge lot. $131,000._</p>
        <p>accept that Mrs. Symmington committed suicide; a second body is found and the poison-pen letters continue. (Part 2 of 2) (1 hr.) (BET) Sports Report (ESPN) College Football Scoreboard (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>(HBO) Take No Prisoners: Robert Townsend &amp;amp; His Partners. in Crime H Stand-up performances and filmed segments featuring a soap opera, the talk show Ask Robert, and Streetwise, an unusual game show. (In Stereo) g (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>(LIFE) Cagney &amp;amp; Lacey (MAX) Movie Extreme Prejudice (1987) Nick Nolte, Powers Boothe. (1 hr.. 50 min.)</p>
        <p>(NICK) Best of Saturday Night Live</p>
        <p>(SHOW) Elayne Booster: Party of One Taped coverage of Elaynes stand-up routine, with guest appearances by Dr. Ruth Westhei-mer, funnyman Brother Theodore and David Letterman. (In Stereo) (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>(TNN) Country Kitchen Featured: John Hartford prepares Iowa com chowder. (In Stereo)</p>
        <p>10:20 (WTBS) PUSH Pro Basketball Gassic (Same-day Tape) (2 hrs., 15 min.)</p>
        <p>10:30 a Sommer (Hympics Con-tiane (1 hr., 30 min.)</p>
        <p>(BET) Sports Profiles (NICK)SCTV</p>
        <p>(TNN) Wish Yon Were Here Featured; Jekyll Island, Ga. (In Stereo)</p>
        <p>11:00 a Rin Tin Tin K-9 Cop O Blakes 7</p>
        <p>a o a News</p>
        <p>(B M*A*S*H</p>
        <p>(ARTS) Moontbatten: The Soldier and the Statesman Germany surrenders and Mountbatten attends Potsdam, where he learns of the atomic bomb. (Part 7 of 12) (1 hr.) (BET) Boxing (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>(DIS) Movie Bus Stop (1956) Marilyn Monroe, Don Murray. (2 hrs.)  I</p>
        <p>(ESPN) SportsCenter ' (HBO) Movie A Fine Mess (1986) Ted Danson. Howie Man-del. (1 hr., 35 min.)</p>
        <p>(UFE) Lady Bine (NICK) Rowan &amp;amp; Martins Langh-In  T</p>
        <p>(SHOW) Movie Naughty Stewardesses (1973) (1 hr., 50 min.) ; (1MC) Movie Crazy Mama (1975) Goris Leachman, Ann Sothera. (1 hr., 30 min.)</p>
        <p>(TNN) This Week in Country Mn-sk</p>
        <p>(USA) Movie Consenting Adult (1985) Mario Thomas, Martin Sheen. (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>11:15</p>
        <p>Saturday</p>
        <p> News g</p>
        <p>11:30 a Crossbow a NWA Pro Wrestling (1 hr.) CD Friday the 13th: The Series Micki and Ryan fall victim to an antique urns deadly gas. causing them to relive their worst nightmares. (R) (In Stereo) (1 hr.) a Sports Spectacular aeersg</p>
        <p>(ESPN) AWA Championship Wr^tling (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>(NICK) Car 54, Where Are Yon? (TNN) Rock N Roll Palace Scheduled; Del Shannon and the Jive Five. (In Stereo)</p>
        <p>11:50 (MAX) Movie The Dirty Doizen (1967) Lee Marvin. Ernest Borgnine. (2 hrs., 25 min.) 12:00 8 John Ankerberg a News</p>
        <p>a SonI Train (1 hr.) a Star Search (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>(ARTS) Living Dangerously The history of boxing with Marvelous Marvin Hagler. Sugar Ray Leonard, Jake LaMotta and Boom Boom Mancini. (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>(BET) Midnight Love (1 hr.) (UFE) Dr. Ruth Show Guests. Dr. Hichard Erlich; Dr. AI Baraff Topic; the male sexual response. (Part 2 of 2)</p>
        <p>(NICK) Mad Movies With the L.A. Connection</p>
        <p>(TNN) Grand Ole Opry Uve Badutage</p>
        <p>Zola Levitt Movie Prince of the City 1981) (Part 1 of 2) Treat Williams, Jerry Orbach. (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>( Movie The Glass House (1972) Vk Morrow. Alan Alda. (2 jhrs.)</p>
        <p>a Summer Olympics Scheduled;</p>
        <p>I Track and Field (Women's 800m,</p>
        <p>! !3000m and other events); Wom-I iens Gymnastics (Individual Fin-lals). (Uve) (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>ESPN) Anto Racing IHRA World Nationals. From Norwalk. Ohio. R)(lhr.)</p>
        <p>/ (LIFE) Sneak Previews Hosts Jeffrey Lyons and Michael Medved look at whats new at the movies.</p>
        <p>(NICK) Lancelot Link, Secret CUmp</p>
        <p>(TMQ Movk Black Widow (1987) Debra Winger, Theresa Russell. (1 hr.. 40 min.)</p>
        <p>(TNN) Grand Ole Opry Live 12:35 (HBO) Movk The Postman Always Rings Twice (1981) Jack Nicholson, Jessica Lange. (2 hrs.) (WTBS) Night Tracks (In Stereo) (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>12:50 (SHOW) Movk Bom in East LA. (1987) Cheech Marin. Paul</p>
        <p>one</p>
        <p>I2:30(</p>
        <p>(191</p>
        <p>Rodriguez. (1 hr., 30 min.) -IdW a Mnsk and More (1 hr.) a NWA Pro Wrestling (1 hr.) f a To Be Announced (1 hr.) j""* (ARTS) Shortstories (BET) Paid Programming (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>(MS) Legend of Marilyn Monroe The life of Norma Jean, who was raised in foster homes and grew up to be a kgendary actress. Narrator; John Huston (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>(UFE) Investment Advimry (3 hrs.)</p>
        <p>(NICK) Make Room for Daddy (TNN) ConniryClips Scheduled; guest Michael Johnson (Thats That); Keith Whitley ("Dont Gose Your Eyes); Ricky Van ffitelton ("Somebody Lied'^. (In Stereo) (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>(USA) Snnb TV 1:30 (ESPN) Snrfer Magazine (NICK) Smothers Brothers Show (USA) Night Flight Night Flight Goes to the Movies &amp;amp; Conning Attraction</p>
        <p>1:35 (WTBS) Night Tracks (In Stereo) (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>2JK) 8 Jewish Voke (ARTS) Miss Marpie: The MovSg Finger Jane Marpie refuses to accept that Mrs. Symmington committed suicide; a second ^y is found and the poison-pen letters continue. (Part 2 of 2) (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>(BET) Video Soul (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>(DIS) Movk Auntie Marne</p>
        <p>(1958) Rosalind Russell. Forrest Tucker. (2 hrs., 30 min.)</p>
        <p>(ESPN) SportsCenter (NKK) Movk Angel Face</p>
        <p>(1953) Robert Mitchum. Jean Sinunons. (2 hrs.)</p>
        <p>(TNN) This Week in Conntry Mn-sk  )&amp;gt;.</p>
        <p>(USA) Night Flight Take-Off to Blues  (1 hr.)</p>
        <p>SATURDAY</p>
        <p>(Contlaued From PafO M)</p>
        <p>(NICK) Mr. Wizards World ^ (TMC) Movk ** Howard  Dock (1986)</p>
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        <p>(ARTS) Travel Magazine (NKK) Dennis the Menace (TNN) This Week in Country Musk</p>
        <p>(USA) Check It Out!</p>
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        <p>Having IftmMOwnem ivilligiff life Insiiiance, is lite having a lip in your umbrdla...</p>
        <p>When you think of your most valuable asset, you probably think of your home. But what about you? You're more valuable.</p>
        <p>Without your earning / power, your family might  ^</p>
        <p>lose their home and their styleoflife.  '  partial  protection.</p>
        <p>We can help protect your home and your family's future through iCtna's Total Asset Plotection Plan. Call now and ask about our full line of ^tna home owners and life products. We're ready to serve you.</p>
        <p>David L. Harrell</p>
        <p>Call or visit</p>
        <p>HOOKER AND BUCHANAN, INC.</p>
        <p>sot Evan StiMt</p>
        <p>lUii</p>
        <p>Insurance</p>
        <p>Dowmmni GmavUk 79t-0|l0</p>
        <p>niiimCiniiywiUiiitMyCwiwwr</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0124" />
        <p>Lynndale Townes</p>
        <p>$186,000-LYNNDALE TOWNES. Princeton Plan which is a 3 bedroom flat with approximately *2.100 square feet It has extras beyond the extra quality you would expect. Extra landscaping, fabulous fixtures, gravel entry, walk-in bar. customized kitchen, elegant entry foyer, 2 baths, lacuzzi in the master bath, cathedral ceiling It's the best. Hostess: Marie Davis, Off Red Banks Road321 PINEWOOD DR. GRAYLEIGH</p>
        <p>$170$. Just listed this executive home in Grayleigh. Eight years old and brimming with style, warmth, convenience and custom features. Four bedrooms, formal areas, large gourmet kitchen, laundry shoot, wet bar, Florida room with skylights, sprinkler system, 2 car garage, bonus room over the 2 car garage, alarm system, dual heat pumps, charm and privacy makes this a house to visit. Hostess: Pat TLOT 46F BRITTANY RIDGE</p>
        <p>$96,900  BRITTANY RIDGE Isn t new nice? Come see this delightful 3 bedroom, 2'z bath, traditional two-story in one of Greenville's fastest growing areas Complete with breakfast room, screened pprch and -dual heatpumps. it's year-round comfort #306 Hostess; Sandy Harrison. Past Lake Glenwood on the left.1309 RONDO DR. TUCKER ESTATES</p>
        <p>REDUCED TO $95,900. OUTSTANDING</p>
        <p>neighborhood! Tucker Estates. 3 bedrooms, 2Vz baths with 2 car finished garage. Beautiful wooded lot. Large patio, deck in front. Large greatroom and master bedroom. Large storage areas Dual climate controls, fireplace and more Affordably priced. #250. Host: Geep Johnson.#31 HUNTERS LANE PINERIDGE</p>
        <p>$69,800  PINERIDGE. Looking for a Cape Cod with nearly 1.500 square feet on a wooded lot and you select the decor? This ones near the^ hospital on a private cul-de-sac. rear deck for cookouts. kitchen with nook and 2'i baths No wasted space #198 Host: Steve McLawhorn. 2 miles out Stantonsburg Road</p>
        <p>4.QUAIL RIDGE</p>
        <p>$64,500. ADAMS PLAN, This three bedroom, 2 story is one of Quail Ridge's best buys. Offering 2'/z baths, nearly 1.500 square feet, wooded rear patio, and you select the decor. Builder pays $1,000 of your closing costs, private location and parking. Come on out today. Your best townhouse buy in Greenville. Hostess: Janet Hoskins114 0AKHURST CIRCLE . RED OAK</p>
        <p>$50S. CONTEMPORARY. Recessed lighting in this spacious greatroom adds a warm, friendly glow you wlllitruly enjoy Master bedroom and bath downstairs with 2 large closets. 2 bedrooms and bath upstairs. Garage, deck and lovely corner lot complete the picture. Hostess:WILLOUGHBY PARK</p>
        <p>' $40$ &amp;amp; $50$. THESE NEW condos are waiting for yOu to decorate The builder pays your closing costs and offers 1, 2 and 3 bedroom floor plans. Payments are like rent and if you are a first time home buyer and qualify your payment could be reduced $75.00 to $100,00. Great location off Evans Street Extension, Willoughby Park. Hostess: Eva Walker.113 KING GEORGE RD. BROOK VALLEY</p>
        <p>$166,000  ONE of Brook Valley's finest. This brick, two story home has four bedrooms, 3 ceramic baths, large deck and patio for outside entertaining. Overlooking #2 fairway. Don't forget the double garage and storage. Like new kitchen appliances. Low utilities with extra insulation, bay windows, small office and more. Definitely for the discriminating buyer. Hostess: Ella McGowan.401 CANDLEWICK DR. CANDLEWICK ESTATES</p>
        <p>$116,900 SUPER HOME with many extras! $116,900 will purchase this 2300 square foot home located near the hospital in a neighborhood where pool and tennis courts are available. You must see to appreciate. All custom made window treatments come with the home and much more. 3 level deck, screened in porch! Nice wooded lot. Call for an appointment today! Hostess. Barbara Briley. 2 miles out Stantonsburg Road.114 LEE ST. CHERRY OAKS</p>
        <p>$80$. Cherry Oaks Owner relocating out of state - needs quick sale. 2200 square foot brick home priced under market value. Excellent closet space. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, large, glassed Florida room, double garage, beautifully landscaped See it now! Hostess: Jean Hopper #325.LOT lOA ARBOR HILLS</p>
        <p>$77,800.WE1GHING VALUES? Here s a new 2 story home in a new and growing subdivision. This home now under construction boasts 1490 square feet with 3 bedrooms. 2'/^-baths just waiting for you to select decor. #243. Arbor Hills. Hostess: Tammy Daughety. By Lake Glenwood.LOT 4 FOXCHASE</p>
        <p>$64,100. FOXCHASE. Today's buy-tomor-row's security 3 bedroom, 2 bath home under construction with over 1200 square feet of character and charm. Spacious but intimate dining room for 2 or 20. Located behind Pitt Community College. Let us tell you more ! #983. Host: Carl King Turn right past Brendles and go 2 miles on the right.  /ROLLINWOOD W</p>
        <p>LOW &amp;amp; MID $60t. Best buy in Greenville!! Choose your decor from a selection of 2 and 3 bedroom homes. Builders have cut homes to the bone for a quick sale and will pay up to $2,000 in points or closing cost. Conveniently located on 264 By-pass, just in front of Leith Oldsmobile-Nissan. Hostess: Mary Ward.104 BAYTREE DRIVE BAYTREE</p>
        <p>BAYTREE. Do you like to entertain? Then youll adore this bedroom. 2 bath home. Traffic flow is perfect for bringing in all your friends for a good time. Many fine details throughout the home built by Ollle Harrington include Andersen windows, whirlpool tub and separate shower In master bedroom, track lighting, wet bar, top-of-the-line plumbing fixtures. #305 Hostess; Liz Samsel506 LANCELOT CIRCLE CAMELOT</p>
        <p>CAMELOT Picture the largest wooded lot in Camelot, with a lovely 2200' home nestled in the trees- this could be yours! 4 bedrooms 2 full baths, gorgeous son room Many windovv treatments and ceiling tans convey. Quick posses-#276 Hostess: Pat Worley.</p>
        <p>.J</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0125" />
        <p>Many rtduMd items 'plus special purchaaaa</p>
        <p>&amp;gt;-4#'</p>
        <p>(rfiBe woftd with wltfilng iMifi</p>
        <p>- a^'CMis SB&amp;gt;r. is.^. M ^</p>
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        <p>Sears  liforfced  wMi</p>
        <p>ieaflin^^^ mHt to bring tcnivel ^ of the year!</p>
        <p>Soft, tiick, supor Itmiiious American Familytiath tow^s only at Sears for just</p>
        <p>t</p>
        <p>it.</p>
        <p>f</p>
        <p>SPECIAL PURCHASE</p>
        <p>ONE WEEK ONLY OR WHILE QUANTITIES UST</p>
        <p> A fuN pound of ootton-&amp;gt;that't 6</p>
        <p>miles of yan for remarlci^ (frying p(wver-4*fu8 aM the super abscNter^ and sdtness that you can or^ get from pure (X)tton!</p>
        <p>Generoue 27xS(Hn. size surrouncte you in kfioiry, tt)e same size as the be^-selling department store towet.</p>
        <p> Mx and matidi with 6 of fria year's most popular solids phis 4 prints made exciusiyeiy for Sears!</p>
        <p>Hand towels, 3.48 Washdoths. 1.88</p>
        <p>Sears Pricing PoNcy: AS rwluo-Nons are from Sews r^Mar prioes uoiws otherwise itaiid.</p>
        <p>K m ttm it not dewseedai ody&amp;amp;ad^ipeclaffitiBiim CkatimuiwpreaAai^.</p>
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        <p>3ca FLU a.ea</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0126" />
        <p>larwai</p>
        <p>Reg.</p>
        <p>I $29.99 ___</p>
        <p>3-pc. twin set</p>
        <p>I PRE-WASHED TO RESIST SHRINKAGE</p>
        <p>Weve blended the softness of cotton with just enough polyester to retain shape PERMA-PREST'* sheets are easy-care,</p>
        <p>I need no ironing when tumble dried</p>
        <p>I CHOOSE FROM 2 PATTERNS All our oxduslvo dotlgnsi 4-pc. full, quoon and king alza aala alao on aala *See store for warranty details</p>
        <p>Jtr'</p>
        <p>iMOTjyaABLE</p>
        <p>f.  ;  </p>
        <p>  at,  *</p>
        <p> '%js  e  Vt- I</p>
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        <p>SAVE 7</p>
        <p>PERCyVLE SHEET SETS</p>
        <p>Cotton and polyester.</p>
        <p>$29.99 4-pc. full .21.99</p>
        <p>Kmg and quMn an MO on MM</p>
        <p>I2!</p>
        <p>3^ I Rog.tiaM</p>
        <p>BUY I PILLOW*, 2 for GET I FREE!</p>
        <p>Sears Best pillows Other sizes also on sale__</p>
        <p>*Alreguiw price  Reg.tiMeaa.</p>
        <p>191</p>
        <p>ANY SIZE-ONE LOW PRICE!</p>
        <p>Comforters, bedspreads Fabulous st^s. Twin, full, queen or king.</p>
        <p>t99</p>
        <p>Reg.tMJW-</p>
        <p>taeas</p>
        <p>sofa</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0127" />
        <p>IMAGINE-LUXUmOUS LONG-WEARING PLUSH CARPETS AT SEARS LOW PRICES!</p>
        <p>YOUR CHOICE</p>
        <p>sq. yd.</p>
        <p>Reg. $14 99 to $15.99 sq. yd.</p>
        <p>PLUS</p>
        <p>NO PAYMENTS TILL NEXT YEAR!</p>
        <p>*No monthly payments until Jan., 1989 on Sears Deferred Credit plan. There win be a tinance charge for the deferral period.</p>
        <p>36 oz. Basic Priority</p>
        <p>8 fantastic colors.</p>
        <p>Thick polyester pile for that expensive look and feel.</p>
        <p>24 oz. Rustic Shadows</p>
        <p>5 sensational shades.</p>
        <p>Strong, durable nylon lie stands up to traffic areas</p>
        <p>Also on sale 70 oz. Rishion Priority Reg. $29.99 sq. yd., 19i99 42 oz. Vivid Shadows</p>
        <p>Reg. $24.99 sq. yd., 14S9</p>
        <p>CALL 1-800-CARPET-1</p>
        <p>for referrals to your nearest SEARS store where FREE estimates and measuring are available.</p>
        <p>Custom Decorator Consultants diew you over 6,000 custom decorating st^es, ngtit in ywir homei</p>
        <p>SAflE 30-80%  I4.USI</p>
        <p>Oh Coronet CoHecUon tebffcalining. Wbor andki^aMiQninduded</p>
        <p>nmirm mm, aww</p>
        <p>ior yr free, Wiome l^ioor^ Oorisuiation.</p>
        <p>SAVE 80% on Coronet horizonUii bRnds</p>
        <p>Sm 80% on selecied uphoistdry fabric</p>
        <p>SAVE 28% on ooort^ung^Jstofn top</p>
        <p>treitfnents and bedtoreads &amp;gt;, Swiiwe% H  wifc wwwr x &amp;lt;</p>
        <p>1*OO&amp;gt;44HISTOM</p>
        <p>Or wf year toeai aoiie Maw</p>
        <p>SAVE *70-*300 ON DECORATOR RUGS</p>
        <p>100% wool pile Kismet Classic decorator rugs</p>
        <p>^ 000^9</p>
        <p>$49999</p>
        <p>5 ft. 7 in. X 8 ft. 9 in.</p>
        <p>4 ft. X 6 ft. 2 in.</p>
        <p>Reg. $299.99.. .199.99 8 ft. 3 in. X 11 ft. 9 in. Reg. $899.99.. .599.99 Available In largar torea only</p>
        <p>SAVE 50% ON BUNDS, SHADES</p>
        <p>Fashionable vertical blinds</p>
        <p>Sateen. 16</p>
        <p>beautiful decorator colorsone to enhance your decor.</p>
        <p>LouverDiape'</p>
        <p>Pleated</p>
        <p>fabric</p>
        <p>shades</p>
        <p>Satina. A</p>
        <p>new, sophisticated outlook in 59 fashion colors!</p>
        <p>3of </p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0128" />
        <p>Sweater weather news:</p>
        <p>I Classics return in new richer textures, and bolder patterns at low, low prices!</p>
        <p>I*6-*I0 OFF</p>
        <p>YOUR _</p>
        <p>CHOICE  a</p>
        <p>Sweaters,</p>
        <p>Reg. $28 ea</p>
        <p>I Bold and dynamic patterns enhance the look of these better-than-ever, classics. Choose an argyle sweat or vest... or a Fair Isle pull-from our collection of soft acryli Available in misses' sizes.</p>
        <p>I Womens argyle sweater, reg. $26-$30........17.i</p>
        <p>Styles and colors shown are representative at Sears^ assortment. Not all styles are In all stores</p>
        <p>*6 OFF Complementing shirts in an array of colors</p>
        <p>Soft polyester and rayon |"V99 shirts in pastels and darks. I # each In misses' sizes.  </p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0129" />
        <p>q!^</p>
        <p>Tops and bottoms with the latest details from NEW tapered shapes to great fall colors!</p>
        <p>*5-*9 OFF</p>
        <p>YOUR</p>
        <p>CHOICE</p>
        <p>14</p>
        <p>99</p>
        <p>Reg. $20-$24 ea.</p>
        <p>Stylish designs in shirts of 100% cotton and sport tops of polyester and cotton. Button front skirts with elastic waists and pull-on pants of polyester and cotton. Misses sizes.</p>
        <p>$16 sport tops............................11.99</p>
        <p>Styles and colors shown are representative of Sears assortment Belt not included</p>
        <p>*10 OFF Coordinating patterned sweaters</p>
        <p>Versatile sweaters of soft 1*999 acrylic in crewneck or | # each V-neck styles. Misses' sizes.  *20</p>
        <p>Styles shown are representative of Sears assortment</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0130" />
        <p>SEARS WORK SHOES SMS""*"</p>
        <p>20-*25 OFF</p>
        <p>Mens DieHard workshoes</p>
        <p>Oil-resistant, dual-density polyurethane soles wear-warranted for one year*. Full grain leather uppers. Absorbent, comfortable cushioned insole. Welt construction.</p>
        <p>A. Oxfords, reg. $72.99 .....</p>
        <p>B. 6-In. workshoes, reg. $82.99 .......62.99</p>
        <p>C. 8-in. workboots, rra. $89.99 ....... 6499</p>
        <p>/ AU OTHER DIEHARD \^KSH0ES ALSO ON SALE *See store for details</p>
        <p>10 OFF Work oxfords</p>
        <p>Leather uppers. OA99 Oil-resistant crepe rubber soles.</p>
        <p>10 OFF 5-in. workshoes</p>
        <p>Leather up- 24ta</p>
        <p>$34 99</p>
        <p>pers. Oil-resistant rubber soles.</p>
        <p>10 OFF 8-in. workboots</p>
        <p>Leather up- 90^ pers. Oil-resistant rubber soles.</p>
        <p>$39.99</p>
        <p>4|2 OFF Mens oxfords Leather uppers. Warranted polyurethane sol^.*</p>
        <p>448?</p>
        <p>I6&amp;amp;99</p>
        <p>420 OFF 5-in. workshoes Leather uppers. Warranted polyurethane soles.*</p>
        <p>15 OFF Leather wellington-style boots Warranted 498? polyurethane soles.*</p>
        <p>*Wear twaiTanted (or 9 monlhs. Sm store for details Otharl</p>
        <p>44</p>
        <p>Reg.</p>
        <p>$6499</p>
        <p>10 OFF Mens hiking boots Sueded split leather uppers, lugged rubber soles.</p>
        <p>10 OFF Light-  lO OFF Mens</p>
        <p>weight hiking shoes  insuiated boots</p>
        <p>9A09 Leather, polyure- 228? 7-in. leather 34^ tf,ane uppers. S99  P P   Sw</p>
        <p>Reg $3699 Boys sizes also on saie</p>
        <p>Composition rubber soles.</p>
        <p>Lugged rubber soles.</p>
        <p>10 OFF Mens insulated boots 7-in. leather 3499 uppers with crepe rubber soles.</p>
        <p>?20 OFF Leak resistant boots Silicone treat- 3399 ed leather up-pers, polyurethane soles.</p>
        <p>$8699</p>
        <p>OAUBI R9P*ln(9e8 SAVCI  Sprirg/Swnmer Catalog</p>
        <p>Insulated boots Full-grain 3Q99</p>
        <p>leather uppers, linings. Lugged, rubber soles.</p>
        <p>last</p>
        <p>foil</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0131" />
        <p>SHAKER SWEATERS IN FALLS KEY TEXTURES AND COLORSSAVE *5</p>
        <p>Your choice of bold stripes or richly marled solids</p>
        <p>ONLY88</p>
        <p>Reg.</p>
        <p>$20</p>
        <p>Stock up now on this unbeatable value! Easy-care acrylic yarns keep colors bright. Mens sizes S, M, L, XL Crew-neck styles.25% OFF</p>
        <p>ALL MENS SWEATERS</p>
        <p>25% to 33% OFF MENS DRESS SLACKS</p>
        <p>Special Purchase!</p>
        <p>SAVE *3</p>
        <p>9</p>
        <p>*  </p>
        <p>I  i</p>
        <p>-  i *  -  </p>
        <p>V..*# "fl   '  I</p>
        <p>SAVE 33!</p>
        <p>LAll-cotton flannel</p>
        <p>Chooee from a variety of rtch plakto.</p>
        <p>WMtoaiNnWMlML10-pr. pk. sport socks</p>
        <p>Cool cotton and polyesler blend.</p>
        <p>S10.MCushion sole hose</p>
        <p>Comfortable, long-wearing socks</p>
        <p>r4</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0132" />
        <p>Hems indicatod larger stores only are available in Bar-boursvllle^ Chatlesion SC (Nor-thwoods), Charleston WV, Charlotte. Columbia. Durham. Fayetteville, Greensboro. Raleigh, Roanoke, Wilmington and Win^on-Salem.ONLY AT SEARS TTi BEST treadmill VALUE in America</p>
        <p>5-function monitor</p>
        <p> CALORIES PULSE TIME SPEED DISTANCE</p>
        <p>OUR EXCLUSIVE ERGOMETER TREADMILL NOT ONLY ELECTRONICALLY MONITORS WORKOUTS BUT MEASURES CALORIES BURNED</p>
        <p>TIL NEXT YEAR</p>
        <p>mSm</p>
        <p>._iiWMeliaHtortw IpMoeVwaclHrimiMr</p>
        <p>SAVE *300399**</p>
        <p>Reg. $699.99 In 1988 Fall General Catalog.ONE WEEK ONLY!</p>
        <p>or while quantilias lastNEW! Ufestyler'" ergometer treadmill</p>
        <p>As the #1 exercise equipment outlet in Amertoa, we demand the latest irvtovations and highest quality for our Lifestyier"* . equipment. We believe the exdusive oombi* nation of features and price, backed by nationwide warranty and parts and service availability, make this the best treadmiii value in Americal</p>
        <p>Vary your walking or jogging speed from 1.75 to 5.0 MPH Removable sideraiis for convenience Siimjiate running conditions vdth 0 to 15 degree incline adjtntrnent ^Mdous 13 X 48-in. jog^ng surface with demount footpads Lockout safety switch feature helps prevent acddentai startuf^</p>
        <p>Cushioned mounted VI H.P. General Elec-tricmotor</p>
        <p>SB</p>
        <p>tap WbwhmlMwlwifdi-</p>
        <p>Iriltnew M Iwniwttd hi mi dWrtbuthin ornm Mrt M I idwdiiW tr pWHB er # ^ OhSary li IP IhMHI hi</p>
        <p>Fio*WUbM^%^</p>
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        <pb facs="00097037_0133" />
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        <p>Sale starts Sun., Sept. 18; ends Sat., Sept. 24,</p>
        <p>unless otherwise specified. Most items at reduced prices.</p>
        <p>Celebrating with SAVINGS on Kenmore^ appliancesplus home electronic, automotive and hardware needs</p>
        <p>^ EXCLUSIVE  Kenmore</p>
        <p>&amp;lt;*&amp;gt; m</p>
        <p>EXCLUSIVE Dual 5 water temps with Action' agitator helps cold rinse to help oet large loads uni- save energy tormly clean</p>
        <p>SAVE ^40 onthepair</p>
        <p>with the largest usable capacity in the industry!*</p>
        <p>Kenrnore</p>
        <p>WASHER</p>
        <p>DRYER</p>
        <p>Reg SS29 99</p>
        <p>Auto Fabric Master senses when load is dry then shuts dryer off</p>
        <p>Kenmore  ^ Kenmore</p>
        <p>Reg $409 99</p>
        <p>m</p>
        <p> japacity</p>
        <p>Match load size, you wash more in help save energy each load than large capacity</p>
        <p>ONLY *19 per month* on SearsCharge PLUS</p>
        <p>White Colors extra Dryer hookup extra Gas dryers $40 more</p>
        <p>BftMd on DOE mtmirements and tf&amp;gt;t rosults ot wa^abtlity Ittls uatng tandard AHAM tatt loads and washabrtfty standards</p>
        <p>End-of-cycle signal Easy Loader door tells you when There is none larger clothes are dry in the industry</p>
        <p>SAVE 190 &amp;lt;.,*</p>
        <p>Kenmore large capacity laundry pair WASHER</p>
        <p>369</p>
        <p>3 water temps Heavy-duty 2-speed motor</p>
        <p>DRYER</p>
        <p> Auto Fabric Master feature</p>
        <p> End of cycle signal</p>
        <p>ONLY *23 per month* on SearsCharge</p>
        <p>R*g</p>
        <p>$46999</p>
        <p>279</p>
        <p>98</p>
        <p>0 $360 99</p>
        <p>SAVE</p>
        <p>Heavy duty, large-capacity Kenmore pair WASHER  DRYER</p>
        <p>9QQ98  :.iar9i;Q98</p>
        <p> 6 wash cycles</p>
        <p> 3 water temps</p>
        <p> 2 water levels</p>
        <p> 4 drying cycles including air 2 temps</p>
        <p>WNtoomy</p>
        <p>ONLY *19 per month* on SearsCharge</p>
        <p>0 $279 90</p>
        <p>Each of these advertised items is readily available for sale as advertised</p>
        <p>Satisfaction guaranteed or your money back</p>
        <p>ALL STORES NOW OPEN SATURDAY MORNING AT 9 AM</p>
        <p>OSMft, Roebuck and Co., 198S</p>
        <p>Itomo Indlcaltd "largor atoras only"are avallabia In Bartwursvllla, Charlaaton. 8C (Northwooda), Charleston, WV, Charlolta, Columbia. Durham. Fayall vtlla, Qraanabofo, Ralaigh, Roanoke, WHmington and WInaton-Salam</p>
        <p>Soars Pricing Policy All reductions are from Sears regular prices unless otherwise staled. It an item la not described as reduced or a special purchase, It Is at It's regular price. A special purchase, though not reduced. Is an exceptional value.</p>
        <p>Large Itema such aa lurnllura and appliances ara Invanloriad In our dlatrlbu-lion cantar and will be achadulad lor pick-up or dallvary. Dallvary la not In-cludad In aalllng pricaa.</p>
        <p>m</p>
        <p>9C9 9/1S/M</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0134" />
        <p>KENMORE-</p>
        <p>Americas best-sellmg name in major home appliances</p>
        <p>Reflects the combined market shares of 11 different product lines.</p>
        <p>NAnONWIDE DEUVERr</p>
        <p> Sat. and one evening available in most areas.</p>
        <p>t Delivery not Included in selling price of all home appliances.</p>
        <p>REMOVAL OF OLD APPUANCE If Flequested</p>
        <p>All cartons and packing materials will be removed</p>
        <p>NATIONWIDE</p>
        <p>CREDIT</p>
        <p> SearsCharge</p>
        <p> SearsCharge PLUS</p>
        <p>Our policy is SATlSimiON GUARANTEED OR YOUR MONEY BACK</p>
        <p>*230 OFF</p>
        <p>19.9 cu. ft. total capacity</p>
        <p>$829.99</p>
        <p>ONLY *20 per month* on SearsCharge</p>
        <p>All-frostless ... Ice never builds up so you never need to defrost!</p>
        <p>Nice N Fresh pan helps keep foods fresh and appetizing Handy door storage is easy to see and to organize</p>
        <p>White only.</p>
        <p>With</p>
        <p>icemaker</p>
        <p>only</p>
        <p>^80 more</p>
        <p>Icemaker hookup extra.</p>
        <p>SAVE *200</p>
        <p>Convenient ice thru door</p>
        <p>799</p>
        <p>  Reg.  $999.99</p>
        <p>ONLY *22 per month* on SearsCharge PLUS</p>
        <p>Family-sized 19.8 cu. ft. total capacity allows plenty of room All-frostless convenience. No need to defrost, ever</p>
        <p> Roomy crisper helps keep fresh foods fresh and appetizing</p>
        <p> Meat pan for organized storage</p>
        <p>White. Colors extra.</p>
        <p>*Your actual monthly payment can vary depending upon your account balance.</p>
        <p>SearsCharge PLUS is available on most major purchases totaling $700 or more.</p>
        <p>*120 LESS</p>
        <p>Kenmore 3.9 peak HP canister vac</p>
        <p>than 1987 Annual Catalog</p>
        <p>99</p>
        <p>199</p>
        <p>  In  tha  1987</p>
        <p>Annual Cataloo</p>
        <p>(1.1 HP VCMA)</p>
        <p>Only *10 per month on SearsCharge</p>
        <p>270 swivel hose for maneuverability Powerful floor light illuminates path Double brushes improve cleaning effectiveness</p>
        <p>Fingertip controls save time and effort Brush edge cleaner for walls, baseboards</p>
        <p>Exclusive quick release wands</p>
        <p>Wtxia guanlMaa laat</p>
        <p>SAVE ^119</p>
        <p>SAVE *150</p>
        <p>Refrigerator</p>
        <p>18.0 cu. ft. total cap. Frostless.</p>
        <p>White only.</p>
        <p>Reg. $599.99</p>
        <p>68S81</p>
        <p>Refrigerator</p>
        <p>17.7 cu. ft. total cap. Frostless.</p>
        <p>ir</p>
        <p>599!</p>
        <p>98</p>
        <p>Reg. $749.99 White. Colors extra.</p>
        <p>COMPACT</p>
        <p>COMPACT</p>
        <p>Refrigerator</p>
        <p>1.7 cu. ft. total QQ97 capacity. Man- QH</p>
        <p>Ual defrost. white only</p>
        <p>Refrigerator</p>
        <p>2.9 cu. ft. total cap.</p>
        <p>Manual de- whiteoniy. frost.</p>
        <p>239^</p>
        <p>SAVE *100</p>
        <p>SAVE *100</p>
        <p>66501</p>
        <p>Refrigerator  ___</p>
        <p>15.1 cu. ft.$OQQ total cap. Man- iJww ual defrost. whiteoniy</p>
        <p>Reg. $499</p>
        <p>Refrigerator</p>
        <p>s.iiS:599*</p>
        <p>ty. Meat'pan. white omy</p>
        <p>Reg. $609.99</p>
        <p>SAVE *20</p>
        <p>SAVE *40</p>
        <p>Freezer</p>
        <p>Chest style. 6.0 cu. ft. capacity.</p>
        <p>229!</p>
        <p>198</p>
        <p>$24999 Almond color</p>
        <p>Freezer</p>
        <p>Upright style. 6.0 cu. ft. ca pacity.</p>
        <p>229t?</p>
        <p>"^$2869$</p>
        <p>Almond color.</p>
        <p>100 LESS</p>
        <p>TOO LESS</p>
        <p>Upright vac</p>
        <p>2-speed motor, 0099 Floor light. J|J|ww</p>
        <p>While quantltlaelMt ^^$199.99</p>
        <p>Canister vac</p>
        <p>3.3 peak HP Qf|99 (.82HPVCMA). HHw^</p>
        <p>WNlequanlitleileM</p>
        <p>$199.99</p>
        <p>*200 LESS</p>
        <p>Sewing machine</p>
        <p>12-stitches. |n099 Buttonholer, IH H wm</p>
        <p>While quenltNee M ^^$399 99</p>
        <p>Carpet cieaner</p>
        <p>Can steam u^QA upholstery.</p>
        <p>119996</p>
        <p>LitCh of tfuiNi.* iitlvt.'rIiSDtl itcnis 1:3 n.suiily dv.iil.ibli' fo( hili' .is .idvt'ilist'd</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0135" />
        <p>! NOP/IYMIVT&amp;amp;i um NEXT YEAR</p>
        <p>No monthly payments until January. 1989 on Sears Deferred Credit Plan. There will be a finance Charge for the deferral period.</p>
        <p>SAVE ^10</p>
        <p>Kenmore' microwave</p>
        <p>Sears exclusive Accu-Wave cook system. 400 watts.</p>
        <p>&amp;gt;79</p>
        <p>Reg. $89</p>
        <p>Solid-state</p>
        <p>500 watts of power output. ^</p>
        <p>\\T</p>
        <p>Reg $209.99</p>
        <p>SAVE m</p>
        <p>SAVE^</p>
        <p>650 watt mid-size solid-state microwave</p>
        <p>169</p>
        <p>98</p>
        <p>Reg</p>
        <p>$259.99</p>
        <p>on SearsCharge</p>
        <p>Delay start option lets you cook even while youre away Digital time of day clock Quick-on key for easy, 2 step programming</p>
        <p>Kenmore Microwaves Americas Best Sellers</p>
        <p>88126</p>
        <p>WHY NOT LAYAWAY A MICROWAVE!</p>
        <p>See store for detailsSAVE ^200</p>
        <p>VALUE</p>
        <p>3-level wash</p>
        <p>15 cycle/options including pots/ pans cycle.</p>
        <p>98</p>
        <p>349</p>
        <p>Reg $549 99</p>
        <p>Kenmore* dishwasher</p>
        <p>Quality dishwasher. Power Miser option.</p>
        <p>^229</p>
        <p>SAVE ^200</p>
        <p>SAVE ^100</p>
        <p>Ultra wash system</p>
        <p>30098</p>
        <p>3 -1 e V e I wash action.</p>
        <p>Reg $599.99</p>
        <p>Sears Best compactor</p>
        <p>;sr!n.o 20098</p>
        <p>1 bag. Extra pac, too.</p>
        <p>Reg. $399 99</p>
        <p>SAVE $220</p>
        <p>Ultra wash system ... nobody cleans better... We can prove it!</p>
        <p>379</p>
        <p>Reg $599 99</p>
        <p>ONLY *14 per month* on Searsharge</p>
        <p> 3-level washour most complete overall cleaning coverage Adjustable racks provide easy loading and flexibility Sound/heat insulation for a pleasantly quiet wash</p>
        <p>Kenmore Dishwashers Americas Best Sellers</p>
        <p>installation warranty</p>
        <p>WHO OFFERS AN INSTALLATION WARRANTY? SEARS DOES!</p>
        <p>One year warranty on Sears arranged installation. See store for details. Free estimates</p>
        <p>16785</p>
        <p>YOUR CHOICE</p>
        <p>SAVE M80</p>
        <p>91181</p>
        <p>Gas or electric range</p>
        <p>01098</p>
        <p>cooktops.</p>
        <p>White</p>
        <p>Self-cleaning oven</p>
        <p>Electronic ^QQ98 range control.</p>
        <p>Electric.</p>
        <p>lU UVVII</p>
        <p>499-</p>
        <p>Rag $079.99 White. Colore extra.</p>
        <p>SAVElOO</p>
        <p>Continuous cleaning oven cleans itself as you bake</p>
        <p>399</p>
        <p>98</p>
        <p>Rag $499 99</p>
        <p>While Colore extra</p>
        <p>on SearsCharge</p>
        <p> Electronic clock and timer for precise cooking</p>
        <p> Solid black gisss oven door</p>
        <p> Lift-up cooktop with support rod</p>
        <p>'Special coattng gradually dtcaolvei most grease as you bake Clean major sptlle. racks and windows by hand</p>
        <p>Gas model also on sale.</p>
        <p>Kenmore Ranges Americas Best Sellers</p>
        <p>Your actual monthly payment can vary depending on your account balance.</p>
        <p>92481</p>
        <p>Each of these advertised items is readily available tor sale as advertised</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0136" />
        <p>merica!^ENER TER</p>
        <p>ONLY</p>
        <p>149</p>
        <p>99</p>
        <p>Special purchase. Quantities limited</p>
        <p>p</p>
        <p>E.</p>
        <p>ID _</p>
        <p>&amp;lt;4 </p>
        <p>No payments til 1989!</p>
        <p>"No p^rnwrtt unH Jan 1989 on Sears Deferred Crotf: Plan. Theio wflbe a finance ctiarge lor the deferral period.</p>
        <p>SAVE *300</p>
        <p>CRRFTSMRNJr</p>
        <p>omsQsiar</p>
        <p>Craftsman 12-HP lawn</p>
        <p>tractor</p>
        <p>Sweeper extra</p>
        <p> Overhead valve engine for cool-running performance</p>
        <p> 6 speed transaxle plus reverse 38-in. deck</p>
        <p> Turf saver tires for added traction $239.99 32 in. sweeper .............199.99</p>
        <p>SAVE ^70</p>
        <p>naFTSMxx^ Craftsman im push mower</p>
        <p>99</p>
        <p>Rsg $269 99</p>
        <p>Super Pull-Lite* starter, cast iron liner,</p>
        <p>13.5 RP**, 20 in. cutting path.</p>
        <p>38032  mearts  reserve  power</p>
        <p>WARRANTED FOREVER</p>
        <p>Craftsman yard tools</p>
        <p>999</p>
        <p>Rep</p>
        <p>$1400-1590 iCrallaman Unllmiled Warranty II any Crslls-man hand tool ever lads to give complete latii-faction, return it lor tree replacement</p>
        <p>SAVE *60</p>
        <p>CRflFTSMflN^ fear-bfSg^</p>
        <p>Super Pull-Lite* starter reduces starting effort, below deck muffler, 3.5 RP**, 20-in. cut.</p>
        <p>'Limitsd warranty for years specified See store lor details</p>
        <p>SAVE *400</p>
        <p>85315</p>
        <p>Craftsman 14 HP tractor</p>
        <p>25431</p>
        <p>Twin cylinder engine with cast iron sleeves. 5 speeds. 38 in. mowing deck.</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0137" />
        <p>SAVE ^10</p>
        <p>SAVE no</p>
        <p>SAVE</p>
        <p>*20</p>
        <p>11612</p>
        <p>Dual motion pad sander</p>
        <p>Reg $49.99</p>
        <p>29</p>
        <p>SAVE</p>
        <p>'10</p>
        <p>SAVE 20</p>
        <p>Craftsman</p>
        <p>4-pack</p>
        <p>SAVE *30</p>
        <p>SAVE *30</p>
        <p>TVi-inch circular saw</p>
        <p>Reg. $59.99</p>
        <p>SAVE 25% SAVE *30</p>
        <p>67042</p>
        <p>40-piece drill bit set</p>
        <p>Special purchase.*</p>
        <p>29</p>
        <p>99</p>
        <p>/C7</p>
        <p>32411</p>
        <p>7V4-inch blade pack</p>
        <p>Special purchase </p>
        <p>nio]</p>
        <p>2Q99</p>
        <p>1x6-in. belt/ disc sander</p>
        <p>Reg. $159.99</p>
        <p>22671</p>
        <p>129*</p>
        <p>Bench top</p>
        <p>jointer/planer|2g99</p>
        <p>Reg $159.99</p>
        <p>SAVE *30</p>
        <p>SAVE 25% SAVE *100 SAVE *100 SAVE *100</p>
        <p>22836</p>
        <p>Craftsman 8-in. drili press |9Q99</p>
        <p>Reg $159 99</p>
        <p>12-inch wood lathe</p>
        <p>Reg $19999</p>
        <p>149</p>
        <p>99</p>
        <p>23461</p>
        <p>10-inch miter saw</p>
        <p>Reg $249.99</p>
        <p>219</p>
        <p>99</p>
        <p>3-piece 8-in. dado set</p>
        <p>Reg $99.99</p>
        <p>32708</p>
        <p>69</p>
        <p>  32070</p>
        <p>"n!</p>
        <p>Saw accei</p>
        <p>Reg $79 99</p>
        <p>59^</p>
        <p>19825</p>
        <p>10-inch table saw</p>
        <p>Reg $449 99</p>
        <p>Reg $499.99</p>
        <p>10-inch radial arm saw</p>
        <p>Reg $499 99</p>
        <p>399</p>
        <p>99</p>
        <p>SAVE *100</p>
        <p>SAVE *100</p>
        <p>SAVE *100 SAVE *100 SAVE 33% SAVE *10</p>
        <p>SAVE *10 Accessories</p>
        <p>19841</p>
        <p>Radial saw with cabinet</p>
        <p>Reg. $549 99</p>
        <p>449</p>
        <p>99</p>
        <p>_  24733</p>
        <p>12-inch band saw</p>
        <p>Reg. $449 99  Q^Q99</p>
        <p>21315</p>
        <p>12-inch drill press</p>
        <p>Reg $399.99</p>
        <p>22592</p>
        <p>Belt/disc sander outfit</p>
        <p>Reg $449.99  349</p>
        <p>Rechargeable wet/dry vac</p>
        <p>Reg $29 99</p>
        <p>19</p>
        <p>99</p>
        <p>17912</p>
        <p>6-gallon wet/dry vac</p>
        <p>Reg $49.99</p>
        <p>39</p>
        <p>99</p>
        <p>17950</p>
        <p>1.5 peak HP wet/dry vac</p>
        <p>Reg. $78</p>
        <p>*68</p>
        <p>SAVE *30</p>
        <p>SAVE *150 SAVE *300 With case</p>
        <p>SAVE 20% Craftsman</p>
        <p>8-piece</p>
        <p>2.25 peak HP wet/dry vac</p>
        <p>Special purchase * 99</p>
        <p>SAVE 40%</p>
        <p>15028</p>
        <p>Compact 1-HP compressor</p>
        <p>Rag $15999</p>
        <p>129</p>
        <p>3-HP air</p>
        <p>compressor ^</p>
        <p>Reg $499 99  Q^Q99</p>
        <p>33760</p>
        <p>60-piece</p>
        <p>toolset</p>
        <p>Speaal purchase' AD</p>
        <p>45288</p>
        <p>4-piece plier set</p>
        <p>Reg $24.99</p>
        <p>199</p>
        <p>41081</p>
        <p>Screwdriver</p>
        <p>set(20-pc.)</p>
        <p>Special purchase *</p>
        <p>44652/1</p>
        <p>Wrench set combination p-</p>
        <p>Speoal purchase' I ^</p>
        <p>9-pc. punch/ chisel set</p>
        <p>Reg $24 99</p>
        <p>48038</p>
        <p>14</p>
        <p>With tote</p>
        <p>20-in. length Buys both</p>
        <p>65008</p>
        <p>18-in. steel</p>
        <p>tool box  1099</p>
        <p>Special purchase *  19</p>
        <p>65338</p>
        <p>3-drawer tool chest</p>
        <p>Speaal purchase </p>
        <p>39</p>
        <p>99</p>
        <p>9-dr. chest/ roll-a-way</p>
        <p>Special purchase'</p>
        <p>179</p>
        <p>Buys both SAVE 20% SAVE 25%</p>
        <p>6 outlets</p>
        <p>65273/</p>
        <p>65053</p>
        <p>4-dr. chest/ roll-a-wa&amp;gt;.</p>
        <p>Special purchase.*</p>
        <p>roll-a-wa&amp;gt;. |gg98</p>
        <p>16-dr. chest/ roll-a-way</p>
        <p>Special purchase *</p>
        <p>299</p>
        <p>SAVE *5</p>
        <p>VALUE</p>
        <p>93194</p>
        <p>Rechargeable flashlight</p>
        <p>Reg $12 99</p>
        <p>199</p>
        <p>Cordless</p>
        <p>light</p>
        <p>Reg $19 99</p>
        <p>14</p>
        <p>99</p>
        <p>SAVE *4</p>
        <p>SAVE *5</p>
        <p>VALUE</p>
        <p>Power strip system  ggg</p>
        <p>Speaal purchase *  Q</p>
        <p>SAVE *2</p>
        <p>Extension cord (100-ft.)</p>
        <p>Reg $14 99  Q</p>
        <p>All DieHard pocket batteries</p>
        <p>99' to</p>
        <p>From</p>
        <p>All Sears . light bulbs w yq</p>
        <p>Reg $2 29  I</p>
        <p>OJ</p>
        <p>9-volt smoke alarm</p>
        <p>^TSarn^ar^rmM on soecial ourchase items</p>
        <p>57470</p>
        <p>499</p>
        <p>All purpose fire extinguishei</p>
        <p>Reg $18 99</p>
        <p>75150/51</p>
        <p>3-way lamp dimmers</p>
        <p>AvaHahle In larger stores only</p>
        <p>power tools require some assemE^</p>
        <p>2-light</p>
        <p>shoplight</p>
        <p>Reg $1299</p>
        <p>SAVE *9</p>
        <p>SAVE *9</p>
        <p>ALL BATH VANITIES</p>
        <p>ON SALE</p>
        <p>Easy Living</p>
        <p>' Warranted (or one-coai</p>
        <p>flat</p>
        <p>coverage</p>
        <p>and 10-year durability ' 100 decorator colors</p>
        <p>For one coal results all Sean one coat paints mull  gal</p>
        <p>be appiierl as direcled Limitsd lO-yesi watianiy. Reg IIB99 see store lor details</p>
        <p>9</p>
        <p>99</p>
        <p>3 DECORATOR FINISHES</p>
        <p>SOLID BRASS</p>
        <p>Weatherbeater' 10</p>
        <p>Low-luster satin finish</p>
        <p> Our most popular exterior finish</p>
        <p> 50 one-coat colors that are mildew resistant</p>
        <p>10</p>
        <p>Req $19 99</p>
        <p>24-Inch</p>
        <p>30 OFF all sizes</p>
        <p>Ten decorator styles, 5 sizes! Solid wood doors and drawer fronts.</p>
        <p>SinH top. laucol entra</p>
        <p>Reg $139 99</p>
        <p>Lavatory faucets</p>
        <p>109</p>
        <p>Chrome, antique brass or polished brass finish. Washerless ceramic cartridge</p>
        <p>39</p>
        <p>88</p>
        <p>special purchase quantmet hmitad</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0138" />
        <p>i</p>
        <p>^ Sears Tire &amp;amp; Auto Centers</p>
        <p>WE INSTALL CONFIDENCE</p>
        <p>POWER PACKED FOR STARTING WINTERS OR BOILING SUMMERS!</p>
        <p>43345</p>
        <p>Get value and power with our WARRANTY: 60 rhonths</p>
        <p>POWER: Up to 530 cold cranking amps</p>
        <p>RESERVE I Provides</p>
        <p>up to 100 minutes reserve capacity. Additional power when you need it!</p>
        <p>SIZES: Available to fit</p>
        <p>most imported and domestic cars, light trucks and vans.</p>
        <p>SERVICE: We'll service you at any of over 700 Auto Centers.</p>
        <p>Limited 60-month warranty See store for details.</p>
        <p>60 Plus battery!</p>
        <p>99</p>
        <p>with trade-in</p>
        <p>Special</p>
        <p>Purchase</p>
        <p>Quantities</p>
        <p>Limited</p>
        <p>1200</p>
        <p>Special</p>
        <p>purchase!</p>
        <p>Heavy duty 2-ton floor jack</p>
        <p>98</p>
        <p>SVe to 19yi6-in. lifting range. Wide stance ensures stability.</p>
        <p>While</p>
        <p>quantities last</p>
        <p>Spectrum motor oil</p>
        <p>I Reg $1.09^ lto$1.14</p>
        <p>70280R</p>
        <p>m  qi.</p>
        <p>Protect car engine while running. Permits easy starts, lubricates.</p>
        <p>SAVE ON Armorall</p>
        <p>Reg. price Sale price Less Rebate Cost after rebate</p>
        <p>$5.99</p>
        <p>4.99</p>
        <p>Helps protect your car.</p>
        <p>68047</p>
        <p>c</p>
        <p>SPECIAL PURCHASE! ROADHANDLER GAS SHOCK</p>
        <p>AUTO CENTER OPENS ATy AM</p>
        <p>_Re2ulai_Houm^n_Sui^</p>
        <p>MONrSAT.</p>
        <p>Pressurized inert nitrogen gas accelerates piston return for quicker, , more controlled response; rides steadier over more kinds of roads.</p>
        <p>Chrome plating helps prevent rod corrosion and subsequent damage to shock seal to assure long life.</p>
        <p>97800</p>
        <p>A SEARS EXCLUSIVE</p>
        <p>Our Comfort Valve" automatically regulates the flow of fluid through the piston to provide uniform comfort and control.</p>
        <p>This shock has all the features of our $25.99 shock... but its $12 less</p>
        <p> Charged with 40% larger piston working area for better ride control.</p>
        <p> Warranted for as long as you own your car. Limited lifetime warranty, see store for details.</p>
        <p>A special purchase though not reduced, is an exceptional value</p>
        <p>Installation extra</p>
        <p>Special Purchase While quantities last</p>
        <p>AM/FM Cassette car stereo</p>
        <p>fU  -f 3</p>
        <p>siir</p>
        <p>Electronic tuning, 12 station memory, and electronic seek mode.</p>
        <p>99</p>
        <p>Reg.</p>
        <p>$99 99</p>
        <p>50094</p>
        <p>Sound installation extra</p>
        <p>$29.99 speakers 19.99</p>
        <p>42% OFF Offer on RAINDANCE car wax</p>
        <p>Reg. price $6.99 Sale price 5.99 Less</p>
        <p>Rebate  $2.00</p>
        <p>Cost after rebate  3.99</p>
        <p>Paste or liquid.</p>
        <p>68127/68141</p>
        <p>^ SAVE 50%</p>
        <p>on Gunk Engine Cleaner</p>
        <p>Reg</p>
        <p>$1.99</p>
        <p>99*</p>
        <p>rMCim Quickly removes grease uS grime.</p>
        <p>59003</p>
        <p>18719</p>
        <p>Pole</p>
        <p>Adjustable 7Cft99</p>
        <p>Da</p>
        <p>Spalding bikes with champion featuresONLY AT SEARS</p>
        <p>i'</p>
        <p>18772^/</p>
        <p>%</p>
        <p>18762</p>
        <p>to 10-ft. goal height. Reg $89 99</p>
        <p>Backboard Isoboard re-QQ9g sists swell-4L9 ing, warping. Reg $4499</p>
        <p>Goal</p>
        <p>Official size. IQ99 Nylon net</p>
        <p>Reg $16 99</p>
        <p>Sport balls UR CHOICE</p>
        <p>H99</p>
        <p>1839/2457/18665</p>
        <p>Your choice of basketball, football or soccer ball at this great price!</p>
        <p>Sportbags</p>
        <p>Duffel bag |7</p>
        <p>Reg $19 99</p>
        <p>ys8</p>
        <p>16-ln. roll bag</p>
        <p>Spaldlna l2-8peed 26-in. ATB</p>
        <p>159</p>
        <p>99</p>
        <p>SAVE 30</p>
        <p>Reg $169.99*</p>
        <p>Mens/womens. Cantilever brakes.</p>
        <p>Spalding 27-In. 12-speed touring bike</p>
        <p>!S,I49</p>
        <p>Reg. $189 99</p>
        <p>Men's/womens lightweight models.</p>
        <p>Reg $9 99</p>
        <p>Water repellent 420 denier nylon.</p>
        <p>98033</p>
        <p>Adult bike helmet (not shown). Reg. $29.99</p>
        <p>2499</p>
        <p>Bikes require some assembly</p>
        <p>Reg</p>
        <p>$18999</p>
        <p>27-In. 12-speed racer</p>
        <p> Mens/womens lightweight lugged frame</p>
        <p> Alloy side pull caliper brakes</p>
        <p> Suntour 1000 precision derailleurs</p>
        <p> Quick release front wheel</p>
        <p> Alloy components; water bottle bosses</p>
        <p>In 1998 Annuel CeWog. QuantHlee Himted</p>
        <p>Spalding Boys 20-in. BMX bike</p>
        <p>Reg</p>
        <p>$14999</p>
        <p>139</p>
        <p>99</p>
        <p>strong frame. Front/ rear caliper brakes.</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0139" />
        <p>TIRESFOR ALMOST EVERY CAR AND LIGHT TRUCK! EVERY POPULAR SIZE, PRICE, WARRANTY!</p>
        <p>CHEVROLET</p>
        <p>FORD</p>
        <p>PLYMOUTH</p>
        <p>BUICK</p>
        <p>DODGE</p>
        <p>PONTIAC I OLDSMOBILE</p>
        <p>JEEP</p>
        <p>AMC</p>
        <p>TOYOTA</p>
        <p>NISSAN</p>
        <p>MAZDA</p>
        <p>SUBARU</p>
        <p>VOLVO</p>
        <p>SAAB</p>
        <p>AUDI  I ALPHA ROMEOl AND MORE30% OFF</p>
        <p>UmHed tire wearout warranty for miles specified. See store for de-taMs.</p>
        <p>Steel belted radlals</p>
        <p>Excellent traction I in all weather conditions</p>
        <p>199</p>
        <p>P1S5/80R12</p>
        <p>40,000 mile wearout warranty</p>
        <p>Guardsman</p>
        <p>Response</p>
        <p>P15S40R12</p>
        <p>P15Sfl13</p>
        <p>P166WR13</p>
        <p>P175R13</p>
        <p>P1lB0fi13</p>
        <p>P20Smmi3</p>
        <p>PieSTORK</p>
        <p>PieSTTMU</p>
        <p>Each Guardsman Each Response</p>
        <p>P195/75fl14</p>
        <p>P205/75nt4</p>
        <p>P2IV75B14</p>
        <p>PsosrrsRis</p>
        <p>PZ1S7SR1S</p>
        <p>P225/75B15</p>
        <p>P235ffSH15</p>
        <p>P155/80R13</p>
        <p>45,000 mile steel-belted radial</p>
        <p>&amp;gt;2 rugged steel belts for strength, durability</p>
        <p>All-season tread for excellent traction under most weather conditions</p>
        <p>45,000-m</p>
        <p>le wearout warranty</p>
        <p>RoadHandler</p>
        <p>45</p>
        <p>a</p>
        <p>SALE</p>
        <p>each</p>
        <p>P155/80R13</p>
        <p>P165/80R13</p>
        <p>P175/80R13</p>
        <p>P185/80R13</p>
        <p>P185/75R14</p>
        <p>P195/75R14</p>
        <p>P205/75R14</p>
        <p>P205/75R15</p>
        <p>P215/75R15</p>
        <p>P225/75R15</p>
        <p>P235/75R15</p>
        <p>$67.99</p>
        <p>74.99 82 99</p>
        <p>92.99</p>
        <p>94.99 99 99</p>
        <p>107.99 109 99</p>
        <p>114.99</p>
        <p>110.99 119 99</p>
        <p>144.90</p>
        <p>40.90</p>
        <p>57.00</p>
        <p>84.90</p>
        <p>85.90</p>
        <p>80.00</p>
        <p>74.00</p>
        <p>78.00 79.09</p>
        <p>82.00</p>
        <p>83.90</p>
        <p>Our best small car radial</p>
        <p>39</p>
        <p>For</p>
        <p>imports,</p>
        <p>compacts</p>
        <p>155SR12</p>
        <p>50,000 mile wearout warranty</p>
        <p>Roadhandltr</p>
        <p>SCR</p>
        <p>Eack</p>
        <p>Roadhandler</p>
        <p>SCR</p>
        <p>Each</p>
        <p>1SVSR12</p>
        <p>145R13</p>
        <p>1SSISR13</p>
        <p>165R13</p>
        <p>17SR14</p>
        <p>183ni4</p>
        <p>166ni5</p>
        <p>iH.</p>
        <p>4I.N</p>
        <p>H.M</p>
        <p>I1.M</p>
        <p>M.M</p>
        <p>e.N</p>
        <p>n.N</p>
        <p>166/70SR13</p>
        <p>17S70SA13</p>
        <p>1B$m)Sfl13</p>
        <p>19&amp;amp;^R13</p>
        <p>6V70SR14</p>
        <p>H570SR14</p>
        <p>205miSR14</p>
        <p>n.M</p>
        <p>M.M</p>
        <p>M.N</p>
        <p>n.n</p>
        <p>M.M</p>
        <p>n.n</p>
        <p>72.M</p>
        <p>35,000 mile steel-belted, all-season radial</p>
        <p>P155/80R13</p>
        <p>35,000-mile wearout warranty</p>
        <p>Guardsman</p>
        <p>35</p>
        <p>Each</p>
        <p>Guardsman</p>
        <p>35</p>
        <p>Each</p>
        <p>P155/80R13</p>
        <p>P16580R13</p>
        <p>P175/80R13</p>
        <p>P18575R14</p>
        <p>P195/75R14</p>
        <p>$24.99</p>
        <p>34.99</p>
        <p>39.99</p>
        <p>45.99</p>
        <p>40.99</p>
        <p>P20575R14</p>
        <p>P20575R15</p>
        <p>P21575R15</p>
        <p>P22575R15</p>
        <p>P23S75R15</p>
        <p>$50.99</p>
        <p>51.99</p>
        <p>52.99</p>
        <p>53.99 54.09</p>
        <p>Roadhandler</p>
        <p>Tredloc-H</p>
        <p>Radial construction Woven Kevlar*</p>
        <p>Aramid belt consMlWi  185TORI3</p>
        <p>40,000 mile wearout warranty</p>
        <p>Roadhandler</p>
        <p>Eack</p>
        <p>Roadhandler</p>
        <p>Each</p>
        <p>Trsdloc-H</p>
        <p>Tredloc-H</p>
        <p>70SLRIES</p>
        <p>16V70HR13</p>
        <p>7I.N</p>
        <p>1SSm)Hfl14</p>
        <p>N.N</p>
        <p>20V70HR14</p>
        <p>M.</p>
        <p>SERIES</p>
        <p>1S5/60HR14</p>
        <p>7I.</p>
        <p>19S)HR14</p>
        <p>N.N</p>
        <p>725IHRI4</p>
        <p>M.N</p>
        <p>I95)HR15</p>
        <p>N.N</p>
        <p>205)MR15</p>
        <p>M.N</p>
        <p>60, 65 High</p>
        <p>Performance</p>
        <p>Response</p>
        <p>Radial construction Folded Aramid around steel belt'</p>
        <p>99</p>
        <p>Pt05/60TR14</p>
        <p>40,000 mile wearout warranty</p>
        <p>High Performance</p>
        <p>Respona</p>
        <p>EACH</p>
        <p>P195W0TR14</p>
        <p>$64.99</p>
        <p>P215/WJTR14</p>
        <p>74J9</p>
        <p>P195W0TH15</p>
        <p>84.eo</p>
        <p>2155TR15</p>
        <p>74.90</p>
        <p>70 series T speed rated</p>
        <p>Great &amp;gt;1099</p>
        <p>handling,</p>
        <p>cornering</p>
        <p>P175/70TR13</p>
        <p>30,000 mile wearout warranty</p>
        <p>Ptflomunc</p>
        <p>MqrtM</p>
        <p>Substtuttd</p>
        <p>lor</p>
        <p>EACH</p>
        <p>P17570TR13</p>
        <p>P18570TR13</p>
        <p>P1B570TR14</p>
        <p>P20570TR14</p>
        <p>P1550fl13</p>
        <p>P16S/fl0R13</p>
        <p>P17575R14</p>
        <p>P19575R14</p>
        <p>S4I.N</p>
        <p>H.H</p>
        <p>I4.N</p>
        <p>7I.N</p>
        <p>Other sixea avelWilo</p>
        <p>McPherson gas stmts, cartridges</p>
        <p>Dual, welded exhaust systems excluded. Pipes, clamps, hangers extra.</p>
        <p>All your fitness needs at affordable prices</p>
        <p>Ergometer cycle with smooth 30-lb. flywheel</p>
        <p>Lets you calculate calories burned as you work out in the comfort of your own home</p>
        <p>Our best high performance tire!</p>
        <p>66*</p>
        <p>Radial construction Woven Kevlar* Aramid belt construction</p>
        <p>P175/70TR13</p>
        <p>50,000-mile weanmt warranty</p>
        <p>SubShrtMl</p>
        <p>tor</p>
        <p>hwHoc</p>
        <p>EmH</p>
        <p>P17S70mi3</p>
        <p>P1tS70mi3</p>
        <p>P19&amp;amp;70mi3</p>
        <p>PmTOTHIS</p>
        <p>P19670mi4</p>
        <p>P20t770mi4</p>
        <p>P21S70mi4</p>
        <p>P21S/70miS</p>
        <p>P227mis</p>
        <p>P23S70miS</p>
        <p>P1S80Rt3</p>
        <p>P1SSMW13</p>
        <p>P17Smi3</p>
        <p>P1IS0R13</p>
        <p>P1I67SR14</p>
        <p>P1tS7Sfl14</p>
        <p>P20679R14</p>
        <p>PZOSTSatS</p>
        <p>P21S7W1S</p>
        <p>P22S7SR1S</p>
        <p>MC.N</p>
        <p>N.N</p>
        <p>74.M</p>
        <p>76.M</p>
        <p>4.N</p>
        <p>N.M</p>
        <p>ea.M</p>
        <p>94.N</p>
        <p>7.M</p>
        <p>N.M</p>
        <p>Front disc brake job</p>
        <p>Warranted for as long as you own your car!</p>
        <p>64</p>
        <p>We replace worn disc pads, turn and true rotors, inspect caiipers. replace fluids, road test</p>
        <p>Rebuild usable calipers .110 aech Limited Metime warranty See store tor details</p>
        <p>Padded, quick release seat for comfort</p>
        <p>Pedal stirrups for proper foot position</p>
        <p>Rag t169 W 1966 CatWog</p>
        <p>60-minute digital timer</p>
        <p>Adjustable</p>
        <p>handlebars</p>
        <p>&amp;lt;r</p>
        <p>I-beam rower with electronic console</p>
        <p>1S622</p>
        <p>16640</p>
        <p>129</p>
        <p>Reg</p>
        <p>Llfestyler 2400 features countdown timer. Wide base for extra stability.</p>
        <p>In 1008 Annual Catalog</p>
        <p>Exsrciao aqulpmant raquirea tome aaaambly Exardaa tqulpmani and tennia labia nol m Ashland. Shalby and WMiamton</p>
        <p>EXCLUSIVE! Dual D^c 20 fitness system</p>
        <p> 399</p>
        <p>Provides 210-lbs. weight resistance. Free standing for 20 basic exercises.</p>
        <p>SAVE *80 132-lb. weight set/bench combo</p>
        <p>S100 00*  11^</p>
        <p>700-lb. capacity (user plus weights). Adjustable horn-load leg lift/leg curl.</p>
        <p>'In 1000 Annual Catalog</p>
        <p>SAVE *101</p>
        <p>Table tennis table combo</p>
        <p>179</p>
        <p>Includes accessory set with 12 official Olympic balls. Reg. separate p^-es total 1^61.96</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0140" />
        <p>NO PmENTS TIL NEXT YEAR</p>
        <p>No payments until January, 1989 on Sears Deferred Credit plan. There will be a finance charge for the deferral period.</p>
        <p>Your actual monthly payment can vary depending on your account balance. SearsCharge PLUS is available on most major purchases totaling $700 or more.</p>
        <p>SAVE *100</p>
        <p>19-m. color TV features MTS STEREO and on-screen display</p>
        <p>29999</p>
        <p>ONLY *13 per month* on Searsharge</p>
        <p> 18-function remote control with mute</p>
        <p> Cable-compatible quartz tuner</p>
        <p> Built-in MTS stereo</p>
        <p> On-screen time and channel display</p>
        <p>TV picture sizes on page measured diagonally</p>
        <p>SAVE *300</p>
        <p>Best-selling camcorder outfit in America inciudes FREE* lens!</p>
        <p>ONLY *25 per month* on SearsCharge</p>
        <p>'7 lux low light sensitivity rating '6X power zoom (increases to 9X with accessory telephoto lens attachment 'Auto-focus, auto-white balance Includes accessories others usually charge extra for; battery, adapter, charger, carrying case, much more! FREE 1.5X telephoto lens normally sold separately for $149.99 *(with purchase)</p>
        <p>VHS VCR features 9-key remote</p>
        <p>compalible SAVE *50</p>
        <p>Mode display  A  A</p>
        <p>14-day 2-event  ^ III</p>
        <p>105 channels</p>
        <p>Reg $269.99</p>
        <p>219</p>
        <p>Only $11 per month* on SearsCharge</p>
        <p>VCR with on-screen programming</p>
        <p>SAVE 70</p>
        <p>279</p>
        <p>27-function remote 1-yr./4-event MIDI-size Cable-compatible</p>
        <p>10-key remote 1-yr./4-program Cable-compatible MTS stereo</p>
        <p>Reg $34999</p>
        <p>Only *12 per month* on SearsCharge</p>
        <p>MTS stereo VCR, on-screen programming</p>
        <p>SAVE *100</p>
        <p>329*?</p>
        <p>$429 99</p>
        <p>Only *13 per month* on SearsCharge</p>
        <p>bach of these advertised items is readily available for sale asSEARS GIVES YOU MORE! HUGE SELECTION OF TRUSTEO NAME BRAND ELECTRONICS!</p>
        <p>AKT()PIONEER Kodak Canoif SONY.</p>
        <p>YAMAHA MA9NAMCK COHIMODOREE RCilbrother maxelL ^TDK. Scotch"</p>
        <p>SEARS</p>
        <p>so 00000 00000 0</p>
        <p>SatMacUon guaranteed or your money back Seers, Roebuck end Co., 1988</p>
        <p>NC:</p>
        <p>8C:</p>
        <p>VA:</p>
        <p>WV:</p>
        <p>ALL STORES NOW OPEN SATURDAY MORNINGS AT 9 AM</p>
        <p>Burllnolon, Charlotte (Eastland, Southpark), Concord, Durham, Fayettevllla, Qastonia, Goldsboro, Greensboro, Graenvllle, Hickory, High Point, Jacksonville, Raleigh, Rocky Mount, Wilmington, WInaton Salem</p>
        <p>Charleston (Citadel, Northwoods), Columbia, Florence, Myrtle Beach, Rock Hill Danville, Lynchburg, Roanoke  KY: Ashland</p>
        <p>Barbourevllle, Beckley, Bluefleld, Charleaton</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0141" />
        <p>Leith Olds Nissans</p>
        <p>1988 Nissan Trucks</p>
        <p>We are pleased to announce Nissans new purchase program, good for a limited time only, just for people whove never bought a car before! You see, we believe your first car-buying experience should be as exciting (and as easy) as possible!  %  -  ,</p>
        <p>If you:  Have a permanent job,</p>
        <p> Have lived at the same address for 1 year,</p>
        <p> Have an income sufficient to make your payments,</p>
        <p> Have no credit (or a satisfactory rating),</p>
        <p> A valid drivers license, and</p>
        <p> A social security number,</p>
        <p>then youre eligible to buy one of the cars above! Perhaps with no cash down!</p>
        <p>The requirements, as you can see, are quite basic and easily met In fact, were willing to bet youre eligible and didnt even know it!</p>
        <p>Just think, you could be cruising down the highway in your brand-new Nissanmuch sooner than youve ever dreamed possible! And by beginning with Nissan quality, dependability and value, youve already made your most important step: getting the right car.</p>
        <p>Simply cut out the credit application weve provided below. Fill it out and bring it to Leith Olds/Nissan. Well be ready to start you on the road to your new carl And when you use your manufacturers rebate, with absolutely no cash down!</p>
        <p>The Deal Kings We Deal in Volume...Not Price!</p>
        <p>991 Greenville Boulevard SW Greenville 756-3115 Call Us Toll-Free 1 -800-553-9218Credit Application</p>
        <p>Name _</p>
        <p>Address -</p>
        <p>Social Security It Employer_</p>
        <p>Credit References: (if any)</p>
        <p>.Drivers License It.</p>
        <p>How Long. Stale_</p>
        <p>.Salary.</p>
        <p>How Long.</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0142" />
        <p>vm m reason</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0143" />
        <p>Carolina 0ast mall graanvllla</p>
        <p>Jewelry By Tacoa*30% OFF</p>
        <p>Regular Prices</p>
        <p>Gold boaded chains and earrings. Great values from Tacoa.</p>
        <p>ji..'</p>
        <p>/</p>
        <p>^EPf M|R letll</p>
        <p>Men's &amp;amp; Ladies' Timex* Watches25% OFF</p>
        <p>Reg. 19.95 to 59.95</p>
        <p>A beautiful wardrobe for your wrist Artfully designed with leather and (; v pV  metal  bands.</p>
        <p>TIMEX</p>
        <p>I VBelk Earrings By Victoria</p>
        <p>t$6 to $18.. _30% OFF</p>
        <p>Pierced and clip-on earrings in gold or silver-tone. Buy a pair for yourself, a pair for a good friend.</p>
        <p>suuabch</p>
        <p>Swatch* Watches 24.99</p>
        <p>Regular 35.00._________________</p>
        <p>Save $10 orr'bold, imaginative, fashionable Swatch watches with colorful bands. Our entire stock is on sale through September 24th...perfect timing for back-to-echool.</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0144" />
        <p>FASHION.^</p>
        <p>.,  **  ,,V  "T  V </p>
        <p>' -1.-?- j</p>
        <p>FALir PREMIER</p>
        <p>Great Values On Jewelry By Monet</p>
        <p>Reg. 6^ to 65.00-----------20% OFF</p>
        <p>Choose from basic and fashion style eamngs, necklaces and pins. Buy</p>
        <p>severai pieces for yourself or for a good friend.</p>
        <p>Napier Jewelry For You To Wear And Love20% OFF</p>
        <p>Reg. 6.50 to 45.00</p>
        <p>Necklaces, bracelets and earrings. Sophisticated at the office, sparkling after dark. Choose from basic and fashion groups...we have a style to suit every</p>
        <p>taste and your new fall wardrobe.Gold And Sterling Jewelry By Danecraft</p>
        <p>Reg. 6.49 to 189.99</p>
        <p>25% OFF</p>
        <p>-L, K</p>
        <p>14-karat gold, sterling silver and 24-karat gold over sterling silver designs. Danecraft necklaces, bracelets and earrings are a welcomed addition to the wardrobe</p>
        <p>of any fashion-conscious lady.</p>
        <p>^anee^a^</p>
        <p>- -</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0145" />
        <p>Carolina 8t mall graatnrilla</p>
        <p>Esprit</p>
        <p>Leather</p>
        <p>Handbags</p>
        <p>Reg. $39 to $60</p>
        <p>Junior styles in various fall colors, all at reduced prices.</p>
        <p>ESPRIT</p>
        <p>Etienne Aigner Handbags And Smaii Leather Accessories</p>
        <p>Reg.</p>
        <p>$12 to $142.</p>
        <p>25% OFF</p>
        <p>Luxury for the adding! Leather handbags a;^ small . leather goods in taupe, navy and signature colors. Leath ers taken beyond functional...to fashionable. From Etienne Aigner. of course.</p>
        <p>^ezssrQ</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0146" />
        <p>. 'H'  --  '.-A'  -  -</p>
        <p>w ,r I-. Vil '-X- vir=F     .-</p>
        <p>^ .VA . :7-^ I.  ....  V.  'i</p>
        <p>' &amp;gt; if' ^' fstii '   '*</p>
        <p>FASHION</p>
        <p>r</p>
        <p>.71'"*'.  ,</p>
        <p>r*'~' ; 1-r^'</p>
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        <p>J 7!</p>
        <p>'V</p>
        <p>.</p>
        <p>  .......^^..rV'</p>
        <p>FALL PREMIER</p>
        <p>Tapestry Handbags From Marilyn USA</p>
        <p>4</p>
        <p>Regular 14.99</p>
        <p>Many choice finds, all at a savings of $51 Ideal for carrying everything to and from work.</p>
        <p>Attention To Detaii is A Cinch With</p>
        <p>Corded Beits</p>
        <p>iSi.</p>
        <p>
        </p>
        <p>9.99</p>
        <p>Regular 20.00</p>
        <p>Corded belts from The Leather Shop in rich autumn colors. Even if you purchase only one. it'll go a long way in polishing your looks this fall.</p>
        <p>S- t'i</p>
        <p>IM</p>
        <p>.Fmc</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0147" />
        <p>Carolina east mall graanvllla</p>
        <p>Chains Scarves From Symphony</p>
        <p>'I12.99</p>
        <p>Regular 18.00..</p>
        <p>Tie your whole look together with Symphony rayon challis scarves in assorted fall solids. Each can add a new dimension of personality to a favorite blouse, sweater or blazer. Tie one on!</p>
        <p>.rx</p>
        <p>Comfortable, Foam-Cushioned Washable Dearfoams Slippers14.99</p>
        <p>Regular 20.00</p>
        <p>Wear them for warmth, lounging, working around the house, or even out in the yard. Foot-soothing Dearfoams are available in your color choice of pink, light blue, white or black. Ladies' sizes.</p>
        <p>Deaifoams;</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0148" />
        <p>Save On Quality Hanes* Hosiery</p>
        <p>25% OFE</p>
        <p>Reg. 2.25 to 7.50</p>
        <p>Sophisticated fall shades and softly toned neutrals in sheer^ and textured hosiery. Including Hanes Too, Silk Reflections and Fitting Pretty styles.</p>
        <p>ii</p>
        <p>Calvin Klein* Hosiery Picks p Up The Pace Of A Fall Look</p>
        <p>25% OF</p>
        <p>Rog.3J0to7X)0</p>
        <p>For special occasions, Calvin Klein hosiery is as rich in color and comfort as you would want. Buy now while our prices are even lower.</p>
        <p>Calvin Kleh</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0149" />
        <p>SHOP SEFTEMBEft latti IfIL SEPTEMBEll</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0150" />
        <p>HELP SUPPORT THE U.S. OIYMPIC TEAM</p>
        <p>Funds raised by the purchase of U.S. Otympic coins will be used to develop and train U.S. Olympic athletes.</p>
        <p>S-pc.OlyinplcnoofSel..................$ii</p>
        <p>Otympic Silver Doikir  ..............$29</p>
        <p>^Olympic Pioolttl;SllvefDo9ai;$50cldPfe^$2^</p>
        <p>DutoHi In SfOlO</p>
        <p>PROUD SPONSOR OF THE 1988</p>
        <p>A aVMPICTeVVIWHtTESALE  WHITE SALE  WHITE SALE  WHITE SALE</p>
        <p>19.99</p>
        <p>13.97</p>
        <p>Sato lM Ea *DrMctofi coNon bMltoNMdi. Beaulifciy designed with elegant pattem. fringed border. IWin. full or queen.</p>
        <p>IWInSlze  O  Our 5.57 Eo.</p>
        <p>tav3%  A For m Bdthlbwel*</p>
        <p>Our 21.97.'*Oumbar sheet tel*.  Ouri.97icL,irWBiliciolfi,2Por$3</p>
        <p>Oura.97,PiSHIieSel**.... 19.97  OurS.S7la.HandlMiM**,2tor$4</p>
        <p>Our34.97,1lMliiComloitor .. 29.97  Shower Curtain Unor........$4</p>
        <p>Our42.97,MIConiloitor ... 34.97  Our 17.97. Shower Curtain $12</p>
        <p>*lndudM 1M. I ffiKieiMt. 1 LSneowcaMi</p>
        <p>**)ciudn</p>
        <p>'Oitae i&amp;amp;s*</p>
        <p>%#Sowe32%</p>
        <p>Our 7.37 Ea **tonoiio both rugs. 21x36* or 21x24* contour.</p>
        <p>Our4.97.UdCoer..........$4</p>
        <p>Our1247.24ii43*lug........$WHITE SALE  WHITE SALE  WHITE SALE  WHITE SALEGREAT 7-DAY SAVINGS EVENT</p>
        <p>1 (1-5 EXC. FLORIDA 7-20) AD# 928 PROG. 0</p>
        <p>1 </p>
        <p>SIM</p>
        <p>~ims</p>
        <p>HO</p>
        <p>18</p>
        <p>mtmWTlWm</p>
        <p>22</p>
        <p>23</p>
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        <p>24</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0151" />
        <p>Our 9.97 St. Diess your twin-size* bed in your le* lection from o palette of matchdk)le colors or ful, decorator-inspired patterns: "Summer Dredik' or "Blooms". Bihance any bedroom decor for iesal Our 19.97, Full Set**. 12.97; Our 23.97, Qumii**, t|,97 Our 26.97, Mng-sbeSel**...................iil&amp;lt;97</p>
        <p>*Stlncludas1lk]l.1lHMtfw9t:1piowca Set kidudeil flat. 1 filled #W: 2 pWowcoies</p>
        <p>P!B5</p>
        <p>: i</p>
        <p>2(1-9ft21)AD#928PROGO</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0152" />
        <p>*^Pk</p>
        <p>PfiOUD SPONSOR OF IHE 1988 USA avMPCIEAM</p>
        <p>Saw 49%. Our 4.97 Ea Ptnn Bom berth fovMl Of absorbent cotton/loolyesfer. Choose from a wide selecfion of lus-ckxjs solid colors. Mlx-n-motch complementing colois to creole a complete decorator look for your both. 24x46*.</p>
        <p>Our1.97,Molchliig12xir9MnRoM^Wnhclolh.........$1</p>
        <p>Our2.&amp;lt;</p>
        <p>Scnre 39%. Olv 4.97 Ea "Chann boRi towel of thirsty looped cotton terry in a variety of soHd colors to complement bolh trodWlonal and contemporary decor. Give your bath a dash of color with greottookhgtowete from K mart. 25x46*.</p>
        <p>Our 1.97,13x13*Chorni'*WcNhclolh.................1.29</p>
        <p>Our3.^*ClKinn'Nand1lowllnhopular16x26Siw ...</p>
        <p>3(1-2I)AD#928PIX)G0</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0153" />
        <p>2^*3 1.99s; 2.99s; 1.99  2,*3</p>
        <p>Our 1.97 Ea KHchMi  Our 2.97 EallTowM</p>
        <p>fowult in 16x25 size.  mm. Polyester/cotton.</p>
        <p>12x12*DMickHli..99C 13x19Plcioellat...796 xI^neUMM! .. 2.99 7X7*MhoMw.... 1.29</p>
        <p>Our 3.99 EaKHchM  Our 2J9-2.99 Ea</p>
        <p>items. Choose from  KKcheiiilems.Dish-</p>
        <p>16x25 towel. 12x18  cloth*, potholder**.</p>
        <p>pioce mot; oven mW. toWTnefcwsi  8.99</p>
        <p>i2Kir 7*r</p>
        <p>Scnre</p>
        <p>24% OCAiraON. Our 1.99 Ea "Heartland 14x28* Mlctien</p>
        <p>towelt of absorbent cotton. Choose from a selection of colors to brighten your kitchen. Our999.13x13*DUheMh;OolorClioloe ... Ba.799WHITE SALE  WHITE SALE  WHITE SALE  WHITE SALE</p>
        <p>4n-21)AO#928PROGO</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0154" />
        <p>i",</p>
        <p>-lUtUiKiPkC ^</p>
        <p>"COUNIRYCHARM ORGAMZRS</p>
        <p>Our3.17,SloragBox.......2.17</p>
        <p>Our3.17,UndrlMdBox.....2.17</p>
        <p>Our7.97,fhMni*.........M</p>
        <p>Our9.57.SiiltBag..........6.57</p>
        <p>MO HtCMig* M 20 ^aaHld bo4 5385-12 (tfwe</p>
        <p>a)53854M(wl1 bag}</p>
        <p>Our9.S7,Ditslag......... hX!</p>
        <p>Our9.97,OigcMiiur  ....3.97</p>
        <p>Our 1247,&amp;lt;drowwrChtt ... 947 Our13.68,3iMal9rBog......10.93</p>
        <p>538541 (dm bog) 350 (ngantaS) 480 (clwiq 5383-27</p>
        <p>(water bag)</p>
        <p>29.97 Sav29%</p>
        <p>Ouf39.97. KKimwrfronM Ml for</p>
        <p>deslgnlf)g your own OoostaTKing. veritloleMawer storage unit. An outsfondng value now at K mart. Our29.97,7nnwr Mom Stl, 24.97</p>
        <p>5305 (lOMrawi MQ5305 (7-nnw M8</p>
        <p>7.77 Sov22%</p>
        <p>Our 9.97. One-drawer Stack bin. Our 11.97,2 drqwrtteckBln, 9.77 Our19.97,3-draiMrStacfcBln, 12.77 Our4.97,itaek-blnllardwQfe, 3.97 Our10.97.Co&amp;gt;lsrSsll!ldapltr, 3.97</p>
        <p>5241 (iHteMtel) 5242 (2-&amp;lt;lKmwi) 5243T34Kmwi) 6240 (haKKraM)5218^</p>
        <p>Me Mee.! emioMKIItllfllli MMMoie 3.97</p>
        <p>Mk. mo/voir3.13.14.88 Sove25%-52%Our 347-19.97. SoNd oak-wood accessories to coordinate your bath.</p>
        <p>lmblerHolder.. 3.13 ISnOwellar.... 3.84 llBwelRing 4.39</p>
        <p>SoapDWi 3.33 WpleRobeHook, 3.89 llsnielox 548</p>
        <p>ItaueHoldcr.... 343 24*1bwelBor ... 444 MletSeot .... 1448</p>
        <p>1/2 OFF</p>
        <p>Mfr.'sSug.</p>
        <p>Retail PricesOur 12.98-27.98 Roll. All in-stock wallpaper and borders in choice of patterns and colors. Available in prepasted, scrubbabie, vinyl or vinyl coated. Redecorate every room now at outstofxing savings. 64913.99</p>
        <p>Mk moyvary AvalabteartylnitoiwwHhVlibiMapwOapl.7 DAYS OF SAVINGS DURING OUR WHITE SALE CELEBRATION</p>
        <p>5-1 (4-5 38310-14 319-20 EXC. WISCONSIN) AO#928 PROG 0</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0155" />
        <p>72.97 107.88</p>
        <p>Our 82.97. UprlgM vac: powerful 5.0 amp motor. Our 19.97,^toolStl,9.7</p>
        <p>U44l (vac) U49n|OOlD</p>
        <p>Our 123.88.4-potHlon up&amp;gt; right vac. 6.0-amp motor. Our 19.97, &amp;amp;VC. Ibol Sl, 9.97</p>
        <p>489(V0C) liWW^)</p>
        <p>Our $219. ConocpI One</p>
        <p>voc; 7.0 amp motor. Our19.97^te1boliel,9.97</p>
        <p>U33(vac) 03903(tootl)</p>
        <p>1.97 43% 401002K(oaiMM) Our 3&amp;gt;7.3-pock dtapoMble</p>
        <p>vac bags in styles for canister or top-fill upright vac models.</p>
        <p>1.094</p>
        <p>Our 24)9.4i&amp;gt;ack boNom-flN vacuum bags for upright convertible cleaners. Disposable.</p>
        <p>401000X:VAIUE-PRICED HOOVER VACUUMS ON SALE THIS WEEK ONLY</p>
        <p>6(1-21)AD#928PROGO</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0156" />
        <p>9.97 coNAm*</p>
        <p>SalPric.ConairdMk/ woll-mountpliOM In colors. Ibne/pulse swltchoble.</p>
        <p>SWIM</p>
        <p>15.88 C0NA&amp;lt;</p>
        <p>SoloPrico. SllnKiMign</p>
        <p>phono In choice of colors. Ibne/pulse swltchoble.</p>
        <p>SW2M OMk/WaUmount</p>
        <p>209</p>
        <p>13-diag.ineas. color lelevl-sion with digital remote, outo programming. 147-channel compatibility, auto-contrast.</p>
        <p>13GP410</p>
        <p>$</p>
        <p>399</p>
        <p>20'-dlag.-meas. color telovi-sion with built-in MTS stereo, remote, on-screen timer channel display, sleep timer.</p>
        <p>F20580WN</p>
        <p>$</p>
        <p>288 Raw</p>
        <p>RCA VHS VCR With 1-yr./4-event timer, on-screen programming. remote and more. OEVHSVCRWHhSloroo... $299</p>
        <p>VR280(RCA) VG7575NotavaiiabllnPuartoRlco (SO</p>
        <p>84.88</p>
        <p>FulHongo oordlefs phone</p>
        <p>with one-touch redial, tone/ pulse swltchoble dialing.</p>
        <p>2-982S DHk/Miniouit</p>
        <p>119W8</p>
        <p>Sale Price. Anfwering mch chine^phone with tone/ pulse swttchabie dialing.</p>
        <p>KXT242(V2427</p>
        <p>yDUIMDE/lfird</p>
        <p>129.88</p>
        <p>Sale Price. ATAT hdHange cordleti phone. Ibne/pulse swttchabie; desk/wall mount.</p>
        <p>Modular stereo with dual cassette and graphic equalizer.</p>
        <p>IW4000</p>
        <p>Sale Price. AM/mi/ Ptt^^stereo receiver</p>
        <p>with dual cassette.</p>
        <p>6S990&amp;gt;2GREAT VALUES IN OUR ELECTRONICS DEPARTMENT</p>
        <p>7(1 ft 3-14) AD#928 PROG 0</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0157" />
        <p>Our Bag. Low Pricas</p>
        <p>All coordinated bodding. Choice of crib sheet, pillowcase, receiving blanket, quitted blanket, comforter, bumper pad or dust ruffle. Save on baby needs this week.</p>
        <p>style, paflem and mir. may vaiy by ttom</p>
        <p>29.97</p>
        <p>$avo25%</p>
        <p>59.97</p>
        <p>Our 39.97. CMIdran*s bookcaso  Our 69.97. Nktoawroy cupboard</p>
        <p>with deep shelves.  with  deep interior. 32V4x30x18'.</p>
        <p>Our9.97,StaekobtoPlastlclln* 7.47  Our 10.97,BunnyBookshalf*....8.97</p>
        <p>Meawet9Vtel0Vyx10&amp;gt;/y*</p>
        <p>*MaaMim BVM9&amp;gt;/yxl6'4r</p>
        <p>29.97 29.97 39.97 14.97 44.97 59.97</p>
        <p>Save 2SV Our 39.97. Highchoir</p>
        <p>with padded seat.</p>
        <p>Me..ilyle mayvaiy</p>
        <p>Saya29%.Our 39.97. Swing with reclining seat.</p>
        <p>MB., style may vaiy</p>
        <p>Sawa20%.0ur 49.97. Folding playpan. 36x36*</p>
        <p>MB . style may yoy</p>
        <p>Sava 31%. Our 21.97. Umbialla tirolter. Folds.</p>
        <p>Sava 2S%. Our 99.97. Sliolar converts to carriage.</p>
        <p>Sava 29%. Our 79.97. FuN-slxa sirolter. Redines.</p>
        <p>FOR BABY  FOR</p>
        <p>FOR BABY  FOR BABY</p>
        <p>8(1-21)AD#928PROGO</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0158" />
        <p>Our 9.97 StI. kifcmit KkMuff fluucu suit of polyester/ cotton. Boys' or girls' sizes 12-24 mos. Screen-print tops. 1b(ldtorsJogSltWmiScrMn-Prinl1bpt,2-4;Sl 7J8</p>
        <p>Boys', girls sloepweor. 1-pc. gowns, or 2-pc. pajamas with elastic waist, infants' 12-24 mos., tots' 2-4.4.47-7.47</p>
        <p>SlylM and cokM may vay by liow</p>
        <p>Our 7.97 Ea Ibddler girls'stone-</p>
        <p>washed Jeans of 100% cotton denim. Sizes 2-4. Another excellent value!OUTFIT MOMS AND TOTS, TOO, DURING OUR BABY WEEK SALE!</p>
        <p>9A (4-6 &amp;amp; 12-14 &amp;amp; 18-20) AD#928 PROG 0</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0159" />
        <p>GREAT FASHION LOOKS FOR THE NEW SEASON</p>
        <p>Our 14.99 Ea. Color-rich pullovor fops feature ribbed trim and patch. Great variety of spirited styles for her active look. Sizes S-M-L</p>
        <p>Our 16.99 Ea. Crow-nock flooco tops* with sweater-trim Insert. Of soft polyester/cotton. Our9.99,KnltPantslnHrSizsS-M-L........$8</p>
        <p>Sizes S-M-L</p>
        <p>Our 10.97-11.99 Ea. Spring Creek separates. Tops, jeans or skirts in girls' sizes 4-6X. Smart tops*, 8.24-9.74; Cool Jeant*, 9.74-18.74</p>
        <p>Girts'ilMs 7-14 styles may vofv by Mow</p>
        <p>On%OFF</p>
        <p>WWOur 2.99-6.99 Gloria Vonderbitt accessories in smart colors. ...2.09-4.89</p>
        <p>Our 7.99 Ea Puff-print handbags in</p>
        <p>tresh fashion styles.</p>
        <p>Evwyday</p>
        <p>Low#</p>
        <p>Pric^</p>
        <p>long brushed gowns in soft cozy styles to help keep you warm on cool nights. S-M-L. Wofnen'tOownslnSlzes22W-28W 7.99</p>
        <p>lOA (4-6 &amp;amp; 12-14 &amp;amp; 20) AD#928 PROG 0</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0160" />
        <p>ITS FAMILY SWEATER WEEK AT K MART!</p>
        <p>Mi</p>
        <p>PROUDSPONSOnOFWE 19B8 USA avMPlCTEAMOur Reg. 8.97-26.97. Choice of styles.</p>
        <p>Womens Styles In 38-44 ...... 9.77-13.97</p>
        <p>Novelty Sweaters In S-M-L .... 10.47-16.09</p>
        <p>Men's Fashion Sweaters..........18.87</p>
        <p>Jr. BoysAcrylic Sweaters In 4-7 .. 6.97-9.79</p>
        <p>BoysSweaters In S-M-L* 11.87-13.27</p>
        <p>GirlsSweaters In 4-6X, 7-14 ... 6.29-11.89 Infants12-24 Mos., Tots2-4 .... 6.27-6.97 Gold-tone Jewelry Available In Jewelry Depl.</p>
        <p>Styles may voiy by sloe Fit boys'sizes B-18 ' Viteat-Ooted isaReij TM ol Monsanto Compony</p>
        <p>-iA</p>
        <p>* M / / /</p>
        <p>use ourffSamfau</p>
        <p>M</p>
        <p>iM</p>
        <p>11A (4-5 8 12-13 818-20) AD#928 PROG 0</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0161" />
        <p>FASHION OUTERWEAR PRICED TO PLEASE!</p>
        <p>Our 33.99-54.99. Many updated looks. Stocfium Jackets For Her* ... 37.49^1.24</p>
        <p>Men^PigmenKiyedJcickets 37.47</p>
        <p>Jr.BoysNyion1WillPcirkasin4'7,.. 24.72 BoysHooded Jackets bi Sizes 8-18, 29.97 GirtsFashion Jackets In Sizes 4-6X, 25.49 GirtsFashion Jackets in Sizes 7-14, 26.99</p>
        <p>SMes may voy by state Sizes 6-18, women's I6V?-24'A</p>
        <p>A</p>
        <p>n</p>
        <p>\n</p>
        <p>Ol</p>
        <p>rrorN</p>
        <p>.39.97</p>
        <p>0-</p>
        <p>24.97</p>
        <p>Our 34.97 St. Itons Mac-Grogor actionwoar of polyester/ cotton knit. Top features zipper front. Pants with elastic waist.</p>
        <p>12B(4ft13)AD#928PROGO20% OFF?'A</p>
        <p>Mens work clothes. Shirts, pants, jeans, overalls or coveralls. 9.57-17.34 Our 1.33-ia97, Select Otoves. 1.064.77</p>
        <p>AraMM In moit K mart Mom</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0162" />
        <p>Our 12.99 Ea lton*t Rusllw</p>
        <p>juons. 4-pocket styles, in colors. OurS.57.lilfisnaklShMs.. 4.97</p>
        <p>Our 12.97 Ea Boysshirts with screen-printed front. In S-M-L*. Our 14.97, loy*Pont*** ... 10.84</p>
        <p>*Fttboyt8-M B-nillm.S-tng.</p>
        <p>Our 4.97 And 6.97. Jr. boys* ChcNIonger soporolsi In 4-7. Our2.97,loyslMdMrNBi* ..1J8</p>
        <p>*WUUim2IM0 StytetmayvaivbyilM</p>
        <p>Our 6J7 Pkg. 3*pocl( moos Ar shirts or briefs. Color choice. Our4.97.3-pack BoyslrMi*,I.97</p>
        <p>S2MS4H-A</p>
        <p>13 (1-4 8 7-13 &amp;amp; 15-19) AO#928 PROG 0</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0163" />
        <p>OUR ENTIRE SIOCK OF MEFTS OUTDOOR BOOTS</p>
        <p>Our 24.97*99.97. Kmart has os many oulckxK boots os there are things to do outdoors Top&amp;lt;|uallty bools from top names tike Texas Sleer and Northwest Territory* .Rugged and comtortobie Our outdoor bools will take on whoteMBT you and nature dish out. 19.1</p>
        <p>SlylM ahOMff) are wprtMmcrtlv ot iOftEAT STYLES FOR HUNTING, HIKING,YVORKING, EVERYTHING</p>
        <p>14A (4-5 ^ 12-14) AD#928 PROG 0</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0164" />
        <p>PtXXO SPONSOR a IW 1088</p>
        <p>aVMPCTEM/I</p>
        <p>AMERICAS</p>
        <p>CARDEN CENTER</p>
        <p>KM Ml VOUt OMOINMO NHM Jwry Balwr, Anwrica*s INattor GoRlMMr,</p>
        <p>Recommencfs The K mart OfM-yvarWtarranty</p>
        <p>K mart will cheerfully refund any outdoor plants that foil to grow within one year. Sirnply return you plant with the receipt to the K nrrart store where purchased.</p>
        <p>Detail m store</p>
        <p>Nunmy stock And Bogged Goods AtaHoble Only In Stom WiTi GoRlen Center Lawn And Garden Items Aroiloble Only In Lotger K mort Stores</p>
        <p>Our 1^7 Ea. Garden mums in</p>
        <p>choice of varieties and colors to accent your garden. 4* pots.</p>
        <p>Molue tpecfrnens iltown</p>
        <p>1.77</p>
        <p>Save 40%</p>
        <p>Our 2.97 Ea Junipers or evergreens in choice of varieties to accent your lawn. 5*-l-gal. pots.</p>
        <p>Mcriuie gieclment shown</p>
        <p>'I t .'r </p>
        <p>&amp;gt;  .  .'f  ,  .1    '.'-'-'v12.97</p>
        <p>Save</p>
        <p>35%</p>
        <p>Our 19.97 Ea. Dogwood or Bradford pear frees accent any landscape. Grown in 5-gal. pots.</p>
        <p>Our 970 Ea Sun-loving pansies</p>
        <p>in wide selection of ddzzling colors. Grown In 4* containers.</p>
        <p>Malum spectaneis shown</p>
        <p>9.97</p>
        <p>Save 33% Our 14.97 Ea 5-7'shade frees in</p>
        <p>choice of silver maple, red maple, green willow and more.</p>
        <p>2.97 3.47 3.27</p>
        <p>Malum spodmans shown</p>
        <p>Our 4.33 Bog. All-purpose potting soil in</p>
        <p>4CHb.-net-wt. bag.</p>
        <p>Our4.BBPkg.Planf food for your garden. 3&amp;gt;A-lb.netwt.</p>
        <p>Our 3.99 Bag. Bttld bird food wifh 5% sunflower seeds. 201b.*</p>
        <p>*Ntwt.</p>
        <p>Malum spadnmns shown68.88</p>
        <p>Our 79.88. Ryan gas-powered</p>
        <p>frimmer features 2-cycle engine. 6mk4-ot.* Motor Oil 2.99</p>
        <p>265 *.01.84.88</p>
        <p>Our 97.88. Ryan gas-powered</p>
        <p>frlmmer/tdger with 2-cycle engine. automatic clutch, more.108.88</p>
        <p>Our 128J8. Oat-powered brush/cufler trimmer: powerful 2-cyde engine, shoulder strop.</p>
        <p>2S5</p>
        <p>HAND-PICKED VALUES FOR YOUR LAWN OR GARDEN</p>
        <p>1SB (4-5) AD#928 PROG 0</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0165" />
        <p>Sate Mc. Compact AM/FM stereo cassette with fast forward ar&amp;gt;d eject switch. For rrwny cars, light trucks.</p>
        <p>Sate Price. Electronically tuned AM/FM stereo cassette with seek rnemory, LED clock/readout. 4"Doormoiint Speakers, Pr., $29 6x9*Deckinount Speakers, Pr., $64</p>
        <p>KE]01I (stemo) TS101I (4speoken) 1S6930(6)i9*&amp;gt;eakeis)</p>
        <p>(U)PIOI\IEER*</p>
        <p>Sate Price Pkg.Hllem-bers Only** seat covers of striped tweed.</p>
        <p>for  or low-back txtckat, twncii</p>
        <p>Sale Price. 4t&amp;gt;c. cor^ peted mat set in complementary colors.</p>
        <p>Mir mayvav</p>
        <p>Sate Price Ea Spln-on type oil fillers to fit</p>
        <p>many Ford, GM cars.</p>
        <p>34i9TAir17</p>
        <p>SatePrice. BBrifte.</p>
        <p>7.47TASC0</p>
        <p>Sate Price. .22 rifle</p>
        <p>scope. 4x15.</p>
        <p>2.97</p>
        <p>Sate Price Ea. Pocket knives for varied uses.</p>
        <p>GoodiOapis.</p>
        <p>Sate Price. Ouilted camo rain Jacket; insulated. Varied sizes.</p>
        <p>AwUlobi* In motl dorm</p>
        <p>WNCMMSntL</p>
        <p>16.97</p>
        <p>Sate Price. Insulated camo sweat shirts.</p>
        <p>londoamocoton</p>
        <p>21.96</p>
        <p>SatoMc.&amp;lt;cigabon(r Steeping bog; 33x75*.</p>
        <p>AroHoblaOnlyMKmart Colorimayvoiy</p>
        <p>SfiASole</p>
        <p>029 Price</p>
        <p>Singte-stiot shotgun*. Oun Cleaning Kit, 6.96</p>
        <p>*SGOVSeciadmoairtt</p>
        <p>23.97 ShoKmn 0( iNla modali</p>
        <p>Sole Price. Engiish-styte</p>
        <p>gun case with plush lining.</p>
        <p>3.88</p>
        <p>Nighthowk lontem with battery: weatherproof.</p>
        <p>AUTOMOTIVE AND SPORTING GOODS VALUES FOR YOU</p>
        <p>16-2 (4-6 &amp;amp; 10-14 617) AD#928 PROG 0</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0166" />
        <p>Tiras And Sffvlc Available Only In Sloras With Seivlce During Regular Service Hours</p>
        <p>nnc</p>
        <p>PROUD SPONSOROf THE 1988</p>
        <p>OtWIPCIEAM</p>
        <p>SIZi</p>
        <p>rMS/IMU</p>
        <p>nrs/Miu 44.V7</p>
        <p>niS/TSIM 4V.V7</p>
        <p>P1M/7SIM S3.V71</p>
        <p>noS/7UM S.f7</p>
        <p>nos/7is SS.S7</p>
        <p>wtt/Tsiis se.ty nanmi</p>
        <p>WM/7WH S.f 7</p>
        <p>SIZI</p>
        <p>nuci 1</p>
        <p>nSS/MRU</p>
        <p>S4.97|</p>
        <p>nS/IM13</p>
        <p>36.97 1</p>
        <p>n7S/IM13</p>
        <p>39.97 1</p>
        <p>nis/10113</p>
        <p>41.97 1</p>
        <p>81IS/7SIM</p>
        <p>43.97 ;</p>
        <p>H 8t9S/7SI14</p>
        <p>45.97 *</p>
        <p>m nos/75114</p>
        <p>47.97 e</p>
        <p>nos/7siis</p>
        <p>50.97 1</p>
        <p>niS/7Sk15</p>
        <p>52.97 </p>
        <p>n2S/7IS</p>
        <p>54.97</p>
        <p>DANOO</p>
        <p>Excellent Ride  40,00(HnileUm&amp;gt; Red Warranty*</p>
        <p>! l}.1hJcWganRa(Sal</p>
        <p>1 SIZI</p>
        <p>pe I</p>
        <p>1 FUS/INM</p>
        <p>M.97</p>
        <p>1 FMS/NtU</p>
        <p>SS.97j</p>
        <p>1 aiTs/mia</p>
        <p>34.97 1</p>
        <p>rtU/INIS</p>
        <p>37.tn</p>
        <p>MU/7NM</p>
        <p>3S.97]</p>
        <p>1 am/7MM</p>
        <p>41.97 1</p>
        <p>1 nOS/7SIM</p>
        <p>43.97 1</p>
        <p>1 PS0S/7SIIS</p>
        <p>4S.97|</p>
        <p>niS/7MU</p>
        <p>47.97 1</p>
        <p>nas/7Mi5</p>
        <p>se.97</p>
        <p>niS/7MIS</p>
        <p>S1.97</p>
        <p>FMS/7NM</p>
        <p>41.97</p>
        <p>Omaemne</p>
        <p>S402</p>
        <p>SleeHBsltod Radiol</p>
        <p>55,000-ml. Warranty*</p>
        <p>077pi55/</p>
        <p>W m 80R13</p>
        <p> "A*ir&amp;lt;iclionRaNng</p>
        <p> Responsive Handling</p>
        <p>OLTNPUNXT SleeHBelled Radial</p>
        <p>55.000-mi. Warranty*</p>
        <p>34</p>
        <p>P155/</p>
        <p>80R13</p>
        <p> Sureiradion</p>
        <p> Blockiread</p>
        <p>Mohawk</p>
        <p>RUBanoMmiinr</p>
        <p>DIMENSION IV</p>
        <p>Steel Belled Radial</p>
        <p>45,000-ml. Warranty*</p>
        <p>80R13</p>
        <p> Crisscross ITeod</p>
        <p> Sure Handling</p>
        <p>'UmNadTwodWMioutWtaiKjn^-OataUtlnStoie MoonHng Included-NoTioda-lnRKjuind Rood Hozad VUonantyAvailable</p>
        <p>vi3i87isffOT^rnBBRSar</p>
        <p>parti. Mfvicetextra Aignmenltec-onwnended on many con wtlh itnit</p>
        <p>1 1 1 1</p>
        <p>ssndicm</p>
        <p>'37?nniizxa</p>
        <p>MMiiinr</p>
        <p>7X.VT</p>
        <p>mnuwr</p>
        <p>TVjVT</p>
        <p>W.V7</p>
        <p>ta.y</p>
        <p>.M</p>
        <p>k Mohaivk</p>
        <p>n MmeoMw</p>
        <p>SR1000G.T.</p>
        <p>Performance</p>
        <p>Radial</p>
        <p> Sp0d Rcrted</p>
        <p> Responsive Hcmdling</p>
        <p>JST7T7*?St.   jM er*^?7**7TSt.! *. 7 j|</p>
        <p>8C!33IEd3</p>
        <p>ICwZu-^31</p>
        <p>i 7&amp;gt; / j</p>
        <p>T!T" I'-ll</p>
        <p>.',"1"' irrm</p>
        <p>er''*r"</p>
        <p>I mmm I s?w I</p>
        <p>kissssk</p>
        <p>CUSTOM A/IS</p>
        <p> 35,000-mile Urn-lied Warranty*</p>
        <p> All-surface Tread</p>
        <p>rrmm</p>
        <p>TTmmci</p>
        <p>RTTnBLi-^iJ</p>
        <p>srntci</p>
        <p>TImItaTOOO-mi. iftfcir-Details In Store</p>
        <p>Sale Price. 2-vrheel drum/disc brake job. Value.</p>
        <p>Fof many US. con lmporti.lt. tnidahighet Additional ports, sefvicet extra, semimetalltc podt extra_</p>
        <p>19.97 Your Choice</p>
        <p>Sole Price. Front-  Sale Price. Tire</p>
        <p>end alignment for  balance/rotation</p>
        <p>cars*, It. trucks.  for cars. It. trucks.</p>
        <p>US ortmport Addltlonol parts, senrtces extra</p>
        <p>72-mo. Limited Warranty*</p>
        <p>Everyday</p>
        <p>Super Struts 16 Fit Omni/</p>
        <p>Horizon......Pr.,98.94</p>
        <p>QMX.ACar8.Pr., 108.94 Ford Mercury. Pr.. 118.94</p>
        <p>Sb97 Ea</p>
        <p>Carryout. Monro-Mcrtic Plus shocks for</p>
        <p>U.S.. import cars.</p>
        <p>89.97 Mk.mayvaiv</p>
        <p>Sole Price. 6/12-V roH-oround charger,</p>
        <p>to 200 nr</p>
        <p>4.97</p>
        <p>Wash and wax system attaches to garden hose. 32 fl. QZ.</p>
        <p>38.97 MR.moyvaiy</p>
        <p>Sale Price. 5/12-V battery charger. 10-</p>
        <p>omp; auto-shutoff.</p>
        <p>2.97</p>
        <p>Sale Price. Blue Coral</p>
        <p>cleaner. 22-fl.-oz. size.</p>
        <p>2.97</p>
        <p>Sale Price Pr. Splosh guards in sizes for many cars, It. trucks.</p>
        <p>Formony U5. con, tt.tiucia</p>
        <p>.96</p>
        <p>-Sale Price Pkg. 1 wiper blade or pr. Of refills. 16M8* or 19*.</p>
        <p>MIt.mayvaiv 60-mo. Limited Warranty*</p>
        <p>37.</p>
        <p>WHh Exchange. MotorvotorO battery. Value.</p>
        <p>Fw many u s . Import oars OataltlnikM*</p>
        <p>Ea.</p>
        <p>With Exchange. MotorvotorSO battery. 650 CCA's</p>
        <p>For many us. Import con and n.kuoks *DraHi In lloraIF YOUR CAR NEEDS IT, K MART IS SURE TO HAVE IT!</p>
        <p>17-2(4)AD#928PROGO</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0167" />
        <p>iVteybelline</p>
        <p>Sale Price Ea. CreamOn eye shadow in dazzling colors for fall! Colors designed to go on smoothly and last all day long. Now all eyes are on you.</p>
        <p>Sale Price Ea Slim Elegance'" lipstick. The fine line in beauty. Rich, elegant tall colors. Cause you never know when youll want to make a lasting Impression.</p>
        <p>Sale Price. Plush Brush blush gives you a gentle glow, a natural glow. Loose powder blush in soft, pretty colors to enhance your natural bearly.</p>
        <p>Sole Price ta.V05 shorn-poo or conditioner in variety of torrTHJias. 15 tl. oz.</p>
        <p>Sale Price Ea Hair care.</p>
        <p>5.5-oz.* styling rnousse, 4-oz.* Gelee, 8-oz.** sculpt.</p>
        <p>*Nrtwi. a or.</p>
        <p>Sale Price Ea VOS hair spray; reg.. hard to hold, unscented. 11-oz. net wt.</p>
        <p>Sale Price Ea. Hairdressing or treatment in conditioning formulas. 1.5 fl. oz.</p>
        <p>bMNtn!</p>
        <p>Sale Price Pkg. Hot Oil treatment helps revitalize hair. 2. .5-fl.-oz. tubes.EXCELLENT SAVINGS THIS WEEK ON NAME BRAND BEAUTY NEEDS</p>
        <p>18 (1-21) AD#928 PROG 0</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0168" />
        <p>2con*3</p>
        <p>Our 1.84-1.97 Con. Tosly mualtim* fovorHui.</p>
        <p>Choice of 240z.-net-wt. Ointy Moore beef slew or 12-oz.-net-wt. Spam luncheon meat. Value!</p>
        <p>Sale Price Pkg. GkidtatKlwfch bags. 300 bogs.</p>
        <p>Sale Price Roll. Okid Cling W^ap.</p>
        <p>12*x250'.Sove.</p>
        <p>Sale Price Pkg.</p>
        <p>Cookies In choice of varieties. 21b.*</p>
        <p>*Netwt.</p>
        <p>Sale Price Can. Whole cashew nuts. 10-oz. netwt.</p>
        <p>Original rolls of C-41 process disc, 110,126 and full-frame 35mm film.</p>
        <p>12 EXP.</p>
        <p>2.49</p>
        <p>88*</p>
        <p>Sale Price Ea. Choice of candy bars. 5-oz. netwt.</p>
        <p>SrPkg</p>
        <p>Sale Price. Crunch *N Munch. Choice of varieties. 5 oz.*</p>
        <p>1.77</p>
        <p>Sale Price. Olive Oil</p>
        <p>tor all your favorite recipes. 16.9 H.oz.</p>
        <p>2for1.49</p>
        <p>Sale Price. Xina in</p>
        <p>water. Great tor sandwiches. 6/^ oz.*</p>
        <p>Nrwt.</p>
        <p>3.97 Pkg'</p>
        <p>Sole Mce. Rash bags; 100,13-gal. or 50,30-gol. bogs.</p>
        <p>Mir. may vary</p>
        <p>15 EXP. 3.69 24 EXP. 5.49 38 EXP. 7.69</p>
        <p>M pM OKS may not M</p>
        <p>oomMmd tiori oiy aKMi</p>
        <p>*&amp;lt;) sm&amp;gt;pica.aiiy</p>
        <p>only 10 pmonrg ORlMi Ita dtaaoNtaniSiai Wiw tmM MMoanaiin-okjdM</p>
        <p>DUSTY LENSCAP</p>
        <p>K MARFS GOODWILL AMBASSADOR</p>
        <p>15.47 &amp;lt;g</p>
        <p>Sato Me*. Film. 2</p>
        <p>pack Polaroid 600 Sun or Spectra film</p>
        <p>20 xp.lolalpw 2-pock</p>
        <p>2F0r*3</p>
        <p>Sale Price. Photo album with 20, yysxim* pages.</p>
        <p>3.97</p>
        <p>Sole Price. f120 bkmk videotape*. Hl-grade1iape*,4.97</p>
        <p>TI20 T120XH6 2-.4-.6-lw. corclng capabWty</p>
        <p>83*</p>
        <p>Sato Me* Pkg. 100 paper lunch bogs</p>
        <p>with flat bottom.</p>
        <p>Mlr.mayvaiyBLUE LIGHT BARGAINS TOO GOOD TO MISS</p>
        <p>1.57</p>
        <p>Sato Plica Ea Col-oring books With pull-out pages.</p>
        <p>7S2S</p>
        <p>19-1 (4 It 7 &amp;amp; 10) AD # 928 PROG 0</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0169" />
        <p>K mart* ADVERTISED MERCHANDISE POLICY</p>
        <p>Out hrm mlcnlion it to ntitO tty iiMO ilOin m liocii on out tnoivtt W w : oovotlitto Iiom It not tOilMllO tOl Out-' cntM Out to any unloiotmn ttaton K intfi tytii Itiuo a Ra&amp;lt;n Choca on 'tquatl lot int mtichanoiM lona itotn ot toaton-abio tainuy quaniiiyi to M putchasoo at tha talo ptKO nonot avaiiaoio ot nil tall you a compatapio ouaiiiy itoin at a cotnpatapii toduclion m pnea</p>
        <p>SotoPric*Pkg.Dlf potobtodoudw. 2,6-</p>
        <p>fl.-oz. bottles. Scents.</p>
        <p>Sole Price Pkg. Ibmpax tampons;</p>
        <p>40 per pkg. Styles.</p>
        <p>Our 6.47 Pkg. Aprs, boysover-colf tube socks. Fit sizes 9-11.</p>
        <p>458ST</p>
        <p>Our6JSPkg.6prs. meifs lube socks;</p>
        <p>over-cotfstyle. Fit 10-13.</p>
        <p>Sole MceEa Spray H</p>
        <p>Wnh.20oz.* aerosol, 32-oz.** trigger spray.</p>
        <p>Natwl. n.0L</p>
        <p>SoleMcekPiiiex laundry soap tor oN</p>
        <p>temperatures. 147 oz*.</p>
        <p>*Natwt. UntfJ</p>
        <p>Save</p>
        <p>40%__</p>
        <p>Our 1.68 Pkg. Ultra sheer pantyhose*.</p>
        <p>OuewiSlze, Pkg., 1.17</p>
        <p>Mwi'izmSMT</p>
        <p>3h.2.25</p>
        <p>Sale Price Pkg. \tan-Ish drop-ins. 1.7-oz.-</p>
        <p>net-wt. eOCh.*McaMoraMlr-f</p>
        <p>1.25 Mail-In RetxM. On Ttia PurchoM 013</p>
        <p>Be........ ......</p>
        <p>Ea.</p>
        <p>Sale Price. Liquid WDollle for fine wash obles. 16-fl.-oz. size.</p>
        <p>3.88m 7.97</p>
        <p>Sale Price Pkg. Bounce tabric softener. 40 sheets.</p>
        <p>Our 5.97 Ea Doormats in variety of designs. 17x28* size.</p>
        <p>Save 20%</p>
        <p>Our 9.97. Infants* Zip-A4hiilt blanket.</p>
        <p>34x43* size. Prints.</p>
        <p>IT</p>
        <p>9 Lives cot food in</p>
        <p>choice of hearty flavors. 6-oz. net wt.</p>
        <p>Our 4.97. Leaf rake</p>
        <p>with painted steel head and 22 tines.</p>
        <p>19-637</p>
        <p>Our 9.88. GE miser CirclHe. 22-wott fluorescent light.</p>
        <p>Sale Price. Saline solution for soft contact lenses. 12fl.oz.</p>
        <p>Sale Price. Lightly coaled osprin. 300</p>
        <p>tablets per package.</p>
        <p>Sale Price Ea. Keys duplicated*. Save.</p>
        <p>MOynMC My liOiCIVif</p>
        <p>*fbrnMoonalruda.doo SoulnMo</p>
        <p>20 (1-20) AD#928 PROG 0</p>
        <p>Dipt. unmi4</p>
        <p>Raguiar PricM May V&amp;lt;xy Ai Soma SlofM Dim To local Comparnion</p>
        <p>Loyowoy Not AvaSobla m AH Slotas</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0170" />
        <p>umoe</p>
        <p>OUR NEW FALL CATALOGS MKHSm-</p>
        <p> ' is&amp;amp;i, .Scotch</p>
        <p>ut</p>
        <p>"We're The One For YouT</p>
        <p>PHAM sa BACK covn FOR STOW HOURS</p>
        <p>7 DAYS ONLY: SALE ENDS SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 24</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0171" />
        <p>,()&amp;lt;</p>
        <p>J-f  .  l^^n1|||.ltii.r-    .  *  V</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0172" />
        <p>SAPPHIRE: BIRTHSTONE Of THE MONTH</p>
        <p>ini'*?  ^nm &amp;amp; Oantond Mwquise Clitw Pandan*. (12) 14K VEUOW OOLD Enwrald &amp;amp; CJiamond MareMta ChMier Eamno (24) 14K YELLOW QOLO 7" 4-Oiamond Hope BracaM</p>
        <p>  .... Your Coal4IMt  in.t7 856^0320 $199,95.................Your  Coal44ttM- $89.97 9324-20fr9 $266.00 ................Your  Coat9l9i9t.  $129.90</p>
        <p>(2)14KYEUOWQOLOSapp&amp;gt;aDiamondMarquiaeCkjslarPandan( (1 14K YELLOW OOLOSappTHra6 Diamond Haatl-Shape Pandam. (2$) 14K YBXOWOOLDTiMsted Knot Diamond Eamnga -</p>
        <p>   Vour  Cow899.99  $98.97 87a027.3 $62500 ................Your  CoW 9999J9 $299.90 8572C340 $215.00................Your  Coat8449.98- $119.90</p>
        <p>($) 14K YEaOW OOLD Ruby &amp;amp; Diamond MarquiH Ckmaf Pendam (14) 14K YELLOW QOLO Sapplwa ft Diamond Pandam  (28) 14K YELLOW OOLD DouUa Open Heart Pandom</p>
        <p>       $88.87  8740.7201 $310.00................Your  C0W8188W8-  $1M.$0  8814O40.Y $150.00 ..................Your  Coal88848- $78.87</p>
        <p>(4) LA0(ES14K YELLOW QOLO Haail Shape ChalhamOaolad Ruby (1$)14K YELLOW OOLOSappNre ft Diamond Evringa  (27) $0" 8mm ONYX ft Baroque Pearl NacUace</p>
        <p>ft lODiamond Rtng  8500056.7 $310.00............  .Your  Cool848848- $148.$8 8576057-7 $100.00 ..................Your  Coal48848- $M.97</p>
        <p>9904 43^ $675.00................Yow  Coal  $44848    $848.80  (18) 14IC YELLOW OOLD Sapphtre ft Diamond Earringa.  (28) 14N YEUOW QOLO Black Onyx Doorfcnockar Eariinga</p>
        <p>(LAIME8'14KYEaOW OOLD Maiqulaa Ruby ft 41XamondRino. .50 8722031.5 $55000 ................Your  Coal 884848- $2$9.$0 85721838 $150.00 ..................Your  Coat $8849  $74.80</p>
        <p>^ raw.  (17) LAOat' 14K YELLOW QOLO MarquiaeShape Sapphire ft (29) 14K YBJ.OW QOLO Black Onyx PandanI wit. 18" Chain</p>
        <p>9004811 $525.00................Your  Coat  899898-  $219.99  14-Olamond Ring luaTQW  8572 188-6 $150.00  .............Your  Coat88848-$74.98</p>
        <p>($) LA0K8' 10K YELLOW QOLO 8Ruby ft l -Diamond Coraago Ring 9004 5089 $120000 ...............Your Coal 8888188 - $899.90 (WQ14K YELLOW QOLO Btack Onyx Earringa.</p>
        <p>W3^$1SO.OO..................Your Coal89040-$78.90 (19)LAINES 14K YELLOW QOLO Oval Sapphxe ft OOmmond Ring 9178304^ 875.00 ...................Your  Coal  84048-$24.97</p>
        <p>(7) LA0K8' 14K YELLOW OOLD II Emerald ft lODiamond Ring. 9904 5987 $525.00................Your Coat $88$i99 $199.90 (21) UUMBS 10K YELLOW OOLD Onyx ft 1 Oimond Rkig</p>
        <p>9904 58I-7 $569.00 ................Your Coal897040  $299.00 (19) U9K YELLOW QOLO 12 Sapphlra ft 3-OWnond CMter Rbig 9040-503-7 $155.00..................Your Coat $8948-$74.90</p>
        <p>m LAMES* I9K YELLOW QOLO EmarNd ft Diamond Paar^hapeCkfltar 97820482 2186.00.................Your Coat8*4048^ 8M.80 ^) LAMES* 10K YELLOW QOLO Onyx ft 3 Dimand Ring</p>
        <p> __w __ go) 10KYEUOW QOLO Marqolao.Shapa Diamond ft SapphtraOuNar 9852 5685 $200 00.................Your Coal $48840 - $N.$0</p>
        <p>98200685 $350.00................Your Ooal $8084$ - $178.88 Sng. 2 CL TW.  (22) MEN*S 18K YELLOW QOLO Onyx Ring wilh Doubla Qold Stripe.</p>
        <p>m LAMES* 10K YBUOW GOLD Hoart-Shapo EmanM ft 4-Dlamond 97882682 $300.00................Your 0001448848- $148.80 9854^789 $300.00................Your  Coat 848888- $14890</p>
        <p>.  (21) LAMO* 14K YELLOW QOLO OamondCul Doma Ring 04) LAMBS* 10K YEUOW QOLO MaiqulaeShapa Facolad Onyx ft</p>
        <p>9852537 1 2189.00 .................Yaur Coat $44848- $8890 98240004 $128.00 ................. .Your Coat $2848- $88.90 FSwiond Wng.</p>
        <p>(19) 14K YELLOW QOLO Ruby ft Diamond Marqulao Clualar Earringa. (22) LAMES* 14K YOXOW OOLD DiamondCul Smal Cruoiiix Ring 08526174 W OO................Your  Cool448948- $129.90</p>
        <p>85680312 $185.00.................Your Cool $11848- $8847 9624C63 3 $125.00  .................Your Coal47948- $8940</p>
        <p>(11)14NYnxOWQOLOSapphireftDamondMarquiaaClualarEarringa. (22) LAO* 14K YELLOW QOLO OWnondCul Bow Rkig</p>
        <p>8568&amp;lt;0&amp;amp;4 $185.00................ Your Coal444848  $89.97 9Kf4458l $60.00 ...................Your Coat $28^ $29.80  SiaiidW*a - 3</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0173" />
        <p>mmmmm</p>
        <p>m'30% OFF</p>
        <p>OUR EVERYOAY LOW PfUCeS ON ENTIRE SELECTION OF 14K QOLD ft 14K QOU^FILLED CHAINS. CHAIN BRACELETS ft ANKLETSt-</p>
        <p>m</p>
        <p>(1) 14X VIU.OW QOlO 18" OMnon(K:ul Sold Ropt Own</p>
        <p>93240GCM S340 00 .............. Vow CM MM  $14t.N</p>
        <p>(DMKVaLOWQOlOWOz AnwwE^ Coin in 14K Ropo Fmio</p>
        <p>898(K334 1 8225 00 ............. Vow CM 8MV - 8108.87</p>
        <p>(8) 18K VHIOW QOU) ir BovoM Tilo Hwrmgbono ' V ChM</p>
        <p>9310^1-1 8125.00 ..............Vow CM 8M.88-848.88</p>
        <p>(4) 14K OOU&amp;gt;#U0 18- Hwrmgbono CtWn.</p>
        <p>8S64C18J 81500 ..  Your CM 887  88.87</p>
        <p>S14K vai^ OOU&amp;gt; r Ti8i Bevolod Homngbono Own BwMI 10244^ 85500  Vow CM884ter. 814J8</p>
        <p>(8) 14K YBXOW QOLO 18" BmOM OwOuplM Hornnobono Own 8984&amp;lt;)10C 838500  Vow CM 8848(88  8188J0</p>
        <p>8B84C114 8430 0018"  . Vow CM 881M8-8188.80</p>
        <p>YELLOW QOLO T' Ouw*u[W BovoM Homngbono OWn</p>
        <p>9400-1082 885 00 .....................Vow CM 84840 - 88847</p>
        <p>m 14K YELLOW QOLO 18 ' Quodbjpii Homv)bono ChWi</p>
        <p>9310-2889 8140.00 .......... ......V0WCM8884T-888J8</p>
        <p>m 14K VIUOW QOLO r Holmr Ropo Own BncoM</p>
        <p>124-0455 815500 ..................Vow CM 888.88. 888.88</p>
        <p>8324-0483 818500 8'............. Vow CM 8U848 . 878J8</p>
        <p>noi 14KVaL0W QOLO 18" Hoftw Ropo own</p>
        <p>U240488 823000......... ......Vow CM884848^ 888J8</p>
        <p>&amp;amp;</p>
        <p> 888.87  tte.97</p>
        <p>844.97</p>
        <p>14KVaX0W QOLO irAmw own  (29) 14K TRICOLOR OWnondCul Rooo Owm</p>
        <p>102983 820000  ............Vow  CM 8I88188  888.80 09780088 8110.00 ..................Vow  CM 88848* 888.97</p>
        <p>9315288-5 8155 00 18" .............Vow  CM488.88-- 888.80 (24) 14K VBXOW QOLO Si Qmofiw Modal</p>
        <p>(12) 14K YELLOW QOLO 18" OwnondCul Homngbono own.  9212-074-0 85000 ........ Vow  CM J8448* 824.97</p>
        <p>.............Vow  CM 818848 - 8188.80 (2^14* YELLOW QOLO (liomoodCul  Honey Boer Chorm</p>
        <p>(14 14K YELLOW QOLD 18" Oooignor Unk NocMooe  8970037-1 875.00 ...................Your  CM 848i8T</p>
        <p>OwnondCm  FIom Eaoinoo</p>
        <p>(14 14K vmowQOLO r Hgroe Braodol  89908655 880.00 .................YowCM84V.</p>
        <p>93109009 8139.95 ................Vow  CM 88848  898.88 (27) 14K YELLOW QOLO Figrw Oide OanM Eamngs</p>
        <p>14K VBIOW QOLD r HoMt BraoaW  9252-059 2 890.00 ...... .....ToSToM^</p>
        <p>2 nooo...............Vow  CM88847 . 884.87 (28) 14K YELLOW QOLO Engraved Hoop vvWi Bon Earringa</p>
        <p>91783442 812500 .................Yow  Coal 488i87 - 889.97</p>
        <p>14K VELL0WQ0L0 9"TrpMBvalMHeri1^^  M14K YEUOW QOLO Low Knot Drop Earnnga</p>
        <p>72458 852 SO.................Yaw  CM 88447.  824.47 8965163 7 8140.00 .............. Vow  CM 8884T.  888.97</p>
        <p>(98) 14K VBXOW QOLO Paarl 8 3 Diamond Pondanl.</p>
        <p>85702193 8139.96 ..... .Yew  CM 888188-  88848 8572-1751 89500 ............... Vow  CM 88842-844.97</p>
        <p> _ (81) 14K YELLOW QOLO Ci*urod(&amp;gt;aarl*DwnondEamnga</p>
        <p>0-&amp;lt;N47 - 88447 9572-I8I-9 912500................. .vow CM8&amp;gt;84r - 888.97</p>
        <p>-  W4KYBiOW QOLO 4mm Cuiued Pop! Earrtnga</p>
        <p>8848346285500 ............ Yaw  CM 88442   88447 945oiM 824.95  ................Vow  CM M</p>
        <p>(99)ir-6419000CuiuredPearlS.;ar</p>
        <p>80861467 8350 00.......  Vow  Opl 888848 - 818M0 94SO10I-2 8385 00................Vow  OM8848M  -  8178.90</p>
        <p>SS:</p>
        <p>r CM 84447-812.97</p>
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        <p>(94)CONMO8B)R8EliolioneJaMryCMPW</p>
        <p>gn     vow  CM  88447-817.97</p>
        <p>SLiii  2*?"  (9BljTO84I.JaMrvClaarw*PolWingCloh</p>
        <p>^2--* WSHO ..................Vm  CM  28447-  884.97  85832052  8900   .Vow  CM  8947&amp;gt;-  89.99</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0174" />
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        <p>(1) JVC 4-BANDIKMTABLE DOUBLE-CASSCTTE COMPONENT SVSTEM.</p>
        <p>Super Ban horn lor boostinQ kw-range sound. High-^Mad laps-lo-tapa dubb ing Ral^i plm from deck A to deck B S^tonam S E A. graphic equaloer FMIAMISW1/SW2 radh). Oalachabla spaNrar units. MaW tape compatible Full autostop. AlC wkh variable monkor. Beal cut sieh. IPC-WtOO.</p>
        <p>681802S4S $189.95 .....................Your  Coal tlltitT 9139 97</p>
        <p>(2)T08NM24ANDSTEICORAOW CASSETTE l00IIDER.0^aUe</p>
        <p>2-way. 4-apaaker syem. 3-band graphic equallMr. Onalouch racordkig. Aulo</p>
        <p>ahi^. Son-ejecl cassslto rnachaniarn and pause control BiANn FMIAMIFM stereo radkx LED kidicaior. Model RT-7016.</p>
        <p>6902-924-7 $09.95  .................. Your TYnm tH- $49 a</p>
        <p>(3)^YSJWCEAMffM STEREO CASSETTB4R0EN.b!ZiC</p>
        <p>wh 3 repeat modas; entire disc, one salection or shune play Auloinallc Music Sensor-aMps lorward or backward to next aalaclion. Hiflli-spaed mudc search 164^ ftin^ Muac Sensor Stereo cassalls recortitigipiBybecA Synchronized dub^ SoA eisa Cue and review. Dslachabla 2-way speakers Sbend graphic equabar. Model CFD444.</p>
        <p>6884-134-5 $299.95 .....................Your  foat ItiiT  8239 97</p>
        <p>(4)80NYWATEIMESI8TANTWALKMAN* PM STEREO RAO.</p>
        <p>watar-resnlanl dedgned lo be splaah proof and sprirNs prool. One dip Iniagraled circuit lor Increesedraladltyarat greater abity to capture dWarksI^ toiiabiR etw-iwMiar* MOR haadphonaa proia wide 1^^ ing real^. lEOirtaieolballary kidnior shows station signal strength ar^ statue Modal SRF-4</p>
        <p>8884-113-9 $32.95 ...................... Your "mtlTitf  837 93</p>
        <p>?&amp;gt;i?'Ii?^"^*^TEREOWAU(MAN* CAsStTCPUY^</p>
        <p>Preset kmina. Mega Bass** svstem. Aulo revena tMhrue r lana /vwn-</p>
        <p>.... V*0_Mega Bass" system. Aulo reverse. Oolbiy B. Metal tape com M^w2m!w ***** *** **'  (rewkidflasl  krrward)</p>
        <p>  -   -..........Vour  CoetSSSifr- $78.97</p>
        <p>'** '** 0nyw*w portabllly. Modd JC-1268K</p>
        <p>6696*109^ $29.99 ........................Yolir  niil IMilT $19 97</p>
        <p>j7) QE 1JWX PM STEREO HEADPHONE RAOfOHirpito^e Sam^ cobsB headphorm Cornfortabto swival earpads. Vernier lursng. B^^  y PortabSly. #7-1285.</p>
        <p>6900-327-6 tt7.95.................... Your  Ce^SISiW-$11.96</p>
        <p>mMAOMVOX STEREO RAOW CASSETTE RECOROBl h^b^ 2-way 4-speakar system. Cueireviaw and pause. BuH-ln condenser mic. HydrajAccasaelleaiad. Monolslereo control. Arrio recording level. AFC FM stereo LED FuH aulo slap ACC Model 008060.</p>
        <p>6840069-6 $59.95 ........................Your  Coat IM.lt 819 9^</p>
        <p>mOE AM/FMfPM STEREO CASSETTE RECORDER. 4 speaker syalam. Dkeci tjll the Air^ recordina. Cushion aiaci. Aulo lane niiis.in mir* arr &amp;lt;</p>
        <p>1  Cushion  ejed.  Aulo  tape  dwl-o.Bui-in  rules.  AFC on</p>
        <p>M-M toudnass compensation Operates on detachable AC cord. Model 3*5455.</p>
        <p>66003S9&amp;gt;9 $64.95  ........... Your  ftwt $4#i9ir* $17 96</p>
        <p>.eCHAROEAWJ MKROCASSETTE RECOtoSTm^ mchargaabla battery cel. Recharges on regular household currant lor a total d 2h^ oper^ with backup power supply d regular "AA" belMries. l-touch ry^ng. BuRnn flat live. Advanced volcfropeialBd recording, bislant ad. Model</p>
        <p>^ Your CeelSPIrtr. $68.97 CR0CAS8ETTE TAPES. #MC80UOM&amp;gt;K.</p>
        <p>6862-020-2 $6.39.....  Your  ft nil tTiif - $4 97</p>
        <p>hokti 10 cmenn and/or peraonal Uareo. Blua.</p>
        <p>6M0^7'2 &amp;amp;.9S  ............  Yoiv  $9  97</p>
        <p>CASSETTE. 4-p*. IbSSk</p>
        <p>6940-0264 $13.20.......... Y&amp;lt;m  Cn^ UaWk ll 99</p>
        <p>(MJKOMIWXPUISSTEREOPHONE. Ll^^</p>
        <p>PTwANuhour^^^ homeislanlng. 10.22JOH7frequency response</p>
        <p>6824'0234 $30.05 ...........  Your  Coal Ooo-#f  m 97</p>
        <p>(14)IUaNAV0X AMrnS CLOCK RADIO. WakeSL,</p>
        <p>8840083-9 $21.90..................... Your  Coal SMitP - S12 97</p>
        <p>!5l2S.5r*''^"'"TEREO. X-lalL0d-PLLuSlreu^ syrj^ ^M stereo tuner Seek and manual hmmg. 16 memory presets 12 F^ AM Aim rer^cassetls deck Fader conkd lor 4-speaker systems Mulii</p>
        <p>'***  **=**  maximum  power out</p>
        <p>pul. MOCM cS'RII-</p>
        <p>. Your Coel 0tt:f7.1139.97 SONY 8x8 2-WAY CAR SPEAKERS. IESS92.</p>
        <p>6694014-7 $79.96 ....................Your  Coat oao-oo . 84816</p>
        <p>SONY 4" DUAL CONE SPEAKER. IE8841</p>
        <p>6694-9QK7-3 S34.96 ................. Your  OlMl SOOriT  820 87</p>
        <p>WPANASOM RACK SYSTEM. (&amp;gt;jbeynlh;alierlurwJ^^ dompreieioDwbMciiaitMded.wlihhl6hapeededlllriQ. DiglMready design 5L!TJS?5525II!L5*'^ BuR* WiendgrapMcequMtar. kvd seise kfcx(:8ynditoedllng;sirlsipl^bedi.ew"l^</p>
        <p>STSf M2!?!.***  'ell Wh catlita Modd SC-3016D</p>
        <p>Z*iy.-g.!gy.g*  .......  -Vour  CoolSISSrSr. $188.87</p>
        <p>AMIPMffM STEREO RECEIVER WITH CASSETTE</p>
        <p>Soml-automde 2-spotd rocord playtr wlh corwnlo cartridge Dynamic 6 wWe-renge lowar speakers. Custonvcrdlsd ctbinel wkh xed com</p>
        <p>6800177-4 $179 95 ........... Your  Coat S488i8Y - $119.97</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0176" />
        <p>(1) YAMAHA FULL-SIZE KEYBOARD. 49 (ul-size keys 100 FM voice. 10 rtiythms 9 note polyphooic Melody memofy. Praprograinmed demo song. Easy play auto bass chord system. Sustain, fill-in, leoY cortlrol. BuA-in speaker Music rest included. Model PSR-6</p>
        <p>6994018-7 $179 95 ........  Your  CoalAtMiW^  $129.00</p>
        <p>(2) CASK) CT-607 FUU-SOE KEYBOARD. 61 standard keys lor fufl range performance versaMily. 20 preset tones and 20 aulo-rhylhms are uba-real thanks lo a new PCM sound source, and tone mixing lets you mix" any hwo tones together (210 variatior).</p>
        <p>6962-0706 $329.00 ................Your Coal Mit.or- $239.99</p>
        <p>(3) SHARP 19 PORTABLE COLOR TV. 19" tinted high k&amp;gt;cus picture tube. 22-lunction random access infrared remote control with channel upfdown on the TV set LEO display. Sleep timer. Channel memory add and erase. Auto color control system 140 oable capabla PLL electronic tuner. Auto line tuning. Model 19NV68BK</p>
        <p>6696-909-6 $509 95................YoutCosI 291 iW . $299.97</p>
        <p>(4) MAONAVOX13" MMOTE COLOR TV. 18 pushbutton remote control. 152 channels LED channel readout. Tubewidlh design. Sleep timer Model RJ4049.</p>
        <p>6840083-7 $299 00 ..:.............Your Cost349.04. $239.94</p>
        <p>(5) TOSHIBA 20 STEREO COLOR TV/MOIVTOaFST* picture tuba for enhanced picture quality 124-channel cable compatible (X)MPUT-R-TUNE" electronic synOwsized tuning with channel return. 20-key random access remote control. Audnlvideo input monitor terminals. Auto swHch-olt timer. LEO (igilal channet indicator Picture sharpness control. 6902-9160 $499.95 ................Your  CoM4339.99-  $349.99</p>
        <p>(6) QE 4-HEAD VCR WITH OH-8CHEENPflOGRAMMPia Remote pro gramming with complete on-saeen graphics 4-event/1-month toner. Modal VGI-7720.</p>
        <p>6799001-2 $44995.....  Your  Coot$899i9r   $299.97</p>
        <p>(7) RCA VR2M VCR. llO^annel tuning. Wireless remote control 4-evenl/2-week programming. Fluorescent function displays. Express recordmg.</p>
        <p>6878-856-1 $329.95 ...:............Your  Coot &amp;lt;a49i9T-  $229.97</p>
        <p>(9) MAXELL 20-HOUR PACK VHS CASSETTES. Includes 2 H(3X Gold T120sand1 HGXGoldT160</p>
        <p>66620291 $3595 ...................Your  Coat $4i99-- $19.99</p>
        <p>(9) QE FULL-SIZE VHS CAMCORDER. 6:1 power zoom tens and CCD Soto! state Imager. RecordlplByback capabiMy; lade m/tade out; lime lapse record. Model CQ-9806.</p>
        <p>6799087-0 $1009.95........................Your  Coot  $899.97</p>
        <p>(10) SCOTCH- VHS CAMERA CASSETTE. EXGT120C 6814-052-4 $11.99.....................Your CoatSOiOO - $7.99</p>
        <p>(11) BUSH NEW OENERATIONS AUOKWIOEO EWTERTABMBNT CENTER. Brentwood finish with adjustable shelvas, endosad storage and son design Measures 468x47.38x15.5".</p>
        <p>6766096-9 $150.95 ..................Your  Coot$9i9P - $99.97</p>
        <p>(12) EMBMON19 COLOR TV. Quick start picture. Solid state low power cornumpUon chassis. Auto line tuning 1 -button auto color control system. 6748-9198 $299.95 ............... Your  Coat $199.99 - $199.99</p>
        <p>(13) BUSH "NEW OENERATIONS" TV CART. Adjustabte bottom shell tills lor magazines. Library Oak finish, rkjal wheel hooded casters. 6766-101-7 $39 95 ...................Your  Coat 939.99^ $29.96</p>
        <p>Ftmt otm mm covBi:</p>
        <p>(1) CHAR4R0N. TABLETOP OAS OfllLL. 12.000 BTU stainless steel burner.</p>
        <p>10800290 $39 95 .  Your  Coal 694:9- 20.99</p>
        <p>(2) LORUS EASY READER MICKEY MOUSE WATCH with black strap 9588 5160 $1995...................Your  Coat 944!9T- $12.97</p>
        <p>(3) VIDAL SASSOON STREAMERS CURLMQ WON.</p>
        <p>3970-023-2 914.95 ....................Your Coat 99i9P-99.M</p>
        <p>(4)C0RNINQWARE* VISIONS* 5-PIECE STARTER SET. Complalo with 1-pinl wid 1-quwt covered saucepans witti pour spout and 7" aWM. 2640-1820 $26 95 .......... Your  Coat 949W9  $14.99</p>
        <p>(5) SCOTCH* VHS CASSETTE TAPE. EGT120.</p>
        <p>6814-0260 $6.99 ...  .........Your Coel 99ir- $2.99</p>
        <p>6814-029-2 $6.99 BETA................ Your Coal 99i9r-$2.99</p>
        <p>(9)H00VER EUTE-200 UPRIOHT CLEANER Ughtwaighl - waigha teas than 11 Iba. Auiohaighi adjustment Large easy-change bag Brushed edge cleaning on bottt sides Computer designed agitator deep deans carpal 24481220 $8895 ............... Your  Coat 9S9i99- $96.99</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0177" />
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        <p>aaO&amp;amp;SSS-T S44 86.......... Vm  CM H8i9^ 997</p>
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        <p>199.96 ..............................y9rOMI79</p>
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        <p>1129999  __</p>
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        <p>99900  YMCM99li9#*a49 99</p>
        <p>(11) axpom 94MUMI7U 2 tocltau &amp;lt;haara hi ir7dulr M0 harna  P1R7 ootarad anam bMi aaalftrlM'</p>
        <p>9094006-1 97000  _ few CM 990i09  989.99</p>
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        <p>991*0049 93699......  ,.....fM CM 99909.919.97</p>
        <p>(in acOTCH 0 OH DNOrm. Ooubla kU. douUa danaly 49TPII2 PacA 991404a6S22ra  Vm  CM  9909^ 99.97</p>
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        <p>09900960 91H 96 ....................Yew  CM99609-99907</p>
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        <p>191600 ............  Tow  OMOOiaa' 97.97</p>
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        <p>28800114 880.00....................Your  Coet 84847 488.87</p>
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        <p>32400874 828.80...................Yout  Ceel 81847  814.88</p>
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        <pb facs="00097037_0179" />
        <p>(1) HANHLTON BEACH TOASTER OVEN. Continuous dean ing interiors, automatic shut-oH.</p>
        <p>3700-143-5 $49.96 ...........Your  CostSaM*'  $34.M</p>
        <p>(2) TOASTMASTER* 2-SLiCE PASTRY TOASTER. Master mind heatMioisture sensor, color-keyed slide contrd, wider bread slots.</p>
        <p>40720930 $19.95............Your  Cost $12.9 - $0.99</p>
        <p>0) QE 8PACEMAKER III MICROWAVE. 6 cu ft capacity. 10 power levels, 3-staoe programmability. 1-year limited warranty.</p>
        <p>3666008-2 $169.95 Your Coot $99:97  $129.97</p>
        <p>(4) FYR4TTER 2-A KhBC FIRE EXTMOUISHER. High capadly multi-purpose extinguisher designed lor heavy-duty use in offices, shops and business sites. Mfr's $6.00 rebate.</p>
        <p>3856003-1 $34.95...........Your  CostOaOtOr- $27.97</p>
        <p>&amp;lt;$)BRAUN AR0MA8TER10COFFEEMAKBt. KXupcapad ty. Special leature lets you enjoy the lirsi cup beiore the last cup is brewedi Also ieatures pivoting filter.</p>
        <p>3576007 3 $39.95...........Your  Coat $900-- $29.09</p>
        <p>10  Brendle's</p>
        <p>(6) WEST BEND 6-QUART SLOW COOKER. Helps prepare delicious,, nutritious meals lor the whole family while you're away from home. Oblong to fit foods better. White porcelainon-aluminum exterior wfih contemporary grey design. Heat-resistant handles. 5-posilion temperature control.</p>
        <p>4140-061-5 $32.95...........Your CostSa$i97  $22.97</p>
        <p>(7) PRESTO* FRYDADDY* ELECTRIC DEEP FRYER. Family-sized fryer makes four generous servings with just four cups ol oil. Auto temperature control and non-stick finish inside andout.-</p>
        <p>3808-1^2 $29.95...................Your  Coat  $19.99</p>
        <p>380S06S9 $34.95 OranPappy*  Your Cost $29.99</p>
        <p>() PRESTO* 11" FRY PAN. Heavy cast aluminum base, selfbasting cover and hard-surface, non-sticfc finish inside and out. Control Master* heat control maintains accurate temperature lor automatic cooking.</p>
        <p>38064)81-8 $29.95...........Your CoetS9M  $17.99</p>
        <p>(9) BLACK A DECKER S-SPEED PORTABLE HAND MIXER.</p>
        <p>Tackles a variely of mixing tasks. Comfortable contoured han@  03</p>
        <p>die for "no-strain" whipping, beating or mixing. Easy-reaC fingertip speed control did for quick speed changes. Full-si/&amp;lt; fuK-performance, chrome-plated beaters plus beater storai clips, flat heel rest and beater eject. Model Ml75. 3664-304-7 $29.95...........Your Cost S2^- $19.9&amp;gt;</p>
        <p>(10) SUNBEAM CAN OPENERA(NIFE SHARPENER. 4036-231-1 $16.95...........Your  Cost  SIMO  $11.</p>
        <p>(11) PRESTO* MINNIE-MAX" COMPACT FOOD PRl' CE8S0R. Blends, chops, grates, juliennes, kneads, mince mixes, purees, shreds or dices moel food in seconds 3808-106-3 $39.95...................Your Cost $27.6*</p>
        <p>(12) BLACK A DECKER AUTOMATIC SHUT-OFF" IRON</p>
        <p>Surge. SHverStonef* coaling. Model F440WHS.</p>
        <p>3664-269-2 $44.95.......  Your  Cost  $99i9r-  $37.9fi</p>
        <p>(1$) BUCK A DECKER UQHTN EASY* SPRAY. STEAM DRY IRON. 7 temperature settings. SHvarStoneP coeting Mock F365YESO</p>
        <p>3664-278-3 $24.95...........Your  Cost  AIMS $15.99</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0180" />
        <p>II</p>
        <p>r. (1) FIRST ALERT COMPACT REAOY^-ITE* . Plugs into waN and has adjustable beam width and direction 3846029-1 $19.95..... Your  Cost $4M9 - $9.99</p>
        <p>(2) POLLENEX 2-SPEED HIGH INTENSITY POWER MASSAQER. Variable speed. Deep penetrating, powerlul massage that soothes, relaxes, eases tension. For musctriar</p>
        <p>'iW aches. 4 massaging surlaces on vibrating head.</p>
        <p>C 3508 063-4 $39.95...........Your  Cost 937i9f - $24.99</p>
        <p>(3) MTERPLAK* PLAQUE REMOVAL INSTRUMENT. Soil ( rotating bristles to remove plaque and stimulale gums. 2 interchangeable Ixush heads.</p>
        <p>,  3632-001-8 $119.95..........Your  Cost 9944T  $79.99</p>
        <p>  (4) 08TER 11-PIECE DOQ TRIM KIT. Electromagnetic clipper</p>
        <p>. with adjustable blade, attachments and instructions.</p>
        <p>L  3844-042-6 $26.95...........Your  Cost$19i98  $17.97</p>
        <p>(5) CONAIR1250 PRO STYLE DRYER. MIr's $5 00 rebate plus , $5 00 BONUS</p>
        <p>3610001-4 $19.95...................Your  Cost  $14.94</p>
        <p>(6) WMDMERE "THE CRMIIPER". Gives hair great looWng lex lure or creates volume. Tangle-lree swivel cord 4138042-9 $12.95.............Your Cost $9:99- $9.99</p>
        <p>(7) WINDMERE THE WAVER. Adds dramatic waves, volume and texture. Lightw^. easy to use.</p>
        <p>4138-050-2 $12.95.............Your Cost $0i99 - $9.99</p>
        <p>(8) TELEDYNE WAU-MOUNTED SHOWERHEAD. With 8 shower selections to help you feel your best</p>
        <p>3532-9410 $44.95...........Your  Cost $2009 - $27.99</p>
        <p>(9) TELEDYNE DELUXE HAND4IEL0 SHOWER MASSAGE. 8 distincl shower seleclions Hand-held or Nationary conve nience. Mounting bracket and 5 hose included.</p>
        <p>3532-0290 $49.95...........Your  Cost 489:97 - $34.99</p>
        <p>(10) ROYAL DIRT DEVH. HAND VACUUM. Revolving brush deans deep and wide. 6W" nozzle with edge cleaning picks up large ot^s. 3 sellings. 2-qt. washable bag. 1 year limited warranty.</p>
        <p>2484 001-9 $49.95...........Your  Cost $3900' $34.97</p>
        <p>(11) BLACK A DECKER DU8TBU9TER HANDHELD RECHARGEABLE VACUUM. Indudes mountable recharging</p>
        <p>base with 4 cord and Nicad bdteries. Model 9330.</p>
        <p>3664-256 9 $29.95.................Your Cost $21.99</p>
        <p>(12) BISSELL ALL-SURFACE SWEEPER. Sell ad|usl8 to dean any floor surface 2 big dustpans cdled dirt on both forward and backward sweeping motions. Natural bristle brush gives consis-lent top performance. Heavy, durable steel construction lasts for years. Hantfle swings a (dl 180* for easy manoiverabilily Lightweighi and compad.</p>
        <p>2412-027-1 $24.95...........Your  Cost $4*tr- $14.99</p>
        <p>(13) EUREKA UPRIGHT VACUUM WITH ATTACHMENTS, to</p>
        <p>dudes a complele sel d above-the-lloor deening tods. 4-posilion</p>
        <p>Dial-A Nap and brilliant headlight</p>
        <p>2428-044-8 $129 95..........Your  Cost $99:97 - $79.97</p>
        <p>(14) HOOVER SPIRir* PORTABLE CANISTER VACUUM.</p>
        <p>7W-quart bag is a snap tochange. Oduxe wheelad rug and Noor nozzle wilh luk-lime edge cleaning. 4.0 peak hp. Convenleni top^ side tod storage. Check bag signal Indudes attachments lor aN your cleaning needs.</p>
        <p>2448 120-2 $139 95.........Your  Cost $199.97 - $99.97</p>
        <p>Brsndle*s  11</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0181" />
        <p>(1)CVDil0t0PTimi04ITECMIfAT.RenKM^ (7)eVENaOSIOIWINDifllMHCNiyR.Convwt8to  botdes. caps, discs, nipples, nipple covers, tongs and brush,</p>
        <p>cover. Warmer In wimer.norveticidng In summer. Meets Federal and utNtty chair and features one4tand tray relaase.  4Splece8et  ongs</p>
        <p>Safety Standards.  216(W)34-3 $49.95...........Yow  Coat  ItAf  SM.M 2078019-5124.95...........Your  Coat MM8 - $14.91</p>
        <p>2150026^9 $39 95  Your CootO$M$-- $24.97 (i) (MACO TRAVO. MATE tTROUER. 3^positlon redining (14) (MACO CARRKR SWYMKtlWW 2oeltton a(^</p>
        <p>^ carrier stand. fTT l^nSTS-nS baby, pleated shade.  2326-010-2 $89.95...........Your  Coot  $14:97-$49.99 mechanism.  -v  ay anu o-minuie quiei</p>
        <p>2320002-5 $29.97...........Your Coot$$$:9f-- $19.9$ (9) WHJNE 4-WAY FORTAILI KN-CRM". Select hard- 2328004^5 $82 95...... Your  Coat04Mt  -  $41  97</p>
        <p>($) CMLORIN (M THE 00 HAM ECRKN. TirSed. wood with harxl-rubbed flniah. A^juatablo 4-poaition legs and (18) C(&amp;gt;$CO 8URESTEP" WALKER/JtNIPER Floor Sensor iranaparent shield protects baby Irom sun.  reinforced mdtress support, vinyl-oovered foam pad.  Bbm" hninA pnment mrkfents on staim or urwunn nurfaces</p>
        <p>2060001-3 $8.95..............Your  Coat$9$$-  $4.$$  2178011-1 $84.96   !^Coot  $$4Sr - $89.97 pSk&amp;gt;^</p>
        <p>(4)CHIJMBNONTNBQO$9UTMAr-.HeavyOutyvlnyl(19) MARHiAU BLBCTROMCt MAOMAO* iATTBRY 20940080 $54 95. . .. Your CoalO40. 819 99</p>
        <p>mat made to catch al of Me'sminor dfeaders. 3x4. Protect OPERATED BRBAiT PUMP. AC/DC pump with accessories  -  -  - .rour ww-oeerw wn.w</p>
        <p>carpets, noors and furnteire.  for nuraing moms.   (18) EVENPLO DELUXE 4(l&amp;gt;40* WUiYL Pt avaim Fuliv</p>
        <p>.....L-- - - V9MT Coat$9i99 - $4.99 21480060 $38.96...........Your  Coat  $890$-  $24.99  pacMd. with special dralt gSdextraSSht</p>
        <p>(M NtHJW NtMiERY FOTTY (MAM. Solid hardwood with (11) BVBWLO PEEDEMIWM SET. Etoctite toedfeg dhh wim 2lSMro $to</p>
        <p>SSfoS I'Sis*  Vaur (!.. oso^ 00 00  ^ ^  WUL.  FoW-out  arms  go  between  rriat</p>
        <p>2178-008-1 $13.95............Your Coot $19i9f  $$.$$ 2078020-3 $28.95.....  Your  Coat  $19.99  -  $19.97  trees and spring to convert an ordinarwtwwttn a tw&amp;lt;vr!iadtMd</p>
        <p>(9)NU4JWCHU&amp;gt;t$TBRCNAM*.Bad(Swinosupfora(12) MAR9HALL BLBCTROMCE MAOMAOf TRAHNO 21780087$^ _</p>
        <p>Takes your baby Irom nurstng to safely ojp to (1$) N04JH $E(UmiTY 0</p>
        <p>217&amp;lt;H)0M.96.............tOl.r...S!3J5S6S!^......</p>
        <p>12-Rrsndtoa  (111 BVENPLORAmE-TORtTRRLiZMRnT.Slsmer, rack. 2178001 2 $15 95...... Your  Coat  $41:97-$996</p>
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        <p>new hak slyle. Ataortad omMs.</p>
        <p>7848^1-9 S17.05...............Your  Co*SUW-118.97</p>
        <p>(6) HASMO MAXlf '8 DAY (MCAMMO BED. Evofythmg a lun- ^S. iovino toon neodt ia wrapped up in this atyliah. "whe iron" Aybed. h64-900-2 Accessories include bed tray, picture Irame. cordtess teiepnone, (13) PARKI</p>
        <p>96.95..................Your  CoelUM-94.49</p>
        <p>PARKBI BROTHERS MONOPOLY* . The standard version brush, cotitb, headphones, ctary. record player, recorcte, mror. l tfw classic business oame. Buy property, buid and ralact re*. boomboK.  Ages 8 and up</p>
        <p>7876-2034 916 95...............Your  Cool  9&amp;lt;9P  -  912.97  81^001-8  910.95 .......................Your Co* 99.92</p>
        <p>(7) HASBRO POViCT PROM MAXK". Dazzfno. dreamy and (14) PRESSMAN WIOEL OF FORTUNE-. Popular game show Is dressed tor rorni^.Mawe is pedurne accented and wears a Shinn- a board game with fun tor the whole famly. 1 to 4 playerx, ages 8</p>
        <p>(2) HUFPY 20 SIVEET STYLE GIRLS BICYCLE. Perfect Purple.</p>
        <p>HKiee frme. 20"x1.75" pink rao with white faie. Hnk touring Quilted racing aaddto. vm swe* heart deaign bag.</p>
        <p>78904040W.95....... .......YourCoe1g9.9P-990.97</p>
        <p>m HUPPY 20 VORTEX BOYS BICYCll. CharcoN Pro frame.</p>
        <p>Sim speed geaiirn.\Msto resin pUtomt pedals, 20"x1.75" while rnery, sparking dress as she stepeoul tor a rnagic* night* tie prom. toaduN</p>
        <p>uniSraction* W iack ATB resin levers. Coaster brakes with front 7876^-8 914.96...............Your  Co*  13^   910.07 8154412-2 914.95................Your  Co*  90.99</p>
        <p>and roar sidopul. red cabloe. Bleck Power Flo handtobars Black turbo gr^ TBScharoo* tork. Air tol systom. Charco* contoured who* else, red cable</p>
        <p>7890403-2 9129.96.............Your  Co* SI10.0P - 900J7</p>
        <p>(4) MURRAY 29 MEN'S 10GPOD MOUNTABIBICYCLI. Carv</p>
        <p>dy Apple Red al-w*ded Mounl*n Bike frame wBi Uack rear Irianole dooe Black Mounl*n Bike fork and handtobar. KVspeed thumb ahiflars. Front and tear *de-pul calper brakae. Black iMuniain BIra</p>
        <p> POWER VfHEaSUL COYOTE. Battery powered Rechargetle &amp;lt;18) HASBRO TAROETMASTPIDECEPTICONASSOIITMPIT.</p>
        <p>O^bOBory  Three devaaMing new TSrgelmaster Oeoeplloone. MWary machines</p>
        <p>81384067 M9.95...............YourCo*S90itf *984.07 convert to robots WKl back and come with two TargalmaNer fibres</p>
        <p> _78768734 98.00..................Your  Co*  49*0  *  W.97</p>
        <p>(9) POWER WHOLS SWOTPEA* .Ou*whe* motor drive tor ex-119) HASBRO TARQETMABTER AUTOBOT ASSORTMENT.</p>
        <p>Threei</p>
        <p>tralracKon.  three exdlng new TargstmastarAutofaols. Each one changes to robot</p>
        <p>8136407-6 980.96...............Your  Co* 490*7 - 984.07 and beck and features two Nebuian figures th* cmvert to weepons</p>
        <p>(in HASBRO POOO BAL* . Bounce, jump, twW, turn and dance and back.</p>
        <p>1 toar slaeves. Black Mtmay saddto. on iroundng. bopping b*l. Stand on the dec and bounc* Ages 8 78768744 98.00..................Your Co*J9iOO  99.07</p>
        <p>and up.  PWHER  PRICE  KITCNDI.  Includes  Mmnorappkancai  stove.</p>
        <p>78761834 918.96...............Vw  Q9.97  oven, retrigerato and sink, FMures ra*i*ic st^ inbri^ lurM*h-</p>
        <p>atom. Black grips v*h corr</p>
        <p>Black plaltonn pedals. 26"x2.125" cenler-ribaHenain gurriw* tkee.</p>
        <p>44 9124.95.............Your  CO*4100*P    900.07</p>
        <p>(9) MURRAY 24 LAOCS104PEED BICYCLE. Pacific Blue fuly kjg(^ frame wkh cable stops and tunnels. Cloud white fork. 6pisce crwk. Padc Blue kMmcus^ gripe. While Murfay sadcla 24"x1%" black gumwafi fires.</p>
        <p>8080^4 988.95...............Your  CO*9T0*P*  974.97</p>
        <p>(11) PUYSKOOL SNOOPY* SNO^XME MACMNE. Simply tood colors, rol-around wheels and easy storage in any doa* Some cnjsh ordkiary ice cubes Mo snow and aprMde with Savoring, assembly</p>
        <p>8150494-4 910.96.................vSur CoaL48*0&amp;gt;* 99.09 7764^9 979.05...............Your  Co*  904*0  *  902.97</p>
        <p>(12) PNHER PRWE PUV POOO ASSORTMENT. Chidren wN  SOMtV,  NO RAINCNECKS ON TOVS</p>
        <p>have fun creating and serving IheseeighI assorted onlreea. Ages 3-7  BnMNSa'a*12</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0183" />
        <p>.. . * conlrol and 42 cm r WM UL IMd</p>
        <p>PMdo^acaoniarelat.UyiKacuiladp^iardHnp C4)mpacd^  t7SM0MS3S9S...................</p>
        <p>I From hWKitlwaMcanM. miMUUOCNHIAVy-OUTYCHAM SAW.</p>
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        <p>M2 MathomauHanamy MW7448 43604804) Ca 97</p>
        <p>(DKACKkOECKnPnMHA*  CWIW  ________</p>
        <p>ooiicu&amp;gt;iiwdin*i.COttillypaia&amp;lt;wiio4plyiood,e&amp;gt;ipioaid.Mi4on4i. iidBioardl motor.manurioto CUMlo28' paiaclaacaid. compotoontoardandptoaci. Amdtokawinnltoto Donolmawlto 44280I2-I 88005</p>
        <p>fin SWWEA^ 8.1. OM onu- 24.000 BTU dull bumar Pato cad Irama. To</p>
        <p>_  _ _ ond Utonai holdart Lava roct 201b LPlank</p>
        <p>WllaCULL0CMH8VV-0IITTCH&amp;lt;MM8W.37cu toai^aElaeliolfcIgrJSaS  VaarCoa80.08 - 880.H</p>
        <p>f*.**gy.SEri!" ***  004  liam  (1)8IWIiqMJIII8LACKMA)l MMniL8NLnia.Bla&amp;lt;*.anaadalu.mtomto</p>
        <p>w  .. t*iudad Mh'i 4^iaSto'ool^^</p>
        <p>Vaai Cea OMiOO  146.64 t0840lO7 817.06</p>
        <p>-...i-.</p>
        <p>. Vaar Coa 880.08.</p>
        <p>Vaai Coat Oia.Or. 8048 Vaat Coa 064r-8MT</p>
        <p>VtoaC.a..,047^*?rKK^3SiS%r*^...-...srstaa</p>
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        <p>CMn^e&amp;gt;IK&amp;gt;T(&amp;gt;.TOOLiaT  &amp;lt;W"OUOOITmT.Padadto.bclBaelCo.aauctodon,nniOlaU.tolayaca^gss^^  \:s55?S2o^*"   Yatoctoioo-f.  8,0842</p>
        <p> ----------------- ,j.  0^  0B8A.  30X100  BTU  dto  bum^  4  "sSwOI^ S^'  ^    *  *  -  ^</p>
        <p>Toa Coa 0,004. 800.07 yar Coa OOiO. 8740ss^iJss'Jito'D^^  aaNaj.tooi^  "sSSiiiaK</p>
        <p>^000 870S6    W4*Woa  PwototocooitoOm ttoaliwlto Itoaroe* iswkiaab 824 0^  Yoar  Coa  0604.</p>
        <p>Vaar Coa 006.0 - 840.80 20i IP M</p>
        <p>14300224 SISOOS</p>
        <p>aarCaa6684r-8,2047</p>
        <p>... 888.00</p>
        <p>BtaNubftooi</p>
        <p>nn.</p>
        <p>001 7 82005  Year  CoaOdto 8,7.04</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0184" />
        <p>UP TO</p>
        <p>25% OFF</p>
        <p>ALL ARCHERY EQUIPMENT IN STOCK.</p>
        <p>INCLUDES BOWS. ARROWS, QUIVERS, HEADS. SIGHTS &amp;amp; OTHER ACCESSORIES. NO RAINCHECKS.</p>
        <p>NO SPECIAL ORDERS</p>
        <p>UP TO30% OFFALL TERMINAL FISHING TACKLE IN STOCK.NO SPECIAL ORDERS. NO RAINCHECKS.</p>
        <p>|1) DYNAMC CLASSICS SIT-UP/CHINNMO BAR. Adjustable bar clamps Dn door lor pul-upa or sil-upe</p>
        <p>1164C41-4 SB 95.................Your  Coal  SM7 -14.97</p>
        <p>(2) DP PRINCESS SMART BELLES. One pair oi a 3 3 tt&amp;gt; Orbalron* jkimbbels.</p>
        <p>I1SO-OS8-2 S11 95.........  Your  Coat  SMB- tS.tS</p>
        <p>f3) OP EXECUTIVE DUMBBELLS. Two 3-Mo (66 ttw) bronze solid Urbalron* dumbbells</p>
        <p>1150^034 5 $1295 ______ Your  Cost  6Si9B- $7.96</p>
        <p>(4) SPALOINQ NBA BASKETBALL. Nylon windng, extra deep pebbing tuid tacky, surahanded leel Autograph adtion</p>
        <p>14020762 S199S..............Your  Coat  SMi$$    I12.$6</p>
        <p>IS) WILSON JM McMAHON AUTOGRAPH FOOTBALL. Ourabla grid htde cover. Ouralon lacing CXIcial size Indudas 6x9" action sholt. 452-187-6 $12.95  Your  Coal  $$i9P. 17.97</p>
        <p>)OPBOOYTONE* 329. Adjustablapoailion tool piales FoarrKXwered ndgrips Maldsd loam seal Heavy-duty rectangular seal rails Teiesoop-j Irame lor storage Fool straps. Whilo hamo</p>
        <p>1156113-7 $100.95 ..................Your  Coat  999.97 - 979.97</p>
        <p>mOPORBATRON* BARBELLTDUMBBEU SET. 64 kgs (140 lbs ) rust, noise or mar Includes kxir 6.5 kg. and two 2 kg lihior docs, and lwo6.Skg andlour4kg tAiedNcsTwoVhkg. behdiaped cast iron han-bie bdl ooMrs 31" plailic slaeve. Two 18" dumbbel ban wh 4N" pMic Heaves CompMe course ol ralnxdlon</p>
        <p>flio-IOS 3 $49.95 ......  Your  Coat  994i9F  929.97</p>
        <p>(9) OP 346 FITMSS BENCH. Easy to assemble Leg MAmiI allachmani</p>
        <p>FiA ranged motion on leg curt. Medium wide barbel supports lor proper gripping d barbel and to help prevent barbel tippage Adjustable inckne posiliorw 1M" squwe sted hame. Electrosuikcally painted Wghl capacilies ltd 600 lbs.: inclined  4(X) fes: leg M - 1(X) lbs. Thick loam-padded beveled cushions with vinyl covering Made in USA.</p>
        <p>1150-097-2 $79.95 ...................Your  Coal  949.99 - $^.97</p>
        <p>m HUFFY PRO SNOT I BACKBOARD A GOAL. Weeiherprod 54x36x1'</p>
        <p>fiberglass N.B.A. endorsed backboard. IB" steel goal</p>
        <p>1586011-5 $69 95  Your  Cool  99M9-$48.94</p>
        <p>(10) HUFFY ELEVATOR POLE SYSTEM. Fint truly adjustable pde aysism. Alows mfinie adjuslatxfily on a 3' vertical radius. Features triple lock plate mecharxam lor strerfgfe. reldxlly and saMy; exclusive mounting system that accommodHas ai backboard panda. 2 year limited war ranly: adjustable motmkng system: powder cooled 3W round pda: mounting hardware</p>
        <p>1588 031 3 $99 95 ...................Your  Coal $99drT -  $78.97</p>
        <p>(11) THERMOS 34-QUART COOLER. Blue and  while</p>
        <p>21'^(s "U12'/fc;Wxt3&amp;lt;V("H MIr's $200 rebate good thru 12131188. 12860666 $15.95....................Your  Coat  99469 - 99.99</p>
        <p>(12) IGLOO 1943UART PLAYMATE KE CHEST. Red and while coder with pressure III lid.</p>
        <p>1280603-3 $1695...................Your  CoatS19.9P-  $11.97</p>
        <p>(13) STANLEY 1-QUART STAMLESS STia VACUUM BOTTLE. WNh cuptesp</p>
        <p>10126061 $2995 ...................Your  Coat 999i94   $19.99</p>
        <p>(14) COLEMAN PERSONAL 9 COOLER.</p>
        <p>11266563 $10.95 ..................Your  Coal SMB- $9.99</p>
        <p>(IS) PENN TENNIS BALLS. Can d 3 HEAVY-OUTY.</p>
        <p>13806016 $3 65 Orange  Your  Coal $8ifB-$2.09</p>
        <p>1380602-4 $3 65 Yallosr  Your  Cost 436B-  $2.09</p>
        <p>13806067 $3 65 Two Tone.........Your  Coal $3r*B-$2.09</p>
        <p>REGULAR DUTY.</p>
        <p>1386951 2 $365 Yallow..........Your  CoalBtilB-  $2.09</p>
        <p>(19) WILSON QRAPMTE MATRIX MBSI2E RACKET. Graphite iberglasa rack with power, led and maneuverabiMy</p>
        <p>1452-1860 $4995 ................Your Coat S394F - $34.97</p>
        <p>(17) MacQREQOR JACK MCKUUS RKMfT-HAND GOLDEN BEAR 9-PIECE IRON SET. Prsciaon weighied with Kghtwdghi sled shdls 3-9 and pitching wedge</p>
        <p>1322 0336 $139.95   Your  Coat  4*19.84 - $109.94</p>
        <p>(19) HacGREGOR JACK NICKLAUS RIGHT-HANO GOLDEN BEAR 3-PIECE WOOD SET. 1,3 wtd 5 woods with Permawood* lammded heads, fightwoighl sted shaRs.</p>
        <p>1322632 2 $90 05 ...................Your CoatS98i99 - $99.94</p>
        <p>(19) ItoeOREOOR JACK NICKUUS GOLDEN BEAR GOLF BALU.</p>
        <p>Ourabla. Surlyn cover. Dozen</p>
        <p>1322631-4 $17 SO............... Your  Cost 4947 - $9.97</p>
        <p>(20) DELUXE GOLF UMBRELLA.</p>
        <p>1242602 2 $15 95 .................. Your  Cool 91949-$9.97</p>
        <p>BrenWa'a - Page IS</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0185" />
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        <p>"We're The One For YouT</p>
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        <pb facs="00097037_0186" />
        <p> A,</p>
        <p>SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 18,1SSS</p>
        <p>Greenvflle, Nordi Cardina</p>
        <p>7</p>
        <p>" fiCOM</p>
        <p>C</p>
        <p>Ctoifieds Get Results!</p>
        <p>. m 752-61^6</p>
        <p>TheWbst ; Up-To-Date e\fvs^&amp;amp;'^rt8</p>
        <p>Dont MhIWs Weeks</p>
        <p>PARtoE</p>
        <p>For Home Delivery Dial</p>
        <p>_J:^52-6166</p>
        <p>BLONDIE</p>
        <p>BY DEAN YOUNG &amp;amp; STAN DRAKE</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0187" />
        <p>DENNIS THE MENACE</p>
        <p>BY HANK KETCHAM</p>
        <p>ANDY CAPP</p>
        <p>BY SMYTHE</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0188" />
        <p>BY WATTERSON</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0189" />
        <p>DOONESBURY</p>
        <p>TlxmimuumTOSAY 5PBBCHH iJusTtxmpeeL^o.i ^JFCW SnLLHAyaAHARP VMBTHINKIhtSOF MiSeiFASA GPOUJN'UP!</p>
        <p>m.wo. mvepy</p>
        <p>CONFLICWP.</p>
        <p>BABm I THINK</p>
        <p>msucH</p>
        <p>MiRAoee, fFsrm' ARBNTT BRAVON THBY? TDRBALLY</p>
        <p>BY GARRY TRUDEAU</p>
        <p>I tem.KNeu  ____</p>
        <p>OUN6IN6 A  INB/ER-TH06HT</p>
        <p>^ROUP HAmerTALLUOUU)</p>
        <p>- B^sonm.</p>
        <p>FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE</p>
        <p>STOP IT!! U)H/ CPMT you</p>
        <p>aizfleem, ifbnvtmin</p>
        <p>HPPEMEDi MlCHEL, ybPge.t)STi(</p>
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        <p>CNDO lStlERlHfir VtoBJlH ENjoy.'</p>
        <p>LOOK AT y^. V^Re. BRCfTriERRNDSlSTER.</p>
        <p>yb Mean the. UtoRLDTbECH</p>
        <p>BY LYNN JOHNSTON</p>
        <p>MlCHEL,lFf=\MVrmNS- , HRPPENeDID lizzie,V&amp;lt;a) D</p>
        <p>BEDEN/RSTHlfeD!</p>
        <p>BORN LOSER</p>
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        <p>OWHDU?</p>
        <p>I'LL 6ve t30^WC\CfOp.cmT)</p>
        <p>BY ART SANSOM</p>
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        <pb facs="00097037_0190" />
        <p>GARFIELD</p>
        <p>CATS ARE. THE GREATEST HUNTERS ON EARTH</p>
        <p>i,;</p>
        <p>REMAININGr AS60LTELV MOTIONLESS,</p>
        <p>CATS WAIT FOR THE PERFECT MOMENT TO LONGE...</p>
        <p>BY JIM DAVIS</p>
        <p>WHAt cor/!</p>
        <p>I WftiTio mefTi^e fm Ani iNPMW-SOTaiWioeE-rHflT IHE l/VILV PEl/IL'5 POnrrCHWT</p>
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        <p>MUL MIKE VD LIKE VOOK 0K/WOF7Tf</p>
        <p>^eUT Of COURSE WE'VE KEPT THE LOOK FEMININE 8V MRKIND RLI MHTCNIN6 JACKETS NICE AND SHORT, DRAWING THE HlORLO'S ATTENTION TO VOUR MASNIflCCNT OUN PLAiO rear ENOSff</p>
        <p>^VOlTRE dOlNr</p>
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        <p>TIFF ANO IMAOINE UNAT THE nWtSH* MENT UMU 8E If HIE REJECT THIS ONE, CNARIENE.</p>
        <pb facs="00097037_0191" />
        <p>HAGAR THE HORRIBLE</p>
        <p>BY DIK BROWNEWill you have aM ^PETIZgP/$||2 2</p>
        <p>YE$, liL HAVE A LA(2&amp;amp;E CHEESE PIZZA.. With  PEPPEP5,SAUSAGE, MU$M(20Q/VV5 ANP ANCHOVIES</p>
        <p>raw!</p>
        <p>OUCH!'THAT ONE PALLY HMPT!;(JOOP HfAvfNi! UrHATi HAPPeNINS?,ooH!I'OIV/</p>
        <p>f^tcfTPUT^ THC/MplNi paivf^/... JAv^tiN^ $TA^^INe Aie- fbLE VALTe/^5 CgA^HIN(? INP M^... AM 1 (30|lv/(3 1t&amp;gt;  ^/?e  Ap5UNP  ^fOL  W/ffN T&amp;gt;/Oi-YAlplT^' AJgg. oyg^l  ^  ^</p>
        <p>e 19aabyNEA.Inc.</p>
        <p>Tv4AN/E5&amp;gt;6|</p>
        <p>CAN YOU TRUST YOUR EYES? There are at leaat six dier. enees in drawing details between top and bottom panels How quicWy can you find them? Check answers with those below</p>
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        <p>unidr Whir</p>
        <p>by Hal Kaufman</p>
        <p>e WORD PLAYtChllmge:nnd tlx 10-letter words that end _  .  -</p>
        <p>with NATION, according to the following def*</p>
        <p>^Inltlona: 1, Candidates</p>
        <p>HOMER VALUES COUNT UP A bonus clause In the contract of a baseball slugger entitles him to a sum ol money lor each home run he hits up to and Including his 2Sth.</p>
        <p>Home run values are reckoned as toUows: One cent for the first; two cents for the second: lour cents for the third; eight cents for the fourth; etc., doubling each time.</p>
        <p>In round figures, then, what WIN be the value of the players 2Sth home run? And what potential value  has  the bonus</p>
        <p>overall? .</p>
        <p>P.S.; rikslxaable.</p>
        <p>*  ooo'tsct</p>
        <p>jw\o  si m'isii</p>
        <p>MKOW  It  92  ON iOUMH</p>
        <p>aim. 2. Royal crowning ceremony. 3. Act of estrangement. 4. Big explosion. 5. Sluggish state. 6. Thoughtfulness.</p>
        <p>How quickly can you * find fitting worrto?</p>
        <p>'uonwiiiinu t uooMaoia ' uoiioiioioa &amp;gt; MonoMHv t -uoiwuojoo c -Mum</p>
        <p>e WHAT SAY? Itne verra Insbu tltpo ura  Latin or a synthetic language? Neither, common adage wHh misspaced words.</p>
        <p>'SmoS a wq 0||W mmu n.</p>
        <p>2 NATION</p>
        <p>IN</p>
        <p> 3____NATIO</p>
        <p> 4----NATION</p>
        <p>5.._,._NAT10N</p>
        <p>6^NATION</p>
        <p>la this It's a What</p>
        <p>HEADS UPl Apply the following crayons or colored pencHs neatly to the amusing soana above: 1Red. 2LL purple. S-YeNow. 4LL brown. SPleeh tones. S .(keen. 7Ok. brown. Ok. purpia.</p>
        <p>TYHN CL0WN8I TWo of the downs shown above WWch two? Study aubfects carefully before you</p>
        <p>SPELLBINDER</p>
        <p>lefftrt In fha wh^d below to form</p>
        <p>two complete words:</p>
        <p>'</p>
        <p>THIN Korel points eech for iff ..............</p>
        <p>found among the letters.</p>
        <p>Trv to score af least II aoinft</p>
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