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        <p>-i-1  [  ,.r</p>
        <p>-r  i:</p>
        <p>Local News  A2  Accent  A9</p>
        <p>Editorials  A4  Obituaries  AlO</p>
        <p>State News  A5  Crossword  B5</p>
        <p>Reagan Wont Suffer In Retirement</p>
        <p>A8</p>
        <p>Virginia Eases Past North Carolina. 106-83 B1THE DAILY REFLECTOR</p>
        <p>Greenville, N.C.Monday Afternoon, January 16,1989</p>
        <p>25i</p>
        <p>*Bush Leads King Honors By Recalling His Dream</p>
        <p>By John A. Bolt</p>
        <p>THE ASSOCIATED PRESS</p>
        <p>ATLANTA  Black leaders nationwide remembered the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. on what would have been his 60th birthday by urging a new generation to use the rights they enjoy because of his struggles.</p>
        <p>Today is a federal holiday honor</p>
        <p>ing the slain civil rights leader, and the commemorations included the swearing in of the first blacks on the Dallas County, Ala., Commission in more than a century. The ceremony was scheduled for Selma, where King began the 1965 Selma-to-Mon-tgomery march that resulted in passage of the Voting Rights Act.</p>
        <p>The Liberty Bell in Philadelphia was to be symbolically tapped today and church and school bells were be</p>
        <p>ing rung in Michigan. Golfers were to tee off in a suburban Los Angeles tournament benefiting Kings Southern Christian Leadership Conference, and the Rev. Jesse Jackson was scheduled as the featured speaker at Kings church in Atlanta.</p>
        <p>President-elect Bush attended an ecumenical prayer breakfast organized by the Inaugural Afro-American Committee in Washington, where he pledged that</p>
        <p>as president he will work to fulfill Kings dreams of racial equality.</p>
        <p>Bush called King an American hero, saying, He lived a heros life. He dreamed a heros dreams. He left a heros indelible mark on the mind and imagination of a great nation.</p>
        <p>Other events in the nations capital included a benefit and fashion show.</p>
        <p>Jacksons keynote address at</p>
        <p>Ebenezer Baptist Church capped a week-long observance in. King's hometown. At the church Sunday, Kings widow urged Bush to hold true to his call for "a kinder, gentler nation and to impose strict sanctions against South Africa.</p>
        <p>In addition. Corelta Scott King said in her annual "State of the Dream speech, the United Stales must do more^by providing education and economic assistance direct</p>
        <p>ly to black South Africans who bear the brunt of suffering in that troubled land,</p>
        <p>"I think we ought to take the president-elect at his word and hold him to his call for a kinder, gentler nation where peace and justice are in fact a reality. she said. But a kinder, gentler nation will require kinder, gentler leaders.</p>
        <p>(See king, A-10)</p>
        <p>a</p>
        <p>Jenkins Memorial Servicie</p>
        <p>Planned Tuesday Afternoon</p>
        <p>Hunt Calls Him An Outstanding North Carolinian</p>
        <p>By Stuart Savage</p>
        <p>THE DAILY REFLECTOR</p>
        <p>Memorial services for Dr. Leo W. Jenkins, who died Saturday, will be conducted at 2 p.m. Tuesday at St. James United Methodist Church on East Sixth Street by the Revs. William K. Quick and Caswell Shaw.</p>
        <p>Jenkins, 75, retired as chancellor of East Carolina University in 1978 after 17 years as the schools top administrative officer. He began his career at ECU in 1947 as dean and became president of then-East Carolina College in January 1960.</p>
        <p>He had been undergoing radiation and chemotherapy treatment since May for cancer and was admitted to Pitt County Memorial Hospital on Jan. 7 in serious condition.</p>
        <p>Former Gov. Jim Hunt said this morning that, I think Leo Jenkins was one of the half-dozen most outstanding North Carolinians in our history. He was a builder and creator and East Carolina Universitys national prominence and medical school will always stand as a monument to his determination and leadership. </p>
        <p>Hunt said, It was my great privilege to work with him and leaders of eastern North Carolina as we passed</p>
        <p>legislation to establish the medical school and I put the funds for the new facilities in my first budget as governor.</p>
        <p>All of us in eastern North Carolina are blessed because he believed in uS and spent his life working for us.</p>
        <p>According to Gov. Jim Martin, East Carolina University is a living testament to Leo Jenkins vision, enthusiasm and determination.</p>
        <p>Robert Morgan, former North Carolina attorney general, U.S. senator and now head of the State Bureau of Investigation, said Jenkins felt like the average common boy and girl in eastern North Carolina was entitled to a university education just like all the others and he meant to make ECU a great university. </p>
        <p>Morgan, an ECU graduate and former chairman of the schools board of trustees, said, some of the toughest battles I have ever been in were when I follow*^ ed Leo Jenkins.</p>
        <p>"I thought he was the most dynamic leader and best organizer and promoter that North Carolina has seen in my lifetime. He loved eastern North Carolina and made</p>
        <p>(See TLESI)\Y.A-3)</p>
        <p>New Signal System Blamed As 110 Die In Train Wreck</p>
        <p>THE ASSOCIATED PRESS</p>
        <p>DHAKA, Bangladesh  Operators using a newly installed system may have given the wrong signal to two trains that crashed head-on, killing at least 110 people and injuring 1,000 in the countrys worst rail accident, officials said.</p>
        <p>About 40 people remained in critical condition today, according to one hospital official, who spoke on condition of anonymity, and the government declared a day of mourning.</p>
        <p>The 10-car express train and seven-car mail train slammed into each other Sunday outside the farming village of Malzdi Khan, sending cars tumbling and tossing passengers into freshly-harvested rice paddies.</p>
        <p>The express train was traveling at about 50 mph, the mail train coming to a halt, authorities said.</p>
        <p>Communications Secretary Mazurul Karim estimated that more than 2,000 people were aboard the</p>
        <p>trains, many of them Moslem pilgrims. He said, however, that people routinely ride between the cars and on*the roofs, making a precise count difficult.</p>
        <p>Rescue workers using two large cranes to pull apart the crumbled wreckage finished the search for victims early today and reopened the track. Karim said no bodies were found inside.</p>
        <p>Shortly after the accident, senior officials of the state-run railroad said they suspected operators may not have known how to properly work a sophisticated digital signaling system installed five days earlier.</p>
        <p>Human failure and wrong signaling may have caused the two trains to come on the same track, leading to the collision, said one official, who spoke on condition of anonymity.</p>
        <p>Dhaka newspapers on Monday blamed the accident on human er-</p>
        <p>language daily, the Khabar, quoted ' witnesses as saying either the wrong signal or no signal failed to keep the two trains off the same track.</p>
        <p>But Communications Minister Anwar Hossain disputed their suspicions, saying more than 200 trains had traveled on the track since the system was installed Tuesday. The track on which the crash occurred shares north- and southbound traffic, so trains often must wait on sidings for trains going in the opposite direction to pass.</p>
        <p>The government appointed a commission to investigate the collision and ordered that the panels findings be ready within two weeks.</p>
        <p>Koreas</p>
        <p>To Hold</p>
        <p>Peace</p>
        <p>Session</p>
        <p>THE .AS,S0C1ATED PRE.SS</p>
        <p>The Daily Reflector/Thomas Forrest</p>
        <p>ECU Chancellor-Emeritus Leo Jenkins, 1913-1989</p>
        <p>SEOUL, South Korea  Communist North Korea today agreed to rival South Korea's proposals to hold the highest-level political and military talks on easing tensions since the Korean War.</p>
        <p>Prime Minister Yon Hyung Mok of North Korea accepted the souths proposal that he and his South Korean counterpart, Kang Young-hoon, should head their respective delegations at talks to be held in both country's capitals,</p>
        <p>"The north and south should remove the state of tension which is driving the same people toward disaster, Yon said in a letter to his Kang. He said the two Koreas should prepare a firm foundation for peaceful unification.</p>
        <p>Yon proposed a meeting at the Panmunjom border truce site on Feb. 8 at which vice ministers would work out terms for full-scale talks. No date was mentioned for the main talks, and the two sides are expected to face problems on agreeing on terms.</p>
        <p>Yon repeated the norths demand for separate talks with South Korea and the United States on reducing tension on the divided peninsula. He also demanded an end to annual South Korea-U.S. military exercises.</p>
        <p>It is obvious to everyone that the north and south can not fundamentally resolve the question of peace by setting aside the United States, which is the party responsible for the aggravation of'tension, the letter said. ^</p>
        <p>Pentagon Job Filled</p>
        <p>South Korea and the United States have rejected the norths demands for separate three-way talks.</p>
        <p>Soldiers, fire officials and villagers pulled at least 100 bodies from the trains on Sunday, and another 10 people died at hospitals, police and railway officials said.</p>
        <p>THE ASSOCIATED PRESS</p>
        <p>ror.</p>
        <p>Iif:</p>
        <p>Weather</p>
        <p>The Sangbad, an independent Bengali-language daily, quoted unidentified railway officials as saying the express train, ignored a signal to stop and allow the mail train to pass. Another Bengali-</p>
        <p>At the scene, sobbing relatives tried to look for loved ones among rows of bodies laid alongside the single track, but were held back by police.</p>
        <p>Oh, God! Bring brother back! cried Sunil Daniel, pressing his arms against his chest.</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON - The No. 2 job at the Pentagon will go to Donald Atwood Jr., vice chairman of General Motors Corp., sources in Presidentelect Bushs transition operation said today.  *</p>
        <p>Atwood, 63, is the lop choice of Defense Secretary-designate John Tower to be deputy secretary of defense.</p>
        <p>woods selection would be announced Tuesday,</p>
        <p>GM spokesman Jim Crellin said today in Detroit , that AtwiKxi was unavailable for comment.</p>
        <p>Mr. Atwood is aware hes on a list of candidates for a position of deputy secretary of defense, Crellin said. He does not feel that it would be appropriate to comment on the matter until a final decision.</p>
        <p>Seoul agreed last month to the norths call for high-level political and military talks on reducing tension. It also proposed that the prime ministers head the delegations to make the talks the highest since the war.</p>
        <p>Transition officials, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, said At-</p>
        <p>The likelihood that Atwood would be selected was first reported by The New York Times.</p>
        <p>While agreeing to upgrade talks to that level, the north has rejected the souths proposal for separate economic and Red Cross humanitarian talks. It said economic issues can be resolved after the political issues and Red Cross talks are outside anv official control.</p>
        <p>Accu-Weather forecast for Tuesday Daytime Conditions and High Temps</p>
        <p>Biologist Sees Threat In County Development</p>
        <p>By Greg Laudick</p>
        <p>THE DAILY REFLECTOR</p>
        <p>Oieas Accu-WMthw, IncForecast</p>
        <p>Clear tonight. Low near 30. Sunny Tuesday. High in mid 50s.</p>
        <p>One of the highest quality areas of natural environment in Pitt County could suffer as a result of the unintended consequences of development, says an East Carolina University professor.</p>
        <p>Dr. Vincent J. Beilis, an ECU professor of biology, says the bluffs on the south side of the'Tar River west of the Falkland-to-Belvoir bridge constitute the highest quality natural environment remaining in Pitt County.Looking Ahead</p>
        <p>Fair Wednesday through Friday. Lows near 30. Highs in 50s.</p>
        <p>But Beilis says that, at the current rate of development, virtually the entire upland portion of the area will be lost as wildlife habitat within five years.</p>
        <p>The impact on adjacent wetland</p>
        <p>high priority by quality developers who will incorporate natural surroundings into their projects, he said.</p>
        <p>Currently situated in northwest Pitt County is the 46-acre, state-owned Otter Creek Natural Area,</p>
        <p>Beilis said the area is used for ecology, geology and botany students at East Carolina University .</p>
        <p>Graduate students and faculty have carried out research projects there and the area has been registered with the N.C. Natural Heritage program, he said.</p>
        <p>Beilis said the intensity of the developments in that area has the potential to fragment the wetland habitat.</p>
        <p>The rivers and floodplains have been the corridors of migration by the animal populations, he said. By closing off these corridors, youre fragmenting that habitat.</p>
        <p>veins and arteries leading to the heart of an individual. The eventual result will be the death of that individual, he said.</p>
        <p>Beilis said the restriction of wildlife movement along streams can lead to the impairment of the gene pool and loss of vigor to the population which could ultimately lead to local extinction of various species.</p>
        <p>People need to recognize the con-s^uences of this curent development activity and decide just how . much of the land we need to have developed and how much is to remain natural. he said. A choice for development is a choice which cannot be reversed.</p>
        <p>habitat may be equally devastating ili' </p>
        <p>unless wildlife values are given a H's almost like shutting off the</p>
        <p>Beilis suggests the Pitt County Planning Board can develop guidelines and procedures for protecting the natural heritage while encouraging high quality development.</p>
        <p>One such development proposed for the area is River Plantation, a combination golf course and residential area.</p>
        <p>Stephen K. Gwaltney, president of Golf Development Group, said the development would include a three-story golf clubhouse, an 18-hole golf course and 4(X) .75-acre lots.</p>
        <p>Gwaltney said the Golf Development Group has expressed a willingness to work with the college and listen to university officials to help minimize potential environmental damage.</p>
        <p>We have planned from the beginning to set aside a portion of the property for natural areas and parks which will be undisturbed and to provide a permanent habitat for the natural vegetation and animal species, he said.</p>
        <p>The subdivision will have restrictions that homeowners will have to have permits to cut down trees more</p>
        <p>than 6 inches in diameter, he said Gwaltney said the engineering in the process of being completi and construction of homes shou begin this summer.</p>
        <p>Jeannette Cox. president of tl real estate firm which is marketii the property, said an increasii number of Greenville citizens a looking at residential properties the area northwest of Greenvil because of the close proximity of tl Medical School.</p>
        <p>Several developments are in th area now and 1 believe well be se ing more growth out there in tl next few years, she said.</p>
        <p>She said River Plantation will be valuable asset to the area, adding the countys tax base and providii area golfing enthusiasts an ad( tional course.</p>
        <p>Greenville only has two g( courses and there is usually waiting list for membership to ph on those, she said</p>
        <p>m --*</p>
        <p>'"T</p>
        <pb facs="00097138_0002" />
        <p>In The Area</p>
        <p>foundation s efforts to encourage tree planting in America, are sugar maple, white flowering dogwood, pin oak. white pine, red maple, birch. American redbud, silver maple, red oak and Colorado blue spruce.</p>
        <p>The trees, to be shipped postpaid between Feb.l and May 31 with planting instructions, are guaranteed to grow or thev will be replaced.</p>
        <p>To become a member of the foundation and receive the trees, send a SIO membership contribution by Jan. 31 to Ten Trees. .National .Arbor Day Foundation. 100 .Arbor Ave., .Nebraska Citv. .Neb. 68410.</p>
        <p>Speir Is Re-Elected To National Panel</p>
        <p>Bethel resident Betty Speir was re-elected Saturday to' her second four-year term as  North Carolina representative to the Democratic .National Committee.</p>
        <p>She was returned to the position her fellow Democratic Executive Committee "</p>
        <p>ELLIOT R. FL TRELL</p>
        <p>President Elected</p>
        <p>Elliot Futrell recently was elected to his second three-year term as president of the N.C. State Board of .Mortuary Science.</p>
        <p>An employee of Seymour Funeral Home in Goldsboro. Futrell is a graduate of Stokes-Pactolus High School and is the son of Mr. and .Mrs Esper A. Futrell of Bethel.</p>
        <p>Forestry Open House</p>
        <p>A Forestry Open House ' will be held Feb. 7 from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. in room 201 of the Pitt County office building on N.C. 43 west of* Greenville.</p>
        <p>Officials from the N.C. Forest Service. N.C. .Ag.ricultural Extension Service. .N.C. Wildlife Resources Commission and others will answer questions about woodlands.</p>
        <p>For more information call 830-6361.</p>
        <p>Alumni To Meet</p>
        <p>.Alumni of Fayetteville State University will meet Tuesday at 6:30 p.m. at South Greenville School. For more information call 830-3746 or 355-6172.</p>
        <p>Samed To Deans List</p>
        <p>Marion Barnes Jr.. who earned a 3.5 grade point average, has been named to the deans list at A&amp;amp;T State University in Greensboro. He is the son of .Mr. and Mrs. .Marion Barnes Sr. of Farmville.</p>
        <p>members during a Raleigh meeting. .Also elected to the committee were .Muriel Offerman of Duplin County; Haney Gant, former mayor of Charlotte, and Walker.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Speir said the first issue facing the committee</p>
        <p>BETTY SPEIR</p>
        <p>Senator Russell</p>
        <p>major is the</p>
        <p>election of a chairman at a meeting Feb. 9 in Washington, D C.</p>
        <p>A Pitt County native, .Mrs. Speir is executive director of the Pitt County-Educational Foundation and coordinator of vocational support personnel for the Pitt County schools. She is former chairman of the Pitt County Democratic^Party and has served as chairman and two-term vice chairman of the North Carolina Democratic Party. She served on the 1988 .National Credentials Committee and the 1^ Site Selection Committee</p>
        <p>Raleigh Attorney Lawrence Davis, elected Saturday as .North Carolina Democratic Party chairman, is the brother of Greenville resident Patsy Duke, wife of Judge W. Russell Duke Jr.</p>
        <p>a 1985 model Nissan truck was, taken from Hard Times nightclub on Greenville Boulevard in an incident reported Sunday at 1:55 p.m.</p>
        <p>Officer R G. .Mendenhall said three electric guitars worth SI.700 were reported stolen from Hard Times in an incident reported Sun-dav at 1:49 a.m</p>
        <p>Officer E.L. Butts said two turntables and a mixing board, with a combined value of S700. were taken from 309 Student St. in a break-in reported at 3:25 a.m.. while Officer P.K. Burrows said a surf board rack was taken from a car parked at 10.5D Cedar Court in an incident reported at8:02p.m.</p>
        <p>Balloon Society Meets</p>
        <p>The Down East Balloon Society-wili meet Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. at the Library,'Recreation Complex, 2000 Cedar Lane.</p>
        <p>Interest Group Meets</p>
        <p>The Parkinson disease interest group for patients and their families will meet Thursday at 1 p.m. at First Presbyterian Church. For information contact Jane Worsley at 756-2463.</p>
        <p>Chamber President</p>
        <p>M. Paran Wheeler of Greenville has been elected to a second term as president of the 43-county Eastern North Carolina Chamber of Commerce during 1989.</p>
        <p>Michael Ryan of Greenville and Ray Boleman of Rocky Mount were elected vice presidents. James Fulghum was re-elected secretary and Janna Draper was re-elected treasurer.</p>
        <p>Wheeler is the executive vice president and manager of the Belk group office in Rocky Mount.</p>
        <p>Meeting Cancelled</p>
        <p>The Pitt County Sediment and Erosion Control Commission will not meet in January- because there are no new- plans for review.</p>
        <p>Free Trees Offered</p>
        <p>Ten free trees will be given to each person who joins the National Arbor Day Foundation during January.</p>
        <p>The trees, which are part of the</p>
        <p>Ms. Shinn Appointed</p>
        <p>Greenville .Mayor Pro-Tern Lorraine Shinn has been appointed to a one-year term on the energy, environment and natural resources committee of the North Carolina League of Municipalities.</p>
        <p>Ms. Shinn, who is regional manager of the state Department of Natural Resources and Communitv De</p>
        <p>velopment in Washington. .N.C., is a member of the Greenville Recreation and Parks Commission, the East Carolina Universitv Chancellor's Society, the Pitt County .Mental Health Association and the Governors Commission on the Fam-ily.</p>
        <p>Church Celebrates</p>
        <p>Mount Calvary- Free Will Baptist Church is celebrating Dr. Martin Luther Kings birthday- with the theme His Truth is Marching On" today at 3 p.m.</p>
        <p>A discussion will be held with area youth and three East Carolina University faculty members: Larry' Smith, assistant vice chancellor for minority affairs, Lilia G. Holsley of the school of education and Dermis E. Chestnut of the department of psychology.</p>
        <p>Youth participants are Kelena Everett, Felicia Higgs, Lori Higgs, Philip Higgs Jr. and Eric Williams.</p>
        <p>Aurora Fisherman Is Early Victim In Dcean Drug Fight</p>
        <p>By Jon Glass</p>
        <p>VIRGI.M.AN-PILOT &amp;amp; THE LEDGER-ST.AR</p>
        <p>^ AURORA, .N.C.  Eight months ago, a few- marijuana ;seeds and part of a marijuana cigarette almost put 'commercial fisherman Michael Jimbo" Ireland out of business.</p>
        <p>Even now, the Aurora fishing captain cringes at the approach of a Coast Guard patrol boat. And the bitterness lingers.</p>
        <p>You don't forget something like this, Ireland. 30, said recently.</p>
        <p>On May 3* Irelands $500,000 boat, the 90-foot Lorraine Carol, was seized at Ocracoke Inlet by shotgun-wielding .Coast Guardmen who found the marijuana remnants in the vessels crew quarters. The vessel and its catch -22.000 pounds of scallops and fish  were confiscated by Ithe U.S. Customs Service.</p>
        <p>I Ireland, who said he was unaware of drug use among :his 12-member crew and later voluntarily took drug tests to bolster his defense, faced felony charges of transporting illegal drugs and misdemeanor possession of drugs. Even worse, he said. Customs agents threat-.ened to sell his boat at public auction.</p>
        <p>"When they read me my rights and told me the charges were punishable by a $250,000 fine, 10 vears in prison or both, I can't imagine any nightmare compared to that, he said.</p>
        <p>The charges against him were later dropped, and his boat was returned. But scars remain. The ordeal cosU Ireland $20,000 in legal fees and $80,000 in lost income during the two weeks Customs held his boat. And he had to pay a $250 fine. The crew members charged with possessing the marijuana were fined $75.</p>
        <p>Unwittingly, Ireland had become one of the nation's first commercial fishermen to fall victim to the Reagan administrations ^ugh war on drugs. At the heart of its new anti-drug effort was a controversial policy called zero tolerance," a hardline attack on even small amounts of drugs found on vessels, vehicles and aircraft crossing U.S. borders.</p>
        <p>Under the program, federal authorities seized 5,073 cars, 229 trucks, 133 vessels and 9 aircraft between March 21 and Dec, 6, said Richard R. Weart, a Customs special agent in Washington, D C.</p>
        <p>The whole point of zero tolerance is that drug use of any amount, as well as trafficking, is wrong and the government is not going to allow it," Dennis Murphy, Customs district director in Virginia, said recently. Our country right now is being devastated by drug abuse. What were trying to do is to get a growing intolerance (of drug use) in society. This is a good place to start, because everybody knows that drug abuse takes place on some of these boats.</p>
        <p>Its the seizure of assets that gets the headlines, but</p>
        <p>its a change in attitude that w'ere trying to get as much as anything</p>
        <p>The confiscation of Irelands vessel, however, sent chills through commercial fishermen in North Carolina and Virginia. Suddenly, they realized that their industry w as under seige.</p>
        <p>In the Coast Guard's 5th District, which is based in Portsmouth and stretches from New Jersey to North Carolina, a half-dozen fishing boats with personal use, amounts of drugs on board were seized in three weeks last spring.</p>
        <p>Since April, when the Coast Guard began enforcing the policy in the 5th District, which is based in Portsmouth and stretches from New Jersey to North Carolina, 21 vessels have been seized, including 11 commercial fishing boats. The rest involved recreational boaters, said Michael Ragsdale, chief of the districts law enforcement branch. All the seized vessels have been returned.</p>
        <p>We didnt know this was going on, and then boom! recalled Bradley Brauer, president of the East Coast Fisheries Association and owner of East Coast Fishing and Scallop Co. in Newport News. Its real tough when youre sitting here faced w'ith losing a vessel because a crewman slips a joint on the boat. We were at that point, and thats scary.</p>
        <p>It was insane, said Jerry Schill, executive director of the North Carolina Fisheries Association in Bayboro. Some boats stayed in port because they were afraid. They were so confused and fearful of having their boats seized that they stayed in port until they found out what was expected of them.</p>
        <p>Irelands ordeal became a rallying cry, and the zero tolerance program came under criticism. The debate even reached the halls of Congress; In November, a law to provide legal safeguards for innocent boat owners went into effect.</p>
        <p>As a result of the outcry, Schill said, fishermen have reason to hope that cases of overzealous enforcement of the policy are behind them.</p>
        <p>On Dec. 5, the two fisheries organizations, after months of negotiations with Customs officials, signed agreements with the federal agency that will likely reduce the number of outright vessel seizures. The pacts, the first of their kind in the country, require boat owners who enter into them to take steps to keep drugs off their vessels.</p>
        <p>In exchange, these fishermen will get much more favorable treatment from Customs agents investigating user amounts of drugs, Murphy said.</p>
        <p>Im not holding anybodys feet to the fire to sign an agrment, Murphy said. It certainly would help (fishermen). These agreements frame what the Customs Service believes are prudent steps boat owners should take. MORE</p>
        <p>Council Will Take</p>
        <p>%</p>
        <p>Up Zoning Request</p>
        <p>A request to rezone a .14-acre tract of land off South Village Drive for commercial purposes will be one Of the items considered by the 'Greenville Planning and Zoning Commission Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. in the council chambers of City Hall.</p>
        <p>The request by Walter L, Williams  is to rezone the property, located be- tween Memorial Drive and West Village Drive, from R-6 (residential) . toCH (highway commercial).</p>
        <p>; Williams also has requested that a ; .01-acre second tract, located ' northeast of tract 1, be rezoned from :CHtoR-6.</p>
        <p>.* The commission also will consider</p>
        <p>a request by Collice C. Moore to close Smith Street (Chestnut Street) west of Memorial Drive across from the existing Chestnut Street; a request by Edward Carson Dail to close a portion of an unnamed street in Westwood Subdivision east of Carlson Street, and a request by the city development department regarding the citys current surety requirements for subdivision provements.</p>
        <p>Residential development in .... downtown rea and space needs requirements of the MD-2 and MD-3 zoning districts also will be discussed.</p>
        <p>im-</p>
        <p>the</p>
        <p>The Daily Reflector</p>
        <p>Incorporated 209 Cotanche Street Greenville. N.C. 278,34 (919) 752-6166</p>
        <p>108th Year No. 14</p>
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        <p>Member Associated Press and</p>
        <p>Audit Bureau I Circulation</p>
        <p>AIDS Meeting</p>
        <p>The AIDS Task Force will meet Feb. 6 at 5:30 p.m. in the Pitt County Commissioners auditorium on the second floor of the Pitt County Office Building on West Sixth Street.</p>
        <p>A report by the organization committee will be discussed. Persons interested in being nominated for office are asked to call Pitt County Health Director Tim Monroe at 752-4141 by Feb. 13.</p>
        <p>Pizza Hut Robbed</p>
        <p>Greenville police are investigating an armed robbery at Pizza Hut at 305 Greenville Blvd. that was reported today about 12:17 a.m.</p>
        <p>Detective W.A. Reid said a man armed with a small calibre pistol confronted an employee at the back door of the restaurant and forced the worker back inside the building.</p>
        <p>After making the employee and two other employees lie on the floor, the robber made off with a brown bank bag containing an undetermined amount of cash, Reid said.</p>
        <p>Construction Under Way</p>
        <p>Motorists who use Evans Street should find an alternate route beginning Tuesday until mid-February. One lane of traffic will be closed w-hile a windening project is under way by the N.C. Department of Transportation.</p>
        <p>(See I.N, A-3)</p>
        <p>Thefts Reported</p>
        <p>Greenville police said five thefts were reported to the department over the weekend.</p>
        <p>Officer K.L. Jones said a $20 camera  later recovered  was taken from 105 Rawls Road in a break-in reported Saturday at 5:33 p.m., and</p>
        <p>DR. DANIEL GOLDBERG</p>
        <p>Doctor Joins Staff</p>
        <p>The Greenville Family Chiropractic Center has announced that Dr. Daniel Goldberg, chiropractic physician, has joined its staff."</p>
        <p>Goldberg is a 1986 graduate of the National College of Chiropractic in Lumbard, 111. Originally from McKeesport. Pa., he attended Indiana University of Pennsylvania where he studied pyschology and served as a counselor and program coordinator for the Crisis Intervention Serv'ices of Indiana County Mental Health.</p>
        <p>Goldberg received his bachelor of science degree in human biology. He specializes in sports injuries and rehabilitative medicine.</p>
        <p>Correction</p>
        <p>The Daily Reflector incorrectly reported Friday that the Eastern chapter of the American Society for Quality Control would meet Tuesday. The group will meet Jan 24 at 7 p.m. at Kings Restaurant in Kinston.</p>
        <p>For more information or reservations, call 291-4275, ext. 420.</p>
        <p>F</p>
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        <pb facs="00097138_0003" />
        <p>The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N C</p>
        <p>Monday, January 16,1989  ^^.3Catawba College Does Turnabout With Its Finances</p>
        <p>THE ASSOCIATED PRESS</p>
        <p>SALISBURY, N.C.  The sucess of a $28 million fund-raising campaign at Catawba College has attracted the attention of officials at other private colleges around the country, who want to know the secret of the schools success.</p>
        <p>Ive been in the business 50 years, and I dont know Of any other institution of that size thats been as successful, said George Brakeley Jr., the founder of a fund-raising consulting company that has helped more than 250 colleges conduct capital campaigns.</p>
        <p>I think theyre right up there with the best in the country. I think thats pretty remarkable, Brakeley said.</p>
        <p>When Stephen Wurster became president of Catawba College in 1981, the small liberal arts school had a budget deficit of more than $865,000, declining enrollment and buildings in need of extensive repairs.</p>
        <p>A new classroom building opened last week; the new student center opened a year ago. Two dormitories were extensively renovated, and a 20-acre sports complex including soccer and other fields was built.</p>
        <p>A stronger academic program and renewed excitement and pride in the schools progress have transformed the once-struggling college into a</p>
        <p>thriving institution, Wurster said.</p>
        <p>God has been good to all of us, Wurster, an ordained Methodist minister, said last week.</p>
        <p>It reminds me of Camelot, of John F. Kennedys 1,000 days in office, Wurster said. I hope this is not jiist a brief shining moment, but we can never take it for granted. When you have good morale and an excitement for learning, you have to keep the momentum going.</p>
        <p>Enrollment at the college, which was 1,029 last fall, is its highest in 12 years, said John Mays, the senior vice president for college relations. But Catawba is not planning to admit many more students, preferring instead to remain a small college devoted to giving its students personal attention from faculty.</p>
        <p>Since 1981, the college has toughened its graduation requirements and admissions standards and increased the percentage of faculty holding doctorates from just over half to 85 percent. Mays said.</p>
        <p>The college also began a freshman studies program that requires all freshmen to study ancient civilizations, said Robert Knott, provost and dean of the college.</p>
        <p>The new emphasis on a strong liberal arts background has followed the trend of the 1980s, Knott said. In the 1960s and 1970s, Catawba followed the lead of many colleges and universities that loosened require</p>
        <p>In The Area</p>
        <p>(Continued from A-2)</p>
        <p>Art Group Meets</p>
        <p>The Greenville Museum of Art Guild of Volunteers and Docents will hold at silent auction at its winter business meeting Wednesday at 10 a.m. at the museum, 802 S. Evans St.</p>
        <p>For more information call the museum at 758-1946 or Joanne Honeycutt at 756-5432.</p>
        <p>permission to practice law.</p>
        <p>Failure to register is a felony punishable by a fine of up to $250,000, a prison sentence of up to five years or both.</p>
        <p>Men ages 18 through 25 can register at any local post office. For men born in 1963 who have registered, 1989 marks the year that ends their elibibility for selecton for induction</p>
        <p>Selective Service</p>
        <p>The national headquarters of the U.S. Selective Service System in Washington, D.C., has provided guidelines for registering for the system.</p>
        <p>Effective'Jan. 1, men who were required to register with the service and who have not done so should be aware that the system does not have the authority to accept late registrations after a man reaches his 26th birthday.</p>
        <p>With few exceptions, a man who fails to register before his 26th birthday will permanently forefeit his eligibility for certain federal benefits such as student aid, job training and most federal employment. Some states also require registration for certain benefits and for</p>
        <p>Swine Must Be Tested</p>
        <p>The N.C. Agricultural Extension Service has recommended that swine producers have their herds tested for disease by the North Carolina Pseudorabies Control Program.</p>
        <p>New regulations by the N.C. Board of Agriculture say that all feeding and breeding swine must be tested by Feb. 1. If producers fail to meet this deadline, they cannot legally transport or sell feeder pigs in North Carolina.</p>
        <p>The tests are free if the hogs are penned and adequate help is available. Testing can be done by veterinarians in the fee-basis program or by N.C. Department of Agriculture livestock inspectors.</p>
        <p>For more information call Phillip Rowan at 830-6361.</p>
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        <p>ments in areas such as foreign languages, he said.</p>
        <p>People dont choose a small college for its cafeteria curriculum, Knott said. A small school cant offer the variety of courses that a university can, so what we try to do is add depth.</p>
        <p>The lenient academic standards were only one symptom of the malaise that affected the college in the 1970s. The r colleges troubles began when the Roberts Co., a tex-tile-machinery manufacturer based in Sanford, went bankrupt in the early 1970s. About $2 million in financing, half of the colleges endowment, died with it, Wurster said.</p>
        <p>At the same time, inflation Was driving up the costs of maintaining the college as gifts to the college declined, he said. Enrollment, however, grew to about 1,100 students  more than the college had room for. Students were crowded into deteriorating dorms, and repairs were delayed to save money, Wurster said.</p>
        <p>I dont think I have ever seen such an unfortunate combination of all these things happening to one college at the same time, Wurster said. A larger institution, or a highly endowed institution, has more flexibility to deal with problems like those.</p>
        <p>Enrollment soon declined, and, in an effort to increase the numbers, the college admitted students with qualifications below the current standards of a B average and a score of at least 8(X) on the Scholastic Aptitude Test, Knott said.</p>
        <p>In May 1985, the board of trustees began a quiet campaign to raise money for repairs. They set a goal of $12 million, soliciting businesses and</p>
        <p>foundations in the Piedmont and Rowan County, where the school is located, Mays said.</p>
        <p>In December of that year, Ralph Ketner, the founder and chairman of the board of Food Lion, which is based in Salisbury, announced that he and his wife, Anne, would donate $3 million to the campaign  the largest gift ever to the school, Wurster said. Ketner is also a</p>
        <p>Catawba trustee.</p>
        <p>The donation by the Ketners helped us set our sights higher," Wurster said. In March 1986, the college went public with the campaign and announced a $15 million goal.</p>
        <p>By March 1987. however, the board had received $16 million in pledges. Mays said that, since the colleges "needs list" totaled $26 million, the trustees decided to raise</p>
        <p>the goal to $20 million.</p>
        <p>By fall 1987, the campaign appeared to have leveled off at $18 million. It was then that the Ketners announced a challenge: they would donate an additional $2 million if the trustees could bring in another $6 million in pledges, raising the goal to $26 million.</p>
        <p>By August 1988, the campaign ended with $28 million.</p>
        <p>Tuesday Memorial Service Slated For Jenkins</p>
        <p>(Continued from A-l)</p>
        <p>us all feel good about it. He challenged us to do what things we could do.</p>
        <p>Jenkins surely had a knack for motivating people, including myself. I could be tired and about ready to give up, Morgan said. But Jenkins could call and after talking to him for a few minutes, I would feel like, golly, we can do it and start all over again.</p>
        <p>Morgan suggested, I dont think we realize in eastern North Carolina the great personal sacrifice Leo Jenkins made for eastern North Carolina.</p>
        <p>He was president, then chancellor, of an established, 75-year-old institution. When Charlotte College was made part of the university (of North Carolina) system, they set the new chancellors salary at more than they did Leo Jenkins. If he had gone to Raleigh and said, Yes, governor; yes, governor; yes, governor, he could have had more money, Morgan said. He didnt have to do the things he did.</p>
        <p>Greenville businessman W.M. Booger Scales described Jenkins as the greatest in-fighter Ive ever known in my life. He had all kinds of guts.</p>
        <p>The only thing he ever lost to in his life was the big casino (cancer), Scales said. The greatest battles Ive ever been in were with him. If he lost, hed go on to another challenge. But he won most of them. </p>
        <p>According to Scales, a staunch ECU supporter, I wrote a letter to him three months ago and told him I thought they ought to change the name of Greenville to Leo Jenkins, North Carolina. And Ive said for the last</p>
        <p>three years they should change the name of Pitt County Memorial Hospital to Leo Jenkins Hospital. I wish theyd done it while he lived.</p>
        <p>He s meant more to more people east of Raleigh than any man who ever lived, in my opinion, Scales said. "My mind is not capable of expressing how I feel toward the man. You just had to like him.</p>
        <p>I will never know, in my lifetime, another man like Leo Warren Jenkins."</p>
        <p>During Jenkins' tenure as president and chancellor, the Summer Theater and the Regional Development Institute were established. East Carolina gained university status, the four-year medical school had its birth.</p>
        <p>Jenkins rated university status "near the top" in memorable events during his years at East Carolina. He was also proud of the four-year school of medicine.</p>
        <p>In his farewell address during the schools commencement program in May 1978. Jenkins said. I trust history will record that together we have done a good</p>
        <p>job in meeting our responsibilities."</p>
        <p>Later Jenkins would say, "The greatest achieve-menf^ I feel it was instilling a sense of pride in the peo-f r ^  People  walk a little taller because</p>
        <p>of ECU, and they lake a great pride in themselves."</p>
        <p>Family visitation will be from 7 p.m. until 9 p.m. today at S.G. Wilkerson &amp;amp; sons Funeral Home.</p>
        <p>The family, at Jenkins request, asks that in lieu of Howers memorial gifts be made to the East Carolina University Medical School Foundation,</p>
        <p>;00 a.m.</p>
        <p>Our doors are closed Tuesday unt</p>
        <p>"hen-watch out for the years hottest savings Jor your family</p>
        <p>JCPenney</p>
        <pb facs="00097138_0004" />
        <p>Opinion</p>
        <p>'Here was a man who knew eastern North Carolina could excel. Jenkins did not believe in mere possibilities, he believed in realities.'</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, General Manager  Alvin  B.  Taytor. Managing Editor</p>
        <p>'  Mary  C  Schulkcn,  Edifona/Page Edrtor</p>
        <p>Truth In Preference To Fiction</p>
        <p>The Fighter</p>
        <p>A Legacy Of Spirit, Vision, Love</p>
        <p>Imagine eastern North Carolina without the East Carolina University School of Medicine.</p>
        <p>Picture ECU without a School of Art located in its building on Fifth Street. Recall the time when the School of Music was a department without its present facilities.</p>
        <p>Remember when there was no School of Nursing, School of Business, School of Education, School of Social Work r School of Industry and Technology at East Carolina University.</p>
        <p>Consider what the area would be like without Minges Coliseum or Ficklen Stadium.</p>
        <p>Imagine ECUs football teams playing be-fore 3,000 fans even on a good night and Pirate basketball still being played in Memorial Gym.</p>
        <p>Visualize eastern North Carolina without all the pleasure that Summer Theater brings.</p>
        <p>If the community considers all those things, and if it considers their tremendous benefit to the state, then it has some concept of the impact of Dr. Leo W.. Jenkins.</p>
        <p>So much of what is ECU today can be attributed to Dr. Jenkins, who died Saturday. The man who was known as a fighter could no longer battle the disease that invaded his body. But for Greenville, ECU and the region. Dr. Jenkins left a legacy of spirit, vision and deep love.</p>
        <p>He would have been the first to say that he built on the foundation his predecessors passed to him. But it is clear there has been no other era like the one he brought to the university and the state.</p>
        <p>Dr. Jenkins challenged everyone. He expected the best from his staff and faculty and he wanted top performance from students. He challenged the people of Greenville and Pitt County. He challenged the entire East to shake off its negative mindset and reach for the fuller, better life he knew was possible. Then he challenged Raleigh and the state to give him the resources to do what needed to be done at ECU.</p>
        <p>Impossible to transform East Carolina College into a full university? Many said so. But Leo Jenkins believed. It happened. Impossible to develop and support a medical school down east? Even the faithful didnt believe. Yet today the school of medicine and accompanying Pitt County Memorial Hospital serve the area from the west Greenville campus.</p>
        <p>Because they do, the people of eastern North Carolina now need not travel so far for the services of a referral hospital. Already some of the physician graduates have set up practice in the area, bring medical care to communities that might otherwise go unserved. Because of special programs and facilities some youngsters are alive and healthy today when they would not have been in past decades.</p>
        <p>All who knew him are aware that Dr. Jenkins interests were not narrow. This transplanted New Jersey native wanted it all for the people he adopted. Music, art, literature and business captured his imagination as much as medical education. And soon, because of his leadership they captured the imagination of the community and region.</p>
        <p>Greenville and eastern North Carolina responded to Jenkins as vibrantly as he reacted to them. Here was a man who believed this immense and rural region, with directed use of its resources and dynamic leadership, could progress. Here was a man who knew eastern North Carolina could excel. Jenkins did not believe in mere possibilities, he believed in realities.</p>
        <p>The president who became chancellor said ECU emphasized everything it did. That was his personal philosophy and it became the philosophy of the institution he headed. He made everyone he touched a better citizen and thrust more rewarding lives upon the region. He wouldnt allow anyone to be less than the best possible.</p>
        <p>Only Dr. Jenkins voice is stilled. His great zeal, energy and combative spirit will continue to inspire future generations. His death represents a final challenge to the region he deeply loved. That challenge is to keep his vision, his tenacity and his concern for mankind alive. It is to keep moving in the direction he commanded  forward, beyond impediments, toward fulfillment of the potential it possesses.</p>
        <p>What Of Chinese Racism?</p>
        <p>William Raspberry</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON  Experts are forever pointing out that what you know from ordinary experience does not quite apply to their area of expertise.</p>
        <p>Of course you can be forgiven for your childlike error, they seem to say. After all, you havent had the advantage of their academic immersion and their long years of experience.</p>
        <p>Their indulgent smiles as they point it out are calculated to underscore your ignorance.</p>
        <p>Nowjhe experts are telling us that what has been going on in China since just before Christmas isnt racism  certainly not racism as we knew it in the American South of a quarter century ago.</p>
        <p>Well, to this son of the South, it sure looks the same.</p>
        <p>The recent events - though not the attitudes that triggered them - began on Christmas Eve, when two African students in Nanjing refused to register their Chinese dates at a university dance. At least 13 people were injured before police could break up the resulting melee.</p>
        <p>The following weeks have seen protest demonstrations, more fights, jail-ings and beatings, some of them at the hands of police, who reportedly used electric cattle prods on the Africans.</p>
        <p>But if the news accounts brought to your mind images of Bull Connor -well, it just proves how ignorant you are.</p>
        <p>A teacher from Western Europe explained that the real issue was the special privileges - special food allotments and living arrangements, for instance  enjoyed by foreigners studying in China.</p>
        <p>Attacking the Africans is a way to get back at the government, this expert explained. The (Chinese) students are giving vent to frustrations over not being treated well.</p>
        <p>Another expert saw the violence as triggered by generalized Chinese suspicion of outsiders and a desire never again to be humiliated by foreigners as they were in the past by Western imperialists and the Japanese.</p>
        <p>Others cited cultural clashes between the puritanical Chinese and the Africans, whose greater sexual freedom was viewed as a threat to Chinese order.</p>
        <p>Still others have seen the anti-African violence as just another manifestation of the Chinese animosity toward all outsiders - including native Chinese who are not members of the dominant Han group.</p>
        <p>All these things may be true, though it is hard to believe that China, with its enormous population, fears domination at the hands of some 1,500 African students, in the country as guests of the government. It is also true that many white Southerners distinguished between decent whites and po white trash, resented outside agitators and saw the Civil Rights Movement as a threat to their cherished way of life.</p>
        <p>But the fundamental fact  in the old American South and in present-day China  is a deep-seated racism, no less virulent because the racists dont know they are racists.</p>
        <p>Racists never do. They always imagine that their attitudes are based on reality. The outgroup is intellectually backward, less hardworking or less cultured, closer to animals. In the South, the assessment applied to niggers. In China, it applies to black devils, as Africans are routinely called.</p>
        <p>And it is complicated by sex. Virtually all of the African students, many of whom are in the country for six years at a stretch, are male. They must either live as monks or date Chinese women. Interracial dating may be the single most important factor in the recent violence.</p>
        <p>The experts, insisting that its not that simple, point out that American blacks are accorded much better treatment than Africans. Doesnt that prove that more than race is involved?</p>
        <p>Well, what did it prove when, as late at the 1960s, Africans in America were accorded rights that were denied to American-born blacks? Were white restaurateurs to be absolved of racism if they seated an African diplomat while tossing a local black professor out on his ear?</p>
        <p>As in the American South, there must be many Chinese who can look at a non-Chinese face without automatically thinking in terms of racial inferiority and superiority. But the overriding attitude of the mainland Chinese toward their African guests, if the accounts of journalists and other observers are to be creditied, is a thoroughgoing racism.</p>
        <p>Officially, of course, the Chinese reject all charges of racism. But who, besides the experts, would expect otherwise? The relevant evidence is not in official pronouncements but in manifest actions and attitudes. You get a pretty fair idea of attitudes in the bewildered reaction of a graduate student in Shanghai.</p>
        <p>Just because we say black devils doesnt mean we are racists, she said.</p>
        <p>(c) 1989, Washington Post Writers Group</p>
        <p>Hats Off To A Covered Pate</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON - The first annual Richard Cohen Man-of-the-Year Award was hard to make. I considered Ronald Reagan, the first two-term president since Dwight Eisenhower; mulled over Mikhail Gorbachev; thought of Dan Quayle, who proved what we all feared in school  that the indolent could succeed if they had good looks and a winning smile.</p>
        <p>But the first annual Richard Cohen Man of the Year has to go to Terence Smith of CBS News. Smith is a bright and personable man and a good reporter. But it is not for this that he has been chosen. It is this: Terry Smith was the first newsman in modern memory to wear a hat on network television.</p>
        <p>To my mind, this is no small thing. It represents something momentous  a break (finally) with the macho dictum that real men do not get cold. More than the misguided belief that the United States has primacy in world affairs, the notion that the hat is an affectation and not really useful is a baleful legacy of the Kennedy era. It was John F. Kennedy, after all, who removed his hat to deliver his Inaugural address. In 22-degree cold, he appeared hatless on the windswept ceremonial platform, and the world has never been the same.</p>
        <p>Since that time, men have ceased b wear hats. I am not one of them I wear hats and I do so for two reasons: I like the way they look and they keep me warm. The first reason is unimportant and, in the view of some,</p>
        <p>Richard</p>
        <p>Cohen</p>
        <p>downright un-American. (American men are not supposed to care about clothing and most dont.) The second reason cannot be as easily dismissed. Most body heat is lost through the head. A hatless man is a convertible with the top down  all show in summer and just plain dumb in winter.</p>
        <p>From Kennedy, the news spread to all politicians, even the dimmest of them, that one way to exhibit toughness was to go hatless in the cold. It was as if a man who wore a hat could not stand up to the Russians  and we all know how important that is. Kennedy also removed his overcoat before speaking on that freezing Inaugural morning. And since then, except in sub-zero cold, politicians will not make an appearance with a coat on. Their mothers must wring their hands in despair. ^</p>
        <p>This coatless-hatless business signifies not toughness but a lack of common sense. When I see a politician making an outdoor appearance without a hat or coat, I do not think the man is tough. I think that anyone who does not have the sense to dress for the weather should be constitutional</p>
        <p>ly prohibited from dealing with the Russians.</p>
        <p>From politicians, this bigotry concerning hats spread to the general population. Men, by and large, will not wear hats anymore. Since I do, I am berated as a poseur, someone wanting to make a statement. But it is the men who ridicule me who are making a statement. A man, especially one who is bald or tending that way, is a fool if he does not wear a hat in the winter. Hows that for a statement?</p>
        <p>But could it be that the trend is being reversed? One recent morning I turned on CBS News, and there was Smith reporting from the White House lawn,*wearing a hat. His hat made perfect sense to me. It was early in the morning, with the temperature around</p>
        <p>the freezing point. A light snow was falling. This eminently sensible man was being eminently sensible. I shall trust his reporting even more from now on.</p>
        <p>Here was my Man of the Year. I called Smith in the CBS newsroom where, presumably, he was hatless. CBS has a hat policy, he told me. His hat is permitted on the morning news, but not on the evening news. Why Smith should not be permitted to wear a hat outdoors while Dan Rather wears a sweater indoors is beyond me, but there it is.</p>
        <p>Smith also pointed out that he is no longer alone at CBS when it comes to wearing hats. Anthony Mason has also appeared on television with his head covered. This is indeed good news since drizzly London, where Mason is stationed, and Moscow, where he was on temporary assignment, are places where a hat is a necessity. Only mad dogs and network correspondents have heretofore gone out without one in either place.</p>
        <p>So after much rumination, I make Terence Smith my Man of the Year. He is a bold fellow, certain of his masculinity, confident of his good judgment and, if truth be told, a bit spare on the pate, a trend not likely to be reversed. But for reversing 27 years of machismo nonsense, for returning the hat to its proper place (the head), I salute Terence Smith of the CBS morning news (but not Terence Smith of CBS evening news).</p>
        <p>My hat is off to him. But not, mind you, if its really cold.</p>
        <p>&amp;lt;c) 1989, Washington Post Writers Group</p>
        <pb facs="00097138_0005" />
        <p>,^-^ </p>
        <p>The Daily Reflector. Greenville. N.C^</p>
        <p>Monday, January 16,1989  /^,5Washington Farmer Plans Test Of Organic Tobacco Production</p>
        <p>THE ASSOCIATED PRESS</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON, N.C. (AP) - An organic farmer seeking a healthier cigarette says he plans to experiment this year with organic methods of growing tobacco.</p>
        <p>A.H. Brownie Van Dorp, who does not smoke, said he thinks cigarettes would be safer if the many chemicals used in growing tobacco were not applied to the crop.</p>
        <p>It would prove to the industry that we would have a product that consumers wanted, a healthier product, Van Dorp said in an interview. I dont believe tobacco is all that badby itself.</p>
        <p>Organic vegetables found a</p>
        <p>Insurance Will Cover Stored Leaf</p>
        <p>THE ASSOCIATED PRESS</p>
        <p>RALEIGH  A new insurance policy that became available to North Carolina farmers last month can protect holdover tobacco, currently worth about $120 million, from certain catastrophies for the months it sits in storage.</p>
        <p>We have been working on this for about two years, said Bernard Cox, policy and rate analyst supervisor with the state Insurance Department. Until now, there has been no way to protect tobacco from the end of one season to the beginning of the next. And the farmer already has his money tied up in it. He cant afford to lose it.</p>
        <p>The coverage would be especially attractive to the large commercial grower who might have 20,000 to 30,000 pounds of tobacco on hand, he said.</p>
        <p>The policy insures against damage due to fire and smoke, windstorm and hail. It would not cover loses due to theft or insect damage.</p>
        <p>Rates for the new policy being offered are based on the type of storage building in which the tobacco is held; $1.50 per 100 pounds if the leaf is stored in a fire-resistant barn made of metal, and $1.80 per 100 pounds for any other type of building. Rates might be adjusted later, Cox said, depending on the number and types of claims made.</p>
        <p>The policy includes a $250 deductible.</p>
        <p>Niles A. Whitake, vice president of the N.C. State Grange Mutual Insurance Co., one of the companies carrying the policy, said last week that the company had not written any of the new insurance policies. He said he did not expect great interest in the coverage until the end of the coming tobacco season.</p>
        <p>Well be ready when that starts, he said. We think farmers are going to be glad about it. They can at least get some coverage where before they couldnt get any.</p>
        <p>Jury Selection</p>
        <p>SHELBY, N.C. (AP) - Jury selection will begin Tuesday in the trial of Michael Brian Church, charged with six felonies against his stepson.</p>
        <p>The child, Travis Gammons, also will be the center of a custody case Friday between his father, Fred Gammons, and the Cleveland County Department of Social Services.</p>
        <p>Prospective jurors will be questioned in Rutherford County. An out-of-county jury pool was ordered to find people who have not already formed an opinion about the case.</p>
        <p>Jury selection is expected to last at least two days. The trial is then scheduled to be moved to Shelby.</p>
        <p>Church, whos been in Cleveland County Jail since he was arrested Aug. 30, 1988, is charged with two counts of assault with a deadly weapon with intent to kill inflicting serious injury, three counts of felonious child abuse and one count of maiming.</p>
        <p>If convicted as charged, Chui^h faces a maximum of 80 years in prison.</p>
        <p>Chief Retires</p>
        <p>LAURINBURG, N.C. (AP) -Norman Whiteford Quick retired Sunday after 16 years as Laurin-burgs police chief, ending a 35-year career in law enforcement.</p>
        <p>Quick, 57, joined the Laurinburg Police Department in 1953 at the age of 22. In 1958, he became a lieutenant, and five years later he became a detective and received training at the FBIs national academy.</p>
        <p>In 1972, he was appointed chief.</p>
        <p>NINTENDO</p>
        <p>Buy - Sell - Rent</p>
        <p>3St Coast Music &amp;amp; Video</p>
        <p>109 Charles Blvd.  758-4251</p>
        <p>Newspaper In Idvcation</p>
        <p>Lessons and issues from real life.</p>
        <p>The Daily Reflector</p>
        <p>Call 752-6166</p>
        <p>market with health-conscious diners, and organic tobacco might be able to develop a similar market with health-conscious smokers, said Van Dorp, who lives in the town of Washington.</p>
        <p>We need to get a product available for testing with other products, to see the difference in carryover of chemicals in tobacco, he said. Wed hope to have tobacco with a clean test, without any chemical residue </p>
        <p>Van Dorp is president of the North Carolina chapter of the Organic Crop Improvement Association, which has chapters in 21 other states, Canada, Mexico and Peru.</p>
        <p>Van Dorp said a similar organization in Europe helped direct an inquiry by a West German company that is interested in marketing a cigarette made of tobacco that can be certified as organically grown and free of phemical residues.</p>
        <p>That request got him to thinking</p>
        <p>about the possibilities.</p>
        <p>I think companies in this country would also be interested, he said. It certainly would be in their interest.</p>
        <p>One difficulty in meeting organic requirements is that a field must lie idle for three years to cleanse it of non-acceptable pesticides and fertilizers. Few farmers are willing to do that with good cropland, Van Dorp said.</p>
        <p>He has 60 acres certified as</p>
        <p>organic on his 105-acre farm, and another 100 acres in Hyde County. He grows mostly vegetables for speciality markets.</p>
        <p>I farmed like everyone else, but I wasnt getting the productivity that I thought I should,  Van Dorp said. So 10 years ago, he began growing crops organically .</p>
        <p>My father came here from Holland in the 1920s and grew acres of flowers to sell, Van Dorp said. He used chicken litter and cow</p>
        <p>manure. He said that was the only way that he could grow good quality flowers.</p>
        <p>He went into the dairy business just to have enough manure for the flowers, Van Dorp said.</p>
        <p>The dairy farm is gone now, but several large poultry farms nearby have chicken litter to sell. And a local crab-processing plant provides crab shells, which Van Dorp says are good sources of calcium for his fields.</p>
        <p>Waim TOBOGGANS</p>
        <p>la rOu% Orion</p>
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        <p>$2.97</p>
        <p>Kitchen De-Lite ROOM FRESHENER CANDLES</p>
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        <p>NUPRIN*</p>
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        <p>aplets or Tablets, 24s</p>
        <p>$2.09.</p>
        <p>DRIXORAL</p>
        <p>Tablets</p>
        <p>Ea.</p>
        <p>$2.9</p>
        <p>or cond/t/oner, 15 Oz. tUllUlllUll.  94  Types</p>
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        <p>$2.99</p>
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        <p>912 Oz. Liquid</p>
        <p>$2.99</p>
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        <p>EFFERDENT</p>
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        <p>Tablets</p>
        <p>$9.27</p>
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        <p>Cbugh Syrup</p>
        <p>0DM, Regular, Expectorant, or Decongestant Formulas 94 Oz.</p>
        <p>$2. H</p>
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        <p>Delicious Aid To Lose Weight 9Qum</p>
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        <p>916 Oz.</p>
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        <p>$2.5^</p>
        <p>Expectorant, Triamlnlcol, 4 Oz.</p>
        <p>$3.37</p>
        <p>COMTREX</p>
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        <p>$2.99</p>
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        <p> 15 ml.</p>
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        <p>Hamorrholdal Craam</p>
        <p>e 0.9 Oz.</p>
        <p>$2.77</p>
        <p>MaxIpads</p>
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        <p>^Ragitlar, Supar, or Deodorant</p>
        <p>$7.99</p>
        <p>50s</p>
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        <p>$2.97</p>
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        <p>9 250 gram</p>
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        <p>9 Laxativa 14 Oz. 3 Flavors</p>
        <p>'91 $6.59,</p>
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        <p>$6.39</p>
        <p>O. B. TAMPONS</p>
        <p>Et.</p>
        <p>^Regular or Super, 30s</p>
        <p>$3.77.</p>
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        <p>OUR EVERYDAY LOW PRICE!</p>
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        <p>Ointment</p>
        <p> 2 Oz.</p>
        <p>-SELTZER PLUS</p>
        <p>$2.29</p>
        <p>9 NIght-Tlma Cold Medicina 20 Tablets</p>
        <p>$2.97</p>
        <p>Maximum Strength</p>
        <p>DRISTAN</p>
        <p>$3.77</p>
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        <p>ESOTERICA</p>
        <p>9 Regular, 3 Oz.</p>
        <p>Scanted or Unaeantad</p>
        <p>$9.27</p>
        <p>^ Facial 3 Oz. ^Fortified, 3 Oz.</p>
        <p>$9. 77e</p>
        <p>CENTRUM</p>
        <p>Multivitamins</p>
        <p>9 100 Plus 30 Tablets</p>
        <p>$8.99</p>
        <p>Prices In This Ad Effective Monday, Jan.19, 1939 Through Saturday, Jan. 21, 1989.</p>
        <p>ImUvifliul Miitaal Slora raarrrf Ihc riKbl U&amp;gt; Unit ({iianItiM oa all ilaaa ia ikU ad. Urraiaalaaraa adf^il pia&amp;gt; vral all atona Iros bclag aUc la ra&amp;gt; order crrtoin advertlacd afuclati.</p>
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        <p>Edwards Pharmacy 1406 W. 3rd Street 746-3127</p>
        <p>GREENVILLE</p>
        <p>Hollowell's Drug Store #1 911 Dickinson Ave.</p>
        <p>752-7105</p>
        <p>Hollowell's Drug Store #2 6fh a Memorial Dr,</p>
        <p>758-4104</p>
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        <p>Bethel Pharmacy, Inc. N. Railroad Street 825-7271</p>
        <p>Hollowell's Drug Store #3</p>
        <p>Parkview Commons</p>
        <p>(Across from Doctors Pork)</p>
        <p>757-1076</p>
        <p>Hollowell's Drug Store #4 1631 SE Greenville Blvd.</p>
        <p>752-0030</p>
        <p>V</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <pb facs="00097138_0006" />
        <p>IN THE STATE</p>
        <p>V.-House Shakeup May Bring Fewer Conflicts With Senate Leadership</p>
        <p>Fata/ity</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP)  Only one person died in accidents on .\orth Carolina roads over the weekend, the state Highway Patrol said today.</p>
        <p>"Its highly unusual " to have only one death, said a dispatcher at., the patrols headquarters in Raleigh. "I think its fantastic. 1 wish I could say we had none.</p>
        <p>Fred Brady, 61, of Carthage died at 9:20 a.m. Saturday when a car he was riding in collided with another car on N.C. 22 in Moore County.</p>
        <p>Twenty-eight people have died on North Carolina roads this year, compared to 37 at this time* last year, the patrol said.</p>
        <p>Escapee Caught</p>
        <p>PHILADELPHIA lAP) -Philadelphia police have recaptured Timothy Dockery, a murder suspect who escaped from two jails in less than two months.</p>
        <p>Police say a confidential informant told them Dockery was staying at the home of a friend. He w^as arrested without a struggle Thursdav night.</p>
        <p>Dockery, 24, was arrested by Forsyth County, N.C., deputies Nov, 9 on assault charges. They then discovered he \vas wanted in Philadelphia on drug and weapons charges and was a suspect in four gangland-style killings.</p>
        <p>But Dockery tricked jailers into freeing him the day after his arrest. Philadelphia police recaptured him Dec. 23, but five days later. Dockery fooled his jailers and escaped again.</p>
        <p>Fatal Shooting</p>
        <p>KENLY, N.C. (AP)  Police say they dont think the slaying of a Johnston County woman killed by a shotgun blast fired from a passing car on Interstate 95 was a random act.</p>
        <p>I dont think there was just somebody traveling around who said. Hey. I'm going to kill this woman, said Detective Larry Carter. "Hopefully, something will come out in the investigation. We do have several leads that we are trying to follow up at this time."</p>
        <p>Phyllis Ann Estep, 2H, was killed about 2:15 p.m. Friday shortly after she left Smithfield, where she was visiting her mother, a family member said. A student at Wayne Community College in Goldsboro, she was trying to get home before her two children got out of school.</p>
        <p>ed an elderly Wayne County woman and her son, fire officials say. </p>
        <p>Ellen Bell Byrd, 77, and John Wesley Byrd Jr., 46, of Mount Olive, were found lying on the floor of their bedrooms after the Friday night fire. They died of smoke inhalation, said Pricetown Fire Chief C.W. Smith. , </p>
        <p>When firefighters arrived about 10:20 p.m., the trailer on N.C. 55 was filled with smoke. Attempts to revive the Byrds failed.</p>
        <p>Clerk Stabbed</p>
        <p>MONROE, N.C. (AP) - Officials arent sure if robbery was the motive in the slaying of a convenience store clerk who was found behind a counter with a stab wound in his chest. Public Safety Chief Bobby Kilgore says.</p>
        <p>William Kirkland Griffin, 60, of Indian Trail, was stabbed to death late Saturday afternoon at Dueys Convenience kore.</p>
        <p>Kilgore said at about 6 p.m. customers found Griffin, who was treated at the scene by Emergency Medical Services workers and taken to Union Memorial Hospital where he was pronounced dead.</p>
        <p>Kilgore said officers were interviewing the customers and have talked to DLieys owner A1 Plyler, but are not certain if anything was taken from the store.</p>
        <p>Safe Theft</p>
        <p>WILMINGTON (AP) - Thieves used a mail cart to wheel away a 300-pound safe containing $38,000 in stamps from a U.S. Post Office branch.</p>
        <p>Thomas Dail, who manages the privately contracted station in Wilmington, said he found the mail cart in an alley behind the post office when he came to work Saturday morning.</p>
        <p>The safe coritained the stamps, $825 in signed money order, $125 in cash and blank money orders, police said. No mail was stolen, Dail said.</p>
        <p>By F. Alan Boyce</p>
        <p>the" associated press</p>
        <p>RALEIGH  The state House and Senate usually jockey for the upper hand of power in the final w'eeks of the legislative session, but lawmakers are looking forward to fewer House-Senate conflicts than usual this year.</p>
        <p>"This is the first fruit that has been born.e from the rise of the tw'o-party system in North Carolina, said Lt. Gov. Jim Gardner. "I think youre going to see an atmosphere of working together.</p>
        <p>Twenty House Democrats joined 45 Republicans last week to oust four-term speaker Liston Ramsey</p>
        <p>and replace him with fellow Democrat Joe Mavretic.</p>
        <p>"I think its going to be much, much better than iPs been in years past, Gardner said.</p>
        <p>When Mavretic, D-Edgecombe, took over the House and reorganized its committee structure, some observers predicted House-Senate tensions would increase, with the Senate gaining the upper hand. Traditionally, partisan squabbling gives way to the inter-house rivalry in the final weeks.</p>
        <p>One senator, who asked not to be identified, said Mavretic might be particularly adept at the end game in which each house takes the others choice bills hostage.</p>
        <p>"He plays a pretty closed hand.</p>
        <p>but two can play that game, the senator said.</p>
        <p>Mavretic, often a player in the inter-house hostilities, was less than enlightening as he tiptoed around the issue.</p>
        <p>The House and Senate will get along as cordially as they have in the past, he said with a smile.  ... Im not going to give you any qualifiers.-</p>
        <p>Some observers wondered whether Mavretic might use his position to renew controversial issues such as his bid to replace all property taxes with sales and use taxes  or even his attempt to remove North Carolina from an eight-state compact for handling low-level radioactive waste.</p>
        <p>Raleigh Plans Collection Day For Wastes You Cant Discard</p>
        <p>Wayne F/re</p>
        <p>MOUNT OLIVE, N.C. (AP) - A pot left unattended on a gas stove ignited a mobile home fire that kill-</p>
        <p>Body Found</p>
        <p>WILMINGTON  Two hunters discovered the body of a woman who apparently had been murdered and left in the woods near Magnolia in Duplin County, authorities say.</p>
        <p>The body of Pauline Whitman Sanderson, 55, of Warsaw was found Saturday about two miles from Magnolia off Secondary Road 1003, said Duplin County Sheriff George Garner.</p>
        <p>An autopsy was scheduled to be done Monday, Garner said. The death is being investigated as a murder, but Garner would not say whether there was any visible sign of how Ms. Sanderson was killed.</p>
        <p>THE ASSOi'IATED PRESS</p>
        <p>HALEIGH  If youve got something to throw away, but are told not to burn it, bury it, pour it down the drain or toss it in the trash, exactly what are you supposed to do with it?</p>
        <p>State officials say its a common problem with the household hazardous wastes that lurk in nearly every homeowners garage or kitchen cabinets: cleaners, polishes, motor oils, paints, thinners and garden sprays.</p>
        <p>Right now, we think its probably going to the landfill, being flushed down the toilet or being poured out on the ground, said Cindy E. Kling, a management analyst with Raleighs public utilities department. Or, theyre storing it in their homes. Theres almost nowhere else for it to go.</p>
        <p>That dilemma is what prompted the city of Raleigh to schedule a hazardous-waste collection day for April 1.</p>
        <p>This is the first community-sponsored household hazardous waste collection day in North Carolina, Ms. Kling said. But there have been lots of them around the country. The last time I counted, there had been more than 1,300 of them across the United States. </p>
        <p>Organizers initially didnt realize that the event would fall on April Fools Day, Ms. Kling said, but they used that coincidence to develop a motto: "Only fools would keep household hazardous waste in their homes.</p>
        <p>State waste authorities hope that message will spread across North Carolina.</p>
        <p>In our state we just dont have the (disjwsal) alternatives available, quite frankly, said Hope Lucas, community relations coor-</p>
        <p>Greensboro Woman Cited For Helping People Think</p>
        <p>By Payl Sowell</p>
        <p>THE S.SK'IATED tU&amp;lt;E.S.S</p>
        <p>CHARLOTTE - Sarah Herbin admits that it is almost impossible to change the way people think  whether its a racist attitude towards minorities or the skepticism of an underprivileged black child.</p>
        <p>But that doesn't stop her from trying.</p>
        <p>"Our society is geared so that as black kids are growing up they dont walk down the street and look at a business and say, I can own that like white kids can, Mrs. Herbin said. "Theres a wide gap and something needs to be done to fill that gap,</p>
        <p>Mrs. Herbin, 72, of Greensboro, was awarded last week for 30 years of work with the National Black Child Development Institute and other organizations. She was one of 10 people to receive the 1989 Lewis Hine Award for her volunteer work with children.</p>
        <p>At a ceremony in New York, Mrs. Herbin was presented the award and Sl.tHM) by John J. Creedon, chairman of the National Child Labor Committee. which sponsors the award.</p>
        <p>The Hine Awards are presented annually for unheralded service to children and youth. Lewis Hines, the awards namesake, was an early 20th century photographer who spent his career documenting the exploitation, poverty and abuse of young children who were forced to work in factories or on farms.</p>
        <p>In a telephone interview from New York, Mrs. Herbin thought back to a hot, steamy day last summer when she invited several black youngsters from her Greensboro neighborhood to take a swim in her backyard pool.</p>
        <p>It began raining so they had to get out, she recalled. We sat on my porch and I asked them, What do you want to be when you grow up?</p>
        <p>The boys were young, she said, no</p>
        <p>older than 11, Still, their replies astounded her.</p>
        <p>"One boy said he wanted to be a checker at a Food Lion (grocery store), Mrs. Herbin said. Hes not alone. So many black children feel the same way.</p>
        <p>In 1969, Mrs. Herbin helped found the National Black Development Institute, which has since grown to include 33 chapters and more than 3,000 members.</p>
        <p>Sarah Herbin is a trailblazer, said Evelyn Moore, executive director of the Washington D.C.-based organization. "She has touched childrens lives in a multitude of ways ranging from education to civil rights, career development, family issues,-alteration of self-destructive behaviors and recreation.</p>
        <p>Her many efforts in and around Greensboro reflect a spirit of hope, dedication and commitment which helps make tomorrow, our childrens future, a better place to live, said Ms. Moore, who won the award last year.</p>
        <p>"One question people frequently ask me is, Why do I concentrate on black children? said Mrs, Herbin, "I have to explain that black</p>
        <p>children have special problems and it takes special policies, services and programs to address those needs.</p>
        <p>These children need to establish a wholesome concept of themselves, said Mrs. Herbin, who managed to find enough time while she was a schoolteacher and later a law office manager to work with children. So long as they are relegated to the back seat they will never have a good concept of themselves.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Herbin admits she is tough on her kids. Her philosophy is that children will live up to whatever expectations are placed on them.</p>
        <p>Thats why she is an advocate of individual attention. One of her latest projects will involve 500 adult volunteers willing to spend a year with an underprivileged black child.</p>
        <p>It could involve anything from tutoring to helping them with their homework to bringing the child on trips to expose him to enriching activities, she said. "Its something in which we hope to see a difference in the child at the end of the year.</p>
        <p>dinator for the Governors Waste Management Board. And were hoping this collection day will set a precedent for other communities.</p>
        <p>In some communities in other States, they have a regular curbside pickup program for household hazardous wastes. That is a model that many people in North Carolina would like to see.</p>
        <p>Although household materials probably account for less than one percent of the nations total hazardous waste production, they can cause serious health and environmental problems if improperly stored or disposed.</p>
        <p>"These household hazardous wastes are not regulated, said Roger Schecter, director of the state Pollution Prevention Program. Therefore, they tend to end up in places where theyll make an impact, such as the local landfill or wastewater treatment plant. Then they may cause localized problems.</p>
        <p>Potential dangers abound. Hazardous products stored around the house can cause poisonings, burns or illnesses if left where children or pets can touch, inhale or ingest them.</p>
        <p>If discarded in trash, the wastes can injure garbage collectors. They can contaminate groundwater or wells if they end up in landfills or are poured onto the ground.</p>
        <p>Pouring hazardous products into drains, toilets, gutters or ditches can pollute streams and lakes. And burning them can pollute the air.</p>
        <p>A private waste-management company conducted the only previous collection event in North Carolina. In 1985, GSX Chemical Services Corp. held a two-day collection in Reidsville and Eden,</p>
        <p>The state Department of Agriculture will pick up used pesticides and herbicides from people who request it. And many service stations and automotive products dealers will recycle used batteries and motor oil for customers.</p>
        <p>But so far, cities and counties have shied away from collecting hazardous wastes because of real or perceived difficulties, said Mary Beth Edelman, a research associate at the Institute for Environmental Studies at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.</p>
        <p>The biggest reason is that local officials  even though they would like to do something positive about the problem  are scared to death about liability issues and the costs, she said. Raleigh has really stuck its neck out.</p>
        <p>Were hoping that other communities will see that its possible, will see that the city of Raleigh got a lot of good publicity and will try to doit themselves.</p>
        <p>Ms. Edelman, co-author of a report on household hazardous waste for the Pollution Prevention Program, said most collection events in other states have been relatively trouble free  despite concerns.</p>
        <p>There have been examples where people bring explosives onto the sites, she said. There have been cases where people bring in things theyre not licensed to handle, like radioactive waste. Youve just got to be ready for that.</p>
        <p>Organizers of the Raleigh collection will take appropriate precautions, Ms. Kling said, by staffing the collection with police, a bomb squad, a hazardous materials response team and pesticide experts.</p>
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        <p>Mavretic has made no mention of either issue.</p>
        <p>Sen. Ted Kaplan, D-Forsyth, th? Senate majority leader, said the change might make it easier to get out early ~ maybe by the first wee| of June.</p>
        <p>I think with the makeup of th Senate and the new makeup of th House is going to make for a very eF ficient General Assembly, Kaplan said. Hopefully, well have our stuff together and we may produce some good legislation and be don with it.</p>
        <p>Limited money could speed the session, as well as a general commitment by Senate leaders t6 shorten the session, he said.</p>
        <p>To some degree, politics has been what kept us here in the past, and a lot of that gamesmanship wont be played, Kaplan added.</p>
        <p>Rep. Martin Nesbitt, D-Buncombe, a key legislator in previous sessions and a Ramsey lieutenant whose fate remained in question under Mavretic, said he wasnt sure how the House and Senate would stack up.</p>
        <p>Thatll be something to be evolved, he said. We have a brand new organization and people and the Senate is tested and seasoned.</p>
        <p>You wont know (the outcome) until you get there and stare each other in the eye, Nesbitt said.</p>
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        <p>The Daily RefJeQlor. Grfeenville, N C____Monday  January  16.  1989  A-7</p>
        <p>The Associated Press</p>
        <p>U.S. team unloads equipment in Hanoi to be used in search for missing GIs in Vietnam</p>
        <p>U.S.-Vietnamese Teams Hunt Remains of Lost Americans</p>
        <p>By George Esper</p>
        <p>THE ASSOCIATED PRESS</p>
        <p>HANOI, Vietnam  While some Americans still await word of a husband, father or son, U.S.-Vietnamese teams patrol the countryside in the biggest effort yet to find remains of fallen airmen and send them on a final, peaceful journey home.</p>
        <p>^ Some families, an unspecified but apparently small number, have been told five teams are investigating and excavating sites where relatives are believed to have crashed during air strikes between 1964 and 1972. This is the fourth joint operation since October.</p>
        <p>&amp;gt; Due to privacy considerations of the affected families we cannot discuss the specifics, a statement from the U.S. delegation said. However, those families have been notified of the investigation and will be fully advised of the results.</p>
        <p>The two dozen U.S. specialists will be in Vietnam until Jan. 23 and will leave with 25 sets of remains that are being prepared for repatriation and identification at the U.S. Army laboratory in Hawaii. '</p>
        <p>Previously, Vietnam had allowed only four U.S. teams in at a time. It has repatriated 63 sets of remains in the past month.</p>
        <p>The U.S. government is pleased that Vietnam has agreed to expand the ongoing effort from four to five teams, the American delegation said. The U.S. government appreciates the initiative taken by Vietnam to fepatriate these remains and hopes to continue the increasing joint cooperation to resolve the long-standing humanitarian issue."  </p>
        <p>Nguyen Can, acting director of VMnams office for MIAs, those missing in action during the long war that ended in 1975, agreed that cooperation has been good and the issue is humanitarian rather than political.</p>
        <p>We dont want to use this as any kind of leverage because we understand the feelings of the American families whose loved ones did not come home after the war, he said. We have our own MIAs, more than the United States.</p>
        <p>Can put the figure at 300,000.</p>
        <p>We want to solve this question and let bygones be bygones he said. Whats the good of keeping this alive? It would only let the spiritual wounds of war bleed, and that would not be helpful to any understanding between the two people.</p>
        <p>Both governments have sought in public pronouncements to separate the human side of the war from politics, but the MIA issue figures into the process of establishing the diplomatic relations Vietnam seeks. Washington has said all Vietnamese troops must be</p>
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        <p>Survivors Of Violent Attacks Say Fighting Back May Help</p>
        <p>removed from Cambodia before it will consider an exchange of ambassadors, economic aid and lifting the U.S. trade embargo.</p>
        <p>Hanoi has said it will meet the requirement by the end of next year, perhaps sooner. Vietnam invaded Cambodia in December 1978, overthrowing the murderous Khmer Rouge regime of Pol Pot, and has occupied the neighboring country since.</p>
        <p>The United States also has sent word to Vietnam that its cooperation in returning remains would be regarded favorably. In the past, Vietnam slowed the search when it was angered by critical U.S. statements.</p>
        <p>Can said some bad elements in southern Vietnam were trafficking in remains by hiring people to dig in Vietnamese graves, steal the remains and try to pass them off as American.</p>
        <p>He said those Vietnamese mistakenly believed American remains would get them entry visas to the United States or some other reward.</p>
        <p>U.S. policy is to accept POW-MIA information from any source, the American delegation said, but we do not view paying for remains as helpful to promoting government-to-government cooperation on accounting.</p>
        <p>Paying for remains would encourage scavenger activities at crash sites by persons lacking the technical recovery knowledge, thus enormously complicating the U.S. governments ability to recover remains, the Americans said.</p>
        <p>Similarly, the U.S. government does not provide refugee resettlement as a reward for cooperation.</p>
        <p>Fewer than 10 percent of the remains of Americans listed as missing in Indochina have been recovered since U.S. forces were withdrawn from Vietnam in early 1973.</p>
        <p>Vietnam has returned the remains of 172 Americans identified by the Army laboratory. Another 2,383 are missing: 1,747 in Vietnam, 547 in Laos, 83 in Cambodia and six in China.</p>
        <p>U.S. officials acknowledge not all cases will be resolved, because much time has passed and many airmen were lost in jungle terrain or at sea.</p>
        <p>The United States will continue its efforts to account for all missing Americans, the delegation said.</p>
        <p>We still have ongoing efforts to account for Americans missing from World War Il^and Korea. This solemn commitment to resolve the fate of missing Americans and to return all recoverable remains to their native land will not be abandoned.</p>
        <p>THE ASSOCIATED PRESS</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON  Most violent crime victims who survived the attacks say they tried to protect themselves, and 63 percent say their efforts helped, a government study found.</p>
        <p>However, the study and a victims rights group both cautioned that the surveys findings should not be seen as an endorsement of fighting back, as those who may have fought back and paid with their lives were not accounted for in the report.</p>
        <p>The study by the Justice Departments Bureau of Justice Statistics was based on National Crime Survey interviews from July 1986 through June 1987 with about 100,000 people age 12 and older in 49,000 households nationwide.</p>
        <p>The findings should not be used to recommend whether or not victims should defend themselves or to determine the measures that are most effective, the study says.</p>
        <p>John Stein, deputy director of the National Organization for Victim Assistance, says that theres no universally appropriate response to a violent crime due to varying circumstances. Even if there were, he said, the victim probably would be too shocked to carry it out.</p>
        <p>If we do resist, its not because its a calculated decision, said Stein, whose organization advocates victims rights, does research on victim assistance and provides direct services to victims.</p>
        <p>Marcos Back In Hospital</p>
        <p>THE ASSOCIATED PRESS</p>
        <p>HONOLULU - Former Philippines President Ferdinand Marcos was in guarded condition with pneumonia after entering St. Francis Medical Center for the third time in little more than a month, a hospital spokeswoman said.</p>
        <p>The 71-year-old Marcos, also suffering from bronchial asthma, returned to the hospital Sunday afternoon, said nursing supervisor Cindy Miller.</p>
        <p>He was moved to intensive care, according to Marcos spokesman Gemmo Trinidad. Ms. Miller said she was unauthorized to confirm that.</p>
        <p>When one is confronted with a violent criminal, the situation clearly is not one in which training, thinlj-ing, cognitive stuff is taking place a lot, Stein said.</p>
        <p>Im not saying we are powerless in moments of crisis, but we certainly emphasize to victims that the level of decision-making we are likely to operate under is very low." he said. That s one of the reasons why were not certain that, for example, self-defense training is likelv to have much of an impact." The survey found that 73 percent of the victims of violent crimes - rape, robbery, aggravated assault and simple assault  made some efforts to protect themselves.</p>
        <p>Those effort's included fighting back, threatening the attacker or screaming from pain or fear. About one-third resisted or tried to capture the offender, one-fourth ran away or hid and one-fourth tried to persuade or appease the offender. Some tried more than one measure.</p>
        <p>Of those victims. 63 percent say resisting helped, 7 percent said it led to more harm, 6 percent said it both helped and hurt, 13 percent said it did neither and 11 percent weren't sure of the effect.</p>
        <p>In explaining why no conclusions were drawn regarding whether a victim should take some self-protective actions or which actions those should be, the study noted that the survey did not determine the exact circumstances of each case or whether the victims were correct in their assessments.</p>
        <p>Finally, it should be noted that the National Crime Survey does not collect information on homicides and therefore misses qny cases of self-protection that may have</p>
        <p>resulted in the death of the victim." the report says.</p>
        <p>Other findings of the survey include.</p>
        <p>Police, when notified of a crime, arrived within 10 minutes to see the victim in 56 percent of the violent crimes, 38 percent of personal thefts and 35 percent of household crimes. They arrived within an hour in 95 percent of violent crimes, 84 percent of personal thefts and 85 percent of household crimes. Previous surveys have found that police are called only in about half of all violent crimes, 40 percent of household crimes and 25 percent of personal thefts.</p>
        <p>Police had later contact with vii^ims in 37 percent of the violent crimes reported to them  including 62 percent of rapes  as well as 35 percent of household crimes and 25 percent of personal thefts.</p>
        <p>The victim received help or advice from a victim assistance office or agency other than the police in about one of nine violent crimes reported to the police.</p>
        <p>The report did not give a margin of error for the survey results. However. traditional polls involving 1,000 people typically have error margins of 3 percent to 4 percent. With a substantially larger sample, the margin should be lower.</p>
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        <p>Reagan Wont Suffer Financially In Retirement</p>
        <p>By W. Dale Nelson</p>
        <p>THE ASSOCIATED PRESS</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP) - As President Reagan heads back to the ranch on George Bushs inauguration day, he will carry with him a passel of perquisites that presidents receive when they become former presidents.</p>
        <p>For one thing, he will fly to California on Air Force Qne, but thats only a one-shot deal. The plane will be flown back to Washington without him and after that will be earmarked for the new president.</p>
        <p>There will be no need, however, to pass the tin cup for Reagan. Unlike such early presidents as Thomas Jefferson, who had to sell his books to make ends meet, Reagan will, like other recent ones, be quite comfortably off.</p>
        <p>He gets two pensions, around-the-clock Secret Service protection, an office allowance and the use of a townhouse in Washington. In addition, the government will pay to ship his papers to California, process them and run his presidential library.</p>
        <p>Reagan already receives a pension of $29,188 a year from the state of California, because of his eight years as governor.</p>
        <p>Now, with eight years as president under his belt, he will receive a federal pension equal to the annual salary of a member of the Cabinet. This is currently $99,500 but will jump to $155,000 if Congress approves a sala-" ry, increase Reagan has recommended.</p>
        <p>The Secret Service protection applies to both the president and his wife, Nancy Should Reagan die, she would receive lifetime protection unless she remarried. The Reagans</p>
        <p>children will receive no protection, since they are all adultS;</p>
        <p>Former Sen. Lawton Chiles, D-Fla., who waged a campaign to scale back benefits for former presidents during his Senate career, estimated the cost of the Secret Service protection at $9.3 million in 1986. This covered former Presidents Ford and Carter, but not Nixon, who chose to hire private bodyguards.</p>
        <p>I wouldnt be surprised to see that double in the first year that Reagan is out of office, said Robert Coakley, who was Chiles staff director and is now on the staff of Sen. John Glenn, D-Ohip.</p>
        <p>Coakley said the first year out of office is always the most expensive because of equipment purchases.</p>
        <p>Also, although Reagan spoke in his final presidential radio address Saturday of going back to the ranch, he and Mrs. Reagan actual</p>
        <p>ly plan to live in a fashionable Los ngeles neighborhood and continue to use their 688-acre ranch north of Santa Barbara as a vacation home. Protecting both places also will increase the cost.</p>
        <p>Each former president receives an office allowance of up to $300,000. Reagan already has waiting for him a penthouse suite in a Los Angeles office building, with offices for himself, Mrs. Reagan, the Ronald Reagan Presidential Foundation, the Secret Service and press aide Mark Weinberg.</p>
        <p>The Washington townhouse, on a side street near the White House, is reserved for the use of former presidents when they come to town, although they do not always use it. President Carter, for instance, stayed in the presidential suite of a hotel about a block away when he</p>
        <p>came through town on a recent book promotion tour.</p>
        <p>In 1986, the Senate passed a Chiles bill to limit Secret Service protection and reduce the office allowances, but it failed to win approval in the Hoiise.</p>
        <p>Chiles did secure enactment of a bill requiring the private backers who put up the funds to build presidential libraries also to create an endowment to underwrite the cost of running them. Theres a catch, though. At the insistence of the administration, the bill exempted the Reagan library, now being built in Simi Valiev, Calif.</p>
        <p>In addition to the cost of running the library. National Archives spokeswoman Jill Brett said an estimated $500,000 is ticketed for moving Reagans presidential papers to California and $1.3 million</p>
        <p>Inauguration Means Another Arrest</p>
        <p>By Jennifer Dixon</p>
        <p>THE ASSOCIATED PRESS</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON  Another presidential inauguration is likely to mean another arrest for Stacy Abney, an expatriate Texan who is routinely carted away by police from a Capitol archway whenever new presidents and foreign dignitaries appear.</p>
        <p>Abney has been arrested 21 times for refusing to leave the archway, where he has slept on 'scraps of carpet for the past 14 years.</p>
        <p>. Rain falling on a recent January day sluiced over the edge of the archway and kept Abney from his usual daytime perch in the middle of the Capitols main steps, where he crouches with a placard listing health problems blamed on his World War II military service.</p>
        <p>Tourists, he says, have told him the Capitol steps are too good for someone like him. But as the chilling cold turns each word into puffs of mist, he declares that he isnt going anywhere until the government relents and gives him disability payments.</p>
        <p>An arrest at this years inauguration of a fellow Texan, George Bush, is a given, says U.S. Capitol Police spokesman Dan Nichols. As part of his protest he refuses to leave.</p>
        <p>Abney is cited for unlawful entry when he wont budge for" police securing the building for special occasions. So far, hes been arrested 21 times, Nichols said.</p>
        <p>The Associated Press</p>
        <p>Stacey Abney stands in front of Capitol archway</p>
        <p>He is taken to a District of Columbia jail, but always comes back to the Capitol upon his release.</p>
        <p>Mr. Abney is never disorder</p>
        <p>ly, Nichols said. Hes very docile as far as police go. He presents no special problems. Nichols, who used to patrol the east side of the Capitol where the</p>
        <p>77-year-old stages his lone and silent protest, says tourists sometimes complain that Abney ruins their pictures, sitting on the imposing Capitol steps with his roughly scrawled cardboard sign.</p>
        <p>Nichols says he always explained to the visitors that only in the United States would a protester be allowed to demonstrate at the foot of the Capitol. They should be happy thats allowed in our country, he said.</p>
        <p>We consider him a demonstrator, not a homeless person, Nichols said. He demonstrates every day on the Capitol steps and at night, by being on the Capitol grounds.</p>
        <p>Born a mile from the Louisiana border in northeast Texas, Abney says he came to the Capitol to fight for disability benefits he believes he deserves for serving in the military  18 months and six days in the United States and 25 months and two days overseas, in England, France, Belgium and Germany.</p>
        <p>He said that after his discharge, doctors told him not to work on account of his weak heart, high blood pressure, gout and arthritis, and he hasnt held a job since 1948.</p>
        <p>I dont get nothing from the VA (Veterans Administration) in Texas for 29 years, he says, so he came to Washington.</p>
        <p>He says some people give him food and money as they bustle past him on their way to tend to</p>
        <p>congressional business, but he still shivers through the winter and swelters in the summer.</p>
        <p>When the wind comes through here, its as cold as ice. I stand here all day in the cold, freezing weather. I aint got no sign of fire, no sign of heat, he says, wiping a drop of rain from his face with a crumpled paper towel.</p>
        <p>In the summer, he says, he finds places where he can rinse the dirt from himself and his clothes.</p>
        <p>Then I sit out in the sun tike an animal and get dry, he says.</p>
        <p>He refuses to move to a shelter for the homeless, because, he says, it would be h-e-double-1.</p>
        <p>Why sure. Im lonely, he says. Who wouldnt be, stuck out here like this 24 hours a day? But no, Im not sad. Im not worried.</p>
        <p>I wasnt getting anywhere so I came up here and decided to fight until I get it. I havent gotten it but Im still fighting.</p>
        <p>for renovating and equipping storage room for them in the Archives facility at Laguna Niguel and in rented space at Culver City.</p>
        <p>James B. McKinney, director of the White House Military Office, which oversees transportation, medical and other services for the president, said those services will be available to the ex-president for six months, but he will have to pay for them. Weinberg said Reagan expects to use only some limited communications support to facilitate the transition.</p>
        <p>Reagans personal finances are hard to measure, since most of his assets are in a blind trust. His latest government financial disclosure form, which discloses assets in broad categories, said only that the trust is worth more than $250,000. The Reagans bought their ranch for $526,000 in 1974 and made $127,000 in improvements to it eight years later. The new home in Los Angeles was purchased for $2.5 million by California friends from whom the Reagans are leasing it for a reported $15,000 a month.</p>
        <p>Both of the Reagans plan to write books and make speeches, for which they are expected to command handsome fees.</p>
        <p>All in all, if Reagans presidential limousine turns into a pumpkin at the stroke of noon on Friday, it certainly should be a prize pumpkin.</p>
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        <p>Amid Political Glitter, The Other Washington Comes Down To Earth</p>
        <p>By Ruth Sinai</p>
        <p>THE ASSOCIATED PRESS</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON - On a snowy Sunday morning this month, two youths were buying drugs within a'** few steps of the Embassy of Spain. There was nothing furtive about the deal, just money handed over and two small packets given in return. Anybody driving by could have seen it.</p>
        <p>Across the street, next to the Polish Embassy, a young woman signaled a passing car. The car stopped, the woman leaned into the open window and handed over some money. She withdrew a gloved hand holding a small package. Anybody could have watched.</p>
        <p>That block, just a mile up 16th Street from the White House, is one of the estimated 90 open-air drug markets flourishing in the capital, which last year achieved the distinction of having the nations highest murder rate.</p>
        <p>Washington is a city of contrasts, and  they never have been more stark. The news coming out of the capital these days - of farewells and the fresh expectations which arise with the inauguration of a new president  competes against news of murder, drugs and a mayor under a cloud.</p>
        <p>Things have gotten bad enough for the other Washington to begin to poke into the consciousness of of-Hcial, prosperous, gleaming Washington.</p>
        <p>Barely a block from the White House, some of the citys homeless huddle on heating grates. Activist Mitch Snyder estimates there are 15,000 people who live in Washington with no homes other than the streets, and he says several have frozen to death. The best publicized case was that of Jesse Carpenter, a World War II veteran who died of exposure across the street from White House in Lafayette Park.</p>
        <p>Across the street from the dome Congress, a beggar jangles coinsj a tin cup and asks pass legislative aides for money.</p>
        <p>Its the American dream and the American nightmare all rolled into</p>
        <p>one, said B.J. Harris, a drug education counselor with the nonprofit Sasha Bruce Youthworks, a youth counseling service named in honor of the late daughter of a prominent American diplomat.</p>
        <p>Statistics provided by the Census Bureau highlight the disparity.</p>
        <p>The District of Columbia has the nations second highest per capita income after the state of Connecticut: $20,303 annually, which is 32.3 percent higher than the national average.</p>
        <p>The city has the nations fourth highest per capita education level, with 28 percent of the population having completed 16 years or more of schooling.</p>
        <p>Yet, Washingtons infant mortality rate is the highest in the country  20.8 per 1,000 births, compared to the national average of 10.6, according to the Childrens Defense Fund. The city has the countrys highest tuberculosis case rate, 25.4 per 100,000, according to the Centers for Disease Control.</p>
        <p>This city has monoliths of marble attesting to a great civilization, and yet some of its neighborhoods .^re like the undeveloped Third World, Harris said.</p>
        <p>Most of the 27 million tourists who come through Washington every year never see the seamier sides. In Washington, most neighborhoods are clearly delineated between the</p>
        <p>170.000 white minority and the</p>
        <p>458.000 blacks and Hispanics.</p>
        <p>There are many middle-class</p>
        <p>black neighorhoods, and integrated neighborhoods, with tidy lawns and substantial houses which could fit anywhere in America. Some of the predominantly white areas, such as green and grassy Spring Valley or Cleveland Park, with shaded streets of elegant Victorian homes, are as comfortable as any in America.</p>
        <p>One can stroll down Massachusetts Avenue  past the official residence of the vice president, past the statue of Winston Churchill, past the ornate Islamic Center where Moslems gather to worship, past dozens of elegant embassies  without a moments thought of danger.</p>
        <p>In fact, one can live a lifetime in northwest Washington removed from the violence and crime that characterize neighborhoods just a few miles away.</p>
        <p>The lines of race and class are very distinct here, said Harris.</p>
        <p>The neighborhood we live in is completely white and its a world apart from the crime-ridden streets in other parts of the city, said Lauren Silva Pinto, a television producer who lives with her husband on a shaded block in northwest Washington. I- feel extremely safe here, we walk around at night with no problems, have barbecues, visit neighbors.</p>
        <p>Washington became a mecca for blacks fleeing the segregationist South in the first half of this century. Washington was segregated itself until after World War II, but jobs</p>
        <p>were available for blacks, who ultimately became the majority group in the capital.</p>
        <p>Most of the people who work in Washington, whether for the federal government or other employers, live in suburbs across the Potomac River in Virginia or across the district line in Marvlanri</p>
        <p>Greene*s Heating &amp;amp; A/C</p>
        <p>757-I35</p>
        <p>AN INFORMATIONAL FORUM</p>
        <p>concerning a</p>
        <p>NORTH CAROLINA TEACHER CAREER DEVELOPMENT PROGRAM</p>
        <p>A PROGRAM PROPOSED BY THE N.C. BOARD OF EDUCATION INCLUDING NEW CAREER LADDER ADVANCEMENT PROCEDURES, TEACHER EVALUATION AND RATING.</p>
        <p>JANUARY 17,1989  8:00  p.m.</p>
        <p>First Presbyterian Church, 14th &amp;amp; Elm Sts.</p>
        <p>KEYNOTE SPEAKER: LOUISE WOODS</p>
        <p>COMMENTS FROM:</p>
        <p>Dr. Chet Preyar, Associate Superintendant, Personnel Development Services Ms. Christina Drye, Certificated Personnel,</p>
        <p>Pitt County Schools.</p>
        <p>Informational Input from Other Involved Professionals</p>
        <p>LWV IS SEEKING COMMENTS AND IDEAS FROM PARENTS, TEACHERS AND THE GENERAL PUBLIC.</p>
        <p>FREE OF CHARGE OPEN TO THE PUBLIC For Information, Call 756-5352</p>
        <p>Sponsored by The League of Women Voters of Greenville  Pitt Co</p>
        <p>Quadrangle Medical Specialists, P.A.</p>
        <p>takes pleasure in announcing the association of</p>
        <p>Garrett Rogers, M.D.  </p>
        <p>for the practice of Interventional Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine at 1705 W. 6th St., Building E</p>
        <p>Unltadway</p>
        <p>FEELING LOW? UNCERTAIN? NE&amp;amp; HELP?</p>
        <p>Why not com* by tho REAL Crlsli Intorvontlon Center: 312 E. ^,40th St; or call 758-HELP, For Free Confidential Counseling or Assistance.</p>
        <p>Our Volunteers and Staff are on duty 24 hrs. a day, yaar around, In order to assist you In virtually any problem area you might have. Our longstanding goal has always been to preserve and enhance the quality of life for you and our community.</p>
        <p>LIcanMd And Accraditad By Tha Stata of North Carolina</p>
        <p>Cardiovascular Disease Donald H. Tucker. M.D., F.A.C.P., F.A.C.C. Douglas C. Privette, M.D., F.A.C.C.</p>
        <p>William J. Minteer, M.D., F.A.C.C.</p>
        <p>Lynn H. Orr, Jr., M.D.</p>
        <p>Eric B. Oirison, M.D., F.A.C.P., F.A.C.C.</p>
        <p>Ga stroenterology Douglas F. Newton, M.D.</p>
        <p>Mark Dellasega, M.D.</p>
        <p>Hematology and Oncology Thomas J. Chapllnski, M.D., F.A.C.P.</p>
        <p>Pulmonary Disease Robert A. Shaw, M.D., F.A.C.P., F.C.C.P.</p>
        <p>Rheumatology C. Michael Ramsdeli, M.D., F.A.C.P. Randal E. White, M.D., F.A.C.P.</p>
        <p>Internal Medicine Richard W. Croskery, M.D.</p>
        <p>Richard Z. Shultzaberger, M.D.</p>
        <p>R. Lee Pippin, M.D. (Farmville)</p>
        <p>Steven L. Hamstead, M.D. (Farmville)</p>
        <p>1705 W. 6th Street Building E Greenville, N.C.</p>
        <p>with offices at:</p>
        <p>1705 W. 6th Street Building D Greenville, N.C.</p>
        <p>201 N. Main Street Farmville, N.C.</p>
        <p>Office Hours:</p>
        <p>MondayFriday, 9:00 a.m.12:00 p.m. and 2:00 p.m.-5:00</p>
        <p>Telephone: 7537141 (Farmviile) 7526101 (Greenville) 752~4163 (NIghta, Waekdaya and HoUdaya)</p>
        <pb facs="00097138_0009" />
        <p>Accent</p>
        <p>Forgive Others AndKnow Peace</p>
        <p>Dear Abby</p>
        <p>Abigail Van Buren</p>
        <p>ft</p>
        <p>Dear Readers; Did you know there is an International Forgiveness Week? Well, neither did I,, until last year. And this is the week.</p>
        <p>If you are a card-carrying member of the human race, there is at least one person in your life who needs your forgiveness. Or perhaps its YOU who needs to be forgiven. So, get aboard the mea culpa bandwagon. Robert Muller, former assistant secretary-general of the United Nations, wrote this piece especially for International Forgiveness Week:</p>
        <p>Decide To Forgive Decide to forgive For resentment is negative Resentment is poisonous Resentment diminishes and devours the self.</p>
        <p>Be the first to forgive.</p>
        <p>To smile and to take the first step.</p>
        <p>And you will see happiness bloom</p>
        <p>On the face of your human brother or sister.</p>
        <p>Be always the first Do not wait for others to forgive For by forgiving You tiecome the master of fate The fashioner of life The doer of miracles.</p>
        <p>To forgive is the highest.</p>
        <p>Most beautiful form of love.</p>
        <p>In return you will receive Untold peace and happiness.</p>
        <p>economic lines within your own nation.</p>
        <p>Thursday: Forgive across cultural lines within your own nation.</p>
        <p>Friday: Forgive across political lines within your own nation.</p>
        <p>Saturday: Forgive other nations.</p>
        <p>Only the brave know how to forgive. A coward never forgives.</p>
        <p>It is not in his nature.</p>
        <p> By Robert Muller</p>
        <p>Many years ago, B.C. (Before Column), I came across this particularly poignant description of forgiveness:</p>
        <p>Forgiveness is the fragrance of the violet which still clings fast to the heel that crushed it. No source was credited, so I searched for years until I finally found it. And here it is:</p>
        <p>Forgiveness  By George Roemisch Forgiveness is the wind-blown bud which blooms in placid beauty at Verdun.</p>
        <p>Forgiveness is the tiny slate-</p>
        <p>gray sprrow which has built its nest of twigs and string among</p>
        <p>Here is the program for achieving a truly forgiving heart: Sunday: Forgive yourself. Monday: Forgive your family. Tuesday: Forgive your friends and associates.</p>
        <p>Wednesday: Forgive across</p>
        <p>the shards of glass upon the wall of shame..</p>
        <p>Forgiveness is the child who laughs in merry ecstasy beneath the toothed fence that closes in Da Nang.</p>
        <p>Forgiveness is the fragrance of the violet which still clings fast to the heel that crushed it.</p>
        <p>Forgiveness is the broken dream which hides itself within the comer of the mind oft called forgetfulness, so that it will not bring pain to the dreamer.</p>
        <p>Forgiveness is the reed which stands up straight and green when natures mighty rampage halts, full spent.</p>
        <p>Forgiveness is a God who will not leave us after all weve done.</p>
        <p>Universal Press Syndicate</p>
        <p>Wedding Vows Said Sunday</p>
        <p>j</p>
        <p>MRS. HOLLOMAN</p>
        <p>Georgia Potter Gives Program</p>
        <p>FARMVILLE  The wedding ceremony of Mary Lisa Carraway and William Nathan Holloman Jr. took place Sunday.</p>
        <p>The Rev. William Scott Sowers conducted the ceremony in the Marlboro Free Will Baptist Church at 3 p.m.</p>
        <p>Parents of the couple are Mr. and Mrs. Robert D. Carraway of Greenville and Mary S. Styron of Farm-ville and Mr. and Mrs. William Nathan Holloman of Harrellsville.</p>
        <p>Jeanie Elizabeth Taylor of Winterville was honor attendant. The father of the bridegroom was best man, Ushers were Brett Lee Holloman and Lofton Heath Holloman of Harrellsville, both brothers of the bridegroom.</p>
        <p>Pianist Lynn Chapolear and soloist Chris Edwards presented wedding music.</p>
        <p>The bride, given in marriage by</p>
        <p>her father, wore a formal gown of white bridal satin featuring a sabrina neckline, fitted bodice and basque waistline. Seed pearls, sequins and schiffli embroidered lace accented the bodice. Lace cutouts trimmed the skirt and cathedral train which cascaded in ruffles. A bustle butterfly bow highlighted the back bodice and matching embroidery and pearls trimmed the full-length sleeves. She wore a crown headpiece of alencon lace flowers, pearls and crystals attached to an imported fingertip-length illusion veil with a bubble pouf. She carrid a cascade of pink sweetheart roses, miniature carnations, babys breath and greenery accented by streamers.</p>
        <p>the pouf sleeves had a ruffle effect. The bodice was fitted and the waistline was basque. The skirt extended into an A-line design with a satin bow in back. She carried a nosegay of pink miniature carnations, white carnations and babys breath tied with pink and royal blue streamers.</p>
        <p>Friends of the bride gave a reception in the fellowship hall of the church.</p>
        <p>The bride is a graduate of Farm-ville Central High School and Pitt Community College. She is employed by Charlotte Memorial Hospital. The bridegroom, who attended Ahoskie High School and Pitt Community College, is employed by Crowdet Construction Company.</p>
        <p>The maid of honor wore a royal blue tea-length gown of satin. The gown had a sweetheart neckline and</p>
        <p>After a wedding trip to Atlantic City. N.J., the couple will live in Charlotte.</p>
        <p>A slide presentation on Monticello highlighted the meeting of Xi Gamma Xi chapter of Beta Sigma Phi held last week at the home of Sandra Everett.</p>
        <p>Recent activities of the group have included a progressive dinner held at the homes of Linda Schadler, Fran Rostar, Carolyn Powell and Georgia Potter and secret sister exchange.</p>
        <p>The service committee reported that refreshments have been provided residents of a local nursing home on a monthly basis.</p>
        <p>Carolyn and Jerry Powell will have a Super Bowl Sunday social at their home Jan. 22.</p>
        <p>Meeting Place</p>
        <p>Monday</p>
        <p>6:30 p.m.  Rotary Club meets.</p>
        <p>6:30 p.m.  H(Bt 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 of the World,</p>
        <p>4:15 p.m.  Pitt County Memorial Hospital Board meets in PCMH conference</p>
        <p>room near the cafeteria.</p>
        <p>6:30 p.m.  Greenville Claims Association meets at Three Steers.</p>
        <p>6:30 p.m.  Greenville Kiwanis Club</p>
        <p>8 p m  .Narcotics. Anonymous open discussion at St Peter's Catholic Church</p>
        <p>Simpson Lodge, meets at Community lildinc</p>
        <p>Babysitting Class</p>
        <p>The Pitt County 4-H Club is sponsoring a babysitting class Jan. 27 from 9:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. at the Pitt County Extension Office for babysitters between the ages of 10 and 15.</p>
        <p>Participants should bring 25 cents and a bag lunch with a drink, he course will cover characteristics and responsiblities of babysitters, responsibilities of parents, physical development, care of children and play activities.</p>
        <p>To preregister call 830-6369 by noon Jan. 26.</p>
        <p>Building.</p>
        <p>7:30 p.m.  Gamblers Anonymous meets at St. Peters Catholic Church</p>
        <p>7:30 p.m.  Greenville Barber Shop Chorus meets at Jaycee Park Administrative Building.</p>
        <p>8 p.m.  Pitt-Greenville Airport Authority meets in the conference room of the terminal building.</p>
        <p>7:30 p.m.  The Adult Children of Alcoholics Newcomers Group meets at St. James Methodist Church.</p>
        <p>8 p.m.  The Adult Children of Alcoholics Support Group meets at St. James Methodist Church.</p>
        <p>8 p.m.  Overeaters Anonymous step</p>
        <p>meets at Cypress Glen Retirement Home 7 p.m.Th</p>
        <p>le Steering Committee of the Dispute Mediation Center of Pitt County meets in D301 Brewster Building. ECU.</p>
        <p>7 p.m.  Post No. 39 of American Legion meets at Post Home.</p>
        <p>Greenville Planning and Zoning Board meets in Greenville City Council Chambers.</p>
        <p>8 p m.  Pitt County Alcoholics Anonymous meets at AA Building, Farmville Highway</p>
        <p>8 pm.  .Narcotics .Anonymous open discussion at St James Episcopal Church, Washington, N C 8 p.m.  Nar-Anon meet.s at St Paul Episcopal Church</p>
        <p>Wednesday</p>
        <p>9:30 a m  Duplicate bridge.meets at Senior Center 10 a m  Pitt Golden K Kiwanis Club meets at Greenville Cnuntrv Club</p>
        <p>8 p.m.  Pitt County Al-Anon family "   '  I  Method-</p>
        <p>group meets at St. James United ist Church. Call 758-1491 or 825-1982.</p>
        <p>8 p.m.  Narcotics Anonymous open discussion at St. Pauls Episcopal Church</p>
        <p>Eastern Electrolysis</p>
        <p>205 COMMERCE ST.. GREENVILLE. NC PHONE 756-4034 PERMANENT HAIR REMOVAL</p>
        <p>CERTIFIED THERMOLOGIST</p>
        <p>meeting at First Presbyterian Church,  iSti</p>
        <p>Harvey-Webb room, Elm Street.</p>
        <p>8 p.m.  Lodge No. 885 Loyal Order of the Moose.</p>
        <p>SAPPHIRES, EMERALDS, RUBIES, PEARLS, DIAMONDS</p>
        <p>8 p.m.  Alcoholics Anonymous closed discussion, AA Building, Farmville.</p>
        <p>8 p.m.  Narcotics Anortymous open meeting at St. Pauls Episcopal Church.</p>
        <p>LAUTARES JEWELERS</p>
        <p>Est. 1912</p>
        <p>Specialists In Precious Gems</p>
        <p>Store Hours Through Dec. 24 10-5:30 Mon.-Sat.</p>
        <p>Tuesday</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 Club meets at the Masonic Hall f-</p>
        <p>iSouthwestern Look Gains Speed</p>
        <p>By Cathrine Cook</p>
        <p>LAT-WP NEWS SERVICE</p>
        <p>* The Western, especially South-I western, trend has .been gathering ^speed for several seasons. Pointed cowboy boots have been much sought-after by the young and tren-!^dy of late, and cowboy fringe is dec-torating many a jacket, in thrift-shop versions on the streets as well as in sophisticated megabuck variations rin the designer boutiques. The influ-ential French designer Jean-Paul ^Gaultier even shows a version of j^chaps in his current collection.</p>
        <p>M Bandannas are another element of I the look, worn pirate style around !^the head by both men and women, tucked in pockets, wrapped as belts ;;'and serving as inspiration for ^Printed fabrics. Laced-up fastenings ,^reminiscent of Daniel Boone are a , detail decorating shirts and skirts ^and pants, especially in suede</p>
        <p>Even the cosmetics industry is getting in the mood. Estee Lauder has titled its new spring makeup campaign Heading West and )romotes makeup colors with names ike Prairie Orange, Canyon Rose  and  Tumbleweed Tan.  </p>
        <p>The Carole Little Wear clothing line for this spring is meant to be evocative of primitive Indian sand paintings in shades the designer refers to as sandstone, sagebrush, maize and coral. The design motifs are based on geometric carpet shapes and pueblo prints.</p>
        <p>The West has provided inspiration for Carole Littles designs at various tinies since she first launched her business in 1975, but lately shes received even greater response to clothes with a Southwestern touch.</p>
        <p>like the beading and the lacing, she says.</p>
        <p>In an era of fashion where people are bringing back the iSOs and hippies, anything you do that has handwork, its something women are going to like.</p>
        <p>Her sweaters and pants for the upcoming transition months are trimmed with wooden and crystal beads and for spring are decorated with seed beads like those on Indian</p>
        <p>1989-90</p>
        <p>Jarvis Preschool Registration</p>
        <p>I think its because so much today is machine-made and people appreciate the detail of handwork that goes into that kind of clothing </p>
        <p>moccasins.</p>
        <p>Western wear offers a certain advantage over such recent fashion fads as neon-colored spandex: It can be worn again. Western wear has become a classic element of the American wardrobe. Well-maintained suede vests and suede skirts, prairie skirts and petticoats can often be worn for years.</p>
        <p>But there are subtle differences between this years fling with the West and that of previous years. Bernie Ozer, vice president with the</p>
        <p>Associated Merchandising Corp. in New York, says that this time around the fringe being worn tends not to be a pure American West interpretation, but a combination of Western and Spanish.</p>
        <p>In a report from Elle magazine, the accessories touted under the heading Cowboy Chic tend not to be literal interpretations of Western garb. The cowboy boots are cropped to the ankle and equipped with steel tif. The star pins are free-form interpretations of the old sheriffs badge. And in place of the conventional bolo there are leather rope necklaces dangling with charms or dog tags.</p>
        <p>General Public (First Come Basis)</p>
        <p>510 S. Washington Street 2:00-4:00 P.M.</p>
        <p>(Basement Fellow^ip Hall) ^</p>
        <p>Sunday, January 22,1989</p>
        <p>Half Day Programs For 2, 3, 4 Year Olds &amp;amp; 5 Yr. Olds Not Quite Ready For Kindergarten Elizabeth Havens, Director</p>
        <p>757-1676</p>
        <p>V</p>
        <p>One aspect of the new trend that may provide it with some longevity is the opportunity it provides for mixing and matching items in an existing wardrobe with new Western clothing or accessories for a variety of completely new looks.Births</p>
        <p>The Washington Rotary Club</p>
        <p>is currently seeking an interesting program to be presented on January 26th at 6:00 p.m. at the Holiday Inn in Washington. If you have a thirty minute program that you would like to present at this meeting, please call Bob Parish, Jr. at</p>
        <p>946-7798.</p>
        <p>James</p>
        <p>Born to Dr. and Mrs. Paul Arthur James, Bethel, a son, Benjamin ;Paul, on Jan. 4, 1989, in Pitt County /Memorial Hospital.</p>
        <p>Howell V =</p>
        <p>Born to Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Ray Howell, Fremont, a daughter, Danielle Renee, on Jan. 4, 1989, in Pitt County Memorial Hospital.</p>
        <p>Purvis</p>
        <p>Born to Mr. and Mrs. Dalton Leavon Purvis, 1506 Mays Trailer</p>
        <p>Park, a daughter, Laura Marie, on Jan. 4,1989, in Pitt County Memorial Hospital. '</p>
        <p>Gladson</p>
        <p>Born to Mr. and Mrs. Roy Gregory -Crladson, Route 3, Greenville, a ' daughter, Jenna Angela, on Jan. 4, *1989, in Pitt County Memorial Hospi-^1.</p>
        <p>Trotman</p>
        <p>Born to Mr. and Mrs. John A. Trotman, Williamston, a son, Corde Quinton, on Jan. 4, 1989, in Pitt County Memorial Hospital.</p>
        <p>Mid-January Sale</p>
        <p>20% Off</p>
        <p>All Merchandise</p>
        <p>We Will Exclude Our Most Ret enl Deliveries From This Sale</p>
        <p>t Me  Pekfee,  ^iem  ceUi ue</p>
        <p>eitMe T&amp;gt;iet  tiM  expUUi</p>
        <p>eun,  pnettUe eeet</p>
        <p>tt^onmeiUet 9tten&amp;gt; Me piteme,</p>
        <p>Further Reductions On Fall And Winter Merchandise</p>
        <p>Sale Ends Saturday, January 21,1989</p>
        <p>RFAI -FVRF</p>
        <p>GAS FIREPLACE LOGS</p>
        <p>Tar Bead Aotlqaea A Fireside Bhep</p>
        <p>Fireplace Accessories</p>
        <p>On the old Tar Road 1 mile south of Sunshine Garden Center  P.O Box 913, Winterville, N C 28590 (919) 355-6003  Night 756-1007 1n-Home Evening Appointments Available Monday Frlday 9-5:30  Sat. 8-5  Sun. 1-6</p>
        <p>907 Red Banks Road 756-2771</p>
        <p>Mon.-Sat. 10-5:30</p>
        <p>4#^ pfieAettneeeU ell tUmal fde pmeieiAett ftem fteeeitf etinie.  (eel  tewU^U</p>
        <p>UUeAd ef emf</p>
        <p>Ude UedMf 7-2S</p>
        <p>pHtde S 6 meee.</p>
        <p>lOe eUetse tUe e</p>
        <p>Me eet te Mee</p>
        <p>^eeifkt sSfssMeeef Se eeU ue tedof.</p>
        <p>.^AT THt</p>
        <p>r DIET .CENTER</p>
        <p>CALI TODAY!</p>
        <p>756-8545</p>
        <p>102 Oakmonl Profettioiuil PIM</p>
        <pb facs="00097138_0010" />
        <p>A-10 The Daily Reflector. Greenville N C</p>
        <p>Monday, January 16, 1989</p>
        <p>Stock And Market ReportsHeart Disease Death Rate Drops But Its Still Nations Biggest Killer</p>
        <p>By The Associated Press HOGS: Market steady to 50 cents lower at N.C. buying stations. Kinston, Spiveys Corner, Murfreesboro, Robersonville, Siler City 41.00; Clinton, Fayetteville, Dunn, Pink Hill, Chadbourn, Ayden, Laurinburg and Benson 40,75; Wilson 41.00; sows: (500 pounds up) Fayetteville 31.00; Wallace 31.00; Spiveys Corner 32.00; Rowland 31.00.</p>
        <p>l)elta.\iH</p>
        <p>DowChem</p>
        <p>duPont</p>
        <p>Iluke Fow</p>
        <p>EstKodak</p>
        <p>EatonCp</p>
        <p>Exxon</p>
        <p>EFLGrp</p>
        <p>FstUnionCp</p>
        <p>EstWachov</p>
        <p>FlaProgress</p>
        <p>Ford Motor</p>
        <p>Fuqua</p>
        <p>TE</p>
        <p>BROILERS: The North Carolina fob dock quoted price on broilers for this weeks trading was 53.25 cents, based on full truck load lots of ice pack USDA Grade A sized 24 to 3 pounds birds. 100 percent of the loads offered have been confirmed with a final weighted average of 53.09 cents. The market is mostly steady and the live supply is adequate for a mostly light demand. Average weights are desirable. Estimated slaughter of broilers and fryers in North Carolina 1,513,00, compared to 2-,090,000 last Monday.</p>
        <p>GTE (T&amp;gt;rp GenCorp GnDvnam-GcnEict GenMills Gen Motors GnMolr E (icnuParl GaPacd Goodrich ((KKiyear Grac'o GtNorNek Greyhound Hertuleslnc Honeywell HC.\'</p>
        <p>50' 1 89-&amp;gt;h 92'.. 4.5H 44H 57'h 44M</p>
        <p>31'4</p>
        <p>20</p>
        <p>34" 1 52 31'h</p>
        <p>44 18</p>
        <p>51' 1</p>
        <p>45</p>
        <p>49", 89'N 91' . 45' . 44 , .56' I 44'j 31's 20", 38', 34' . ,52"s 31</p>
        <p>43 17 .50 44 , 54 ", 87 44' , 35" 37 ,53.</p>
        <p>.50' 89', 91", 45', 44",</p>
        <p>By Ihmiel Q. Haney</p>
        <p>THE .ASSOCIATED PREks</p>
        <p>5/</p>
        <p>44", 31', 20 38 34" I 52H 31</p>
        <p>44 17 51</p>
        <p>45</p>
        <p>MONTEREY, Calif. - Heart disease remains the nations biggest killer, taking a life every 32 seconds.</p>
        <p>King</p>
        <p>(Continued from A-1)</p>
        <p>,)2  I 28 41', 30' 1 48</p>
        <p>tiO"</p>
        <p>rnGorp nuH IBM</p>
        <p>40'</p>
        <p>40',</p>
        <p>InoKand</p>
        <p>GRAIN: No. 2 yellow shelled corn 2 cents higher, at mostly $2.97-$3.13 in the East; mostly $3.13-$3.23 in the Piedmont; No. 1 yellow soybeans 5 to mostly 6 cents higher at mostly $7.95-$8.09 in the East; mostly $7.75-$7.80 in the Piedmont; wheat mostly $4.16-$4.22; new crop wheat $3.34-$3.69. Exchange rates for P.I.K. certificates were steady and ranged from 97 to 99' 2 percent of face value.</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (AP) - The stock market was little changed.today in quiet holiday trading.</p>
        <p>The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials slipped 1.% to 2,224.11 in the first half hour of trading. '</p>
        <p>Gainers and losers ran about even in the overall tally of New York Stock Exchange-listed issues, with 420 up, 429 down and 564 unchanged.</p>
        <p>Volume on the Big Board came to 15.72 million shares as of 10 a.m. on Wall Street.</p>
        <p>Trading had been expected to be light because of the absence of many 'investors taking thejday off in observance of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.s birthday.</p>
        <p>Analysts said the mood of the markets kept brightening gradually as the rally in stock prices that began last November continued into the new year.</p>
        <p>By the end of last week, several primary indicators of market trends stood at their highest levels since the crash in October 1987.</p>
        <p>However, brokers said some traders were selling today to cash in on those gains. Many Wall Streeters worry;that" the rally cannot make r much progress unless interest rates turn downward.</p>
        <p>Losers among the blue chips included American Express, down '4 at  Sears Roebuck, down tq at</p>
        <p>41^4; General Electric, down s at 44Tg, and Eastman Kodak, down Vh at 44^4.</p>
        <p>The NYSEs composite index of all its listed common stocks slipped .05 to 159.53. At the American Stock Exchange, the market value index was up .06 at 315.99.</p>
        <p>On Friday the Dow Jones industrial average rose 3.75 to 2,226.07, finishing the week with a net gain of</p>
        <p>IntlPaixT</p>
        <p>IntlReit</p>
        <p>.JaniesKivr</p>
        <p>K Marl</p>
        <p>Kaiu'bSvc</p>
        <p>Krogt'r</p>
        <p>Lix'kheed</p>
        <p>LwwsC'p</p>
        <p>McDormlnl</p>
        <p>McKi's.sn</p>
        <p>Mcaili'p</p>
        <p>Mercaiit.Str</p>
        <p>MiniiMnp</p>
        <p>Mobil</p>
        <p>.Monsanto</p>
        <p>M MU p</p>
        <p>N.k'co</p>
        <p>.N.ivistar^.^.;,</p>
        <p>Noi Hk.Soir :</p>
        <p>.Nvncx </p>
        <p>(lIiiUp Pu hlisi^ Il'iinev.b _ PepsiCo Phelps 1)00 Pliilip.Mor PhiiipPet Polaroid s Pnmeriea Iroetlianib</p>
        <p>31,</p>
        <p>124',</p>
        <p>49</p>
        <p>4' 1 28' , ,15' ,</p>
        <p>12)</p>
        <p>48"</p>
        <p>4'</p>
        <p>28</p>
        <p>35</p>
        <p>35''</p>
        <p>124"</p>
        <p>48</p>
        <p>4'</p>
        <p>28'</p>
        <p>.35'</p>
        <p>)l</p>
        <p>66'</p>
        <p>51" 0 I ,)1  38</p>
        <p>il-P'in  Saturday in Pitt</p>
        <p>hono^Kine^''''y '"o'-"'' """I'i"''</p>
        <p>'/L  rangements  will  be  announced  by</p>
        <p>103'</p>
        <p>21'</p>
        <p>37'</p>
        <p>22'</p>
        <p>87'</p>
        <p>102"</p>
        <p>20</p>
        <p>)6</p>
        <p>22</p>
        <p>87'</p>
        <p>103</p>
        <p>21'</p>
        <p>37</p>
        <p>yuaxernai</p>
        <p>TO</p>
        <p>Quantum RJ</p>
        <p>-iJK.Nab lialstnPur Koekwel SPXCorp -ScottPapr _ Sear.sR(Kb" Shaklee Shawlnd Skyline Cp</p>
        <p>.Sony Corp Southern Co</p>
        <p>.SwstBell TRW Inc Texaco . TexEastn Textron USX Corp UnCamp UnCarbde US West UniKal WalMart WslPtPf</p>
        <p>.56'</p>
        <p>94"-,</p>
        <p>84"</p>
        <p>21</p>
        <p>40 39', 42' 24 23 15', .58 23',</p>
        <p>41</p>
        <p>42',</p>
        <p>.53'</p>
        <p>45'</p>
        <p>25'</p>
        <p>31',</p>
        <p>:i5',</p>
        <p>26</p>
        <p>ji'</p>
        <p>'P</p>
        <p>WestghM</p>
        <p>Weyerhsr</p>
        <p>WinnDix</p>
        <p>W(X)lworth</p>
        <p>Wrigley s Xerox Cp</p>
        <p>94' 84', 21", 39, 39' ; 41" 24</p>
        <p>2:!</p>
        <p>15' .58 23' 40 42' .52" 1 44" 24", 31', 35 .26', 57' 40'-. 31", 45'., 52", 26 44" 53" 36 .581..</p>
        <p>94"</p>
        <p>84"</p>
        <p>21".,</p>
        <p>40 39', 41 24 23 15', 58'., 2;)',</p>
        <p>41</p>
        <p>42" .53 44', 24 31" 35', 26", .57' 40" 31", 45' , .52 26 44" 53', :&amp;gt;</p>
        <p>Following are selected slock quoiai as of 11.00 a m Ashland Oil Uni.sys</p>
        <p>Fieldcrest Mills Flowers Inds Halteras Inc. Securities Hilton Hotel Corp Jefferson Pilot</p>
        <p>John Deere.........</p>
        <p>Lowe's Company-Interstate Securities</p>
        <p>Wickes  __</p>
        <p>.Soulhmark Corporation'....'.... ...........1</p>
        <p>United Telecommunications .......47"</p>
        <p>Dominion Resources..........................42'</p>
        <p>Piedmont Natural Gas.............^........2:5</p>
        <p>Johnson &amp;amp; Johnson.'... 85'</p>
        <p>OVER THE COUNTEfrf^</p>
        <p>Branch Bank  i to 18</p>
        <p>Planters National Bank............14  to 14</p>
        <p>Vermont American..................24'  to  24"</p>
        <p>Inlegon.........................................6 to 6'</p>
        <p>Southern National Bank...........18",  to 19'4</p>
        <p>Peoples Bank...................  i:i  to  13'a</p>
        <p>North Carolina Natural Gas 17',  to 17" ,</p>
        <p>Cooper LaserSonics....................8', to 8' 2</p>
        <p>Burroughs Wellcome..................', . .7", to 8</p>
        <p>Food Lion A .........................9'i to 9"</p>
        <p>Food LionB................... 9  to  10'</p>
        <p>Mrs. King gave her speech before an estimated 1,200 people at the church where King and his father ^ were co-pastors. It may have been * her final State of the Dream address as president of The King Center, a memorial and policy center in Atlanta.</p>
        <p>On Saturday, she announced that her 27-year-okl son. Dexter Scott King, would assume the presidency April 4 - the 21st anniversary of King's assassination at a Memphis, Tenn., motel in 1968.</p>
        <p>Today is the fourth year for the f ' Mot -il holiday. In 1983, after V  ''ate, Congress nam-</p>
        <p>g.</p>
        <p>nauoiiui hi</p>
        <p>whose actual birthday was Sunday.</p>
        <p>Most states also observe Martin Luther King Jr. Day as a state holiday. Among the few that dont is Arizona, where rallies were planned in Phoenix and Tucson and where prospects are uncertain for a measure that lawmakers plan to in-jf! troduce this year. ^ ca  When will those who have been elected to lead our great state into the 21st century finally remove all the suggestions of racial bigotry and narrow, myopic political viewpoints and let this state join the entire nation? said the Rev. Warren Stewart during a church service in Phoenix on Sunday.</p>
        <p>Former Gov. Bruce Babbit created a King holiday for some state employees in 1986 after the Legislature refused to act on a broader bill, but the state attorney general ruled""it illegal legislative action.</p>
        <p>Babbits successor, Evan Mecham, rescinded the order before the tirst holiday could be celebrated.</p>
        <p>0 1 he uproar helped create a climate that led to Mechams impeachment and removal from office last year.</p>
        <p>Jackson, the former Democratic presidential candidate, was in New \ ork on Sunday where he told about l,oO(j people in a Harlem church that too many young blacks are confused about what their civil rights are.</p>
        <p>If "you know your^history, youll have a sense of desUny, Jackson said. If slavery could not stop us... if apartheid could not stop us, nothing can stop us now.</p>
        <p>He also urged people to avoid drug abuse.</p>
        <p>That is a civil wrong. Dr. King did not die for your right to sniff cocaine and crack and heroin^Stay the dream. Dont betray^theldream.f Jackson said.</p>
        <p>but researchers have made unbelievable " progress in taming the disease, according to the American Heart Association.</p>
        <p>Figures released Sunday show that deaths from heart and blood vessel disease have dropped 24 percent during the past decade. Researchers attribute the improvement to healthier living habits and better treatment.</p>
        <p>The public ought to appreciate the progress that has been made in heart disease over the past 20 years, said Dr. Myron L. Weisfeldt, ihe associations president-elect.</p>
        <p>"Its almost unbelievable. There is almost no form of heart disease that we can't approach without meaningful treatment."</p>
        <p>However. Weisfeldt, a heart specialist at JohnsMopkins University, cautioned that much work remains in improving care and encouraging people to take better care of themselves.</p>
        <p>1 believe we can prevent at least 50 percent of the ischemic heart disease in the United Slates by the year 2000 if we slop smoking, get cholesterol treated if its above 220, and identify and treat hypertension, he said.</p>
        <p>Ischiunic heart' disease is the clogging of blood vessels that feed the heart. It underlies most heart attacks, the single most lethal heart ailment.</p>
        <p>The a.ssociation siiid that in 1986, the most recent year tor which there</p>
        <p>are statistics, an estimated 978,500 Americans died from heart attacks, strokes and other diseases of the heart and blood vessels. Cancer, the No. 2 killer, took 466,000 lives.</p>
        <p>The associations latest figures show that more than one in four Americans suffers some form of cardiovascular disease, arid almost half eventually die from it.</p>
        <p>Obituaries</p>
        <p>Obituary</p>
        <p>Mrs. Lizzie</p>
        <p>Floyd</p>
        <p>M. Floyd of 1108 N.</p>
        <p>^ithout</p>
        <p>TOO MUCH DEBT?</p>
        <p>31.78 points.</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (API</p>
        <p>--Midday stocks:</p>
        <p>AMR Corp AbbottLaos</p>
        <p>High</p>
        <p>54,</p>
        <p>Low</p>
        <p>.54'</p>
        <p>Last 54",</p>
        <p>47"</p>
        <p>47</p>
        <p>47' ,</p>
        <p>Alcoa .</p>
        <p> .59" 1</p>
        <p>59'a</p>
        <p>.59' a</p>
        <p>Am Brands</p>
        <p>64</p>
        <p>M</p>
        <p>64'</p>
        <p>AmCyan</p>
        <p>49'</p>
        <p>48",</p>
        <p>49</p>
        <p>Amentech</p>
        <p>94</p>
        <p>!M"</p>
        <p>94 ',</p>
        <p>Ameritech wi</p>
        <p>47" 1</p>
        <p>47",</p>
        <p>47",</p>
        <p>AmlnlGrp</p>
        <p>69</p>
        <p>69</p>
        <p>69</p>
        <p>Amer T&amp;amp;T</p>
        <p>29'</p>
        <p>28</p>
        <p>29</p>
        <p>Amoco</p>
        <p>78'</p>
        <p>77",</p>
        <p>78'..</p>
        <p>BellAtlan</p>
        <p>70' 1</p>
        <p>70</p>
        <p>'70' ,</p>
        <p>BelLSouth</p>
        <p>39</p>
        <p>39"'</p>
        <p>:9'..'</p>
        <p>Beth Steel</p>
        <p>24'</p>
        <p>24</p>
        <p>24</p>
        <p>Boeing</p>
        <p>BoiseCascd</p>
        <p>61' 1</p>
        <p>61</p>
        <p>61'</p>
        <p>41'&amp;lt;</p>
        <p>41</p>
        <p>41' ,</p>
        <p>Borden</p>
        <p>.57</p>
        <p>.57 '</p>
        <p>.57</p>
        <p>CSX Cp</p>
        <p>32 ,</p>
        <p>:12</p>
        <p>32</p>
        <p>CaroPwLt</p>
        <p>.35</p>
        <p>35"</p>
        <p>:15" 1</p>
        <p>Champ int</p>
        <p>:13' .</p>
        <p>:i3'</p>
        <p>33' ,</p>
        <p>Chevron</p>
        <p>48</p>
        <p>48' .</p>
        <p>48</p>
        <p>Chrysler</p>
        <p>27",</p>
        <p>27',</p>
        <p>27</p>
        <p>CocaCoia</p>
        <p>44</p>
        <p>44'a</p>
        <p>45''.</p>
        <p>44'a</p>
        <p>Colg Palm</p>
        <p>46</p>
        <p>46</p>
        <p>Comw Edis</p>
        <p>33</p>
        <p>32",</p>
        <p>32</p>
        <p>ConAgra</p>
        <p>30"</p>
        <p>:10'</p>
        <p>:)',</p>
        <p>Stop Repossessions An(j Foreclosures. Stop Harassment By Creditors. The Chapter 13, Wage Earner Plan Provides The Debtor With An Opportunity To Repay His Debts Based On His Income And Expense.</p>
        <p>Allen C. Brown</p>
        <p>Attorney-At-Law</p>
        <p>752-0952</p>
        <p>FREE CONSULTATION</p>
        <p>Effective weight loss &amp;amp; we'll Pay Ybur Medical Fees</p>
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        <p>Open Mon. - Fri, 9 a.m. - 7:30 p.m.</p>
        <p>.  -  'c;</p>
        <p>- Professionally supervisee^</p>
        <p>Weight Loss program</p>
        <p>' Nutritious, real food diet</p>
        <p>r Physicians  I</p>
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        <p>RALEIGH 1</p>
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        <p>781-7952</p>
        <p>Near CrabtrN Mill</p>
        <p>787-0488</p>
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        <p>626-225?</p>
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        <p>4T4</p>
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        <p>rangements will be announced by Mitchells Funeral Home in Winleiv</p>
        <p>ville.</p>
        <p>llardv</p>
        <p>NEW HAVEN, Conn. ~ Ms, Martha B. Hardy of 108 Genesee St. died Sunday at St. Raphael Hospital. Arrangements will be announced by Norcott nd Company Funeral HomeinVden, N.C.</p>
        <p>.Sammie Whitehurst, 83, dii 1 .'v.iuihi} in Beaufort County Hospital.</p>
        <p>His funeral will be conducted Tuesday at 2 p.m. at Piney Grovet3 Free Will Baptist Church in Beaufort County by the Rev. Norwood Futrelle. Burial will be in the Jackson Family Cemetery.</p>
        <p>A native anil lifelong resident of the Leggett's Crossroads community ot Beaufort County, Mr. Whitehurst was a farmer and a member of Piney Grove FWB Church.</p>
        <p>Walston  /</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON D.C. - Mr. James Walston died Saturday in Washington, D.C. Arrangements will be announced by Hemby-Willoughby Funeral Home in Tarboro, N.C.</p>
        <p>Whitaker</p>
        <p>NEW YORK - Mrs. Ardelia Smith Whitaker died Friday in New York City. Arrangements will be announced by Mutts-Willoughby, Funeral Home in Scotland Neck, ^ N.C.</p>
        <p>Surviving are three daughters, Lucille Spain ot Greenville and Mildred Beach and Barbara Perry, both of Williamston;, three sons, Leonard Whitehurst of Williamston, Carroll Whitehurst ot Washington and Robert Whitehurst of Winston-Salem; tour sisters, Ida Mae Jackson and Flossie Taylor, both of Leggetts Crossroads, Alma Bailey of Williamston and Gladys Whitehurst of Washington; 14 grandchildren and five great-grandchildren.</p>
        <p>Whitehurst</p>
        <p>"^WASHINGTC</p>
        <p>Then family will receive friends Monday from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. at the church. Arrangements are by Wilkerson.Funeral Home in Green-</p>
        <p>Heath  '</p>
        <p>Mrs. Alma Edwards Heath, 81, died Sunday at Pitt County Memorial Hospital.  I</p>
        <p>The funeral service will be conducted Tuesday at 2:00 p.m. in the Wilkerson Funeral Chapel by Rev. Bobby Aycock and Rev. Ed Walker. Burial will be in Pinewood Memorial Park.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Heath was a native of Pitt County and spent most of her life in Greenville. She had farmed in the Red Oak community and had worked as a private sitter with patients in the University Nursing Center. She was a member of Unity Free Will Baptist Church and had resided at Carolina CareJ Rest Home for the past year.</p>
        <p>She is survived by a son, Norman Waddell Heath, Sr. of Grefenville; a daughter-in-law, Mrs. Corrine Manning Heath of Bethel; 3 sisters: Mrs. Luna Mae Braxton of Greenville, Mrs. S.A. Paramore, Jr. of Winterville, and Mrs. J.S.W. Brown of Greenville;</p>
        <p>2 sister-in-laws: Mrs. Nina Allen Edwards and Mrs. Dorothy Edwards Stewart both of Greenville; 4 grandchildren: Dr. Lin-wood Scott (Linnie) Heath, Jr. of Blacksburg, Va., Mrs. Ellen H. Dudley of Greenville, Rev. Norman W. Heath, Jr. of Knoxville, Tn. and Rev. Jeffrey D. Heath of Greenville; and 4 great grandchildren.</p>
        <p>The family will receive friends at the funeral home from 7 to 9 p.m. Monday and other times will be at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Norman Waddell Heath, Sr., 320 Prince Rd,, Greenville, N.C.</p>
        <p>(Paid Announcemenl)</p>
        <p>$50,000 Deposit</p>
        <p>Annual / Base^ Yield / Rate</p>
        <p>$10,000 Deposit j</p>
        <p>Annual^p Base Yield ^1 Rate</p>
        <p>24 -1- Months</p>
        <p>9.15 / 8.76'</p>
        <p>9.00' / 8.62'</p>
        <p>18-23 Months</p>
        <p>9.05 / 8.66</p>
        <p>8.90 ' / 8.53'</p>
        <p>12-17 Months</p>
        <p>9.00 / 8.62'</p>
        <p>8.80"' / 8.44"</p>
        <p>, 4-11 Months ji</p>
        <p>8.80"' / 8.44"'</p>
        <p>8.30" 1</p>
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        <p> An interest-bearing checking account with no minimum balance requirements</p>
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        <p>Rates are subjeet to charufe daily. Substantial penalty for eurlv wilbdruwal</p>
        <pb facs="00097138_0011" />
        <p>THE DAILY</p>
        <p>REFLECTOR</p>
        <p>Greenville, N.C. Monday, January 16,1989</p>
        <p>Sports</p>
        <p>Comics</p>
        <p>Entertainment</p>
        <p>Classifed</p>
        <p>BWoody Peele</p>
        <p>Its been 25 years this month since I first sat down at the sports desk at The Daily Reflector.</p>
        <p>There have been a lot of people who have crossed my path during those years, but not one of them had the effect on sports than the man who died Saturday night, Dr. Leo W. Jenkins.</p>
        <p>Leo Jenkins influenced the lives of nearly every person in eastern North Carolina while he served as president, and then chancellor of East Carolina. He led the school from the ECTC days to university status, making it one of the top schools in the state.</p>
        <p>He fought against great odds to have his greatest dream, a medical school for East Carolina, come into being.</p>
        <p>What he accomplished in the field of education and medical sciences not only affected us during his tenure but will continue to affect us long into the future.</p>
        <p>Jenkins was also proud of the athletic programs at East Carolina and always was putting forth the idea that if a school had a program, it should be one it could be proud of. He urged the other four Division T schools in the state to play the Pirates and saw that come to be. Although those ties have, at least for now, ended, they might never have occurred if not for Jenkins leadership and pressure.</p>
        <p>Shortly before I came to Greenville, he started his movement to bring East Carolina out of the minor leagues. He took the school out of the Carolinas Conference and into the Southern Conference. He went into the mountains of North Carolina and brought Clarence Stasavich from Lenoir Rhyne to head the football program.</p>
        <p>Now, 25 years later, the program is still growing, still struggling, to meet the goals of Leo Jenkins. Many might say that it has not yet arrived, and in many ways, they might be correct.</p>
        <p>But without Jenkins leadership, the ECU athletic program would have never made the strides it has.</p>
        <p>Often, I joked with him following a speech over his misquote of Grantland Rice. Grantland Rice was wrong with that bunk about how you played the game, Jenkins would say. It does matter whether you win or lose.</p>
        <p>You always quoted him wrong, Leo. Rice wrote:</p>
        <p>When the One Great Scorer comes to write against your name</p>
        <p>He marks  not that you won or lost  but how you played the</p>
        <p>game</p>
        <p>Leo, you played the game well  and we all won for it.</p>
        <p>Morgan, Cavaliers Rip Tar Heels</p>
        <p>J</p>
        <p>The Associated Press</p>
        <p>Virginia's Richard Morgan drives past Steve Bucknall</p>
        <p>THE AS.SOCIATK PRESS</p>
        <p>CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. -Virginias Richard Morgan has no aspirations of becoming a doctor, but hes glad to practice a little medicine without a license when the patient is Cavalier coach Terry Holland.</p>
        <p>It was a chance for us to do something for him and maybe ease the pain a little bit," Morgan said after scoring a career-high 39 points Sunday to help Virginia to a stunning 106-83 Atlantic Coast Conference victory over No. 8 North Carolina</p>
        <p>Hours before the contest, Holland had been released from the University of Virginia Medical Center, where he had been confined since Jan. 1 for stomach surgery. On his way home, Holland stopped at University Hall for a visit w ith his team prior to the game.</p>
        <p>To see Coach Holland come in just before we went to our team meal was a very heartfelt experience, assistant coach Dave Odom said. In the seven years I've been ' associated with him, thats the first time Ive ever seen him crack just a little. I think he allowed himself one tear  thats all his personality will allow. But he just told the team to have fun.</p>
        <p>Morgan said the Cavalier players had more in mind,</p>
        <p>"Just seeing him today gave us all the extra incentive we needed, Morgan said. "Nobody said anything, but it was understood</p>
        <p>The victory broke Virginias five-game losing streak, including three losses that had come since Hollands hospitalization, and raised the Cavaliers mark to 8-6 overall and 1-2 in the ACC.</p>
        <p>North Carolina. 14-3 and 1-1, had won six straight against Virginia and 13 of the last 14.</p>
        <p>"Im wary every time I come up here, Coach Dean Smith said. "Theyre always ready for us.</p>
        <p>On this day,Morgan was especially prepared. The 6-foot-4 senior guard hit 13 of 25 field-goal attempts, including a school record eight of 14 from 3-point range, en route to the best scoring game by a Cavalier at home since Ralph Sampson's 40 against Ohio State in 1981.</p>
        <p>Smith changed his defense several limes in an attempt to control Morgan, and at one point in the second half even assigned 6-10 Scott Williams to guard him.</p>
        <p>"He showed what kind of a player he can be when those rainbows are</p>
        <p>(See VIRGINIA, B-2)</p>
        <p>Cards Top Tech; Pass Road Test</p>
        <p>THE ASSOCIATED PRESSSports Calendar</p>
        <p>Editor's Note: Schedules are supplied by schools or sponsoring agencies and are subject to change without notice.</p>
        <p>Todays Sports Basketball</p>
        <p>George Mason at East Carolina (7;30p.m.)</p>
        <p>Efast Carolina women at George Mason (7:30 p.m.)</p>
        <p>Rec Leagues</p>
        <p>Peewee Division Terrapins vs. Tar Heels (3:30 p.m.)</p>
        <p>Midget Division Tigers vs. Woupack (5 p.m.)</p>
        <p>AA-1 Division Empire Brushes II vs. Aldridge &amp;amp; SouUierland (SG  7 p.m.)</p>
        <p>Pitt Memorial II vs. Fred Webb (SG  8p.m.)</p>
        <p>Junior Division Cavaliers vs. Pirates (7 p.m.)</p>
        <p>Terrapins vs. Blue Devils (7:45 p.m.)</p>
        <p>AAA Division Pro Service vs. TRW (WG - 7 p:m.) Pitt Memorial I vs. Fieldcrest (WG  8p.m.)</p>
        <p>Tuesdays Sports Basketball</p>
        <p>Belhaven vs. Bear Grass (5 p.m.) Chocowinity at Bath (5 p.m.) Farmville Central at North Pitt (5</p>
        <p>p.m.)</p>
        <p>Ayden-Grifton at South Lenoir (5 p.m.)</p>
        <p>C.B. Aycock at Greene Central (5</p>
        <p>p.m.)</p>
        <p>Conley at Havelock (5 p.m.)</p>
        <p>Rose at Kinston (4:30 p. m.)</p>
        <p>Terra Ceia at Trinity (5p.m.) Greenville Christian at Bethel (3 p.m.)</p>
        <p>ATLANTA  Coach Denny Crum had been waiting for a road test for his ninth-ranked Louisville Cardinals.</p>
        <p>He finally got one Sunday, and the Cards survived the test, using two key 3-point baskets by Kenny Payne in the final 1:17 to trim No. 19 Georgia Tech</p>
        <p>67-65.</p>
        <p>They were 49-1 against nonconference teams here, Crum said of Tech. I think that says something about our team. It gives us momentum and its always nice to beat a real good team on the road. That was the first Top Twenty team we had played on the road this season.</p>
        <p>Since opening the season with consecutive losses against Xavier and Vanderbilt, the Cardinals have reeled off 12 victories.</p>
        <p>Tech, which dropped an 82-68 Atlantic Coast Conference decision at North Carolina State on Saturday, fell to 10-4.</p>
        <p>Paynes first 3-pointer with 1:17 to play gave the Cardinals a 63-62 lead; his second, with 44 seconds left, built a 66-64 advantage.</p>
        <p>Im always glad to see him (Payne) shoot the ball, Pervis Ellison said after carrying the Cardinals most of the game.</p>
        <p>Ellison, who scored 20 points, hit one of two free throws with four seconds left to provide the final margin, just after Techs Brian Oliver had missed an opportunity to tie the game with five seconds to play. Oliver was fouled on a</p>
        <p>rebound, but missed his first free throw and made the second to cut the lead to66^.</p>
        <p>Louisville seemingly took control of the game with just over 12 minutes remaining when Keith Williams built a 48-42 lead with two free throws.</p>
        <p>The Jackets fought back to lead 52-50 when Tom Hammonds converted a three-point play with 9:09 left.</p>
        <p>Tech led twice down the stretch on 3-point baskets by Dennis Scott, but couldnt hold off the Cardinals in the final 90 seconds.</p>
        <p>This is a good confidence builder for our team to beat a Top Twenty team on the road, Ellison said.</p>
        <p>When it was on the line, he (Payne) hit two in a row that really helped us, Crum said. But, everyone had to contribute and it was a good team effort. To hold that team to 65 points on their floor is a good defensive effort.</p>
        <p>I thought we held our poise well even when they made some runs, Crum said. We didnt get flustered and we executed pretty well. </p>
        <p>For the two 3-pointers, Louisville definitely deserved to win, Tech coach Bobby Cremins said.</p>
        <p>We looked sloppy at times but we played our guts out, Cremins said Weve got to play a little bit smarter, but I have no complaints as far as guts go. We really gave a tremendous effort.</p>
        <p>Payne scored 12 points for the Cardinals and Scott led Tech with 24, including five 3-point baskets. Hammonds had 19 points and 10 rebounds for the Yellow Jackets.</p>
        <p>Pleas For</p>
        <p>Big Game Could</p>
        <p>A Good Super Bowl</p>
        <p>Develop Into Spectacle Of Boredom</p>
        <p>By Scott Ostler</p>
        <p>LAT-WP NEWS SERVICE</p>
        <p>Prediction: This will be the year that the Super Bowl outlives its usefulness to humanity. I hope Im wrong, but dont bet on it.</p>
        <p>Unfortunately, its too late to cancel the whole thing. You cant stop an avalanche in mid-slide. But if this turns out to be the most boring Super Bowl in history, dont say nobody warned you.</p>
        <p>The game itself will be terrible, of course, but everybody expects that. The games are always terrible. The Super Bowl game is footballs equivalent of a hangover, the pay-the-price residue after a week of fun.</p>
        <p>The real event. Super Bowl Week, has always been a festival of comedy, controversy and commotion. John Riggins shows up in full uniform and cowboy boots. Howie Long and Lester Hayes amaze and amuse. John Matuszak blows curfew, Jim McMahon drops his pants, Joe Namath calls his shot, Dexter Manley alternately dominates</p>
        <p>and boycotts the interviews. Natural rivalries surface, artificial rivalries are created, great characters are discovered.</p>
        <p>This year, though, it looks as if the fun will be in short supply.</p>
        <p>For starters, the opposing head coaches are the very best of pals. Youd think that the National Football League, as long as it has been in business, would take measures to prevent such an occurrence. Nothing is as dull as buddy coaches, unless its ten-nis-buddy coaches.</p>
        <p>Bill Walsh of the San Francisco 49ers and Sam Wyche of the Cincinnati Bengals were tennis pals when Wyche was an assistant under Walsh at San Francisco. Did Walsh make questionable line calls, or fake injuries if he was losing to Wyche? Did Wyche try to quick-serve Walsh, or ruthlessly exploit Bills weak backhand? No, to hear them tell it, theirs was an intense yet spirited relationship. They respect and admire one another so much it makes you ill.</p>
        <p>Until recently, the 49ers had a dandy quarterback controversy</p>
        <p>going. Walsh and Joe Montana spent most of the season pouting and glaring at one another. Walsh whipped up the controversy in the first place, then shamelessly blamed it all on the media.</p>
        <p>Now, its over. Montana played so well, even Walsh couldnt make a case for thinking about starting Steve Young at quarterback. After one playoff game, Walsh and Joe Montana even put their arms around each others shoulders and smiled brightly for the sideline television camera.</p>
        <p>Walsh and team owner Eddie DeBartolo clashed during the season. Would Eddie fire Bill? Would Bill resign? Neither. The 49ers would start winning and Bill and Eddie would rekindle their warm friendship.</p>
        <p>You know youre in big trouble when your most exciting story going into Super Week is whether or not Walsh will retire after the game. That specter has kept me awake many nights. For those similarly afflicted, I recommend warm milk and Lawrence Welk on your Walkman.</p>
        <p>(SeeSUPER, B-2)</p>
        <p>49ers Hope Road Remains Kind</p>
        <p>Bengals Hoping To Reverse Seasons Travel Woes</p>
        <p>The Associated Press</p>
        <p>Boomer Esiaon loosens up at a practice in Miami</p>
        <p>THE ASSOCIATED PRESS</p>
        <p>MIAMI  The road to Miami has been a kind one for the San Francisco 49ers, the NFLs best team away from home.</p>
        <p>The Cincinnati Bengals, the leagues best home team, havent taken so kindly to safaris outside the Jungle  Riverfront Coliseum.</p>
        <p>Next Sunday, both teams will be in strange environs  neither has ever played in Joe Robbie Stadium, site of the Super Bowl.</p>
        <p>For the 49ers, there are places like home. Better places, in fact  San Francisco is 7-2 away from Candlestick Park this season, including the 28-3 romp at Chicago for the NFC championship. At home, the 49ers were 5-4.</p>
        <p>Its a sign of an experienced team when you can win on the road, quarterback Joe Montana said. Were not the type team to get flustered.</p>
        <p>In a lot of ways, you are a littler better off on the road because you concentrate more on the game, Coach Bill Walsh said. Maybe there was a day and age where guys went on the road and there was a</p>
        <p>wild party or whatever. But now you get more football in and more concentration than at home.</p>
        <p>If ever the 49ers were ripe to trip on a road trip, it was at Soldier Field. Presented with icy conditions as well as the Bears bone-chilling defense, the Niners never shivered, never looked out of place.</p>
        <p>This is too good a team to be bothered by things like the weather or not having the home field, Montana said. The best teams in this league can win anywhere. You wont even get into the playoffs without being able to win on the road.</p>
        <p>The Bengals won only four of their eight games on the road and just one - against the Cowboys, the NFLs weakest link in 1988 - came after the fifth week of the season. The Ickey Shuffle, the no-huddle offense and AFC crown cant hide those results, which include losses at Kansas City and New England, not exactly NFL powers.</p>
        <p>Were going to do it in Miami just like we did it here, star running back Ickey Woods said after the victory over the Bills. "Championship teams dont have weaknesses and this team's got no weaknesses. Not here, not in Miami. </p>
        <p>HOW TEAMS WERE BUILT</p>
        <p>^ San Francisco</p>
        <p>2% Irados</p>
        <p>Cincinnati</p>
        <p>2%Walvors-i r* 8% Trades</p>
        <p>n Drattad 30 players 64% r* Drafted 37 players 79% Free Agents 16 players 34% ^ Free Agents 8 players 17% 1 player 2% Tredei 1 player 2% Weivere 1 pli^ef 2%</p>
        <p>^ Trades</p>
        <p>AP</p>
        <p>Top Twenty Is Shuffled</p>
        <p>By Jim O'Connell</p>
        <p>THE ASSCKHATED PRESS</p>
        <p>After a week which saw nine ranked teams suffer 10 losses, Duke and Illinois remained the top two teams in The Associated Press college basketball polj^ while the shuffling continued in the remainder of the Top TVenty and North Carolina had its string of 63 consecutive weeks in the Top Ten ended.</p>
        <p>Duke, 13-0, and along with Illinois the only undefeated Division I teams, held the top spot today for the ninth consecutive week in the regular season as well as having been No. 1 in the preseason voting.</p>
        <p>Georgetown, 12-1, jumped from seventh to third with 1,070 points after victories during the week over Pittsburgh and Boston College, the latter without coach John Thompson, who walked off the court before tipoff to protest the recently passed Proposition 42. a new set of academic entrance requirements, which the Hoyas coach says is discriminatory against certain students.</p>
        <p>Oklahoma, which fell to 13-2 after losing to Pittsburgh on Sunday, dropped two places to fifth with 947 points, 12 more than Michigan, 14-2, which held sixth despite losing to Illinois on Saturday.</p>
        <p>The Top Twenty tooms, in the Associated Press' colieiie hasketball poll, with first-place votes in parentheses, total points based on 20 Ht-lH 17 10 1;V14 i:t-l2 U-10--8-7-6-5-4 :! 2-1. iword through Jan 15 and last week's ranking</p>
        <p>Record Pts Pvs</p>
        <p>l.Duke 51)</p>
        <p>2.Illinois (131</p>
        <p>3. Georgetown</p>
        <p>4. Louisville</p>
        <p>5 Oklahoma</p>
        <p>6 Michigan</p>
        <p>7 Iowa</p>
        <p>8 Missouri 9..Arizona</p>
        <p>10 Nev -I&amp;gt;as Vegas 11.Syracuse</p>
        <p>12 Seton Hall</p>
        <p>13 North Carolina</p>
        <p>14 Florida State 13.N Carolina State le.Ohio State</p>
        <p>17 Kansas</p>
        <p>18 Tonnessw</p>
        <p>19 Indiana 20.Stanford</p>
        <p>Others riveiving 49; Providence 40;</p>
        <p>Villanova 21, Pitts</p>
        <p>Barbara 9. St Johns 9; St. Marys, Calif 8; West Virginia 8. Notre Dame 5; Bali Alabama 1; Boise State 1, Clemson l; Evansville 1 Virginia 1.  '</p>
        <p>13- 0</p>
        <p>1266</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>13- 0</p>
        <p>1229</p>
        <p>2</p>
        <p>12- 1</p>
        <p>1070</p>
        <p>7</p>
        <p>12 2</p>
        <p>998</p>
        <p>9</p>
        <p>13 2</p>
        <p>947</p>
        <p>3</p>
        <p>14- 2</p>
        <p>933</p>
        <p>6</p>
        <p>13- 2</p>
        <p>807</p>
        <p>3</p>
        <p>13- 3</p>
        <p>779</p>
        <p>10</p>
        <p>11 2</p>
        <p>729</p>
        <p>12</p>
        <p>11- 2</p>
        <p>668</p>
        <p>11</p>
        <p>14- 3</p>
        <p>651</p>
        <p>4</p>
        <p>15- 1</p>
        <p>645</p>
        <p>13</p>
        <p>14 3</p>
        <p>639</p>
        <p>8</p>
        <p>12 1</p>
        <p>541</p>
        <p>14</p>
        <p>11- 1</p>
        <p>477</p>
        <p>15</p>
        <p>12- 3</p>
        <p>268</p>
        <p>18</p>
        <p>14 2</p>
        <p>191</p>
        <p>16</p>
        <p>It 2</p>
        <p>179</p>
        <p>17</p>
        <p>i:i- 4</p>
        <p>115</p>
        <p>12- 3</p>
        <p>112</p>
        <p>_</p>
        <p>votes: Georgia</p>
        <p>Tech</p>
        <p>Texas-EI</p>
        <p>Paso 24;</p>
        <pb facs="00097138_0012" />
        <p>Sports Notes Sixers Handle Hornets DefenseDorney Leads GGC In Qualifying Me?t</p>
        <p>as Ihe Greenville Gymnastics Clubs top tinisher at a Class II Qualifying Sectional Meet Saturday and Sunday</p>
        <p>Dorney, comf^ting in the 12-14 year old age group, totaled 60.05 in the all-around for fourth place. Her individual scores were first place in the floor exercise with a 16;80; third on the uneven bars with a 14.55; fourth in vaulting with a 16.55 and sixth on the balance beam with a 12.15 f u feu  Katherine Daniel scored 58.60 in the all-around to</p>
        <p>take fifth. Her individual scores were third in vaulting with a 16.60; fifth on the balance beam with a 12.65; sixth on-the unveven bars with a 14 lO-and sixth in floor exercises with a 15.25.</p>
        <p>In a Class III Open Meet also in Charlotte, 12-year old Amy Rose of Greenville was first in vaulting with a 8.15; first on balance beam with a 90 nc  exercise  with an 8.1 and second in the all-around with a</p>
        <p>Susu Hunniecutt was first in floor exercises with an 8.25, a third place in the balance beam with a 6.15; fourth place in vaulting with a 7.95 and fourth in the all-around with a 28.35.</p>
        <p>I^gan Tayl^ was second on uneven bars with a 7.25; fifth in vaulting with a 7.75 and third in the all-around with a 28.75.</p>
        <p>Wendy Dixon was third on uneven bars with a 6.85; fourth on balance beam with a 6.1 and sixth in the all around 28.10.</p>
        <p>Christy Thompson was fourth on uneven bars with a 6.15. Rebecca Witter was fifth on uneven bars with a 6.05 and fifth on floor exercises with a 8.0. Anne Taylor took sixth in vaulting with a 7.75.</p>
        <p>In the 15-and over age group, Nikki Harris placed first in the all-around with a 20j00. In the 9-11 age group. Jessica Sloan was first on the balance beam with a 6.95; third on the uneven bars with a 6.85 and third in the all-around with a 29.25.Jones Takes Hope Classic In Sudden Death</p>
        <p>PALM DESERT, Calif. (AP)  Steve Jones birdied the first extra hole and scored his second consecutive victory in the Bob Hope Classic. Jones made up three strokes in three holes on leader Paul Azinger and beat Az-inger and Masters champion Sandy Lyle. The trio were tied at 343,17 under par.</p>
        <p>Jones, who shot a 63 in the final round, put his approach shot four feet from the cup on the 14th at Bermuda Dunes, site of the playoff. After Azinger and Lyle missed birdie attempts, Jones, winner of last weeks Tournament of Champions, rapped his putt into the back of the cup.King Tops Jamaica Classic After 2nd Round</p>
        <p>SANDY BAY, Jamaica (AP)  Betsy King, the leader after two rounds, shot a l-under-par 70 and won the inaugural $500,000 LPGA Jamaica Classic by six strokes over Nancy Lopez.</p>
        <p>King, who led the entire way in the first LPGA event of the year, finished with an ll-under total of 202 for 54 holes. Lopez shot a final-round 69 and was next at 208, followed by Lori Garbacz and Marth Nause, each at 210.strange Outduels Floyd In Australian Open</p>
        <p>GOLD COAST, Australia (AP) - Curtis Strange shot a 1-over-par 73 for a two-stroke victory over Raymond Floyd in the $525,000 Daikyo Palm Meadows Classic. Strange, the 1988 U.S. Open champion, finished with an 8-under-par 280 and earned $92,000. Floyd finished at 282 and Australian Terry Price a shot back in third.Edberg Takes Forfeit Win Over Cash</p>
        <p>ADELAIDE, Australia (AP)  Stefan Edberg completed his preparation for the Australian Open Saturday with a forfeit victory over Pat Cash in the final of the Rio Challenge exhibition tournament.</p>
        <p>Cash was forced to withdraw after suffering an elbow injury with the score at 6-6 in the first set.</p>
        <p>THE ASSOCIATED PRESS</p>
        <p>CHARLOTTE  Mike Gminski says the 76ers know what to do now when opposing squads double-team Charles Barkley, and it showed as Philadelphia downed the Hornets 116-109.</p>
        <p>We've been winning because other guys have stepped forward in scoring when Charles is covered, Mike Gminski said Sunday. We werent burying those shots last year.</p>
        <p>Barkley scored 24 points, pulled down 15 rebounds, and had six assists and two blocks, but it was his willingness not to pad his statistics that may have been the most telling.</p>
        <p>The Hornets double-teamed Barkley in the fourth period. Time after time, he gave the ball away to open teammates.</p>
        <p>Philadelphia scored on all but one of its last 13 possessions aRer acquiring a five-point lead midway through the fourth period. And Ron Anderson sunk two long jumpers in the last two minutes to keep Charlotte at bay.</p>
        <p>When Charles gets double-teamed and kicks out the ball, youd better make it, Anderson said.</p>
        <p>A little more than seven minutes into the second half, Earl Cureton was steaming downcourt toward Charlottes offensive end. He approached Barkley near the foul line, then suddenly went down on his back.</p>
        <p>Cureton, who said that Barkley hit him with a forearm under the chin, leaped to his feet and poked Barkley on the side of his face. He was quickly restrained, but fought for more than a minute to get free.</p>
        <p>Cureton was given a technical foul on the play. Barkley received a personal foul.</p>
        <p>I had this flashback to my football days, Barkley said. I thought I was a linebacker so I hit the first guy that came down the court. I didnt even know it was Earl.</p>
        <p>Cureton said, It was just a dirty play. I dont mind physical basketball, thats my game. But that got me mad.</p>
        <p>Charlotte started the game slowly, making just one of its first even shots from the field. Leading scorer Kelly Tripucka pulled a groin muscle on the first play of the game and disappeared into the Hornets locker room for much of the first quarter.</p>
        <p>Rex Chapman came off the bench to score 10 in the first quarter and keep the Hornets going, but they still fell behind 37-26 after one period. Charlotte pulled to within 58-57 at the half.</p>
        <p>The Associated Press</p>
        <p>Charlottes Robert Reid battles Charles Barkley and Shelton Jones for a loose ball</p>
        <p>The ganie stayed close until the 76ers assumed control early in the final period. Ahead 89-86 with 9:51 to play, the Hornets missed eight straight from the field.</p>
        <p>Philadelphia took advantage of the drought to score eight in a row and take a 94-89 lead with 7:19 left.</p>
        <p>Charlotte closed to 96-95 on Tripuckas spinning bank shot, but Hawkins sank a 3-pointer for Philadelphia, and the Hornets couldnt get closer than three points for the rest of the game.</p>
        <p>Anderson added 18 points for the 76ers. Tripucks led Charlotte with 25 points, and Chapman had 22.</p>
        <p>Lakers 116, Clipers 95 The Los Angeles Lakers found an easy way to end their long road losing streak. They played a game in Los Angeles.</p>
        <p>Byron Scott scored 28 points and Magic Johnson got 22 as the Lakers beat the Los Angeles Clippers 116-95 Sunday.</p>
        <p>Even though the victory at the</p>
        <p>Clippers Sports Arena came just eight miles from their home at the Forum, it officially ended the Lakers eight-game road skid. That tied for the longest in team history.</p>
        <p>Heat 118, Pacers 117 Rory Sparrow scored 20 points, including four foul shots in the final 19 seconds.of the second overtime, and Miami rallied from an early 29-point deficit to beat Indiana and end a 10-game losing streak.</p>
        <p>Jon Sundvold scored 25 for Miami, including two 3-point baskets in the last 24 seconds of regulation. A pair of baskets by Miamis Pat Cummings in the final 50 seconds of the first overtime forced a second extra period.</p>
        <p>Bulls no. Celtics 104 Michael Jordan scored 42 points. Bill. Cartwright had 23 and Scottie Pippen 20 as Chicago beat Boston.</p>
        <p>The Bulls won their season-high fourth straight game. The Celtics fell to 4-H on the road.</p>
        <p>With the score tied at 104, Cart</p>
        <p>wright made a pair of foul shots with 52 seconds left. Pippens jump shot with 17 seconds remaining clinched it. Jordan scored 17 points in the fourth quarter.</p>
        <p>Reggie Lewis led Boston with 32 points.</p>
        <p>Mavericks 111, Trail Blazers 108 Derek Harper made a steal and layup with 17 seconds left as Dallas ended a seven-game losing streak by beating Portland for its first victory of 1989.</p>
        <p>Harpers basket made it 110-107 and Detlef Schrempf added a foul shot with 11 seconds left. Portands Clyde Drexler and Terry Porter missed 3-point attempts as time expired.</p>
        <p>Bucks 120, Pistons 112 Terry Cummings scored 26 points and Milwaukee past Detroit for its sixth straight victory.</p>
        <p>The Bucks, trailing by eight after three quarters, used a 13-2 burst to overcome a 95-93 deficit. Cummings got five points during the run.</p>
        <p>Super Bowl...</p>
        <p>(Continued From B-1)</p>
        <p>The rest of the 49ers, quotewise and controversy-wise, forget it. They give you name, rank and serial number. This is a team that prides itself on holding back from the media. If the old Raiders were the most colorful team ever to infiltrate a Super Bowl, the 49ers may be the blandest and most reserved.</p>
        <p>The most talkative and quotable member of the San Francisco group is Montanas back surgeon, who is trying to make things interesting by predicting that Montana, should he be sacked from the blind side, will actually break in two.</p>
        <p>Interesting concept, except that Montana doesnt have a blind side. Those arent ear holes on the sides of Joes helmet; theyre eye holes.</p>
        <p>Montana may be the best performer in the clutch in Super Bowl history, but hell never make the all-interview team, featuring such motormouths as Joe Theismann and McMahon and Namath.</p>
        <p>Meanwhile, in the Bengals camp, you may get some bluster from Boomer this week, but its nothing like the good old days when Esiason and Wyche not only were not on the same page, but werent even in the same library.</p>
        <p>Now, they have enormous</p>
        <p>respect for one another. They probably play tennis together. Yawn.</p>
        <p>Ickey Woods? The rookie with the ponytail and the Ickey Shuffle? OK, Woods is a very promising young runner, but do we need to know any more than we already know about his end-zone dance? In a dance contest, Ickey would get no better than a tie with Dancing Bany, who entertains at the intermission of Laker basketball games. Ive seen guys show better moves hailing a cab.</p>
        <p>The games venue is no help. When they play the Super Bowl in New Orleans, you can count on two or three players doing something foolish on Bourbon Street, embarrassing the team and generating great interest for the event. In Los Angeles, Sunset Strip is always a temptation. But where can a guy go to get in trouble in Miami? The Everglades?</p>
        <p>It will still be party time in Miami for the fans and the corporations that turn Super Bowl Week into one long tax write-off toga party. In America, the Super Bowl is Gods way of telling us we have too much money.</p>
        <p>But the football outlook is bleak. This year we have to rely on the actual game to provide the Super Bowl thrills, and thats scary.East Wins Japan Bowl Easily, 30-7</p>
        <p>THE ASSOCIATED PRESS</p>
        <p>YOKOHAMA, Japan  Robert Drummond started the shw for Japanese football fans with a tackle-breaking 41-yard scoring run on the games first series and his Syracuse teammate, Kris Ingram, effectively ended it with a fourth-quarter interception.</p>
        <p>In between, the East All-Stars let the West in the game for only six minutes in a 30-7 triumph, only the fourth for the East in 14 Japan Bowls.</p>
        <p>Drummond scored twice, adding a 1-yard touchdown plunge in the second quarter, and ended with 66 yards in eight carries and another 17 in three pass receptions as he won outstanding offensive player honors.</p>
        <p>Dukes Anthony Dilweg, who threw three touchdown passes in the Easts 21-10 victory over the West in the Hula Bowl a week earlier, threw 10 yards to West Virginias Anthony Brown for the Easts other touchdown.</p>
        <p>Pete Stoyanovich of Indiana added field goals of 49,30 and 22 yards.</p>
        <p>After Drummonds early touchdown, the West, led by UCLA quarterback Troy Aikman, went 79 yards in 12 plays for its only offensive success of the game, Aikman completed four of five passes for 43 yards before UCLA teammate Eric Ball scored from the 3.</p>
        <p>Then the Wests Marcus Turner intercepted a pass by Michigan States Bobby McAllister.</p>
        <p>But Shon Morris of Auburn intercepted Aikman on the next play, and the East defense kept the West bottled up for the rest of the game, allowing just 45 yards rushing and 94 passing.</p>
        <p>After Morris interception, Stoyanovich lined up to try a 40-yard field goal, but after a bad snap from center he tried a pass and Doug Kline of UCLA intercepted.</p>
        <p>The tide turned again on a key third-down play. Thomas sacked Hartlieb, and the East went 66 yards in six plays for a 14-7 lead. Dilweg passed 42 yards to Boo Mitchell of Vanderbilt and later threw to Brown for the touchdown.</p>
        <p>On the Wests next possession. Rod Carter of Miami intercepted Hartlieb and the East went 33 yards, with Drummond scoring from the 1.</p>
        <p>East 24, West 6</p>
        <p>STANFORD, Calif. - The West all-stars managed to contain the Easts fleet receiving corps in the 64th annual Shrine game, but they couldnt corral a punter and linebacker on the run.</p>
        <p>Two key plays by those players resulted in two touchdowns and a 24-6 East victory Sunday in front of 76,000 fans and dozens of NFL scouts at the nations oldest collegiate all-star game.</p>
        <p>But several players stepped forward to give standout performances and enhance their standing in the NFL draft, among them East running back Lewis Tillman of Jackson State and West strong safety Steve</p>
        <p>Atwater of Arkansas, selected players of the game. Tillman, who broke Walter Paytons school rushing records, ran for 86 yards and a 1-yard touchdown, and Atwater picked off two passes and made 10 tackles, nine of them unassisted.</p>
        <p>Punter-placekicker Mike Gillette of Michigan and linebacker Jerry Olsavsky of Pitt provided the plays of the afternoon for the East while the West was suffering from the absence of its two most explosive players. Southern Cal quarterback Rodney Peete and Oklahoma State wide receiver Hart Lee Dykes were injured in the Hula Bowl a week earlier.</p>
        <p>Gillette raced 18 yards out of a punt formation for a second-quarter first down formation that led to the only touchdown of the games first 52 minutes for either side. It was a nifty bit of deception that found a loophole in the games strict rules, which prohibit exotic formations and blitzing in order to best showcase the talent of top college seniors.</p>
        <p>Olsavsky clinched the victory by chugging 75 yards with an intercepted pass for the final score</p>
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        <p>with 4:40 remaining, spoiling a rare West drive. He nearly ran out of gas Tin the return, but made a couple of dekes in the final yards to send three would-be tacklers sprawling. Olsavsky also was in on 11 tackles.</p>
        <p>The West players had been told not to get beat deep by the Easts four fast wide receivers, and they allowed only nine receptions by Andre Rison of Michigan State, Nasrallah Worthen of North Carolina State, John Ford of Virginia and Mark Stock of VMIs&amp;amp;w</p>
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        <p>Virginia Rolls Past Tar Heels...</p>
        <p>(Continued From B-l)</p>
        <p>going in, Smith said oi Morgan. "I dont think he had an open one all day. We had a hand in his face. All you can do in those situations is congratulate your opponent. </p>
        <p>North Carolinas Jeff Lebo scored 26 points before a severe sprain of his left ankle sent him to the bench with 5:23 to go. Smith, whose team plays top-ranked Duke on Wednesday, said he was uncertain how long Letw would be out.</p>
        <p>: Lebo was examined by Dr. Joseph 'DeWalt, the team physican, after the team returned to Chapel Hill on Sunday night. DeWalt said Lebo suffered a severely sprained left ankle, but the X-ray indicated no fracture. He said it was unlikely that Lebo Would be ready to play against top-ranked Duke on Wednesday, accord-ing to North Carolina Sports Infor</p>
        <p>mation Director Rick Brewer.</p>
        <p>North Carolina, trailing 87-76 when Lebo left, was unable to score again until Hubert Davis made a 3-point goal and free throw that cut the Tar Heels deficit to 96-80 at the 1:30 mark.</p>
        <p>Virginia went ahead for good by closing the first half on a 17-7 run that began with two short jumpers by Curtis Williams. A 3-point goal by Morgan gave Virginia a 50-38 edge with 32 seconds left in the half before North Carolinas J R. Reid converted a three-point play to make it 50-41 at intermission.</p>
        <p>Virginia was up 62-53 with 15:07 left when Morgan scored his teams next eight points, including a pair of 3-pointers, to give the Cavaliers a 70-55 advantage at the 13:48 mark.</p>
        <p>North Carolina could get no closer the rest of the wav than 73-66 on</p>
        <p>Lebos 3-pointer with 10:37 remaining. But Morgan once again answered, this time with a 3-point goal 13 seconds later.</p>
        <p>Virginia also got 12 points apiece from Williams, Anthony Oliver and Kenny Turner.</p>
        <p>Reid, with 21, was the only other Tar Heel in double figures^__</p>
        <p>It marked the second time in eight days Morgan hacLestablished a new career scoring high, but Holland was the main thing on his mind after the game.</p>
        <p>This is the best healing mechanism around, the best medicine possible, Morgan said.</p>
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        <p>SCOREBOARD</p>
        <p>TANK FNANARA*</p>
        <p>The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N C.</p>
        <p>Monday, January 16, 1989  B-3</p>
        <p>NHL Standings</p>
        <p>By Thf Associated Press All Times KST WAI.ES ('()NFF;RKV{ K Patrick Division</p>
        <p>W I. T Pts (iF (.A</p>
        <p>Washington Pittsburgh NY Rangers Philadelphia Nevy Jersey NY Islanders</p>
        <p>Montreal Boston Buffalo Hartford Quebec</p>
        <p>24 16 23 IS</p>
        <p>23 15</p>
        <p>24  21</p>
        <p>17  21</p>
        <p>12  29  _</p>
        <p>Adams Division</p>
        <p>31  11  6</p>
        <p>18  18  10</p>
        <p>19  21  5</p>
        <p>17  22  3</p>
        <p>13  27  6</p>
        <p>2</p>
        <p>55 170 152 54 206 laj 53 180 161 50 1^ 163 41 154 180 26 131 181</p>
        <p>68 184 137 46 152 145 43 159 172 37 151 152 32 154 208</p>
        <p>(ampbfii, (onferencf;</p>
        <p>Norris Division _ ,  WET  Pts  (IF  GA</p>
        <p>21  16  8  50  177  170</p>
        <p>St; Louis  15  21  7  37  147  159</p>
        <p>Minnesota  14  22  8  36  141  163</p>
        <p>Toronto  15  27  3  33  13$  i90</p>
        <p>Chicago  12  26  6  30  165  200</p>
        <p>Smvthe Division Calgary  28  10  7  63  188  129</p>
        <p>Angeles  27  15  3  57  238  187</p>
        <p>Edmonton  23  18  4  50  195  168</p>
        <p>Winnipeg  16  17  9  41  166  176</p>
        <p>Vancouver  17  23  6  40  143  148</p>
        <p>Saturday's Games Boston 5. Detroit 5. tie New York Rangers 4, Pittsburgh 4, tie Chicago 5, New York Islanders 3 Buffalo 1, Quebec 1, tie Montreal Toronto 3 Calgary I, Minnesota 1, tie Los Angeles 9. Hartford 6</p>
        <p>Sunday's Games Boston 4, Washington 3 New York Rangers 6. Pittsburgh 4 New Jersey!. Edmonton 0 Buffalo 3, Calgary 2 Detroit 8, Philadelphia 4 Minnesota 4, Winnipeg 1 Vancouver 2. St Ixiuisl</p>
        <p>Monday's Games Hartlordat Toronlo,7:35p.m Edmonton at Chicago, 8:; p m Tuesday s Games</p>
        <p>New Jersey at Quebec, 7:35 p m Calgary at Detroit. 7 .35 p m,</p>
        <p>Pittsburgh at New York Islanders, 8 05 pm</p>
        <p>Los .Angeles at St. Louis, 8:35p m Philadelphia at Vancouver, 10;35 p.m.</p>
        <p>NBA Standings</p>
        <p>By The Associated Press All Times EST EA.STF.RN ( (INFERENC E Atlantic Division</p>
        <p>V V  ,  "  '  f'-  '</p>
        <p>Nevv- Vork  24  11  686  -</p>
        <p>Philadelphia  20  15  571  4</p>
        <p>Boston  16  18  ,471  7'-.</p>
        <p>New Jersey  14  21  400  10</p>
        <p>Washington  11  22  333  12</p>
        <p>Charlotte  9  26  257  15</p>
        <p>Central Division Cleveland  26  7  788  -</p>
        <p>Detroit  22  11  667  4</p>
        <p>Milwaukee  21  11  656  4'-.</p>
        <p>Atlanta  21  14  .600  6</p>
        <p>Chicago  20  14  .588  6'-</p>
        <p>Indiana  9  25  265  17'-^</p>
        <p>WESTERN CONFERENCE Midwest Division</p>
        <p>W I. Pci. GB Houston  22  12  647  -</p>
        <p>Ctah  21  15  583  2</p>
        <p>Denver  19  16  543  3'-</p>
        <p>Dallas  18  16  ,529  4</p>
        <p>San Antonio  10  24  294  12</p>
        <p>Miami  4  31  ,114  18'2</p>
        <p>Pacific Division L A Lakers  24  12  667  -</p>
        <p>Phoenix  21  13  618  2</p>
        <p>Seattle  20  13  . 600  2'2</p>
        <p>Portland  20  15  ,571  3'-</p>
        <p>Golden State  16  16  500  6</p>
        <p>Sacramento  9  23  281  13</p>
        <p>L A Clippers  10  26  278  14</p>
        <p>Saturday's (lames New York 132, Atlanta 122</p>
        <p>New Jersey 106, Indiana 97 Houston 110, Dallas 98 Portland 103, San Antonio 99 Cleveland 116, Denver 104 (^IdenState 131, Utah 105 Seattle 102, Sacramento 93 Sunday's Games Philadelphia 116, Charlotte 109 .Milwaukee 120, Detroit 112 Chicago 110. Boston 104 L A Lakers 116, L.A, Clippers 95 Miami 118, Indiana 117, MT Dallas 111, Portland 108</p>
        <p>Monday's Games Charlotte at Philadelphia, 1 p m Atlanta at Washington. I p m SanAntonioat New York, 1:30p m Phoenix at Cleveland. 2:30 p. m. .Sacramento at Denver, 4 p m HoustonatL A Lakers,5p.m '</p>
        <p>Boston at Detroit. 7:30p m.</p>
        <p>.Seattle at (iolden State, 10:30pm Tuesday's Games San Antonio at New Jersey, 7; 30 p. m Phoenix at Miami, 7:30 p m Milwaukee at Atlanta, 8p.m Indiana at Chicago. 8; 30 p.m Houston at Sacramento. 10:30 p.m.</p>
        <p>Utah at Portland 10:30 p.m.</p>
        <p>L A Clippers at Seattle, 10 p.m</p>
        <p>NBA Standings</p>
        <p>By The Associated Press At Charlotte, N.C.</p>
        <p>PHILADELPHIA (II6I</p>
        <p>Jones 2-3 2-4 6. Barkley 8-13 7-12 24 Gminski 7-13 8-10 22, Cheeks 6-10 3-4 15 Hawkins 4-13 34 12, Henderson 4-6 56 13, Anderson 9-13 0-118, Brooks 0-3 06 0, Welp , 06 06 0, Coleman 2-4 06 4, Thornton 1-2 06 2 Totals 43-80 28-41 116 CHARLOTTE (1091 Tripucka 8-18 9-9 25, Rambis 6-10 34 15, Cureton 5-10 06 10, Holton 4-7 2-3 10, Reid 2-7 2-2 6, Chapman 9-23 3-4 22, Kempton 4-5 36 11, Bogues 5-12 06 10, Hoppen 06 06 O.Totals 43-92 22-28 109 Philadelphia  37  21  26  32-116</p>
        <p>Charlotte  26  31  28  26-109</p>
        <p>3-Point goals-Barkley, Hawkins, Chapman Fouled out-Cureton, Rambis. Re-bounds-Philadelphia 54 (Barklev 15i, Charlotte 51 (Rambis 141 Assists-Philadelphia 22 (Barkley 61, Charlotte 27 (Bogues 9). Total fouls-Philadelphia 22, Charlotte 23 Technicals-Philadelphia illegal defense, Charlotte assistant coach Badger, Cureton A-23,338</p>
        <p>At Milwaukee DETROIT (1121 Dantley 1015 4-4 24, Salley 2-3 4-4 8, Laimbeer 7-12 06 14, Johnson 5-10 06 10, Thomas 1017 2-2 25, Edwards 5-10 02 10, Rodman 7-9 06 14, Williams 2-4 1-1 7, Dem-bo 06 06 0, Mannion 06 06 0, Harris 06 06 O.Totals 48-8111-13112 MILWAUKEE (120)</p>
        <p>Cummings 11-2146 26. Krystkowiak 8-14</p>
        <p>1-2 17, Sikma 3-9 7-813, Humphries 2-9 46 9, Pressey 8-13 4-7 20, Roberts 3-3 2-2 8, Pierce 1014 5-7 25. Mokeski 1-2 06 2. Totals 4085 27-38120</p>
        <p>Detroit  25  31 30 26-112</p>
        <p>Milwaukee  20  31 27 42120</p>
        <p>3-Point goals-Thomas 3, Williams 2, Humphries. Fouled out-None. Re-bounds-Detroit 37 iLaimbeer lOi, Milwaukee 48 (Sikma 10) Assists-Detroit 35 (Thomas 13), Milwaukee 33 (Pressev 9). Total fouls-Detroit 29, Milwaukee 19 A-18,633</p>
        <p>At Chicago BOSTON (104)</p>
        <p>McHale 4-13 66 14, Uwis 11-21 1012 32, Parish 5-101-111, Johnson 4-8 9-10 17, Ainge 7-17 06 16. Acres 1-1 06 2, Jim Paxson 2-4</p>
        <p>2-2 6, Grandison 02 06 0, Shaw 2-5 06 4, Lohaus 1-2 06 2, Gamble 06 06 0 Totals 37-83 28-31 104.</p>
        <p>CHICAGO (110)</p>
        <p>Grant 4-9 3-3 11, Pippen 9-13 2-5 20. Cartwright 914 56 23. John Paxson 03 06 0, Jordan 13-23 16-17 42, Hodges 3-10 06 6, Sellers 4-4 06 8, Perdue 02 06 0, Vincenl 06 06 0. Corzine 06 06 0. Totals 42-78 26-31 110</p>
        <p>Boston  23  29  28  24104</p>
        <p>Chicago  32  22  26  30-110</p>
        <p>3-Point goals-Ainge 2 Fouled out-None Rebounds-Boston 49 'McHale 13) Chicago 41 (Grant 10). Assists-Boston 25 (J(ton 7), Chicago 26 (Jordan 11) Total fwls--Boston 23, Chicago 24 Technical-John Paxson A-18,676</p>
        <p>At Lot Angeles L.A. LAKERS (116)</p>
        <p>Green 56 06 10, Worthy 9-14 3-5 21, Ab-dui-Jabbar 5-13 2 4 12, Scott 12-20 06 28, Johnson 8-13 5-5 22. Thompson 3-9 0-1 6 tlampbell 36 06 6, 2-2 1-2 5, Rivers 06 06 0, Totals 4o-oo 14-20116</p>
        <p>L.A. CLIPPERS (95)</p>
        <p>Smith 7-9 56 19. Norman 4 14 3-3 11, Beniamin 912 3-3 21, Dailey II 19 2-4 24, fdixon 2-7 06 4, Wolf 2-3 06 4, Williams 2-7 2-4 6, Kite 06 06 0. Garrick 1-2 06 2, Gondrezick</p>
        <p>2-3 06 4, Totals 40-7615-21 95</p>
        <p>L..A. Lakers  31  34 27  24-116</p>
        <p>L. A. dippers  28  29 15  23- 95</p>
        <p>3-Point goals-Scolt 4, Johnson, Cooper Foul^ out-None Rebounds-L.A. Ukers 53 ((Ireen, Johnson 9i, L A Clippers 35 (Benjamin I3i Assists-LA Lakers 32 (Joh^n 12), L A Clippers 32 (Nixon 13) ToUl fpuls-L.A Lakers 15, L A Clippers 23. Technical-Benjamin. A-15,352</p>
        <p>At Dallas PORTLAND (108)</p>
        <p>Bryant 2-3 2-2  6,  Kersey  711  0-4 14,</p>
        <p>Johnson 713 3-4  17.  Drexler  11-25  2-3 25</p>
        <p>Porter 7-16 7-9 23, Vandeweghe 6-15 2-2 15, Young 2-3 06 4, Jones 1-2 2-3 4, Anderson 06 06 O.Totals 43-88 18-27 108 DALLAS (III)</p>
        <p>Aguirre 6-15 2-4 14, Perkins 6-9 66 18, Donaldson 2-2 2-2 6, Haiper 6-18 66 20, Blackman 1M9 2-4 24, Davis 2-3 3-4 8, Schrempf 46 36 II, Wennington 26 06 4, Tyler 3-5 06 6,Totals 4263 24- 111.</p>
        <p>Portland  34  27 27 20-108</p>
        <p>Dallas  31  29 25 23-111</p>
        <p>3-Point goals-Porter 2, Harper 2, Drexler, Vandeweghe, Davis Fouled out-None. Rebounds-Portland 41 (Drexler 8), Dallas 62 (Schrempf 121. Assists-Portlan(i 32 (Porter 13), Dallas 29 (Harper 11) Total fouls-Portland 20, Dallas 19. A-17,007.</p>
        <p>At .Miami INDIANA (117)</p>
        <p>Person 11-21 7-9 29, Williams 8-14 3-5 19, Smits 6-15  4-5  16,  Miller  5-13 1-2 14, .Skiles</p>
        <p>26 1-2 5, Tisdale  3-7 4-8  10, Gray 0-2 06 0,</p>
        <p>J Long 2-2 06 4, Fleming 7-10 5-5 20, Dreil-)ng 06 (M) 0 Totals 44-90 ffi-36117.</p>
        <p>MIAMI (118)</p>
        <p>G Long 3-8 46 10, Thompson 7-10 4-5 18, Seikaly 4-15 5-14 13, Sundvold 9-21 4-4 25, Sparrow 4-17 11-11 20, Cummings 8-12 2-2 18, Mitchell 2-3 2-4 6, Shasky 06 06 0, Upshaw 0-3 06 0, Neal 1-3 1-2 4, Hastings 0-2 4-4 4 Totals 38-94 37-52 118.</p>
        <p>Indiana  31  26 19 20 8 13-117</p>
        <p>Miami  19  18 31 28 8 14-118</p>
        <p>3-Point goals-Miller 3 Fleming, Sundvold 3, Sparrow, Neal Fouled out-Williams, Smits, G Long. Rebounds-In-diana 66 (Smits 15), Miami 62 (Seikaly 13i Assists-Indiana 22 (Fleming 6), Miami 24 (Sparrow 8). Total fouls-Indiana 38, Miami 33. A-15,008</p>
        <p>Colonial A.A.</p>
        <p>Men's Basketball Conf.</p>
        <p>W L</p>
        <p>Richmond  4  0</p>
        <p>James Madison  2  1</p>
        <p>East Carolina  2  1</p>
        <p>UNC-Wilmington  2  1</p>
        <p>American  3  2</p>
        <p>George Mason  1  2</p>
        <p>William &amp;amp; Mary  0  3</p>
        <p>Navy  0  4</p>
        <p>Overall W I.</p>
        <p>8  7</p>
        <p>9  6</p>
        <p>8 6 6  7</p>
        <p>6  5</p>
        <p>2 11 3 10</p>
        <p>Saturday's Results</p>
        <p>Richmond 76, Navy' 74, OT American 90, William &amp;amp; Mary 72 East Carolina 62. James Madison</p>
        <p>57</p>
        <p>UNC-Wilmington 77, George Mason 66</p>
        <p>Sunday's (iames No games scheduled</p>
        <p>Monday's Games George Mason at East Carolina William &amp;amp; Mary at Towson State James Madison at UNC-Wilm-</p>
        <p>ington</p>
        <p>FI</p>
        <p>N.Carolina</p>
        <p>Madden</p>
        <p>Chilcult</p>
        <p>S Williams</p>
        <p>Bucknall</p>
        <p>Lebo</p>
        <p>Fox</p>
        <p>Reid</p>
        <p>Rice</p>
        <p>Davis</p>
        <p>Denny</p>
        <p>Totals</p>
        <p>VIRGINIA</p>
        <p>Stith</p>
        <p>Biundin</p>
        <p>Dabbs</p>
        <p>Morgan</p>
        <p>Crotly</p>
        <p>Turner</p>
        <p>C Williams</p>
        <p>Oliver</p>
        <p>Bair</p>
        <p>Daniel</p>
        <p>Cooke</p>
        <p>Totals</p>
        <p>MP FG</p>
        <p>27 3-13 23 4- 4 16 3- 7 31 2-13</p>
        <p>28 11-14 21 1-7 31 9-15 12 1- 1 6 1- 4 5 0- 2</p>
        <p>260 3^</p>
        <p>FT R</p>
        <p>3- 5 6 0-0 5</p>
        <p>0- 0 3 0-0 6</p>
        <p>1- 1 3</p>
        <p>0-0 7 3- 6 5 0- 0 2 0 0</p>
        <p>1-12 0 3 0- 0 0 0 2 8-13 44 6 28</p>
        <p>MP FG  FT  R  A  F  Pt</p>
        <p>19  3-  7  1-  2  6  2  2  7</p>
        <p>26  2-  6  4-  6  9  4  2  8</p>
        <p>14  1-  5  0-  0  4  0  4</p>
        <p>36 13-25  5- 6  6  2  1</p>
        <p>28  2-  4  2-  3  0  5  4</p>
        <p>21  4-  6  4-  5  3  4  1</p>
        <p>17  6-  6  0-  2  5  0  1</p>
        <p>15  3-  7  6-  6  3  0  1</p>
        <p>4 0-10-0101 19  1-  3  4-  4  3  0  1</p>
        <p>1 0-0  1-2  0  0  0</p>
        <p>aio 35-70 27-36 44 17 18 106</p>
        <p>N Carolina Virginia</p>
        <p>4 14 2-83</p>
        <p>5 0 5' 6 - 1 0 6</p>
        <p>3-poinl gdals-North Carolina 5-26 (Mad den 0-5, Sl^Wdhams O-l, Bucknall 06, Lebo 36, Fox 0-2, Rice 1-1, Davis 1-3, Denny 0-2), Virginia 9-17 (Morgan 8-14, Crotty 1-2, Turner 0-1). Fouled out-Fox. Re-bounds-North Carolina 39 (Fox 7), Virginia 44 (Biundin 9). Assists-North Carolina 6 (Lebo, Fox 2t, Virginia 17 (Crotty 5) Total fouls-North Carolina 28, Virginia 18 A-8,864 (at Virginia)</p>
        <p>LOUISVILLE</p>
        <p>Payne Kimbro Ellison Williams Smith Sullivan Spencer Holden Totals</p>
        <p>MP FG FT R A F Pt 36  4-  8  2-  2  8  5  3  12</p>
        <p>25  4-  7  0-  0  3  2  4  9</p>
        <p>36 9-16 2- 5 8 2 30  3-  4  1-  2  0  1</p>
        <p>36  1-  9  2-  2  2  2</p>
        <p>14  1-  3  2-  2  2  2</p>
        <p>18  4-  7  1-  2  5  1</p>
        <p>5 1-10-010</p>
        <p>3 20</p>
        <p>3  7 8 4 1 4</p>
        <p>4  9 0 2</p>
        <p>m 27-55 10-15 33 21 20 67</p>
        <p>GEORGI A TECH M P F G F T</p>
        <p>Hammonds</p>
        <p>Sherrod</p>
        <p>Brittain</p>
        <p>Scott</p>
        <p>Oliver</p>
        <p>McNeil</p>
        <p>Brown</p>
        <p>Whitmore</p>
        <p>Totals</p>
        <p>R  A FP  I</p>
        <p>40  9-17  1-  1 10 1  3  19</p>
        <p>18  0-  4  0-  0  3  1  1  0</p>
        <p>18  1-  3  0-  1  3  0  4  2</p>
        <p>40  8-22  3-  3 3 2  3  24</p>
        <p>40  3-  8  7-  9  7  11  3  14</p>
        <p>22  1-  2  2-  2  5  0  3  4</p>
        <p>20  0-  1  2-  4  1  0  4  2</p>
        <p>20-00-00000 200 22-57 15-20 38 19 17 65</p>
        <p>by Jeff Millar &amp;amp; Bill Hinds</p>
        <p>lorida International at Ameri-</p>
        <p>AGC Standings</p>
        <p>By The Associated Press</p>
        <p>Conference Overall W L Pet. W L Pet. Duke  3  0  1 000  13  0  1 000</p>
        <p>N.C, Stale  2  0  1,000  11  1  .917</p>
        <p>Clemson  3  1  750  10  3 769</p>
        <p>N. Carolina 1 1 500 14 3 824  Ga Tech  1  1  500  10  4 714</p>
        <p>Virginia  1  2  333  8  6  571</p>
        <p>Wake Forest  1  3  .250  8  5  615</p>
        <p>Maryland  0  4  000  6  9  400</p>
        <p>ACC Boxes</p>
        <p>Georgia Tech 6-15 (Scotl/5-11, Oliver 1-4) Turnovers - Louisville 7/ Georgia Tech 11 - None Of</p>
        <p>technical fouls Hausman. Croft Georgia Tech)</p>
        <p>  Jfficiais -</p>
        <p>Dodge A-9,111 (at</p>
        <p>A F Pt</p>
        <p>0 4  9</p>
        <p>1 0 8</p>
        <p>0 4  6</p>
        <p>1 4  4</p>
        <p>2 2 26 2 5  2 0 4 21</p>
        <p>3</p>
        <p>4 0 83</p>
        <p>College Basketball</p>
        <p>By The Associated Press EAST</p>
        <p>Alfred 84, Clarkson 82. OT King's. N Y 70, FDL-Madison 65 Pittsburgh 99. Oklahoma 91 Rhode</p>
        <p>irgh99.</p>
        <p>Island</p>
        <p>Louisville 3334-67 Georgia Tech 3629-65 3-point goals - Louisville 3-9 (Payne 2-3, Kimbro 1-2, Smith 0-2, Sullivan 0-2);</p>
        <p>Coll, 93, W. .New England 00</p>
        <p>St Joseph's, L I 97, Green Mountain 83 Temple 80, George Washington 68 SOUTH Centre 69, Thomas More 65 Florida St. 101, Tennessee 90 Louisville 67, Georgia Tech 65 Shenandoah 95,Lynchburg 75 South Alabama 97 N C Charlotte 83 Virginia 106, North Carolina 83 MIDWEST Illinois St, 91, Bradley 83 Tri State91, Ind -Pur Indpls 86 SOUTHWEST Texas Christian 70. Rice 64 FAR WEST N Mex Highlands 103, Fort Lewis 91 Washington 82, California 80</p>
        <p>Golf Scores</p>
        <p>PALM DESERT, Calif (AP) ^ Final scores and prize money Sunday from the $1 million Bob Hope Classic golf tournament, played on the par-72, 6,478-vard Indian wells Country Club; par-72', 6,708-yard Eldorado Country Club, par-72, 6,931-yard Palmer course at PGA West and par-72, 6,927-yard Bermuda Dunes Country Club courses:</p>
        <p>x-Steve Jons, $180,000 7fr68676369-343 Paul Azinger, $88,000 6968-706769-343 Sandy Lyle, $88.000  7068686869-343</p>
        <p>Lanny Wdkns. $39,375 68-7068-7068-344 Kenny Knox, $39,375  68-71696769-344</p>
        <p>Fred Couples, $39,375 65-71-716869-344 Mark Calcvcc, $39,375 71676767-72-344 Hubert Green. $29,000 73-70656869-345 Tom Kite. $29,000  68696869-S71-345</p>
        <p>Bemhrd Lngr, $29,000 70686869-70-345 Dave Rmmlls, $23,000 75-68676769-346 Tim Simpson. $23.000 68-71-716769-346 Donn Hmmnd, $23,000 73686767-71-346 Howard Twtty. $17,500 72-71-706767-347 Bruce Lietzke, $17,500 73-71656969-347 Ted Schulz, $17,500  7068686 972-347</p>
        <p>Brad Bo'ant, $17,500 6768-7367-72-347 Davis Lov HI, $12,171 73-71676869-348 Corey Pavin, $12,171  70697168-70-348</p>
        <p>J C Snead, $12,171  7167-706971-348</p>
        <p>Chip Beck, $12,171  71 716966-71-348</p>
        <p>Peter Jacobsn, $12,171 67-706971-71-348 Jodie Mudd, $12,171  726668-7072-348</p>
        <p>Scott Verplnk, $12,171 706865-72-73-348 Brian Tennysn, $7,800 72-73696768-349 Larry Mize, $7,800  70746867-70-349</p>
        <p>Bill Glasson, $7,800  7367-706970-349</p>
        <p>Mike Donald, $7,800  71-736866-71-349</p>
        <p>James Hallet, $7,800  74686966-72-349</p>
        <p>Payne Stewart. $6,650 707268-7268-350 Bobby Wadkins, $6,6507168-707071-350 Jay Don Blake, $5,300 68-706973-71-351 John Mahaffey, $5,300 706971-7071-351 Hal Sutton, $5,300  697168-72-71-351</p>
        <p>T.Armour HI, $5,300  68-7568-7070-351</p>
        <p>Rocco Mediate. $5,300 7070736969-351</p>
        <p>John Cook, $5,300 Steve Pate, $5.300 Ken Green, $5,300 Jack Kay, $3,504 Gil Morgan. $3,504 Tim Norris, $3,504 David Ogrin, $3,504</p>
        <p>Don Reese, $3,504  ---------</p>
        <p>Billy Ry Brwn, $3,504 70-73696971-352 Johnny Miller, $3,504 74697068-71-352 Jim  Bene^, 3,504  6868-766971-352</p>
        <p>Jeff  Sluman, $3,504  6968-74-7269- 352</p>
        <p>Bob Tway, $2,443  73696968-74-:3</p>
        <p>Buddy Gardner, $2,443 716971-71 71-353 David Canipe, $2,443  74-71696970-35.3</p>
        <p>Gary Koch, $2,443  68-7974-71 70- 353</p>
        <p>Lon  Hmkle, $2,443  74-74686968-353</p>
        <p>Mike Sullivan, $2,443  74-71-726868-353</p>
        <p>Craig SUdler, 12,240  7565-71-71-73-354</p>
        <p>Loren Roberts, $2,240 7369736974-354 Jim Gallagher, $2,240 6972-72-7974- 354 Mark BroSs, $2,240  7369686975-354</p>
        <p>Webb Hntzlmn, $2,240 72-716973-72-354 Andrew Magee, $2.240 73-79716972-354 Robert Wrenn, $2,240 73-73-746569- 354</p>
        <p>SA.NDY BAY, Jamaica (AP) - Final scores and prize money Sunday m the</p>
        <p>BeUy King, rs,000 Nancy Lopez. $46,250 Lon Garbacz, $30,000 Martha Nause, $30,000 Hollis Stacy. $17,834 Beth Daniel. $17,833 Rosie Jones, $17,833 Rohm Walton. $11.194 Colleen Walker, $11,194 Sherri Turner, $11,194 Judy Dickinson, $11,194 Nancy Brown, $8,276 D.Ammaccapane, $8,276 Cathy Morse, $8,276 Carolyn Hill. $6.860 Cindy Ranck, $6,859 Vicki Fergon, $6,859 M.Figueras-Dotb, $5,901 Sally Little, $5,901</p>
        <p>Transactions</p>
        <p>By The .Associated Press BASEBALL American League</p>
        <p>NEW YORK YANKEES-Announced the resignation of Lou D'Emiilio, assistant mema relations director</p>
        <p>National League PITTSBURGH PlRAltS-Agreed to terms with R J Reynolds, outfielder, on a one-year contract SAN DIEGO PADRES-Signed Marvell Wynne, outfielder, to a one-year contract New York-Penn League NEW YORK-PENN LEAGCE-Approv-ed the move of the Little Falls Mets to Pitt sfield. Mass. for the 1989 season B.ASKETB.ALL National Baaketball .Association MIAMI HEAT-Signed Todd Milcheli, forward, for the remainder of the season, and Craig Neal, guard, to a 19diy con tract</p>
        <p>MILWAUKEE BUCKS-Placed Sidney Moticrief, guard, on the mjured list Resigned Mark Davis, guard PHOENIX SUNS-Waived Mark Davis, guard Signed T R Dunn, guard, to a 19 day contract</p>
        <p>$500,000 LPGA Jamaica Classic played on the par-71, 6,191-yard Tryall (mif Beach Club course:</p>
        <p>646970-202</p>
        <p>697969-208</p>
        <p>797169-210</p>
        <p>71-7168-210</p>
        <p>6971-71-211</p>
        <p>766669-211</p>
        <p>797167-211</p>
        <p>H(KKEV</p>
        <p>National Hockev League PITTSBURGH PE\GUlN9-^Senl Kevin Stevens, left wing, to Muskegon of the International League</p>
        <p>UOLl.EGE ATIA.NTIC CHRISTIAN-Named Garv W Hall director of athletics, chairman of the department of phvsical education and men s ^cer coach LOYOLA ILL - Declared Gerald Hayward, forward,,and Antowne Johnson, center, ineligible lor the rest of the season SOITHERN METHODIST-Announced that Kato .Armstrong, guard, has been declared academically' ineiigible for the springsemester TEXAS-Named Leon Fuller defensive coordmator</p>
        <p>Japan Bowl</p>
        <p>Bv The Vssot ialed Press Al Tokvo</p>
        <p>' East  : 1; 3 3_3o</p>
        <p>West  ; 0 (I a_ ;</p>
        <p>East-Drummond 41 run Siovanovich kick'</p>
        <p>Wesi-Ball 2 run' S Slater kick East-Brown l pass from Dilweg (Stoyanovich kick;</p>
        <p>East-Drummond 1 run .Siovanovich kicki</p>
        <p>Easl-FGStovanovich:i(j Elast-FG Stoyanovich 22 East-FG Siovanovich 49 A-29,000 </p>
        <p>71-70-71-212</p>
        <p>East</p>
        <p>Wesl</p>
        <p>71-7269-212</p>
        <p>First downs</p>
        <p>21</p>
        <p>8</p>
        <p>70-7468-212</p>
        <p>Rushes-yards</p>
        <p>41-228</p>
        <p>24-4p</p>
        <p>797168-212</p>
        <p>Passing</p>
        <p>152</p>
        <p>70-71-72-213</p>
        <p>Return Yards</p>
        <p>28</p>
        <p>'.211</p>
        <p>71-70-72-213</p>
        <p>Comp-Alt-Int</p>
        <p>17-29-2</p>
        <p>10-18-3</p>
        <p>69-7668-213</p>
        <p>Punts</p>
        <p>(H)</p>
        <p>427</p>
        <p>72-71-71-214</p>
        <p>Fumbies-Losi</p>
        <p>-0</p>
        <p>16</p>
        <p>797269-214</p>
        <p>Penalties-Yards</p>
        <p>1 5</p>
        <p>3-30</p>
        <p>72-7468-214</p>
        <p>71-7971-215</p>
        <p>72-72-71-215</p>
        <p>East</p>
        <p>West</p>
        <p>18</p>
        <p>12</p>
        <p>40-98</p>
        <p>31-1</p>
        <p>147</p>
        <p>141</p>
        <p>201</p>
        <p>27</p>
        <p>12-27-3</p>
        <p>17-45-3</p>
        <p>930</p>
        <p>5-2</p>
        <p>5-23</p>
        <p>940</p>
        <p>28:09</p>
        <p>31:51</p>
        <p>INDIVIDUAL STATISTKS</p>
        <p>RUSHING-East, Drummond. Syracuse, 966, Green, Notre Dame. 1455 'Hunter Kentucky. 953, Brown, West Virginia. 9 27. McAllister, Michigan State, 416 Dilweg, Duke. 1-11 West. Ball. UCLA. 942 Pern, Baylor, 914, Webster, Southerr, Calilomia. 2-5: Stafford. Oklahoma, 91 Harllieb, Iowa, 9' minus 17 PASSING-East. Dilweg 910-970 Francis. Tennessee. 9146-57; Mc.Allister 2-41 25, Stoyanovich, Indiana. 9116 West, Aikman, UCLA, 5-191-54. Hanlieb 5-92-40 RECEIVING-East, Mitchell. Vaniier bill, 987: Waddld Boston College, 3-25 Drummond 917, Hunter 26. Brown 1-10. Weygand, Auburn, 1-7 Green 16 West Ingram, California. 3-39, B Slater Washington, 2-21; Webster 2-15, Pern 1-7 Brison, Nebraska, 16, Phillips. Houston. 16</p>
        <p>MISSED FIELD GOALS-EasI. Stoyanovich, 35</p>
        <p>Shrine Bowl</p>
        <p>By The Aiisoriated Press Ai Stanford, Calif East  I)  7 3 1424</p>
        <p>Weat  3  3 9 0-6</p>
        <p>Wesl-FG Walsh 29 West-FG Walsh 42 East-Tillman 1 run Gillette kick 1,</p>
        <p>Easl-FG Gillette 44 Easl-TJohnson 1 run Gillettekick) East-Olsavskv 75 interception return Gillettekick A-76.000iest.i</p>
        <p>First downs</p>
        <p>Rushes-yards</p>
        <p>Passing</p>
        <p>Return Yards</p>
        <p>Comp-Atl-Int</p>
        <p>Punts</p>
        <p>Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards Time of Possession</p>
        <p>INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS</p>
        <p>RUSHING-East Tillman Jackson St. 1986 . Gillette, Michigan 1-18; Johnston. Syracuse 913; T Johnson, Clemson, 4-9. Wilkerson Kent St, 2-5 Rison. Michigan St, 16, Gruden. Louisville, 2-'minus 5). Elkins, Wake Forest, 9 minus 28( West, Richards, California, 915, E Johnson. Utah. 913. Henderson. Iowa St 2-12; Jenkins, Washington. 4-6, Taylor Nebraska, 9'minus 6' Wilhelm, Oregon St 9 minus 15 r, Walsh. New Mexico. 1-minus 24)</p>
        <p>PASSING-East, Elkins 7-14-2-97. Gruden 912-950, Tillman 91-16 West. W ilbelm 923-262, Tavlor 922-1-79 RECEIVlNG^East. Rison 3-43; Ford, Virginia 934 Wprthen. N Carolina St. 2-19 .Wilkerson 2-18, Slock, V'MI, 1-20 Reeves, Auburn, 1-13 West. Affholter, Southern Cal, 763 Richards 6-47. Millikan, .Nebraska, 931 E Johnson 16</p>
        <p>Rec Basketball</p>
        <p>Peewee Division</p>
        <p>Yellow Jackets ......3  2 6 718</p>
        <p>Pirates  2  12  2-622</p>
        <p>Leading scorers YJ  N. Barakat9; P - G Terry 12</p>
        <p>Cavaliers  .  2  2  2  28</p>
        <p>Tar Heels  2  7  10  8-27</p>
        <p>Leading scorers C - B Molden 6 TH  M Bel vie 11, J Whitehurst</p>
        <p>Midget Division</p>
        <p>Pirates  9  6  9  1034</p>
        <p>Blue Devils  7 6 8 223</p>
        <p>Leading  scorers P    S  Briley</p>
        <p>15;BU D Cherry 8</p>
        <p>A AA Division</p>
        <p>Collins &amp;amp; Aikman 1  26  3864</p>
        <p>Waltson's............ 19  12-31</p>
        <p>Leading scorers: CA - Mike Baker 16.1) West 13; W - .Mitchell Moore 14, Ed Hayes,6</p>
        <p>A.A-2 Division</p>
        <p>Rockers .......... I6 28-44</p>
        <p>Wachovia .............21  1738</p>
        <p>Leading scorer R  Dave White 20. Ed Hobby 13; W  Dave Brown 13, Jim Riiey8</p>
        <p>A,A-1 Division Collins &amp;amp; Aikman III , 18  2644</p>
        <p>Pitt Memorial II 25  2651</p>
        <p>Leading scorers: CA  Joe Joyner 11. Arthur Wooten 9; PM -Chris Shankleford 13. Melvin FairclothS'Rear Panthers Roll Past Sooners, 99-91</p>
        <p>By Bob Greene</p>
        <p>THE ASSOCIATED PRESS</p>
        <p>Will the real Pitt basketball team please stand up.</p>
        <p>You saw the real Pitt team today, Oklahoma coach Billy Tubbs said after the Panthers upset his third*ranked Sooners 99-91 Sunday. They played a physical game, and they whipped us physically and emotionally.</p>
        <p>So how come the Pitt Panthers were beaten earlier this season by Siena and Duquesne?</p>
        <p>I think weve shown that we are capable of beating anybody ... or of losing to anybody, said Pitt guard Sean Milter.</p>
        <p>Brian Shorter and Rod Brookin had career-best performances as Pitt won only its second game in its last six outings. The other victory came against Syracuse, at the time ranked No. 2 in the country.</p>
        <p>Shorter scored 37 points and had 12 rebounds, and Brookin had 24 points as Pitt overcame Mookie Blaylocks 37-point performance for Oklahoma. The Sooners got no closer than five points in the second half as their 11-game winning streak ended.</p>
        <p>- We were ready to play, Miller said. Its the most ready Ive ever seen Brian and Rod for a game. </p>
        <p>In other games Sunday involving Top Twenty teams, it was Virginia 106, No. 8 North Carolina 83; No. 9 Louisville 67, No. 19 Georgia Tech 65; and No, 14 Florida State 101, No.</p>
        <p>17 Tennessee 90.</p>
        <p>Every time wed get close, theyd make the big play and wed make the wrong play, said Tubbs, who also was assessed a technical foul in the first half.</p>
        <p>Shorter had 22 points and Pitt used a nine-point run to take a 55-49 halftime lead. That was just two points less than the Panthers scored in their last game, a 76-57 loss at Georgetown.</p>
        <p>Brian is capable of dominating a lot of games the way he played today, Pitt coach Paul Evans said of Shorter, a 6-foot-6 sophomore who sat out last season because of Proposition 48. That was the player I recruited.</p>
        <p>And Rod told me before the game that his best game ever was against Oklahoma last year, and he felt really good coming into the game. Oklahoma, which made 16 of 24 free throws to Pitts 30 of 42, has been held under 100 points in its last three games after scoring more than 100 in nine straight games.</p>
        <p>No. 14 Florida St. 101, No. 17 Ten-neessee 90 Tony Dawson scored 30 points and George McCloud had 29 as Florida State beat visiting Tennessee.</p>
        <p>Florida State, 12-1, opened a 50-28 lead late in the first half and fought off several Tennessee spurts in the second half. The Volunteers, 11-2, closed within 66-61 with 12:14 left in the game on Dyron Nixs 3-point shot, but were unable to get any closer.  '</p>
        <p>S. Alabama 97, N.C. Charlotte 83</p>
        <p>Once again, Junie Lewis and Jeff Hodge led South Alabamas offense, but it was a freshman guard who provided a spark off the bench.</p>
        <p>Lewis scored 24 points and Hodge added 19 Sunday to lead South Alabama to a 97-83 Sun Belt Conference victory over visiting North Carolina-Charlotte.</p>
        <p>The Jaguars improved to 8-4 overall and 2-0 in the Sun Belt, while the defending conference champion dropped to 6-6 and 0-2.</p>
        <p>South Alabama trailed by as many as nine points in the first half, but freshman guard Derek Turner came off the bench to ignite a 13-3 run with three straight 3-pointers. That gave the Jaguars a 47-41 lead at the half, and the 49ers never got any closer.</p>
        <p>South Alabama shot 57 percent from the field. Lewis hit 9-of-ll shots and was j^rfect on six free throws. Hodge tried 11 shots and made seven, and was 5-of-6 from the free throw line.</p>
        <p>The Jaguars inside game was handled by John Jimmerson, who scored 12 points and grabbed 12 rebounds, and Gabriel Estaba, who had 10 points and seven rebounds. South Alabama had a 36-30 advantage on the boards and turned the ball over only 10 times.</p>
        <p>Bryon Dinkins and Henry Williams each scored 20 points to lead the 49ers, who hit 11 of 21 shots from 3-point range. Jeff West and Frank Persley added 13 and 12 points, respectively; and Mike Washington came off the bench to grab 12 rebounds.</p>
        <p>The Associated Press</p>
        <p>Pittsburghs Brian Shorter, who scored 37 points, moves past Oklahomas Stacey KingHoyas Thompson Is Only Seeking Satisfaction</p>
        <p>THE ASSOCIATED PRESS</p>
        <p>LANDOVER, Md. - All Georgetown coach John Thompson wants is a little satisfaction.</p>
        <p>^Thompson made headlines around the country when he walked off the court prior to the Hoyas Big East game against Boston College Saturday night to protest a newly adopted NCAA rule on scholarships.</p>
        <p>Now the question is: Will he do it again Wednesday at Providence?</p>
        <p>Im not going to continue to go off every game, but Im going to stay off until I get some satisfaction, Thompson said. I dont want to pinpoint what that satisfaction will be because I dont want anybody to threaten me and I dont intend to threaten anyone else.ATTENTION HUNTERS!</p>
        <p>Have Just Leased Two New Ranches In Montana Offering Some Of The Best Deer And Elk Hunting In The State. Excellent Bow Hunting For Trophy White Toils And Mules. Bugle Hunts For Bull Elk, Rifle Hunts For Deer Or Elk, Combination Hunts Available. Also, Trophy Antelope Hunts For As Little As $500.</p>
        <p>Booking Now For 1989. Licenses Go On Sole February 15. Contact Steve Sosnett,</p>
        <p>Kinston, N.C. 919-527-5933__</p>
        <p>Thompson, in a paid interview with WTTG-TV, added, I think that Im dealing with reasonable people who have made a mistake, and when reasonable people make a mistake they rescind what they do. I think thats what Im interested in.</p>
        <p>No one was prouder of Thompsons dramatic protest against Proposition 42 on Saturday than the players he walked out on, including his son.</p>
        <p>Im really proud he took a stand, said freshman Ronnie Thompson, the coachs son and a backup guard for the Hoyas. Hes looking past just playing games.... Hes looking down the road, to my kids and his grandchilaren, who may not be able to go to college because of this.</p>
        <p>Georgetown freshman Alonzo Mourning also felt that Thompson was casting an eye toward the future when he took his walk.</p>
        <p>He knows were not going to be affected by it, but it could influence our</p>
        <p>BUNCEH'S TRANSMISSIONS .NC</p>
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        <p>relatives, little sisters or brothers, Mourning said. Hes looking out for young kids down the road.</p>
        <p>Thompson s current crop of teenagers had little trouble beating Boston College even without him gripping his white towel in front of the bench. Under the guidance of assistant coach Mike Riley, the Hoyas shot a team-record 60 percent from the field in an easy 86-60 victory.</p>
        <p>If Coach was there, we would have done the same thing, said senior forward Jaren Jackson.</p>
        <p>Maybe so, but Thompsons absence did not go unnoticed.</p>
        <p>We miss him on the bench, him yelling at us. said guard Dwayne Bryant. It means a lot to us to hear his voice. We wanted to win very badly for him.</p>
        <p>Frank S. Harper, LPT ATCGreenville Physical Thera^</p>
        <p>Sports Medicine Clinic</p>
        <p>1712 West 6th Street Greenville, N.C. Hours: 9-5 Mon.-Frl. Saturday By Appointment Office 752-0929</p>
        <pb facs="00097138_0014" />
        <p>O)</p>
        <p>
        </p>
        <p>c</p>
        <p>o</p>
        <p>WNa</p>
        <p>wen</p>
        <p>MONDAY EVENING</p>
        <p>e</p>
        <p>o</p>
        <p>o</p>
        <p>CD</p>
        <p>CD</p>
        <p>OIS</p>
        <p>ESPN</p>
        <p>HBO</p>
        <p>LIFE</p>
        <p>MAX</p>
        <p>SHOW</p>
        <p>TMC</p>
        <p>USA</p>
        <p>WTBS</p>
        <p>7:00</p>
        <p>Our House</p>
        <p>7:30</p>
        <p>Business Rpt</p>
        <p>USA Today</p>
        <p>Cosby Show</p>
        <p>Cosby Show</p>
        <p>USA Today</p>
        <p>Wheel-Fortune</p>
        <p>Bugs &amp;amp; Pals</p>
        <p>Peter &amp;amp; Wolf</p>
        <p>SportsCenter</p>
        <p>Biggies -</p>
        <p>Beantown</p>
        <p>NC People</p>
        <p>Lose or Draw</p>
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        <p>Night Court</p>
        <p>Lose or Draw</p>
        <p>Jeopardy'</p>
        <p>Fraggle Rock</p>
        <p>Mouseterpi,</p>
        <p>8:00  8:30  9:00  9:30  in-nn</p>
        <p>Movie: Angel and the Badman</p>
        <p>Martin Luther King</p>
        <p>Newhart</p>
        <p>Kate &amp;amp; Alhe</p>
        <p>10:30</p>
        <p>700 Club</p>
        <p>Masterpiece Theatre</p>
        <p>Murphy</p>
        <p>Design. W.</p>
        <p>Living the Dream: A Tribute to Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.</p>
        <p>ALF</p>
        <p>Newhart</p>
        <p>Hogan Family</p>
        <p>Kate &amp;amp; Allie</p>
        <p>MacGyver</p>
        <p>Judds Acros. Heartland</p>
        <p>News</p>
        <p>Movie: The Cover Girl and the Cop'</p>
        <p>Murphy B.</p>
        <p>Design. W.</p>
        <p>Judds Across Heartland</p>
        <p>Movie: The Ryan White Story</p>
        <p>Movie: Bataan</p>
        <p>Born Free</p>
        <p>College Basketball: Syracuse at Conrjecticut</p>
        <p>Adv of Tartu</p>
        <p>Movie: Western Union</p>
        <p>Animals</p>
        <p>Encyclopedia</p>
        <p>Molly Dodd</p>
        <p>'War of the Worlds Contd</p>
        <p>The Producers Cont d</p>
        <p>Charade</p>
        <p>Short Film</p>
        <p>Miami Vice</p>
        <p>Andy Griffith  Sanford</p>
        <p>College Basketball: Ohio State af Michigan</p>
        <p>Movie: Hope and Glory</p>
        <p>Cagney &amp;amp; Lacey</p>
        <p>1st &amp;amp; Ten</p>
        <p>1st &amp;amp; Ten</p>
        <p>Spenser: For Hire</p>
        <p>Movie: Close Encounters of the Third Kind'</p>
        <p>Movie: Tough Guys</p>
        <p>Movie Wall Street</p>
        <p>Murder. She Wrote</p>
        <p>Movie: The Big GhiH'</p>
        <p>Perry Mason Returns</p>
        <p>Movie: Fatal Attraction'</p>
        <p>WWF Prime Time Wrestling</p>
        <p>Movie Blood &amp;amp; Orchids</p>
        <p>Movie: Blood &amp;amp; Orchids</p>
        <p>British Actress Says Her Typecasting Hard To Lose</p>
        <p>SundoyT^Tly  klY  TV  SHOWTIME  from</p>
        <p>HBO Dramas Capture 13 Cable TV ACE Awards</p>
        <p>THE ASSOCIATED PRESS</p>
        <p>LOS ANGELES  Home Box Office swept the cable industrys lOth Annual ACE Awards on the strength of a trio of dramas that captured 13 of the cable networks 35 awards.</p>
        <p>HBO won four times more awards than its nearest competitor: Arts &amp;amp; Entertainment, which won eight. The ACE awards were presented during ceremonies Sunday sponsored by the National Academy of Cable programming.</p>
        <p>HBOs winning dramas were Vietnam War Story, Mandela</p>
        <p>and Tidy Endings. In all, HBO had received 114 nominations in the 76 categories for which prizes were given. ^</p>
        <p>Winning performers included Danny Glover, Alfre Woodard, Stockard Channing, Rip Torn, Robin Williams, Billy Crystal and Billy Joel. Lucy Webb received a fourth consecutive ACE as best actress in a comedy series for HBOs Not Necessarily the News.</p>
        <p>Other winning networks were: CNN five; Bravo Cable Network, Discovery Channel, ESPN and Showtime four each; Disney Chan-</p>
        <p>January Coupon Special</p>
        <p>COUPON</p>
        <p>Not good with other coupons</p>
        <p>off any meal</p>
        <p>with this coupon</p>
        <p>Dine-in or Take-Out Coupon Good Through January 31, 1989</p>
        <p>FOSDICK^</p>
        <p>1890 SEAFOOD</p>
        <p>-i'</p>
        <p>2903 S. Evans St. Call 756-2011</p>
        <p>Additional Parking Now Available</p>
        <p>22222222222S222E22222Z:</p>
        <p>PLAZA CINEMA</p>
        <p>OLIVER</p>
        <p>PLAZA MALL 756-0088</p>
        <p>WEEKDAYS 7:00 ONLY</p>
        <p>HELLBOUND</p>
        <p>HELLRAlSERn</p>
        <p>d</p>
        <p>WEEKDAYS 9:00 ONLY</p>
        <p>OEEPSTARSIX</p>
        <p>WEEKDAYS 7:00 &amp;amp; 9:00</p>
        <p>SCHWARZENEGGER DEVITG</p>
        <p>Only their mother con toN them opart.</p>
        <p>-PG-</p>
        <p>nel three; Cinemax, Nickelodeon and USA Network two; and Lifetime, Prime Ticket and SuperStation TBS one each.</p>
        <p>Vietnam War Story, a 30-minute anthology series, won five awards out of its 18 nominations, the most of any show. It was named best dramatic series and Wesley Snipes won as best actor. Other ACEs in the dramatic series category were for directing, writing and direction of photography.</p>
        <p>Glover and Miss Woodard were cited as best actor and actress in a movie or miniseries for their roles as South African black activists in Mandela, which got four ACEs in the movie or miniseries categories. Glover played Nelson Mandela, imprisoned founder of the African National Congress, and Miss Woodard was his wife, Winnie Mandela. The drama also won for directing and film editing.</p>
        <p>Tidy Endings, adapted from Harvey Fiersteins play about settling the affairs of an AIDS victim by his ex-wife and homosexual lover, took four awards. It was named best dramatic special and Miss Channing won as best actress in a dramatic or theatrical special. Fierstein, her co-star, won an ACE for writing and another went to the director.</p>
        <p>The Race for the Double Helix won best movie or miniseries. Juliet Stevenson also won as best supporting actress in a movie or miniseries. Blackadder the Third on A&amp;amp;E Network was named best comedy series. HBOs On Location: Dennis Miller: Mr. Miller Goes to Washington won as best comedy special.</p>
        <p>Pamela Reed won best actress in a dramatic series for HBOs Tanner 88. Crystal was cited as best actor in a comedy series for HBO Comedy Hour Live: An All-Star Toast to the Improv. Jackie Mason won as best writer of a comedy special for HBO;s On Location: Jackie Mason on Broadway, but lost the best performance title to Williams for HBOs Comic Relief 87.</p>
        <p>Joel won as best performer in a music special for HBO World Stage: Billy Joel Live from Leningrad. The show was named best music special.</p>
        <p>Daniel Massey won as best actor in a dramatic special for HBO Showcase: Intimate Contact. Torn was the winner as best supj^rting actor in a movie or miniseries for HBOs Laguna Heat.</p>
        <p>Peter Ustinov received an ACE as best informational or documentary host for Peter Ustinov in China on the Discovery Channel. Roy Firestone was best sports host for Sports Look on ESPN. Bernard Shaw of Cable News Network was named best news anchor.</p>
        <p>HBO won the Golden Ace, the , cable industrys highest honor for its high imiwct programming. Its three winning dramas were cited, as was Dear America: Letters Home from Vietnam, winner for documentary special.</p>
        <p>The Governors Award went to Charles F. Dolan, chairman of Cablevision Systems Corp., for his contribution to the development of cable programming.</p>
        <p>Harry Anderson, star of NBCs Night Court and of cable comedy specials, was host of the awards presentation, which was carried live on 10 cable networks.</p>
        <p>Awards in the crafts and technical awards, and in some acting categories, were made Saturday night.</p>
        <p>By Kathryn Baker</p>
        <p>THE ASSOCATED PRESS</p>
        <p>NEW YORK  During the filming of the classic thriller, The Birds, Veronica Cartwright would take Alfred Hitchcock his tea.</p>
        <p>Every afternoon at 4:30, said the English-born actress, then a 12-year-old child star. He loved the fact that I was from Bristol, because he used to tell me all the best wine cellars to go to, like it was really going to help me at 12. I wish I could remember some of them now.  </p>
        <p>Ms. Cartwright got her start in William Wylers 1962 film The Childrens Hour. Most recently her roles have included The Witches of Eastwick, The Right Stuff and Alien and the critically acclaimed HBO series Tanner 88.</p>
        <p>She can be seen Tuesday night in the CBS movie Desperate for Love, playing the mother of a teen-ager who is accused of murder.</p>
        <p>That was funny when they sent us the T-shirts, she said during lunch at a midtown Manhattan restaurant. It says Desperate For Love. Can you imagine me wearing that down the street here? </p>
        <p>The movie was shot in Georgia and is based on a real-life case from Mississippi.</p>
        <p>Ms. Cartwright seems surprised when it is suggested that she works a lot.</p>
        <p>Im glad it seems that way, she said. Sometimes when Im off for a month, I start to panic and go, Wheres my next job? Yeah, Ive been really lucky, and the parts that Ive gotten have been really dif-, ferent and not really in the same realm which makes it exciting.</p>
        <p>Jack Nicholson, who had directed her in Goin South, had suggestf'd her for the role as the small-town prude in The Witches of Eastwick, a part that had been written with an older actress in mind. Her performance was praised, but she said it set her career back briefly, because casting agents thought she was older than she is, her late 30s.'</p>
        <p>I wanted to get out on Bull Durham. I was too old. Susan (Sarandon) gets it, and shes three years older than I am!  she said.</p>
        <p>Ms. Cartwrights sister, Angela, was a regular on TV in Make Room for Daddy and Lost in Space. Angela lives in Tolucca Lake, Calif., and devotes her time to running a gift shop and raising two children, Jessica, 7, and Jesse, 3, Veronica said.</p>
        <p>The doting aunt pulled out pictures of the kids. She said her sister works on occasion, if its convenient and doesnt take her away from her family.</p>
        <p>Maybe she got saturated when she was a kid, I dont know, Ms. Cartwright said. She was on series  for 12 years. No, Im the only nut in the family. I like to subject myself to torture.</p>
        <p>Birthday Party</p>
        <p>LOS ANGELES (AP)  Jay Leno, Corbin Bernsen and Ed McMahon were among the 250 celebrities and friends who honol-ed NBC entertainment president Brandon Tar-tikoff at a surprise 40th birthday party at Dodger Stadium.</p>
        <p>Tartikoff was flown by helicopter into the stadium Sunday where he was met by a marching band and Leno, who was host of a This is Your Life, Brandon Tartikoff tribute.</p>
        <p>PARK THEATRE ^</p>
        <p>When she played Ethel Kennedy in Robert Kennedy and His Times,^a CBS miniseries, she had to quickly enlist her niece, Rebecca, to play a bit part as one of the Kennedys children.</p>
        <p>They had put in a call to general casting to send down two sets of twins. They sent an Oriental set and an Hispanic set, she recalled.. Theyre going, No, these are supposed to be Kennedys children!</p>
        <p>Rebecca, then 3, performed so admirably, director Marvin Chomsky leaped up and shouted, Give her her (Screen Actors Guild) card! Give her her card! she recalled proudly.</p>
        <p>Ms. Cartwright pulls out another photograph of my bear, her husband, Richard Compton, on the set</p>
        <p>of a Miami Vice episode he was directing. They moved to New York last August after he just up one day and announced he was sick of the West Coast.</p>
        <p>I wasnt going to divorce him just because he wanted to move to New YoiJi, she said. The city does seem to nave won her over since they ^ moved here.</p>
        <p>I was walking to the post office one day, ... and this guy js walking by goes, I love your work! Thank you so much! and kept on walking. You go, Thanks! I mean, it makes you feel so great! They l^now what youve been in. And here, theyll tell you. They dont bug you about it, they just want you to know that they like it. In L.A. they dont dio that. Its terribly flattering.</p>
        <p>Dixie Queen Seafood Restaurant</p>
        <p>Winterville 756-2333  Rocky  Mt.  446-4444</p>
        <p>Monday, Tuesday Wednesday &amp;amp; Thursday D.Q. Mini Shrimp Special____</p>
        <p>*3.65</p>
        <p>Banquet Facilities Available  We Have Plenty Of Parking Mon.-Sat., 4:00 P.M. to 9:00 PJ4. Closed Sunday</p>
        <p>CLIFFS Seafood House and Oyster Bar</p>
        <p>Washington Highway (N.C. 33 Ext.)</p>
        <p>Graanvllla, North Carolina Phone 752-3172</p>
        <p>Mon. thru Thurs. Night'</p>
        <p>Shrimp</p>
        <p>Plate</p>
        <p>WEEKDAYS 7:00-9:10</p>
        <p>BUCCANEER MOVIES</p>
        <p>1:30-4:00-7:00-9:15 TEQUILA SUNRISE (R)</p>
        <p>1:15-3:15-5:15-7:15-9:15 STRIPPED TO KILL 2 (R)</p>
        <p>1:00-3:00-5:00-7:00-9:00 NAKED GUN (PG-13)</p>
        <pb facs="00097138_0015" />
        <p>Crossword bv eucene sheffer The Family Circus</p>
        <p>By Bil Keane HorOSCOpC</p>
        <p>From The Carroll Rjghter Imtitiite</p>
        <p>ACROSS IWord before hurrah or straw 5 Part of a min.</p>
        <p>8 Gil  </p>
        <p>12 Infant cupid</p>
        <p>14 Clumsy fellow</p>
        <p>15 Native of Toronto</p>
        <p>16 Lava source</p>
        <p>17 Ending for can or con</p>
        <p>18 Self-</p>
        <p> conceit</p>
        <p>20 West Coast capital city</p>
        <p>23 Tear .</p>
        <p>24 Yale men</p>
        <p>25 Rummys cousin</p>
        <p>28 Egyptian god</p>
        <p>29 Roman household gods</p>
        <p>30 Macaw</p>
        <p>32 Party</p>
        <p>goodies</p>
        <p>34 Barren</p>
        <p>35 Farm field</p>
        <p>36 Daily food</p>
        <p>37 Taiwan Cq)ital</p>
        <p>40 Drunkard</p>
        <p>41 Feed the kitty</p>
        <p>42 Rabble</p>
        <p>47 Wharf</p>
        <p>48 Discharge</p>
        <p>49 Amuse; slang</p>
        <p>50 Drink slowly</p>
        <p>51 Black and green</p>
        <p>DOWN 1 Varnish ingredient</p>
        <p>2 Doctors org.</p>
        <p>3 Babe in blue</p>
        <p>4 Swaps</p>
        <p>5 Child ish word?</p>
        <p>6 Airport info.</p>
        <p>7 Assembles</p>
        <p>8 Harmon izes</p>
        <p>9 French  novelist</p>
        <p>10 Marne, to Patrick</p>
        <p>11 Command to</p>
        <p>Rover</p>
        <p>13 Ancient kingdom in Asia</p>
        <p>Solution time: 24 mins.</p>
        <p>Saturdays answer i:16</p>
        <p>19 Anecdote collections</p>
        <p>20 Harden</p>
        <p>21 Guinness</p>
        <p>22 Bean or city</p>
        <p>23 Street show</p>
        <p>25 Freakish notions</p>
        <p>26 Weight allowance</p>
        <p>27 Met highlight</p>
        <p>29 Bridal fabric</p>
        <p>31 Put 2 and 2 together</p>
        <p>33 Table linens</p>
        <p>34 Picasso, for one</p>
        <p>36 F'eather .scarfs</p>
        <p>37 Lights out bugle call</p>
        <p>38 Blue dye</p>
        <p>39 Hqwering shrub</p>
        <p>40 Small cut</p>
        <p>43 French friend</p>
        <p>44 Golf ball position</p>
        <p>45 Mauna </p>
        <p>46 Printers</p>
        <p>measures</p>
        <p>Copyright t989 Cowles Syndicate inc</p>
        <p>PJs frosting at the mouth.</p>
        <p>Bridge</p>
        <p>FORECAST FOR TUESDAY Jan, 17  </p>
        <p>ARIES (March 21 to April 19): Dont waste time rehashing what has at ready been done. Remove the mental clutter that is holding you back. Look to the future.</p>
        <p>TAURUS April 20 to May 20): Approach relationships for what they ar and not what you expect them to be. This could be a lively period for lov and friendship.</p>
        <p>GEMINI (May 21 to June 21): What you think is a good plan or idea may have some flaws. One way or another you may have to work extra hard to get results.</p>
        <p>MOON CHILDREN (June 22 to July 21): When someone you care about doesnt understand you may want to pull out and run. Control angry impulsive responses.</p>
        <p>LEO (Ju y 22 to Aug 21): Bucking the system can bring more trouble than results. Just when you thought the confusion was over, here it is again. Relax.</p>
        <p>VIRGO (Aug. 22 to Sept. 22): Appreciation of the arts and musk; can stimulate your day and cheer you up. Exercise can be helpful in eliminating inr-somnia.</p>
        <p>LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct 22): Avoid spending money on items that will soon be forgotten, A marital situation can be stimulating if you demonstrate your feelings.</p>
        <p>SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov, 21): The silent treatment can give the impression that you dont care. Speak to your romantic partner openly. Use tolerant discretion.</p>
        <p>SAGITTARIUS (Nov, 22 to Dec, 21): A moody loved one has you wondering where you stand. Weigh what you say or do. Words can be helpful or destructive.</p>
        <p>C.APRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan, 20): Two heads are better than one at the workplace only if you consider both opinions. Consult others and lay out important plans,  -</p>
        <p>AQUARIUS (Jan. 21 to Feb, 19); Your generous mood and understanding ways give you an advantage. Use caution in forming a relationship.</p>
        <p>PISCES (Feb. 20 to March 20): Appreciation of beauty and harmony will be with you today. Use caution not to stretch the bank account when shopping.</p>
        <p>(c) 1989, The McNaught Syndicate Inc.</p>
        <p>By CHARLES COREN AND OMAR SHARIF</p>
        <p>CRYPTOQUIP  ^  .</p>
        <p>1-16</p>
        <p>,SYQBU C IQGMBCG  IQH</p>
        <p>C KWJ MWACJCH SCG</p>
        <p>JVATYQA CKH TYYU?</p>
        <p>Satardays Cryptoqnip: WHY IS IT THAT DRINKING A FEW MARTINIS MAKES YOU SEE DOUBLE BUT FEEL SINGLE?</p>
        <p>Todays Cryptoquip clue: S equals C</p>
        <p>Q.lBoth vulnerable, as South you hold:  &amp;lt;</p>
        <p> A ^AKQJ73 0874 4AK8</p>
        <p>Your right-hand opponent opens the bidding with one spade. What action do you take?</p>
        <p>A.We are sure that therell be votes for a direct cue-bid of two spades, a takeout double or a jump to four hearts. Our choice is none of the abovewe would bid three no trump! With any lead other than a diamond, we should be able to claim nine tricks; and even if the opponents find a diamond lead, theres no guarantee that they can take five tricks.</p>
        <p>Q.2Neither vulnerable, as South you hold:</p>
        <p> J6 7KJ5 OAKQ107 AQ4</p>
        <p>Your right-hand opponent opens three hearts. What action do you take? El</p>
        <p>A.You cant double because you dont have spades and you might</p>
        <p>ANSWERS TO WEEKLY BRIDGE QUIZ</p>
        <p>not come close to 11 tricks at dia- The bidding has proceeded: monds. Wed gamble on three no trumpthe odds are pretty good that partner will have the cards we need to collect nine tricks, as well as the half-stopper in spades.</p>
        <p>West  North East  South</p>
        <p>1 9  Dbl  Pass  ?</p>
        <p>What do you bid now?</p>
        <p>A.Since partner almost surely has four spades on this auction, we would opt for four spades. However, if you feel the urgent need to check on whether partner does, indeed, have four spades, we would accept a cue-bid of two hearts.</p>
        <p>Q.5As South, vulnerable, you hold:</p>
        <p> K1076  ^5 0KJ6 # 98652</p>
        <p>The bidding has proceeded:</p>
        <p>North  East  South  West</p>
        <p>1   Pass  1   Pass</p>
        <p>3 NT  Pass  ?</p>
        <p>What action do you take?</p>
        <p>A.In standard methods, partner is showing a balanced hand of about</p>
        <p>- 21 points. With your 7 points, you</p>
        <p>Q.4Both vulnerable, as South you p should be content to try for nine</p>
        <p>tricks in no trump rather than 11 at #AQ74  96  0KJ952  #873  clubs, despite your five-card clul?</p>
        <p>Q.3Neither vulnerable, as South you hold:</p>
        <p>#Q107 9A6  0K95  #AQ765</p>
        <p>The bidding has proceeded:</p>
        <p>West North  East  South</p>
        <p>1 #  2 0  Pass  ?</p>
        <p>What do you bid now?</p>
        <p>A.This is no time for dragging your feet. You have a good hand, stoppers in all suits and a sure source of tricks, since partner almost surely has a six-card diamond suit and you have a key filler. Bid three no trump.</p>
        <p>support and singleton heart. Pass.</p>
        <p>Q.6As South, vulnerable, you hold:</p>
        <p> 954  97  0AK9872  #A63</p>
        <p>The bidding has proceeded:</p>
        <p>North  East  South  West</p>
        <p>1   Pass  2 0  Pass</p>
        <p>2   Pass  ?</p>
        <p>What action do you take?</p>
        <p>A.You know your side has at least an eight-card spade fit, and you have a very fine hand for partner-three prime cards, three trumps and a singleton. Three diamonds is a terrible bidit shows a sub-minimum two-over-one response. If you bid anything other than four spades, you need to haul out that book on bidding theory.</p>
        <p>For infonnation about Charles Gorens newsletter for bridge players, write Goren Bridge Letter, P.O. Box 4426. Oilando, Fla. 32802-4426.</p>
        <pb facs="00097138_0016" />
        <p>B-6 The Daily Reflector. Greenville. N C.</p>
        <p>Monday. January 16. 1989</p>
        <p>Four Skaters Die After Thick Ice Breaks  How They Voted</p>
        <p>THE ASSOCIATED PKESS</p>
        <p>BANGOR, Pa,  Four skaters, including a mother and her two young children, died after they fell into a frigid take despite a fishermans efforts to save them and signs warning of thin ice, authorities said.</p>
        <p>I ran over there and mv first reaction was to get those kids out, said Carmen Gruppo, 37, who went</p>
        <p>to their aid Sunday afternoon on Minsi Lake.</p>
        <p>i grabbed a piece of rope and tried to work my way out as close as I could. Upon getting pretty close to them, I ended up falling in also, said Gruppo, who was pulled out on a ladder by firefighters. The others were pulled out by divers.</p>
        <p>Carolee A. Strunk, 27, her children, April, 8, and Jared, 5, and</p>
        <p>the childrens playmate, SaraAnn Bowers, 8, all of East Bangor, were walking across the lake when the ice cracked underneath them, authorities said.</p>
        <p>The group had planned to go skating at the popular ice-fishing spot 65 miles north of Philadelphia,^ said Monroe County Coroner Robert Allen.</p>
        <p>The four were in the w'ater about</p>
        <p>35 minutes before they were rescued, and clung to life up to nine hours after the accident, officialssaid.</p>
        <p>They fell through the ice about 150 yards from shore, said Capt. Darryl Moser of the Portland Ambulance Corps diving unit.</p>
        <p>Gruppo said he threw a rope toward the victims but it was too short.</p>
        <p>District Court</p>
        <p>Judges H. Horton Rountree, \V. Russell Duke, David Leech. E. B Aycock Jr. and J. W, H. Roberts disposed of the following cases dur-^ ing the Jan. 3-6, term of District Court in Pitt County:</p>
        <p>William Russell Stonehani. .Jeiierson Drive, speeding, pav $15 and costs.</p>
        <p>Robert Bruce Broughton, .\ew Hern,</p>
        <p>exceeding safe sfx-ed. nay costs Donald Roger (iraay, (ioldsboro, dnv</p>
        <p>ing while impaired and no liability insurance, 60 days jail suspended on pay ment of $100 and costs, surrtoider opera tor's license, not drive for 1 year, perform 24 hours communitv service and pa\ fees, obtain assessment at Mental Health.'</p>
        <p>Dana Hunter, F'armville. trespass and assault on a female dismissal; assault on a female, 6 months jail susptmded. remit costs, spend 26 days in jail, released lor time served, not harass or threaten pro secuting witness.</p>
        <p>Clifton Albert Edward, F; irnmlle. no liability insurance, hit and run. and dri\ ing while impaired. 1 vear jail ^u.'-tiended on payment of $4(Hi and cosis, probation .5 years, pav $1(KI restitution to pniseculing witness, spend, 28 days m jail atUnd alcohol school and pa\ leis olUain assessmentat Mental He.il'lh Dee Dee Jones, Farrnvillc larcenv, dismissal.</p>
        <p>Michael Thomas .Slrerler, .Vndeison Drive, exceeding safe s(eed, pay costs.</p>
        <p>William Vernon .Smith. VVinter\ i!le, speeding, prayer for liidmnent continued on payment of costs.</p>
        <p>william Scott Sower-speeding, pay $10and costs</p>
        <p>Billy' Frank Sparks, Rocky Mount, speeding, pay $10 and costs.</p>
        <p>Eric Lloyd McDonald, Red Springs, speeding, pay $10 and costs.</p>
        <p>Troy Samuel Mitchell, Dover, speeding, pay $10 and costs.</p>
        <p>Kimberly Wood Salisbury, Cary, speeding, prayer,for judgment continued on payment of costs,</p>
        <p>James Riley Johnson 111, Courtney Square, speeding, pay $10 and cost Lonzie Edmond Poster Jr., Elon College. spt'oding, pay costs.</p>
        <p>Gregory Vonsiella Cox, Washington, speeding, pay $10 and costs.</p>
        <p>David Brian Burton, Plymouth, exceeding safe spt'cd, pay costs.</p>
        <p>.N'icole .Michelle Carr, Ford Street, speeding, prayer for judgment continued on payment of costs.</p>
        <p>Kciiton Bailey Seay, Eleanor Street, fail to reduce speed, disrissal.</p>
        <p>Douglas Earl Leveston, Walstonburg, city code violation, pay costs.</p>
        <p>Paul Scott Beam, Raleigh, speeding, pay $2,5 and costs Gerald Franklin Padgett, Farmville,</p>
        <p>Charles Wesley Hardy, Fountain, trespass, dismissal.</p>
        <p>Randy Cummings, Winterville, larceny and damage to property, dismissal.</p>
        <p>Bernadine Cummings, Winterville, larceny and damage to property, dismissal,</p>
        <p>Lewis Warren, Maury, unauthorized use of motor vehicle, dismissal.</p>
        <p>Willie Crae Pridgen, Wrightsville, trespass, dismissal.</p>
        <p>worthless check, pay costs, restitution has been paid.</p>
        <p>Rex A. Corey, Riverview Estates, wor</p>
        <p>thless check, 30 davs jail suspended on payment of costs ana check.</p>
        <p>W. Slade Tripp, Highland Trailer Park, CKS (2 counts), pay costs in'</p>
        <p>worthless check- __________,</p>
        <p>one case and checks in each case. Cherylene Parker, Route 2, speeding.</p>
        <p>Marie McNeill Pridgen, Wrightsville, v hv</p>
        <p>pay $10 and costs. David</p>
        <p>exceeding safe speed, pay $10 and costs Donald Ronald McCorkel, Dickinson</p>
        <p>Farm ville.</p>
        <p>Avenue, armed robbery, dismissal.</p>
        <p>Kenneth Alexander Barnes, Paris Avenue, assault with a deadly weapon intent to kill inflicting serious injury,' dismis.sal</p>
        <p>Willie James WTlliams, Roundtree Drive, burglary arid larceny from the person, no probable cause found.</p>
        <p>Gregory Roberson, Ayden, larceny, prayer for judgment continued on payment of costs.</p>
        <p>. Roy Thomas Hardy Jr., PMrmville, communicat iHg^ threatT'cmmts I, dismissal.</p>
        <p>trespass and obtain property by false pretense, dismissal.</p>
        <p>Danny Wray Braxton, Charles Boulevard, larceny, dismissal.</p>
        <p>Ellen Mae Rouse, Route 8, possession of stolen goods, dismissal; larceny, 90 days jail suspended on payment of $50 and costs and $.300 restitution to Home.stead Memorial, probation 1 year.</p>
        <p>Amy Laverne Heath, Route 4, posses sion of marijuana, pay $25 and costs.</p>
        <p>James W. Barnes, Grifton, worthless checks (26 counts), 30 days jail in each case to run. consecutively suspended on payment of costs in 13 cases and checks in each case, pay $1.50 attorneys fees.</p>
        <p>Bea Cummings. Winterville, worthless checks (10 counts), 30 days jail in each</p>
        <p>case to run consecutively suspended on ncfch</p>
        <p>payment of costs in 5 cases ancf checks in each case.</p>
        <p>Terry Highsmith, West Tenth Street, worthless checks (2.counts). 90 days jail</p>
        <p> Godley, Deep Run, worthless checks (9 counts), dismissed at the close of state's evidence.</p>
        <p>Nancy A. Johnson, Route 8, worthless checks (47 counts), 30 days jail in each case to run consecutively suspended on payment of costs in 15 cases and checks in each case.</p>
        <p>W. T. Hicks, Winterville, worthless checks, dismissal.</p>
        <p>Louise M. Mitchell, Ayden, worthless checks (3 counts), :iO days jail in each case to run consecutively suspended on payment of costs in each case and checks meach case.</p>
        <p>Rose Edmondson Moseley, Edgewood Trailer Park, worthless checks (2 counts), 30 days jail suspended on payment of costs in each case and checks in each case,</p>
        <p>Patrick O'Brien, Colony Court, worthless check, 60 davs jail suspended on payment of costs and check.</p>
        <p>Louis Person Jr., Van Dyke Street, wor-</p>
        <p>in each case suspended on payment of costs in each case case ana checks in</p>
        <p>thless check, 30 days jail suspended on ndc'</p>
        <p>each case</p>
        <p>Donna Bowie, Elizabeth Street, worthless check, dismissal</p>
        <p>payment of costs andcheck.</p>
        <p>Kevin C, Phillips, Sylvan Drive, wor</p>
        <p>thless check, 30 days jail suspended on idc.</p>
        <p>Phyllis C. Branch, Grifton, worthless heck, pay costs and check.</p>
        <p>Angela Marie Bryant. Chocowinitv,</p>
        <p>payment of costs and check Holland Waters, Colony Court, worthless checks (3 counts), 30 days jail suspended on payment of costs in each case and checks in each case.</p>
        <p>Washington - Heres how area House members were recorded on major roll call votes in the opening week of the 101st Congress. There were no Senate roll calls.</p>
        <p>TO REFORM HOUSE RULES By a vote of 231 for and 162 against, the House endorsed the Democratic majoritys proposed rules for its operation in the 101st Congress.</p>
        <p>The vote cleared the way for routine adoption of the Democratic rules, which are essentially unchanged from those used in the 100th Congress. It rebuffed a reform package authored by House Republicans.</p>
        <p>At issue were GOP complaints that Democrats in recent Congresses have used their control over committee and floor operations to all but eliminate Republican opposition. Republicans say increasingly restrictive rules also lessen accountability to constituents and make it more difficult for public , opinion to influence Congress.</p>
        <p>The GOP rules sought to require roll call votes on final passage of all appropriations and taxation bills and members pay raises, substitute a five-day work week for the present three-day week, outlaw proxy voting in committees and require committees to be more open in conducting meetings and divulging voting records.</p>
        <p>Republicans also attacked the increasing use of closed rules that limit or prohibit floor amendments, the Democratic majoritys growing reliance on budget act waivers to skirt statutory deficit limits and the practice of adding unauthorized money and programs to appropriations bills.</p>
        <p>Also, the GOP rules required the House to include itself in civil rights, fair labor practices and other social legislation it has passed for the rest</p>
        <p>of the country and directed the Rules Committee to recommend ways of streamlining the Houses committee bureaucracy.</p>
        <p>Democrats did not comment on the Republican proposal.</p>
        <p>Members voting yes supported House rules put forth by the Democratic majority.</p>
        <p>North Carolina voting yes: Walter Jones, D-1, Tim Valentine, D-2, Martin Lancaster, D-3, David Price, D-4, Stephen Neal, D-5, Charles Rose, D-7, W.G. Hefner, D-8, James Clarke D-11.</p>
        <p>Voting no: Howard Coble, R-6, Alex McMillan, R-9, Cass Ballenger, R-10.</p>
        <p>Not voting: None.</p>
        <p>CLOSED RULES  By a vote of 163 for and 239 against, the Hoqse rebuffed a Republican attack' on the Democratic majoritys increasing use of closed debating rules.</p>
        <p>Closed rules set by the Rules Committee ban floor amendments or limit the number of amendments that can be offered to a particular bill during floor debate. Republicans say their use has nearly quadrupled in the past decade, frustrating the GOP minoritys efforts to present alternative to Democratic legislation.</p>
        <p>This vote killed a GOP attempt to require four days notice of any Rules Committee meeting that could send bills to the floor under restrictive rules.</p>
        <p>Members voting yes favored four days notice of Rules Committee meetings that could produce closed rules for floor debate.</p>
        <p>NORTH CAROLINA Voting yes: Coble, McMillan, Ballenger.</p>
        <p>Voting no: Walter Jones, Valentine, Lancaster, Price, Neal, Rose, Hefner, Clarke.</p>
        <p>Not voting: None.</p>
        <p>THE D.AILV</p>
        <p>REFLECTOR</p>
        <p>Classified</p>
        <p>Call 752-6166 To Place Your Ad</p>
        <p>Rates</p>
        <p>TRANSIENT RATES Minimum 3 Lines</p>
        <p>1 Day 90'oer'lirieoefcidy 2-3 Days . 68'pe-I'le ter day 4-6 Days 61'per line per day 7-14 Days 55'per line per day</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>$4 15 Pe' Gol Inch Conirac! Rares Available</p>
        <p>Office Hours</p>
        <p>Monday thru Fnday 8 30 a m 5 00 p rn</p>
        <p>THE daily reflector</p>
        <p>rjMrvis th* ngni io aa,t or r-|CI any  submil-</p>
        <p>ld</p>
        <p>Deadlines</p>
        <p>Mon</p>
        <p>Tues</p>
        <p>Wed</p>
        <p>Tnurs</p>
        <p>Fr,</p>
        <p>Sun</p>
        <p>Classified Display Deadlines</p>
        <p>Fri Noon F r I 4 p rn Mon 4 p n Tues 4 p m Wed Noon 'Wed 3pm</p>
        <p>Classified Line Deadlines</p>
        <p>Mon  Fn  4 p.m</p>
        <p>Tues  Mon  3pm</p>
        <p>Wed  Tues  3pm</p>
        <p>Thurs ' Wed 3pm Fri  Thurs  3pm</p>
        <p>Sun  Thurs  b p.m</p>
        <p>Errors</p>
        <p>Please read your ad carefully the (irsi time ii appears in the paper If M needs a correction as a result pt our error, please call us before 9 30 am and we will Cprrftct il tor you' The' Daily dehuclor cannot make allowances for errors alter the tsi day ol publication</p>
        <p>Cancellations</p>
        <p>II you wish to cancel an ad. please call belore 9 30 a m on me day mal is is,scneduied to run and we will remove it We cannot cancel ads after 9 30 a m</p>
        <p>Classified Index</p>
        <p>Miscellaneous</p>
        <p>PfSC"3iS-  '</p>
        <p>'n MerfiO'-a" Ca'C0'1arr5 Spec a' Nppces ''ave i'ov's Aviomoii.e Cn ifl Ca'e 3a&amp;lt; Nu'se",</p>
        <p>earn Ca'e Empioyne''! fq' Sale</p>
        <p>InSl'LCi'O''</p>
        <p>^OS' A'lfl Totrp Business Se'vices</p>
        <p>'"C</p>
        <p>BuS'-essOpport-fes</p>
        <p>^cessic'</p>
        <p>..etjtn- irrfp'pvenen'S'"</p>
        <p>Peai tsraie App'd-sais</p>
        <p>Loans A-d Melgases , Pe-:ai5'</p>
        <p>Wanted</p>
        <p>Help ..a'-'ec</p>
        <p>Ap'n.rr sfa; &amp;lt;e</p>
        <p>Cit/.ca.</p>
        <p>Me-Tcai</p>
        <p>M.sceia'eous</p>
        <p>Saies</p>
        <p>156</p>
        <p>'M</p>
        <p>36C</p>
        <p>'eacners</p>
        <p>^ecn-icaii'rases--','(0' rVa-iea Aaniec  Roomn-.ae vVamed ..anfeC '0 Buy .Vai'ied tq Lease ..a-iec '0 Ren;</p>
        <p>062</p>
        <p>063</p>
        <p>064 19C</p>
        <p>192</p>
        <p>194</p>
        <p>'96</p>
        <p>HOuSei-OrRen;. ~</p>
        <p>t?3-</p>
        <p>Jeeps Arp Vans</p>
        <p>-04tr-</p>
        <p>Mobile HomerRD''Saie</p>
        <p>102</p>
        <p>lO!S rCi Re'l!</p>
        <p>175</p>
        <p>^mc)(S RprSale</p>
        <p>041</p>
        <p>Mobile Home Insufarce</p>
        <p>103</p>
        <p>Verc''a'ai5e Remis</p>
        <p>Pets</p>
        <p>050</p>
        <p>Musical Instruments</p>
        <p>105</p>
        <p>Mocne Homes Re Re'll</p>
        <p>179</p>
        <p>Antiques</p>
        <p>066</p>
        <p>Spoftin; GooOs</p>
        <p>109</p>
        <p>Moc,'ie Home Lois ^o' Rem</p>
        <p>180</p>
        <p>Auctions</p>
        <p>069</p>
        <p>WooOsioves</p>
        <p>112</p>
        <p>0"'ce Scac Rem</p>
        <p>181</p>
        <p>BuiiOing Supplies</p>
        <p>072</p>
        <p>Commercial RropeOy</p>
        <p>132</p>
        <p>Pesor P'ooery Rqrflem</p>
        <p>184</p>
        <p>-uei VVoop Coal</p>
        <p>080</p>
        <p>Co'idomimums Rpr Sate</p>
        <p>136</p>
        <p>Rooms ^0' Re"'</p>
        <p>185</p>
        <p>Fu'niture</p>
        <p>081</p>
        <p>Farms For Sale</p>
        <p>139</p>
        <p>Rent/Lease</p>
        <p>Sale</p>
        <p>Aja'ime''; -c' Rent</p>
        <p>'6'</p>
        <p>Autos For Saie</p>
        <p>011-029</p>
        <p>BuS'ness Hen;ais</p>
        <p>163</p>
        <p>Bicycles For Sale</p>
        <p>. . 030</p>
        <p>Campe's Fo' Re'-;</p>
        <p>167</p>
        <p>Boats Anfl Motors</p>
        <p>. .032</p>
        <p>Conflornmiums Fo' Ren:</p>
        <p>'70 '</p>
        <p>Camping Equipment ..</p>
        <p>034</p>
        <p>=^a'ms -or tease</p>
        <p>UC</p>
        <p>Cycles For Sale .</p>
        <p>036</p>
        <p>Ga'ageTad Sales Heavy Eqb'pmen! Household Goods Farrn Equipmem ^arp. Rroducis Rfuiis &amp;amp; Vegeiacies L'vestocK irisurance  Miscellaneous</p>
        <p>084</p>
        <p>092</p>
        <p>095</p>
        <p>,099</p>
        <p>Houses Fof Sale Busi'iess invesime''! Proper'/ Invesimem Rropeny Land For Sale MoPiieHome Lots For Sale lots For Sale Reson Properly Fq' Sale Timperland S ''imDe'.  Towntiouses For Sale</p>
        <p>NOTICE</p>
        <p>Having qualified as Executrix of the estate of Henry Gooden, late of Pitt County, North Carolina, this is to notify all per sons having claims against the estate of said deceased to pres ent them to the undersigned Ex ecutrix on or before July 9, 1989 or this notice or same will be pleaded in bar of their recovery All persons indebted to '.aid estate please make irnmediate-</p>
        <p>002</p>
        <p>Personals</p>
        <p>CAROLINA DATING &amp;amp; Escort Service Find'your dreammate Call 1 77S 3579 anytime. ,</p>
        <p>I, JIMMY H. MAY Will no longer be responsible for any debts contracted by anyone other than myself.</p>
        <p>007 Special Notices</p>
        <p>payment</p>
        <p>This 12th day of December, 1988</p>
        <p>Evangeline Gooden 608 Gooden Place Greenville, NC 27858 E xecutor of the estate ot Henry Gooden,deceased January 9, 16, 23, 30, 1989</p>
        <p>NOTICE</p>
        <p>Having qualified as Executor of the estate ot Howard Glenn James, late of Pitt County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having clainis against the estate of said deceased to present them to the undersigned Executor on or be fore July 9, 1989 or this notice or same will be pleaded in bar ot their recovery All persons in debted to said estate please make immediate payment</p>
        <p>This 22nd day of December, 1988</p>
        <p>Howard Glenn James, Jr.</p>
        <p>PO Box 183  '</p>
        <p>Stokes, NC 27884 E xecutor of the estate of Hovvard Glenn James, deceased January 9, 16. 23, 30. 1989</p>
        <p>WANTED: Singles, only. New league forming at Hillcrest Bowling Center Free bowling party Friday January 20 at 7</p>
        <p>p m Call today for more details.</p>
        <p>7^2020,</p>
        <p>WE</p>
        <p>CARRY BATTERIES</p>
        <p>ifiveriMdy) for all makes ot watches' Floyd G Robinson Je.velers. Downtown Evans Mall Greenville, 758 2452.</p>
        <p>Oil Autos For Sale</p>
        <p>"A GOOD PLACE TO BUY!</p>
        <p>"CREATIVE FINANCING" WeAlso Sell On Consignment .</p>
        <p>EASTGATE MOTORS,INC</p>
        <p>130 East Greenville Blvd. Greenville, 355 2193</p>
        <p>NOTICE</p>
        <p>Having qualified as Executor of the estate of Sarah D Bra* ton, late of Pitt County, North Carolina, this is to notify all per sons having claims against the estate ot said deceased to pres ent them to the undersigned E  ecutor on or before July 16, 1989 or this notice or same will be pleaded in bar ot their recovery All persons indebtec) to said estate please make immediate</p>
        <p>"TOP CASH DOLLAR for your car, truck or RV!" Goodman Auto Brokers, 355-9196, (Beside Coggins Goodrich Tire Store),</p>
        <p>1987 CHRYSLER Fifth Avenue 1986 Mercury Sable GS Both ex rellent condition, 756 2187,</p>
        <p>013</p>
        <p>Buick</p>
        <p>1979 bOTck CENTRY Sta</p>
        <p>tionwagon Tilt wheel, power steering, air, power door locks. Body m very good condition. Engine needs work. $900 or best otter Call 756 5439after6p m</p>
        <p>979 CENTURY Wag^jTsSM 355 7086</p>
        <p>payment</p>
        <p>his 12th day of January, 1989 Heber Guy Braxton Rf t, BOX604C Ayden, NC 29513 E xecutor of the estate of Sarah D Braxton, deceased Jan 16, 23, 30; Feb 6, 1989</p>
        <p>OUTER banks COTRACi TORS, INC. of Kitty Hawk,</p>
        <p>1985 BUICk Riveria White with burgandy veiopr interior Ex cellent condition driven 56 000 miles. Fully equipped including wire wheels, air, automatic, super sound systems, tilt wheel cruise, rear defoqger, and much more Must see to appreciate Retail 510,500 asking $8995. Call owner. Lee Walston 752 7538.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>013</p>
        <p>Buick</p>
        <p>1984 BUICK SKYLARK, 4 door $3800. Call after 5;30,  1552.</p>
        <p>014</p>
        <p>Cadilla</p>
        <p>1977 COUPE DEVILLE. Fully equipped, blue/blue leather in terior, excellent condition, high mileage, $2195. Call 355 7112.</p>
        <p>015</p>
        <p>Chevrolet</p>
        <p>1976 MALIBU Classic. Good condition. $600. 758 2687.</p>
        <p>1978 CAPRICE. Good condition. Light blue Asking $2100, 752 6554</p>
        <p>1978 CHEVROLET 350 engine, new tires, runs good, needs painting, bought new truck. $800 758 6046 after 6.</p>
        <p>1979 MONTE CARLO, good shape, $1600. 756 8684 1982 CHEVETTE, 4 door, tape deck, fully equipped, low mile age. $950. Call 756 94Z5.</p>
        <p>016</p>
        <p>Chrysler</p>
        <p>1979 CHRYSLER Newport Good condition. Loaded. V 8. $1195 After 5pm, 758 6004.</p>
        <p>018</p>
        <p>Ford</p>
        <p>1978 FORD Fairmont Wagon, Auto, air $850 Call after 5 p m 355 3277.</p>
        <p>1982 FORD ESCORT. Needs motor, body good. 39.000 actual miles. $290. Call 355 5379</p>
        <p>1982 FORD ESCORT 4 speed with air, Fm/Am radio, in excellent condtion. Call 355-4518 or 7580185.</p>
        <p>1984 FORD ESCORT Fm/AM radio, 4 door, 5 speed, excellent condition. 355 4518.</p>
        <p>1984 FORD MUSTANG LX Hat</p>
        <p>chback, tilt wheel, air condition ing, automatic, AM/FM stereo cassette. 355 0719 after 5:30 p m.</p>
        <p>1985 COUGAR, silver Extra clean, loaded. $6,500. 756 3432, 355 6539, or 756 3428.</p>
        <p>019</p>
        <p>Lincoln</p>
        <p>1980 LINCOLN Towncar. Low mileage. $3800. 756 0148.</p>
        <p>1986 LINCOLN TownCar, SIG Loaded, low mileage Extra sharp. Take up lease,or refinance. 756 8588 or 756 0944</p>
        <p>020</p>
        <p>Mercury</p>
        <p>1977 MERCURY Grand Mar quis, good condition. $650 . 756 6l65atter5:30p.m,</p>
        <p>1986 MERCURY Sable GS Champagne in color, ' door, fully loaded, new tires, garage kept Car must be seen to appreciate. Asking price $7500. Call Jim, days, 752-6124, evenings 355 5614</p>
        <p>023</p>
        <p>Pontiac</p>
        <p>BLACK 1987 Pontiac Fiero GT Automatic transmission, V6, ful</p>
        <p>ly equipped, sharp collector's ite-..............</p>
        <p>item. $10,950. 1 946 5818.</p>
        <p>1979 PONTIAC Bonneville sta tionwagon, 1 owner, good condi tion, $1595. 756 4720</p>
        <p>1983 PONTIAC 6000. Clean and in good condition 752 2807</p>
        <p>024 Foreign Cars</p>
        <p>FOR SALE TO Satisfy storage lein: 1982 Toyota Tercel 4 door sedan, white, 87,000 miles. Remanutactured engine ust in stalled. To be sold "as is" to highest bidder. Auction lOAM, January 20, 1989 at Toyota East Service Center.</p>
        <p>024 Foreign Cars</p>
        <p>1988 ACCORD LX. Gray, 5 speed, 4,000 miles $13,500 best offer. 752 6185.</p>
        <p>1988 TOYOTA Tercel 2 door Sedan Dark blue, air, Am/Fm cassette, automatic, excellent condition. $7500. Must sell, get ting married Monday Friday, 9 5:30, 758 5644 after 5:30, 757 0385asktorEffie.</p>
        <p>029</p>
        <p>Auto Parts &amp;amp; Service</p>
        <p>FOR SALE TO Satisfy storage lein: 1982 Toyota (^ressida 4 door 127,000 miles. Does not run To be sold "as is" to highest bid der Auction 10AM, January 20, 1989 at Toyota East Service Center.</p>
        <p>1976 TR7 Good condition, 5 new Klyber tires $1600. 752 6096</p>
        <p>1978 TOYOTA Corona. 5 speed, 4 door Good condition $800 firm. 355 7873.</p>
        <p>1980 TOYOTA Tercel 44,000 ac tual miles Excellent except transmission needs work. $550 .758 2687.</p>
        <p>1980 VW SCIROCCO Low miles. Sun roof. Good condition. $2500 or best offer. 830 9230or 355-2130, leave message.</p>
        <p>1981 HONDA PRELUDE,</p>
        <p>sunroof, AM/FM cassette, good shape $2995. Call 756 9076</p>
        <p>1984 ISUZU IMPULSE 2 door hatchback Automatic, loaded, cruise, power windows, low mileage Excellent condition. $4,750. 756 0469</p>
        <p>1984 VOLKSWAGEN RABBIT</p>
        <p>Diesel, 5 speed, 4 door, low mileage, air Call 757 0610.</p>
        <p>1986 HONDA ACCORD LX. Low</p>
        <p>miles, average retail $9075. 756 5352</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>PEUGEOT SALES AND SERVICE</p>
        <p>All makes and models. Call Steve Baker, East Carolina Peugeot, 355-</p>
        <p>032 Boats &amp;amp; Motors</p>
        <p>B&amp;amp;KMARINE</p>
        <p>Evinrude, Omc, Mariner and MerCruiser service center; All Evinrude and Mariner motors and Cox trailers at clearance prices!</p>
        <p>1205 Dickinson Avenue, Greenville 752 2882. CREATIVE MARINE Construe tion. Bathhouses Piers Bulkheads Seawalls Jetties Decks. If it is in the water we do it and do it well. All work guar anteed. Remember its cheaper to do it right the' first time. (919)923 6971, (919)927-3580.</p>
        <p>FAST AND DEPENDABLE</p>
        <p>Service and repairs on outboard motors We also, buy and sell used boats and motors and sell new long trailers. Billy's Marine 8. Repair, 355 2793.</p>
        <p>INSIDEWINTERBOAT</p>
        <p>storage (cars, campers, etc.) Call 756 4125, Ray Cannon. Monthly leases available.</p>
        <p>1984 19' SEA LIDN center con sole semi V, 115 horsepower, tilt and trim, galvanized float on trailer, toot control electric motor. $5,300 Call 758 6925.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>032 Boats &amp;amp; Motors</p>
        <p>GREENVILLEMARINE 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>036 Cycles For Sale</p>
        <p>YAMAHA 250 Exciter 1984. Less than 2500 miles. Including 2 helmets. Excellent condition. 830 1639.</p>
        <p>1986 HONDA XR80. Excellent condition. $595 or best otter. Day 752-1592or night 756 7887.</p>
        <p>1988 HARLEY DAVIDSON Sot</p>
        <p>tail Custom, custom paint, extra chrome, less than 600 miles Must sell. $9500 or best otter. Call 756 5882 after 6:00 p m.</p>
        <p>040 Jeeps &amp;amp; Vans</p>
        <p>1984 FORD CLUB Van XL Dual air, removable rear seat, 53,000 miles. 758-2300 days; 758 1742 nights.</p>
        <p>1987 4-WHEEL DRIVE S-10 Blazer, 63,000 miles, fully load ed. $12,000. Call 756 5981.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>041</p>
        <p>Trucks</p>
        <p>1974 CHEVROLET #lck up Full size with camper top, only 32,000</p>
        <p>miles, dual gas tanks, $1750. Call 752 0201</p>
        <p>1986 CHEVROLET K 5 Blazer Loaded, 4,.000 miles. Call 355 4672, leave message</p>
        <p>1986 FORD RANGER. Excellent condition Many extras, low mileage. Take over payments. To see call 524 3204 ask for Gary</p>
        <p>1986 SUBURBAN. Excellent condition. All options. 355-7086. 1986 4X4 TOYOTA 5 speed, Am/Fm cassette, excellent gas mileage, matching shell, new tires, excellent condition. Pay off value. Nights, 757-3303.</p>
        <p>1988 BRONCO II XLT, 4 wheel drive, burgandy and silver, power windows, power door locks, cruise, AM/FM stereo cassette, luggage rack, alloy wheels. $14,995. Call 756-3115, ask for James Tyndall; after 8:00 p.m., 355 4897</p>
        <p>1988 DODGE DAKOTA LE, plus other extras, 7,600 miles Take</p>
        <p>over payment of $283.77 per month. 757 0704 after 5:00p.m.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>PARTS STOCK CLERK</p>
        <p>Duo to Increased sales and facility expansion, we have an opening for a parts counter person. Job responsibilities will include receiving, stocking and shipping parts inventory. Wo offer good working conditions and an excellent benefits package. Apply in person only to; Mr. Ricky Browning.</p>
        <p>A Sigmon Company  Authorized Mercedes-Benz Dealer</p>
        <p>TOYOTA EAST</p>
        <p>109 Trade Street, Greenville, NC</p>
        <p>NO PHONE CALLS WILL BE ACCEPTED</p>
        <p>044</p>
        <p>Child Care</p>
        <p>EXPERIENCED LADY wanted starting April, 1989 to look after infant at our residence every Monday Friday from 7:30 a m to6:00p.m. Please call 355 7519.</p>
        <p>WOULD LIKE TO Babysit in my home 6 p.m. 7 a.m. References available. 830 4776.</p>
        <p>WOULD KEEP Infants and tod diers in my home. Call 746-4071. WOULD LIKE TO KEEP kids in my home anytime. Lots ot experience. Very reasonable prices. Belvoir Highway. 752-3537.</p>
        <p>050</p>
        <p>Pets</p>
        <p>AKC AKITA Pups. Why pay pet store prices? $500. 734 8592,</p>
        <p>AKC DOBERMANS For sale Call 946-1435 after 6pm.</p>
        <p>AKC REGISTERED Cocker Spaniel puppy for sale. 5 months Old. Price neaotlabiP 7-7in9</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>North Carolina, Is the apparei low bidder on the Brook Valley</p>
        <p>and Riverblutt Sewer Projects located in Greenville, NC We would welcome all quotes from MBE andWSE Contractors. For additional inlormation, call (919) 2612255 EPA Project 4C370487 04</p>
        <p>Jan 16, 17, 18, 19. 20,22,23, 1989</p>
        <p>EXPERIENCED SEWING SUPERVISOR:</p>
        <p>One year minimum experience sewing supervisor, must be aggressive and knowledgeable of all facets of cut and sew operation. Salary and benefits commensurate with Knowledge. Send resume to DR 1249, g/o Daily Reflector. PO Box, 1967, Greenville, NC 27835,</p>
        <p>IMPORT SAUS</p>
        <p>We need the best salesperson in town!</p>
        <p> 20  40% Commissions</p>
        <p> $300 pack</p>
        <p> F &amp;amp; I participation</p>
        <p> Car allowance</p>
        <p> Health care benefits</p>
        <p> Management advancement</p>
        <p> No 1 product in C.S.I.</p>
        <p>For confidential interview call</p>
        <p>Dan Marlowe</p>
        <p>Oak Tree Acura</p>
        <p>355-2258</p>
        <p>Automotive Sales</p>
        <p>Sigmon Chevrolet Buick Pontiac GMC Truck, Farmville has openings for automotive sales personnel. We are lo6king for qualified people with positive attitudes who are willing to work hard for exceptional compensation. For an interview appointment please telephone Ken Sigmon, 753-7103.</p>
        <p>050</p>
        <p>Pets</p>
        <p>AKC REGISTERED Siberian Huskies, born October 31; 4 females, black and white have first shots. $225. Call 756 9515 daytime or night, 752 8836;</p>
        <p>AKC WHITE German Shepherd puppies. Shots, 6 weeks. Call 355 6087.</p>
        <p>BOXER PUPPIES, Full Blood-** ed. Fawn with black mask. * Parents on premises. $75. 752- '* 0532, call anytime.'  *</p>
        <p>BRITTAINY SPANIEL Puppy.-^ AAale. 6 weeks plus. For hunting ( or pet. Call 946-9800 anytime.</p>
        <p>COCKAPOO PUPPY. 3 months' old. Black male, $50 or best offer. 830 9043.</p>
        <p>REGISTERED Male Dober man. 4 years old, black/brown, good watch dog. Call 746 3000 days; 746 2374 after 5, anytime" Sunday.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>uality Oil</p>
        <p>Responsible individual needed to drive fuel oil truck on local route. Benefits include hospitalization, insurance, retirement plan, profit sharing, and paid vacation.</p>
        <p>Applications taken in person Mon.-Fri. 8 a.m.-5 p.m. 220 Hooker Rd. Greenville, NC</p>
        <p>AUTOMOTIVE SALES</p>
        <p>We have an outstanding career opportunities available now with our first line Toyota dealership. No automobile sales experience Is required. Successful candidates will be highly motivated, committed and have a strong desire to succeed. We offer an outstanding training program as well as an excellent potential. For an interview appointment please telephone Toyota East, 109 Trade Street, Greenville NC, 756-3228.</p>
        <p>HOMEOWNHB NEED MONEV? 0%</p>
        <p>Rates As Low As</p>
        <p>Annual Percentage Rate</p>
        <p>i Same Day Approval in Most Cases $ No Application Fees SFixed Rate Loans $ Credit Problems Understood $ Consolidation Loans</p>
        <p>% No One Turned Down With Sufficient Equity. $ Applications Taken By Phone</p>
        <p>EQUITRUST FINANCIAL</p>
        <p>Plione 1-800-292-S444</p>
        <p>TRIAD</p>
        <p>HEALTHCARE</p>
        <p>CENTER</p>
        <p>OF GREENVILLE</p>
        <p>Opening for Assistant Director ot Nurses. 120 Bed ICF &amp;amp; SNF Facility</p>
        <p>Contact:</p>
        <p>AncJrea Swink, DON</p>
        <p>758-7100</p>
        <p>Competitive Salary/Benefits RN N.C. License Required</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <pb facs="00097138_0017" />
        <p>Mondav Classifieds</p>
        <p>The Daily Reflector, Greenville. N.C.</p>
        <p>Monday, January 16,1989  g./</p>
        <p>Holiday bills have you strapped for cash? Advertise your no-longer-needed items in classified</p>
        <p>The Daily Reflector Classifeds...</p>
        <p>"When you want results!"</p>
        <p>752-6166</p>
        <p>057 Help Wanted Administrative</p>
        <p>FULLTIME ADMINISTRATIVE personnel to work directly with operations manager of firm, Superior organizaional skills needed. Very exciting and challenging environment. Call for interview appointment with Sara Hamp ton, 756 2224 or send resume to: Scott Johnson, Brody's, The Plaza, Greenville, NC 27858.</p>
        <p>058 Help Wanted Clerical</p>
        <p>CHURCH FINANCIAL siiii" tary part-time. Previous book keeping course work and/or ex perience required Computer background helpful. Send resume to Oakmont Baptist Church, 1100 Red Banks Road Greenville NC 27858</p>
        <p>Help Wanted Medical</p>
        <p>URGENTLY NEEDED: Nurs log Assistants Full-time, part time, all shitts; every other weekend off. Weekend coverage in particular Certified prefer red Competitive pay/benefits Apply Triad Health Care Center or call 758 7100.</p>
        <p>URGENT NEED; ForRN'sand LPN's, 3-11 and 117 shifts. Full or part time Every other vyeekend off, Nevv wage scale. Competitive benefits Apply Triad Health Care Center or call 758 7100.</p>
        <p>COMPANY SEEKING res^ sible applicant for general offic work. Willing to train right person. Full benefits. Reply with resume to: Clerical Help, PO Box 2898, Greenville, NC 27835</p>
        <p>due TO the expansion~of</p>
        <p>The Plaza, Brodys is adding several office positions in eluding secretarial, accounting, data entry, customer service and human relations. Positions requiring from limited experi ence to extensive office background. If you have a desire to be a part of the bigger and better Brody's, please apply in person with Sara Hampton, k;Brody's, Carolina East Mall, Monday Wednesday, 2:00 4:00 or call 756 2224 for interview ap pointment.</p>
        <p>HEAD TELLER POSITION</p>
        <p>Planter's Bank. 2 4 years expe rience required. Contact Sandy Simmons at 752 7173 for ap pointment.</p>
        <p>LOAN CLOSING Secretary needed for local law firm. Must be a proficient typist and possess good math skills. Send resume to DR*1245,c/o The Dai ly Reflector, PO Box 1967 reenville NC 27835</p>
        <p>OUR FINANCIAL SERVICES</p>
        <p>Company is seeking a Customer Service person for challenging position in our growth oriental organization. If you are depen dable with a strong communica tion skills and possess general office skills, including typing and math aptitude, we are inter ested in discussing our oppor tunities with you. For additional information and consideration contact Harlon Neal, 355 3666 EOE.</p>
        <p>POSITION AVAILABLE For</p>
        <p>General office person. Data en try, sales and customer rela tions experience desirable App ly in person at Daughtridge Oil Company, 2102 Dickinson Avenue.</p>
        <p>SECRETARY NEEDED Light bookwork and payroll. Must have pleasant voice for phone. No phone calls please. Apply at 503 East 3rd Street</p>
        <p>SECRETARY/BOOKKEEPER</p>
        <p>Bookkeeper needed Monday Friday, 8:30 5:30. Experience in accounts receivable, accounts payable and payroll necessary Computer experience helpful Send resume to: Bookkeeper, PO Box 5032, Greenville, NC 27835.</p>
        <p>WORD PROCESSOR Needed To operate IBM Display Write System. Send resume to DRX1244,c/o The Daily Reflec tor, PO Box 1967, Greenville NC 27835.</p>
        <p>059 Help Wanted Medical</p>
        <p>HEALTH EDUCATOR needed immediately. Must be willing to relocate. Send resume by January 20, 1989, to PO Box 187, Faison, NC 28341.</p>
        <p>LOCAL PUBLIC Health Ad ministrator II vacancy for Ber tie County Health Department. Minimum requirements:4 year degree, heath related, posses Sion of working towards MPH or similar degree, experience in public health including ad ministrative. Send resume and state application to: Dr. Greg Gelburi Box 628, Windsor NC 27983. Closing daye 02/24/89 EOE</p>
        <p>LPN, MOA and X Ray Tech wanted for urgent care facility. Send resume to: PO Box 2276, Greenville, NC 27858.</p>
        <p>NEEDED: Energetic, en thusiastic, creative individual for Assistant Activity Director position in long termed care set ting, part-time Flexible hours Excellent starting salary. Expe rience preferred, but not man datory. Contact Sandra Ross at 758 4121.</p>
        <p>PHYSICIAN ASSISTANT/FNP</p>
        <p>for innovative school health program in northeastern N.C. Call (919) 821 0485.</p>
        <p>RN's NEEDED TO PROVIDE</p>
        <p>visits to Homebound Patients. Full and part time positions. Aurora Home Health Agency. 300-682 0019. EOE.</p>
        <p>SPEECH PATHOLOGIST Full or part-time position is available NC for a dlligenf</p>
        <p>In eastern speech pathologist.</p>
        <p>Respon</p>
        <p>sibilltes providing diagnostics, treatment, and i</p>
        <p>ongoing tin:  </p>
        <p>I presen</p>
        <p>inservice programs Ex cellent salary and benefits. Clinical Fellowship Year Clini-ans please apply. Send resumes to: 6060B Six Forks Road, Raleigh NC 27609.</p>
        <p>TERRIFIC DENTAL STAFF</p>
        <p>seeks part time member. If you | are a warm and caring Regis tered Dental Hygienist who would like one day a week posi lion, please call 756 1456.</p>
        <p>WANTED Full time Girl Friday for Greenville medical billing office. Must be good with figures and working with peopie. Responsibilities: answering telephone, incomlmg mail, bank deposits and patient contact , Must be mature and flexible. Excellent benefits package. Please send resume and refer enees to: DR1247, c/o The Dally Reflector, PO Box 1967, Green vllle, NC 27835.</p>
        <p>WEEKEND NURSE-For 15 bed</p>
        <p>ICF/MR unit located in Green ville. Provide nursing services and assist direct care staff in ac tivities. Work Saturday and Sunday 8am to 8pm, tot^l of 24 hours per weekend Two paid half hour meal breaks. Starting at $8,25 per hour, to $8 50 after 6 months. Minimum re quirement N.C. LPN License and good references. Experi ence with the mentaly retarded a plus. Qualified persons with an interest in every weekend or every other weekend should ap ply at Skill Creations of Green ville located at 2701 W. Fifth Street (next to Alcohol Rehabilitation Center) or call Linda MoeschI at 752 8869. EOE</p>
        <p>060 Help Wanted Miscellaneous</p>
        <p>FARM EQUIPMENT Mechanic with atleast 5 years experience Must be able to weld, use torch and be able to troubleshoot hydraulic systems Call 566 9644 after6p.m.</p>
        <p>Just a call awayl Call us today to place your classified ads 752 6166</p>
        <p>HOUSEKEEPER for single pro fessionat male Duties include cleaning, laundry, ironing, sew ing, some cooking. Must have transportation. 355 3030 days</p>
        <p>HVAC SHEET METAL Installa tion Mechanics. Experience preferred. Contact Billy Ken nedy with Electricen at new Washington High School job site 975 6586 or call 523 2191 EEO/ MF</p>
        <p>LICENSED HAIR DRESSER</p>
        <p>wanted. Apply in person at George's Hair Designer, The Plaza</p>
        <p>060 Help Wanted Miscellaneous</p>
        <p>A PROFESSIONAL RESUME</p>
        <p>At an affordable price C R Writing 355 6390.</p>
        <p>AVON CAN Help you pay those Christmas bills. Call 756 6396</p>
        <p>CASHIER NEEDED Call be tore 11:00a.m., 752 5747.</p>
        <p>CERAMIC TILE Helper i months experience required Must have own transportation Call after 6pm 753 5381,</p>
        <p>CJ'S WANTS YOU!</p>
        <p>Every position open. We are put ting together the best waite staff, cooks, and prep personnel to make CJ's the best restarant TEAM in eastern Carolina Call between 2 5 for appointment, Monday Friday, ask fror Casey, 355 3543.</p>
        <p>CONSTRUCTION</p>
        <p>Management/Project Manager. Eastern North Carolina based general contractor seeking ex perienced Contra c,t Management/Project Manage ment personnel, total building construction management expe rience required. Excellent growth potential, benefits and negotiable salary for commit ted, oriented individual. An Equal Opportunity Employer Send resume to: Construction Management, PO Box 7287, Greenville, NC 27835</p>
        <p>CRUSTY'S PIZZA</p>
        <p>Now hiring 10 delivery person nel. Earn $4.00 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>DELIVERY PERSON needed Must have knowledge of Green ville. No phone calls please. Ap ply at John's Flowers, 503 East 3rd Street. Greenville, NC</p>
        <p>DISABLED PERSON needs jart time assistance. Call Marty jetween 8and 1 p.m , 752.2994</p>
        <p>DRIVERS WANTED $3 65 an</p>
        <p>hour plus tips and commission. Inquire within Dough Boy Pizza, 1011 South Charles Blvd. 830 9400.</p>
        <p>DRY CLEANING: Counter Sales/Inspecting, excellent benefits. Prior counter sales ex perience required Call 756 6800 for an interview.</p>
        <p>EASY DELIVERY Work Flex ibie hours Greenville area only. Call 758 7920 for appointment.</p>
        <p>EXPERIENCED Paste up and mechanical artist. Fpr ap pointment call 756 8617.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>LONG HAUL TRUCKING Get</p>
        <p>into a high demand career as an owner/operator with northA merican Van Lines! Operate your own tractor If you don't nave one, we offer a tractor pur chase program that is one of the best of the industry No experi ence necessary If you need training, we will train you You must be 21, in good physical condition and have a good driv ing record Call northAmerican for a complete information package 1 8(X) 348 2147 ask for operator 360.</p>
        <p>LOOKING FOR A LEAD Guitar player for a already established Country/Country Rock ,Band Must be able to play almost every weekend. Call 946 3168, if no answer leave name and number on answer machine.</p>
        <p>MACHINIST NEEDED Run</p>
        <p>lathe, milling machine Good pay and benefits 756 5989.</p>
        <p>MAINTENANCE MAN. Needs to have experience in plumbing, electrical, heat and air concfi tioning, hydraulics, general maintenance 5 or more years experience required. Send resume to 1108 East 4th Street, Washington NC 27889.</p>
        <p>MAINTENANCE SUPER VISOR needed for mobile home park. Must have knowledge of plumbing and park upkeep. Call 752 6735 between 9:30 and 5:00.</p>
        <p>Si</p>
        <p>EMPLOYMENT MAINTENANCE FRONTOFFICE MANAGER BOOKKEEPER LEAD PRODUCTION MANAGER TRAINEE 758 1393</p>
        <p>101 W. I4th Street Suite 203</p>
        <p>Low Fee Personnel Service</p>
        <p>MAP AND CHART Dealer Fast growing nationwide map service firm needs manager with business skills and knowledge of professional maps or related services. Great entrepreneurial opportunity within established group of companies. Resumes to J. Castillo, LBA Group, Box 8026, Greenville NC 27835.</p>
        <p>MEN OR WOMEN Needed in our office. Day or evening hours Call 758 7920 for appointment.</p>
        <p>NEED DISHWASHER and</p>
        <p>clean up person. Call before 11:00a,m., 752 5747.</p>
        <p>NEEDED; ATTRACTIVE</p>
        <p>females. Velvet Touch Massage. Call 1 972 9082.</p>
        <p>OWNER-OPERATORS Lease your tractor with Schneider Na tionals Carrier or take advan tage of our New Tractor Pur chase Program We offer ex celient revenue, top miles, dis counts on insurance, tires, maintenance and fuel. 1 800 334 1178.</p>
        <p>PART-TIME Laundromat At tendent and full time shirt presser needed; also need alterations person Call 758 6621.</p>
        <p>PERSONNELTEMPS</p>
        <p>Meeting your temporary needs</p>
        <p>752-1811 301 W.14th St Suite A Greenville, NC 27834.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>' NOCREDIT? S NO PROBLEM!</p>
        <p>If you are having difficulty in trying to purchase a car because of no credit, or if you are not able to get any credit, come see me, Mark McDonald and Ill help you find a way to drive off the lot in one of our vehicles.</p>
        <p>\</p>
        <p>BROWN &amp;amp; WOOD</p>
        <p>(Downtown)</p>
        <p>1205 Dickinson Avenue</p>
        <p>752-2882</p>
        <p>/</p>
        <p>i@e8Si8SSS@8S8&amp;amp;SSSSSSSSSS8SS8S8SSSSSSS@S8aSSS@S8i</p>
        <p>FASHION EXECUTIVE</p>
        <p>Join me in a career of fashion and glamour, $100-$200 potential a day, part-time; up to $400 a day in management. Personalized imaging for companies, corporations and individuals. Local training by national company listed with the stock market.</p>
        <p>Call now, ask for Debbie 919-443-3079</p>
        <p>@8S@88S@S888SS@8S88S88S8S@S&amp;amp;8&amp;amp;SS8SaS@8S3S08@@8M</p>
        <p>PRODUaiON SEWERS:</p>
        <p>Base rate $4.50 plus production, paid vacations, holidays, 4V2 day work week. Insurance available. OTHER POSITIONS AVAILABLE. Cont^t Van Jones, Hatteras Hammocks for interview, 11 AM-1 PM Tues.-Thurs., 1 PM-2:30 PM and 4 PM-5:30 PM Fri.</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>060 Help Wanted Miscellaneous</p>
        <p>PASTE UP ARTIST NEEDED,</p>
        <p>Experience reguired Alco Graphics, Kinston, 523 5866</p>
        <p>PRESS OPERATOR Excellent opportunity with rapidly grow ing print-shop In eastern North Carolina on the Neuse River Experience In 4 color process</p>
        <p>Creferred Dark room, layout, indery or other related experi ence a plus. Send resume with salary requirements to: Village Graphics, PO Box 510, Oriental, NC 28571, Attention Gray Win trey or call 249 2225 days or 249 2373 nights.</p>
        <p>060 Help Wanted Miscellaneous</p>
        <p>TRAINEE FOR APPAREL</p>
        <p>Operation firm located m Farmville Hard working and willingness to learn Background in apparel or fabric helpful, excellent communica tion skills needed Call 753 7121 for appointment, ask lor Russ Evans</p>
        <p>PROFESSIONAL RESUME</p>
        <p>Composition Atlantic Person nel, 355 7931</p>
        <p>QC INSPECTOR Housewares manufacturer looking tor in coming, in process, final inspec tion. QC experience required Send resume to 1108 East 4fh Street. Washington NC 27889</p>
        <p>RGIS, NATIONS largest inven tory service is.seeking motivated high school graduates tor inventory in Greenville and surrounding area Must be available days or evenings and weekends Start at $5 50 per hour. No experience necessary, paid training Call 752 1204, 9 00 a m. to 6 00 p m., January 16th and 17th</p>
        <p>S A S CAFETERIA, Carolina East Mall, is looking for a mature responsible cashier with references. Apply in person Monday Friday, 8 10 a m and 3 4 p.m. No phone calls</p>
        <p>SECURITY PERSONNEL</p>
        <p>Needed Experienced only App ly in person at K Mart, Green ville No phonetalls</p>
        <p>SELL FOOD. Everyone Eats! National company expanding throughout NC $600 average weekly earnings, major medi cal, bonuses and paid vacation Management opportunity within 90 days. 1 872 9087 9am 9pm</p>
        <p>SERVICE TECHNICIAN Pitt County farm equipment dealer has opening for experienced mechanic. Specialty training available, Co m p any paid benefits. Reply FO Box 47, Farmville NC 27828 or phone 919 753 3143.</p>
        <p>WAREHOUSE/DRiVER</p>
        <p>PME, .Inc., has an opening for a Warehouse/Delivery person Qualified individual should have some experience in the ad ministrative side of warehouse and delivery as well as a chauf leur's license Must be able to complete work with minimum supervision To apply, call 757 1398 to arrange an interview or leave a message on answering machine</p>
        <p>PME, INC</p>
        <p>EOE</p>
        <p> WINGATE, TAYLOR MaTd~ A Burlington Motor Carrier TRACTOR TRAILER DRIVERS SINGLE/TEAMS Looking for'a bright fufure for yourself and your family' Come |Oin our team</p>
        <p> Competitive pay package</p>
        <p> Medical and dental insurance</p>
        <p> Incentive bonuses</p>
        <p> Credit union affiliation 40l(k)Plan</p>
        <p>Family oriented' corporation Call Bill Holland 9i9 864 9639 EOE</p>
        <p>061 Help Wanted Sales</p>
        <p>CAN YOU SELL? Outstanding opportunity to work for the 9th largest remodeling contractor in the US. $30 $35K first year is ex pected. Management potential a must. Call 1-800 444 9830</p>
        <p>SHEETROCK Hangers and tin ishers. Experienced only. 756 9508.</p>
        <p>SNELLING &amp;amp; SNELLING</p>
        <p>specializes in sales, manage ment trainee, accounting and clerical positions. Call 758 0541</p>
        <p>SURVEYORS</p>
        <p>All levels. Local Jobs Call SEI Technical Services for local in terview. (1 800 522 9103) or (704)542 7100</p>
        <p>TACO BELL</p>
        <p>Now hiring full time and part-time personnel. Flexible hours. All positions opened Apply in person 319 E. (ireenville Boule vard. Greenville.</p>
        <p>TAKE CHARGE OF YOUR</p>
        <p>future Entry level positions available now with Smithfield's Chicken N Bar B Que Benefit from what you can produce. Looking tor individuals interest ed in developing themselves to fullest potential. Must be able to run a successful restaurant business Investment oppor tunities. Call 346 6150 Monday, Tuesday, Thursday and Friday, 9:00 5:00.</p>
        <p>DECORATING DEN America's fastest growing interior decora ting franchise company, as featured in Womans Day and Cosmopolitan, is currently ex pending in the (reenville area We are looking tor a few ere alive individuals with a flair for color to train for a career in this exciting field Exciting options for advancement Call for an in terview and to receive a decora tor assessment profile test. (919) 833 3305, Extension 100</p>
        <p>FASHION EXECUTIVE Open ing for a fashion executive rep resenting a multi million dollar company offering a total Image solution for individuals, organizations and the corporate business world Management at tainable first year. Peggy Smith 919 582 3229</p>
        <p>TELEMARKETERS Needed to work evening hours Sunday Thursday, 5 30pm 10pm Salary plus bonus. Carolina Window 8. Doors Co , Inc. Call for an ap pointment between 9am 5pm, 756 2585 ask tor Tammy</p>
        <p>THE WAFFLE HOUSE is now</p>
        <p>taking applications for all posi tions, full and part time. No, ex perience necessary, will train. Benefits include paid vacation after 6 months, incentive bonuses and medical dental insurance available Must be dependable, honest, and enjoy working with the public. Apply in person only at 306 Greenville Blvd , Monday Friday, 11 a m. 2pm.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>FULFILL YOUR DREAMS</p>
        <p>Own your own business and con trol your own destiny.lt this is your dream we will guarantee a chance to tulfill it within 3 months. Start full or part-time Call Bob at 756 2594 Tuesday Friday 1 5pm</p>
        <p>GURANTEED STARTING Sal</p>
        <p>ary $300 weekly while training, $3000 $5000 monthly after train ing. Excellent benefits Estab lished company 25 years proven program. Apply Wednesday 16, Thursday 10 6, see Mr. Holltelder, Hampton Inn.</p>
        <p>HAVE YOU GOT What it takes to make a lot of money? Then we want you to come work with us. Call today to find out how you can earn $35 $40K your first year selling for the fastest growing contracting company in the U S Management potential a must. Goldsboro, Wilson, Kinston and Greenville areas For an interview call 1 778 9830</p>
        <p>IF YOU ARE LOOKING For a</p>
        <p>friendly atmoshphere, a store you can be proud of, where you would service the needs of the public, we would like to talk to you. Brody's has positions available for full time/part time sales Apply In person, Brody's, Carolina East Mall, Monday Wednesday, 2 4.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>SECRETARIAL POSITION</p>
        <p>Eastern North Carolina company seeks an individual to plan, organize and control general office activities in Greenville. This individual needs to have a good telephone personality and the ability to organize on their own. This job will require versatility and the ability to work with a broad range of people.</p>
        <p>If you feel you meet these criterias, send your resume to; Waste Industries, Inc.</p>
        <p>P.O. Box 3046 Greenville, N.C. 27836</p>
        <p>COMPUe AIDED DESIDN PERSDN</p>
        <p>Parker-Hannifin Corp., a Fortune 500 company located in Kinston, NC has an immediate opening for an experienced CAD-CAM Designer. The ideal candidate will have a minimum of 2 years experience in the use of a CAD System; ideally CAE)-AM, and perform design work with an associate degree in mechanical drafting.</p>
        <p>Parker offers excellent benefits, which includes paid vacations, paid holidays, medical/dental and life insurance, 401K retirement plan, company paid pension benefits, long term company disability and much more.</p>
        <p>Interested applicants should forward resume to;</p>
        <p>EMPLOYEE RELATIONS MANAGER</p>
        <p>Parker-Hannifin Corp.</p>
        <p>P.O. Box 3524 Kinston, NC 28501</p>
        <p>Openings For RNs, LPNs And FOOD SERVICE SUPERVISOR</p>
        <p>60 Bed Skilled Facility</p>
        <p>Contact Kayron C. Mason, Adm.</p>
        <p>946-7141 Britthaven of Washington</p>
        <p>120 Washington St. Washington, N.C. 27889</p>
        <p>061 Help Wanted Sales</p>
        <p>NORTHWESTERN MUTUAL</p>
        <p>Life InsuBBnce Company 1$ now accepting applications tor our March training school. Send resume to W H Fleming, 217 Commerce Street, Greenville, NC 27858</p>
        <p>NOW</p>
        <p>Join the profession of the 1990's.</p>
        <p>Today, people demand q.uality and convenience That is Southern Food Service</p>
        <p>If you have a minimurr.,^2 years successful outside Wes experience, and are looking for a career opportunity, why not make a great" decision and onoose a recession proof business</p>
        <p>For the right candidate we ot ter</p>
        <p>Liberal compansafion Monthly.'Quarterly Bonuses Profit Sharing</p>
        <p>Hospitalization'Dental</p>
        <p>NoTravei</p>
        <p>Local Work</p>
        <p>Performance Based Salary -to Begin</p>
        <p>*^to  $34,(XX) up</p>
        <p>OUR COMPANY IS expanding and we need good people We of fer (ij Profit Sharing (2)</p>
        <p>Health and dental insurance '3)</p>
        <p>Vacation with pay, 4) Ag vancementOpportunity, (5) 5525 salary .plus 7 Commission 16) Caroer, (7) Starting income $22.000 $36K, (8) Trips won year ly. (9) Management opportunity within 1 year. $50K $125K If you are self motivated, hard work ing, honest and have good ppr sonal reputation, not afraid of long hours, I wot d like to inter view you for this career Previous sales experience is a plus, but not mandatory with the right person Call Lux Homes for appointment with Ray Scott, 756-6996 , 850 Greenville Blvd Greenville, N C</p>
        <p>PART-TIME Membership Salesperson wanted at Green ville Athletic Club Appiyinper son. 140 Oakmont Drive</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>061 Help Wanted Sales</p>
        <p>ATTENTION: LICENSED Real Estate Agents. One of Green vine's most aggressive firms seeks full time, motivated, am bilious sales agents. Excellent working conditions with a pro fessional atmosphere (-all CENTURY21 JANET BOWSER 8. ASSOCIATES, 355 7800 An Equal Opportunity Employer</p>
        <p>REAL ESTATE SALES</p>
        <p>Immediate opportunities, with choice properties. New offices and excellent staff support Ex perience preferred but not re quired Must have license For interview, call Ball 8, Lane 752 0025</p>
        <p>RETAIL SALES AAanagement position open One to two years sales experience needed Con tact Fred Koury at 355-7695</p>
        <p>RITZ CAMERA Due to com pany promotions, the largest camera retail dealer in US is s^king a career rriinded, full time sales assbciate Grow with an expanding company Good benefits and excellent earning potential Camera and sales ex perience very helpful Apply within, Carolina East Mall-</p>
        <p>062 Help Wanted Teachers</p>
        <p>XO^LOR</p>
        <p>Coastal' Carolina Community College Qualifications include Masters Degree m Guidance and Counseling Evening work required Send letter of applica tion and credentials to John G Gay, Dean of Students, 444 Western Blvd , Jacksonville. NC 28546 Deadline January 25, 1989. Equal Opportunity Institution</p>
        <p>063 HelpWanted Technical &amp;amp; Trades</p>
        <p>MACHINISTneeded Hun</p>
        <p>lathe, milling machine Good pay and benefits 756 5989</p>
        <p>experienced FOREIGN</p>
        <p>car mechanic needed Potential to earn up to $16 00 an hour depending on expe''ience Apply Eurasian Import Center '.05 W Greenville Boulevard across from E veveady Battery</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>RN COORDINATOR</p>
        <p>New position. Management level, with primary responsibility of supervision of licensed staff. Prior experience in long term care essential. Excellent salary, full benefit package including life, health, stock and tuition reimbursement. Mon-. day-Friday, with no weekends. For more information, contact Kim Smith. DON, 758-4121.</p>
        <p>ATTENTION IMMEDIATE OPCNINC EARN $30,000-1-</p>
        <p>Local company, which has proudly served the Greenville community for over 50 years, has 1 opening in our advanced planning department. To be considered for this position you must be self-motivated, energetic, outgoing, and have a strong desire to succeed in life. Our program has a proven success record and we provide complete and thorough training to assure your success. If you are seeking a permanent fulfulling career and fill you meet the above qualifications, I would be happy to discuss this opportunity with you. For personal interview call;</p>
        <p>Joe Owens At</p>
        <p>752-2613 Monday-Wednesday 10-12 noon or 2-5 p.m. only</p>
        <p>Skill Level A Technician</p>
        <p>S10-S12 an hour. As many hours as you want. Cleanest and best equipped shop in town. Uniform furnished. Excellent benefits. Hospitalization and dental plan. Paid holidays and vacation. Possibly the best technician opportunity in town.</p>
        <p>For confidential interviews send brief work history to attention;</p>
        <p>Service Manager,</p>
        <p>P.O. Box 1896, Greenville, N.C. 27834.</p>
        <p>PHOTOGRAPHY</p>
        <p>In town, out of town, we hove several full-time positions immediately available for ambitious success-minded individuals.</p>
        <p>ABSOLUTELY NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY!!</p>
        <p>On-the-|ob paid training,' excellent company benefits:  in</p>
        <p>cluding life and health insurance programs, retirement and vacation programs.</p>
        <p>If your have the desire. We have the jobs.</p>
        <p>Apply in person only, Tuesday and Wednesday, January 17th and 18th, 2:00 p.m.-7:00 p.m.</p>
        <p>OLAN MILL STUDIO BUYERS MARKET GREENVILLE</p>
        <p>EOE MF</p>
        <pb facs="00097138_0018" />
        <p>B-8 The Dally Reflector. Greenville, N.C.</p>
        <p>Monday, January 16.1989Monday Classifieds</p>
        <p>OW Help Wanted Technical &amp;amp; Trades</p>
        <p>fcAf-ERIENCED Gas Service man nee&amp;lt;Jed. Must be familiar propane installations, owflts package. Experienced oppllunts a^ly in &amp;gt;person at DauQhtrldM Gas Company. 2102</p>
        <p>Dickinson Avenue_</p>
        <p>MECHANICS and truck drivers ii*&amp;lt;ted. 25 years or older. Experience only. Minimum 2 years over-the-road, good driving record. Insurance and uniforms are available after 90 days. Call 823-2182.</p>
        <p>MECHANIC. Light industrial, electric and gas litt truck expe rience required. Pay based on experience. Monday Friday, 8:30 a.m.-5:00 p.m.. 522 6598. Drug screen.</p>
        <p>099 Miscellaneous</p>
        <p>BASEBALL CARDS, auto graphs, photographs and card supplies. 752 3273afterS OOp.m</p>
        <p>BRIDAL GOWN For sale Never been worn. Call 758 1679 alter 6</p>
        <p>CALL CHARLES TICE, 758 3013, for small loads sand, top soil, stone, pine bark Also backhoe and driveway work</p>
        <p>102</p>
        <p>Mobile Homes For Sale</p>
        <p>1989 M WIDE, payments as low as $149.46. Greenville volume dealer Thomas' Mobile Home Sales. Across from Airport. 752 6068</p>
        <p>CURTIS MATHES Stereo and VCR for sale. Regular price $2,000 for both, will sale for $900 355 3666</p>
        <p>2 bedroom, 2 bath Clayton Wilson Fully furnished. 1988 close out price Less than $180 a month ..all Luv Homes, 756 6996</p>
        <p>144 Houses For Sale</p>
        <p>needed, experienced</p>
        <p>person to weld and fabricate and do some machine work Also need experienced machinist Good benefits, paid holidays and vacation. For more information, call 827-4860, Monday Friday, 7:30-4:30.</p>
        <p>SIDING MECHANIC needed Experienced only. Call 830-1058. WANTED: ROOFERS, sheet metal mechanics and laborers Apply In person, 1314 N Greene Street. No phone calls please</p>
        <p>WANTED: FRAMING Carpen ters. Call 756-0063</p>
        <p>FIREPLACE INSERT Ap</p>
        <p>palachian. Heats 3,000 square feet, burns 24" logs Like new. $300. King size mattress and box springs, very nice, $175. Call 355 4948.</p>
        <p>FOAM RUBBER</p>
        <p>Sofa cushions cut while you wait All types of foam rubber products sold 756 7829_</p>
        <p>FORMICA TOPS and tables, cushioned stack chairs, shut ters Cheap Call 355 4742.</p>
        <p>FREEZER. UPRIGHT, like new. $75,00. 2 used vacuum cleaners, $25 each 758 4651</p>
        <p>GE REFRIGERATOR In good condition. $50 Wood splitter $500 756 1403.</p>
        <p>WANTED; Cabinet makers Must have experience with plastic laminate work and mor tis and tenon jolntry. Send resume to Cabinets, Rt 13, Box 125 Greenville</p>
        <p>GOOD USED WASHERS,</p>
        <p>dryers, stoves and refrigerators priced from $75 and up. 746-2391, S.G Williams Repair Shop.</p>
        <p>HAPPY BIRTHDAY For your child's next celebration let Sports World do it all. Call 756-6000 for details.</p>
        <p>064 Work Wanted</p>
        <p>A-l QUALITY Painting, minor repairs, mildew control, w&amp;lt; wash houses. Free estimates Work guaranteed 758 4136.</p>
        <p>ALLPHASESOF</p>
        <p>CONSTRUCTION</p>
        <p>Remodeling, and repair Steele A.Sons. Serving all of Pitt Coun fy. 753-2833 Free Estimates.</p>
        <p>ALL TYPES OF Remodeling and repair work. Additions, decks, custom cabinets For free estimate call -Donnie Moore, 752-0830.</p>
        <p>CAROLINA TREE Service. All types done St,ump removal Free estimates. Fully insured 752 6420or 757-0117.</p>
        <p>CARPENTRY Decks, doors and general repairs. For consulta tion call 752-0201.</p>
        <p>CERAMIC TILE installation and repairs. 29 years experi ence Free estimates. 753 5381.</p>
        <p>EXPERIENCED Christian lad would like to clean houses, Rel erences If needed Call 830-0173 after 5,30,</p>
        <p>HOUSECLEANING, Sunday Wednesday. Reasonable Call 830-8957</p>
        <p>INTERIOR, EXTERIOR paint Ing, guttering, and roof repairs, general carpentry. 752-4171.</p>
        <p>JOSEPH PADLEY Paint Com pany - Highest quality work, dependable, thorough, neat Customer satisfaction is our goal Reterences gladly provid ed.Call 756-8561.</p>
        <p>LANDSCAPING, LAND Clear Ing, grading, drainage, demoll tion, site preparation, top soil, sand, stone, dump trucks, bull dozers and backhoes. Good ser vice, good rates! Call R.C Davenport Company, 756 1339,</p>
        <p>LEE'S TELEPHONE Service, phone acks and cable TV in stalled. Call 355-5518.</p>
        <p>NEW ROOF AND REPAfR</p>
        <p>work: built up or shingles. Call Sutton's Roofing, 752-7069.</p>
        <p>PAINTING Residential and commercial. Interior and exterior. Quality work. Reasonable rates. Save 30%-50% on winter rates. Free estimates. 758-7395.</p>
        <p>PAPERING, INTERIOR Paint Ing and paper removal. All wall papering guaranteed in writing. Insured for your protection. Call Don English, 756 7010.</p>
        <p>QUALITY Paint Ing/Wallpapering and Land scaping For estimate, 752 3942</p>
        <p>R&amp;amp;RCLEANINGSERVICE</p>
        <p>Home, office, or post construe tion. Free estimate 830 9261.</p>
        <p>ROOF LEAKS FIXED and</p>
        <p>minor repairs 18 years experience Work guaranteed After 6 p m call 752 5906</p>
        <p>SEWING</p>
        <p>ALTERATIONS</p>
        <p>Quality work, competitive prices 15 years experience. 355 6584</p>
        <p>SIGN PAINTER, inexpensive. Call 752 0209.</p>
        <p>SILVERTHORNE HAULING.</p>
        <p>Small loads of topsoil, sand, pine bark, yard maintenance, small clean up jobs. 758-3296.</p>
        <p>TURNER DRAFTING Service For architectual, landscape and environmental drafting. Call be fore6p.m., 355-4860.</p>
        <p>WASHERS, DRYERS, And</p>
        <p>Stove repairs. $15 and up. Fast home service. All work guaran teed. We pick up your old appli anees, working or not. Free estimates. Call 7 days a week, 6:00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m., 825-1264.</p>
        <p>068</p>
        <p>Antiques</p>
        <p>antique oak 3-DOOR ICE</p>
        <p>box. reflnished, excellent condi tion Asking $550 . 756 5882 after 6:00pm</p>
        <p>072 Building Supplies</p>
        <p>STEEL BUILDINGS. 40x75x12 $3.43 square foot. 5Oxl00x16-$3 32 square  foot  60x100x16 $3.05</p>
        <p>square  foot  70x100 14 $2.90</p>
        <p>square  foot.  100x100x14 $2 76</p>
        <p>square foot. Allied Steel 1 800 635-4141.</p>
        <p>075 Computers</p>
        <p>TLEVIDEO TS803 with word processing $400, Call 758 2300.</p>
        <p>080 Fuel, Wood, Coal</p>
        <p>AAA FIREWOOD. Oak season ed 6 months. $95 a cord. Green $80 a cord. Guaranteed measurements, delivered free. Call anytime 1-823-6837</p>
        <p>PINE LUMBER Trim Ends Excellent for kindling. Ranger pickup loads $20. 756-7234</p>
        <p>TONGUE AND GROOVE From 1,020 square feet. $150. Call atter 6 p.m., 756-5518, weekdays.</p>
        <p>WOOD FOR SALE, 16" 18 Oak, maple, gum. Will deliver or you may pick up and save. 756 2014.</p>
        <p>081</p>
        <p>Furniture</p>
        <p>1800's Oak Dining table, 4 leaves, $395. Wing back colonial sofa, earth-tones. maple trim, $235. Upholstered straight back chair, wooden legs, $150 Dining table, 1 leaf. $85 830 8944 days; 752 0751 evenings</p>
        <p>QUEEN SIZE WATERBED,</p>
        <p>semi waveless mattress, mirrored headboard, padded rails, real nice. Come see 752 9432</p>
        <p>IBM ELECTRONIC Typewriter Wheelwriter III. Excellent con dition. 823-7396 after 6 p.m.</p>
        <p>INDEPENDENT HERBALIFE</p>
        <p>Distributor. For weight control products and/or information call 355-7503.</p>
        <p>INSTANT CASH</p>
        <p>Loans on and buying guns, tvs, stereos, gold jewelry, coins, riding mowers, and air conditioners. Most of anything of value.</p>
        <p>Southern Gun &amp;amp; Pawn, INC 752 2464</p>
        <p>LEE'S TELEPHONE Service, phone jacks and cable TV Installed Call 355-5518.</p>
        <p>LIKE NEW Electrolux diamond jubilee with warranty. $225. Call 355-0708.</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>NEW YEAR'S SPECIAL</p>
        <p>Electrolux vacuum cleaners now at tremendous savings for January only. Financing available. Call 355-6744 for no cost, no obligation demonstration</p>
        <p>NEW 5-PIECE wood dinette suit, only $139.95</p>
        <p>NEW 2-PIECE living room suit only $189.95</p>
        <p>NEW 4-DRAWER chest only $39.95</p>
        <p>NEW 252 COIL Mattress and foundation. Twln:$79.95 set; Full: $99.95 set; Queen: $138.95 set.</p>
        <p>Compare our prices before you buy, we will save you money.</p>
        <p>Jamie'S FiJl-niture 756-6027.</p>
        <p>NEWLY FABRICATED Custom built from the ground up-Utility Trailers-priced to sell! We have various sizes available, just call for more information. The 4x8 easy-loader is only $449! Toyota East Parts Department 756-3228.</p>
        <p>OLD TIN. $1 a sheet. Call 355</p>
        <p>RCA 21" COLOR TV</p>
        <p>model. Good condition. 756 9724.</p>
        <p>Floor</p>
        <p>$250,</p>
        <p>SHAMPOO YOUR RUG! Rent shampooers and vacuums at Rental Tool Company.</p>
        <p>SHINGLES $9.95 square and up, 8 "xl6' Beaded Hardboard siding $2.49; Reject Plywood 5/8 $6 25; 3/4" $6 95. 12'5V Tin $7 49 Builders Bargain Center, Greenville N C., 758 7061.</p>
        <p>STORAGE BUILDINGS For</p>
        <p>sale. 8x8-$550, 10xl2-$875, 10x14 $975, I2x16 $1450, 16x20 $2250 Other sizes available 689 2381 after 8:00pm</p>
        <p>TIRESII! Great buy on brand new 225/75 R 15 mud and snow tread tires with rims to fit Toyota products, A fuli set of four for only $169! Toyota East Parts Department 756 3228.</p>
        <p>WASHERS, DRYERS,</p>
        <p>refrigerators, freezers, stoves $100 up Guaranteed. 746 6929</p>
        <p>WHIRLPOOL MICROWAVE for</p>
        <p>sale. 700 watts. Defrost and high setting. $100 or best otfer. Call 756 1884.</p>
        <p>102</p>
        <p>Mobile Homes For Sale</p>
        <p>A BETTER BUY FOR YOU!</p>
        <p>Beautiful 3 bedroom Oakwood, 14' X 70', underpinned, ready to move in! Located in Santree Mobile Home Park Only $499 equity and take over payments! Call 756-5434 for more details</p>
        <p>WORKING COUPLE Special His and her's bath, plenty ot room, extra high ceilings, all electric. Fall Special! Carefree Housing of Greenville, 355-7893</p>
        <p>ARE YOU TIRED 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 fit your needs. Call Greg at Carefree Housing, 355 7893</p>
        <p>COLONIAL 14x70. Furnished, 2 bedrooms, 2 baths with shower stall enclosures, Westinghouse stove and refrigerator. General Electric washer/dryer, air con ditioning, stereo system, under jinning, deck, fireplace. Set up for viewing $13,525 firm, $725 down, balance to be financed at the bank. Phone 1 524 4507 or 1 443 2862</p>
        <p>COME SEE OUR FALL</p>
        <p>Specials. New colors, new prices. Carefree Housing of Greenville, 355-7893</p>
        <p>FACTORY OUTLET</p>
        <p>Custom order your Horton or Mansion home, (Colors, carpets, wall boards, etc.) $ave Thou sands. For free literature and information call toll- trw 1-800-346 4847</p>
        <p>GENERIC PRICES Brand name quality. 70x14 3 bedroom 2 bath home, $12,995 Double wide with fireplace, $17.995. Delivery and set up free. No gimicks Outlet savings. Limited time on ly! Martindale Homes. Highway 301 South, Wilson, 1 800 637 1228</p>
        <p>NEW 2 OR 3 Bedroom, 2 bath 14x70 Only $177 per month 10% down, 14% APR, 180 months Bob'sMobile Homes, 355 0365</p>
        <p>REDUCED Must sell 1984 Oakwood, 14x60, small equity payments $154.19 756 2187</p>
        <p>SMOKED GLASS AND Chrome breakfast room table and 4 chairs. $100 Call 752 1818, 9AM 5PM, Monday Friday.  </p>
        <p>TAN/BROWN/BLUE Tweed queen size Bassett sleeper sola $250. 756 6373 affer 5pm</p>
        <p>SPECIAL SPECIAL SPECIAL</p>
        <p>Luv Homes, is now having their Special Edition Sale to start the year off right 1989 14x70, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, fully fur nished with fireplace for only $14,900. Act last, this special will end at the end of this month Call Luv Homes at 756-6996</p>
        <p>THE USED HOME SPECIATs now on at Luv Homes in Green vllle Come see for yourself or call 756 6996 for more informa tion.</p>
        <p>4 MONTH OLD Semi Waveless waterbed $200 Call 830 9332 ask tor Mary</p>
        <p>086 Farm Equipment</p>
        <p>FOR SALE New John Deere Plow Parts. Points, shins, wings and heels. 13% above dealer's cost. Call 566 9644 after 6 p.m., or 753 4036 days. _</p>
        <p>088 Farm Products</p>
        <p>17,039 POUNDS Tobacco for sale. Call 758 1606 or 758 3283.</p>
        <p>092</p>
        <p>Livestock</p>
        <p>USED MOBILE HOME Need some repair. Asking $1500 758 1189 Ext 216, after 5, 758 6773</p>
        <p>WE WILL NOT Be Undersold! Ask us about the Bob's Challenge! Bob's Mobile Homes, 355 0365</p>
        <p>14X70 FLEETWOOD 3</p>
        <p>bedrooms, 2 baths, stereo and air. Loaded. Only $18,041 25, Act fast. Call 756-6996 for more in formation</p>
        <p>1914 14X70, 2 bedroom, 2 bath and much, much more Only $9,700 or $997 down, 8 years, $157,37 per month. Days 523 9160; night 752 2696.</p>
        <p>1986 FLEETWOOD Vogue $300 down, take over payments 757 3555 atter 5</p>
        <p>HORSEBACK RIDING. Jarman Stables, 752-5237,</p>
        <p>HORSES TRAINED,</p>
        <p>and for sale. Call anytime</p>
        <p>Boarded 753 5467</p>
        <p>1989 CLAYTON Doublewide 24x40, 3 bedrooms, 2 _ baths, masonite siding, shingl roof, fully furnished with fireplace Excellent buy! On sale this month for only $22,291.66 Call Ray Scott at 756 6996,</p>
        <p>3 BEDROOM, 2 bath, 14x70 Brigadiere. Only $495 down, in eludes free furniture 355-2151</p>
        <p>105Musical Instruments</p>
        <p>CASH FOR USED PIANOS.</p>
        <p>Piano &amp;amp; Organ Distributor, 355 6002.</p>
        <p>FOR SALE;Spinet Console Piano Bargain, Wanted: Responsible party to take over low monthly payments on psirtet piano. See Locally: Call 800 327-3345 ext.102.</p>
        <p>RENT A NEW PIANO for as low</p>
        <p>as $25.00 a month Call now, Pearson Music Co., 355 7575 RENT A NEW PIANO for as low as $25 00 a month. Call now, Pearson Music Co., 355-7575.</p>
        <p>CHERRY OAKS. Meant for liv ing this spacious 4 bedroom, 3 bath tudor style home in this great family neighborhcxjd. Of fers living room, family room, den, sunroom, workroom over kitchen, double garage. On a lovely wooded lot. Reduced to $118,500 Please call Nancy Dudley, Aldridge &amp;amp; Southerland, 756 3500 or 756 5596 nights.</p>
        <p>CLUB PINES/Enticing</p>
        <p>Williamsburg Home. $104,900. Begin a new life in fhis 1'4z story 3 bedroom, 2'z baths First owner care. Paddle fans, French doors, crown mouldings, hardwood floors. Great room, foyer, multi purpose room, Ce ramie tile floor in kitchen, old brick fireplace. Duffus Realty, Inc Better Homes and Gardens 756 5395</p>
        <p>144 Houses For Sale</p>
        <p>NEW 3 BEDROOM 2 baths, garage. Winterville school district. $65,900. 522 1938 atter 6,</p>
        <p>161</p>
        <p>Apartments For Rent</p>
        <p>CONTENTEA CREEK Water front home with 3 bedrooms and in excellent condition Conve nient to Kinston and Greenville. Call Rita Quinn, Century 21 Bass Realty, 756-6666. 947</p>
        <p>112 Woodstoves</p>
        <p>HUNTSMAN Woodburning stove. Excellent condition Need to sell $250.756 5476.</p>
        <p>115 Lost &amp;amp; Found</p>
        <p>LOST IN THE VICINITY of</p>
        <p>Abel and Pittman and Pendleton; black Chow-Chow puppy, male, 8 weeks old. Please call 355-5351.</p>
        <p>LOST: 1 year old female black Doberman in the Grimesland area. Answers to the name Taylor Reward 756 3533 or 758 9592</p>
        <p>LOST: MIXED GOLDEN re</p>
        <p>triever in Cherry Oaks area. Blue collar, answers, to "Blue berry" Reward! 756 6903.</p>
        <p>REWARD Medium size Shep herd mixed, male and female 355 5330.</p>
        <p>118 Business Services</p>
        <p>MANNING Landscaping and Seeding Service Fertilizing, aeration, seeding. 919 792 6477.</p>
        <p>122</p>
        <p>Business</p>
        <p>Opportunities</p>
        <p>A BUSINESS7 Buy or sell your business with C.J. Harris &amp;amp; Co., Inc. Financial 8. Marketing Con-sultants. Serving the Southeastern United States. Greenville, N C. 355 7799, nights 756-8444.</p>
        <p>ARE YOU HAPPY with your p^resent career? Decorating Den, a national interior decorating franchise company, is cur rently expanding In the Green ville area. We offer years of ex pertise, national name recognition and a system which has been proven in the Carolinas. If flexible scheduling, extensive training, and excellent income potential are important to you, we urge you to call our regional office at (919) 833 3305 Ext. 1050.</p>
        <p>OPEN A LADIES/Childrens Apparel or one price ($9.99) shoe store. First qualify name brands only. Investment starting at $14,750 includes opening inven tory, fixtures, supplies, and training. Thre Fashion Concept (615)675-6200.</p>
        <p>COUNTRY. On 2 acres, minutes from the hospital and shopping. Three bedrooms, 3 baths, spacious living room with tireplace, bright and airy kitchen with dining area, office, garage, and more Can't be duplicated for its price of $76,500. Please call Nancy Dudley, Aldridge 8, Southerland Realtors, 756 3500 or 756 5596, evenings</p>
        <p>'CRAFT BILT homes</p>
        <p>CUSTOM HOME BUILDERS WE BUILDNDFINANCE</p>
        <p>As low as $500 down to qualified landowners, no closing cosfs, no legal fees, no discount points Call 937 6186 anytime or 1 800 942 5211 Monday-Friday oniy.</p>
        <p>DEDICATED TO QUIET liv</p>
        <p>ing an excellent floor plan allows room for all In this brick charmer convenient to Greenville, Attractive neighborhood and wired workshop. Call Mable at Century 21 Bass Realty, 756 6666. 857 -</p>
        <p>EXCELLENT INVESTMENT</p>
        <p>opportunity in Winterville area. Make your dollars work for you in this three bedroom bungalow. Call Mable Savage at 756 6666, Century 21 Bass Realty, *988.</p>
        <p>EXECUTIVE HOME in Green vine's finest area is reduced. Quality built and in superior condition and location. Call Mable at CENTURY 21 Bass Realty, 756-6666. *982.</p>
        <p>EXQUISITE ELEGANCE In</p>
        <p>Lvnndale. Your first impression of this brick traditional will be a lasting one. Quality built by Oltie Harrington, this 4 bedroom, 3 bath home offers large formal living and dining rooms, spacious family room, plus recreation room and more. The bargain of Lynndale at $169,750 Please call Nancy Dudley, Aldridge 8. Southerlancl, 756 3500 or 756-5596</p>
        <p>EXTRA SPECIAL!! This best buy In the neighborhood. Priced below the rest. Three spacious bedrooms and room to spread out. Call Shirley at Century 21 Bass Realty, 756 6666. #958.</p>
        <p>PUTT PUTT GOLF COURSE</p>
        <p>for lease for 1989. Call Don Ed monson at 355 5444.</p>
        <p>WANTED: Business Investment associate to share in the con struction of custom built homes and earn 50% of net profit. If in terested, send reply to: DR1237, c/o The Daily Reflec tor, PO Box 1967, Greenville NC 27835,</p>
        <p>1000 SUNBEDS, Toning tables Sunal WOLFF Tanning beds SlenderQuest Passive Exer cisers. Call for free Color Cata logue. Save to 50%. 1 800 228 6292.</p>
        <p>124 Professional</p>
        <p>CHIMNEY SWEEPING Gid</p>
        <p>Holloman. North Carolina's original chimney sweep, 30 years experience working with chimneys and fireplaces. Fireplace repair, chimney caps installed, screens for chimney tops. Call day or night, 753 3503, Farmville. NC.</p>
        <p>132</p>
        <p>Commercial</p>
        <p>Property</p>
        <p>BUILDING FOR RENT for</p>
        <p>shop. 25x90, office and a bath, $400 a month, 16x16 room for storage, $60 a month. Location, May Street behind Cox Ar mature. 756-3755.</p>
        <p>OFFICE BUILDING near courthouse. New renovation, reasonable rent Speight Realty, 752 2136 or 756 4156,</p>
        <p>136</p>
        <p>Condominiums For Sale</p>
        <p>QUAIL RIDGE 1918-T. Contem porary flat, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths fireplace. By owner, 355 5319,</p>
        <p>139 Farms For Sale</p>
        <p>NICE SEVEN STALL Horse</p>
        <p>stable and 6 acres of land, some wooded Nice home site. Ex cellent location 2 miles from city limits By owner. 355-5947 atter 5  p  m</p>
        <p>140 Farms For Lease</p>
        <p>FOR RENT 100 acre farm. Tobacco 23,000 pounds, peanuts 11,555 pounds, corn base 30 acres, wheat 37 acres. Pactolus Highway,Beaufort County. 946 5069.</p>
        <p>144 Houses For Sale</p>
        <p>ASSUMABLE NONQUALIFY</p>
        <p>ING loan on this precious 3 bedroom brick home located on wooded lot with low down pay ment. Call for details. Century 21 Bass Realty, Marty Cooper, 830 1173 or 756 6666.</p>
        <p>BEAUTIFUL BUY!! Lovingly JTiaintained- ranch in Carnelot with excellent floor plan and manicured lawn. Priced to sell quickly. Call Marty at Century 21 Bass Realty 756 6666. 942 ,</p>
        <p>BRENTWOOD SUBDIVISION</p>
        <p>For sale by owner. Nice 2,0(X) square foot ranch style home with a lot of extras, great loca tion. $83,000. Loan can be assumed with equity Call 919 756 8342 after 5 for appointment BUSHELS OF APPEAL in this remodeled bunga low/farmhouse. Picture-perfect setting with 2 fireplaces and formal areas. Priced right at $57,500. Call Lory at Century 21 Bass Realty, 756 6666. #955. ,</p>
        <p>BY OWNER, No qualifying assumption 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, fireplace, dining room. Low 80's 830 0801 No Realtors,</p>
        <p>BY OWNER; GREAT location Assumable 3 bedrooms $58,000 Weekdays, 8 30 5:00, 752 1076. No RealtorsTolerated!</p>
        <p>CAREFREE LIVING at its best is what awaits you in fhis home nestled among the trees In Quail Ridge Loads of privacy. Call Rita at Century 21 Bass Realty, 756 6666 * 983</p>
        <p>Train to be a Professional</p>
        <p>SECRETARY EXECUTIVE SEC. WORD PROCESSOR</p>
        <p>HOME STUDY /RES, TRAININQ</p>
        <p>FINANCIAL AID AVAIL. JOB PLACEMENT ASSIST</p>
        <p>1-800-327-7728</p>
        <p>THE HART SCHOa  DIv ol A.C T. Com Nn. hdqk#. Pompxno Bch FL</p>
        <p>FAMILY COMMUNITY. Brick, 5 bedroom, 3 bath traditional home Excellent established neighborhood. New gas furnace, hardwood floors. Formal areas, den, rec room. On a lovely lot on quiet street. $lOO's. Please call Nancy Dudley, Aldridge 8, Southerland Realtors 756-3500 or 756 5596 nights.</p>
        <p>FEELING FRISKY? Romp to your hearts delight in fhis spacious traditional with formal areas and office space. Hard wood floors and detached garage/shop Call Ann Bass at Century 21 Bass Realty, 756 6666. 904.</p>
        <p>FOR SALE BY OWNER - Brand new 3 bedroom, 2 bath home close to hospital. $68,000 firm. 830 3804.</p>
        <p>FOR THE FUSSY!! Fresh air and room to stretch out in fhis new home in one of our most sought after after neighborhoods. Three roomy bedrooms, sunny kitchen, and double garage. Call Ann at CENTURY 21 Bass Realty, 756 6666 #966.</p>
        <p>GREAT COUNTRY SETTING</p>
        <p>for this 5 year young brick ranch on approximately 1/2 acre lot. It features 3 bedrooms, I'z baths, fenced in back yard, extra storage building and is cute as it can be! Perfect starter home and great possibility for FmHa Loan if you qualify. Call Diane Barnes, Aldridge 8. Southerland 756 3500 or 757 1552.</p>
        <p>HISTORICAL CHARM Own a</p>
        <p>piece of Greenville's history in one of Greenville's most demanded areas. Spacious por ches and ample bedrooms. Graces corner lot convenient to university and shopping. Call Lory at CENTURY 21 Bass Re ally, 756 6666. #964</p>
        <p>HOUSE FOR Sale by owner. 209 Fairway Drive. Completely rennovaled. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, 2 story in Sherwood Green Subdivision with Great room/ dining room, large kitch- deck upstairs and down</p>
        <p>stairs. Nice apartment or shop</p>
        <p>In backyard. Ce "  .......</p>
        <p>terested after 5.</p>
        <p>823 0661 if in</p>
        <p>HYDE COUNTY, Swan Quarters, 3 bedrooms, 1 '2 baths, fireplace, deck, central heat/ air Close to Pamlicao Sounds, Lake Maftamuskeet. $47,500. Cal I 926 807 latter 6pm</p>
        <p>INTIMATE COTTAGE In unl</p>
        <p>versify area perfect for the newlyweds or small family. Gleaming hardwood floors and cozy fireplace. Call Rita at Cen fury 21 Bass Realty, 756 6666, #895.</p>
        <p>MOVING TO GREENVILLE?</p>
        <p>Call for FREE video ot homes in your price range! HOMES BY VIDEO, Inc. Hignite Realtors, 919 757 1969 Anytime.</p>
        <p>NEW HOME BUILT ON YOUR</p>
        <p>lot. Quality construction, stick built. $200 down, no closing cost, no points, no construction loan, no attorney's fees, fixed rate fi nancinq. George Tyler, 756 8107</p>
        <p>OWNER WILL SELL 1600 square loot 1' 2 bath house af 205 Grimmersburg Street, Farm ville for less than $40,000 Has jnany energy sa_yers, other ex tras, walking ciistance of downtown Must see interior to appreciate Call 758 2232 tor ap pointment Leave message after fourth ring. Will return call promptly No realtors please.</p>
        <p>REDUCED to $48,900 Nothing down for Vets! 3 bedroom, t'2 baths Only $1,475 down for FHA financing Located six blocks from Nichols Homes by Video, Inc., Hignite Realtors, 757 1969.</p>
        <p>ROLLING MEADOWS. Two</p>
        <p>story homo on huge lot Offers 3 bedrooms, large living room with fireplace, garage, deck Beautifully decorated. $67,900. Ask (or Nancy Dudley, at Aldridge 81 Southerland Real tors, 756 3500 or 756 5596</p>
        <p>SIMPSON AREA Rural home, 1 acre lot with other acreage available. Heated area, 2,t92 square feet. 3 bedrooms, 3,baths, great room, country kitchen and dining area, sunroom, office and other specials. Located between Simpson and highway 33, rural paved road 1757 Excellent price, $121,000 The Wingate Agency, 757 3441, 758 1280, or 355 5007,</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>STUDY^S TRAININQ</p>
        <p>PMANCIAL AH) AVAIL. JOB PLACEMENT A88I8T.</p>
        <p>1-800-327-7728</p>
        <p>A.C,T, TRAVa SCHOOL Nad hd&amp;lt;|6.Poni|&amp;gt;m) BcK FL</p>
        <p>STEVE EVANS REALTY PRESENTS:</p>
        <p>NEW OFFERING. 3 bedrooms, 1'2 bath in Winterville School, district. Has fireplace with brick hearth and carpet. One year warranty free fo buyer. Priced at $56,900,</p>
        <p>UNDER CONSTRUCTION.</p>
        <p>Contemporary style townhome. FJve units in project. 2 bedrooms, 1W baths. Priced at $47,900each.</p>
        <p>UNIVERSITY CONDOS. Con</p>
        <p>dominum with 2 bedrooms, l/2 baths, close to ECU campus. One year home warranty tree to buyer. $34,900.</p>
        <p>(.all 355 2727 for more details</p>
        <p>TUCKER ESTATES. For the</p>
        <p>discerning purchaser. This 2 story traditional, situated on a wooded lot, includes 3 bedrooms, 2'2 baths, and gener ously proportioned great room and formal dining room Quality constructed in 1986. An excep tional homebuying opportunity. $121,900 Please call Nancy Dudley, Aldridge 8, Southerland, 756-3500or 756 5596. nights.</p>
        <p>VETS! Nothing Down on these New three bedroom brick homes with two full baths, and Builder will pay all your points and closing costs! Only $48,750. FHA down payment Is only $1,463 Homes by Video, Inc., Hignite Realtors, 757 1969 Anytime</p>
        <p>WOODRIDGE. A country dream! This Victorian has it all. Bay windowed dining, breakfast, and master bedrooms. Large family room with french doors. Master bath with garden tub and shower. Garage. All for $86,900. Please call Nancy Dudley, 756 3500 or 756-5596, nights. Aldridge 8. Southerland.</p>
        <p>148Investment Property</p>
        <p>APARTMENT COMPLEX 13</p>
        <p>units on 18 acres. 100% occupied, 38 miles east of Raleigh, $345,000. For details call David Corbett at Coldwell Bankers Odom Realty. (919)553 4615,, Horne (919)934-0827,</p>
        <p>RENTAL PROPERTY with tennant $1500 down, assume loans. No qualifying Prime location near Pitt Plaza. Call Tim at 830-9435, leave day and night phone number. AAust sell!</p>
        <p>150 Land For Sale</p>
        <p>I AM LOOKING FOR land to buy and develop or to help you develop and market your land. Pease call Don Edmonson at RE/MAX PROPERTIES, 355 5444 or 756 7583 for a confidential discussion.</p>
        <p>152 Lots For Sale</p>
        <p>ABOVE AVERAGE Size lof Westhaven-Section 8. Call 355-7627.</p>
        <p>BEAUTIFUL WOODED LOT.</p>
        <p>Winterville School District. 1500 square foot minimum. Call The Evans Company, 752 2814; Jack Gordon, 355 5494 or Winnie Evans, 752 4224.</p>
        <p>BEAUTIFUL WOODED LOT in</p>
        <p>popular Baytree on cul de-sac. Great possibilities for you as a new home owner in a comfortable established neighborhood. Call Diane Barnes today, Aldridge 8. Southerland, 756-3500 or 757 1552.</p>
        <p>GET AWAY FROM THE CITY.</p>
        <p>Come see Emerald. Chase. Large wooded and cleared homesifes are approximately five miles from Carolina East Mall, 3 miles from Winterville City Limits For more informa tion, call 756-1339.</p>
        <p>GOLF COURSE Building lot. 110' wide, 191' deep along 15th fairway, Ayden Country Club Cleaned, seeded, ready for con struction. Only $17,900 Nights call 746 3784</p>
        <p>LARGE WOODED Or cleared lots with restrictions that will compliment your mobile home. Owner financing. 355 8900, 758 6218 nights.  ~</p>
        <p>LOTS FOR SALE with septic tank and water, financing garaunteed with no down pay ment. Two locations. 758 5103.</p>
        <p>OVER 2 ACRES located in ex elusive country setting with river access by historic site. $87,500 Call Alice Moore Realty Inc., 355 6712.</p>
        <p>RESIDENTIAL LOTS Located on Old Creek Road. Consists of 3/4's an acre. Have been surveyed and approved for septic tanks. Approximately 2 miles from Highway 264 East. $7,500 per lot. The Wingate Agency, 757 3441 or 355 5p07 or 758 1280.</p>
        <p>IV2  2 ACRE LOTS located be tween Ayden/Grifton. Owner fi nancing. 746 2764.</p>
        <p>ACRE Wooded lot, Winterville 235 feet road frontage. $12,000 1 729 0381.</p>
        <p>153 Loans &amp;amp; Mortgages</p>
        <p>WE BUY first and second mor-tages. Contact Credifhrift, Harlon Neal, 355 3666.</p>
        <p>155</p>
        <p>Resort Property For Sale</p>
        <p>WATERFRONT 2 BEDROOM</p>
        <p>cottage: Pamlico River, Hickory Point, completely remodeled, central heat and air and pier 9.900. 1-553-3780 after 6 00</p>
        <p>157</p>
        <p>Townhouses For Sale</p>
        <p>LEXINGTON SQUARE II Sales model, available February 1 919 778-3516.</p>
        <p>161</p>
        <p>Apartments For Rent</p>
        <p>ABEAUTIFUL PLACE ALL NEW2 BEDROOMS*</p>
        <p>UNIVERSITY</p>
        <p>APARTMENTS</p>
        <p>2899 E 5th Street JAsk us abqut^our special rates to change leases, and di^orts for January rentals)</p>
        <p>Located Near ECU Near Major Shopping Centers ECU bus service Onsite laundry Contact J.T, or Tommy Williams 756 78)5or 758 7436</p>
        <p>AZALEA GARDENS*</p>
        <p>CLEAN a'ND QUIET one bedroom furnished apartments, energy efficient, tree water and optional washers, dryers, cable TV Couples or singles on 'V^15 a month 6 month lease MOB LE 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>nr 0*1!.  ^'^'00171  hoUSe</p>
        <p>TCO . ''Ifoom $220 Kids OK 752 1375 HOMELOCATORS Fee.</p>
        <p>*PA"TMENTS for R-ENTh^</p>
        <p>House-212 Manh.tI.n Avinue. 1 story brick, living ;oom. kllch.n. 3 bedroom</p>
        <p>m.oor</p>
        <p>208 Lancelot Dr. - Three bedrooms, 2^/3 baths, graalroom, dining room, kitchen with eating area. Deck, 1 ear garage. Lot 96 x 150. Price $75,000</p>
        <p>TURNAG</p>
        <p>REAL ESTATE</p>
        <p>Get More With Les Home 756-1179</p>
        <p>Q</p>
        <p> -  II</p>
        <p>niALTOB*</p>
        <p>752-2715</p>
        <p>40 Years Experlenc</p>
        <p>APARTMENT for RENT 2</p>
        <p>bedroom fownhouse with washer/dryer hookups. Quief wooded cul de sac. Excellent for couples. No pets. $350 per month. 756-9387.</p>
        <p>AVAILABLE NOW! Super nice, excellent location. 1 bedroom, washer/dryer hook ups, wafer furnished. $235. 757 1626. No pets.</p>
        <p>AVAILABLE AT Once 2 bedrooms. University Condominium. IVj bath, carpeted, patio, cable TV, pool, air, stove, refrigerator, dishwasher, wafer and sewer. All for $295. Lease and deposit. No grass cutting, no ^tSj^Married couple preferred</p>
        <p>3610</p>
        <p>756 4532. Other, 756-</p>
        <p>AVAILABLE MARCH 1  2</p>
        <p>bedroom, 1 t/i bath duplex apartment. $325 per month. No pets. Blanche Forbes Realty, 756 4926, askforKafhy.</p>
        <p>BAILEY LANE Apartments. Vanceboro applications needed for 2 and 3 bedroom apartments. Full carpeting, central heat and air, refrigerator, range, drapes, on site laundry, HUD subsidized rents, EHO Phone 244 1324.</p>
        <p>BRAND NEW I and 2 bedrcxim luxury apartments near Medical Park. Huge floor plan with loads of extras. Ask about our rent discount special on 1 bedrooms with l year's lease. Call 830-0661</p>
        <p>TREYBROOKE</p>
        <p>APARTMENTS</p>
        <p>CAMPUS! 1 bedroom duplex $180 or carpeted 2 bedroom $250 752 1375 HOMELOCATORS Fee.</p>
        <p>CARRIAGE HOUSE Apart ments, HWY 43 South just past The Plaza 2 bedroom townhouses, all electric, fully-carpeted, pool and laundry room. Call 756 3450after 5pm</p>
        <p>Cherry Court</p>
        <p>Spacious 2 bedroom fownhouse with iVj baths Also 1 bedroom apartments available. All are carpeted, with modern kitchen appliances including compactor and dishwasher. CTentral heat and air. Free basic cable TV, water and sewer Washer/dryer hook ups plus laundry room, pool, sauna, tennis court, club house 752 1557</p>
        <p>161</p>
        <p>Apartments For Rent</p>
        <p>FOR RENT; 2 bedroom fownhouse, 112 Riverbluff Road. $310 per month. No pets. Call 756 0889,</p>
        <p>FURNISHED 2, 3, or 4 room apartment. 752 7212or 7.S6-ni74</p>
        <p>LOVE TREES?</p>
        <p>Experience the unique in apartment living with nature outside your dOor.</p>
        <p>COURTNEY SQUARE APARTMENTS</p>
        <p>Quality construction, (ireplaces, neat pumps (heating costs 50 percent less than comparable units), dishwasher, washer dryer hook ups, cable TV, wall to-wall carpet, thermopane win dows, extra insulation.</p>
        <p>Office Open 9-5 Weekdays</p>
        <p>9 5 Saturday  15  Sunday</p>
        <p>Merry Lane Off Arlington Blvd.</p>
        <p>756-5067</p>
        <p>NEWl BEDROOM Apartments Washer/dryer, cable TV, carpet, electric heat,-air conditioning, appliances. 756 3342.</p>
        <p>173 Houses For Rent</p>
        <p>EXECUTIVE 4 BEDROOtVL glass porch with 2-car garage i'/i baths, on hill at Oak and 10th St. $800 per month. 752-0816.</p>
        <p>Winterville/Greenville. $395/ month. Available now. 746-2913.</p>
        <p>SINGLES OK! 3 bedroom $325 or huge 4 bedroom 2 baths $490 752-1375 HOMELOCATORS Fee</p>
        <p>THREE BEDROOM, 2 bath home with garage, fireplace, refrigerator and stove. $450 per month. Call Steve Evans Realty 355 2727.  ^</p>
        <p>181</p>
        <p>Office Space For Rent</p>
        <p>DOCTORS PARK  Over 4, square feet of prime medical ol flee space available. Visible aad accessible with excellent parK^ Ball 8, Lane for defatt,</p>
        <p>752-0025</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOMS, 2 baths fif rent, $500 a month. Alt appli-anees. Pets negotiable. 756 4511</p>
        <p>UNIVERSITY AREA. 2</p>
        <p>bedrooms with fenced backyard. 355 8955 after 6pm.</p>
        <p>2 BEDROOMS, 1 bath, garage, 1% miles from hospital, air carpet $395a month. 756 2187</p>
        <p>3 BEDROOM $350 with fireplace or 3 bedYoom $425 Fenced yard 752 1375 HOMELOCATORS Fee</p>
        <p>174</p>
        <p>Townhouses For Rent</p>
        <p>OAKMONTSQUARE APARTMENTS</p>
        <p>Two bedroom fownhouse apartments. Fully equipped kitchen, pool, tennis courts, cable TV. 24 hour emergency maintenance. Very convenient to Pitt Plaza and University Office hours 9 5 30, Monday-Friday, 1212 Redbanks Road. 756-4151</p>
        <p>ONE AND TWO bedroom apartments for rent. Smith In suranceand Realty, 752 2754,</p>
        <p>ONE AND TWO BEDROOM</p>
        <p>apartments available now. Call 752 3311.</p>
        <p>ONE BEDROOM apartment. Heat, hot and cold water, sewage Included, $250 monthly. 201 N. Woodlawn. 756 0545 or 758 0635.</p>
        <p>EASTBROOK AND VILLAGE GREEN APARTMENTS</p>
        <p>One, two and three bedroom apartments, featuring cable TV, modern appliances, clean laundry facilities, swimming pools, fully carpeted.</p>
        <p>Office: 204 Eastbrook Drive</p>
        <p>752-5100</p>
        <p>Fairlane Farms Apartments</p>
        <p>1,2, and 3 Bedrooms One of Greenville's newest lux ury apartments. Woodburning fireplaces, celling fans, washers/dryers, washer/dryer hookups. Pets allowed. E 300 energy efficient, tennis court. Pool Clubhouse. $95 security deposit. Ask abouf rent special.</p>
        <p>1510 Bridle Circle 355-2198</p>
        <p>FURNISHED I bedroom $165/ walk to ECU 1 bedroom $200 752 1375 HOMELOCATORS Fee,</p>
        <p>(iREENMILLRUNAPftTMENT$</p>
        <p>One bedroom apartments, fur nished and unfurnished. Ex cellent condition, iVj blocks from ECU. Water, sewer, drapes and basic cable included. 24 hour maintenance and on site mangemenf, quiet environ ment. Call 758 2628</p>
        <p>GreeneWay</p>
        <p>Large 2 bedroom garden apart, ments, all with 7 closets, carpeting, kitchen appliances including dishwasher, central heat and air. Free basic cable TV, water and sewer. Laundry rooms, spacious grounds, playground and pool, abundant parking. Pets allowed Adjacent to Greenville Country Club. ($300).756-6869.</p>
        <p>ONE BEDROOM APARTMENT</p>
        <p>available. 5245 a month. Call Ray Holloman, 355 6666 or home, 757 1877.</p>
        <p>ONE BEDROOM apartment. Carpeted, range, refrigerator, water furnished, $225. 752-8915.</p>
        <p>ONE BEDROOM, unfurnished, deposit, no pets, washer/dryer hookup, professional, $235 per month, 756 8785</p>
        <p>ONE BEDROOM, furnished, utilties included, professional or student. $275 per month. Available. Call 756 8785,</p>
        <p>PET LOVERS! 1 bedroom $210 or 2 bedroom fownhouse $325 752-1375HOMELOCATORS Fee.</p>
        <p>STRATFORD ARMS APARTMENTS</p>
        <p>Spacious 1,2 and 3 Bedroom Apartments $200 Security Deposit Required CABLE TV.TENNISCOURTS.POOL Convenient to Shopping and ECU</p>
        <p>Offlcehours9a.m. to5p m, Monday through Friday</p>
        <p>Call us 24 hours a day at</p>
        <p>756-4800</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOM fownhouse for rent. $335 per month No pets. Call 355 7071 after 6.</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOM duplex at Frog Level Couples only. Call 756 4624 before 5 and 756-8076 atter 5.</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOM, IVz bath. Call 355-2474; after 6:00 p.m., 355 6016.</p>
        <p>WEDGEWOODARMS</p>
        <p>2 bedroom, 1 llj bath townhouses. Excellent location. Carrier heat pumps, Whirlpool kitchen, washer dryer hookups, pool, tennis court, draperies. 355-6302.</p>
        <p>WHY PAY RENT When you can own for only $495 down. 355 0365</p>
        <p>KIDS OK! 2 bedroom duplex $175 or 4 bedroom $241 Others 752 1375 HOMELOCATORS Fee.</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 lOth Street</p>
        <p>WOOD'S EDGE</p>
        <p>Spacious two bedroom duplexes located in a quiet residential community in Heritage Village featuring; Greatroom with ca thedral ceiling, fireplace, fully equipped kitchen, washer and dryer connections, energy effi cient, outside storage room, private enclosed patios</p>
        <p>756-4151</p>
        <p>WOW! 1 bedroom duplex $160 or 2 bedroom duplex $t95 Others</p>
        <p>752-1375 HOME LOCATORS Fee.</p>
        <p>1 BEDROOM APARTMENT.</p>
        <p>Carpeted, range, refrigerator. $195 , 503 East 2nd Street. 752-8915.</p>
        <p>2 ONE BEDROOM Apartments available and i efficiency apartment. 756 6336; after 5 30 756-0603 or 758-6088,</p>
        <p>170</p>
        <p>Condominiums For Rent</p>
        <p>KINGS ARMS</p>
        <p>Large 1 bedroom apartments. Carpeted, modern kitchen ap pliances, heat pump for energy efficient heating and cooling Laundry facilities. 1209 Charles Boulevard, Office Apartment</p>
        <p>f04,</p>
        <p>752-8915</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>OWN A HOME?</p>
        <p>HOME EQUITY LOANS</p>
        <p>$5,000 to No Limit Mortgage Past Due O.K. Credit PTOblems Understood</p>
        <p>Various Rates &amp;amp; Terms Cash For Any Purpose</p>
        <p>WHEN YOUR BANK SAYS NO...</p>
        <p>mmm</p>
        <p>FAST SERVICE Midstate Financial Services Apply By Phone</p>
        <p>1-800-777-3701</p>
        <p>M-F 8 am-10 pm;</p>
        <p>Sat. 9 am-5 pm</p>
        <p>CONDO IN TREETOPS, 2</p>
        <p>bedrooms, 2 baths, all appli anees including washer/dryer Pool and tennis. Available im-mediatly. No pets. $425 a month. Call 756-7633,</p>
        <p>2 BEDROOM, 2 baths, fireplace, appliances with microwave, washer/dryer. Call 355 6960,</p>
        <p>173 Houses For Rent</p>
        <p>A COUNTRY 2 bedroom $275 Fridge stove/4 bedroom 3 baths</p>
        <p>752-1375HOMELOCATORS Fee.</p>
        <p>CHEAP! 3 bedroom $275 Kids OK or 4 bedroom 2 baths $350 752 1375 HOMELOCATORS Fee</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>WANTTO DRIVE A TRUCK?</p>
        <p>C NOW TRAINING MEN &amp;amp; WOMEN</p>
        <p>We uain on loaded equipment</p>
        <p> OOT CEflTif ICATE</p>
        <p> financial assistance</p>
        <p> full i pAi Time Classes</p>
        <p> JOB placement ASSiS'^ANCE</p>
        <p>BLANTON'S</p>
        <p>JONIOR COLUCCE TRACTOR TRAILER TRAINING CENTER</p>
        <p>I9S Hwy /'</p>
        <p>Lumucrltm NC Wityo/i. NC Olhcf</p>
        <p> 1 80f)-'&amp;gt;ZZ-16?b  i91'IiZ9I-4144</p>
        <p>GOODMAN</p>
        <p>AUTO BROKERS</p>
        <p>"Let us tielp you BUY your next car or truck" "Let us help you SELL your car or truck." (Consign a-car Plan)</p>
        <p>312 W. Greenville Blvd.  Greenville  3SS-9196 (Biiide Coggins Goodiich Tire Store)</p>
        <p>1986 Honda LXi</p>
        <p>Charcoal gray, 4 door, automatic, sunroof, gray cloth one owner.  '  '</p>
        <p>i</p>
        <p>AVAILABLE 2 bedroom, V/i baths, bar, patio, Lexington Square III. (919)778-3516.</p>
        <p>CONVENIENT TO hospital an"d mall, 2 bedroom brick fownhouse In Shenandoah, no pets. $345.756 4746.</p>
        <p>f.x|cirfivr"PARjrwEsTi</p>
        <p>MMlcal or business uses allovw ed 1,000 to 15,000 square fee* available or build to suit be* s.</p>
        <p>In rapidly expanding medical district. Call Ball ( LjAf^Realtors lor detallS'</p>
        <p>L)JRYOFFcnPCf FROM$99.00 PER MONTH</p>
        <p>Fully Furnished</p>
        <p>Services Servlc*^* Telephone</p>
        <p>^P'' Service Conference Room Free Parking Short or Long Term Call Steve, 758-2174,</p>
        <p>OFFILt SPACE FOR RENY. $150 and $160 per month. 3101 S Evans Street. Call 355-2788.</p>
        <p>OFRCE SPACE available, one to five-room suites, ample park* Iso available. (919) 355-7443. Evans Street Center &amp;amp;</p>
        <p>StTM?  ^</p>
        <p>OVIET AREA. 2 bedrooms, l'/5 baths, patio, storage, paddle fan, microwave. Ideal for pro fesslonals. No pets. $385 756 7480.</p>
        <p>SHENANDOAH 2 bedroom, I'/i bath, fireplace, new carpet and paint. No pets. $365. Work 355 6002; home 756-7541.</p>
        <p>SPACIOUS Windy Ridge townhouse. Available for Im mediate lease. Close to tennis and pool. Call 756 3944</p>
        <p>179</p>
        <p>Mobile Homes For Rent</p>
        <p>HOMELOCATORS!</p>
        <p>A WASHER, DRYER 2 bedm</p>
        <p>$190 or 3 bedroom 2 baths $235</p>
        <p>HEY COUNTRY 2 bedroom $170</p>
        <p>washer, dryer or 3 bedroom $220 KIDS OK! 2 bedroom $150 in town or clean 3 bedroom $225 WON'T LAST! 2 bedroom $125/3 bedroom $150 Many others too' ALL AREAS ALL PRICES 752 1375 Fee. Open 6 days.</p>
        <p>OFFICES IN Dunnt-Grler Building with conference room and' coffee machine available 758-0423 or 756-1076.</p>
        <p>PRtS IIGIOUS OFFICE Space"</p>
        <p>313 315 Clifton Street, just off Arlington. Will finish to suit tenant. Utilities, Janitorial, Security furnished. WSV Properties,</p>
        <p>PRIME</p>
        <p>rent In</p>
        <p>OFFICE SPACE for</p>
        <p>downtown Greenvllfe</p>
        <p>with private parking lot. Singib offices or suites avallabT*. Janitorial services and Utilities Included. $6,50 a square foot Call Pat at 752-5953 days; 834 9269 evenings.</p>
        <p>PRIME OFFICE Space 2 rooms with private front entrance art Arlington Office Center, $350 per month, 355 8900.</p>
        <p>PRIVATE ENTRANCE, Super</p>
        <p>nice. 240 square fpot, utilities furnished, $150. 757-1626.</p>
        <p>single office, ufllities In eluded, 1902 S. Charles. Call 355-0364.</p>
        <p>MUST RENT! Special Sav ingsl! Two bedroom mobile home. Convenient location After 5:30, 757 1542.</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOMS, washer, dryer, good condition. In good park No children, no pets. Call 756-0801 affer 5:00 pm.</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOMS, 12x60, fur nished, $235. Deposit required. 756-9267 days; 752 3991 evenings, ask for Gene.</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOM mobile home tor rent, $200 per month, $100 deposit. No pets. Call after 5.00 p m., 752-2684.</p>
        <p>VERY NICE 2 BEDROOM,</p>
        <p>brand new appliances, $200 per month Call 355 7489, If no an swer, leave message.</p>
        <p>WHY PAY RENT When yog can own for only $495 down. 355 0365.</p>
        <p>1 AND 2 BEDROOMS for rent. One child OK. No pets. Deposit and lease required. 758 0745.</p>
        <p>TWO ROOMS WITH Private e^ trance, front offices. Rooms ap proximately 12x14' and 14xl-P. $4(X) month. Call Janet Bowsdf, CENTURY 21 Janet Bowser  Associates, 355 7800or 756-8580..</p>
        <p>IM Resort Prop4|^ For Rent</p>
        <p>CONDO IN MYRTLE BEACH</p>
        <p>Week of May 20-27. Call days 355-5980; evenings, 746 2909 ask for Debbie.</p>
        <p>MYRTLE BEACH DAYS</p>
        <p>Ocean front condos. 1, 2, 3 bedrooms. Indoor pools, jacuz-zis, health spas, tennis. Special $39/nlght up. FREE brochure 1-800 777-9411, Smith Realty.</p>
        <p>192 Roommate Wanted</p>
        <p>FEMALE Non-smoking grad student or professional. Sheraton Village. $200 pigs utilities. Niveen, 355-3248</p>
        <p>I BEDROOM Furnished. 3 miles from Greenville. $165, deposit No pets. 752 3884 after 5.</p>
        <p>12X65 2 Bedroom, washer/ dryer, central heat and air, fully furnished, total electric. Conve niently located No pets and no children. References required 756 2927.</p>
        <p>2 BEDROOM I' j bath $250 per month plus deposit. 752 4577</p>
        <p>2 BEDROOM I bath $225 per month plus deposit 752 4577.</p>
        <p>2 BEDROOM Mobile home for rent. Furnished Call 756 1450 for appointment.</p>
        <p>2 BEDROOM TRAILER, 2</p>
        <p>baths, furnished with washer and dryer on a private lot. 758 5520 or 752-1924</p>
        <p>180</p>
        <p>Mobile Homes Lots For Rent</p>
        <p>FEMALE TO Share 2 bedroom, 2 bath trailer. Rent $150 plus utllifies. Call Sherry at 355-2011 day, 355 7518 after 6pm, ,</p>
        <p>FEMALE ROOMMATE needMl. Young professional or grad sHi-dent, non smoker. Rent $177.50 plus half utilties. Call Amee at 355 3308 after 5.</p>
        <p>FEMALE ROOMMATE wanted</p>
        <p>to share 2 bedroom trailer el Bells Fork. It interested, cell Joy at 756-3369 after 7 p m.</p>
        <p>NEEDED Immediately! Female non smoker to share.2 bedroom duplex. Will have oWn room. $110, 1/3 utilities. % miles from campus. 758-2096.</p>
        <p>PROFESSIONAL Female Id share expenses. Spacious 3 bedroom house. 355-0247 after 5.</p>
        <p>LARGE LOTS. 15 miles east of Greenville. $80 per month. 355 8900, 758 6218 nights</p>
        <p>LARGE SHADY LOTS; Deer Run Estafes. Phone 752 6643,</p>
        <p>LOTS AVAILABLE in nice modern park. Call 752 6245.</p>
        <p>MOBILE HOME SPACES for</p>
        <p>rent in park on Highway 33 East. Call 758 0745</p>
        <p>private lot Belvoir</p>
        <p>Highway, city wafer, neat and clean. $75 a month. 756-4156.</p>
        <p>181</p>
        <p>Office Space For Rent</p>
        <p>EXECUTIVE OFFICES And</p>
        <p>suites for rent on Commerce Street. Gaylord Builders, 756 5550.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>NEEDED</p>
        <p>Shop</p>
        <p>Laborer</p>
        <p>Person</p>
        <p>AT</p>
        <p>Carolina Window &amp;amp; Door Company INC.</p>
        <p>Apply between 9am-12pm Tuesday-Frlday 2220 Dickinson Ave., Greenville</p>
        <p>PROFESSIONAL FEMALE</p>
        <p>Needs non smoker to share townhouse. Call 355-6867after4.</p>
        <p>ROOMMATE WANTED</p>
        <p>Mature graduate student needs roommate to share half rent ($135) in great 5 room apart ment Central heat and air, quiat neighborhood, great location Call Rick, 758 8365.</p>
        <p>194 Wanted To Buy</p>
        <p>I BUY HOUSES IN PITT County area. Don't lose your home through foreclosure, sell and save your credit. Call Montford, Broker, anytime, 355-7730.</p>
        <p>TRAVELING evangelist wants to buy a Lincoln Town Car, 1982 or 1983; low down payment, low monthly payment. 355-6679.</p>
        <p>WANT TO BUY pine and hard wood timber. Pamlico Timbar Company, Inc. 756-8615, nightf.</p>
        <p>WANTED; STANDING Timber. Pine and hardwood. R.M.B. Enterprises, 636 3255.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY-</p>
        <p>TORSALE^</p>
        <p>DUPLEX</p>
        <p>LOTS</p>
        <p>BY OWNER 756-5981 328-0500</p>
        <p>Located on Tobacco Road</p>
        <p>Commercial Truck Rentals Highwoy It South  Wiirterville, N.C.</p>
        <p> ^756-3635</p>
        <p>HOME FOR SALE</p>
        <p>On quiet street, 407 Harding St. University neighborhood. Sizable living room with fireplace, adjoining reading room (or den), leading to three bedrooms, 2 baths, connecting hall.</p>
        <p>Nice dining room, 10 foot ceilings ample kitchen space, hardwood floors. Central air and heating. Small back porch, covered. Large floored attic (may be converted to half-story).</p>
        <p>2,000 square feet. Asking $80,000. Call Frank M. Wooten, Jr. or Gregory K. James at 752-3129. Nights and weekends, 752-2084.  &amp;lt;</p>
        <pb facs="00097138_0019" />
        <p>I V</p>
        <p>The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.  Monday,  January  16,  1989  g-9</p>
        <p>J</p>
        <p>PLUS</p>
        <p>J</p>
        <p>J</p>
        <p>Sft</p>
        <p>INVOICE S A L E</p>
        <p>J</p>
        <p>-iO</p>
        <p>NO'-</p>
        <p>ftO</p>
        <p>9*-</p>
        <p>&amp;lt;o</p>
        <p>sP</p>
        <p>X</p>
        <p>X PLUS</p>
        <p>V-</p>
        <p>' /</p>
        <p>PLUS</p>
        <p>PLUS</p>
        <p>INDICE</p>
        <p>$-|00</p>
        <p>FREIGHT DEALER OPTIONS</p>
        <p>e^DAY SALE PRICE</p>
        <p>X</p>
        <p>1988 Honda Accord LX</p>
        <p>13,795 ^246^.-</p>
        <p>12% A P R,, 66 months</p>
        <p>1987 Honda CRX Si</p>
        <p>9,799 *201 </p>
        <p>12% A P R,, 54 months.</p>
        <p>1987 Volvo DL</p>
        <p>14,550 *276* 9K,-</p>
        <p>12% A.PR, 60 months</p>
        <p>1988 Honda LXi Coupe</p>
        <p>13,595 *240**</p>
        <p>t2% A P R 66 months</p>
        <p>t9S3 Honda Accord LX</p>
        <p>6,995 *163^</p>
        <p>*14% APR 48months</p>
        <p>1987 Honda Accord</p>
        <p>12,695 *248*</p>
        <p>*13% A P R , 54 months</p>
        <p>1986 Pontiac Grand Am</p>
        <p>$5,495 *128^-</p>
        <p>13% APR, 48 months</p>
        <p>1985 Olds Regency 98 Brougham</p>
        <p>$9,995 *267*^ 9</p>
        <p>13% A PR , 36 months</p>
        <p>1985 Lincoln Continental Givenchy Edition</p>
        <p>.9,995 267"..</p>
        <p>' 13% A P R., 36 months</p>
        <p>1986 Olds Calais Supreme</p>
        <p>8,500 *1 94^ 9-</p>
        <p>*13% A PR , 48months</p>
        <p>1987 Mazda GT 626 Turbo</p>
        <p>10,495 *215^* 9.</p>
        <p>'12% A P R , 54 months</p>
        <p>1987 Olds Regency Brougham</p>
        <p>12,000 *227*^ 9.</p>
        <p>* 13% A P R . 54 fT&amp;gt;onths</p>
        <p>1988 Toyota Camry LE</p>
        <p>$14,995 *259^^ -</p>
        <p>*11% APR , 66 months</p>
        <p>1985 Renault Alliance DL</p>
        <p>$2,995 ^69*^9-</p>
        <p>'14% APR, 48 months</p>
        <p>1985 Dodge Aries LE</p>
        <p>..,999 118* .</p>
        <p>*15% APR, 48 months</p>
        <p>1986 Buick Riviera</p>
        <p>10,995 *230^* 9</p>
        <p>t3% A P R , 54 months</p>
        <p>1986 Pontiac 6000 STE</p>
        <p>8,995 *208^* 9</p>
        <p>t3.5%APR 48months</p>
        <p>1986 Chevy Beauville Van</p>
        <p>10,495 *220** 9-</p>
        <p>t3% A P R 54 monins</p>
        <p>1988 Nissan Sentra</p>
        <p>9,99, '179.</p>
        <p>12.5% A.P H , 66 months</p>
        <p>1985 Ford F-250</p>
        <p>4,495 *10r9..</p>
        <p>13 5% A P R , 48 months</p>
        <p>1988 Plymouth Voyager SE</p>
        <p>13,995 *251^9.-</p>
        <p>t25% A PR . 66 months</p>
        <p>1988 Legend Coupe L</p>
        <p>25,910</p>
        <p>1986 Cutlass Calais</p>
        <p>8,995 *188^^9.</p>
        <p>13% A P R. 54 months o</p>
        <p>1984 Cutlass Ciera</p>
        <p>5,495 *142^*9.</p>
        <p>14 25% A_PJ^ , 42 morilhs</p>
        <p>332^^Aemorial Dr.  Greenville, N.C</p>
        <p>355-2258  1-800-544-8876</p>
        <p>Mon.-Fri., 9 to 8 Sat., 9 to 6</p>
        <p>*15% down plus lax and taga lo quallfltd buyara</p>
        <p>RA</p>
        <p>^ Service Special:</p>
        <p>J  Oil Change</p>
        <p>i $-1595</p>
        <p>I    Plus  Tax</p>
        <p>I (Include;! up to 5 quarts of oil and filter)</p>
        <p>Good until Monday, January 23. 1989  ^</p>
        <pb facs="00097138_0020" />
        <p>Monday, January 16. 1989</p>
        <p>f ^</p>
        <p>m* ^ -</p>
        <p>rJ</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>^ t</p>
        <p>i ^ i</p>
        <p>"T,'</p>
        <p>'y</p>
        <p>WMS;</p>
        <p>I*</p>
        <p>^  *?..i</p>
        <p>- nisr '45*1 *^8</p>
        <p>y^'-;--3^  =</p>
        <p>m--</p>
        <p>ji &amp;lt;'[  I',</p>
        <p>t--^ ''iv'</p>
        <p>Read The Daily Ifeflector.</p>
        <p>!&amp;lt; &amp;gt;</p>
        <p>W&amp;gt;&amp;gt;'  ^</p>
        <p>The Daily Reflector has been reporting the facts and events that shape the lives of Greenville and Pitt County residents for more than 100 years with honesty, dignity and integrity.</p>
        <p>Every weekday and Sunday, we keep you on top of local news and sports, inform you about places to go and things to do in eastern North Carolina and help you plan your shopping. For more than a century, weve continued to meet the changing needs and interests of our community and maintain that commitment every day..</p>
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