Daily Reflector, January 6, 1983


[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]





Weather

Clear tonight, lows in mid-30s; partly cloudy and windy Friday with high in upper 50s.

102ND YEAR

THE DAILY REFLECTOR

INSIDE READING

Page 6-Sec. Dole?

Page 8 - LetMUKms ordeal Page 14More cyanide

NO. 5

TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FiaiON

GREENVILLE, N.C. THURSDAY AFTERNOON. JANUARY 6. 1983

20 PAGES TODAY PRICE 25 CENTSSchool Officials Await Budget Report

Local school officials say they wont know until after a statewide meeting of superintendents next week where cuts in school funds approved Wednesday by the State Board of Education will be made.

Well receive (at the meeting) firsthand information about the requested areas for decrease in funds, said Eddie West, superintendent of Pitt County Schools. Until then, its just speculation to say what

areas the cuts will be made in.

The state, because its provides the majority of funds, also sets the rules for the expenditure of these funds, he said.

Dr. Delma Blinson, siqier-

mtendent of Greenville city schools, said this morning his office had not received any information oth^ than what weve heard in the media. Blinson said he, West and other siq)enntefKients across the state will meet Sunday

through Tuesday with ^te school officials to dis(m the cuts. Until that time there is little I can say, he noted.

In an effort to help the state balance its biHlget, the state Board of Education has agreed to cut 2 percrat of its

nearly $1.5 billion in funding for public scHwls for the rest of this fiscal year. That means the state school board, which traditionally retains about 1 percent of its budget in unspmt funds, will return an estimated $28

million to the state treasury.

The boards action followed a request earlier this week by John A. Williams, state budget director. In a memo, Williams said 2 percent of the schools money is needed

to balance the state budget by June 30, the end of the fiscal year.

Budget problems arose when tax revenues failed to rise as quickly as the Legislature had predicted.

(Please turn to Page 5)

Gasoline Tax Hike Signed Into Law By Pres. Reagan

Working On A Rainy Day

WORK ON A RAINY DAY - Crews of Uw citys Public works Dq>artment dont stop because its raining. According to director Mayo Allen, jobs are just shifted to another task for the rain. Here Marvin Lee Cox and David

Langley (right) plant and rake grass seed on Gum Road. The project is part of a plan to improve the street. (Reflector Photo by Tommy Forrest)

WASHINGTON (AP) -Consumers will pay more for gasoline and bigger trucks will soon appear on the nations major highways following President Reagans siting today of legislation , raising the gasoline tax by a nickel a gallon.

After brief remarks an-' nouncing an end to a period of decline in (Americas) vast and world-famous transportation system, Reagan sat down at a table in the State Dining Room and hastened to put his signature' on the bill before the bridges fall down.

Then he stood up and pronounced to an audience of 150 supporters of the legislation, It is law.

The new law is expected to raise more than $5 billion a' year, with 4 cents of each nickel used to repair and rebuild the countrys deteriorating network of highways and bridges. The fifth penny will go to mass transit pi^grams. The tax begins in April.

Although Reagan said in September it would take a palace coup to gain his

support for an increase in the gasoline tax, he was persuaded by outgoing Transportation Secretary Drew Lewis to back the measure.

Reagan told reporters Wednesday night the building program financed by the new tax would create jobs for 300,000 to 350,000 workers.

However, his chief economic adviser, Martin Feldstein, told him in a memo last month that the program might actually result in increased unemployment. Feldstein explained the money taken out of consumers pockets by the new tax would cost jobs in other areas while if would

be many monihs before people actually go to work on the roads, bridges and transit systems that will benefit from the legislation.

Some independent uiickers have threatened to stop driving if Reagan signs the bill, which .they say could plunge them into bankruptcy because of ttte heavier taxes.

Nuclear SafelUfe To Hit Earth

By TIM AHERN Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON (AP) - A nuclear-powered Soviet spy satellite will likely blaze back to Earth within weeks, and the Pentagon says it could spread destruction and radioactivity if its broken pieces fall in a populated area. It is too early to say where it will hit.

Cosmos 1402 is tumbling out of control in an orbit that covers mostly oceans but also goes over most of North America, most of the Soviet Union, the entire African continent, all of South America, and much of China, the Defense Department said.

On Jan. 24, 1978, another Soviet .nuclear-powered spy satellite came back into the earths atmosphere over

northern Canada. Most of Cosmos 954 burned up in the atmosphere, but some intense radiation was discovered near the eastern shore of Great Slave Lake.

After the 1978 cra^. President Carter proposed banning nuclear-powered satellites. The United States has none.

"We do not know where it will land, nor do we know precisely when to expect re-entry, said a Pentagon statement.

But Pentagon officials pointed out that three-quarters of the earths surface is water and that there are wide expanses of sparsely populated land areas.

The five-ton Cosmos 1402 is powered by a nuclear reactor with about 100 pounds of

enriched uranium, the same amount of fuel that was in the 1978 reactor. '

Should it fall into the water, there would be no consequential risk, said Maj. Douglas Kennett, a Pentagon spokesman. But if it hits on land, there is a health risk from debris, he said.

Geoffrey Per^, a leading English satellite tracker, said it could prove very dangerous if Cosmos 1402 hits in a populated area.

. In Moscow, Vladimir Kotelnikov of the Soviet Academy of Sciences said today when asked about the satellite: Look, we are making experiments, qiera-tions which have been envisaged. There is no danger, we have no alarm about the fate of this satellite.

He was asked the question at a press conference held by two Soviet cosmonauts. Kotelnikov refused to discuss the troubled satellite further.

REFLECTO^

ffOTLlOe

752-1336

Hotline gets things done for you. Call 752-1336 and tell youi problem or your sound-off or mail it to Hotline, The IMy Reflects, Box 1967, Greenville, N.C. 27834.

Because of the large numbers received. Hotline can answer and publish only those items considered most pertinent to (hjt readers. Nam must be given, but only initials will be used.

SPLIT DUSTERS SOUGHT I am looking for two split dusters to use for making puppets. My mother has one, but she likes it so much and doesnt know how shed replace it, so she wont let me have it for this purpose. It has the name, Kellogg Quality, on it. Its made out of yam and has a U on one end so you can dust around chair legs. Dee Braxton, Route 1, Wintervle. 756-7333.

REESES EXPRESS THANKS The Godfrey Reese family, appealed for in Hotline in December after their home in Simpson burned, has asked Hotline to thank everyone who responded so onerously to their plight.

Among N.C. Leaders In Construcfion Permits

saying it was unrelated to the press conference.

Both the Soviet Union and the United States use a variety of satellites to ^y on each other.

The Soviet satellite was launched last Aug. 30 and uses the nuclear reactor to power its radar, which tracks American naval vessels, the Russians normally use the satellites for about six months before they are replaced.

Greenville ranked fourth among the states 44 cities of more than 10,000 peculation in the value of construction permits issued in September, according to state Labor Commissioner John Brooks.

The commissioner said Greenvilie issued $5,042,119 in permits for the month as it trailed only Raleigh ($22,823,060), Charlotte ($12,785,622) and Winston-Salem ($5,189,113) in the amount of building activity.

Permits issued in Greenville for the first nine months of 1982 amounted to $16,231,864, Brooks reported.

Pitt County authorized permits totaling $5,119,152 for the month, including $615,800 for 18 sin^e-family units, $131.100 for eight

multifamily units, $2,719,132 for 15 non-residential units, and $1,653,120 for 56 additions and alterations.

The spokesman said construction authorized in the 44 cities in September decreased 14.1 percent from September 1981, while value, at $91,769,695, dropped 3.4 percent from $105,989,459.

During the first three quarters, activity in the cities lagged 16.7 percent bdiind Ok same ptriod test year. Brooks said. Total units reported for the nine months, at 25,517, compared tii) 30,633 recorded in Ml.

He said that according to his dq;>artments researc)i and statistics division, permits for single-famiiy homes during the first nine

months dropped ll.l percent, from 5,051 to 4,491;

Compared to last Sq>-tember, the average con-structicm cost for a single-family home increased 14.7 percent, to $44,633 from $38,915, said Brooks. The figure was $39,787 in August.

Building values for September and for the first nine months in several eastern towns Included: Elizabeth City, $467,091, $4,830,150; Gotdaboro, $m,m, $8,634,886; Jacksonville, $3,966,362, $17,772,313; Kinston, $178,283, $3,136,365;

New Bern, $1,310,078, $8,971,849; Roanoke Rapids, $268,542, $2,123.465; Rocky Mount, $1,250,407, $9,101,532; Tarboro, $175,400, $12,504,258; and Wilson, $859,086, $9,049,843.

Carolina Tel Is Largest Taxpayer For Greenville

Carolinas Telephones 1982 city tax payment of $115,673.84 makes the company the largest taxpayer in Greenville, according to city Tax Collector FUoyd Uttle.

R.I. Flye, CTATs district commercial and marketing manager here, said the companys total tax payment within Pitt County, including ail city taxes, is $340,881.81.

County and municipal 1982 taxes paid by CT&T in its SOKKHinty (q[)erating area, serving some 580,000 customers, totaled nearly $8 million, he said.

Flye said Carolina Telephones total tax bill for the year, including all state and federal taxes, is expected to come to nearly $63.7 million. He said the figure does not include, more than $2.8 milion in 1 percent federal'

excise tax payments which were billed in 1982

According to Flye, Carolina telephcme has over $1 billion invested in its service area.

In recent years, our (xmstruction programs have been costing us about $100 million annually, Flye said. He said atxHit half of the total goes to maintain and replace existing equipment. The remaining dollars are being us] to modernize and upgrade our facilities. ' CT&T has applied for a general rate increase which would up its local service revenues by $37.7 million annually, Flye said that should "the state Utilities Commission approve the request, federal and state taxes would take a little more than half of the requested revenues.

SATELLITE IN TROUBLE This is an undated file photo of one of the Cosmos series satellites. The nuclear-powered Cosmos 1402 is

tumbling out of control, and according to the Defense Department, will likely blaze back to ea^ within weeks. (AP Laserpboto)

LARGEST PAYMENT ... R.I. Flye (right), district commercial and marketing manager here for Carolina Tel^hone, presents a tax check for $115,673.64 to Floyd Uttle,

city tax collector. Uttle said the check makes CT&T the largest taxpayer in Greenville. (Reflector Photo by Tommy Forrest)





2-Tbe Daily Reflector, GreenviUe, N.C.-Thursday, January 6, ISO

New Help For Phobics

By DEBORAH BAKER

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (UPI) - Jan Cochran was afraid to leave her iKHise.

She hung sheets over the windows and kqit the lights blazing at all hours.

At the age of 50 she was a virtual recluse.

It happened little by little," following a long illness which kept her confined, the Charleston nurse recalled. Shed think about walking out the front door, then put it off until another day.

Jan Cochran finally did leave - to get help. Today she lives normally.

Countless people have fears of everyday situations such as taking elevators, climbing stairs, and getting into water.

Assistance for people with phobias fears out (rf proportion to the circumstances - is available from private therapists and from public social service agencies.

There is some disagreement about causes, methods and treatment time, but mental health professionals seem to agree on one thing: there is help for phobics who want it.

The prognosis is good -but the person has to really want to be better," said David dayman, a Charleston medical psychologist in private practice. It takes time, commitment on the part of the person, and commitment on the part of a support system.

What worked for Ms. Cochran was a program using a technique sometimes called systematic desensitization - a step-by-step approach to confronting the feared situation and gradually overcoming the fear.

She sought help from the Womens Counseling Center of West Virginia, a small outfit operated by psychotherapist Lynn Hartz.

Its 16-week phobia program inciudes weekly, 90-minute group sessions with other phobics, an hour of individual therapy a week, and time with paraprofessionals. Those workers mi^t accompany phobics to airports, restaurants or to the local'swimming pool. They can visit

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agoraphobics, peop'p vdw are afraid to lea\o thr homes.

We dont offer cures," said Shawana Thompson, the program coordinator. We help people to be in oxitnd of their ph^ic situation."

Ms. Cochran, t1o also had qualms about driving, learned relaxation techniques that divert her when she feels anxKNis.

I struggle hard, said Ms. Cochran, who is training to be a paraprofessional at the center. Now I have very few panic attacks, but I do occasionally have them. Then its good to know I controlled them last week -and I can contrcd them again next week."

There are a muitiplicity of relaxation training techniques," said Gayman, including muscle relaxation, biofeedback and selfhypnosis.

His Process-Strategies Institute ran a fear-of-flying group for six weeks - and out of six people in the group, five have flown successfully. But they were not anxiety-free."

Therapists stress that their patients may have more than one phobia, or that their fears may be part of a phobic pattern that masks other kinds of anxieties. They may require other counseling.

They need a sense of mastery over the other areas of their lives, said dayman.

The Womens Counseling Center considers its program, designed by a Maryland doctor, a self-help method.

Theres a lot of practice and a lot of homework, Ms. Thomjpsonsaid.

Practice is considered key to successfully learning to cope with phobias. Without it, phobics can easily backslide and let their fears take over again.

For agoraphobics, their practice may be just walking out the front door each morning," Ms. Thompson said.

Randy Clifford of Shawnee Hills Community Mental Health Center says ah alternative to the slower, systematic desensitization method is hypnosis.

I think its a fantastic tool," said difford, who has not been trained in hypnosis but has seen it demonstrated.

It is based on a theory - a controversial one among therapists - that the phobia was caused by a single, traumatic incident. Phobics under hypnosis can go back to that incident, and the therapist can then inject some element of comfort so that recalling the incident is not accompanied by the same feelings of fear, difford said.

Glaucoma is the leadmg-cause of irreversible blindness in the United States, but can be prevented through screening and early detection. It can also be effectively treated with medication and apprq>riate medical supervision.

t) Western Wear

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Births 1

More, More Buttons

BUTTON BOUNCE Liz Holmes, left, and Karen Prestim wearing black and white berets adorned with buttons from the Graham Smith millinery collection for Kangol have tyring and summer in mind. Laseiirfioto)

Lang

Bom to Mr, and Mrs, Dennis Ray Lan^ Farmville, a daughter, Jessica, on Dec.

27, 1962, in Pitt Memorial H(^ital.

Cobb

Bom to Mr. and Mrs. Alloi King Cobb, Walstonburg, a son, Patrick Alli, on Dec.

28, 1982, in Pitt MemoAal Hostal. Mrs. Cobb is the former Linda Tyson of Farmville.

Williams Bom to Mr. and Mrs. WUliam Michael Williams, Ayden, a daughter, Danesha Lynette, m Dec. 28, 1982, in Pitt Memorial Ho^ital.

Phillips Bom to Mr. and Mrs. Michael Craig Phillips, Route 8, Greenville, a son, Michael Craig Jr., on Dec. 28, 1982, in Pitt Memorial Hayital.

Shirley Bom to Mr. and Mrs. Ronnie Martin Shirley, Grifton, a dau^ter, Robin Elaine, (Hi Dec. 29, 1982, in Pitt Memorial Ho^ital.

ByCECILYBROWNSTONE AP Food Editor If, stowed away in your refrigerator or freezer, theres a little ham and some tuikey leftover from holiday meals, you can use these to advantage for a small company su{yer that is easy to pr^are.

NCHCAMeet

Announced

GREENSBORO - The N.C. Hairdressers and Cosmetologists Association meeting will be held here Feb. 5-7 at the Holiday Inn Four Season Convention Center here.

Judy and Joel McKinney of Shelby will be special guests.

Restration will start at 1 p.m. Saturday and contests will start at 6:30. Sunday and Monday registration starts at 9 a.m. and the exhibit hall opens.

The convention wUl include guest artists, the OHDC, private classes, dance and entertainment.

Slice and garnish the turkey' and with it serve a creamy ham and grape mold |dus crescent-rolls. Preface this main course with hot split pea soup (made with the bone from baked ham) and top the soiq) with croutons.

For dessert you can heat leftover fruit cake and serve it with an eggnog sauce. Or, lacking fruitcake, dessert could be leftover holiday or other cookies plus coffee.

HAM GRAPE MOLD Vi cty green grapes, with seeds or s^ess 1 envelope unflavored gelatin Yk cups clear fat-free homemade or canned chicken broth ^4 cup mayonnaise 1 tablespoon Dijon mustard 1 tablespoon lemon juice 1 cup diced (V4-inch) cooked ham cup diced (V4-inch) celery 1 small scallkm, minced

Rinse and dry grapes. Halve and, if necessary, remove seeds. If halves are large, halve again.

In a medium bowi sprinkle gelatin over \ cup of the chicken broth and let soften.

Heat remaining 1 cup broth to boiling; pour over gelatin mixture and stir to dissolve.

Whisk in mayonnaise, mustard and lemon juice untU blended. Stir in grapes, ham.'^celery and scallion. Turn into a 1-quart mold.

At serving time, unmold. Garnish, if desired with extra green grapes.

Makes 6 servings.

is proud to announce the association of

Katrina Redden

(Fonnerly (rf Hair Pfaczazx)

as manager of the

Isis Heaith & Beauty Hair Salon

She invites all her clients to come^in and visit the new salon and for a free consultation.

Katrina Spactahtcs In:

IWcCiittlng PWw. Waving Nanlcvna Frosttng Fadab

ScnbtmdNaila HakRaMval Hatrm^Ughriag Hdr Groarth TnatnMnto OnidMonliv TnatHMnto HakStfllniaDsdin

</4ic1nr Srctvt for

t/Modcrn ^ocWe*

Bridal

Policy

A Mack and white ^ossy flve by seven photograph is re<]uested for engagemrat announcements. For publlcatkm in a Sunday edition, the information must be submitted by 12 ncxm on the preceding Wednesday. Engagement pictures must be released at least three weeks prior to the wedding date. After three weeks, only an announcement will be printed^_

Wedding write-ups will be printed through the first week with a five by seven picture. During the second week with a wallet si% picture and write-up giving less description and after the second week, just as an announcement. Wedding forms and pictures should be returned to The Daily Reflector one week prior to the date of the wedding. All information should be typed or written neatly.

Furgurscm Bom to Mr. and Mrs. T-    L    r^* Em^ Whitmal Furgurson

Keports Given ni, stokes, a son, James

A i 1 - j Patrick, on Dec. 29,1982, in

At Club Meet PittMemorialHospltal.

A report oh the family aided at Christmas was given by Laurie diariton at the meeting of the Cherry Oaks Home and Garden dub.

The family received gifts, toys for the children, clotiies, food and furniture.

A report on clearing and cleaning lots was given. The February meeting will be a covered^ish siq)per followed by a sock hop. It will be held Feb. 19 at 7:30 p.m. at the club house. Husbands of members will be guests.

A program on color analysis was given by Patsy Garzik. She was introduced byMaryScudder.

Candy Gunn and Mary Jo Nason were meeting h(t-esses.

Owens

Bom to Mr. and Mrs. Timothy Sadley Owens, 1900 S. Charles Blvd. No. 39-D, a son, Nathan Thomas, on Dec^ 29, 1982, in Pitt Memori^ Hospital.

Stephenson Jr., on Dec. 30, 1982, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.

Lowcho*

Bom to Mr. and Mrs. Matthew Ford Lowcher, 801 E. Fourth St., a daughter, Ashley Nicole, on Dec. 30, 1982, in Pitt MenRHlal Ikispi-tal.

Tett^loo Bom to Mr. and Mrs. Hilton Louis Tetterton Jr., Atlantic Beach, a son, Joshua Hilton, on Dec. 30, 1982, in Carteret Gowral Hospital, Morehead dty. Mrs. Tetterton is the former Jo Lynn Switzer of Pactolus.

Singers Roberta Flack and Art Garfunkel were both school teachers.    i

JANUARY

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Bom to Mr. and Mrs. Richard St^henson Cooper, Windsor, a son, Richard

CaroIlM Eaat Centre (Beside PUtt Theatre)

Eastern

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Group of Mens Dress Pants .    25%    Off

Group of Mens Suits & Sport Coats. 30% Off Group of Mens Dobb Hats ..    30%    Off

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Thursday, Jan. 6, Thru Wednesday, Jan. 12

Downtown Greenville Shop Daily 10 to 5:30

Carolina East Mall Shop Daily 10 to 9





Candlelight Ceremony Performed On Friday

Couples Are Considered One

By Abigail Van Buren

* 1983 by nivtrMM Prest Syrxjicale

DEAR ABBY: Over the years youve had prayers in your column from children, parents, mothers-in-law, secretaries, etc., so I thought you might find this prayer also worth sharing with your readers. I dont know who wrote it. Maybe one of your readers will.

ELUE IN ILLINOIS

DEAR ELLIE: It is:

. ' CALORIE COUNTERS PRAYER The Lord is my shepherd I shall not want.

He maketh me lie down and do push-ups.

Hp giveth me Hollywood bread.

He restoreth my waistline.

He leadeth me past the refrigerator for mine own sake.

He maketh me to partake of the green beans instead of the potatoes.

He leadeth me past the pizzeria.

Yea, though I walk through the bakery,

I shall not falter, for thou art with me;

Thy Tab and Fresca, they comfort me.

thou preparest a diet for me in the presence of mine

enemies.

Thou anointest my lettuce with low-cal oil.

My cup will not overflow.

Surely Ry Krisp and D-Zerta shall follow me all the days of my life,

^nd I will live with pains of hunger forever. AMEN

DEAR ABBY: Several of us are going in on a gift. There are six of us altogether two married couples and two singles. The married couples think the cost of the gift should be divided four ways. The singles think it should be divided six ways. Which is the fairest way?

ONE OF THE SIX

DEAR ONE: Married couples are usually considered one, so in my opinion, the cost should be divided four ways.

If this isn't agreeable to all concerned, perhaps the single ones should go together on a gift, and the married couples go together on another.

Getting married? Whether you want a formal church wedding or a simple, do-your-own-thing ceremony, get Abbys new booklet. Send $1 plus a long, self-addressed, stamped (37 cents) envelope to: Abbys Wedding Booklet, P.O. Box 38923, Hollywood, Calif. 90038.

RALEIGH - In a candleli^t ceremony Friday aftenxxHi at five oclock, Linda Jaccjueline Newsome became the bride of Louis Edward Alexand* Jr. The Rv. John White performed ' the cern(my in Saint James

United Methodist Church here.

Parents of the coi^le are Mrs. WUliam Ralph Goins Sr. of Route 1, Fountain, and the late F.R. Newsome, and Mr. and Mrs. Louis Edward Alexander Sr. of Gamer.

MRS. LOUIS EDWARD ALEXANDER SR.

Thomas Alva Edison first demonstrated the incades-cent electric lamp Dec. 31, 1879, when he was 32 years old. It was one of the 1,000 inventions - ranging from the megaphone to the teleprinter - which he patented before his death in 1931. Edison also invented the phonograph and experimented with talking and silent movies.

TTie bride was given in marriage by her brother, Robert Lee Newsome of Winston-Salem. Her honor attoKlant was her sista*, Phyllis Whitley of GreoiviUe. Bridesmaids included Eyssel Gurganus of Wake Forest and Beverly Cashwell of Raleigh.

The father of the bridegroom served as best man ^and ushers included James Blackwell and Douglas Newsome, brother of the bride, both of Ralei^.

A |MX)gram of wedding music was rendered by Gaynelle Glass, organist, and Billie Jo Ckrckman, both of Raleigh .

The bride wore a white qiana gown styled with a (Jueen Anne neckline reembroidered with alencon lace and seed pearls, empire waistline, long slim sleeves with lace appliques with covered buttons. The skirt was A-line and extended into a watteau chapel train. The back of the gown featured a sheer yoke with appliques. She wore a brimmed hat with matching lace appliques and pearls with a veil. A tulle bow accented the back. She carried a silk cascade bouquet of white phalaenopsis orchids, stephanotis, lavender sweetheart roses laced in stardust gypsophila, fern and variegated spider plant.

The honor attendant was dressed in a lavender qiana floor length gown styled with an empire waist,, scoop neckline, spaghetti straps, accordian pleated skirt with a matching cocoon lacket.

She carried a silk arm bouquet of white ph^amopsis orchids, stqdianotis, lavender sweetheart roses accented with stardust gypsophila, lavemter lilies, fem and variegated ^ider plant tied with white picot ribbon. Ste wore a cluster of lavender sweetheart roses in her hair.

ll^e dresses of the bridesmaids were styled idoitical to that of the honor attendant in huckleberry. Dieir bouquets were identical and were tied with lavender picot ribbon. They wore clusters of lavender sweetheart roses in their hair.

The mother of the bride wore a floor length ^wn of mint green with a sheer overlay. The mother of the bridegroom selected a floor length gown styled with an empire waistline. Both wore

The Dtlly Reflector, Greenville, white phalaenopsis orchid corsages.

A champagne reception was held at 2001 VIP.

The couple will live in Raleigh after a wedding trip to unannounced points.

The bride attended Farmville High School and Pitt Technical Institute. She works at Something For The Head Haircutters in Raleigh

N.C.-TtHuiday. January 6, lMB-3 Assistmg hosts and hostess were Thad ^Thornton, Mr. and Mrs. Ray St^henson.

Nearly a fifth of the worlds gem diamonds come from a single region of Namibia. The area is called the Sperrgebiet, and machines recovered 1.56 million carats there in 1980.

The bridegroom attended Gamer Senior Hi^i School and is now a conductor on the Seaboard Systems Railroad, A rehearsal dinner was held Thursday evening at the home of Percy Rwmton.

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Enrollment Limited Call 756-9209 By January 14

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4The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Thursday, January S, 1983

Hospital Is Growing

EHY GOOD DEAL AT THAT!

It seems like only yesterday:

When the dream of a new Pitt County Memorial Hospital was being realized, and people gaped at the vast structure, there was talk even then that theyll always be building there.

And that was the way it turned out to be.

No sooner was one addition or improvement attained than another was on the drawing boards. The next big step apparently will be moving up to a 900-bed facility.

That does seem like an awful lot of hospital for a small city and a relatively lightly populated county; but actually, Pitt Memorial is not a local hospital. It serves the ill and injured from any number of nearby counties and the radius of its influence spreads further outward every year.

Size is not the criteria. Growth is attributable to the growing wealth of know-how, equipment and talents gathered into one small comer of eastern North Carolina. Physical gro^h goes hand in hand with the demand for services offered as a manifestation of the magnet effect in the healing arts.

When you think about it, the new phases of the expansion program (in three to five years) is awfully close to hand. And then?

The early planners were a far-seeing panel when they acquired a large site with potential additional space available for expansion. The regional hospital is going to need a lot of land, and it might be best if its acquired before the march of events catches up.

We keep remembering, they dont make it (land) any more.

Spiro Agnew Pays Maryland

It is alomst difficult to recall when Spiro T. Agnew was vice president of the United States, let alone governor of Maryland.

Today, however, the state of Maryland is $268,482 better off because its former governor has repaid that amount of alleged kickback funds, plus interest. Agnew was not convicted of accepting kickbacks and maintained his

THIS AFTERNOON

innocence even as he paid the money. A civil court, however, ruled that. he was liable for the money.

The repayment is justice of a sort for the state of Maryland. For the nation, perhaps, it puts in the past the sorry spectacle of seeing a vice president of the United States resign under a cloud. May it never happen again.

Many New Faces

By PAUL OCONNOR

RALEIGH - This year, as every year, therell be plenty of new faces for the legislative session that opens Wednesday. Therell be 29 freshmen legislators, a host of new secretaries and staff members and even a few new lobbyists. But of all the players in the legislative process, no group has suffered greater turnover in the past two years than has the legislative press corps.

Of the 23 full-time unofficial members of the unincorporated group that covered the 1981 session, only 11 return for the 1983 session. Of the other half-dozen reporters who regularly covered the big stories, only three are still in towm. The Associated Press, the Greensboro papers, the Charlotte papers, the Durham Morning Herald and the Winston-Salem Journal have all changed their No, 1 legislative reporters.

The turnover is high even for a business notorious for its job jumping. But what does the turnover mean to the readers who rely on these two dozen reporters for most of their legislative news?

Of course the turnover has an effect on the coverage, says Jay Jenkins, a retired 30-year newspaper veteran who spent 21 years covering the statehouse -most of those years for the Charlotte Observer, You can cover fires, or robberies without background. But with politics, its especially important to know what happened before ... Im not saying we were smarter than you guys, just that we had more experience.

Gary Pearce, press aide to Gov. Jim Hunt, has quipped on many occasions that the press turnover makes his job easier they dont catch Hunts changes of direction.

In the old days North Carolina, like most states, had a corps of crusty old reporters whod been in the Capitol as long as the spittoons.

Ob-

the

PAUL T. OCONNOR

People like Jenkins, APs Noel Yancey, Lynn Nesbitt who wrote this column, Arthur Johnsey of Greensboro, Roy Parker of Fayetteville and others. They knew what previous governors had proposed. They knew how previous assemblies had acted.

Today, only Dick Hatch of UNC-TV has tenure going back before the 1970s - and this year Hatch will be doing less reporting than in previous years. Next in longevity are Dan Hoover of the Raleigh News & Observer, who first covered a session in 1973, and Gene Wang of UPI, whose first session was 1974

with the Fayetteville server.

Russell Qay covered statehouse for 13 year for the Durham Morning Herald and the N&O and now serves as an aide to House Speaker Liston Ramsey. Legislative coverage has slipped in quality, he says. First reason is turnover. Background is essential, he says. Also, the Legislature has spread out and become more difficult to watch. The Capital was much smaller than the Legislative Building and its new annex. And at ni^t, legislators did their dealing at the Sir Walter Raleigh Hotel where reporters would hang out. Reporters came away with stories full of inside stuff. Now legislators stay in apartments and hotels around town and reporters rarely get the real background, Clapays.

Theres a positive side to the turnover. Some legislative reporters have returned to their hoine newsrooms and brought an understanding of state government with them. The

(Please turn to Page 5)

THE WHITE HOUSE

Words Soon Forgotten

By JAMES GERSTENZANG

Associated Press Writer

WASHINGTON (AP) - It will be, as always, a grand occasion of state. The House galleries full to capacity, the leaders of American government assembled, the floodlights blazing down.

And at the rostrum, the president of the United States, delivering his appraisal of the State of the Union.

President Reagan will appear before a joint session of Congress, and a national radio and television audience, on Jan. 25 to give his assessment and to describe his goals for the year ahead.

Despite the pomp, circumstance and ceremony that surrounds the annual presidential address to Congress, few of the speeches delivered there are truly memorable, and most are soon eclipsed by the press of daily business, and the political infighting that surrounds any presidents program.

Besides, the State of the Union doesnt stand still, and the programs proposed in January often are shelved by July. Reagans new federalism plan to turn federal programs back to the states, the centerpiece of his last State of the Union address, remains on the agenda, but nowhere near enactment.

The speech tradition goes

The Daily Reflector

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Other Editors Say Education Funds

(Transylvania Times)

Usually we dont write editorials simply filled with statistics, but we thought you might find it interesting to know where North Carolina ranks in terms of expenditures for education.

As you read the information, please note how much we spend per pupil and how our average annual salary for teachers compares with other states.

The federal government supplies 12.6 percent of North Carolinas education funding, ranking the state 11th among .the states and the District of Columbia. State funding accounts for 64 percent of North Carolinas money for education,-placing the state 9th in the ratings. An additional 23.5 percent of N.C. education funds comes from local and other sources, placing the state 43rd among the states.

When looking at total expenditures for public eiementary and secondary education. North Carolina has the 10th largest school system in the country. Spending much more than other states were California $11.2 billion and New York - $9.3 billion. 'The smallest expenditure for public elementary-and secondary education were allotted by Vermont, North Dakota, Delaware and South Dakota - states with smaller public school enrollments.

North Carolina ranked 38th in annual per pupil expenditures based on average daily membership. Expenditures calculated on average daily attendance were slightly higher. North Carolinas per pupil expenditure was $1,869. The highest expenditures were Aladia ($4,669), the District of Columbia, (,202) and New York ($3,023). The lowest were Alabama ($1,331), Kentucky ($1,457), Mississippi ($1,464) and Arkansas ($1,490).

According to NCES, the average annual salary for teachers in North Carolina in 1980-81 was $15,858. Twenty-seven states and the District of Columbia had higher averages. Alaska paid the highest average salary of $29,000 and six states plus the District of Columbia paid an average of $20,000) -Hawaii, Michigan, New York, Washington, Wisconsin and Wyoming. Teachers receiving the low^ average salaries were from Mississippi ($13,000) followed by Arkansas, Vermont, New Hampdre, South Dakota and Maine.

Spending, of course, is not the whole answer; but there is a corrdation between the rate of q|)ending and the quality of education.

Getting the most for our mimey is important, and the Leg^ature and county governments are going to be looking harder than ever at how that immey is used.

back to George Washington and the year 1790. Reagan who calH attention to that last Jan. 26 when he gave his own first State of the Union address, and stressed the accuracy of his report.

He quoted from Washingtons reminder that the preservation of liberty is in the hands of the American people. Then the president added:

For our friends in the press, who place a high premium on accuracy, let me say : I did not actually hear George Washington say that. But it is a matter of historic record.

But much of what he said that ni^t didnt happen as he envisioned it.

Some did, as when Reagan said the economy will face difficult moments in the months ahead. Then he added:

The program for economic recovery that is in place will pull the economy out of its slump and put us on the road to prospertiy and stable growth by the latter half of this year.

It didnt,

To no ones surprise a year ago, Reagan said that the nations problems are the inheritance of decades of tax and tax and spend and spend. No one will be surprised to hear him say it again this month.

Nor was there any surprise in the presidents 1982 declaration of opposition to tax increases, or in his promise to decrease the federal deficit.

The doubters would have us turn back the clock with

tax increases that would offset the personal tax rate reductions already passed by this Congress. Raise present taxes to cut future deficits, they tell us. Well, I dont believe we should buy that argument,he said.

Raising taxes will slow economic growth, reduce production, and destroy future jobs, making it more difficult for those witout jobs to find them and more likely that those who now have jobs could lose them. So, I will not ask you to try to balance the budget on the backs of the American taxpayers, he said. And he followed it with this promise:

I will seek no tax increases this year, and I have no intention of retreating from our basic program of tax relief.... I will stand by my word.

He a^eed, reluctantly, to a $98 billion, three-year tax increase in August, and endorsed another increase, in the federal gasoline tax, late in the year.

The policies we have in place will reduce the deficit steadily, surely, and in time, completely, the president said.

That was before he sub-(PleasetumtoPage5)

Quote

The people are the only reliance for the preservation of our liberty." Thomas Jefferson

sure

Texas Edge Is Monda le's

By ROWLAND EVANS

and ROBERT NOVAK

AUSTIN, Texas - In the wake of the broadest liberal election sweep in Texas history, liberal stalwart Walter Mndale is close to putting an early lock on this conservative states big delegation to the 1984 Democratic national convention.

Sen. Edward M. Kennedys dropout enabled Mndale to comer liberal-labor activists who dominate precincts vital to delegate selection here. But the former vice president also has made remarkable gains among centrist-to-conservative Democrats. The result is a universally-recognized lead in Texas over Sen. John Glenn that some politicians call overwhelming.

That is bad news for Glenn, whose presidential strategy conjures a sweep of Southern, western and Border states where Democratic leaders presumably consider Mndale a sure loser against Ronald Reagan. Such feeling in Texas has been softened by Mondales quiet years of missionary work here and reduced by the states 1982 Republican election fiasco. Still, even some of Mondales newfound friends privately question his general election prospects, in Texas and nationally, if there is significant economic recovery.

Their drift to Mndale is partly a commentary on Glenn. My gut feeling would be for Glenn, a Mon-daleleaning conservative told us, but he has done no organizing in Texas, and I can see no signs he plans to do any. An example: Mndale was on the telephone to Texas on election night congratulating election winners; Glenn was not.

Glenns sole tangible asset here is Lt. Gk)v. WUliam Hobby, a moderate conservative who is one of the most powerful figures in state government but usually avoids party affairs. He sponsored a postelection Glenn fundraiser in Houston and can open doors to state legislators, The Lobby in Austin and big Texas

money. But against Glenns Hobby, Mndale has a dozen movers and shakers.

State AFL-CIO president Harry HuU)ard, MriM tdd Kennedy to his face in Houston this sununer that he could not ,carry Texas, sees labor unified for Mndale. Former senator Rali^ Yar-boivgh, more prestigious today than before his defeat in 1970, is aggressively pro-Mondale. Soim also may be State Controller Bob Bullock, a rough-and-tumble political operator.

Active siqiport from State Railroad Commissioner Buddy Temple, unsuccessful candidate for governor, gives Mndale a ready-made statewide organization and entree to big money (Temples father, tycoon Arthur Temple Sr., is vice chairman of Time, Inc.). Former state Democratic chairman Calvin Guest is a Mondaleite linked to Gov.-elect Mark White, raising speculation that White eventually will climb aboard.

Whites intimates insist he will stay neutral, unless some serious presidential candidate poses a ^ial threat to Texas - a shrouded warning that is Mondales only cloud here. That threat, they suggest, could be a 1984 version of Adiai Stevensons 1952 Tidelands oil stance that co^ him the state. Centrist White was furious over President Jimmy Carters windfall profits tax on oil and would not be happy about Mndale support for such a levy on natural gas.

Texas conservatives inclined to Mndale, consequently, are anxious to tidy up his energy posture. State Railroad Commissioner Mack Wallace, an energy conservative who likes Mndale, plans to discuss natural gas with him. There is speculation about a compromise energy position leading to Mndale choosing a Texan for vice president: probably Sen. Lloyd Bentsen (considered pro-Mondale), but possibly White.

Even without such Texas trimmings, however, the only (Please turn to Page 5)

Strength For Today

NO NEED FOR LASH

A farmer once gave his son a colt the day the animal was bom and made the boy, responsible for its care. The boy trained the growing colt so carefully that it never needed to be broken to saddle and harness.

The farmer had another colt which was allowed to run wild for several years. In this case the process of breaking for saddle and harness had to take place, and it was painful both for the colt and those who broke him.

This illustrates the dif

ference between those people who have had Christian nurture from their earliest years and those who, being allowed to run wild, are at last converted. Some of the latter are young people whose parents have the very false notion that it is good for young people to sow their wild oats while they are young and get the evil out of their systems.

Happy and fortunate are those who from the beginning have been taught to walk in the pathway of light. -Elisha Douglass

Big Recall Is Facing 'X' Cars

By H. JOSEF HEBERT Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON (AP) -The government, convinced that repairs 18 months ago to thousands of General Motors cars failed to correct brake defects, is about to order a recall of 220,000 of the 1980 automobiles, according to government sources.

The investigation by the Transportation Department is focusing on all 1980 model X-Body cars with manual transmissions, including the Chevrolet Citation, Pontiac Phoenix, Oldsmobile Omega, and Buick Skylark.

The mid-sized, front-wheel drive cars were introduced with great fanfare in April 1979. But in August 1981, General Motors recalled 47,000 of them because of complaints that the rear brakes were locking prematurely, causing the cars to go into a dangerous spin.

Investigators of the National Hi^iway Traffic Safety Administration have concluded that the GM recall in 1981 focused on the wrong problem and was not broad enough, said the sources, who asked not to be identified.

We havent made an initial finding of (a) defect.

(But) were' poised ready to, said one source. Another said a recall is expected very soon. It could be by the end of the month.

The federal highway safety agency said only that the investigation is continuing.

The case is still open. We are still pressing the case and if the 1981 fix had solved all the problems we would have been able to close this case much sooner, said Raymond A. Peck, the agencys administrator.

The agency said it has received 203 complaints about brakes locking prematurely in 1980 X-Body cars. At least two suits have been filed against General Motors as a result of the braking problems, including one by a family of a New York man killed when his car struck a tree.

General Motors manufactured more than 1.1 million 19) model X-Body cars in 1979 and 1980 with about one-fifth - 220,000 - of them equipped with manual transmissions.

Investigators believe the problem is confined to the cars with manual transmissions, although some complaints were received by owners of cars

with automatic transmissions as well, one source said.

In announcing the 1981 recall. General Motors said the brake problem was caused by a valve that regulates brake fluid pressure. The company at the time said the problem was confined to 47,000 of the vehicles that were built prior to July 1979.

At same the time, however, NHTSA investigators already were of the opinion that the problem was in the thickness of the rear brake lining in cars equipped with manual transmissions and not in the valves. One source said the agency was 99 percent sure in the summer of 1981 that the brake lining was the culprit.

It is unclear wdiy the government did not push immediately for a recall to correct the brake lining problem since the GM correction was focusing on the valve. One agency source argued that the GM rcall in 1981 provided adequate warning to owners of the cars that there existed a brake problem which needed to be corrected.

Nevertheless, NHTSA kept the case opal. Last month

the agency informed General Motors it was expanding its investigation to include 1981 through 1983 model X-Body cars as well, although one source said there is no evidence yet that the problem involves cars other than the

1980 model.

Harold Jackson, a General Motors spokesman confirmed that the company is continuing to work with the government on the brake issue, but said, We know nothing about any additimal recalls.

Robert Stemple, a GM vice president, defended GMs

1981 actions. Based on the data we have today and the facts we have we think weve done exactly what has been necessary, he said.

In the meantime, both the government and General Motors has come under criticism for not moving fast enou^ to fix the brake liniiigs and for including more cars in the initial recall.

Claroice Ditlow, director of the Center for Auto Safety, a consumer group, suggested that economics might have been a factor, noting that it is much che2q>ei to fix the valves than replace the rear brake linings.





In The Area Salute Helms'

Tax Struggle

1982 Peanut Sales Figures Needed

'W.F. Tyson, chairman of Uie Pitt County Agricultural Stabilizatkm and Conservation Committee, says peanut growers should complete their marketing for the 1982 peanut crop. ASC county offices need the marketing data before they can notify farmers of 1983 quotas, be said.

Peanut buyers should submit insj^tion certificates and sales memoranda to ASC county offices as soon as possibl, Tyson said, because any delay will slow reconciliation of 1982 marketing by the Pitt Comtty ASCS office. The 1983 quota notices will be mailed to farmers after last years sales review is cfHnpleted.

Teen-Ager Arrested In Break-In

K

Greenville police arrested Carious Douglas Elliott, 18, of Pinetops on breaking, entering and larceny and auto larceny charges Wednesday in connection with a break-in at the Short Stop on Greenville Boulevard and the theft of a car from Eastbrook Apartments on Dec. 17.

Chief Glenn Cannon said Elliott allegedly broke the glass from a door at the Short Stop, then took $2 in change and a bottle of sherry, valued at $10.

Cannon said Elliott also allegedly took a car later found abandoned near Pinetqps - and a $260 pistol from the vehicle, which has also been recovered.

Elliott was placed under a $6,000 bond pending a hearing of thecase.

Driver Charged In Collision

Clyde Luther Jirtinson of lllA Cherry Court was charged with failing to see his intended movement could be made in safety following investigation of a 1:40 a.m. traffic collision today at the intersection of Greenville Boulevard and 10th Street.

Officers said the Johnson car collided with a vehicle driven by Hubert Wayne Lewis of Greenville, causing an estimated $3,000 damage to the Johnson car and $5,000 damage to the Lewis vehicle.

AARP To View Film On Africa

Greenville Chapter 2016 of the American Association of Retired Persons will hold its January meeting Monday at the Memorial Baptist Church, 1510 Greenville Blvd., at 2:30 p.m. Directors will meet at 2 p.m.

The program will feature a film on a trip to Africa presented by Richard Jennings of Bell Arthur. AARP meetings are open to anyone 55 years of age or older.

Belvoir Accreditation Continued

ATLANTA - The Southern Association of Colleges and Schools has awarded continuing accreditation to Belvoir Elementary School by action taken during the associations 87th annual meeting recently. The Southern Association is one of six regional accrediting bodies in the United States.

Everett Named To Board

The executive conunittee of the Pitt County Republican Party has endorsed Sen. Jesse Heims' attempts last month to defeat a bill which increases the federal tax on gasoline, county GOP Chairman Henry Smith of Fountain said in a news release distributed today.

Smiths release made no mention of Sen. John East of Greenville, who joined Helms in leading the (^position to the gas tax. Neither Smith nor other members of the GOP Executive Committee could be reached today.

Smith said the executive* committee, in a meeting earlier this week, endorsed and saluted Senator Helms efforts to defeat the additional tax on gasoline, which

was ultimately ai^iroved.

Smith al) sd the GOP committee agreed to siq;^rt the efforts of Texas Rqp. Philip Gramm, a Democrat who resigned ttom Ccxi^^ss Wednesday to run in a special election as a Republican.

In that effort, the Pitt County GOP will make an undisclosed financial con-tributkm to Gramm i^ion his announcement of sec^g a seat in Congress on the R^ublican ticket, Smith said.

Gramm resigned after House Democratic leaders ousted him from his seat or the House Budget Committee because of his si4>port for President Rcmald Reagans economic programs.

Awaiting Report...

(Continued from Pagel)

The General Assembly based its 1982-83 budget on revenue increases of 8.9 percent. For the first half of the fiscal year, revenues have grown by about 5 percent.

Gov. Jim Hunt has ordered other state d^artments to return 6 percent of their spending money to help balance the budget. He asked the schools for less because he did not want them to lay off teachers or cut salaries. The schools already have been trying to voluntarily cut back expenses.

At the recommendation of state Superintendent Craig Phillips, the board Wednesday ordered the controller to set aside enough money each month to pay salaries before sending money out to local boards. About 92 percent of the schools budget goes for salaries and tenefits for teachers and other staffers.

The board voted to give local officials flexibility to use the available money as best they could and promised to review the situation monthly. __

In addition, the board barred local school systems from obligating any money for programs that have not already been approved by state officials and said the contnrilers office of the state Department of Public Instruction and Phillips office will study carefully requests for funding.

Funds to local schools essentially will remain at the same level as the last three months of 1982, when spending totaled 98 percent of the amount budgeted, according to Deputy State Budget Officer Marvin K. Dorman.

For the October, November and December quarter, they paid the payrolls, moved the buses and paid the utility bills and only spent 98 percent, he said.

Dorman, who met with the board to discuss the cutback, said budget officials hope savings from the 2 percent reduction in school spending, combined with the 6 percent ordered for other state agencies, will be enough to comply with a state constitutional requirement for a balanced bud^t.

RALEIGH - Clifton W. Everett Jr. of Greenville and Dr.

Earl E. Thorpe of Durham have been named to the North Carolina Historical Commission. They will serve until March 31,1987.

Everett is a partner in the law firm of Everett and Cheatham. He is a member of the Greenville Elks Lodge and a past president of the Pitt County Bar Association.

Clyde M. Norton of Old Fort was reappointed to the 11-member commission, uliich assists the secretary of cultural resources in purchasing and preserving items of ^ historical interest.

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O'Connor Col....

(CoDtinuedFrom Page 4) ^ts they leave open are filled by aggressive young reporters who have fresh ways of approaching stories.

'The days of a veteran Raleigh press corps are probably gone for good. Clay says covering the assembly was once the summa cum laude of North Carolina journalism. Now its mostly a two- or four-year stint that fattens reporters resumes and improves their chances of becoming an editor, a Washington correspondent or staff writer for a larger paper.

Gerstenzang...

(Continued from page 4)

mitted a budget that led to the nations greatest deficit. The administration now acknowledges that deficits are likely to approach $200 billion in the years Immediately ahead.

Last year, matching a campaign promise, Reagan said he would be doing away with two Cabinet agencies.

The budget plan I submit to you on Feb. 8 will realize major savings by dismantling the Departments of Energy and Education, he said.

Theyre still in business.

Evans-Novak...

(C(NitiDuedfrompage4)

way to trip Mndale here may be to stop him in early primary states. In Texas, a liberal tide and Mondales superior campaign have given the liberal standard-bearer a surprising eaily edge in a nxmservative state whose electoral votes always have been essential to elect a Democratic president.

Copyright 1982 Field Enterprises, Inc.

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Expect Confirming Of Transportation Secretary

By H JOSEF HEBERT Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON (AP) -Elizabeth Dole, President Reagans choice as his new transportation secretary, is expected to breeze through

Senate confirmation and become the administrations first woman to head a Cabinet department.

Reagan announced Wednesday night he' will nominate Mrs. Dole, a presi

dential assistant, to related Drew Lewis, who leaves the administration next month to head a major cable television company.

Welcome to the Cabinet, the president said as Mrs.

PRESIDENT WITH MRS. DOLE President Reagan announces Wednesday night that Mrs. Elizabeth Dole, left, will be

nominated to succeed Transportation Secretary Drew Lewis. (AP Laserphoto)

N.C. Education Board Approves Budget Cuts

RALEIGH, .C. (AP)-In an effort to help the state balance its budget, the state Board of Education has agreed to cut 2 percent of its $1.5 billion in funding for public schools for the rest of this fiscal year.

The boards action Wednesday followed a request by John A. Williams, state budget director. In a memo, Williams said 2 percent of the schools money is needed to balance the state budget by June 30, the end of the fiscal year.

Budget problems arose when tax revenues failed to rise as quickly as the Legislature had predicted.

The General Assembly

based its 1982-83 budget on revenue increases of 8.9 percent. For the first half of the fiscal year, revenues' have grown by about 5 percent.

Gov. Jim Hunt has ordered other state departments to return 6 percent of their spending money to help balance the budget. He asked the schools for less because he did not want them to lay off teachers or cut salaries. The schools already have been trying to voluntarily cut back expenses.

State school Superintendent Craig Phillips commended local school boards for spending only 98

percent of the money theyve received.

At Phillips recommendation, the board ordered the controller to set aside enough money each month to pay salaries before sending the money out to local boards. About 92 percent of the schools budget goes for salaries and benefits for teachers and other staffers.

The board voted to give local officials flexibility to use the available money as best they could and promised to review the situation monthly.

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Dole acccunpanied him at a nationally televised news conference. ^ later issued a statement saying she was de^ly honored and will accept the assipment with enthusiasm.

Mrs. Dole will become the first woman transportation secretary. She will bead the ^vemments sixth largest department with 75,000 employees. Its agencies range from the Federal Aviati(m Administration to

Hoped Avoid Poison Pome

BOONE, N.C. (AP) - A Watauga County school official says the reason he waited six days before reporting to autlMxities that rat poison had been found in rice at an elementary school kitchen was that he feared the public might panic.

Watauga County schools superintendent Lester Propst said Wednesday that he waited until Dec. 22 to report the incident to the sheriffs department because he felt it no longr posed any danger and because of the possibility that some people could panic ifthey heard the report.

There was never intent to withhold information, Said Propst. Assumptions can be dangerous.

Cafeteria workers found a clump of Talon in an open bag of rice in a storage room in the kitchen of Bethel Elementary School before the rice was prepared or served.

At a news conference Dec. 31, District Attorney Tom Rusher and Sheriff Red Lyons said an investigation began Dec. 22, when they said the incident was reported.

We were aware of that error (about the date of the discovery), but the public release was made by the sheriffs department, Propst said.

The school board was notified of the incident before the sheriffs department, he said.

It is my understanding that they found it on ... the 16th, Lyons said Tuesday. It would have given us a little bit more time if officials had reported it Dec. 16, he said.

Lyons said he still could not say whether the Incident was an accident or a criminal act.

Local health department officials visited the school Monday, three days after Carl 'Tuttle, director of the county health d^artment, found out about the incident on the radio.

Tuttle s^ftd he should have been notified of the event when it happened.

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the U.S. Coast Guard.

Formed in 1965, the department dispenses hl^way and mass transit money, rebates air tranqwrt and fe^ral aid to airports as wdl as overseeing maritime issues. During the past two years the department has spearheaded the administrations drive to get users of various trans-portatkm systems to pay a greater share of q;mtk.

In succeeding Lewis, Mrs. Dole takes over from the most visible trai^rtation secretary since the dq>art-mrat was form^ in 19^. Lewis also was c()sida^ among the most ctqiable members of the Reagan Cabinet.

Mrs. Dole, 46, a lawyer, former member of the Federal Trade Commission and wife of Sen. Bob Dole, R-Kan., is the highest ranking woman at the White House as the presidents assistant for public liaison.

The liaison job has been charactolzed as particularly difficult since much of Mrs. Doles assignment has involved (tealing with interest groups such as minorities, womens groiq and organized labor opoily critical of administration policies.

Faith Ryan Whittlesey, a long-time Reagan political activist and now the ambassador to SwitzerlaiKi, will replace Mrs. Dole at the White House, Reagan said.

Although a team player, Mrs. Doles views have at times differed from those of most other members of the Reagan inner circle. In the past she has endorsed tourer regulation of business and has siqjported the Equal Ri^ts Amendment, although she also has said she agrees with Reagans view that theres more than one way to reach equal rights for women.

At the White House, Mrs. Dole, whose nickname is Liddy, has been known to lobby quietly for the hiring of more women in an administration that has been criticized for not placing enou^ of them in high-ranking positions.

When c(Mifirmed by the Senate, Mrs. Dole will join UN Ambassador Jeanne Kirkpatrick as the only other woman with Cabinet rank.

She is the sevoith woman named to a Catnnet position inhistory.

Mrs. Dote is a veteran of Washington govemmoit and pditical circles. For nearly six years she was a member of the FTC, resigning in 1979 to help her husband in bis unsuccessful presidential campaign.

TlKNigb she has no background in the transp(1ation fidd, Mrs. Dote is considered to have a keen legal mind and good administrative

skills. She was a Phi Beta Kap^ at Duke University and is a graduate of Harvard Law School.

She and her husband, who is dialrman of the Senate Finance Committee, are one of the most powerful husband-and-wife teams in Washington.

But iKr two years at the ..White House have been marked by little fanfare. Some of her sui^rters have reportedly con^lained that she has been lantely muzzled

by a maledominated cadre of presiditial assistants.

This aint so bad, she once was quoted as saying to guests at a dinner in bar honor, First chance Ive had to my mouth in 13 months.

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Tbe Djy Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-^Tburwtay, January , i_7Reagan Stays Aloof From Social Security Studies

By CHRISTOPHER CONNELL Associated Press Writer

WASHINGTON (AP) - Members (rf the Social Security reform panel are still hoping fw a last-minute agreement on a rescue plan, but President Reagan says th^rll have to do it without his help.

Reagan, speaking at a nationally televised news conferwice Wednesday ni^t, said if the commission members cant agree on a coraprtiensive plan for saving Social Security by Jan. 15, they should present him with a list of altomatives.

And then I think that is the time we should join together and seek to work out a cinnpromise, he said.

But he firmly rejected aiggestions from some awnmission members that he become directly involved in the talks now.

I believe that for me to impose myself, I dont care how much they ask for H, for me to impose myself on the commission and say, Hey fellows, this is the way I want you to go, I WMild then stand back, cock my ear, and wait ior the loud outcry from Capitol Hill, and the same old pditical football would be seen going up in the air like a ptmt on third down,Reagan said.

But Sen. Larry Pressler, R-S.D., said after the news

Will Teach And Sfvdy In Japan

A prime project I also intend to persue is to continue making contacts with ^ialists in this field of historical research, Gowen said. He predicted that such contacts could stimulate a further flow of scholarship back and forth across the Pacific.

DR. ROBERT GOWEN

ECU News Bureau

Dr. Robert J Gowen of the East Carolina University history faculty, a specialist in the history of the Far East and Asian diplomacy, has been selected for a fellowship providing five months of study, teaching and research in Japan.

As an N.C.-Japan Center Fellow, Gowen will go to Japan in August to teach and study at Doshisha University in Kyoto and to conduct research into patterns of Japanese emigration to^the United States and Canada.

* During previous studies in ; Japan, diina and Hawaii,

Gowen earlier compiled a definitive bibliography of more than 18,000 entr^ of historical materials about the international relations of east Asia and the Pacific Islands.

In preparation for the fellowship tour in Japan, Gowen will ^>end six to seven weeks this summer in intensive study of the Japanese language at the N.C.-Japan Center in Raleigh.

Biggest Draw'

For U.S. Savers

; WASHINGTON (AP) -The new money market ac-counts have become the *biggest money-draw for federally insured savings and ;loans since the government ;began keeping records in the 1980s, federal officials say.

The new saving account, ^designed to help banks and ^savings and loans compete with money market mutual funds, attracted an estimated $21.8 billion to S&Ls in the first week they were offered, the Federal Home Loan Bank Board says.They are paying interest in the range of 10 percoit, *(o 11 percent.

i Based on a sampling of fiSome 230 large S4Ls, the bank board estimated that 58 percent of the money deposited in the new accounts, which were introduced Dec. Mandcarry a $2,500-minimum deposit, was shifted from other dc^it accounts at savings associa-"lions.

$50,000 Gift To

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CMifoence that be was kind of disappointed the {vesidem didnt take a stand on Social Security. He said he int^ to send Reagan a letter today urging him to ctnne ig) with more specific proposals.

Reag^ sjnke after several commission members, including chairman Alan Greenspan, repwtedly conferred with administration officials. "The fact that were talking obviously suggests that we still have something to talk about, Greei^>an said. But there was no report of progress.

Reagan e^ablisbed Uie comm^icm last year after proposing changes in Social Security that drew a hostile reaction in Congress, particularly from Democrats.

When Reagan set the conunission, he said he wanted to remove it from politics, a point be made again Wednesday ni^t.

He also said he would reject any proposal that reduces benefits for Social Security recipients. I think those people have been scared enough by demagoguery, he said.

The Greenspan panel will go out of business <m Jan. 15. The

Gowen said ne realized that documents pertaining to Japanese emigration have been virtually untouched by American scholars and are a fertile field f(Hr research. He hqies this year to gain access to new Japanese foreign office documents and other hitherto unexamined source materials.

The N.C.-Japan Center is a state government agency created by Gov. Jim Hunt to build relations between specialists of the two countries. The centers three-year-old fellowship program was extended this year to the entire University of North Carolina system and to private business and private colleges.

CHRISTMAS JOY Snickers, a 15-year-old gorilla, holds her bundle of Christmas joy, a baby boy gorilla, during his public debut at the IMadd{riiia Zoo Wednesday. The unnamed baby gorilla was born on Christmas Day, giving ttie zoo the oldest and youngest captive gorillas in the worid. Massa, the oldest gorilla, celebrated his 52nd birthday on December 30. (AP Laserplx^)

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RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -Carolina Power & Light will make a $50,000 initial contribution to the state Division of Social Services in the Carolinas for use in aiding the needy in the compnays service area pay their bills.

In addition, company President Sherwood H. Smith Jr. said the company will match contributions from customers and employees dollar for dollar iq> to an additional $150,000.

Smith said CP&L contributions will come from shareholder funds, and will not be paid for by customers.

15 members agree the system'' needs to save $150 billioo to $200 bUlk over the next seven years, btk they have been unable to a^^ on a prec^ mix of payroll tax hikes and a ^owdown in the growth (rf benefits to generate the savings.

Greenspan met with Sen. Bob D(^, R-Kan., the chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, on Wednesday. Also attoiding the meetii^ were former Social Security Com-misskmer Robert M. Ball and Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan, D-N.Y., two Democratic members, and Rq>. Barber Conable of New Y<xk, the Repifolican on the House Ways and Means Committee.

Greenspan and other members have said rqieatedly that the panel will be unable to reach a compromfoe unless Reagan and House Speaker Thomas P. ONeill, D-Mass., agree, too.

Although Reagan said he did not want to get involved in the panels ddiberations, some administratKMi officials have privately expressed a desire to use the commission as the vehicle to make a deal with congressional Democrats on

Social Secunty.

The old a^ fund has borrowed $17.5 blion to pay its benefits on time through June and congresskmal action is needed to keep the benefits flowing <m time beyond that.

The cwnmission favors Ininging new federal workers and those hired in the past five years into the system, along with all employees of non^irofit organizations. That would bring in $30 billion by 1990.

In November, Ball, Moynihan and three other liberal Democrats proposed speeding up paynril tax hikes to solve most of the short-term financing problem.

But the Democrats also offered to back a three-month delay in next Julys cost-of-living hike and they suggested a new tax treatment of Social Security that would enUil gradually phasing in a tax on benefits, coupled with a new tax credit or deduction for workers.

The Democrats have complained repeatedly that no Republicans on the panel or in the White House ever made a counter-offer.

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Lebanon Paid Heavy Price in Last Summer's War

ByEARLEENF.TATRO Associated Pre^ Writo*

SIDON, Lebanon (AP) -The twinkling lights of crowded pastry shops, the boutiques full of cdorful fashions, the bustle of the streets are beginning to obscure the memories of June in Sidon, of invasion, death and devastation.

The resilient Lebanese people, credited by President Amin Gemayel with an ability to rise phoenix-like from the ashes, are rebuilding. And throughout Lebanon, just as in this Mediterranean port, the reality of last summers war is fading.

But with it the task of assessing just what happened in Israels swift and stunning invasion is growing more difficult.

No one will probably ever know for sure how many people died in the 10-week ' war, which was mounted to oust the Palestine Liberation Organization from Lebanon. The number of homeless, the amount of destruction, the damage to the countrys already decrepit infrastructure remain in dilute.

Here in Sidon alone, the casualty figures from Junes days of fire and fury remain hazy. By Israeli count, 265 Lebanese died here, but by Lebanese count possibly more than 1,000 were killed.

When it came to statistics, there was no reliable source ^ for reporters covering the war. The perception of what happened varied when described by the Israeli military, the PLO and Lebanese officials.

The mispercepttons were perhaps best exemplified by a young Israeli soldier encountered by a reporter in west Beirut after the last Palestinian guerrillas had sailed out of Beirut port.

You must have been a fighter, he insisted to the journalist. We were told the civilians had gone. In the face of obvious evidence to the contrary, Israeli military officers had claimed that most civilians left west Beirut during the siege.

Here is a iook back at major areas of disagreement and dispute - and, in some cases, later clarifications -in a war that stirred con-

Hoping 'Guilt' ^Brings Revenue

PITTSBURGH (AP) -Hq>ing ^ilt will raise revenues, city officials have asked suburban residents who work in Pittsburg to pay $30 a year as a Volun- tarytax.

People generally dont give without being asked, City Councilwoman Michelle Madoff said Tuesday.

City officials have no authority to raise a $10-a-year occupational tax, so they asked suburban resi-(tents who benefit from city services but pay no city taxes to tax themselves $30.

I feel there are a lot of people out there who feel guilty and feel they should ' give more than $10, Ms. Madoff said.

Panel Problem: FindingQuorum

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -The State Board of Community Colleges has had difficulty assembling a quorum recently because of resignations and business conflicts among the 19-member

^A quorum of 10 members present is required by law for the board to conduct business.

The board is requesting the 1983 General Assembly to amend the quorum requirement to say that a majority of the qualified members holding board seats would constitute a quorum.

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LIVING IN RUINS - A Palestinian child waves to photographer at the Sabra refugee camp in Beirut in Nov., 1982. Many refugees live in

the remnants of their homes that were destroyed during the 10-week war. (APLaserphoto)

fusion, controversy and invective far beyond Lebanons borders.

CASUALTIES . In the wars first weeks, the Israelis said the number of Lebanese and Palestinian dead stood in the hundreds, Lebanese sources placed it in the several UuHisands, and the PLO was claiming 35,000. Various PLO officials later put it at 50,000 or more.

On Nov, 30, Lebanese police working on a detailed casualty report said a total of 19,085 people were killed and 30,302 wounded between June 4 the day Israeli planes bombed Beirut in pr^ara-tion for the June 6 invasion and Aug. 31, when the PLO evacuation from west Beirut was nearing completion.

The police conceded their statistics were not entirely reliable but contended they were close to the actual number.

They said 6,775 of the deaths were in Beirut'and the rest in the old PLO-controlled territory south of

the capital.

The Israeli army said Nov. 28 it had no casualty reports for Beirut but in the rest of Lebanon the death toll was 381 Lebanese and over 1,000 Palestinians. Those were the same figures reported by Israel July 7.

Israeli officials accused the foreign news media of relying on the Palestinian Red Crescent, the PLOs equivalent of the Red Cross, for casualty figures. But correspondents of major news organizations had dismissed the PLO estimates as inflated. )

International relief organizations generally avoided making caaialty estimates, but on June 12 Francesco Noseda, head of the International Committee of the Red Cross in Lebanon, told a news conference the Lebanese Red Cross estimated 1,000 to 1,500 civilians had been killed in Sidon, a figure dismissed by the Israelis as exaggerated.

In one case in Sidon, the

Israelis reported 48 people died in a school basement during an air strike. But a reporter visiting the scene counted 50 men, women and children in what was clearly only the top layer of a decomposing heap of bodies in the basement. Lebanese residents claimed 300 were kUled.

THE HOMELESS

Many people who fled from south Lebanon to Beirut in the first few days of the invasion became refugees for a second time as the Israeli juggernaut approached the capital. Some headed farther north or east, and others were seen making their way back south.

In mid-June, Lebanese government officials and International Reel Cross workers estimated as many as 600,000 people were living at least temporarily away from their homes. By late August, U.N. relief officials estimated there were 50,000 to 60,000 homeless in south Lebanon alone, although

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20,000.

Now that wint^ is nearing, U.N. and Red Cross workers say they have found no one without some kind of shelter. Many of the tomdess have crowded in with relatives, and others live in schools and other public buildings.

BEIRUT REFUGEES

The Israeli army imiisted at the height of the siege that most civilians had fled west Beirut and those who remained were PLO sympa-thizers. At the other extreme, former Lebanese Prime Minister Saeb Salam claimed the Israelis were holding 600,000 to 700,000 Lebanese civilians hostage in west Beirut despite the fact that the districts p(^u-lation was estimated at (ly 600,000 befcne the war and tens of thousands fled during it.

Corre^ndoits vriio knew Beirut \nll estimated between ^,000 and 400,000 peqple, almost all civilians, weathered the siege.

These civilians became hostages, in effect, in the PLOs pn^ganda war and in the real war as well. As the Israelis tightened their noose, the PLO retreated deeper and deeper into residential nei^borhoods, and military and civilian targets became more indistinguishable.

MILITARY OPERATIONS

Both sides suffered credibility gaps.

At a news conference July 2, Mahmoud Labadi, spokesman for PLO chief Yasser Arafat, displayed a Mickey Mouse balloon be claimed was full of poison gas and was One of many the Israelis had dn^ped on west Beirut so the children would die when they blew it up.^

But the alleged poison balloon was the pre-inflated, completely sealed type commonly sold by Beirut toy vendors, and Labadi admitted he did not know where or when the balloon was found, or what kind of gas it contained.

On Aug. 1, OIK of the worst days of the sie^, a PLO spokesman claimed the Israelis fired 150,000. shells on west Beirut in a nine-hour period - a seemingly impossible average of five shells per second.

The Israelis strained credibility as well.

In July, they denied they were responsible for the cutoff of electricity and water to west Beirut. But a reporter \riio went to an east Beirut relay station found three Israeli soldiers guarding the control room where a flick of the switch could have restored power.

DAMAGE

During the height of the siege, Israels critics claimed that terror bom

bardments wm destroying Beirut. The Israelis dismissed these assotions and insisted they were striking military targets, with only some inadvertent dama^ to other buildings. Neither was ciMTect.

The capital is far from destroyed, but the Lebanese governments reconstruction councU says 25 percent of west Beiruts buildings were damaged. Most of the damage was south of Corniche Mazraa, the broad boulevard that maiked the northern boundary of the area where mijist Pale^ans lived and PLO offices and arms were concentrated. That part of west Beirut is still a shambles, but the r^ of the city again hums with activity.

According to the coimcils preliminary estimate, at least $1.9 billkm in f^ysical

damage was done throu^out Lebanon during the Isi^i invaskm.

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The Daily Reflector, GfeeovlUe, N .C.-Thunday, January t, lM3-t

Naming Soviet Cardinal Baffles Some Observers

ByROXlNNEERVASn Associated Press WritCT MOSCOW (AP) - Pope John Paul II, locked in a bitter war of words with the Kremlin, has chosen the first Roman Catholic cardinal living in the Soviet Unkm, along with three other princes of the church from the Eastern bloc.

The pontiff, accused by the Kremlin last week of subversion, sto(^ short of pidldicly naming a cardinal from the most heavily Catholic Soviet republic, Uthuania, and chose instead a prelate from the small and passive community of Latvia.

This guy was definitely not nan^d without the Soviets knowing about it in advance, said a Western diplomat, who declined to be identified. If it testifies to anything, it is that the Vatican ost-politik is going alimg

apace despite the war of wortte. Here you have two organizations which are ^eat believers in quiet diplomacy.

Monsignor Ju'lijan Vaivods, the apostolic administrator in Riga, Latvia, was amo^ 18 prdates horn 15 countries named by the pontiff Wednesday to receive the red hat of cardinal and serve in the College of Cardinals, which evmUially would choose John Pauls successm*.

Also diosen by the poitiff were the Most Rev. Jozef Glemp, the archbishop of Warsaw and primate d the Roman Catholic Church in John Pauls native Poland; the Most Rev. Franjo Kuharic, archbishop of Zagreb, Yugoslavia and the Most Rev. Joachim Meisner, archbishop of Berlin, r^re-senting the Ea^em and

Western halves of the divided city.

Little is known about the new Latvian cardinal. But the fact that be was allowed to attend the 1978 fimeral Pope John Paul I at the Vatican appears to signify that he was in official favor, at least at that time.

NiM* was it known vdietho' Vaivods would be allowed to travd to the Vatican for the cardinals installation, scheduled for Feb. 2.

I The choice of Vaivods baffled some Western sources who f(dlow rdigious issues in this officially athiest Communist state. *

The interesting question is why not a Lithuanian cardinal, said a W^tero ^lomat who asked not to be identified by name or embassy. Afto* Lutheranism, Catholicism is the mo^ important churd) in Latvia, but Latvia as a Roman Catholic

center in amparisin to Lithuania.

Thoe was speculation that the poi^ dard not name a cardinal living in the Lithuanian repuNk because of possible rq>ercussions agak^ ttie dei^ ^ the faithful th^.

About 60 percent (tf the 2 million Lithuanians are bdieved to be practicing Roman Cathdics and the church there has firm roots at the officially sanctioned level, as well as a Qourishing undergroiffid that has come undo- rqi^ted attack from the Krenilifl. Latvia, with an e^imated 2^,000 Catholics, is bdifved to be much less active.

Another suggestion was that'the pope had earlier secrdly named the M(t Rev. Julijonas Steponavicius, the exiled archbislK^ (rf Vilnuis, capjital of Lithuania, as a cardinal

in pectore, or in the heart, and was thie free to choose a Latvian. Steponavicius has been ^t into internal exile and is believed living in a small town near the Latvian border.

Several past popes have named Soviet cardinals, but all have chosoi prelates living in exile.

The naming of Vaivods is a si^icant development in that he is the first, that he can puMkly (^lorate as a cardinal," the d^lomat said.

It was not clear how the elevation of Vaivods, w the oUier three East Bloc prelates, might impact on the war of words being waged between the Kremlin and the Vatican.

Last week, in an unusual personal attack on the head of the Catholic church, Moscow accused the pope of using the cover of religion to

igage in antKkmununist propaganda and to carry out subversMxi in Poland and other East Bloc countries.

In an equally lauisual reprisal, the Vatican issued a statement saying that the Kremlin criticism is in contrast to the real facts and situatkms wdiich are well known.

Neither side mentioned the so-called Bulgarian connection although it is believed to have lndled the recent escalation of tenskms between Moscow and the Vatican.

The connection theory, unearthed by Italian investigators, alleges that Bulgaria, a close Kremlin ally, had a hand in the attempted assassination of Pope John Paul in 1961. ^Theory has it that the would-be papal assassin was aided by Bulgarian agents, presumably operating under

Soviet control or at least with Soviet knonriedge, hi an effort to sUoce papal siqi^xHt fOT die inctepoident Solidarity labor movement in Poland. Moscow and Bulgaria have denied any links with the attonpt on the pontifrslife.

Papal support for the church in Poland got a boost with the elevation of Glemp, who was earlier chosen by John Paul to succeed the late Polish Cardinal Stefan Wyszynski, who died of cancer in May 1981.

Many Poles compared Glemp unfavorably to Wyszynski, claiming he was too moderate in his dealings with the martial law

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But his ekvation to the razk of cardinal was a clear ^gnal ofnapalsigipMi.

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ACfMlFiMiHMNngtFMt 1114-A E.1IU8I. OtilTIMJII

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1982 Has Been Such A Good Year Hackwells' Says "Thank You" With Storevt/ide Savings!

SOFAS

CH^S

1/3

OFF

ORIENTAL

RUGS

PEARL

GRANDFATHER

CLOCKS

BARCO-

LOUNGERS

1/3

OFF

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SAVINGS TO

PICTURES 00

%

ACCESSORIES 30/off

ONE GROUP

50 ^ TO 60 OFF

LAMPS

BRASS    GINGER    JAR

50

OFF

30

OFF

OCCASSIONAL 0%

TABLES

ON SALE

OFFRemnants Sale Price Off... Some Lower!!!

Size

12x16

12x19

12x12

12x10

12x17'

12x17

12x7

12x16=

12x10

12x16^

12x18

12x8

12x9

12x10^

12x9'

12x11

12x12

12x7

12x15

12x8

12x9

12x10

12x15

12x9

12x8

12x11

12x13

12x12

12x16

12x1f

12x15

12x16

12x18

12x19

12x16

12x1f

Color

Sunlit Copper Plush Vanilla Plush Golden Buff Saxony Ginger Plush

Grass Green Commercial

Tan 8i Creme Commercial

Blue Night Sculpture

Kraft Brown Patterned Kitchen Carpet

Emerald Blue Commercial

Rusty-Brown

Quiet Brown Saxony

Tobasco Commercial

Mauve Mist Plush

English Coffee Sculpture

Sea Spray Blue Sculpture

Medium Brown Saxony

Iceberg Blue Plush

Gold Leaf Saxony

Brown Saxony

Toasted Almonjj Sculpture

Gold Leaf Saxony

Crystal Blue Plush

Boy Rum Sculpture

Eucalyptus Green Saxony

Gold Leaf Saxony

Lemon Balm Saxony

Juniper Green Plush

Creamy Beige Plush

Camel Tan Saxony

Blue Stone Saxony

Rose Plush i

Chomlos Tan Saxony

Silver Smoke Sculpture

Burlwood Brown Plush

Pumpkin Plush

Moon Glow Sculpture

Reg.

SALE

Size

Color

520'

259

53900

269

12X11

Sculptured Wheat

289

139

12x16

Spicy Teal Saxony

325

16V

12x15

Scrimshaw Beige Sculpture

320

159

12x8

Ice Gren Saxony

289

119

12x7

Lime Avacodo Astro Turt

129

49

12x12

Chestnut Saxony

359

179 ^

12x12

Golden Beach Sculpture

185

3900

12x12

Mushroom Beige

44900

219

12x12

Java Saxony

390

189

12x9

Burnt Orange Plush

140

70

12x20-

Silver Blue Plush

347-

173

12x11-

Antique Brass Sculpture

280

139

12x15

Brown Commercial

135

85

12x5

Golden Buff Saxony

290

145

12x15

Creme Plush

292

146

12x17

Emerald Blue Commerciol

108

39

12x12

Avocado Green Saxony

359

179

12x10

Oyster White Plush

15900

69

12x12=

Chamois Sculpture

14400

59

12x16=

Beige-Rust Sculpture

289

139

12x18

Maple Sugar Sculpture

280

140

12x11=

Tobasco Commercial

252

126

12x12

Midnight Blue Plush

127

49

12x14=

Sandstone Commercial

310

154

12x8

Royal Blue Commercial

400

199

12x20

Rust & Creme-Sculpture

432

216

12x18

Deep Rose Plush

320

159

12x8

Mint Green Saxony

220

110

12x15

Deep Rust Sculpture

625

289

12x11

Light, Beige Plush

320

159

12x18

Soft Brown Plush

490

239

12x20

Woodbine Green Sculp.

520

255

12x10

Monteray Brown Sculp.

560

279

12x14-

Wheat Plush

335

159

12x14

Coffee Saxony

Reg.

SALE

265

132

288

140

44500

220

200

69

120

59

243

121

430

198

395

197

420

210

284'

142

510

240

286

143

24900

125

100

49

516

350

339

159

240

120

335

175

350

175

473

235

348

215

192

96

410

199

320

155

143

71

360

180

710

275

200 .

69

499% .

225

400

199

490

240

360

180

333

166

410

199

39900

196

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Sal. 10-4

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10Tbe D*gy Reflector. Gfwnvflte. N.C.ThuiKtoy, Jawutfy *. MO

Stock And Market Reports

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) (NCDA) - The trend on the North Carotina hog market today was steady to 25 cents higher. Kinston 54.50, Clinton, Elizabethtown, Fayetteville, Dunn, Pink Hill, Chadboum. Ayden. Pine Level, Laurinburg and Benson 54.75, Wilson 55.00, Salisbury 54.00, Rowland 54.50. Sows; all weights 500 pounds up; Wilson 49.00, Fayetteville 50.00, Whiteville

48.00, Wallace 49.00, Spiveys Comer 49.00, Rowland 49.00, Durham unreported.

Poultry RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) (NCDA) - The North Carolina f.o.b. dock quoted price on broilers for this weeks trading was 41.75 cents, based on full truck load lots of ice pack USDA Grade A sized 2'/^ to 3 pound birds. Too few of the loads offered have been confirmed to report prices. The market is barely steady and the live supply is moderate for a moderate demand. Weights desireable to heavy. Estimated slaughter of broilers and fryers in North Carolina Thursday was

1.797.000, compared to 1,581,000 last Thursday.

NEW YORK (AP) - Stock prices staged a strong advance today in buying attributed to ho^ for a recovery from the recession.

'The Dow Jon^ average of 30 industrials rose 11.95 to 1,056.84 by noontime.

Gainers outpaced losers by almost 3 to 1 among New York Stock Exchange-listed issues.

In his news conference Wednesday night. President Reagan acknowledged the n^ to reduce the widening federail budget deficit. He repeated his belief, however, that any tax increases would be a mistake at a time when the economy is depressed.

Evidence of investors hopes for an end to the long recession was provided by strength in many stocks considered hi^iy sensitive , to the economic cycle - for example, chemical and metals issues.

In the chemical group, DuPont rose 14k to 384k; Dow Chemical VA to and UnionCarbidel'/ito54'^.

Among metals stocks, Alcoa, up 1 at 30'/^:; Kaiser Aluminum, up % at 16%, and Inco, up % at 12%, all made the active list.

The NYSEs composite index rose .88 to 82.64. At the American Stock Exchange, the market value index was up 6.08 at 353.78.

Volume on the Big Board totaled 42.62 million shares at noontime, against 39.97 million at the same point Wednesday.

NEW YORK (AP)

AMRCorp

AbbtUbe

Allis Chaim

Alcoa

Am Baker

AmBrands

Amer Can

Am Cyan

AmPamlly

Am Motors

AmStand

Ainerm

Beat Pood

Beth Steel

Boeing

Boise Cased

Borden

Burlngt Ind

CSXCotp

CaroPwLt

Celanese

Cent Soya

Champ int

Chrysler

CocaCola

Colg Palm

Comw Edis

ConAgra

ConU Group

DeltaAlrl

DowChem

dui^t

Duke Pow

EastnAIrL

MASONIC NOTICE Winterville Masonic Lodge No. 232 will hold a communication at the Masonic Hall Friday at 8 p.m.

William Elbert,

master

Anninias C. Smith,

secy

-Midday stocks:

High

22%

Low

22%

Ust

22%

%

%

X%

10%

10%

10%

X

29%

29%

12%

11%

12%

46%

46

46

30%

30%

30%

35%

X%

X%

15%

15%

15%

7%

7%

7%

31%

30%

31%

63%

62%

63%

23%

22%

23

21%

21%

21%

X%

35

35

37%

37%

37%

47%

47%

47%

27%

27%

27%

50

m

SO

21%

21%

21%

48%

48

48

16%

16%

16%

24%

23%

24%

17%

17%

17%

51%

51%

51%

19%

19%

19%

25%

25%

25%

a%

28%

a%

M%

X%

x%

42

41%

42

28%

27%

m

X%

37%

X

23%

23%

23%

8

7%

8

The

Meeting

Place

7:00

THURSDAY

UreenvUle Elks

I p.m.

! No. 1645 meets 7:10 p.m. Overeaten Anonymous meets at First Presbyterian Church

7:30 p.m. - American Legion Auxiliary meets at Legion Home 8:00 p.m. VFW meets at Poet Home

8:00 p.m. Coochee Council No. 80, Degree d Pocahontas meets at RedmensHail

FRIDAY 7:30 p.m. Red Men meet

East Kodak EatonQ Esmark s

Exxon

Pirestone

FlaPowU

PtaProgreas

PordMot

For McKm*

Fuqua Ind

GTECorp

GnDynam

Gn Elec

Gen Food

Gen Mills

Gen Motors

Gen Tire

GenuParts

GaPscif

Goodrich

Goodyear

Grace Co

GtNor Nek

Greyhound

Gulf Oil

Herculeslnc

Honeywell

HospitCp

Ing Rand

IBM

Intl Harv

Int Paper

Int TAT

K mart

KaisrAlum

kanefaSvc

KrogerCo

Lockheed

Loews Corp

Masonite n

McDermott

Mead C:orp

MinnMM

Mobil

Monsanto

NCNBC^

NabiscoBrd

Nat DistUl

NorflkSou n

OlinQt

Owenslll

Penney JC

PhilipMorr PhlllpaPet Polaroid Proct Gamb Quaker Oat RCA

RalstnPur

RepubAir

Republic SU

Revlon

Reynldind

Rockwelint

Pap Scott Paper SealdPow SearsRoeb Shaklee Skyline Cp Sony Corp Southern Co

iraca*

StdOilInd StdOilOh Stevens JP TRW Inc Texaco Inc TexEastn UMC Ind Un Camp Un Carbide UnOUCal Uniroyal US Steel Wachov Cp WalMart s WestPtPm Westgh El Weyerhsr WinnDix Woolworth Wrigley Xerox Cp

a

SAN

atfe

im

3SN.

i*w

43N

41

3*4^.

47>i

cm

a

4-1N

KNi

34^4

34N

3SN.

aotx

28N<

m,

41V,

96

4N.

47%

30%

23N

16%

16%

%

76%

149

47%

31%

19%

73%

36%

78%

19%

37

34%

S2%

33%

29

46%

a

s%

35%

115%

41%

a%

17%

8%

16%

30%

51

43V

30%

25%

21

45%

29%

40%

34%

15

15%

a%

34%

44%

%

21%

67%

31%

58%

9%

63%

53%

30%

13%

21%

a

46%

38%

a

44%

a

42%

a%

84%

a

56%

20%

19%

36%

16%

39%

43%

a%

40%

a%

92\

39%

47%

61%

31%

43 % M% 34

a

35%

17%

30%

a%

83%

54%

41

%

4%

47

%

a

15%

16

a%

76%

14S>4

47%

a%

19%

73%

a

77%

19

a%

24%

a%

a%

a

46

35%

%

a%

27%

114%

41%

a%

17%

7%

16%

a

50%

43%

20%

24%

20%

45%

29%

40%

M%

14%

15%

a

M%

44

a

21%

67

31%

M%

9%

62%

53%

a%

13%

21%

a

46%

M%

a%

35%

44%

a%

42%

a%

Following are selected 11 a.m. market quotations:

Ashland Burroughs

Carolina Power A Light Collins A Aikman Connor Duke Eaton Eckerds Exxon Fieldcrest Halteras HUlon Jefferson Deere Lowes McDonalds McGraw Piedmont Pizza Inn PAG

TRW, Inc.

United Tel.

Virginia Electric Wachovia

OVER THE COUNTER Aviation    18%-I9%

Branch    16%-16%

Little Mint    l%-%

Planters Bank    a'-2-29^;i

84%

a

56%

39%

19%

36%

16%

31%

43%

a%

40%

a%

M%

39%

47%

61%

a

43

26

34%

a%

%

35%

18

30%

a%

83%

55%

41%

a

4%

47%

%

23%

16%

16%

38%

76%

148%

47%

21%

19%

73%

26%

78%

19

36%

34%

52%

23%

29

46

35%

59%

35%

27%

115

41%

a%

17%

8

16%

a%

50%

43%

20%

25%

20%

45%

29%

40%

24%

14%

15%

a

34%

44%

a

21%

67%

31%

58%

9%

a%

a%

30%

13%

21%

a

46%

M%

a

a

44%

a

42%

a%

stock

X

42

21

a%

19%

a%

a

24%

a%

M%

16

42%

%

31%

a%

57%

a%

M%

6%

US

67%

21%

14%

a

Obituaries

MORNING HOUSE FIRE - Greniville the fire. Heavy smoke was seen coming ftom fire-rescue members battled a blaze at a 1205 the dwelling v^n the first fire units arrived. Meadowbrook Drive residence north of Firemen quickly had the Maze under control Greenville shortly after K) a.m. this morning, and were in the process of investigating the According to witnesses at the scene, the cause of the fire this morning. (Reflector occiqiant of the house was the Charlie Heath Photo by Tommy Forrest) family and they were not home at the time of

Cable TV Says Costs Forced Cut 2 Stations

By JERRY RAYNOR Reflector Staff Writer We regret that we had to cut two stations from our cable lineup, Janet Cooke, general manager of Greenville Cable 'TV Inc., said today in reference to the recent removal of WOR-TV and WPTF-TV from the local cable 'TV lineup, but it was that or having to charge our customers a much hi^er rate, which we certainly dont want to do.

The two stations were dropped from Greenville Cable TV as of Dec. 31 as the result of a ruling by the Copyright Royalty Tribunal to the effect that beginning Jan. 1,1983, a cable system carrying more distant signals than had formerly been permitted by Federal Communications Commission rules prior to the deregulation rule in 1981 will be charged 3.75 percent of basic revenues ior each additional independent signal. The copyright ruling also requires the payment of one-fourth of 3.75 percent of basic revenues for each additional network distant signal carried.

Both WOR-TV from New York and WPTF-TV from Raleigh-Durham fell into the category of stations for which the Greenville Cable TV would have been required to pay the 3.75 percent if they remained on the air. That percentage is for each individual station, Ms. Cooke remarked. That made the cost of carrying these stations prohibitive.

If we had decided to keep these two, it would have been necessary to go up on our rates tremendously, and we simply could not see that as being a feasible move.

Ms. Cooke notes this is the first time since we began operations that weve had to take channels off the air. We were dismayed by the Copyright Royalty Tribunal ruling, Ms. Cooke added. It was completely unexpected. It was in 1981 that the FCC eliminated the distant-singal rules which enabled cable TV systems to import an unlimited number of distant TV signals. It was under this 1981 rule that WOR and WPTF were added to cable

Greenville Woman Is Injured in Fire

REMEMBERED

SYDNEY, Australia (AP) American Tony Lush, 33, trying to sail around the world, said Wednesday he had one thought as his yacht began sinking in the Indian Ocean: I cant swim.

JEFFERSONVILLE, Vt. - A Greenville, N.C., woman, Anifa Rogers, was injured in a fire which (te-stroyed most of an eight-condominium complex at the Village at Smugglers Notch ski resort Wednesday shortly before 8 a.m.    ^

Miss Rogers, 21, suffered first-degree burns on her legs and second-degree burns on both feet. She was treated and released from the Copley Hospital in nearby Mor-risville. No other injuries were reported among the approximately 100 persons evacuated during the fire.

Her mother, Mrs. Charles L. Rogers, said in Greenville that Anita and her sister, Melanie, 18, were vacationing with other college students at the ski resort. She said her dau^ters told her they were awakened by a smoke alarm almost simultaneously with someone knocking on their door and yelling fire. Anitas burns were reportedly sustained during her escape down a blazing stairwell.

The condominiums privately owned but mana^ by the ski area - were quickly evacuated. Each had been rented to 12 students, the spokeswoman said. Several units were destroyed and the re^ heavily damaged in the wind-whipped fire.

Mrs. Rogers said her daughters assured her that they were fine, though everything they had along was destroyed and theyre wearing loaned clothes. Anita, a senior at East Carolina University, was flying to NcHTolk and driving home from there today, wtiile her sister was returning to Dana Hall, a school in Wellsley, Mass.

All I know is Im a

thankful mother, thankful my daughters are all right, Mrs. Rogers said.

the cause of the fire was unknown, although a fire investigator said the blaze may have started from a free-standing fireplace or a faulty electric corcl.

Firefighters from Jeffersonville, Cambridge, Underhill, Hyde Park and Johnson battled the blaze for most of the morning.

The occupants who havent left the resort were being housed temporarily in a building called The Meeting House.

Some of the vacationers said the fire was not going to ruin their time at the resort. Were not going to let this dampen our spirits, Rusty Carrier, 18, of Concord, N.C., said as he headed to the Smugglers Notch ski sl(^ even as. firefinters rolled up their hoses.

Notte* of Town ItooUnot for Martin and Pitt Porliona of the 6th diatrlct of the North Carolina Houaa of Rapraaantativas From: John B. GNIam, III, North Carolina Rapresantatlva.

Due to the unfortunate Illness and death In my family, the town meetings scheduled for this fall have been postponed until now. The following schedule will be followed for the purpose of Town meetings. These meetings are the result of my campaign promise to bring the North Carolina General Assembly closer to the people of the 6th district.

Friday, January 7,1983 8:30 a.m. Bethel Elementary School 9:00 a.m. Bethel Town Hall 9:45 a.m. Stokes Elementary School 10:30 a.m. Stokes Town and Country Restaurant 11:15 a.m. Magin Community College 12:30 p.m. Bern Grass School 1:30 p.m. WHIIamston High School 2:00 p.m. Williamston Town Hall 3:00 p.m. Jamesville School 3:40 p.m. Jamesville Town Hall 4:30 p.m. Farm Ufe Fire Department Special Notica From John B. QHiam, III, Rapraaantativa 6th Diatrlct.

On January 10,1983, the newly developed 6th district legislative council will be meeting at 6:00 p.m. at the Holiday Inn in WHIIamston, North CaroHns for an organizational meeting. All council members are urged to attend.

SPECIAL NOTICE FROM THE OFFICE OF REPRESENTATIVE JOHN B. QILLAM III TO: The People of Martin and Pitt Portions of the 8th District FROM: John B. GHIsm III, North Carolina House of Represen-Utives

The 1983 North Carolina General Assembly will convene at 12:00 noon, Wednesday, January 12, 1983; My family and I would like to Invite you to be with us on January 12, at 10:30 a.m. in the Legislative Building: we ere hosting a ctrffee hour In your honor. Please come to my office In the Legislative Building In Raleigh, North Carolina (Rooms 1017-1018) between 10:30 a.m. and 12:00 noon to share thia happy occasion with my family and me. My wife, Bobble, and I look forward to seeing you. If I can ever be of any service to you, please do not hesitate to contact me.

Very Sincerely,

JohnB.Gillam. Ill Representative, North Carolina House of Representatives

TV here on channels 16 and 19.

To replace the two lost channels, Greenville Cable TV has added to its super service, effective Jan. 1, the Cable Health Network and the Landmark Weather Channel. We are also in the process now of adding a new channel that will feature womens programs during daytime hours. When we go to full programming on that channel, it will also include evening programs of the performing arts. We think our customers will enjoy this station.

During 1981-1982 Greenville Cable TV added a total of six programs to its lineup. The six are: the Greenville Governmental Channel; the Trinity Broadcasting Network; WCPE classical music station; Music Television, a 24-hour daily station featuring rock music and news; Home Box Office, an optional pay service, and cable news network.

Armaos Mrs. Nora Jane Kdley Armaos, 31, of 725 Gayiwd St., Winterville, died Wednesday in Pitt Cimty Memorial Hospital. The funeral service vrill be conducted at 3:30 p.m. Friday in the Wilkerson Funeral Chapd by the Rev. Ed Taylor. Burial will be in the Wintmllle Cemetery.

Mrs. Armaos bad lived most of her life in Winterville and had been employed as a chef. She was a member of the Winterville Free Will Baptist C!hurcb.

Surviving are her husband, Emmanuel H. Armaos; a son

Federal Aid To Colleges Vetoed

WASHINGTON (AP) -Legislation that would have authorized federal aid for community colleges run by Indian tribes in seven western stateshas been vetoed by President Reagan.

The presidoit said the administration was committed to providing educational (^portunities for Indians but that he opposed a provision that would legally bind the government to provide tribal community college education.

College-level Indian education has never been characterized in law or treaty as a trust re^nsibili-ty of the federal government, Reagan said.

The veto does not kill the program since it already is authorized throu^ Sq>t. 30. Reagan called on Congress to enact new legislation extending the program without the features he cited as objectionable.

Victim Of A Fatal Beating

HIGH POINT, N.C, (AP) The body of a 47-year-old Thomasville man was found in a wooded area near High Point Wednesday, police said. Ray Moser appeared to have been beaten to death. Police Capt. Wayne Hartley said. No murder wea^n was found and the body was sent to the chief medical examiners office in C3iapel Hill for an autopsy, Hartley said.

and a daughter, Charles Jacob and (^sie Jo, both of Louisiana; a dau^ter, Vinia Nicole Arm of the home; her paraits, Mr. and Mrs. WUliam H. Wilson of Winterville; two sisters, Mrs. Jo Anne Braddy and Teri Lynn Wilson, both of Dunn; and five brothers, William B. Price, R. Timcithy Kelley and Harvey W. Wilson, all of Greenville, and Domis M. Kelley and T. Wayne Wilson, both of Winterville.

The family will receive friends at the fimeral home from 7-9 p.m. tonight and at other times will be at the home, 725 Gaylord St. in "Winterville.

Donaldson

Funeral services for Joseph Hinton Donaldson will be conducted Saturday at 2 p.m. in the niillips Brothers Mortuary (%apel by the Rev. Patrick Houston. Burial will be in Brown Hill Cemetery.

A Pitt County native, Mr. Donaldson had been a distributor for Adolph Beauty Manufacturers of Philadelphia. He was a charter member of the Eastern Tar River Credit Union, which he served for 20 years as secretary.

Family vistatkm will be held Friday from 7 to 8 p.m. at Phillips Brothers Mortuary CSi^. At other times they will be at the home of Sandra Moore, 204 Haw Drive, Greenville.

TARBORO - Mr. Charle Orris Everett, 61, died Wednesday. His funeral service wUl be conducted Friday at 3 p.m. in the Carlisle Funeral Home by the Rev. Kelly Wilson and the Rev. Monte Bishop.

Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Mable Z. Everett of the home; two dai^ters, Mrs. Vikki Brown Lancaster and Mrs. LuJohn Brown Pollard, both of Tarboro; four sisters, Mrs. Blanche Forbes of Farmville, Mrs. Grace Hackney of Colonial Heights, Va., Mrs. Doris Duffy of Jacksonville, and Mrs. Irene Barbuto of Farmingdale, N.J.; ei^t brothers, Daniel Everett Jr., Percy Everett and Joseph Everett, all of Conetoe, William Everett of Port St. Sucie, Fla., Edward E. Everett of Leggett, Alton Everett of Pico Rivera, Calif., John Everett of Chesapeake, Va., and Hu^

Everett of Lawrence, and four grandchildren The family wUl receive frioids at Cariisle Funeral Home tonight.

Pinkston WINSTON-SALEM - Mrs. Olga Davis Pinkston, 73, of 1521 Seneca St. died in Medical Park Hospital here Wednesday. A memorial service ot her will be conduct Fridhy at 11 a.m. in Ardmore United Methodist Church, Winston-Salem.

A Forsyth County native, Mrs. PlnksUHi was a retired missionary of the United Methodist Church Committee for Overseas Rriief, which she served as co-director with her husband. She was a member of Ardmore United Methodist Church, which she served as a president of the United Methodist Women and as a Ho^ice volunteer.

Surviving are her husband, Robert S. Pinkston of the home; a son, Robert Sherrill Pinkston Jr. of Greenville; five grandchildren; four great-grandchildren; a brother, James S. Davis of Oxon Hill, Md., and two sisters, Mrs. Burton Hair of Burlington and Mrs. WUliam Bodenhamer of JacksonvUIe. The famUy requests that memorials be made to Hospice of Winston-Salem/Forsyth County.

Williams Mr. Clyde W. Williams, 72, of Route 1, Tarboro, died Wednesday in Edgecombe General Hospital. A graveside service wUl be conducted Friday at 3 p.m. in the Bethel Ometery by the Rev. WUliam L. BuUer and the Rev. Keith Andrews.

Mr. WUliams, a native of Pitt County, spent most of his life in the Ctoakley community of Edgecombe County, where he operated a store for many years.

Surviving him are two sisters, Mrs. Ruth Prescott and Mrs. Jennie Hardy, both of the home.

The famUy wUl receive friends at the Wilkerson Funeral Home in GreenvUle tonight from 7 to 9 p.m.

Card OF THANKS

We, The Lopez, Randolph & Earley Family Wish To Thank The Doctors And Nurses Of Pitt Memorial Hospital And Every One Else For Every Kind Act And Deed Shown To Us During The Loss Of Our Dear Loved One. May God Bless Each Of You And Keep You In His Loving Care.

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Sports the daily reflector Classified

VTENOON,

THURSDAY AFTEf

JANUARY 6. 1983Heels, Terps, Deacs All Win; Unheralded Wagner Trips Duke

By Tlie Associated Press

No. 18 North Carolina offered a preview of the Atlantic Coast Conferences new rules Wednesday night as the Tar Heels hit SO percent of their three-point field goal attempts to beat Rutgers 86-69.

Jim Braddock was six for seven from the 19-foot circle, scoring a career-high 20 points in <^orth Carolinas first experiment with the three-pointer and 30-second shot clock.

If theyd have been for two points, we wouldnt have taken them, said coach Dean Smith, whose team improved to 9-3.

In other action involving ACC teams. Wake Forest beat Buffalo 121-56, Maryland eased past William & Mary 56-51 and Duke was stunned by Wagner, losing 84-77..

Wake Forests Sylvester Charles scored 26 points and grabbed 14 rebounds as the Demon Deacons fell one point short of their all-time scoring record in beating the Division III team.

Like North Carolina, Wake Forest took advantage of the ACC rules in extending its record to 9-1. But coach Carl Tacy said his team still needed some polishing before starting conference play Saturday.

Im glad were starting the conference race at home, he said. Georgia Tech will be a difficult team to play. Well have to be ready.

Maryland needed some last minute free thiows from Adrian Branch, who led all scorers with 26 points, as they

RUTGERS

Black

Tillman

Hinson

Brunson

Ellerbe

Battle

Remley

Nieberlein

Randolph

Totals

N. CAROLINA

Doherty

Perkins

Daugherty

Jordan

Braddock

Peterson

Hale

Hunter

Brownlee

Martin

Exum

Makkonen

Robinson

Totals

held off a William & Mary charge. The Torapins, 7-3, will take a five-game winning streak into their ACC t^ner against No. 4 Virginia, 10-1, on Saturday.

Duke coach Mike Krzyzewski offered no alibis for the Blue Devils, who fdl to 5-5 after their hot-shooting opponents from Staten Island, N.Y., ran away in the last eight minutes.

Wagner played an

excellent game, he said. Nothing they did all ni^t was negative. They deserved to beat us, as much as I dont like to say that.

For Wa^r, 3-7, it was an exhilarating victory.

This was the biggest win of my career, said guard Bob Mahala, who scored ^ points toleadtbeSeahawks.

Duke plays LaSalle in a non-conference game Saturday before entering leagire

4    16 2 22

5    12 5 4

2 25 1 5

0 0 0 0

Jackman

Wendt

Tissaw

McNeely

Totals

40    8-12    0-    0    8

40 10-18    2-    4    6

39    5-10    7

13    2- 4    0- 0    0

40    9-13    7- 8    4

26    0- 2    5- 6    1

10-0 0-10 10-00-00 200 3468 1^22 30 9 U 84 MP PG    FT    RAFPt

23    3- 7    0- 1    7    2    1    6

22    4- 7    3- 3    7    0    3    11

32    6-12    4- 4    4    2    3    16

40    9-19    0- 0    3    2    2    18

29    4- 7    3- 4    6

21 5-9 3-5 2 9 0- 4 0- 0 0 4 0- 0 0- 0 0

3 0-10-0 0

4 0-10-0 1 7 0-10-0 1 6 1-1 0-0 1

3 2 11 0 5 13 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 2 2

200 3248 13-17 35 13 19 77

Turnovers; Wagner 21, Duke 23. Technical fouls: Wagner bench. Officials; Hausman, Vacca, Cassiere. Att: 5,500.

200 31-87 1M4 36 19 17 86

Rutgers ...............28 41-89

North Carolina................,42    44-86

Three-point goals: Rutgers: Tillman 2-3, Ellerbe 44, Battle 0-1, Remley 2-2, Nieberlein 0-1. Total: 8-15. North Carolina: Doherty 2-4, Jordan 0-3, Braddock 6-7, Peterson 4-9, Hale 0-1. Total; 12-24.

Turnovers: Rutgers 19, North Carolina 10.

Officials: Forte, Moreau, Shamply.

Att: 12,581.

Sports Coltndor

Editors Note: Schedules are supplied by schools or sponsoring agencies and are subject to change without notice.

Todays Sports ^    BasketbaU

^East Carolina women at Cincinnati (5:40p.m.)

Wrestling Conley at Havelock (7 p.m.)

Fridays Sports

Basketball Wilson at Greenville Christian (5:30p.m.)

Jamesville at Creswell North Lenoir at Greene Central (6:30p.m.)

Ayden-Grifton at C.B. Aycock Southwest Edgecombe at Farmville Central (6:30 p.m.)

North Pitt at SouthemNash Roanoke at Tarboro Williamston at Roanoke Rapids Rose at Northern Nash (6:30 p.m.)

Nash Central at E.B. Aycock (4 p.m.)

WresUlng Northern Nash at Bose (7 p.m.)

Up For A Rebound

Duke Universitys Jay Bilas (21) goes up against Wagner Colleges Gregg Khaleel (31) for control of a rebound during first half play Wednesday .night at Cameron Indoor Stadium. Wagner upset the Blue Devils, 84-77. (AP Laserphoto)

Tyson Named Junior Coach

WH AMARY

Strayhoro

Richardson

Weidner

Cooper

Cie^icki

Traver

Bland

Brooks

Coval

ToUls

MARYLAND

Fothergill

Bias

Coleman

Adkins

Branch

Baxter

Veal

Palnrer

Holbert

Driesell

Rivers

Farmer

ToUds

MP FG FT R

33 2- 7 2- 3 4 30 3- 8 1- 2 3 36 3-11 2- 3 4 30 2- 5 0- 0 2 33 4- 8 2- 3 2 23 4 - 7 4- 4 2 12 2- 4 0- 0 2 2 0- 0 0- 2 2 10-00-00 200 2060 11-17 23 MP FG FT R 30 2- 3 4- 4 11 26 3- 5 0- 3 2 30 6-10 0- 0 3 38 1- 4 0- 1 2 38 8-12 6-6 4 17 1- 1 0- 1 2 11 1-3 0-0 3 2 0-0 0- 1 4 2 0-10-0 0 2 0- 0 0- 0 1 2 0-10-0 0 2 1-10-00

AFPt

1 5 6

1 3 7 0 5 8 0 2 4 0 1 10 0 312

0 1 4 0 0 0 0 0 0

2 20 51 AFPt

1 4 8 0 1 6

1 4 12

2 3 2

3 4 22 0 0 2

3 1 0 1 0 0

WUliamtMary................22    28-51

Blaryland......................36    30-56

Turnovers; William & Mary 9, Maryland 20.

Officials: Nichols, Donaghy, Fralm.

Att; 8,125.

Debbie Tyson, the daughter of Rev. and Mrs. Dewey '^son of Greenville, has b^n named as the head coach of the Nebraska Junior National team (Junior Olympics) in volleyball.

Tyson, who attended Louisburg and graduated from (kiilford College, holds a masters from East Carolina University. While at Louisburg and Guilford, she played both volleyball and basketball, garnering all-State honors at the former and both all-State and all-conference at the latter. She was chosen Most Valuable Player in volleyball at Louisburg her sophomore year and at Gilford her junior year. At Guilford she won the Best Defensive Player award twice.

Since earning her postgraduate degree at ECU, wliere she served as a graduate assistant in volleyball, Tyson has been coaching at Platte Community College in Columbia, Nebraska. In her

four years there, she has a combined 124-61 record, having won one conference title and finished second three times. She captured one regional NJCAA title, qualifying her team for the nationals, where she finished 11th. She has two other third and one fourth place regional finish.

She was selected as Coach of the Year in her conference her first year at Platte.

For the past two years, Tyson served as assistant coach of the Nebraska volleyball team in volleyball, moving up to the head coaching position this year. She has recently completed auditions for the team, which includes girls ages 16-18, and will be^n training and play later this month. Play continues through April.

BUFFALO

Fitzpatrick

McGuire

Haris

Ross

Downs

Buenzow

Jordan

May

Hasner

Marks

Sharons

Cox

Florzak

Rhodes

Totals

WAKE FOR

Rogers

Toms

Teachey

Rudd

Young

Charles

Garber

Kepley

Karasek

Warden

Davis

Totals

MP FG FT RAFPt

32    6-16    3-    6    8    1    3

22    0- 8    0-    0    8    1    4

16 1-1 1-200

19    1- 5    0-    0    4    0

32    6-18    0-    0    6    1

10-0 0-0 10 5 0-10-0 0

20 6-17 0- 0 5

9    0- 5    0-    1    4

10    3- 6    1-    3    3

3    0- 0    0-    0    1

13 1-3 0-0 6 3 0- 2 0-2 0 15    0- 2    0-    0    1

17 0

5 3 4 2 3 13 0 0

0 2

0

300 2464 5-14 48 6 34 86

MP FG FT RAFPt

22    5-    6    6-    8    7    0    0    16

18    3-11    2-    3    3    1    0    8

21    4-    5    0-    0    13    4    2    8

16    5-    6    5-    5    0    2    0    15

16    1-    8    4-    4    1    4    3    6

20 10-12 5- 7 14 2 2 25 15    2-    3    0-    2    1    2    1    5

15    1-    4    5-    9    2    3    4    7

19    0-    4    4-    4    7    0    0    4

16    7-11    2-    2    4    0    1    16

22    3-    5    3-    5    1    5    3    11

200 41-75 3847 55 23 16 121

N.Y.-Bulfalo...................32 24- 56

Wake Forest...................6150-121

Three-point goals: N.Y.-Buffalo; Fitzpatrick 2-4. Ross 0-1, Downs 1-3, May 0-5, Hasner O-I, Marks 0-1, Wake Forest: Young 0-3, Garber 1-1, Keppley 0-1, Worden 0-1, Davis 2-3.

Turnovers: N.Y-Buffalo 25, Wake Forest 13,    

Technical fouls: Harris.

Officials: Burch, Dodge. Moser.

Att: 4,080.Wichita State Football Draws NCAA Fire; Given Two Years

play.

On Friday, No. 16 North Carolina State, 5-1, takes on Cemson, in the second ACC game of the season. Virginia beat Duke in the league opener.

Saturday, in additkm to the Virginia-Maryland and Georgia Tech-Wake Forest conferences clashes. North Carolina meets No. 9 Syracuse at Charlotte, N.C.

Sunday, N.C. State visits No. 15 Missouri.

MP FG FT RAFPt

200 41 10-16 35 8 21 56

MISSION, Kan. (AP)-The NCAA has levied another probation against its most penalized member, Wichita State University, this time for violations in the schools football program.

Wichita State, which now has been cited seven times by the NCAA since it began its enforcement program in 1952, was slapped Wednesday with a two-year probation.

The Shockers basketball program already is on a three-year probation, handed down less than a year ago for recruiting violations.

Under the terms of the football probation, the Shockers are restricted from appearing in bowl games and on television during the 1983 and 1984 seasons.

The Missouri Valley Conference school also will be allowed to award only 25 scholarships, instead of the normal 30, during each of the 1983-1984 and 1984-1985 school years.

Head football Ckiach Willie Jeff Jeffries and assistant coach Fayne Henson will be prohibited by the school from recruiting off-campus for a specific period of time, according to a rqwrt by The Wichita Eagle-Beacon. Jeffries has been head coach since 1978.

The university was charged with five violations of NCAA rules, three of which the NCAA said occurred on Aug. 12, 1982. The violations were committed by the head coach, an assistant coach and a graduate assistant, none of whom was identified in the NCAA report.

It had been widely reported that the school was under investigation for the recruitment of Dennis Tex Allen, a junior college prospect who did not enroll at Wichita State.

Allen had been quoted as saying he was met by an NCAA investigator shortly after he was drivrti to Wichita by a Shockers assistant coach.

Two Bucs Drafted

Two members of the 1982 East Carolina University football team were among those drafted this week by the new United States FootbaU League, viliich is scheduled to begin play in March.

Jody Schulz and Tom Carnes were both drafted by the Washington Federis of theUSFL.

Schulz was chosen on the 14th round, while Carnes was picked iq) in round #20.

Schulz, a third-team AP All-America selection, is a 64, 242-pound defensive end, while Carnes is a 6-5, 277-pound offensive guard. Both were selected to the all-South Independent team earlier this year.

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The NCAA charged the two coaches aiKl the graduate assistant with knowingly providing false and misleading information to the NCAA at an unspecified time. In addition, the head coach was accused of instructing a recruit and his niother to lie to the NCAA.

The head coach also was accused of giving a recruit cash in the office of an assistant. The money was to be used to pay the recruits transportation costs home, the NCAA said.

The NCAA further charged that the assistant coach and the graduate assistant provided transportation for a recruit between his home and the university so the recruit could enroll in WSU and participate in preseason practice.

Tlie assistant coach also purchased a meal for the recruit, the NCAA said.

The assistant coach and the

graduate assistant contacted a recruit on August 12,1982 at a time prohibited by the NCAA, the infractions committee reported.

The NCAA said the assistant coach and the graduate

assistant lied when they told WSU President Qark Ahlberg in August 1982 that they had reported their knowledge of violations of NCAA rules to the infractions committee.

(Pcase Turn To Page W

ECU Volleyball Coach To Quit

Lynn Davidson, for two years the head volleyball coach at East Carolina University, has resigned her post, it has been learned.

Davidsons resignation would become effective at the end of the current school year, sources said. Davidson, when contacted, corfirmed that she has turned in her resignation.

An all-state player at N.C.

Emory Confirms Aides Leaving

East Carolina University head football coach Ed Emory confirmed the resignation of two of his assisants yesterday afternoon. Word of the resignations was unofficially published yesterday prior to Emorys announcment.

Both Jim Holland and Jim Bengala have done an outstanding job for our program, Emory said. We wish both the best as they leave us for other professional interests. Holland helped develop a virtually non-existant strength program to the fine one we have today, while Bengala helped recruit outstanding players like Jeff Heath and Ricky Nichols.

Both coactes were three-year veterans of the E(^ staff, coming to the school with Emory when he took over

as head coach. Holland coached the defensive ends this past year after having worked with the defensive line for two years. Bengala was the defensive secondary coach after having worked with both running backs and quarterbacks in his first two years.

, The resignations brought to three the number leaving the ECU staff this year. Defensive coordinator Norm Parker earlier announced he would leave ECU to join the new Michigan State staff.

Emory has been looking for a new defensive coordination and reportedly is near to making his selectiim. He has also begun a hunt for replacements for the otter two former staff members.

State, Davidson was a four-year player in that sport and also lettered in softball for two years. She was a coKiaptain of the junior varsity basketball team while at State.

She also coached at Cardinal Gibbons High School in Ralei^ and worked with the Raleigh Parks and Recreation Department as a coach and organizer prior to coming to ECU as an assistant coach three seasons ago. After one year as an assistant, she took over the head post when Alita Dillon resigned. Her first season, Davidsons team posted an 11-23 record. This year, however, the Pirate team finished with a 26-15 mark, best ever for an ECU team.

Dr. Ken Karr, Director of Athletics, was unavailable for comment on Davidsons resignation or prospects for a new coach, having already left Greenville for next weeks NCAA Convention on the West Coast.

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Michigan State Upsets Iowa, 61-59

By The Associated Press Theres no place like away-from-home for Michigan State, which just closed another successful road show on its "meat grinder tour.

The Spartans visited No.8 Iowa Wednesday night, and ^iled their hosts (tebut in the new Carver-Hawkeye Sports Arena with a 61-59 upset victory.

Kevin Willis and Sam Vincent scored 18 points apiece for Michigan State in the Big Ten opener for both teams. Vincent hit a free throw in the final seconds and Iowa lost a chance to tie on a turnover with two seconds left.

TOP TWENTY In other games involving Top Twenty teams, Auburn bounced fifth-ranked Alabama 91-80, third-ranked Kentucky got past Louisiana State 52-30, No.9 Syracuse trimmed Providence 83-58, No.lO Arkansas topped Mercer 83-62, 13th-ranked Louisville defeated Kentucky Wesleyan 79-58, No. 17 Georgetown stopped Monmouth 82-59, and No.18 North Carolina beat Rutgers 86-69.

"We enjoy breaking in new arenas, said Michigan State Coach Jud Heathcote, whose Spartans dampened Boise

States debut at its new complex earlier this season.

"In all honesty, we caught Iowa on a cold night in their shooting and we ar very fortunate to win, Heathcote said. "The Big Ten will be a meat grinder all year. We had been struggling and its great to get a victory in the opener. Iowa Coach Lute Olson said his Hawkeyes, 8-2, had all the comforts of home but just didnt win.

No, I dont think the new arena had anything to do with it, Olson said. "We even moved the same rims from the old fieldhouse so there would be psychological effect from that.

The two coaches disagreed, however, on the effect of the Hawkeyes new home.

Im very pleased with the new arena from the standpoint of fan involvement, Olson said. The noise level was certainly equal to, if not louder, than the old fieldhouse.

Differed Heathcote: "It was like a neutral court for Iowa. The crowd was an influence < for Iowa but seemingly less intimidating than in their other building.

Alabama, which moved up a notch to No.5 this week, lost

its second consecutive Southeastern Conference game. Charles Barkley 9C^ 27 points, incliKling 20 in the second half, as Auhirn puUed away in the final seven minutes.

Ennis Whatley had 31 points for Alabama, 8-2, which lost its SEC (^ner to PkHlda on Monday ni^t.

"I am really disappointed for our kids, said Alabama Coach Wimp Sanders<Mi. "We certainly have our work cut out for us this weekend with Kentucky.

Kentucky, meanwhile, had to hold on to ovenxHDe LSU in another SEC game. Melvin Turpin Mocked Leonard Mit-chells field goal attempt with two seconds left to give the Wildcats their 10th vfctw7 in 11 games. Jim Master of Kentucky led all scorers with 14 points.

Erich Santifer tallied 18 points for unbeaten Syracuse in its rout of Providoice in a Big East matcbiQ). Ihe Orangemen, 11-0, scored the last four points of the first half and first six points of the second half to put the game away.

Junior guard Alvin Robertson tied his careo'-high with 23 points on nineK>M3 shooting fnmi the field to pace Arkansas, now KM). The Razorbacks hit 19 of 28 shots, including 13 layiqis and dunks, in racing to a 46-28 halftime lead against Mercer.

Louisville, sparked by brothers Rodney and Scooter McCray, exploded to start the second half in routing Kentucky Wesleyan, a Divisiai II team. Louisi^e, 9-2, scored 19 CMisecutive points early in the second half to take a 62-34

lead. Scooter had 10 points, eight rebounds and nine assists while Rodney had 14 points, six rebounds and four assists.

Center Patrick Ewing scored 15 points and Michael Jackson and David Wingate each added 14 as Georgetown easily defeated Monmouth. The victorious Hoyas, 9-3, took a 23-8 lead and were never threatened.

North Carolina played its first game under the new Atlantic Coast Conference rules iiKluding a 19-foot three-point field goal and 30-

secmKt shot clock - and Jim Braddock made the most of it against Rutgers. He sc(^ 20 points as be hit 5K>f-5 three-point attempts in the first half and made l-of-2 in the sec(kid half. Sam Perkins added 18 for

the Tar Heels, 9-3, ho have won six straight.

And, in a surprise. Bob Mahalla sc(ed 25 points to lead visiting Wagner to an 84-77 victory over unranked Duke.

Clack Charged In Coke Bust

Marcus Allen Is Easy Choice As Offensive Rookie Of The Year

c

OACHES'

ORNER

By CHARLIE HARRISON ECU Mens Basketball Coach

As a new year begins and the old year ends, the ECU basketball team "hits the road again and again and again but we will return to the friendly confines of Minges Coliseum against none other than the league champions of a year ago, James Madison, on January 8.

As I reflect on the past three months as the new head basketball coach, I see some improvement and I see a great deal of room for more. Still "on the road, we have time to wish for a few things in the new year and as the bus rolls along on its six-hour trip to Virginia Tech, I thought Id jot down a few New Years wishes, not resolutions mind you, but wishes for our 1983 team. Truthfully, besides wanting the roof in Minges repaired, all I truly want are a few wins and more consistent play from our team.

The life style of a basketball team during the Holidays is one most people cannot relate to. We, and I say "we as coaches are included, are not part of the chestnuts roasting by an open fire, not really involved with most Holiday festivities. We must practice. We must prepare for upcoming games and league play. Since my sophomore year in college,

I have been with my family only once at Christmas time. Not that Im complaining but if Im not home for Christmas neither are my players.

Scrooge! Huh?

Basketball players dont have the life of leisure. Surely they have media exposure yet I think that all of you should be aware of the time - leisure time that the average student and person ejoyns during Christmas and New Years is not a luxury for ECU basketball players.

As the "mean ole coach that some of my friends have labeled me, I must defend myself as I did not lock the players up in their rooms for the entire duration of the Holiday season, yet Christmas night we were hard at work and continued to do so throughout the normal Holiday time for the other students. This is a sacrifice by these people. They stay in their dorm room, eat at the Crows Nest, and practice twice a day when not playing.

I relay this to you here in Coachs Corner only in an effort to make you aware and maybe more appreciative of a group of students that besides the luxury of having an athletic schoiarship are giving up a great deal of time - time usually taken for granted by others unless they were the families of those who represent ECUs mens (and womens) basketball teams and were away for the Holidays.

I hope that this leisure time sacrificed will be beneficial to us later. I hope that their time will be appreciated by others as time well spent by being in attendance at games. I hqie that this time spent in the hopes of having a representative and competitive basketball team will not go unnoticed....

And the "mean ole coach makes out the practice play for the Virginia Tech game as the six hour bus ride almost has ended. We wont go long. A short practice, says the mean ole coach.

Yeah, says one of the players under his breath. Only two or ttiree hours.

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NEW YORK (AP) -Marcus Allen, the National Football Leagues scoring leader in 1982 and linchpin of the the Los Angeles Raiders resurgence, was unanimously named today The Associated Press Offensive Rookie of the Year.

Allen, Heisman Trophy winner from a running back factory called,the University of Southern California, received all 84 votes from a nationwide panel of ^rts writers and broadcasters.

His selection came after his roommate at Southern Cal,

Tobocco Bslt ConfsrsncG

Boys Standings Conf.

Overall

W L

W

L

Aurora

4 0

7

2

Mattmauskeet

3 1

5

1

Columbia

3 1

4

2

Chocowinity

3 2

3

2

Belhaven

3 2

3

5

Creswell

2 2

4

3

Bath

1 3

1

3

Bear Grass

I 4

2

5

Jamesville

0 5

0

7

Girls Standings Conf.

Overall

W L

W

L

Belhaven

5 0

8

0

Bear Grass

5 0

7

0

Chocowinity

4 1

4

1

Bath

3 1

3

1

Columbia

1 3

3

3

Aurora

1 3

1

6

Jamesville

1 4

1

6

Mattmauskeet

0 4

0

6

Creswell

0 4

0

7

Eostern Carolina

Boys Standings

Conf.

All

W L

W

L

North Pitt

1 0

7

3

Ayden-Grifton

1 0

6

3

FarmvlIleC.

1 0

6

4

Southern Nash

0 0

1

7

SW Edgecombe

0 1

7

3

C.B. Aycock

0 1

0

9

GrewieC.

0 1

0

9

Girls Standings

Conf.

All

W L

w

L

SW Edgecombe

1 0

9

1

GreieC.

1 0

8

1

C.B. Aycock

1 0

8

2

Southern Nash

0 0

5

3

North Pitt

0 1

5

6

Ayden-Grifton

0 1

3

6

FarmvlIleC.

0 1

1

10

Coostal ConfGrGiKG

Boys Standings

Conf.

All

W L

W

L

West Craven

0 0

9

1

Conley

Havelock

0 0 0 0

7

6

2

4

West Carteret

0 0

3

3

North Lenoir

0 0

4

5

White Oak

0 0

2

7

Girls Standings

Conf.

AU

W L

W

L

Conley

0 0

9

1

North Lenoir

0 0

7

2

Havelock

0 0

6

4

West Carteret

0 0

2

4

White Oak

0 0

2

7

West Craven

0 0

1

10

Geveland Browns linebacker Chip Banks, won the Defensive Rookie award on Wednesday.

Allen fini^ied the season third in the American Conference and fourth in the league in rushing with 697 yards on 160 carries and scored a league-leading 11

Wichita...

(ContinuedFrom Page 11)

"Although there were not a large number of violations in this case, it was considered by the Committee on Infractions to be quite serious, said Charles Alan Wright, chairman of the NCAA Infractions Committee.

The violations involved unethical conduct on the part of members of the universitys football coaching staff who reported false information to the institution and the NCAA, Wright added.

Wright said an even-more-severe penalty would have been imposed, if Ahlberg "had not already taken significant disciplinary and corrective actions against the football coaching staff members who were involved in the case...

A spokeswoman in the WSU sports , information department, Susan Wolcott, said she was unaware of any disciplinary actions taken against the coaching staff. She said the university would not have any comment on the NCAA probation until today.

The probationary period impo^ by the NCAA would coincide with the last two years of the probation imposed on the Shockers basketball team. The basketball team was barred from post-season tournament play and limited in the number of scholarships it could award.

The Shockers finished the 1982 football season with an 8-3 record, their best since 1961 and their first winning season in 10 years. The team was led by senior quarterback Prince McJunkins, whose jersey was retired at the end of the season.

The NCAA action comes on the heels on Athletic Director Ted Bredehofts Nov. 8 resignation under pressure from AMberg. Ahlberg also has said he would leave the university at the end of the current school year.

touchdowns on the ground.

-He ad(^ 401 yards and three touchdowns as the Raiders No. 2 receiver with 38 catches, four behind Todd Christensen. His 84 points on 14 touchctowns made him the first non-kicking rookie to win the NFL scoring title since Gale Sayers did it in 1965. He also was selected by his peers as the only rookie starter in the Pro Bowl game.

With Allen joining Kenny King in the backfield, the Raiders returned to the offense which had made them one of the most potent teams in the pro game - an offense predicated on the quarterback telling his backs and receivers: "Everybody go long.

The Raiders, Super Bowl champions two years ago but only 7-9 in 1^1, rebounded to post an 8-1 record, the American Conferences best in this strike-shortened season.

Allen followed in the footsteps of Mike Garrett, O.J.

SimpscHi and Charles White in winning the Heisman, emblematic of college football supremacy, vdiile at Southern C. The school also turned out running backs Ricky Bell, Anthony Davis, Sam Cun-nin^iam, Garence Davis, Jon Arnett and Frank Gifford.

As a senior, Allen rolled up 2,342 yards, an NCAA single-season record. But when he was drafted by the then-Oakland and soon-to-be-Los Angeles Raiders, club owner A1 Davis was accused of making a blatant pitch to sell tickets in their mw home. Memorial Coliseum.

New England had the No. 1 pick in the draft and used it to take defensive lineman Kenneth Sims from Texas. Eight other teams also passed on Allen two of them going for other running backs, Minnesota taking Darrin Nelson, Atlanta selecting Gerald Riggs - before the Raiders turn came.

Michael Spinks Is Arrested

RALEIGH (AP) - Former Pittsburgh Steeler and New York Giant offensive lineman Jim Clack was released on $10,000 bond Wednesday following his arrest (i drug-related charges, police said.

Gack, a gu^ and center for the National Football League Steders from 1971 to 1977 and a member of the teams 1974 and 1975 Siqier Bowl champions, was charged with con^iracy to deliver cocaine and delivery of cocaine.

He ^uld be scheduled for trial in the next 60 days, Nags Head Police Chief Charles DaU said in a telephone interview Wednesday night.

Clack, 35, of Rocky Mount, and four Dare County residents were named in sealed indictments Monday. The indictments were sealed until Wednesday to avoid hampering an ongoing drug investigation in Suffolk, Va., Dail said.

The indictments followed an investigation by the Nags Head Police Department, the North Carolina State Bureau of Investigation and Suffolk undercover police, Dail said.

The investigation was launched when Dail asked the SBI and Suffolk police for assistance some time back, he said. We didnt know what we were going to find when we started.

Dail would not release details of the investigation.

We cant try the case in the press, DaU said. To be honest the investigation is still continuing.

Gack, a Wake Forest University graduate, finished Ms professional footbaU career as a member of the New York Giants from 1978 untU 1981.

Clack currently owns a sporting goods store in Rocky Mount and has several business ventures in the Nags Head area, including owning some condominiums, Dail said.

Others charged in the case included Kenneth Zane Smith, 34, a Nags Head real estate broker, arrested Monday on charges of conspiracy to deliver cocaine and delivery of cocaine. He was released on $25,000 bond, police said.

Kill DevU HUls r^idents -Richard Kenneth Ostlund, 33, a tennis pro, and Sharon Cmss Metzger, 24, who worked for a realtor were each indicted on charges of conspiracy to deliver cocaine and delivery of cocaine, conspiracy to sell and deliver cocaine and sale and delivery of cocaine.

George Michael Paul, 21, of Wanche%, was charged with felonious possession of LSD and sale and delivery of LSD,' according to DaU.

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PHILADELPHIA (AP) -World Boxing Association li^t heavyweight champion Michael Spinks says a stolen gim that police found in his car was a "keepsake* he received in Canada following the 1976 Olympics.

Spinks, who was charged Wednesday with possession of a gun without a permit, denied police reports that he had led officers on a 25-block highspeed chase.

The 26-year-old younger brother of former heavyweight champion Leon Spinks was arrested early Wednesday after police stopped his car and noticed a .45-caliber revolver on the floor. Michael Spinks 20-year-old brother, Leland, also was in the car but was not arrested.

Michael Spinks was released on his own recognizance after an arraignment before Municipal Judge Lynwood Blount via closed-circuit television.

Detective Capt. William Bergman said two officers began pursuing Spinks car after it went ttirou^ a red light at the outskirts of the city about 1:45 a.m. After they

stopped the car, they noticed a gun lying at Spinks feet. The gun contained six spent shells, police said.

Police said Canadian authorities had been notified of the pistol, which was reported stolen in Toronto in 1975.

Spinks, who won a gold medal during the 1976 Olympics at Montreal, told reporters he had used the gun to fire shots into an open field to celebrate making it to ttie New Year.

I dont carry guns, no weapons at all, said the fighter. He said he forgot the weapon was in his car..

Spinks also said there was no high-speed chase.

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JamesvHle Bullets Looking For

Improvement Despite 0-7 Start

By WOODY PEELE Reflector Sports Editor JAMESVILLE - Despite having three starters return-ing from last years Jamesville Bullet basketball team, Coach William Johns(m was not really looking fw all that good a year.

With a young team, I was hoping that we might win more than we did la^ year (4-16), Johnson said. But so far, things havent gone that well as Jamesville is off to a 0-7 start.

The three returning starters include Kenny Moore, a 6-3 senior center; Rex Bell, a 6-1 senior forward; and Richie Ange, a 54 sq[>homore guard.

'Die other t\iro starters have come from non-letter winners Tracy Peele, a 5-10 sophomore forward, and David Biggs, a 5-10 fresiunan guard.

Other members of the team are Stanley Roberts, a 5-11 senior guard; Berkley Perry, a 6-0 senior forward; James Anthony, a 06 guard; J(^ Pierce, a 5-11 junior guaid.

None of the non-starters are lettermen.

Having just nine is a problem, Johnson said. Weve did have ten but one left the team. We have a conference rule that if we bring a jayvee player up, we cant send him back down and Id rather have them playing on the jayvee level than sitting on the bench on the varsity.

For the most part, Johnson is using between six and seven players a game.

Inexperience and the lack of hei^it are' our biggest problems, the coach said, ei^ially in this cmiference. The other teams have pretty good overall height. Rebounding, with the height, is a problem, iHit Johnson feels the team is doing pretty well for its size. Against a big team, it does cause problems, however.

We have to be selective in

our shocking, and I think we have been. WeU take the break who) we can, otherwise well come down and work for the good shot. The last couple of games weve been shooting fairly well.

Defensively, Johnson is pretty weU satisifed. We pUy a basic z(e and try to pack it in the middle and take a chance on their not hitting the

out^ shots.

In the Tobacco Belt Conference race, both Mat-tamuskeet and Aurora are unbeaten in the conferaice and Johnsm feds these two are the class of the league, although Chocowinity and Bdhaven could win out, as could Columbia.

We woe picked to finish next-to4ast in a poll of the

coaches, but I think if we continue to play well we can improve on thi^ possibily to as high as sixth, Johnson said. Were not playing bad and the kids are not dixMir-aged. Tlieyre still enthused about playing.

JohiKon is hc^ful that the losing streak will be comii^ to an end sorni. I hope it will be Friday night, he said.

Lady Bullets Snap String

With First Win Of Year

lY PEELE Sports Editor JAMESVILLE - Things havent been too good for the Jamesville Lady Bullets so far this year. In fact, until Tuesdays game with Columbia, the girls had not picked up a victory. But the 30-20 decisicm finally ended their six-game losing streak.

Coach Jerry Ange, in his first year with the Lady Bullets, has three starters back off a team that went 184. Those three include Kim Floyd, a 5-11 senior center; Lorie Hardison, a 5-3 senior forward; and Ci^tal Perry, a 5-7 senior forward.

Having three starters back off an 18-8 team, however is decq)tive. One of the losses was point guard Kelly Hardison, who graduated, and Angie Credle, a 6-2 center who is phyically unable to compete this year.

The three, too, are the only letter winners on the squad. There are ei^t others on the team.

The other two starters include Rdt)in Gardner, a 5-4 sopomore guard; and Cindy Getschel, a 5-4 freshman guard.

The remaining girls hiclude Terry Treadwell, a 5-4 senior

guard; Rie Brown, a 5-8 freshman center; Renee Col-etrain, 5-2 freshman guard; Tammy Crisp, 5-7 freshman forward, Sherry Perry, a 5-3 freshman guard; and Gina Reasrni, a 5-4 freshman guard.

Except for the three who are back, we dont have a great deal of experience. Hardison and Perry werent used to scoring last year, and theyre having to do so this year, and it hasnt come easy for them. Floyd has been our leading scorer. She was hitting about 13 a game prior to Christmas and she got 16 (Tuesday) night, Ange said. Her actual average is 12.5.

Our ball handling skill are very poor right now, but weve improved tremendously. Were still not close to where we need to be to be competitive. We worked the ball well and we moved it quick against Columbia. That was our best game.

Team shooting has been rather poor, according to Ange. Floyd has been the team leader and Hardison is behind her. I kinda really expected our footing to be weak with our inexperience and the fact that our returning people didnt shoot that much in the past. Our foul shooting

is poor too. Since the first game we havent been above 50 percent.

Defensive rebounding has good, Ange feels, but offensively, it hasnt been that good. We havent really got the height to get a whole lot of offensive rebounds and we have to be selective with our shots.

Defense against the weaker teams has been good, but against the better teams, it hasnt looked that good. Its average. Id say, Ange said. We held Belhaven to 44 and thats pretty good.

As to the Tobacco Belt Conference, Ange said he was hoping to finish around fifth. Right now, Chocowinity, Belhaven and Bear Grass are pretty strong. Other than that you could toss a coin on any pven night. With the inexperience we have, if we finish in the middle of the pack, that would be a good year for us, Ange said.

We played a tough schedule early, and that should help us. Losing six games in a row,

I was worried, but I told the girls to look back at who we played and their record. I told them that if they worked hard it would pay off when we played the others.

SCOREBOARD

TANK IFNAMARA

by Jeff Millar & Bill Hinds

wve U6wa? OF eux, wweMT sDu ? pBo fooTBAu. puwa?r most-so?

RcBosktboll

ALeague

Fergusons............26    3967

Rockers...............42    3375

L.eading scorers: FDanny Hinds.* 26, Stuart HaiUicock 12; R-David Wooten 19, David White 13.

Denver    2    7    0    .222    148    2

Houston    I    8    0    111    138    245

Baltimore 0 8    1    .056    113    238

Niaiooal Conference

Hookw................29    42-71

Integdn................22    40-62

Leading scorers: HCalvin Kerwtai 20, Dennis White 16; I Tony Gatlin 25, Mont Gaylord 14.

Cherrys..............47    3279

GVUla................43    35-78

Leading scorers: CT. Shelton 35, A. Wynn 17; GV-R. Silvena 16, R. Coggins 16^

x-Washington    8    l    0    .888    ItO    128

x-Dallas    6    3    0    .887    226    145

x-GieenBay    5    3    1    .611    226    188

X-Minnesota    5    4    0    .556    187    188

x-AUanU    5    4    0    .558    183    188

x.St. Louis    5    4    0    .558    135    170

x-TampaBay    5    4    0    .556    158    178

X-Detrolt    4    5    0    .444    181    176

New Orleans    4    5    0    .444    128    160

N Y. Glanu    4    5    0    .444    164    160

San Francisco    3    6    0    .333    208    206

Chicago    3    6    0    .333    141    174

PhUaldidiia    3    6    0    333    181    185

L A. Rams 2 7 0 .222 200 250' x.<iualifled for playoffs

Monday's Game Minnesota 31, Dallas 27 END REGULAR SBAS(X4

SUPER BOWL XVU Surcan. 30, Pasadena Rose Bowl, 6

^ AFC vs. NFC champions, for Vince Lombardi Trophy

%OBOWL Sun., Feb. 6, Honolulu AFC AU.Stars vs. NFC All.SUrs

Cent. Connecticut 68, Qulnnipiac 67, OT Drexel 74, St. Francisca. 64 Geneva 8, Wash. A Jeff . 75 Georgetown 82, Monmouth 58 Hamfltoneo, Albany St. 53 Harvard 67, Army 38

NHLStondings

PhUa. Textile80, Clarion St. 77 St Francis, N Y. 81, Loi^ Island U. 72

By The Associated Press Wales Conference Patrick IMvision W L T GF GA

5 166 124 10 156 142 150 133 166 143 131 178 113 178

NFlPloyoWt

NBAStondinfls

Associated Press ._LN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division

W LPct. GB

(Seedlngi In Parentheses)

The top eight learns in each conference ire seeded Ito 8 for the duration of the layoffs by won-kwt percentages and ie-oreakers:

First Round AFC

Boston

Montreal

Buffalo

.833 -.750    2

584 7 .548 8V3 .375 14

.647 -.500    5

.452 614 .375 8

.633 V4

.441    614

.418 7 .371    8

.128 16

Philadelphia    25    5

Boston    24    8

New Jersey    18    IS

Washington    17    14

NewYbrk    12    20

Central Divisk

Milwaukee    22    12

Detroit    18    18

AUanO    M    17

Indiaitt    12    20

ChicaiD    11        355    8>A

aeveSnd    6    27    .128    16>/4

TWESTERN CONFERENCE Midwest Otvisioo Kansas City    18    U

San Antonio    22    13

Denver    15    W

Dallas    13    18

Utah    13    a

Houston    4    27

Padflc Division LoaAngeles        7

Seattle        0

Phoenix    21    13

PorUand    a    M

Golden sute    13    

SanDlego    .    7    26

Wednesday's Gamas _ PhlkKMphla 122, Los Angeles 120, OT Detroit 1, Cleveland 116 I. San Antonio 131 I, Denver 118 _ Juhll5.0T Seattle 104 liundaysGnnes AtlenUatNewYork Phomiix at New Jersey

Phoenix at Indiana Dalles at Atlaida

Saturday's Games

aeveland (8) at Loe Angeles Raiders

<l),4p.m.

New England (7) at Miami (2), 4 p.m.

Sunday's Oamae New York Jeto (6) at CincimaU (3), 12:30p.m.

San Diego (5) at Pittsburgh (4), 12:30 p.m.

NFC Saturday's Games

Detroit (!) at Washington (1), 12:30

Louis (6) at Green Bay (3), 12:30

p.m.

 ^sGamas

Chicago MinnesoU St. Louis Detroit Toronto

Tampa Bay (7) al Dallas (2), 4 p.m. AUanU (5) at MinnesoU (4), 4 p.m. Sat.,Jan.l5&Sun.,J|D.U

.781 -.687 2>4 618 5 .600 5t4 .384 12>4 yi2 18V4

AFCandNFCC Lowest remaintng seeds remaining seeds; second-lowest second-lovKM seeds

at hi^ stseeAat

CONFERENCE CHAMPIONSHIP (Wtamarsof Jan. 15-16 fUMs M home oLU^ remata^sseds)

Saturday. Jan. 22

PhUadeltoiia    24    12

Washing    18    11

NY Isles    20    16

NY Rangers    20    16

Pittsburg    12    22

New Jersey    8    25

Adams Division 24    10    6    174    117

21    11    8    181    143

18    14    8    156    133

Quebec    18    15    6    176    168

Hartford    10    24    5    128    184

Campbell Conference Norris Division 26    9    6    182    135

20    11    9    170    151

14    24    5    150    168

9    22    11    130    180

8    21    8    136    174

Smytbe Division

22    12    8    215    167

17    18    4    158    166

14    21    7    166    179

13    18    8    140    149

Los Angeles 14    18    5    125    145

Wednesday's Games Buffalo 3, New York Rangers 3, tie Washington 5, Detroit 2 Toronto 4, New Jersey 4, tie Boston 4, Chicago 1 St.LouU3,MimKsoU3,tie Edmonton 8, Whmtpeg 3

nnrsday's Games Vancouver at Hartford Toronto at Washington Los Angeles at Montreal Winnipeg at Calgary

Fridas Games Vancouvo-at Buffalo Boston at New Jersey Quebec at New York Rangers nttsburgh at Edmonton

Pto

53

48

47

44

30

24

Southanmton 80, Gannon 65 Trenton St. 79, Rutgers-Nev Utica 71, Vermont ('eslcyi

i71,N,

Newark 49

W Va. Wesleyan 49. Charleston 44 Yeshiva71,frY,Poly41 SOUTH

Auburn 91, Alabama M Clark Coll. 83, AugusU Coll. 78 Fla International 93, Ohio Dominican

Fort Valley W, Ga. Southwestern U Kentucky 52, Loutolana St. SO LouisvilHe 79, Ky. Wesleyan 58 McNeese St. 86, Texas-San Antonio 57

Mississippi 77, VanderbUt 62 Mississippi St. 62. Florida to

North Carolina W, Rutgei .StetsonS

Richmond 53,;

Roanoke 84, Bridgewater, Va. 66 St. Andrew's 110, Newport News M S Carolina St, 92, St. Xavier 83 Southern Tech 83, Ind. Central 68 South Florida M, Columbia 54

Wagner 84, Didw 77 WakeFoi

Edmonton

Winnipeg

Calgary

Vancouver

Forest 121, Buffalo St 66 Wash. A Lee W Jfew Palto itlDWEST Baldwin-Wallace 83, Tiffin 82

iGreenTl.EallSt.N

Bowling Gi CapitalSl, AddandM Cent. Michigan 78, E. Michigan 51 Defiance 73, Indiana Tech 64 .Indlana-SEM

Franklin (

John Carroll SO, Wilmington 56 Kenyon 68, MarietU 65 Miami 60, Kent St . 54 Michigan St . 61, Iowa 58 Ohio Northern 77, Urbana S3 Ohio U 71, Toledo 52 Siena Heists M, Bluffton 54 W Michigan 54, N Olinois 53 SOtmREST Arkansas 83. Mercer 62 Southern Methodist 84. Texas Tech 77

N.C. Scortboord

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San Indiana

PhdaddMila at Washington Boston at San Antonio

New Jersey at Chkago Uua at Kansu aty DeOwit at Milwaukee Hmjston at Denver

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Investigate Oregon Cyanide Poisoning

By DAVID STAATS Associated Press Writer HILLSBORO, Ore. (AP) -The cyanide poisoning of a woman who died aftr taking Anacin-3, in the first death

from a tainted dn^ since the Tylmol killings, was probably an isolated tragedy, says the ^te medical examiner.

An autq^y and toxicology

N.C. Fourth In UFO Sightings

PORT-A-jOHN deer stand Dave Riesell OUie Wilson pose next to their converted portable toilet \ntiich is used as a deer stand or blind. Sitting on tqp of the trailer overlooking prime deer pastures, this contraption is equipped withy carpeted floor, electricity, a heater, radio and of course a toilet. It was set ig) on Wilsons farm in Summerfield, N.C. (AP Laserphoto)

Superior Court Report

The following cases were disposed of during the Dec. 6 term of Pitt County Superior Court.

Shirley Dixon Roberts, Grifton,

Isaac Cornelius Smith, 309 Line Ave., breaking, entering and larceny, possession of stolen property, breaking and entering, three years Jail.

Raymond Dean Humphries, no

larceny, safe cracking, two years address, larceny, three years jail jail    suspended on payment of restitu-

Thomas Franklin Ricks, no tion, three yearsprobatlon. address, forgery and uttering William Harvey Humbles, Ayden, stolen possession of stolen property, three

(three counts), receiving

three years jail on payment of costs, restitution, four-and-one-half years probation.

William Glenn Powell, 1900 Kennedy Circle, tampering with auto (two counts), 18 months Jail. Stan Peyalmal, Route 11,

years jail, 60 days active, remainder suspended on payment of restitution, probation.

William Allen Hines, 200 Falrview Way, possession of stolen goods, voluntary dismissal.

Robert Lee Harris, 608 Ford St.,

LINCOLNTON, N.C. (AP) North Carolina ranks fourth in the nation for the number of UFO sightings in the last 30 years, says a field investigator for the Mutual UFO Network Inc.

George D. Fawcett says unidentified flying objects were reported in 12 cities in the state in 1982, many accompanied by swishing and whirring sounds.

Fawcett said a high school student in Kemersville suffered burning eyes, xtreme - thirst and red arms after a (lomed UFO hovered above liim as he played basketball on his family basketball court in March.

Larry Walker reported the court lights went out while the object was in the area, but came on when the UFO left. Fawcett said Walker also reported seeing a figure moving behind the windows of the object.

Ten members of the Preston Woods family in Hillsborough reported seeing a 50-foot object with a row of windows ^maneuver above their home on Jan. 4. They said the UFO made a whirring sound.

Two postmasters, Robert McRee of Maiden and Jack Bolick of Conover, reported an object that looked like a large window of rectangular

Wrecks Cause

GreenvUle, driving under the In- common law robbery, 10 years jail; flunce, 90 days Jidl suspended on breaking and entering, four years

payment of $100 and coat, probation Jail to begin expiration of previ^ two years; driving while license sentence; assault with deadly

Light Damage

An estimated $2,600 damage resulted from three traf-

yeareprobaUon.    Leo    Harj^r    luos    layror si., collisions investigated by

Michael Dou^as Pitt, Edgewood driving while lirai^ revoked,    Greenville ndice Wednes-

raUer PArk, driving under Influ- sisting arrest, (Wying under Influ- ^reenvuie police weones

revoked, six months JaU suspended weapon (two counts), voluntary on payment of fine, costs, three dismissal

Trailer

ence, six monUis jail suspended on ence, 18 months jail, payment of fine, cost, three years Victoria Roberts Hardee, Route

probation.

Lance Pitt, Farmville, armed robbery, 14 years.

Jacqueline Pearson, Mill Street, employment security law violation (12 counts), two years jail suspended on payment of costs, restitution, three years probation.

Timothy Nichols, Fountain, har-rasslng telephone calls, six months jail suspended on payment of costs, three years probation; harrassing telephone calls, six monUis jail suspended on payment of costs, attorney fees, Uiree years probation.

Troy Moore, Route 2, Winterville, common law robbery, 20 months jaU.

Kirk Moore, 1206 MyrUe Avenue,

1, Winterville, shoplifting, 60 days

jail suspended on payment of costs, U

two years probation.

Randall Ray Hardee, Route 2, Ayden,. breaking and entering.

safecracking, three years jail. George Voncent Ha

day.

Officers said the heaviest damage occurred when cars driven by Sheila Deanne Bullock of Mocksville and Michael Kachmer of Greenville collided about

iancock. Route

1, Selma, safwracklng, breaking 4-02 p.m. on 14th Street, 35

ft Bt of the Charles forgery and uttering, uttering Street intersection, forged check, two years Jail sus- poHce, who charged Ms.

Bullock lth falling to see

tering (two cunts), voluntary dis- her intended movement missal.    could be made in safety.

estimated damage at $350 to

Williamston,

one year jail, aid -

larceny, three years jail suspended of c

of costs, three years

ation.

Timothy John McDonald, Route 8, Greenville, .10 percent blood aU

Reginald Gatlin, no address, sale of heroin (four counts), eight years Jail.

Harvey Frazier, Tarboro,

the Bullock car and $1,000 to the Kachmer vehicle.

An estimated $400 damage resulted to each of two cars

breaking,enterinoandlarceny,two involved in a 6:43 p.m. COl-

SLlSETsS'?2rp,i! listn St the intersection of

bation.

William Clay Everett, Route 1, Bethel, larceny, 18 months jail. Booker T. Dixon Jr., Route 2,

Third and Ash Streets.

. Drivers of the cars volved were identified

in-

as

reckless driving, pended on payipent of costs, fine, attend alcohol workshop..

Farland MIchell Woolard, Pinevlew Trailer Park, forgery, two years jail suspended on payment of 1250 and costs, restitution, three years probation.

Jesse Lee Willis, 1916B South Pitt Street, assault on female, two years jail.

Jeffrey Wayne Williams, Route 6, Greenville, breaking, entering and larceny (three counts), (our years jaU.

Herbert Issac Williams, Route 2, Greenville, breaking and entering.

Susan Respess of

posal of mortgaged property, one year jail suspoi^ on payment of costs and restitution.

Shirley A. Teel, no address, welfare fraud, two years jail suspended on payment of 11,290 restitution, four years probation.

Marvin Jackson Strickland Jr., 218 Belvedere Drive, credit and fraud, voluntary dismissal; larceny, two years jail suspended on probation; credit card theft, three years jail, 60 days acUve,. remainder suspended on payment of restitution, probation.

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light over Maiden in March.

On April 13, J.P, Stevens Co. employee Slade Hicks said he watched a chrome-topped UFO rise from behind the reservoir at Stanley, trailing sticks and dirt from its bottom.

On April 19, members of the Roland Lowry family in Monroe said a UFO with red, bliK, amber and white lights appeared, causing dogs, cows and chickens to become extremely agitated.

On June 8, Ginger Harris, a Pineville housewife, reported an object with lights attached to it hovering near her home and making whirring sounds.

Larry DeArmond, an Eastern Airlines employee, said he saw three UFOs making wide sweeps, right-angle turns and rapid ascents near Charlotte on July 6.

A long black cigar-shaped UFO with a light on it was reported on Sq>t. 10 hovering over Belmont. Fawcett said police received more than 20 phone calls before the object moved toward Mount Holly.

A UFO swept the ground with a searchlight beam later in September, according to WUlara Griffith of Belmont.

Sgt. Frank Olszewski, a guard at the Timken Plant in Lincolnton, and Security Officer Patricia Chapman observed three brightly lit object maneuvering above the plant. After the objects left, the pair reported six to ei^t airplai^ appeared in the area, as if searching for the UFOs.

In a similar incident near the McGuire Nuclear Plant on Lake Norman, plant employees Gary Fortenbe^ and Jimmy Bumgarner said a disc-shaped object with four landing legs flew about 250 feet above the ground in the early dayli^t hours in October.

examination revealed cyanide and bits of an un-i^ntified capsule in the stomach of 3l-year-old Patricia F. Bennett, a college security guard, Medical -Examiner William Brady announced Wednesday in Portland.

Mrs. Bennett died at about 4 a.m. Tuesday in the intensive care unit of Tuality Community Hoqiital about S>/2 hours after she was driven to the hospital by her husband Norman, 45, a self-employed carpenter.

Family members reported Mrs. Bennett took Anacin-3 a couple of hours before she became ill, said Washington County Sheriffs Capt. Harold Kleve said Wednesday.

Tests were planned today to learn whether capsule fragments found in the victims stomach were from Anacin-3 or airother medication, Brady said. Trace amounts of cyanide were found in the air of an Anacin-3 bottle taken from her home, he said, and tests of the remaining capsules and other drugs in the home also were to be conducted today.

Brady did not release the lot number for the Anacin-3 bottle, and said he was not advising a recall of the pain reliever.

We dont want to create an inapproDriate attitude of

Money To Build Foreign Market

WASHINGTON (AP) -The U.S. Feed Grains Council has received a three-year grant of $160,000 annually from a Des Moines, Iowa, company to help build foreign markets for U.S. feed grains.

Darwin E. Stolte, president of the council, said the grant is from Pioneer High-Bred International Inc. and that the money will make a si^ificant impact on our ability to move forward with new export development programs in regions such as Latin America, Africa and the Peoples Republic of China.

The council is a non-profit organization of producers and agribusinesses which works to develop foreign markets for feed grains. Pioneer, a seed company, is a member of the council.

alcohol content, 30 days Wayne Clayde Iradi, Route 3,

Wilson, false pretense, three years jail suspended on payment of costs,

restitution, five years probation. ------- - ----------    u    i i. /

Chester Ray Wooten,    Farmville,    Grifton, receiving stolen goods (six    MarCUS Joseph Hepburn Of

ing,    60    days    jail    sus-    counts), possession of stolen pds,    jq2 gt. and David Jon

three years jaU suspended on payment of costs, proljatlon.    LOWC 01JZ UaK ol.

Stephen Connor, Tarboro, Cars driven by breaking and entering, possession Hulbrt Respe

Washraglon and My' Ray

restitution, three years probation.    Burroughs Of 2001 E.

Bevelyn Clemmons, 402 Manhat-    Greenville Blvd. collided

ten Ave., employment security law .    ,*1,

violation (14 counts), two years jail    about 1.36 p.m. on 10th

suspended on payment of costs.    Street, 100 feet east Of the

restitution, three years probation    RockspringS Road interseC-

Johnnle Ray Connon, Winterville,    ^    ,    ,

common law robbery, 60 days jail,    tion, according to in-.

Donald Ray Brown, Ayden, vestigators.

,--------...--------------- possession of stolen proprty. Damage was Set at $150 to

three    years    jail;    uttering    forged    years jail, 60 days active, re-    .    Rpcnpcc    car    and SSflfl    to

check, two    year* JaU suspended    on    malnder suspended on payment of    the    KespeSS    car    MG WW    10

payment of cosU, restitution, five restitution, probation.    the Burroughs vehicle,

years probation; forgery ai^ ut- David Odell Britt Jr., 100 Howell tering, voluntarydiamissal.    Street, auto larceny (two counts),

Barbara Wells, WlntervUle,    dls-    two years Jail

posing of mortgaged property, one Timothy Ray Boyd, Belvolr,

year JaU suspemted on payment of breaking, entering and larceny, COUPLE ESCAPE cost and restitution.    breaking and entering, tw years    ui*P7Apifi?D Wit

Barbara A. Wallace, Ayden,    dls-    jaU suspended on payment of costs,    HllALIL.n, west

restitution, three years probation. Germany (AP) A Ronald Earl Best, Route 3,    91    Gnrman    la-

Ayden, uttering forged check (two    l-year-OW    wrman    la

counts), forMry (four counts),    borer and his 19-year-old

dismissal; uttering forged check    girlfriend escaped aciws the

(two counts), breaking and enter- p.v Djvpr into Wpst lng,thit!C days jail, 60 days active,    *'ver    nio west

remainder susjHsnded on payment Germany on Wednesday, of fine, costs, probation three border police said, years.

Frankie Avent, Hams

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public cfmcern, Brady said. I think this is most iikdy -and my office is treating it as a sin^e isdated tra^dy at this time.

Seven people in the Chicago area died last year between Sept. 29 and Oct. 1 after taking Extra-Strength Tylenol ca^es laced with cyanide. The deaths set off a nationwide wave of product tampering incidents, but Mrs. Bennetts death was the first confirmed fatal poisoning.

'The maker of Anacin-3, American Whitehall, was sending Dr. Bmry Nash of its staff to assist in the Hillsboro investigation, Brady said.

Were working as fast and furious as we can to isolate the source of the contamination, said Scott Up-ham, Washington County district attorney.

Kleve and Brady said Mrs. Bennett showed no sign of mouth or throat burns, indicating that the cyanide was taken in capsule form. Brady said she probably swallowed one or two capsules.

Were certain the capsules contained cyanide, Brady said. This lady ingested cyanide-filled capsules.

Upham advised people to check all over-thMOunter medications for tampering, the same precautions they have been advised to utilize since the Tylenol matter.

Were investigating it as a homicide because we want a thorou^ investigation, said Deputy John Armstrong. It could be it was taken by her in a suicidal-type situation. We dont know.

Brady said the district attorney was investigating three possibilities that it was a suicide, that someone

set out to murder her, or that she was the victim of a random killing.

Mrs. Bennett had been a campus security officer at Portland Community Colleges Sylvania Campus since August 1981. Besides her husband, her household ccmsisted of her mother, Golden Mitchell, and a 14-year-old dau^iter by a previous marriage.

Meanwhile, in San Jose, Calif., a judge (xi Wednesday refused baU to a man accused of trying to murder his wife with cyanide after making it appear the poison was placed in a capsule of Maximum Strength Anacin-3.

Richard Bowen, 29,

pleaded innocent to poistming his wife Susan, 30. Mrs. Bowen, who nearly died from swallowing cyanide Nov. 26, said in a statement she supported her husbands reqi^ for bail.

No arrests have been made in the Chicago-area Tylenol killings. On Wednesday, Illinois investigators pleaded for a person who turned in a bottle of cyanide-poisoned Extra-Strength Tylenol a few days after the poisonings to come fmward and idmtify himself.

Investigators want to find out where the bottle was bou^t, said Mort Friedman, a spokesman for the task force investigating the deaths.

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1982-83 ACC TV Schedule

Dec 8Virginia at Duke. 9 p m.

Jan. 8Ga Tech at Wake Forest. 7 p.m Virginia at Maryland. 9 p.m.

Jan. 12Virginia at N.C. State, 9 p.m.

Jan 15Clemson at Wake Forest, 12 noon Ga. Tech at N.C. State. 4 p.m Jan. 17Virginia at Ga Tech. 8 p.m Jan. 19N C. State at N Carolina. 9 p.m.

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The Daily Reflector, GreenvlUe. N.C.Tbunday, January 1,1M3

kOBOT CALLIGRAPHER Japans annual New Year    or road, a word oftm associated with spiritual    (u* moral

calligraphy oimpetition had a new twist Tuesday vtilien a robot    enlightenment. Judges pick a winno* from human entrants

shbwed off its calligraphic skills before thousands of young    based on artistry in drawing the characters. That    made the

entrants. He the robot draws the Chinese character for path    robot ineligiWe. (AP Laserjdioto)

Honor Lists At Pitt Schools

Pitt County Schools have released the honor rolls and principals lists for the second marking period. The schools and those students making the lists are as firflow:

AYDEN-GRIFTONfflGH

SCHOOL:

Honor roll: Tammy Cox, Bill Rodebaugh, David Wiggins, Marla Avery, Angela Ingrant^ Ginger Haddock, Regina Thornton.

Princes list: Karen Cannon, Reggie Barrow, Carla Gray, Shelia Mann, Wendy Wooten, Tina Venters, Marti Wilson, Curtis Tucker, Lisa Teal, Melissa Harris, Sharon

Ward, Gina Young, Nelsonp Cox, Greg Ball, Steve Joyner, Shannon Whmey, Tammy Brown, Karen Cook, Carl Rouse, Rebecca Burney, Michael Cecil, Scottie Garris, Garlene Hopkins, Ronnell Peterson, James Woodard, Angela Hooks, Candace GardiKr, Jessalyn Woods, Missy Daughtry, Kevin Fontana, Paula Hargrove, Paul Swpinj

Jolly, Wendy Rouse, Laurie Van-dlford. Todo Venters, Cathy dall, Teresa Adams, Renee Brown,

Tyrone Hart, Lari Mooney, Tonia Lovitt, Rosa Artis, Jackie Brown, Tammy Cannon, Sharon Gat-terpuck, Betty Ellison, Rita Jackson, Melanie Hardee, Catherine Reaves, Gary Parisher, David Webb, Russell Tyndall, Adrien Williams, Lori Wells, Youvonkia Stocks.

D.H. CONLEY HIGH SCHOOL: Honor roll: Mlchell Waters, Monika Avery, Todd Hoogerland, Cathy Bozik, Vernice Ward, Linda Kay Evans.

jl^lpals list; Angela Hardy, Hope Gark, Annette Moulton, Cari Dunn, Michael S. Elks, Michelle Halby, PatU Keeter, Roy Uwls, Phillip Dickerson, JaneUe Gaylord, Oha Credle, Patricia Hanson, TuU Worthington, Beth Darden, Ragan Spain, Lori Kandrotas, Penny Jdyner, Michelle Savage, Todd N$tcheU,CarlRohs,

Barit Richards, Deborah Little, Sarella KUpatrick, Llnzette MUls, Ranee Rice, Karen Credle, Gwen Sherrod, Carla Snow, Andy Garris, Wendy Jones, Neal Evans, Judy Boyd, Karen Andrews, Karen Bozik, Beth Horne, Robin Mills, Donna Jean Hales, Gmnle Mitchell, Arlene Gardner, Darlene Gardner, Patti Williams, Darlene Cannon, Kerry Caruso, Christy Hardee, Angela Smith, Kim Swank, Steve

Ann

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SCHOOL:

Honor roll: Kelly Andrews, Virginia Harrell, A1 Roberson, sandy Andrews, Karen Pilgreen, Jeffery Bell, Angela Bell.

Principals list: Charles Lewis, Tfacy Palmer, Mary Purvis, Bernica Thigpen, Rod WhiUey, Lamont Wilkins, Angela Wynne, Lari Howard, Reneese Pitt, Troy Whitehurst, Melissa Leigh Whitaker, Leigh Whitehurst, Wendy McLawhom, Amy Carson, Billy Hardison, Tami Tetterion, Pam Worsley, Tammle Cherry, Jarvis Massenburg, Laurie Walker. NORTH PITT HIGH SCHOOL: Honor roll: Kimberly Farmer, Renee Briley, Albert Campbell, Keith Coltrain, Rhonda Eastwood, Wendy Flynn, Tammy Nelson, Renee Oakley.

Principals list: Revonda Hyman, Peggy Jenkins, LaWanda Jones, ScotT Rawls, Rose Bell, Sandra Braxton, Vicki Davis, Shonda Johnson, Denise Stroud, Valerie Ward, April Weatherington, Patricia Barnes, Karen Dunn, Jennifer Farmer, Virginia Hardy, Cb^n Morris, Greg Spain, Henry Tripp, Willie Mae Tj^, Shirley Andrews,

Christine Gift, Glenda Johnson, Larry Wade McKeel Jr., Mariha Moore, Harold Northern, Michelle SCaton, Paula Stilley, Patricia Sumerlin, Peggy Thigpen, Ken

Whitehurst, Scartette Wright.

AYDEN MIDDLE SCHOOL: Honor roll: Terri Craft, LeAnne Burney, Carla Joyner, Tom Ricks, Lea Teel, Bob Rodebau^.

PrincipaTs list: NUcki Tucker, Chris Thompson, Jerome Dickens, Octavia Faison, Jill Bulow, Stacy Creech, Sonya Dozier, Dawn Hines, Belinda Jones, Jamie Sug^, Kim

Tammy McCotter, Toni Tina Allen, Eric Blount, Todd Buck, Connie Craft, Nicole Doe, Carole Stokes, Melanie Gaddy, Kenneth Carmon, Jessica Hales, Patty McLawhom, Beth Chester, Paul Gaskins, Meredith Page, A1 Davis, Angela Wilson, Cathy Craft, Tammy Hardy, Beth Norris. FARMVnXE MIDDLE SCHOOL: Honor nril: Freda McLawhom, Andrea Craft, Dawn Garner, Kathryn Gay, Dean Lawrence, Amy Mewbom.

Princes list: Jamie Durham, Allen Lewis, Rhonda Owens, Johnny Tugwell, Melanie Wells, Sue Massey, Channel Dixon, Iris Dupree, Evonne Edwards, LaMar Dilda, Brent Ellis, Jonathan Moore, Misty Crisp, Shona Reason, Michelle Waddell, Coleman BaUey, Michelle Crawford, Usa Deans, Mary Jo Harris, Kim Keel, Rhonda McKeel, Meredith Summerlin, Niki Vandiford.

WELLCOME MIDDLE SCHOOL: Honor roll: Amanda Jacobs, Nickie McKeel, Kay Nobles, Usa Pollard, Donna Leggett, Tamila Vines.

Principals list; Stanton Alleyne, Regina Eakes, Mary Ann Cobb, Jodi Galloway, Laura Tripp, John Unton, R(m Linton, Bill Carroll, Charles Langston, Kdly Briley, Daniel Sutton, Kelsha Pilgreen, Sue Ellen Turner, Tarsha Daniels, Calvin Hunter, Malana Harris, B.H. Bland Jr., Rhonda Jones, Marie Anderson, Patricia Bland,

Jeff Buffaloe, Tommy Flynn, Malinda Hardee, Tina Harris, Laurie Harris, Shelia Harris, Felicia Johnson, Shannon Langley, Jerry Mlzell, Christy Oakley, Jimmy Pemell, Sandra McMillion.

BETHEL EUIMENTARY SCHOOL:

Honor roll; Kelly Andrews, Virginia Harrell, A1 Roberson, Sandy Andrews, Karen Pilgreen, Jeffery Bell, Angela Bell.

Principals list; Charles Lewis, Tracy Palmer, Mary Purvis, Veraica Thigpen, Rod Whitley, Lamont Wilkins, Angela Wynne, Lori Howard, Reneese Pitt, Troy Whitehurst, Melissa Whitaker, Leigh Whitehurst, Wendy McLawhon, Amy Carson, Billy Hardison, Tami Tetterion, Pam Worsley, Tammie Cherry, Jarvis Massenburg, Laurie Walker.

CHICOD ELEMENTARY

SCHOOL:

Honor ndl: Patrick Leary, Anna Foster, Strahanie Haddock, Angela Capillary, Hunter Gardner, Crystal Newby, Steve Haddock, Melanie Hardee, Joey Johnson, Lorayne Mills.

Principals list; Angie Jones, Robby Lockamy, Shelia Kite, Wendy Dixon, Stephanie Gamer, Britt Haddock, Gina Halstead, Stephanie Mills, Leasu Evans, Daniel Beachum, Tracey Stancill, Lisa Rouse, Christy Boyd, Kristy Gurkins, Bobbie Jo Strickland, Eileen Evans, Timmy Gray, Patrick Mills, Derek Foster, Katrina Layton,

Suzette Haddock, Amy Mills, Paula Holland, Elmer Leary, Rhonda Mills, April Davenport, Rhonda Jackson, Lisa Smith, Christy Shivers.

A.G. COX GRAMMAR SCHOOL: Hrnwr roll; Melanie Bennett, Bonnie Biggs, Noelle Blasi, Shannon FieTite, Hollis Gunn, Gail Lilley, Lenor McLean, Kerri Meyers, Jesse Nelson, Jacquelyn Posey, Kristin Roundy, Amy smith, Julie Smith, Jason Watson, Patrick Winstead, Amy Woolard, Betsy Burnish, Celeste Chariton, Chad Dickerson, John Dunn, Jeimller Finch,

Bill Jenkins, Julie MUner, Grier Moore, Kathryn Mohror, Jonathan

Prescott, Angie Sexton, Kimberly Colson, Leigh Cowan, Sherri Daughtridge, Sharm Duncan, Julie Gilstrap, Amanda Haddock, Christie Hardee, Courtney Jones, Brian Ledford, Shannon 0Geary, Mark Simmons, Chris Weathington, Steve West, Jessica Bays, Jessica Campbell,

Miriam Fulford, Misty Jo'nes; Pamela Keel, Stephanie Watson, Eric Weathington, Mystie Becton, Paul Bredderman, Jennifer Hardee, Sharia Richardson, Brian Joyner.

Princes list; Jason Adams, Jeremie Baugham, Jimmy Berkman, John Bland, April Brown, Eddie Burnish, Jennifer Campbell, Patrice Carmon, Felicia Clemons, Ashley Cobb, Eric Cox, Ben Edwards, Tonya Ellison, Stephanie Felton, David Forrest. Chris Gray, Nicole Hegger, Amanda Hines, Christopher Holland, Michelle Howard,

Kristen Johnson, Alyssa Kishore, Amy Owens, Jennifer Paniohelli, Erika Puryear, Sabrina Roach,

Terri Dawson, Jermaine Duncan, Anna Gaskill, Dawn Haddock, Leslie Hart, Amy Langley, Mary Beth McLeod, Mary McMurray,

Cheri Moore, MicheUe oicley, John Peaden, Gentry Pinner, Missy Ratcliffe, Scott Seymour, Billy Shivers, James Smith, Lynn Van-Dyke, Angela Whitfield, Bill Wainwright, Glam Weathington, Larry Woods, Rickie Allen, Sonya Atkinson, Kris Banks, Melanie Becton, Tony Brown, Travis Clemons, Scott Claybrook, Lanett Coward,

Erica Credle, Anna Harrington, Jana Holland, Scott Hudson, Christie Lawrence, Chris Lindsey, Nicole McIntyre, Sarah McKinney, Winton McLawhom, Darlene Moulton, Ginny P(ey, 'Tammle Stocks, Carl Tyson, Van Vanhoroe, Queenie Williams, Shelia WoUard,

Ketan Amin, Beatrice Bogenn, Julie Brew, Derrick Credle, Cathy Creech, Karen Dail, Hall Dunn, James Faulkner, Teresa Gray, Mike Hardee, Hannah Hill, Laurie LitUe, PhU Medlin, Kimsu Meyers, Albert Newman, John Pinner, Sheila Sloan, Heather Smith, Stephanie Smith, Edwina Sneed, Dalton Stocks, Denise Sumerlin, Jerry Tucker,

Stephanie Unverferth, Krista Waller, Edwin West, Jennifer Wii Donna Woods, Marlon Boyd, Ix Conger, Ed Daughtridge, Faith Clark, Lyn Hazelton, Becky Joyner, Jay Joyner, Carolyn Lawrence, Marsha Maye, Renita Memolo,

Linette Moifis, Leslie Ray, Jill Seawell, April Scudder, Gulsty Smith, Gavin Sudwall, Julie Taylor, Kenneth Wuiiams.

FALKLAND ELEMENTARY SCHOOL:

Honor roll: Carrie Hale, Tracy Lawrence.

Principals list: Dawn Greene, Melissa Brown, Chris Gilllkin, Mary Lindsey, Ricky Smith, Buddy Vandiford, Wendy Whitehurst, Tricia Wooten.

GRIFTON SCHOOL:

Honor roll: John McLawhorn, Jason Williams, Kathy Day, Daphne McLawhom, Kim Stokes, Duania Campbell, Alex McLawhom, Missy Rose.

Principals list; Wayne Lyeriy, Joseph Moore, Alanna Stokes, Dwayne Lyeriy, Lori McGaine, Paula PhUlips, Michael Boswell, Susan Koon, Patricia Nobles, Shirley Stancill, Pam Cannon, Robert Evans, Shawner Kinsey, Amy Shepard, Bryant Wilson, Heather Garris, Leticia McCotter, Michael Little, Fred Woods, Suzanne Berry,' Michelle Burns, Michelle Walston, Elizabeth Koon, Sherry Wilson, Becky Liles, Karen Edmonds, Roberta Harris, Kelly Langston, Juanita Murphy, Erin Tyndall.

PACTOLUS EUIMENTARY SCHOOL:

Honor ndl; Heather NoUe, Kim Lee, Sherry Dyson, Jamie Braxton, John Paul Corey.

Principals Uat; Cindy Beth Mizdl, GiasUty Vines,

Lee, Chris McCullen, Tiffany Heady, Susan Hardy, Sabrina Coburn.

H.B. SUGG SCHOOL:

Honor roll: Rhonda Davis, Crystal Gay, Reginald Howard, Melanie Parker, Kelvin Tu(

Amanda Corbett, Dionne Griffi Principals list: Jeffrey Vanessa Corbett, Zimmie Dawn Croiser, Angela Davis, Carrie Emory, Jennifer Gill, Nicole Graham, Sharon Harris, Brian Harrison, Susan Harrison, Michael Holloman, Jon James, Melissa Jarman, Dwayne May, Wayne ^ May, Carol Mozingo, Michelle K Streeter, David Tugwell, Jaki Brown, Vicki Chesnut, Renee Crawford, Katrina Harris, Timmy Joyner, Angela McLamb, Donna Shiver.

G.R. WHITFIELD SCHOOL: Principals list; Juanita Crandall, Anthony McCann, Kathiwn Dail, Michelle Abel, Quency Hawkins, Christine Searcey, Stephanie PhUllps, David O^Neal, Angela Clark, Trudy Coggins, Tiffany Gatlin^ Becky Hardee, Denise StancUi, Debbie Flake.

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Cable Introducing Rock Groups

IMUSTON (UPI) - Every ('lehard rock n roller has heard of the Rolling Stones, The WTio, Frank Zappa and Fleetwood Mac. But who, or what, are the Waitresses, Squeeze and Joe King Carrasco?

How about the Police or the Boomtown Rats?

All are rock groups that have been introduced to

millions of cable television viewers through MTV, or Music Television.

MTV is the only 24-hour-a-day, all stereo, video music channel available. Since August 1981, Warner Amex Satellite Entertainment Co. has bera bringing its viewers music and interviews with rock stars, along with bizarre.

surrealistic video cl^ of the groups acting out the words of their songs.

niere was an audience out there that was being underserved, Les Garland, vice president of programming for MTV, said. No one was reaching the 12 to 34 group.

The record companies were spending between

OH, WHAT A 1X)LL! - Ricky Shroder tries a different angle for an upcoming episode of NBCs Silver Spoons when he dresses up as a girl after he has a hard time trying to find a

date for his friend Derek. The episode, The Most Beautiful Girl in the World", is scheduled to air January . t aP Laserpnoio)

Dale Evans

Has Eye Surgery

TV Log

.SANTA ANA, Calif. (AP)

- Former cowboy movie star Dale Evans has been released from a hospital where she had cataract

. surgery.

Miss Evans, 70, who is married to her cinema sidekick, Roy Rogers, was admitted Monday to Western Medical Center and had the operation Tuesday, said her secretary, Francie Williams. She was released Wednesday.

' Rogers, also 70, had been , out of town on business and planned to return to Southern .California on Wednesday to meet his wife, said his secretary.

Rogers and Miss Evans made 35 films together and 'co-starred along with Trigger the horse. Bullet the dog and Nellie Bell the jeep

- In the Roy Rogers cowboy series that ran on television for 12'/i years.

For eomploto TV programming Information, eonault your wookly TV SHOWTIME from Sundaya Dally Rofloclor.

WNCT-TV-Ch.9

THURSDAY 7:00 Jokers Wild 7:30 TlcTaC 8:00 Magnum P.I. 9:00 Simon*. 10:00 Knot's L. 11:00 News 11:30 Movie

FRIDAY S:00 JimBakker 6:00 Carolina 8:00 Morning 8:25 News 9:25 News 10:00 Pyramid 10:30 Childs Play 11:00 pflcels

WITN-TV-Ch.7

THURSDAY 7:00 Jeffersons 7:30 Family Feud 8:00 Fame 9:00 Cheers 9:30 Taxi 10:00 Hill Street 11:00 News 12:30 Letterman 1:30 Overnight 2:30 News

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10 :30 Sale of the 11:00 Wheel of 11:30 HitAAan 12:00 News 12:30 Search For 1:00 Days of Our 2:00 Another Wor, 3:00 Fantasy 4:00 All In The 4:30 Dark Shadows 5:00 Little House 6:00 News 6:30 News 7:00 Jefferson 7:30 Family Feud 8:00 Powers of 9:00 Knight Rider 10:00 Steele 11:00 News 11:30 Tonight 12:30 Comedy 2:00 Overnight j:00 News

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10:00 Romance 10:30 Laverne 11:00 Love Boat 12:00 Family F. 12:30 Ryan's Hope 1:00 All My 2:00 One Life 3:00 G. Hospital 4:00 Carnival 4 30 BJ/LOBO 5:30 People's 6 :00 Action News 6:30 ABC News 2:00 3's Company 7:30 Alice 8:00 Benson 8:30 NewOdd 9:00 Movie 11:00 Action News 11:30 Nightline 12:00 Classics

1:30 An Evening

9:00 PMI Donahue 2:30 Early Edition

WUNK-TV-Ch.2S

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THURSDAY 7:00 Report 7:30 School Day 8:00 Previews 8:30 Enterprise 9:00 Nature Of 10:00 Austin City 11:00 Hitchcock 11:30 Morecambe FRIDAY 7:45 AM Weather 8:00 TBA 8:35-WriteOn 8:40 Parlei Mol 8:50 Readalongl

; TBA

10:00 Solutions 10 :20 Word Shop 10:35 Fiction 10:55 WrIteOn 11.00 StoryBound 11:15 SouptoNuts 11:30 Carousel 11:50 Readalong2

7:00 Report 7:30 Stateline 8:00 Washington 8:30 Wall St.

9 :00 Six Great 10:00 Nature 11:00 A. Hitchcock 11:30 AAorecambe

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11:57 Newsbreak 12:00 News 12:30 Young and 1:30 As the World 2:30 Capitol 3:00 Guiding L.

4:00 Waltons 5:00 Hillbillies 5:30 A. Griffith 6:00 News9 6:30 CBS News 7:00 Jokers Wild 7:30 Tic Tac 8:00 Dukes 9:00 Dallas 10:00 Falcon C.

11:00 News9 11:30 Late Movie

ATLANTA (AP)- - Burt Reinhardt has been named president of Cable News Network, Turner Broadcasting System Inc. Chairman Ted Turner announced Wednesday.

Reinhardt, who had been CNNs executive vice president, succeeds Reese Schonfeld, who resigned from the news organization, which is owned by Turner Broadcasting.

Burts career in the news business is a long and very distinguished one, and the job hes done for us has been tremendous, Turner said in a statement. Were lucky to have him.

Reinhardt began his career as a World War II combat photographer and later became managing editor of Fox Movietone News.

As executive vice president of UPI Television News, he supervised the establishment of the agencys worldwide television operations. Before joining CNN, he served as executive vice president of the non-theatrical and educational division of Paramount Pictures.

Pavarotti In Big Benefit

12:00 Ways of the 12:20 Tip Top Ten 12 :30 Word Shop 12:45 Electric Co. 1:15 19th Century 1:45 Give and Take 2:00 Tuned In 2:15 Special 2:30 Sepcial 3:00 Over Easy 3:30 TBA 4:00 Sesame St. 5:00 Mr. Rogers 5:M Powerhouse 6:00 Dr Who

OKLAHOMA CITY (AP)-Opera tenor Luciano Pavarotti joked his way into Oklahoma with praise for its ladies and a ribbing for the women in his own life.

Pavarotti, arriving here Wednesday for a benefit concert Friday night, told fans and reporters who greeted him at the airport that he was most impressed with the beautiful women he saw.

The 37-year-old singer also said he developed his own

$25,000 and $75,000 to produce a 31/^-minute clip and there was no place to put them exc^ in clubs or as fiUos. It was an instant success."

MTV is piped day to almost 8 million homes where basic cable service is available at no extra char^ to viewers, Garland said.

The OHJcept of bringing rock music to television viewers is not new. Dick

Clark started American Bandstand in 19S7, bringing the idols of their day to

American teens. It gave

fans a chance to put faces %m with the names and voices they heard.

Other shows - Shin-Dig, Hootennanny, Soul Train and Solid Gold -also gave viewers a chance to see who was singing what.

In the past, rady well-known groups were featured on television. Now, under the MTV logo, many groups known oidy as opening acts for more establidksd groups in lar^ cities, are making names for themselves.

People wdio live in small towns off the usual concert circuit never got a chance to see the group Men at Work, but at least two separate cuts from a recent album have been conc^ tualized in a corny but clever videotape that plays regularly on MTV.

It has been a real shot of new life for the record business, Garland said. Record company buyers agree.

MTV sells records for us, said Charles Pennington, a record buyer for Peaches in Fort Lauderdale, Fla.

Record store owner Dennis Douvanis in Allentown, Pa., said he has opened a new section to accommodate requests for New Wave records, which did not sell before MTV was introduced in the area.

MTV has created an audience for groups that get no airplay whatsoever in this area, Douvanis said. MTV has created overnight a market for New Wave music in Allentown.

Mike Duncan of Cactus Records in Houston said, Within a certain age group, people will come in and ask for off-the-wall stuff, and we know that MTV is the oply place th^ could have b^n turned on to that. It exposes a product that isnt being exposed anywhere else.

Victor Mickunas of the Music Circuit in Des Moines, Iowa, said, Anybody whos on MTV sells in my store. Bill Still of the Record Theater in Buffalo, N.Y., said, MTV seems to spur sales of obscure groups, and it helps because radio stations wont play new artists. We show MTV in-store and its had a direct effect on sales, both how much and what they buy.

Artists do not pay for their airtime on Music Television,

powerful voice because he had to speak loudly during a life surrounded by women first his mother and aunts and later his wife and three daughters.

Pavarotti, who played an opera singer in the 1982 movie Yes, Giorgio, said: I am an opera singer. I will always be an opera singer. Im trying to give back what the world of opera has given me ... I want to use everything God has given me like a gift.

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said executive producer Julian Goldbmg, who compared the conc^ to radio, where records are smt to stations by the recmd compaas for airtime. Goldberg said die unscdicited videos are screened by MTV officials, who decide what will go on the air.

When the tapes are aired, informatkm about the groiq;>, song, album and record conqiiany is flashed on the screen for eight seconds.

An added attractkm are interviews by one of the five video jockeys with rock stars, and ctmcert clips fnnn international shows.

Garland said about 40 percmit of the videos tm MTV are concert dips. The remainder are creative performances dubbed to the music.

Short, in-studio interviews with such notables as The Whos Pete Townshend, the Rolling Stones Mick Jagger, Keith Richard and Ron Wood and tlM father-daughter act of Frank and Moon Ziqqia are quite pc^ar because they give viewers a chance to see the rook ^n rollers in relaxed cimversations.

The success of MTV also is measured in ddlars.

Garland said Warner Amex spent about $20 million to start MTV, but national and local advertising dollars already have generated dmost that much in revenues. There are only 6 minutes of national advertising per hour and 2 minutes of local ads.

Garland said because of the p(^ularity of miuic on television, an organization in Nashville plans a country music version of MTV, and an investor in New York is planning around-the-clock rhythm and blues on television.

CHiPs Actor

Has Trial Set

LOS ANGELES (AP) -CHiPs co-star Thomas Reilly has pleaded innocent to three misdemeanor charges stemming from his arrest last month while driving near downtown Los Angeles.

Attorney David Leland King, appearing Wednesday on Reillys behalf before Municipal Court Commissioner John Goddard, entered innocent pleas to charges of driving under the influence of a drug, driving without a valid California drivers license and possession of a controlled substance.

Misdemeanor defendants are not required to appear at court proceedings in California.

Goddard set a Feb. 9 trial date for the 23-year-old actor, plays California Highway Patrol Officer Bobby Hot Dog Nelson on the p(^ular NBC TV series.

documentaries

LONDON (AP) - British television is screening three documentaries showing previously unseen footage of movie star Chari Chaplin, including out-takes, abandoned projects, rushes and rehearsals.

WARMING UP FOR A CRUISE - Anne Murray and tdevision host Richard Simmons, left, limber up during a break in filming aboard the liner S.S. Norway this week off St.

Thomas, in the U.S. Virgin Islands. The pair were in the midst of filming a television show, Anne Murrays Caribbean Cruise which will air later this month. (APLaserphoto)

Listeners Will Vote On

Radio Station's Music

SYRACUSE, N.Y. (AP) -The last easy listening radio station in Syracuse is giving listeners a vote on whet^r to keep the soothing string music or switch to rock n roll.

Dennis Israel, president of station WEZG FM-AM, proposed the two-week balloting in order to give the people what they want.

We are putting the vote to the people, Israel said. Were always talking about the airwaves belonging to the people. Yet when pro^am-ming decisions are made, how many times do we ask the public what they want? The answer is, not very often.

The campaign, which started Tuesday evening, includes radio announcements asking people to call in and cast their votes, newspaper ads with ballots to clip and mail, and spots on the three local television stations.

Its one of my crazy ideas, said Israel, who teaches a television and film course part-time at New York University.

The usual way of soliciting public opinion on a format change is to hire a company to poll a few hundred households, Isradsaid.

I dont think thats really fair, he said. We hope to get responses in the tens of thousands. You just cant get

that through statistical research.'

The idea of a format change at WEZG, which has offered beautiful music for 11 years, came up a week ago when the top radio sta-tion in Syracuse WSYR-FM - announced a switch from album rock to an adult contemporary format.

Israel said a change to album rock, \^ich appeals to teenagers and people in their early 20s, could bring his

New Daughter

For Chevy Chase

LOS ANGELES (AP) -Comedian Chevy Chase and his wife, Jayni, are the parents of a newborn daughter, Cydney Cathalene.

The 7-pound, 7-ounce baby was born at 8:35 a.m. Tuesday at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Heidi Schaffer of PMK Public Relations said.

Chase and his wife met during the 1981 filming of Under the Rainbow, where she was a production assistant. They were married early last year and this is their first child.

Chase, 39, who rose to stardom on the Saturday Night Live television series, has starred in the movies Foul Play and Seems Like Old Times.

(2.00 SAT.-SWI.FiST SHOW OtY

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Skirts____

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MENS A LADIES

Ski Jacket

MENS A LADIES

Sweaters.

e Rag. $n Now

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1

MILL OUTLET CLOTHING

R .'-P' Across From N'chol-^: Ot,':- Mo-I -S,it

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f

station up from its place as number five in the 13-station marketplace.

The cost of such a change would be well into six figures, Israel said. The sta- tions operations would undergo an almost 100 percent change, he said, and staff would increase from 14 to between 25 and 30.

If the station sticks with its present format, I dont see us ever being number one or two, Israel said.

But if the peqple come out and say 'Dont change, yes, we would stay.

PITT-PLAZA SHOPPING CENTER

PAUL iNEWMAh

Frank Galvin has one last chance to do soDMthing riKht.

THE VERDia

I ]h CENTUnV-I FOX FILMS

MON.-FRI.

3:00

7M

0:30

L





The Silent Epidemic: Brain Injuries

ByJ0HNC.6USTAVSEN Associated Press Writer HARTFORD, Conn. (AP) A young mans sevoe brain injaries left him partially paralyzed, blind, speechless and unable to fUDCtkHi without constant supmviskm.

PEANUTS

Another man i^peared normal but can no longer wiUis^and the rignrs of academic life and has abandoned a career as a cdlege professor.

Both suffo- fecun the effects of traumatic brain injury, a silent epidmic that

experts say may afflict more pra^ than the total numbo of victims of cerebral palsy, musmdar dystrophy, multi-|de sclero^ and spinal cord injury comtdned.

NationaUy, 500,000 people survive severe traumatic iH'ain injury each year. Be

tween 30,000 and 50,000 never return to nonnal life, ac-ccmling to the National Institutes (d Health.

Most TBI victims are male, b^ween the ages of 15 and 30, says the Traumatic Brain Injury Support Group, Inc., a iwrivate, non-jMofit

B.C.

I fft    Iflc,    IMS

^eax\ieo

7-7

^Jsr^ir.

NUBBIN

BLONDIE

ALEVANDEC^VOUAND COOkJEHAVETO CLEAR THE DINNER TABLE^^

WE WORKED IT OUT great; MOM.

WE'LL BOTH SCRAPEAND

RINSE    ^

BUT IF NEITHEROF VOU CLEAR THE TABLE, YOU'LL HAVE NOTHING TO SCRAPE AND RINSE

C

itdlovouweJ /

VVORKEDlTCXJr^ *

'-1 GREAT

___/

, m

BEHLE BAILEY

PHANTOM

Triumphant.

RETURN KULAKU:

RETUFNEP WlTH.THe PHANIOM; AVW2/NG/

I NEVER TH0U6HT THE RJ/MMY COULP PO IT^

IT

FRANK A ERNEST

1st NATIONAL BANK

iMptlEP VIOiSNCe,    'j

TAOT WiTlWr ftlNO I TCENCY...I l|g    I

that in a holdup I

NOTE.

fUNKY WINKERBEBII

I two ID READ m SaONO PEROO 0/66 THE RKjr flCTTHIS MORNING

WE HAI/ENT eoriENIiJflT , R4R AU)N& IN1HE eOOKVET.I

organization, based in Norwich. Sixty percent are injiffed in motor vehicle crashes and another 14 percent are hurt in falls or sports. The rest are victims of adults, gimshot wounds, swimmiii^ and bk^cie ac-cidats, aid child abuse.

Thdr injuries rang^ fnxn a bump on tbe bead to severe blows.

Fot many, like tbe fOTmer college professor who bears no outward sign of injury, life is filled with misunderstanding, frustration and withdrawal.

I have a young woman who was a respiratory therapist and now she is unemployed because shes so fatigued she can 00 longer work a full day, said Jean Harkens, director of the Traumatic Brain Injury SuppOTlGroiq).

Often TBI victims are misdiagnosed as mentally retarded, she said. They usually cannot hold a job because employers cannot c(^ with their special needs for repeated and explicit instructions.

Because of tbeir dependence they place financial and emotional burdens on their families. People who formerly lived in a better way, they must now accq>t doles in order to get by, Ms. Haitenssaid.

Tbe injuries frequently result in a rebounding of the brain within tbe skull, leading to damage far from the initial injury location.

Since specific areas of the brain control various intellectual and physical functions, each injury usually produces a unique set of problems. They can include temporary or permanent disability in concentration, memory, learning, abstract thinking, social adjustment, oral and written communication and physical coordination.

Because of the complexity of brain injury, complicated and individualized rehabilitation programs are needed. But until recently, treatment consisted mainly of neurosurgery and convalescence.

Many ... ho^itals have established separate head injury units in recognition of the fact that very special therapeutic af^roaches are required, said Dr. Martin L. Spivack, president of the National Brain Injury Foundation based in Framingham, Mass.

Even in these units, however, there are rarely personnel trained to treat the cognitive and behavioral problems that arise in the patients, he said.

Still, the medical profession is convinced that the condition of the traumatic brain injured can be improved, although treatment and r^abilitation require lOTig periods of time and can be difficult to ascertain.

In Connecticut, Gov. William ONeUl has appointed a task force to study existing services, possible alternative programs, and the need for finaiKial and other forms of assistance to families of victims.

This Traumatic Brain Injury Task Force - composed of medical experts, representatives of seven state agencies, private groups and

relatives of TBI stfferers -wiU have to focus its work 00 the need for acute care when mjury ... first strikes, as well as short-term and kger-term rehaMlitatkm, tbe governor said.

Barbara Del Buono of Waterbury was anxmg the speakers at a recent task force bearing in Stamford. Her 31-year-old son suffered serious brain damage when he was assaulted five years' a^. He was in a cixna for ei^t mraths.

Although Dd Buono was left blind, unaUe to speak and paralyzed on his ri^t side, be has learned to communicate through a specially designed, one-handed sign language consisting of 150 gestiim.

He is fully conscious and alert. He imderstands everything that you say to him, said Mrs. Dd Buono, a^ member of the governors task force and a director of the Traumatic Brain Injury Siq>portGroiq>.

There is a life there, she atkd He doesnt have to change, walk, see to have real value.

Dr, Clair Call), medical director of the state Department of Income Mainte-naiKe, said only two hospitals in the state - Gaylord Ho^ital in Wallingford and New Britain Memorial Hospital - can rehabUitate TBI victims. Only at the New Britain facility Is anything beyond short-term care available.

TBI victims need three years to five years of intensive rehabilitatkm.

The Department of Income Maintenance - Connecticuts wdfare dqmrt-ment - has paid an average of $45 a day for Dd Buonos care in the five years since his injury. However, Mrs. Dd Bixmk) says the amount is inadequate, not enough to pay for the specialized therapy her son and other IBl victims need.

Ms. Callan says one of the task forces Important goals will be to help prevent traumatic brain Injury. Education about brain injury and its incidence among drunk-driving accident victims and motorcyclists who dont wear helmets could bdp reduce Its occurrence, they said.

I think were really beriming to see what the needs are, Ms. Callan added.

Poses Trucking Shutdown Coll

WASfflNGTON (AP) -The leader of an indepoident truckers grotg) says it might call for a trucking shutdcmm if President Reagan signs a bill, passed by Congress, that would increase truck taxes.

Mike Paridiurst, (Hesident of the Indepoident Truckers Associatkm, said if the tax goes throi^, I think tbe truckers will be so frustrated we will be fOTced to endorse a shutdown.

Parkhurst said he hoped to visit the White House and added, "I hope we can persuade tbe president not to sign it.

Craft Programs

The program of winter crafts being offered by the Greenville Recreation and Parks Department, to be held in the Community Building at tbe cwner of Fourth and Greene Streets, will be^ M<mday.

The fee for each program, unless otherwise noted, is $15. Programs, beginning dates and ddails are:

Weaving - Jan. 10 and Jan. 12, both frmn 9 to 3. InstructOT, Myra Sexauer.

Swedish weaving - Jan. 10, 1-4. Instructor, LUUe Randolph.

Oil painting - Jan. 17,1-4. Instructor, Marlene Alton.

Water colOT - Jan. 10, S^ioon. Instructor, Wanisn Chamberlain.

Crochet - Jan. 11, 9-12 noon and 6:30-9:30. Instructors, Lucille Sunuell and Patsy DensOTi. Registration fee $3.

Candlewicking - Jan. 11,1-4. Instructor, UUie Randcriph.

Silk flowers - Jan. 11, 6:30-9:30. InMructor, Re^ Falkowski.

Rug braiding - Jan. 11, 6:304:30. Instructor, Blackie Smith.

Basketry - Jan. 11,1-4. Instructor, Blackie Smith.

Drawing Jan. 12, INioon and 1*4. Ii^ructor, Bob Daniels.

Oil painting (advanced) Jan. 20, 9-3. Instructor, Marlene AlUm.

Drawing - Jan. 13,6:304:30. Instructor, Bob Danids.

Calligraphy - Jan. 13,74. Instructor, Ctaidy Singletary.

Portrait pahiting - Jan. 13,6:304:30.

Current continuingeveigs and ig)comlng events are;

QuUtingGud-Jan.25,2.

Clown Alley - Jan. 11 and Jan. 25, both at 7.

Che Club - Each fifonday in January at 7,

Prer^ster for a night class in lampshade making be^nningsoon.    \

For further information oti any (rf the programs listed, intOTested persons are tecali 7524137, extension 250.

MONEY In Your Pocket!

When you need money, cash in on the items that are laying around houseitems that you no longer use

FamHy Want Ads Must Be

Ftaeed By An indfvkfuatTo Run UndwrThe MltetHan-ous For Bate Ctesslflea-tton. Limn One Item Per Ad With Sete Velue Of 1200 Or Leee. Commercial Ada xeluded. All Adc Caah With Order. Ne Rw> fund For Early Caimella-tion.

Use Your VISA or MASTER CARD

THE DAILY REFLECTOR

Classified Ads 752-6166

PUBLIC

NOTICES

IN THE bENjl^/^COURT

DISTRICTOTURT DIVISION S3CVD109S NORTH CAROLINA PITT COUNTY

PEOPLES BANK AND TRUST COMPANY,

Plaintiff

GEC^GEH POWELL,

NOTICEOF^^VICE OF PROCESS BY PUBLICATION TO: Georga H. Powwll, tha above named defendant;

Take notice that a plaading Making raltef against you has baan filad In the above entitled action. Tho

nature of the relief being sought is as rs: nrtoney owad on a Pro-ry Note I are reouire :h pleading

lys after the I  _    .    ^

iblicatlonof this Notice es set forth

foliows: nrtoney mtssory Note You are reouired to make defenM such pleading not later than 40

slow, and upon your failura to do so, the party saeking sarvica against you wifi aMly to me Court for the

Is, the I

13th day of Dacambar,

ralief i This,

DIXON, HORNE, DUFFUS DOUb

Randy p. Ooub

for PlalntIH

Attornm for Pla NCNB Building P.O. Drawar tYlS

?>raanville. N C 27B34 eiephona: (19) 7SS 6300 li,23.30,'    

Dec.

, 19S3. Jan. 6.19S3

NOTICE

Having qualified as Executors of the estate of James P. Jones late of Pitt County, North CUirolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of said ceaiad to present them to the undersigned Executors on or before July 4, 1M3 or this notice or same will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate please make immediate payment.

This 23rd day ofOecember, 1912. Leonard Wayne Jones Rt. 2, Box 211 AAoreheadCity. N.C. and

Gail Susan Jones 1502 E. Wright Rd.

Greenville,^.C. 27134 E xecutors of the estate of James P. Jones, deceased.

Jan. 6.13,20,27, l3

WANT

ADS

007 SPECIAL NOTICES

WE PAY

Floyd G R

ivanijaati

CASH for diamc igblnson Jewelers, DovmtovmGmfivii

diamonds. 407

ilt^

010

AUTOMOTIVE

Oil

Autos For Solo

BEFORE YOU SELL or trade your 79 82 model car, can 7S6-1877, Grant Butck. We will pay tqp dollar.

JEEPS,CARS,TRUCKS

Under $100 avalleble at local gov arnment sale* In your area. Cell (refundable) 1-6I9-S69-0341, extension 1504 for directory on how topur(;hati.i4tistfri,

SELL YOUR CAR the Netlone! Autofinders Way I Aulhoriiad Daalar In Pitt f Ford. Call 7M-on4

ay I Aulhoriis Citunty. Hastings

1978 LaMANS, cruisa, tilt vhaal, powar staarlng and brakas. Must sail. S29S0. 197f Cadillac DaVllla, all laathar intarlor, S4690. 7M-

013

Buick

1977 REGAL buick, ona ownar,

197? BUICK RIVIERA Astro powar windows, stoering, brakoi Mats; air, AM/FM starao wit tapa. Ntw tiras. NADA ratall 18979; wftl tacrllica for 87490. 796-3148 from 9 to 9._

014

Cadiltec

97?TPlEETWOOP CADILLAC 69.000 mllosTsiW. 792-9334.

0398 aHer 9:30 pm,_

015

Chtvroitt

fa^Ss^*;?97/r

car. Barwick

f ECONOMICAL treMt

WANTED

portatlon I _____.

car. Aga not ImMrten

l974ornei^.7ff:H3i,

1973 CHEVROLET 1490. Call 798i

mt

1977 MALIBU Cl^tl loadad.9^.798 1iy. MALIBU CLA

ItIC, 4 door;

1978 MALIBU CUAifTr Ste-tionwagon, good condition, taw mileege, , cl|^ femlly cer. By

1979 CHEVROLBJ Melibu Estate. Full power, 41,000 mllee, excellent

ltt9n(1gYYn8fil:y491(-

1980 CHEVETTE, 4 door, stra^ shift, air. excellent condition. $3M0 or bost otfor 796 7806 or 796 98W.

burgundy loett^ ini^tar. (fall ^

_aim!!_^

1980 IMPALA OloMi Stattan Wagon. 3 Motor, 99,000 miles. 94900. 797-

im.

1981 CHEVETTE, 4 CYBder, 2 door, air conditional AWFM, low mllaaoa 6.900. t4800T8ll^flk.......

Oil

Ford

FORD MAVERICK, 1974, air, automatic transmission, 4 door.

good condition. 9900. 746-6146.

FORb THUNDERBIRD, 1981, AM stqrao, tilt, crulM. Prico neootloblo-Call 798 9278.

1969 FORD, Fair condHlon, good tlrf$. 796 0144.

1978 FORD THUNOERiIRO AM/FM storoo ceuetle. Excoltant condition 13400. Excoilont coodi

tion. 796 3994,

197 T^BIRD Excoilont condition.

019

Lincoln

1978 UNCOLN Contlnontel AAark V, Bill Blass dasionar tartas, moM roof, now paint, vtry nica. will trad^. 757 OSSlor 792 3366.-

020

Mtrcury

1973 CAPRI Run* good. 1800. Call

746 6336._

021

Oldsmoblie

1973 CUTLAS SUPREME Good

condition. 395 27M.

1982 OLDSMOBILE . Cutla^ yO|

ttonwagons and Sedan*.

cW.

flit, dfaMl. 27 mitas per Mitan tnso. Cell Mr. WhlWiuret, 79^148^

022

Plymouth

1978 PLYMOUTH ARI^ 2 dMr, automatic trammlsslen, cleen, Qood condition. After 6,399-490.__

023

Ponttec

and 9:30. ek for Ro(t>erf Mo$tnfle,_

024

Foroign

79^995. ek for willtam.

/moving Mutt sacrifice. 1981 ttonda 4 doorCivIc, 17400 mWat. Call after 6p.m.. 796-1848.

RABBIT, 1980, air, sunroof, carefully driven end malntelnad. Runt like new. 93975 rwgotlaWe. 756 8801 or 7574413._

VOLVO GL  ......

silver, 4 door sedan

1981. 14.990 ml^

AM-

casMtte, vdour interior, sunroof, powwr windows and tacks. S12.999.

i^86-83Kit......    I    I





If-Ttw Dally Reflector, GrecoviUe, N.C. -Thuraday, Jawiary C, IMS

024

Foreign

1*73 TOYOTA CORONA ata liomvaaon Automatic, air. radial tiras. iTao or baat otNr

1*73 NIG MIDGET, naw transmission, brakes and front and iiTOO. Call 7sa 1300 days

1*77 TOYOTA COROLl^. q?od fltkm, naw paint. S3I00. tall 1 7S2 3*25 or 7K *IQ aftar 6

days)

036

Cycles For Sale

?*7l 4JD YAMAHA in axcallant condition AAotor just ovartiaulad 757 0074

039

Trucks For Sale

1*7 HONDA XL171 low milaaga G4Md ccmdltlon. Halnriat Included *375 or bast otfar 71.3H5

1*77 HONDA Goldwing GL.1000

1*79 DATSUN 2S0Z. low mitas, 5 speed, excellent condition Call Reid Wtiitetiurst at Don Whitehurst

Pontiac Buick, Tarboro, 033 *15*

1*01 DATSUN 2X. Iwwnar,

ivai ,,,1,

immaculate condition, 5 speed Call Reid Whitehurst at Don whit^urst

Pontiac Buick. Tarboro. 23 41 1*0, TOYOTA COROLLA 5 speed AM/FM, air    24.00(

^ '17o.

miles. 4 door *0000 757 3l7i

032

Boats For Sale

SORRY YOU MISSED our Da cember specials but it $ not too late to make us an off*' on a l*M sailboat RB Sailor, Highway 2*4 East. 758 4641

14' CAROLINA BOAT, trailer and 18 t^uT^tor. iSOO Call 758 2651 after 4 p.m. - -----

034 Campers For Sale

TPg^TcOVERSAII sizes, colors

Leer Fiberglass and S fops 250 units in stock

iHileigh. N C 834 2774.

fsman

iriants.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

Windiamar and siarao. ExcalNnt

It

condltkm. *1*50 Aftor 5. 758 3*07

1*01    DR135    SUZUKI    *800.    will

consider best offer Attar 6 call 74* *27*. before*. 75* 8308

250 SUZUKI, 1*81 GS. electric start, many extras and halmats Included

Sellirrg due to time to year, **50 retail, will let go for STOO oi oner Call aft^ 5. 758 4742.

039 Trucks For Sale

1973 GMC VAN V8, automatic, power steering, air. captain chairs. interior carpeftd 1200. 758 874*.

t*7* CHEVY BLAZER Real ^ condition *3500. Day* 75* 3929. ntohts 756 8771

1*7* JEEP Cherokee Chief Call 756 8987    _

1979 FORD RANCHERO, new paint, good shape, will trade 757 OMIor 7 236*

1900 CHEVY BLAZER Silverado Loaded. *9300 Days 75* 2929, nights 75* 8771

WHEN SOMEONE

they turn to the Classified Ads

rney lu* n iw

Place your Ad today tor Quick results

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

1*01 CHEVY custom. 10 delwxa, cylinder, strait drive, long bad, 16,000 mile*.

1*03 CHEVROLET SIO V*. automatic, AM/FM, long 1^, Ilk*

MwJKaLZtkZilZ

046

PETS

Qer5:30.

810 each. 403

AKC GOLDEN RETRIEV|Rj

1*03 DODGE TRUCK for sale, *5800 Call 75>2^._

040

Child Care

CHRISTIAN MOTHER would like to keep children in her home. An

:*cp children in her home. Any . ^ans Trailer Park area. Call

age. Ev

7 3000

WILL KEEP CHILDREN in my

home. Highway 43 South, betvMon Elk'* Grocery and Cox

Jake

c

roMroad*. 355-2*5*.

046

PETS

BASS^MHOUNb PUPPIES, AKC registered, tri-colored, beautiful and healthy, 3 weeks old. Put some

mofiey down to save your* now *175. 778 4011._

BLACK CHOW puppy tor sale Call 355 *35*._

EXPERT DOG Obedience training. 750 5590.    _

FEMALE Doberman, brown/rust.

I'z year old, spayed, very QuarddOQ.tlOO. 752 059*.

*100. Call 75*

4E pups 0fo3or7:

ONE DOBERMAN PINCHER, champion bloodline, * weeks old, male. *100. Call 75* Mfeafter 5.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

MUST GO!!

Inventory Markdown Sale

1980 AMC Concord    .    *4350.00

1980 Chevrolet Citation 4 door.................  M250.00

1982 Chevrolet S-10 Pickup    ^7350.00

1980 Chevrolet Malibu 4door ........M950.00

1980 Chevrolet Caprice Classic 4door ^6600.00

1980 Chevrolet Cheyenne Pickup ...............^5500.00

1981 Chevrolet Monte Carlo...............................^6900.00

1980 Chevrolet Silverado Pickup Didsel ..,.    55400.00

1980 Chevrolet Chevette Scooter....................52750.00

1978 Ford Mustang.................................. 5350O.OO

1978 Chevrolet Caprice Wagon    54250.OO

1979 Datsun Pickup ................... 53950.00

1979 Olds Delta 88    54450 OO

1979 Chevrolet Cheyenne Pickup  ..................54750.OO

1979 Plymouth Horizon ........................ 5-|850.00

1978 Chevrolet Monte Carlo..........................53800.00

GMaUAUrY

SERVicE/nyns

Kaep That draat QM Feeling With Genuine GM Parts

GENlRALImXSmRTSDnriSIQN

male, excellent with kids, 75.

AKC GOLDEN RETRIEVER pup plat, born Thanksgiving. Phan* 757 3534._

AKC RED OOBE RIMAN PUP, male, excellent chanwion_pedigr**. Call 758 1809 days; n3*713 nights and xveekend*

AKC REGISTERED SIBERIAN Husky PUPPt^. *100. 753 71*4

AKC WHITE GERMAN Shjmherd

aTTio.

PUP. Must sate All shot*. 753 :

051

HMpWanM

L^ATTAceTmpany ni

experienced cMwctor. AAust bondaW* and hava valid NC drh

za:

.it be ... drivart licansa. Sand rtmum* only to Branch AAanager, P O Box 2*4. Graanvllla. N C 37834._

sacfatiry caiiar:

bla; must typa at laasf 50 words par

minute. Sand rasuma only "to Branch AAanaoar, P O Box 2*4, Greanvllla. N C 37834

051

HBlpWantwl

INTERIOR DECORATOR wantad at local stora. Owe* and expari anca raquirad. Sand rasume to OaccMlw. PO Box 1*67, Graanvllla.

051

HclpWantBd

BOOKKEEPER NEEDED for full tint* work. Must have experience with road mileage and tax. Those qualified or Interested call 753-6134 Atonday through Friday

BRODY'S has opening for full time salesoerson if you like fashions, like and want interesting lob y benefits. AAusf b feasant. Apply at

company benefits. AAust be neat and pleasant. Ape' Brody's, Pitt Plata. 2 to *P.m

CHOOSEY SECRETARY S10K plus. National company has Immediate need for person with 3 years secretarial experience or

?iraduate of business schools. AAust ype and take shorthand. Excellent benefits including retirement. Call Judy. Herltaoe Personnel. 355-2030

DRAFTER LAYOUT AAetal form ing and fabrication company with propriefa^ lines needs experienced drafter. Duties include layout of drawings and diagrams from data

ngs    _    ____

oiyen by dMignars or et^in^s

Cl *        

alculate dimensions and allow anees in accordance with general

practice. Compile bills of materials after drawings to suit engineering changes. Minimum of 3 years draf

ting experience and 1 to 3 years in metal forming and fabrication.

Send resume and salary require ments to Cox Trailer Inc., P O Box

338, Griffon. N C 28530.

EMPTY DESK

Real Estate agent needed. AAust have a pleasant personality, self starter, and wilting to work 40 hours

per week. In house training, sales tools, and prospects furnished. Commissions of s30,000 feasible for

first year. For your confidential interylevy call Dee Hetfren,756-8T24.

EXCITING NEW OPPORTUNITY WITH AVON I

Earn up to 50% on everything you sell. Call 752-7006.

EXECUTIVE SALES Progressive Corporation has two openings for It motivated individuals to

self motivated individual

market Financial Services.

funity to earn over *35,000    _____

cement into Management. College degree or sales experinece pre fared. Call 756-8539.

FLOOR COVERING Salesperson 'Inyf sa

with retail carpet and vinyl sales experience needed by established company. Send resume to Floor

Covering, PO Box 19*7, Greenville,  8M.

NC 2783

GOVERNMENT JOBS Immediate Overseas and domestic.

$20,000 to *50,000 plus a year. CaU

------------    II0Z4A

(312) 931 7053 Extension I074A

HAIRDRESSER WANTED Top

commission paid. Contact Katrina 35569

Redden at 355-6972 for an Interview.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

SPECIAL Executive Desks

60x30 beautiful walnut finish. Idaal for home or office

Re8.PrlcB $251.00 '

Special Price

$17900

TAFP OFFICE EQUIPMENT

5MS.E*ansSt. 752-2175

LPN'S NEEDED Full time end part time In 1S2 bad long term health care center. All shifts available, good benefits, competitive salary. Contact AArs. Tern lie. DON, Oak AAanor of Kinston, 17 Rhodes Avenue, Kinston Phone

MANAGEMENT Large corpora tion looking for management potential. Must start In sales. 60 hour week. Some door to door. Salary and benefits. Conner Mobile Homes. 75*-0333

MOBILE HOME SET UP AAAN with experience. Apply in person at Azalea AAobile Homes, see J T Williams- 756-7815

OFFICE POSITION Clerical opening for well established business in Greenville. Office experi-fo; office

ence preferred. Apply .    _    __

Position, P O Box 1%7, Greenville.

N C 27834.

PHOTOTYPESETTER and paste up/layout artist needed. Experienced only. Reply to Phototypesetter, P O Box 1M7, Greenville. N C 27834._

REGISTERED NURSE with 2

years nursing experience including 1 year In a charge nurse role. Salary range; *17,0 to *24,732 per ar Call 758-3151, Extension 242.

year Call 758-3151, Extenslo Equal Opportunity Employer.

RN NEEDED for skilled nursing

supervisor in 182 bed long term " * shift, every

health care center. 7-3

other weekend off, good benefits', competitive salary. Must hold eur-ract license and nave supervisory

ei^rimce. Contact Mrt. Temple^

Oak AAanor of Kinston, 317 Rhodes Avenue. Kinston. Phone 523 0083.

ROUTE SALES *17K Fortune 500 company has immediate need for aggressive salesperson. Previous

experience preferred. Established route. Excellent benefits. Minorities

encouraged to apply. CaH Judy, Heritage Personnel. 355-2020.

SALES AAANAGERS Potential *90 a year. National Premier Company

expanding, need Sales Reps and AAanagers. Mr. Henry, (213) 327-7980.

SECRETARIES, word processors and typists needed Immediately for

long and short term temporary assTc .....

assignments. AAust have et least one

year work experience. Call for an appointment - 757-3300.

MANPOWER TEXAPORARY SERVICE

SECRETARY 9 to 3 for a Greenville

based group of preschools. Apply in I at Jl3 East 10th Stm>. No

UNLIMITED OPPORTUNITY for commercial and industrial supply sales. Draw plus commission Training and company benefits Experience helpful but not neces sary for self starter. Send resunse to Supply Sales. P O Box 507. Gr^yllN, N...|?W4

VARIETY BAND with own PA system and transpw^ation looking a drumnr<er with own drums and microphones. 753-1441.

WANTED, College greduate for sales position. Emnuses, no trav

eling, and an opportunity for a very

rewarding future. Send resume to PO Box 3097, Greenvllle.NC 27834

WANTED SECRETARY/lnsurance Clerk for a busy chiropractic office AAust be proficient in typing, short idures.

hand, office proced

and

excellent with people. Only quail fled candidates need apply. Hours to 4 AAondav-Fridav. 756-0*^.

WOULD LIKE MIDDLE AGED

Ladyjq    nights    with    elderly

lady. 746-:

SOMEONE IS looking tor your unus

ed power mower. Why not advertise it with a low cost Classified Ad?

059

Work Wanted

ALL TYPES tree service. Trim

ming, cutting, storm damage, cleanup, and removal. Free estlmates.jp Stancll, 753-6331.

ALL TYPES OF AAASONRY repair

or bujld. 30 years experience, ts*-(ime

2581. Free estimates.

ALL TYPES of plumbing. Reasonable. State License 5159. 756-1898

days, 757-3143 nights.

ALL TYPES OF DRYWALL repairs and work, 8 years experience. Free estimates. Call 758-9931 or 752-5764.

HOMEOWNERS SPECIAL Paint or wallpaper any room, second room painted or wallpapered >/i price. By Design. 758-7165._

HONEST PAINTING, year round.

CalL^R^a^^Birchard, Jr. 6 pm. to 11

pm. 757 3

I WILL KEEP children In my home at Shady Knoll Trailer Park. 753-4064._

LOOKING FOR patoting jobs. Inte

rior and exterior. Cheapeist man in 275T.

town. 746-3949 or 746-:

PAINTERS INC , recently moved

mercial

size. Com-

to Greenville. Special rates of *25 rdless of

il pail . _lso dry\ and plaster. Free estimates. Real

person    ___

phone calls please.

TAP ALL YOUR KNOWLEDGE LEARNED IN NURSING NEEDED

RN'S

Full time 3-11; 11-7 Part time 7-3 Competitive Salaries

Willing to work around school tula

schedules.

Contact:    Lydia Morgan RN,

Director of Nursing, university Nursing Center, 758-7X00.__

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

WE REPAIR SCREENS & DOORS

RemodelingRoom Additions,

C.L. Lupton Co.

FULLTIME

BAR MANAGER WANTED

Must be experienced bartender and have some management ability.

Apply At The

BEEF BARN

Between 5:00 and 6:00 PM Daily

per room regai ana r or exi

Jer. Fi ..... .....

tors, please feel free to call. 756

residential painting, interior or exterior, also drywall

4955. 34 hour answering service, ask for Jerome. _

PAINTING, Interior and exterior. Free estimates, work guaranteed. 11 years experience. 7S6-6873 after 6pm._

SANDING and finishing floors

Smalljcarpenter jobs, counter aker Fl *    '

065 Farm Equipment

BUILDING A WOOD SPLITTER?

.Chack our prkreel Four way oeon center valve *43.95. Four way val^ with kick out *57.95. 4"x24"

with li'j" rod *13*95. Lbvejoy coupling complefe *10.95. Pumps,

hoses, other valves and cylinders

So

14' TANDEM-AXLE tilt bed all steel trailer. Alto Internationel 400 Cycio corn planter. Both in excellent condition. 757 1827 or 752-6529

067    Garage-Yard Sale

GARAGE AND MOVING SALE

Bedroom, dining room, and living room suite*. Guitar, tenni* rackets.

clothes, also 50 pairs of new shoes, 250 V belts, and many other Items. 9 a.m., Saturday, January 8, 101 Harrell Street, Cherry Oaks. For more Information call 7m-1632

INDOOR SALE Thursday, Fri*y, and Saturday all day. Den chairs, guitar, lamps, small tables.

machine ^op*^ istruments,"'s^ slamp collection, riding mower, etc

408 South Harding Street.

NEW PITT COUNTY Fair Grounds Flea AAarket, (Sreenville Boulevard. Open Saturday and Sunday 8 til 5. Crafts, tools, furniture, antiques, and fresh produce. Call Bill 746-3541, Mike 74*^3550, Fair Grounds 758-6916.

RAYNOR ItORBES AND CLARK

Flea AAarket open Saturdays 7 til 1, across from Atose Lodge. 756-4090

YARD SALE indoors. Depot Grill, Wintervilie. Saturday, January 8, 8 til 2. Antiques, furniture, glass, tools, clothing, heaters, and more.

072

Livestock

white blaze face, four white |?ockings. 3Vj year* old. Rides

Enollsh. Also a beautiful Palomino (all "............

Walking Horse. 15.1, 15.2 hands. 8 to Anyone can rU<e.

752*6500

HORSEBACK RIDING Jarman Stables. 752-5237

PEANUT HAY FOR SALE *1.50 per bale. Call after 7 p.m. 752-9225' or 756-0920.__

074

Miscellaneous

APPLIANCES, used freezers, refrigerators. washers, furniture and much more at Elite Repeat, 110 West 2nd Street, Ayden, next to Bob's TV

BEDDING AND WATERBEDS

Save up to Vz and more. Factory Mattress And Waterbeds. 730 (^eenville Blvd. next to Pitt Plaza. 355-2*26

BLACK & WHITE TV, floor model, 75. Good condition. Call 753-5354

BRUNSWICK SLATE POOL Tables. Cash discounts. Delivery and installation. 919 763-9734

CALL CHARLES TICE, 758 3013, for small loads of sand, topsoll and stone. Also driveway work

Jack Baker Floor Service. 756-: anytlme.U no answer call back.

WOULD LIKE TO BABYSIT or clean house. Reasonable rates. Ex ^ienced~756-7892.

WOULD LIKE a job on a farm or chicken farm. Call 752-7569.

060

FOR SALE

PAINT INTERIOR, Exterior, resi dential, commerical. Well experi enced. 752-5320.

1979 CHEVROLET VAN Good condition. 752-5320._

064 Fuel, Wood, Coal

ALL TYPES OF firewood for sale J P Stancll, 752-6331

LARGE LOAOS OF hardwood, *40 load. Call days 757 1528, after 6, 758-0294.

OAK FIREWOOD for sale. Call 752-8847 or 752-6420.

SEASONED OAK *50 Vz - cord, delivered and stacked. 757-1637

FOR SALE: Oak $45; mixed

40. Call 752-638*.

100% OAK FIREWOOD for sale. *45 a load if we deliver; *40 a load If you pick UP. 758-3797 or 752-5488.

100% OAK FIREWCX30, green *50, <T Guaran

seasoned $55 per Vz con teed full measure. 752-0091

065 Farm Equipment

2 ROANOKE GAS Buck Barns us^

3 ^ears. Price negotiable. 753 4*19

1-4713.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

WE INSTALL ALUMINUM AND VINYLSIDING

RemodelingRoom Additions,

C.L. Lupton, Co

752-6116

WERE USA-1

AND TAKING CHARGE

Now Thru March 31,1983 Were Offering

.9%

GMAC Financing

On All 1982 And 1983 Chevrolets

FREE CUSTOM INTERIOR Value S452.00 On Special Equipped Caprice Classics

FREE AIR CONDITION Value $725.00 On Special Equipped C-10 Pickups

Come In Now And Take Advantage Of This Special Financing

See One Of Us In 1983 We At Phelps Want Your Business

Waverly Phelps Norman VanHome Jamas Phalpa

DarrallPtiaipB Clyn Barbar EdBrHay

MikaPhalpB Mika Outlaw RodMoora

RaxWaiimrlght    Dwight Myara

Remember: Were USA-1 And Taking Charge!

KMRThetGrMt OWPBellna WMiOeiineaM Parts

CHERRY DINING room table. Excellent condition, 84"x43". $475. 75**231.

COPY AAACHINE 1 year old. Call 758-2141 from 8 to 5.

COUCH AND CHAIR, *80. One boys , *30.

bike, *30. One corner table, 757 1733.

CUSTOM BUILT handrails, grills, gates, spiral stairways, interior, exterior, residential, commercial. Metal Specialties, 758-4574,    1210

Mumforcf Road.

FOR SALE: Crib and mattress. Like new. 756-9179.

FURNITURE, 1/2 Price Clearance Sale now at Furnifure World. Fi

nancing available. 2808 East 10th St. 7-045T.

074

Mitceilantous

R C A S E L.E C T A V I s I O N

vldeo/recqrder: VMS, programma ble, renr^e control. Excefl^t can

dltlon.7S6 51tS.9tai

REPOSSESSED VACUUMS and Shampooer*. Call Dealer. 75*6711.

Saturdey.

Hand carvad items, table*, dw cfiS*''*' *wing machine, guitar, riding mower, machine shop in struments, and mannual, nunSrous StrSll    Harding

SHAMPOO FOR FALL! Rent ^j^nggw^yd vacuums at Rental

IW- Call 746-6224 after 5om. _

SOUNOBEIGN disco stereo system, AM/FM radio, S-track tape player '* i.*c?rder and record playar. *250. Call 758-2651 after 4 p.m

refrigerators 756-

U$E03MCOPIER Call752 7lll

WHEAT STRAW

*1.30 Per Bale 746 2538 or 746 232*

WOULD UKE TO BUY 1957 Shirley J-VIP * Doll, and other-old doll* 7S6-041.___

10 SPEED BICYCLE, Miyata in good condition. S12S. 75* os.i*^

19. PEET chain length fence; 4' high, * corner post gate, miscella- -r hwdware included, S175. Call

/66/ti2.

' inch sofa with Dark Graen upholstery also has orange print i,P    *    *2 ceiling fan.

*75. Both In good condition. 7S6-B04S.

14 LB WHIRLPOOL washer, copper tone, like new. 2 speed, 4 . cycle. 150.758-0*11.

20p^P SERVICE AND POLE *200 firm. 752-11M.

35 MM CAMERA, Fujica ST 901,

automatic and manual, good condi-Day, 752-7471 or night.

75* 4373.

$L?EPSI BOX, excellent condition.,

*^. Hotdog machine with' roii'r sfeamer, *1*5. Old type Ice cream

chest freezer^ $80. Cell 74* 6040' Game World downtown Ayden.

offer. 752-371*.

075 AAobile Homes For Sal

B^RAND NEW DOUBLEWIDE tor the price of the single. 48x24, 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, loaded with extras including beamed ceilings, windows, 200 amp t^al electric, frosf free refrigerator, and' mucfi, much more.

$17,495

Delivery and set up included. V FHA and conventional financi

Mobile Home Brokers, *30 Greenville Boulevard. 756-0191

MUST SACRIFICE I 1977 Skyline heal,

doublewide, 24x60. Central air. Excellent condition. Complataly unfurnished. *14,000 asking price. 1 747 3779 or 1 747-8179 days; 1-747-8587 nights. Snow Hill.

MUST SELL I 12x60 Princess, 2' bedrooms, 1'/z baths, well cared for, appliances, wallpaper, partially furnished, *9500. Can 758-4821 after 6. Must see to appreciate.

NEW HOMES START as low as. *129.93 a month at Azalea AAobile Homes. See Tommy Williams or Lin Kilpatrick. 756-7815.

REPO 70X14, 3 bedrooms or 2 bedrooms. Good selection. Low. downpayment. Delivery and set up includea. Contact J T Williams at Azalea Mobile Homes. 756-7815.

SSES!

REPOSSESSION, 1982, 3 bedrooms,

GAS SPACE HEATER Heats up to 3 rooms. Call 757 3753

GIGANTIC truckload carpet sale. Great for apartmants, dorms, bathrooms, etc. Average *12 per roll. On sale this Wednesday, Thursday and Friday only. Alpha Phi House, Tenth Street (bottom of the hill).

GO-CART, Pepsi Mini Car, fiberglass body, musical horn, and brand new. 756 1047.

GREEN AND GOLD print wing back chair, good condition. %75, 758-5571 after 5:30 p.m

GROW YOUR OWN FRUIT Free

copy 48 page Planting Guide Catalog in color. One of " complete lines of planting _ _ offered In Virginia including fruit

One of the most material

trees, nut trees, berry plants, grape

vines, landscaping plant mal Waynesboro Nurseries, Inc., Waynesboro, Virginia 229TO.

J St J's ANTIQUES, now operating at Woodside. James Allen and Jenny AAove. Note: 756-1133.

LIQUIDATION SALE of electrical, plumbing, heating and air conditioning contractor. Electrical and hand tools and supplies. Call 753-4021 or come by 207 S Waverly Street. Farmvllle.

LOVE SEAT hide-a-bed In new condition. *195. 746-6294.

Help fight inflation by buying and selling through the Classified ads. Call 752 6166.

MUST SELL ANTIQUES

Oak/leaded glass side board, 4 poster double oed; iron double bed;

wicker rocking chair plus 1981 Honda Civic. 7M-1848after 6 p.m.

NET SUPPLIES; Webbings, rope, floats, lead, everything you need to make your own net or complete net ready to fish. Commercial fishing licenses. Whichard's AAarina, 94?

4275.

PEAVEY AMPLIFIER Classic VT Series, 65 watts. 2 months old, used very little. *400. 756-5793._

PANASONIC AM/FM Player/Recorder, *175. Golf clubs, 9 Irons, 3 woods, and bag, *135. Glenfleld 30-30 rifle with scope and case, *150. Bedroom suite. Pine bed,

night stand and dresser, *375. Call

0838 after 6 pm.

PECANS 75 per pound. Call Dean at 758-4638._

PIANaSTUDIO SIZE Beautiful condition, just tuned, will help deliver. *595. 756 8737._

lived In only 4 days. *300 down arid -if*. "

up. MobI    _ _________

630 West Greenville Boulevard,

take up paymenfs. Free dejivary ef up. Mobile Home Brokers,

and set

12X80 RITZCRAFT 2 bedrooms, 1'/j bath, central heat and air, electric appliances. Located in nice

trailer park. Partly furnished or unfurnished. *6500. 756-2564 after

1974 KINGSWOOO. 12x65,    3

bedrooms, iVz baths. *6500. Call 756-7211.

1975 12x65 mobile home, fully

furnished, 2 bedrooms, cenfiral air,: afier5:30.

*7,000 firm. 919-637-32061

1976 A^BILE HOME for sale, $5800. (fall 753 2488.

1979 CONNER, 14 X 70, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths. Small equity, take

payments. 752-7563.

up

076 Mobi le. Home I nsurance

AAOBILE HOAAEOWNER Insurance at competitive rates. Smith Insuf-ance and Realty, 752-2754._

077 Musical Instruments

DRUAAMER and keyboard player needed for country, country-rock.

and some top 40's, must be 31 or

older: 752-247?or 795 4360 aHer 6.

AAOBILE DISCO consola, amplifier, mixer, two turn tables, speakers, dolly, utility treller. Cell 355-6448.

PIANO, upright, beautiful condl-tIon. $500 or best offer. Call 756 5371.

078

Sporting Goods

HATTERAS CANVAS PRODUCTS All types canvas and cushion repairs. SpcclaliziM in marine pro-ducts. 7a-064l. n(a Clark Street.

INTERSPRING MATTRESSES 35x75. Ideal for campers. Call 756-3422 before 5 p.m._

082 LOST AND FOUND

LOST heavy gold link bracalet December 13. Reward. Finder

please call 758-1346.

085    Loans And AAortgags

NEED CASH, get a second mortgage fast by phone, we also buy mortgages; make commercial Tfree 1

loans, calf

I 800-845-3929.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

GLFND

SKI

SALE

NOW IN PROGRESS

During Januaiy All Golf ft Sld Merchandise

Reduced 25% to 70% Greenville Country Club

756-0504

SALESMAN OF THE MONTH

Waverly Phelps, President of Phelps Chevroldt'Q pleased to announce that Mike Outlaw is the winner of the Salesman Of The Month Award. Mike won this award for hia outstanding sales performance during the month of December.

PHELPS CHEVROLET

West End Circlt

75M1S0

1





093 OPPORTUNITY st"

list or buy your buines with C J Harris B Co., Inc. Financial &

AAarketing Consultants. Sarving the Southaastarn Unitad Statas. Greanvilla. N C 737-dOOl, nights 7S3 401S

SERViCEiMASTER profassional homa and etfica claaning franchisas avallatda in tha Eastern NC area. S14,000 includes equipment and training. Financing available. For information call or write ServiceAAaster, 304 West Peace Street. Ralalah 37403. C3 2002.

095 PROFESSIONAL

CHIMNEY SWEEP Gid Holloman. North Carolina's original chimney sveep. 2S years experience working on chimneys and fireplaces. Call ighf,--------

day or nighf, 753 3503. Farmville

102 Commercial Property

WILL LEASE or sale: 21.000 square foot building located at the corner of Cotanche and 14th Street. Lot Is 110' X 345' Zoned commercial. Multi uses possible. 752 1020._

106

Farms For Sale

FARM 5 miles east of Ayden. Tobacco allotment, 55'/3 acres cleared, 34.9 cut over woodsland. Tiled, good road frontage, excellent location. Call AAoseley-Marcus Re-alty at 744-2146 for full details

13 ACRES all cleared with 2'-'i acres tobacco allotment, 8 miles North of Greenville. Aldridge & Southerland Realty, 754-3500; nights Don Southerland, 754 5240.

37 ACRES with 21 cleared and 2 acres of tobacco. Located near Stokes. For niore information contact Aldridge & Southerland, 756-3500; nights-Don Southerland. 754-5240.

107

Farms For Lease

WANT TO BUY tobacco pounds 758 73 after 4.

WANT TO BUY tobacco pounds. Call after 4. 758-2859.

WANTED TO LEASE Farm for 1983 in Pitt County or Tobacco pounds. Call 744-4298

WOULD LIKE TO purchase tobacco pounds at a reasonable price. 744 3935 or 744 2343

WOULD LIKE to lease tobacco pounds. 753 3444. _

109

Houses For Sale

ATTENTION FmHA applicants! We have three homes with assumable FmHA loans available to qualified buyers. Floor plans offer 3 bedrooms, 1-IVi baths, two

have carports. Call for further details. AmvIs Butts Realty, 758

0455 or Jane Butts, 754 2851.

VALLEY Comfortable .olonial on a quiet circle and a lovely wooded lot. Four bedrooms, two baths, foyer, living room, formal dining room, family room with fireplace, recreation room. Perfect for the family. $89,900. Duffus Realty Inc., 756-5X5._

BY OWNER 3 bedroom. 1 bath, house, university area, excellent starter home or retirement. Priced at $38,500. Call ^54 9070 after 5

109

Houses For Sale

WORDS WANT DO IT You'll have to see this home to appreciate all n with it.

the value that goes constructed in Lynndale. it offers

Newly

all formal areas, with hardwood floors, den with fireplace, and country kitchen. Double staircases permits kids to go to the second story playroom without disturbing

the adults. 3rd story walk up attic is great tor storage. Builder will consider a trade-in. $136.500. #302

CENTURY 21 Bass Realty, 756-4444.

1800 SQUARE feet, three bedroom Belvedere. Call 754-0504.

3 OR 3 BEDROOMS, 2300 square foot, 2 story rustic country house, 4 irs old. Located 4 miles past > Sti    

year:

no^i

Ital off

itantonsburg Rbad $40's. Days 754 5780; nights 752 1437

4-ROOM house and lot for sale by owner. Approxinutely 4 mites from

Burroughs Wellcome, one mile (df mvTlk

Greenville-Befhel Highway. Call 752 4247. Good Buy'

$41,500. Centrally located. This 3 bedroom, 3 bath brick ranch features family room with fireplace, plus formal area. At tractive neighborhood, convenient

to schools and shopping. Call June Wyrick at Aldridge 8i Southerland Realty. 754-3500 or758-7744._

111 Investment Property

NEW DUPLEX Yearly rental of $4600 with assumable loan

Excellent tax shelter. $41,000. Aldridoe A Southerland. 754-3500.

3 BEDROOM HOUSE and separate

25X30 garage........

at-home busin morial Drive. 756 3057

25X30 garage/workshop. Ideal for ^ess. $32,000. 2505 Me

113

Land For Sale

BY OWNER 3.1 acres, 7 miles east of Greenville. Ideal location for country estate or 4 small houses. $24,000. Call 754 3530.    _

115

Lots For Sale

BAY1MX3D, TWO ACRE lot. FI nanclna available. Call 754-7711.

EXCELLENT BUILDER inventory of lots starting at just $9,000. Owner financing at 10% Call Blount & Ball, 754-3000.    _

HALF ACRE LOT East of Ayden. 1.10 mites east of Venters Crossroad. 744-4237.

TWO LOTS off Hl(

Pactolus.

$4,500

financing available. Call AAavis Butts Realty. 758-0455 or Jane Butts. 756-2851._

LOTS off Highway 244 In us; may be sold separately, & $5,000. Possible owner

120

RENTALS

LOTS FOR RENT Also 3 and 3 bedroom mobile homes. Security deposits required, no pets. Call

758 44-.....

I 4413 between 8 and 5.

NEED STORAGE? We have any _ Cafl

ngton Self Stora day Friday 9 5. Call

size to meet your storage need. Arlington Self Storage, Open Mon-" II 9933.

121 Apartments For Rent

APARTMENT tor rent. University

area. 2 bedroom duplex, appliances .......ible.....

furnished. Available immediately 1204 B Forbes Street. Ideal for students or families. $195.754-0745.

BY OWNER Sale or trade. 3 bedroom cedar siding home,

located southside Ayden, lust off Highway 11. $7,000 egully and assume mortgage or will consider

mortgage trade for condominium east/south of Greenville. Call 744 2411 after 4.

BY OWNER 3 bedroom house, large living room with fireplace arxJ separate 35X30 garage/workshop. Ideal for at-home business. Priced to sell. $32,000. 3505 Memorial Drive. 754 3057

BY OWNER 3 bedroom, IVi bath, carport and boat shelter all on a large lot in the Eastern Pines area. Good neighbors. Seller will pay points. $39,900. 758 7524 after 4

CHESTNUTS ROASTING on an open fire; AAoore & Sauter has a townhome to meet your hearts

desire! AAonthly payments less than rent, fireplace optional, no closin costsi Call Moore A Sauter 758 4050

GREENWOOD FOREST Builder will pay points! Take advantage while FHA/VA rates are low. New three bedroom home on spacious wooded lot. Must sell now. $53,500. Call Blount A Ball, 754-3000 or Lee Ball, 752-1444._

HANG YOUR MISTLETOE and holly in your new 2 or 3' bedroom

townhome by golly! Shared equity "in rent

financing. Payments less than makes anyone feel folly! Call AAoore A Sauter 758 4050 for the garland of details beginning with no closing costs!__

HOI HOI HOI To your new home you will go - and your payments will be Towcan AAore^A Sauter and find out how shared equity financing makes it so!! 758-6050. No closing costsi

IF YOU'VE GIVEN serious thought to building a home in 1983...read on I Still time TO have some in-put on the construction of this Ideal plan

Construction to begin soon on this masonite (or wood siding) honie resting on a wooded lot near

masonite (or

hospital. Features great room with

fireplace and vaulted ceiling, large dining area off kitchen with breakfast bar, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths.

heat pump and garage. Why carry the Interest charges on a construe tion loan when someone else is

offering to? FHA/VA financing available, fixed or graduated payment schedules. Only $54,9 Call AAavis Butts Realty, 758 0455

MAKE AN OFFER Owner ready to deal. House in Oakdale featuring 3 bedrooms, 1Vi bath, living room, large roomy kitchen, stepdown den, situated on a pretty corner lot. All for only $37,^. Call Blount and Ball at 754-3000 or Betty Beacham at 756-3680

AAOVED Must sell. 1800 square feet. Elmhurst School district, close to university, 1405 Evergreen Drive. No commission. First of January will turn over to realtor for market

value. $55,500. Contact Jerry Jones,  ----     427.

AAondav-Frldav 9 to5, 754-242

NICE 5 room house. Enclosed back porch, carport, new paint in and out. Very good condition. In the county. Good pecan trees. $34,000. By owner. 758-3218. After 4, call 7*^199,____

OWNER'S AAOVED Has to sell Small equity required to assume FHA 235 loan. 3 bedroom brick home, only 5 miles east. Fully carpeted. A great buy. Estate Realty Company, 752-5058; nights 7S2-3647 or 758-4474. _

AVAILABLE NOW spacious 2 bedroom townhouse, lVi baths.

pool. $250. Walking distance from campus. 919-94r "*

AZALEAGARDENS

Greenville's newest and most uniquely furnished one bedroom apartments.

All energy efficient designed.

Queen size beds and studio couches.

Washers and dryers optional

Free water and sewer and yard maintenance.

All apartments on ground floor with porches.

Frost-free refrigerators.

Located in Azalea Gardens near Brook Valley Country Club. Shown by appointment only. Couples or singles. No pets.

Contact J T or Tommy Williams _ 756    7815    _

CARRIAGE HOUSE Apartments. Highway 43 south, just past Pitt Plaza. 2 bedroom townhouses, all electric. Dishwasher, refrigerator, folly carpeted, cable TV, pool and laundry room. 754-3450after 5p.m.

Cherry Court

Spacious 2 bedroom townhouses with V/2 baths. Also 1 bedroom apartments. Carpet, dishwashers.

compactors, patio, free cable TV, wasfier-dryer hook-ups, laundry room, sauna, tennis court, club house and pool. 752-1557

DUPLEX Two bedroom, I'/j bath, carpeted, waher-dryer hoOkup, heat pump, dishwasher. Available Feb-ruary 1. Call after 4, 754-3543

DUPLEX 2 bedroom apartment

close to University and schools Electric heat, central air, range,

refrigerator, dishwasher, washer dryer hookups. $285. Available Feb

ruary 15 or earlier. Deposit; lease

ilr                    

required. 752-3224 day or night.

EASTBROOK AND

VILLAGE GREEN APARTMENTS

327 one, two and three bedroom garden and townhouse apartments, featuring Cable TV, modern appliances, central heat and air conditioning, clean laundry facilities, three swimming pools.

Office 204 Eastbrook Drive

752-5100

GreeneWay

Large 2 bedroom garden apart-ments, carpeted, dishwasher, cable TV, laundry rooms, balconies, spacious grounds with

abundant parking, economical utilities and poof Adjac Greenville Country Club. 754-4849

IN WINTERVILLE- 3 bedroom apartment, appliances furnished, no children, no pets. Deposit and lease. $195 a month. Calf 756-5007. Available end of December._

OWNER WILLING to pay points cosfs

and buyer's closing cosfs! You won't find a cuter home than this dhe so lovingly cared for. Features living and dining combo, spotless kttchen complete with range and refrigerator like new, 3 spacious bedrooms, 1 bath, detached garage With workshop, fenced backyard, so i9iuch more! FHA/VA financing vailable. $37,900. Call AAavis Butts Rbaltv. 758 0455

3 PLACE YOUR Classified Ad, St call 753-4144 and let a friendly J-Visor help you word your Ad.

SAVE AAONEY this winter., shop use the Classified Ads every

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

9e=ss=-BB=sa

CRAFTED SERVICES

'QtitHty fumHure RefinMilnfl and Mpaira. Superior eanhig for aN ty^ ehilre, larger aalecWow of cuetom pietme framing, aurvey 8takeeany length, all typee of

paHeta, hand<rafted rape

I fra

wocka, aeleeted framed repraductlona.

Eastern Carolina Vocational Center

lndu8tilaiPark.Hwy.il

HM1    IA.ll.4jgP.ll.

. N.C.

I

$500-$800 REUffESONMOSr QUflMOOD HOMES!

Use toward your down payment!

Now through January 9, get a $500-$800 rebate on a beautiful Oakwood Heritage or Classic model home. And you can apply the rebate toward your down payment! All Oakwood homes come fully furnished, complete with GE appliances. So start the New Year out right in a quality home of your own. Visit your Oakwood Homes Sales Center today!

OAKWOOD MOBILE HOMES

626 W.Giccnvtlle Blvd. GfcenvUlc. N(C. 27834 PboM9l9-756-5434

121 Aparinranh For Rent 121 Apartments For Rent

KINGS ROW APARTMENTS

One and two bedroom garden

apartments. Carpeted, range, refrigerator, dishwasher, disposal and cable TV Conveniently located

to shopping center and schools. Located |ust off 10th Street.

Call 752-3519

URGE ONE BEDROOM APARTMENT

Completely Furnished

Individual air and heat, central vacuum. Laundry room and drink machine. Available imnrediately. $200 month. Call 752t2491

LARGE 2 BEDROOM Duplex. 705-B

Hooker Road. Stove and refrigera tor, washer, dryer hookups, air condition, heat ^mp. Deposit and

lease required. No pets. $260. Call after 5 pm. 754-5217, 754-4382, or

754D489.

LEWIS STREET One bedroom furnished apartnrenf. Heat, air and

wafer furnished. I block from 4o Pets. Call 758-3781 or

University. No 754 0889

LOVE TREES?

E xperience the unique in apartment living with nature outside your

COURTNEYSQUARE APARTMENTS

Quality construction, fireplaces, heat pumps (heating costs 5o% less than comparable units), dishwash

er, washer/dryer hook-ups, cable TV,wall-to-wall carpet, thermopane windows, extra insulation

Office Open 9-5 Weekdays

9-5 Saturday    15    Sunday

Merry Lane Off Arlington Blvd.

756-5067

NEW DUPLEX 2 bedrooms, excellent location. No pet^ deposit required. $275 per month. Call from 8-4, 756-4)09 after 4, 522-0782. Refer-ences required

OAKMONT SQUARE APARTMENTS

Two bedroom townhouse apart-Dish

ments. 1313 Redbanks Road.

washer, refrigerator, range, dis ppsal included. We also have Cable TV Very convenient to PIft Plaza

and University. Also some furnished apartments available

756-4151

ONE BEDROOM, furnished apartments or mobile homes for rent. Contact J T or Tommy WlUlams, 754 7815..__

ONE BEDROOM apartment, carpeted, kitchen appliances. $195. 758^11._

ONE BEDROOM, one block from ECU Library. $190 per month. Call 758 4200or7i4-5077

ONE BEDROOM apartment for sublease. 2 blocks from ECU Carpeted. New appliances. 758-3082 or 754-4334, ask for Judy

ONE BEDROOM furnished effi

ciency apartment. Freshly painted.

blocks from university. Available now. $175 a month. Call W S

Corbitt. III. 752-2040.

ONE 1 bedroom apartment; one 3 bedroom apartment; one 2 bedrdom

trailer. Cafl 752 3839.

ONE 2 bedroom country apartment, ...... Gre

about 4 miles from Greenville. 754-9132

SAAALL EFFICIENCY apartment for student or professional. Call 754-8785. _

STRATFORD ARMS APARTMENTS

The Happy Place To Live CABLE TV

Office hours 10 a.m. to 5 p.n Monday through Friday

Call us 24 hours a day at

756-

SUBLEASING immediately. Furnished one bedroom apartment. $175 per month. Call 758-4445 anytime or 758-7100 after 2:30p.m.

TAR RIVER ESTATES

1, 2. and 3 bedrooms, washer-dryer hook ups, cable TV, pool, club house, playground. Near ECU

Our Reputation Says It All -"A Community Complex."

1401 Willow Street Office Corner Elm 8. Willow

752-4225

TWO BEDROOM townhouse. 1>/i baths, carpeted, kitchen appliances. . 108 G Cedar Court,

3311._

heat pump. 108 G Cedar mgnfn. 758-;

. $380

TWO BEDROOM apartments for

rent. Verdant Sf Duplex $290.00; Village East $300.00. Ail require

lease and security deposit. Duff us Realty, Inc., 754^1._

WEDGEWOODARMS

NOWAVAILABLE

2 bedroom, IVi bath townhouses. Excellent location. Carrier heat pumps. Whirlpool kitchen, washer/dryer hookups, pool, tennis court.

756-0987

I AND 2 BEDROOM apartments Available immediately. 752 3311.

1 BEDROOM energy efficient 744

apartment. 754 5389 or 754 0025.

3 BEDROOM TOWNHOUSE 4 miles

West of hospital. Washer/dryer

... - ..

hook up, central air. Call 752-01 nlQhts. and 754-5780 days.

2 BEDROOM apartments available. See Smith Insurance 8, Realty, 752 2754._

2 BEDROOM FURNISHED

Apartment for professionals only. University area. No pets. Deposit. Call 752 3M1._

3 BEDROOM TOWNHOUSE for rent immediately, 1108 A Brownlea Drive. 752-8179

3 BEDROOM DUPLEX near ECU Carpet, heat pump, range, refrlger-ator. No Pets. $245: 754-7460._

2 BEDROOM TOWNHOUSE

El

.

dishwasher, hookups. $295.

rtergy efficient heat pump. l</i baths, carpet, rarm, refrigerator, ^    75^7

>7480.

3 BEDROOM Apartment, carpeted, appliances, 1>'> bath. $250. 802 /^rtment 4, Willow Street. 758

3 BEDROOM DUPLEX near Uni versltv. $290. 754-7779.

405 HOLLY STREET $215 per month. Includes utilities. 754-7809.

125 Condominiums For Rent

TWO BEDROOM flat duplex available in Shenandoah. $300 per

month, 12 month lease. Young

>cf?

couple preferred. Call Clark Brancr Realtors, 754-4334._

127 Houses For Rent

AVAILABLE lAAME DIATE LY 3 bedroom, 2'/s bath townhouse In Windy Ridge. Includes fireplace in living room, kitchen complete with

range, refrigerator and dishwasher, washer and dryer, free use of pool, sauna and tennis courts. $425 per

month/one month security deposit, lease. Call AAavis Butts Realty, 758 0455

HOUSES AND APARTMENTS in town and country. Call 744-3284 or 524 3180._

LYNNDALE Four bedroom ranch home available early January, $550 month. Deposit and one year lease required. Call Richard Lane at Blount A Ball. 754-3000._

THREE BEDROOM houses for rent. Grimesland, $300.00; Sylvan

Drive, $325.00; Hardee Acres, $335.00, Country Sgulre, $325.00, Pittman Drive, $325.00, Paris Ave., $5.00; Green Farms, $325.00; Charles St., $375.00; Lynndale, $400.00. All require lease and secu

$400.00. All require lease and secu r^^iieposit. Duffus Realty Inc..

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

ROOFING

STORM WINDOWS DOORS & AWNINGS

RemodelingRoom Additions

C.L. Lupton, Co.

VERY NICE 12x50 mobile home, private lot. very clean 756 3220; nights 758-7741

' BEDROOM AAobile Home for rent. :all 754 4487._ _

3 BEDROOMS, 2 baths, furnished, washer/dryer, excellent condition. Located in good park. Couples only. No pets. 754 0801.

BEDROOM trailer furnished in

unn^^ane Club. Call after 4 p.m..

744

3 BEDROOMS, 3 baths. $175 month At Quail Ri(^.

1407 West 5th Street

Apply in person.

2 BEDROOM furnished trailer, 12x50. Near Parkers Barbecue. 756 5241 after 4    _

2 BEDROOMS, 1 bath, central heat, air condition, $325 a month. Call Steve Evans A Associates. 355 2727

YOU CAN SAVE^^wiey bj^hogping

for bargains in I

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

mmm COUPON

Wheel Alipnentl Special

Only I

$1388 I

With Coupon I

127 Houses For Rent

133 AAobile Homes For Rent

TWO BEDROOM houM nesr col leoe. Coll 75a-3S54.

^ICK ACTION Classified Ads are the answer to passing on your extras to someone who wants to buy.

101 SOUTH Woodlawn Av*nu, 3 bedroom, central heat and air. $325 month (919) 745 4384 or 745 3338.

135 Office Space For Rent

3 BE DROOM country apartmant. 11 miles south of Greenville on Highway 43 Call 524-5507.

AVAILABLE NOW Pitt Plata, two

1000 foot office spaces. Good loca-f Ion, reasonable rent. Call 757-489.

3    BEDROOM housa. 413 East Church Street, Farmville. Call after

4    D.m.. 744-4540.

EXCELLENT LOCATION 1, 2 ar 3 office spaces with janitorial services Heat and ufilitles furnished, $85 to $100 per month. Call 754 3422 before 5 o.m

3 BEDROOM HOUSE North Washinqfon Street. 753 3311.

3 BEDROOM HOUSE within walk ir>g distance of the university. $335 month. CENTURY 21 B Forbes Aoencv, 754 2121.

AAOOERN, attractive office space for lease Approximately 1500 square feet. Located 3007 Evans Street beside Moseley Brothers. Call 754 3374.

3 BEDROOM HOUSE located cIom to University. 754-0528.

3 BEDROOM houM, 3 bath, central location and more. $435 month. 754 4410OT 754 5941.

NEAR DOWNTOWN Single office $140 month including utilifies. Also suites and conference room avalla blM. EvwnlnoSv 752-5048

3 BEDROOMS. 1 bath, corner lot, $375. Call Steve Evans & Associates. 355 2727.

NICE FURNISHED office near post office. $80. Includes utilities, sfwt term. 754 2471 or 758 1543.

133 AAobile Homes For Rent

OFFICES FOR LEASE Contact J T or Tommy Williams. 754-7815.

SINGLE OFFICES or suites, with utilities and janitorial. Chapin Little building. 3104 S Memorial Drive. Call 754 7799.

BE YOUR OWN LANDLORD 1979, 14x40, 2 bedroom, 1>a bath with washer, dryer, and central air. Low downpayment and assume pay ments less than rent. Tri County Homes, 7540131.

STORE/RESTAURANT/SINGLE or multiple offices available now downtovm Offices convenient to courthouse. 754-0041. 754-3446.

CLEAN, 3 bedrooms. Call 754-0173.

FOR RENT OR SALE 14X40 3 bedroom. Located in country on 244 758 3749.

TWO ROOM or four room office suite. Highway 244 Businass. Eco nomicall, Private parking. Some storage available Call Connally Branch at Clark Branch Realtors, 756 4334

SPECIAL RATES for students 2 bedroom with carpet, $145. No pets, nochildren. 758 4541.

TWO BEDR(X>MS, completely furnished, washer/dryer, no pets. Call 752 0194.

UNFURNISHED 1 bedroom, $140 a month, stove and refrioerator In

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

TWO OFFiCS FOR $250 1 office

For meet cars tnd pickmps. Four | Wheel Alignmeni Extra. Olhar . I aarvteaa avaBaMe: Brakaa, ahocht, 9

- mufflara, oN hibrteaMon...lo maka | I your rtdaSnwolh and aafa.

Call 756-5244

For Appointment

'mmm COUPON mm mg

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

TIRES

NEW, USED, and RECAPS

Unbeatable Prices and Quality

QUALITY TIRE SERVICE 752-7177

Official North Carolina Inspection Station

OIL, LUBE & FILTER

WOODWVCAin

" ITIRE ^CEIMTER^..........

WMt End Shopping Canter Phone 7564371 Openldi04:00Mon-Fri Set. 6:00 to 1:00

729 OicMneon Avenue Phone 752-4417 Openl:004MMon4ri Sat.6:00to1d)0

( GUARANTEED USED CARS

for $125. Office plus use of reception area, $175. Office plus someorw to answer phom $225 For more in

formation call Dee Heffren at 754 8724_

300 SQUARE FEET two room office a^ 440 square feet three room office, Joyner-Lanicr Building, 219 N Cotanche Street. Parking availabte. Call Jim Lanier, 752 5505.

138

Rooms For Rant

PRIVATE ROQAA,, furnished,

;e. C,

private entrarrce. Call 754-8705.

140

WANTED

WANT TO BUY tobacco pounds or lease tobacco pournfs. 749 3551 after 4p.m._____

142    Roommate Wanted

FEAAALE NICE 3 bedroom house.

including local phone. $95 and 1/3

t. C  --------

utilities, call 758-0944.

LOOKING FOR responsible male to share 3 bedroom apartment. $92.50 illties

month and halt utilities. 758 7259.

MATURE, RESPONSIBLE roommate to share 3 ixedroom apartment. rent and utilities. 758 1324 after 5. .    _

PRIVATE ROOM, $87 a month plus ' 3 utilities. Eastbrook Apartments.

758 5044.

PROFESSIONAL OR WORKING Roommate to share Townhouse. Deposit, $150 per month. 754 8594.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

142 Roommate Wanfad

ROOMMATE (S) wanted. Availabte immediately. Brick home with two

baths, full kitchen, fireplace, and garage Located behind Belk Derm at 9 East 14th Street Prefer

student or nrtafure adufl. Call 758 2903 after 7 p.m or come by before and ask tor Rudy.

RCX3MMATE WANTED to share 3 bedroom trailer. $170 month. In eludes everything but food. Call 752 9534.

ROOAAMATE needed, ' 3 rent, ' j utMities. CtoM to campu. Call a4i??.

34 YEAR OLD AAale home owner looking for responsible roommate. Call Dean at 754-3171, after 5. 754 5534.__

144 Wanted To Buy

HANDCRAFTS WANTED to sell on a commission basis only. Call

754 4770 between 11 and 4.

TAX PREPARES I will purchase your accounts. References furnished'754-4553.

WANT TO BUY mahogany Queen

I IV ov T mm

Anne tern stand. Call:

146

Wanted To Leas*

WOULD LIKE TO lease tobacco pounds tor 1983.011752 3439.

148

Wanted To Rent

TWO OR 3 bedroom apartnient or

llTe <

house In West Greenville or Win terville. Call collect 1-391 3510.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

GRANT BUICK INC.

603 Greenville Blvd., Greenville, N.C.

USED CAR SAVINGS

1979 Buick Electra 4 door, 3 in slock 1982 Buick RoQdl -"2door

1980 Buick Regal 2 door

1981 Mazda B2000 Truck 1981 Mazda GLC

1974 Chevrolet LUV Truck

1979 Mazda GLC

1981 Chevrolet Chevette

1979 Ford Pinto

1980 Toyota Truck 1966 Ford Mustang 1979 Toyota Corolla

1978 Buick Regai 2 door

1981 Voikswagen Jetta 1981 Chevrolet Monte Carlo 1978 Toyota Clica ST 1977 Chevrolet Monte Cario

1981 Oatsun 280-Z

1977 Plymouth Volare

1978 Pontiac Sunbird

1979 Buick Skylark

1982 Mazda GLC 2 In stock 1982 Mazda RX-7

1980 Mazda GLC

The Dealership Where You Would Send A Friend Weekdays: 8:30 to 6:30    Phone    756-1877

Saturday: 9:00 to 2:00     756-18]!

1981 Audi 4000 S Plus 5....................MO,950.00

1980 Volkswagen Truck.....................M495.00

1980 Plymouth Horizon TC-3.................^4495.00

1979 Volkswagen Convertible...............^7995.00

1979 Ford Fairmont.........................*2695.00

1979 Pontiac Sunbird.......................*4195.00

1978 Mazda GLC..............    *2795.00

1978 Honda Civic .....................*2795.00

1978 Olds Cutlass Supreme.................*4995.00

1978 Olds Cutlass Wagon  ..........*4895.00

1978Volkswagen Dasher4 Door  *3995.00

1977 Volkswagen Rabbit....................Automatic

19H Buick Skylark..........................*3395.00

1976 Ford Courier Truck  ..........  *1995.00

1975 MG Midget Convertible................*2995.00

1973 Volkswagen Beetle.........j    Like New

This Week's Special 1981 Yamaha 750 Seca Motorcycle ..

2450.00

12 Month/12,000 Mile Warranty Available On Some Of The Above

loe Pecheles Volkswagen, Inc.

<

HI

04

04

lU

Z

04

o

u

Introducing

Lexington Square

Phase HI

Noar Tha Graanvltia Athlatic Club

Custom Built Townhouses At Afiordable Prices

J.R. Yorke Construction Co.

355-2286

I

ui

ItA I- UI

Ayden N.C. 609 Snow Hill St.

4-Bedroom; Brickveener Residence; formal living room and dining room den, large rec. room with fireplace and built In grill; double carport; outside garage and storage; 2530 square feet heated area.Lot 123X240'.

520 Park Ave.

2-Bedroom8; 1 bath, living room, dining room, kitchen, den, double garage and side porch, 1290 square feet heated area; corner lot with shade trees, fireplace in living room.    

Houses shown by appointment only Building lots and land for .dovolopment for sale

Chester Stox Real Estate

746-6116 day

Ayden, N.C.

746-3308 after 5:30 PM

PROTECTING YOUR POSSESSIONS IS OUR BUSINESS

Our "Qood As Oold Quarantee you of the safa dofhrary of your fumHuro and MhraWoe, your offlco or aloro oqtdp. mont. Movlne iocaNy or out of ttato, you ntod tho roHabWly and affprdaWllhf of Aaetlon, your UnHod agont.

b'een,/;e B:.i

^5bll35

1

Serving Greenville To The Coast For 18 Years

1M7 Chmlmit St., QrcOTvHK, N.C.

758-700Q





X>Ttte Daily Reflectiir, Greenville, N.C.Thursday. January <.liC

Crommwon! By Eugme Sb^

GOREN BRIDGE

FORECAST FOR FRIDAY. JAN. 7.1983

ACROSS 1 Top pilots SCoiToded 8Ii!4>ale

12 Chess turn

13 Actor Knight

14 Ancient garb

15 Ajar If Crone 17 Hymn

close U Mexican poncho

21 Baseball goofs

22 Sea dog 23Goawry 24 Portal

27 Nonsense

32 Self

33 Hockeys Bobby

34 Keats product

35 Fielding hero

38 Cygnets parent

39 Pinnacle

48Heatunit: SIBurgles fSpangled abbr.    57 Actor Howard Annie song

42Skicourse    58 Jane-    II Fabric device

45 Nancys    DOWN

spouse 1 Andys tf Sci-fi author    parteer

Anderson 2Getalong 51 Numero    3Atsometime    24 Obtain

-    4 Governing    25 Paid

SEin,zwei,    groig)    21 Tiny fellow

5 Actor    28Metalsource

William    29 Mother ina

I Britons brew 60s song

11 Outlaws 19 One of the Kettles 21 Seep stage

lY CHARLES GORCH AMD OMAR SHARIF

18S3 Tnbun# Company Syrxhcaia. Inc

BURY DECLARER WITH A SPADE!

from the Carroll Rightar Instituta

Both vulnerable. West deals. NORTH

K1064 ^AK63 0 A93

J7

53 Pinnacle

54 Fresh

55Solardisk 7Border

31 Harem chamber

Avg. sotntkw ttme: 24 min. jj    for

Moses 31 Energy units . IB1 37 Harvest

EAST

Q853

0 1076

Q854

38 Dessert item 41 Fros partner 42S(g)portbeam

43 Comic Jam

44 Gone down 4IBohonian

(coUoq.)

47 Ogle

WEST AJ2 10754 OK42 A A 102 SOUTH

97 ^QJ8 OQJ85

K963 The bidding:

Weit    North    East    South

1    DUe    Pasa    1    NT

Pass    2 NT    Paaa    3    NT

Paaa    Pasa    Pasa

Opening lead: Seven of 9.

48 Have repast Answer to yesterdays puzzle. 5] Bom

Dear Charlie:

Well, Biarritz is over and I am back home. I did not do as well as I had hoped, but as someone said before me: "I shall return."

My partner, Paul Chemla has a complaint. He claims that, despite the fact that I co-author a bridge column, no one ever writes about him. Now we both know that that is a vile canard-as a matter of fact, I sent you one of our hands a few weeks ago. But Paul did produce one of the best defended hands of the tournament, in a match be tween his team and Poland.

After Paul opened the bidding with one club, the Poles reached an aggressive contract of three no trump. The

only point of interest in the auction was Souths one no

trump response to his partners takeout double. Since that showed reasonable values, North had no qualms

CRYPTOQUIP    1-6

BZKVFL BTTZ BZELXJ BTVFXAR BJT-

MNAR MJTC MNJRA ATKJOECXOA

Yesterdays Cryptoquip ALARM IN DELI COUNTER HELPED POLICE GRAB THE HAMBURGLER.

Todays Cryptoquip clue: B equals P.

1W Cryptoquip isa simple substitution cipher in which each letter used stands for another. If you think that X equals 0, it wUl equal 0 throughout the puzzle. I^ngle letters, shl words, and words using an apostrophe can give you dues to locating vowels. Sdution is acoanpUahed by trial and error.

1SB2 King Fmimw SyndicaM, Inc.

N. C Water Table

Is Now Replenished

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -Increased rainfall in most parts of North Carolina in 1982 has replenished water tables that had shrunk to critically low levels in 1981, officials say.

Overall, the water supply across the state is in the most favorable position it has been in many mmths, says Hu^ B. Wilder, assistant district chief of the U.S. Hydrological Survey.

Rainfall rates at National

Weather Service stations across the state, with the exception of Charlotte, were uniformally above normal.

Wilder said surveys taken in December, a particularly rainy month in most areas, showed that water tables were 1.5 feet to 3 feet above normal in most areas.

Those water tables were a full 3 feet to 6 feet higher than in December 1981, when experts began saying that a real problem existed in the

water table levels following an extended drought in 1981.

Conditions were so bad in Christmas 1981 that winter sportsmen near the mountain town of Canton were skiing while town residents were catching water in buckets to wash their cars.

Polk and Rutherford counties were granted emergency drought loans for their crops. Chapel Hills groundwater as 2.5 feet below normal, while Elizabeth Citys was 2.15 feet below normal.

Those statistics could have been devastating, since each foot of water represents between 50 million and 100 million gallons of water per square mile of stored groundwater.

But the drought began to end by last summer, when rainfall amounts reached record levels in some areas.

In stark contrast to December 1981, stream flows for Decemb^ averaged from 125 percent to 150 percent above normal, Wilder said. Water tables in some low-lying coastal areas even rose above land surfaces, causing other problems.

And the extra rainfall proved to be welcome relief for the most of the states

crops.

Juicy, fi^ cut

JUK^

beeL..

^^Friday^Saturday

aiways!

Special No. 4

New York Strip

$499

only

with balud potato or french IiIm mdToMToMt

NcwiocattonatSOOW. Grccnvilla Bhd. abo at 2903 E. 10th Straat. GiaanvtUa

lIViBStern

Sizzlin

STEAK HOUSE

WEPmnoMTHiPun

about inviting game. ,

Paul led a heart. Declarer won in hand, led a diamond to the ace and a diamond back to the jack. Paul won the king and, quick as a flash, shifted to the jack of spades.

That card assured the con tract's defeat, because it removed any possibility of an end play. Had declarer duck ed, Paul would have abandoned spades and shifted to clubs, and declarer would have lost two tricks in each black suit and the king of diamonds.

But winning the king proved to be no better. Declarer had only eight tricks. As soon as the defenders gained the lead, they could take three spade tricks and the ace of clubs to go with the king of diamonds.

Remind me to send a clipping of this to Paul.

Best regards.

Omar

ACTIVISTS OUTLAWED DUBLIN, Ireland (AP) -The government has outlawed the leftist Iri^ National Liberation Army, subjecting its estimated 200 hard-core activists to possible trial without jury and seven-year prison terms for belonging to an illegal organization.

GENERAL TENDENCIES: A good day to coordinate your efforts with other persona in projects that are vital to your success and happiness. Make sure your artistic qualities are fully utilized.

ARIES (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) Try to be more explicit in letting associates know of your exp^utions and gain their co(^ration. Use care in motion.

TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 201 Have a good ulk with co-worirers so that you can increase productirm. Enjoy social affair in the evening.

GEMINI (May 21 to June 21) Get in touch with friends you havent seen in a long time and deepen relationships. Don't neglect important business matters.

MOON CHILDREN (June 22 to July 21) Good day to get both your home and yourself polished up so "that others will be impressed.

LEO (July 22 to Aug. 21) Join with good friends and come to a far better understanding. Obtain the data you need that will bring you greater success.

VIRGO (Aug. 22 to Sept. 22) Gain the assistance of those with whom you have monetary dealings. Try to improve the value of your property.

LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) Take the treatments you need that will improve your appearance. Have a happy time with friends in the evening.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov, 21) Gain the favor of th(e who can help you get the information you need to be successful. Avoid a trcHiblemaker.

SAQITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) Try to enlist the help of good friends for a new project you have in mind. Dont neglect to pay pressing bills.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 20) Plan exactly how to expand where your career is concerned and get good advice from experts. Be kind to others.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 21 to Feb. 19) You are able to view present situations from a different angle now and can handle them more successfully.

PISCES (Feb. 20 to Mar. 20) Try to please your mate more and add to present happiness. Make plans that can bring advancement in your career.

IF YOUR CHILD IS BORN TODAY ... he or she wiU be one of those charming young persons who will be able to work along very well with others, so be sure to pve as fine an education as you can in order to make the most of this cooperative spirit. A fine person here.

On the Caepelgn Trail

Why if thie men ao hnpBjr? Porooethhii, todejrii hia

68th birthday. And, for uutm, Wttm Tritg

Mndele ia cooaidaied by many lobe tbefromraimer

for the 1964 Damocralic praaidantial nomination. MoodMaa poUtkal aipmienoa |om back to 1948 whn. at the age of 20, ha manafad Hnbmt Hnmpfaiay'afnooioaftil campaign fbrthaU,&Siata. At 86, Mndala bacama a Smiator himaalf wbnn Oovmnor OrviUa F^ramian mmfd him to fill dm vacancy whm Hnmphiay bacama Vice Praaidint nndir (jmdon Johnaon. Minnaoota dactad Mndala to the Sonata for tim montarme bafbmhafoUowadin the footalapa of Hnbirt Hnnqihiay onot again to baooma Vice Pnaidmt under Jimmy Carte.

DO YOU KNOW Who waa the laat Pneidint who bad ban n alactad vice pnaidant?

TUItDAirt AMSWER - TrMum lalara to tim dma arta of languago: grammar, iogie. and rtiatelc.

I

I

I

I

^1.00 Off

Any Plate - With Coupon Friday Or Saturday Only 4:30P.M.-9:30 P.M.

WMMngton Highway (N.C.33 Ext.) QraenvWa Phone 7K-317Z

One Coupon Par Parson

I

I

I

Boy, the things we found when

we took inventory Sale!

Overstock for us means BARGAINS for you...

Sale prices good thru Wed., Jan. 12

Kwikset Key & Button Entry Lock.

Plumbing

TOILET TANK REPAIR KIT

Exterior knob operates with key, Interior with turnpiece. Bright brass finish. No. 400-T. Reg. $10.19.

Repair

Parts

All carded and loose plumbing parts, pipes, joints, etc. in stock.

Kwikset

Passage

Lock

Inside lockset of polished brass. Bel Air style. N0.20OB. Reg. $7.19

Sale

Sale

off

Nautilus Bath Fan-Light

Bathroom economy in a ventilator and light in one. Separate switches (or separate or combination use of fen or light. Easy to instell Instructions Included. Model N688.

Reg.t34.M

Sale

29*

Electric Heater Close out.

All remaining store stock.

off

Includes fan-forced radiant and quartz heaters.

Nautilus Range Hoods

En|oy a 'cleaner, brighter Kitchen with a power fan and bright 75 watt capacity light.

Baked-on enamel finish. Washable alum, grease filter. Ducted, ductless and convertible models. Reg. S3I.M to SM.M.

Bathroom Vanities

Assorted styles and sizes. All with cultured marble top and molded-ln basin. Reg. 39.95 to $133.95.

'OFF

Pine

Shelving

N0.3 grade pine; sanded all 4 sides. Ready to paint or stain.

Now

'Off

Pink Power Rebate!

Amerock Hardware

Save 25 to 50% on selacted

Amerock cabinet hardware. Pulls, knobs, hinges In various finishas.

Get $10.(X) back when you buy 10 rolls of any Owens    Corning

Fiberglass pink Insulation. Rebate expires Feb. 21, 1983. Act now and save. Details at Garris Evans. R-19 faced-15" on center.

$1449

Roll

lumlierCo.liK.

701W. Fourteentli St.

Greenville, N.C. Telephone: 752-2106 Open Weekdays: 8-5 Saturdays: 8-Noon

ACE

MS4*


Title
Daily Reflector, January 6, 1983
Description
The newspaper was established in 1882, and was originally named the Eastern Reflector. It was founded by Julian Whichard and David Jordan with equipment they purchased from The Greenville Express. On December 10, 1894, it adopted the name The Reflector and began publishing every day. Cox Newspapers acquired The Daily Reflector in 1996. Creator: Daily Reflector (Greenville, N.C.)
Date
January 06, 1983
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
NC Microfilms
Subject(s)
Spatial
Location of Original
Joyner NC Microforms
Rights
This item has been made available for use in research, teaching, and private study. Researchers are responsible for using these materials in accordance with Title 17 of the United States Code and any other applicable statutes. If you are the creator or copyright holder of this item and would like it removed, please contact us at als_digitalcollections@ecu.edu.
http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC-EDU/1.0/
Permalink
https://digital.lib.ecu.edu/95263
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