Daily Reflector, January 7, 1983


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





WMth*r

Fair tODi^t, lows in mid-30s. Mostly cloudy Saturday, bl^ Id 40s, 30 percent chance oisbowas.

THE DAILY REFLECTOR

INSIDE READING

Page 7-Fear the worst Page 15-Health news Page 20-Rare glimpse

102NDYEAR NO. 6TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION GREENVILLE, N.C. ffilOAY AFTERNOON, JANUARY 7, 1983

20 PAGES TODAY PRICE 25 CENTS

December Unemployment Up

By ROBERT BURNS AP Business Writer

The nations unemployment rate edged up to 10.8 percoit (rf the work force in December from a revised 10.7 percent the previous mmth, the Labor Department said today.

Novembers jobless rate originally was put at 10.8 percent, a post-Depr^ion high.

The 0.1 percenta^point gain was the fourth straight monthly increase in tl unemployment rate, but was less than the 0.3 percentageiwint rise from October to November.

However, the number of Americans giving up the seardi for work climbed to a record, the department said.

Ranks of discouraged workers those no longer counted as unemployed becai^ they left the labor force expanded by more than 200,000, to li million, the highest since the government began tracking that statistic in 1970.

Less discouraged is the financial community, viliich seems once again grip^ by a conviction that the economy is on the

mend, although the Reagan administratkMi expects a slow healing.

The stock market zoomed TTiursday as the Dow Jones average of 30 industrial stocks hit a record peak and trading was Uk busiest since the record rally of last fall.

Hie Dow average, the nmt closely watched index of the markets performance, jumped 26.03 points to 1,070.92, breakin the record (rf 1,070.55 set Dec. 27.

Nearly 130 million shares changed hands (Hi the New York Stock Exchange, the ninth-larg^t total (m record and the most since a record volione of 149 millkin last Nov. 4.

Analysts said investors seemed convinced that an economic recovery was finally at hand.

In contrast to many gains during the rallies of last summer and fall, the stock market posted Thursdays advance without the help of a dn^ in interest rates.

But the latest forecast of the administration gives an uncommonly pessimistic view of 1983.

The new forecast, prepared as part of the fiscal 1984 budget plan Reagan will send Congress Jan. 31, predicts the economy - after adjusting for inflatkm - will grow only 1.4 percent in 1983. That is a much smaller growth rate than typical in the first year following a recession.

The foreca^ also foresees the unemployment rate remaining above 10 percent until next fall, and above 9 percent through the end of the year. It predicts unemployment will not to 7 percent until 1988.

In other ecimomic developments:

-Major domestic carmakers planned to assemble 77,067 autos in the United States this week, 31 percent more than a year ago. Wards Automotive Report said Thursday. The firms built 50,908 cars in the same week last year.'

Meanwhile, indefinite layoffs among U.S. autoworkers hit a record 269,400 this viwk. The previous record had been 269,360 the week before Christmas.

I El Salvador Army Facing A Mutiny

EXAMINING RARE MOSELEY MAP . . . Cartographer William Gumming of Davidson College, (left) and Donald R. Lennon, director of the ECU Manuscript

Collection, examine the only known existing copy of the Edward Moseley map in the United States. The map was found at Edenton. (ECU News Bureau Photo)

Researcher Finds

Rare Old N. C. Map

By WILLIAM A. SHIRES ECU News Bureau

Rummaging throu^ the attic of antebellum Wessington mansion in Edenton, N. C., several months ago a i^archer came upon an old map, folded neatly and tucked among stacks of papers, publications and ledgers of a century ago.

When he retrieved and unfolded the map, historian Donald R. Lennon knew instantly he had discovered an extremely rare historical find, an original c<^y of a 250-year old map of North Carolina drawn by coloniasl surveyor general Edward Moseley.

It was one of the most exciting momemts of my life, says Lennon, director of the ECU Manuscript Collection at East

Carolina University.

It has been verified that Lennons find is the only original copy of the famous Moseley map known to exist in the United States.

Measuring 57 by 45 inches and in good condition, the Moseley map had been in the possession of the John W. Graham family of Edenton fcnr several ^n-erations but it had disappeared from view during the late 19th century.

Mr& Graham, who had donated the papers of Grahams grandfather, William B. Shq>ard, to the ECU Manuscript Collection, has now added the Moseley map the the gift.

It is an extraordinarily important donation to the University, Lennon said. Mrs. Graham has entrusted East Carolina

reflectoF^

ftOTLIdf

752-1336

Hotline gets things done for you. Call 752-1336 and tdl youi problem or your soimd-off or mail it to Hotline, The Daily Reflector, Box 1967, Greenville, N.C. ^834.

Because of the large numbers received, Hotline can answer and puUish only those items considered most pertinent to our readers. Names must be given, but only initials will be used.

MAGIC STUIffiNTS SOUGHT Jim Brown of Pitt Community (jollege has asked Hotline to appeal for persons interested in taking an Introduction to Magic course at PCC. The course is slated to start Tuesday at 7 p.m. but will not unless 10 participants can be enrolled. Seven persons want to take this course, he said, but the collie has a policy of not holding any class with fewer than 10 enrollees. Magic can be of assistance to doctors, dentists, nurses, teachers anyone who works with people, especially children, said.

Anyone who would like more information about the course is asked to call 756-3130, Ext. 238.

University with a truly unique and irreplaceable historic treasure.

We are extremely excited that the Moseley has found a home here, he said. After careful restoration and conservation work, it will be placed on permanent display in the ECU Manuscript Collection.

Lennon said the Moseley map, published in 1733, was one of the most important colonial maps of North Carolina, providing the first detailed and accurate cartographical survey of the North Carolina coastal area.

AH later 18th century maps of the colony were strongly influenced by the Moseley which was printed only in a very limited edition, Lennon said.

Only two other ori^nl (xq)ies are known to exist, one in the British Public Records Office in London and the other at Eton College, aslo in Britain. Neither is in good condition.

Noted cartographer William P. Cumming of Davidson Colley, who examined the Edenton map with Lennon, said a fourth original copy which belonged to J. P. Kendall of New York and South Carolina apparently was destroyed some years ago.

A tracing of one of Uk originals was done in 1822 and is preserved in the National Archives in Washington, but no further mention of the originals has been found in the cartographic literature.

Wessington mansion, where the map was found, was built around 1850 by Dr. Thomas Warren of Edenton and served as Union headquarters between 1862 and 1865 during the occiq>ation of Edenton.

Cumming said the details of land formatkm, of rivers and creeks and waterways tourk of the sounds are numerous. There is a wealth of names of the chief settlers and larger plantations.

dHetteturnto Piute 10)

By ARTHUR ALLEN Associated Press Writer SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador (AP) - A top Salvadoran military commander refused an order sending him to a diplomatic post in Uruguay, placed his garrison on alert and today called for the resignation of Defense Minister Gen. Jose Guillermo Garcia.

I am confident that other officers (of the armed forces) will go alimg with me, Col. Sigifredo Ochoa Perez told The Associated Press in a telephone interview from his headquarters at Sesuntepeque in the northern province of Cabanas.

Either he (Garcia) goes or we go, Ochoa said. We are not afraid to die on the job. He called Garcia a corrupt man vriio has become strong throu^ manipulations. He is a little Adolf (HiUer).

He added be did not expect a military attack. The officers know who is who. There was no immediate comment from ranking government officials in the capital. San Salvador was quiet and there were no reports of any violence anywhere else in this Central American nation.

There was no indication that any other military commanders were joining Ochoas mutiny.

His garrison has at least four infantry companies, including the headquarters company, or about 640 soldiers. Ochoa also has an estimated 300 national guardsmen and pidice under his command.

Ochoa, considered by colleagues and American military officers in the country as OIK of the best field commanders in the ri^tist governments 3-year-old war against leftist insurgents, said he rebelled against an

order sending him as mili-tary attache to the Salvadoran Embassy in Montevideo, Uru^ay.

He had been identified a few months ago with a gniup of officers reportedly plotting to remove Garcia as defense minister. He is 40 years old and member of the military generation that includes Cols. Domingo Monterosa and Miguel Mendez, commanders of two elite, U.S. trained anti-guerrilla battalions.

Earlier a spokesman at Ochoas headquarters in Sesuntepeque, 60 miles northeast of the capital, had said; The officers and troops of Military Zone No. 2 have disobeyed the order issued by the defense minister.

The spokesman, who refused to identify himself, added: We have asked for his (Garcias) removal. We appeal to the commander general of the armed forces, the president of the republic ... to relace him for the good of the armed institutions and their better control.

The colonels spokesman

charged that the transfer order was not an isolated action but part of an effort to get rid of the Cabanas commander.

Knowledgeable sources, who requested anonymity for security reasons, said Ochoa received the transfer order Thursday ni^t and placed his troops in a state of emergency a few hours later.

Garcia and Ochoa are known to have been at odds for some years.

Ochoa is widely reflected by the civilian population in Cabanas, a poor mountainous province that was a hotbed of rebel activity until he took over command in late 1981.

Ochoa has said he has managed to clean out secret guerrilla bases and camps in his area of (^ration. But he has been complaining recently to visiting reporters about lack of govenunent financial help for poor peasants in the province and victims of the war.

The United States last year provided the government here with $320 million in aid.

High-Up Perch

GETTING NEW PAINT - Venwi Morris of A. M. Morris Construction Co., dressed for the cold job of being outside, hangs from a rope on the side of the Minges biding in downtown Greenville, as he gives the building a fresh coat of paint. (Reflector Photo by Tommy Forrest)

(gasoline Tank Explosion And Fire A New Jersey Holocaust

By KATHLEEN BIRD Associated Press Writer NEWARK, N.J. (AP) -Gasoline from a ruptured storage tank gushed like Niagara Falls before erupting early today in a window-shattering explosion that killed one man, injured at least 23 others and sent flames hundreds of feet into the sky.

The 12:15 a.m. blast was reported felt 130 mUes away. The flames reached 1,000 feet

into the air and the fire was so intense that firefighters were forced back from the burning tanks and were waiting today for the fire bum itself out.

As the sun rose, winds that had been blowing the thick, black smoke northeast toward New York City shifted to the west, sending billowing clouds over New Jersey. The flames were visible miles away.

There were reports of

looting in nearby Jersey City after the explosion blew out windows downtown.

Top Ingraham, a spokesman for the northeast division of Texaco USA, which owned the tank, said the company had no indication what caused the nqiture or the blast. City officials said the fire did not appear to be suspicious.

The fuel went through the holes ... it was spilling out like Niagara Falls, said

GAS TANKS BURN - Firemen fight blaze at Texaco fuel storage facility in Newark after an explosion in the early morning hours today

shattered the facility. The Newark, N.J. skyline is in background, left. (AP Laserphoto)

i

George Gray, describing the scene just before the explosion. We ail saw the tgas. Thats when we decided to run.

Newark Fire Director John Caufield said the three gasoline tanks which cau^t fire held a total of 19 million gallons of the fuel.

Caufield said the dead man, 40-year-old William Vanzile of North Arlington, was found lying on his back several hundr^ feet from the burning 10-story tanks. Charles Sands, assistant manager of the terminal, said Vanzile was a Texaco truck operator.

Authorities said they believe one man is missing, but they would release no details. Sands said all Texaco employees were accounted for.

It looks like devastation. Theres many buildings in there that have been very heavily damaged, some automobiles that are completely demolished, Caufield said. Of course the tanks themselves, two of them are collapsed and the third one looks like its melting down.

Police said there were about 40 railroad tank cars within 100 feet of the blazing storage tanks, but Caitfield said the fire is not going anyplace.

Tom Norwood, a spokesman i(xr Texaco in Houston, said the facility is a sales terminal where tanker trucks load with gasoline and di^l fuel to make ddiveries to service stations.

Hie terminal is in a heavily industrial area about five miles from New York City across the mouth of Uk Hudson River with few residences nearby.





3-Tbe Daily ReOector, GreenvUk N.C -Friday. Jamtary 7. IMS

Exercise Program Has Mothers, Toddlers

By JOANNE DEGNAN PRINCETON, N.J. (UPI) Wearing tmy navy blue sneakers and flowered overalls, Leslie Strauss of Princeton spent most of her time in gym class going head-first down a foot-hi^i red plastic sliding board, gigging as she landed on the mats below.

Not bad for an 18-montb-old.

Slides are her favorite, said Leslies mother, Bridget, 26, but she also likes the balance beam. Elsewhere in the ^mnasi-um, 15 other wide-eyed tod^ers and their mothers crawled through tunnels of mats, swung in rubber tires hung from parallel bars and played catch with giant beach balls.

OK, everybody, time for Row Row Row Your Boat, says instructor Betsy Hike to her Fun Fw Ones class at the Princeton YWCA.

The babies and their mothers immediately sit on mats. Holding hands and facing each other with toes touching, they do sit-ups together in a see-saw motion while singing the popular childrens song.

Afterwards, the babies clap their bands and jump up and down in excitepient.

As she does after almost every successfully completed exercise, Mrs. Hike then calls hugs and kisses time for her students.

One of the nice things about the class is that the mothers learn how to play with their children, she said. "At the same time the moms also become less inhibited and they learn to relax and let go of their children.

Mrs. Hike said toddlers change dramatically during the nine-week session, which ended Nov. 18.

By the end. the. aebaie willing to leave ,if(Nnmy, play with each other and explwe more on their own. She said oumy (rf Uie lS4o 24-month-olds eventually graduate to more structured type exercise classes for 2-and 3-year-olds called Parent Toddler Gym. Cathy Fontana, of Lawrenceville, said she never has any pn^alem getting her daughter, Paula, 2^^, to finish her breakfast on

Cooking Is Fun

IA Fun And Creative Way To Exercise Night Class Begins Jan. 8 Morning Class Begins Jan. 19 I Intennediale-Advanced Jan 20 To Regi^er,

Call Donna Whitley 152-0928

Classes held at NC Academy of Dance Arts

By CECILY BROWNSTONE AP Food Editor COME FOR DESSERT Pumpkin Cheesecake k Coffee PUMPKIN CHEE^AKE As served at New York Citys Vista Hotel.

2 tablespoons iHitter, soft

>4 cup graham cracker c r u m b s V, cup finely chopped 'pecans Four SKHince packages cream cteese, soft 16-ounce can pumpkin I'/i cups sugar 6 large eggs

l-3rd cup all-purpose flour teaspoons ground cinnamon 1 tea^^ ground nutmeg teaspoon ground cloves Vi tea^n ground ginger

3 teaspoons vanilla

In a small bowl stir together butter, graham cracker crumbs and pecans. Press over the bottom of a buttered 9 by 3-inch springform pan; refrigerate. In the large bowl of an electric mixer, at high speed, beat together cream cheese and pumpkin until blended. Add remaining ingredients and beat until blended. Pour over graham cracker layer. Bake in a preheated 325^e^ oven imtil cheesecake begins to come away from sides of pan - Vk hours. Turn off oven cwjtrol; (^n oven door; let cheesecake stand in oven for hour. Let stand at room temperature to cool completely. May be served at once or after brief chilling. Makes 16 servings.

DONALD R. HATCHER

Certified Public Accountant Announces The Relocation Of The Firms Offices To Corner of Horne And Walnut 300 N. Walnut Street Farmville, North Carolina P.O. 80x1108 (919)753-5518 January 1,1983

momii^ before gym class.

One class and she loved it, said Mrs. FonUma, hiding Paulas lumd as she walked fearlessly along a 4-inefa high balance beam.

The children learn to do forward itt, jump rope, climb wooden play ladders, swing from parallel bars and other exercise games with their mothers.

We also try to use some of the games to teadi the children concbpts such as over, under and around, said Jean Rodmer, of Kingston, N.J., an instructor and mother of two.

In one such game, the mothers go on Ml fours to form a bridge. The babies are told to crawl over, around and under their moms bellies.

When pregnant mothers are unable to routines such as undo* the bridge, their batnes work with the instructors.

Mrs. Hike has taught at the Y for the past five years. She said inters in the baby exercise classes has surged since the program was first offered 18 months ago.

We began with two classes a week and now were iip to six classes.

The cost is $20 for nine weekly classes.

Mrs. Hike said she also gives the mothers lists of exercise and infant nutrition books they can read at home.

Many parents say they practice the routines with their infants at home.

It gives my daughter and me a chance to be alone and do something together, Mrs. Strauss said.

At

Wits End

By Erma Bombeck

Engagement Announced

SYLVIA ANN THOMPSON...is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harrison Thompson of Winterville, who announce her engagement to Issac Chapman, son of the Rev. and Mrs. Mark Chapman of Kinston. The wedding is planned for Feb. 12.

Fashion Tips For Women

Tips for the large woman, from Pat Swift and Maggie Mulhem:

Be realistic. Dont turn

into a yo-yo, losing weight drastically and then regaining tlw loss. This can be a health hazard.

Start tucking in those shirt tails. This is good discipline for tummy and waistline.

-Forget the cliche that black makes you look slimmer. "If you weigh 300 pounds, said Miss Swift, what are 5 pounds one way or other in dress! Wear what you feel good about.

Kwp mobile and agile. Smaller women tend to take^ their slimness for granted* and dont exercise as much as they should.

When shopping, take a tape measure. Buying clothes that are snug wont help you look smaller. Instead, if you have a size 40 bust, youre better off with a garment with a 45-inch bustline. Take a friend shopping if you trust the friends honesty.

-The word fat diould be used only in medical terms. Fat is giving up and not caring about yourself, Miss Swift said.

Doraphobia is a.dread of touching the skin or fur of an animal.

I visited my old hmiK town a few wedcs a^ and ran into my childrens piano teacher, having lund) m the same diu ingroom.

I must say I was surprised. She lodced wonderful. The nervous twitches aroimd her nmuth were gone. The eyes that used to spin counto--clockerwiae in her head were steady no and held my gaze. And I reaUaed die was smiling. I had never seen her smile, befwe . . . even at recitals.

Lwetta, I said, Iww long has tt been?

"Elevmi years, two months, one week and ttmee days, she said, taking a deep Inreai.

"And are you still plachig ttose pudgy, little, sticky fingers on the keys? Goodness gracious, do you have any idea bow many little people you had mardiing to the tune of your metronome?

"You still blame me, don't you? she said.

"Dont be ridiculous, I said. "Do you hmieMly think 1 still go to pieces ev7 time I hear, Theres a Rose in the Bottom of My Teaciq)? Whoi the (foctor explained to me it was just a childs way of working out parental lHtili-ty,Iun(terstoodit.

"Mrs. Bamhardt blam me, she said.

niat was different, I said. "You had absolutely no right to assign 'Lady of Spain to a beginning accordion stu

dent for a recital. 1 hear she still isnt right.

As 1 Me lunch, 1 occasionally cast a glance at Loretta, and a wave of affectfon came over nw. What had Mie (kme that was so wrong? She took three children off my hands for an hour ev7 week and introduced them to the "March of the Little Toy Soldiers (to be played lively), "The Parade of the Turtles (to be played softly) and The YodM and His Echo (to be played in a basenwnt in Kansas City).

She awakened a talent - if not for making music, then for appreciating it.

She taught them what instruments can do and how you can play softly for effect or loudm* when you place

your foot on the pedal.

She taught them if you practiced for three kaisy hours on the same song and hit the same sfopid note wrong every time you coidd turn your mother info a snivfding bowl of cookie batter.

Then 1 thought, life is so short, why not let bygones be bygones? As I left, I dropped by her tMde to teB hor so, when she grabbMl my hand and said, "1 forgive you for your ttuee littk no-tatent chdren.

The anableps is a fish which has divided eyes. The eyes allow the fish to look underwater and at the waters surface simultaneously.

Fresh Rolls Daily

DIENERS BAKERY

iWDIeWaanAw.

NC. tteacterny of |)anee Nrts Special Session Of Aerobics!

A Creat Exercise Workout For January Beginniiis Jan. 10,7 Classes for $18.00 Mon. 6:30-7:30 p.m. & Wed. 5:30-6:30 p.m.

Experienced, Professional Instruction By Mitzi Cherry Moye

CMl to reglatcr: 355-2140 Sun: 12:00-8:00 p.m. Mon: 3:00-5:30 p.m.

k 207PlaaaDv.

'MmnlngClaMi Wed. 10:30 a.m.l

Director: Shenvl Mercer

r^HEAR Mr. Dennis Teel

In PIANO CONCERT

TEMPLE FREE WILL BAPTIST CHURCH SUNDAY NIGHT, JANUARY 9, AT 6:00 .

Loestsd bsMnd SunsMns Qardm Csntsr

Hear the finest in sacred music performed by one of Greenviiies finest young pianist!

The public bi Invited to Join Temple Church for a Great evening of sacred music.

9-

New Sweater

SHAGGY DOG SWEATER-Andrew Pincus of Lenox, Mass., models a sweater made by his wife, Kate, left, from the hair of their dog, Nik-Nik. To make the sweater, Kate collected hair that Nik-Nik had shed over a period of two years. (AP Laserphoto)

Yntmirwkdb see imdlm Americas lea^Christianautlu)rifymh^m/L

Jomes C OobsoAt Plulh

inhchaUet^ing, new

F CUS THE

FAMILY

FILM SERIES

t H1PRK.MT l7F(Ht ATIOSALPhOOtasniVIMOS WORD ISCX^RrORATtD

Filml: The Strong-Willed Child

Film 2: Shaping the Will Without Breaking the Spirit

Film 3: Christian FaUiering

Film 4: Preparing for Adolescence: The Origins of Self-Doubt Film 5. pmparingfor Adolescence; Pter Pressure and Sexuality Film 6: What Wives Wish Their Husbands Knew About Women: The Lonely Housewife Film 7: What Wives Wish Their Husbands Knew About WoBaen; Money, Sex, and Children

^EOP

^AP





Miracle Cure Is

Prescription

For Poverty

By Abigail Van Buren

1 M3 by Univbriil brni lynMit*

DEAR ABBY; I have a problem that is eatinf my insides out. I started writing to a TV evangelist because I have multiple sclerosis. I know he is well-respected, in touch with Ood and does many good things. The problem is at he always wants more money. I sent him $100. Thit) he wrote to me personally and told me that something great was going to happen to me, but I had to send him' another $100 first ~ even if I had to save my pennies and get the m^ney any way I couldl 1 Relieve in Ood with all my heart and strive to be a good person, but, Abby, I cant take food firom my chil-dran's mouths because this man says Ood will do aome-tMg good for me if I do. That comn very close to saying that Ood can be bought.    ^

My husband is very angry with me because I sent u mow as I did. I would like to be fiwe of my disease, but 1 wfl^ not deny my family the neceesitiH in order to send tli^man money.

Flease tell me something positive about these TV evan-gel^ts. I'm beginning to believe that all they want is my money money that I dont have.

Ood understands. Why cant they?

OOTTOKNOW

DEAR GOT TO KNOWs Its unfair to tar all tvan-gellats with the same brush. Many inspire their followere to be better people - to be kinder to their fellow men and have faith in the Lord.

Ood cannot be bought, nor does he reserve his blessings for those who send money to a TV even*

gelist.

DEAR ABBY: I am being married in the near fitturs. My father is living, but my mother is deceased. However, my mother is with me in spirit all the time.

Is there any way 1 can tactfiilly acknowledge my mother on my wedding invitations?

REMEMBERING MAMA

DEAR REMEMBERING: You might identify yourself as the daughter of **Mr. (    )    and    the    late

U.. /    \    H

Mrs.( ).

It is not usually done, but if it will give you pleasure, I see no reason why you shouldnt do it.'

DEAR ABBYi About the business of writing a thank-yeif note on the reverse of a cancelled check: What is this

wprid coming to? Anyoiie who cant find the time to write a (facent thank-you note for a check dount deaerve the girC If it*s just an added gesture while endorsing the c&sck, I take it back, but to dash off a "thanks" on the b|ok -of the check and consider that adequate thanks is the pits.

In my case, I don't even receive cancelled checks. All I gft is a statement fi-om the credit union, and I imagine thM the day is coming when all checks will be handled in that fashion.

Thanks for letting me have my say.

CHECK-WRITINO GRANDMA

A Chocolate Cake America Loved

The Dally Reflsetor, QrcenviUe, N.C.-Prtdsy, Jaauaiy 7,

ly dOLY ttOWNirONI irnMhmmmat Sons of AnMhd'i isvortts rseipsi coos itrtibt from the lihi of food Mdu|M. They in, of couni, dsvilGpid by tbs minuficturtn. of pickagsd foods. lo 1171, Oiil ^ wrote i ngpsfhf^ ciUsd "But from thsbicki of boxes, botti Cioi ind jui" (McGnw-Hill). Since tbeo ihe bn compiled two mon coUecUoM of lucfl reclpee

hot wttff often, ivi I apteree

of the cbocolite; reierve ihivlngi. Id i nail micm brMk up remitelBf chocoiite; add eufar and water; &m low Int, etir until ehoeolite malte and mlxtun le emootb; off beat, itlr la vaaiUa; cool to room

'%cupofcbocolatomliture toto dry pte cruet mix until tbe

coneiiteocy of imootb froattoi.

waieaa

-three One of

In all. label" reclpee not

Divide Into 4 parti. Preai over tbe bottom of an Inverted

In bar booka la for Chocolate

l-lnch round layw cake pan to wltbtnmncboftbe

Pii^ ^ that flnt appeared

CHOCOUTE PASTRY CAKE - Ntw cooka miy want to try a dessert that was extremely popular in the ndd-1960s.

HerettliifilDforinew lUon of cooka aa well u for I cooks to tbe mld-lNOi who loved the rec^ but lost It.

1N6 OiOCOUTE PASTRY CAKE S pickifes (each 4 ouncea) iweet biking cbocoUto d cup augir ^ cup water teupooni vinlOi 10-ounee package pte cruet mix

2 cupi heivy creim Remove wraj^ from one end of I package of chocolate. Dipping I iwlvel-blide peeler toto

' the edgH. Bike to a preheated 42S^e oven

Mrs. Cobum Gives Talk

Host Families Are Needed

The American Scandinavian Student Exchange (ASSE) la leeklna local faml-llei to serve ai noati for IS Scandinavian and German hi|^ ichool itudenti who are part of the ASSE exchange visitor program.

The non-profit ASSE operates under the auiplces of the Swedish Department of Education and to officially designated by the U.S. In-formetlon Agency as an

A program on "Dressing to Look Thin" wu given et the meeting of the Pictolui Extenilon Homemtkera held Tuesday afternoon.

Giving the program wu Luna Cobum.

Pruident Jo Ann Clayton presented an Intemetlonel certificate to Blackie Smith and perfect attendance pins to Erllne Wynne, 14 yeira and Dot Simmons, six years.

The meeting wu conducted by Mrs. Clayton and the devotional wu tfven by Mri. Coburn. Meeting hostesses were Mrs. Clayton and Mrs. Wynne.

Ergophobia la the fear of or aversion to work, according to Webiteri "Third New International Dictionary.

Surpris' \oiirs<>lf liK Ih>s Nou!

Exchange Visitor Program. Famlllea interested in

urvtng u boats for the 1983-84 achool year should contact Wlllene ONeal, 919-756-6466.

If itubborn pockati of fat cling to your hipi, thighi, itomachwa can htlpl

Personal

Mr. and Mri. Atlas Wooten of Falkland, Mr.' and Mrs.

Llnduy Briley of Pactolus and Mr. ''    

5-lS toch loai onfkalvMt

NotUtetorLoaa

Not Seran Ukap 100%MlnanlVteu AtteckaCallulite

qukfclyk aflacdvtey

Noalealuteaa

and Mrs. Fenner Allen Jr. of WIntervllle wQl attend the National Farm Bureau Convention In Dallu, Tex., Saturday through Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. Wooten were elected voting delegatu at the state convention In Rileigh during December.

CALL TODAY 756-6659

Carolina Eat Contra (BMMePllttThMtra)

imy*

Emilia WaOw Jonai and John Graham Chairy Jr. wara unliad In marrlM Nov, 27 at St. Paul's Episcopal Church In Irvington, Alateima, with the Rav. Colaman Inga officiating.

Tba brtda Is tha daughtar of Mrs. Jamas Austin Jonas and tha lata Mr

Jonaa. ThabitdMroom Uthason of Mm.Vhn OralimC^ d, N.C.

of Oraanvtila,. ..^.

Mrs. Paxton Laon KMraU Jr. aitandad har slalar as matron of honor and M. Chwry was hu son's bast man

AfMraracaptlonatthahomaof Judgaand Mrs. Braxton L. KlttraU Jr .. ^ eoupla lafi for a wadding tr^ to tha Bahamai. Thay wii) raslda In

BayMlnaila.

mam

Couple Has Anniversary

.Mr, and Mri. Herbert Turnige of Groenvllla oelebriiid thetr m wed-dlfig snnivsrury at a buffet dlgntr glvsn by their daugh-twr, Ltaite Blount of Qitoenvllk

- Hosts and hoateuN were ihtir ehlldran, Porllt Laithim uid Guy Ttfffiaga of NSW York, Harturt Tvuniaga Jr. of Gtrmany and Mri. Btount.

Ounti wart grittad by irandaoni,Rai|leHlnMand Lawtrance Latham. Qlfti wra racalvfd by thalr aunddiufhtori, Carolyn RIpu aid Latrtcla Latham.

Mrs. Tumaga wu waarina I pink formal gown trimmad in.pliik laca. She won a icmge of white earaatloni.

: fhe couple repeeted their fiddlDg vowa 0ven by the .RIv.Thomu Dixon.

' Ooo(M)yu wen aakl by the hoitiandhoiteiBU.

Throughout The Month Of January BED    BATH BOUTIQUE

Is having a

rmKKTwm

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hdeovtn

25%

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25%

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25%

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Carolina East Mall

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firm - I to I

uaUl ihnoit minutos. If

of pan, trim with maip . Cool S mlnutoi; earteuUy run I knife undar layers to toouo from ths pens. Cool complitity onracks.

Wig the cnam; told to thi nmitotog chocolato mixture; spread betwein and onr the top of layers; aanlah with the reserved shsvtngs. Chiu, ooveied, (Or It least 8 hours. Mikas 12 to i$i

Note; Csfci may bi stend to freuer. FresM uncovend until firm; wrap appropriately and return to freeur, Tbiw to refrlg-entor for a few hours before lervtof.

sB""

Elactrolysls

1tiOAKMONTMVt.lU(TI| NNINS4W,aailNVlUI.N.C. WWANINTHAtonilllOVAL

u

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WEEKEND

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BUDGET STORE FRIDAY AND SATURDAY ONLYI

Ladies Sweaters On Salel

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Group of ladloa* ewtatara by Soclaty* priood to aall quicklyl Navy, grtan and pink aolida. Craw or V-naok. SIzaa 8, M, L Shop aarlyl

ladies Gowns & Pajamas! Save!

V2

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Thick n Thirsty Cannon Towels

2,3.00

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Shop Uondoy Through Soturoiy 10 s.m. Until $p.m.-Pheno TSO-B-e-L-K<nnm)

Up to $20 Off on LlttloOnoo' Outorwoarl

Reg-lilteia

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AIIQIrla Sletpwoar Up to *16 Off I

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Inf int A Toddlsr Sportswtar on Salol

Rafularl.7ltoll.N  ..................25% Off

Llttla Qlrla Sportawaar RaduoadI

Regular $11 to IN ..........................Vd Off

Soya* Tuf n Ruf* Danim Jaana Raduoad

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Salel Qirla lzod Sweaters

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Rack Of paitel oraw naok oable knit or V-neok aoft Orion* aweatera. Slzea 7 to 14, Preteen 6 to 14.

1

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4^^ Day Reflector, GraenviUe. NCFriday. January 7.1SS3

The Governor's Salary

QUITE A STRING AnACHED!

The governor of North Carolina makes an annual salary of $57,864.

A proposal is being discussed by legislative members to increase the salary to $100,000, a $42.000 jump. The increase, .of course, would apply to the next elected governor and would not affect the salary that Gov. Hunt will receive for the remainder of his term in office. The governor, however, says that he opposes any increase in the governors salary for the next term of office.

Predictably the potential candidates for governor in 1984 downplay the salary increase possibilities. Generally they indicated they would leave it up to the Legislature to determine the gubernatorial salary.

Charlotte Mayor Eddie Knox, a possible candidate, said holding the

office shaould involve an element of giving.

The $42,000 figure seems too big a jump, but at the same time there should be reasonable increases in the governors salary to make the job acceptable to all who seek it. Some candidates are independently wealthy and can afford to take a loss on their living expenses for four years. Those who do not have independent wealth, however, should not be precluded from holding the office solely because of finances.

We would suggest an increase in the next governors salary something less than the $42,000 figure and it should be implemented after the freeze on government workers and teachers salaries has been lifted. That seems the fairest way to provide an adequate salary for the governors office.

Water Table Back To Normal

Remember the drought of early last summer. Water tables dropped several feet below normal and some experts thought it might be years before adequate precipitation fell to replinish the ground water.

There was even talk of an extended drought period which might change our way of living.

Mother Nature provides. Rains came later in the summer to end

THIS AFTERNOON

the immediate drought. Persistant rainfall since has returned the water tables to normal and above.

Nature is not always consistant but it usually provides the balance that the environment needs. North Carolina is blessed with a good water supply. There was concern about it last summer, but now all is well.

By ART BUCHWALD

Battleships Are Back

Idle Teen Years

ByPAULT.OCONNOR RALEIGH - Every weekday afternoon, the Cary Village Mall altere I buy my evening newspaper fills up with idle kids.

They dont cause any trouble but they cant be doing the mall merchants much good, either. With the exception of the pizza and ice cream vendors, few merchants appear to be making any money off them. They crowd into the record store to rock to the Album of the Day or they mull around the doughnut shop to discuss the latest development in East Cary Junior Highs love wars.

Idle teens are a lost resource and a brewing headache, says a study recently published by the University of North Carolinas Center for Early Adolescence, Handled properly, kids from the age of 10 to 15 can be developed into upstanding individuals who despite their youth can contribute tremendously to their communities. Left to their own devices, and to the vices that will find them, these kids can savage themselves, their parents and their communities.

It is the contention of Leah Lefstein, editor of 3:00 to 6:00 p.m.: Young Adolescents at Home and in the Community, that the three hours immediately following school are essential to a young adolescents positive development. She, and the authors who contribute to her book, contend that the lack of sometWng to do in these hours contributes to some alarming statistics" about this age group.

Girls under the age of 15 are the only group of women in the United States for whom the birth rate is not declining.

Between 20 and 30 percent of all ei^th graders in the country drink excessively.

Those adolescents who are later treated for heavy use of alcohol report that they started around the age of 12.

FAULT. OCONNOR

But if kids this age have a capacity for trouble, they have an equal capacity for good, say Mrs. Lefstein and her boss, Joan Lipsitz, director of the center. They cite programs around the country where children this age are spending their afternoons helping the elderly at rest homes, helping the sick at hospitals, doing volunteer work for social agencies, expanding their studies and developing athletic skills.

A key fetor in whether a kid goes to the good or the bad, they say, is the afterschool guidance provided by

the community. This is a confusing age for children. They may be devel(^ing their mental faculties faster than their physical coordination. Or vice versa. Most likely, the childs friends will be devel(^ing faster in some ways and slower in others. The writers use the word vulnerable. Kids know theyre confused and they look to adults for help.

In most homes these days, however, there are no adults after school. Both parents are working. Like many conservative social thinkers, Mrs. Lefstein says the single-parent home and the home where both parents work are factors in the problems facing young adolescents. But she differs from these conservatives in saying that the problem wont be solved by getting mother out of the workforce.

Historically, parents are not the most important adults to adolescents. At this stage, theyre seeking out other adults as role models, Mrs. Lefstein said in an interview. Adults with whom (Please turn to Page 6) ^

President Reagan recommissioned the battleship New Jersey last week, and there wasnt a happier man in Washington than a 91-year-old retired admiral I know.

Didnt I tell you ie battleship would come back, son? he said at the Army-NavyClub.

You told me every day, I replied.

The admiral wds slapping his thighs and chortling. Well, this is going to give them carrier fellows something to think about. They said we were finished, and they almost put us out of business. But you need a President like Ronald Reagan to know a dreadnought when he sees one. The flyboys and submariners can talk all they want about a modem Navy, but its the old values of a battlewagon that this country still longs for.

I hope it will close the , window of vulnerability with the Russians. It cost us $365 million just to get it out of mothballs, I said.

Its a bargain, son. You couldnt build a Navy tugboat for that now. By golly, when they demothball the Iowa next, well have the two greatest fighting ships in the world. When you put your feet on the deck of a battlewagon, you know youre standing on

a ship.

You know more about it than I do, but it seems to me a battleship is outdated, compared to missiles and bombers and nuclear submarines.

The Daily Reflector

INCORPORATED

209 Cotanch* Straat, Qreanvilte, N.C. 27834 EstablisNKi 1882 Published Monday Through Friday Afternoon and Sunday Morning DAVID JULIAN WHICHARD. Chairman of the Board JOHN S. WHICHARD - DAVID J. WHICHARD Publishers Second Class Postage Paid at Greenville, N.C.

(USPS14M00)

SUBSCRIPTION RATES

Payable in Advance Home Delivery By Carrier or Motor Route Monthly $4.00 MAIL RATES

(Mcm incivei iM < aaaubta)

PHt And Adloining Counties $4.00 Per Month Elaewhoro m North Carolina $4.38 Per Month Outaido North Carolina $8.80 Per Month

MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PReSS The Associated Press Is ei-clushrely entitled to use for piAHcatlon all news dispat-chos credited to It or not othorwlso credited to this pspor and siso the loeal news pubUahed herein. All rights of publications of special dispatches here are also reserved.

UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL

Advertising rates and deadlines available upon request. Member Audit Bureau of Circulation.

Other Editors Say Scenic Treasure

Cnie Hickory Record

With congressional approval of funding for the final 7.7-mile Blue Ridge Pailcway link around Grandfather Mountain, posterity is assured of a completed piece of valuable scenic real estate.

For some, the Parkway has been viewed as a burden because of the tremendous c(^ of upkeep and improvement projects such as the 1,243-foot Unn Cove viadiKt now nearing completion. But most who drive along the scenic route can readily appreciate its aestetic values both to the present generation and generations to come.

The Parkway courses the Blue Ridge Maintains from Asheville into Vir^a, tmiching the northern tip of Burke County and winding through Watawga County just yards from the Caldwell County line.

Its natural beauty attracts millions of tourists annually, provides tremendous outing experiem^s sightseeing, hiking, picnicing, camping - and is readily accessible for people of the Unlfour and surrounding counties.

While some may lament the vast dollar amounts required to preserve, maintain and inqirove this national monumoit to nature, there is an abiding appreciation of its presence in a time when real estate values and expanding population are making any similar projects exorbitant, if not impossible.

The foresight of national leaders to conceive this project and be^ its construction in 1935 assured us and posterity a

Had the lead^ not^takra^ initiative to move forward with the scenic omcept, it would not be thwe today. It was begun when motmtaln real estate was of littfo value, whoi the w(^ fmee vu willing to accqit any job available, and when the iKMiiiy wage for labor was computed in coits rather than dollars.

Funds for cmnpletiOB of the final Unk are timely in that if current trends are indicative of the future, fu^ delays woiitd have served no purpose but to increase the burden of cost.

It is impossible to appraise the real value of Itbe Blue Ridge Parkway. If we broke it down into doUar-and-cent values relating to real estate, equipment and amenities, that would represent only the tip of the iceberg when we began adding in the aesthetic, recreational, sentimental and futurity benefits of this scoiic route through a dozen North Carolina counties andonintoViq^a.

ART BUCHWALD

Thats because youve never sailed on wie. A battleship has something no carrier or submarine can provide and thats firepower. You can sit 26 miles out at sea and lob in 16-inch shells on Soviet gun emplacements all day long, and the Russians cant do a damn thing about it. Take my word for it, the New Jersey is just the kind of ship to make the Commies yellUncle.

What worries me about a battleship is that it takes so many officers and sailors (o crew one. The Navy Is short of personnel rww, and if you have to put 1,300 men on one ship, youre taking an awful lot of trained personnel away from other ships, I said.

Thats the kind of bilge the flyboys have been handing out for years. The reason they dont like battleships is that you cant sink one.

I thought they sank an awful lot of them in world Warn.

Ri^t, and we learned from that experience. Now

we know where to put our heavy armor and how to protect our fuel tanks. It would take a nuclear torpedo to sink a ship like the New Jersey in the next war.

So?

Theyre not going to fire nuclear weapons at a battleship because the New Jersey has nuclear weapons on bpard that can fire back.

re you trying to tell me they demothballed the New Jersey as another deterrent?

Youre darned tootin. That, and the fact that when we sail a battlewagon into a 'Third world powers harbor, they know we mean business. Theres nothing that beats showing the flag on a battleship to scare the hell out of a small hostile country.

The admiral bought drinks for everyone at the bar. Son, this is a great day for the Navy. When Reagan recommissioned the New Jersey, he not only sent a message to the Soviets, he also sent one to the naval Air Force that their days were numbered. I never thought Id live to see the day that Pentagon chiefs would come to their senses.

Im happy for you, skipper, I said. You battleship advocates have been fighting a losing war with Navy planners for years and now you have finally been vindicated.

The reason is we never lost faith. We knew that as long as there was one battlewagon in mothballs, we had a chance of making a comeback. I think the President said it best when he called the New Jersey one of the most important cost-efficient additions to the U.S. fleet. And hes been in enough war movies to know what hes talking about.

(c) 1983, Los Angeles Times Syndicate

Lunar Show Was Thriller

ByHUGHA.MULUGAN

AP Special Correspondent

RIDGEFIELD, Conn. (AP) The best things in life are free ... or so the songsraiths assure us. And sometimes theyre ri^t.

The total eclipse of the moon in the last week of the old year was more stunning and satisfying than any movie I have seen in the past five years. Nature managed to pull off her Iffilliant (&a-matics without resorting to gutter language or full frontal nudity.

It was worth getting up at 4in the frosty predawn to watch. Under a full moon, which is retired for a total lunar eclipse, the lawn glowed as brightly as Abou Ben Adhems be<lroom just before the Recording An^l made his appearance. The skeleton tree branches in the windless night took on the appearance of an old Japanese print. Nature imitating art again. Diamond flecks of frost jittered in the stubble of the decadent garden.

The temperature hovered in the low 20s. For the moon watch I had set up my Ice Station Zebra with a wooden rocking chair, a mohair blanket, a thermos of steaming coffee, a rug for my feet and a notebook and ballpoint pen (which soon coagulated and refused to record the phenomenon) at a picnic table on the porch or the deck as it is called here in Connecticut,

None of my neighbors seemed aware of the big show about to begin in that star-studded sky. There were no lights on in any of the houses for as far as I could see in any direction along our road, w4iich suddenly seemed to have been paved with old pewter. A fat skunk carrying his own highway stripe padded softly across the lawn and disappeared in the hedges behind the woodpile, leaving the world to eerie brightness and to me. Not that the bri^tness lasted long.

At 4:48 a.m., the Earths shadow nibbled a tiny cookie bite out of that luminous orb hanging halfway down the sky on the western horizon. Far overhead in the clear, cloudless night a passing jet winked back at the stars, and a distant dog began to whimper. No early birds twittered or stirred. In my limited experience in exurbia, the early bird is a greatly overrated incentive to character building. The earliest any of them seem to be up and doing around here

is somewhere around 8 a.m., with the rapacious bluejay first on line for breakfast at our bird feeder. Sometimes our wily squirel family, born thieves all, empties the larder an hour tefore the first feathered freeloader gets off his roost or perch (a-wherever they spend the night. Unless, of course, the raccoons have pulled off another night heist and beaten the squirrels to the booty.

The next gala moon show wont take place until 1989, so 1 didnt want to miss a minute of this one.

A few m(H*e dogs down the road stHnewhere commenced to whine, not really howl, but more like a banshee wail, as the disc of Earths shadow moved from left to right acns the face of that wonderfully bright moon. It was as if someone was drawing a Mardi Gras mask across the man in Um moons face, producing the half black and white harlequin effect so popular in theatrical dance masks and ceramic wall ornaments.

Acording to my frozen notes, which are mere indented lines in a yellow legal pad from that inkless pen, it took about 28 minutes for the Earth to block out half of the moons face.

By now, if we were in Vietnam back in the old days, ARVN troops would be firing tracer rounds into the increasingly darkening sky, trying to keep the sun dragon from swallowing the moon. I remember one full lunar eclipse over Saigon in the middle 60s late in January or early February during the weeklong celebration of Tet, the Vietnamese new year. Vietnamese infantry units on perimeter guard around Ton San Nhut airport hemstitched the night with an incredible display of neon embroidery from automatic weapons loaded with tracer rounds. The Air Force joined the show, drq>ping million candle power flares and trying to assault the sun dragon with sorties from Puff the Magic Dragon, a lumbering cargo plane fitted out with a rotating barr^ Gatling-type gun that fired rockets. If that many rounds had been expended in the vicinity of the airport a few years later, Saigon might not have fallen to the North Vietnamese.

Even in the last fraction of an arc from the disappearing full moon, the Earth and my acre of it reflected the sheen of old Victorian silver.

(Please turn to Page 6)

Strength For Today

FISHERS OF MEN

When Jesus sent forth his disciples, he declared that he was sending them out to become fishers of men. 'They would cast out their nets and bring great schools of fish. Or they would bait hooks and bring in fish singly. But they would be fishers - catching something.

Too much of the original idea of the Church has vanished in modern times. The Church has become an institution. It is the dwelling place of the faithful, the stronghold of sound and or

thodox belief, the kindly helper to those in need. All of these things are good, but Christianity started out as a fish-catching expedition. The disciples were to enclose great masses of converts in their nets.

When the Church has been healthy, it has been intent on fulfilling this function. Since today a great mass of people are outside the Church, we should remember that Jesus wanted his disciples to become fishers of men, -Elisha Douglass

We're Not The Only Inf laters

By ROBERT BURNS AP Business Writer

NEW YORK (AP) -Youve heard the theory that the more money a government prints die less its worth. Thats the inflation lesson, depressing as it may be.

It makes you wonder how everyone else can be so irreiqxxisible, running off on a spending spree, as they must, with the first extra dollar they earn.

Now comes an ecimomist with a word of scdace: Americans are not the only in-flaters.

Robert Heller, an interoa-tkmal economist at Bank of America in San Francisco, 0ves BrazU as an cam(rie. The amount of money circulating in South Americas biggest country jumped 80 percoit last year alone, yet the buying power of that money fell. And it fell

a lot, as the Brazilian consumer could testify.

By Hellers estimate, the Brazilian money supply was equal to 12,000 cruzeiros (the local currency) for every man, woman and child at midyear 1981. In U.S. dollars, that was eqjuivalent to about 135 U.S. dollars for each person in that country.

A year and a half later, at the end of 1982, the Brazilian money supply had bulged to about 20,000 cruzeiros for every citizen. Now here is the Zinger; that bigger wad of bills was worth only 80 U.S. dollars, based on current exchange rates, or a drop of 40 percent.

Part of the decline in the value of that money is due to the strength of the U.S. dollar, which increased in relation to most of the worlds currencira last year. But Heller says there is another l^son to be learned

from Brazils experience.

He says the Brazil case makes it atxmdantly clear that pumping more money into the economy does not necessarily put more buying power in peoples pockets..

It is ironic that the real value of the money stock is lowest in the countries that print the most new money and is highest in those countries that ke^ the actual money stock virtually constant, Heller said in a recent report.

Stable money means that people are willing to hold the currency as an asset, and this increases the c^and for it not only at home, but also abroad

What went wrong in Brazil?

The answer can be found by looking at what went right in other countrfos.

Take Switzerland for example. 'The Swiss money

supply has remained virtually unchanged at 55 UUion Swiss francs since 1977, according to Hellers calculations That amounts to about 8,500 Swiss francs for each citizmi, or the equivalent of about 4,000 American dollars at the current exdiange rate, or about 20 percent m<H% in dollars than five years ago.

The United States, too, was an example la^ year of what Heller calls the ben^ts of monetary respon^Wllty.

The U.S. money supply, by Hellers count, grew less than 8 percent last year, to about Milk. And, according to tbe Federal Reserve Board, the value of the U S. dollar rose more than 12 percent hi relatkm to the curraicies of 10 (^r major industrial countries.

If every American could have an equal share of that money, each would bkve about $2,000. That is up from $1,900 a year earlier.





Publishing Chinese Hymnal

PEIKING (AP) - Chinas ^rotestants plan to publish a new hymnal this year, with at least a fourth of the hymns to be original songs composed by Chinese Christians.

general of Chtoas official

Shen Deron, secretary-

Protestant group, disclosed the proj^t at a meeting of the duistian Association of Oiina. ^ also announced that China has published 1 million Bibles and condemns foreign Bible smugglers.

Special Olympics Request OKd

Police Qiief Glenn Cannon has announced the approval of a request by the Greenville Special Olympics to conduct a sidewalk solicitation Feb. 11-12. The progject is designed to raise funds for the spring Special Olympics games and activities.

Famous Maker Fully-Lined, Wool Suits at a Sensational Big 65.00 Savings Now!

caroHna east mat k^greenvdk

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Savings On Mens Briefs 20% o

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TheAredlDisagree Over Forestland Intentions

Data ixp^cf^d On Nw Bnn^flti

Jim Hinnio. mantflir of Um OrsenvUls offlct of tho Kmploymtot Stcurlty Oommliilon, layi lit will mtki public, iR loon u bo rectivM information, Um tfftcUvt data for : extandtd untmploymant banaftu.

: TIm fadaral govanunant racanUy annouocad plana to add

unamploymant batMflti of up to alx waaka to tha currmt

unamploymant banafit pwlod.

"Wa hava ractivad numaroua calla about thla," Hannan I aald. "At this tlma wa hava no dafinlta information on whan ; the extandad partod wUl ba affactlva, but wa wUl carUtnly gat : this information out to tha public aa aoon as wa know."

T Library Boord Tyiday

i

i TruatoM of Shappard Mamorial Library wUl meat at 8 p.m. t Tuaaday In tha confaranca room of tha main library.

: Board mambara who cannot attand ara aakad by tha library

to call 752-4177.    ^

I

1 Two Maka Honor Roll

RALEIGH - Amalia Yongua and Mallaaa Taft of Graanvilla hava baan namad to Um honor roll at St. Mary's 'Collaga for tha fall oanMstsr.

I Ms. Yongua Is tha daughtar of Dr. and Dr. Alfrad Yongua. !mb. Taft la tha daughyar of Mr. and Mn. Williams Holstan iTaftJr.

Show AlymnI Moot Monday

:

Tha Pitt County Chaptar of Um Shaw University Alumni will hold its monthly maaUng Monday at 7:30 p.m. at tha iKuna of Robert Sanders, 3M Undell Road.

Major agenda items include a report on tha Shaw Players k Company production of "Tambourines to Glory" by Lanpton Hughes and the racruiUnent of students for fall.

F^r further Information contact: Evelyn Sanders at 756^ or Mildred Council at 757-1037

Jaycooi Launch Jolly Saloi

Greenville Jaycaes are preparing for thair annual Jaycae Sale to raise money for the North Carolina Bum Center

Jelly Sale to ri in Chapel HUl. Lasting thro

_ throughout January, this year's campaign will ba the ninth year of the jelly sales. Jaycee chapters all over the stale will sell the jars of jelly for $1 each.

Jim Cola of Sanford, state president, said about $800,000 has txien raised in support of the bum canter, which has been recognised naUonuly f victims.

EitlmafonfoMoot

ly for Its treatment and care of bum

The Coastal Plains chapter of the Professional Construction Estimators AssociaUon will meat Thursday in Wilson. Tha meeting will ba at 6:30 p.m. at the Holiday Inn on U.S. 301 South.

NAACP Plam Man Mooting

The Pitt County Branch NAACP wUl hold ito monthly mass meeting Sunday at 7 p.m. at Medley Chapel CME Church in Bethel. An installation service tor all elected and appointed persons wiU ba conducted by the Rev, D.C. Morgan.

ByJOHNrLBSHER

AMoetotadPrsn Writer

RALEIGH. N.C. (AP)-A U.S. Forest Service official says ivlronmmtalists have blown out of proportion Um Reagan administration's study of Um poaalbla sale of national forssts.

But a state official says virtually all of North Carolina's 1.8 militon acres of naUonal forest land is under consideration for possible auction and he says he will remain suspicious until Um ivamment discloses Its In-itlons.

Forest service spokeswoman Diane 0 Connor said up to 140 million acres of the nation's 101 million acre national forest system could be sold to private owners. But, in a telephone Interview Thursday from Washington, D.C., she said it's unlikely the administration will recommend selling more than 18 million acres.

Even if the service recommends selling land. Congress will have to give permlsalon before the transactions can proceed, she said.

Jay Langfelder, state assistant secretary of natural resources, said leu than 50,000 of North Carolina's 1.2

O'Connor Col....

(QoatautdFivmPtgt)

th^ come in contact can serve u thoie role models.

Youngsters at this time need challenges which they can conquer - something to make tmm feel competent. In Um old days, farm chores and household duties provided these challenges. Those are gone now. Either communities provide kids with poilUve challenges and role models, they say, or there'll be some nefarious sort wholl do It for us.

million acras of federal land wasn't being considered in the forest ervice review.

"Until we see the list of land they want to auction, Tm somewhat skeptical of Weone teUing us not to worry," Lan^elder said. "We'd very much like to see that list."

Any attempt to seU na-tlonail forest land in North Carolina Is likely to meet considerable resistance from state officials, he added.

Neither Ms. O'Connor nor Roy Gandy, land minerals director for the forest services souUteastem regional office In Atlanta, would say whether national forests in North Carolina are likely sale prospects.

Published reports have said the Nantahala and Plsgah forests In western North Carolina, the Uwhar-rie forest near Asheboro and the Croatan forest in Craven County were being considered.

Environmental groups have attacked the proposed sale as an effort to dlsmanUe U)e national park system for the short-term benefit of timber companies, miners and developers.

"Its like selling your house to pay off the credit cards, said Dusty Zaunbrecher, public lands resource specialist with Um

National Wildlife Federation.

But Ms. OConnor said environmental groups were overreacting. She said their reactions were caused by erroneous reports that the sale of 140 million acres of public land was imminent.

"What vre're doing is taking a quick inventory of national forest lands, to see which ones warrant a more intensive review u possible candidates tor sale," Ms. O'Connor said.

"We expect Uiat no more Uian 15- to 18-million acres will qualify for the second review, which will be carried

out with full public involvement. There art no plans for a massive auction of public lands."

Gandy, howtver, said "we could be talking about fairly large portions^ of natlqoai foresu or even entire forests if thw are JudgMl suitable for sale.

U.S. Secretary of Apiculture John Block is expected to announce by the end of the month which lands the forest service wants Included in the second revMw, Gandy said.

Both he and Ms. OConnor were vague on the criteria being used to classify public

Record Year At N.C Aiqiort

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -Raletgh-Durham Airport boarded a record number of passengers in 1982, up 8^ percent over the previous year, officials said.

Airport Director John C. BranUey III said 942,036 passengers were boarded this past year compared to 888,218 In 1981. The best year was in ip when M7,873 passengers were boarded.

City rsridents are remiixied that they must display a current city license decal on their vehicles. Decals for 1983 are now available atatyHall.

lands M suitable or unsuitable for auction, though they agreed there wu virtually no chance that some 51 million acres of wilderness lands would be sold.

"We don't know rigit now because theyre still in the process of reviewing the land," Gandy said. Most likely to be rscommended tor disposal Is land that's "Isolatad, less than 50 percent owned by the federal government," or an odd comer protruding from a national forest's main body, he added.

Such blocks could range in slxe from 4040 acres to "very large," Gandy said.

The ease or dlffleulty of overseeing a portion of land might be a factor u weU, he said.

Charged With Bank Robbery

WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. (AP) - Robert Finney, 20, hu been charged with bank robbery in the holdup of First Federal Savings and Loan office Thursday. Police recovered a bag of money near the Hanes Mall Branch offce after a dye packet exploded. Finney Is being heldi in Guilford County jail under $50,000 bond, pending a .hearing before a federal magistrate.

Mulligan

(CotlniMd from Pass 4)

Gh such a nighty this, you expect E.T. to come strolfing acroy the lawn, moonatruck for the old neighborhood.

On such a night y this, Lorenso speaks of love and harmony to his beloved Jeuica in Shakespeare's ^ "The Merchant of VeiSce" : "How sweet the moonlight sleeps upon this banki Here will we sit and let the sounds of music Creep in our ears: yft sUUneyandthenl^t Become the touchy of sweet harmony."

On such a night y this scientists with their telescopy and light refrytlon devlcu are probing the darkening sty tor further evidence of the sweet harmony of crMtloo. It wy during a solar ecUpy that Albert Einstein tested and proved an important theory about the eftoct of gravitation on light. It wy during an eclipy of one of Jupiters moons that the Danish astronomer Olay Roemer discovered the approximate speed of light.

Some observers next morning professed to be disappointed becauy the moon did not turn blood red or the color of burnished copper before doing her final co^. I was not diup-pointed, becauy I belMve such special effects belong more to Hollywood than our

planetary system. Many times, while crossing the ocean on ships, 1 have stood at the rail at sunset watching tor the sun to set off thoy jyt

promised

be^ it ^ungy Into the ocean, but iMve rarely been rewarded with even a faint flush of turquoly.

The flash of emerald happened only once when I wy around, which doent keep me from returning to the sun dyk evening after evming. Like a recalcitrant clrcy animal, nature might not always perform y expected, but her fry shows nevy fall to ytlafy and Im making my reservations now for the next sky watch blg^ In 1989.

Heres looking at you, Mr, Moon.

SHOP-EZE

WMt Snd Shaaiitni Conltr

Saturday Lunchaon Spaolal , BBQ

52.49

Smokad Bauaaga

51.79

SSMM are rtth I f>fMh VafaicMMflMft.

PIANO TUNING 0 Days Onlyl Limited Appolntmantal Call Now 756-7166.

H.O.Ton KS?.25I

W May Sav* You *200 A Year On Your Auto Liability Inauranca If You Have A DUI Or Equivalent In Inaurance Polnta.

Call Day Or Night:

Edward Stokes Insirance Agency

405 New CIrela Drive Ayden, N.C.

74M301

F. EARLUMPHLETT

Certified Public Accountant Announces That His Office Is Now Located At 103 North Main Street Farmvllle, North Carolina 27828 (919) 753-2204

Fint Jawalers and Diamond Importers Carolina EaatMall Greenville

Diamond Solitaires

From $99 To $12,000 30% & More Off Entire Stock

ANNUAL INVENTORY REDUCTION SALE

CHAINS ^ V XU bRACELETSI

14K

Diamond Clusters 25% & More Off Entire Stock

Reg

ale

.100..............

..............1290

199

.200..............

..............1599

390

V4O..............

..............1690

499

/bO...........

..............1900

625

.400..............

..........$995

525

ViO..............

.............11240

1699

V^O..............

.............$2990

1900

1.040..............

.............$6975

3980

.07 Ct..................................

.12 Ct.................................

VaCt...............................

VaCt..................................

1.00 Ct.....................................$1295

R^.

da

.$215

149

$280

199

.$460

299

499

$1295

890

$4500

2900

LadiM Smnl-PrKiouiStone Rings

Onyx, Tiger Eye, Opel, Peerl 30% ft More Off Entire Stock

Reg.$126Onyx.......Onyx-Diamond..$i40

79

98

Diamond Pendants From $69 To $400030% & More Off Entire Stock

Rag. lele

,05 ct...................1125    85

,10Ct...................$195    119

,150.............  1296    WO

.33Ct............. 1540    425

ViCt  ...........11495    *799

Ladies Rings

Diamondi, Sapphlrei, Rubies, Emeralds

30%

& More Off Entire StockDiamond Earrings

From $24 To $2000 30% & More Off Entire StockRy- lele

.050.........................179    *49

.100.......................1180    *99

.200.......................1290    *199

.33Ct. ..................M90    *399

ViCt.....................81040    *699

|l4K Gold'SO

I Charms

I oil

14K Add-A-Beads

13mm  ........39*

14mm...............  69*

5mm  .................99*

6mm ........ *1**

7mm  ..........

lUKGolddl

Earrings

>00

14K Serpentine Chains

Ry.    Sait

15 Inch..........131.96    19

16 Inch..........M7.80    23

18 Inch..........IMM    ^27

IMIneh........H9.96

Bncalct.........114.10    9**

Mens Diamond Rings35%

Off

EntIra Stock

Mens &, Ladies Watches

Bulova, Otilan, Seiko, Accutron SwIm, CiravaUt

20%

Off

Entire Stock

lOanvanlaiilWayaTaliiy Raai'a Cliarga, Amarioan Ixpraaa, Maaiar Oara, Vila, y hrtaraal Fraa Layaiyy

Layaway Or Charge h Now At ReadsNobody, Bui Nobody UndonoUoRood^o

Caroline East Mall - Oraanvllla

All Items Subject To Prior Sale

STORES IN: ChapalHiN. Cf^ Rocky Mt.

Wllion,JVm^on, Jackionvllie.

WhlMvtUa & Myttia Baach.





School Staff Layoffs, Salary Cuts, Feared Ahead

By The Associated Press Teacher and staff layoffs and salary cuts are being cited by local sctnol officials in North Carcdina as about the only way the scbotds can give back 2 pacmt oi their budget to the state.

The State Board of Education Wednday approved a recommoidatkm that schotd systems receive only 98 percent of the money apfm^iiated to them by the CkmeralAssemtdy.

State budget officials say the $28 million reductkm, along with a 6 pocent cut fw oUkt agencies and departments, should be enough to balance the state budget.

State Superintendoit Craig Phillips said school boards should be aide to make the cuts without hanmng educa-

tkmal pn^rams w salaries. But local schocd officials are skq>tical.

I dont know any way we oMild do it with ffie exce^on of having a furlough fkir our people two or three da^ off without pay, said Joe Fries, superintendent of Cabarrus County Scbo(ds.

Fries said 2 potent of Cabame $13 millkm annual state budget is $260,000, the equivalent of the yeary salaries of 13 teachers.

A tenqiorary layoff, affecting everyone from the siqierintendent to teacher aides, would be the fairest way to cut, be said.

Stanly County Superintendent Jimmie Martin said any cuts pndiably would be made in salaries.

Two percoit is about $180,000. In ordo to cut that much, we must ctd salaries. We dont have sufficient functs locally to i^laoe 2 percoit, Marthi said.

The Stanly systems budget of $13 million was to include almost $9 milUon from the state, he said.

Officials in the Chariot-te-Mecklenburg system havent determined how theyll deal with the budget cuts, finance offico Gus Campbell said.

I dont imow how theyre going to get 2 percent for us, he said. Thoe iait that kind of money ieft around.

Ninety-two percent of the school systems $99.3 million state budget is committed to

Panel Proposes A New Redivision Of Powers

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -An estimated 200 proposals

including recommendations that would redivide power betweoi the General Assembly and the governor

have been fwwarded to the Legislative Research Commission.

The commissicm will send the committee reports, whose subjects range from aging to railroads, to the Legislature whoi it convenes next Wednesday. Tradi

tionally, committee chairmoi have introduced bills based on the work of their groups.

The Committee on S^iara-tion of Powers macte 95 reconunoKtations, most of them dealing wiUi the way the state budget is prepared and officials salaries set. Most deal with the duties of the powerful Advisory Budget Commission, which recommends a budget to the

Deny Landfill's Liner Is Unsafe

AFTON, N.C. <AP) - Opponents of the PCB landfill say a large pocket of gas that is forming under the landfills liner supports what theyve said all along that the landfill is structurally unsound and is a threat to the environment.

However, state engineers say,the pocket of gas was cau^ decaying vegetation and is a threat.

I dont bdieve they can say they dcmt have a problem, says Henry Rooker, a member of Warren County Citixens C(mcerned about PCB.

RookM* and other Warren Cmndy residents protested against the landfill last fall, saying it was [riaced in the county because the area has a hi^ prc^rtkm of blacks. Police made more than 500 arrests of demonstrators trying to block trucks.

William W. Phillips, assistant to the secretary of crime control and public safety, said the bulge developed when carbon and hydrogen from decaying vegetation and moisture formed methane inside the landfill.

But the erosion has uncovered the plastic liner, reducing the pressure.

Engineers placed tl^ one-inch vent pipe in the 10- to 15-foot-wide bulge to ^ease the gas tenqiorarily until tl^ topsoil can be repliu;ed.

However, Rooker said the ^state was trying to appe^ Warren residents by placing the voit in the landfill.

Theyve put another p^ in, but its a cover-iq), a cosmetic treatmoit to pacify the pe(q)le who go look at the landfill, Rooker said.

Ro(Aer said he has seen erosion for several weeks and that there was one ^y 5or6feetde^.

When capping the landfill, contracUH^ pid a layer of red clay over the liner.

The dirt just ckiesnt have any ctmsistaicy, it doesnt stick together, Roidcer said. Its really coming apart a cubic yard at a time.

Hus has bem one of our complaints all akmg, be said. Weve said the soil is just not suited for this kind of thing. It lo(d[s to me that the project is under way as a faure.

governor.

The s^aration of powers issue was raised by the state Supreme Court in a decision last January. The court ruled it unconstitutionai for legislators to sit on boards or commissions that implement laws. As a result, tte committee re-examined the role of legislators ai^ the governor.

The Committee on Regional State Offices recommended no ^ific legislation but urged all state departments to re-examine the need for offices outside Raleigh. The committee urged the state Board of Educati(Hi in particular to avoid duplicating services in regional education centers.

Proposals to streamline the teacher tenure law were made another panel and one committee proposed an anti-slavery law.

The Committee on Day Care made 11 reomimenda-tions aimed at stricter enforcement of existing laws and closer motions of child care facilities. The proposals also deal with lowering the number of diildren per adult and improving the quality of standards for adults working with the youngsters.

A ^ million prqiosal that would provide an income tax deduction for people who maintain their parents who are age 65 or olc^ was made by the Committee mi Aging.

Twenty recommendations were made by the Committee on Annexatkm. Some of the proposals would Imigthen the time it takes to annex land while others deal with what happens to rural volunteer fire d^artments \xdimi land they serve is annexed.

Tunp Ups Br.iK* Job-Gpneral Rppairs

Auto Specialty Co.

917 W 5th St

758-1131

Methane like this is produced in every sanitary landfill ever placed in any county, Phillips said. It poses no threat, and weve taken action to vmit it. Well do whats necessary to keqi that thing so it will not become a threat to the puMk; health or to the environment, says O.W. Strickland, director of the stdid and hazardous waste tNancb (rf the state Dqiart-ment of Human Resources.

Coastal Uniform Center

The PCB was dumped illegally along 240 miles of state highway in 1978. State officials scraped iqi the chemical, which causes cancer in laboratory animals, and placed in the landfiD last fall.

Open T8P.M.

Bill Meyer, an engineer with the waste division, said a vent pipe has been placed in the lao^ to allow the gas to escape, but a builg) occurred because of recent soil erosion.

A top laym of s<^ wia placed on the landfill to apply even amounts of pressure to the gas, which would force it up through the cmitral vent pipe, be said.

Pant Suits And Dresses

25%35%

Group Of Tops

50%

Off

Off

Our Spring stylet are arriving and we need to make room for them.

: EXTENDEDWEATHER : ODTUX)KFORN.C.

Chance of rain matady in j the east Sunday; partly

Saftlllimil

Dcc.27tlum Jan.l5

ckxMfy Ifonday and Tuesday.

each dqr in SOs (40s in west) SiBiday. Lows in 30s, 205 in the west on

Pitt Plaia Greenville

salaries, be said, and heating and materials money cannot be cut.

Gaston County Schools Superintendent George McSwain said teadier U^fs would be the last course of action taken to make cuts. But the posmbiiity exists, he said.

If we have to ad, it will have to come frmn supfdws and matoials and salaries for teaching positions, McSwain said. We hope the teaching positions will be the last thing we cut.

The Gaston systems budget of $5Q million includes about $40 million from the ^te,besakl.

This cutback will be mighty rough on us, said Union County SupmintoM^t Paul Hammack. The state funds we receive do not cover all our costs for custodians, teachers aides and clerical positkxis. Our state fuel allocation wUl be used up when we pay our December bills.

Ihr. Robert Bo^, Guilfcnd County school superin

tendent, said that because his system buys supplies early in the year to have them on hand, most of our money for siqiplies and material is already spent. That leaves trans-portatkm and utilities, and

we already have cut so close in these areas that 1 cant compreboid whm to cut, B(^said.

Jerry Shavo*, acting su-pointoideid of High Poild schools, said tax money allocated by the county

Board of Commissioners may make up the slack.

If we have to send back

money, it might have to cwne from local money, ^aversaid.

whimqi

NOnCf^F MiaUC HEAMNO AMENOMQ KCnOM IMIC OF TNI ZOMNO OMNNANCe OF TMi OTV Of ORCramuC. NC

NoHoa hi hMby ghnn thM Vw CNy Coiinch ol w CNy of Qnm aiaHno, mM oonduct putMc fNortng In 10 Ctly Council Chambn,

M MiinleiptI BuMdlno, WownWo. NorVi CwoHno, on TlHirMtay, January IS, IMS. I

, ant door of

Faia.w.toflhapufpoaaolaiiiandln;Hhaion>nBorOlnanoaaaWloaia:

Amand SacHon Si-*7C by adding two now tubaacitono; ona

laguMIng aatbadw tor gaa pump talante, and lha oftiar raguMMng aatoaefeahrc

rcanopfaa and awntnga In watoui zoning diatricta.

During Ihia pubMc haartng. any obiactlona or auggaaiiona w ba duly conaidarad byttia^Oouneil.

A of tha prapoaad ordinanoa la on Wa In lha Qty Clartt'a offlca loealad at an ttoat mSIrtte.durlngnocmal worWnghoura, Monday through Friday ev ORDER OF T> COY COUNCIL.    LataO,    Wfitldtelaii

CMyClam

NOTICE OF FUOUC NEAMNO ON THE QMtTKMI OF THE AOOFTKW OF AN OR-

OWiANCE RESNNNO TMUTORV LOCATED WTTHM THE CORFORATE URMTS OF THE CtTT OF OREBmLU. NC.

Purauanl to Amoia II, Chaptor IMA of Iw Oanaral SNMaa of Norih CaroIlM, noMoo to haraby gNon IM tha Clly Counch of tha City of QraanvMa, NC. iW con

duct a pubic hawing In tha CRy CounM Clwmbara of tfw Municipal BuNdmg In Iw CNy of QraanvWa, NC. on TTwraday. January IS, IMS, at 7:30 p.m., on tfia quaoUon

of Via adoption of an oidlnanea ratmng tga Mtowing daacftbad tarrNory rtthin Ita eorpoma Mmlta of tha City of OraanvWa aa toltowa:

OOCflrnON OF FROFERTT TO BE REZONK) FROM R-1S (RESOENHAU TO M (RESOENTIAU To Wit: Waalhavan SubdMaton. Saetion IV

In WtntawVta Towoahip, Pllt County, North Carolina; aouth of

I Townahlp, RM County, North Carolina;

M, aaat of Club FInaa SubdMaton. Sactlon V, and

Waalhavan SubdMaton, Sactton M, laeaiad wHhtn Vw corpomla Umita of tha Clly of OraarMlla.

Ourtng Vila public hawing, obiacUona or auggaaiiona wNI ba duly oonaldarad by ANIrrtai

CRy Cound. AN Irrtaraalad I

Id to ba praaam at Via hawing, and

Viay wW ba aftordad an opportunRy to ba haard.

A oopy of Vm propoaad ordlnanoa to on IHa at tha CKy Claili'a offica tooatod W SOI Waal SOI SIraal. and N avaUafala tor puWlc Inapaclton during nomwl workino houra

THE CfTY COUNCIL

LatoO.

CMyCtoitContrstOM Missionnr Baptist Ctarch Kotin Of PablicitKtiMSiBe

Thw following personal property will be sold at public auction to the highest bidder:

24 red upholstered pews 138

8 red upholstered pews 72

24 red upholstered oak framed folding chairs

Date of Sale: January 8,1983 Time of Sale: 11:00 A.M.

Place: Cornerstone Missionary Baptist Church, Comer of 13th and Railroad Streets

The above listed property may be inspected one (1) hour prior to the sale. All sales are as is and without warranty. Payments must be by cash or certified check. The Seller retains the privilege to reject any or all bids. For more information call Roderick PhMlips at 752-2536.

SUPER

WATCH OUR ADS ALL MONTH. THE VALUES WILL KEEP COMING.

JANUARY SALE

Shoe Clearance for the family.

Womens shoes: Girls shoes: Boys shoes:

Sale 9.99 Sale 5.99 Sale 6.99

to 18.99

Mens shoes:

Sale 16.99 to 34.99

to 18.99

Orig. $24 to $50. A select group of mens shoes. Includes suede and leather casuals and leather dress shoes. Broken sizes.

to 23.99

Orig. $15 to $42. A select group Orig. $10.99 to $28. A select Orig. $15 to $28. A select group of womens casual and dress    including    of boys shoes including slip-

shoes. Various styles and col- dreaa, casual and boots, ors. Broken sizes.    Various    stylos.    Broken    sizes.

ons, oxfords and boots. Various styles. Broken sizes.

Womens

Jogging

Apparel

.7.99

.18.99

Orig. $13 to $27. A group of jogging separates including lackets, pants and sweatshirts.

Womens

Tops

3.99

.14.99

Orig. 313 to 320. A group of Mouses and shirts including plaids, solid oxfords, ruffle-neck and T-shirts. Junior and misses sizes.

Womens

Sweaters

..14.99

.23.99

Oflg. 311 to 338. Group of sweaters Includes cardigans, vekHjrs, prints for juniors.

Womens

Slacks

..7.99

.14.99

Oflg. $20 to 322. A group of junior and misses pants. Includes corduroy, cotton-denim and polyester. Various cMors.

Womens

Coordinates

su14f99

.47.99

Oflg. 123 to $73. A select

group of misses and junior coordinstss. Includes, psnts. Mouses, skirts and Mazsrs. Oroktn sizss.

Womens

Skirts

Sale

14.99

Oflg. $22 i $32. Choose from junior A-line pieid wool Mend skirt or misses front-piected skirt.

Mens Velour Shirts

Sal7 .99 .10.99

Orig. ^ to 333. A select group of mens velour shirts. Crewnecks or v-necks in soilds or stripes.

Mens Fox Sweaters

Sala

12.99

Orig. kS i 321. A select group of mens v-neck Fox sweaters. Soilds.

Girls

Sportswear

Saia

3.99

Orig. I4.M to $14. A select group of girls skirts, jerseys, Mouses and tops.

Girts

Sportswear

Saia

5.99

Ortg. 112 to IIS. A select group of girts velours, tops, knit shirts and sleepwesr.

Girls

Sportswear

Sale

9.99

Oflg. 314 to $21. A select (^oup of velours, dresses, Mouses, cord psnts and jogging spparel.

Delonghi

Heater

Sait

89.99

Orig. 11I.M. The Oetonghi permanentty oiifMled eiec-tric heater. 3 heet settings, an sir temperature ther-fTKtat.

Quartz

Heater

Sala

32.99

Orig. 3I.M. The Preato* oecHlating heater for a skJe-to-skte sweep of mfrs-red quartz heat. Single tube.

Kerosene

Heaters

Ofif. SNe

169

Ortf. Me

91Q99 BTU .2N.N t 15

Ceiling

Fan

Saia

99.99

Ortg. 17t.fl. 52 wooden Made ceiling fan.

E.T. Toys

aieycie.........7JI 1.99

CoasctMss......US 99^

apBM^......4JI 1.99

Ftgwe..........4JE 1.99

Discontinued Video Tapes

4118180 Oflg. Me

SpaceBatlls ....tijs 28.99

NHL Hockey.....WJI 23.99

See Settle.......nm 34.99

^araSevenge ...iijs 28.99 Wwtonle........siJi 28.99

Save 50% on all notions

zippers

lace

yam

more

Space-saving

furniture

Eaoy-to-ossemblaunnt

Orfg. Sala Entertainmant AAQQ Cantor ...1N.N iil

Orig. Saia

Op 40099

Library.14I.N Iv9

Mens

Flannel

Shirts

Saia

5.99

Orlg.$I.N. lyiens 100% cotton plaid flannel shirts.

IMS J C Pfiuwy Compwiy uk

JCFfenney

8hop1ia,in.-fp.iii.Phooa710-1188PlttPlszs ^





#-Tbe Dtlly Reflector, GreenvUte, N.C.-Frktay, Juiisry 7, IMS

,^'1

By V JOHN

lehtIST0NIN6

ST0NIN3 WASTue CSDINAQN \OC5E QP CAPITAL PUNISHMENT DQESCQ19ED BV HEBBEW LAW. OilS ANCiENT VAETViOD WAS SOT CONPINEO TO THE HEBBEWS BUT WAS USEP BV TME MACBOONANS AND PERSIANS ALSO. T4E PRISONER WAS TAKEN TO THE ED6E OP THE CITY, WITNESSES PLACED HEIR aANDS on WS head IN TOKEN OF THE SUILT RESTINS ON WM. THE CULPRIT WAS THROWN TO THE SflOUND PROM A SCAFFOLD ABOUT TEN FEET HISH BN THE FIRST WITNESS, HE PQST STONE CAST BV THE SECOND WITNESS, ON THE CHEST ON/ER TME HEART. IF IT CAluED TO CAUSE DEATH, THE BNSTANDER5 COMPLETED THE EXECUTION. THERE WAS NO REPRIEVE TO THIS CAPITAL PuNiSHMENT.

I'*-

ml' f P I \ -' ''Mi.    i';    i        V    f'

I

NCV\' Die mOu

3lA5PkE/V^!NG son 0<= SeuAL.

IB . sh >y . ;,:vj

. A    -    .        ,|/.    :    >    'V^

SAVE ~-S POR VOwR SUNCWi^ SCHOOL SCRAPBOOK_

, ; : i' H <    .\-'    N Y I09JO thfojyh H tLinson Associates 18110 Village 18, Camorillo Co. 93010Sponsors Of This Page, Along With Ministers of All Faiths, Urge Yon to Attond Your House of Worship This Week, To Believe In God and to Trust In His Guidance For Your life.

0

COZARTS AUTO SUPPLY, INC. BIIOicMnsonAv.

752^94

Bnka Cozart A Employeea

PAFWERS BARBEQUE RESTAURANT Ph: 756-2388 S. li/lamortal Dr.

Doug Parkar And Employeea

Compliments of

PITT MOTOR PARTS, INC.

Ph: 758-4171 811S.We^lngtonSt.

NEW YORK LIFE INSURANCE CO. Wayne Adama Ph: 756-3930 1801 Charlea BM.

Don McQlohon INSURANCE HInea Agency, Inc.

Ph. 759-1177

Compliments Of PITTTILECO..INC.

Cerpet, Vinyl and Formlce Ph. 75249982735 E. 10th St.

STATE FARM INSURANCE Meek Beale, Agent 1205S. MemortelOr., Ph: 758-7280 Qreenvllle "

EAST CAROLINA INSURANCE 2721E. 10th St.

Ph:75243i

Compliments Of LOVEJOY AGENCY Daybreak Recorda Ph: 7584774118 Oakmont Dr. Larry WhIttlngUm

Compliments Of

KRISPY KREME DOUGHNUT CO.

114 E. 10 St.

Ph: 7^-5205

ELECTROLUX Salea and Service

"Known for Quality For Over 55 Yearn" *FreeE$tkneteeFreePlck-UpA Delivery 104 Trade St. Ph: 7584711

Compliments Of HEILK3-MEYERSC0.

518 E. Qreenvme Blvd.

Ph: 7584145

GREENVILLE FLOWER SHOP and

RUDYS PHOTOGRAPHY 1025-27S.Evena St.

Ph: 758-2774 752-5187

GREENVILLE MARINE & SPORT CENTER Qreenvllle Blvd. N.E.

7584838

Joe Vemelaon, Owner

GRANT BUICK, INC.

Qreenvllle Blvd.

758-1877

Bill Qrenl 8 Employeea

INAS HOUSE OF FLOWERS N. Memorial Dr., Eift 752-5656

Management i Staff

OVERTONSrsUPERMARKET, INC.

211 S. Jarvlf 752-5025 /

All Employeea

HENDRIX-BARNHILLCO.

Memorial Dr.

752-4122 All Employeea

BUCKS GULF STATION & EMPLOYEES E. 10 St. Ext. 752-3228 "Road A Wracker Service"

Jartren Truck A TreHer Rntala

COLONEL SANDERS KENTUCKY FRIED CHICKEN 2905 E.m

Take Out Only 752-5184 800 S.W. Qreenvllle Blvd.

Eat In or Take out 7588434

INTEGON UFE INSURANCE CO.

W. M. Scelea, Jr. Qeneral Agents WalghtyScalea, Rep OerkeStokea, f?p

EAST COAST COFFEE DISTRIBUTORS

Ph. 758^

l514N.QreeneSt.

"A comptetereateurantA office coffee aervlce'

Compliments of FRED WEBB. INC.

TOMS RESTAURANT "The very beat In home cooking"

Ph. 758-1012

Maxwell St.. ^t End Area

RIQGAN SHOE SHOP Open Mon. ruFrt. 94, Sat.94 Ph. 7584204

113W.4St..Qreenville

tmoHme

JAlJhr-

QUAOTY TIRE SERVICE

andEmployboe

Ph. 752-7177 N. QreeneSt.

WHrmGTON.INC. ChehM Street. Qreenvtlle, N.a Rey,mUfngton PhcinfB845V

Compliments of S&W SEPTIC TANKS & CONCRETE PRODUCTS, INC.

Ph. 7524086

1000 N. Qreene, Qreenvllle

h

SAM STEWARTS PAINT & BODY SHOP

Speclallzing In front-end alignment and brake work

Ph. 758-75253012S. Memorial Dr.

Compliments Of THOMAS W. RIVERS

Compliments Of YAMAHA OF PITT COUNTY Ph. 7520878

1506 N. Qreene, Qreenvllle

G.B. ELECTRIC CO., INC.

Qerald Buck, Owner Ph. 7584688 FermvUleHwy.

BARWICKS HOUSE OF MEATS. INC. Ph. 758-2277

100PoUerdSt..QreenvtUe Allen Berwick, Owner

DAUQHTRIDGE OIL & GAS CO.

2102 DtcMnaon Ave.

Phone 758-1345 Bobby Tr^ A Employeea

PEPSKX}LA BOTTLING CO.

Ph. 7584113 QraenvUle

RAYS BODY SHOP Owned A Operated By Ray Evana Ph. 7580070

1500 N. Qreene, Qreenvllle

CAROUNA MICROHLM SERVICE i405DfcklnamiAve.

7524770

Jerry Creech, Owner

BK3QS DRUG STORE 900Evena7S22138

HARGETTS DRUG STORE 2500 S. Charlee Ext 7584344

PAIR ELECTRONICS, INC. ^

ElectroniceSupfKlere

Ph. 7582281

107 Ttede, Qreenvme

Compliments of HOLLOWELLS DRUG STORE No.10110kMteonAve.

No. 2 Memorial Dr. A 8 St.

No. 3Slenloneburg Rd. et Doctore Perk

BONOS SPORTINQ GOODS i18Arilnglon Blvd. 7984001

H.L. HOOQESOO. i10E.9St.7S419B

TAPSCOTT DESIGNS 222E. 5 St.

7i57-dS

KetePhlHlpa, Interior Deelgner Aaeoclate Member ASID

PIGQLY-WIGGLY OF GREENVILLE 2105 DIcklnaon Ave. 756-2444 Ricky Jackaon A Employeea Open24Houra"

D.D, BRIGHT ELECTRICAL CONTR. Ph. 7522315

P.O. Box 2837, Qreenvllle, N.C.

JA-LYN SPORT SHOP Hwy. 33. Chlcod Creek Bridge Ph. 752-2878, Qrimealend Jemea end Lynde Faulkner

LAUTARES JEWELERS

414 Evens

7523831

ANNES TEMPORARIES, INC. Ph. 7584610

120ReedeSt, Qreenvllle

ALDRIDGE AND SOUTHERLAND REALTORS Ph. 7984500

220Commerce St.. Qreenvllle

HARVEY BOWEN hdOTORS CompMe Une Of Used Cera Ph. 7484475or7484003 Hwy. mviMatofAyden

EARLS CONVENIENCE MART ^ ^

Routel

7984279    *

Eari FeuMnerA En^Koyeea

PUGHS TIRE A SERVICE CENTER 1. 7524125

Comer of 5 A Qreene, Qreenvme

PLAZA GULF SERVICE Ph. 796-7018 701E. Qreenvme Blvd.

Ryiker Truck Rentele 7584045 Wretter Service dey 755-7518 mte 7584478

WINTERVILLE INSURANCE AGENCY Ph. 7980317

123S. RMImed. WInlenrille

Compliments Of CAROUNA EAST CLEANERS Ph. 7580471'

ICeMlneEeet Centre

FOUNTAIN OF UFE. INC.

Oekmont ProfeaaionM Plete Qreenvme, N.C. Ph. 7580000 MnmmnglonIf Yoo Hon 3 IbUt Of Foffowini Tko Creori. ffo Soggost, Jlo Oest Cnw to Follow is ttt Crvwd BoioeToOga

_____    .i.tete-^"I.. ~ Vonn





Come To CHURCH

Music Urecwr-Vivian Mills Steve Aslinger OrganM-Leida McGosmb Youtk UadeisJaeUe and Shlriey

The Cteily Reflector, Greenviile, N.C.Friday, Jamiary 7,196Sff

GLORIA DEI LUTHERAN CHURCB The Womans duh. 23M Green S|>riii ParkRd.'^    ^

Ihe Rev. Richard A. Miller Phone: 7SMI

>:00a.m. Sun. -Stnday Sdwol 10:15 a.m. - The Morning Worship Service

4:00p.m. Mon. - Sr Qai. Class 8:00 p.m. Wed. - Adult Coot. Oaaa 7:30 p.m. Thur. - Adult Bible Class

OUR REDEEMER LUTHERAN 1800 S. Elm R. Graham Nahouae 9:00a.m. Sun. HolyCommuDioo

9:45 a.m.Sunday School 11:00 a JB. - Wors^ Service 6:00p.m.L.SA 7:00 p.m. Pastors Class 7:30 p.m. Church Council 8:00 p.m. Mon.-LCW 1:00 pjn. Tue. - LCW Mildrnd Hecker's, 1008 Sherwood Dr.

4:lSp.m. Iti YearContirmatioo 7:30 p.m. - Building Comm.

7:15p.m. Wed, SeniorChoir

RED OAK CHRISTIAN CHUROi 204 By-Pass West Dr. ttsroid Deitch, Pastor 6:4Sa.m. Sim.-BibleSchool 11:00 a.m. Keep The Faith 5:00 p.m. New Begming Choh 8:00 p.m. Youth program for all ages 7:00p.m. Choir RelMusal 7:00 a.m. Mon. - Mens Prayer Breakfwt 10:00a.m. Wilma James Group at the church

3:30 p.m. Rubelle Goln group at VdmaDeitch 7:30 p.m. - Penny Cmc group with Penny Cox

7:30 p.m. - Sandra Slocks group at the church

2:30 p.m. Tue. Nursing Home Birthday party 7:00 p.m. Wed. - VisiUtk

Nursery school Monday thur Friday 7:00 a.m. til 6:00 p.m.

FIRST PENTECOSTAL HOLINESS CHURCH Comer Brinkley Road * Plau Drive, Greenville, N.C. 27834 Rev. Frank Gentry

9:45 a.m. Sun. - Sunday, ScboM, Dickie Rook

11:00 a.m. Worship Service 6:00p.m. -OMirPractice 7:00 p.m. Communion Service 7:30p.m. Mon. - Womens AuzOiary 7:30 p.m. Wed. - Bible Study/Ufdinm 7:30 p.m. Childrens/Teen Choir 7:30 p.m. Thur. Nursing Home Chocowidty 9:30 a.m. Fri. - Sunday School Lesson WBZQ

7 :Q0 pm. Unlvmity Nursing Home

EVANGELISTIC TABERNACLE

Full Gospel Church

264 Bypass West at Laughinghouse Drive 'k S. J.WilHams, Minister Mike Pdlard, Minister of Music 10:00 a.m. Sun Sunday School Lin-vrood Lawson, Supt.

11:00 a.m. Morning Worship 5:45 p.m.Adult Choir Practice    

7:00 p.m. - Celebration of Praise 7:30p,m. Wed, -Prayer A Share 7:30p.m.-Youth Service 7:00 p.m. Sat. - INTERCESSORY PRAYER TIME

ARLINGTCm STREET BAPTIST CHURCH 1007 W. Arlington vd.

Pastor, Rev. Harold Greene 9:00 a.m. Sun. - Sunday School 11:00 a.m. Morning Worship 7:30 p.m. Business Meeting 6:30 p.m. Teachers and Workers Meeting

7:30 p.m. Mon. Personnel Meeting 7:30p.m. Tue. BYW Home of Patricia Haddock

7:30 p.m. - Bible Study WMU Mary T^lor Hostess 7:30 p.m. Wed. Prayer Service 8:30 p.m. Adult Choir

CEDAR GROVE MISSIONARY BAPTIST CHURCH Rt. 9 Cherry Oaks Sidxli vision Greenville, N.C.

Pastor: Rev. James Wright 7:30 p.m. Fri. General Conference 10:00 a.m. Sun. Sunday School 11:00 a.m. Morning Worship, Sermon by the Pastor. Music will be rendered by the Senior Choir 7:30 p.m. Tue. Male Chorus will have rehearsal

10:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. Wed. - Clothes Closet open, call 752-5337, 752-7468, 756-7578,752-7946 7:30p.m. Prayer meeting 7:30 p.m. Thur. Traveling Choir will have rehearsal

ST. PAULS EPISCOPAL CHURCH 401 East Fourth Street The Rev. Lawrence P. Houston, Jr., Rector

The First Sunday after the Epiphany The Rev. Lawrence P. Houston, Jr., Rector

The Rev. J. Dana Pecheles, Asst, Rector 7:30 a.m. Sun. - Holy Eucharist 9:00 a.m. - Holy Baptism with Eucharist 10:00a.ro Christian Education 11:00 a.m. - Morning Prayer 4:15 p.m Childrens Choir Rehearsal, Chapel

5:00p.m Jr. Choir Rehearsal, Chapel 6:00p.m. - Jr. EYC, Parish Hall 6:00 p.m. - Sr. EYC, Steve Hollomans, 1711 Forest HiU Drive 7:30 p.m. Inquirers Class, Friendly Han

7:30 p.m. - Al-anon, Jr. High Oassromm, Upstairs 7:30 p.m. Mon. - Vestry Meeting, Friendly Hall 7:00 a.m. Wed. - Holy Eucharist 10:00 a.m. - Holy Eucharist and Laying-On of Hands 3:30 p.m. Holy Eucharist, Nursing Home

7:30 p.m. - Choir Rehearsal, Ch^

8:00 p.m. Sat. AA Open Groiq) Discussion, Friendly HaU

ST. TIMOTHYS EPBCOPAL CHURCH 107 Louis Stlfeet, Oieny Oaks The Rev . John Randolph Price, Rector 8:00 a.m. Sun. - Holy Eucharist, Rite I, 9:30 a.n*. - Christian Education 10:30 a.m. - Holy Eucharist, Rite II, Guest Preacher, The Reverend Warren Soule, insUtution of VESTRY 7:OOp.m. - FEAST OF UGHTS 7:00 a.m. Mon. - Mens Breakfast Three Steers Restaurant 7:30 p.m. - VESTRY MEETING

FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST SR 1727 (Formeriy the Eastern Pines Community BIdg.)

Minister Mr. Melvin Rawls 10:00 am. Sun. - BiWe School 11:00a.m. - Worship Service 7:00 p.m. - Evening Worship 7:30 p.m. Wed. - Prayer Meeting and Ymdh Meeting

SAINT PETERS CATHOUC CHURCH 2700 E. 4th Street Greenville, N.C.

758-1582

Rev. WUIiamE Frost 5:30 p.m. Sat.-Mass 8:00 p.m. Sun.-Mass 10:30 a.m.-Mass

GREENVILLE CHURCH (WCHRIST 284 By Pass A Emerson Road Brian Whelchel, Community Evangelist Cart Etchlson, Campus EvanaHist 8:00 a.m. Sun. - Amailng Grace TV BiWe School Channel 12 10;0 a.m. - Bible Study Classes (or all ages

11:00 a m. - Morning Worship 6:06p.m. - Evening Worship 7:00 p.m Wed. - Bible Study Classes

For Fu^r Intormation and or Transportation please call 752-5111 or 752-8378

CHRISTIAN SCIENCE CHURCH Fourth and Meade Streets II ;0e a m. Sun. - Sunday School 11 80 s.m. - Sunday Service 7:45pm. Wed.-Wed. EveningMeetiM 2:86lo4:00 p.m. - Reading Room 400 S: Meade Street

PEOPLES BAPTIST TEMPLE Rev J M Bragg. Pastor 3061 W. Greenville Blvd., Greenville, NC; 27834 7:36 a.m. Sun: - Uymens Prayer BtetritMCrteee Steen)

16:00 am. - SuudaySdiool

11:00 ajn. - MoraiBg Wonhip 4 00 p.m. - Radie Ptmw Peoptes BaptM TeoMiie IMur - W^

5:30 p.m.Choir Practice 6:30 p.m. - fecial FUra II The StroiM-Wtlied ChRd-Dr. Jaams C. Dobson

7:15 a m. Mon -Fri. - Radio Proffam -Together Again-WBZ4}

6:X p.m. IM. - CHURCH VISITATION

7: p.m. Wed. - S5. Teachen A Worken Meeting 8:00 p.m. - Hour of Power

THE CHURCH OF GODWPROPHECY 1206 Mumford Road James C. Brown Paator 10:00 ajn. Sun.Sunday School 11 00 a.m. - Homing Worship Service 6:30 p.m. Young fHnple Service 7:00 p.m .-Evaageliatic Service 7:30 p.m. Wed.-l^yw Meeting

MORNING GLORY APOGTOUC FATH HfXJNESSCHURCH 1012 West 5th St. Greenville N.C.

Eidress Irene G. Epps Every Sunday

10:00 a.m. Sun. Bibie Sehooi 12:00 p.m. - Worahip A PreatAlng 7:30 p.m. WorMiip Service 7:30 p.m. Tha. - Worahip A Preaching 7:30 p.m. Thur. - WorMdp A Preaching

UNIVERSITY CHURCH or CHRVT 100 Crestline Blvd.

7S6AS4S

10:00 a.m. Sun. - Sunday School 11:00 a.m. Momig Worahip a :00 a.m.Jr. Church 6:00 pjn. Choir Rehearsal 7:00 p.m. Evetng Worship

mVIA CHAPEX FREE BAFTm CHURCH 1701 South Green Street Rev. Clifton Gardner, Paator 3:00 p.m. Sat. Young Adult Choir rehearsal 9:45 a.m. Sun. - Sunday School a :00 a.m. - Worship Service Carnation Ushos wU nteet Immediately following morning worshqi.

7:00 p.m. Mon. Junior Chidr rehearsal 7:30 p.m. Tue. - Goqtei Chorus rehearsal 7:30 p.m. Wed. - Prayer meeting 3:00 p.m. Sat. - No. One Ushers will meet

OAKMONT BAPTIST CHURCH 1100 Red Banks Road E . Gordon Conklin, Pastor NeU D. Booth, Jr., Min. ^Education Treva Fhllmr, Min. of Music 9:45 a.m. Sim. Library Open -10:00 a.m.

9:45 a.m. Simday School 10:45 a.m. - Library Open - 11:00 a.m.

11:00 a.m. - MORNING WORSHIP, Childrens Church 5:00 p.m. - Carol Choir Reboarsal, B.Y.F.

6:00 p.m. - GAs, Chapd Choir Rehearsal 9:lSa.m. Wed.-Staff Devotkmal 8:00 p.m. Prayer Meeting 8:00 p.m. TTiur. Chancel Choir Rehearsal

PHILIPPI CHURCH ('CHRIST 1610 Farmville Boulevard Rev. Randy B. Royall, Pastw 8:00p.m Fri. - Members kleeting 11:00 am Sat. - Senior Choir Rehearsal 9:45 a.m. Sun. - Sunday School,

11:00 a.m. FamUy Day Service 7:30 p.m. Wed. Bible Study and Prayer Meeting

FIRST FREE WnXBAPTTST

CHURCH 2600 South Charles Street Greenville, North Carolina 27834 Pastor Harry Grubbs 9:45 a.m. Sun. - Sunday School 11:00 a.m. - Morning Worship 7:OOp.m. - Evening Worship 7:30 p.m. Wed.-BlUeStudv 8:15 p.m. - Choir Rehearsal

HOLY temple AFC.O.G.

Route 6, Greenville, N.C. (Satnt-svUle)

Phone 757-3686

Elder Isaac J. Robinson Pastor 11:30 a.m. 1st Sun Missionary and Youth Day 11:30 a.m. 2nd Sun. - Deacon Day 11:30 a.m. 4th Sun. - Pastoral Day 11:30 a.m. 5th Sun.-Union 7:30p.m. Tue.-Midweek Service 7:30 p.m. Fri. - BiUe Studies 10:00 a.m. Sun.-Sunday SdMol 7:00p.m. 2nd Sun. Worship Service 7:00 p.m. 4UiSun. - Worshq> Service

FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH 520 East Greenville Boulevard 756-3138

Dr. WUlR.WaUace, Minister . Rev. Joanne L. Ver Burg, Associate Minister 9:45 a.m. Sun. - Church School 11:00 a.m.-Worship 4:00 p.m. - CYF, Chi Rho, JYF, Primary Choir 5:00 p.m. Snack Siqiper 5:30 p.m.-Junior Choir 7:30p.m. - Official Board Meeting 10:45 a.m. Mon. - Circles 1,4,5,7,8, 9, Church 11:45 a.m. - CWF Luncheon/General Meeting, Ladies Parlor 7:30p.m.-Circles 10:30 a.m. Tue. - BiWe Study. Conference Room 7:30 p.m. Wed. - Chancel Choir Rehearsal, Choir Room

ST. JOHN MISSINARY BAPTIST CHURCH P. 0. Box 134, Falkland, N.C. 27827 Rev. Anton T. Wesley, Pastor 7:30 p.m. Fri. - General Church Conference

10:00 a.m. Sun.-Sunday School 11:00 a.m. - Morning Worhsip A Holy Communion 7:00 p.m. Tue. - Prayer Meeting A BiWe Study 7:00 p.m. Wed. - Young AdWt Choir Rehearsal

CORNERSTONE MISSIONARY BAPTISTCHURCH Allen Chapel Road A SUtonsburg Reverend Ariee Griffln, Paito 9-11:00 a.m. Sat. - TutoriariTogram for grades 9-12 3:00 p.m. - Youth Choir will rehearse 9:15 a.m. Sun. - Church School 11.00 a.m. - Divine Worship, Youth in charge 6;30p.m.-BTU will be held 7:30 p.m. Tue Deacons and trustee will meet

2:30 p.m. Wed. - Bradleys Rest Home-Pralse Service 7:00 p.m. - Senior Choir will rehearse

6:30 p.m. Thur. - We Study A FeUowship

. 7:30 p.m. Prayer meeting and Bl-^ We Study

6:30 p.m. Fri. Deaconess Board will meet 7:30 p.m. - Church bueiness meeting

THE MBkKMUAL BAPTISTCHUBCH (Southern Baidlit)

1510 Greenville Boulevard E. T. Vinson, Senior Minister; Hal Melton, Mlnlrter with EducaUonnfouth 7:45 a.m. Sun. - Mens Prayer Breakfast, Program by RAa A Leaders 9:45 a.m. - Sunday School 11:00 a.m. - Mor^ Worship, Baptism. Mini A Junior Ourch, Jr Hi# Youth at ClHffdi, Sr. High YouUi with the James Oirogges, Rt. 9. Boa 38AA 2:30 p.m. Mon. - Afternoon BiWe Study with Mrs. Irma Overton, 1886 DrewryLane 7:36 p.m.-Evento BWie Study 9:45 a.m. Tue. - MarWag Current MISBian Group 7:06 p.m. - Church CoumW 5:45 p.m. Wed. - FamBy Nl#t Sig>-per

6.36 p.m. - Devotkmal, New Member RecogWtlon, Mistto FriendA Cherub A Cmul Choirs 7:66p.m - GAt, RAs. Sunday School Workers. Baptist Women CtoicU 8:00p.m -ChancelChohr

HOLLYWOOD PBESBYTERIAN CHURCH HWY 43 South

Minister-Rev. C. WeWey Jentogs S.S. Supt.-Elsie Evan*

18:66 a.m. Snn. - Smulay Sitoel II :66 am. - Worriiip Service 7:3^.m. Mon.-Ckciee Meet T:26^jbTWl-Odea Meet 16:l6aAl.-Met^qrcie

8:60 p.m.--amir PracUee

THE CHURCHOrjBSUi CHRIST OP LATTBR-DAYSAINTS (MORMONS) 367 MarttobtfW# Road, Greenville, N.C.

Bie^DamvBrew 9:60 ajn. Sun. - Faat A Tedtmeny Meeting

16:15 a m. - Sunday School A Primary

11:10 a m - Prteethood, Relief Society, Young Men A Yaum Women

IMMANUEL BAPTBT CHURCH 1101 South Elm reet, GremivUle. NC Hu# Buriington, Pastor Minister of Education and Youth, Lynwood Wallers 6:45 a.m. Sun.-Sunday School a :00 a jn. - MorWng Worship 3:00 pjn. Youth Committee Mftrtlng

4:00 p.m.-YouthAParenU Meeting to evaluate Cheiri 4:30p.m.-Junior Hi# Cholr,Senior Hi# CiMircfa Tralnto 5:31p.m.-YouthSupper 6:00 p.m. - MaaterLUe General Meeting. HI# Scfaooi/CoUe# Choir. Junkx-Hi# amreh Training 7:00 p.m. Evening Woniilp 9:45 a.m. Mon - Dr. SaUie Pence BiWe Study 7:30 p.m. - College Bible Study at 2I2-A Lewis Street 5:30 p^. Tue. T- BSU Supper and

7:30 p.ffl. - WMU Miadoa Aetioa at ECVC

3:30-9:30 p.m. Tue., Wed. Thur. Fri. - Photogra^ tar Scheduled Appito-ments

10:00 a.m. Wed. - Current Mbaton Study

5:15 p.m. - Graded 1-8,44 Chlktoene Choir, Libruy Open 5:45 p.m. Fellawihh) Sigipcr Une Opens

6:45 p.m. - Pastor Begins January BiWe Study, PuppeU 7:30 p.m. Deacons, Parents A Youth Meet about Ski Retreat, Adidt Choir

7:00 p.m. Thur. - BSU Pauee Worship

10:00 a.m. Fri. - Prayer-BiWe Study

SAINT JAMES CHURCH UNITED METHCNNST 200 East Sixth at Forest Hill Chde Greenville, North CaroUaa 27834 (919)7524154 M. Dewey Tyson, Mlnisto Ralph A. Brown, Associate Minister Stephen W. Vau#n, Diaconal VUnister 7:30 p.m. Sun. Mena Breakfast 9:45 a.m.Onirch School 10:30 a.m. Chancel Choir 11:00 a. m. Worship of God Mr. Tyson 5:00p.m. Youth Choir 6:00 p.m. - UMYF Supper A Programs

7:00 p.m. Education Work Area 8:00 p.m. Administrative Board 9:00 a.m. -12 p.m. Mon-Fri. - Weekday School 7:30 p.m. Mi. Bible Study Groups

11 (Brown) with the Wrt#ts

12 (Tyson) with Blanche Smith

4:30 p.m. Tue. Chapd Chdr and Merry Music Makers 7:30 p.m. - BiWe Study Group

13 (Moore) with Brad Moore

7:15 p.m. Wed. St. James Rln#rs 7:30 p.m. Greenville Dist. Workshop at Jarvis UMC 7:30 p.m. - Boy Scout Troop 1340 8:00 p.m (Chancel Choir 6:30 p.m. Thur. Evangdism Expd-slon in Ferguson Classroom Acolytes

11:00 a m. - Jody Ross, Michdle Robins

January Ushers

11:00 a.m. Bruce Hudson, Charles Whiteford, Lynis Dohm, Larry Hou#, Bobby Heath

HOOKER MEMORIAL CHRISTIAN CHURCH 1111 Greenville Blvd.

Greenville, North Carolina 27834 Ralph G. Messick, Minister Phone 750-2275

9:45 a.m. Sun. Coffee Fdlowshlp 10:00 am-Church Schod 11:00 a m Church at Worship 7:30 p.m. Tue. General Board 7:00 p.m. Wed. Missions A Benevolence 8:00 p.m. Choir Rehearsal

FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Corner 14th and Elm Streets Richard R. Gammon and Gerald M. Anders, Ministers; Brett Watson, Director of Music; E. Robert Irwin, Organist 9:00a.m. Sun. - (hmmunion 9:45 a.m. Church Schod 11:00 a.m. Communion 4:00 p.m. Study of Plan for Reunion 6:00 p.m.Youth 7:00 p.m. Board of Deacons 10:00 am. Mon.-Circles 1,2,3 12:00p.ih.'-Clrcle9 2:00 p.m.-Circle 5 6:30 p.m. Brownies 7:00 p.m.-Boy Scouts 7:00 p.m.Gtri Scouts 8:00 p.m.-Sierra (Hub 8:00 p.m.-Circle 4 9:00 a.m. 'Tue. - Park-A-Tot 10:00 a.m.Circle 6,7 12:00 p.m. Newsletter Deadline 7:00 p.m. - Parents Anonymous 7:00 p.m.-Cub Scouts 7:30 p.m. - Worship Committee 8:00 p.m.(hcleS 2:00 p.m. Wed. - Loyal Labders 2:30 p.m. - Address Angels 5:00 p.m. - (hildrens (hoirs 7:00 p.m. Brownies 7:00p.m.-Girl Scouts 7:00 p.m. - Evangdis Explosion 7:30 p.m. - Gallen Choir 9:00 a.m. Thur. Park-A-Tot 7:30p.m.-Commitment Committee 7:30 p.m. Overealers Anoiwmous 10:00 a.m. Frt. - Pandoras Box 10:00 a.m. Sat. - Pandoras Box

GREENVILLE S.D.A. CHURCH 2611 East 10th Stred Robert H. Kerr 757-3082 or 7584717

9:30 a.m. Sat. - The Church at Study, topic; "Sacrifice Foradudowed

10:45 a.m.(hncerns of the dnircb 11:00 a.m. (hurch at Worship, RobertH. Kerr: TemptingGod

2:30 p.m. - Share Your Faith 4:30 p.m. - Vespers and Prayer 8:30p.m. Tue. - Pathfinders 7:00 p.m. Wed. - Prayer Meeting at the Church

HUEYS CHAPEL F. W.B. CHURCH Route 1. WinterviUe, NC2SS00 J. B. Taylor Pastor 7;00p.m. Fri. - Prayer Service 4:00 p.m. Sat. - Pastors Aid Oub Meetii

4:30 p.m. - J. B. Taylor Traveling Choir Meeting 7:30 p.m. Wed. - BiWe Study 7:30 p.m. Thur. (Jan. 13) Render service at Hdy Trinity HWiness Church at 1104 Douglas Avenue In Greenville, NC. nme is 7:30 p.m., J. B. Ta#>r Traveling Choir will accompany the Pastor and Congregattao. The Pastor of HoiyTrtnltyisUdtapR. E.Love

JARVIS MEMORIAL UNITED METHODEST CHUROi 510 S . Washington Street Ministers; Jim Bailey. Susan Pate. Martin Armstrong, Adrian Brown Minister of Muw; Jerry Jolley Organist: Mark Ganaor 8:45 a.m. Sun. - Morning Worship 9:15 a.m. - Church Ltoary Open 9:40 a.m. - Cburdi School- Nuriery

Suspects Trend Is Too Extreme

By GEORGE W .CORNEIX APRflligk Writer Talking with a dHirdunan in the Sovwt Union, Billy Graham remarked that readng of the Bible is prohibited in American schools. The man kxAed in a state of sbock, Graham relates.

He said, is that America? I though it bad religious freedfHn.

evangelist cited the incident in contoiding that U.S. courts and state officials have given in overmuch to efforts to ban religious ele-

Speaker On Youth Day

REV. JEREMIAH DAVIS

The Rev. Jeremiah Davis, a student in the Shaw University Divinity School, will be gwst speadcer at the mony youth day service to be held at Phillipi Missionary Baptist Church in Simpwon Sunday at 10:30 a.m.

Davis is a member of the New Hope Baptist Church of Edgecombe County and attended Rocky Mount Senior Hi^ School and Elizabeth City State Univeristy, He serves as chairman of the Executive Board of Ministers, Deacons and Laymens Union of Rocky Mount.

Regards Jesus As A Feminist

ST. LOUIS (AP) - Jesus was clearly a radical feminist of his time," says Roman Catholic Archbishop John L May of St. Louis.

He tdd a feminists for life" forum that Jesus attitude toward women shocked rabbis, teachers and even his own disciples.

By and large, the church did not remaian faithful, we must admit, to the radical feminism of Jesus, May added.

11:00 a.m. - Morning Worahip 12:15 p.m. HWy Communion-ChapW S:00p.m -Youth Choir 6:00 p.m.-UMYF Supper 6:30p.m. UMYF Prtoams 6:45 p.m. Childrens Handbells 7:30 p.m. - Young Adults-Parlor 11 ;00 am. Mon. - Adult Hamtolls 7:00 p.m. - EE III-CR 7:00p.m.-GlrlScoute-FH UMWGroiq) Meeting 10:00 a.m. II, Mrs Robert Daniel, leader, meets with Mrs. Daniel, 227 Orton Drive.

10:00 a m. 12, Miss Helen Hawes, leader, meets with Mrs. Alyce Barrett, 104 KUby Drive.

8:00 p.m. 13, Mrs. C. E. Fleming, leader, meets with Mrs. Robert Tripp, Routes

10:00 a.m. M, Mrs. Edwdrd Davis, leader, meets with Mrs. Charles Hudson, 1006 Oaklawn Drive 9:30 a.m. 15, Mrs. Rick Vau#n, leader, meeU with Mrs. Vmighn, 103 Ironwood Drive.

10:00 a m. M, Mrs. Rufus Stark, leader, meets in the Clnirch Parlor.

3:00 p.m. 17, Mrs. Wyatt Brown, leader, meets with Mrs. Amert Contey, 100 Fieldside Drive 7:30 p.m. 18, Mrs. Lacy Blanton, leader, meets with Mrs. Blpnton, 109 W QuaU Hollow Road 10:00 am. iS, Mbs Annie Laurie Askew, leader, meets in the Church Conference Rotmi 12:00 pm. 110, Mrs. Dorothy Johnson, leader, meeU in the Church Conference Room.

9:30 a.m. Tue. - Church Staff Meeting

7:00 p.m. - Stewardfhip Comm - CR I0:0S-12;Q6 Wed. - ClolheWine 10:30 a.m. Prayer Group CR 4:30 p.m. - Pre-SchoW Music Act. Youiw Childrens CMr 4; 30 p.m. Oldei Childrens (2ioir 7:00 p.m. - (2iancel Choir 7:30p.m.-District Woritsho|M 10:00 a.m. Thiff. - Achilt BiWe Studv 7:30 p.m. Susan Pates BiWe Study 6:30 am. Fri. - Mens Prayer Breakfast, Toms Rest.

12:00 p.m. Women's Prayer Luncheon

10:00-12:00 Sat. -ClotbesliDe

HEAR THE GOOD NEWS...RECEIVE NEW LIFE

Red Oak Christian Cbvrch

{MBypMBWwt

1:48 RJR. BMW School

CooioQrewWllhUo 11MomKMpThoFallh

841 pjn. Ofoot Yovlh Program

Whoii you got oR wrMdod up with caro and worry, H is a good Hnro to got your faith Rftod.

Nuroory School Monday Thru Friday 741 ojn. tfl 840 p.m. Tho End Of Your Soorch For A Ftlondly Church

ments from Am^an civil life.

This country has carried the business of separatkm of church and state too far," he said in a New York interview. The writers of the Con^itutkMi meant freedom of religion, not freedom from religion."

Graham is part of a tradition, the Baptists, who were pivotally re^wnsible for the constitutional provision against any establishment of reli^on" and gui^an-teeing its free exercise. That doesnt mean siqiress-ingit,hesaid.

But now students in our schools cant even sing carols at Christmas time," he said. Tliey cant have group prayer. Theyre sometimes stopped from carrying Bibles or meeting to study it.

In some places, its been held illegal for ttwm even to have a period to meditate \riiether about a girl friend or whatever. Schools and other institutions are prevented from displaying the 10 Commandments, the basis of civilized law.

Teachers have been frightened against any reference to God. Theyre frightened of their superintendents; the superintendents are frightened of the school boards, and the boards are frightened of the courts."

He said the trend has been carried so far theres going to be a reaction from the people. The 1st Amendment was iKver meant to outlaw religion and moral values from the school system or the country."

Graham, who has avoided identification with the religious right, such as Moral Majority, said he doesnt favor a constitutional amendment to counter the 1962-63 U.S. Supreme Court decisions outlawing mandatory school prayer.

Thats not the way to go," he said. Its too long and bloody a process. We simply have to work and pray for adjustment of misinterpretations. At some point its got to go back before the Supreme Court for clarification."

Graham noted that the 10 Commandments are engraved in the Siqireme Court building itself, that Congress has chaplains opening sessions with prayer, that the U.S. pledge of allegiance, the national anthemn and motto all express trust in God.

If you went around Washington pulling down every mention of God and morality, youd have to pull down a lot of buildings and statues," he said. But it cant be talked about in schools.

They can talk about Islam and what it believes, but cant do it about Christianity. Theyre now afraid to talk about Jesus even as a historical figure. He cited recent instances in his home state of North Carolina where a student was re-primmanded for carrying a Bibie and a superintendent ordered a teacher not to mention Jesus.

Youd think that Christianity dic^t exist or that Jesus n^ver existed, Griaham said, adding:

I dont believe the Supreme Court means that, but its being interpreted that way, and the pressure is being put on teachers and some lower courts to see it that way."

Graham, 64, maintaining his usual iHisy schedule, already has several U.S. crusades lined up this year in Orlando, Fla.; Anchorage, Alaska; Tacoma, Wash,; Sacramento, Calif., and Oklahoma City.

As in 1982, vriien'he interspersed crusades with trips to three East European countries and appearances at several U.S. universities, he plans work this year botti overseas and on American campuses.

Both odlege students and faculty are now willing to listen," he said, surmising that his stand against the nuclear arms race has given me a bearing by a gitHip that wouldnt me before.

He said an ambivalent gray area about religion on campus is gone. Now its either black or white. Theyre either all-out religious persons or all-out heathens. The munber of all-out believers is much greater than it was five years ago, but many stixtents are just lost, psyctxdogically and spiritually lost, and theyre searching for something to believe in.

iey know the biblical ideal comes nearest to what they want, but they dont want to pay the price of being devout Christians or devout Jews. There are moral demands that many students dont want to live up to. Theres a wistfulness about them. They want it but ttey dont want to pay the price."

Celebrated

Christmas

MOSCOW (AP) - Millions of Russian Orthodox faithful ignored the Soviet Unions atheist doctrine and crowded into churches to mark the start of their traditional Christmas celebrations with glittering Masses.

The Russian Orthodox Christmas falls 13 days after the Western holiday. The church s(ill adheres to the Julian calendar, which honors the birth of Jesus today instead of Dec. 25 as on the Gregorian calendar.

Thousands of believers stood shoulder-to-shoulder in the Yelokhovskaya Cathedral in north Moscow Thursday night for Christmas Eve services conducted by Patriarch Plmen, spiritual head of the church in Moscow and Russia.

Pimen, resplendent in his sprawling gray beard and purple-and-black vestments, blessed the congregation and prayed for a peaceful 1983. Priests in gold robes wafted sandalwood incense from censers and chanted the liturgy.

Most worshippers in the cathedral were elderly women wearing brightly colored flowered scarves on their heads. But many younger women and men also turned out, dressed In expensive fur coats and hats.

Western experts estimate there are 30 million Russian Orthodox faithful in this nation of 270 million people, where Russian Orthodoxy was the state religion before the 1917 revolution.

There are an estimated

20.000 church^ in the Soviet Union today, compared with

55.000 reportedly in existence before the revolution.

Services were crowded beyond capacity throughout the week in Moscow, and the church was believed to have taken in millions of rubles nationwide by selling votive candles and tinned Christmas cakes.

Christmas is the most im portant religious holiday in the Soviet Union after Easter. But for nonbelievers, there was little evidence of a celebration.

The coming of the new year is the major winter holiday, celebrated with fir trees bearing shiny glass balls and colored lights. Tradition has it that on New Years Eve, Father Frost -resembling the American Santa Oaus in a red suit trimmed with white fur -visits children and leaves presents.

All those decorations were taken down by Thursday night.

Youth Soryico At Reid's Chapel

Youth Service at Reids Chi^ Mission Baptist Giurch in Fountain will be held at 11 a.m. Sunday.

The Rev. James Tyson of the Ebineezer Baptist Church of Rocky Mount wl be guest speaker The junior and gospel choirs of the church will accompany him.

Bethel Church Plans Songfest

BETHEL - A singing will be held at the Church of God here Saturday at 7:30 p.m. The program will be presented by Bettie and the Sunrise Singers.

Golden Jubilees To Perform

llie Golden Jubilees of Greenville will be in concert at Nazerene Disciples Church, 205 Skinner St., Greenville, Sunday at 7:30 p.m. 11 concert is open to t) public.

U-U Schedules Aeeting

Rituals in an Informal Society will be the subject of Sundays meeting of the Unitarimi-Univeroalist Fellowship of Greenville. The discussion will be led by Donna Whitley.

Preceded by a social time at 10:30, the program will begin at 11 a.m. in the civic room of Planters Bank, corner of Itiird and Washington streets. A covered dish dinner will f(diow at noon.

For more information, call Lon Felker, president, 752-0787.

Week Of Services Planned

Holy Trinity United Holy Church on Douglas Avenue will hold service nightly at 7:30 Monday through Friday.

Scheduled guests include: On Monday, the pastor and congregation of Rock Springs Free Will Baptist Church; Tuesday, the pastor and congregation of Arthurs Chapel Church; Wednesday, Dr. W. L. Jones and Mount Calvery FWB Church; Thuraday, the Rev. Johnny Taylor and Coreys Chapel Church, and Friday, the congregation of Holy Temple ofSaintsville.

The services will benefit Holy Trinitys building fund.

Quarterly A/leetIng Ends

Nazarene Church of Christ, 205 W. Skinner St., will complete its quarterly meeting Sunday with an 11 a.m. service at the church, followed by a congregational visit to the Best Chapel Free Will Baptist Church at 3 p.m. The morning sermon will be delivered by the Rev. E.B. Williams.

Congregational Meeting Set

A meeting for all officers and members of Sweet Hope Free Will Baptist Church will be held Monday. The sesssion will be held at the church at 7:30 p.m.

Little Creek Plans Services

Little Creek Free Will Baptist Church will conduct quarterly meeting services this weekend.

Membership conference will be held Friday at 7:30 p.m. Saturday at 7:30 p.m., Holy Communion will be celebrated with the congregation of Sweet Hope FWB Church as guests. Sundays 11 a.m. service will be followed by dinner. An afternoon service, starting at 3 p.m., will be led by Btslwp Stephen Jones and the congregation of Haddock Chapel FV^ Church.

Building Fund Drive Set

First Timothy Church, 710 Dickinson Ave., will hold its building fund drive Sunday-Saturday with the following services scheduled:

Sunday, Bishop W.L Phillips and Rock Spring choir and ushers will render service; Monday, Elder C.R. Parker and Cherry Lane choir and ushers in charge; Tuesday, Bishop J.H. Vines and Lewis Chapel choir and lu^rs in charge.

Wednesday, Elder R E. HiUiips and St James duirch choir and ushers of Fountain as guests; Thursday, Bishc^ Stefirfien Jones and Haddock Chapel choir and ushers In charge; Friday, Dr. R.L. Gorham and Dildas Chapel choir and ushers will render services; Saturday, Elder F.C. Mitchell and the chorus and usirs will be in char^.

Ail services begin at 7:30 p.m.

Missionaries To Speak

The Church of God in Christ, 1515 S. Pitt St., has scheduled the following services for the week:

Sunday, 11:30 a.m., Missionary Ward will be the speaker; 7:30 p.m., Missionary Annie Johnson will be the speaker at Holy Mission.

Monday, 7:30 p.m., Missionary Daniels will be the guest speaker; Tuesday, 7:30 p.m., Missionary Walston will be the guest; Wednesday, 7:30 p.m., Eidress Wooten will be in charge; Thursday, 7:30 p.m., pastor Shirley AtUnscm will be the speaker; Friday, 7:30 p.m. Missionary Thomas will be the guest. ,

Calvary Choir To Meet

Choir No. 5 of Calvary Free Will Baptist Church will hold a business meeting Saturday. Vice President Rrni Darn said the meeting would begin at 1 p.m. in the Conference Room.

BUSINESS MEETING ing for Allen Chapel Church The Rev. Jasper Tyson has Saturday at 2 p.m. annouiKd a busineiw

Dr.HmWW.MIcIi

Greenville Gheitli Of The Nazaiene

Prsssntly Mteting In Ths First Fedsral Building, Community Ro4Mn, Qroonvllle Boulevard.

Cliff Jones, Pastor

Sunday SctHxri...................  9^^    A.M.

Morning Worship  ..............11:00    A.M.

Sunday Evening Service................6:00    P.M.

Tlw dwrch Of TH Noito. Thmigli H o Loeai CoeigroioWoro m TIM WoiW. SMO T Prorito A Ploco WIWTO Erory Poroon Cm So torod Aii4 Moodod: Whoro Tho Aro teeportoBl. Arid Tito Proooneo Or Abooneo to Holteod: A CIroto Of FoUootolp Whom Thoy Cm Ihero Ttto Probtomo WHh Sowwono Who WE Not Judgo Thom. H Yon How A PorooriE Nood, Ptoom Lot Uo Asatot; H In Ariy Way Wo

Cm bidudo Von In Our FoNowahto. Ptoooo ANow Uo That PrtvHogo.

^ou at inuii&d | to lUat <. C7.

fill Sunday..."

SUNDAY SCHOOL..... .9:45 A.M. WORSHIP.............11:00    A.M.

88SS32I or 788-8172

i

L/iir    WORSHIP.............11:00    A.M.    I

\ cN{ttnoxixii    I

1510 Greenville tflvd. S.b.

0    I

1    GREENVILLES    FIRST BAPTIST    CHLCH    |

"    ORGANIZED    1827    





10-The Daily Reflector, Greenvilte, N.C.FYklay, January 7,1983

Stock And Market Reports

Hunt's Decision On Dix Hospifai is Questioned

Obituaries

Hogs

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) (NCDA) - The trend on the North Carolina hog. market today was steady to 25 cents lower. Kinston 55.00, Clinton, Elizabethtown, Fayetteville, Dunn. Pink Hill, Chadbourn. Ayden, Pine Level, Laurin-burg and Benson 54.50, Wilson 55.00, Salisbury 53.50, Rowland unreported. Sows: all weights 500 pounds up; Wilson 49.00, Fayetteville

49.00, Whiteville unreported, Wallace 49.00, Spiveys Corner 49.00, Rowland unreported, 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 trudk load lots of ice pack USDA Grade A sized 2h to 3 pound birds. 91 percent of the loads offered have been confirmed, with a prliminary weighted average of 41.49 cents f.o.b dock or equivalent. The market is steady and the live supply is moderate for a moderate demand.. Weights mostly desirable to heavy. Estimated slaughter of broilers and fryers in North Carolina Friday was

2.100.000, compared to 375,000 last Friday.

Hens

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) (NCDA) - The North Carolina hen market was steady with a steady undertone. Supplies adequate. Demand moderate. Prices paid per pound for hens over seven pounds at farm for Wednesday, Thursday and Friday slaughter was 14 cents. ,

By The Associated Press Grain: No. 2 yellow shelled corn slightly higher at

2.40-2.61, mostly 2.54-2.61 in east and 2.45-2.75, mostly 2.65-2.75 in Piedmont; No. 1 yellow soybeans higher at 5.51-5.85, mostly 5.51-5.74 in east and 5.25-5.47, mostly

5.41-5.47 in Piedmont; wheat 2.80-3.36, mostly 3.06-3.22; oats 1.20-1.40. (New crop -com 2.52-2.53; soybeans 5.60; wheat 2.75-3.08); soybean meal f.o.b. N.C. processing plants per ton 44 percent 194.00-200.00. Prices paid as of 4 p.m. by location for com and soy-beans: Cofield 2.61, 5.85; Conway 2.50, 5.63; Creswell 2.40, 5.62; Dunn 2.58,5.56; Elizabeth City 2.46, 5.72; Farmville 2.60, 5.58; Fayette-ville , 5.74; Goldsboro 2.60, 5.60; Greenville 2.54, 5.68; Kinston 2.56, 5.68; Lumberton 2.55, 5.51; Pantego 2.54, 5.68; Raleigh -, 5.74; Selma 2.58, 5.64; Whiteville 2.55, 5.51; Williamston 2.54, 5.68; Wilson (2.59-2.61), 5.68; Albemarle 2.45, 5.41; Barber 2.68, 5.47; Mocksville 2.65; Monroe (2.69-2.75); Mt. Ulla -, 5.45; Roaring River 2.70; Statesville 2.65,5.25.

NEW YORK (AP) - The stock market gained more ground in heavy trading today, continuing the rally that carried it to record hi^s on Thursday.

The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials, up 26.03 on Thursday, rose another 4.87 to 1,075.79 by noontime today.

Gainers outnumbered losers by about 3 to 2 among New York Stock Exchange-listed issues.

Volume on the Big Board

The

Meeting

Place

reached 61.30* million shares by noontime, heading for its second day in a row of more than 100 million shares.

Amax led the active list, down '/2 at 24^4. A 1.07 million-share block traded at 244.

Teledyne fell 44 to 127. The company took a writedown of $49.1 million on its investment in International Harvester Co., lowering its earnings for the fourth quarter and all of 1982.

The NYSEs composite index gained .20 to 83.91. At the American Stock Exchange, the market value index was up 3.85 at 362.82.

Following are selected II a.m. stock market quoiatHHis    *

Ashland    36s.

Burroughs        M

Carolina Power & Light    21 \

Collins &Alkman    22^^

Connor

Duke    23

Eaton    33S.

Eckerds    24%

Exxon    31

Fieldcrest    30%

Hatteras    15%

Hilton    43%

Jefferson    30'.4

Deere    33%

Lowe's    34%

McDonald's    59

.MeGraw    4ffS

Piedmont    28%

Pizza Inn    6%

PAG    114%

TRW, Inc    69%

United Tel. '    21%

Virginia Electric    14*4

Wachovia    31%

OVER THE COUNTER Aviation    I8%-I9%

Branch    I8%-IAt4

Little Mint    1%-%

Planters Bank    29-29^4

Midday stocks: High    Low    Last

23%    22%    23

39%    38%    38%

12%    11%    12

11%    11%    11%

47%    47%    47%

31%    31%    31%

36%    36    36%

15%    15%    15%

8%    7%    8%

33%    33%    33%

64%    63%    64

22%    22%    22%

22%    22%    22%

35%    35    35%

38%    38%    38%

49%    49%    49%

28%    27%    27%

53%    53%    53%

21%    21%    21%

50%    50%    50%

16%    16%    16%

25    24%    24%

17%    17%    17%

52    51%    51%

19%    19%    19%

25%    25%    25%

28%    28    28

36    35%    35%

43%    434    43%

29%    29%

40^4    40^4

22%    22%

7.    7%

29 41 23 8 86%

33%    33

57

31%    %

86.

33% 56%    57

31

19%    19%    19^4

36t4    36%    36^4

19%    19    19%

40%    38*    38%

43%    43%    43%

33%    32%    33%

41%    41%    41%

32%    32%    32%

96    95%    95V4

39-%    39%    39%

48%    48%    48%

61%    61%    61%

33

34

33

44%    44%    44%

27%    27    27

35%    35%    35%

35%    35%    35%

4OA4    40%    40^4

37%    37%    37%

18%    18%    18%

31%    31

30

30%

31%

30

54%    54%    54.^

43    42%    42%

97..    97

4%

50

FRIDAY

7:30 p.m. Red Men meet

SATURDAY

1:30 p.m. Duplicate tiridge at Planters Bank 8:00 p,m. AA open discussion I meets at St. Pau)s Episcopal lurch

NEW YORK (AP)

AMR Corp AbbtLabs Allis Chaim Am Baker AmBrands Amer Can Am Cyan AmFamily Am Motors AmStand Amer TAT Beat Food Beth Steel Boeing Boise Cased Borden Burlngt Ind CSX Coro CaroPwLt Celanese Cent Soya Champ Int Chrysler CocaCola Colg Palm Comw Edis ConAgra Conti Group DeltaAirl DowChem duPont Duke Pow EastnAirL East Kodak EatonCp Esmark s Exxon Firestone FlaPowLt FlaProg FordJ

For McKess Fuqua Ind GTE Corp GnDynam Gen Elec Gen Food Gen Mills Gen Motors Gen Tire GenuParts GaPacif Goodrich Goodyear Grace Co GtNor Nek Greyhound Gulf Oil Herculesinc HospitCp Ing Rand IBM

Inti Harv Int Paper Int Rectif Int TAT K mart KaisrAlum Kane Mill KanebSvc KrogerCo Lockheed Loews Corp Masonite n McDermott Mead Corp MinnMM Mobil Monsanto NCNBCY NabiscoBrd Nat Distill OlinCp Owenslll PepsiCo Phelps Dod PhilipMorr Polaroid Proct Gamb Quaker Oat RCA

RalstnPur RepubAir Republic StI Revlon Reynldlnd

MASONIC NOTICE The Winterville Masonic Lodge No. 232 will hold a labor in the third degree on Jan. 22 instead of Jan. 29, as previously announced.

William Elbert,

master

Anninias C. Smith,

secy

OES NOTICE Susanna Chapter No. 161 OES will have a call meeting Saturday at 2 p.m. at the Hall in Pactolus. All members are asked to be present to prepare for the funeral of Mrs. Carrie Mooring.

97% 4%    4%

49% 49/* 11%    11%    11%

31%    30*    30%

23%    23%    23%

17%    17%    17%

15

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -The decision to keep Dorothea Dix Ho^ital open may be interpreted as a serious blow to deinstitutionalization of mental patients, says the states mental heatlh director.

Dr. A. Eugene Douglas says the decision announced by Gov. Jim Hunt Thursday to keep the mental facility open and have its facilities shared with minimum-security prison inmates could severley damage the states efforts to move mental patients from large state hospitals to community programs.

I think the decision the governor has made will be interpreted throughout the state as serious blow to deinstitutionalization, Douglas said.

Douglas said local mental health directors had known they would be l(ing federal money for the community programs because of federal cutbacks, but they had assumed that Department of Human Resources plans to close psychiatric wards at Dix would free up enough money to help offset the losses.

If the funding is no longer available to pay for these patients in the community, theyre going to be sent back to Dorothea Dix, he said. Weve gone from deinstitutionalization to reinstitutionalization.

He said in light of Hunts decision, his future as head of the Division of Mental Health would depend on whether the Legislature can come up with additional money to the community programs going.

liie closing of Dix had been originally proposed in November by state Human Resources Secretary Dr. Sarah Morrow, who recomended a cost-cutting measure that included shutting down most programs at Dix and sending patients to community-based treatment programs or the states other three mental hospitals.

Her proposal drew quick opposition from Dix employees, families of Dix patients, residents near the hospital, county officials and Wake County legislators. Representatives of those groups met with Hunt last month.

In Thursdays decision on the proposal, Hunt ordered hospital operations consolidated on the east side of Dix, a move he said would save some money for com-

15

15

17%

16%

16*

Rockwelint

43%

43

43%

39%

39%

39%

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20'%

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151

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151

Scott Paper

21%

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48%

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SearsRoeb

29%

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29%

21%

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Shaklee

43

41%

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20%

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Skyline Cp

25

24%

24%

74%

74%

74%

Sony Corp Southern Co

15%

IS

IS

26%

26%

26%

16%

16

16

82%

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82%

Sperry Cp SldOifCal

34

33%

33%

19%

19%

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35%

34%

35'%

38%

36%

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45*

45%

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41%

41

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Stevens JP

21/*

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30

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89%

69%

9%

36%

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Texaco Inc

31%

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60^4

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38%

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munity programs for the mentally ill. He did not know how much money would be saved but acknowledged that H would not be much.

Hunt asked Department of Correction officials to use the west side of Dix to house minimum-security inmates who are mentally ill, retarded, non-violent, young or female.

He estimated that up to 500

inmates could be housed at the hospital. Most of the inmates would come from the Raleigh area, he said.

Personnel at Dix would diagnose and treat inmates.

In addition, Hunt said his staff would work with the city of Raleigh on a plan to lease or sell part of the 1,500-acre campus for private development, possibly housing units.

Arrested For Another Fraud

Old Map...

(Continued from Pagel)

The delineation of the coast and nomenclature along it provide the first detailed and accurate cartographical survey of the North Carolina coastal area.

Between the coastal region and the Cherokee mountains, Moseley gives only rivers, their branches, the location of Indian villages and a few scattered legends. Tlw Indian trading road is shown from the crossing of the Yadkin River near present day Salisbury, N. C., to the crossing of the Roanoke River near the Virginia line.

A legend between Deep River and Haw River begins this country abounds with Elk and Buffaloes at a distance of about 150 miles from the sea and describes the abundance of game and the fertility of the soU. Cummingsaid.

H. G. Jones of Chapel Hill, curator of the N.C. Collection at the University of North Carolina and former director of the N. C. Division of Archives and History, said the map is a tremendous asset to the historians of North Carolina.

The availability of the Moseley will permit much clearer photographic copies that has been possible previously. This is particularly important due to the early details in the Moseley that identify the locations of prominent people, religious meeting places and the Indian tribes that still existed at that time.

Moseley, who died in 1794, was survey general as early as 1710. He was reappointed and remained in office until about 1730. By 1705, Moseley was a member of the Coimcil and landowner. In 1714 he was licensed to practiced law and became the foremost lawyer in the province, becoming commissioner for the North Carolina-Virginia, North Carolina-South Carolina and Granville-North Carolina boundary lines.

He was also public treasurer, chief baron of the Exchequer and Associate Justice of North Carolina.

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Notic* of Town Mootingt for M8vtln and PHt Portiona of tha 6th diatrict of tha North Carolina Houaa of Rapraaantathraa From: John B. QHIam, III, North Carolina Rapraaantathw.

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

Friday, January 7,1983 8:30 a.m. Bethei Eiementary Schooi 9:00 a.m. Bethei Town Mali 9:45 a.m. Stokes Elementary School 10:30 a.m. Stokes Town and Country Restaurant 11:15 a.m. Martin Community College 12:30 p.m. Bear Grass School T.30 p.m. Williamston High School 2:00 p.m. Williamston Town Hall 3:00 p.m. Jamesvilte School 3:40 p.m. Jamesville Town Hall 4:30 p.m. Farm Life Fire Department Special Notice From John B. QHIam, III, Reprosentative 6th Olstricf.

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

SPECIAL NOTICE FROM THE OFFICE OF REPRESENTATIVE JOHN B. QILUM III

TO: The People of Martin and Pitt Portions of the 6th District FROM: John B. Glllam III, North Carolina House of Representatives

The 1983 North Carolina General Assembly wUI convene at 12:00 noon, Wednesday, January 12, 1083. My family and I would tike to Invite you to be with us on January 12, at 10:30 a.m. In the Legislative Building: we are hosting a coffee hour 111 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 this 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, pleaae do not hesitate to contact me.

Very Sincerely,

John B. Glllam. HI Representative, North Carolina House of Representatives

A former Pitt County resident who faUed to appiear in court last March for her trial on fraud charges has been arrested by Wake County authorities on a telephone fraud count.

A spok^man in the Wake County cioiis office said that Baitara Waring Dudley, formerly of Route 7, Fairway Drive, Greenville, was charged with sutecribing to telephone service on four occasions using assumed names in order to avoid paying for the service.

The spokesman said the names of Jean Dudley, Susan Griffin, Janice Smith and Bara Waring were used during the alle^ activity. The Raleigh address listed in the warrant was 3915B Tara Drive.

Ms. Dudley was scheduled for a 3 p.m. bond hearing today in Wake County.

The woman was charged last Feb. 5 by local authorities on 22 counts of fraud, according to tlK Pitt clerks office, liie warrants, obtained by the local Employment Security Commission, charged Ms. Dudley with making false statements to the commission in order to receive unemployment compensation while she was woridng.

The spokesman said Ms. Dudleys case came up in Pitt County ai^ was continued until last March. When she failed to show up in court in March, an order for her arrest was issued by the court. Authorities were unable to locate her at the Fairway Drive address, it was pointed out.

Sheriff Ralph Tyson said she will be brou^t back to Pitt County for trial on the fraud charges.

PREMIUM PRICE DUBLIN, Ireland (AP) -Prime Minister Garret FitzGeralds new government is expected to increase the gasoline tax 9 cents a gallon today, raising the price of premium gas to $2.95 a gallon to ke^ a government refinery in business.

Breau

AYDEN - Mr. Romeo Lorenzo Breau, 57, died Thursday night. A memorial service will be conducted Saturday at 2 p.m. at Fanner Funeral Chapel by the Rev.RoyTumageJr.

Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Edith Breau of Ayden; three sons, Barry Breau of Phoenix, Ariz., Romeo Breau Jr. of New Bedford, Mass., and Tommy Lake of Houston, Texas; four daughters, Mrs. Paula Carria ^ Mrs. Juliette Pinchero, both of New Bedford, Mass., and Mrs. Pauline Carria and Mrs. Maria Smith, both of Early, Texas; three brothers, Abbie Breau of New Bedford and Alyer Breau and Eddie Breau, txHh of Lolland, Conn., and 13 grandchildren.

The family will be at the funeral home from 7-9 p.m. toni^t. In lieu of flowers, a contribution may be made to the Pitt County Heart Fund.

Daniels

Funeral services for Mrs. Irene Daniels, 101, who died Saturday in St. Johns Hospital in Brooklyn, N.Y., will be held Sunday at 2:30 p.m. in St. Peter Missionary Baptist

GUC Meeting

The board of commissioners of the Greenville Utilities Commission will meet Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. in the Utilities Building at the intersection of Fifth and Washington streets.

Included on the agenda will be a report on the waste water treatment plant priority list hearing and consideration of adjustments to the gas appliance service rate schedule and other business.

Best Chapel

Plans Services

Quarterly meeting will be held this weekend at Best Chapel Church, Route 6, Greneville.

Tonight at 7 p.m. a board meeting will be held. Saturday at 7:30 p.m. communion services will be led by the Rev C.R. Parker and the Cherry Lane choir and ushers. Sunday at 11 a.m. Bishop Matthew Best and the senior choir and ushers will be in charge. At 3 p.m. the Rev. E.B. Williams and the Nazarene Church of Christ will lead services.

758-1131

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Youre probably living in your biggest asset Youve been paying money into your home for a long time now. With housing costs rising, your home is probably worth more today than you paid for it Cash in on that value with a second mortgage from' First Federal.

FRST FEDERAL fSlSAMNGSH

324 Evans St and Greenville Blvd.

Greenville, N.C.

Church by the Rev. Hue Wal^n. Burial will be in Brown Hill Cemetery.

Mrs. Daniels was a native of Pitt County who had spent her life in the Greenville community. She was a member of St. Peter Church.

Surviving her are three daughters. Miss Mary Daniels and Mrs. Elizabeth Simmons, both of Brooklyn, and Mrs. Rosa Shields of Norfolk, Va.; 14 grandchildren and several great-grandchildren and great-great-grandchildren.

The family will receive friends Saturday from 7 to 8 p.m. at Flanagan Funeral Home Chapel. At (kher times they will be at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Freddy Farmer Sr., 902 Bancroft Ave.

Manning

Mr. Thurman G. (Buck) Manning, died at bis home near Vanceboro Thursday. The funeral service will be conducted at 2 p.m. Saturday in the Wilkerson Funeral Chapel in Vanceboro by the Rev. Alfred Wethington and the Rev. Elmer Parker. Burial will be in the Epworth United Methodist Church Cemetery.

Mr. Manning was bom in Pitt County and ^nt most of his life in Craven County in the Vanceboro community. He was a retired farmer and a member of the Vanceboro Free Will Holiness Church.

He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Elsie Jones Manning; two sons, David G. Manning of New Bern and Gifton E. Manning of the home; a daughter, Mrs. Lucille M. Atkins of New Bern; a , brother, T.G. Manmng of Ohio; three grandchildren and one great-grandchild.

The family will receive freinds at the funeral home from 7-9 p.m. tonight.

Marshall

ROBERSONVILLE -Mrs. Aliena Mar^all of Martin Street, Robersonville, died Thursday in Pitt County Memorial Hc^ital. She was the mother of Mrs. Dorothy Mdica and Mrs. Verateen Hudson, both of Robersonville, and Mrs. Gloria Andrews of Bethel. Funeral arrangements will be announced later by Flanagan Funeral Home.

Mooring

Mrs. Carrie E. Manning, 94, died Tuesday in Pitt County Memorial Hc^ital. Funeral services will be conducted Sunday at 2 p.m. at St. Marys Missionary Baptist Church in Greenville by Elder F.R. Peterson.

Burial will follow in the Mooring Cemetery near Old Shivers Schoid.

Mrs. Mooring was bom and reared in Martin (bounty but lata- made her home in Greenville. She was married to the late George Mooring. She was a member of the Eastern Star of Pactdus.

She is survived by seven sons, Linwood Mooring Sr. of the home and Leonzer Mooring, Ulysses Mooring, John Frank Mooring, Giarlie Mooring, Jesse Mooring and Jimmy Mooring, all of Baltimore; four daughters, Mrs. Dorothea Moc^y of Willow Grove, Pa., Mrs. Elizabeth Turner of Philadelphia and Mrs. Lula Robinson and Mrs. Earleen Shivers, both of Baltimore; one step-daughter, Mrs. Mamie M. Redmond of Greenville; one brother. Mack Williams of Wai^ington, D.C.; 78 grandchildren; 102 greatgrandchildren; 10 great-great-grandchildren and two great-great-great-grandchildren.

The family will receive friends at Phillips Brothers Mortuary from 8-9 p.m. Saturday.

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Edwards Pharmacy

Ayden, N.C.

Bethel Pharmacy

Bethel, N.C.

Farmville Discount Drug

Farmville. N.C.

OES MEETING W Bri^t Star Chjqiter No.

313, Order of Eastern Star, will have a called meeting Saturday at 2 p.m.

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An Introduction To Computer Concepts &

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CREDIT TELEVISION COURSES OFFERED BY

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REGISTRATION/ORIENTATION wUI be held 11 January, 7:004:30 PM in room 209 Humber buHdkig.

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Sports the DAILY REFLECTORClassifiedffilDAY AFTKNOON, JANUARY 7, 1983

Andruzzi Cres 'Foul' As Lady Pirates Bow

CINCINNATI, Ohio -We were raped out there, Coach Cathy Andruzzi claimed, after her East Carolina Lady Pirates bowed to the University of Cincinnati, 73^, yesterday afternoon.

Andruzzi, who was ejected from the game after drawii^ three swond half technical fouls, claimed that highly prejudiced offiating was the reason for the loss. They hacked and beat on us and got away with it, Andruzzi said. At the same time, we couldnt do anything.

East Carolina did out-shoot the Lady Bearcats from the floor, 56 points to 54. But the Lady Pirates went to the foul line only ten times and could connect on just four of those shots. Cincinnati, meanwhile, was hitting on 19 of 26 tries. A total of 20 fouls were called against East Carolina while 14 were whistled against Cincinnati.

The first half of the game was very close. Both teams managed brief

leads, East Carolina getting out by as many as four and Cincinnati by a like number. The Bearcats managed a 30-28 lead at the half.

East Carolina moved back out into the lead in the early minutes of the second half, taking a 42-38

lead, but from there on, it was all Cincinnati.

East Carolina was hampered by having two of its regiars in foid trouble eariy. Both Caren Truske and FYan Hooks fouled Old of the cmtest. Truske picked 14) three of her fouls in the first five minutes of play.

It was ridiculous, Andruzzi said. We were lairing good stxds but we didnt get to the line. They put us in foul trouUe eariy and every time wed get close, theyd shoot us down.

Andruzzi said the La^ Pirates went to Cincinnatis strength and were doing a good job against the Bearcats, and they (the officials) started doing that.

When we get the ball inside to Mary (Denkler) that often and we go to the line only six tinKS in a game, you have to wonder whats going on.

I know we could have beaten them. But when youre playing with a young team like we are and we have to go to our bench because of the fouls, it takes away from us, Andruzzi said.

Andruzzi drew her first technical of the game with 11:08 left in the contest, then was whistled for another with 9:38 showing. The third, which meant automatic ejection, came with 24 seconds to go.

I was only protesting

vriiat they were (kung. Those refs were so unprofessional it was terrible, Andruzzi said.

Cincumati was paced by Kelly Reeman and Joy Roberts, with 22 points each, while Anita Tergni added 14 and CheiTl Co(A badil.

Denkler led East Carolina with 22 plants while Loraine Foster had 14 and Sylvia Bragg had 10. Foster dished out 11 assists in the game.

The Pirates fall to 5-5 on the season with the loss, their third in the last fiair games all im the road. Cincinnati is now 9-3.

Ea^ Candina resumes play (HI Friday, January 14, traveling to meet nationally ranked Old Dominion in Norfolk, Va.

EMtCaraiiudO)

IIP PC FT RbFAP Fofiter 40 7-M    0-1 5 5 11    14

Truske    U    M    00    2    3    0    4

Mabry    40    0-2    0-2    6    2    0    0

Hooks    2    4    00    4    5    0    4

Denkler    38    O-ll    4-7    6    2    0    22

Braffi    21    5-10    OO    3    1    0    10

Chaney    13    3-5    00    2    2    0    6

Sinunons    1    00    00    0    0    0    0

Team    2

Totals    MO    4-10 30 so 11    10

OnctaBatKTS)

Tersignl    31    4-10    00    S    1    1    14

Cook    31    3-12    56    4    3    5    11

Jennings    31    1-8    0-1    3    2    1    4

Reeman    40    0-12    44    6    2    6    22

Roberts    28    9-13    40    11    4    0    22

Ash    18    0-1    00    0    0    0    0

John    11    0-1    0-3    3    2    0    0

Jones    1    00    00    0    0    0    0

Team    5

TMals    300 27011M8 37 14 IS    73

Fj^Csmltoi.............18    32        80

CiQphmatl.................38    43    -    73

Turnovers; ECU 16, UC14.

Technical folds; ECU Coach Andruzzi

3.

Officials; Hauy.Ffahw.

Attendance; 300.

TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) -Johnny Miller had just finished off a 4-under-par 66 a single stroke back of Gil Morgans lead and was mentally kicking himself for the round that got away.

After the way I bit the ball, to shoot 66 is a crime. I should be locked up, jailed, for the night, Miller said Thursday after the opening round of the $300,000 Joe Garagiola-Tucson Open, the inaugural event im the 10-month PGA Tour.

The days play was delayed an hour by frozen greens and eventually was halted by darkness with 17 men stranded on the 6,830-yard Randolph Park Municipal Course. They were scheduled to comsete the round at daylight today.

Miller, a four-time winner of this event, built his reputation as golfs Giddai Boy on his domination of the desert events. In this one, he said be had a chance to shoot 59, the Tours all-time record, but just threw away a lot of shots.

I was hit^ my irons right on the sticks. I hit some flags and lipped out some and I shoot 66. At the very worst it should have been 63. In 74 or 75 it would have been a 61. No question. Absolutely no question about it. And it may have

been a 59, Miller said.

He sighed.

Its like throwing a nohitter for eight innings then letting in three runs and losing 3-2, said MUler.

He birdied his first five holes, missed four other times from less than six feet, hit the stick and failed to birdie on another, got his approach within six inches of the cup im still another and, after the ball spun back, ended up with a 3-putt bogey.

I dont know, he said. I just cant do it any more.

Its a matter of motivation. If I had the motivation of Tom Watson, theres no telling what 1 could have accomplished on the Tour. Its not bad, what Ive done, but, like Chi Chi Rodriguez said. Im kind of doing it in my' spare time.

Its nice, though, to be hitting the irons so good, getting the ball so close to the hole. 1 dont know how long it will last, but its fun while it does. And Ive still got a chance to win the tournament, if I can slop in some putts.

Morgan, a non-winner since 1979, said be benefitted from a recent session with his longtime teacher Ernie Vossler, a session that put Morgans game in the best shape its been in a limg time, a xxl or

Sports Colnndflf

Editors Note: Sdteduies are supplied by cAoo/s or sponsoring agencies and are subject tot^ange without notice.

Todays Sports BasketbaU WUson at Greenville Christian (5;30p.tn.)

Jamesviile at Cresweil North Lenoir at Greene Centrai (6;30p.m.)

AydeiHjriRoa at C.B. Aycock Southwest Edgecombe at FarmvUie Central (S;30p.m.)

North Pitt at SouUiem Nash Roanoke at Taitoro WUliamston at Roanoke Rapids Rose at Northern NaMi (6;30 p.m.)

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

Wrestling

Northern Nash at Rose (7 p.m.)

r-if

Conley Rally Tops Havelock

HAVELOCK - D.H. Conley spotted Havelock a ten-point lead then rallied to gain a 36-22 victory over the Rams in a Coastal Conference wrestling match.

Pirates Host Tough Madison

East Candinas Pirates return to the relative safety of Minges Coliseum Saturday night, but their foe is not (e that would make Minges seem safe at all.

The James Madison Dukes, defending regular season champkHis in the ECAC-South, come to town for the 7:30 p.m. conte^.

East Candina, which won the first meeting b^ween the two schools two years ago, 61-K, has lost the last three times it played the Dukes, all three by lipsided scores.

This is their fir^ nweting of the 1982-83 season.

The Dukes come into the game with a 5-5 record, having drawn even last ni^t ni^t with a 61-56 victory over UNC-Wilmington. The start is

not what Coach Lou C^-pindli would call a usual one for the Dukes, who have advanced to the NCAA tournaments second round the last two years and came within a basket of ousting eventual champion North Carolina from the field last season. James Madison has never had a losing season in basketball.

After opening the year with a 58-33 victory over VMI, the Dukes fell to then top-ranked Virginia, 51-34. But they bounced back with wins over Maine (58-53) and Virginia Commonwealth (66-57) in the next two games.

A four-game losing streak followed, however, as James Madison lost four tournament contests - all by close scores. They bowed to Louisiana

Tech, 62-61, Fairleigh-Dickenson, 65^; Iowa, 47-45, and St. Bonaventure, 58-54.

They bounced back into the winning column, 68-38, over. Fredonia State, last Monday ni^t, however, before handling the Seahawks last night.

The Dukes are led by All-ECAC-South selection Jeff Ruland, their 6-8, 240pound senior, who is the third leading rebounder in the conference with a 7.7 average. Hes scoring 12.9 points a game, one of two Dukes in double figures. The other is 6-2, 178-pound senior guard Charies Fisher, with an 11.7 average.

Another strong player is 6-4, 190-pound senior guard David Dupont, while only scoring 5.4 points a game, is an outstand-

Foots Chosen As Top Offensive Player By AP

SAN DIEGO (AP) - San Diego quarterback Dan Fouts, named the Offensive Player of the Year by The Associated Press, says the honor siKHild be divided among his coaches and teammates because Im surrounded by the best in the league.

Fouts, passing yardage king of the National Football League for the past four years, was an overwhelming choice by the nationwide panel of 84 sports writers and

broadcasters. He out-polled Marcus Allen, the Los Angeles Raiders running back and a unanimous selection as Offensive Rookie of the Year, by a 43-18 margin.

Third in the voting with 11 was Mark Moseley, the Washington Redskins placekicker who narrowly beat Fouts In the osi Valuable Player balloting. Moseley set an NFL reciuxl of 23 consecutive field and was 20 of 21 for the year.

Miller Unhappy After 66One Shot Off Lead

better than its been in the last two or three years, he said.

He did not make a bogey and took sole cimtrol of the top ^ with a 15-foot birdie putt on his final hole, which completed a 65.

Im kind of surprised, he said. Im usually rather a slow starter.

Miller was tied for second with Fred Couples, Mark Hayes, Jay Haas, Qarence Rose, Scott Simpson and David Graham, wlm once was informed he had been disqualified and was re-instated ^y by a ruling by Commissioner Deane ^man.

Graham, a former U.S. Open and PGA champion, said he was unaware of a mw rule which required players to register at the tournament site by 6 p.m. Tuesday. He did not arrive in Tucson until Wednesday morning. When he attempted to register, he was told of the new regulation and, he said, was Udd he was disqualified.

Abmit onehalf hour later, Graham said, Stadler also arrived in exactly the same situation 1 was in.

Stadler is the defending champion in this tournament, the Masters titleholder and 1982 leading money-winner.

Offensive Player Of Year

San Diego Chagers quarterback Dan Fouts, passing and tying a record for 900-yard consecutive games against the Los Angeles Raiders on Nov. 22, has been named the Associated Press NFL Offensive Player of the Year. Fouts tied Johnny Unitas record when he passed for 900-plus yards in 26 consecutive games. (AP Laserphoto)

Others receiving more than one vote were San Diego wide receiver Wes Chandler and Dallas quarterback Danny White, three votes apiece, and Chargers tight end Kellen Winslow with two.

The 30-year-old Fouts, a force since Coach Don Coryell arrived in 1978 and installed one of the NFLs greatest air attacks, helped the Chargers average 450.4 total yards per game. That is the third hipest total in NFL history, just shy of the 458.8 mark set by the 1951 Los Angeles Rams.

With Fouts throwing for more than 300 yards in five of San Diego's nine games, the Chargers set an all-time NFL record by averaging 325.9 yards per game through the air.

Its nice to be singled out, said Fouts, but they probably shouldnt give out any awards. Ttey pn^bly should just

gve everybody on the Siqper wl team an award. But thatwhat they do.

Our society is so hung up on the star system and singling out people. Its wrong In a team ^rt like football to do that, but you cant seem to get away from it. Im not knocking it, its just the way things are, said Fouts, who surpassed Johnny Unitas NFL record of most 300-yard passing games (26). Fouts now has 30.

He also became the first passer in NFL history with two consecutive 400-yard games.

Theres no ipiestion hes the catalyst, said Coryell. Hes the sparkplug of this team. Hes perfect for our offense: intelligent, sees the field so well and very tough, both mentally and physically.

Terry Bradshaw, Fouts counterpart in Sundays playoff opener at Pittsburg, added lofty praise.

I put him at the very top of the list, with the kid (Joe Montana) and Ken Anderson and the rest of us battling it' out, said Bradshaw. I wish I could take five steps aixi throw the ball as well as he does.

ing floor leader for the Dukes. The other starters include 6-6, 195-pound freriiman Tracey Williams, 4.9 per g;ame, and 6-7, 214-po^ junior Keith Bradley, hitting 3.1 points a game.

JMU has been having its problems from the floor, hitting only 45.0 percent through its first ei^t games worst among the six ECAC-South teams. But they are hitting 73.4 percent of their free throws, second best in the league.

Ruland is the number eight scorer in the league, while Fisher is tied for ninth. Fisher is eighth in the league in field goal percentage, hitting 53.4 percent, while hes fourth in free throws with 86.4 percent. Ruland is eighth in that same category, making 79.4 percent.

As to the Pirates, freshman center Johnny Edwards is the second leading scorer in the league with an 18.8 average, having scored 27 points in the Pirates loss to Virginia Tech earlier this week. Bruce Peartree, hitting 12.4 was sixth prior to the VPI game, while Barry Wright, now 12.3 was tied for ninth.

Edwards is seciRid in rebounding at 8.7, while Grem is sixth at 6.3. Edwards also ranks fifth in steals with 1.5 a game, vdiile Green is third (1.2) and Peartree fouri (0.7) in blocked shots.

Edwards is third in die league in field goal percentage, hitting 58.7 percoit, while Green is seventh with 51.3. Peartree is sixth in free throw percentage at 81.3.

ECU stands fourth in the league in fwld goal percentage at 50.5, while the Hrates are fifth in free throw shooting, hitting 67.8 percent.

The Pirates have one other player in double figures as Green is hitting 12.0 per game.

Peartree was benched in the VPI game, not starting and playing only six minutes in the first half, as Coach Charlie Harrison attempted to ^ more defense and ball movement by inserting John Williams. WUliams is tentatively slated to start again on Saturday.

Despite its 5-5 mark, however, Harrison believes that JMU will be a tou^ opponent for the Pirates, who go into the game with a 4-5 but are 2-0 in Minges.

Madison Stalls Seahawk Rally

WILMINGTON (AP) -Center Dan Ruland scored 16 points as James Madison turned back a University of North Carolina-Wilmington second-half rally to post a 61-56 college baricetball victory Thursday night.

James Madison travels to Greenville Satqrday night to meet East Carolina.

James Madison, now 5-5, led 49-32 with 9:25 remaining before the Seahawks reeled off '14 consecutive points during Uie next 4:16, cutting the margin to 49-46 on Shawn Williams steal and dunk.

Bob Donohoe sank a short jumper to spark a Dukes drive which upped the gap to seven, but Frankie Dickens jumper at the 1:10 marii again brought the Seahawks with three, at 59-56.

The Seahawks forced a

turnover, but missed a shot which would have cut It to a sin^e point deficit. Donohoe then hit both aids of bonus free throw situation with 18 seconds left to sea! the verdict.

Donohoe finished with 12 points while David Dupont added 11 and Keith Bradley 10.

Tony Anderson led the Seahawks, now 54, with 17 points. WUliams chipped In 12 points and Terry Shiver 11.

JAMES MADISON (41)

Wllliami 1 <H> i, Bradlay 4 2-2 10, Ruland S 0-7 10, D^ 4 S-S 11, Pliher 1 4-66. Oanotwe44-4l2,StaeleOM2, bdi 0 (Mi 0, Boler 1 0-1 2. Jackaon 0 60 0. Totals 20 21-2S 61.

N. CAROLINA-WILMINGTON (M)

Kelly 3626. S Prudboe 12-2 4, Gordon I 2-2 4, Andenon 7 63 17, WlUlama 4 4-4

12. Shiver 2 7-0 II, DIcksM 1 (Ml 2, M. PrudlMe 0 0-0 0, Joluuin 0 04) 0. Totals II

1622 M

Fouled out-Kelly, Bradley. Total (oula-James Madison 22. N. Carolina-Wilmington 23. Technical-N. Caro-i-Wliming

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ACC Begins Its Serious Play

Wake at GreeavUle Christian (3

^ Simes lifadison at East Caroliiia (7:30 p.m.)

Washington at Conley (6:30 p.m.)

WrotUnf Tarboro, Manteo, Cooley at Fannville Central (12 noon)

Indoor Track East Carolina at Chesterfleld Invitational

Swimming JtHPdan. Goldstnro at Rose (11 a.m.)

Havelock won ve of the first eight weight classes to move out into a 22-12 lead. But Conley tb won the rmain-ing five weights, two t than on phis, and another on a siqiarMMr decision, to claim the win. Among those five was a win by 169i)ounder WOlie Greene, who missed the West Carteret Invitational, but downed Steve Searl, the runner-tq> in that evem. Paul Menechelli, wha downed Kevin Sublette in the match, avenged an eariier loss at the hands of SidUette in the West Carteret event.

The win boosts the Conley record to 7-1. Hie Vikings wUl face Manteo at 1 p.m. Saturday at FarmvUie Central. Summary:

100 - Pat Rook (H) won by forfeit.

107 TOdd Cochran (C) d. Lawrence Cooper, 63.

114 - Kerry Farris (C) d. Chuck ADdmon,61.

121 - Scott Uttrdl (H) d. RednaklMo(H,64.

15 - Steve Jarvis (H) p. Joel Maye, 0:43.

134 Shawn Hardy (C) p. Rob Thomas, 4:29.

140 - Jeff Peay (H) d. Chun Duocaii,61.

M7 - D.J. Fleming (H) d. Andy Ma)ette,60.

157 - William Bridgett (C) d. Mike Rook, 162.

109 - Willie Greene (C) d. Steve Searle,30^.

157 - Mike Long (C) p. Marty Rlvenbark.2:S7.

197 - Paid MenecheUi (C) d. Kevin SUUette, 44).

HWT - Stacy McCarter (C) p. Billy lioas, 0:46.

By The Associated Press

Now that the prriiminaries are out of the way, its time for AUaiUic Coast Conference basketbaU teams to get down to serious butine^.

Only one conferenc game has been played to date, but that (^ges this weekend wten three ACC matchups are schoiuled.

The first of those gets underway at Clemson, S.C., tonight whoi I6th-ranked N.C. State goes against a Tiger club that has beoi struggling.

Coach Jim Valvanos Woifpack is 6-1 on the seasim, whUe ClemsoB 64. But Valvano says playing in the conference could give (Hanson new life.

This is kind of like an opowr for than, a retUrth, a new start, he said.

Anytime youre in am-ference play, its an important

game. It doesnt matter what happened before. We wUl have to play a good game.

The Tigers have been hampered by injuries to key players, including guard Vincent HamUton.

Theyve had a lot of injuries and losing HamUton was like us losing (leading scorer Dereck) Whittenburg, Valvano says.

Two other ACC matchups are slated on Saturday. Georgia Tech travris to Wake Forest, while 4th-ranked Vir^nia takes i Maryland.

In addition, two other ACC teams are slated for oition Saturday. North Carolina has climbed back into the top 20 after recording six straight wins, but the ISth-ranked Tar Heels are in for another difficult test when they play undefeated Syracuse at Chariotte.





Woody

Pecic

Purdue Rolls By Wisconsin

The NCAA Convention for 1983 will be held this coming week out west and the biggest piece of legislation proposed so far is that of limiting the number of Division 1 basketball schools.

There is a proposal up which would reduce the 270-odd membership in Division I by forming as has been done in football a Division I-AA group. Criteria for membership in Division I-A (the majors) would be automatic for those schools having a Divison I-A football program such as East Carolina. Other schools would have to meet certain requirements as to size of arena and attendance on home and all games basis.

A straw poll, however, conducted by a Washington newspaper, found that most athletic directors leaned against voting for the attendance requirement. Whether some other proposal would find favor in replacing it is questionable.

The result of the voting might cast some shadow on the future of the ECAC-South alignment. Currently, East Carolina and Navy are the only schools assured of Divison I-A status by virtue of their football programs. Richmond, William & Mary and James Madison compete on the I-AA level in football and George Mason does not compete in that sport.

Whether those schools could meet the attendance requiretnents is questionable with the possible exception of Madison.

There are recurring rumors and that is all that can be said of them at this time that one or more schools might join the ECAC-South next year or may pull other members out, depending on your source.

At George Mason, we heard that VMI is thinking of leaving the Southern Conference and would become an ECAC-South member next year, as would American University, giving the league eight members.

Then, at Virginia Tech, we heard a report that if VMI left the Southern, it would be to join a newly formed league of football schools including W&M, Richmond, Madison, Delaware, Leigh and possibly Villanova, which may resu-rect football on the I-AA level. What that would mean for the ECAC-South is uncertain.

At any rate, what occurs next week and what follows in the next few , months will be closely watched by ECU fans.

Another proposal, which the Southwestern Conference is attempting to gain support for although voting on it is probably a year away is sure to find great trouble in passing.

That proposal    would    move    the    start of

basketball practice back from October 15 to November 15, and would move the start of the season from Thanksgiving weekend until after Christmas.

Can you imagine    no basketball in    December? A

quiet and quick burial    is what    this    proposal

needs.

   

Now that the bowl games are over, we caniotal up the rights and wrongs and declare a winner in the Daily Reflector panel of experts for this past year.

As you may remember, Tom Baines went into the bowl games with a slim one game lead over this writer, while Rick Scoppe was in third, followed by Vickie Spivey and Joe Jenkins. Our guests trailed the field.

When the smoke cleared, we had put together an 11-5 record for the 16 bowls and moved into first place with a 108-50 record for the season. Baines, who slumped to 9-7, finished in second place with a 107-51 mark.

Spivey finished third with a 106-52 record, with Scoppe fourth at 102-56. Jenkins as has been his habit of late finished last among the regulars with a 100-58 record. Our guests had a 97-61 mark.

Baines has already sworn revenge next year and Jenkins well, Joe says you only remmber who finishes first and who finishes last. And Joe is well remembered.

Junior High Basketball

...........41

A.G.COX.........30

BETHEi, - Jarvis Massenburg scored 15 points to lead Bethel Junior Hi(^ to a 41-30 win over A.G. Ck)x in the opening basketball game of the season for both teams.

Ricky Farrow had 10 points forAG.Cox.

In the girls game, A.G. Cox rolled by Bethel, 34-9. Trellany Boyd and Monica Long each had eight points to lead Bethel.

Weiicom*........46

Chicod ..........28

Jerry McKeel scored 12 points and Joey Braxton added 10 to spark Wellcome past Chicod, 46-28, Thursday in a junior high basketball game.

Otis Brinkley and Mike Mills each had eight points for

C3)icod (0-4). Wellcome is now 1-1 overall.

In the girls game, Melissa Gamer scored 10 points to lead Chicod to a 33-14 victory overOiicod.

Wellcome, now 4-1, was led by Climmie Harris with eight points. Chicod is now 1-0.

GCA.............28

St. Peter's 26

Greenville Christian ed^ past St. Peters in a junior high school ba^etball game yesterday, 28-26.

Thomas Taylor led Greenville with 12 points, while Jud Crumpler led St. Peters with 11.

In the ^rls contest, St. Peters rolled to a 29-13 win. Kim Bridges led St. Peters with 18, while Tammy Huggins had six to pace GCA.

By The Associated Press The Big Ten features the three-point goal for the first time this basketball season. The way Russell Cms is playing, however, its a cinch Purdue wwit have to use the long ^t too often.

One of the leagues most dominating inside players, the 6-foot-lO junior hit 12 slam-dunks Thursday night and scored 31 points to help the 20th-ranked Boilermakers rout the Wisconsin Badgers 8(^64.

You talk about blue-chip players, said Wisconsin Coach Steve Yoder. He just dominated us

Cross, averaging 17 points a game coming into the contest, also collected 12 rebounds, blocked five shots and intercepted several passes in his fine all-around performance.

Russell Cross is a good player, probably the most intense I have played

against, said Wisconsins 6-foot-ll Brad Sellers, who scored 24 points and grabbed 10 rebounds in his battle with the huskier Ooss.

The victory was Purdues 11th straight over Wisconsin, dating back to February 1977, and improved the Boilermakersrecord to 10-1.

The lead changed hands nine tim^ in the first seven minutes of the game before two baskets by Cross gave the Boilermakers a 21-17 lead.Purdue pulled to a 46-35 advanta^ at halftime, and the Boilermakers moved steadily ahead of the youthful Badgers after intermission.They took a commanding 73-60 lead on a stuff shot by Cns with 2:30 to

go.

In the only other action Thursday night involving the nations ranked teams. No. 2 Memphis State whipped St.

Taylor Gets AP Defensive Nod

NEW YORK (AP) -Lawrence Taylor of the New York Giants, who has become the prototype outside linebacker in the National Football League after just two seasons, was named Defensive Player of the Year today by The Associated Press.

Taylor, who was both the Defensive Rookie and Defensive Player of the Year following the 1981 season, received 34 of the 84 votes cast by a nationwide panel of sports writers and broadcasters, three from each NFL city.

Linebacker Ted Hendricks of the Los Angeles Raiders and defensive tackle Randy White of the Dallas Cowboys each received eight votes and linebacker Joel Williams of the Atlanta Falcons received six.

Other players receiving more than one vote were New York Jets defensive end Mark Gastineau and Dallas cor-nerback Everson Walls (5 apiece), Pittsburgh Steelers linebacker Jack Lamtert (4), safety Neal Colzie'of the Tampa Bay Buccaneers (3) and Cowboys defensive end Harvey Martin (2).

Taylor, a 6-foot-3, 237-pounder out of North Carolina, was the leagues leading linebacker in sacks with in 1982, throwing opposition quarterbacks for a combined

King Says No Fight

GOLDSBORO (AP)-Clyde King says hes willing to return as manager of the New York Yankees in 1983, iMit he says he doesnt plan on fighting to keep his job.

King talked Yankees boss George Steinbrenner out of the job once last season, with Steinbrenner opting to replace Bob Lemon with Gene Michael. However, on Aug. 5, Steinbrenner sent King from his job as adviser to the president to the bench.

This time. King says he wont attempt to dissuade Steinbrenner, and plans to let his boss make the first move.

A lot of people dont understand that, said King, a 40-year veteran of professional baseball. I remember listening to the radio one time when they were interviewing Red Auerbach after he had coached the Celtics to the world championship.

80 yards in losses this despite playing most of the season with a damanged right ankle. He also had 55 tackles (32 solos, 23 .assists), one blocked conversion, two forced fumbles and one interception.

A lot of things came easier last year, Taylor said. Nobody knew a whole lot about Lawrence Taylor. 1 got to go against a lot of backs and single blockers on blitzes (when he finished with 133 tackles and Wk sacks). It got harder.

Ive gotten to make other teams change their offensive plans. I consider that to be effective.

His interception came at a most opportune time on Thanks^ving Day in Detroit and on national television. He picked off a Gary Danielson pass at the Giants 3-yard line and sprinted 97 yards - the longest interception return of the season to beat the Lions 136.

He didnt start that game. He wasnt even supposed to play. He had a sprained right knee and a sprained right ankle. But he outraced the Lions speedy backs and receivers the length of the field for the games only touchdown.

Because of his speed as well as his strength, NFL observers have said Taylor could fit in just as well at defensive end. Some have even suggested he could make it as a tight end. The Giants are happy hes theirs, no matter what the position.

Bill Parcells, the Giants defensive coordinator and linebacker coach in 1982 and their head coaqh next season as Pay Perkins successor, was asked recently his philosophy about the draft, whether to pick for p(ition or to take the best available athlete.

Im sure Id go for the best on the board, no matter what, Parcells said. For example, when we drafted Taylor (second overall, behind George Rogers), we didnt really need a linebacker. But 1 dont think anybody will argue the fact that we made the right choice. If a guys that g^, hell start and in his first 15 minutes in training camp, I knew he was going to start.

STIHL*015 CHAIN SAW.

rM90 iilX-BJUIIIHIlL

Memorial Dr. 752-4122

Louis University 78-64 and No. 11 Nevada-Las Vegas s^ped Utah State 89-77 in overtime.

Top Twenty

Andre Turner scored 19 points to lead Memphis State over St. Louis. Turner, a

5-foot-lO, 150-pound point guard, also finished with two steals and two turnovers as the Tigers improved their record to 114).

Andre Craig, St. Louis

6-foot-lO junior coiter, was the games hi^ scorer with 21. points and hi^ rebounder with 15. Memphis States Keith Lee had 16 points and 14 rebounds.

That little guy Turner was the difference in the game, St. Louis Ck>ach Rich Grawer said after his 3-10 Billikins had lost to the Tigers for the second time this season. Hes really improved a lot since the first game.

Andre is getting into \x4iat were doing a lot better, said Memphis State Coach Dana Kirk. He got us into our running game - he really took the ball to the basket.

Danny Tarkanian made eight straight free throws in overtime to boost Nevada-Las Vegas over Utah State.It was the Rebels 11th victory without a loss.

With nine seconds left in regulation, UNLV had two chances for field goals, but couldnt convert, and the game went into overtime. But the Rebels took charge right from the start of the extra period, as Jeff Collins hit a free throw and Sidney Green a field goal with four minutes left in overtime to give UNLV a 77-74 lead. Tarkanian then hit his eight strai^t free throws to seal the Rebel victory

Others

In other action, Joe^ McGuiness hit both ends of a' 1-and-l with 14 seconds left to give Manhattan a 52-51 victory over Connecticut; Jim McLoughlin scored a career-high 32 points, including six three-point goals, as Temple defeated Rhode Island 103-94; Terry Youngbauer scored 24 points and sparked a second-half rally that carried Drake to a 67-63 victory over Southern Illinois; Minnesota center Randy Breuer and guard Tommy Davis scored 19 points each to lead the

Gophers 75-49 runaway victory over Illinois and Dan Ruland scored 16 points as James Madison turned back North Carolina-Wilmington 61-56.

Also, Terry Catledge scored 26 points and grabbed 15 rebounds to lead South Alabama to an 84-72 victory over North Carolina-Charlotte; Shelton Gibbs scored 18 points to lead St. Peters to a 69-53 victory over Siena; Texas A&M forward Claude Riley scored 21 points to lead the A^es to a 9762 drubbing of Angelo State; Mark Acres layup with one second left in overtime bn^e

a tie aiMl led Oral Roberts to a 73-71 victory over Kansas; Xavier McDaniel scored a game-high 29 points and pulled down 13 rebounds as Wichita State nipped West Texas State 89-88 and Wayman Tisdale scored 19 points and Calvin Pierce added 17 as Oklahoma ran past Baptist Colley 78-56.

Steve Harris scored 29 points and Ricky Ross added 20 as Tulsa charged back from a 15-point second-half (teficit to ed^ Indiana State 96-91 in overtime; Gaddis Rathels 19 points paced Northwesterns 69-64 victory over Michigan; Anthony Webster scored 12

points and shut down Creightons heralded freshman cmter Benoit Boi-jamin RT lead Bradley to a 74-65 win over the Bluejays; Michael McKennys 18 points led a balanced Illinois State attack that carried the Red-birds to a 72-62 win over New Mexico State; James McDonald scored six of his 14 points in a 19-4 ^urt that opened the seciMid half and sparked Smithem Cal to a 7467 victory over Arizona and Michael Cage scored 19 points and grabbed 19 rebounds as San Die^ State nriled to an 80-55 victory over St. Marys College.

Have You Missed Your Daily Reflector?

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If You Are Unable To Reach Him Call The Dally Reflector

752-3952

Between 6:00 And 6:30 P.M. Weekdays And 8 Til 9 A.M. On Sundays.

Tisdale Rebounds

University of Oklahoma forward Wayman Tidsale (23) wrestles a rebound from Baptist College center Jack Avent (52) during first

period action Thursday night. Oklahoma defeated the South Carolina team by a score of 78-56. (AP Laserphoto)

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Big Eight, Others Opposing Move To Pore Down Division i

OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) -A move within the NCAA to trim up to 45 Khooli from the auQciation1 Diviiion I lilt of big colleges could be doomed after the Big Eight Qmference and the American Council on Education publicly opposed it.

The proposal will be up for a vote next week at the National Collegiate Athletic Aiaocia-tions convention In San Diego.

Both groups said throo^ spokesmen they oppose the idea to drop 35 to 45 schools down to U Division II level, The Dally Oklahoman reported In today's editions.

All the Bli Eight schools and most of the education council members are in Division lA, the largest

schools within Division I. Their support would be.needed to pass the measure, the newspaper said.

An NCAA spokesman said the association has not met to consider a request to withdraw the proposal. It was schedided to meet today In San Diego.

The association drew up the restructuring proposal after

many of the nation's malor athletic programs requested the division be reduced to schools with ilmUar financial athletic program commitments.

The schools dro|^ would become Division II schools and lose the chance to compete for national titles against the biggest colleges. There are

S74 schools with basketball teams competing in Dlvliloit 1.

Dr. Robert Atwell, executive vice president of the Mhdaitlc council, said Its committee has asked the NCAA to withdraw the proposal. He said if it does not, council members will move to refer the proposal to the NCAA Select Committee on Athletic Problems for further study.

Dan Qlbbens, faculty repre-sentlve at the Univeril^ of Oklahoma, said the Big Eiiht hu prwared a resolution asking that the proposal be Ubled.

Atwell said a number of schools object to the councils restructuring proposalOklahoma City University Given Two Year Probation By NCAA

ras u

r

on I,

because H divides scbools by commercial criteria," including attendance and number of lebolarihlpi awarded.

He said the scholastic council's stand also wu In response to opposition number of non-football Ing schools In Divisin whose support the council Is seeking for a proposed strengthening of academic requirements for athletes.

Glbbeni said the Big Eight opposes the proposal because the league wants the re-structurtng combined with a move toward a federated" NCAA, in which each division would primarily decide Its own rules and regulations.

OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) -Oklahoma City University officials say they are trying to help their athl^ departmit comply with NCAA regulations, but their efforts didnt prevent the school from receiving a two-year probation for violations.

The National Collegiate Athletic Association announced Thursday in Mission, Kan., that a wide range of vlolationi, including a cash Christmas present to the schools basketball team, led It to assess Its second probation in two days. The NC;AA on Wednesday slapped Wichita State with a two-year penalty for violations in its football program.

Oklahoma City officials responded to the announcement with a thrsMentence statement and refused further comment.

The entire athletic program was put on probation, al-Umu^ most of the violations

occurred In the baskrtball program, said Charles Alan Wright, chairman of the NCAA Committee on Infn* tlons. He said most of the violations took place in 1979 andl9B0.

The NCAA penalty bars the basketball team ht)m playing in any televised or post-season games this year.

Oklahoma City University President Dr. Jerald Walker issued a terse statement Thursday night:

Internal management systems have been in place since the fall of 1900 to provide more effective monitoring of the university's Intercollegiate athletic proffams toward the end of upnolcung NCAA rules.

It must be remembered, however, that an individual can, if so determined, subvert the best monitoring program.

It is the institutions policy to conduct Its varsity athletic programs In full compliance with NCAA policies and regu-

latltms," the statemmt said.

An lnvesti|stlon of the Oklahoma aty program turned up vtolatlons Involving extra benefits to student-athletea and Improper use of funds, financial aid, transportation, entertainment, tryouts, scouting and certification of compliance. Wrtghtsald.

The NCAA said the university reported the violations, and that the school's former athletic director and former members of the basketball coaching staff were Involved.

In its report, the NCAA cited nine examples of extra benefits and Improper trans-portatlon supplied to Btudent-athletes or prospective student athletes between August 1979 and the summer of 1980. The NCAA said violations Involved credit given for commercial flights to and from the university, and automobile rides to and

Dolphins Remember Day Of The Snowplow

from the school.

The violators included the head basketball coach, assistant basketball coach and the head tennis coach.

A spokesman at the school said the head coach in question was Ken Trickey. who also wu the schools athletic director. He uid the assistant coach included in the Investigation was Gene Andruss and the tennis coach wu Henry Tryon.

The NCAA uid Trickey. now a coach at Century Hli School near Cairo, 111., also distributed a small amount of cash to the turn u a Christmas preunt In December 1979.

Norfhtflsttm

Boyi stand tnp

Cont Ovtrall W L W L Roanokt    BO    71

Plymouth    4 1    7 1

Tirboro    S 1    4 4

Bartia    XI    S3

Wiihtniton    IS    4 6

R.Rapldl    IB    IB

Edanton    14    6 4

Ahoakla    14    SB

Witliamaton    14    IB

QlrliStandlnfi

Conf. Ovaran W L W L 0 0

By The Associated Preu A blliurd

33-yard field Smith, a 3-0

a snowplow, a by John ictory for the

Snow Covortd Flold -

A' workman makea hii way up the atepi at Lambeau Field In Oreen Bay Thuraday afternoon aa a mixture of anow and freezing rain falla. The

atadlum will be the alte of Saturdaya National Football League playoff game between the Oreen Bay Packera and the St. Loula Cardlnala. (AP Laaerphoto)

IlllUlf

New England Patriots

It all happened on Dec. 12, and the Miami Dolphins arent about to forget that defut at Poxboro, Man. When the two teams meet Saturdsy In the first round of the National Football League playoffs, the Dolphins (7-2) don't expect a repeat of any of thou things.

Miami hu thrown down the tomahawk and uid, 'You beat us on a fluke up there in your snow garden; now come down here and play us on our fair field and let's SM what we can get done,"' uid Patriots Coach Ron Meyer, who ordered an attendant at the game to uu the snowplow to clear a spot from which Smith could kick. "1 think that's a tremendous challenge. I'm looking forward to it."

SCOREBOARD

Bowling

Shirts a Sklrti

W    L

Tar Landing Seafood... 47^    lOMi

Teamivs...............44    24

Dean Oil Co............42    26

Planters Warehouse    ... 38    29

The Lucky Strikes.....38    29

PacAttack............36    32

Plajnnates  .....34    34

OddOnes..............34    34

TANKIPNANAIU

by Jail Millar & Bill Hinds

Big Macs ........33    36

HalaS.................33    36 .

On Time...............32Vk    3BVk

Camelotlnn...........32    36

ComweUBuiiders 31    33

DalfMuslcCo..........30    31

The jokers  .......29    36

Family Affair  IS'    40

HotToTrot............24    44

Strike Wishers.........20    48

Mens hl|di game, Steve Shankle, 223 r men^s high series, Ken Sermons, 631; womens high game and series. Sue Holman, 236,664.

Thursday Night owls

Little Dippers   36Mi    20Mi

Team 46...............32

ComwetiBuiiders .....31

High Rollers...........30

Team 41...............30

TheE.T.'s..........28

Strikeout.............19

Three Steers...........m    37Mi

Men's hidi game and    series,

Danny Wooten, 197, 819; womens h^Jame and series, Joyce Cates,

Rac Boikttboll

AAALsagus

PCC...................31    34-86

Flamingo..............31    41-72

Leadmg scorers; PC-Calvin Home 19, Ken Hardy 17; F-Dennls Pitt 16, Kano Farrow 18.

HusUers...............26    2662

Pirates................21    14-83

Leading scorers: H-Danny Carmon 20. Lonnie Pay^ 19; P-Jesale Harris 17, Flo^ Sneed 14;

AA League

TRW..................30    47-77

Orady-Whlte 16    36-81

Leading scorers: TR-James Brewlngton 33, Haywood Montgomery 20; OW-Frank Brown 38.

'woomnuonai

Hall 12, Eric Woodworth S: W-MlkeKlnley 18, Trey Fuqua 16.

I

.^ew Jerssy    10    II

Wsshtngton    17    14

NewY(^    II    11

OsntralDlvlsiea Milwaukee    II    11

Detroit    11    16

Atlanta    15    17

Indiana    II    K

Chicago    tl    ID

develar

lit

170

I 110

II 1 I 1

DtvUion a    11    I    111

1?    II    4    160

II    11    7    171

14    19.,    I    141

ll.Loi/BiaMest

Coke

Taff

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laaiorUaiuo Cavaliers............    3342

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Leading scorers; C-ltepbon Holloffian IS, Orsji Davis 21; W-Tony Johnson S, Bflt ZadeRa 6.

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So are the Dolphins, who have not won a poatwaaon

Kmc lince the 1974 Super wl. On the other hand, New England, 5-4, hain't won In the Orange Bowl tn 17 yean.

Weve been atruullng of-fenilvely," aatd Dolpnini Coach Don Shula, especially lince we got back from the itiike. The elght-wuk layoff really hurt a guy like (quarterback David) Woodley, and we had a tough time getting untracked. Our performance last week agatnit Baltimore was our beat itnce we got back."

The Dolphtni beat Baltimore 34-7 last week. Their defeme moit Imprened Meyer.

"They remind me of those piranha flih that go after live meat when tti thrown tn the water," latd Meyer. "Thetr defenilve football team li as good ai youll see."

In other gamei Saturday, the Los Angelei Ralden, 8-1, host 4-5 Cleveland; Washington, 8-1, entertains Detroit, 4-5, and St. Louis, 6-4, li'at 5-3-1 Green Bay, On Sunday, Cincinnati, 7-8, hosti the New York Jeti, 6-3; San Diego, 6-3, li at Plttibur^, 6-3; Dillii, 8-3, Is at home against Tampa Bay, 8-4, and Minnesota, 54, hoiti Atlanta, alaoS4.

Many of the Chargera latd late In the leason that they were confident they could win their final two gamei to flnlih 7-2 and make sure they wouldnt be forced to play In a cold-weathar city. But, after falling to the Ralden In the leaion finale, San Diego must now travel to Pittiburgh, where the temperature lin't likely to be balmy. It also doein't figure to be u cold ai the mlnuii40 degree wind-chill factor the Chargers played In while losing the AFC champlonghip game last January at Cincinnati.

"We can't get Into an aerial war with them," warned

Rosnoke

Tsrboro

Bdsnton

Plymouth

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Bertls

Washington

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Tha Redskins passing game will be hindered by the Iom of Art Monk, who has a broken foot. StUl, the Skins had the beat record In the NFt and Datrolt hasnt won In Washington ...ever.

"The Lions may not be a at team," said Richie Pet-bon, Waihlngtoni defensive coordinator. But then, theyre not playing a gnat team either.

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The Dally Reflector

752-6166





Following Novel May Be Weak Point

ByFREDROTHENBERG AP Television Writer NEW YORK (AP) - "The Good Soldier on public televisions Masterpiece Theater Sunday ni^t, is true to the style and spirit of the Ford Madox Ford novel on which it is based. But that may be its downfall.

Some works come to life on the printed page and on television. This mie falls flat on the small screen.

Ford employed a technique that Alistair Cooke, the Masterpiece Theater host, describes as time-shifts. The story is not told in a linear fashion, or through flashbacks. Instead, it repeatedly jumps back and forth, offering different character perspectives of the same incident.

A reader can chew on this literary movement, but the TV viewer will find it jar-

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ring. Events seem to fly by in several directions, without enough opportunity for absorption.

The deficiencies of the program, an unusual "Masterpiece Theater offering in that it wraps up in one two-hour piece, are even more glaring ftrflowing the 13-part To Serve Thera All My Days. R F. De-Iderfields book succeeded wi TV because it offered a variety of interesting characters, amusing dialogue and engrossing conflicts.

"The Good Soldier is more of a mood piece, but without the kind of lyrical beauty that entranced viewers in Brideshead Revisited. Instead, it opens a window on a period of time and dispassionately profiles a class of people, whose mores and personalities seem too distant to interest American audiences.

European high society in the early 20th century, with its stilted manners and hypocritical morality, is the focus of The Good Soldier.

Two married couples, one British, one American, meet each year at a German health resort. They appear the embodiment of digiified

virtue, never drof^ing their guard (XT their pretension. But b^ind this facade is a web of infidelity, and the guilt that goes with living lies that satisfy {Hivate appetites and contradict public appearances.

On the surface, this has TV appeal, similar to Dallas, Dynasty or Peyton Place. But the characters never display enthusiasm. They continually make pompous speeches and rarely connect on any level.

It wasnt a miniwt we stepped; it was a prison, says John Dowell, wie of the husbands who, as the narrator, also provides his personal outlook throughout the program. John, played with wooden reserve by Robin Ellis, star of Poldark from several seasons back, strikes a mel-, ancholy tone.

His is a loveless marriage. His wife, Florence (Vickery Turner), has a bad heart. "Emotions should never be stirred, says her doctor. However, that doesnt keep

her from having an affair with Col. Edward Ashburnbam (Jeremy Brett), the good soldier of the story. Only hes not really good at all.

In fact, who) Ford finished the book in 1915, he wanted to name it The Saddest Soldier, expressing the lament of a man caught between desire and deterrent. But he was told by his publisher that such a title, coming during World War I, would be suicidal for sales. Hence the paradoxical

good sirfdier.

Asbbumhams character is established in an early fla^back. He takes advantage of a young common girl wboi the two are sharing a train compartment. It also seems he is being blackmailed because of some other indiscretion.

Still, his wife, Leonora (Susan Fleetwood), has hope. If he can love all these other women, he must be able to love me, too, she says.

Ultimately, he falls in love

with a young woman named Nancy (Elizabeth Garvie), who arrives late in the first hour and causes more coiq;)lingc<mflicts.

llie programs final words seem a.fitting farewell: Its beyond me, says John Dowell. Its all a daitness.

Ordered To Try Conciliation

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For complete TV programming Information, eonairit your weekly TV SHOWTIME from Sundays OaNy Reflector.

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PART II

4TAHMK,

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LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP) -Singer Connie Francis, making a state-by-state anti-crime campaign, has challenged lawmakers to pas's legislation to aid victims of violent crimes.

The 44-year-old performer, who was raped in a New York motel in 1974, called for mandatory sentences for people convicted of violent crimes and the removal of insanity and diminished capacity defenses.

im doing it on my own when I should be out singing and making a living, she told legislators Thursday. The ^ple are fed up with rhetoric.

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LOS ANGELES (AP) -Singer Helen Reddy and her estranged husband Jeff Wald have been sent to a conciliation service to try to settle their custody dispute over their 9-year-old son, Jordan.

The two were granted a preliminary divorce decree last September but still had to settle the custody issue and other matters before the 14-year marriage would be dissolved permanently.

Superior Court Judge Richard Lavine sent Ms. Reddy, 41, and Wald, her former manager, to the Family Mediation Conciliatory Service on Thursday.

Hugh Mclsaac, director of the service, said the agencys operations are confidential.

He said a couple meets with the service in an effort to iron out their differences. However, if they are unable to come up with a solution, they return to Superior Court where the judge will decide the issue.

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The DtUy Reflector, Greeuvllte, N.C.-Fridty, Januery 7,19C-15Blame Poor Day Care Center Hygiene For illnesses

By JOHN DOWLING Associated Pres Writo* CHICAGO (AP) - Sloppy hygiene in day-care centers is spreading intestinal diseases to children and their parents, and dnonstrates a need to go back to the basics of sanitation, a doctor says.

Dr. Stanley H. Schuman, whose findings appear in an article in todays edition of the Journal of the American Medical Association, said day-care attendance is a common thread to an outbreak of intestinal infections reminiscent of the presanitation days of the 17th century.

We are entering an era of unexplained diarrhea and dysentery in many children and their parents in the United States, Schuman said in a telephone interview.

adding that the problem is too wide^read to be solved by case-by-case treatment anddiagno^.

We ctont have enough vaccine to prevent -the ^read of infections in daycare facilities, he said. That, requires a reawakening of the consciousness of sanitation in day-care centers... We have to ^ back to the basics of sanitation.

Schum^ a professor at the Medical University of South Carolina in Qiarleston, S.C., cited several factors bdieved to contribute to the problem;

Day-care workers develop a casual, tolerant attitude toward frequent lapses in sanitary routines,^ even those as simple as washing hands.

Public health officials

tend to ac^t little clear-cut responsibility ot daycare operations, with regulations varying am<ig states or inadequate money for enforcenient of the rules.

-Day-care proprietors sometimes lack training in food4iandling.

Children enter and leave the centers in an erratic' pattern, ensuring maximum mixing of infected and susc^tible children.

Gatherings of diaper-age children present many opportunities for transmission of bacteria from fecal matter.

-Children under 6 sometimes c^rry infections that they transmit to their . parents witlwut showing any symptoms themselves.

According to figures released by the U.S. Department of Health and Human

Researchers Find Gene Changes In Cancer Cells

BALTIMORE (AP) -Chemical changes in the genes of cells that become cancerous may provide clues to how malignant tumors form, according to research published by two Johns

\

Find Health Status Good

WASHINGTON (AP) -The death rate for most Americans is dropping significantly, but young people are dying at greater rates because of fatal car accidents, murders and suicides, the government says.

Dr. Edward N. Brandt, head of the U.S. Public Health Service, on Thursday released a new report which he said shows the general health status of Americans is continuing its very healthy trend.

The report, Health, United States, 1982, noted a decline in the death rates for cancer, heart disease and stroke since 1950.

Early data for for 1980 showed that over 80 years the mortality rate dropped significantly for children between the ages of 1 and 14, adults between the ages of 25 and 63, and the elderly, the report said.    .

The state of health is good: thats what this report says, Brandt said in an interview. The general health status, as we measure it, is continuing its very health trend ... The people are beginning to involve themselves in improving their own personal health. But the death rate for those aged 15-24 has .been rising since 1976. Automobile accidents, murders and suicides account for three out of four deaths in that age group.

Auto accidents were responsible for two in five of the deaths among white youths in 1979, making them the leading cause of death. Homicides account for the largest proportion of deaths among blacks in the age groiq) - some 39 percent.

The motor vehicle accident rate for young whites is about twice as hi^ as that among young blacks, partly because of the higher socioeconomic status of young whites makes it more commonplace for them to have access to cars, the report said.

The report also said the gap between the death rat^ for young blacks and young whites is beginning to cwi-ver^ in part because of the decline in the number of homicides and non-motor-vehicle accidents among blacks. Meanwhile, fatal car accidents among whites are increasing.

Traditionally, deaths among young blacks have been far hi^r than among young whites.

Generally, the report showed Americans are tak-ing better care of themselves, opiitting coking and getting screened fw hi^ blood pressure.

Richard Schweiker, secretary of the Department of Health and Human Servkxs, said the report dem^rstrated American medical science is continuing its extraordinary progr^ in treating pe<^le after they get sick.

Hopkins Hospital researchers.

Alterations in the genes of cancer cells are particularly important because the genes carry the information that makes the cancer cell different from a normal cell, said Dr. Andrew P. Fein-berg, a post-doctoral fellow and co-author of the study published in this weeks issue of Nature.

Feinberg and Dr. Bert Vogelstein compared cancer cells and normal cells of five cancer patients. Four of the patients had cancer of the colon and the fifth had lung cancer that had spread to the liver.

Compared to normal cells, genes in the cancer cells from four of the five patients had significantly fewer groups of atoms called methyl groups attached to DNA, the basic molecule that encodes genetic information.

Genes for the human growth hormone and genes that help make hemoglobin, the molecule that carries oxygen in the blood, were isolated during the research because they normally are dormant in the lungs, liver and colon. None of these organs produce human growth hormones or hemoglobin.

The genes in the normal cells taken from these organs contained the usual number of methyl groups attached to the DNA - indicating this group of atoms keeps them dormant. But in four of the five patients, genes in the cancer cells were termed hypomethylated because they had fewer methyl groups.

In the patient whose lung cancer had spread to the liver, ie genes in the liver cancer cells had even fewer methyl groups than the genes from the lung cancer cells.

'The rearchers say this phenonomenon may explain why cancers grow progressively worse when they

spread to other parts of the body.

Hypomethylation also may explain why normal cells that do not produce hormones do so when they become cancerous.

Further research will be required to understand fully the significance of these changes in DNA methyla-tion, Vogelstein said.

One can be certain, however, that the elucidation of these and other genetic changes will be crucial in understanding cancer and eventually developing new methods of treating and preventing It.

Two Captured Prison Escapee

GASTONIA, N.C. (AP) -Two Gaston County men captured an escapee from the state prison unit in Dallas Wednesday, ending a statewide manhunt.

Tony Day and Steve Robinson found Edward Boone, 20, in the trunk of a car owned by Robinson's father, Joe. Boone had escaped Saturday.

When the men found Boone, they slammed the trunk lid and Robinson stood nearby with a rifle while Day summoned police. Mfhile they were waiting for police to arrive, Boone stuck a foot out of the cars trunk. Day said.

Steve shot his rifle at the ground, Day said. And he pulled his foot back in that trunk and stayed there until the police came.

Boone had been serving a five-year sentence for felonious breaking and entering and larceny.

The Greenville Fire-Rescue Department provides emergency medical services to GreenviDe citizens. For information on services, call 752-4137.

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Services, 7 millioo children were in day-care costers outside of their b(ne in 1961. Of those, 5.1 million were in private homes othor than their own and 1.9 million attended small and lai^ organized day-care coitors.

Burton Miller, a past president of the Pre-School Owners Association of Illinois aiKl a state delecte of the National Association for Child Care, agreed Thursday that potential for ctmtracting disease in day-care centers is a problem for children up to age 2, whose immune systems are not as developed as in older children.'

You cant take a child (under 2 years (dd) and put him in a care center and have him be given the same protection as at home, Miller said, recommending that day-care centers use dis

posable eating utensils to reduce the risk of infectk.

A 1961 study found tiiat 25 percit of the children entering day-care caters came down with diarrhea. The rate declined to 10 percent in subsequent weeks, but children ran the same chance of getting diarrhea if they entered a new center,

the study showed.

Concern ov&r the problem has prompted physicians to organize the First International Symposium on Day-Care-Associated Infections. The meeting, scheduled for June 1984 in Minneapolis, will include doctors, day-care operator, parents and pitrfic health

officials.

While basic sanitary practices such as washii^ hands can help cut down on

the incidence of diarrhea, there is less that can be (ke about other infections, Schuman said.

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eroMtlMUt

Plan A Record Turnout For Demo Convention

Drlaklnf tad Tmbi In tht put mm yun. 80 itatM havt ndud thiir minimuiB diialdaf un. And thif yur at laaat M othir lUtM wUl ooniidir dolaf tin mbm. taoralary of Traniportation Draw Ltarli and Hialth and Humaa SarvioM Soerttary Riehard Schwiikar havt lUj^ portad maidnf 81 tha lafal drlakiaf afa ia all lUtai, and thay hava uaad Mina Mfhtaaiaf atatiatico to back up thalr poaltioa. In 1881,88 paroaat of thamon than 86,000 fktalitiaa Uakad to druak drlviaf in* volvad pMpla afad 18 to 84. But a laoaat atudy conduotad by tha Univaraity of Miehlf an ahowad that thia fifura can ba raduoad by 80 paroant la tha fliat yaar aftar a atata raiaaa Ita dfiaklBf afa to 81.

DO YOU KNOW - Whleh Conatltutloaal Amaad* mant ftva 18>yaar^da tha vota, and whaa wu It ratiflad?

WIONIIOAY'I ANIWIft - Rlihard Minan wu tha laat FraaMant to hava baan an alaaiad Vlaa RraaMant.

1441    avM.iuiNi

WASHINGTON (AP) -Mora deiafataa than ever bafora - S.8I3 ~ ara achad-ulad to ittand tha 1984 Dain> ocratic Natkmal ConvanUoo, according to official party ftguraa.

Spokaaman for tha party uld tha Incraaaa In (telegataa wai mada to allow for aatibliihlng a bloc of more than SOO uncommittad dala-gata Ilota, which will ba filiad by alactad and party offlclali. In I960, 3,331 dala-gatu attandad tha Damo-cratlcconvantlon.

But whtla Incraailng tha dalauta total by 992, party offlclali ihj^y cut back on altamatai. lliat maani tha combinad total In 1964 will ba 5,242 dalagataa and altamatai comparad with 8,436 In 1980.

Tha allocation of dalaptai li lubjact to approval by the Democratic Natlonil Com-mlttw whan It maati In WiihlngtonFab.5.

Population and how itatai voted In tha lait three prail-dantlal alacttoni ware major

factors In determining the allocation of dalagataa. Since Republican praildentlal candidatai wera big winnari In 1972 and i860, tha alMtkm with the moat influence on the allocatloo of delagatas wu 1978 whan Southamar Jimmy Carter wai tha victor.

Carter'! win ovar Republican Ouald F(Htl wu aided when tha Georgian carried every Southern atata but Virginia.

Southern itatas will aand 1,037 dalagatu to the 1984

convention, u Increau of 291 over 1980. Midwaat lUtu will continue to have tha largest bloc of dalagatu with 1,095, an tncreau of 121 over their 1980 ihara.

It li undaar what the geographic ahlft might mean to the several aspirante for the 1984 Democratic presi

dential oomlnaUoo.

Two Soutbamari - former Gov. Reubln Aikaw of Florida and San. Eroaat F. HoUingi of South Carolina ~

are ruiulni hard, and a third - Sen. Dale Bumpan of

Arkansu ~ li thlnklog about enterln| the race.

But San. John Glano of

Ohio, who became a utional hero 10 yean ago whan ha wu the first Amarlcu to orbit tha Earth, also la regarded u potentially a strong candidate In the South.

California will have the targast delagatloo with 345 votu at tha 1984 convention

- a factor that looms large in tha planning of Sen. Alan Cranston of California. Cranston plan to announce his candidacy for preiidanl on Feb. 2.

California had 308 vdu at the l8n convention.

No state loau dalegatu under tha new aUocatkm.

PEANUTS

Chain Offaring $10,000Rward

WINSTON.SALEM, N.C. (AP)-A 110,000 reward hu been offered by tha Steak and Ale restaurant dialn in connection with a double murder and armed robbery at lU Winston-Salem restaurant Dec. 23. Police uld Nveral luds had baan re-

I FELTSMAETUIHIN I UlOKE UP THIS M0RNIN6..

SUT THEN IT 5TARTIP 10 SNOUIMILE I UIA5 UMLKIN610 SCHOOL...

All THOSE shouflakes

COOLEPOOWHMTWAIN!

Millions Of Birds Plague Rich Square

RICH SQUARE, N.C. (AP) -r Millions of birds hava flocked to northeastern NoMh Carolina for the wintnr, but residents are moved to curiu rather than poetry,

"There are so many back here that whan they conu In, the sky Is black," Rich Square raitdant John Morris said.

Morris lid hs had used fireworks and bottle rockets

ThrM Wracks Invaitlgatad

An utlmsted 14,000 damage ruulted from thru traffic coUlsloM tnvutlgatad by

damage resulted from a 5:30 p.tn collision on Washington Sireet, 125 fut north of the 12th Strut Intersection, Involving ciri drivtn by George Petterion Shamble of 104B Howell St. and John Andrew Karinak of 3002 Sherwood Drive.

Police, who charged Shamble with driving under the Influence and driving without I IlctflM, Mtlmatad damatt at 11,500 to the Shamble car and 11900 to the Karinak vehicle.

An utlmated 1800 damage ruulted to uch of two cere involved In a 8:03 p.m. mil-hap at the Interieetlon of Arlington C^'Mlevird and Commerce hUx.t

Drtveu oi vcMclu involved wen toenilfled u Kristina Ann Olsen of Dover and Srtki Osrlens Tui of 2710 Edwards St.

Vehicle* driven bv Larry Jamas Staton of 105A Emma^ Plau sod Zella McNair Vincint of 1007 Co^ Uand Road eoUldid about 9:40 a.m. on tha Stan-tonsbura Road, 300 feat wut of tha Moya Boulovird in-tariictlon, eauilng an utlmatad 1300 damagi to eachoflhetwovehtolu.

Santancad For Daoth Of hoby

In an attampt to acaro tha squawking btrdi from hli property. "It sums to make them move over lome," he uld.

Biologists uy the flocks includs grscklu, cowblrdi. starlings and rad-wingad blackblrdi that mlgrata from northern aruu and stay In tha South until March.

About 30 million to mlllton birds turn up In North Cirollns uch yur, splitting Into flocks that cauu problems for scoru of com-munltlu.

This yur, tht birds have utabllihed winter (luarteri in a 25-acre wooded tract on thw louthwait side of Scotland Nuk. Efforts to banish them In put years hava ruulted only In chang

I

Friday-Saturday-Sunday 4:00 P.M. to Closing

CHARLOTTE, Mich. (AP) - The father of in ll-diy-old girl who died of pneumona without medical trutmant hi(H bun untenced to a )ur in Juii attar being convlctad

Alaskan Crab Legs

lLb..Baktd Potato, Salad

ui involuntary manslaughter.

ult Juyi Hudson iK'mln g ilso fliuriday or

Circuit

rh rcd Kannath Suly, who Hiiid he pri^ over nil sick d.iughter, Carl, to undergo

counseling,

The judge give Seily's pi'ubation agent authority to

.si'c (hat Sealy'i future children get pro^r medical

core.

Sealyi wifi, Bonnla.li due to dellvtr thalr thlra child any day. Thalr first child, Joihua, died March 20 of i malignant tumor foUowtng court-ordaradiurgiry.

6

99

Shrimp

Siuttod In Gsurlic Buttor Baktd Potato, Salad

Seafood

{s5 OyslerBar 2

City maps ire svillible itlii Enginurlng sod IniputlOM OepirUntnt. Cill 7824137 tor in-tormitlon.

FMdtga YieN.OitiMSt. lltMAM-

lotooms

CtlMtatipMlalMe

t^ColwriAaqnhlaa A9wImn AiWtM

FNANK A ERNEST

HAVfAFlT?

..    i-Mi

(MaMAM whautNiiwM '

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

DIO LOU READ OHERE THE BI&WALNUr TECH TEACHERS SOT A SIX PERCENT INCREASE INTHEIR OONTMCTS

Bl^ I SniX 1HINK1HBI

me A BIS MtmKE in

ENINS ^TW^-nvE VEAR6.I





Ctonwotd By Evgtm Sbtffer See Drugs Link

Aimnea m 11--- m _    n_______

To Corruption

MX068    17 liakiitem

ITIeddioes IfSovietrange IRevcrace aSqieriative

I Rnfayor Suia 12 Home Ulsalkmed MAries IS Worth WForvteU IS Affirmed

suffix aitetgiri 5iCBrtoonlir. a Old auto a Cammerdals 57 Dae 19 DOWN IFligfat

aHymodose 2Beameor 21

rating org.

SGooqr stuff 24 Prise 2SJokes .

27 Not neat 29 Broadway

musical a Central ideas KFrait 37 San-,Italy ttResortisle 41 Archaic 43U4)oat HCompeteitf 4S Toms aside

tOgle 9 Play II Avid uae

17 Lumber worker

Vigoda

Answer ta yesterdays paide

mm isa um

\Wm IQS QSJ]

'ssHQaa [laasaM Q3 aaa SQii[^ QS!;7^Qaaii ass saa mm nscBsaaa hoqh iisa -mx asaxss aauiQaa mm XUS sasa Qiiajj mm fsai aaaa

Ai^ sohitka time: 21 min.

SIhm    ttCirais

adornment worter 4Blaei>endl nOmdetbaae 5 Coup-    22 Average

I Current unit 21 Qgar 7Repd, remnaid withoff 21 Buffalo

hockey team 21 Hamer 9lGott-Dank (IteklKkxi)

32 Bottle contents,

SflHMtiings

33 Down-under bird

II Weep 31 Nomads 3SPadmger 39 Lower 41 Disney dog IfTinqani 45 Like some dieeses HE^isnare Gotcha!

1-7 siActorChaney 51 Turf

CRYFTOQUIP

QCU BPA LNSPBJL WSPA XSYU XNL CSL YSJLQ WNQU

Yesterdays Cryptoqaip - PLUCKY POOL PLAYER POCKETS PROFITS FROM FIRST TOURNAMENT.

Todays Cryptoquip due: Sequals I.

The Cryptaqnip is a simple substitution cipher in which each letter used stands for another. If you ttdnk that X equals 0, it wiU equal 0 ttiroughout the puixle. Single letters, short wwds, and words using an apostrophe can ^ve you clues to locating vowels. Sdutkm is accompUdied by trial and error.

019S2 King Fmmnw SyndicaM. me.

FORECAST FOR SATURDAY. JAN. 8.1983

from the Carroll Righter Institute

ASHEVILLE, N.C. (AP) -Wilkes County officials are iq)set with a U.S. attorneys handling of a probe into a posside connection between international drug trading and corruption of pdblic officials in western North Car-dina.

Charles Brevo*, U.S. attorney for the Western IXs-trict of North Cardina, said a federal grand jury is probing a possible link betvren voter fraud and intematioial drug trafficking in the area.

Brewer said there is evi-dmce that drug trading in Wilkes County may be re-, lated to comqition among public officials.

Hes put a dark cloud over all elected officials in Wilkes County, said North Wilkesboro Mayor Neil G. Cashion. If he has something on any elected officials, he ought to cone forward with it. I think it is a farce and completdy pditical. Max Bauguss, chairman of the county Board of Commissioners, also expressed his concern.

I dont feel that by letting the accusations jist hang in the air he is properly conducting his investigation, Bauguss said. I dont know of any problems with any elected officials, but if he has something he ought to go ahead and pursue it.

The directors of a special task force assigned to the case met for the first time Wednesday in Asheville,

Brewer saW.

The investigation has grown out of a federal grand jury investigation in Parkersburg, W. Va. That grand jury indkted 15 people, including two Wilkes County men, on drug and tax evasion charges.

Brewer said be has reviewed the information compiled by the West Virginia grand jury and that it includes allegations of drug trafficking, puWic cor-nq>tk)n and corpcK^te involvement in drug transactions.

Brewer said the task fmxe directors include himself, Ferris R. Bond, a ^ial prosecutiMT with the U.S. Department of Justice; two assistant U.S. attorneys and the agents in charge of the Western District offices for the Internal Revenue Service, the FBI, the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms.

Bond assisted in Uk West Virginia investigation. Hiat probe has been moved, at the Justice Departments request, to Asheville. Bmd has declined comment on the probe.

Brewer also has met several times with Michael Ashbum, district attorney for the 2^ District, and said that Ashbum has cooperated in beginning the investigation. But Brewer said no state agencies would be involved in the task force.

lY CHARLES GOREN AND OMAR SHARIF

1963 Tribune Company Syndicate. Inr^

SLAM INTO REVERSE

GENERAL TENDENCIES: This is a good day to look over your surroundings and make plans for improvement. Devise quicker ways to handle chores. You have a good chance to gain greater success now.

ARIES (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) Make plans to gain your finest aims. Find out what clme ties expect of you. Keep poised and smne at ail times.

TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May ^0) You can now develop good ideas by studying events in newspaper! and magazines. Use tact in a communication.

GEMINI (May 21 to June 21) Express your talents to one in authority. Showing increased affection for loved one brings excellent response.

MOON CHILDREN (June 22 to July 21) Take steps to coq>erate more with close ties. Study new project that could bring greater success.

LEO (July 22 to Aug. 21) There is much work ahead of you so waste no time in accomplishing your tasks. Avoid one who is always asking for favors.

VIRGO (Aug. 22 to Sept. 22) Stay within your budget if you go out for amusement ot you will regret it later. Follow advice of experts.

LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct 22) Handle routine chores early in the day so yull have time fw recreation later. Be more outgoing at a group affair.

SCORPIO (Oct 23 to Nov. 21) Good day to study your monetary position and figure out a sensible way to improve it. Take it easy tonight

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) Make needed changes in your surroundings and improve the quality of your life. Make this a most productive day.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 20) Making plans early in the day to gain your pwsonal goals is wise. Take time tonight for proper recreation.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 21 to Feb. 19) A good day to engage in recreational activities that appeal to you. Show more affection to family membera.

PISCES (Feb. 20 to Mar. 20) Plan how to make your future brif^tor., Listen to what co-workers have to suggest Strive fw more hairiness.

IF YOUR CHILD IS BORN TODAY ... he or she wiU be one of those brilliant young parsons who can communicate well with others. Teach to handle money wisely and to be more considerate o others. Dont nei^ect religious training early in life.

The Stars impel they do not cmnpel. What you make of your life is largely up to you!

1983, McNaugfat Syndicate, Inc.

Vice-Chancellor IsRecommended

Neither vulnerable. South deals.

NORTH J86 710743 0KQJ5 AAK WEST EAST #1032    #K75

7KJ986    7Q52

01032    0 4

#98    #076543

SOUTH #AQ94 7A

0A9876 #J102

The bidding:

Senth West North East 10    Pass    1    7    Pass

1 #    Pass    2    #    DUe

Pass    Pass    3    0    Pass

3 #    Pass    4    #    Pass

4 7    Pass    5    0    Pass

6 0 Pass Pass Pass Opening lead: Nine of #.

By far the best performance at the recent World Bridge Olympiad in Biarritz was by Lew Stansby and Chip Martel, two young West Coast experts. They won the Open Pairs and finished a close second in the team event.

Stansby and Martel use natural methods. On this deal, they reached an excellent slam that was missed by the forcing club pair at the other table. Stansbys bid of two clubs said nothing about the suit-it was simply a

A grea group...oT a great

Sturdily built ond softly cushioned, this rustic group would be o plus to any fomily room.

Framed m solid wood for durobility, ond smartly tailored in a center-mofched decoroior print.

CHAPEL HILL, N.C. (AP) - University of North Caro-lioa-Chi^ Hill ChanceUor Christo^ C. FOrtham 01 has reGommended the appointment of Dr. Farris W. Womack as the schools vice chancellor for business and finance.

Womack has been director of the Arkansas Department of Finance and Administration since July 1981, while 00 leave from his administrative and teaching positions with the University of Arkansas.

I

forcing action. Easts double actually helped North-South -Martel was able to pass to allow his partner to further describe his hand and Stansby could show the quality of his diamonds with a jump raise. Cue-bids then got North-South to their excellent slam.

the hand is simple if trumps are 2-2, but the more likely division is 3-1 and Martel adopted a dummy reversal to allow for that possibility. He won the club lead in dummy and crossed to the ace of hearts. A trump to the king provided the entry for a heart ruff, and declarer gave the enemy a trick by leading a low spade to dunv: mys jack and Easts king.

East returned a club, and declarer ruffed another heart. The table was entered with the queen of trumps and dummys last heart was ruffed with the ace of trumps. Declarer'ruffed his last club low on the table and drew the outstanding trump with the diamond jack. The ace and queen of spades took the last two tricks.

As declarer remarked at the time, his line of play was quite sound, it would have failed only if clubs had divided 7-1, or if spades had split 5-1 - both remote possibilities.

The Daily Reflector, GnenvUle, N.C.Friday, Jaouary 7,

TKOAILY

REFlfCTOR

Classified

Advertising

Rates

752-6166

3 Line Minimum 1-3 Dtys.. 45* per line per diy 4# Oeya.. 42* perline per day 70rMore

Days.....40* per line per day

ClaesHted Dispiey

*2.75 Per Col. inch Contract Rates Available

DEADLINES Classified Lineage DeadHnes

Monday Friday 4 p.m.

Tuesday Monday 3 p.m.

Wednesday.. T uesday 3 p.m. Thursday. Wednesday 3 p.nv

Friday Thursday 3 p.m.

Sunday.........Friday noon

ClassHled Display Deadilnea

Monday.........Friday noon

Tuesday Friday 4 p.m.

Wednesday .. Monday 4 p.m. Thursday Tuesday 4 p.m. Friday.... Wednesday 2 p.m. Sunday... Wednesday 5 p.m.

ERRORS

Errors must be reported immediately. The Daily Reflector cannot make allowance for errors after 1st day of publicatlbn.

THE DAILY REFLECTOR reserves the right to edit or releel any advertisement submitted.

PUBLIC

NOTICES

NORTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF PITT The undersigned having ouallfied as Executor of the Estate of LEWIS C TEBEAU, deceased, late of Pitt County, North Caroiina, this is to notity aii persons having claims aglanst said estate to present them to the undersigned Executor on or before the 27th day of June, 19S3, or this notice will be plead in bar of their recovery. All persons in^ted to said estate will please make immediate payment to the undersigned Executor.

This 17th day of December, 1W2. WACHOVIA BANK & TRUST COMPANY. N A P. 0. Box 1747 Greenvillle.NC 27134 Executor of the Estate of Lewis C. Tebeau, Deceased Gaylord. Singleton, AAcNaily & Strickland P O. Box 545 Greenville, NC 27834 Attorneys at Law

December 24,31,1982; January 7,14, 1983

NOTICE OF EXECUTOR NORTH CAROLINA PITT COUNTY The undersigned AAarjjaret Blount Harvey and F. L. Blount, Jr., having qualified on December 10, 1982 as Co-Executors of the Estate of F. Leighton Blount, Sr., late of PIN County, this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate to present them to the undersigned Margaret Blount Harvey and F. L. Blount, Jr., in care of White, Allen, Hooten, Hodges 8, Hines, P.A., 106 South McLewean Straet, Kinston, N.C. 28501, on or before June 24, 1983, or this Notice will be pleaded In bar of their recovery.

All persons Indebted to the estate are requested to make Immediate payment to AAargaret Blount Harvey or F. L. Blount Jr., in care of White, Allen, Hooten, Hodges 8i Hines, P.A., 106 South AAcLewean Straet, Kinston, N.C. 28501.

This the 24th day of December, 1982.

ESTATE OFF LEIGHTON BLOUNT, SR

AAargaret Blount Harvey and F. L. Blount, Jr., Co-Executors WHITE, ALLEN, HOOTEN, HODGES & HINES, PA 106 South AAcLewean Straet Kinston, N.C. 28501 December 24,31,1982; January 7,14, 1983

NOTICE OF DISSOLUTION OF AAAC GOWAN'S SCOTTISH AAANOR INC

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that Articles of Dissolution of AAac Gowan's Scottish Manor Inc., a North Carolina corporation, were filed in the office of the Secretary ot State of North Carolina on the 16th. day of Oecamber, 1982, and that all creditors of and claimants against the corporation are required to present ttieir respective claims and demands immediataly in writing to the corporation so that It can proceed to collect its assets, convey and dispose of its properties, pay, satisfy aiw discharge its liabilities and obligations and do all other acts required to liquidate its business and affairs.

This 22nd. day of December, 1982. AAac Gowan's Scottish AAanor Inc.

1407 E. 4th Street Greenville, N. C. 27834 W. I. Wooten, Jr., AHorney Greenville, N.C. 27834 December 24,31,1982; January 7,14, 1983

NOTICE Having q^ualffiad as Administratrix CTA of tha estate of Joie^ Hebar Cobb late of Pm Coun ty. North Carolina, this Is to notity all parsons having claims against the estate of said deceased to present them to the undersigned Administratrix CTA on or before July 1,1983 or this notice or same will' be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate please make Immediate payment. This 2Sth day of Decmbar, 1982. AAaryl^Cobb Ro 1, Box 158 Fountain, N.C.

Administratrix CTA ot the estate of Jof^ Heber Cobb, deceased.

Dec. 31,1982; Jan. 7,14,21,19S3

NOTICE Having qualified as Executrix of the estaite of Walter AAolic late of Pitt County, North (^oDna, this Is to notify all parscm i having claims against the estaf said dacaasad to prasant them to the undersign Executrix onor before July 1,'9*3or this notkeor same will be pleaded in bar of ttiair recovery. All persons indebted to said estate please make Immediate payment.

This 29th day of Dactmber, 1982. AnnaF.AAofic 240 Windsor Road Greenvilla, North Carolina 27834 E xacutrix of lha astate of Waltar AAolic, dacaasad.

Dec. 31, 1983; January 7, 14, 21, 19S3

007 SPECIAL NOTICES

BAKER'S BARBER Shop, betvMen Greenville and Grimesland. Hair cut. >4.00. Call 758-1723._

010 AUTOMOTIVE

WANTED nice, clean used cars. reasonably priced. Phone 756 6763.

Oil Autos For Sals

JEEPS, CARS, TRUCKS

Undar S100 avallabla at local gov-arnmant sales. In your area. Call (refundabla) 1-619-569-0141. txlension 1504 for directory on how to purchase. 34 hours

SELL YOUR CAR the National Autofinders. Wayl Authorlied Dealor In ritt County. Hastings ^d Call 758-0114.______

1978 LoMANS, cruise, tilt wheel, power staorina and brakes. Mutt tell. S2950. 1977Cadillac DaVllla, all powar, laathar intarior. S4650. 756 9318 days; 756-1542 nights

013

Buick

1977 REGAL BUICK, ona owner,

60-40 saat, alaclric windows, air condition, tilt wl^, good condition

1979 BUICK RIVIERA Astro roof; powar windows, steering, brakes, seats; air, AM/FM starao with tape. New tiras. NADA ratall 18975, wOl sacrifica for *7450. 7S6-2I48 trom9to5,

014

Cadillac

1975 FLEETWOOD CADILLAC 69,j00mne*Tt1995,752-5334

1980 SEVILLE, Silvar-gray, DIatal. extra nice, low mileage. Call 756 oM.iitgrsj.a.am,_

015

Chsvrolst

WANTED ECONOMICAL transportation In compact or regular tiza car. Age not Important at condition. 1974 or newer. 75-4415.

1972 CHEVROLET $450. Call 750

1974 VEGA station wagon. Clean.

1977 MALIBU CLASSIC, 4 door,

iffpdfd .taM:7a.iifi

1979 CHEVROLET AAalibu Estate Station Wagon. Full power, 41,000 miles, axcanant condition, 1 owner.

1979 CHEVROLET, straight drive, 6 cylinder, good conditio. *2750.

19M CHEVETTE. 4 door, straight snift, air, axcellant condition. SOO or best otter. 756-7*06 or 756-5S96._

tiac Buick, Tarboro. 133-6156,

19*0 IMPALA Olatel Station Wagon 3 soatar, 59,000 miles. *4500. 757

im.

190, CHEVEHE.

door, air conditioner, r^w,,w rw,, .. blMHflf    (^11)    7    mi,

018

Ford

FORD AAAVERICK, 1974, air, automatic transmission, 4 door, good condition *900.746-6146

FORD THUNDERBIRD, 19*1, AM-FM starao, flit, cruise. Price negotiable. Call 758-5378 or 756-4914

1969 FORD, Fair condition, good

first, 7.a.:0fcfe

1969 MUSTANG Good condition, must tell. *1100 or best offer ZLlZfift

197* FORD THUNDERBIRD AAA/FM stereo caMotta. Excellent condition. S3400. Excallant condl

ti9h,7a-.3a5,

1979 T-BIRD Excallant condition. *5.000. Cll 752 2639

I9t0 FORD FIESTA, taka w

msntL

p*y

020

Msrcory

1973 CAPRI Runt good. *800. Call

74fca36,-_

021

(Mdsmobils

1973 CUTLAS SUPREME Good condition. 355-3733.

1974 OLDSMOBtLE Vista Curlier

, '^S?.'go}i**0.''

7S3 2756

1982 OLDSMOBILE CutlaM Sta tionwagons and Sedans. Several colors. I tlonwaponj

colors. Lugaaga rack tionwagon), AM/FM starao, tilt, dMti. 27 miles per gallon. $7950. Call Mr. Whitehurt.78fii43,

- (sta starao, ^cylse,

022

Plymouth

IoTpLYMOUTH ARfi^, 2 door, automatic transmission, cfaan,

good <9ffdit.9ikAftr 6,    

023

Pontiac

^t^L^all'7M-?54o\thMM

sad ? W. M* for Ppbyt Moyifm...

1978 SUNBIRO, sliver, vinyl top, V6, air, power staarlna^ manual

powar

i9r7tm

ISt

024

Foroign

MG MIDGET, 1972. New ang top, paint and Interior. S1800. :

RABBIT, 1910, air, sunroof, carefully driven and maintained. Runt llxa new. *3975 na^iaMa. 756-fWlg:.Z.-MH.

VOLVO GL 19*1. 14,990 _ml^, tlT^r, 4 door toden, AM-FM cassatto, vokwr Interior, sunroof, windows and locks. t12,9H.

power w

972 TOYOTA CORONA sta-tlonwagon. Autemetlc, air, radial tlrf*,ilWdr Ottf gffST. 7H3t*l

1973 MG MIDGE^T, new transmission, brakes and front and UM

nlsslon,

elLz

1977 TOYOTA COROLLA, good condlflon, new peTnf, *2100. ^11 dSYf 753-39 firlfeffiiafliri,_

1979 OATSUN 28SZ, low mllet, 5

spaed, excallant condition. Call R^ Whitahurst at Don Whitehurst Pentlec-BulcKTyboro, 823-6156.

1979 TOYOTA Corolla SR5, hsf-chback, AM @6,5 Mead, air, 56,000 miles. *3500. Phone?5^._

sun roof. ,

oof, good condMion. Priced to

sail. Call 758 3263 after 5pm._

1910 TOYOTA CELICA AA6/FM. air, good condition. Need to sail.

Cefi    __

1981 DATSUN IsaZX, I owmr, Immaculeta condition, 5 speed. Call Raid Whitehurst at Don ^itahurst PffptitcBvttilL.Iirb9-gi maSL

19S1 TOYOTA COROLLA 5 ipaad, AM/FM, air conditkmlna, 4.660 miff, 4    _

032 BoatsForSots

SORRY YOU MISSED our De comber specials but It's not too lets to make us an otter on a I9S3 spilboat. RB Sailor, Highway 264

gft,7?#4MLZZ_

034    Campar* For Salt

Toooo^BuTTSSnS^jSSS^

Volunteer, Tulty loaded. Xair 756-imftmhglrtllfl,-

034 Campsrs For Sals

TRCRTK COviRS - All siies, c Leer Fibergless end Sportsman tops. 250 unlH tn stock Orients. Ralelah. N C 34-im._

WANTED, College graduat^Sr sales position. Bonuses, no trev-etlng, and an opportunity lor e very rewording future. Sena resume to PO Box 3#7, GreenvMle,NC 27S34.

036 Cyclas For Salt

71 jM YAA4AHA In excelient condition. Motor ust overtveuled. 7?7-74

1*7 HONDA XL17S. low mileage. Good condition. Helmet Included. *375 or best otter. 756 3*45.

1977 HONDA Goidwing GL1000. Windiamer and stereo. Excellent condition. *1*50. After S. 75* 2*07

1**0 COACHMAN *x2*. self contained, *il.(X. Cell 752 500S.

1*S1 DRI2S SUZUKI tSOO. will consider beet otter After 6 cell Z#4376.btfor 6.756^

250 SUZUKI, 1*1 GS, electric start, nrtany extras and helmets Included. Selling due te time to yeer, **50 retail, will let go for *700 or best otter. Cell etter r>5*-4742._

039 Trucks For Sals

1*73 CMC VAN V*, eutomatic, power steering, elr. captain chairs, Intartor carpafed. *1200. 75* 1749. 1*76 CHEVY BLAZER Raal good condition. *3500. Days 7562*2*; nights 756-8771.

1*80 CHEVY BLAZER Sllvarado Loadad. t*200. Days 756-2*29, nights ZM-8771    ^

1*81 CHEVY custom 10 deluxa. 6 cylindor, stral(t drive, long bed. 16.9W.m|ly*.H,fa.75|1660

19S2 CHEVROLET SIO V6, eutometic, AM/FM, long bad. like B8y.64K>.7j6-74il_

040

Child Cart

CHRISTIAN MOTHER would like to koM children In her home. Any ay,^^ens Trailer Perk area. Cell

WILL KEEP CHILDREN in my home. HIgnwey 43 South, between Jake Elk's Grocery and Cox Crossroads. 355^._

046

PETS

ADORABLE half Garman Shapard

AKC GOLDEN RETRIEVER pup las, born Thanksgiving. Phona

Si

KC REGISTERED SIBERIAN iuskypuBPtes. *100. 753-7164

AKC WHITE (3ERMAN Shepherd PUP. Must sale. All shots. 752 77to.

BASSET HOUND PUPPIES, AKC registered, tri-colored, beautiful and haalthy, 3 waeks old. Put some money down to save yours now. *175. 77* 4811,

BLACK CHOW puppy for salt. Cell 355-635*

DRASTICALLY REDI Cairn Terrier pupmes week* old. *71 tSt^TO.

OUCEO AKC 3 males

EXPERT DOG Obedience training.

FEMALE Dobarman, brown/rust, m yaar old, spayed, very good

auar^^immvfi

GREAT DANE pups. AKC *75 to *IOO.Call7S6-it3lor75

LZifcHZL

ONE DOBERMAN PINCHER, champion blopdllna, 6 woaks old, msH,    tttff    f-_

051

HtlpWanftd

BABYSITTER WANTED days antf/ytytaiPB 7si 0493

BOOKKEEPER NEEDED for full tima work. Must have experience with road mileage and tax. Thosa luallflad or Intarasted call 752-6124

y through Friday.

BRODY'S has opaning tor full tima nif you llko fothlons, llko

_________

Brody's, PlttPlgza, 3to6p,m

slaspari

paopio and want Intarssting |ob. Good company benatr and pleasant.

naat

Must

Apply

CHOOSEY SECRETARY *10K plus. National company has Im-madlata naad for parson with 2 yaars sacratarlal sxparlanct or graduate of buslneu schools. Must type and taka shorthand. ExcellanI bcnaflts including ratlremant. Call

HtrJUfltPrignntL M429M:

DRAFTER-LAY

Ing and labricat^^company w Ith proprlata^ lints naads exparlancad drartar. Outlas Include leyout ot drawings and diagrams from data givan by daslgnars or anginaars. Calculata dimanslons and allow ancas in accordanca with ganaral practica. Compile bills ot materials after drawings to suit englnoaring changas. Minimum of 3 yaars drafting axparianca and 1 to 2 yaars In matal forming and fabrication. Sand rasuma and salary requlra-mants to Cox Traitor Inc., P O Box 33, Gritton, N C 2*530.

Matal fori

urrn

with

EMPTY DESK

Raal Estafa agant naaded

hava a -----^ ------------

   -    ..Ini,

iMust

I a plaasant parsonallty, salt lar, and willing to work 40 hoi/rs par waak. In houia training, salas tools, and prospacts furnished. Commissions of *20.000 leaslble for first yeer. For your contldentiel Interview call SseHeffren, 756 *724,

EXCTIN^^m^^RTUNlTY

Earn up to 50% on evarything you sell. Call 752-7006

FLOOR COVERING Salesparson with ratall carpet and vinyl seles experience needed by established company. Sai^ rasuma_ to Floor I Sovarlng, PO Box 1*67, Greanvllta,

HOMEWORKERS WIrocraft pro ductlon. We train house dwellers. )=or full details write: WIracreft, PO BOX323,Norfolk.Va.23501.

INTERIOR DECORATOR wantad at local stora. OMrae and exparl-tnc* required. Send resume to ator, PO Box 1*67, Greenville,

051    Hi(>    Wantad

059

Work Wantad

ALL TYPES tree service. Trimming, cutting, storm damage, cleanup, and removal. Free estimates. J P Stancii. 752-6331.

ALL TYPES Of MASONRY rapeir

build 30 years exparlence. 756-1. Free estmeles._

mi

ALL TYPES of plumblrw Reason able. State Licenss 5199 756-10*0 days, 757 3143 nights.

ALL TYPES OF ORYWALL tMalrs and work, years axparianca. Frse estimates. ^It 750-9*31 or 752 5764.__

ALTERATIONS OF all types. Carpentry, masonry and rooting. 35 years experience in building. Cell James Harrington after 6 pm.

CUSTOM CARPENTRY WORK Framing, ramodallrtg, rapalrs. Reasonable rates Reterences. Greenvtlte. 355 2*56.

HOMEOWNERS SPECIAL Peint or wallpaper any room, stcond room painted or wellpapered W price. By Oeslgnr75< 716T^

HONEST PAINTING, yeer round. Call, Ralph Birchard, Jr. 6 pm. to 11

I WILL KEEP children In my home at Shady Knoll Trailer Park 752

LOOKING FOR painting lobs, interior and axterlor. Chaapest nsan in t9n..Z46 394*9r74f|73?;^

PAINTING. Interior and axterlor. Free estlmetes, work guaranteed. 11 years axparianca. 756-6873 after 60 m._

SANDING and finishing floors Small carpanter jobs, counter tops. Jack Bakar Floor Servica. 7S6-2U nidl.fnt<!! tUBShtWr SS (HKk.

WOULD LIKE TO BABYSIT or claan house. Reesoneble rates. Ex-perlenced. 756 78*2._

WOULD LIKE a lob on a farm or chicken farm. Call >52-756*.

060

FOR SALE

PAINT INTERIOR, Extarlor, resl-dantial, commarlcal. Well experl enced. 752 syo.

1*7* CHEVROLET VAN Good

<;opqittqn, 5320._

064

Fusl, Wood, Coal

ALL TYPES OF firewood for sale. JTF StancTl. 782-6331

LOG SPLITTER rentals end services. Parts end repair service , for small engines. Cell 756-00*0 i Qiflhttjnd^""*    1

englnei

hand!

OAK FIREWOC tor sale. Call *

ZilHZ. g 752 6M

SEASONED OAK *50 Vi cord,

WOOT^FOR^y^LE: Oak *45; mixad

100% OAK FIREWOOD tor sato. *45 aload If we deliver; *40 a loedit you pick UP. 750 3mor 252 5498, 100% OAK FIREWOOD, green *50, seasoned *55 per cordT Guaran-t*9d f,w!l    :W91,_

065 Farm Equlpmsnt

bTlDoA WOOp SPLITTERI Check our pricesi Four way open center valve *42.95. Four way valva

with kick out *57 *5. 4"x24.....

with l>/y" rod *13*.*S

ovtjoy

coupling complato *10.95. Pumps, hosas, othar valves and cylinders arc avellabla. Ag Greenyme.NC752 3*9f,

 ;yll______

AgrI Supply.

14' TANDEM-AXLE tllt-bed all steel trailer. Also Tntornattonal 400 Cyclq corn planter. Both In excellent condition. 757-1127 or

2SHS2L.

2 ROANOKE GAS Buck Barm usad

3 yaars. Price nag^able. 753-461*

>5.....

9r7M:.47U,,

067 Garagt-Yard Salt

oARAorT^^ovSTssnr

Bedroom, dining room, end living room sullas. Guitar, tennis recketC clothes, also SO pairs ot new shoes, ISO V bells, end many other Items. 6

ftm., Saturday. Janueiy *, 101 errell Street, Cherry Oaks. For m9fi    m-lffl,

GIGANTIC YARD SALE, several families. Child's clothes and housewares. Lcnnle's Grocery, way, 4</i miles from

Y/l1dr>)IL

__________ei

Falkland HI

INDOOR SALE Thursday, Friday, and Saturday all dayToin chairs.

guitar, lamps, machina sndp 1r stamp col 498WhHtrdlM

OVING

allay) thing mvttflpl

. small tablas, instrumants. sllvar rj^jm mowa7> ate.

El Satu

EVary-

gins. EVary

and trash produce! Ceil )iir746-3541, Mika 746-3550, Fair

YARD SALE Indoors, Doaot Grill. WlntorvTlte. MTurdiiy, Jenuery I, i ' til 2. Antiques, furniture, glese, tools, clothing, heaters, and more.

5 FAMILIES Lots 04 clothes from youth to ailts, dinette set, cptfae and and tables end more furniture Items, curtains, rugs and tots of kitchen Itoms. 100 Onnetery Roed,

LOCAL FINANCE company needs axperlancsd collector. Must be bondable end hava valid NC drivers license. Send resume only to Box 2*4,

license. Send resume Branch Monagar, P O Graanvllla, nT^27*34.

LOCAL FINANCE company naads sacratary cashtor. AAust bt bonda-bto; must typa at taast 50 words par

typa

minuto. Sand rasui.^ Branch Managar, P O

g.riE0Yii5irgga.

m#

LPN'S NEEDED Full tIma and part tIma In 1*2 bad long farm naalth car# cantar. All shifts avallabla, good banaflts, com

523 0083

.....  .    Inston,

vanua, Kinston. Phono

MANAGEMENT Large corporation looking for managomant rt In salas. 60 door to door. Contm Atocho

vwir^wf wwwsewsw s

tion looking tor _______.________

potontlal. MMf start In salas. 60 hour waak. Soma Salary and banaflts

MOBILE HOME SET UP MAN with

/Gatoa***^^liorrias,

person

jf

OFFICE _______

opening for welt esi

ness In Greenville

POSITION Clerical iTfWlshed bust

^Ica < liy to:

REGISTERED NURSE with 2 rs nursing axparianca including

Iwfi 0BP9rtimllYfnBdgYr

chargo nuria roto. .. 117,0 to *24,732 par '5*-3151, Extonslon 242.

RN NEEDED tor skilled nursing supervisor In 182 bed long tarrn

ftLMMTV

Iwalth

.....    long    ______

care center. 7-3 shift, every ' oft, good benefits, ^t

other weekend competlfive saler rect license and

hold cur

XTCisa

of Klnslon, 317 Avanut, Kinston. Phona

80RS neadad far 1 fy. Good salary 1 10 tor. 3-11 shift

skill plus

7Call E Lullan at

Him

ROUTE SALES *17K Fortu company has Immadtote oa aggressive salesperson.

SALES MANAGERS Potontlel **( e year. National Pramtor Company expanding, need Sales Raps and

Managars. Mr. Hanry, (213) 327

2SSL

SECRETARY * to 3 for a Greenyllto basad groua of praschools. Apply In person at 313 EMt 10th Stroet. No

TAP ALL YOUR KNOWLEDGE LEARNED IN NURSING NEEDED

RN'S

Full tima3-11; l?-7 Part tima 7 3

Competitive Salaries    __

Willing to work around school

VARIETY BAND with own PA ystom e^ transportetton lookinga drummer with own drums end mKrgphgop, 752 I44L-

072

Livsstock

ize face, four white

white blaze face, four white Walking Horsa. 15.1,15.2 hands. 8 to

752SS80* ****'

RIDING Jarman

PEANUT HAY FOR SALE *1.50 perito, (fall atfar 7 p.m. 752 *225

Sistsm-

074

Misctllarwout

ALL USED REFRIGERATORS, fraazars, rango, washtrs and dryers ere reduced for quick sale. Call B J Mills, Authorized . <^l-jncjt Service, 746-2446 at Biack

row w

as

istim

E OAK .dresser enjt r^-

original brass pul ik bed with loot board, arcelounger Reclinar

nr r k 1^9% WC w/ w*W irWAW* Vf fw^

frigerators, washers, furniture and much more at Elite Repeat, iio Street, Aydan. next to

ASSUME PAYMENTS of *37.92. 3 piece living room suite; lofe, cheir, rgYfWtt, "vrp)tVffWyW.,7-ML.. ASSUME PAYMENTS of *4*.46. 7 piece Imtern living room suite; sofa, dtalr, rocker, 3 tables, ot-toman. firnlturalMyiA757-965L

ASSUME PAYMENTS ot 43.12. 3 cgmplato rooms of turnltura. PurtffturaWorld, 757-0451.

EDDINO AND WATEIUIE08

va up to </i and more, rectory ttrass And WatorMs.. 736

BE ODIN

&Ar!!Ss

Graanvllli

mm,

ivHto ^Cd, nexVto Flit Plaza: SJOL

Sl.  _........

BUNK-STORAGE .bad

with

____     unit    :

bookshalvas.

stone. Also drlvtwSYWerk,

CATERING

COPY MACHINE 1 yaar old. Call 7582141 tromto5._

CUSTOM BUILT handrails, grills, gates, spiral, .stafrways, interior.

JEilWr

tS^I ^peSaitles, MumforOTRpad

rasldantlal, commarclal.

758-4574,    1210

ENCYCLOPEDIA BRITANNICAS,

and roferenca books, *1100 value-wlll sell tor *500. Call Jim. 750 7*26. EXERCISE BIKE like new. *40. f57 07*2 etter Som.

OR SALE: 1*7* YZSO OIrl Bike, xcellent condition. 753-2655 after 6 pm.

FQR SALE: Crib and mattress. Like new. 756-9I7*__

QUICK-ACTION Classified Ads are the answer to passing on your extras to someone who wanfs tobuy.





1*-Tte Dty Reflector, GreemrUle, N.C.-Frtday, Jaoiiuy 7, if

074

Misctiianeous

Foa SALE: 7 diamond clwstor ring.

FROST-EREE rofriflorotor tor M>jo Almect Ilka naw Soars CoMpo* li**31*30) avocado Fricad to mova tart at Mt MSO Cali MJ 43rt from 10 a m fit*p m. and    attar    

furniture, 1/3 Frica Clartrtj Sola now at Furnitura World. FI I availabla. 2006 East lOtti St

062    LOST AND FOUND

L<T haavv go imA Oacambar 13. Reward. Ftndar

Diaasa call yse-1344.

OSS Loans And AAortgagts

FURNITURE .FOR^S^ Cash

CHHtwtfn4 4m

GIGANTIC truckload carpat sola. Graat for apartmants, dorms.

Thursday and Friday only Alpha Phi Howaa, Tanth Straat (bottom ot

tfiiUL_

GO CART, PapsI Mini Car, flbaroloM body, musical horn, and branc(naw.4J04Z

at Woodside. Jamas

Nota 7S4 1133

kerosene HEATERS A real boy

at    and    $239.95. Introductory

ottar at $139 95 and $) *5 Saa and compare. Little Fireside Shop, 754 i5i. Ooan Tuesday Saturday

liquidation sale of elctrica , plombln*, heating lionlng contractor. Elctrica arrt hand tools and supplies. Call 753-3mi oTcome by^7 S Waverly Street. Farmvllla

LOVE SEAT hidaabad In new condition. $195 746-6294_

. . W .    ---

maternity clothes, size

10/12 ^ses. $15 Slacks, $5 Shirts, $3 756 5545

moving 25" Zenith console color Tv In an Early American cabinet with sharp picture, only $15. ^

____ jnarH    v,    v,,,,

AAaonavox console combination olS- TV in a solid oak cabinet with AM/FM stereo and record playrt.

12 month warranty on picture tube, asking $225, excellent worki conditio^ Zenith 19" black and white

portaM TV with simulated wood grain design, old tor mw $l79.52-asklng only $45. like new.

want to help you sat and achieve your goals through financial planning and selective investing. Pro grass through plannirM. C J Harris And Company, lrc Financial And

...._ Company,

AAarketing Consultants, 757-IXXil

rSt-9492.

must SELL AN^T^UES Oak/leaded glass side board; 4 poster double bed, stereo console, ivkher Ticking chair Call 756 1848 atterdP.m,

NET SUPPLIES: Webbings, rwa, floats, lead, everything you n^ to make your own net or complete net ready to fish. Commercial fishing licenses. Whichard's AAarlna, 946-

pounds of tobacco allotment located 5 miles

southeast of Wintervllle. Contact Don Southerland at

Aldridge & Southerland Realty, 756 35857 niohts 756 5260

4275

OUR SALES DOUBLED In 1W I still growing. Come see why! You name It we have It -at our ^tiqiw

name ii--wv    n-     y ^^tique

Barn Swap Shop, W L Dunn & Sons. Plnetops, NC

l2 ACRES with 31 clear^ and WOO pounds tobacco allotment located 3 miles west of Wintervllle. Contact Don Southerland at Aldridge & Southerland Realty, 756-3500; nights 756 5260

PANASONIC AM/FM Player/Recorder, $175. Golf clubs, 9 Irons, 3 woods, and bag, $135. Glenfleld 30 30 rifle with scope ai^ case, $150. Bedroom suite. Pine bed.

?| ACRES with 12 ciMred. Near hicod School. 15 miles Southeast ot Greenville. Owner financing available. For more Information

call Aldridge & Southerland Realty, nig

night starid and dresser, $375. Call 7

756 3500, nights Don Southerland, 756-5260

756-0838 after 6 pm.

PECANS 7H per pound. Call Dean at 758 4631,

58 ACRE_FARM Good, road fron

PIANO-STUDIO SIZE Beautiful condition, lust tuned, will help deliver. $595. 756 8737

REFRIGERATOR 17 cubic f^, Gc Coppertone, frost free. $100.

tdge on SR 1753 and SR 1110. 51 acres cleared, 6,209 pounds tobacco allotment, pond and 2 bedroom house. St. Johns Community. Call for more details. Call AAoseley-Marcus Realty at 746-2166 for full details._ -_

758-1979.

REPOSSESSED VACUUMS and Shampooers. Call Dealer, 756A711

SHAMPOO FOR FALLI _Rent shampooers and va ToofCowipan;

I vacuums at Rental

SMALL REFRIGERATOR fv sale (18x21x21'A). Perfect for office or dormftory room. Reduced to half kice ($&). Lall 752-4348 from 10 $.m. til 6 p.m. and 756-4619 after 8

.ID OAK Dining room suite.

Jii---------------

6 746-6224 after 5pm.

TAINLESS STEEL 2 ^compart-ical

ment commerlcal sink. Good con Itlon. 752-1645

ITOVE 30 Inch GE C^^rtone, self

eieanlnoovn.$l50.75

TWO USED REFRIGERATORJS knd OQO stove for sale. $75 each

ik

REFRIGERATORS 756

WHEATSTRAW

$1.30 Per Bale 746-2538 or 746-2326

10 SPEED BICYCLE, MIyata In EfiajMfii

lltlon. $125. 756-0536.

100 FEET chain length fence; 4' high, 6 corner post gate, miscrtia

heoM hardware Included, $175. Call 756-7912

INCH SOFA with Dark Green print

f08 ll._..  .........

gpholstery also has orange prin! slip cover. $100. 52 inch celling fan *75. Both In Qood condition. 756V)48. 19" RCA COLOR TV Reasonable Must sell. Call 756

19273.

AMP SERVICE AND POLE ) firm. 752-1132

25" RCA COLOR TV console,, good

condition, $165. Black vinyl sofa and anatching chair, $75. Complete bed with mattress and box spring, $40. Dinette table and 4 chairs, $30. 50,000 BTU Atlanda gas heater, like ew, $135. Cedar liried wardrobe, >35. 746 6929

3M-107 COPIER with paper,,dN pensers. Best offer. Call Boyd

Associates at 758-4284.

I AAM CAMERA, Fujlca ST 901 utomatic and manual, jiood condl lwi^125. Day, 752-7478 or night

4 FOOT BY 6 FOOT Utility trailer $250rCall 756 5354. _

4X8 TRAILER with 2 foot sides. E^xcellent for hauling firewood. $125. Red light for Volunteer Fireman, 2 lens, one red and one

lear, 6 bulbs, 4 clear and 2 red. $45. Tie downs and straps f e. Best offer. 752 M79

rie _ hosa

and straps for mobile

in^PSI BOX, excellent condition. $300. Hotdog machine with roll Steanrter, $1u. Old type Ice cream

^hest freezer, $80. Call 746-6040 iefore 3 p.m. or can be seen at ame World downtown Avden

7 PIECE bedroom suite; Lowry gan, Mnle L5; J^ass trumpet.

Ime. 746-4174.

075 Mobile Homes For Sale

BRAND NEW DOUBLEWIDE I the prke of the single. 48x24,

bedrooms, 2 full baths, loaded with

extras Including beamed ceilings, storm windows, 200 amp total electric, frost free refrigerator, and

much, much more.

$17,495

Delivery and set up Included. VA, F.HA and conventional financing

AAoblle Home Brokers, 630 West Greenville Boulevard. 756-0191

HAVELOCK, 1974, 12x60, totall

remodeled, air conditioning, appi 74,8 to 1

anees, 3 bedrooms. 355-2474,

MUST SACRIFICE I 1977 Skyline doublewlde. 24x60. Central ^t, air. Excellent condition. Completely unfurnished. $14,000 asking price. 1 747-3779 or 1 747 8179 days; 1 747-8587 nights. Snow Hill

NEW HOMES START as low as $129.93 a month at Azalea AAoblle

Homes. See Tommy Williams or Ltn " -7815.

Kilpatrick. 756-:

REPO 70X14. 3 bedrooms or 2 bedrooms. Good selection. Low

downpayment. Delivery and set up incluioed. Contact J T Williams at Azalea AAoblle Homes. 756-7815

loan PLACEMENT We plan, structure, package, preeant and place business, farming and com marcial real estate development

loans. Short and kng term business surpose loans. C J

DuroCMe loans, i. j Harris And Company. Inc., Financial And AAar-ketirSrConsultants 757^1, hights 753 4(fl5

NEED CASH, get a second nwtgage fast by pt^. we also buy mortgages, make commercial loans. calfYnw 1 800 845 3929.

093 OPPORTUNITY

LIST OR BUY^your business with C J Harris A Co., Inc. Financial A

AAarketing Consultants. Serving^ the Southeastern United States

Greenville, N C 757 (X1, nights 753 4015

SERVICEMASTER protesslonal home and otflce cleaning fra;Khlses available in the Eastern NC area $14,000 includes equipment and training. Financing available. For information call or write ServlceAAaster, 204 West Peace Street, Raleloh 27603.833-2802.

095 PROFESSIONAL

CHIMNEY SWEEP Gid Holloman. North Carolina's original chimney sweep. 25 years expeflence working on chimneys and fireplaces. Cad day or night, 753 3503, Farmvllle,

FINANCIAL CONSULTANTS -Investor, farmer or nnerchant, we

NEW HOME never occupied. FHA 235 loan with payments as low as $280 if your income does not exceed 30,105.00 with two In the family, .'hree bedrooms, 1',^ baths, large lot. Call today. Offered at $42,300.

106 Farms For Sale

FHA 235 ASSUMPTION ---

Grove. Excellent condition. Wooded

108 ACRES with 60 cleared and 9700

107 Farms For Lease

WANT TO BUY tobacco pounds. 758-2873 after 6._

 TO BUY tobacco pounds.

:all after?. 758-2859.

WANT

Callafh

WANTED TO LEASE Farm for 1983 In Pitt County or Tobacco pounds. Call 746-6298

WOULD LIKE to lease tobacco pounds. 753-3644

WOULD LIKE TO RENT oeanut pounds. Call after 6p.m., 758-3742.

109 Houses For Sale

BUILDERS CHOICE I That's right, he buTiT It for himself but we ve

talked hloi Into selling it. You should 00 all the extras...the mar ffo<

velows floor plan. This Is the one you've been dreaming about. Trade That smaller honrM for this spacious

beauty surrounded by trees. $90's. I^TTENTURY 21 Bass Realty,

BY OWNER 2 bedroom, 1 bath, house, university area, excellent

109

Houiai Per Sale

xfmi

^>aO' IifII

tpaciaue Canoa has i* features such as t

-    ------- mLNIa ~ ~ *

wtffl

fIrepTace Mari warm tn the

TtfTll Thto

many extra

kaatiT

4tu

ATTENTIOW FmMA appHeontol

We have three hemes with assumaMe FmHA loam avaltable to qualified buyers. Floor p^

---   1.11M    fcsMflibW    KortS

TO    rwFWY ppvwpw

offer 3 bedrooms. MVs baths, t^ have carports. Call tar furthar details. AAavIs Butts Realty, 738-0655 or Jane Butts. 756-285^

ATTENTION BUYeSjMrgy ficient 2 story with 4 bedroams. T/j baths, owner Mng tr|mtarred. Only $66,900. Steve Evans A Associates, 355 2727

BROOK VALLEY By ovmer 3 bedrooms, 2 baths. 756-9097 or

758

3568.

CLARKBRANCH SELLS THREE HOMESAWEEK SOMETIMES FOUR

$48'S

FmHA LOAN ASSUMPTION In Ayden. Just on the market, this brick rdnch offers 3 bedrooms. 1',^ baths, electric heat and garage. You may qualify for payments as low as $125 gjj month. Equity

negotiable. $43,1

8% FmHA LOAN assumption on this brick ranch located lust minutes from the hospital. Tall

pines to keep you cool arid priced In the low $40's to fit your budget Call

today for exclusive showing of this

today for exclusive snow well kept 3 bedroom home

Oak

lot, 3 bedrooms, m baths. Offered at $41,500. Carport. Hurry, it won't last long. Assume If your income is less than $22,000 per year. Total l^pe -----

payments less than UM per month.

WANT TO MOVE in with little equity? How about less than $2000 on this home in the low sag's. Let the builder pay your closing costs and points. Payments around $300 per month on FHA 245. East of >reenville. Call today and get the custom features you want.

REALTY WORLD CLARK-BRANCH.INC REALTORS 7M-6336

Ctonc Quinn ... ON CALL .. . 756-6037

Sharon Lewis..............756-9987

Tim Smith  .............752-9811

AAary Chapin...............756-8431

Ray Holloman..............753-5147

Toll Free: 1-800-525-8910, ext. AF43

An Equal HousingOpoortunlty

CLARK BRANCH SELLS THREE HOMESAWEEK SOMETIMES FOUR

80'SA90'S

INVESTMENT SPECIAL Inconrte

producing property with 11% permanent rinancing by sailer. Over $200 per month positive cash flow plus $4800 annual depreciation. In

eludes 1 house and 2 duplexes. One mile east of Greenville. Excellent condition with 100% occupancy guaranteed. Call today $80,000.

NEW OFFERING 13Vi% fixed rate assumption on this 1900 square foot home located on three acres.

Beautifully decorated interior and low malnfenance exterior. Sunki

den and custom int^lqr plus e^y^y

saving features. Call for today. Offered at $94,000.

starter or retlreinent. Priced

eisyssLi

BY OWNI

all 756-9070 after 5.

Sale or trade. 3 sidli

BY OWNER    ______

bedroom cedar siding home, located southslde Ayden, lust off    - ZCO equity and

consider

Gene Quinn ... ON CALL ... 756-6037

Sharon Lewis..............756-9987

Highway 11. V,0(Xi equi

assume mortgage or will c-------

trade for condominium east/south la. Call 746 2611 after 6.

ofGrevllle

Tim Smith.................752-9811

Mary Chapin.......... 756-8431

Ray Holloman..............753-5147

Toll Free: 1-800-525-8910, ext. AF43

BY OWNER 3 bedroom house, large living room with fireplace and sapafate 35X30 garaj^/iywkshop.

Ideal for at-home business. Priced to sell. $32,000. 2505 AAemorlal Drive. 7ta 3057

BY OWNER 3 bedroom, IVa bath, carport and boat shelter all on a large lot In the Eastern Pines area. Good neighbors. Seller will pay points. $39,900. 758 7526 after 6

BY OWNER 3 bedroom house on Singletree Drive, natural wood exterior with deck, heat pump and central air. $49,000.355^14._

CHESTNUTS ROASTING on an open fire; Moore 8, Sauter has a

townhome to meet your hearts dMirel Nionthly payments less than

desire I Nionthly payments less than rent, fireplace optional, no closing costs I Call Atoore 8. Sauter 758 6050.

CLARK BRANCH SELLS THREE HOMESAWEEK SOMETIMES FOUR

40's

FmHA LOAN ASSUMPTION Country Squire. Less than one year old. Convenient to downtown

Grjmvllje and fwyltal. w|w^^

rent when you can own this--------

about the same-price. Two bedrooms, l bath. Call today for appointment. Low$40's.

FARMVILLE COUNTRY CLUB 8% FHA loan assumption. Near golf course, swimming pool and tennis courts. This 3 bedroom ranch has nearly 1500 square feet, den with fireplace, new carpet and freshly painted. Fenced yard. Mid $40's.

LOOKING A DEAL Just listed in Ayden. $5000 and assume loan of 9%% with low payments. This VA assumption offers an $8000

backayrd pool. 1400 square feet, fireplace.

brick heatllator wallpaper and more. 13 nsonth warranty on home. Paved drive and large corner lot. New carpet in living room. Offered In low STs.

NEW OFFERING In Fox Run with 1650 square feet. Owner will provide

new wallpaper, paint and carpet.

firepla --------- "----

Features fireplace, separate den or

playroom plus 3 spacious bedrooms. 8% loan assumption available. Of

fered at $48,300. Call now. It won't last long.

REALTY WORLD CLARK-BRANCM, INC

REALTORS

756-6336

REPOSSESSION, 1983, 2 bedrooms,

lived in only 4 days. $300 down and payments. Free delivery

Gene Quinn ... ON CALI____756-6037

Sharon Lewis..............756-9987

take and 630

up pi

w

I. AAoblle Home Brokers, Greenville Boulevard,

Tim Smith.................752 9811

AAary Chapin...............756-8431

Ray Hoi loman..............753-5147

Toll Free: 1-800-525-8910, ext. AF43

12XSS, 1973, American, 2 large bedrooms, underpinning, central air. 355-2474.8 to 5.

12X60 RITZCRAFT 2 bedrooms, 1>/2 bath, central heat

 __and    air,

electric appliances. Located In nice

trailer ^jjNrtk. .Partly .fVJll.h*d,.or

uitfurnli

$6500. 756 2564 after

1923 12x65, 3 bedrooms, needs some .83100.756-0975 after 5 p.m._

1974 B^IRE 12X65, 3 bedrooms, IV bafOMOO. 746-378B,_

1975 12x65 mobile home, fully furnished, 2 bedrooms, central air, rm?^9-f7-mt!xM

s/,uwi Tirm. y iv-ej/-tve euL ? ,. 19to CONNER, 14 X 70, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths. Small equity, take up

<WOOD AAoblle home, un ..rnlshed 14 X 70, central air and heat. $500 and take up payments

Its,

076 Mobltt Horn* Insuranct

MOBILE HOMEOWNER In^ance at oHnpetitTve rated. Smith Insur-

077 Musical Instruirwrrts

MOBILE DISCO corwple. mixer, two turn tabM, dollv, utility trailer. Call 3

le. amplifier,

mg GIBSON LES PAUL JR.Ri

I960 GIBSON LES PAUL JR Re-

l^STOetx^e r";;W%ip^^

JBL sneaker,$150.758-9469

078

Sporting Goods

twlTTERA^JMlvArp^

All

pairs

types canvas and cushion re-s. Specializing in marine pro-Is. 7q-0641.111 Clark Street.

/tKfi f

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

ROOFING

STORM WINDOWS DOORS & AWNINGS

Hemoflelinq -Rooi- Addiliiin<.

C.L. Liipton. Co.

REALTY WORLD CLARKBRANCH, INC.

REALTORS

756-6336

An Equal Housing Opportunity

m HOUBBBForlBtO

FmHA LOAN ASSUMPTION, 3

tomlly roqn^ca^^,

TURY 1?

CURK-BRANCH SELLS THREE HOMESAWEEK SOMETIMES FCXJR

NEWOFFERINGS

GREENFIELD Aydan. FHA 235 loan assum^ion. Ona of only a taw 235 loane on tha marfcat. Extra larga ntaetar badroom wHh m baths. This horn# has fireplaca with haatllator to haat houaa and a This ona won't last long.

all today. LowesiTs.

PINERIDGE 3 badroom brkk ranch |urt minutas from tha hospital. WOodad lof with garden space end e large floored workshop are ust e few of the tine feetures this orne offers. Cell today for your parsonal showing. AAM forttas.

RED OAK Four bedroom brkk ranch with all formal areas. This horn# has ovar 2,000 square feet, large wooded tot and is priced to self Owner trensferred. Cell now for your personal showing. Lots of extras. Uppar sixties.

RED OAK This Immaculate brkk ranch is availabla due to owner's transfer. Has an extra lot for your

garden end Is located at the end of fhe block for privacy. Also very close to schools and shopping. Can today for your personal showing.

block for privacy. Also

Low sixtias.

REALTY WORLD CLARK-BRANCH, INC

REALTORS 756-6336

Gane Quinn ...ON CALI____754-6037

Sharon Lewis  .........756-9987

Tim Smith.................752-9811

Mary Chapin...............756-8431

Ray Holloman..............753-5147

Toll Frae: 1-800-525-8910,    axt. AF43

An Equal Housing Opportunity

COUNTRY LIVING Lovaly 3 badroom homo, approximataly /z acre lot. Pmible 12% FHA financing. $30's. CENTURY 21 B Forbas Aoancv. 756-2121 or 756-7426.

lOf

H0U8BS For SbIb

ruf iBOffSSHBi cirpef^ llv' Ing

l?!S!!S!cate%E S^t.Ayd

746^3761 Of 7464

Good B

Ayden.

RflNVBOOO FOREST - Butidar will pay poinfsl Take edvantege while rHA/VA rates ere low. New three badroom homo on spacious woodod lof. Must tail now. $53.500.

II Blount B Ball, 756-3000 ar Laa

11.752 164*.

HANG YOUR MISTLETOE and holly In your now 2 or 3 bodroom

townhoma ^

financing. Payments Iom th^

makes anyone tael jolly! Call Mobra B Sauter 758-4050 for the gerl

V   _______Qsrlsfid of

detallt'^beglnning wii no closing cofl

HOI HQI HOI To your new home you win go - end,your peymenfs will te low - Call Mo^ B Sautar and And out how sharad aquify financing makae If sol I 758-4050. No

IF YOU THINK of your family...picture them In this three bedroom split level home. Just listed I (Sreafroom with fireplace.

dining room, end_patlo out b^lu

and a basemant. Saa it today____

you wilt say "This Is it." SSITs. f444. CENTURY21 Baw Raaltv. 754-5868

IF YOU'VE GIVEN sarious thought to building a home In 1983. ..read on I Still tmalo hava soma in-put on tha

in-put

construction of this idaal plan.

Construction to begin soon on this masonite (or wood

home

siding)

resting on e woodod lot near hospital. Faaturas graat room with

firsplaca and vaulted ceiling, large dining area off kitchen with breakfast bar, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, heat pump and garaga. why carry tha Intarast chargas on a construction loan whan somaona alse is

offaring to? FHA/VA financing avallaBla, flxad or^^raduatad

paymant schadulas. Only $54,900. Call AAavIs Butts Raalto, 758-0655 or llalnaTrolano. 756-634?.

LUXURY FOR $458 PITI par nonth down

with lass than $16,000 down. De-slrabla 1450 squara foot flat at Windy Ridga. Racantly radaco-ratad. Assunta 9Vi% mortgaga. For sala bv owner. 756-0339.

MAKE AN OFFER - Owner ready to deal. House in Oekdele featuring 3 bedrooms, I/Y bath, living room, large roomy kitchen, stepdown den,

   --------corner lot. AI

._    _____ jII Blount and

Ball at 756-3000 or Batty Baacham pt756-aB0,-

ELMHURST, 1619 Longwood, Immaculate brick 3 bedroom home, large family room, deck, workshop, and carport. 12% financing availabla. $52,500. Bill Williams Raal

Estate. 752 2615; homa 756-2862.

Estate Realty Co.

752-5058

COUNTRY HOME - fiva mllas aasf consisting of fhreo bedrooms, largo

riving room, spacious kitchon. Excellent FHA 2p loan assumption.

Call now-only 843,900.

GRIFTON - only $32,900 buys yj^    go    family

three bedrooms, extra large family

----*'aca, anergy-savlng

_____wnay-savrng    loan

assumption. Call for details.

AYDEN - this very neat home has two bedrooms, living room with fireplaca, spacious kitchen, new

fireplaca, spacious ----------- _    .

furnace, one-car garage. Only $42,900.

BAYWOOD home consisting of five bedrooms, V/t baths, ell formal areas, fully carpeted, heat pumps, maintenance free exterior, two<ar garage. Situated on 1.2 acres. Call for details.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

AAOVED AAust sail. 1800 square feat. Elmhurst School district, close to university, 1405 Evergraan Drive.

No commlulon. First of January kat

will turn qvar to realtor for mark value. $55,500. Contact Jar ' AAondav Friday 9 to 5,756-2

NEED A KING SIZE BED? D>n't have a master tedrMm big enough? Look no furthar. This homa has It. There are two more specious

bedrooms, greatroom with woodsfove, cathadral calling wito skylight, and much more In this

contemporary home In Camalot. Priced right to sell. The quk^ you

Bass Realty. 756-5868

NEW LISTINGI North Library. 3 bedrooms, bath, llv

Fisher Wood Stove. kitchen. $37,500. Goldia Kirk Realty,

living room with e, oinli

ling room,

752-1443.

NEW LISTING 3 bjirgams, V/i baths, large country lot, WIntarvllla School district. $37,500. Stave Evans B Associates. 355-2727

NICE 5 room house. Enclc^ back porch, carport, now Mint in ^ out. Vary good condition. In tha county. Good pecan tr^. $34,000. By owner. 75B3218. After 6, call 7-4199^_

 home. Large

wooded lot, 2 cer Byage. 860's. CENTURY 21 B Forbes Agency, 756-2121 or 756-7426._

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

108

HouBBBForSalB

as Hke tats of ctaaet tpaca.

kitchon pankry and brkk bar^b-qua

a showing.

.ER'S AAOVED - Has to sail.

home, only 5 mlias oart. Fuliy carped. A gniat buy. Estate Reelty Company, 7S2-M58

nights

OWNER WILLING to My polnH and buyer's closing coetsi You won't find a cutar homa than this ona so lovingly carad for. Features living and dining combo, apoNess

kitchen complete with range and rafrlMr*tor Ilka new, 3 spacious bedrooms, I bath, detached garage

with workshop, fwiced backyard, so much morel  ..........

........- FHA/VA financing

ivallabla. $37,91. Call AAavIs ButH

avallaba

R-tv,

REDUCEDI Beautiful 3 bedroom, 2 robm wl

bath homa, living robm with fireplace, special taatures in kitchen, approximataly 2,677 square tart. MO'sTcENTURY 21 B ^Forbas Kancv.75B2121 or 756-7436

REDUCED IN CHERRY OAKSI Throe bodroomi

two baths, all formal areas. Owner has moved and must sail. Don has hMtliator fireplaca to helo cut vintar heating bills. $75,000. CENTURY 21 Bass RMltY,756^:i3WA

REDUCED TO $49,900. Pay $3000 and awuma this fixed rata FHA iMn. Three bedrooms, two baths.

large Mf-ln kitchen, living room with ftrMlaca and garaga. Call CENTURY 21 Bass RMlty.756-6666.

la

SNOB APPEAL pi^iglous area, WIlTlamsburg design, rMks of

Vvllll4iiil9iAVt M wwwsyis# meqw

class. This newly constructed homa fits in with tha bast of 'om. You'll

1119 in Wlltl fffV BFWMI WSS9. fWV IS

love tha hardwood floors In ttw foyar and formal dining room. If you're moving up in tho world you need to trade In that modest house of yours for this alagant ona. Do it

BFi."!!a"7?iTJS9'"SS

Raaltv. 756-5868.    _

START THE NEW YEAR RIGHT BUY THAT HOUSE YOU'VE BEEN WANTING

SPACIOUS TOWNHOUSE - 1422 squara feat includes 3 bedrooms, living room, dining room, kitchen and 7/2 baths. Reduced to $54,9(.

lAAMACULATE TOWNHOUSE - 5 rooms and i'/i baths, central Iwat

and air, possible iMn assumfitlon. Reduced to $41,900

REAL ESTATE BROKERS

2723 East Tanth street 752-4348,756-4619 or 757-3278

START THE New Year off right with this spacious ranch In

with this spacious rancn in Eastwood. This classy tomato fMturas In ground pool, all formal areas, country kitchen, and a dan with fireplace. Call toekw for your orivate showing. $60'%. #435. CENTURY 21 Bass RMlty, 756-5868.

THREE BEDROOAAS, living room, kitchen (oldar homa), convaniantly located. $1^000. Aydan Loan B Insurance Co., 103 E 3rd St., Avdan. 746-3761 or 766-6474

UNIVERSITY AREA Reduced for

quick sale. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, family room, fireplaca, over 1850

squar

Stave

ire feet. AAany other fMtures. Evans B Associates. 355-2727

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

WE REPAIR SCREENS&DOORS

Remodelinq Room Additions.

C.L. Lupton Co.

CLARK BRANCH SELLS THREE HOMESAWEEK SOMETIMES FOUR

100's

LUXURY ABOUNDS In this colonial style two story home. All formal areas open for easy living. Double garage offers 6asy access

with energy efffclency exceeding E-300 statidards. Located In ora-stigious Graylaigh. This four bMroom with many extras is

available for occuMticy and builder will consider financing. Call today. 14% fixed rata iMn availabla. $i20's.

THIS 2900 SQUARE FOOT homa Is within walking distance to pool and ilf course. Custom built hopia with _ bedrooms, graat room with fireplaca, game room, 3V Mths, plus 2 car garaga. To top It off - a fixed rate iMn assumption of i3Va% Offered at $110,000.

BROOK VALLEY Price reduced

on this lovaly Williamsburg In Brook Valley. Large wooded lot on a quiet cul-da-sac. This fine hoitw

offers a Faro?dan, all formal areas and all the extras. $120's.

COUNTRY ESTATE Contractors combine business and homa with this residence and warehouse on 3Va acres of land located less than 2 miles from Pitt Plaza, Op-portunlttas are limitless. $210,000.

REALTY WORLD CLARK-BRANCH.INC REALTORS 756-6336

<^ne Quinn ... ON CALL ... 756-6037

Sharon Lewis..............

Tim Smith.................752-9811

Mary Chapin...............

Ray rtol loman..............753-5147

Toll Free: 1-800-525-8910, ext. AF43

An Eoual Housing OMortunlty,

FOURBIDRGUS

WoodlawnAve..............$27,500

University..................$55,000

RIvarHllfo..................$S'SS

griffon.......................78,    W

raxelbrook............fS'SS

irook Valley..............!S'2S

herryOaks................

Bf-Mk Valley................$92,M0

Club Pines   ................$94,500

Brook Valley...............>25*225

Bethel  ......  $1M,000

Brook Valley  ........>*222

Lynndale(5).........  >175,000

Hotly Hills

.$250,000

Duffus Realty, Inc.

756-5395

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

FUMINO FURNITURC 6APPUANCE

Cieeby

KaMsaM

POLYLOK

Seeking rtliaMe person In dyeing and finishing wHh thrse years expsrience as lead person. Must be able to work well witb employees. Pay wHI depsnd upon experience.

Excellent benefits with good opportunity for advancement.

Apply Personnel Department between the hours of I to 12 and 1 to 4 pm Monday through Friday.

POLYLOK CORPORATION

3808 Anaconda Road    Tarboro.N.C.    27818

iqiwl OppemmHy Imptoy*

Drive A New

1983 Datsun Pickup

For As Little As

$1370*

per month

Basad on sailing priea of $8188.80. Ststa taxaa not Indudod. Down payment or oqiilvaiont trade *880.00. 1.8 Annual Percentage Rate, 48 monthly payments, finance charges *1184.84, Total of payments $0878.84.

Datsun Deluxe Lil Hustler

Extended Through January 31st

HOLT OLDS-DATSUN

101 Hooker Rd

Greenville

75S-3115

GRANT BUICK INC.

603 Greenville Blvd., Greenville, N.C.

USED CAR SAVINGS

1979 Buick Electra ^4 door, 3 In Stock 1982 Buick Regal looor

1980 Buick Regal zdoor

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 Regal 2 door

1981 Volkswagen Jetta 1981 Chevrolet Monte Carlo 1978 Toyota Clica ST 1977 Chevrolet Monte Carlo

1981 Datsun 280-Z

1977 Plymouth Volare

1978 Pontiac Sunbird

1979 Buick Skylark

1982 Mazda GLC 2mock 1982 Mazda RX-7

1980 Mazda GLC

"Th0DMlm%liWhenYouWoukSMidAFrt^___

WMkdlw:(:30lo(dS

SMwdMMiioZM-  _Z2!"

Iflf HouaaaFcrSala

bedroom bungalow It within wrtk-ing dirtanco rtttw Unlvoralty anO dawnfown rtwMing. Faaturot many

xtrat l.ncluolng naw furnacq.

harOwood ftoort and tunny porch. #444. CENTURY il^Batt

Mltv, 756-58*8.

WOKOS WANT DO IT You'll havo fo taa thia homa to opprociata all tha valua that, goat wWi It. Nawiy conrtructod id Lynndata. It oftan

all forfnal araat. with hardwood floort. don with firopiaca, and country kitchon. Doubta rtalrcatot

pormitt kldt to go to tho tocond ttory playroom without tho adultt. 3rd ttory walk

ditturbif

grMt for ttoragt

conrtdar a trado-ln. _____________

CENTURY 21 Batt Raattv, 7S*-**6*

iurbing attic It r will $136,500. *302.

YOU'LL LOVE THIS Woodad YardI Thit throo badroom brick

ranch fraturot Hving room with

firople<> two batht, and a garaga Low $S0't. Call CENTURY 31 Bm

Raaltv. 756-6666.1442B

1$00 SQUARE toot, throo bodroom. Bolvodero.^11756^._

3 BEDROOMS, 2300 tquaro , 2 ttory rurtk country houto, 4 old. Locofod 4 mitat pott

yMrt oW. _______

howltai off Stantontburg Rood $i7%. Dayt 756^50; ntghtt 752-1637

$3S,M0. 3/4 Dorcont FAAHA loan

   ^ '^.'iv5^a'i

mantt. To quallflod buyort. W5 Call Juna Wyrick Aldridga and Southarnland Raalty 7A-3600 /

7?t-77M

(Ion.

6-ROOM houto. and tot tor tata by

ownar. Approximataly 4 mllat Burrought Wtllcoma, ona mllo off GraanvTlla-Bathal Highway. Call

752 62f7.Qq9deyyj

Ml,500. Cantrally locatod. Thit 3 badroom. 2 bath brick ranch faafurat family room with firoplaco, plut formal arM. Attractive neighborhood, convonlonf to tchooit and thopplnq. Call Juna idga B MMtharli

Wyrick at Aldridga 8 RMlty. 756-3500 or758-7744.

riand

. J. NEW LISTING Spaciout 3 (room, 2 bath brick ranch homa

with 2 car garaga it locatod jutt off Graenvllla Boulevard, convaniant to

ihopping and ECU Alto, you'll lovo tha larga tunroom or pli Call Juna Wyrick, AldrI Southarland. 756-3500 or 758

j8r?Ko*^

58-7744.

SVb% FHA loan atsumption, 3 bodroom, 2 bath homa, carport, workthM and iMdio. $40't. (TEN-TURY B Forbat Agancy, 756-

2121 or 756-7426.

Ill Investment Proparty

NEW DUPLEX YMrly rantalof ibla

$6600 with attumabla loan. Excallant tax thalfer. Ml,000. Aldridga B Southarland. 756-3500

Top qMlHy, fual-oconomical cart can be found at low pricat In Clatsiflod.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

111

Investment Property

25X30 gar. at-homa t "1.10,

issrr

l32.(fOS 2S05 Ate

113

Land For Sale

5'?5S!ii.'',ssr4iaisi*e

country attata ar 4 tmail houMt

|24,0W.Cgllff*-W

C J HARRIS B Co,. Inc., J Look# Conrad, rogittorad forortor on tfaff. id fin

appraltelt.

invottmont anaiytit, managomant

planning. Initial conouitatlen froa of charflo,7S

chargo.757-0001. nightt 527 4768.

115

Lots For Sale

BAYTREE SUBDIVISION

AttractiM woodad toft within Iha 75^^342^ financing avallablo. Cali

EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY

BAYWOOO, TWO ACRE lot. Ft nancing avallablo. Call 756 77n. EXCELLENT BUILDER inventory o4 lota tfartlng of |utf $*,oqp. oimar at 10% Call Blount B

financing at Ball. 75^3000.

HALF ACRE LOT Eart of Aydan. 1.10 mllot oatf of Vonfort Crotroed. 766-4237.

ONE ACRE^OF land Til IRi country. Owner hat baon trant^rad and murt tall. Make end o^i Hot boon perked end it tuitabio tor mobile homo. *A42 ull Batt Realty. 756%rt"

Tvw LOTS off Highway ?44 in Pactolut; may bo told loporataiy, $4,500 B $5.600. Pottlblo wtmai able. Call Mavit 758b655 or Jino

financing available. Call Bum RmHv,

Bum. 736-2051.

1 ACRE WOODED LOT 6 mllat It of _Groonvillo on Highway 33.

Inf, private

r.?i- of a vary qualn., davalopmant with community wafer

^    iiiiwvtti    V    gvqaiw

and Ixidio trallt, $8500, Owner financing availabla. Call John Jackton nights and vookondt only Z6:i26fii.

$100 ,Dp1^ with owner finencing own lot. 12 miles Mtf of Greenville on Pactolut Hijjhway. Purchase

price $5000 with payments of $7*.65 for 8 years at 12% Interest. Cell John Jackson nights and waekands

only 756-4360.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

TIRES

NEW, USED, and RECAPS Unbeatable Prices and Quality

QUALITY TIRE SERVICE

752-7177

T

$500-$800 REBATES ON MOST QAKWOOD 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

626W.GrecmUleBhid. GrecntflUe. N.C. 27834 Phone 919-756-B434

SHOPTHE BEST

SHOP HOLT

1981 Datsun 4X4 Truck

Red. Long bed, 18,000 miles, dean.

1980 Datsun King Cab Truck

GL package, loaded, blue.

1979 Datsun King Cab Truck

4 speed, air condition, AkMIM radio.

1982 Chevrolet Camaro Berlinetta

Loaded. White with blue interior, like new.

1981 Datsun 280-ZX

2 plus 2. QL package. Burgundy, 21,000 miles.

1981 Datsun 280-ZX

6L package. Blue with blue velour Interior.

1980 Chevrolet Monte Carlo

Sliver with burgundy landau top, burgundy Interior.

1981 Datsun 210 Liftback

Loaded. Light blue with blue Intwlor.

Toyota

S speed, air coi

Corolla

1981

2 door. 5 spee3, air condition, AM-FM stereo caaaetta, brown.

1980 Datsun 200-SX Liftback

Automatic, air, AM-FM radio. Black, nice car.

1980 Datsun 200-SX Coupe

Automatic, air, AM-FM stereo cassette, red.

1981 Datsun 210

Sapeed, AM4HM radio, silver.

1981 Chevrolet Chevette

4 door, automatic, air condition, AM-FM stereo, beige.

1978 Chevrolet Malibu Classic

4 door, automatic, air, AM-fM etereo, light green.

1976 Alfa Romeo

4 door, 5 speed, air condltton, AM-FM radio. Mack.

HOLT OLDS-DATSUN

101HookrRd.

75W115

i





115

Lots For Si

LOTS AHGiy; ritdM USM , Slav* Evans * Aaaocisiss.

>io,eoe

35S27V

1

RENTALS

LOTS FO R

dsposits rsqutrsd no iMta. 75*^13 bs4>sssn I sod S

. Me I mna i homo* SocM^

NEED STORAGE? Ws Ksvf sizs to mast Aril

Ecw RtfWfv^R^cr WWW nv

to mast your storaga nsad. ling^ SsM Storaoa, , V Fridav * 5 CatlTs-V^

at

121 Apartments For Rent

AVAILABLE A OMCEI 2 badroom nl varalt^^ Condominium

baths, carpatod.

TowntMusa iniloaad patia pool. air. stoa. retrigarator, dishwashar. S2SS in-cludas watar. aawar, cabla TV Ldaaa and daposit. No grass cut-coupias

ting. No pratarrad.

3610or75S-4532

AZALEA GARDENS

Graanvilla's nawast and most uniqualy fumishad ont badroom apartments.

All energy afficlant designad.

Quean size bads and studio couches.

Washers and dryers optional

Free watar artd sawar and yard maintenance.

All apartments on grourtd fioor with porches.

Frost-frae rafrigarators

Located in Azalea Gardens near Brook Valley Country Club. Shoum by appointment only. Couples or singles. No pats.

Contact JT or Tommy Williams

CARRIAGE HOUSE Apartments. Highway 43 south, just past PiH Plaza. 2 bedroom townhouses, all eiectrk. Dishwasher, refrigerator, fully carpeiad, cable TV, pool and laundry room. 754-3430 after 5 p.m

121 Apartmdnts For Rant

URGE ONE BEDROOM APARTMENT Completely Furnished

Individual air and heat, caidrai vacuum. Laundbv raam and drink

machina. AvaitaMa imma^taiy.

taoo month. Call 2Sml._

ONE iEDROOIM, furnished or moMlt    for

ronf. Contact J T or WHilims,

ONE

kitchen

M apartn appliancgs.

im.

ONE BEDROOM, one Mock from ECU Libranr. tiTC par month. Call 7^grTff77

ONE BEDROOM apartment for sublease. 3 Mocks from ECU Carpeted. New appliances. 7M-30t3

ONE BEDROOM furnished efficiency apartment. Freshly painted.

bwcKs from universitY, Availa-Me now. SI7S a month. Call W S Corbm.HI,7a-40

ONE BEDROOM Apartment for rant, partly furnlshad. 752 7SS1

ONE I badroom apartment; one 3 badroom apartment; one 3 badroom trailer. Calt7S2 3K._

STRATFORD ARMS APARTMENTS

The    To    Live

Office hours 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. AAonday through Friday

Call us 34 hours a

jrs a day at

756-4dOO

122

Business Rentals

TERRIFIC BUSINESS lacation tar rent Located in the 37M Mock of heavily travatiad East Mth Street. Am^ Free parktiw. For additional information, call Real Estafa BftaffSt TSr-qg.

TERRIFIC BUSINESS tocation for rent Located af Mghiy visaMa comer of Wth, Dickineon, Railroad Street. 4JOO square laat with ample Free parking. For additional kt-formanon, call Tha AAarkatpiaca,

lns.7S:^:_^_

12S Condominiums For Rent

TWO BEDROOM fiat dwpiax availabla In Shanandoah. S300 par month. 13 month tana. Young couple pratarrad. Call Clark Branch Realtors. 7SAA33S._

127

HouMsFor Rent

AVAILABLE lAAMEDIATELY 3 bedroom, tVt bath townhousa in Windy RIdga. Includes fireplaca in living room, kitchen complete with range, retrigarator and dishwashar. wamar and dryer, free use of pool, sauna and tannis courts. S43S par month/one month sacurity daposit, laasa. Call Mavis Butts Raalty,

ZSfcStil

HOUSES AND APARTMENTS m town and country. Call 74*-33S4 or

LYNNDALE - Four badroom ranch home availabla aarty January. SS50 noonth. Deposit and ont year laasa required. Cell Richard Lane at Blount A Ball. 75S-3000

Cherry Court

Spacious 3 badroom townhouses with I'/i baths. Also 1 badroom apartments compactors . wasnar dryar hook-ups, laundry room, sauna, tannis court, club house and pool. 752 1S57

DUPLEX Two badroom, 1Vi bath, carpeted, waher-dryar hookup, heat pump, dishwashar. AvaHaMa Feb-ruarv 1. Call after 4.756-3563.

DUPLEX 3 bedroom apartment close to University and schools. Electric heat, central air, raeoe. retrigarator, dishwashar, washBr dryer lookups. S2SS. Availabla Feb ruary 15 or aarlier. Deposit; lease reqgfrqd, 7Jg-3^ day or night,

EASTBROOK AND VILLAGE GREEN APARTMENTS

327 bne, two and three bedroom garden and townhouse apartnrwnts, taaturing Cable TV. modern ap^l anees, 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 pool. Adjacant to Greenvllla Counfr/ Club. 756-4069

IN WINTERVILLE- 3 bedroom apartment, appliances furnished, no children, no pets. Deposit and laasa. $195 a month. Call 756-5007. AvallaMe end of December

KINGS ROW APARTMENTS

One and two badroom garden apartments. Carpeted, rarm, refrigerator, dishwashar, disposal aridcable TV Conveniently located to shopping center and schools Locatedlusf off lOth Street.

Call 752-3519

LARGE 2 BEDROOM Duplex. 705-B Hooker Road. Stove and rafrlgara-tor, washer, dryer hookup^ air condition, heat pump. Deposit and lease required. No pets. t2M. Call after 5 pm. 756-5217, 756-6382, or

756-0489

If that vacant apartmant is losing you nwoey, remady the situation quickly with a rasult-gatting Classified ad. Call 752-6166.

LOVETREESI ...

Experience the unique in apartment living with nature outside your door.

COURTNEYSQUARE APARTMENTS

Quality construction, fireplaces? heat pumps (heating costs 50% less than comparaMe units), dishwasher, washer/dryer hook-ups, caMe TV,wall-to-walf carpet, therroopane windows, extraInsuiation.

Office Open 9-5 Weekdays

9-5 Saturday    1    -S    Sunday

Marry Lane Off Arlington Blvd.

750-5067

TAR RIVER ESTATES

1, 2, and 3 bedrooms, washer-dryer hook-ups, cabla TV, pool, club house, playground. Near ECU

Our Reputation Says It All -"A Community Complex."

1401 Willow Street Office - Corner Elm A Willow

752-4225

TWO BEDROOM -----

baths, carpeted, kitchen ------

heat pump, 1M G Cedar Court,

at pump, IM nonth. 750-3311.

WEDGEWOODARMS

NOW AVAILABLE

2 bedroom, V/t bath towr . Excellent location. Carrier

heat

pumps. Whirlpool kitchen, washer/dryer hookups, poM, tannis court.

756-0987

BEDROOM apartments.

752-3311.

1 AND________

AvallaMe Immadlatelv

1 BEDROOM anargy aft apartment. 756-5389 or 7&4)025

efficient

2 BEDROOM TOWNHOUSE 4 miles West of hospital. Washar/dryer hook up, central air. Call 753-0181 nlQhts, and 756-5780 davs

2 BEDROOM apartments availabla. See Smith Insurance A Realty. 752 2754._

2 BEDROOM DUPLEX near ECU Carpet, heat pump, range, refrlger

ator.NQpgtit,|air>Kj^_

2 BEDROOM TOWNHOUSE Energy efficient heat pump, 1</i baths, carpet, range, refrigerator,

di$>iwg$hr. h99Hwt

3 BEDROOM >^rtment, caroeted, appliances, bath, $2ScT 803 ^rtment 4, Willow Street. 758

3 BEDROOM DUPLEX near Uni versify. $290.756-7779._

CLASSIFIED ADS will go to work (for your your ad.

VUPVSaiV-IK W    will

for you to find cash buyers for your unused items. To place

phone 752-6166

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

THREE BEDROOMS, freshly painted. $250 per month. Convenient location. Call CENTURY 21 Bass Realty. 756-6666

TWO BEDROOM house near col laoa. CalT750-2854.

101 SOUTH WOodlawn Avenue, 3 bedroom, centralhaat and air. $335

month. (9191 745-4306 or 745-3320.

2 BEDROOM country apartmant, 11 miles south of Greenville on Highway 43. Call 524 5507._

Highway 43.

2 BEDROOM house, 413 Easi Church Street, Fermvllle. Call after 6 p.m.. 746-4560

2 BEDROOM HOUSE Washington St^. 752 3311.

North

3 BEDROOM HOUSE within walk ing distance of the university. $325 month. CENTURY 21 B Forbes Agency. 756-2121

3 BEDROOM HOUSE located close to University. 756-0528

3 BEDROOM house, 3 bath, central location and more. $425 month. 756-4410 or 756-5961._

3 BEDROOMS, I bath, corner lot, $275. Call Stave Evans A Associates. 355 2727._

133 AAoblle Homes For Rent

BE YOUR OWN LANDLORD 1979. 14x60, 2 bedroom. 1Vi bath with washer, dryer, and central air. Low downpayment and assume pay mants lass than rent. TrI County Homes. 756-0131

CLEAN. 3 bedrooms. Call 756-0173 FOR RENT OR SALE 14X60 3 bedroom. Located in country on 264 750 3769

SPECIAL RATES for students. 3 bedroom with car^, $145. No pets, no children. 758 4541.

TWO BEDROOMS, completely furnished, washer/dryer, no pats. Call 752-0196

UNFURNISHED 1 bedroom, $160 a month, stove and refrigerator In-cluded. Good location, l-ai-3336. VERY NICE 13x50 mobile home, private lot, very clean. 756-3330; nlohts 750 7741

Home for rant.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

WE 8UY USED CARS lOHNSON MOTOR CO.

FULLTIME

BAR MANAGER WANTED

Must be experienced bartender and have somp management ability.

Apply At The

BEEF BARN

Between 5:00 and 6:00 PM Daily

OAKAAONT SQUARE APARTAAENTS

Two bedroom townhouse ap^-mants. 1212 Radbanks Road. Dish-washer, refrigerator, range, disposal includi^ We also tave Cable TV Vary convenient to Pitt Plaza and University. Also some furnished apaiTments available.

756-4151

fl

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

WE INSTALL ALUMINUM AND VINYLSIDING

flemodp'inqBoom Addi' ..ns.

C.L. Lupton. Co.

GOLF AND SKI

SALE

NOWINrOGRESS

DortnsJaimaryAU Golf e Ski Merchandise

Reduced 25% to 70% Greenville Country Club

756-0504

ejnEnn#

Challenging, yet rewarding positions availabie for mature, responsibie individuis, if you are seeking the opportunity to advance whiie buiiding a secure future, contact ME and in just 45 minutes I wili show you how to make $300. - $500. a week: An exciushre preview of this income-making opportunity will be shown at 10:00 oclock Saturday, January 8,1982.

ACT NOW - CALL FOR APPOINTMENT

355-6972

ASK FOR PAULA PYLE

2S10 South Charles Boulevard, GreanvNIa, N.C.

THE DECISION IS YOURS!

133 Mohile Homes For Rant itgpoOMS. ^aMw!Ttahd!

washar/dr^, axcallant condHlon.

] BEDROOM trallar Sunny Lana Club. Call 746-4380.    _

fumishad in attar 6 p.m

3 BEOftOCMS, 3 baths, $175 month At Quail Ri<^. A^y In parson. 1487 Watt SthWwt_

3 BEDROOM fumishad frailar. 12x58. Naar Parkars Bai^ua. 756 5241aftar.

2 BEDROOMS. 1 bath, oontral haat.

air conditloa $335 a mgntti. Qli StavtEvai Assoc tatas. 355^2727

2 BEDROOM mobila homa, arivata lot, washar/dryar, cantral aSr. Call

752-8181.

3 BE

milas ______ .    _____ _____

ConiaY. no pats. 756-8975 aWar 5.

 undarplnnad. <

PIH Plaza. Naar D H

135 OffkB Space For Rent

AVAILABLE NOW PIH Plaza, two 1088 foot offica spacas. Good toca-tlon. raasonabla rant. Call 757 8689.IBe iMUy Kcflector. GreenvtUe, N.C.-Frfctay, Jaauary 7. iiss-i*

135 Office Space For Rent

135 Office Space For Rent

140 WANTED

AYDEN OFFICE SPACE for rant J87 South PiM Street. CMT746-3767.

TWO OFFICES FOR $250 1 ifici for $125. Offica plus uaa of racapfl^ araa. $175. Ottlca plus aemaom to amwar phona $M. For mora to formation calibea Haffran at 756-8734.

WANT TO BUY tobacco pounds or least tobacco pounds. 749-3551 offer 6e.m.

xttrarfiuf frar*

for laaM. A|H>roximataly ISM square teat Lacatad 2087 Evana Street batMa AAosafoy Brothers. Cell 756-9374.

300 SQUARE FEET two room offica

NEAR DOWNTOWN Si^ otfica 3140 month including utttttlas. Also sulfas and confarenca room available. Evenirras. 758-5848.

and 440 square taet Ihraa rooM availabla. Call Jim Lanlar, 752-5585

142 Roommate Wanted

or grod studont

NICE FURNISHED offica naar post offica. $80. Includes utilHias. Sh^ term. 756-9671 or 751-1543.

137 Resort Property For Rent

wanted to sharo 3 badroom townhousa In Windy Ridga. FIraMaca. patio. moI. fonnis court. Call Pamv days 7^-4139 or nIghH

OFFICES FOR LEASE Contact J T or Tommv Vinillams. 756-7815.

SPRING VACATION on lha Outer Denk* " fully aoyippad con-donjinlom. For rant March 36-Aprll 2. Phona752ta18aar 5:30. ^

SINGLE OFFICES or sulfas, with utilllias and ianltorial. Chapin-LiHfo building, 3106 S ManSlai

ROOMAAATE(S) wanted. Availabla immadiataly. Brick homa with two baths, full kitchen, firapiaca, and

OATAAta 1 m-amI t-taitrinrl wtalk rVme*

Oriva. Call 7S6-7799. STORE/RESTAURANT/SINGLE or mltipla officws availabla rww downtown. OHicas convanlant to courtfiouew 7MOft1

138 Rooms For Rent

i#u*esjw. iMfninQ oviK ^orvn

at m Eaal I4th Straat. Prater student or ntaturo adult Call 758-

ROI^ ^RNISHED^ including utilltlas. 3603 Tryon Drive. SIOO. 753-2884.

2983 attar 7 p.m. or com# by boforo noon and Mk for Rudv.

TWO ROOM or four room offica

ROOMAAATE WANTED to sharo 2

suit*. Highway 264 Business. Eco^ nomkal. Private parking. Soma storaga availabla. Call Connelly Branch at Clark Branch Realtors. 756A336.

STUDIO APARTMENT ROM $100 month includas aiaclrlclty. Convenient to campus and downtown. 355-2257 avanlnos.

StalUl AAtaf 1 IfMiVTWy Ml/W viffltaflTf, HI"

cludM avarything but food. Call 732-9S34.

ROOAMAATE NEEDED, Mi rent, ' , utilities. Cloaa to campus. Call 7^129.

142 Roommete Wanted

FEAAALE nice 3 badroom houta. Including local phona. $95 and I/i utmtlas.Xall 75841966.

LOOKING FOR rasponsibla mala to share 3 badroom apartmarH. 893.58 monm and halt uttllHas. 758-7299.

PRIVATE ROOM $87 a manth plus < ' 3 utilltlas Eastbrook Apart mants.

144 Wanted To Buy

BUYING USED pistols and guns. gall Bakar-s BaTby Shop. 758-1%^

HANDCRAFTS WANTED to sail on a commission basis only. Call 756 4770batwaan11and6. ^

TAX PREPARES I ^11 purchata' your accounts. Rafarancas furnlshad. 756 4553.

WANT TO BUY^maNany Ouaan Anna farn stand. Call 756YB.

146    Wanted To LeaM

Call 756-9623attar 6pm._

THE REAL

ESTATE

CORNER

Cyprc Creek Towukoipes

We*ve Made the Best Now weVe made the best Affordable

y

*12X FHA/VA Fixed Rate for 30 years. (*Rate eubject to change)

13^ X Conventional Fixed Rate for 30 years.

blount & ball

MARKETED EXCLUSIVELY BY

756-3000 OPEN HOUSE SUNDAY From 2 to 5

ESTATE SALE

19M 14 X n MONTICELLO TRAILER by Oakwood. Two bedrooms, 2 baths, fully furnished, heat pump and central air. Underpinned, excellent condition, set up on nice lot at Evans Mobile Home Park.    qqq

1172 BUICK ELECTRA, leather upholstery, 93,(XX) miles. Well cared for car In excellent condition.

2,000

ZENITH CONSOLE, 25 Color, 5 years old. Price includes outside antenna.

$400

Shown By Appointmant Only

Call 756-6134

Mildred Stocks

Executrix for tlw estele of AHen Heatti

A NEW YEAR, NEW PRICES, NEW HOMES ***NEW INTEREST RATES***

ASaUHE A N1/2% Fixeo RATE LOAN. Thal-I only oiw ol th# phMM 10 lhi m8 kapl homo N 213 Stuttordahlru Roid In popular Bohraduro SubdMolon. Tuvo ttory plan faatum toyar, formal Hdng room, tormN dkUng room, apadout Wichan and aaHngming araa, iamlly room wHh flraplaoo. uWity araa, garaga. two taparaN dacks. Currant loan bal, approx. $48,080. currant paymant 1644 Pm. Mead at

FOUR BEDROOMS AT A OREAT FWCE. Thia homa la ImmacuMa plualll Try 10 And tour bodrooma at ihia prtca in Ma good a loeaOon. LocaMd al 404 Laneakit Oftva in Camdol SutxXvialon on a prhaM amodad M. Plan laMuroa formal iMng and dkima araaa. khchan wHh aaUng araa, tamNy room wNh fbaplaea 8 aaH. tour bodrooma, thraa hiN baltw. Exfra apodal utNNy araa Mrtih Ma of cabmoia. ona car garaga. CaH lor an appokrtmanl. Mead at ITMH.

lAROE OLDER HOIK ttMLaMbMi^ Mrad i||^)catad 81402 Hookar Road Mo targo homo taalurad ^|Biari%lMia aCSwao a big family room and

IThroo bodrooma, bra fuN

battw. garage and aioragoWMPUMVoAtaiPteltar M. 8ata pitoa tM4M.

13% LOAN AieUMFnON. ExcMlonl honw al 1103 Cortland Road m Orchard HW

SubdMakm. Inaida plan whicb la apoSoaa laaturaa IMng room Mth firapiaca, apadoua kNcban and dfcilng araa Mob oniara onto a dock. Tbraa bodrooma, two fu8 balha. garaga and largaal M In Itw ndgbborbood wHb fanco for pola. Currant loan batanea of Approx. 348.800. Paymant of 3883.10 Pm. Pitead al 383JH. Maka uaanolforl

8TBP INTO OLD WILUAMSBURO. Tbit homa la txad ropHea d an dd WMfomaburg homa bul avaryMng about thia ona la modam. Ovar 29B0 aquara fool ol haatad araa plua a doubfo garaga. Plan foomraa largo toyar wM alalreaaa. aparato formd IMng and dtoing roemt, fomHy room Mth llropfoea, kliehan and aoOng araa wWi aN Iho oxtraa, kMr bodrooma. 21/2 bathe, larga dock on roar of bouoa and amaN baaamani araa tor ttorago or workabop. LocaMd at 106 Windamara a. in WIndamora Subdlvtoton. ItMJSI.

am MEW OP THE OOLF COURM. Tbio two atory cdonitl ovartooka ona of lha boot vfowa on Brook Valfoya fina golt oourao, but ma rtal pkia la lha houaa. Naarly 2800 aquara foal of araa wWi an imtMfovabfo oounlry kMcban wim pina lioora, tramandoua graal room wWi firapiaca, hobby or work room, mraa or four bodrooma upafoira, formal dining room wHb pIno boor*. Singlo garage and eaperafo etonee. ItSMIS.

ORfAT STARTER HOME IN C0L08RAL NEIOHTS. TMa homa at 2810 Jofforaon Drive lor only 837X*naads an ewnar.Convenfonllyloeafod to ehopplog, tcboda, churctfoa and Sw UravaraNy mia homo foaturaa IMng room wHh flrapfoca, ibroa badrooma or bra and a don, kNebon, aoparala dintag araa. doaod In garaga for work room or hobby. A good buy al ilia prioa. 137 JM.

ANOTNER ig 1/1% LOAN ASEUMPTION. The owner natoa to foava mia Una homo M muat banetar away. Hie toot la your gain. TMa home la m knmacufoH condf-on and baa bean waN cared for. Plan foabiroo graal room wMti flrapfoca, aaparala dtoino area, mraa bodrooma, bra fua bama. nloa kllcban wim ak axiraa. deck, tofo ol plueee Nke eeWng lane and Ibapfoce Ineerta. Currant loan befonee on mis VA loan la Approx. 46,133, currant paymant la $41454 PITI. Prtoad al nMM. toealad al 181 Lancaafor Orlvo In Cambrktgo Subdivialon.

A MANEION M ONEENVNXE. Locafod al 1813 East PHm sbaal on a larga eomar lol. TMa oidar homa foabiraa ovar 2730 aquara fool 04 hoatod araa Mm larga foyer, formal IMng and tramandoua torawi dliiing room. Sun room, don or aludy, kit-ebon, tour badrooma, 21/2 boma, huge aWc. garaga and ofltoe asparsM. Larga iwidect^eU loL ell99p999*

PNMIA PIXEO RATE P1NANCNI0 AVANJtSU on maaa two now homaa In Or-chard HM SubdNfolon. RaaBy uMqua lloor plana uONza a Iho avoHabfo apace wMeb taabiraa graal room wWi dkitng aroa and flrapfoca, oozy modam kNeban wim tola of exira'A forge atoraga apace, mraa badrooma, bra fuH bama. Whora can you gal a deal Rko mia m ma low sar a. Can lormora dafofla.

34MMIH. Hwd to baNava you cm an* buy a Mea boma In a ntoi araa tor mis prtoa anymora. Wta buM taN^admpm|K)|M foaajaataiMty room Mm flrapfoca. kitehan wim aaUng area, ofhipHt%Xom,Mrgta>na car garage wim amali wothahop or atoraga araaJlHRnailcerry Ak^ 8R1726. Fritad to aa8 at

l8aaREaORDOWtlE.TMatwnialeundarnawownaraMpandlabatnQcfoanadup and bpniaod up Mid gsamg ready to aaM. Hard to And a home In iMa araa tor a good prtoa Nka mia. Modern pfon taahirao larga toyar Mb stop down ihrir: room wMb flraplaoo. aaparala largo tormal dbdng room. Mteban toadod mm cabfosM. bra badrooma plus a study or amtR don, larga doubfo garage. A on a larga bra acra loLAddWlonal lot next door itacaraflabla. Pitead atm.

FEDERAL LANO BANK PtNANCNia AVAXAEU on Na boms in exoMfonI eondl-flon In HORSEflHOE ACRES subdbdaton not for bom m# HoapMal comptox . Plan taabiraa graal room wflb flrapfoca and forgo dintng area, apoco conactoua fcn-etan. flwao bodroosH, bra full baflia. Wall landacapod loi otfora a loi ol room tor gMdmbig or play and flwraa a paSo and aaparala Storaga bunding. Currant loan

batmoa ot approx. 134wflh paymant oilJflPWPdaadatlflMW-pwes RBWCnON oh anr LOCATKM AIIOtNm. loealad al 233 BarksMra

Head mit Baa boaw foaturaa toyar. tormal Mvlng and formal dbiinp room. lamMv

room wNb flrspfooe, fcNetMn wflb amafl dbMHa araa, aeraanod In back porMi. fliraa badrooma, bra Mbafl>a.mfoad now alOwner wants an olfor.

HE D.G. MULS IGDICr

752-4012

752-7666

PROTECTING YOUR POSSESSIONS IS OUR BUSINESS

Our Qood As QoM Quarantae" aaauraa you of the sate daNvwry o( your tumltufv and vahialilsa, your offica or store aquip-mant. Moving locady or out of stete, you nood the roMMIty and aWordabWty ol Aactlon, your Unltod agont.

1007 ChBstnut St.. QiwnvHto, N.C

758-7000

LOCX THE DOOR AGAINST HIGH RENT by owning your own home. Great starter or retirement home featured In this 2 bedroom. 1 b frwne home. Large IMng room, eet-in kitchen, den aree, extra dtep lot Mth outside storage. FHA/VA financing available. S2fl,m.

mlnutea from . ^-twea lem IMng room,

* aasumable 8%% FmHA gwyo downpayment to qualified buyer at ttUt pricel

*51 I

HOmilBLE WORDITRANBEERRED; but you can taka awinable FmHA loan H

ai^anloy tfra comlorta thIa fine brick home

^    her    financing

available LMng room, kttchen Mth separate dining a^l^ laundry a^ 3 badrooma, 114 bafhs, SStoijSil f "flhborhood. Don't defay-

A HOME YOU CAN JUtT MOVE INTO 8 llvel Just

palmed Inside & out, new vinyt & wallpiwer In popular WHHamaburg mottf. Features nice hardwood floors, IMng room, wainacoling In dNng room i kHohan, 3 bedrooms, IVk baths, carport Mth storage 8 attractive lot tn Eastwood. Asaumabla 10% flxad rata loan aaaumptlon; total monfWy payments ol 1347.34. Only

IF YOU'RE LOOKINQ FOR A tURER Omn homa, milel location 8 room to spraad out, don't tot this beauty pata you by! Home offera dead-end street tocaftoi) over 1S60 aquara feel Including toyer, IMng dining area In Mtchen, den with fireplace, 3 badrooma, 2 baths, haat pump, attractively landscaped tol. Asaumable 1314% fixed rate loan to qualiftod buyer, til,m.

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)0-Ttae D*Uy Reflector, GreeavtUe, N.C.-Friday, Janu^ 7, IM

REWIRING-GreenvUleUtUlUes crewmen on north Summit Street. The rewiring was make use of a clear day Tuesday to finish part of a change of service at the complex, some wiring on the River Front Apartments (Reflector Photo by Tommy Forrest)

Life As It's Lived

Time For The Visit To A Dentist And Terror

ByGAlLMKmELS

I have never understood how a doctor or a dentist could rate in their professional capacity as a father figure. How anyone but the Marquis de Sade could put their trust in someone who not only inflicts pain but charges money for doing so is simply beyond me.

But terror-stricken as I am, I find that I, like everyone else, must occasionally submit to torture for the sake of my general health. Naturally, 1 put it off till the last minute; I was, for instance, unable to use one side of my mouth before I gave in and made an appointment with my dentist last week.

Although this man appears to be friendly and kind, I am almost positive that underneath his compassionate facade beats the heart of an agent of SAVAK. And he did nothing to raise himself in my estimation when, after examining me, he suggested a root canal.

Isnt there anything else you can do? I gulped.

What were you thinking of?

False teeth seem like an attractive alternative.

He patted my shoulder. Now, now, theres nothing tobefrii^tenedof.

Remembering Megs description of her root canal (It was pain!), I cowered back into the recesses of the chair.

Is there any reason that we cant give you gas? he continued.

Theres not even any reason you cant use chloroform.

He smiled reassuringly. Im sure that wont be necessary. Then he placed something that looked like a piece of elaborate diving equipment over my nose. Just breathe deeply, and in no time youll be relaxed, he told me as he aimed the barrel of a huge shot needle at me.

In no time I was hyperventilating. I had

forgotten to mention that I ne^ect to breathe in when Im abject with fear. Its a trait that has had Phillip mystified for years. Are you sure this gas stuff is not a placebo, I squeaked.

He quickly filled my mouth with enoui dental equipment to prevent anything but a few gutteral attempts at screaming.

As he whitted away at my tooth with his instruments of torture, he asked in an offhand manner, Do you have anything at home for pain?

Thats when the involuntary tremors began to wrack my body. He looked at me qs if 1 were Mount St. Helens. Your daughter is a better patient.

Finally, after 1 had pulled my sweater out of shape and had bruised my arms with my fingers, he looked up at his assistant and said, Ive done about all the damage I can do.

He was lying. He hadnt yet given me the bill.

Lawyer Says Bigamist

Had No Plan To Defraud

By LARRY LOPEZ

Associated Press Writer

PHOENIX, Ariz. (AP) -Giovanni Vigliotto married at least 100 wrnnen to fulfill their fantasies, not to defraud them, his lawyer says.

This defendant is in love with life, with women and with marriage, defense attorney Richard Steiner said in opening arguments Thuisday at Vigliottos trial on chai^ of bigamy and fraud.

He offered to these 100 or more women a chance to withdraw from the humdrum of life and be treated as important people, to be treated as queens, as all of us like, Steiner said.

But the prosecutor, Deputy Maricopa (bounty Attorney David Stoller, sd Vigliotto robbed the women of their assets and emotional wellbeing.

The trial was scheduled to resume at 10 a.m. Monday.

The case is one of promises, dreams, insecurities, stengtos, love, lies ... vio-lation of the human spirit,

Stoller said.

Vi^iotto talked of family traditions, he talked values of home ... he ingratiated himself into a womans affections only to vanish with her money, Stoller told the jury.

The story of the prosecutor is a fantasy, Steiner replied. This is a case about fantasy.

The fantasy was mutual, the public defender said.

There is no dispute Vigliotto went throu^ wedding ceremonies in Mesa and has gone throu^ similar ceremiMes with more than 100 women in the last few years, he said. "He created an aura of excitemeirt that allowed these woman to j<^ in his fantasy ... it was madness ~ something they both shared.

Vi^iottb, 53, is charged with one couiH eadi of fraud and bigamy. Prosecutors say he bilked Patricia A. Gardiner, 41, of Mesa, of $36,500 when he disappeared two weeks after their marriage Nov. 18,1981.

Glimpses By Ex-SovietGeneral

The defendant initially sou^t to fire Steiner and represent himself but changed his mind a day before trial, telling the judge he had been admitted to mental ho^itals ei^t times.

Steiner promptly asked Siq)erior Oourt Jud^ Rufus Coulter to add insanity as a defense, but Coulter denied the motion Thursday, saying it should have been raised earlier.

Vigliotto was arrested <m a parole violation charge the next month in Panama City, Fla., where another of his alleged wives had tracked him over three nxHiths and 10,000 miles, after being left barefoot in the motel parking lot.

By CHARLES J. HANLEY Associated Press Writer NEW YORK (AP) -Former Soviet general Pyotr G. Grigoroiko, whose book Memoirs offers a rare ^Lmpse at generations of Kremlin leaders, says new Soviet chief Yuri V. Andropov probably will free some jaUed dissidents soon asagekuretotheWest.

But there is no doubt the repression then will be stepped up, he said. You must understand: the new head of the government is a cop.

The 75-year-old exile, Imig one of the U.S.S.R.s best-known dissenters, was in

terviewed at his home in Long Island City, a grimy industrial comer of New Yorkaty.

He has been here since 1^, dim be left Moscow for medical treatmmt in the United States and the Soviet government ^rq^ him of his citizenship.

Memoirs, just puUisbed by W.W. Norton i Co.. details a life crowded with history a childhood amid the fury of revolution, a fervently communist young manhood, combat commands in World War II, post-war disillusionment, a daring personal campaign for democracy, and finally suppression.

BLACKPOOL, England (AP) - Animal lovers want to give a gallantry award to a man who died trying to save his drowning dog. But the attempt to save the thiy torier claimed the lives of three police officers, nearly killed two others and left at least one fellow officer angry.

This thing should be put in a bloody museum for all the damage and death its caused, police officer Brian Horsfall said as he lugged the body of the dead dog named Henry from the frigid sea where it was recovered Thursday, one day after thedrownings.

Henrys owner, Alistair Anthony, jumped into the water and drowned in a bid to save the animal after it was swept off Blackpool promenade in a gale.

Five officers, incliKling a policew(Hnan, plunged into the 20-foot waves to aid Anthony. The woman and two other officers died. One of the survivors hearts stopped and he remains gravely ill. The other was kq)t under sedation at a hospital for 24 iHMirs.

Tie Royal Society for tte Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, which was founded in 1824 as the worlds first humane society and has Queen Elizabeth II as its official patron, recommended Anthony for a posthumous gallantry award for trying to save his pet.

He was obviously a very sensitive man and if anything happened to his dog it would be his first reaction to try to save it, said Margaret Bysterbosch, secretary of Bladqxwl brapchoftheRSPCA.

No suggestion so far has been made for awards for the officers, but Blackpool Mayor Tom Percival has made a public appeal for fuiks to aid dependents of the victims.

Horsfall found the dead dog at Fleetwood, eight miles north of here, as 100 police, aided by light aircraft and helicopters, scoured 15 miles of the Lancashire coast in northwest England for bodies of the victims.

The body of police officer Colin Morrison, a 38-year-old married man with four children, was winclwd from the sea by helic(q)ter.

The bodies of Anthony, 23-year-old officer Angela Bradley, and 24-year-old officer Gordon Connolly are still missing.

'Black Hole' Discovered

In the early 1970s, Grigorenko was put in psychiatric prison for four years because of his protest activities. He was diagnosed as 'suffering fnnn paranoia with the presence of reformist ideas. Three Anr-ican psychiatrists lata- found him to be mentally sound.

Grigorenko never met Andropov, 1 headed the KGB secret pdice in the 1970s. But Grigorenkos wife, Zinaida, once tangled with Andnqwv for an hour.

In 1972, she asked for an appointmoit with the KGB chief to aiq)eal for her husbands release. When she arrived at KGB offices, she was met by a man ^ recognized as Andropov but who identified himself as Yuri Andreivich Yuriev. He said, Why come to us? The doctors should handle the generals case, she now recalls.

I told him, Both you and I know my husband is normal. And he said, OK, lets talk about his future. Andnqiov wanted to know what her husband would do if he were released, Mrs. Grigorenko said. I told him he would probably write a history of the Second World War, a project suggested to him by autlK- Alexander I. Solzhenitsyn.,

Oh, no, he wont! Andropov replied, according to Mrs. Grigorenko. History is also a kind of politics.

She described the future Communist Party general secretary as very sly, very smooth. He tried to be nice. But her husband was not freed for another two years.

Grigorenko said he expects Andropov, dio succeeded the late Leonid I. Brezhnev as party leader, to make a ^w for the West and allow prominent dissident Andrei A. Sakharov to return to Moscow from his banishment in the city of Gorky, or to free some serioiely ill dissidents from prismi.

But then he will return to the pld line he followed at the KGB - suppressing dissent, he said.

The exile acknowledged that the dissident movement has been hard hit by a crackdown on the Helsinki Watch human rights groups in Moscow and other Soviet cities.

But the movement is changing its form, Grigoraako sakl. There is now a Soviet pacifist movement, there are growing nationalist movements among minorities, and the dissident religious movements are very widespread.

His 6-foot-3 frame is now bent with age, and he tremUes from Parkinsms disease, a nerve disorder. But the bald, good-bumped Grigormiko remains alert, speaking in a forceful bariUme.

He was interviewed through an interpreter in his simply furnished fifth-floor apartment, in a living room full of books and memorabilia, Russian icons and Tchaikovsky records. He and Zinaida, his second wife, care for his eldest scm, Oleg, an invalid. Another son lives with his family nearby.

Grigpenkos Memoirs seeks to puncture some of

ficial myths about Kremlin leacters:

Althou^ Brezhnev was adulated as a World War II hero, Grigorenko, who served with him, writes that Brezhnev avoided the bat-tlefroot.But they ^ depict things as if Brezhnev had himself led an attack. *

Marshal Georgi Zhukov, renowned World War II general, was poorly educated in military science, made childish mistakes, and was cruel and vengeful.

Nikita Khrudichev, a commander in the midst of an inqwrtant Worid War II battle, acted like a child, fri^tened and cpitributed to a SovKt defeat. Later, as premier, Khrushchev stripped the dissident Grigorpiko of his military rank but at the last minute declined to sign the potentially iitegal decree. A fdlow Politburo member signed it instead.

DISSIDENT - Former Soviet general Pyotr G. Grigorenko and his wife Zinaida pose with Grigorenkos book at their New York City home. The book offers a behind-the-scenes glimpse at generations of Kremlin leaders. (APLaserphoto)

CITY FLOODED JAKARTA, Indonesila (AP) - Heavy torrential rains flooded this city of 6.5 million people today, causing long traffic jams on the hi^ways and preventilng many people from getting to work.

WASHINGTON (AP) -Astronomers say they have discovered a massive black hole - an object so dense that nothing escapes its gravity - in a neighboring galaxy. It is the first such ixxiy ever confirmed outside the Milky Way.

Canadian and U.S. scientists said Thursday that the black hole they found is in the Large Magellanic Goud, the nearest galactic neighbp to the galaxy Milky Way which contains Earths solar system.

Scientists believe black holes are the final ^ges of some big, dying stars. These stars collapse and compress to create small but very dense objects with gravitational pulls so strong that nothing - including light -escapes.

The sun, with a diameter of 865,000 miles, would have to be compressed to a diameter of less than four miles to become a black hole.

The newly discovered black hole is only the second of its type found so far, said the scientists. This body is the companion of a nearby visible star that can be used to make indirect measurements of the black hole.

The first black Ixrie was discovered 10 years ago in the Milky Ways constdla-tion Cygnus. Named Cygnus X-1, it also is part of a bin^ system with a massive normal star.

Scientists suspect that other black holes exist at the core of certain galaxies, including very distant ones called quasars and perhaps even at the cme of ttie Billky Way.

The new black Im^ is estimated to have a mass between 8 and 12 times that of the sun. The object is the invisible compankm of a star six times more massive than the sun and th^ rotate around each other every 41 hours, the scientists said.

The object we found should be both bigger and bright^ than the companion, but we see nothing, Dr. Anne P. CkJwley, one of the discovovrs, said in an interview. Thats why we knowitsaUackhcrie.

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Title
Daily Reflector, January 7, 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 07, 1983
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
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NC Microfilms
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Spatial
Location of Original
Joyner NC Microforms
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