Daily Reflector, February 3, 1983


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





mmmm

Weather

Partly cloudy tonight and Friday. Lows in upper 20s and Fridays high in mid to U{^r40s.

102ND YEAR

THE DAILY REFLECTOR

INSIDE READING

Page 11-More storms Page 16 - Area items Page 20-N.C. Assembly

NO. 29

TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION

GREENVILLE, N.C. THURSDAY AFTERNOON, FEBRUARY 3, 1983

24 PAGES TODAY PRICE 25 CENTS

Afternoon Ceremony

Howell Installation On Friday

Dr. John Howell will be formally installed as chancellor of East Carolina University during ceremonies in the 1,600-seat Wright Auditorium on the campus Friday.

Gov. Jim Hunt is scheduled to be, the keynote speaker at the 4 p.m. installation program, to be presided over by University of North Carolina President William Friday.

University officials said today that the installation program is open to the public. However, free tickets will be required.

The tickets may be obtained by calling Edgar Loessin, coordinator of the program, at 757-6390.

In addition to the governor and Friday, other platform speakers will include faculty chair Carolina L Ayers, ECU Alumni Association President John C. Lennon Jr. of Raleigh,

ECU trustee Chairman Ralph Kinsey Jr. of Charlotte, UNC Board of Governors Chairman John R Jordon Jr. of Raleigh, ECT Student Government Association President Eric Henderson and N.C. Court of Appeals Judge Gerald Arnold, an ECU alumnus.

The chancellor installation program wilt end a two-day symposium sponsored by Phi Kappa Phi on the theme Toward the New Millenium; Changes and Dreams. Speakers for the installation have been requested to tailor their messages to the theme.

Howell, a founder of the annual ECU Phi Kappa Phi symposium, had requested that his formal installation be

scheduled as part of the 1983 symposium program.

Howell was named chancellor last spring and assumed the post July 1. He had served as acting chancellor since the resignation of Dr. Thomas Brewer.

Howell, opening the symposium this morning, said Phi Kappa Phi is the most prestigious honor society on campus

The chancellor told about 100 people attending the first session it is good for us to hear different approaches to the possible solution of problems. He also said that, while there may be many different opinions on how something should be done, there is unity of purpose on the ECU campus.

Reagan Advisers Agree

Ponder Emergency Programs

By MIKE SHANAHAN Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON (AP) - At the urging of Republican congressional leaders. President Reagans top advisers are considering a federal jobs program and emergency relief for homeless victims of the recession.

White House Chief of Staff James Baker held preliminary meetings with members of the White House staff earlier this week, but no specific proposals have been agreed on. Republican sources say.

Senate Majority Leader Howard Baker of Tennessee and Sen. Paul Laxalt, R-Nev., general chairman of the Republican Party, also talked about proposals for dealing quickly with the recession with presidential counselor Edwin

Meese III, according to the sources, who spoke on condition that they not be identified.

The discussions reportedly took place with Reagans blessing, despite the presidents continued public opposition to any large scale public works projects intended to reduce the 10.8 per cent unemployment rate.

The presidents economic spokesman testified on the administrations 1984 budget blueprint again on Wednesday, and said the quickest way to reduce unemployment was to reduce the federal deficit by enacting Reagans program.

What we are striving for is to get the economy moving again, said Treasury Secretary Donald T. Regan.

The president said on Tuesday he opposes a federal public works program, but without elaboration added; That doesnt

Three Suspects Arrested For Shooting AtTrucker

NORTH WILKESBORO, N.C. (APr Two men and a woman were arrested after they allegedly pulled up alongside a moving truck and fired several shots at it, officials said today.

The Wilkes County Sheriffs Department said the three were charged in connection with shots fired from a car late Wednesday night at a truck driven by

Warren Pope of Jonas Ridge. The driver was unharmed, but the truck sustained minor damage.

Authorities said they had no idea if the shooting was related to a nationwide strike by independent truckers protesting rising fuel taxes and fees.

The shots were fired at the rear of the truck from a car which passed Pope on U.S. 421 in northwestern North

Carolina, according to Wilkes County sheriffs dispatcher Claudia Stamey.

She said Pope, operating the rig for Cell-U Products Co. of Patterson, was able to get a good look at the car and describe it to authorities.

Wilkes Sheriffs deputies later stopped a car fitting the description, arrested its three occupants and confiscated a 12-gauge shotgun.

a .32 caliber pistol and a .25 caliber pistol, she said.

Charged with shooting into occupied property wre Ricky R. Ball, 33; Cyrus V. Perry, 39, and Deborah A. Miller, 29, all of North Wllkesboro, the dispatcher said. She said Ball was also charged with drunken driving.

The three suspects were being held today in the Wilkes County jail.

Officials Report More Than 300 Trucks Damaged In Violence

ByJOHNDANISZEWSKI Associated Press Writer A Milwaukee brewery cut back operations and California powers warned that Valentine Day roses might wither because of the nationwide strike by independent truckers, whose working counterparts demanded federal protection from snipers, arsonists and vandals.

Officials reported more than 300 trucks have been damaged, one driver slain

REFLECTOR

and 27 people injured in violence stemming from the shutdown, which was called by the Independent Truckers Association on Monday to protest higher fuel taxes and fees.

Food shipments to some Eastern cities were curtailed Wednesday, and some produce prices rose.

Bennett Whitlock, president of American Trucking Associations, sent a letter to Attorney General William French Smith, demanding

flOTLIff

752-1336

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

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

HUMANE SOCIETY NEEDS

The Pitt County Humane Society has asked Hotline to appeal for some doghouses for its animal shelter. Houses may be donated and are tax deductible. Or if anyone is willing to make some, the society will supply the material. Also needed are relatively small cages. Anyone able to help is asked to call Bobbie Parsons, 756-1268 or Janet Uhlman, 756-3251.

the Justice Department and the FBI play a greater role in fighting the widespread bloodshed and intimidation.

Theres an absolute need for strong federal leadership. ... Federal law enforcement officials must make their intentions known and their presence felt, he said.

U.S. attorneys across the country have been told to be on the alert for any violations of federal law, said Justice Department spokesman John Russell, who said he was not aware of Whitlocks letter.

Meanwhile, Florida offered Highway Patrol protection to truckers if more requests are received and if truckers can organize convoys of 15 to 25 trucks. And Alabama said Wednesday it would use state liquor agents, revenue agents and game wardens to help state troopers patrol the highways during the strike.

It looks like war out there, said Chief Deputy Edmory Rush in Colleton County, S.C., who urged sheriffs departments in surrounding counties to step up patrols of major truck routes. We dont want this to be a bloodbath.

Mike Parkhurst, head of the ITA, called the strike to protest scheduled increases in fuel taxes in April and highway use fees in 1985. The association claims to represent 30,000 of the 100,000 truckers who own and operate their own rigs - a claim that is disputed by other trucking groups.

While the independents make up about a fifth of the nations truckers, they haul

about 90 percent of its fresh food and much of the steel!

Drivers who idled their trucks, either out of sympathy with the strike or from fears for their safety, caused anxiety for produce growers.

California flower growers desperate to reach East Coast markets in time for Valentines Day scrambled Wednesday to find trucks, and some shipments were being sent on more costly railroads and planes.

If the flowers dont reach their destinations on time we would have to absorb the total loss. Just like other perishable agricultural crops, our product has a limited life, said David Ninomiya, a rose grower from Richmond, Calif.

The availability of trucks at Florida vegetable packing houses was off 80 percent, with packers concerned about being able to make their shipments, said Steve Hull, a spokesman for Gov. Bob Graham.

Many truckers are now into a daylight-only schedule, said Terry Rodes, president of the New England Produce Center.

In Tennessee, truck traffic on five major interstate highways rose 46 percent Wednesday, and state police Sgt. Dale Page said he thought truckers were running a little more legal and are trying to stick to the primary routes for safety.

Some Pabst Brewing Co. workers in Milwaukee were told to stay home today because a shorta^ of trucks had caused a lag in the companys beer shipments.

mean that there arent things that need doing.

The most likely jobs program would involved federal projects already planned like repair of federal buildings, highways, bridges or water projects already planned but lacking money.

House Democrats led by Speaker Thomas P. ONeill are planning an emergency package of their own, expected to cost at least $5 billion.

ONeill, of Massachusetts, said althou^ the administrations most recent economic report issued Wednesday rejects the need for jobs legislation. Its dismal employment forecast is itself the best argument for a Democratic jobs bill.

ONeill said Senate Republicans are already eyeing the next election and predicted they would not only back a jobs bill, but would attempt to sell the president... theyre the ones who have to turn the president around.

Senate leader Baker has asked Republican committee chairmen to assemble a program designed to show congressional concern for the more than 12 million people out of work.

In testimony before the Senate Budget Committee,* Budget Director David Stockman indicated some willingness to add recession relief to the presidents program.

If this committee comes up with something that is reasonable in its cost and is targeted (to hard hit parts of the country). Im sure there is room in the budget for it, he said.

Stockman was also publicly conciliatory to critics urging deeper cuts in Reagans $238.6 billion military budget for next year.

He said White House officials will listen to proposed spending reductions. Noting the attacks on Reagans defense budget, Stockman said, The differences between us are far less than they would appear in the extreme rhetoric of the last few days.

There was less willingness to compromise on defense from Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger, who said not only should there be no cuts for 1984, but cuts made last year already have reduced the security of the nation in a way that we much rather would not have had.

Regan was asked by the House Budget Committee why the president was not willing to negotiate on tax policy, including the third year of Reagans tax cut scheduled to take effect in July.

If you show us your cards, we will show you ours, replied Regan, adding: This might be possible when we see what you want to compromise to.

But Treasury spokesman Marlin Fitzwater said later Regan was not willing to delay the final reductions of the tax package enacted on Reagans urging in 1981.

Jobless Claims Seeing Decline

MAN VS. TANK U.S. Marine Capt. Charles Johnson of Neenah, Wis., talks with newsmen in Beirut. The Marine company commander drew his pistol during a confrontation wilh three Israeli tanks at a U.S. checkpoint. (AP Laserphoto)

Stood Up To Three Tanks

WASHINGTON (AP) -Some 465,000 newly unemployed Americans put in claims for jobless benefit payments in the week ending^ Jan. 22, the Towest number' since September 1981, the government said today.

The Labor Department said it was the third consecutive week of declining first-time claims, in which people seek to determine their eligibility for unemployment insurpce compensation protection.

While declines in new claims for unemployment benefits may signal that businesses are laying off fewer people, they dont necessarily portend a decrease in the nations 10.8 percent 'Unemployment rate. The labor force figures for January will* be released Friday by the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

In its report today, the Employment and Training Administration said that in the week ending Jan. 15, the seasonally adjusted figures showed that approximately 3,942,000 people got benefits under basic state-run 26-week programs, an increase of 12,000 over the previous week.

Under the 13-week program of extended benefits, which are paid by 20 states and Puerto Rico with the federal government picking

up half the costs, some 343,200 people were getting up to 39 weeks of unemployment checks, an increase of 3,500 over the week ending Jan. 8, according to these figures, which are not adjusted for seasonal variations.

By R. GREGORY NOKES

Associated Press Writer

WASHINGTON (AP) - A Marine captain who stared down an Israeli tank commander at gunpoint probably will be commended for behaving with extreme courage, says Secretary of Defense Caspar Weinberger.

Three Israeli tanks sou^t to push past a Marine checkpoint in Beirut Wednesday, but were stopped by Capt. (Charles B. Johnson of Neenah, Wis. who jumped atop an Israeli tank with pistol drawn and said it could proceed only over his dead body, said Weinberger.

The incident appeared certain to add to the steady souring of relations between Israel and the United States over the continuing presence of Israeli soldiers in Lebanon nearly eight months after they invaded.

It was the sixth and most serious incident yet involving Israeli soldiers and the 1,200 U.S. Marines who are members of the international peacekeeping force in Beirut

Both the United States and Israel claimed the incident occurred in an area subject to their jurisdiction.

In an appearance Wednesday before the House Armed Services Committee. Weinberger called it basically damaging to the presidents efforts to secure peace in that whole area, and made it clear he held the Israelis solely responsible.

But Israels charge

daffaires, who was sum-' moned to the State Department to be told of the "gravity with which the Reagan administration viewed the incident, denied that the Israelis had done anything wrong.

The Israeli patrol went.. into an area which we understood had been agreed upon earlier as territory to be patrolled by Israel, said Ebenjamin Netanyahu. There was no attempt whatsoever to cross or challenge the American Marines, or the territory they are holding

The confrontation between the Marine captain and the Israeli tank commander occurred near the Beirut University library when three British-made Centurion tanks clanked toward the Marine position.

According to the U.S. account. the lead tank approached to within a foot of the Marine checkpoint when the Capt. Johnson stepped out and asked to talk with the senior Israeli officer present.

Weinberger said the Israeli officer insisted they were coming through, the Marine captain said they were not" Johnson next climbed onto the lead tank, said that if they were coming through they'd have to do it over his dead body, Weinberger added

City Building Permits Again Among Top Ten

Greenville was one of nine North Carolina cities of more than 10,000 population recording over $2 million in building permits for October, according to state Labor Commissioner John Brooks.

He said Greenville issued permits during the month valued at $2,023,321, down sharply from $5,042,119 in September, when Greenville ranked fourth among 44 cities

Permits issued here for the first 10 months of 1982 amounted to $18,255,185, Brooks reported. ^

Pitt County issued permits totaling $2,049,821 in October, including $1,140,440 for 37-Single-family units, $60,000

for four multifamily units, $483,425 for 14 non-residential uniLs. and $365,956 for 47 additions and alterations.

Brooks said that building activity authorized in the 44 cities during October increased 20.7 percent from the previous year, with value up 271 percent He pointed to a gain of 119 8 percent in permits issued for singlc-family homes.

Total authorizations in the first 10 months of 1982 remain considerably off from the comparable 1981 period, the commissioner said. He said the 1982 figure was down 13.5 percent to 28.945 units from 33,473.

Compared to October 1981, the average construction cost

for a single-family home decreased 10.6 percent, he said, to $.39,689 from $44,408 The average was down 11.1 percent from September's $44,6.33

Building values for October and for the first 10 months in several eastern towns included: Elizabeth City, $136,150, $4,966,300; Goldsboro, $348,875, $8,983,761; Jacksonville, $1,965,250, $19,737,563; Kinston, $72,000, $3,208,365;

New Bern, $1,842,820, $10,814,669; Roanoke Rapids. $461,925, $2,585,390, Rocky Mount. $ 1,2 1 8,978, $10,320,510; Tarboro, $405,000, $12,909,258; and Wilson. $775,502. $9,825,345.





Fascination With Private Foibles

By EDITH M.LEDERER Associated Press Writer

LO.NDON (,^P) - In a country where pamphleteers first wrote about the escapades of kings and politicians in the 18th century, gossip is still helping to sell British newspapers with Andy and Koo and Charles and Diana, as the main targets.

The Daily Mails Nigel Dempster, dean of the scandal mongers, says Britons are hooked on gossip t)ccause the country is so homogeneous. In this country, everyone's heard of everyone.. And were all interested in each other."

In the Uhited States, gossip columns dont have the same impact because the population is so large and diverse, he said. A lot of American gossip columns are about people who nobodys heard of

While scandal remains the bread and butter of tabloid gossip-tellers here, the three high-brow national newspapers eschew sex and concentrate on political foibles in their "diary" columns.

Dempster recalled that 'when he began work at the rival Daily Express 20 years ago. people hid their peccadillos so it was big news if you reported that a member of Parliament was sleeping with his secretary and divorcing his wife.

.Now, no one gasps at

extramarital affairs and a child tjorn out of wedlock "is no longer* a bastard but a love child." he said.

"People lead more open lives because of mv kind of column. If a bust nd says hes going to put his wife out of the house without a penny, she says,* OK. ill ring up Nigel Dempster. In a way. were sort of social policemen, arent we

Other journalists disagree. Jocelyn Stevens, formr managing director of the Daily Express, once said that Dempsters reports are rich in the three Is: "intrusion, innuendo and inaccuracy Alexander Chancellor, editor of the right-wing political weekly, the New Statesman, took a wider swipe at the gossip columns, calling todays cast of characters too dull and the gossip "rather stale

"In the old days, ordinary people felt quite^ remote from the upper class and were amused to read about the antics of the aristocracy, he said in an interview. Now all thats over and the upper class is much more merged and they arent mysterious to anyone. So I think its less thrilling to read about a dukes daughter doing something naughty

The Daily Mail and the Daily Express, whose gossip column is published under the name of a somewhat scandalous 19th century

essayist named William Hickey, find no lapse in demand.

Dempster said his column is read by nearly 6 million people and Jane Slade, the only woman on the William Hickey reporting team, put the c'olumns readership at about 10 million.

William Hickey broke the news last October that 22-year-old Prince Andrew wason a Caribbean vacation with Koo Stark, a 26-year-old American actress who had appeared in several soft porn movies.

Miss Slade said the story came from a royal contact, and boosted the Express circulation.

Last November, Dempster was the first to report that 34-year-old Prince Charles was "desperately unhappy" and 21-year-old Diana who had turned into a fiend and a little monster after 16 months of marriage.

Buckingham Palace branded Dempsters remarks "rubbish and his rivals dismissed the story. But Dempster said that after Dianas display of petulance on the ski slopes earlier this month, every newspaper that attacked me is writing the same thing.

Dempster said his story came from inside Kensington Palace. Charles and Dianas London residence.

"The situation got so out of hand in November that I

Nigel Dempster

spoke out... The queen couldnt say anything. Prince Charles is ... not in control of the situation. Theres nobody there to spank her. The person who has to reprove the Princess of Wales is me, he said.

Three days after he criticized Diana for never wearing the same dress twice, she appeared in a dress for the second time "and thats not just coincidence, Dempster said of his impact.

Miss Slade said that when the Hickey column reported that the queens husband Prince Philip was planning

Si

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752-0715 Open 12:30-5 Daily

AMERASIANS ARRIVE -Donna Mae Watson, far right, of Seattle, supervisor of the Intergovernmental Committee for Migration, escorts some of the 18 Amerasian children out of customs and immigration at Seattle Tacoma International Airport. The group arrived after a 10-hour flight from Toyko.(AP Laserphoto)

Birth

'Tuten

Born to Mr.. and Mrs. William Earl Tuten, Snow Hill, a son, Travis Earl Dyon, on Jan. 25,1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.

Happy

^ Birthday Papa SmuHU!

Wc Love You, Bonnie, Derek & Blake    . ,

King Henry VIII of England married Anne of Clves, his fourth wife, in 1540.

Before making any alterations or repairs to your home, contact the City Engineering and Inspections Department at 7524137.

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At Wits End

By Erma Bombeck

"Be not the first by whom the new are tried.

Nor yet the last to lay the old aside

1 dont care what Alexander Pope said, computers ' arent for everyone, and theres no doubt in my mind that I will be the last person in the world to acknowledge a terminal as anything more than where you catch an airplane.

There are maybe a dozen or so thfowbacks to the gaslight era roaming the earth today and 1 am one of them. I cant load a cassette into a camera.

I could break into a bank easier than I could follow instructions for the 24-hour teller. I manually lift old dirt out of the sweeper bag rather than replace it with a new one, I once poured $2 worth of

to attend a dinner in Los Angeles at a club where blacks are banned, he canceled the appearance.

Dempster claims to have been first with news that Labor Prime Minister Harold Wilson would resign in 1976 and that Princess Caroline of Monaco and her husband Philippe Junot were getting divorced.

Miss Slade said William Hickey was first with Dianas inaugural royal appearance at Princess Margarets 50th birthday party and with Richard Burtons surprise attendance at the 50th birthday party of ex-wife Elizabeth Taylor.

Dempster admits dropping a few bricks among the 1,820 items he reports each year.

Last summer, Sir Dawda Jawarra, president of the small west African country of Gambia, won a libel suit against the Mail because of a Dempster item.

Dempster said he loses an average of one lawsuit a year, costing the paper between $10,000 and $20,000.-But he quoted his ex-boss at the Express, Lord Beaverbrook, as advising him to "sow the seeds of discord. And he does.

gasoline on my feet because 1 had the wrong nozzle in a self-service station. And I will only say this once, my ironing board has been i^) since 1953.

Its nothing Im proud of, it's just that I dont know how I am going to survive the computer age. I have had only one computer experience in my lifetime. 1 carried on correspondence for three months once with a computer in Columbus, Ohio, that insisted I had not made my quarterly payment for my cleaning womans Social Security when in fact I had.

The computer wrote a nice letter. It should have been. It was the same one every time. We didnt seem to be communicating, so one day 1 called and asked to speak to it personally. The person told me that computers dont talk.

(1 understand m since then they have found a voice.) I figured anything that didnt talk couldnt testify so I wrote the computer one final letter and said, Stop bothering me with all this crappo, and that was the last I heard from it.

Mercifully, my children did not inherit these inept genes from their electronic klutz of a mother. Its a certainty that their children will be educated by computer, attend church electronically, write books and letters by machine, order their groceries from a terminal, be diagnosed and treated by computer, mate and date by machine, be married by a series of belches, pay bills, shop and have their menus planned by machine and depend on it for their social life. ,

Their computers will duly note that their grandnM)ther never bought a battery, never owned a chip, and went into the 20th century kicking and screaming. 1 dont trust anything that cant laugh or

cry or acknowledge that the check is in the mail!

Maybe Im just not reach to trust my memories t# a machine yet. They re too important and on some days theyre all Ilre got.

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anything In our shop

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Jewelry, Decorative Items & More

Cloisonne, Semi Precious Stones, Lucite, Sterling. 14K Gold,' Gold Filled, Wood & Pewter.

Also, if you come in by Feb. 12 you can have your hearts desire made to order at 10% off our usual price This is the place to find or have that unusual gift made.

To come to our Shoppe, take. Highway 11 South from Greenville and turn right on the first paved road,past Pitt Community College. We are 1 mile on the right.

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Learning To Live With Siblings

By DENNIS OSHEA SOUTH BEND, Ind. (UPI) Brock, a nervous 7-year-old, clutches his Mortimer Snerd doll. Worried by the screaming infant just down the hall, he asks his mother, Will ours cry like that? Later, after a tour of the hospitals maternity floor and a look at a nursery full of newborns. Brock is so reassured he becomes more worried about whether itll be a boy or a girl than whether itll be a pain in the neck.

Reassurance is the point of sibling orientation class or, as Barbara Blaschke calls it, a class for future big brothers and big sisters.

Our main purpose is to tell them whats happening to their mom, thats shes coming back and that shes coming back with a baby, said Ms. Blaschke, head nurse in South Bend Memorial Hospitals Family Centered Maternity Care Unit.

They really want to know where mom is and whats haR)ening to her, and they get Scared, added Carol Bartosik, the hospitals director of recreational therapy and co-teacher of the twice-monthly sessions.

About a dozen kids and their parents meet in a hospital waiting room early Saturday mornings for a brief talk, the videotaped story of a 4-year-olds experience with a new sister, and a walk around the maternity unit.

Then theres a peek into the nursery and a semipri-vate room like the one mom will be staying in - the kids all get a chance to adjust the electric beds. They seem even more fascinated by remote control TV. 'Then they return to the waiting room for diapering lessons and distribution of diplomas.

They tour the maternity unit in operating gowns. Afterwards, each is given a surgeons mask and hat and some extra diapers to practice with at home.

The class was inspired by^ an article Ms. Blaschke read in a medical journal. It was started in November 1982 and is already paying off with better prepared, better adjusted older brothers and sisters, the teachers said.

They know just where theyre going when they come to the hospital to visit, Ms. Blaschke said. They

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feel real comfortable about seeing mom in a (ho^ital) room. Theyre just prepared and they feel better about the whole thing.

The hardest part is when the mother is absent from the home, and right after she gets back and theres a lot of visitors just to see the new baby. TTieres that whole upheaval of activity.

Ms. Bartosik said both parents should remember to devote full attention to the older siblings for part of the time during these crucial periods. She said parents shouid also be realistic in discussing the new baby with older kids.

If they address it from the angle of playing, some kids might thii^ theyre getting a grownup playmate, said Ms. Blaschke. "Some kids dont realize that babies cry, that they get up in the middle of the night, they cant do Anything for themselves, they dont sit up.

If the child is old enough,! dont think it hurts to talk about responsibility, to say, Youre old enough to be a big help to me.

The teachers said most children wait until they get home to ask questions -particularly the inevitable Where do babies come from? - but some queries seem to pop up every class, especially after the nursery visit.

They all seeip to think the poor nurse has to stay in there all her life and never gets out, a smiling Ms. Blashcke said.

There are also a few misconceptions to set right -for example, the little girl who asked for a rubber band during diapering practice so she could wrap a blanket more tightly around her baby doll's neck.

The lessons were particularly useful when one expectant mother left class early to have her baby.

Thai was like a baptism of fire for us, said Ms. Blaschke, who cared for the womans 3-year-old son while the father was called to the hospital. "Her little boy did really well, He wasnt frightened. He wasnt uncomfortable. At last report, both the boy and his baby brother were getting along just fine.

Weight Loss Benefit Set

WINTERVILLE - Win-terville Jaycees are sponsoring a weight loss for muscular dystrophy.

Competition members participating will receive pledges for each pound they lose over a six-month period. The contest will begin at a public weigh-in at the Win-terville Municipal Building at 10 a.m. Saturday.

The contest will officially end at the second public weigh-in at the same location Aug. 27 at 10 a.m.

All proceeds will be presented at the Muscular Dystrophy Telethon in New Bern Sept. 1.

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T,IMELESS SUIT Elegant, classic suit for any season, designed by Farida Ferrario, has sophisticated cardigan jacket, mock-wrap straight skirt and matching clutch bag. The pieces are crocheted in gray tweed-ed blending of cotton/rayon and mohair/acrylic; worn with crepe de chine blouse. (Yarn by Wm. Unger & Co.; blouse, Vogue Pattern 1081: suit and bag pattern from spring-summer issue, Vogue Knitting.")

Quilting

Winners

Named

Phyllis McLawhon of Greenville is the winner in a recent quilting contest sponsored by Calico Square of Greenville.

Her entry was a quilted jacket made of bone white polished cotton. She adapted Oriental designs in an ab over quiltihg pattern.

Suzanne Woolard of Greenville received second place with an original pieced portfolio bag that included several stripe piecing methods. Third place was awarded to Augusta Ferguson of Washington for a small quilt of pieced sail boats.

Receiving honor mentions were Gloria Windley of Bath for a small childs quilted coat and bonnet, Grace Karnes and Bertie Hengeveld of Greenville for quilted vests. Judges for the show were Jane Hall and Kathy Sullivan of Raleigh, members of the N.C. Quilt Symposium board of directors.

The quilt exhibit is open to public Monday through Saturday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. through Feb. 14 at Calico Square. Articles being exhibited include small quilts, wall hangings and a variety of quilted clothing and accessories.

By CECILY BROWNSTONE Associated Press Food Editor

SUPPER FOR FOUR Baked Sole & Rice Vegetable Salad & Rolls Lemon Pie & Coffee

BAKED SOLE Linda Anderson of DeKalb, 111., contributed a version of this recipe.

2 skinless sole fillets, about 1*2 pounds Juice of * 2 medium lemon 2 tablespoons butter

1 small onion, finely chopped C'4 cup)

*4 pound mushrooms, finely chopped l-3rd cup heavy cream

2 tablespoons parmesan cheese, grated

Sprinkle fillets with lemon juice, salt and pepper. In a 10-inch skillet, over medium heat in the hot butter, cook onions

The Daily ReflcU)r,GreenvUte,N C.-Thur*diy, February 3,196-3

Betty Ann Knudsen To Speak Monday

He Feeds Self And The Dogs

By Abigail Van Buren

'983 by UnivetJii Press Syndical

DEAR ABBY: Our dining area is near a .sliding glass door that opens onto the patio. We eat all our meals there. My husband continually opens and doses the door while were eating to feed the dogs from the table and tend to their needs Hes up and down constantly. It drives me crazy!

I have told him and told him how annoying it is to have him feed the dogs from the table, but he pays no attention to me. Every mealtime is a nightmare, and its very hard on my digestive system to eat while Im aggravated

Whats the matter with this man? And what should I do about it?

FED UP

DEAR FED UP: If his inconsiderate behavior is something new, he should see a doctor to determine whether hes sick or just plain ornery. If hes ornery, tell him (in a loving way) how upset you are. If that doesnt work, set a place for yourself in another room where you can enjoy a calm and peaceful meal. Tell him hes in the doghouse, and let him eat with the dogs!

DEAR ABBY: What can a mother do when she knows her .son cannot afford to get married but his girlfriend keeps nagging him to marry her'.^

She has not fini.shed school, shes not trained for anything, and shes very childish for a girl of 20. My s(n is 22 and up to his neck in debt he owes me money and also owes the hank. He knows he cant afford to get married now, hut this girl is constantly trying to get him to change his mind. I tried to talk to the girl, but you cant tell her anything. They would like me to help them. What should 1 do?

THE BOYS MOTHER

DEAR MOTHER: Make it plain that they can expect no help from you. A man has no business on the sea of matrimony unless he can paddle his own canoe.

DEAR ABBY; I do not have sex very often with my husband; hut on one of those rare occasions, he infected me with herpes. 1 didn't know what I had until I started having trouble and visited a doctor

When 1 confronted my husband with this news, he swore up and down that he hadn't l)een with anybody else and must have gotten it off a toilet seat. Is this possible ' Or is it a lot of bunk?

Now, the problem: I am having an affair with a wonderful married man I once worked for. Should I tell him about my herpes? I think the world of him and dont want to lose him.

HAS HERPES IN CHICAGO

DEAR HAS HERPES: Recent studies show that the Herpes Virus II (affecting the genitals) can survive on a toilet seat, hands, clothing and elsewhere for hours, and theoretically can be transmitted to an innocent party, so your husband could be telling the truth.

About your wonderful married man, tell him! He should be examined immediately by a physician. It is imperative that he use protection during any future sexual encounters with you.

The Democratic Women of Pitt County will hear a talk by Betty Ann Knudsen Monday evening starting at 6:30 at the Ramada Inn

Mrs. Knudsen is vice chairman of the Wake County Board of Commissioners. She is also a current meiiS^^Pthe Gov-ernors Sci^ce and Technology Board and Triangle Council of Governments. She is chairing the Natural Resources Committee, Solid and Hazardous Waste Committee and the N.C. Center for Public Policy Research Board.

Her areas of expertise include lobbying in the public

interest, coordinating human services and financing the public school system.

The cost for the dinner meeting will be $8.00 per person Husbands and guests are invited

To make reservations send checks to Democratic Women of Pitt County, Judy Sadler. PO Box 2943, Greenville, or call 756^)488.

C

Betty Ann Knudsen

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until wilted, stirring often. Add mushrooms; cook briskly, stirring constantly, until liquid evaporates. Stir in cream. In a shallow 1*2-quart buttered baking dish arrange fillets in a single layer. Add cream mixture and sprinkle with cheese. Bake in a preheated 425-degree oven until fish flakes easily and is opaque -10 minutes. Serve at once. Sauce will be thin. Makes 4 small servings.

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4-The DaiJy Reflector, Greenville. N.C.-Thursday, February 3,1983

Exciting Possibilities

NOT LOOKING GOOD FOR OUR SIDE!

Eaton Corp. last weekend announced a unique restructuring of its industrial truck division which directly involves the divisions Yale production line of forklift trucks that are manufactured in the local plant.

Eaton said the division will become an independent company. Once the transition is completed the Yale company will be owned by a partnership of Eaton Corp.. Jungheinrich of West Germany and Sumitomd' Heavy Industries of Japan. An important part of the ownership will be the new companys employees, who through an employee stock option plan, will own a portion of the stock. Remaining shares will be distributed to present holders of Eaton stock.

Officials of the company made it clear that the Yale division is not being wound down. And local plant spokesmen said no changes are anticipated in the plant operation where 315 are employed.

Alfred M. Rankin. Jr.. president of the Eaton materials handling group, will be board chairman and chief executive officer of Yale. He said Eaton is making a financial com

mitment to Yales future by creating a new and imaginatively structured company

The development of the new Yale company is an intriguing and exciting one for our community which is concerned in the companys success through the local manufacturing operations.

The involvement of employees through the stock option plan is no doubt something that will be watched by other corporations. There have been efforts in the past by employees of plants to assume ownership and operate them. This has usually been done without the benefits of major corporation management and financing, however. In the case of the new Yale corporation employees will be joining with Eaton, Jungheinrick and Sumitomo Heavy Industries and other stockholders in a venture that could set new patterns of management for industries.

The reorganization of the Eaton industrial truck division is obviously the result of extensive study. Now it will be up to everyone connected with the venture to make it operate efficiently and profitably.

Groundhog Mokes Forecast

Hows the weather.^ It was a lousy day for Punxsutawney Phil, the groundhog of Punxsutawney, Pa., but thats good news for the rest of

us.

The groundhog came out for the 97th time Wednesday and faced g dreary, rainy day. In groundhog folklore this is good news for, if the groundhog doesnt see his shadow on Groundhog Day, we will see an early spring. A spokesman for the club

THIS AFTERNOON

Campaign In N.C.

By FAULT. OCONNOR

RALEIGH - Proponents of the nuclear arms freeze will be stepping up their activity in North Carolina this month and theyve enlisted some prominent North Carolinians to help them.

They're advocating a verifiable freeze on all new nuclear weapons, research, development and deployment by both the United States and tle Soviet Union. To get their message across to the public, they plan a three-pronged media campaign.

Dean Smith, basketball coach at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, has cut a radio spot advocating the freeze and it is scheduled to begin running on three Charlotte radio stations this week, said Jean Wood, coordinator of Charlotte-Mecklenburg SANE, a pro-freeze group. Radio listeners in most of the western Piedmont should be able to hear Smith's message, and a similar spot recorded by actor Ed .Asner, she said. Radio stations in other parts of the state will be contacted soon, she said, in the hope that theyll also run the spots.

In the radio messages. Smith and Asner give a national hotline number which private citizens can

call to learn more about the freeze. By calling that number, you can also enlist yourself in lobbying campaigns aimed at congressmen. legislators and President Reagan. If you agree, freeze organizers will put your name on a pre-

which oversees Punxsutawney Phil said his movements indicate that just like the economy of the nation, the worst is over.

Spring is on the way, the spokesman said.

Of course it must be said that the National Weather Bureau has issued its 90-day forecast calling for unusually cold and wet weather for a large portion of the nation.

You can take your choice, but our money is on Punxsutawney Phil.

By JAMES KILPATRICK

Election Ills And Cures

picture of earth and the statement, "There's only one world, support a U.S.-U.S.S.R. bilateral nuclear weapons freeze. Call 1-800-364-1518.

Newspapers across the state will also be hearing from freeze proponents. Theyve established a series of Speak-Out Letters in which prominent North Carolinians will advocate the freeze in letters to the editor. First letter was written by Helen Goldstein of Cary, North .Carolinas current Mother of the Year as chosen by the N.C. Mothers .Association. The next letter will be signed by the John Stevens family of Asheville, current N.C. Family of the Year.

Dale' Evarts, coordinator for "North Carolinians for the Freeze in Raleigh, says (Please turn to Page 5)

WASHINGTON - What will Congress do about the ballooning costs of running for federal office? The answer, I fear, is not much, and that prospect troubles me - for the costs are both visible and invisible, and the invisible costs may be greater.

The problem has been with us forever. More than 75 years ago, Theodore Roosevelt was plumping for federal financing of federal campaigns. In the 1920s, Teapot Dome set off cries for election reform. The Watergate scandals intensified the demand for disclosure of political contributions. Now that some sobering figures are floating in from last Novembers elections, the subject is once more a matter of public concern.

Let me sketch my own ambivalence clearly. I am not greatly worried by the dollar amounts as such; as a people we annually spend more on toothpaste, mouthwash and liquor than we spend on our biennial elections. Except for the weakening effect they have on our two-party system, I am not much troubled by the proliferation of political action committees (PACs) in the private sector.

Neither am I persuaded that with all this money floating around, incidents of outright bribery are likely to multiply. There may be times, as the Abscam cases demonstrated, when some

FAULT OCONNOR

printed post card and mail that card to any public official you designate.

That telephone number will also be printed on billboards scheduled to go up in Charlotte and Asheville, and possibly Raleign during the month. In all. 12 billboards have been ^aran-teed to freeze coordinators. They consist of a satellite

The Daily Reflector

INCORPORATED

209 Cotanche Street. Greenville. N.C. 27834 Established 1882 Published Monday Through Friday Afternoon and Sunday Morning DAVID JULIAN WHICHARD, Chairman of the Board JOHN S. WHICHARD - DAVID J. WHICHARD Publishers    

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iPrlcai includv t*i oticr* ppllctbt*)

Pitt And Adjoining Counties $4.00 Per Month Elsewhere in North Carolina $4 35 Per Month Outside North Carolina $5.50 Per Month

MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to use for publication all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited to this paper and also the local news published herein. All rights of publications of special dispatches here are also reserved.

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

membel* of the House or Senate sells his influence for a few thousand bucks, but these felonies are exceedingly rare. A while back we had a congressman who remark-

Other Editors Say Why Tamper?

(Salisbury Post)

If it aint broke, dont fix it.

Somebody should remind certain key Democratic legislative leaders in Raleigh of that old admonition. In their recently announced effort to seek yet another change in the gubernatorial succession law, they are trying to correct a situation that gives no evidence of having anything wrong with it.

The president pro tern of the North Carolina Senate, Craig Lawing. D-Mecktonburg, said the other day that he will introduce a bill calling for a referendum on the question of succession.

The states voters would have three choices; (1) Keep things as they are, with the governor and lieutenant governor eligible for two four-year terms; (2) Establish a single six-year term; or (3) Go back to the single four-year term.

The governor and lieutenant governor have been permitted a second term only since 1977 when the voters approved a constitutional amendment to that effect. Gov. Jim Hunt and Lt. Gov. Jimmy Green, both elected in 1976 and re-elected in 1980, are the only people to have taken advantage of the provision.

Lawing has been joined in seeking another change by Senate Majority Leader Ken Royall, D-Durham, and Sen. Harold Hardison, D-Lenoir.

Those behind the mini-movement may have their own political futures foremost in mind. It has been noted frequently in recent years that the second gubernatorial term has thwarted upward mobility of other people, keeping * legislative leaders cooling their heels in their jobs longer than before.

But that is for politicians to worry about. The main question is what would be best for the people of North Carolina, and succession does not seem to have caused any problems along those lines. In fact, Jim Hunt has done a creditable job so far, and it is probably to the states advantage to have had the opportunity to keep him in office.

A single four-year term was overly restrictive, because it did not permit the voters to retain a good man. A single six-year term would be no improvement, because it would not allow them to get rid of a bad one soon enou^. One four-year term with an option for a second the still-new procedure now in effect. seems like the best solution. Why tamper with if

JAMES J. KILPATRICK

ed cheerfully that his vote couldnt be bought, "but it might be rented. The gentleman, I think, was kidding. Outright bribery is too crude, and it carries too many risks.

But when all that has been said, much remains to be said. By any yardstick, the costs of running for high public office are getting out of hand. We now have reliable estimates, drawn from reports to the Federal Election Commission, that last November saw more than $300 million spent on House and Senate campaigns. Mark Dayton spent $7.1 million on his losing Senate race in Minnesota; Frank Lautenberg spent $5.2 million on his winning race in New Jersey. The two Senate candidates in California spent more than $12 million between them. Five candidates for the House spent more than a million dollars each.

Large chunks of this money came from the roughly 3,5()0 PACs that have popped up like dandelions on our hustings. About l,5(X) of these

have been formed by corporations, another 600 by trade associations, 350 by labor unions. Collectively, the PACs have become more important than the old-line party committees.

As I say, these facts in themselves are not particularly alarming. Campaign contributions in essence are extensions of our right of free speech; we put our money where our mouth is. And if Dick Lugars campaign in Indiana cost $3 million, so what? We got a man of integrity back in the Senate.

Yet the question has to be asked; What were the contributors buying with their $300 million? The high-minded answer is that the contributors were trying to elect men and women with compatible attitudes conservative or liberal, as the case may be. The uncomfortable but inescapable answer is that the contributors were hoping to buy access, and in Washington access is very nearly the be-all and end-all. To be able to get into a senators private office, to speak on a first-name basis with him, to present ones legislative argument personally to a committee chairman this is what counts. And let us not be naive; The person who has contributed $2,000 has better access than the fellow who has spent 20 cents on a stamp.

In the long haul, of course, the member who sees only his (at cats, and brushes off the common folk with a form letter, is likely to be turned out of office. But long hauls can get to be very long hauls indeed, and meanwhile the frenetic pursuit of money -big money - absorbs an inordinate amount of time.

I dont know the answer. Public financing has its _drawbacks. To impose tight and enforceable limits on campaign spending, in the British fashion, gives a well-(Please turn to Page 5)

Europe Cuts Its Welfare

By HENRY GOTTUEB V Associated Press Writer

BRUSSELS, Belgium (AP)

Western European governments have awakened from their post-war dreams of creating perfect welfare states.

From Denmark, where some old-age pensions are being cut, to Italy, where subsidies for medicine have been lowered, almost a dozen governments grappling with recession will try to spend less on social programs this year.

If unemployment gets worse, as experts predict, the search for cuts may continue for several years.

Whether theyre socialist or not, the governments are now following the same path, said Philip Calderbank, an economist in the European Common Markets social affairs department. They are all trying to find ways to save money on social security.

Since imperial Germany established Europes first nationwide pension system 96 years ago, European gov ernment&have been outdoing each other to expand social benefits, often to a point Americans might think lavish.

In the Netherlands, where every family with two children gets a $50-a-month stipend, almost one-third of the gross national product goes for social benefits.

One can get public money in Western Europe - usually at rates higher than those available in the United States

- for being pregnant, a child, a student, handicapped. out of work, sick, old, or a widow.

But the recession has cut into tax receipts, and unemployment has left fewer people paying into social welfare funds - just when governments need to pay more benefits to the growing number of jobless in Western Europe, now totaling more than 16 million.

Calderbank says European, like American, officials also are worried about the impact of population changes on social security. For every recipient of an old-age pension there are now three workers paying into the funds. Within 20 years, there will be only two workers to support the aged.

Calderbanks department urges ingenuity in meeting these new challenges. Rather than cut health benefits, for example, it says gov

ernments should lower doctors fees and the length of hospital stays, and stop paying unquestioningly for prescriptions and tests.

Here. is how * the governments are reacting to their individual problems;

NETHERLANDS

The center-right Dutch government cut 10 different categories of social benefits in December. The government expects to save $324 million, for example, by scaling down a yearly increase in old-age benefits and civil service pay.

ITALY

Within a month of taking office in December, Italian Premier Amintore Fanfani called for a $1 billion cut in government contributions to old-age insurance and a $1.5 billion reduction in upper-scaie pension benefits.

Changes in medical benefits, including a $1.05 tax on prescriptions, have led to protest strikes by Italian health workers.

BRITAIN

The British governments social spending has risen sharply because of the rise in unemployment - now at 3 million people. 13 percent of the work force.

But the Conservative Party government cut social welfare payments 5 percent and began taxing unemployment benefits. Inflation has further eaten into the purchasing power of a welfare family of four living on the governments $126-a-week dole.

Opposition Labor Party member Jeff Rooker contends the government is expressing concern about unemployment, but of concern at the actual plight of the unemployed and their families there is no evidence.

BELGIUM

Unemployment benefits to Belgians who are not heads of household have been cut. The government also proposes taxing social benefits for the first time.

WEST GERMANY

Under new rules adopted in January, automatic raises in old-age pensions will be lower, and retired people are contributing to health-insurance premiums. Unemployed West Germans, who once got 68 percent of their last salary for the first six months of joblessness, will now receive that amount for only four months.

(Please turn to Page 5)

Strength For Today

NATURE OF FAITH

What is faith? The Epistle to the Hebrews answers by stating, Faith is assurance of things ho{^ for, a conviction of things not seen (11;1). Or as another translation has it, Faith is the giving of substance to things hoped for, a test of things not seen.

Let us observe the latter translation. Faith as the giving of substance to thin^ hoped for is a God-like quality in the human soul which enables one to make his dreams and aspirations come true. Faith is not some

thing man works up in his own nature, but something which God gives to man when man shows himself capable of handling it and willing to receive it. This faith becomes a creative power in a persons life.

As a result of faith, people take on new stature. TTie weak become strong, the blind receive their sight, and the prisoners of sin know the ecstasy of emancipation. People of faith can begin to perform some of the wonderful acts of their Lord and Master. - Elisha Douglass

A Frightened Credit Market

ByJOHNCUNNIFF AP Business Analyst NEW YORK (AP) -Beneath the seemingly calm acceptance of more big budget deficits lies a frightened, jumpy credit market.

Some home mortgage rates have turned a bit higher. Earlier this week the yield on Treasury borrowings rose. And so, as a consequence, did the rate that savings banks can pay on six-month certificates.

Dealers in money and credit link such activity directly to the realization that in just two fiscal years, 1983 and 1984, the federal budget deficit is likely to total about $400 billion.

That deficit has to be financed. There is only one way in which to finance it. and that is by borrowing money in the same marketplace where you borrow money to buy a

house, a car of anything else on credit.

Mammoth federal deficits can sop up most of the money into the credit pool, leaving little for others. And if the others insist on a share, then there is only one way in which the price of money can go. That is, up.

It is such fears, money people say, that leave credit markets so edgey, no matter what the economic seers say about a continued fall of inflation and interest rates.

Most scenarios of lower inflation and interest rates, including that of the Reagan administration, are based on a disturbing assumption -that the recovery will be weak or. as it is more euphemistically stated, modest.

Students of credit say a weak demand for money -that is. a weak recovery in the consumer and business sector - might allow the

government to have the credit pool mostly for itself. Like an elephant in the water hole.

But what if the other credit-using creatures also seek to take a dip With the federal government already planning to take a huge portion of the credit pool, the demand for money could be greater than the supply.

Projections now indicate that the federal government will pre-empt nearly three-fourths of new private saving for the year 1983, says a report from the Center for the Study of American Business at Washington University, St. Louis.

The center, headed by Murray Weidenbaum, recent chairman of President Reagans Council of Economic Advisers, concludes that precioiis litle is left with which to finance an enduring private-sector recovery.

At least three conclusions

can be drawn from this predicament. Many already have been.

1. The recovery isnt likely to expand very far or fast.

2. If by some set of circumstances it tries to do so, higher interest rates might intervene.

3. If interest and inflation rates continue to decline, in spite of big federal deficits, the explanation would lie in the weakness of the private sector economy.

If it wasnt clear before it is now: Many and probably most forecasts of lower interest and inflation rates are based on the assumption that the recovery is going to be weak.

That doesn't rule out an unexpectedly strong recovery. But if a strong recovery develops, then it would seem to rule out falling interest and inflation rates.

Already the credit markets are nervous.





Croaaword By Eugene Sheffer

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45 Race

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49 Newsman Sevareid

50 Canine comment

13 Zodiac sign 52 Green light

14 Intertwined 53 Compos

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17 Privy to

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22 Pro

23 German I

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32 Picture

33 Period

34 Nabokov novel

35 Chapter titles

38 Biblical land

39 Lemon

40 Great weight 42 Marsh

plant

mentis

54 Greek letter

55 Eat

56 Assist

57 Aviv

58 Football players DOWN

1 Elec. units

2 Profound

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word 21 Pedros aunt

24 Bat wood

25 Middling grade

26 Front page item

28 Energy unit

29 Refined

30 Bustle

31 Block up

36 Harmonious

37 Altar phrase

38 Put into cipher

41 Running

42 Plateau

43 Fleet horse

44 Steam pioneer

46 Related

47 Hourglass fill

48 Potato parts 51 Norma

(1979 film)

CRYPTOQUIP

^

VXXK, CAJCYMZ MWAD KOWDAOL LCK-

WAD N KXZNJ VWYAWY.

Yesterdays Cryptoquip RECORD DEALER WAS GIGANTIC HIT WITH SINGLES AT DISCO.

Todays Cryptoquip clue: K equals R.,

The Cryptoquip is a simple substitution cipher in which each letter u^ stands for apother. If you think that X equals 0, it will equal 0 throughout the puzzle. Single letters, short words, and words using an apostrophe can give you clues to locating vowels. Solution is accomplished by trial and error.

1983 King Features Syndicate, Inc

School Break-In Cases Increase

GREENSBORO, N.C. (AP) - Break-ins at Greensboros public schools have risen 107 percent - from 26 to 54 since last January, causing school officials to tighten

O'Connor Col...

(Continued from page 4)

his group hopes the General Assembly will pass a resolution supporting the freeze during the 1983 session. Such a move, he says, would have a great impact on the states congressional delegation.

Weve got several people, at least in most of the counties. In some, we have hundreds. Theyre calling their legislators urging them to address the issue in the General Assembly ... That would really send a message to our congressional delegation and to the president that this is an issue that North Carolinians re concerned about and which they want something done about something which is more significant than Reagans START talks. Evarts said.

So far a number of Democrats have indicated they will support the measue. And two Republicans, Rep. Maggie Keesee Forrester of Greensboro and Sen. Bill Redman of Sttesville have said they can support the freeze if it is verifiable on site.

Even if the assembly doesnt support a freeze resolution, Evarts thinks theres merit to pushing the issue here. Were continuing to focus on this issue, to keep the debate going about nuclear weapons and nuclear war until we come up with a solution. The more people talking about it, the more likely well come up with a. solution.

Kilpatrick Col....

(ContinuedFrom Page 4)

known incumbent a heavy advantage over an unknown challenger. Maybe there is no satisfactory answer, but Congress will have to keep looking nonetheless. '

Copyright 1933 Universal Press Syndicate

campus security.

The prime target of burglars over the past six months has been school lunchrooms, officials say.

From July 1, 1982, to Jan. 31, 1983, thieves hauled off $3,520 in food, mostly meat, said Darrell Boyd, operations manager. Boyd said the loss amounts to an 829 percent increase over the same six months in 1981-82, when burglars took $379 in cafeteria food.

Gottlieb Col...

Continued from Page 4)

FRANCE

French President Francois Mitterrand, one of the few socialists in power in Europe, has cut unemployment benefits in order to rescue the government-backed unemployment insurance program from an estimated $2 billion deficit this year. Workers now get 80 percent of their salaries when first unemployed, rather than 90 percent.

DENMARK

The new center-right government has slashed many benefits, stirring angry debate. For more than a month, Danish ports have been closed by spontaneous i>strikps by dock workers protesting benefit reductions for colleagues who must work part time.

What do people do when they are told that from now on they will have to make do with 10 kroner ($1.20) per day per family member for food, clothes and other necessities? asks social worker Erik Smith.

But Social Welfare Minister Palle Simonsen counters, Unlike the 1930s, .no one is faced with the problem of mere survival, but rather of adjusting themselves to a lower level of consumption.

NEWPOPEMOBILE

SAN JOSE, Costa Rica (AP) - A Costa Rican company will build a bulletproof popemobile for Pope John Paul II to use during his Central American trip in March, local church leaders report.

ImDortant News

ror

Downtown Pitt Plaza

Fashion Conscious Clientele!

The Great Giveaway!

Friday and Saturday

Things To Expect:

1. Quantities limited.

2. Expect to make the biggest savings of the season.

3. Expect to find dresses by R&K. Jack Mulqueen. Leslie Faye and Schrader.

4. Expect to find limited quantities of Austin Hill. Dalton and other sportswear.

^ 5. Expect to find savings to 75 %.

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Hurry In For Better Selections

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6-The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N C.-Thursday, February 3,1963

ColumbusCountyJudge'Gullty'

FOUND GUILTY Columbus a U.S. District Court jury convicted County Judge J. Wilton Hunt Sr. and him of racketeering and interstate his wife Pamela leave the Federal gambling. (APLaserphoto)

Building in Raleigh Wednesday after

Jurors Deliberating In Trial Of Federal Judge

By ANNE s. CROWLEY Associated Press Writer MIAMI (AP) - Jurors resumed deliberations today in the bribery-conspiracy trial of U.S. District Judge Alcee Hastings and the foreman said the jury was making a list of all its questions about the complex case.

U.S. District Judge Edward T. Gignoux sent tfcje 12 jurors back to the jury room this morning with the chalkboard they had requested after deliberating just over an hour late Wednesday. Hastings. Floridas first black U.S. district judge, is accused of selling light sentences in return for a $150,000 bribe.

"You look fresh, rested and in good spirits. Gignoux said with a smile. "Im very happy to observe that.

The jury forewoman, Elizabeth Keller of Naples, told the judge: Were compiling a list of things we still have questions about. Hastings. 46, is charged with conspiracy to solicit a bribe and obstruction of justice. He is the first sitting federal judge ever tried for crimes allegedly committed while oq the bench.

Jail Terms For 4 Protesters'

NEW LONDON, Conn. (AP) - The refusal of four nuclear protesters to pay $1,386 each for damage they caused to a Trident submarine has resulted in one-year jail terms for each of them.

Superior Court Judge Seymour L. Hendel revoked suspended sentences Wednesday and ordered the jail terms for the demonstrators involved in a July 5 protest at the Electric Boat shipyard.

The four had been ordered to begin making $100 mon-. thly payments starting Dec. 1. They were arrested Jan. 10 after they refused to comply. Five other people who took part in the protest against the nuclear missile armed submarine have already been jailed.

Leaf collection services are provided by the City's Public Works Department For information, call 752-4137.

The defendant and defense attorney Patricia Williams waited Wednesday in Hastings chambers, from which he has directed his defense.

Hastings friend, attorney William A. Borders Jr. of Washington. D C., was convicted on similar charges last year and sentenced to five years in prison. Justice Department attorneys Reid Weingarten and Robert Richter also prosecuted that case.

Hastings, appointed to the bench in 1979, has said he wont resign if convicted on the indictment issued Dec. 29, 1981. He could face impeachment proceedings by Congress or suspension by the chief judge of the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.

Maximum penalty for each count is five years in prison and a $10,000 fine.

The prosecution maintains that Hastings and Borders teamed up to solicit a $150,000 bribe from an FBI agent posing as one of two men convicted of racketeering before the judge.

In return, the government charges. Hastings was to reduce the defendants three-year prison terms and return some of the $1.2 million in cash and property he ordered seized by the government.    *

In closing argument Wed-, nesday. Miss Williams criticized the governments case as riddled with reasonable doubt.

"They havent shown that there was any knowledge (of the conspiracy) on his part, ever, she said. Youre supposed to surmise it, infer it, feel it, because it helps the governments case. Weingarten said the judges charming exterior hid a man who committed a crime, then lied on the witness stand to cover it up.

"Its his word vs. the circumstances, Weingarten told the jury, noting that a government witness had contradicted Hasting story about what 'he did after learning Borders had been arrested on Oct. 9,1981.

"If you find him in one lie, his whole defense collapses around him like a house of cards, Weingarten argued.

He said Hastings needed the money to satisfy his expensive tastes.

"Alcee Hastings led a fast life 'With fast friends. He stayed at the best hotels and ate at the best restaurants. He was frustrated by his lack of money and he knew where there was a lot of it.

The prosecution assembled a complicated circumstantial case by tapping telephones and taping Borders meetings with the FBI agent.

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -Columbus County Judge J. Wilton Hunt Sr. faces up to 25 years in prison and $35,000 in fines when he is sentenced March 14 following his conviction Wednesday on racketeering and interstate gambling charges.

Hunts attorney, Kenneth Robinson, says he will appeal the conviction after sentencing.

Hunt was convicted of taking $7,000 in bribes from undercover agents to fix traffic tickets and reduce bonds. He was also convicted of conspiring to violate interstate gambling laws by giving undercover agents tlK

Reunited With Abducted Baby

MIAMI (API - Hospital staffers were delighted that a 3-day-old baby and her mother were reunited just one day after the infant was abducted from the facility, a spokeswoman says.

The child was found unharmed in a housing project Wednesday after poliice received an anonymous telephone tip. Debra E. Brown, 29, was taken into custody and charged with false imprisonment.

Everyone heres delighted, said Jackson Me-morial Hospital spokeswoman Betty Baderman. The hospital should thank the media for getting this story out so fast.

Court Rebuffs Palimony Claim

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The state Supreme Court has rebuffed the long-time mistress of Alfred Bloom-ingdale, who wants $10 million for devoting herself to the late department store magnate.

The court Wednesday refused to reinstate three crucial portions of the palimony suit brought by Vicki Morgan, a former model who says she took up with Bloomingdale after they met in 1970 when she was a 17-year-old and he was in his 50s.

She alleges that Bloomingdale, the department store heir who died Aug. 20 of cancer, at age 66, had promised her lifetime support and a home in return for her loving attention.

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ptKMie number of a bookmaker in South Canfina.

The eight-man, four-woman jury ddiberated fm* seven hmirs before reaching a guilty verdict on both charges. On one occasion, they asked for information on the definition of entrapment. They also asked to hear tapes of Hunts first meetings with undercver FBI agents and to see the

N.C. Reward Is Matched

A $5,000 reward offered by the governors office for information leading to the arrest ai)(J conviction of those responsible for the Monday night shooting death of a North Carolina truck driver has been matched by the Fountain of Life ministry in Greenville.    

'The Rev. Jim Whittington, head of the non-profit television ministry, said today that he sympathizes with both sides of the nationwide' independent truck drivers strike but it is my feeling that we do not need this type of violence to solve problems and prove points.

Whittington said his ministry logs about 150,000 miles per year by private coach and he pointed to several threats on my life in my work. He said there have been times in other states where pranksters threw objects off bridges and struck his bus, including an incident in Delaware where the front of the vehicle was dented.

I relate to the fear and trauma of not being able to go under an underpass without fear of having something thrown at you, the minister observed.

In offering the $5,000 re-\ ward, Whittington said, Something needs to be done to keep more of this from happening. I feel like this is a gesture toward mankind.

Saying the reward is a reflection of what Gov. Jim Hunt is doing, Whittington commented, We feel it is in good taste to do this. We want to see a peaceful nation.

videotape of the judge taking a payoff.

Hunt was among 21 people arrested in July on federal charges stemming from the federal investigation into corruption in Columbus County, named COLCOR.

The 50-year-old judge, suspended from the bench at the outset of the trial, shook his head as each juror was polled about the verdict. Hunts family, sitting behind him, remained impassive.

Later, as his family gathered around him. Hunt said he was innocent and that he was certainly entrapped by the FBI undercover probe.

I dont believe you can print what I think about Uie FBI, Hunt told reporters after the trial.

U.S. Attorney Sam Currin said he was satisfied with

POUTICAL MANEUVER

TORONTO (AP) -Former Prime Minister Joe Clark has resigned as leader of the Progressive Conservative opposition in the Canadian Parliament, but says he will try to regain the position.

the verdict, adding that the jurys decision lays to rest the issue a[ entrapment in COLCOR.

After the trial, defense attorney Kenneth Robinson, who defended U.S. Rep. John Jenrette, D-S.C. in his Abscam trial, said he thought the jury might not have shown Hunt leniency because he is a district court judge.

Across the land, I find that juries are much firmer when judging public officials, he said.

Robinson was not contesting the bribery charges against Hunt. Instead, he tried to convince the jury* that his client was entrapped into taking payoffs and was

not predisp(^ to cmnm a crime before being iOjM?<l to do so by FBI agents.

The prosecution based its case on'Secret videotapes and tape recordings made by undercover agents. The strongest evidence came in a videotape of Hunt taking payoff RKmey from an undercover agent. In several tape recordings, FBI agents can be heard counting out money and the judge tbank-ipg them for it. ? v

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Cemetery Has Space For More Confederate Dead

ByUNDADUFFIELD Associated Press Writer

HAGERSTOWN, Md. (AP) Although the Civil War ended more than a century ago, the bodies of Confederate soldiers who fell in bloody western Maryland battles would still be accepted at a cemetery here. Since the cemeterys dedication, the bodies of more than 2,000 rebels, most of them unidentified, have been exhumed and moved there.

The well-tended grassy knoll which is their final resting place is marked by a statue (k^icting Hope. and a directory of the dead buried therein.

But the most recent burial of a Confederate at the Washington County Confederate Cemetery took place in 1932. when workers constructing a portion of the Shari^burg Pike found the remains of an unidentified rebel soldier, according Samuel Pruett, a local expert on the cemetery.

Right now, there is still some space available, said

Urge Prize For Walesa

WASHINGTON (AP) -Solidarity leader Lech Walesa and seven other human rights activists in Eastern Europe and the Soviet Union should be awarded this years Nobel Peace Prize, the U.S. Helsinki Commission is urging.'

The Helsinki Commission formally known as the Ommission on Security and Cooperation in Europe -was established to help monitor compliance with human-rights and other provisions of the 35-nation Helsinki accords signed in 1975.

Signing a letter Tuesday to the Nobel Institute in Oslo, Norway, were the commissions coKihairmen, Rep. DantftB-FasccU, D-Fla.;jod Sen. Bob Dole, R-Kan., along with nine other congressional members of the panel.

In addition to Walesa, the commission cited Soviet dissident leaders Yuri Orlov, Anatoly Shcharansky, Mykola Rudenko and Viktoras Petkus; playwright Vaclav Havel of Czechoslovakia, and Polish dissidents Jacek Kuron and Adam Michnik. Except for Walesa, who was released from detention late last year, all of them are currently imprisoned.

Pruett. If somebody finds a Confederate lying in his backyard and wants, him moved, we will be happy to arrange it.

The cemetery was dedicated in 1877, five years after Maryland agreed to provide money for a burial area for Southern soldiers who died at the battles of South Mountain and An-tietam.

Until then, the remains of Southern soldiers had been buried in unmarked graves in cornfields, creeks and yards near here because of anti-SoutlKm sentiment.

By then, there were a few more Confederate sympathizers and nwderate state legislators who were willing to do something and not get hung up on the idea of whether it was a dead Confederate or a dead Union soldier, said Pruett, a Washington County state employee.

The Union sympathizers didnt allow the Confederates to be buried in the Antietam cemetery although the regulations drawing it up permitted them to be buried there, he said.

Then finally, the state of Maryland put up money, and dictated the cemetery should be built here, he said.

Some were buried in creeks, some buried in orchards, he said. They were buried where they fell in many cases.

Once money was appropriated for a cemetery where the fallen Confederates could be buried decently, Pruett said, men were hired to find the soldiers bodies, exhume them, attempt to identify them, and bring them by wagonload to the cemetery.

They did a right good job, said Pruett. Using a list compiled in 1866, the workers went around and tried to get together all of the information concerning the (original) burial spots.

Among the bodies were men who fell in the Battle of South Mountain, which pitted

Offer Reward In 'Missing' Case

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -The state is offering a $5,000 reward for information leading to the arrest and conviction of those responsible for the possible kidnapping and murder of Mer-rimanCayleHill.

Hill was reported missing Dec. 18, 1982, anu blood stains were found in both his home and car, police said.

RESTING PLACE The bodies of more than 2,000 Confederate ^Idiers who fell in Civil War battles in western Maryland lie in this cemetary in Hagerstown, Md. The cemetary was dedicated in 1877 to provide a final resting place for Southern soldiers who had been buried in unmarked graves. (AP Laserphoto)

the Union forces of Gen. George B. McClellan against the Confederate forces of Gen. Robert E. Lee on Sept. 14,1862.

Three days later, on Sept. 17, the armies of the North and South clashed at Antietam, where 23,000 men were killed or wounded, giving the fight the distinction of being the bloodiest singleday battle of the war between the states.

The map at the Confederate cemetery lists 2,451 rebel soldiers as being buried on the grounds. But Pruett said the figure, by his

FIGHT EPIDEMIC TEL AVIV, Israel (AP) -Moslem leaders in Jerusalem and the occupied West Bank are trying to stamp out an epidemic of sex movies and videotapes, the news agency ITIM reports.

calculations, is actually 2,468. Of those, the identities of 2,122 have not been determined.

'Reservations' Over Nominee

WASHINGTON (AP) -AFL-CIO President Lane Kirkland says his union has grave resenations about the nomination of Donald Dotson to head the National Labor Relations Board, although it is not actively opposing the nominee.

Kirkland, in a letter to the Senate Labor Committee, said the information the ilicin has is not sufficiently documented to meet our standards for actively opposing a nominee.

Kirkland said President Reagans appointments to the NLRB are rewards... to the reactionary businessmen and to the far Hght wing that administration delights to serve.

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Infants

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Sale 8.00

Quilted Print.

Rg. $10. Lightweight cotton quilted diaper bag in colorful prints. Sesame Street^ cloth quilted diaper bag. Reg. $12. Sale S.60.

Sesame Street and the Sesame Street Sign are trademarks and service marks of the Children's Television Workshop.

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sale 2.23

Novelty Pullover.

Reg. 2.79. Adorable novelty pullover shirt in easy care cotton/polyester. Infants' sizes 6-24 months.

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Reg. 3.99. Short sleeve all-in-one Pilucho. Combed cotton knit or terry. Prints or solids. Infants sizes S.M.L.

All Bedding.

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Reg. 5 .25. (^tton receiving blankets in choice of two cheerful prints. Size 30"x40. Package of 2.

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Reg. $13. Warm poly/cotton comforter zips to form a sleeping tog. In assorted colorful prints.

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Reg. 3.59. Thermal knit cotton receiving blanket is warm In winter, cool in summer. Size 30x40.

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Reg. 6.59. Polyester/cotton knit fitted crib sheet stretches for a smooth fit. Ballons N' Bears or Cheerful Chipmunks prints.

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Womens

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Women's sleepwear coordinate group. Includes shift, pajamas and long gown - Choice of colors.

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Orlg. $12. Group of young men's short sleeve western plaid shirts. Polyester/cotton for easy care. Limited quantities.

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travel bag

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Orlg. $25. Group of young men's Khaki jeans. Assorted styles. Limiteo sizes and colors.

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Closeout JCPenney Comfort Suit.

The JCPenney Comfort Suit. Tailored in a new stretch fabric of Dacron poly.

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Shop 10 a.m. -9 p.m. Phone 756-1190 Pitt Plaza





p The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Thursday, February 3.1983

The Forecast For

Friday. February 4

Te

Low Temperatures

Rain

Showers

Snow [23

Flurries^^

Fronts: Cold

WEATHER FORECAST - The National Weather Service forecasts snow and showers for Friday in the Southwest, Snow flurries are

By The Associated Press

Colder weather is on its way to North Carolina tonight.

Partly cloudy sky cover vill be the rule in most parts ni the state tonight with a tow lingering snow flurries over the mountains.

Temperatures tonight will drop to the colder 30s and 40s east of the mountains while mercury levels will dip to near 20 over the northern niountains.

By Friday, partly cloudy kies will be the evident, with

Occluded

Stationary

indicated in the Northeast. Cold weather is forecast for the northern Plains and Mississippi Valley. (AP Laserphoto Map)

temperatures ranging from the 30s over the mountains to near 50 over southern and eastern areas.

The spell of rain, heavy in some areas, that fell Wednesday had ended in most parts of the state by early today.

The heavy rains that moved into the mountains Wednesday caused some flooding. Rainfall amounts of 3 to 5 inches occurred over that area of the state. One of the reported heavier

amounts was 5.7 inches that fell at East Fork in Transylvania County. Some flooding was reported along streams in Buncombe County.

Thunderstorms were also reported Wednesday over sections of the Piedmont and coastal plain, and ome isolated damage from winds was reported. A tornado watch was issued Wednesday afternoon for the Sandhills and coastal plain. Temperatures pushed well into the spring-like 60s to low 70s.

'Baby Doe' Is Claimed And Renamed By Couple

By NANCY BENAC

Asssociated Press Writer

LANSING, Mich. (AP) -Ray and Judy Stiver returned home to claim and rename Baby Doe," confident the 3-week-old boy born with a-^birth-d^t is their child - not the^ of a man who hired Mrs. Stiver as a surrogate mother.

For now, I do feel he is mv son. said Stiver after he

Put A Bite On Suspect

JACKSON, Miss. (AP)-A policewoman put the bite on a robbery suspect when he tried to grab her gun, and the wound led to his arrest when he sought hospital treatment, authorities said.

Patrolwoman .Azell Smith. 39, was leaving a post office when she saw a man grab a womans purse, said Sgt, (hipPippen.

Ms. Smith gave chase in r car and found the man hind a nearby lounge, look-ig through the purse. She identified herself as a police officer and attempted to arrest the man, Pippen said, but he tried to grab the gun.

As they struggled, the gun ii-scharged, shooting the patrolwoman in the right f(K)t. Then Ms. Smith bit the man in the cheek.

She said she was doing everything she coul^ to get him off of her, Pippen said. The man fled without the gun, and Ms, Smith fired one 'hot but missed.

Security officers at Uni-.ersity Medical Center later notified police that a man liad sought treatment for a uiTt* wound.

Police Tuesday arrested Minbn Buckhalter, 23, of lackson, on charges of liong-armed robbery and iravated assault on a ' M'e officer. Pippen said.

Me added that Ms. Smiths M)t injury was not serious.

and his wife came back from Chicago, where it was announced that blood tests proved the child could not have been fathered by the sperm donor, Alexander Malahoff, 46.

We want to bring him back home, Stiver said.

The child is in a temporary foster home. The Stivers are scheduled to appear Monday in Ingham County Probate Court for a custody hearing.

The baby was bom with microcephaly - an unusually small head which often indicates mental retardation.

Mrs. Stiver, 26, gave birth Jan. 10 at Lansing General Hospital after being hired for $10,000 by Malahoff, of Middle Village, N.Y., to bear his baby through artificial insemination.

Mrs. Stiver said she apparently got pregnant by her 41-year-old husband before she was artifically inseminated.

The Stivers said they obeyed their contract strictly, adding Mrs. Stiver could have conceived the child only because they were not instructed to abstain from sex in the days immediately before insemination.

"There were no winners. Everybody suffered, Malahoff said Wednesday after he and the Stivers received the' test results while taping a segment of the nationally televised Donahue show.

"Im surprised, but not disappointed. Mrs. Stivers said.

When the child was born, doctors said the babys retardation was severe and he might live just days.

GUEST SPEAKER The Pitt County School Food Service Chapter held its monthly meeting at Grifton Elementary School recently with Linda Bowen, regional coordinator for the school food service program, as the guest speaker, Mrs, Bowens topic was Getting Children To Eat,

according to Malahoffs attorney, William Leininger of New York.

Malahoff, a Roman Catholic, had the newbown christened Alexander to "prevent him from being thrown into Limbo, Leininger said.

But Stiver declared Wednesday, Its not going to be Alexander coming home with us. Its going to be Christopher Ray.

Stiver said they had not yet made a decision on whether to file suit over the situation.

Malahoff was to reclaim his $10,000 payment, which was being held in escrow by Noel Keane, a Dearborn lawyer who set up the surrogate arrangement.

Leininger refused to say if Malahoff would drop a $50 million suit he filed last week against the Stivers for breach of contract and loss of a childs love. Leininger did say we have no intention of hurting the Stivers.

Malahoff hopes to recover from the 'Stivers $30,000 he has already paid out In expenses for the arrange ment, Leininger said.

Baby Doe first attracted attention when Malahoff allegedly refused to authorize certain medical procedures after the childs birth.

Lansing General Hospital won a temporary court order to continue treatment.

Arrest Suspects In Big Theft,

ByRICKHAMPSON

As^iated Pr^ Writer

NEW YORK (AP) - An armored car company ^ard charged in an $11 million theft, the largest cash heist in U.S. history, was sunning himself by the pool in Puerto Rico when FBI agents moved in, authorities said.

Although a second man was also taken into custody in New York, none of the money from the Dec. 12 theft at Sentry-Armored Car-Courier Co. has been found, the FBI said Wednesday, adding that a search was continuing for more suspects.

Christos Potamitis, 24, a guard at Sentry, was arrested Wednesday by FBI agents at the Holiday Inn in San Juans Condado beachfront district.

George Legakis, 21, a student and part-time cook, turned himself in to the FBI Tuesday night in New York.

The pair, charged with larceny in the theft from the Sentry building in the Bronx, were two of the more important players in the heist, said Lee Laster, assistant director in charge of the FBIs New York office.

We spoiled (Potamitis) vacation, Laster said. He had been sunning himself by the pool most of the after

noon.

Legakis, described as Potamitis associate," was arraigned Wednesday.

My client is a scape^at in this matter," William Spanakos, Legakis lawyer, told U S. District Jud^ Lee

Terrorism Toll Soared In 1982

WASHINGTON (AP) -Deaths and injuries stemming from terrorism rose dramatically in 1982 compared to the year before, the FBI says.

In an annual report released in conjunction with a Senate subcommittee hearing Wednesday, the FBI said terrorist deaths rose to seven last year compared to one the year before.

Injuries linked to terrorism rose to 26 from four in 1981, the agency told the subcommittee on security and ' terrorism.

Deaths and injuries were the highest since 1979 when eight people were killed and 39 injured.

Of the 51 total incidents listed, bombing and attempted bombings were by far the most frequent - 28 bombings and nine attempted bombings. There were no more San three incidents in any of 10 other

WAR VICTIM - A two-year-old Cambodian boy, who lost his arm during an artillery attack on a Cambodian border camp at Nong Chan, last month, sits at the entrance to the hospital ward at Khao I Dang refugee camp. His father was one of four pecle killed during the attack which also injured his mother. Vietnamese forces launched a major attack against Nong Chan this week, driving many Cambodian refugees towards Thailand. (AP Laserphoto)

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categories. The bureau >fe-ported 42 incidents in 1981. Broken down by target, 14 were against commercial establishments and seven against government build-^ ings or property.

The agency blamed 25 of the 51 incidents wi Puerto Rican groups. The next highest number, eight, was attributed to Jewish groups.

By region, there were 24 incidents in northeastern states, 15 in Puerto Rico, nine in the South, two in western states and one in north central states.

The FBI defines a terrorist incident as a violent act or an act dangerous to human life in violation of the criminal laws of the United States or of any state to intimidate or coerce a government, the civilian population, or any segment thereof, in furtherance of political or social objectives.

Among the incidents listed in the 1982 report: the Dec. 8 takeover of the Washington Monument in which Norman David Mayer, described as an antinuclear advocate, was the only victim.

He was shot to death by police and his death is among the seven listed as being victims of terrorism.

Report Record CAP Missions

CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) - Officials of the North Carolina Civil Air Patrol say they conducted a record ii emergency-services missions last year.

Capt. Eric Karnes of Charlotte, director of emergency services for the state CAP, said Wednesday the patrol flew only 46 missions in 1981.

More than 1,000 CAP personnel took part in the missions and flew more than 230 hours.

P. Gagliardi. The attorney said Legakis had an absolute alibi" on the night of the robbery.

Legakis was ordered held on $1.5 million bail. Potamitis was awaiting extradition proceedings in Puerto Rico.

Laster said the two men were not acting alone,. but did not elaborate.

Three Sentry executives have been charged with skimming $100,000 from deposits at the firm in a separate scheme. Asked if they were implicated in the $11 million heist, New York chief of detectives James Sullivan replied. We are dealing with two separate cases.

Potamitis told police after the robbery that two men entered Sentrys building by piercing the two-story brick buildings steel-and-tarpaper roof. They then used a crowbar to pry their way into a vault-like money room, he said.

A co-worker reporting for work found Potamitis handcuffed to a pipe. A spokeswoman for an alarm company confirmed later that Sentrys intrusion alarm had not been set when the robbery occurred.

Authorities began to doubt the guards story after it was learned that a garage door to the warehouse had been opened between 10 p.m. and 11 p.m. the night of the heist, said Ira Block, an assistant U.S. attorney.

The doors controls were in a dispatchers room, where

Potamitis had been watching tSlevision, Block said. But Potamitis said be never let anyone into the building after 9p.m.

Law enforcement officals said neither su^ieet had a criminal record. Asked by reporters how the two men had the sophistication to commit the crime, Sullivan said, It doesnt require any ^eat brains to pull a larcojy like this in such a poorly guarded place.

Sentry went out of business last month following a series of disclosures of other losses after the Dec. 12 heist. First, $225,000 In Yonkers Raceway receipts was discovered missing about three weeks after the $11 million robbery.

While investigating both those losses, police discovered an additional $100,000 had been stolen in June.

Three Sentry officials were arrested and charged in the alleged skimming operation, including John Jennings, Sentrys president and a former New York City police detective.

On Jan. 18, Bronx District Attorney Mario Merola said at least $500,000 had disappeared from Sentry before the Dec. 12 heist. Two days later it was learned that $4,500 in equipment had been stolen from the company.

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Peru's War Against Inca Guerrillas Embarrassed

By FENTON WHEELER

Associated Press Writo-

AYACUCHO.Peni(AP)-Mountain roads are littered ' with stones big enough to wreck a car or stop a bus. Soldiers eat with one hand on their soup spoons and the other on their automatic rifles. Not even dogs are seen after curfew.

And to be a stranger in Ayacucho is to risk becoming a casualty in the governments war against an Inca guerrilla movement.

This city 13,500 feet high in the Andes was the birthplace of the Shining Path insurgency; where 1,000 government troops hunted house-to-house for guerrillas in December; and the capital of the district where nine Peruvian journalists were found hacked to death last week.

Witnesses said 400 peasants attacked the reporters with slingshots, stons and machetes in Urcnuraccay, 50 miles from Ayacucho. One body was found tied to a crude cross.

Senate President Sandro Mariategui ordered a congressional probe after a peasant told reporters civil guard members gave orders to massacre any strangers because they would be terrorists.

The peasant said the paramilitary civil guards had told peasants to torture and mutilate any stranger.

It was a sharp embarrassment for the government in the battle against an estimated 500 to 700 guerrillas, a battle it had claimed to be winning in the 4,000-square-mile area around Ayacucho.

Considered one of the South Americas leading democrats. President Fernando Belaunde Terry last year bowed to criticism' both inside and outside of the Peruvian armed forces in ordering troops to back up police against the guerrillas. On Dec. 29, he ordered 1,000

troops to sweep Ayacucho.

Since then, Belaunde has said, peasants around Ayacucho have refused to pay revolutionary taxes to guerrillas.

When there were reports eaiiier of guerrillas being hacked to death, Belaunde dismissed them as transcendental. But after the deaths of the journalists, he ordered an investigation.

People in Ayacucho, where Peru won its independence from Spain 158 years ago, live a double life.

By day, women, students, vendors and bootblacks jostle in the Plaza de Armas, which opens on the University of Huamanga, a hotel, the government building and a cathedral - the nations noblest ensemble of Spanish colonial architecture. But the plaza is deserted by sunset, four hours before the 10 p.m. curfew.

Ayacuchos tourists are gone, its streets criss-crossed by armored personnel carriers and its 60,000 inhabitants, 80 percent of them inca descendants, are under suspicion.

We have been under a state of emergency, off and on, for almost two years. Nobody expects it to end' soon, says one resident. Typically, he does not want his name known.

In the paramilitary civil guard post at Pampa Cangallo, 50 miles from Ayacucho, Capt. Elias Sierra said recently that he has told peasants to fight back against the guerrillas with anything at hand.

When reporters asked for casualty figures. Brig. Gen. Roberto Noel y Moral, the armed forces commander in Ayacucho, responded; There is not time to pick up the bodies.

The three units of police fighting the guerrillas - the National Police, the Civil Guard and the Republican Guard - have reported killing more than 50 guerrillas since the first of the year.

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Typical Questions

From Readers...

Q. Is it just a myth that people wiUi arthritis can foretell wet or rainy weather?

A. Many people with arthritis, migraine and bursitis seem to have builUn weather-vanes. For some strange, unaccountable reason, they really can anticipate the onset of damp and sticky weather. A sudden increase in their general actes and pains warns them.

Most people with arthritis seem to feel more comfortable in warm, dry climates. Certainly climate and humidity play a role in the severity and intensity of the discomfort of arthritis.

A related peculiarity of climate occurs in many parts of the world. A vidnd that blows into southern France, the mistral, produces all sorts of strange complaints in sensitive people. Another, the sirocco, is a hot, dust-laden wind that temporarily affects the physical health and emotions k people in Italy and Malta. Similar winds in Switzerland, in the area of the Sahara and India affect the comfort and emotions of those who live there.

The body has many strange and exciting reactions, many of which still remain in the dark recesses of mysticism.

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Q. Can anything be doK for the stretch marks on the abdomen that happen to women after chUdbirth?

A. These stretch marks are sometimes called the hash marks of mbthers. When the skin of the abdominal wall and breasts are expanded during pregnancy, these stretch ma^ of the skin become evident.

Theres virtually nothing that can be done to erase these mariis short of a surgical procedure.

Many pe(^le fall into the trap of quackeries and are exploited by special hormone creams, exercising gadgets and electrical devices that are expensive and worthless.

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Q. Can exercise bum off the excess calories of a heavy meal?

A. This is a delightful fan

tasy that keeps people in a deluded but happy state of mind while indulging in their favorite exercise - chewing food.

To begin with, no one sensibly exercises after a heavy meal and enjoys both. In the second place, exercise before eating makes one hungrier and tends to add calories rather than subtract them.

And here is the third misconception.

It takes about one hour of running or four hours of walking to bum up part of the calories of a piece of Danish and an ice cream soda that takes about four minutes to consume.

The only exercise that affects caloric intake is that known as pushing away from the teiTq)ting table of goodies.

Exercise undoubtedly is a great contribution to health. But in no way does it substitute for sensible, weU-controUed patterns of eating and calorie countii^ if loss of weight is the objective.

Offshore Oil Posed Challenge

STAVANGER, Norway (AP) It took eight years to build the giant Ekofisk offshore oil production complex 162 miles from the shoreline here.

Workers battled storms in the cold North Sea to erect structures in water about 230 feet deep. The offshore complex now includes seven oil fields, 27 oil-drilling platforms, four pipeline booster stations and two longdistance sub-sea pipelines.

ARREST MOTHERS?

PARIS (AP) - The Iranian government arrested 80 mothers seeking information about their jailed children, the Paris office of' the Mugahedeen Khala guerrillas reported Wednesday.

compared with 34 in all of

1982.

More than 350 are reported imprisoned Uma.

Two days after a machete attack oi guerrillas, two

village officials and two peasants were killed in reprisal. Scores of others have been threatened with death.

Sendero Luminoso, or Shining Path, was founded

by Abimail Guzman, 58, a Communist dropout and (rfii-losophy professor at the University of Huamanga.

Guzman went underground in 1978, preaching an Andean

versim of Maoism and recruiting guerrillas for five-stage war; propaganda, sabotage, violence, support bases and insurrection in the cities.

Students of Shining Path says the guerrillas are in ^ stage four, often cont)llin| I roads and villages In area around Ayacucho, 350 miles from Lima, the Peruvian capital. There have been more than 2,000 terrorist attacks in the past two years.

The guerrillas have also attacked a government building near Belaunde's palace in Lima, and blacked out the capital for more than an hour last Augusts, by blasting power installations.

Followers of Guzman, code name Comrade Gonzalo, include many teen-agers, women trained as nurses, ex-students and peasants.

His philosphy preys on the poverty of Ayacucho, one of poorest of Perus 24 states.

where infant mortality Is more than 140 per 1,000 births, illiteracy 52 percent aiHl corruption a way of life. Per capita income is $30 a year, although many peasants live purely in a barter economy.

Speaking Quechua, the Inca language, the guerrillas have spread both politics and terror, forcing more than 20 government officials to resign under threat of death.

Perus Roman Catholic bishops denounced the civil

guards for breaking the arm of Edmundo Cox Beuzeville, a guerrilla suspect, b Si-cuanl, more than 250 miles from Ayacucho.

In Ayacucho, Russel Wensjoe was pulled from a hospital bed a year ago with other guerrilla suspects and shot dead An investigation is said to be continuing. The socialist newspaper El Diaiio has published photographs alleging mutilation deaths of two guerrillas by police.

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HOUSE DAMAGED BY AFTERNOON FIRE - WintervUle firemen check the interior of a Winterville home Wednesday afternoon after fire caused heavy damage. According to fire department reports, the house was owned by John Lewis Patrick and was occupied by

Enisha Patrick of 301 Ola Circle. Firemen at the scene said the fire may have been caused by a kerosene heater. No one was home when the fire began and damage was listed at $15,000. (Reflector Photo by Tommy Forrest)

Peddlers VS. Pedestrians For Control Of NYC Sidewalks

NEW YORK I,API - The Port Authority Bus Terminal Is encircled by them and the theater district is lined with them. Canal Street has them 24 hours a day and even Park Avenue matrons must dodge them

Peddlers seem to be taking over the sidewalks of New York, say pedestrians tired of squeezing past them and store owners who dont like the cut-rate competition in

Suggest Gas 'Donations'

R.ALEIGH. N.C. (API -The Public Staff of the state Utilities Commission says North Carolina's natural gas companies should donate up to $200,000 each to help people pay their winter heating bills.

The staff, which represents consumers in rate increase requests, said Wednesday that Public Service, Piedmont and North Carolina Natural Gas each should donate $50,000 and provide an additional $150,000 in matching money for contributions from employees, stockholders and customers.

Under the proposal, none of the money would come from ratepayers, and all money would go directly to the state Division of Social Services to help low-income, elderly and handicapped people pay energy bills.

This is a modest proposal, but it should be a big help to those who need aid. said Public Staff director Bob Fischbach.

Fischbach said the gas companies had received a windfall that could boost donations. The state SupreniUpurt last week overturned a Utilities Commission order requiring refunds to customers of about $1.2 million in overcollections.

The donation proposal is patterned after programs currently being offered by electric utilities in North Carolina, he said.

Mndale Buys AQuiet Retreat

NORTH OAKS. Minn. l AFi - Former Vice President Walter Mndale and wife, Joan, have bought a secluded house, described as a place they can use as a retreat.

The home is in a wooded area near Pleasant Lake in this suburb north of St. Paul. A family spokesman said the Mndales plan to use the dwelling as a retreat, a location for meetings and as a place to entertain friends. The purchase price was put "in the neighborhood of $200,000

The Mndales live in Washington, but their son, Teddy, a student at the University of Minnesota, will live m the home while attending classes.

Neighbors describe the house as modest in size but an "architectually interesting" rambler.

front of their own doors.

The peddlers foes have been pushing their way past the pushcarts to a series of hearings by the citys Consumer Affairs Department, which is considering new restrictions on vendors limiting them to certain areas at certain times.

The open hearings began Monday and are continuing all week around'the city. Dominating the testimony have been been private citizens, merchant associations and community groups eager to put a cap on the sidewalk entrepreneurs

But peddlers interviewed at their stands argued that they should not be made

A 'Big Bird'

Is Missing

MUSKOGEE, Okla. (APi Anyone who happens to see a creature that looks like a refugee from Sesame Street might call Tim Goss. Hes lost a big bird. ^

The gray ostrich? 5 feet tall, disappeared Jan. 13 when a dog got into a pen where Goss kept five ostriches. Three were killed and one was seriously injured. The fifth got away.

Efforts to track the bird and newspaper ads offering a reward have failed to turn up the creature, still missing Wednesday.

"Im attached to them just like someone would be with a big. old racehorse. Goss said. "Its just like a chicken running around the place. But Goss said anyone who sees the elusive fowl shouldnt try to apprehend it. "Ostfiches use their feet as weapons. Its just like being hit with a fist, he said.

The wings are fragile, and an inexperienced person "might break a wing if they try to catch it, Goss said He got the birds, shipped from San Antonio, Texas, when they were 5 days old. For the past two years he kept them on his land south of Muskogee.

"I just wanted to get more of them into the country, he said. "There are very few|0f them left.

Prepared For Fire Emergency

. MINNEA^PLIS. Minn. (AP) When the University of Minnesota decided to build a new mineral engineering laboratory more than 100 feet underground to conserve energy, planners had to consider how to handle a fire

In case of fire, occupants would have to run up a flight of stairs the equivalent of It) stories to exit the structure.

To give people a chance to catch their breath on the way out. a fire room with its ow air supply is located halfway up each stairwell.

Housed in a 48,000-square-foor space 110 feet below the university campus, the new laboratory meets all fire codes.

scapegoats for street congestion, and say they just want to make some money.

"Thank God I can come out here. said one 62-year-old vendor who identified herself only as Stella L., as she tried to interest passersby in jewelry laid out on a trash can on Park Avenue in midtown Manhattan.

She said her husband had been out of work since last February and she'has to make between $10 and $50 a day to supplement her $320-a-month Social Security check.

At least she is not on welfare, Stella said, adding that police should have better things to do than chase vendors off comers.

Nearby, on Fifth Avenue, a vendor who identified himself as Bob was selling the latest in sidewalk novelties, a soft plastic octopus that crawls down walls.

"They say we clog the sidewalks. What about that he said, jerking his thumb toward a construction site that was forcing pedestrians through a narrow passageway.

Joan Ramer, director of the community board for mid-Manhattan, wants the area where Stella was working to be declared off limits to peddlers between 8 a.m.and8p.m.

"Park Avenue looks like a bazaar. she testified at the hearings, "The peddlers even regard the street as their personal property.

Last year, one ven(ior told an architectural tour group to get off his comer, she said.

Lt. Fred Stinner of the Port

Authority of New York and New Jersey police force described the 42nd Street bus station as besieged by vendors. We are completely surrounded, he said.

Witnesses said Canal Street is so popular with peddlers that some spend the night at choice locations to hold onto them.

George Wachtel of the League of New York Theaters and Producers said the theater district is congested by peddlers, whom he called antithetical to the way of life here.

The peddlers attract customers because they offer merchandise such as stereo equipment, clothes or novelty items at competitive prices, usually free of taxes, officials said.

Althou^ they often spill into restricted areas in their quest for customers, most of the vendors just want to make an honest living, said Leroy Watkins, the Consumer Affairs departments deputy general counsel.

They run afoul of the law in other ways too, police say.

There are 458 non-food vendors with licenses but a greater number are unlicensed, avoiding a requirement to put up a $2,500 bond, buy a $25 license and pay sales taxes, police say.

Before Christmas the city began a crackdown on peddlers in Manhattan, issuing 2.542 summonses. But it seemed to have little impact.

Even when their wares are seized, the peddlers usually have a second stash that lets them return to the streets in a few hours, said Officer Ernest Fazio.

Reagan's Healthjpare And Service Package Defended

By BETTY ANNE WILLIAMS

Associated Press Writer

WASHINGTON (AP) -Richard S Schweiker, on his last day as head of health and human services, is defending the Reagan administrations health care packa^ that would raise consumers out-of-pocket expenses.

Schweiker is scheduled to appear before the House Ways and Means Committee to outline the administrations plans for overhauling the way Americans pay their health bills.

A former Pennsylvania senator, Schweiker is leaving as secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services to enter private

business. Margaret Heckler, a former Massachusetts congresswoman, has been nominated to succeed him.

Two of Schweikers predecessors, Arthur S. Flemming and Wilbur Cohen, called the administration package, which is aimed at cutting federal payments for Medicare, both indefensible and unfair.

Flemming headed the old Department of Health, Education and Welfare under President Johnson, and Cohen was secretary during the Eisenhower administration.    

Their criticism was directed at a series of changes in Medicare, the health program for the el-

Pinewood Derby Is Held By Pack 205

Cub Scout Pack 205 of Memorial Baptist Church held its monthly meeting Monday night with Den 3 performed the opening and closing excercises.

Sam Mullis and Phil Martin conducted an awards ceremony. An Arrowpoint Award was presented to Jimmy Beckman. Chris Smindeil was given a Bobcat Award and a Wolf Award was presented to Chad

Urge Rejection Of 3 Closures

WASHINGTON (AP) t Five senators have urged Congress to reject the Federal Trade Commissions request to close regional offices in Boston, Seattle and Los Angeles.

The bipajptisan group said in a iett^ We believe a strong FTC regiQnal office structure is vital to ensure that consumers and small businesses are protected through strong enforcement of federal antitrust and consumer protection statutes.

It was sent to Sen. Paul Laxalt, R-Nev., chairman of the Senate appropriations subcommittee on state, justice, commerce and the judiciary.

The letter to Laxalt was signed by Sens. Warren Rudman, R-N.H.; Dennis DeConcini, D-Ariz., Lowell P. Weicker, R-Conn.; Daniel K. Inouye, D-Hawaii; and Arlen Specter, R-Pa.; according to a spokesman for Rudman.

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McGehee. Sam Mullis earned a Bear Award.

Jerry Tester, director of the recent Pinewood Derby, explained the race and introduced the judges: Ken Mayor, Stan Garren and John Weaver.

The race winners of the 8-year-old division were; speed, Chad McGehee, first, and Scott Hardison, second; best construction, Jason Hines, first, Chris Swindell, second, and Chad McGehee, third; most unusual, Scott Tester, first, Scott Hobson, second, and Jeff Garzick, third.

The 9-year-old division winners were; speed, David Higdon, first, and Marty Whichard, second; best con-truction. Will Stanley, first, Marty Whichard, second, and David Higdon, third; most unusual, Jimmy Beckman, first. Rocky Thurston, second, and Hollis Gunn, third.

For the 10-year-old division, Sammy Mullis won first place in speed, best construction, and most unusual.

The best overall trophies were presented to David Higdon for speed, to Jonathan Martin for cos-truction and to Matt Carroll for the most unusual car.

The Blue and Gold Banquet will be held Feb. 28 at the church.

derly which is expected to cost $64.7 billion this year.

President Reagan wants to charge Medicare patients part of the hospital bill during each of the first 60 days they are hospitalized. In exchange the government would pick up the tab for the cost of catastrophic illnesses, those lasting longer than 60 days.

Under current law, a patient pays hospital charges the first day and after the 60th day. Seven million Medicare patients are hospitalized for relatively short stays each year and about 200,000 suffer catastrophic illnesses requiring hospitalization.

Flemming and Cohen said; The purpose of this proposed change is not to in-sulate Medicare beneficiaries against longterm illness. The purpose is to cut Medicare expenditures.

The administration also wants to collect higher rates from beneficiaries who buy Medicare insurance to cover doctors bills, and offer optional ' Medicare vouchers where beneficiaries could buy health care coverage in the private sector with Medicare dollars.

The American Public Health Association also criticized the plan. Karen Davis, speaking for the association, said the changes are the unfairest tax of all because they are a tax on the sick and vulnerable.

Ms. Davis, a professor at Johns Hopkins University, administered Medicare and Medicaid in the Carter administration.

Sen. Max Baucus, D-Mont., a member of the Senate Finance Committee, also criticized the proposals when

Schweiker appeared before the panels health subcommittee on Wednesday. He said they would "cut the heart out of Medicare benefits.

Schweiker came before the Senate panel to describe just one feature of the package of health care reimbu^ment changes - prospective payment for hospitals.

That revision would set national Medicare payment rates based on a patients diagnosis and age. The plan, which would be adjusted to reflect regional labor costs, is designed to help slow the growth in hospital costs, which rose 12.6 percent last year compared to the general inflation rate of 3 9 percent.

Right now the system lacks incentives b tvnroi costs, Schweiker said. We pay whatever they (hospitals) spend.

Medicare will cost $64.7 billion in 1984. Medicare and Medicaid, the health program for the poor, pay for 40 percent of all hospital bills in the United States.

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Sforms Expected Bring Foot Of Snow To Midwest

By KIM MILLS Associatei Press Writer A alprm that dumped two feel d snow on Southern Caltfimiia mountains left 42 schoolchildren stranded today, while a foot of new snow was forecast for parts of the Midwest, where 21 people have already died in the regions worst' blizzard of winter.

In Florida, thousands of people lost power temporarily after a record string of tornadoes swept the state and left three people dead.

As the Midwest storm moved east, winds gusting to 74 mph Wednesday in Pennsylvania templed trees and overturned two tractor-trailers in Erie, The National Weather Service urged local residents to stay indoors.

Heavy fain was forecast today in the north Atlantic states, and the weather service issued a flash flood watch for southern New England. Streets were already flooded in Mobile, Ala., and western North Carolina.

The weather service predicted another 6 to 15 inches of snow would fall today in parts of Michigan, Minnesota and Iowa.

Meanwhile, a new Pacific storm hit waterlogged Southern California^ with rain, gusty wind and snow.

In eastern San Diego County, nearly 100 pupils were temporarily stranded at their junior high school in Pine Valley after buses were

unable to get through two feet of snow to take them home, the county Disaster Preparedness office said. All were picked up Wednesday night by their parents -after roads were sufficiently cleared, said duty officer Carolyn Harshman.

Another 30 children were staying at a community center in Alpine, also in the mountains east of San Die^.

At Acton, about 30 miles north of Los Angeles, 25 teachers and 12 pupils were stranded early today at a schoolhouse that was without heat because of the storm. The children were kept at the school after two buses skidded off roads Wednesday.

Gale-force winds capsized four boats in Lower Otay Lake near San Diego as the fishing season opened Wednesday. No injuries were reported.

About 40,000 San Diego residents were without power during the storm, but no major areas were blacked out, said Tom Larimore, a spokesmanfor San Diego Gas and Electric.

* 1

Forecasters warned of

mudslides in coastal areas battered by four storms last week, but said the latest storm had less punch.

Florida was hit by 26 tornadoes on Tuesday and Wednesday, scouring the state and overturning cars and mobile homes before heading out over the Atlantic. The previous De

cember record for Florida twisters was set in 1975, when 10 struck in one month.

At least 10,000 homes in the Orlando area and 6,000 in Jacksonville were left without power Wednesday, but electricity was restored today.

About two dozen people were injured, including eight hurt' when a twister slammed into an apartment complex in Orlando. At least 200 pecle were left homeless, the Red Cross said.

A 64-year-old man was-killed in Hawthorne when his log cabin collapsed during a tornado. In Dover, a tornado tore homes from their foundations, injuring two women, and a man was hospitalized in New Harmony for injuries suffered when a twister flipped over his trailer and left him pinned beneath a refrigerator.

A Miami Beach woman was electrocuted when lightning struck a high-tension pole, causing a 4,000-volt power line to drop into a puddle she was crossing, police said.

Walter L. McCurdy, 77, was electrocuted in Jay, in western Florida, when he became entangled in a downed power line while trying to cut limbs from a tree felled in the storm, a Santa Rosa County sheriffs dispatcher said.

The Midwest storm has been blamed for 21 deaths since Monday. Kansas, Missouri, Michigan and Iowa each reported two deaths in

May Ask Arrest Power For Wildlife Officers

By MARY ANNE RHYNE

Associated Press Writer

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -The Wildlife Resources Commission may ask the 1983 General Assembly to give its officers powers to arrest people similar to those of other law enforcement officers, says the com-mfesions executive director.

Jhe pjoposal might sQlve, some of the complaints voiced by wildlife officers and echoed Wednesday in the Senate Committee on Natural and Economic Resources and Wildlife.

Vernon Bevill, executive director of the commission, said one of his groups legislative proposals would seek full law enforcement authority for wildlife officers who now make arrests only for fish and game law violations.

He said many times the officers stumble on fields of marijuana, drug dealers or other illegal situations in which thby are not authorized to make arrests.

The proposal would mean that if they come up on a significant violation there would be no grey area involved as to what they should or should not do, Bevill said.

Sen. Don Kincaid, R-Caldwell, noted Wednesday in the Senate Committee that wildlifeofficers had told him about a list of complaints

they have and the possibility of organizing to resolve the problems.

Kincaid said the need for full arrest powers was among the officers concerns. He said the wildlife officers also complain that although their qualifications are identical to those for state Highway Patrolmen their pay is several steps lower.

Kincaid said the officers also complain that they may work 55 hours a week while Highway Patrolmen work only 40 hours.

Bevill said the commission began working with the state personnel office last year to list the duties of wildlife officers with an eye toward a strong justification of the need for higher pay if there is one.

The study should be completed by May, he said. Buf he acknowledged that starting pay for one type of officer is about $12,000a year, almost $2,000 lower than for Highway Patrolmen. That salary also is 8 percent to 12 percent lower than for similar officers in this region, Bevill said.

We are working within the process of state personnel, he said.

Other problems cited by Kincaid were the need for better equipment and vehicles.

Bevill said the com-

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traffic accidents. In Oklahoma, one woman died in a traffic accident and a 76-year-old man was killed when a road grader rolled over him. The machines (4)erator had been about to climb down to help a stranded motorist.

Five people died in accidents in Texas and four died of heart attacks whilp shoveling snow in Kansas. In Nebraska, an 82-year-old woman died of exposure and an 18-year-old youth died in a traffic accident.

Forecasters said the blizzard was the worst of the winter for parts of the Midwest because the storm

came in from the southwest, instead of losing moisture in the Rockies.

In Iowa, a second blast of snow and high winds hit Wednesday afternoon. Winds up to 40 mph blew snow back onto roads as fast as plows had cleaned them. A foot or more of snow fell on Nebraska, and winds gusting to 40 mph made the temperatures feel like 20 below zero.

Snowdrifts and blowing snow made driving hazardous in Minnesota, and police reported 160 accidents in Minneapolis and St. Paul.

In Omaha, Neb., high winds and icy roads caused a semi-trailer truck to plunge

70 feet off a bridge on Interstate 80. The driver was iK^italized in fair condition with a possible concussion Troopers closed all state and federal highways into

Wichita, Kan., on Wednesday, and roads remained impassable in the Texas Panhandle though sunshine melted down the snowdrifts.

In western Oklahoma.

motels were booked solid as troopers shut down all roads because of nine-foot drifts and winds caused by the states worst blizzard in 26 vears

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mission, like other agencies in state government, is strapped for money.

Im not indicting anyone ... Im just taking his (the officers) complaints to the proper authority, Kincaid said.

He acknowledged that money and action by the Legislature could clear up some of the problems.

Gov. Hunt At N.Y. Meeting

NEW-yORK (AP) - Gov. Jim Hunt met Wednesday with 50 of the nations political, business, labor and science education leaders.

The meetings purpose was to discuss how the country should meet the education and training needs of a modern technology ecomony.

We are trying to create a greater understanding of the link between economic growth and education, Hunt said. We must have a massive effort in this nation to rebuild our economy, and a major part of our strategy must be education.

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I2-The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Thursday, February 3,^1983

Stock And Market Reports

Hogs

RALEIGH, N.C (AP) (\CDA) - The trend on the North Carolina hog market today was 50 cents to $1 higher. Kinston 59.50, Clinton, Elizabethtown, Fayetteville, Dunn. Pink Hill, Chadbourn, Ayden, Pine Level. Laurinburg and Benson 59.25, Wilson 59.75, Salisbury 58.00, Rowland 57.50, Spiveys Corner, 57.50. Sows: all weights 500 pounds up; Wilson 54.00,,Fayetteville 52.00, WTiiteville unreported, Wallace 52,90, Spiveys Corner 55.00, Rowland 55,00, Durham 53.00

Poultry

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) (NCDA) - The North Carolina fob dock quoted price on broilers for this weeks trading was 43 cents, based on fiil truck load lots of ice pack USDA Grade A sized 2'-> to 3 pound birds. Too few for final weighted average. The market is higher and the live supply is moderate for a good demand. Weights mostly desirable. Estimated slaughter of broilers and North Carolina was 1,681,000, to 1,741,000 last

fryers in Thursday compared Thursday.

NEW YORK (AP) - The stock market moved ahead today amid continuing hopes for a recovery from the recession.

The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials rose 5.15 to 1,067.79 by noontime.

Advancing issues held a 9-5 lead over declines in the midday count of New York Stock Exchange-listed issues.

On Wednesday, Martin Feldstein, President ^ Reagans chief economic adviser, said he saw stronger and stronger signs that recovery is imminent. Separately, Chairman Paul Volcker of the Federal Reserve said a business upswing "may be taking its first steps.

Pan American World Airways led the active list, up h at 5h in trading that included a 600,000-share block at 54.

Among actively traded blue chips, American Telephone & Telegraph rose ^ to 684; Exxon 4 to 30, and International Business Machines ^toOS'Hc.

The NYSEs composite index gained .48 to 83.15. At the American Stock Exchange, the market yalue index was up 2.02 at 360.59.

Volume on the Big Board totaled 36.29 million shares at noontime, against 33.46 million at the same point Wednesday.

NEW YORK lAPi

-Midday stocks;

T

Low

Last

AiMR Corp

214

22

AbbtLabs

394

39,

Allis Chaim

124

124

Alcoa

324

32'v

324

Am Baker

144

14'4

M'4

Am Brands

45

44'4

45

Amer Can'

30

304

,30''4

Am Cyan

3S

354

354

AmFamily

164

16'V

164

Am Motors

74

7'-.

74

AmStand

324

314

314

Amer T4T

694

684

68-4

Beat Food

234

23

23'-,

Beth .Steel

I9'j

19'4

194

Boeing

35.

35'V

35'v

Boi.se Cased

37',

37'v

Borden

52'

52',

52'-.

Burlngt Ind

27'4

27',

27',

CSX Con)

51

50'v

51

CaroPwLl

22,

224

22',

Celanese

534

534

534

Cent Soya Champ Int Chrysler

164

16

16'.

24

234

24

16.

164

164

((xaCola

49',

49'y

49',

Colg Palm

194

194

19',

Comw Fdis

26';

264

26'..

ConAgra

30'.

30';

304

Conti Group

354

354

354

DeltaAirl

46

45'j

46

DowChem

28',

27',

28

duPont

40'-.

40

40',

Duke Pow

234

23'.

234

Ea.stnAirl,

9'.

9's,

9',

Fast Kodak

84'i

84',

84',

FatunCp

,31

30',

304

Fsmark s

56',

.56

56

Exxon

294

294

294

Firestone

19'.

19

19',

FlaPowLi

:i7 ,

:r?4

37',

FlaProgres.s

19

18,

184

KordMol

40

39'.

39';

For McKess

40

:,

;)94

Fuqua ind GTE Corp

31v

1 40'.

40',

40'..

GnDynam

:!7'.

37'.

37'.

Gen Flee

100-,

100'.

100'.

Gen Food

;!9

38',

:tS4

(ien Mills

46',

46'.

46'.

(ien .Motors

61',

61',

61'-;

(len Tire

31'-.

31'j

314

GenuParts

41';

41',

41'i

GaPaeif

244

24

24',

Gixxirieh

:il4

31',

31's.

G(x)dyear

:12';

:i2.

;!2'.

(irae Co

40' .

404

40'.

GtNor Nek

41'.

41'.

41'.

Greyhound

20',

20

20',

THURSDAY

pm, - Greenville Elks

7:00

Lodge No 1645 meets 7:30 p m r-'Overeaters Anonymous meets at First Presbyterian ('hurch

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

8:00 p m Coochee Council No 60 Degree of Pocahontas meets at Red Men's Hall

FRIDAY

7:30 p m . - Red Men meet

Gull Oil HerrulesIiK

Honeywell HospK'p s

ng t IBM

Inti Har\ Ini Paper Int Rectil lot T4T K mart KaisrAlum Kane Mill KanebSvi

KrogeKo ckheed

laxk Ixiews Corp Masohile n McDermott Mead Corp MinnMM Mobtl Moasanto \('NB Cp .NabiscoBrd Nat Distill NorflkSou n DlinCp Dwenslll Penney JC PepsiCo Ptielps Dod PhilipMorr PhillpsPet Polaroid Proel Gamb ProctGmb wi (^aker Uat RCA

RalstnPur

RepubAir

Republic .Stl

Revlon

Reynldlnd

Rockwellnt

R(('rown

StRegis Pap

Scott Paper

SealdPow

SearsRoeb

Shaklee

Skyline Cp

Sonv Corp

.Souihem Co

NO SHADOW Weather forecasting groundhog Punx-sutawney Phil is held high by handler Malcom Fud Dunkle as Groundhog Gub Inner President James H. Means, left, waits to interpret the word Wednesday on Gobblers Knob

(Pa.). Phil saw no shadow and predicted for only the fifth time in 97 years that winter would come to an early end. (AP Laserphoto)

StdOilInd StdOilOh Stevens JP TRW Inc Texaco Inc TexEastn CMC Ind II n Camp I'n Carbide UnOilCal Uniroyal LS Steel Wachov Cp WalMart s

WestPtPqp h fi

Poland Orders United Press International Halt Activity

Westgh Weyerhsr WinnDix Wool worth Xerox Cp

Kullowing are selected market quotations Ashland prC Burroughs

Carolina Power & Light Collins li Aikman Connor

II am stock

Duke

Eaton

Eckerds

Exxon

Fieldcrest

Hatteras

Hilton

Jefferson

Deere

Lowe's

McDonald's

McGraw

Piedmont

Pizza Inn

P&G

TRW. Inc United Tel Virginia Electric Wachovia

OVER THE COU.NTER

Aviation

Branch

Little Mint

Planters Bank

37-,

44G

22',

214

I7S,

234

304

234

294

294

IS4

404

294

31,

314

WARSAW, Poland (AP) -Communist authorities today ordered United Press International to suspend news gathering activities in Poland and withdrew the

accreditation of its remaining correspondent, Bogdan Turek, a Pole.

It took the step to retaliate for the expulsion of the Polish governments cor-

424

32'v

Bethel's Board roves Pact

App

20-4-214 164-164 14-4 274-28

Overturn Order BarringCutback

CHICAGO (AP) - A state Supreme Court justice has overturned an order that blocked Illinois from making $160 million in emergency budget cuts, but he called thie case a cruel and painful dilemma.

Justice Daniel Ward said his decision was temporary pending a hearing before the full Supreme Court. At issue is a Cook County judges order Monday blocking cuts in state medical programs which Gov. James R. Thompson says are needed to help avoid big deficits.

Ward ruled Wednesday, as Thompsons budget office announced the states projected cash shortage has reached $255 million, even after the $160 million in cuts are counted.

BETHEL - Bethel Town Commissioners at their February meeting voted on several agenda items and tabled a number of others for later action.

An agreement with the Bethel Chapter of the Pitt-Greenvllle Chamber of Commerce was approved, with the town to pay $1,500 to the chapter for a variety of community services to be provided to the town during the year. Commissioners also approved a resolution presented by Ricky McGee to purchase at a fair appraisal evaluation property on Church Street for the Community Development Project. McGee is the Mid-East Commission representative for the town of Bethel.

Approval was given to a drainage proposal by Parker and Allen Drainage Co. for drainage work needed at Pine Lawn Cemetery. The work proposal carries a cost tab in the amount of $2.923. The town attorney was instructed to draw up a maintenance and construction agreement relative to crossing personal property to effect the drainage project.

Action was taken to

approve charging off assessment accounts more than 10 years old, with the town attorney authorized to make efforts to collect other delinquent accounts.

'The board approved a $10 fee to join a safety council, and voted to purchase a new time clock for use at the utilities department.

Agenda items discussed and tabled for action at a later date include a proposed ordinance for regulating game rooms ahd another ordinance to more stringently enforce minimum housing standards.

Also to be considered at a later date is a request from Otis Potter of the Board of Transportation to change the status of Railroad Street from a state road to a city street; and a request that trains be allowed to travel at 15 mph Instead of the current 10 mph through town in order to ease the problem of long blockage of streets while trains pass through.

Postponed

masonic NOTICE

Mount Calvary Lodge No. 669 will meet tonight at 7:30. All Master Masons are asked to be present.

Julius Phillips, Worship Master

Abram Lang, Secretary

GUEST SPEAKER

The Rev. W.H. Joyner will be the guest speaker Sunday at 7:30 p.m. at Sweet Hope Free Will Baptist Church, The church is located at Galloways Crossroads.

A meeting of the board of trustees of East Carolina University scheduled for this weekend has been postponed untU March 4.

The March 4 meeting will be at 2 p.m. in the Mendenhall Student Center.

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respondent in Washington.

The chain of events began Jan. 13 when the Polish government withdrew the accreditation of UPIs sole Warsaw-based American correspondent, Ruth Gruber, and expelled her, and calling it a warning for other foreign reporters in Poland to watch their step.

The regime alleged she was involved in activities of an intelligence character, charges denied by Ms. Gruber.

Washington reponded to the expulsion by ordering Stanislaw Glabinski, the sole correspondent of PAP, the official Polish news agency, to leave the United States.

The Polish Foreign Ministry said today that UPI could resume normal operations in Poland as soon as a new PAP correspondent is accredited in the United States, and Miss Grubers replacement arrives in Warsaw.

After Miss Gruber left Poland, UPI continued to send disptaches by Turek.

Turek was summoned

the Foreign Ministry today and informed of the latest decision. He sent his final dispatch 90 minutes later, a report on the withdrawal of his accreditation.

The UPI office in Warsaw will remain open, Turek said, to handle bookkeeping and administrative affairs, but will be barred from sending news.

The Associated Press bureau in Warsaw was not affected by the Foreign Ministry action. About 19 American reporters are accredited in Warsaw, including TV networks, newspapers, magazines and The AP.

BANK ROBBED

to

GOLDSBORO, N.C. (AP) - Goldsboro police Wednesday were looking for a man who held up Southern National Bank. Police Chief C M. Gilstrap said the man gave a teller a note demanding money.

Tag Deadline Approaching

The deadline for the purchase of city tags In the village of Simpson is Feb. 15. Thereafter, the village ordinance will be enforced with the assistance of the Pitt County Sheriffs Department, according to Clerk Leslie Edwards.

Revival Service Begins Friday

Revival services will begin at 7:30 p.m. Friday and continue through Sunday night at the Winterville Pentecostal Holiness Church. Evangelist Patsy Ethridge Spence of Wilson will be guest speaker. Special singing will be presented each evening.

Obituaries

Chapman Mr. William Earl Chapman, 50, formerly of the Calico community, died Saturday in Greater Southeast Community Hospital, Washington, D C. His funeral service will be conducted Saturday at 1 p.m. at Joseph Free Will Baptist Church on Route 1, Vanceboro. Burial will be in the church cemetery.

Gardner Mr. Roosevelt Gardener of Parm^ died Wednesday "in Pitt County Memorial Hos?)i-tal. He was the husband of Mrs. Verna Gardner. Funeral arrangments will be announced later by Flanagan Funeral Home.

Mr. Chapman had made his home in Washington for several years. He was a member of Joseph Branch Church.

Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Nancy Chapman of the home; a duaghter. Miss Barbara Chaprnan/of Washington, D C.; four wns, Earl Chapman ^'IVnne N. Chapman, Ro^A. Chapman

and Benjamiii Y. Chapman,

b11 of Washii igton, DC.; a stepson, Alexander Rich of the U.S. Air Force; three stepdaughters, Mrs. Phyllis Payne of Maryland, Mrs. Louise Delaney of Washington, D C., and Mrs. Hazel Thurman of Pennsylvania; fjve foster sisters, Mrs. Esther Stewart of Ayden, Mrs. Pearl Alexander and Mrs. Lillian Hawkins, both of Baltimore, Mrs. Lucy Hall and Mrs. Georgia Stewart, both of Portsmouth, Va., and Mrs. Carrie Moore of Brooklyn, N.Y.; two foster brothers, Edward Chapman of Route 2, Ayden, and James W. Chapman of Baltimore, and 13 grandchildren.

Moye

Mr. Willie Roy Moye, 54, died Monday at Pitt County Memorial Hospital. Funeral services will be conducted Saturday at 2 p.m. at Hardees Funeral Giapel by the Rev. Horace Joyner. Burial will follow in the Brown Hill Cemetery.

Mr. Moye attended H.B. Sugg High School in Famville. He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Rosa Moye of the home; two sons, Willie Moye Jr.of the home and Jesse Lee Tyson of Midg-ettefield.; one daughter, Evelyn Tyson of Midg-ettefield; one stepdaughter. Mrs. Veronica Corbett of the home; his mother, Mrs. Annie Bell Moye of Washington, N.C.; seven sisters, Mrs. Mildred Boykin. Mrs. Gloria Parker and Mrs. Barbara Atkinson, all of Greenville, Mrs. Alice Joyner of Fountain, Mrs. Pearlie Joyner of Farmville, Mrs. Mar^e Spell of Stanford, Conn., Mrs. Sandra Ard of Ayden and two grandchildren.

The family will receive friends Friday from 8-9 p.m. at the funeral home and at other times at 806 Fairfax Ave., Greenville.

The family will receive friends Friday from 8 to 9 p.m. at Flanagan Funeral Home Chapel, Greenville.

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Sports the DAILY REFLECTOR Classified

THURSDAY AFTERNOON, FEBRUARY 3, 1983Dixon Guides ODU Past Lady Pirates

By WOODY PEELE Reflector Sports Editor It didnt turn out tp be a slugging match - or even the most physical game of all -

but the outcome was no different that the first time around as Old Dominions Lady Monarchs rolled up a 76-37 win over the Lady

Pirates of East Carolina last night.

Earlier in the season, the two teams met and when the ODU had finished off the 92-52

Gimme That!

Old Dominions 6-8 center Anne Donovan (partially hidden) pulls a rebound away from 5-8 Fran Hooks of East Carolina during action last night in Minges Coliseum. ECUs

Mary Denkler (34) is held out of the play by ODUs Regina Miller (24) as ODUs Pam Elliott looks on in the background. ODU rolled over ECU, 76-37, in the contest. (Reflector Photo by Katie Zemhelt)

Three Area Teams Still Ranked In The Top Ten

By The Associated Press There was only one change among the leaders this week in the fourth Associated Press North Carolina high school basketball poll,

In 3-A Girls, Burlington

Sports Colendor

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

Todays Sports Basketball Williamston at Bear Grass Midget Division WolfpacJc vs. Wildcats Terrapins vs. Blue Devils Swimming Rose at Goldsboro (2:30 p. m. l FridaysSports Basketball Creswell at Jamesville North Pitt at Greene Central (6:30 p.m.)

Ayden-Grifton at Southern Nash Conley at West Carteret Roanoke at Bertie Northern Nash at Rose (6:30 p.m.)

E B Ayucock at Nash Central (4

p.m.)

Pee Wee Division Wildcats vs. Terrapins Midget Divison Cavaliers vs. Blue Devils Junior Division Cavaliers vs. Blue Devils Wolfpackvs. Wildcats Pirates vs. Tarheels

Cummings dropped from a tie with Southwest Edgecombe for the top spot. Southwest remained in first, while Cummings fell to third.

Greensboro Page is the top team in Boys 4-A as the Danny Manning-led Pirates took all 11 first-place votes for 110 points.

Brevard leads the Boys 3-A while West Montgomery tops the Boys 2A-1A poll.

Gastonia Huss paces the Girls 4-A while Bandys heads the 2A-1A division.

2. Mattamuskeet 134), 71

3. Fairmont (1) 13-0.61

4. Monroe Parkwood 13-1,59 5 Newton Foard 14-1,38

5 Sampson Union 13-1.58

7 Whitevillel5-1.49

8 Nakina 18-2, 31

9 Bandys 12-3,25

10. Sylva-Webster 11113;3,19

4A Girls

I Gast. HtJs.si9i 15-0,117

2 Ral Broughton i3i 174), 110 Foi

3 Fay Pine Forest 154), 95

4 Gast Ashbrook 11-1,69

5 Goldsboro 12-3,64

6 McDowell 12-3,58

7 Hoke 8-4,31

8.S Caldwell 11-4,30

9 Wilm HoggardlO-1,19

10 Jacksonville9-3,16

Here are the'rpsults of this weeks A.ss(K'iated Press North Carolina high school basketball poll, with first-place votes in parenthesis, teams' records and number of voting^i^:

I Gbo Pagelll) 124), 110

2. Fay Pine Forest 14-1,85

3. Chapel Hill 15-2,82

4 Char Independence 14-1.77-

5. Gast Huss 14-1.67

6 Gast Ashbrook 12-2,48

7. Bocky Mount 9-33S

8 McDowell 12-3,27

9 W-S Parkland 114,18

10 Wilm. Laneyll-2,13    

3A Girls I. SW Edgecombe (5)15-2,95 2 E Bladen (2) 1341.82 3. Burl. Cummings 14-1,67

4 Madison-Mayodan 111164), 61

5 Kannapolis Brown (11114), 58

6 Davie 15-2,47

7 Thomasville 15-2. ,38

8 l.incolntpn (1110-1,27 8. Tarboro 12-2,27

10. Graham 15-1,21

2A-lAGirls

1 Bandys (7) 154), 113 2. Belhaven WUkinson (1) 154), 97 ,3. E Carteret 154), 87 4 SW Guilford (2) 15-0,79

5. Ornimdi 144), 66

6. Monroe Parkwood (1) 13-1,59

7. .Sampson Union II-I. .38

8. Albemarle 11-1,31

9. Hiwassee Dam 14-3,28

win. Coach Marianne Stanley charged that EUs women had used dirty tactics in the game, playing far more physically than called for. She especially took aim at Mary Denkler, accusing her of manhandling her 8-inch taller foe Anne Donovan.

Denkler held [)onovan to below ten points for only the second time this season in that game, and last night repeated that performance, holding her to nine. Denkler, held to under double figures for the first time this season in that game, came back with 13 last night.

Those 13 enabled her to become the number two career scorer in ECU history, passing Debbie Freeman with a total of 1,571 points. The number one scorer, Rosie Thompson, with over 2,300 points, remains out of reach for the senior forward.

After this game, however, there were no repeat charges, and both coaches seemed to feel that the contest was well-officiated and that the officials were in firm command of the game all the way.

In the previous encounter, ECUs Cathy Andruzzi had been whistled for two technicals, while Stanley drew one. Last night, only one tech was called, that on Donovan, who complained once too often for the liking of referee Bill Franklin. It was the first career technical against the 6-8 giant.

-The Lady Pirates as in the first game - got the first two points, as Sylvia Bragg hit a jumper. Then, as in the first game, the Lady Pirates went ice cold, not scoring again for over eight minutes. Old Dominion, playing not quite the same way, however, ran off 16 straight as compared to 20 in the first game - to take the lead for good.

Donovan, Helen Malone and Medina Dixon each scored two baskets during the string that ran them out to a 16-2 lead. After that. East Carolina never came closer than ten points.

Throughout the first half, ODU held as much as a 17-point lead, 24-7, on two free throws by Alphelia Jenkins, former Southwest Edgecombe star, and by as little as ten, 16-6, after Caren Truske hit a jumper.

The half ended with ODU leading 30-16.

East Carolina cut the lead back to 12, scoring the first points of the second half, but ODU quickly pushed put to a 20 point lead behind the play of Dixon, at 40-20. ECU later cut it back to as little as 16 -from 23 - but the Lady Monarchs surged away again, running their lead out to the final 39-point margin by scoring the final six points of the game.

ECU shot poorly in the contest, hitting only 29.3 percent for the game - as compared to 49.2 percent for the Monarchs. ODU also held a 2-1 rebounding edge, 50-25.

"Old Dominion is a very good team, Andruzzi said afterwards. You cant underestimate their ability or talent. Theyre sixth in the country, and were a very young team with severe injuries, not that the injuries

3AB0VS

1 Brevard (911741, l()5 2. N Surry (2) 15-1,98 .3 Ash Reynolds 12-1,74 4 E Bladen 11 2,61 5. W. Craven 12-2.56 6 Greenville Conley 13-3,40 6 N. Pitt 124,40

8 .Shelby Crest 13-3,32

9 RobersonvUle Roanoke 11-3,28

10 NEGuillBrdl5-2,ll

10 Sylva-Webster 111 15-1.19 10 Whitcville 13-1.19

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would have made any difference. But we have people in different positions and people playing who havent been playing.

Andruzzi sai^that the Lady Pirates, despite being out-manned, played their hearts out. We tried to get people open and get good shots, nd we tried to press but they just flew right by us.

1 told them (in the dressing room afterwards) that they have to rise to the occasion. They have to believe in themselves. They dont know what they can do yet. Theyre still looking for someone to spark them, but there is no one. They have to do it as a team.

If there was a dominant factor in the game, it was the play of Dixon, who originally began her career at South Carolina, then transfered to ODU. She scored an ODU career high of 24 points in the game, sinking 12 of 18 shots from the floor, while pulling down 12 rebounds and having

four assists She was the most highly recruited player in the country two years ago - just as Donovan was four years ago. We just dont have the caliber to handle the Top 20 teams this year. That's nothing against our kids, just the truth.

Andruzzi said the loss wasnt an embarrassment for the Lady Pirates, Were just so young and were plying tough opposition, To be 8-9 with the schedule were play-ijig is tremendous,

.Andruzzi also praised the crowd of 1,750 attending. The people have been with us all the time like always and we need them. Weve had some great years, but this is a rebuilding year, and we need their constant support.' Meanwhile Stanley said she didnt envy Andruzzi in her situation. Considering the situation, they are playing good basketball.

Asked to compare this game with the previous meeting, Stanley said she didnt think

the first meeting had an effect on this one. The last game was atypical of womens basketball with the physical play

In addition to Dixon's scoring. ODU got 14 points from Regina Miller and 12 from Malone. Donovan, held to nine points; did pull down 12 rebounds.

, East Carolina was led by Denklers 13 and 12 more by Chaney, who is playing the best basketball of her career. She also had 13 rebounds

The win boosts the sixth ranked .Monarchs record to 16-3 on the year For East Carolina, the game was the first home contest in two months. They hit the road again on Saturday, however, traveling to James Madison, Sunday evening at 6 p.m., however, theyll be back in Minges against Richmond. That game was originally scheduled for Richmond, but was moved to Greenville due to a conflict in Robins Center

Uixon

Miller

Donovan

EIImmi

Malone

Uullen

Blais

Jenkins

Barnes

Wilkerson

Team

Totals

OidDominioai76i

MP FG FT Rb F A P

32    12 18    0-3    12    1    4    24

39    610    2 2    2    1    2    14

34    4 12    1 2    1 5    4    1    9

26    N    44    3    0    1    4

33    6 12    b-U    6    3    1    12

T    2-4    2-2    5    1    0    6

5 04)    (M)    Olio

11 . 14    34    2 0 0 5

1    04)    04)    0    0    0    0

12    11    IN)    2    0    12

3

200 32-65 12-17 50 11 II 76 East Carolina (3Ti

31    3-9    041    I    4    :l    6

40    615    1 1    6    1    1    13

39    .517    (M)    13    4    0    12

4(1    28    1 2    2    4    3    5

40    0-7    041    0    1    2    0

7 12    r-2    0)03

Bragg Denkler Chane>

Tiuske Hooks Squirewell Team    3

Totals 200 17 58 3-5 25 15 9 37 Old Dominion    30    46 - 76

East Carolma    16    21-37

Turnovers ODl 19 FCl 21 Technical fouls Donovan Officials Salerno and Franklin Attendance 1.7,50

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Borg Unlikely To Change Mind

By TOM FOREMAN Jr.

AP Sports Writer

CHARLOTTE (AP) - Dont bet on Bjorn Borg getting the competitive itch two years from now, picking up his rackets and heading for the tennis courts His decision to retire is - in tennis jargon -game, set and match.

But just before he leaves, he'll give his fans in the U.S. a taste of the skills that made him a five-time winner at Wimbledon and a six-time champion at the French Open.

Borg. 26. thrilled a capacity crowd at the Charlotte Coliseum Wednesday night by wearing down and eventually whipping Roscoe Tanner in an exhibition match. After fighting to beat Tanner in a pair of 7-6 tiebreakers. Borg opened the throttle and administered a 6-2 whipping.

It wasnt vintage Borg, especially since hes been off the circuit for several months. He admitted to reporters that hes out of shape because of his layoff, but he added that not even the matches hell play in the next four weeks will change his mind.

Thats the final decision, he told reporters during a news conference prior to the exhibition, 1 have four weeks left now and I would like to make the best of it

The beginning of the end came in Stockholm. Borg had sat out the latter portion of the 1981 season, and his efforts to return in 1982 were thwarted when it was determined that he would have to play qualifying matches in order to become eligible for tournament play. Suddenly, he said, it dawned on him that there's life after tennis.

I woke up and 1 told Mariana that I probably would retire from tennis. She didn't really believe me. She thought 1 would start to play and was trying to convince me to play. he said.

During the forced layoff, Borg had been attempting to regain his edge, he found that the thrill was gone and nothing he tried could get it back.

"It was very difficult to come back. I didnt have the motivation and I really didnt enjoy it as much as/ 1 did before, he said "I just hoped that maybe my feeling would change later. Actually, it just

got worse and worse.

Another sign was Borgs temperament. Victories and losses took the same priority and he discovered that life away from the court wasnt so ba^

When I took my rest in November 1981, that was the first time in 10 or 11 years. I had a break, I was ready to come back in April 1982, then I had the problem with qualification. Even if I had started playing in April, maybe I would have felt the same as I feel right now.

Several theories were introduced as reasons for his departure. Tanner suggested that Borg might have wearied of the constant shots at his No.

1 status, not to mention the weekly grind of travel and tournaments.

"Unless you go someplace out in the wilderness, you see what the other guys are doing, so youre still really involved in it. In Bjorns position, there was a great deal of pressure on him to play every week, said Tanner.

However, Borg says pressure did not move him to quit.

You can feel the pressure when youre on the top. Youd like to stay on the top all the time. But that had nothing to do with my retirement.

Tanner said theres nothing in the rules of tennis that says Borg'has to keep going just because hes 26. "Thats his personal decision. It he wants to stop, he certainly ought to be able to.

Stopping must have opened Borg's eyes to things hed never thought possible, things like vacations, time with his wife and careers in fields not directly related to tennis.

"Right now, 1 will try different things. I can do public relations. I can do a ton of things, he said. Id just like to find something 1 really enjoy. I want to have ambitions in other fields. Well just have to see what those will be,"

Tanner also suggested that Borgs decision, although not devastating, would have some effect on the popularity of the game. Borg disagrees.

"I hope the people will miss me. I will miss them. Still, there are quite a few good players out there.

Heels Squeak By Tigers; Duke, NCS, Terps Win

By CHARUE HARRISON ECU Mens Basketball Coach

As the season begins downhill, the struggle for ECU basketball team continues to be up-hill. Although were two-thirds of the way through out schedule. Im still quite honestly in awe of what our players have done and how theyve performed with a very difficult and demanding schedule, and how theyve reacted when one of the top performers on the team went down with an injury. Im also in aew of our league and quite honestly surprised by its strength Here in the midst of the ACC mystic fans forget that there are other teams that are very good college basketball teams. The ECAC-South has as much balance as most any league around and if fans will check the record. Im sure they'll discover that the ECAC-South has already proven itself as a reputable group of basketball teams.

Recently, I was talking with Carl Tacy at Wake Forest and he kept shaking his head about William &

.Mary. They have no highly publicized players but they systematically beat a very good Wake Forest team by an easy 16 points. They highly publicized Sun Belt promoted i in their brochure as the "Best Coaches League in the USA, is now 2-6 against the ECAC-South..

Everyone can beat everyone else in the ECAC-South but each team has also proven it can play and compete with the Big Boys of College Basketball and most of the time its on the Big Boys home floor, with the Big Boys own league officials, and in front of a screaming mob of the Big Boys fans.. Old Dominion, Wake Forest, South Carolina and Virginia have ventured onto the ECACs home floors and the record book shows that the EC AC has won three and lost one. The teams and coaches have proven themselves as good teams - teams t|iat can compete with the so-called Biggies and the ECAC Tournament in Richmond, although shadowed by the ACC-Hoopla, promises to be a great and interesting three days of very good basketball. To fans (unless avid ECU or ECAC supporters) they ask, Who cares? In the movie Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid. Paul Newman kept asking about the posse in hot pursuit -"Who ar those guys^ (By the way, they eventually caught them.) The same question has been asked by Old Dominion. Wake Forest, Iowa, South Carolina and Temple to name a few as they left the site of a game against the ECAC-Souths teams. "Who are those guys They, too, discovered that "those guys are teams to be respected and never taken for granted.

By The Associated Press No. 1 ranked North Carolina North Carolina squeked by Atlantic Coast Conference cellar dweller Clemson 84-81 in college basketb^l Wednesday night.

In, other basketball action. North Carolina State beat Georgia Tech 74-64, Duke nipped William & Mary 73-71 and Maryland downed Old Dominion 87-67.

North Carolina barely held onto its undefeated ACC record and the top spot in the nation by coming from behind with less than five minutes left.

The Tar Heels entered Littlejohn Coliseum in Clemson 17-3 overall and 6-0 in the ACC against a team that had struggled to a 7-13 overall record and a 1-6 ACC mark.

Weve still got a lot of work to do, but were a pretty good team, North Carolina Coach Dean Smith said afterwards. I dont know if were No. 1, but we do deserve to be in the top 20.

"If you look at the way Clemson played, they should be right behind us.

The Tigers committed just seven turnovers, while the Tar Heels turned the ball over 19 times, including eight times on steals.

The Tigers appeared to be shooting pretty well as they led 75-72 with 4;37 remaining. Clemson had erased a 49-41 halftime deficit and appeared to have a chance of pulling off an upset.

But center Sam Perkins, who finished the night with 30 points, helped the Tar Heels turn the deficit to a 79-75 lead with one minute left to play.

At Atlanta, North Carolina State went to the free throw line to silence a late rally by Georgia Tech.

The game developed into a , scoring battle of two outstanding freshmen - States Ernie Myers and Techs Mark Price. Each drilled a quartet of three-point goals as Price won the individual battle with 30 points to Myers 25, but the State star had more help.

Thurl Bailey scored 13 of his 17 points in the first half and also grabbed 11 rebounds for the Wolfpack, which took the lead for good on a three-point goal by George McClain 3:43 before halftime.

State surged to a 12-point lead twice in the second half, but Tech rallied in the final 1:25, cutting a 66-56 deficit to 69-64 with 55 seconds remaining on rebound layup by Danny Pearson.

The victory lifted State to 10-7 overall and 4-4 in the ACC and Tech fell to 8-9 and 1-6.

Johnny Dawkins sank two free throws with nine seconds left to give Duke a 73-71 non-conference college basketball victory over William & Mary Wednesday night.

Duke, 9-9, maintained control until Tom Emma scored on a driving layup at the 1:28 mark and, following ah Indian miss, Mark Alarie scored on a dunk to boost the margin to four.

Adrian Branch scored seven of his 19 points during a 15-point Maryland streak Wednesday night as the Terps pulled away in the stretch to defeat Old Dominion 87-67.

Maryland, 13-5 after winning its sixth in a row, led 49-33

Riggins, Fouts Top Free Agents

By The Associated Press

John Riggins and Dan Fouts are the most prominent players on a list of 252 National Football League players - more than 16 percent of the league - who have become free agents. But if the past is any criterion, most will almost surely return to their present teams.

The NFL released its free agent list Wednesday.

It included Fouts, the All-Pro quarterback from the San Diego Chargers, and Riggins, who set a Super Bowl rushing record of 166 yards. Nineteen of Riggins Washington Redskins teammates, including eight other starters, also are on the list, the most from any one team.

In the past, only one free agent has played out his option and moved to another NFL team - cornerback Norm Thompson, who left St. Louis and signed with Baltimore. The reason is the compensation - a team signing a player for $80,000 must surrender a first-round draft choice and the compensation escalates for higher salaries.

This year free agents have another option - the new United States Football League, which starts play March 6. One NFL free agent, linebacker Stan White of Detroit, has signed with the Chicago USFL team.

Riggins said after the Super Bowl that he is undecided about what hell do.

When I get home. Ill sit down and take a long, hard look at it and talk about it with my wife,. the 33-year-old running back said. Theyll

call me into the office and say Well, what do you think youll do? I dont know what Im going to do; they aint called me in yet.

The list also inlcudes players who have long-since retired, like Ron Yary of the Los Angeles Rams, or who have announced their retirement, like Craig Morton, of the Denver Broncos.

In addition to Fouts and Riggins, prominent free agents include quarterback Ken Stabler of New Orleans; wide receivers Harold Carmichael of Phila(]^lphia and John Stallworth of Pittsburgh; defensive linemen Kim Bokamper of Miami and John Matuszak of the Raiders; defensive backs Mike Haynes of New England and Donnie Shell of Pittsburgh; offensive linemen Dan Dierdorf of St. Louis and Charley Hannah of Tampa Bay, and tight end Don Hasselbeck of New England.

The list also includes punter Ray Guy of the Raiders and kicker Uwe von Schamann of Miami.

In addition to Riggins, Redskins starters who are free agents are offensive linemen Fred Dean and Joe Jacoby, linebackers Rich Milot and Neal Olkewicz, defensive backs Jeris White, Mark Murphy and Tony Peters and defensive tackle Darryl Grant.

Washington's 20 free agents are followed by 18 from the Chicago Bears and 16 from Buffalo. The New York Giants and Dallas Cowboys have the fewest, two each.

with 13:33 left. But the. Mwiarchs outscored the Terps 16-3, including six by Mark West, to pull within S2-39 with 9:30 remaining.

WMtliARY

Strayhom

Richardson

Weidner

Cieplicki

Traver

Coval

Bland

Brooks

Coop

Totals

DUKE

Henderson

Bilas

Alarie

Emma

Dawkins

Meagher

Jackman

Wendt

Engelland

Totals

MP FG FT RAFPt

40 S- 5    2- 2    4    6    3    12

25 2- 7    0- 0    3    3    3    4

20 S- 9    5- 7    8    0    2    15

34 8-13    4- 4    2    3    5    20

24 6- 2-3

21 1-2 3-4

15 0-0 0-0

11 0-0    1-2 1 0-0 0-0

200 27-45 17-22 23 IS 17 71 MP FG FT RAFPt 30 5- 9    0- 0    5    4    2    10

25 3- 4    2-2

29 5- 9    2-2

25 4- 7    2-2

34 7-16    2-3

16 1-2    1-4

12 0- 3    0-0

3 0- 0    0-0

26 7-10 0- 0 I 200 32-60 9-13 28 23 19 73

WUllamtMary................37 34-71

Duke...........................3135-73

Turnovers: William & Mary 9, Duke6. Officials: Fraime, Dodge. Knight.

Att: 8,564.

39 18 14 87

Old Dominion...................27    40-^7

Maryland......................35    52-87

Turnovers: Old Dominion 12, Maryland 16.

Officials: Bureh, Moser, Rise.

Att: 6,850.

N.C. STATE

MP FG

FT

RAFPt

Bailey

36 6-12

5-5 11

1

2 17

Charles

25 2-4

0- 1

2

0

4 4

McQueen

11 9-1

0-0

2

0

4 0

Myers

36 9-15

3-5

4

0

325

Lowe

34 3-4

3- 4

5

4

3 10

Gannon

25 2-4

4- 4

0

1

1 10

Battle

11 0-2

0- 0

2

0

1 0

McClain

8 3-6

0- 2

1

0

0 8

Thompson

6 0-0

0-0

0

0

0 0

Ensmore

4 0-0

0- 1

1

0

0 0

Warren

4 0-0

0- 0

0

0

1 0

Totals

200 2S48 15-22 31

6 19 74

GATECH

MP FG

FT

RAFPt

Thomas

29 0-3

0- 0

8

1

4 0

Bradford

26 2-5

0-0

4

1

3 4

Harvey

30 2 -4

1-2

3

0

3 5

Price

39 11-19

4- 5

3

1

4 30

Byrd

22 5-13

1- 4

3

1

2 12

Salley

21 3-7

1- 1

4

1

5 7

Pearson

31 3-11

0-0

9

1

5 6

Mansell

1 0-0

0-0

0

0

0 0

Wilson

1 0-0

0- 0

0

0

0 0

Totals

200 2662

7-12 38

6 26 64

N.C.SUte..

,37 37-74

Georgia Tech...................33    31-64

Three-point goals: N.C. State 9-14: Myers 4-5, Lowe 1-2, Gannon 2-4, McClain 2-3. Georgia Tech 5-15: Thomas 0-1, Bradford 0-1, Price 4-9, Byrd 1-4.

Turnovers: N.C. State 13, Georgia Tech 13.

Officials: Donaghy. Forte, Brown.

Att: 5,167.

N. CAROLINA MP FG    FT

Perkins    38 13-18    3-7

Doherty    35    2- 5    2- 2

Daugherty    19    1-2    2-2

Jordan    36    6-12    11-15

Braddock    31    2-9    8-8

Peterson    10    0-1    1-2

Hale    9    V 0    0- 0

Martin    18    2- 5    0-1

Exum    3    0-0    0-0

Brownlee    1    0-0    2-2

Totals    200 26-52 29-39

CLEMSON    MP FG    FT

Shaffer    34    2- 9    2-3

Michael    24    4- 9    1-4

Jones    14    3- 6    0-0

Wallace    27    8-11    0- 0

Eppley    31    4-8    2-2

Campbell    18    2- 7    0-0

Jenkins    20    3-13    1- 2

Bynum    6    0-2    0-0

McCants 10-10-0 Jarman    25    7-10    5- 5

Totals    200 33-76 11-16

RAFPt

10 1 4 30 7 12 6 5 0 4 4 7 2 3 24

3 9 5 1 1 2 5 1 0 1 0 0

2 13

44 18 19 84 RAFPt

9 4 3 6 5 0 4 9 2 14 6 1 2 218

1 7 4 11 12 3 4 8 14 8

2 0 10 0 0 0 0 5 1 5 19

38 18 30 81

N.Carolina.....................49    35-84

Clemson........................4140-81

Three-point goals: N. Carolina 3-11: Perkins 1-1, Doherty 0-3, Jordan l-l, Braddock 1-5, Peterson 0-1. Clemson 4-21: Shaffer 0-3, Michael 0-2, Wallace 2-3, Eppley 1-3, Campbell 0-5, Jenkins 1-4, Bynum 0-1 Turnovers: N. Carolina 19, Clemson 7. Officials: Clougherty, Wooldridge, Taylor,

Att: 10,500,

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AK Eyes On The Ball

Duke Universitys Johnny Dawkins (24) reaches out to gain control of a loose ball as fellow teammate Jay Bilas (21) and William & Mary players Tony Traver (30) and Mike

Strayhom (25) look on. The Blue Devils defeated the Indians, 73-71, Wednesday at Cameron Indoor Stadium in Durham. (AP Laserphoto)

Trotter Coach Arrested

TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) -Drug agents who didnt want to disappoint fans of the Harlem Globetrotters allowed the teams player-ooach, Nate Branch, to play in a game here before booking him after on drug charges, authorities said.

Branch, 38, was arrested Wednesday evening when he claimed his luggage at Tucson International Airport after a flight from San Francisco.

State Department of Public Safety agents acting on a tip from the federal Drug Enforcement Administration in San Francisco found two grams of cocaine and two ounces of marijuana in Branchs luggage, Sgt. David Gonzales said.

Although Branch was arrested, he was not immediately booked into Pima County Jail and instead was driven by two agents to the Tucson

Community Center, where the Globetrotters had a scheduled game, Gonzales said.

Its very uncommon, Gonzales acknowledged. But a lot of people came to see him play and we didnt want to disappoint them.

Branch, of Palo Alto, Calif., has coached the Globetrotters since 1978. He joined the team 15 years ago.

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Night Of Struggle For Top 20 Teams

By The Associated Press If 18-3 equals No.l, how come 7-14 doesnt equal 1-A?

Dont ask North Carolina Co^ Dean Smith.

if you look at the way Clemson played, they should be right behind us, Smith said Wednesday night after his defending national champion Tar Heels celebrated

their return to the No.l position in The Associated Pr^ poll by coming from behind to nip Atlantic Coast Conference rival Clemson 84-81.

Six other members of the Top Twenty were in action and three of them also struggled. Tenth-ranked Missouri nipped Colorado 68-65 in a two-overtime Big Eight game.

No.12 Louisville staved off a late Cincinnati rally to post a 79-73 Metro Conference victory and No.17 Minnesota needed two overtimes to turn back (%k) State 89^ in Big Ten action.

Meanwhile, in Southwest Conference routs, eighth-ranged Houston trounced Baylor 86-69 and No.9

Watson Tom Between Duty And Golf Game

PEBBLE BEACH, Calif, (AP) - It is a time of frustration for Tom Watson.

The man who has dominated world golf for the past five years is tom between what he wants to do and what he feels he should do.

Hes a disciplined man. So duty won.

Im eager to play, anxious to play golf, But at this time, I feel my duty is to my family, to be with them as much as possible, Watson said.

The family includes 2-month-old Michael, Watsons second child and first son. His birth in December, and the attendant duties of parenthood, have restricted Watsons early season schedule.

I just hope I dont get out of the gate too slowly, he said. Usually, I play five of the seven tournaments in the West. This year Im playing only three.

As a result, he isnt playing as well as hed like coming into todays scheduled first

round in the 42nd Bing Crosby National Pro-Am.

I dont give myself much chance here, Watson said. Im forcing the club, not swinging the club very freely.

Still, Watson ranks among the games ^atest, most intense competitors. Although he wasnt playing to his usual standards, he tied for sixth in his only previous start this season and ranks as one of the men to watch in this storied old tourney hes won twice.

He will play the last two rounds at Pebble Beach, where he turned back Jack Nicklaus with that dramatic chip-in birdie on the 71st hole of the U.S. Open six months ago.

Nicklaus, a three-time Crosby winner, also is among the 168 pros scheduled for one round each on Spyglass Hill, Cypress Point and Pebble Beach before the final round Sunday at Pebble Beach.

He was scheduled to play with former President Gerald

Ford as his amateur partner, but Ford withdrew for medical reasons.

The three courses on the Monterey Peninsula have been lashed by a series of storms and received almost six inches of rain in the last week. More rain is in the forecast for Thursday and Saturday.

Ive never seen it so wet here, said Qyde Mangum, deputy commissioner of the PGA Tour. He announced that players would be allowed to lift, clean and place balls in the fairway.

In addition to Nicklaus and Watson, some of the standouts include Masters titleholder Craig Stadler, defending champion Jim Simons, Tom Kite and Lanny Wadkins, along with Rex Caldwell, a playoff loser in each of his last two starts.

Portions of the final two rounds Saturday and Sunday will be televised nationally by CBS.

Arkansas whi(^ Rice 7(M3, while No.20 Syracuse wiped out Connecticut 89-^ in a Big East contest.

In winning its 15th consecutive game. North Carolina erased a threeiwint deficit at Clemson with less than five minutes remaining. Sam Perkins, the games high scorer with 30 points, led a rally that took the Tar Heels from a 75-72 deficit to a 79-75 lead with one minute left.' Clemson had erased a 4941 halftime deficit and led by up to five points in the second half.

North Carolina boosted its ACC record to 7-0, while Clemson is 1-7. Murray Jarman kept the Tigers in the game in the first half and finished with 19 points before fouling out.Jarman and freshman Warren Wallace, who had 18 points, led Clemson to a 69-64 lead before Perkins and Michael Jordan, who had 24 points, paced North Carolina's rally.

Weve still got a lot of work to do, but were a pretty good team, Smith said.

Top Ten At Houston, Qyde Drexler scored 29 points, hitting 13 of 16 from the floor, to lead the Cougars, 17-2 overall and 8-0 in SWC play, over Baylor for their 12th straight triumph. Drexler hit his first 11 shots and the Cougars used a full-court press during a five-minute stretch to sprint to a 42-31 halftime lead. Substitute Benny Anders added a season-high 15 points, while Houstons shot-blocking specialist, Akeem Abdul 01a-juwon, rejected nine shots. Drexler told Coach Guy

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SCOREBOARD

Rec Boskctboll

Pee Wee Division

Cavaliers............6 8 6 424

Pirates..............4 2 2 210

Leading scorers: CDavid Likosar 12, Camilla Brown 6; P Jeff Jones 8.

Wolfpack ...........8    4    8    9-29

Blue Devils..........4    4    4    416

Leading scorers: W-Jason Wing 17, Grant Harmon 8; BD-Ben Edwards 4. Jonathan Powers 4.

Midget Division

Cavaliers.......22    11    6 3 3-25

Wolfpack.......10    4    6    2    6-28

Leading scorers: CPaul Powers 13, Mitch Mitchum 7; W-Chris Christopher 17, Jamie Brewington 8.

Pirates.............. 1    5    4    6-16

Tarheels............4    2    4    515

Leading scorers: P-Wesley Jackson 10, Nelson Galloway 4; TWalter Gatlin- 8, Patrick Joyner 5.

Junior Division

Terrapins..........8    2 2 7-19

Blue Devils 7 9 14 4-34

Leading scorers: T-Bob Ahles 11, Scott Davis 5; BDCarl Wille 13, Clay Young9.

Pirales............9 8 12 12-42

Wildcats...........4 8 10 14-36

Leading scorers: PGreg Jones 15, W-Eric Jarman 16, Ed Daughtridge 10.

Pee Wee League

Tigers................8    7    7    3-25

Warriors............3    0    4    3-11

Leading scorers: T-Lemeul Gilbert 10, Lamont Gunter 10; WMark Joyner 8, Robert Jenkins 3.

Irish ..,...........2 7 8 5 3-25

Deacons ,...9 5 4 4 426

leading scorers: 1-Demetrice Williams 15, Dalanta Teel 6; D Derrick Clark 21, Israel Farnville 5.

_Bowling_

Saturday Morning Confusion Bantam & Prep Divison

W L

Nite Riders............25    5

TheE.Ts.............15    15

Midgits................12    18

Smurfs.................8    22

Girls    high    game    and    series,

Sheila    Kite, 65,    112;    boys    high

game and series, Billy Vines, 94, 167.

Junior Division

Bad News Bears 29    11

Team#!'................29    11

Family....:...........20*    20

Ten Pins...............19    21

TheSpares............18    22

8 Balls.................18    22

Lightning Bolts    18    22

Playmates............17    23

Girls    high    game    and    series,

Wendy Crisp,    156, 427; boys high

game and series. Robbie Erhmann, 203,505.

CollogoBflsketbflll

By The AsMcUted Press

EAST

Boston ColL 73. Providence Coll 70 Bucknell 51. Colgate 50

   ^    ....

Ha

Dickinson 4S. Muhlenberg 43 Fordham 52, Army 51

George Washington 87. Navy 79 Lafayette 76. Leni^69 Long Island U. 89. Marist 78

Manhattan 77. Hofstra 69 Maryland 87. Old Dominion 67 Massachusetts 84, Penn St 62

New Hampshire 71. Vermont 69 i6. Monmouti

70

Rider 56. Monmouth 50 St. Michaels 80. St. Josephs 72 St Peters 69, Fairfield 66, OT St. Francis, NY 71, Fairleigh Dickinson

Pacific Division

Los Angeles    34    10    773    -

Portland    27    19    587    8

Phoenix    28    20    583    8

Seattle    26    20    565    9

Golden State    19    26    422    15'.

San Diego    14    33    298    21' '.

Wednesday s Games Boston 120. San Diego 110 Indiana 141. Detroit 135 New Jersey 118. Cleveland 105

Tom Brookens. mfielder, agreed to terms on a one-year contract MINNESOTA TWINS-Signec Rich Yett, pitcher, and Greg Gagne, shortstop, to one-year contracts TORONTO BLUE JAYS-Signed Willie Upshaw, first baseman, to a one-year contract

National League

<POS-Si

Kansas City 117, Washington 115 New York 109, San Antonio 98

Siena 64, Loyola 57 Syracuse 89, Connecticut

'Towson St. 65, Delaware 56 W. Virginia 90, Va Tech 86.30T Wagner 86. Baltimore 82 West Chester 98, Bloomsburg 71 SOUTH Belhaven68,DeltaS1.64,OT Clark 99, Morehouse 79 Duke 73, William & Mary 71 Florida St. 90, S. Carolina 85, OT Furman 73, Newberry 64 Louisville 79. Cincinnati 73 N Carolina 84. Oemson 81 N Carolina St. 74, Georgia Tech 64 New Orleans 71, Pan American 63 Tenn-Chattanooga 50. Appalachian St.

48

Tulane 97, SW Tennessee 56 MIDWEST DePaul 78, Detroit S3 Kansas 75. Iowa St . 69 Kent St . 99. Ball St . 83 Minnesota 89, Ohio St . 80.20T N Illinois 66. Miami 48 N Kentucky 70. Indiana-SE 50 NE Missouri St. 78. Missouri-St. Louis 76,30T Nebraska 60. Oklahoma 59 Notre Dame 68, LaSalle 56 OhioK.E Michigan 57 SE Missouri St 74. NW Missouri St 52 Toledo 80. W Michigan 62 W Illinois 80, Campbell 62 SOUTHV^

Arkansas 70, Rice 43 Ark -Pine Bluff 74, Grambling 59 Houston 86. Baylor 69 SE Oklahoma M, Cent. Oklahoma St. 54 Texas Wesleyan 62. Oklahoma City 46 Trinity U 77, Texas Lutheran 76 Tulsa 101. Oral Roberts 71 FARWEST Denver 76. S Colorado 71, OT Missouri 68. Colorado 65.2 OT Redlands 84, Cal Tech 29

Dallas 122, Los Angeles 120 Houston 135, Denver 128 Phoenix 112, Utah 96 SeattIellIMwaukeelM 'Thursdays Games Denver at Atlanta San Diego at Detroit Philadelphia at Golden State Fridays Games Boston at Indiana Chicago at New Jersey Atlanta at Cleveland San Diego at Washington New York at Dallas Los Angeles vs, Kansas City atSt.Louis MilwaiAeeat Utah Houston at Phoenix Philadelphia at PorUand San Antonio at Seattle

MONTREAL EXPOS-Signed Jeff Wilpon, catcher, Bobby Cox Jr shortstop, and Blaze Katich, outfielder Traded Chris Smith, infielder-oulfielder, to the San Francisco Giants for Jim Wohlford, outfielder

HOCKEY National Hockey League MINNESOTA NORTH STARS-Traded Markus Mattsson, goalie, to the Los Angeles Kings for future considerations FOOTBALL National Football League HOUSTON OILERS-Named Kay Dalton offensive coordinator PHILADELPHIA EAGLES- Released John Bunting, linebacker. Louie Giam mona running back, and Wally Henry; kick returner.

United States Football League

ARIZONA WRANGLERS-Signed ....... hfely.

NHlStondings ft'

NBA Stondings

By The Associated Press EASTERN CONFERENCE

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

Philadelphia    34    13    7    224    152    75

NY Isles    28    17    9    199    156    65

Washington    25    16    12    209    184    62

NY Rangers    23    23    7    198    186    53

New Jersey    ll    31    11    145    216    33

Pittsburgh    12    34    7    161    253    31

Adams Division Boston    33    10    8    201    134    74

Montreal    28    14    10    243    184    66

Buffalo    25    17    10    201    167    60

Quebec    25    21    6    229    214    56

Hartford    13    34    6    170    262    32

Canmbell Conference Norris Divisloo Chicago    33    14    7    232    187    73

Minnesota    26    14    13    219    190    65

St Louis    17    28    10    191    214    44

Toronto    13    28    10    191    224    36

Detroit    12    29    12    162    223    36

Smythe Division Edmonton    29    15    10    289    217    68

Calgary    21    25    8    217    227    50

Winnipeg    20    26    7    200    223    47

Vancouver    17    25    10    187    206    44

IxK Angeles    16    27    8    183    238    40

Randy Jostes. tackle, and Tony h^ly defensive back

DENVER GOLDReleased Phil Davis, luarterback, James Bettis, William .larrison, James Holden, Craig Johnson and Derrel Sanders, offensive backs; Ricky Bynum, Larry Dixson, Chris Jones, Harlan Kamofski. Jim Perryman and Dale Williams safeties; Mike Cusamano, Steve Martinez, Harry Washington and Vernon Wells, wide receivers; Basil Dabbs, Larry Jamison and Victor Simon, linebackers, and Andy Bresolin, Aaron Finch, Dave Griffin, Rick Olive. Pete Perry, Tim Rucks and Steve Sierros, linemtn.

NEW JERSEY GENERALS-Released Elvis Peacock. Milt Williams, Mickey Fitzgerald and Ted Blackwell, running

backs; Tony Bubniak. center; Mar. DiFabio antf Tony Suttora. guards; and Mackel Harris, linebacker Signed Fred

Sturt, guard, aiid Ray Costict, linebacker PHILA------- '

Philadelphia Boston ^ New Jersey Washington New York

AUantIc Division

W L Pet

413

6

36    10

30    17

20    25

19    27

Central Division

31    17    .641

23    24    48

22    23    48

16    31    3

15    30    33:

9    37    191

WESTERN CONFERENCT: Midwest Division SanAnlonio    29-    19    60-

Kansas City    24    22    52:

Dallas    22    23    48

Denver    22    26    451

Utah    18    30    3T

Houston    9    37    191

GB

Wednesdays Games

Minnesota 2, Buffaio2, tie

3'-.

10

19

20'j

St Louis 4. Detroit 3 Toronto 7. Hartford 1 Chicago 7, Pittsburgh 4

 ^ADELPHIA S'TaRSNamed

John Rosenberg defensive backfield coach

COLLEGE DARTMOUTH-Announced the resignation of Seaver Peters, athletic director

HOWARDNamed Joe Taylor head football coach KINGS POINT-Named Jim Riordan assistant business manager for athletics NAVY-Named Jerry Hartman assistant football coach SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA-Named Craig Fertig assistant athletic director

Philawlplua 6, Winnipeg 3 'sGame

Milwaukee

Detroit

Atlanta

Chicago

Indiana

('leveland

Quebec < NYIslar

7'.

7'-.

14'-.

14'-,

21

'Diursdays Games

at Boston

. Y Islanders at New Jersey Minnesota at Washington Los Angeles at Edmonton Montreal at Calgary

Fridays Games

N.C. Scoreboord

By The Associated Press Mens Basketball

N C Wesleyan 55. N Carolina Greensboro 52 Guilford 89, Lenoir-Rhyne 80

Pittsburgh at Winnipeg nion

Montrealat Edmonf

hynef

Pembroke St 92, High Point 76

4

5'-,

7

II

19

Tronsoctions

By The Associated Press BASEBALL American League

DETROIT TIGERS-Announced that

Tn Chattanooga 50, Appalachian St 48 Methodist 91, Greensboro Col 80 Duke 73. William & Mary 71 Belmont Abb^ 80, Elon 71 St Andrews 75, Averett55 N Carolina Asheville84, Benedict 56 Womens Basketball Old Dominion 76, E Carollhi 37 Shaw 70, N Carolina Wilmington 54

First FederaVs Tax Saving Individuai Retirement Account

First Aid For Tax Bite

^ FIRST FEDERAL ^ ^ SAVMGS E

GiccmUk. RmnvUk. Griiion. Avdcn

Lewis before the game that he was ready for a big night. Besides his sharp shooting, he grabbed 12 rebounds and dished out two assists.

He was ready to start playing well, he told me that the other day, Lewis said.

At Fayetteville, Ark., DaT-rell Walker led a balanced Arkansas attack with 14 points, while Joe Kleine had 13 and Leroy Sutton and Alvin Robertson 10 apiece. The Razorbacks jump^ to a 23-9 lead in the first nine minutes and boosted it to 38-19 at the half. It was63-30 with 6; 19 left.

Arkansas improved its record to 18-1 aiKl remained in second place in the SWC at 7-1. The Razorbacks' only loss was to Houston.

At Boulder, Colo., Jon Sun-dvold scored 25 points and Steve Stipanovich added 17 as Missouri edged Colorado. Colorado led by eight with 5:20 remaining but Missouri caught up on two free throws by Stipanovich with 1:14 left In the first overtime, Missouri built a four-point lead, but Colorados Kevin Cornish tied it with a tip-in at the buzzer.

Second Ten At Cincinnati, Milt Wagner scored 22 points and Rodney McCray added 18 to lead LousivUle over the Bearcats. Louisville, 6^ in the Metro Conference and 17-3 overall, took a 42-30 halftime lead. But Cincinnati, winless in six conference games, was led by Dwight Jelly Jones with 16 points and reserve Marty Campbell with 15.

Louisville stretched its lead to 67-47 midway through the second half. But Cincinnati trimmed the deficit to 75-72

before Louisvilles Charlie Jones sank two free throws and Lancaster Gordon scored on a slam dunk as time ran out to complete Louisvilles 14th straight victory over the Bearcats.

At Columbus, Ohio, Roland Brooks four points starting the second overtime gave Minnesota the lead and the Gophers, paced by 7-foot-3 Randy Breuers 26 points, went on to take over the Big Ten lead with a controversial victory over Ohio State. Tommy Davis sank two free throws with no time left on the clock after the first overtime to pull the Gophers even at 72-72.Minnesota, 6-2 in the Big Ten and 14-3 overall, broke a

first-place tie with 5-2 Indiana.

Ohio State appeared to have the game won when Troy Taylor hit two free throws with four seconds left in the first overtime. But, Davis, who scored 20 of his 24 points after halftime, was fouled on a three-point field goal attempt just before the t^zer ending the first overtime. Despite the boos of the partisan Ohio State crowd, Davis sank both free throws to force the second overtime,

Ive been in coaching 21 /ears and 1 havent seen many like that one, Miller said of the personal foul call against Ohio State guard Larry Huggins. They may ban me from this league, hut thats a

farce."

Minnesotas Jim Dutcher saw it differently "Weve got the best officials in the country, he said Of course he was fouled Seriously, Ive got the poorest seat in the house. But if it hadnt been a" foul, thev wouldnt have called it

At Syracuse. N Y., Erich Santifer and Tony Bruin sparked an early surge as Syracuse crushed Connecticut Santifer and Bruin each scored six points as the Orangemen bolted to a 14-4 lead, which also happens to be their record. They finished with 18 and 14, respectively Leo Rautins had 15.

Blair Feels Image Is Not Really Justified

HONOLULU (AP) - The image of pro football players has suffered in recent years, and Matt Blair of the Minnesota Vikings feels its unjustified.

While stories of isolated drug abuse may grab national headlines, the good deeds done by many National Football League players are largely overlooked, says the Vikings linebacker, who will be appearing in his sixth Pro Bowl game next Sunday.

It makes me feel bad to know all the good things that players contribute are not talked about very much, he said. But if one wrongdoing

comes up. it gets wide exposure all across the country.

Blair is a walking testament to the type of positive social roles many players assume off the field.

Back in Minneapolis, he does fund-raising work -for multiple sclerosis, the Kidney Foundation. United Way and Big Brothers. He also is active in the African American Cultural Center and Minnesota Association for Retarded Citizens, and he frequently participates in USO tours overseas.

His pet project is a summer football camp he conducts for

kids.

Blair, 32, finds time for all the activities despite owning a trucking firm and doing television broadcast work in Minneapolis.

I find a lot of things to do, he said, smiling. I used to get kind of bored in the off-season, and 1 started with the Heart Fund, and now Ive worked my way up to just about any organization that wants me.

"About the only time I say no is when my schedule wont permit it.

Blair said his status as a so-called celebrity gives him the opportunity to be very active.

Big tost

Boys Standings Conf

Overall

W L

W

L

Kinston

4 3

12

4

Northern Nash

4 3

10

4

Rocky Mount

4 3

9

4

Fike

4 3

8

7

Northeastern

3 4

11

4

Hunt

3 4

10

5

Beddingfield

3 4

7

8

Rose

3 4

4

9

Girls Standings Conf

Overall

W L

W

L

Rocky Mount

7 0

8

5

Fike

5 2

11

4

Hunt

5 2

6

9

Rose

4 3

6

8

Northeastern

3 4

10

5

Kinston

2 5

6

7

Beddingfield

2 5

6

9

Northern Nash

0 7

0

14

ECU Basketball

VS

George Maso^,

An ECAC-South League Game Saturday-Feb. 5*7:30 P.M. Minges Coliseum

Watch the Pirates Attack.

After Inventory

Sale

/

Mens Dept.

Group of Mens

Slacks  30%..50%o

Group of Wool &    A

Corduroy Shirts........TrvI /O Off

Group of    1    /    Q

Mens Outerwear.........X    /    Ooff

Group of    Ai\Qf

Sport Coats.........../OOff

  .. .40%o,

Group of    A iW

Dress Shirts............Trv /a) Off

Group of    Q A

Sweaters..............01/ /O Off

Group of    C A CJf

Ties  ............Ov A) Off

Group of Long    C A Qf

Sleeve Knit Shirts.......Ovr /O Off

Downtown Greenville Shop Daily 10 to 5:.30

Carolina East Mall Shop Daily 10 to 9

mm





16The Daily Reflector, GreeovUie, N.C.Thursday, February 3,1963In The Area ISocial Security Rescue Is Threatened

Schools Launch Radio Program

Pitt County Schools Viewpoint," a radio program produced by Pitt County Community Schools, will be aired for the first time this weekend over several local radio stations. The program will be hosted by Barry Gaskins, the school systems public information director.

Stations carrying the program include WRQR-FM, WITN-FM, WGHB-AM. WOOW-AM, WBZQ-AM and WNCT-AM this weekend Gaskins said WRQR-FM will air the show at 8:30 a.m. Sunday and other times will be announced later.

The three-to-five-minute show will spotli^t one aspect of Pitt County schools each week. Gaskins said the first show will be introductory and will feature school Superintendent Eddie West

Toll-Free Line Is Added

Persons facing the problems of unplanned pregancies can receive free counseling services from the Childrens Home Society on a new toll-free number, 1-800-632-1400.

The toll-free line was added this week to make the services of the Childrens Home Society in Goldsboro more available to individuals who need them. Last year the society was contacted by 409 persons seeking counseling about a problem pregnancy.

Caseworkers are available from 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. At other times, persons can leave messages on a recorder and someone will call them the next day. The Chidlrens Home Society is a United Way agency and works with clients in eight offices, including one in Greenville.

Christ's Temple Plans Service

The Rev. C.H. Parker from Cherry Lane will render a service at Christs Temple on the Bethel Highway Fridays. The service will startat 7:30 p.m.

Evangelist To Speak

Evangelist Ann Baines and the Crusade Team of Rocky Mount will conduct services Friday and Saturday nights at Tabernacle of Faith Revival Center. Services will start each night at 7:30 p.m.

k

Artist On TV Show

Beverly Cotten, former visiting artist-in-residence at Pitt Community College, will be a guest on the television show Hee Haw on Feb. 19. Ms Cotten, who clogs and plays banjo, is now visiting artist-in-residence at Piedmont Technical College in Morrisville.

A rerun of the Hee Haw episode is scheduled for Aug. 20.

Playwrights Plan Workshop

The Playwrights Fund of North Carolina will hold a table ^ reading worl^hop at 10 a.m. Friday at 120 Oxford Road in Brook Valley. New scripts are to be read aloud and critiqued, with suggestions offered to help the playwright with revisions.

The workshop, which will be free, will be open to anyone interested in development of new scripts. Each playwright bringing a script should provide copies for each character in the play.

For more information, call 756-8253.

Youth Choir To Rehearse

Choir members in the Youth Department of Sweet Hope Free Will Baptist Church will hold a rehearsal Saturday at noon. Friday night officers will attend a business meeting at 7 p.m.

Joyner Attends Fire Conference

Pitt County Fire Marshal Bobby Joyner recently attended the National Fire Safety Education Conference in Arlington, Va.

He represented the National Volunteer Fire Council on the conference planning committee. He also is treasurer of the North Carolina State Firemens Association.

Social Work Cluster Formed

A Greater Greenville Social Work Cluster is being formed in Pitt County, with membership open to anyone in the social work field, employed or unemployed. Plans are being made to celebrate March as National Social Work Month.

Interested social workers may send their names and addresses to Jane Walden, Patient and Family Services Department, Box 1082, Greenville.

Tax Receipts Top $300,000

Net sales and use tax collections in Pitt County in November amounted to $324,557. according to state Revenue Secretary Mark Lynch.

Totals in several neighboring counties for November included: Beaufort. $133,445; Carteret. $174,080; Craven, $251,205; Edgecombe, $152,887; Greene, $18,556; Lenoir, \$204,532; Martin. $76,437; Nash, $278,741; Wayne, $288,373; and Wilson, $255,398.^

Net collections in the 99 participating counties during the month amounted to $20,727,159, Lynch said.

Gillam Named To Committees

Rep. John B. Gillam III, D-Windsor, has been appointed vice chairman of five committees in the 1983 General Assembly. Gillam, who represents the 6th House District, holds the No. 2 spot on the Agriculture, Appropriations Base Budget. Justice and Public Safety, Appropriations Expansion. Budget on Justice and Public Safety and Local Government 1 committees.

Other committees on which Gillam will serve as a member are: Banks and Thrift Institutions. Commercial Fishing, Corrections. Courts and Administration of Justice, Health and Judiciary IV.

Solicitation Requests Approved

Police Chief Glenn Cannon announcecd the approval of two requests for solicitation permits in Greenville.

He said the requests were submitted by: St. Timothys Episcopal youth group to conduct a door-to-door solicitation Feb. 5. 12, and 19 to sell doughnuts to raise funds for youth group projects; and by Gamma Sigma Sigma national service sorority to conduct a sidewalk solicitation Feb. 18-19 to sell lollipops to raise funds for donation to the Lupus Foundation and other projpcts.

Board Seeks Typical 1908 Home

The Greenville-Pitt County Board of Realtors is conducting a search to find the most representative local home built in 1908 to enter in a nationwide competition sponsored by the National Association'of Realtors.

I President Thelma Whitehurst said the board will use its records and those of the historical society and any other available sources to locate a 75-year-old home that will best represent the area in the Diamond Jubilee Homes Competition to honor the finest examples of 1908 American homes

Ms. Whitehurst said all suggestions from anyone in the area will be welcome. She asked that anyone who owns a home built in 1908, or knows of someone who does, contact Jean Hopper. Make America Better chairman, at 756-3500. The deadline for nominations is June 1.

ByCUFFHAAS Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON (AP) -The fragile support for a bipartisan Social Security rescue plan is threatened by a dispute over raising the retirement age, with a key congressman saying he will oppose the entire package if that is done.

That issue and other problems facing a $168 billion package drafted by the National Commission on Social Security Reform have cropped up during House Ways and Means Committee hearings which began Tuesday.

He'll Pay II Tax Boosted

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) - Gov. Jay Rockefeller already pays hundreds of thousands of dollars^in taxes, but hell have to pay a lot more if his propoised state tax hike is approved.

Rockefeller paid $15,912 in state sales tax alone in 1980 - nearly twice as much as West Virginias per capita income.

The information came from a financial disclosure statement filed with the U.S. Senate Commerce Committee. 'The panel is holding confirmation hearings tliis week on the nomination of Sharon Rockefeller, the governors wife, to the board of directors of the Corporation for Public Broadcasting.

The statement puts the governors gross income for 1981 at $2.7 million, and his federal taxable income at just over $2 million.

Under current law, the state would impose $186,637 in income tax on the $2 million, although the figure might vary because of different state deductions, said state Tax Commissioner Herschel Ned Rose.

Rockefeller has asked the Legislature to approve hiking the personal income tax for those in higher income brackets. Under the proposal, Rockefellers state income tax on the same salary would be $265,360, Rose said, an increase of $78,723.

West Virginias first family has assets totaling $98 million, including $66 million held in a trust established by the governors grandfather, John D. Rockefeller II, the statement shows.

The governor paid $375,799 in state taxes in 1980, including $4,441 in real estate taxes, $15,912 in general sales taxes, and $2,677 in personal property taxes, according to the statement.

Judge Closes 11 Massage Houses

CHARLOTTE, N.C. (API - A Superior Court judge shut down 11 Charlotte massage parlors in response to lawsuits charging that the parlors operate as houses of prostitution.

Judge Frank Snepp issued temporary restraining orders Tuesday.

Mecklenburg County deputies began serving restraining orders on the businesses Tuesday night.

The lawsuits seeking a permanent injunction were fled Monday on behalf of county District Attorney Peter Gilchrist. Gilchrist contends the massage parlors are public nuisances under state law.

Believed Victim Of Setting Fire

CHARLOTTE, N.C. (API - Arson investigators say a fire that killed a Charlotte man last week was set intentionally by the man but died accidentally.

Eric Lockewood Bultman. 31, was killed in the Jan. 25 fire at his home.

Arson investigators^ said Bultman apparently used kerosene to set the fire in a bedroom and it ignited prematurely, trapping him inside the house.

Bultman was vice president of Metro Oil Co. of Charlotte.

Outgoing Health and Human Services Secretary Richard S. Schweiker and Social Security Commissioner John A. Svahn were testifying today on the retirement systwns financing crisis, which the administration has said will leave Social Security without enough money to cover benefit checks after June.

The reform commissions proE^sal calls for payroll tax increases, a six-month delay in Julys cost-of-living increase, a levy on benefits going to middle- and upper-income retirees and other steps to produce $168 billion over seven years, as well as wipe out two-thirds of the systems long-term deficit.

However, the commission was divided on how to close the remainder of the financing gap. A Republican majority on the 15-member panel recommended raising the retirement age from 65 to 66 by 2015 then indexing it to longevity. But five liberal Democrats urged instead an increase in the payroll tax in the next century.

The dispute flared Wednesday at the Ways and Means Committee as Rep. Claude Pepper vowed to drop his support for the compromise plan if Congress adds a provision to raise the retirement age in the next century.

Raising the age of eli^-bility is nothing but a cut in benefits, the 82-year-old Florida Democrat told the tax writers.

If you put one item in there cutting benefits I cannot support this bill, declared Pepper, the

chairman of the House Rules Committee and a key member of the reform commission.

Congressional leaders consider Peppers support essential to passing a Social Security bailout plan because he has been such a vigorous advocate for the system.

Rep. J.J. Pickle, D-Texas, the 69-year-old chairman of the Ways and Means subcommittee on Social Security told Pepper that raising the retirement age was an absolute inevitable development in the history of our country as I see it. He asked Pepper not to be intransigent about future changes in benefits, saying, 1 could take just as intractable a position as you.

Pepper responded, I dont make any distinction between the present and the

future.... When I say, Dont cut benefits, I mean now or hereafter. Leave the law as it is.    '    ,

The exdiange reflected a division in Congress over how to handle the proWem.

Senate Finance Committee Chairman Bob Dole, R-Kan., appeared before the House committee Wednesday saying, People live longer, theres not much question about that. Dole ami other senators have introduced separate legislation to raise the retirement age.

Meanwhile, other legislators have said during the hearings that they are uncomfortable with various provisions of the bipartisan plan, including the higher taxes, berwfit freeze and a plan to include newly hired federal workers under Social Security.

Congre^kmal leaders have said that moves to make major changes in the reform commission recommendations could sink the compromise, which both President Reagan and House Speaker Thomas P. ONeill, D-Mass., support.

Ways and Means Commit-tee Chairman Dan Rostenkowski, D-111., has declined to disclose which course he favors, saying, I dont intend to blink my eyes, or move my head vertically or horizontally about any of this until such time as I feel the package is whole and we can move with it.

Rostenkowski deciined to comment whether he thought cracks were appearing in the support for the rescue plan. But he acknowledged, Therels a whole host of

peo(^ who want to jump off that vehicle.

In other developments related to Social Security: -R^. Jim Wri)t, D-Texas, said he has run into a twist in trying to get congressmen covered by Social Security. That move, which would require members of Congress to pay Social Security taxes, could also apparently lower taxes for some, Wright said.

-Rep. G. William Whitehurst, R-Va., saiil he would introduce legislation to proliibit illegal aliens for receiving Social Security benefits. Whitehurst released a Genera] Accounting Office report which said the government could eventually pay out $1 billion in benefits if only 10 percent of the illegal aliens qualified for ^ial Security.

FREEDOM MEDALS - From left, Averell Harriman, Coretta Scott King, Robert McNamara, Jacob K. Javits and Joseph Raugh have all been named 1983 recipients of the Franklin D, Roosevelt Freedom Medals. According to Arthur Schlesinger Jr., chairman of the Centennial Commission and

the Four Freedoms Foundation which conferred the medals, These five great Americans epitomize the four freedoms enunciated by President Roosevelt 42 years ago. (AP Laserphoto)

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The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Thursday, February 3.1983-17Bankers Nervous Over Bad Loans Disclosure Rule

.    By SALLY JACOBSEN

Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON (AP) Consumers will get a chance this summer to find out the amount of bad loans their banks are carrying under a new fedo*al rule that is being resisted tooth-and-nail by the banking industry.

Federal banking regulators want the information made public partly as a way of placing checks ofl risky banking activities now that fedoral controls are being eased. Customers wiU better be able to evaluate the banks theydeal with, they say.

But bankers - some of whom have asked Vice President

George Bush for help in their fight - contend the release of the information could seriously damage their institutions if the bad-loan figures are misunderstood by unsophisticated users" of the data.

a rediKtion in either the principal or interest rate. Data on loans past due 30 to89 davs will not be released to the public

They also dont like being forced to reveal the information when savings and loans dont have to.

Events Scheduled By 10 Schools To Mark Career Planning Week

No data is better than the limited data that would be available to the public in the new (financial) report," says Mark Serqica, s^esman for the 13,200-member American Bankers Association.

The regulators argue that public disclosure - which is to start with (juarterly reports filed June 30 - is necessary in an era of deregulation when banks are freed of tight federal restrictions on their activities.

Nine Pitt County schools and one Greenville school are scheduling events for Career Planning Week, Feb. 7-11.

The Career Planning Week ties in with the year-long observances of the Year of the Public Schools in North Carolina, which will feature a particular theme for each month of the calendar year, including the summer vacation months.

Career Planning Week is in conjunction with Februarys statewide theme of Preparing for the Future. The career planning program is aimed at students in grades seven and eight.

The Greenville school with students to participate is Greenville Middle School. The nine county schools taking part are Farmville Middle, Wellcome Middle, Bethel, Chicod, Whitfield, A.G, Gox, Grifton and Ayden Middle. Approximately 1,285 students are expected to attend the activities offered by local and area groups in various occupational fields.

Occupations to be covered, and representatives to make presentations are;

Architecture - Jimmy Hite of Dudley, Shoe, & Hite Architects & Planners.

Agriculture - Ralph C. Tucker Jr., Tucker Farms.

Child care - Tammy Dale, Kindef-Care.

Computers - Carl Schnier, Radio Shack and Sandra Cayton, Vermwit American Corp.

Cosmetology - Dale Chalmers, Mitchell Hair Academy.

Engineers - Jeanne Gamber and Bill Williamson, both Eaton Corp.

Graphic Communications - Sherrill Duncan, Curry Copy.

Law Enforcement - Sgt. Doug Thurston, Greenville Police Department.

Manufacturing (production)

Gamble. .>

Manufacturing (machinist)

Carbide Corp.

Medical - Mary Yahaker, Pitt County Memorial Hospital.

Military - Air Force. Sgt. Bruce D. Barry; Army, SFC

Arthur Wright, Procter &

Sheila Needham, Union

. THE GREAT ESCAPE - Vicki Whitten, a model from Birmin^iam, Ala., goes heels up as she demonstrates a new high-rise emergency fire escape invention at a Denver hotel. Miss Witten lowered herself 11 stories with the Safe-T-Scape device. According to the manufacturer, the unit contains a harness and it lowers the individual t the rate of 3 mph. The device is available in 10, 30 and 99-story model. (AP Laserphoto)

Environmental

Laws Confusing

By MARY ANNE RHYNE

Associated Press Writer

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -Confusion about the impact federal environmental laws have on parallel North Carolina ordinances sparked debate Wednesday in a state House committee.

Rep. Joe Mavretic, D-Edgecombe, once defended a rule approved several years ago that keeps state laws on hazardous waste and clean air and water from being stricter than federal laws.

But he argued Wednesday that the state should be allowed to take whatever action necessary to protect its citizens, despite the relaxation of federal regulations.

Looking at some areas we see movement away from environmental issues, he said.

Mavretic, ^ who has introduced a bill to ban the use of landfills for the most hazardous wastes, said it should pose no problem because there is no similar federal statute.

The absence of federal standards on landfills pres-

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During the month of January, the Year of the Public Schools theme was The Basics and Beyond.

In the GreenvUle Middle School program for February, concepts of activities will be based on (l) focus on the the career guidance compwient of the master guidance program for the city schools; (2) a public forum on vocational education program; and (3) TV coverage.

Impetus for the Year of the Public Schools was provided last year in a proclamation issued by Gov. Jim Hunt calling on schools to focus on the role of public schools and their accomplishments over the years.

C.T. Conover, comptroller of the currency, summed up the arguments;

On the one hand, banks will say: If we have to disclose our problems, disclosure will only erode confidence and make our problems worse.

On the other hand, regulators will argue: If you knew that information about problems would be disclosed, maybe you would act to avoid them.

Under the rule, each bank is required to give the total amount of its real-estate, commercial and industrial, consumer and farm loans that are delinquent. Banks with foreign brawches have to give the total number of bad loans in those offices

No confidential information will be given out on individual loans, but aggregate figures will be publicly disclosed for loans that are 90 days overdue or have been renegotiated with

Roughly 14.500 commercial banks are affected by the new rule. Publicly held bank-holding companies already make public similar information under federal securities laws.

The regulators expect the information to be beneficial to a banks stockholders, large depositors who have money above the JIOO.OOO insurance limit and some other customers.

Conover, like other regulators, contends that most banks are well-run and have nothing to fear from this kind of disclosure.

The Independent Bankers Association of America, which represents 7,100 small community banks, sees it differently.

In an appeal to Bush, who is heading a task force on supervision of financial institutions, the group contended that the well-being of small community banks will be irretrievably damaged by the disclosure.

Robert McCormick, the groups president, argued that the loan information is technical and can be easily miscontrued by laymen or the media which will unfairly undermine the public trust in our banking system

He also said banks are likely to tighten up on their lending practices and that mi^t mean they wont be able to carry farmers and small-business owners through bad times.

Another banking official, who agreed to discuss the new rule only on condition that his name not be used, argued that loans considered delinquent at a certain time are often still repaid,

There isnt a great deal of correlation between loans that go into that category and ultimate losses. he said.

ents no conflict with the bill because there is no yardstick by which to measure those standards, he said.

However, Mavretic said a a. bill pending in Congress would do much the same thing as his proposal. He said he would bring researchers from Washington next week to talk about the bills and wastes covered under them.

Milton Heath of the Institute of Government in Chapel Hill told the House Committee that the federal government has taken the lead in establishing clean air and water standards.

But Heath said hazardous waste regulation is more recent and in some cases states and local governments may be ahead of the federal government in passing laws.

Hazardous waste laws also raise a question about Mavretics bill because they say state laws may be no more comprehensive than federal laws. However there is a clause exempting rules that deal with location of the wastes in relation to population centers and water supplies.

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8-The Daily Reflector. Greenville, N.C.-Thursday, February 3,1983Brown Lung Ass'n Is Planning A Public Campaign

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Members of the Brown Lung Association say they have started a public campaign to protest federal proposals to ease national cotton dust standards.

We want to make it known to the public that we don,t want the standards changed, says Florence Sandlin, president of the Brown Lung Association for North Carolina, South Carolina, Virginia, Georpa and Alabama. Were writing to our senators and congressmen, were appealing for support on the radio and television, anything we can do to let people know what the.government is trying to do."

Ms. Sandlin said. syndicated columnist Jack Anderson recently taped an interview with Brown Lung Association members in Greensboro about the proposed changes. She said the program will be aired later this month.

Officials of the U.S. Department of Labor announced last month that they might ease cotton dust standards in textile mills to spare the textile industry the expense of installing equipment to control cotton dust.

Thorne Auchter, assistant labor secretary, said the department would make its proposals by mid-February.

Federal standards originally were imposed to protect textile workers from brown lung disease, or byssnosis.

Auchter. who heads the Labor Departments Occupational Safety and Health

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WASHINGTON (AP) -Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger says the Pentagon has dropped plans to order an additional 10 guided-missile frigates because the 75 it has already ordered will provide us with an adequate level through the end of the decade.

The Perry-class frigates are used for escorting convoys and for use in amphibious operations. A report on the Reagan administrations defense plan, submitted to Congress this week, contains a paragraph disclosing no more are being requested this year.

Last year the administration proposed a fiveryear shipbuilding program that contemplated building 10 more frigates in 1984 through 1987. In 1973 the Navy estimated the frigates would cost less than $50 million each. Now, the Navy says they cost more than $236 each.

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Administration, would not discuss ^Ifk changes his (tepartment proposes. He did say the cost of dust-limitation devices should be weighed against potential benefits.

Textile-industry officials have said it will cost millions of dollars to install the control devices.

North Carolina plants employ about one-third of the countrys textile workers.

Ms. Sandlin says federal officials have refused to discuss the proposed changes with her organization.

I They have been secretive about this and we dont know exactly what their plans are, said Ms. Sandlin, a former textile worker. "But , any changes will set us back at least three years.

The cotton dust standard

. requires companies to provide workers with periodic lung tests, issue plans for decreasing cotton dust, test cotton dust levels every six months, keep medical records on employees for 20 years and require workers to wear protective masks until the dust level is lowered.

The standards were imposed after the government was sued m 1975 by the Amalgamated Gothing and Textile Workers Union.

Scientists have linked brown lung disease to prolonged breathing of cotton dust.

In 1981, an occupational disease committee of the state Industrial Commission defined brown lung disease as an occupational lung disease caused by exposure to dust from cotton, flax or

temp fibers.

Last week, a team from the Harvard School of Public Health said in a report that installing equipment to ctm-trol cotton dust is the most effective way to prevent brown lung disease.

Studies show that cotton dust needs to be controlled, doctors say it but the federal government just doesnt listen, Ms. Sandlin said.

The courts have given the textile mills four years to clean up, she said. We have two years of that four years to go. I dont un

derstand why the government wants to change the standards when the mills havent even ctnnplied with court orders. They (the mills) just keep breaking the law and the government isnt doing anythi^ about it but making it easier on them. She said some of the states large textile mills are trying to control cotton dust, but she said most of them are just waiting to see what the Reagan administration is going to do.

Meanwhile, a Labor Department spokesman says it

would take three months to put any cotton dust chuges Into effect.

Labor Department spokesman Kono Shima says it will take at least three months to take commoit from intere^ {Ktriies, hold tearing and a(!opt any new regulations.

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GENERAL TENDENCIES; A time not to resent slights or make sudden changes, or you could fail to gain your objectives. Accept conditions as they are and don't become irritated with others at this time.

ARIES iMar. 21 to Apr. 19) Try to please your friends today instead of talking about personal worries. Show more consideration for the one you love.

TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) Dont irritate a higher-up or you could have more trouble than you can handle. Show increased devotion to family members.

GEMINI (May 21 to June 21) Be alert to opportunities but don't jump into anything hastily. Studying old situations that need clarification brings right answers.

MOON CHILDREN (June 22 to July 21) Use care and tact in attending to promises and gain the respect of others. A new outlet can be profitable.

LEO (July 22 to Aug. 21) You have to be tactful with an associate and prevent some action that could be detrimental to you both. Think constructively.

VIRGO (Aug. 22 to Sept. 22) Quietly straighten out any errors at work and avoid getting panicky. A co-worker could be distraught so give words of encouragement.

LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) You have to te more sensible where practical matters are concerned to gain your aims at this time. Be poised.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) Any situations that arise today should be considered from a standpoint of how they will affect you and family members.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) Attend to duties that must be done early in the day so youll have time for social activities later. Be cheerful.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 20) You need to apply yourself more now to gain your cherished wishes. Sidestep one who will to imposes on you.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 21 to Feb. 19) Use good sense today, especially in the face of a possible emergency. Also, te sure to show thoughtfulness for others.

PISCES (Feb. 20 to Mar. 20) Carry through with original plans even though you may be limited in some way. Use diplomacy in your business dealings.

IF YOUR CHILD IS BORN TODAY ... he hr she will be one who has to be taught to seek sensible solutions for whatever is puzzling and thereby avoid trouble. Direct education along lines of entertainment since there is talent in this chart. Dont neglect ethical training.

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A FANTASY OF OZ - Ray Bolger, right, The Wizard of Oz which was filmed on the visiting on the MGM set of Fame television same sound stage as the Fame segment, a series, does the Yellow Brick daiKe step fantasy in which the television series actors

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A Hallmark Viewer Valentine

By FRED ROTHENBERG APTdeviakm Writer NEW YORK (AP) - In a more perfect and s>timen-tal world, Ciqpids arrows always land in the right "place and Hallmarks viewer Valentine, Thursdays Child, would be on toni^it, and not two days ago.

That was the preference of Hallmark, the card company that has offered warm, mushy givings and full sponsorship of exemplary television programs for over three decades.

Hallmark believes the best time for its commercial messages is Thursday night. 10 days before the holiday. If an advertisement is going to inspire somebody to buy Christmas or Valentines Day cards, it should be closer to the weekend shq)-ping period, the cardmaker reasons.

Since CBS generally broadcasts movies on Tuesday, Wednesday and Saturday nights, Thursday, actually, was not a strong possibility. But Wednesday night

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11:30 Tonight 12 :30 Comedy 2:00 Overnight 3 00 News

probably would have meant more Hove yous.

Joseirfi Curran, Hallmarks corporate vice president, understands, however, that television accommodates advertisers, when possible, but not at the expense of larger station profits.

Thursdays Child, about a courageous 17-year-oId with a de^nerative heart condition, is the kind of sentimental family entertainment that appeals to Hallmark and establishes the right climate for cheerfully solicitous prose.

But it was judged too sweet by CBS to attract the heavy viewership required in the February sweeps, when ratings fix local stations advertising rates for the next three months. (The Arbitron ratings service began its sweeps Wednesday night. Nielsens sweeps measurements begin tonight.)

If we had a choice, wed want to position ourselves at the beriming of a peak selling period, says Curran.

'The last Hallmark Hall of Fame presentation also came too early for Hallmark. Witness for the Prosecution was on Saturday, Dec. 4, too late in the weekend for viewers to hit the stores, and' a full three weeks before Christmas.

Originally, Hallmarks Christmas movie was going to be CBS homage to Prince Charles and Lady Di. But, in an effort to beat ABCs version to air, CBS broadcast its show three months ahead of schedule, and you cant sell Christmas cards in September. (ABC beat CBS by three days anyway.)

In any case, Hallmark needed a new diristmas vehicle. CBS pushed Witness for the Prosecution, although it wasnt conventional Hallmark fare, that is films of inspirational human achievement, iike Thursdays Child or The Marva Collins Story, about a teacher who taught inner-city kids Shakespeare.

Getting involved in the project after Witness tor the Prosecution had been filmed prevented Hallmark from influencing the script, a privilege it exercises as full

Walt Disney drove an ambulance during World War I.

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^xmsor, strongly suggesting changes not to act as censors," sa^ Curran, but to make sure it's family entertainment and it doesnt have unnecessary language, violence or sex.

TV involvement goes beyond selling mash notes. Like the institutkmai underwriting by the oil companies <on public television, in this type of advertising, the medium is

very mucn the message.

The purpose of our advertising. says Curran, is not wily to stimulate sales, but to put a quality image in front of the public.

In any event, the film worked for both CBS and Hallmark. Effectively counterprogrammed against ABCs usually dominant escapist fare, Love Boat and Fantasy Island," Witness finished 17th in the weeks ratings, and ranked higher than any other Saturday show.

Witness broke all the TV commandments. says Steve Mills, a CBS vice president for TV movies. Thou shall not do movies.,^ith British actors, or in confined courtrooms, or remakes, or films for older audiences.

We were happy with the results, the ratings and critical acclaim, says Curran. "For our purposes, the program did very well, He says Hallmark had strong Christmas sales, although he offered no data linking profits to program success.

But, even so. Hallmarks

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L^ss Time 'Posturing' For N. C. Representatives

By F ALAN BOYCE Associated Press Writer

IIALEIGH, N.C. (AP) - State representatives will spend Ktre time at their desks and less time posturing for their l onstituents under rules changes proposed Wednesday. , Changes recommended by the House Rules Committee would require House members to vote from their seats, would limit debate on some measures and would prohibit representatives from using questions of privilege to extend the courtesy of the House to the gallery,

Rep ,A1 Adams. D-Wake, said the rule governing privilege was intended to answer attacks on the House or its members, not to recognize your wifes aunt or to extend the courtesy of tlic House to the gallery."

If the changes are adopted by the House, only the Speaker Aould have the power to recognize members of the gallery.

In addition, debate on the adoption of a minority report vduld be held to 20 minutes per member and no : d[)resentatives would be allowed to speak on a bill during the iitstof its three readings.

The rule on voting was proposed because many members !:irlng last-minute lobbying tend to bypass the electronic ! ing system during the 20 seconds when votes are tallied, its really not uncommon to see 20 people scattered Tout, said John J. Hunt, D-Cleveland, committee 1 hairman.

Hut Rep George W Miller Jr., D-Durham, was unhappy with that rule.

After all. there are times when you need to have discourses, he said.

Other changes recommended would:

- Change the time allowed for changes of committee a.ssignments from 10 legislative days after the committee is created to 10 days.

- Require that once a substitute bill is adopted by a committee, the original bill must be put to a vote to decide if it receives an unfavorable report.

- Require that if members wish to delete an amendment, they should have it reconsidered instead of filing an amendment deleting it.

- Require reporters, but not television cameramen, to wear a coat and tie or suitable dress in the case of women w hen present on the floor of the House.

In other legislative action:

Plea Bargains

.Hep. Gus Economos, D-Mecklenburg, introduced a bill that ould prohibit plea bargaining in drunken driving cases.

We are not addressing the problem in the courtroom as we

Deny 'Vendetta' In Tax Proposal

ByJOHNFLESHER . Associated Press Writer

HALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -\n effort to tax commercial leo games cant be I. (juated with the desire of critics to zap the games out of existence, state lawmakers say.

Sen. Cass Ballenger, R-' iiawba, has introduced a I ill that would enable state fid local governments to tax the games, with proceeds going to public schools.

Several years ago. Sen. Bob Swain, D-Bumcombe. introduced similar legislation which wasnt passed.

Ballenger said in an interview Wednesday he didnt want to run video game arcades out of the state. Swain said he also didnt think the games were inherently evil, despite claims of some officials that theyre addictive and bring out violent tendencies in the young.

"I have nothing against video games, except that thev lake lots of money from schoolkids. sid Ballenger. "This IS an attempt to put some of it back.

Some say they'iesa plus in that they get you used to computers, he said. T cant quite see that. But 1 also dont think theyre that terrible. either tnough some

children are using their lunch money to play and thats bad.

Despite his assurances, some merchants and lobbyists arent convinced and say theyll fight the bill, Ballenger said.

1 got a call from one (game operator) who asked if I was trying to destroy him, he said, im not. Ive heard that some of these games bring up to $400 a day, so that gives you some idea of their profitability.

William Rustin, president of the N.C. Merchants Association, said Wednesday he hadnt decided whether to oppose the bill, though there were parts that concerned him.

The bill would require operators of the games to buy a $100 privilege license for each machine, starting July 1. Cities and counties would be allowed to levy an additional $10 per machine.

Ballenger estimated that there are 20,000-35,000 video game machines in North Carolina, and that his bill would produce $2.5 million to $3 million in revenues.

^wain said he wasnt familiar with Ballengers bill but might not support it because of changes in the video game industry since Swain introduced his legislation.

should be, he said,

Economos acknowledged that Gov. Jim Hunts package to fight drunken driving includes a pn^sal to eliminate lesser alcohol-related offenses that have been used in plea bargains-in the past. Hunt also wants to force judges and district attorneys to explain in writing why they chose to use plea bargains.

But Economos said Hunts plan doesnt change a thing. He said plea bargains should be outlawed whether or not Hunts package is enacted.

In^am

State Insurance Commissioner John Ingram wants revisions in the states insurance laws to prohibit price fixing and promote industry competition.

Ingram told the House Insurance Committee he sought the repeal of a 1977 law stripping him of his authority to halt insurance rate increases without going to court.

Until his office reached a compromise last month with the North Carolina Rate Bureau, Ingram said, the law prevented him from getting a single rate decrease. He said the compromise on workers compensation insurance had fostered .free enterprise.

"Real competition would allow business and industry to shop for the lowest possible workers compensation rates, just like businesses do for all other needs. Ingram said.

But he said rates remain too high despite the compromise, which he said would reduce workers compensation rates by 10.6 percent beginning April 1.

Ingram also proposed that people convicted of drunken driving should pay three years worth of insurance surcharges, that the money should go to the N.C. Reinsurance Facility regardless of whether the driver is in the facility, and that recoupments shouldnt be surcharged without the insurance commissioners approval.

Drunken drivers outside the reinsurance facility, which provides coverage for high-risk drivers, pay about $200 less than drunken drivers inside the facility. Ingram said.

Ingram also called for:

- A reinsurance facility law for collision insurance;

- Changing the safe driver plan so that Division of Motor Vehicles points are used as the basis of safe driver insurance points and surcharges;

- Eliminating territorial categories used by insurance companies in the ratemaking process;

- Prohibiting the companies from including lobbyists fees in their expenses for ratemaking purposes; and

- Abolishing the monopolistic N.C. Rate Bureau.

Education

Chancellors of University of North Carolina campuses continued to plead for money from the Joint Appropriations Base Budget Committee on Education.

John Thomas, chancellor of Appalachian State University, said his schools liberal arts programs needed continued funding despite increased emphasis on technical curricula.

Utilities

State Commerce Secretary D M. Lauch Faircloth told the House Public Utilities Committee that North Carolina needed a period of growing electric power supplies, but without rate incre^s that would put unfair burdens on the consumer.

We cannot force on the present-day consumer a rate he cannot pay, Faircloth said. But we must also recognize that the industries we are trying to attract ... will want to know whether we can provide an uninterrupted supply of power.

In an interview. Faircloth said he would not call for any changes in utility regulation. Last summer, the Legislature passed a number of laws widely viewed as crackdowns on rate increases.

Water    #

Natural Resources and Community Development Secretary

Seek Crackdown On Animal Thefts

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -State Sen. Julian Allsbrook, D-Halifax, called Wednesday for a crackdown on animal thefts, which he said are becoming more common in North Carolina.

Allsbrook introduced a bill that would place animal thefts in the same criminal classification as stealing other property. Presently, all animal thefts are misdemeanors.

.Animal theft can involve more than just stealing a cat, he said. Often the animals that are stolen are worth thousands of dollars. While there have been

some reports of rustling of farm animals, such as cattle or horses, Allsbrook said he was especially concerned about thefts of purebred dogs used for commercial breeding.

Under this bill, if you steal a $1,000 horse your punishment will fit the crime, he said. No more getting off with a misdemeanor and a maximum of two years (in prison), I certainly do think this will curb the problem.

The bill would make thefts of any animal worth more than $400 a felony, the same cutoff point for other property.

FLOODED MOUNTAIN LODGE - The kitchen, dining room and lobby of Smoketree Lodge were flooded when water from an overflowing stream broke through a back door Wednesday morning. The water reached a depth of 3 feet in the lobby

before a door and window were broken to allow the water to escape. The lodge is located south of Boone in Watauga County, N.C. (APLaserphoto)

A

Joe Grimsley told a Senate committee that Um availability and quality of water is his departments primary concern.

He told the Senate Committee on Natural and Ecmomic Resources and Wildlife that another problem is guaranteeing public access to public lakes and rivers.

Taxes

The House unanimously approved and sent to the Senate a bill that would change the amount of state taxes corporations

pay

Rq). Dan Lilley, D-Lenoir, said the bill would allow corporations to recover their investment credit (on state taxes) the way they do under federal law. He said the bill would cost the state about $20,000 a year.

Tickets

Rep. Dennis Wicker, D-Lee, introduced a bill that would shorten the len^ of time that records are kept for driving offenses, like speeding tickets.

Wicker said those violations stay on the books for 10 years now and his bill would reduce that time to seven years.

Another bill introduced by Wicker would allow the state to sell vehicles or car parts it picks up from the roadside. In the past, Wicker said the state has been forced to hold that property.

Mental Patients

Rep. Martin Lancaster, D-Wayne, introduced a bill aimed at closing the revolving door at mental hospitals. The bill would make it easier for judges to involuntarily commit outpatients who fail to take their medication or follow treatment plans.

This is aimed at the people who are feeling well and say I dont need to take my medication, 1 dont need to go to the health clinic ... and then they become dangerous again,

Lancaster said.

Opponents are concerned because the bill would allow patients to be committed without privilege of 1^ counsel. Lancaster said the patients are not being denied personal liberties and so counsel is not required.

License Tags

Vehicle owners would be able to register them by mail under a bill introduced by Rep. Davkl Bumgardner, D-Gaston.

The bill would levy a charge of $1 per vehicle for postage and handling.

It also would allow one-day title service for $25, with the money to go the state highway fund.

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The V.P. in Geneva

Tomorrow Vice President George Bush is scheduled to speak at the arms control talksjn Geneva as part of his current European tour. Mr. Bush is well-suited to a role in international politics. As Ambassador to the United Nations, he spoke for the U.S. during some of the most difficult years of the Vietnam War. In 1973, he became Chairman of the Republican National Committee at the height of the Watergate scandal. And in 1976 he took over the Central Intelligence Agency when that organizations reputation was at its lowest point in years. If the arms talks demand delicate diplomacy in a difficult situation, George Bush would seem to be a good candidate for the job..

DO YOU KNOW_^ What state elected George Bush to two terms in the House of Representatives?

WEDNESDAY'S ANSWER - The College of Cardinals are the Pope's main advisers and they elect a nevv Pope when necessary.

2-3-83        .    e    VEC,    Inc, 1983

No bridge tournament is without its share of amusing hnds. Consider this example from the recent Fall North American Championships in Minneapolis.

We were not given an ex planation of the bidding,^n particular of North's cue bid of three hearts. Suffice it to say that neither South nor North was reticent at any stage of the auction. The result was a slam" that was distinctly against the odds. And the only thing we can say about West's vulnerable weak jump overcall is don't even look at it. But it did play a vital part in the outcome of the hand.

VVest led a spade, and as soon as dummy hit the table, declarer remarked: ' Well, I'm off the two top clubs, but obviously they're 11." Declarer could be sure of that, ior had either defender started with both trump honors, he would have doubled six clubs!

Declarer won the ace of spades and ruffed a spade. To make the hand, he had to eliminate diamonds as an exit suit for the defenders and hope for an end play. So he cashed his three top diamonds and exited with a trump, and was delighted to find that it was Wet who had to win the trick while East's king came tumbling down.

Since a spade would give declarer his contract via a ruff and sluif, W'est exited with a heart. Confident that he knew the heart position because of West's overcall, declarer played the queen from the table. Unfortunate ly that fetched the king from East-down one!

N.CAThursday, February 3.1983-21

CLASSIFIED

INDEX

MISCELLANEOUS

Perdonis In AAemoriam Card Of Thanks Special Notices Travel & Tours Automotive Child Care Day Nursery Health Care Employment For Sale Instruction Lost And Found Loans And Mortqaqes Business Services Opportunity Professional Real E slate Appraisals    '

Rentals

002

003

oos

002

009

010

040

041 043 OSO 060 oao

083

os

091

093

09S

too

tot

130

WANTED

Help Wanted Work Wanted Wanted

Roommate Wanted Wanted To Buy Wanted To Lease Wanted To Rent

051

0S9

140

143

144 146 148

RENT/LEASE

Apartments For Rent Business Rentals Campers For Rent Condominiums tor Rent Farms For Lease Houses For Rent Lots For Rent Merchandise Rentals Mobile Homes For Rent Office Space For Rent Resort Properly For Rent Rooms For Rent

121

133

134 12S 102

132 139

131

133

135

132 138

SALE

Aulos for Sale    OH    039

Bicycles tor Sale    030

Boats tor Sale    .    033

Campers for Sale    034

Cycles lor Sale    036

Trucks tor Sale    039

Pets    046

Antiques ..    ..    061

Auctions      063

Building Supplies ....... 063

Fuel. Wood. Coal ..    064

Farm Equipment    065

Garage Yard Sales    062

Heavy Equipment    068

Household Goods .069 Insurance    021

Livestock    023

Miscellaneous    024

Mobile Homes for Sale    025

Mobile Home Insurance    .    026

Musical Instruments    .022

Sporting Goods     028

Commercial Property    103

Condominiums for Sale    104

Farms for Sale    106

Houses lor Sale    109

Investment Property    III

Land For Sale     H3

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Resort Property lor Sale.......112

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In addition to whispering <5weet nothings in your loved one's ear this Valentines Day, put your message in print with Sweet Somethings '.

Use this form to express "Sweet Somethings" to your loved one. Your loving message will be published on Monday, February 14.

Deadline is noon, Friday, February 11,1983.

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-    I I I I I I I I I I I I I I

. J

NOTICE OF SALE COAAMUNITY DEVELOPMENT DEPARTMENT OF THECITYOF GREENVILLE ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS NOTICE is hereby given that the Community Development Depart ment of the City of Greenville will unfil 11:00 AM, E.S.T , on the 14th day of February, 1983, af City Hall, 201 West Fifth Street, Greenville, NPrfh Carolina, receive sealed bids for the purchase and development of the tollowinq described properties located in the Central, Business District Project Area known as Pro iect NCR 66, Greenville, North Carolina, Pitt County Tract 1, Disposal Parcel S 6 BEGINNING at a nail in cap set in I the western edge of a ten toot I sidewalk, also the western right of (way of Reade Circle, this nail and cap is 184 7 feet, more or less, as measured along the western right of 'way of Reade Circle, trom the in jtersection of the southern right of ! way of Dickinson Avenue and the western right of Reade Circle, from ! this nail and cap runs then along the I western edge of the ten foot sidewalk ithe western right of way of Reade (Circle, along a curve having an in , terior angle of 14 deg 21 min 32 sec I and a radius of 738 88 feet, a tangent !ot 185 17, S49deg 31 min. 20sec. E a chord distance of 184 68 feet to an I iron pipe set. runs then S 19 deg 00 min 30 sec W 155.52 feet to an ex I isfing iron pipe; runs then N 58 deg i 33 min 30 sec. W 99.00 to an existing iron pipe, runs the N 33 deg 28 min. 10 sec W 89 65 feet to an existing I iron pipe, runs then N 33 deg 22 min. ;30 sec W 76 03 feet to a railroad I spike set, runs then N 48 deg 03 min. 40 sec E 115 25 feet to the point of beginning Tract 2, Disposal Parcel S 8 BEGINNING at a steel pin in con Crete marked 1778, this pin located 5 5feet N 70deg 50min 55sec Wot the back of the sidewalk on the west side of Evans Street, 5 5 feet nor theast of the back of the sidewalk on

' the north side of Eighth Street, trom fh

this Steel pin runs then N 70 deg 50 min 55 sec W 194 66 feet to an ex isting iron pipe; runs then N 70 deg 30 min 47 sec W 115 feet to an ex isting iron pipe, runs then along a curve, N 48 deg 45 min 50 sec w a chord distance of 162.37 feet to an ex isting Iron pipe, runs then N 27 deg 30 min 54 sec W 44 99 feet to an ex isting iron, the point of beginning.

From this beginning point runs then N 26 deg 53 min W 13 93 feet, runs then N 39 deg 29 min W 33.77 feet; runs then N 26 deg 08 min W 38 02 feet, runs then N 61 deg 46 min 20 sec E 57.68 feet to an ex isting iron pipe, .runs then N 26 deg 12 min 40 sec W 77 69 feet to an ex isting iron pipe; runs then N 63 d^ 22 min. E 64.63 feet to an existing railroad ^ike, continues then N 63 dfifl 22 min. E 5-56 feel id~a railroad spike set, continues then S 33 deg 22 min. 30 sec E 76.03 feet to an ex isting iron pipe; continues then S 33 min 10sec. E 89.65feet toan

deg

existing iron pipe continues then S 63 30 min. W 140.82 feet to the point

of beginning

Tract 3,'Disposal Parcel S9 j at a St

BEGINNING at a steel pin in con Crete marked 1778, this pin located 5.5 feet N 70 deg 50 min 55 sec W of the back of the sidewalk on the west Side of Evans Street, 5 5 feet nor theast of the back of the sidewalk on

the north side of Eighth Street; from this steel pin runs N 70 deg 50 min

55 sec W 194,66 feet to an existing

iron pipe, the point of beginning;

ing point r

From this beginning point runs then N 70 deg 30 min 47 sec. W 11.5 feet to an existing iron pipe runs then a long a curve, N 48 deg. 45 min 50 sec W a chord distance of 162.37 feet to an existing iron pipe, runs then N 27 deg, 30 min. 54 sec W 44 99 feet to an existing iron, runs then N 63 deg. 19 min. 57 sec. E 140 69 feet to an existing iron pipe, runs then S 58 deg 45 min E 98 9 feet to an existing iron pipe, runs then S 19 deg 09 min 05 sec. W 172 12 feet to the point of beginnir fh

a 4 foot by 5 I

bisects the lot from the east tg west

ling

Fhis lot subiect to an easement for I foot box culvert which





22 The Daily Kenector, Greenville, N C.-Thursday. February 3,1983

PUBLIC NOTICES

Deqmning on Eighth Street approx imately 80 feet east of the western corner of the lot and runs to a point approximately 30 feet south of the northeastern corner of the lot The above described land is sub lect to the land use regulations and controls as contained in the

Redevelopment Plan for said pro d thi           "

lect and the covenants as contained m the declaration on file at City Hall, 201 West Fifth Street. Greenville, North Carolina Bidder may be any person, firm or corporation who agrees to conform in all respects with the provisions of i bidding documents, including Redeveloper s Statement lor Public , ttsclosure Form HUD MXX, and | Redeveloper s Statement for i Oualif ications and Financial. Responsibility Form HUD6004A, | copies of which may be obtained upon request at City Hall, 201 West Fifth Street, Greenville, North I Carolina Any further information or j copies ot the proposed disposal agreement may be obtained at City I Hall In general the properties are j being sold for redevelopment as follows Disposal Parcel S6. S 7, i and S 9 Bids shall be accompanied |

nr A r

by cash cashier s check,lor a cer titled check payable to the Com

munity Development Department of ty of Greenville in an amount

the C equal to tive (5 price

i) percent of the bid

Bids shall be opened at II 00 AM I S T on the I4tn day of February, : 1983 at City Hall 201 West Fifth ;

Street. Greenville, North Carolina I The Department reserves the right i 007 to waiver any irregularities in bid ' wmm ding and the right ot reject any or all bids Submitted All sales or other transfers of land shall be subiect to the approval of the City Council of the City of Greenville Contact the Oftice of the Com munity Development Department ot the City of Greenville for further' details

Community Development Department

SPECIAL NOTICES

bio

AUTOMOTIVE

Oil

Autos For Sale

of the City ot Greenville January26 February 3, 1983

northcarolina

PITT COUNTY

NOTICE TO DEBTORS.

tiYors

ANDCREDII

The undersigned having qualified Of.......

as Executor ot the Estate of Mavis Parker Lupton, late ot Pitt County,

North Carolina this is to notify persons firms and corporalions having claims against the Estate of

said decedent to present them to the undersigned Executor or attorney on or before the 8th day of August 1983 or this Notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery All persons m debted to the estate will please make immediate payment This the 31st day ot January, 1983 CARLYLE L LUPTON Executor, Estate'of Mavis Parker Lupton 1800 East Fifth Street Greenville, North Carolina 27834 OFFICE OF FRANK M WOOTEN BY Frank M Wooten, Jr Attorney    .

February 3, 10, 17, 24, 1983

A8.MUSEDCARS has moved to 3014 S Memorial Drive BEFORE YOU SELL or trade your 79 87-model car, catl 754 1877. Grant Buitk We wit I pay top dollar

CARS $100! TRUCKS$75!

Available at tocal government sales Call (refundable) 1312 931 5337 extension I0/4B tor your directory on how to purchase 24

hours _    __ ________

CARS AND TRUCKS AUCTION every Friday from 7pm until. You bring them we will sell them Dealers welcomed At the Onstow

County Fairgrounds 347 2424_

CARS sell tor S117 95 (average) Also Jeeps, Pickups Available at local Government Auctions For directory call 805 687 6000

_ (tension 8752. Call refundable SELL 'your CAR the National Autofinders Way! Authorized Dealer in Pitt County Hastings Ford Call 758 0114

013

Buick

I 1977 BUICK Electra Limited door* 756 0489 alter 5pm

NOTICE

Having qualified as Administrator

'Stc.........

ot the eslate of Jack Andrews late of Pitt County North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of said deceased to present them to the undersigned Administrator on or before August 3, 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 1st day of February. 1983.

W H Dawson Jr PO Box 53

Washington, N C 27889 Administrator ot the estate of Jack Andrews, deceased Feb 3, to, 17, 24, 1983

1978 ELECTRA LIMITED, 4 door, loaded. S5400 Call 756 8760 after 6

p m^___________

1980 ELECTRA LIMITED, 4' door, loaded 50.000 miles $7295 Call

758 1427.

NOTICE OF SALE northcarolina

PITT COUNTY Take notice that pursuant to the provisions of Chapter 44A the General Statutes of North Carolina, NCNB National Bank, as Executor of the Estate ot Dr James Morris Curtman, late ot Greene County, North Carolina, will offer for sale at public auction to the highest bidder for cash at 410 Parish Avenue, Greenville North Carolina at 12 00 noon on the 17fh day of February, 4983 various articles ot household furniture, furnishings and personal effects belonging to Roman Nickens and John Nickens and more par ticularly describd as follows '

1 Black ring 1 pair ot Pearl earrings I Opal ring 1 Gold flower ring 1 Gold Pearl flower ring ) Imperial camera I Tussy cream deodorant I Armetron watch

3 Keys on key ring old

3 Keys on gold key ring

5 Brown keys on key ring I Sharp pocketknife

1 Green key ring

2 Black ashtrays 2 Coaster wheels

1 Box of assorted magazines I Cassette tape 1 Milk crate Assorted books 1 Gray coat I Dustpan 1 Silver key 1 Mop 1 Broom 1 Wine Crate

I Portable "RCA Television I Large '-'RCA ' Television I Jarrad Turntable

1 Bicycle Rim

2 Bicycle Tires I Heat Bulb 12x4 Wood stand I bottle of cologne

1 Chrome frame chair

2 25 lb weights 2 Wood cabinets 1 Baseball

1 Green ink pen    ^

I Red bookend

1 pair of black dress shoes o 1 Metal bedframe 1 Brown tree stump table 1 Kitchen chair 1 Box of assorted clothes

1 Bic lighter

2 Pillows.

I Brown trashcan 1 (jold ink pen I Lufkin power tape 1 Roll of tape 1 Blue cup

4 Small keys

1 Elegance jewelry collection in

015

Chevrolet

Sales 756 77

yol

5

MALIBU CONVERTIBLE 1965 Nice Dark blue with white top Call Leo Venters Motors, Ayden, 746 6171.    _

TWO 1978 NOVAS One in excellent condition, $2000. Other needs engine work $1500. Call 758 9858 or 752 1675.

1969 CAMARO, automatic transmission Good condition Call 756 8 781.

1973 IMPALA, automatic, air, power steering and brakes, electric windows, good running condition '57

Catl after 6pm., 752 4557

1977 CAMARO Z28, 55,000 miles, AM FM cassette. 4 speed, air, yellow with h^ack interior New tires, excellent condition $3800 Phone 758 6321 alter 5__

1977 CHEVROLET CAPRICE, 4 door, small V 8, regular gas, air, cruise control, tilt. AM FM radio, Michelin radial tires, clean, like new condition, 57,000 miles, kept in

?arage. original owner. $3500 Call 56 3727    __

1980 CITATION, air, AM FM, 4 floor. $4800 Call 758 9157, after 5, 752 5556__

1982 CAMARO Z28, power steering, cruise control, tilt wheel, AM FM

stereo with cassette, digital clock, custom interior, charcoal exterior. 752 3765 after 6 p.m.______

1982 MONTE CARLO, low mileaq will consider trade 756 5077after 6

018

Ford

MUSTANG 1979. Light blue, qgod condition, extra clean. Call Rex Smith Chevrolet, Avden, 746 3141

THUNDERBIRD, 1981, automatic, cruise, tilt, AM FM cassette Must sell! 758 5278 or 756 4914___

1966 MUSTANG Completely re built New tires Automatic

transmission 6 756 5791 after 5

cylinder $2395.

1969 MUSTANG, 69,000 miles, 302 automatic In floor, stereo system, wire wheel coYers. 758 4736 1975 FORD ELITE Good condition

756 8597 alter 5__________

PINTO

1976 FORD PINTO Automatic, Excellent condition, tor information

call 756 684X    _____________________

1979 LTD II, 302 candy apple red, good condition, original owner, $3100 Call 746 4868 after 6    ______

019

Lincoln

LINCOLN CONTINENTAL Mark V,

1978 Bill Blass edition with sun rootand give us a call at Furniture World, 757 0451    _

024

Foreign

DATSUN 260 Z, 1974. excellent condition $3350 Call 756 7337 or 756 5555, ask lor William

TOYOTA Clica GT Sport Coupe, loaded, excellent condition, t4,79i

753 4750 or 753 5500 alter 6

1972 TOYOTA, runs good $800 Call 758 98 58 or 752 1675

1 9 73 MG MIDGET, new transmission, brakes and front end

if 109 Call 758 2300 days_

1974 HONDA CIVIC, needs starter $650 negotiable 752 0173 or 752 1595 Slier 5    _

1974 TOYOTA CORONA Mark II, 4 door, automatic, air. $995 firm Call 752 5650    __

1975 VOLKSWAGEN RABBIT, 4 >eed, air, AM FM stereo 1976

756 8281 or 758

4 speed 9090

1977 VOLKSWAGEN RABBIT, 2

dqor^ajr, AAfl./FM, $1995 756 4496

1978 CELICA GT, llftback, 5 speed. AM PM, air, sunroof, 54,000 miles Call 756 70l3atter 7p m

1978 DATSUN HLB210. automatic, air, AM FM, excellent condition 67,000 actual miles $2200.756 3974 1978 TOYOTA Corolla SR5 liftback $2000 Call 756 9760.

1980 HONDA ACCORD Hatchback, 5 speed,air.AM'FM Excellent con dition $5100 firm 756 8062 after 5.

1981 TOYOTA COROLLA, 2 door good condition, air 757 3646 alter 5 1981 VOLVO GL, low milew, excellent condition, white Call 756 4 508alter 7pm_

032

Boats For Sale

WE PAY CASH lor diamonds Floyd G Robinson Jewelers, 407 Evans Mall, Downtown Greenville

SAILBOARD, Dutour Wing, used 10 limes, $600 negotiable Call 752 5775

after 5 p m or before 5, 756 217), ask lor Mr Habiby

034 Campers For Sale

TRUCK COVERS All sizes, colors Leer Fiberglass and Sportsman tops 250 units in stock O'Briants, Raleigh. N C 834 2774_

036

Cycles For Sale

XL350, 1975, new back tire, $650 752 2357 or 756 4019.

1974 HONDA 750. new paint and tires Fully chrome Good condition $995 752 5818__

1979 HARLEY LOW RIDER Call 946 5062

1982 HONDA 750 CUSTOM A I

condition Business, 756 519), home, 746 2461, ask lor Mike

039

Trucks For Sale

CHEVROLET EL CAMINO 1980 Extra clean, gcxxl condition Call Rex Smith Chevrolet, Ayden, 746

314). _

1973 FORD TRUCK, power steer

ing, power brakes, air. Call after 6,

753

: 5466

1979 CHEVROLET LUV Straight drive, air condition, low mileage. Good condition, $3595 price negotiable. Call 758 4006alter 6.

1979 CHEVROLET TRUCK

Straight shill 6 cylinder $2650. Call  If'

758 0F85

1981 BLAZER, silver. 25,000 miles. 4x4, new tires, air condition, AM FM, power, bush wacker, fog lights, carpet rack, like new and clean Call John Moore, WRQR, 753 4110.

1981 JEEP CJ 7 RENEGADE, V6, 4 speed, AM, FM cassette, 19,000 miles, two tops, red. Call 756 1927.

1982 TOYOTA LONGBED, diesel, air, AM'FM, and camper shell. Call after 6, 524 5614._

040

Child Care

MATURE LADY would like to babysit In her home References it needed 758 6679_

046

PETS

AKC GOLDEN RETRIEVER pup hunting stock I25.

good 757 3524.

BEAUTIFUL WHITE Eskimo Spitz puppies. Ideal Valentine's gift. Phone 756 1297

FREE KITTEN, has all shots Call 758 6880

REDUCED AKC Register Collie lies. $50. only 4 left Call 135

051

Help Wanted

ACCEPTING applications for full & part time convenience store work Manager, assistant manager,clerks needed Mature, responsible indi viduals apply to Quik Snak, P O Box 590, VVindsor, N C 27983

AMBITIOUS PERSON willing to work for career 752 3090, ask lor Linda    _

AUTO MECHANIC 5 years experi-Regional Auto

ence tools Apply at Parts, Inc., Highway 264 Contact M E. Porter, 756 1 company benefits

West, 100 Good

AUTO SALESMAN needed Experi ence not necessary. Excellent

company benefits Apply in person at East Carolina Lin coin Mercury GMC, Dickinson Avenue, Greenville.

AVON Wanted sales repre sentatives Earn 50% Call 746 3494

COLOR SEPARATION TECHNICIAN

Gravure or offset experience in four color camera separation or a de gree in photography or Graphic Arts A 30 year old Southeastern company with wages and benefits among the top in industry. An Equal Opportunity Employer

Mail resume to Technician', PO Box 1967, Greenville, N C 27834

EXCELLENT OPPORTUNITY Large corporation has outstanding sales opening for a sales repre senlative Individual must be local resident with managerial ability, ambition and show progress for age Business or sales background

helpful In requesting personal in ferview, please submit resume

stating personal history, education and business experience Write:

P O Box 406, Greenville, N C__

FULL ALTERATIONS One Hour Koretizing'. 756 0545

021

Oldsmobile

1975 OLDSMOBILE Cutlass Salon, excelleni condition, ) owner Asking $1.895 756 7765 or after 5, 746 4653 1981 OLDS OMEGA, 2 door, blue with blue cloth interior all power I air conditioning, cruise, radio, i 80 000 road miles. Company car, : serviced regularly Call 758 0110, 8

! lo5 $3700_    _    _

I 1982 OLDSMOBILE Cutlass Sta tionwagons and Sedans Several I colors Luggage rack (sta tionwagon), A^M FM stereo, cruise, lilt diesel 27 miles per gallon

FULL TIME Attendants for coin operated laundry Call 355 2172 alter 6 pm

GENERAL OFFICE Manager for Used Automotive Parts business Must have an automotive parts background and be able to deal with the public. Call 752 6124, 9 to 5

GRADY WHITE Boats is now seeking individual with at least 2

years college or related experience

to

$7950 Call Mr Whitehurst, 752 3143

022

Plymouth

eluding necklace stickpen, one pair jrrings and bracelet

of earrings 4 Keys on gold key ring with white tag

I Solid State AM FM Radio, Tuner and Amplifer with Eight Track tape deck 1 Certificate from Agnes Fullilove School

1 Box of assorted clothes hangers I Large foam rubber mat with pillows

Roman Nickens and John Nickens. tenants of Dr James Mor ris Curtman prior to his death and as tenants ot NCNB National Bank as Executor ot the Estate ot Dr James Morris Curtman following the death ot Dr James Morris Curt man vacated the leased premises at 2505B Dickinson Avenue, Greenville, North Carolina leaving said household furniture, furnishing and personal effects, and said property has remained at the leased premises tor more than 21 days after the paid rental period has expired NCNB National Bank, as Executor ot the Estate of Dr James Morris Curt man and as Lessor of said leased

1981 PLYMOUTH RELIANT Good as new! 12,000 actual rrtiles Call 6045 days. 756 3229 nights__

serve as Production Lead Person Prefer someone with Indus trial background Must be willing to learn various phases of boat biuld ing and to assist in supervision By appointment only Call Grady White Boats, 752 211 1 between 9 a m and 4

p m , Monday through Friday_

HELP WANTED Live in compa nion for elderly lady Reply in writing to PO Box 308, Plymouth, NC 27962__

023

Pontiac

1976 PONTIAC I paint lob Very I intormation call

CATALINA New

good condition for 756 6843

I 1980 GRAND PRIX Black, sunroof, ; tilt cruise, AM FM stero, air con ; dition Assume monthly payments, very small equity, 355 2928

1980 SUNBtRD. air power steering power brakes, sunrool, tilt wheel

AM FM cassette, deluxe interior Make otter CaH 756 2109 1981 TURBO TRS AM, low mileage Many extras Call weekdays after 6 pm anytime F riday Saturday, Sunday 756 9780

JOB INFORMATION Overseas, Cruise Ships, Houston, Dallas, Alaska $20,000 to $60,000/year possible Call 805 687 6000, extension J 8752 Call refundable

LADIES AND Children's Shoe De partment Manager Trainee wanted. Good opportunity (or career minded If you are mature, honest, like people and like retail work, this may be tor you Start at $10,000 'early, advance upward Apply

yearly, advance Brody s. Pitt Plaza

MANAGEMENT Large corpora tion looking (or management potential Must start in sales 60 hour week Some door to door Salary and benefits Conner Mobile Homes, 756 0333

MECHANIC WANTED Good reli

024

Foreign

able mechanic with good working habits Excellent pay and benetil package Prefer Ford experience

habits Excellent pay and

DATSUN 240Z, new tires, new paint excellent condition, $4,000 3 <750 or 753 5500 after 6,

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

Apply in person to jC Jones, Eist Carolina Lincoln Mercury GMC, Greenville

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

SHOP & SAVE - SHOP & SAVE - SHOP & SAVE

premises has a lawful claim for damages totalling $774 00 against Roman Nickens and John Nickens as tenants ot the premises ot 2305B Dickinson Avenue, Greenville, North Carolina Proceeds from this sale shall be applied to satisfy said claim for damages, rtie above articles may be in spected at any time prior fo the sale by contacting Duffus Realty, Inc . 201 Commerce Street. Greenville, North Carolina by telephone at (919) 756 5395

This the 1st dayot February, 1983 ---------------- -    Jk

NCNB NATIONAL BANt Executor of the Estate ot Dr James Morris Curtman, Deceased

CO Dixon, Horne, Dutfus & Doub

Attorneys at Law I Bulldinc

NCNB Building P. 0 Drawer uas Greenville, NC 27834 February 3. 10, 1983

1

FURNITURE WORLD WE WILL NOT BE UNDERSOLD!

WE GUARANTEE that, if you huy any home

furnishings item from us and within 30 days find the identical Item for less we will, upon verification. Cheerfully Refund The Difference'

Check us out at 2H0H E 10th St or pick up tlie phone and , give us a call 7570451 We Have Instant Credit'

SHOP & SAVE - SHOP & SAVE - SHOP & SAVE

051

Help Wanted

HOMEWORKERS Wirecratt pro

ductlon We train house dwellers

For full details write Wirecratt, P O Box 273. Nortolk. Va 23501

MECHANIC NEEDED Experience necessary Must have own tools

necessary must nave own loois. Excellent company benefits Apply to Jesse Boyd. Grant Buick, Inc., 603 Greenville Blvd , 756 1877

NEEDED Greenville Villa DO N Good benefits Salary negotiable Contact Dr Carolyn Harrell, 758 4121    ___

OILCOMPANYOPENINGS

Offshore Rigs No experience nec essary Start immediately. $35,000 plus a year For information call 1 312 920 9364, extension 1074 B

PARTS COUNTER PERSON needed Possible management op

portunity depending on experience txcellent pay and benefit backage Prefer Ford experience Apply to Parts Counter Person, P O Box

1967, Greenville

PROGRAMMER Minimum 1 year experience in RPG programming on IBM System 34 or 38 Send resume to Programmer, PO Box 1967. Greenvllle.^C 27834_

R N ASSISTANT and staff nurses motivated by challenge and pro fessional growth We are a 124 tied facility nursing home where you can practice true patient care. Excellent salaries and fringe benefits Including In service time and tuition funds Call 792 1616 Monday through Friday, ask for Director ot Nursing

REAL ESTATE CAREER

Business is great we need help We have expanded and need a qualified sales associate to handle the increase in sale volume We

otter an extensive training pro

>r

gram, sales tools, out of town referrals, national advertising and a full time sales manager to assist you in your efforts. In addition to selling, you will be given the opportunity to participate in our inner office syndicated group to purchase real estate for invest ment. For your contidential in

terview call Donny Hemby, 756 21 Bz

6666, CENTURY 21 Bass Realty

RESORT REAL ESTATE sales qpportunties. Established Real Estate Development and Marketing Firm seeking sales representative for existing and future con dominium projects in Morehead City, NC and Myrtle Beach, SC Unlimited Income and long term potential. Send resume to PO Box 1373, Myrtle Beach, SC 29578

SALES

WILL YOU TRAIN FORA NEWCAREER

IMMEDIATE OPENINGS

We are a 54 year young national corporation, manufacturing lighting products for industrial and com

mercial accounts, has openings tor sales professionals in EASTERN NORTHCAROLINA *-

Experience in direct sales ot Indus trial commercial accounts pre ferred However, individuals with sales background in debit or direct sales will also be considered. The applicant selected must be non pressure, honest, sincere and a career minded professional go getter

ood nucleus of    -    9^

commissions, bonus paid weekly,

We offer a g< established presFige accounts. High

company benefits Excellent tunity. If you are interest

I^TTn

establishing a consistent high come with repeat business

CALL COLLECT

DON EYLAT (404) 633-0132

Equal Opportunity Employer M/F

SALES PERSON wanted for Farmville and surrounding areas. Starting salary $300 it qualified. Good company benefits, excellent opportunity for person willing to work..Call 753 4482, Thursday and Friday nights between 7 and 9pm

SALES REPRESENTATIVE for

national known gift lines covering Eastern NC and Southern Virginia Commissions. 217 Deer Creek

Drive, Matthews, NC 28105.

SECRETARIES, word processors and typists needed immediately for long and short term temporary assignments^ Must have at least one

year work experience. Call for an 757 ----

appointment 757 3300

MANPOWER TEMPORARY SERVICE 118 Reade Street

059

WorkWanfed

ALL TYPES TREE SERVICE

Licensed tree surgeons. Trimming, cutting and removal. Free estimates J P Stancil, 752 6331

ALL TYPES OF yard work, wash, wax and clean cars. Call anytime 753 2791, James Williams

ANY TYPE OF REPAIR W)RK

Carpentry, masonry and roofing. 35 years experience in building Call James Harrington after 6 pm 752 7765. _

CREATIVE HOME IMPROVEMENTS CO

Quality construction and renova tion Phone 757 0799 after 6 pm

EX-MARINE, now student, desires full time weekend work Anything considered. 756 9906._

PAINTERS INC, recently moved to Greenville. Special rates ot $25 per room regardless ot size. Com mercial and residential painting, interior or exterior, also drywall and plaster Free estimates. Real tors, please feel free to call. 756 4955. 24 hour answering service, ask for Jerome.

tUf ,lgfUMtC,    ._

PAINTING, Interior and''exterior. Free estimates, work guaranteed. II years experience 756 6873 after 6pm._

SANDING and finishing floors. Small carpenter jobs, counter tops. Jack Baker Floor Service. 756 2868 anytime,If no answer call back.

SHIRLEYS CLEANING SERVICE Clean your home once a week or monthly. References ottered Call after 3, 753 5908._

SIGN PAINTING Truck lettering as low as $59 95. Call Steve Atkins tor all your sign needs. 756-9117.

WILL DO AD LAYOUTS, copy writing, logo design, illustrations, in store merchandising, handle promotions. By the hour or job. 756 4858 after 6 p.m. only.

WOMAN WILL SIT with shut in.

elderly or babysit at anytime. References. 752 8305, Monday

Friday, 12 noon to 4 p.m

060

FOR SALE

061

Antiques

HOME PLACE ANTIQUES Large selection of oak. depression glass, collectibles Open everyday 10-5; Sunday I 5.    14    miles east of

Greenville, Highway 33.

J & J's ANTIQUES now operating at Woodslde. James Allen ano

Jenny Move Note: 756 1133.

SMALL 3 piece antique wicker set. $300 355 6642.    _

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

044

Fuel. Wood, Coal

I ALL

.i_PJ

StancM. 752 6331.

FIREWOOD FOR SALE

40 FOR PICKUP

CALL 757-3568 or 758-5063

FIREWOOD, $30 a load. Call 7S8 4611 anvlime for dallvery.

OAK FIREWOOD for Mie Ready to 00 Call 752 6420

OAK FIREWOOD for sala. 752 8847_

Call

OAK FIREWOOD. 756 7159.

>AK FIREWOOD, $45 pickup load 1758 3190,__

OAKWOOD BY JAMES All oak $40 load 758 2840 or 756 9193 anytime

SEASONED MIXED FIREWOOD for sale. All hardwood. $80 cOrd. Free delivery and stacked 756 8358 anytime

100% OAK FIREWOOD for sale. $45 a load if we deliver; $40 a load if you pick up. 758 3797 Of 752 $488.

065 Farm Equipment

IDENTIFY YOUR LIVESTOCK with ear tags from AgrI Supply. Medium blank one piece tags $8.49 per bag of 25. Applicator $11.95. Marking pens, insectricide tags, and numbered tags in various sizes are available,    Supply,

Greenville, NC 752;

WHEAT STRAW FOR SALE Large bales. $1 30 746 2538or 746 2326

067 Garage-Yard Sale

fFLEA ^RKET, personal home

and business items. Saturday, Feb , 211 west 9th

ruary 5, 8 a.m. 4 p.m.,..........

Street, between Morgan Printers arrd Edwards Auto Supply._

GARAGE SALE Saturday, Febru ary 5, 8 til 12 noon. Bedroom furniture, mattresses, springs, clothes, pictures, books, small appliances, at 102 Carlson Street, Westwood Subdivlsiqiv_

AAOVING SALE, 400 S Pitt St , Saturday. 9 until. Classic 1968 Thunderblrd, queen size mattress and box springs, china closet, beige sota, plants. Oishes, other furniture and miscellaneous items. 758 0900.

NEW PITT COUNTY Fair Grounds Flea Market, Greenville Boulevard. Open Saturday and Sunday 8 til 5. Crafts, tools, furniture, antiques, and fresh produce. Outside dealer spaces Frw! Call Bill 746 3541. Mike 746 3550, Fair Grounds 758 6916.    _

SIGAAA PHI Epsilon Yard Sale, 505 East Fifth Street, Saturday, Feb. 5, 8 am to 4 pm._

YARD SALE, Saturday from 8 until. Clothes and household Items. 306 Lewis Stree._

072

Livestock

HORSEBACK RIDING Jarman Stables, 752 5237. __

074

Miscellaneous

ASSUME PAYMENTS of $37,92. 3

fiiece living room suite; sofa, chair, oveseaf. Furniture World. 757 0451.

ASSUME PAYMENTS of $49.46. 7 piece Western living room suite; sofa, chair, rocker, 3 tables, ottoman. Furniture World, 757-0451.

ASSUME PAYMENTS of $63.12. 3 complete rooms of furniture. Furniture World, 757-0451. _

ATARI VIDEO GAMES repaired. We buy 758 9513.

buy used ataris, any condition.

BEDDING AND WATERBOS

Save up to '2 and more. Factory Mattress And Waterbeds. 730 Greenville Blvd, next to Pitt Plaza. 355 2626.    _

BEDRCX3M SET, 6 piece modern E xcellent condition. $400. 756-8143. BRUNSWICK SLATE POOL Tables Cash discounts. Delivery and installation. 919 763-9734.

CALL CHARLES TICE, 758 3013, tor small loads of sand, topsoil and stone. Also driveway work.

CHAIN SAW, Remington SL11A 4 cubic inch. Compression release model, 20 inch bar and 3/8 chain, never used. Chain saw case. $275. Call 756 7179.    _

CHICKENS FOR SALE 7St each Humbles Cage Farm, 2 miles west

?S*g

Please to put chickens in

of Ayden, Highway 102 to County Road lilt. Please bring something

CHIPPENDALE Porch Rails on display at The Cabinet Shop, 1306 North Green Street, 757 1843, 8 to 5 or evenings.

CLARK & COMPANY

Stihl Echo Sachs Dolmar Snapper Tpro Lawn Bov

FOR SALE:    26    inch    Schwinn

Varsity 10 speed bike. Good condi tion. $35 752 0619.

FOR SALE; Couch and chair set, $60. Call 752 1412._

FRUIT TREES, nut trees, berry

plants, grape vines, landscaping lant material offered by one of

P<4

Virginia's largest growers. Free copy 48 page Planting Guide-

Catalog in 'color, on request. Waynesboro Nurseries Inc., Waynesboro, Virginia 22980.

FURNITURE CHEAP

Moving soon. Pecan Mediterranean dining room suite, 2 twin or bunk beds.756 4299 or 752 2539_

GANDY, 9x4'/2 foot pool table, W

slate top, drop pocket, $750. 753 4750 or 753 5500 after 6._

GAS WALL FURNACE 65,000 BTU, $150 Good condition Call 753 5544.    _

GREEN VINYL ROCKER, re

diner, $100. Call 756-4472 after 5:30 p.m.

Help fight inflation by buying and selling Through the Classiiieo ads.

Call 752 6166.

KING COIL bedding Sale prices starting at $99.00 per twin set. Pick up the phone and give us a call at Furniture World, 7j7 0451._

KITCHENAID trash compacter, harvest gold, $200. Call 155 6139

a)ter6:30p.m.

LARGE GAS LOGS, like new $60 Phone 758 4306    _

MATCHING Stove and refrigerator.

Magic shelf harvest gold, 1'-2 years old. Proof of purchase available.

Queen size bed with frame, Firm I, 3 months old. Book Case, child chest. Highway 258 to Horton Cor ner, turn left on county road 1200, go 2' miles, white house on right, 60x171.    _

SOMEONE IS looking tor your unus ed power mower. Why not advertise it with a low cost Classified Ad?

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

FRANK M. SUTTON

Certified Public Accountant

ACCOUNTING AND INCOME TAX SERVICES 757-1807

Monday - Friday 9 to 5 7S6-9000 Saturday 9 lot

Salesman Of The Month

Clyn Barber

Waverly Phelps, President of Phelps Chevrolet is pleased to announce that Clyn Barber is the winner of the Salesman of The Month Award. Clyn won this for his outstanding sales performance during the month of January.

PHELPS CHEVROLET

West End Circle

756-2150

074

Miscellaneous

MAYTAG Portable dryer. $50 Evans Trailer Park, Lot 75. 756-1523.

PIANO LESSONS NOW available Grimesland area Beginner. Children and adults. Call 758 4155

REPOSSESSED VACUUMS and Shamoooars. Call Dealer, 756 6711.

SHAMPOO FOR FALL! Rant sharnpooers and vacuums at Rental Tool Company

SHOTGUN, STEVENS SAVAGE 12 guaga, 3" AAagnum, Double Barrel Pirre corrdition Kentucky leather case. $160. Call 756 7179

SINGER SEWING MACHINE Styl

ist, z^igz^^wlth disc In cabinet

$190,

TIMBERLAKE PRINT signed and numbered, framed "Morning Sun "

$400. Ward Nickols Print, signed and numbered, framed. 'The

Legacy". $300. White wicker sofa, $1W. 76 6468.

TOP SOlU field saird. mortar sand and rock. Call 746 3296 or 746 3819 TWO NCR CASH registers, both in working condition $135 each Wickes Lumber Co, 125 W Greenville Blvd , 756 7144.__

VIRGINIAN WOOOSTOVE Free standing or insert Used 2 months. $450. 752 6696.    _

WE TAKE TRADE INS Pick up

the phone and give us a call at Furniture World, 757 0451

$1000 INSTANT CREDIT Open an account today Pick up the phone and give us a call at Furniture World. 757-0451._

17 CUBIC FOOT Kelvlnator refrig erator/freezer. new, almond. $400.

Dealer cost $470 752 8205

19" COLOR TV Take over pay ments of $27.48 tor 24 months. Furniture World, 757 0451.__

19" RCA COUORTRACK remote $275. 747 2412 days, 747 3152 niohts.

2 BIRD CAGES with han each. Good condition, 355 65

ers. $8

WHEN SOMEONE IS ready to buy. they turn to the Classified Ads, Place your Ad today for quick results.

075 Mobile Homes For Sale

BRAND NEW 1983 top quality 14 wide, 2 bedroom mobile home loaded with extras, cathedral beamed ceilings, plywood floors, plywood counter tops, total electric, range, refrigerator. Regular price, $12,995

. Limited Time Only

$9,995

VA, FHA and conventional on lot financing. Delivery and set up included Hours, 8 am to6 pm.

MOBILE HOME BROKERS 630 West Greenville Boulevard 756-0191_

13 top

double wide. 52 X 24. 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, many extras including

masonite siding, shingle root, bay windows, frost free refrigerator, garden tub, cathedral ceiling and

much, much more. Regular price, $24,995

Limited Time Only

$19,995

VA, FHA and conventional on lot financing. Delivery and set up includedT Hours, 8 AM to6 pm. MOBILE HOME BROKERS 630 West Greenville Boulevard _756-0191    _

DOUBLEWIDE, 3 bedrdoms. : baths, all appliances. Central air Underpinned, Barn attached. Set uf on 1 acre of land. 946 8436

REPOSSESSION, 14 X 70,    3

bedroom, 2 baths, central air. $295 down at 12% interest. Call Art Dellano Homes, 756-9841

, USED HOMES 1971 2 bedroom, 1 bath 12X55 2 bedroom, t bath 12X65 3 bedroom, 2 bath These homes can be seen at Art Dellano Homes. 756-9841._

$155 PER MONTH You can now own a new Conner Home for as low as $155 a month. Limited time offer at Conner Mobile Homes, Intersec

tion of 264 Bypass and Highway II, , UC_

Greenville,

1971 MOBILE home and lot 2

bedrooms, 2 baths, well and septic tank, $12,900. Speight Realty, 756 3220, nights 758 7741.

1973 12X65 STAR Mobile Home. 2 bedrooms. 1 bath, large, living room with wood heater, electric heat and central air. Call after 6:00, 756 0205.

1975 CELEBRITY 12X60,    2

bedrooms, 1 bath, furnished, central air, undefpined, set up in nice park, 10X12 storage barn, 752 4126 days, 756 3161 nights._

1976, 2 BEDROOM Mobile Home, Completely set up with washer/dryer, and furniture. $5200. Call 753 2488    _

1976 12 X 65, 2 bedrooms, I bath. Already set up. $1000 down, take over payments of $132.50. Call Lawrence at Art Dellano Homes, 756 9841.__

1979 A60BILE HOME, 2 bedroom.

$400 equity, assume payments of $127.34. Call 757-0137._

1980,    14x70,    large    living

fireplace, large k "

appliances.

_ room, itchen with all washer/dryer, partly

furnished. $1500 equity and assume loan. Call after 5 p.m., 756 7218.

1981, 60X14. Assume loan, $227 per month. No downpayment. Free de livery and set up. Call Conner Homes, 756-0333._ _

1981 BRIGIOIER trailer for sale 14 X 64 Call after 5:30pm, 792 5488.

1981 CAROLINA, 14x70. 1 2 baths, 3 bedrooms, excellent condition. No equity. Assume payments. Call 825 1698.

QUICK ACTION Classified Ads are the answer to passing on your extras to someone who wants to buy.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

WE REPAIR SCREENS & DOORS

RemodelingRoom Additions

C.L. Lupton Co.

075 AAobilf Homes For Sale

Ife2 BRIGIOIER. 2 bMfrooms. I bath. Total alactric, washar and dryar. Alraady sal up $299 down and $176 par month. Call Art Dellano Homas. 756 9>4l

)9t2 DOUBLE WIDE with fireplace Equity and assume loan Call 758 9163.__

I9C3, 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths. Completely furnished Take up payments. Call 758-6717

2 BEDROOM. I owner trailer.. 1974 Extra clean Furnished, air Super

p.m.;

buy $2600 . 756 7506 after 8 752 0052 anytime days_

24 X 52 USED DOUBLE wide 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, lapside shingle roof Delivered and set up $14.995. Call Art Dellano Homes, 756 9841.

3 BEDROOM, 1>i bath mobile home $500 down and assume payments. Call 758 5376 between 9 and 12 a.m.

076 AAobi le Home I nsurance

AAOBILE HOMEOWNER Insurance at competitive rates. Smith Insur ance and Reeltv. 752 2754_

077 Musical Instruments

BIG 40% and 50% SALE on Thomas organs, Kimball and Yamaha piano and organs. Plano & Organ DIstrIb utors, Arlington Boulevard. 355 6002

PEAVEY AAACE HEAD with 4 12 cabinet. $500. First Man

rgan,

closest sound to B3 Hammond, $600. Call after 7 p.m., 795 4360._

OLD UPRIGHT PIANO, new ivories and fells, $200 You pick up. Arm strong flute, excellent condition.

/I

$175 746 4577after4p m

OLD UPRIGHT piano $250 Call 752 1030 after 5 pm

PIANO, Wurlltzer Studio; excellent

fiiece ot furniture, excellent musical nstrument; $850 and will pay to have it tuned after delivery. Call after 6, 752 0209.    _ __

PRIVATE GUITAR LESSONS Call k756 2253or 752 5069._

5 STRING BANJO, with case new $100 756 2790._

078

Sporting Goods

HATTERAS CANVAS PRODUCTS All types canvas and cushion repairs. Specializing In marine pro ducts. 758 0641.1104 Clark Stree).

082 LOST AND FOUND

FOUND Irish Settler on Stan tonsburg Road. Call and describe, 752 4806.    _ _

LOST PRESCRIPTION glasses, blue case, last Wednesday. Need desperately. Please catl 756-1593

LOST FEAAALE gray tabby cat. White feet, blue collar. Eastern

Pines area. 758 1375 after 9 p.m.

YOU CAN SAVE money by shopping for bargains in the Classified Ads.

LOST: FEMALE part Collie and

Poodle, real    browri    and

gray in color. 756-

085 Loans And AAortgages

NEED CASH, get a second mortgage fast by phone, we also buy mortgages; make commercial loans, cairtree 1 800 845 3929

091 Business Services

FOR YOUR INCOME TAX

preparation needs contact J Gene Locust, 10 a.m.-2 p.m. daily, 756

INCOME TAX SERVICES Hilton Boyd. Call 756-3264._

093

OPPORTUNITY

BUSINESS ASSOCIATE WANTED

Christian man or woman with some sales experience. Excellent oppor tunity, good income, plus profits as

part owner of company, area Pitt County. $7,500 investment required. For toll details write:    Business

Associate, PO Box 1967, Greenville, NC 27834. Please give phone number.    _

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

093

OPPORTUNITY

FOR SALE: E*labiihed scrap yard, equipped lor ferrous and non ferrous metals Call tor details. Teresa Jones, Broker, 946 9649.

LIST OR BUY your business with C J Harris t. Co.. Inc. Financial & Marketirig Consultants. Serving the Southeastern United States. Greenville. N C 757 0001, nights 753 4015_

SERVICEAAASTER professional

home and oftice cleaniM franchises "  NC erea.

available in the Eastern $14,000 includes equipment end training. Financing available For information call or write ServiceMaster, 204 West Peace Street, Raleigh 27603^ 2802

095 PROFESSIONAL

CHIMNEY SWE Old Holloman North Carolina's'original chimney sweep. 25 years experience working chimneys and fireplaces. Call

If, 7.r.....

day or night, 753 3503, Farmville.

102 Comnwrcial Property

WILL LEASE or sale: 21,000 square loot building located at the corner of Cotanche and Uth Street. Lot is 110' X 365' Zoned commercial Multi uses possible 752 1020_

104 Condominiums For Sale

BY OWNER Quail Ridge Condo, 3 fan

bedrooms. 2',} baths, large living

room with fireplace, and dinin^j

room. Pool and tennis court 355 6053

GOTANOTHER RENT INCREASE?

You can have monthly payments

Ifl I

lower than rent that will not go upt Contact one ot our brokers today to discuss our affordable alternative to rent.

MOORE & SAUTER

no South Evans 758-6050

106

Farms For Sale

13 ACRES all cleared with 2V3 acres tobacco allotment, 8 miles North of Greenville. Aldridge & Southerland Realty, 756-3500; nights Don Southerland. 756 5260.

37 ACRES with 21 cleared and 2 acres of tobacco. Located near Stokes. For more information con tact Aldridge & Sutherland, 756-3500; nights Don Southerland, 756 5260.__

58 ACRE FARM Good road Iron tage on SR 1753 and SR 1110 51 acres cleared, 6,209 pounds tobacco allotment, pond and 2 bedroom house. St. Johns Community, Call tor more details. Call Moseley-Marcus Realty at 746-2166 for lull details._

107

Farms For Lease

TOBACCoTioUNDrFOR SALE at $3.50 per pound. Call 752-5567 after 6.  .

WANT TO LEASE peanut pounds, any amount. Call 758 2859

WANTED Corn and Bean land between Winterville and Greenville. Call 756 3623after 6 pm.

WANTED TO lease tobacco pounds for 1983. 752 0310 or 758 4353.

WAtlTED TO RENT, 12,000 pounds tobacco to be moved Phone 752 6416,____

Sell

 your used television the

Classified way. Call 752 6166.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

WE INSTALL ALUMINUM AND ViNYLSIDING

RemodelingRoom Additions

C.L. Lupton, Co.

6800 BTU KEROSENE HEATERS

582.95

Other Sizes At Comparable Low Sale Prices

WICKES LUMBER CO.

125 W.QrMnvtll* Blvd.

IMPORTANT VALENTINE MESSAGE FROM COX FLORAL SERVICE 117 W. 4th ST. DOWNTOWN

VALENTINE DAY COMES ON MONDAY THIS YEAR. WE WILL BE DELIVERING VALENTINE FLOWERS ON SATURDAY 12. SUNDAY 13 and MONDAY 14.

Please place your orders early to ensure delivery. Send an extra day early to enjoy.

Cannot guarantee prompt delivery on flower orders placed on Monday, Feb. 14th.

On Monday we suggest you pick up your flowers to avoid disappointment. This is a special day for love...Please order early.

Cox Floral Service, Inc.

1937-1983

Greenville, N.C.

758-2183

GIIAIIIIIIEED USED CARS

1981 Volkswagen Rabbit..............AUTOMATIC

1981 AUDI 4000 5 Plus 5........ ^10,595

1979 Ford Fairmont Wagon  .........   .^3995

1979 Pontiac Sunbird...........................^4195

1979 Ford Fairmont............................^2695

1978 Olds Cutlass Wagon.......................^4495

1978 Olds Cutlass Supreme.  ..................^4995

1978 Honda Civic...... y................ ^2695

1978 Plymouth Horizon..................  ^3995

1978 Mazda GLC........................  ^2895

1977 Buick Skylark.............................^2995

1975 Volkswagen Beetle........................^2495

1974 Volkswagen Beetle  AUTOMATIC

1974 Volkswagen Beetle. ....  ^2495

1976 Ford Courier Truck................. ^1795

Pre-Spring Specials 1975 MGB Midget 1981 Yamaha 750 Seca Motorcycle 1978 Ford F-150 Super Cab Pickup .........M395

lOE PECHELES VOLKSWAGEN

264 By-pass

756-1135

Seiving Greenville To The Coast Fot 18 Years

IP





107

Farms For Lease

'OW.O LjKlTO RENT d*.

PgffiL.gall eWtf SD.m . ift fit

108 Houses For Sale

109

Houses For Sale

,nut WHY RENT? When you can assume a 9>% FHA loan with payments of S3M. 3 bedroom, 1*i bath brick ranch in Hardee Acres. For sateOv owner. 7M-om._

^*EAT BUVI Three bedroom how with fiwlace In spacious family room; heat pump and 14M

A SMART START-For your tirst home or first investment this three bedroom bwwlow will win your heart. Central heat, storm windows, roof are I ust a tew of the extras assume the VA loan.

CE^uIy 21 Bass

^TJBACTIVE loan Assumption. 3 bedroom brick, very attractive inferior, large detacid work shop. Assumable af 9'/!% Ray M Spears.

* Southerland

K. f Sparkling new Cape Cod with a bay window in the dining room, greatroom with french doors leading to a spacious deck. Buy now and choose your carpet and wallpaper. M24. CENTURY 21 Bass Realty. 754:4400

111 investment Property

ATTENTION INVESTORS Older home converted into 3 apartments Rental income tS2S. S30's. Call Davis Realty 752 3000, 756 2904 or 756 1997.

113

Land For Sale

APPROXIMATELY 1)0 Acres of cut over woodsland tor sale by owner. Southeastern Pitt County Call 752 5917 after pm.__

AT BELLS FORK 3< > acres for shopping center usage Owner will finance. For details call Darden Realty 758 1913. nights and weekend758 2230._

FOR RENT OR

1007 W 4th

Street, Greenville, ^an be made into two apartments. Good location *17,500. Days 746 2166, Nights: Billy Wilson, 758 4476 or Louise H

Moseley. 746 3472.

GOOD STARTER Home tor sale by owner 2 bedroom, living room, 1 bath, and kitchen, carport. Plus additional lot beside house. S26.000 price negotiable Call 758 4006 after

LYNNDALE Owners transferred. Hates to leave this plus honne. All formal areas Den with fireplace. Wet bar Will consider trade. Don't miss your chance to move up to the .top 5135,900. #341. CENTURY 21 Bass Realty, 756 5868

AAAKE mine country You can with this charming brick ranch near the hoMital. Great room with fireplace, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, big country kitchen and country decor throughout 563,500.00.

JUST ARRIVED 1500 square feet ot country delight and decor near the hospital. Great room with fireplace, kitchen, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, separate utility and garage $63,500.00.    ^

UNIQUE FLOOR PLAN with sunk en great room, formal dining room, large kitchen, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, dec1( and garage Tucker Estates. $89,900.00.

VERANDA AND COLUMNS lead the way to this roomy home near University. Four bedrooms. 2 baths, formal areas, den, office and country kitchen FHA assumable 9'j% loan. $72,900 00.

Jeannette COX Agency Inc.

756-1322    .    .

MEADOWBROOK 2 bedrooms, 1 bath. Loan assumption. Make an otter. $28,500 ^Ight Realty, 756 3220, hiqhts 758 7741.

MEADOWBROOK 4 bedrooms, 1 bath. Excellent shape. Must sell. Make an otter. Speight Raay, 756 3220, nlQht$738-7r41 NEW LISTING: Spacii brick home, located oi acre. Approximately 7,\ feet. Greatroom with tii bedroom, 2'i bath Plus' tuTTial living/dining room. Approximately 2 adjoining acres available Possi ble Federal Land Bank Financing. W 12. Call June Wyrick, Aldridge 8. Southerland, 756-3500 or 758 7744.

BLACK JACK area 5 acres woodsland. 527' road frontage. $17.000. Make an offer. Speight Realty, 756 3220, nights 758 7741

8 ACRES Wooded. East about 6 miles. $15,000 with owner financing. Darden Realty 758 1983, nights and weekends 758 2230.

115

Lots For Sle

4 ACRE LOT In country, a fitting setting tor this 3 bedrom, 2 full bath doublewide. Close to city, central heat and air, furniture negotiable. Only $32,900. Call Davis Realty 752 3000, 756 2904 or 756 1997;

APPROXIA8ATELY 3/4 ot acre, trees, well and septic tank. Home stead AAobile Estates. $10,000 or best offer. 756 5348.

BAYWOOO, TWO ACRE lot

nancinq available. Call 756 7711.

Fi

BELVOIR 'Highway. Good for mobile homes. Nice area. Speight Realty. 756 3220. nights 758 774T

GOOD BUY Lot in Westhaven Need to sell. Darden Realty 758 1983, nights and weekends 758 2230.

HIGHWAY 33 East. Acre lot, wooded ISO' road frontage Nice area $9000 Speight Realty, 756 3220. nights 758 7741._

LOT ON THE CORNER ot Broad and Ridgeway Street call tor details Estate Realty Compahy, 752 5058._

PARTIALLY WOODED Cherry Oaks Subdivision. Priced to sell. Days 758 7687, after 6, 756 7227.

1.5 ACRES between Winterville and Ayden; 212 foot road frontage. Excelent building site $14,^. Estate Realty Company, 752 50M; nights 758 4476 or 752 3647.

$8200 WILL BUY you this attractive lot in Winterville area all hookups and amenities on quiet cul de sac. Call Davis Realty 752 3000, 756 2904 or 756 1997

117 Resort Property For Sale

ONPAMUCORIVEr^i cottage sitting on wooded lot at Jarvis s landing. Good buy. For details call Darden Realty 758 1983, nights and 223C

weekends 758 2230.

RENTALS

LOTS FOR RENT Also 2 and 3 bedroom mobile homes. Security deposits required, no pets. Call

758 4413 between 8 and 5._

NEED STORAGE? We have any

NICE, COZY contemporary house in Twin Oaks, excellent financing. F L Garner, 355 2628 or 756 321* Owner, 758 2520

NICE 5 room house. Enclosed back porch, carport, new paint in and out. Ver^ good condition. In the

county.

pecan trees. $34,000

B^ owner, 756 3218, call after;

.4199.

OUT OF THE ORDINARY This exceptional rustic cedar farm home offers superior construction. Pewter light fixtures and period wallpaper. Floor plan is a re production ot owner's grandma's borne and lends a touch of nostalgia. Owners transferred and regret having to sell. Call now for your private showing. $81,900. #441. CENTURY 21 Bass Realty, 756-5868.

OWNER BEING TRANSFERRED, Immaculate throughout. Excellent location, 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, beautiful landsc^ing. 210 Crestline Blvd. Call Ray Spears at Aldridge and Southerland, 756 3500 or 78 4362

ROBERSONVILLE 3 bedroom, 1 bath older home in good neighborhood. $18,500. Speight Re alty, 756 3220; nights 758-7741.

SIXTIES

CAME LOT...................6<L000

HORSESHOE ACRES ..^900

DUPLEX....................62,500

lfv^EWj?Ls;::::;:::::-;;::M

WESTHAVEN II.............67,400

CAME LOT...................69,900

ENGLEWOOD...............69,900

DUFFUSREALTY INC

756-5395

size to meet yOur storage need. Ca Arlington Self Storage, Open " day Friday 9-5 Call 756 9933,

en AAon-

121 Apartments For Rent

AZALEAGARDENS

Greenville's newest and most uniquely furnished one bedroom apartments.

All energy efficient designed.

Queep size beds and studio couches.

Washers and dryers optional

Free water and sewer and yard maintenance.

All apartments on ground floor with porches.

Frost tree refrigerators.

Located in Azalea Gardens near Brook Valley Country Club. Shown by appointment only. Couples or singles. No pets.

Contact J T or Tommy Williams _ 756 7815

Cherry Court

Spacious 2 , bedroom townhouses with iVj baths. Also 1 bedroom apartments. Carpet, dishwashers, compactors, patip, free cable TV. wasnerdryer hookups, laundry room, sauna, tennis court, club house and pool. 752 1557

WEST FOURTH Street. 5 bedroom house. Good location. Must sell. $21,500. Speight Realty, 756-3220; nights 758 774T._

10'/2% APR Thirty year, fixed rate FHA or VA on new homes to be built in Edwards Acres, Pleasant Ridge and Country Squire or will build on your lot. Seller pays points and closing costs. Take advantage ot this low interest rate now! Duttus Realty Inc., 756 5395.

$53,500. Windy Ridge, 3 bedroom, 2 2 bath condominium. Features family room with fireplace, heat pump. Recreational facilities available. Seller will make some allowance tor new decorating. Call June Wyrick at Aldridge & Southerlnd Realty, 756 3500 or 758-7744,

$61,500. Centrally located. This 3 bedroom, 2 bath brick ranch features family room with firplace, plus formal area. Attractive neighborhood, convenient to schoois and shopping. Call June Wyrick at Aldridge 8. Southerland Realty, 756 3500 or758 7744.

$9 3,900. NEW LISTING Exceptional location. 2story Williamsburg. First class decor. 4 bedroom, 2V2 baths. Less than 1 year ?ld, heat pump, deck, custom kitchen, built-in microwave. W 13. Call June Wyrick Aldridge & Southerland, 756 3500 or 758-7744

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

TIRES

NEW, USED, and RECAPS

Unbeatable Prices and Quality

QUAUTY TIRE SERVICE 752-7177

CYPRESSGARDENS

APARTMENTS

2308 E Tenth Street

Available immediately two bedroom flat with washer/dryer hook ups, heat pump, frost free refrigerator, dishwasher, disposal. Call days 758-6061, nights/weekends 758 5661.

Professionally managed by

Remco East, Inc_

DUPLEX SIDE 2006 Chestnut. Ap pliances. $125. Call 752-4639 days.

EASTBROOK

AND

VILLAGE GREEN APARTMENTS

327 one, two and three bedroom garden and townhouse apartments, featuring Cable TV, modern appli anees, central heat and air conditioning, clean laundry facilities, three swimming pools.

Office 204 Eastbrook Drive

752-5100

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

CRAFTED SERVICES

Quality furniture Reflnlshing and rapalra. Superior caning for all type chaira, larger aelectlon of cuatom picture framing, aurvey atakeaany length, all typea of pallete, hand-crafted rope ham-mocka, aelacted framed reproductlona.

Eastern Carolina Vocational Center

Induatrlal Park, Hwy, 13 758-4188    8A.M.-4:30P.M.

Greenville, N.C.

AUCTION

FARM EQUIPMENT

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 410 A.M.

LOCATION: 1301W. Sth St., Washington, N. C. Home of Country Boys Auction Co.

TRACTORS 165 Massey Ferguson,clean 135 Massey Ferguson, clean 135 Massey Ferguson, clean

TRUCKS 1966 QMC Pick up 1968GMCTwoton

BARNS

6 Roanoke Gas Fired 126 Rack Bulk Barns

EQUIPMENT

10 Long Disc

Massey Ferguson 4 Bottom 'Plow

2 Massey Ferguson 3 Bottom Plows

5 Hardee Sideboy 6 Bush Hog Mower 2 Row Tobacco Transplanter Powell 2 Row Topper (New) Massey    Ferguson    2 Row

Planter

Lllliston    2 Row    Rolling

Cultivator w/Fertilizer Attachment

Lllliston    2 Row    Rolling

Cultivator

Massey    Ferguson    2 Row

Cultivator

Johnson 3 Point Sprayer /Tobacco Trucks Solar 295 Amp Welder Grime Fighter Steam Cleaner

Sail Conducted by

COUNTRY BOYS .AUCTION AND REALTY CO. I. 0, Box l.IS Washington, North Carolina i^'hotH'. '):ib 007    State    License    No.    /bb

OOUC'CUfUCINS CrMnVllle, N. C. 7MI75

HOT RSSPONSIBLE FOR ACCIDENTS

RALPH RESPESS

121 Apartnfients For Rent

FOURTH ST WEST, 2 iwdroom duplex, wall to wall carpafing, waVier and dryer included. $230 per monlh. Call aHer 6. 756-0942. ,

i

GreemWay

Large 2 bedroom garden sptrl menfi, carpefed, dfh waahar, cable TV. laundry room, balconias, sp4Kiout grounds with abundant parking, economical utilities and pooL Adjacent to Greenville Country Club. 756 6869

GRIFTON MANOR APARTMENTS New I, 2 and 3 badroom apartments available. Wall to wall carpet, drapes, central heat and air condi tion. Washer and dryer connections _CALL    Til    2000

IN WINTERVILLE 3 bedroom apartment, appliances furnished.

no children, no pets Deposit and lease $195 a month. Call 756 5007 Available end of December

. KINGS ROW APARTMENTS

One and two bedroom garden apartments. Carpeted, range, re trigerator, dishwasher, disposal and cable TV Conveniently located to shopping center and schools. Located iusfoff lOth Street.

Call 752-3519

121 ApBrtnwit For Rent

RIVER- BLUFF has 2 bedroom townhouse apartments and 1 bedroom garden apartments Six months leases. For more informa lion call 758 4015. 10 a.m. to 6 p m Monday Friday, or come by the River Bluff office at 121 River Bluff Road

TOWNHOUSE FOR RENT 2 bedrooms, l*> baths, energy effl cieni Convenient location 757 0001 or nights 753 4015

TWO BEDROOM apartments tor rent Bryfon Hills $235.00: Stancil Drive $250 00, Verdant St Duplex $290.00: VUIage East $300 00 Yorktown Sguare. 3 bedrooms $400 00 All Require lease and secu rity deposit Duttus Realty, Inc., 756 0811 /

TWO BjTOROOM apartment. River Bluff ifoad $240 per month. No pets. Cbll Smith Insurance 8 Real ty, 752 2759

127

Houses For Rent

FOR RENT: Gorgeous 3 bedroom. 2'j bath, energy efficient home In country Wood stove, heat purnp. double insulation, etc. Only $375 per month 752 4809

FOUR BEORROM house 405 West Fourth Street $300 per month Call 757 0688

HOMES IN GRIFTON Call Msn Waters at Unify. Inc $200 $300 monthly 524 414? days, 524 *007 nights.

HOUSES AND APARTMENTS in town and country Call 746 3284 or 524 3180

TWO BEDROOM apartment, carpeted, appliances, central air and heat. 804, Apt 2. Willow St $250. 758 3311.

LOVE TREES?

E xperience the unique in aparkment living wilh nature outside your door

COURTNEY SQUARE APARTMENTS

Quality construction, fireplaces, heat pumps (heating costs 50% less than comparable units), dishwash er, washer/dryer hook ups, cable TV.wall to wall carpet, thermopane

er, washer/dryer hook ups, cable TV.wall to wall carpet, th windows, extra insulation.

Office open 9-5 Weekdays

9 5 Saturday    1    5    Sunday

Merry Lane Off Arlington Blvd.

756 5067

Looking for an apartment? You'll find a wide range of available units listed in the Classified columns ot to day's paper.

OAKMONT SQUARE APARTMENTS

Two bedroom townhouse apart ments. 1212 Redbanks Road. Dish washer, refrigerator, range, dis posal included. We also have Cable Tv Very convenient to Pitt Plaza and University. Also some furnished apartments available.

756-4151

WEDGEWOODARMS

NOW AVAILABLE

2 bedroom, I'j bath townhouses. Excellent location. Carrier heal pumps. Whirlpool kitchen, washer/dryer hookups, pool, tennis court.

756-0987

WILSON ACRES APARTMENTS

New 2 and 3 bedroom, washer dryer hook up, dishwasher, heat pump, tennis, pool, sauna, self cleaning Ovens, trosi free refrigerator. 5 blocks from ECU Call 752 0277 day or night. Equal Housing Opportuni 1L

WINTERVILLE, 2 bedrooms, living room, kitchen dining combination, stove and refrigerator, ceramic bath, central heat and air Brick duplex. $200 per month Call 746 6569, office or 746-3541, house

1 AND 2 BEDROOM apartments Available immediately 752 3311.

1 BEDROOM energy efficient apartment. 756 5389 or 7^ 0025. .

ONE BEDROOM, furnished apartments or mobile homes tor rent. Contact J T or Tommy Williams, 756 7815. _

ONE BEDROOM furnished apartment, adjoins ECU, com pletely modern with central heat and air. Stadium Apartments, 904 East 14th Street. $1M month. 752 5700 or 756 4671.    _

ONE BEDR(X>M apartment. Near campus. No pets: $215 a month. 756 3923. _

ONE BEDRCX)M, stove and refrig erafor, fireplace, deposit and lease. No pets. $160 month. 1310 Myrtle Avenue. Call, after 5 p.m., 756 0489 or 756 6382.    _

ONE BEDROOM apartment, carcieted, appliances, central air and heat. 802, Apt. 2, Willow St. $195.758 3311.

STRATFORD ARMS APARTMENTS

The Happy Place To Live CABLE TV

Office hours 10 a.m. fo 5 p.m. Monday through Friday

Call us 24 hours a day at

756-4800

TAR RIVER ESTATES

I, 2, and 3 bedrooms, washer-dryer hook ups, cable TV, pool, club house, playground. Near

Our Reputation Says It All "A Community Complex."

1401 Willow Street Office Corner Elm & Willow

752-4225 CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

I BEDROOM APARTMENT, located 2 block from campus. Fully carpeted, energy ettkcient, applicances and water furnished No Pets. Call Judy af 756 6336

WHEN SOMEONE IS ready to buy. they turn fo the Classified Ads. Place your Ad today for quick results

2 BEDROOM FURNISHED Apartment tor rent Call 756 0407 anytime.

2 BEDROOM DUPLEX near ECU Carpet, heat pump, range, retriger ator No Pets $261 756 7480

2 BEDROOM APARTMENT with sun deck $285 per month Pets allowed. 756 9175 before noorri*' Monday Friday.__

3 ROOM furnished apartment with private bath and enterance. Pre lerred married couple without children, at 413 W 4th Street.

1, 2 and 3 bedroom houses tor rent Call 752 3311

IN FARMVILLE 3 Bedroom, nice neighborhood. All major appli

anees Call 753 4214_

LIBRARY STREET 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, kitchen, living room with fireplace. Call 7526117 days, 756

380fatter5_

THREE BEDRCXJM houses tor rent Grimesland, $3(X) 00. Sylvan Drive, $325 00, Hardee Acres, $335 00, Country Squire, $325 00 Pittman Drive, $325 00. Paris Ave., $325 00, Green Farms, $325 00. Charles St, $375 00, Yorktown Square. 3 bedroorhs. $400.00. Lynndale, $600.00. All reciuire lease and security deposit Ouflus Realty Inc.. 756 0811

THREE BEDROOM, I'j bath $350 per month Located in Hardee Acres Phone 756 4364 after 6 Ask tor Donnie.

112 NORTH SUMMIT 3 bedroom house within walking distance ot the university, $310 month CENTURY 21 B Forbes Agency. 756 2121

2 BEDROOM HOUSE in the country. Deposit required $150 per month I 523 3562

3 BEDROOM house, 2 bath, central location and more. $425 month

756 4410 or 756 5961.__

3 BEDROOM ranch style home Car^^rt^ ^rage, quiet subdivision.

756 9006.

or nights, 753 4015,

3 BEDRCX)M brick house with large closed in carport on corner lot. Located about 200 teel from Kwick Wilson's Store just oft Pactolus Highway near fairground. Call anytime 752 2417,_

3 BEDROOM HOUSE FOR RENT, Appliances furnished 1117 Evans Street Call 758 2347 or 752 6068 3 BEDROOM, I'l bath, washer, dryer, and dishwasher, central heal and air, storage, great location No Pets $375 . 758 3l4f

129

Lots For Rent

TRAILER LOT for rent, 100x200 Located at Lot 33 Quail Ridqe Trai ler E states 752 0038 after 5:30

133 Mobile Homes For Rent

AVAILABLE 2 bedrooms near Ayden Reasonable rent. Deposit Total electric. Call after 6, 746 2445

CLASSIFIED ADS will go to work tor you to find cash buyers for your unused items. To place your ad, phone 752 6166

122 Business Rentals

1500 SQUARE FOOT commercial space tor rent on Greenville Boulevard. Call Echo Realty, Inc. at 756 6040; nights 524 5042

300 FOOT ot road frontage and building on East Greenville Boulevard. Ready for occupancy Call 756 6953

125 Condominiums For Rent

FOR RENT WITH OPTION fo buy. Large 3 bedroom Condomimium. enjoy the fireplace, the fenced in patio, the formal dining room. Call 1 847 8201 or 1 847 4471 after 7 pm. and ask tor Allen.

TWO BEDROOM flat duplex available in Shenandoah. $300 per month, 12 month lease. Young couple preferred. Call Clark Branch Realtors, 756 6336.

2 BEDROOM, 1'/2 bath, carpeted, major appliances furnishea No Pets, married couple pretered. 825 7321 after 5 P.m._

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

innings Contracting

speclilteing In

FIBERGLASS SHINGLES & VINYL SIDING .

Off SMson Specials Now Through February FREE ESTIMATES FINANCING AVAIUBLE

FOR RENT 12X50 Colonial Park $100 deposit and $160 rent Call 756 6230

FURNISHED 2 bedrooms and 3 bedrooms, $150 and >$185 month

Colonial Park. 758 0174 ____

FURNISHED 3 bedroom. $185 plus

deposit 756 0173._____

SPECIAL RATES tor students 2 bedroom with carpet, $115 No pets, no children. 758 4541 or 756 9491

12 X 65 TWO BEDR<X)M, 2 bath, new carpet. $150 per month 5 miles south ot Greenville Call 746 6575

12X65, central heat and air, 3 miles north ot city. Call 758 2347 or 752 6068

2 BEDROOM Mobile Home for rent Call 756 4687.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

You Get The Best Pricing At Tysons GE&RCATVV Gibson & GE Appliances Litton Microwaves & Accessories Statewide Electrical Service

Henry Tyson Electric & Appliance

756-2929 202 N. Railroad St. _ Winterville

Budget Minded

For

S3COO

A78X13

Whitewall

Quality: Guaranteed Recaps

G78X15 2 10, Res-Tread While H78X1s2 Ioi43 Reg. Tread White L78X1s2 ior44 Reg. Tread White

Mud 81 Snow Grips G78X14, G78X15, H78X15

L78X15: 2 lor*50 AllSizes

Radial Recaps 4 tor AR78X13 Whitewall *88 FR78X14 Whitewall *90 GR78Xt5 Whitewall *95

(Good Casing Required)

All Other Sizes On Sale, At Tremendous Savings

CAR WONT START...Because of COLD WEATHER!

Get A Tune-Up Now At I These Special Coupon | Prices.    I

4-Cyl. 6-Cyl. ^    

*29 *36* !

TRANSMISSION WONT CHANGE PROPERLY

During These Cold Mornings! Correct The Problem With Our Coupon Special

Now

Only

$3288

OIL CHANGE LUBE AND FILTER

Major Brand Multigrade Oil UpTo5Qts.

WOODfVEAm

ITIRE ^ CENTERI

West End Shopping Center Phone 756-9371 Open 8:00-6:00 Mon-Fri Sat. 8:00 to 1:00

729 Dickinson Avenue Phone 752-4417 Open 8:00-8:00 Mon-Fri Sat. 8:00 to 1:00

VB4*rtie Uaily Reflector. Greenville. ,N C.Thursday, Februar) 3,198323

133 Mobile Homes For Rent 135 office Space For Rent

2 BEDROOMS, partially turni$hd. itlon. no

142 Roommate Wanted

air. good local chlldffi, 758 4857

pots

OFFICES FOR LEASE tontact J T Of Tommy Williams. 7S6 7gi5

2 BEDROOMS turnished washor/dryor excelloni condition Private lot in edge ot city Couples only No pets. 756 0801 after 5p m _

2 BEDROOMS turnished with washer Call 758 6679

138

Rooms For Rent

2 BEDROOM TRAILER for rent Carpet, air, no pels I'j baths 756 4005

2 BEDROOMS, washer, carpet, air, completely furnished No pets Call 7560792

2 BEDROOMS, with carpet, approx imately I mile from Carolina East AAall $145 month Call 756 1900

2 BEDROOMS, nice trailer, nice' park, fully furnished, washer and i air, no pets 756 7381, leave name ! and number on answer phone._;

FURNISHED PRIVATE ROOM kitchen priveleges washer ana dryer vacuum cleaner private balh. cable TV and stereo fireplace, telephone except for long distance patio and grill, swimming pool and club house Complete privacy No utilities Best apart ments In Greenville Male or female $150 per month Prefer graduates or prolessional 756 5564 NEAR COLLEGE Kitchen pnvi

leges 756 2025 after Sp m___

SEMI PRIVATE ROOM tor rent $75 month Call 758 2818

male ROOAAMATE needed imme , dialely Mostly furnished apart . rnenf at Eastbrook $125 a month I PJjj* 'z yllljties 752 5828 or 355 2626 MATURE female Roommate be . t^n age 70 and 30 Wanted to I Share nice lurmshed apartment

r'^7509    **' 7

, rSq^'aTE ' WANTED immedi I ately 2 bedroom apartment Share bath 1. miles from ECU Female $120 per month . utilities Si?0 dep^it 752 3076 atter 4p m

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

140

WANTED

135 Office Space For Renf

FOR RENT Approximately 800 square leet $250 per month loth Street, Colonial Height Shopping Center, 758 4257    ^

AAODERN, attractive office space for lease Approximately 1500 square teef Located 2007 Evans Street beside AAoseley Brothers Call 756 3374

NEAR DOWNTOWN Single office $140 month including utilities Also suites and conference room avalla ble. Evenings, 752 5048

OFFICE FOR LEASE 1203 West I4th Street, 758 3743 or 355 6458 Available Immediately

SINGLE OFFICES or suites, with utilities and janitorial Chapin Little building. 3106 S Memorial Drive Call 756 7799

TWO ROOM or tour room office suite, Highway 764 Business. Eco nomical Private parking Some storage available Call Connally Branch af Clark Branch Realtors. 756 6336

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

ROOFING

STORM WINDOWS DOORS& AWNINGS

RemodelingRoom Additions

C.L. Lupton. Co.

142 Roommate Wanted

FEMALE R(X)4IMATE needed immediately to share nice 7 bedroom apartment Reasonable For more information call 758 1547 after 1 p.m_ ___

FEAAALE ROOAAAAATE, I 3 lirTf

and utilities 752 5260___________

MALE ROOAAMATE wanted to share furnished trailer $90 per month. 1A7 utilities Call 758 9684 before 3 pm  _____

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

SPECIAL Executive Desks

Reg. Price S259.00

60 * 30' beautiful walnut finish Ideal (or home or office Special Price

s^jgoo

TAFF OFFICE EQUIPMENT

569 S Evans St

757-2175

FOR SALE TO BE MOVED RAILROAD DEPOT

Located in Winterville. Approximately 1500 square feet.

Ideal for Antique or Craft Shop, Flea Market. Warehouse or you name It.

For Price Quotations Call

J.W. LANDEN&SONS, INC.

7-u;s

House Moving Contractors Greenville

756-4031

SEE ME ON SUNDAY BUY ME ON MONDAY

Largest Inventory Sale Ever!! See Details In Sundays Paper

YOU CAN AFFORD A FORD

AT HASTINGS FORD

NEW83FOD CAR OR TRUCK

*^95 DOWN

With Approved Credit

AND

O APR FINANCING

Save On Down Payment

Save On Finance Charges

Save On Gas Expense

^157^^ Per Month

'83 Escort L 2 Door

No. 1 Nameplate in the World

47

Est.

Highway

33

Est.

MPG

Stock no. 1062. 1.1 Utrs lual savat. 4 spaad. IronI rhaal drtva. loM down raar saat Powar tlaaflng and braka, apacial two Iona paint with tap# tirlpat. Carolina VIP package. Sala prlca HTtS.OO |Hut la*, down paymant 12 with approvad cradlf, 11.*% APR, 44 monthly paymanta.

83 Ranger - S

Compact Pick Up

39 Si... 27

Est.

MPG

Slock no 6046 2.Q lltra, lOt" whaal baaa wida bo< body Sal# prlca $62*5 00 plus tai. down paymant $2*5 with approvad cradlt. 11.*% APR. 41 monthly paymant*

NOTICE Now Taking Orders At Firm Prices On1983Thunderbirds

(Be One Of The First!)

ASTING

Dealer No. 5720

Tenth Street & 264 By-Pass 758-0114 Greenville N C 27834

I





HP

24- The Daily Renector, Greenville, N C -Thursday, February 3,1963

District Court Report

Judge W    Lee    Lumpkin

disposed of the following cases during the January 10-13 term of District Court in Pitt County.

Willard l>ee .Acklin. Bethel a.s.saull with deadly weapon, dismiitsed Mark Thoma.s Braneh, Wmterville re< kle>s driving. Ml days ]afl saspended on payment of IHIO and cost attend alcohol workshop Willie KIberl Briley Jr Wilmington speeding, dismissed

Wilcy Ray Chancey. Broad Street a.ssault with deadly weapon dismis.sed \ ickie R Hardee Highland Trailer Iark. worthless check M2 countsi. ;IU days jail suspended on payment of cost and check, probation 1 year false registration, registrathin violation. * day s jail suspended on payment of cost remit

Karen Uwis Keel Chocowmity ex leeding safe speed, cost Roger Dean I-assiter. Henderson, possession of paraphelia. dismissed .Sook Swan Leung. Carriage House .\pl impniper equipment, cost Randy Mills. Route 4. Greenville false report to police, di.smis.ied Donald Kugene Moore Cheroki'e Drive damage personal properly, dismis.sed. a.ssaull with deadly weapon. 90 days jail suspended on payment of 1221 12 restitution, cost Christopher Todd Patton KTirabelh .Stn-et, inspection violation dismissed William lee Perkins. Conley Street nonsupport t> months jail suspended on payment of cost. 40 month support Clifton Reddick Pourteenlh Street, trespa.ss cost remit Debra Jean Pierce. Route -I Green ville driving under influence. 6 months jail suspended on payment of tl5U and cost, surrender operators license Charles Monroe Royster. Oxford possession of paraphanalia. dismissed James Edward Sheppard. Green ville. reckless driving, 10 days suspend ed, pay t25 and cost Billv Rav Smith, Route I Greenville

s leld right of way. dismissed Krm-st M Hams. Tuckahoe Drive make false statement. 30 days jail

suspended on payment of S2S and ^ Emerson Earl Harrison,

improper equipment, prayer for judg mcnt continued u

i upon payment of cost Connie Mae .Suggs, (turn Road larceny, no probable cause found James Allen Wilson. Albemarle Avenue trespass. 3 days jail Richard Cheatham Vound. Hender son. possession of paraphanalia dismissed James Lloyd Riggs. Wilson Acres, in toxicated and disruptive dismissed Soma Dickerson. Ellsworth Drive, assault, prayer for judgment continued upon payment of cost, remit lamn Vines, Fountain, dnving while license revoked. 6 months jail Billy Wayne AJphin. Winterville, ex ceeding safe speed, cost Ralph Neal Beaton Jr , Cioldsboro. inspection violation. 10 days jail suspend ed on payment of cost Jill Christine Brown, Cotanche .Street, registration violation, dismiss ed

Alice Faye Chance. Azelea Gardens, shoplifting. 90 days jail suspended on payment of S50 and cost, probation t year

Vernon Lee Clark, Lakeview Ter race, shoplifting. 6 months jail suspended on payment of *25 and cost, probation 2 years Samuel Camell Davis. Pantego. fail

Ridge Place, speeding, cost Bryan Manning Horne, Beulavrile. no operators license, dismissed Verna l-ee Keel, Robersonville. shoplifting. 90 days jail suspended on pay ment of *50 and cost, probation 1 year

Patricia H Lassiter shoplifting. 6 months jail saspended on payment of *25 and cost, probation 2 years Hilton Karl Miller. Ahoskie, 10% lilood alrohol content. 90 days jail suspended on payment of *150 and cost, surrender operators license, attend alcobol workshop James Wayne Mills. Route , Green ville, as-saull. dismissed disorderly con duct. iKi probable cause by magistrate Timothy Earl (dham. Ayden, ex ceedmg sale speed, cost Reginald Peterson. Cherry Street shoplifting. 90 days jail Rus.sell Pettaway, Bethel driving under influence. B months jail suspend ed on payment of *150 and cost, sur render operators license, attend alcohol work.shop Steven H Scott Raleigh, speeding, cost

Raymond Thompson. Charlolle, non support dismissed Donald Ray Tyndall. Wilson, posses Sion of sawed' off shotgun. 6 months jail saspended on payment of *50 and cost John Wilkins. Grillen Street, trespass. II) days jail suspended on pay-nienl of cost Merry Daniel Wmterville. worthless check. 10 days jail saspended on pay meiil of cost and check James A Sutton. Woodside Road, worthless check, 10 days jail suspended on payment of cost and check Donna Lynn Gay. Williamston, ex ceeding .55 in 55 moh zone, pay cost William Baxter Waddell 111, Rober-sonville exceeding sale speed, cost Thomas Temple Allan Jr., Washington driving under influence. dismi.s.sed Roy Thomas Murphy. Maury, forgery and uttering, dismissed Donald Edmundson Jr, Evans Street, damage personal property, dismissed Robert J Gouras. Greene Street, nonsupport. dismissed Daniel Allen Hardee. Wilmington, no operators license lor motocycle, cost William Earl Hardison. Bethel, driving under influence, speeding. 6 months jail suspended on payment of *150 and cost attend alcohol workshop, surrender operators license Freddy Earl Highsmith. Bethel, .10% blood alcohol content. 6 numths jail suspended on payment of *200 and cost, probation 2 years, 2 weekends in jail William Eric Hopkins, no address, stop light violation, cost.

Jimmy Roy Hulon. Route 4. Greenville. firelighting deer. 6 months jail suspended on payment of *500 and cost Wayne Conley Manell, Winterville, speeding, not guilty Andrea Michille Page. White Dorm, possession of marijuana and cocaine, dismissed.

Stephen Keith McCall. Hollybrook Estates, safe movement violation, cost.

Richard Cornell Parker. Fourteenth Street, sale movement violation, dismissed

Edmund Jon Paizt, Chocowmity 10% Wood alcohol workshop 6 months jail suspended on payment of *150 and cost, attend alcohw workshop, surrender operators license ailton Earl Pratt Bethel assault on female dismissed Dalton Ray Price. Paris Avenue, in spectton violation, cost-remitted Jessie 1^ Ruffin. Blands Trailer Park, driving under influence no operators license. 6 months jail suspended on payment of *150 and cost, attend alcohol workshop Stephen Linwood ScoU. PoUocksville. 10% blood alcohol conleot. months jail suspended on payment ol *2UU and cost, surrender operators license, at tend alcohol workshop David Earl Simpkins. Washington, worthless check 13 counts i.: days jail suspended on payment of cost and checks

John Michael Spivey. Kinston. lu% blood,alcohol content, driving wrong way on one way street. 6 months jail suspended on payment of *1.50 and cost, attend alcohol workshop, surrender operators license Kuby Stalon. Evaas Street irespas.s. not guilty Orville Floyd Sweet. Virginia, no operators license, dismissed, driving under the influence, 6 months jail saspended on payment ol *250 and cost. surrender operators license William .Alexander Wallace, Grilton possession o( marijuana, robbery with dangeroas weapon, dismissed Henry Tripp. Hollybrook Estates false report. 30 days jail saspended on payment ol *100 and cost Jimmy Ray Vines, Box 109. Green ville. 10% blood alcohol content. 6 mon Ihs jail suspended on payment of *250 and cost, .surrender operators licease 2 weekends in jail Hue Wilbert Walston. Route 5. Green ville. expired registration, cost George Henry Ward, fool Acres, im proper equipment, dismissed Konnie Earl Waters. Route 4. Green ville, allow no operators license. 6 months jail suspended on payment of cost Ronnie Earl Waters. Homestead Trailer Park, contributing to deliquen cy of minor, dismissed James Wells.- Play Meadows, firelight deer, 6 months jail suspended on payment of *500 and cost, probaiion 6 months

Whitley Wllkerson. Wilson, assault on female, prayer lor judgment continued upon payment of cost Larry Darnell Wilkins, Wmterville, driving under influence-2nd offense, driving while license premanently revoked. 12 l( months jail Debra Ramona Woolard. Kiverbluff Apt.    10% blood alcohol content,

speeding. 6 months jail suspended on payment ol *150 and cost, surrender operators license, attend alcohol workshop Doris Davenport Wynne. Grimesland. stop light violation, dismissed

possession ot marijuana. *50 and cost Milton Boots Carmon. Ayden tre^iass. 10 days jail; intoxicated and disruptive dismissed WillUm Henry Carraway Ayden. ex ceeding safe gieed dismissed Donnie Deconn Chapman, Gnfton, exceeding safe igieed. dismissed Randy Darrell Cummuigs Winter ville, driving under influence. months Jail suspended on payment of *150 and cost, surrender operators license, at

tend alcohol workshw Dawson Dail Jr Gnfton. obtain pro-

Sandra Lynn York. Wedgewood Arms, exceeding safe speed, cost

William Jefferson Alphin. Ayden. damage com operated machine. 6 months jail suspended on payment of cost, *10 restitution Zachary Vernon Apperson, LaGrange, speeding, dismissed James Ray Baker. Route 9. Greenville. exceeding safe speed. *10 and cost

Margaret Jennings Baleme, Route 5, Greenville, no operators license, prayer for judgment continued upon payment of cost remitted James Earl Barrett. Azalea Gardens, trespass, 30 days jail suspended on pay ment of *25 and cost: larceny by employee, dismissed Kimberly Rose Bown. Ayden. exceeding sale speed, cost Arleen Edwards Braxton. Stokes, safe movement viofalion. dismissed Johnny Braxton. Ayden. assault on female. 60 days jail suspended on payment of cost.

Jennie Louise Carmon. Ayden.

perty by means of worthless check 6 months jail suspended on payment of cost, remitted, probation 3 years Dava Lynn Davis, Jacksonville, exceeding safe speed, prayer lor judg men! contUiued upon payment of cost Gary Gardner, Ayden, trespass. 30 ^ days jail suspended on payment of *S and i-osi

Jeff Gams. Ayden. assault with deadly weapon, dismissed Roland Goff. Grifton, communicating threats. 6 months jail suspended on payment of cost, probation 3 years George Richard Griner, Azalea Garden, stop sign violalion. cost, speeding, no linancial responsibility, *10 and cost Harvey 1-ee Harris Jr. Grifton, povsession of marijuana. *50 and cost Tony J Hines. Wmterville. no operators license, dismis.sed Tracey Hines. Ayden, trespass, dismissed Elizabeth C Jones. .Shady Knoll, breaking & entering, dismissed Robert Joseph Lucas Jr . Uingmeadow Road, operate left of center, : days jail suspended on pay mini of *50 and cost, surrender operators license Roger Izx- Mann. Ayden, driving under influence. 6 months jail suspended on payment of *200 and cost, proba I ion 2 vears, 3 w eekends in jail Daryle Caryle Mills. Deep Run. spr-eding. dismissed (ieorge Harvey .Moore, Ayden, non support 6 months jail suspended on payment ol cost-remitted. *30 week support

.Malcolm .Moore, Ayden, larceny by cmplovee, dismissed Willie Moore Jr, Ayden, driving under influence 2nd offense. 6 months jail suspended on payment of *200 and cost surrender operators license, attend alcohol workshop Teddy Murphy, larceny. 12 months jail saspended on payment of *100 and cost. *75 restitution, possession of stolen goods, dismissed Joseph Michael Noonan. Harvey Drive, exceeding sale speed, prayer for judgment continued upon payment of cost

William Ekller Normann.'Sanford, exceeding sale speed, cost Patricia Overstreet. Walstonburg. trespass, not guilty Norman Ray Pugh. Route 1, Green ville. trespass, 30 days jail suspended on payment of *25 and cost, larceny by employee, dismissed Andy Maurice Sasser, Ayden. speeding, no operators license, 10 days jail suspended on payment of *10 and cost

Earl Shackleford, Aydeo. intoxicated and disruptive, 10 days jail suspended on payment of cost Dennis Renard Spencer. Washington, I) C , driving under influence. 6 months jail suspencM on payment of *200 and cost

John Russell Terrell. Kinston, exceeding safe speed, cost Beatrice Tyson. Winterville. worthless check, io days jail suspended on pavmenl ol cost and check Susie Van Wagener, Ayden. assault, dismissed Charlie Lindell Williams, Virginia, fail stop at scene of accident. 6 months jail saspended on payment ol *100 and cost, surrender operators license Tracy Jones. Ayden, trespass, assault, dismissed Ricky Huggias. Ayden, worthless check, di.smissed-1

I

FLOODED CHARLOTTE STREET - Torrential rain wreaked havoc with rush-hour traffic in Charlotte Wednesday morning. Low-lying streets leading into Charlotte were flooded by more than an inch of rain. Police said they had reports of

motorists stranded in n to four feet of water. Pictured are vehicles in deq) water on Charlottes South Boulevard. (AP Lasen^ioto)

Police Report Four Collisions

An estimated $5,300 damage resulted from four traffic collisions investigated by Greenville police Wednesday.

Heaviest damage resulted from an 11:45 a.m. wreck at the intersection of Fifth and 10th streets involving cars driven by Mary Grace Pate of 113 Riverbluff Drive and Emily Moye Hadley of 408 W. Fifth St.

Damage was estimated at. $1,500 to the Pate car and $800 to the Hadley vehicle.

Cars driven by Bobbie

Horton Brown of Route 2, Greenville, and Belva Hardee Stocks of Route 1, Winterville, collided about 11:22 a.m. at the intersection of Memorial Drive and Arlington Boulevard, causing an estimated $600 damage to the Brown car and $800 damage to the Stocks auto.

A 5:13 p.m. mishap on 10th Street, 125 feet east of the Cotanche Street intersection, involved cars driven by Boi Lap Thai of 113 W. 9th St. and Susan Baskett Seymour of Route L Winterville.

Police stimated damage at $300 to the Thai car and $800 to the Seymour car.

MEETING

A district meeting of Alpha Delta Kappa will be held Saturday at the New Bern Country Club. The organizations Alpha lota Chapter will hold its next meeting March 15 at the Three Steers Restaurant in Greenville.

Carl Koonce, Grifton. assault on female, dismissed Wilbert Chamberlain, Grifton. break into coin operated machine, damage personal property, dismissed

Cash In On The Value Of Your Home With A Second Mortgage

First FederaVs Equity Loan

^ FIRST FEDERAL ^ ^ SAVINGS -

F<r$i    lo*    AiwciMtori    o'    Cowmt

Giccnvilic Rinnvlilc Giliion. Avdcn

r

401 West 10th SI,. Greenville - 758-2513

<____

Furniture, Inc. j

LOWEST PRICE EVER..100% NYLON CARPET IN LOOP PILE- HIGH AND LOW TEXTURE..

$488

SQUARE

YARD

Special Purchase 12 Foot Widths...Choice Of Two Colors.. .Over 300 Yards To Sell At This Low, Low Price.

COMPARE WITH CARPETS SELLING UP TO *11.00 SQUAREYARD... ANTRON III PLUSH PILE CARPETS BY EVANS & BLACK.

$^95

7

SQUARE YARD .

Choice Of 3 Colors.. .French Opal...Jadestone And Rust...DuPont Teflon Treated For Soil Resistance.

SAVE UP TO 50% ON SHORT ROLLS, ROLL

BALANCES AND REMNANTS...ONE OF A KIND

SIZE

COLOR

DESCRIPTION

REG.

PRICE

SALE

PRICE

12Ft.x7Ft.91n.

Beige

100% Nylon Sculptured

$110.00

$6500 ^

12Ft.xllFt.6In.

Golden Brown

100% Nylon Brick Pattern

$145.00

$11500

12Ft.x3Ft.

Light Beige

100% Antron Velvet

$40.00

$2000

12Ft.x8Ft.9In.

Light Tan

100% Nylon Sculptured

$120.00

$8500,

12Ft.x6 Ft.

Rust

100% Nylon Sculptured

$120.00

$6000

12Ft.xlOFt.

Light Blue

100% Anso Nylon Sculptured

$180.00

?120

12Ft.xl3Ft.6ln.

Tan & Brown

100% Nylon Sculptured

$170.00

$12500

12Ft.x5Ft. 10 In.

Rose

100% Nylon Velvet

$70.00

$4500

4Ft.x3Ft. 6 In.

Green Tweed

Herculon Commercial

$11.00

$500

12Ft.x5Ft.

Brown

Anso IV Nylon Velvet

$75.00

$4500

6Ft.x6 Ft. 6 In.

Light Brown

100% Nylon Sculptured

$40.00

$2000

12Ft.xl2Ft.

Golden Tan

100% Nylon Velvet

$150.00

$8000

12Ft.x4 Ft.

Rust

100% Nylon Velvet

$40.00

$2000

12Ft.x2Ft.81n.

Green

100% Enka Nylon Sculptured

$40.00

$1800

12Ft.xl2Ft.91n.

Blue

100% Nylon Sculptured

$160.00

$ggoo

12Ft.xllFt.4In.

Brown

100% Enka Nylon Sculptured

$180.00

$12500

4Ft.91n.x3Ft.61n.

Green

100% Nylon Sculptured

$24.00

12

12Ft.xl2Ft.

Green Tweed

100% Herculon Commercial

$220.00

'

L


Title
Daily Reflector, February 3, 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
February 03, 1983
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
NC Microfilms
Subject(s)
Spatial
Location of Original
Joyner NC Microforms
Rights
This item has been made available for use in research, teaching, and private study. Researchers are responsible for using these materials in accordance with Title 17 of the United States Code and any other applicable statutes. If you are the creator or copyright holder of this item and would like it removed, please contact us at als_digitalcollections@ecu.edu.
http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC-EDU/1.0/
Permalink
https://digital.lib.ecu.edu/95287
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