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Couple Marries In Double Ring Ceremony
Tamela Delores Dale and PhUlip Wayne Worthington were united in marriage Sunday at three oclock in the Winterville Christian Church. The double ring ceremony was performed by the Rev. Tom Everton.
The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George R. Dale of Greenville. The parents of the bridegroom are Mr. and Mrs. Graham Carl Worthington Sr. of Winterville.
Escorted by her father and given in marriage by her parents, the bride wore a formal gown of ivory organza over peau de soie designed with a sweetheart neckline outlined in floral silk Venise lace accented with pearls. Floral silk Venise lace encircled the empire bodice. The long bishop sleeves were enhanced with organza cuffs overlaid in beaded lace. The modified A-line skirt and attached chapel length train were accentuated with an edging of scalloped silk Venise lace. She wore a bridal hat overlaid in ivory chiffon with pencil edging, satin ribbon and beaded silk Venise lace encircled the crown. A bow of illusion with streamers was centered at back. The bride carried a cascade of original design fashioned of silk roses, calla lilies, azaleas and wisteria in shades of pink and mauve tied with ivory ribbons.
Becky White of Winterville was honor attendant and wore a formal gown of rose lustreglo designed with a ,criss-crossed draped bodice. The sleeveless gown was complemented with a cowl back and a flared skirt. She carried a silk bouquet of cranberry hydrangeas interspersed with mauve sweetheart roses and babys breath tied with ivory ribbons.
Bridesmaids were Rhonda Dale of Greenville, sister of the bride, Teresa Ann Mozingo of Roanoke Rapids, cousin of the bride, and Cindy Brown of Greenville. They wore gowns styled identical to the honor attendant in a contrasting shade of cranberry. Their flowers were also identical and tied with ivory and cranberry ribbons.
Kimberly Dawn Worthington, daughter of the 1 bridegroom, and Cheryl Buck of Winterville were flower girls. They each wore a formal gown of rose lustreglo designed with a round neckline and short puff sleeves. Ivory lace with rose ribbon encircled the empire bodice. Matching lace edged the flared skirt. They each carried a wicker basket with ivory and cranberry ribbons and dropped flower petals.
The father of the bridegroom was best man and ushers included the bridegrooms brothers. Max Terrell and Carl Worthington Jr., and Virgil ONeal, all of Winterville.
The mother of the bride wore a turquoise formal knit gown with attached chiffon caplet. The mother of the bridegroom selected a formal pink lustreglo gown with a cowl drape caplet. Both wore corsages of mauve sweetheart roses.
A program of wedding music was presented by Susan Lambert. She sang Evergreen and The Wedding Prayer.
The wedding was directed
MRS. PHILLIP WAYNE WORTHINGTON
by Linda Mozingo of Roanoke Rapids, aunt of the bride. Linda Jackson of Ocracoke presided at the register.
After a ceremony a reception was given in the fellowship hall by the parents of the bride, Linda Mozingo and Bettie Dale, aunts of the bride.
The three-tiered wedding cake was served by Brenda Buck and punch was poured by Glenda Carawan.
Angela Dale of Fayetteville, cousin of the bride, and Rhonda Dale, sister of the bride, gave out rice bags and scrolls.
A rehearsal party was given by the parents of the bridegroom Saturday evening in the church fellowship hall for members of the wedding party and relatives.
The bridegroom is a graduate of D.H. Conley High School and is employed with the Greenville Police Department The bride attended schools in Charlotte
Bridal Policy
A black and white glossy five by seven photograph is requested for engagement announcements. For publication in a Sunday edition, the information must be submitted by 12 noon on the preceding Wednesday. Engagement pictures must be released at least three weeks prior to the wedding date. After three weeks, only an announcement will be printed.
Wedding write-ups wiil be printed through the first week with a five by seven picture. During the second week with a wallet size picture and write-up giving less description and after the second week, just as an announcement. Wedding forms and pictures should be returned to The Daily Reflector one week prior to the date of the wedding. All information should be typed or written neatly.
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Elon College, Elon College, N.C.
A RESIDENTIAL-CONMUTER CAMP FOR GIFTED AND TALENTED STUDENTS IN GRADES 5-12
~^^Si6gWAM ^
"Always changing to attract gifted and talented students nationally!"
EkmiDrwDpmeniol Education
SUMMER 1983
A unique academic residency and commuter camp divided into 3 one-week sessions for students in grades five (5) through twelve (12). Each week is structured to accommodate two grade levels according to their current grade placement in the fall, 1983, as follows .
SESSION ONE: Grades 5-6. July 10-15/SESSION TWO: Grades 7-8. July 17-22 SESSION THREE: Grades 9-12, July 24-29
STUDENTS: SELECT ONE MAJOR MORNING AREA OF CONCENTRATION FROM THE FOLLOWING;
F Exploration In Dance
G. General Plant Physiology
H. Human Anatomy-Physiology 1 Instrumental Music: Brass
J. Instrumental Music: Woodwind
A A Study Of Films
B. Computer Mathematics
C. Computers; Problem Solving
D. Computer Fundamentals
E. Chemistry-Mathematics
A
STUDENTS ALSO SELECT ONE AFTERNOON MAJOR EXPLORATORY AREA OF CONCENTRATION FROM THE FOLLOWING:
1. Aerodynamic Structur* 2 Creative Dtamallcs ,1 Visual Irrrage of Film 4 . Paper Creations 5.Calligraphy
K. Radio Broadcasting L. Space Exploration M. Language Exploration:
1. Conversational French
2. Conversational Russian 3 Conversational Spanish
TOTAL TUmON PLEASE SEND ME A BROCHURE AND APPUCATION FORM Call or write George R Lentz, Sr,
PER WEEK Director, Office of Continuing Education, Elon College, Campus Box 21M, Elon College, North Carolina
$185 00Redencv 27244 (919|SM-24.t7
$15000Commuter NAME_ADDRESS_PHONE! )_
ELONS DEVELOPMENTAL - GIFTED EDUCATION PROGRAM
The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C -Monday, March 7 1!#83~3
Pats
Pointers
By Pat Trexler
Multiple strands of a skinny yam knit up as quickly as knitting worsted-weight, but with much less bulk. The miracle-thin yarn also allows you to create your own mix of tweeds and slids easily and economically. This striking V-neck pujlover was created from this'yaraiw a
^s T^ea^eight for ind^ winter wear, too.
The easy-to-follow, unabbreviated directions are written for mens, womens and childrens sizes, so any and all family members can have one of these classic sweaters, which can be worked in 4-ply
$12; for Kit KKM-306 in adult sizes 32 to 38, send $18; or for Kit KKL-306, in adult sizes 40 to 46, send $24. Please specify your choice of gray tones, beige/rown tones, coral/russet tones or blue tones.
knitting worsted-weight yarn if you prefer.
To obtain directions for making the Classic V-Neck Pullover in a full range of sizes, send your request for Leaflet No. KL-306 with $1 and a long, stamped, self-addressed envelope to: Pat Trexler ("The Daily Reflector), P.O. Box 810, North Myrtle Beach, S.C. 29582.
Of you may order a kit containing instructions and a blended color combination of miracle-thin yarns by sending a check or money order to Pat Trexler at the same address. For Kit KKS-306 in childrens sizes 4 to 14, send
My staff and I have had an exciting time experimenting with the Flere Troder concept for knitting and crochet. This is a new system from Scandinavia that combines thin strands of yam into the thickness and colors desired for any weight. Using, these yarns, Margaret Brainard designed the knitted sweater featured today and 1 am working on a crochet vest that you will be seeing in my column in a couple of weeks.
This yarn is packaged on cones, with each cone consisting of a single strand of one color. Margaret combined four grays for the body of the sweater and then two double strands of the lighter grays for the neck trim and four strands of the darkest
gray for the bands - a neat trick that would be difficult to duplicate with other yams.
The bonus is the feel of this yarn. While it is a washable synthetic, it feels just as soft as wool and the resulting garment is much lighter in weight than it would be worked in single strands of worsted-weight yam.
Leftovers can be combined with other colors of this or other yams for completely new heathery colors. Even with different dye lot numbers, strands of the same color blend together so that the differences are indistinguishable.
Then, if you want to make an item with a different weight, just change the number of strands you use together. Three strands, for example, create a sports-weight yarn, while two will give you a fingering weight. Obviously, the more strands you use, the bulkier the resulting yam will be.
Other uses of your leftovers would be for needlepoint, embroidery. Russian punch work - even stitchery on rug canvas with many strands in your needle.
If you would like ^oclip and save this column for future reference, here are some quidelines for the number of strands to use with various sizes of canvas. On 5-mesh rug canvas, use l to 12 strands; on 7-mesh plastic use 6 strands; on 10-mesh, 3 to 4 strands will do: on 12-mesh, try 3 strands: on 14 to 16 mesh. 2 strands will usually suffice,
Needlecrafters everywhere will soon join me in thanking the Scandinavians for developing this concept'
Eastern
Electrolysis
133 OAKMONT DRIVE, SUITE I PHONE 75W(W,GREENVILLE.NC PERMANENT HAIR R ;MOVAl CERTIFIED ELECTRG'.OGIST
and is a graduate of D.H. Conley Hi^ School and attended Pitt Community College. She is director of Kinder Care Learning Center.
A bridesmaids luncheon was given by Cindy Brown Saturday and the bride remembered her attendants with gifts. A dinner party was given by Alva and Lois Worthington.
After a trip to unannounced points the couple will live in Winterville.
Duplicate
Winners
Mrs. Barry Powers and Gary Bryant were first place winners in the North-South duplicate bridge game played at Planters Bank. Their percentage was .622.
Others winning were Sara Bradbury and Dr. Charles Duffy, second; Mildred Harker and Dorothy Ritchy, third,
East-West: Mrs. William McConnell and Dave Proctor, first with .604 percent; Mrs. Effie Williams and Mrs. William Parvin, second; Chris Langley and Ed Yauck, third.
Wednesday afternoon North-Soith winners included: Mrs. Ray Gunderson and Mrs. Dot McKemie, first with .574 percent; Mrs. J.S. Rhodes Jr. and Mrs. Roger Critcher, second; Mrs. Barry Powers and Lee Hastings, third.
East-West: Mrs. C.I. McClelland and Emma B. Warren, first with .589 percent; Mrs. Bertha Jones and George Martin, second; Mrs. E.J. Poindexter and Mrs. Robert Barnhill, third, Wednesday morning winners included Mrs. C.F. Galloway and Mrs. C.D. Elks first with .650 percent; Mrs. Bertha Jones and Mrs. Blanche Kittrell, second; Mrs. Stuart Page and Mrs. Sidney Skinner, third.
A unit tournament will be held Wednesday afternoon.
DIAL-A-PIZZA
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ASSISTANT MANAGERS & PIZZA DELIVERY RUNNERS
Must be willing to work nights & weekends
Salary Plus Commission
TUES. & WED. 10A.M.-3 P.M.
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Accepting Applications for Children 2 12-4 Make An Investment In Your Child's Future
355-6268
'Association Montessori Internationale
NOTICE OF NONDISCRIMINATORY POLICY AS TO STUDENTS
The Greenville Montessori Sthool. 21 Bayu.ood Dr Winter ville, N.C, , admits students of any race,' color, national and ethnic origin to all the rights, privileges, programs, and activities generally accorded or made available to students at the school It does not discriminate on the hasis of race, color national and ethnic origin in administration of its educational policies, admu sions policies, scholarship and loan programs, and athletic andj ^ther school-admiriistered programs
V-NECK SWEATER...is knitted with miracle-thin yarn, resulting in a lightweight sweater perfect for spring and fall.
Wedding
Invitation
Mr. and Mrs. Dexell Herring of Kinston request the honor of your presence at the marriage of their daughter, Sandra Jane, to Kenneth Augustus Minch, on March 12 at 4 p.m. at the Tanglewood Church of God in Kinston. No invitations were mailed in town.
HAVE A PROBLEM? NEED HELP?
Come By The Real Crisis Center: 312 E. 10th St.; or Call 758-HELP, For Free Confidential Counseling in Areas Such As:
Job
Suicide Family Rape School
Depression Sexuality
Domestic Violence
Loneliness
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General Information
Licensed And Accredited By The State of North Carolina
leans
Due to the tremendous demand, we have decided to continue our sale for another week.
Sale Daya: Now thru Monday March 14 Rain or Shina. . Open FrI. til 8
Womens Sizes to 38 Mens Sizes to 50
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Next to McDonalds On 264 ByPass, Greenville Phone 756-0857
THE DAILY REFLECTOR"MONDAY AFTERNOON, MARCH 7, 1983
Lady Terrapins
Again Champs
FAYEHEVILLE (AP) -Maryland womens basketball coach Chris Weller thinks her seventh-ranked Terrapins might have won the Atlantic Coast Conference womens title much easier had she kept quiet.
Maryland won its fifth ACC title with an 84-81 victory over No. 16 North Carolina State. The triumph gives Maryland an automatic bid to the NCAA tournament while the Wolfpack, ACC regular season champion, is a top contender for an at-large bid in to the 32-team NCAA tournament.
The Terrapins ran into difficulties in the last two minutes. One was N.C. States Linda Page and the other was its own inability to complete an inbounds play.
Sometimes, if Id just keep my mouth shut and let the players play, I think wed be better off, Weller said. We were using an inbounds play we hadnt used before. I think we tried to do too much."
Page scored six of her 32 points in a 38-second span, drawing the Wolfpack to within 82-81 with 13 seconds left. Marylands only point in that stretch was a free throw by guard Marcia Richardson.
After each Page basket.
Sampson Reigns As Top Player
By TOM FOREMAN Jr.
AP Sports Writer
Virginias Ralph Sampson capped his career at Charlottesville in perfect fashion -hitting the game-winning shot against Maryland and earning The Associated Press player of the year honor in the Atlantic Coast Conference.
In a race as close as his final game at University Hall, the 7-foot-4 Sampson edged out North Carolina sophomore Michael Jordan for the award in balloting by a panel of sportswriters and broadcasters.
Both Sampson and Jordan received four first-place votes, but Sampson outpolled Jordan 76 to 75 for the honor.
Winning Player of the Year honors are as great this time as the first, Sampson said following Sundays 83-81 victory over Maryland. The year will be complete with the national championship, which means more to me than any personal honor.
The Harrisonburg, Va., native has carried his team to the threshold several times. In his freshman year, the Cavaliers captured the National Invitation Tournament championship.
Virginia reached the Final Four in Philadelphia in 1981, where it was defeated in the semifinals by the Tar Heels. Last season, the Cavaliers
Sports Colendor
Editors Note: Scbeduies are supplied by schools or sponsoring agencies and are subject to change without notice.
Todays Sports Baseball
N.C. State at East Carolina (2
p.m.)
Men's Track Conley, Bertie at New Bern (3 p.m.)
Basketball
District 1 3-A Semifinals at Ahoskie
Tuesdays SjMits Basebafl
Beddingfield at Greene Central JV(4p.m.)
Ayden-Grifton at Roanoke (4
p.m.)
Greene Central at Beddingfield (4
were eliminated from the Mideast Regional by Alabama-Birmingham.
Although Sampson has compiled outstanding statistics, he refuses to take all the credit.
Any personal honors I receive are as a result of the performance of our team as a unit and I would like to credit those guys, Sampson said. The ACC is a great conference. Im just glad to be recognized as the Player of the Year in the conference.
He is a tremendous talent, and he is certainly worthy of recognition by the AP, Virginia coach Terry Holland said. He is obviously one of the all-time greats in the game.
The 22-year-old leads the Cavaliers into the ACC tournament in Atlanta carrying an 18.5 per game scoring average and leading the conference in field goal percentage, 60 percent, and rebounding, 12.3 per game.
In four years, Sampson has scored 2,113 points, an average of 16.8 per game. Hes grabbed 1,450 rebounds, an average of 11.5 per game.
In 126 games, hes hit 56.6 percent of his field goals and 65.6 percent of his free throws. He has also blocked 446 shots and handed out 152 assists.
For two years, he kept classmates on the edge of their seats as professional basketball teams tried to lure him out of college, but he told a University Hall crowd that he had no regrets.
I wish I could stay another four years, but Ive got to move on, he said. You can see what being a speech major has done for me. I didnt prepare a speech, but I talked anyway. I want to be remembered because I went to school here and got my degree.
Aides At
p.m.
N.C. State at East Carolina (2 p.m.)
Conley at North Pitt JV (3:30 p.m.)
North Pitt at Conley Bear Grass at Williamston (3:30 p.m.)
SoftbaU
. Greene Central at Beddingfield (4 p.m.)
Conley at North Pitt (3:30 p.m.) Tennis
Greene Central at Parrot Academy New Bern at Rose (3:30 p m ), Roanoke at Washington Williamston at Plymouth Golf
East Carolina Invitational at Brook Valley
Basketball
Sports Club
4-A State Plwoffs, first round District 1-A Finals at Bath
District II 3-A Finals at Conley Women's League Dazzle vs. Burroughs-Wellcome Pitt Memorial Hospital vs. Johns Florists
Art Baker and Tom Throckmorton, East Carolinas two new associate head football coaches, will be the speakers for the meeting of the Greenville Sports Club, to be held Tuesday at the Holiday Inn.
Baker, former head coach at The Citadel, Is now the offensive coordinator at ECU, while Throckmorton, a former VMI aide, has taken over as defensive coordinator.
Luncheon will begin at 12 noon, with the speakers set for 12:30p.m.
This is the next-to-last meeting of the Sports Club for this year. >
ACC Spotlight On Atlanta
N.C. State called time out to set up a full-court press. Twice Marylands Debbie Lytle also had to call time out to avoid a five-second call and once she threw the ball away.
After Pages final basket, and timeouts by both teams, Lytle got the ball in to Lea Hakala, who passed to Richardson. Wolfpack guard Angie Armstrong knocked the ball free at midcourt, but referee Joe Forte called a foul as Richardson tumbled to the floor.
A 77 percent, free throw shooter, Richardson hit both shots of the bonus situation with eight seconds left.
That call could have been made, or could not have been made, said N.C. State coach Kay Yow, whose teams have lost to Maryland in four ACC finals. I think we lost the game on that break.
Richardson and Hakala, who played all 40 minutes, led Maryland with 18 points each. The Terps, two-time losers to the Wolfpack in the regular season, used just six players and all scored in double figures. Forward Jasmina Perazic hit her first six shots en route to a 16-point performance and co-most valuable player honors with Page.
By The Associated Press With the regular season completed, focus on Atlantic Coast Conference basketball now switches to Atlanta and The Omni, site of the 1983 tournament.
No. 8 North Carolina will hold onto the top-seed in the
tournament after compiling a 12-2 regular-season conference record. Second-ranked Virginia also went 12-2 in league play, but the blemishes were at the hands of the Tar Heels, thus the Cavaliers have been relegated to second-seed.
The Tar Heels, who whipped
Duke 105-81 on Saturday, will raise the curtain on the first ACC tournament held south of Charlotte when they face last place Clemson at 12 noon Friday. Despite the Tigers lackluster season, Michael Jordan said he doesnt plan to take the game lightly.
No one likes to lose, said Jordan, whose 32 points paced six Tar Heels in double fig
ures. Were going to play in the tournament like its the start of the season. We want to prove that we can win the ACC championship again.
Ralph Sampson, who edged out Jordan for The Associated Press player of the year honors in the conference, scored on a foul-line jumper with four seconds left to lead the Cavaliers to an 83-81
victory over the Terrapins.
Virginia, 25-3, meets Duke, 3-11 and 11-16 in the 7 p.m. game Friday. Maryland, 8-6 and 19-8 plays Georgia Tech,
Pirates Face
George Mason
MARYLAND
Bias
Fothergill
Coleman
Adkins
Branch
Baxter
Farmer
Rivers
Holbert
Driesell
Totals
VIRGINIA
Mullen
Robinson
Sampson
Wilson
Newburg
Carlisle
Miller
Edelin
MP FG FT R A F Pt 39 4-11 0- 0 7 1 2 8
34 3- 6 2- 3 5 2 5 8
16 4- 7 0- 0 2 2 5 8
33 2- 8 0- 0 3 4 4 6
37 9-20 3- 5 6 6 3 28
4 0- 0 0-0 2 0 1 0
23 4-10 2- 2 4 0 5 10
13 5- 5 0- 0 3 0 0 13
1 0- 0 0-0 0 0 0 0
0 0- 0 0- 0 0 0 0 0
200 31-67 7-10 34 15 25 81 MP FG FT RAFPt 11 1-4 0- 0 0 0 1 2
37 3- 7 3- 5 12 1 1 9
33 8-15 6-12 10 0
35 4- 8 3- 4 4 7
5 0- 1 0- 0 0 0
27 4- 7 0- 2 0 2
28 8- 11 5- 5 5 0
2 23
8 0- 1 0- 0 2 0 4
4-10 and 12-14, in the nigl Luckily, the ball back and I put it in that said Sampson. When i back to me, I just wai put it in.
Wake Forest and Carolina State are heac a 2 p.m. rematch c Saturdays game, an Demon Deacons will b on avenging the thrashing they suffer Raleigh.
That wont be mud help to us unless we pla better, said Wake coach Carl Tacy when a revenge would be a Its not who we play ni how we play.
RICHMOND, Va. - East Carolina Universitys mens basketball team will face George Mason in the opening game of the ECAC-South tournament Thursday in the Robins Center at the University of Richmond.
ECAC-South
The Pirates finished the season with a 3-7 ECAC record, and were seeded fifth in the tournament brackets. George Mason, 3-6, was seeded fourth. The two meet at 7 p.m. Thursday as tournament play opens.
Conf. Overall Final Standings.
W L W L 'William & Mary 9 0 19 7
James Madison 6 3 17 10
Navy 3 3 16 10
George Mason 3 6 15 11
EastCarolina 3 7 15 12
Richmond 2 7 12 15
'Clinched Championship
Stokes 12 1-2 1-2 1 1 ,1 3
Merrifield 4 2-3 2-2 0 0 0 6
Totals 200 31-59 20-32 36 11 16 83
Maryland.......................46 35- 81
Virginia.....................* 45 38- 83
The hosting Richmond Spiders, 2-7, finished last in the league standings and will play number three Navy, 3-3, in the 9 p.m. game on Thursday.
Tournament Pairings First Round, Thursday
7 p.m., George Mason (4) vs. East Carolina (5)
9 p.m.. Navy (3) vs. Richmond (6)
William and Mary (1) and James Madison (2) get byes
Second Round, Friday 7 p.m. William & Mary vs. GMU-ECU winner 9 p.m. James Madison vs. USNA-UR winner
Three-poinl goals: Maryland 12-21: Branch 7-12, Rivers 3-3, Adkins 2-4. Fothergill 02. Virginia 1-6: Sampson 1-2. Wilson 01, Mullen 03.
Turnovers: Maryland 12. Virginia 10 Technical fouls: None Officials: Clougherty. Nichols. Donaghy.
Alt: 9,000.
Clemson nipped II Chicago Circle 92-88 on free throw shooting i closing minutes. Raj Jones scored 18 points t( the Tigers.
Gatlin Is All-Amerh
Championship, Saturday
. Friday wir
7:30p.m. Friday winners
N Carolina Virginia Maryland N.C Slate Wake Forest Ga Tech Duke Clemson
Final Standings Atlantic Coast Conference Conference All Games W L Pet. W L Pet. 12 2 .857 25 6 .806
12 2 .857 25 3 .893
8 6 .571 19 8 704
8 6 .571 17 10 .630
7 7 .500 17 10 .630
4 10 286 12 14 .462
3 11 .214 11 16 .407
2 12 .143 11 19 367
Keith Gatlin, a senior Conley High School ii County, has been named 27th Annual Parade Ma| High School All-Am( Basketball Team Gatlin, a 6-5 point guar has already declared f University of Marylanc selected to be one of the
Home Held
University of Virginia basketball player Ralph Sampson (50) holds the ball away from Maryland defenders Mark Fothergill (22) and Adrian Branch (rear) during first half action in their ACC game Sunday at Charlottesville. Sampson sank a shot with four seconds left in the contest to give Virginia a win and a share of the ACC title in the game, his last on the Virginia home court. (AP Laserphoto)
William & Mary won the regular season standings race with a 9-0 record and is top seeded in the bracket. The ECU-GMU winner will face the Indians in the second round on Friday at 7 p.m. while James Madison, 6-3, and seeded second, faces the Navy-Richmond survivor at 9 p.m. Friday.
The championship will be decided on Saturday at 7:30 p.m. with the winner receiving an automatic berth to the NCAA Tournament.
Two Qualify In Gymnastics
basketball players ii country at his position I magazines national bo; collegiate coaches, scou recruiters. His shootini centage is 56 percent a foul line shooting w, percent during the cou
Greenvilles Rosettes placed third as a team and had two first place individual winners in a sectional qualifying gymnastics meet held here Saturday and Sunday.
No Bid For
Cavs, Heels Lead ec women
AP'sAH-ACCTeam
By TOM FOREMAN Jr.
AP Sports Writer
Second-ranked Virginia and eighth-ranked North Carolina, co-champions of the regular season in the Atlantic Coast Conference, have claimed two positions each on The Associated Press all-ACC basketball team for 1983.
The Cavaliers and the Tar Heels, both 12-2 in the ACC, earned those positions on the basis of ballots cast by a panel of sports writers and broadcasters and included four voters from North Carolina and one each from Georgia, South Carolina, Virginia and Maryland to reflect the conference membership.
Ralph Sampson and Othell Wilson represented coach Terry Hollands squad, while the reigning national champion Tar Heels were led by Michael Jordan and Sam Perkins. They were joined on the first team by Thurl Bailey of North Carolina State and Ben Coleman of Maryland.
Sampson and Jordan each received four first-place votes, but Sampson piled up 76 votes while Jordan collected 7s! Voting was based on a 10-point system, with 10 points awarded for a first-place selection, nine for a second spot and soon.
Coleman and Wilson tied for the fifth spot on the first team.
Georgia Tech freshman Mark Price, throughout the season a challenger to Jordan for the league scoring title, led the second team picks. Accompanying Price were Marylands Adrian Branch, Johnny Dawkins of Duke, Sidney Lowe of N.C. State and Danny Young of Wake Forest.
The 1982 83 season came to a close for East Carolina Universitys Lady Pirate basketball team today as it failed to receive a berth in the ECAC Tournament being held this weekend.
New Hampshire, St. Peters, Fairfield and Manhattan will compete for the tourney title.
The final opening in the tournament came to a selection between the Lady Pirates and Manhattan, with Manhattan chosen for its 13-9 record against Division I schools compared to a 13-12 mark for ECU.
Against common opponents, Manhattan held a 2-1 edge. But the Lady Pirates posted an 81-70 victory over St. Peters early in the season -one of only four losses it suffered in the 1982-83 campaign. ECU dropped a narrow 58-54 decision to Fairfield in the Lady Pirates second game.
The Lady Pirates finished the season with a 14-12 record overall.
The Rosettes finished with 190.95 points in the Class II competition, just behind Charlotte YMCA, which scored 192.25 points. First place went to Gymnastics World of Boone with 195.20 points.
A total of six teams had enough members competing to figure in the team standings.
Debbie Sigler and Kerri Moreno both met qualifying standards in the Class 11 event, while Nancy Johnson just missed by 0.55. Sigler finished first in the all-around competition with 67.60 points, while Moreno was second at 65.90. Johnson had a total of 57.45 points.
Siegler took first place on the uneven bars with a total of
16.80. marking the fifth strai^it time she has taken a first in sectional competition. She was also second in floor excersises with 16.85, third on the balance beam with 16.15, and third in the vaulting with
17.80.
Moreno took first place on the beam with 17.35, and first in the floor exercises with
17.80. She also finished sixth on the bars with 14.20.
In the class I competition, Salem Gymnastics Center of Winston-Salem was first with 205.95 points, followed by
Raleigh School of Gymnastics with 199.45. Durhams Triangle Gymnastics was third with 196.2.
For the Rosettes, Peggy Becker finished fourth on the uneven bars with a total of 15.60 and fourth on the beam with 15.35. She suffered an injury in her final event, however, and was unable to finish her competition. She may still get into the state, however, on appeal based on her other scores.
The state meet will be held in Winston-Salem on March 26-27.
the season which sav average over 25 points a through play in the sem of the district tournamen
Tall for a point guai avearged around 10 reb a game along with assists.
A total of 40 players fr states were named to th team. Russ William Dunbar High Scho( Baltimore, Md., was se as the top prep player nation.
Gatlin was actually ] on the second of four tei units selected. He was th selectee from North Care
EC-State Game Is Rained Out
East Carolina Universitys baseball game with N.C. State, scheduled for today at 2 p.m., has been cancelled because of rain and will not be made up.
The two schools are scheduled to meet again on Tuesday in a single game at 2 p.m.
Happiness
is
What I sell!
James A. Mannin Bethel, N.C. 825-5631
HIITn PROrtSSIOPIAl QDAIITY AND DtPtlXDABlt SERVICt
IllPi
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6-The Daily Reflector. Greenville, N.C.-Mooday, March?, 1M3Farm Groups Upset By Cargo Preference Moves
A
WASHINGTON
ByDOfiKENDALL ^
AP Farm Writer >
(AP) - Many farm organizations and
commodi^ groups are upset over moves in Congress to expand feoecal cargo preference laws aimed at helping the U.S. maritimeindustry.
The American Soybean Association has been a leader in opposing such moves, on grounds that requiring more ocean cargoes to be haied in U.S. ships would put severe a financial burden on American farmers.
.According to association leaders, who were in Washington last week for a round of Congressional and administration meetings, the immediate potential threat is a bill introduced by Rep. Lindy Boggs, D-La.
The measure is called "The Competitive Shipping and Shipbuilding Act of 1983 and would require that 5 percent of all U.S. dry and liquid bulk imports and exports be carried by U S. built, owned and operated flag vessels.
Further, the association said, The 5 percent preference
Farm Scene
BySAMUZZELL Agricultural Extension Agent
ByROGERCOBB Agricultural Extension Agent
Premature flowering has become a problem for tobacco farmers since several high quality tobacco varieties are susceptible. There are a few things we can do to help reduce the potential of premature flowering.
Avoid using bunchy plants which sometimes flower early in the field. Use plants that are about the size of a pencil. Be sure to cover beds at night when there is a danger of late-season frost or if temperatures are expected to drop lower than normal. The effect of low temperatures on early flowering is greater when the plants are near transplant size than on smallc plants.
The temperature under the covers can become too great,* sometimes damaging or killing small plants. Early in the season if you dont want to punch any more holes or take the covers off you can use your irrigation system for 10-15 minutes several times a day. This may help prevent removing covers early in the season if the warm spell lasts only a day
orteo. , " '
Generally temperatures should not be allowed to exceed 100 degrees Fahrenheit until the plants reach the size of a quarter. If soil moisture is adequate, larger plants can tolerate slightly higher temperatures but should not exceed temperatures higher than 110-115 degrees F.
Avoid overuse of any soil-incorporated chemicals, some of which are known to cause root injury in cool, wet, early seasons. Failure to properly incorporate some chemicals may also restrict the root growth.
Use only water and approved chemcials in the transplanter barrel. Liquid fertilizers and most transplant water chemicals sometimes injure root systems and reduce nutrients absorption.
Use suggested rates of nutrients and apply them in a manner that reduces the probability of fertilizer salts injury and nitrogen stress.
Co-Ops To Hunt New President
WASHINGTON (AP) -The National Council of Farm Cooperatives has named a special selection panel to find a new president.
Council chairman Roger J. Baccigaluppi said the search IS necessary to replace Gary D Myers, who is returning to The Fertilizer Institute as its president and chief executive.
A new president is expected to begin duties on June 1, he said. Meanwhile, James S. Krzyminski. the councils vice president and general counsel, wiliserve as acting chief executive.
TOLD TO DESIST
JERUSALEM (AP) -Israeli Television and Radio have been ordered to stop referring to personalities in the PLO in newscasts because the term has posi-tive connotations, a spokesman for the state subsidized Broadcasting Authority says'
Solution From Martian Expert
AMES, Iowa (AP) - A space exploration scientist here used his knowledge of the planet Mars to find out how to keep snow from drifting onto Iowa highways,
Iowa State University Professor J.D. Iverson, an authority on snow, dust and sand movement on Mars, concluded that carefully arranged vegetation barriers would provide good snowdrift control at highway bricjge overpasses.
The Iowa transportation department funded Iversons work on the basis of reports that surface conditions on Mars resemble Iowa in winter.
Program OK'd As A Pilot
The North Carolina Agricultural Extension Service has officially approved the Partners In Learning Program locally known as Pre^-H.
Pitt Countys Pre-4-H was a pilot program according to Dale Panero, 4-H Extension Agent. The program is
Mental
Health
S
Perap^tives
Alcohol Consumption On The ftlse
ALCOHOI, CONSUMPTION IS on the increase in every nation except Poland, according to a World Health Organization (WHO) study of drinking habits in 25 nations over the past 20 years
France lost its lead in absolute alcohol intake, dropping from 4 5 gallons to 4 0 gallons, with Luxembourg forging into the number one slot with 4 75 gallons The U S ranked 20th among the 25 nations, with a 2 ,38 gallon per capita consumption of alcohol.
For those who believe beer or wine encourages a more moderate coiuumption of alcohol, the WHO study may
have come as somewhat of a surprise.
In the nations where wine was the alcoholic beverage of choice, wine still predominated as the number one beverage, but wine drinkers were also consuming more beer and distilled spirits, with the result generally being a higher intake of absolute alcohol.
The same was true in the WHO study for nations where beer was the alcoholic beverage of choice ..beer drinkers were also consuming more wine and more hard li-quot, with the general effect being a higher per capita consumption of absolute alcohol.
If you hpe a question you would like for us to answer through this column, please submit to Community Serv|es, Pitt County Mental Health Center. 306 Stantonsburg Road, Greenville, or call Community Services, 752 0119.
requirement would increase 1 percent a year until U.S. flagships carry M percent of all bulk imports and exports. When the United States was burdened by massive cn^ surpluses in the mid-1950s. Congress devised Public Law 480 Food for Peace - which authorized the sale of wheat and other commodities to needy countries at low interest rates and over long periods of time.
In 1954, the same year Food for Peace became law, Congress also passed the Cargo Preference Act, which required that at least 50 percent of the quantity of all products exported under certain U.S. government programs be shipped on U.S. flag vessels.
Cargo preference legislation reduces farm income and erodes U.S. agricultural exports because if forces U.S. exporters to use U.S. vessels, which,cost more than foreign-flag carriers, says the American Soybean Association in a background paper.
Supporters (of the legislation) hope to revitalize the U.S. merchant fleet by forcing American soybean farmers to pay $341.7 million out of their dangerously low income to cover
higher export shipping costs for U.S. ships, it said. Cost per farmer would be $821 or $1.43 for each export bushel. The soybean price received by farmers is curreotly about $5.60 per bushel.
The assocation contends that farmers will pay cargo preference costs because neither the grain marketing pipeline nor foreign customers will absorb the higher costs of transportation.
Additional costs would only reduce the profit margins of grain exporters, shippers, carriers, processors and country elevators, the report said. Soybean farmers are price takers - they cannot pass cargo preference costs backward or forward.
Last year, the report said, foreign vessels cost an average of $52.57 per metric ton less than U.S. ships charged for the same type of cargoes. A metric ton is about 2,205 pounds.
Thus, it cost $1.43 a bushel less to ship soybeans and wheat in foreign vessels than in American carriers. Corn shipments translated into about $1.33 per bushel less in the foreign ships.
Research On Soil Erosion
Whitley Says Tobacco Support System Requires A United Front
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -The tobacco price support system probably will survive if the tobacco community presents a united front. Rep. Charlie 0. Whitley, D-N.C., told a group of growers.
Speaking at Rep. Ike F. Andrews annual farm breakfast, Whitley said various tobacco factions must cease bickering among themselves if they are to save the federal flue-cured tobacco program. Whitley added that it wasnt clear whether 1983 will be a good year to introduce tobacco legislation in Congress, he said.
But whatever we do, were not going to take any action to expose the program
to greater risks than it already faces, he said. Andrews made no comments on tobacco issues.
Whitley rejected the idea that North Carolinas congressional delegation is in disarray over tobacco issues. He acknowledged that House members and senators occasionally pulled in different directions.
There are those in the Senate who think we ought to hunker down and shut up, he said. We must get the two sides together.
Some House members prefer moving ahead with legislation to correct defects in the flue-cured stabilization program, said Whitley, a member of the House subcommittee on tobacco and
peanuts.
Sen. Jesse Helms, R-N.C., has said introduction of tobacco legislation this year could give anti-tobacco groups a chance to damage the program.
Rep. Charles G. Rose III, D-N.C., has introduced a bill to amend the no-net-cost assessment enacted last year, designed to keep the program from being subsidized by taxpayers.
The fee now is paid by allotment holders who lease their allotments and again by the grower who leases. As a result, growers who lease pay twice because allotment holders are increasing their rents to cover the fee.
The N.C. Farm Bureau has
opposed legislation this year, but the recently formed United Tobacco Growers Association has pressed for action to resolve several problems.
The association and the N.C. Grange announced last year that they favored legislation in 1983 to freeze price supports for up to two years in exchange for keeping the allotment at last years level. That allotment later was reduced by 10 percent.
Price supports, tied by law to rising production costs, have gone up each year, making U.S. tobacco less competitive with foreign leaf.
Our tobacco is not as far ahead as it used to be, Whitley said.
WASHINGTON (AP) -Resources for the Future, a research foundation based in Washington, has two major studies under way which focus on the nations water and soil erosion problems.
The foundation, which has specialized in resource economics for more than 30 years, said the erosion study will examine how different kinds of soil react'to erosion and to attempts to offset its effects on productivity.
Further, the two-year project will estimate actual productivity losses caused by erosion, and look into its effect off the farm, particularly to bodies of water.
The research will be funded by the Andrew Mellon Foundation and will add to earlier work financed by the Mellon organization. Ultimately, the study will examine the implications for soil conservation policies.
In another two-year effort. Resources for the Future said the focus will be to improve understanding of the nations water problems and ways of dealing with
them.
Kenneth Frederick, director of the project, said that although it has been widely reported that the United States may have a water shortage, it is not clear that this shortage is general or even that it is real.
The water project will be financed by a grant from the William H. Donner Foundation, New York City.
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Peanut Support Said Inadequate
PETERSBURG, Va. (AP) Virginia growers are angry the federal support price on peanuts has been held at $550 a ton and want concerted action by growers in other states.
They say the U.S. Department of Agriculture would not recognize an increase in production costs.
Russell G. Schools, executive secretary of the Virginia Peanut Growers Association, says he will meet soon with his counterparts from other states to determine a course of action.
I guess about the only thing we could do is bring a lawsuit against the USDA, Schools said last week. At this point, I dont know the
available to boys and girls ages 6-8 and their parents.
According to Panero, once a month after school the participants, leaders and parents meet.
Communities in Pitt County interested in beginning a pre-4-H program in can contact the 4-H Office at 752-2934, extension 362.
feasibility of such action, but we do feel strongly about the situation.
Schools says peanut production costs increased 6 percent last year.
It was our contention the support price should have been increased by 6 percent to $583 per ton, he said.
Under federal law, the support level must be increased as costs increase. The USDA contends our costs have not increased. We feel strongly that our cost figures, showing a 6 percent increase, are correct.
Rep. Norman Sisisky, D-Va., has criticized Agriculture Secretary John Block on the decision last week not to increase this years peanut price support loan rate.
In meetings with peanut farmers from across the
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(4th) district during the past two months, producers have told me their production costs increased last year. Not one farmer told me his costs had gone down, Sisisky said.
But the farmers are pleased with a USDA decision allowing growers another year to move any leased peanut allotment back to their own land without
losing it. They also will be allowed to retain their quotas this year.
The federal support price on peanuts grown above quotas eligible for full federal price supports had been reduced earlier from $200 to $185 a ton for this year.
Schools said he is urging state peanut growers to plant the same or less than they did last year.
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Views On Dental Health
I
Kenneth T. Perkins. D.D.S.P.A.
TONGUE THRUST PROBLEMS
Every person swallows prevent new teeth
some 2,0(X) times a day. During that swallow, the tongue can exert one to six pounds of pressure. During the correct swallow, the tip of the tongue presses with the force slightly behind the top teeth. The main pressure of the tongue is against the strong palate. This is good.
During an incorrect swallow, the tongue force is exerted fully against the front teeth. The teeth are not equipped to withstand this type of pressure and may be pushed out of alignment. Also, it may
new
erupting properly.
from
In order to correct this situation. Myofunctional Therapy (sometimes called tongue-thrust therapy) is used for both children and adults. This therapy is designed to retrain the muscles of the tongue, lips and cheeks to properly perform as to strength and placement; to teach correct swallowing patterns; and to instill a permanent, correct swallowing pattern Tongue thrust can be overcome, but it requires full cooperation by the patient.
Prepared as a public service to promote better dental health. From t^e oWices of: Kenneth T. Perkins, D D.S.P A Evans St,, Phone 752-5126.
GnnviU 752-5126
Vanceboro 244-1179
As if sicklepod (or coffeeweed) wasnt a tough enough problem, now scientists tell us that sicklepod grows up with a herbicide shield. This is a waxy coating that can actually interfere with the effectiveness of your critical postemergence sprays.
But Vernam herbicide, tank-mixed right in with your TVeflan,* Prowlf* or Basalinf, makes a difference, Research shows us that Vernam applied preplant incorporated has the unique ability to reduce the foliar _____
waxes on sicklepod. So your pOstemergence sprays stick better, adsorb better and knock out sicklepod more effectively.
Vernam. It not only knocks back the first flush of sicklepod, but also cuts the wax to help your postemergent finish the job.
See your chemical supplier now. Always read and follow the label directions.
Stauffer Chemical Company,
Agricultural Chemical Division,
Westport, CT 06881.
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\^rnatri. I8BI It sets up sicklepod for control
Weather
Variable cloudiness tonight and Tuesday with chance of showers. Low in low 50s, hi^ inmid-60s.
THE DAILY REFLECTOR
INSIDE READING
Page 6-Farmpa^
Page 11 - USFL openers Page 16 - New style homes
102NDYEAR NO. 56
GREENVILLE, N.C.
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION
MONDAY AFTERNOON, MARCH 7, 1983
16 PAGES TODAY PRICE 25 CENTS
Sunday Storm Damage
Tornadoes Strike State
By The Associated Press
A week of unseasonably warm weather came to an end Sunday as three
tornadoes touched down in North Carolina Sunday, ripping off roofs and damaging schools and businesses but
causing no injuries, authorities said.
The heavy winds followed torrential rains which
dumped up to 2 inches in the western portions. By 2 a.m. today, the National Weather Service reported clearing
Rain Ended Several Days Of Springlike Weather
By SUE HINSON Reflector Staff Writer
Wet slickers and sour faces were the rule Sunday as rain saturated Pitt County after a few days of spring sunshine.
Although Greenville residents had to stay inside most of the day, no major problems arose from the deluge.
Students at East Carolina University, however, were in the dark for about 35 minutes according to Malcom Green, assistant director of Greenville Utilities.
The university is on a seperate power system from Greenville, but we assisted with getting the electricity back on, Green said.
As far as we can tell, the outage was not directly related to the rain, but it might have been, he said. Green said debris in the switch gears of the universitys electrical system are suspect in the power outage.
Other than than, Greenville had relatively few weather related problems. We only had a couple minor outages, he said.
DISCUSSES VICTORY - West German Chancellor Helmut Kohl is all smiles as he presides at a meeting of his Christian Democrats today in Bonn to discuss the victory in West German elections, (AP)
REFLECTOR
hOILIIf
752-1336
Hotline gets things done for you. Call 752-1336 and tell you problem or your sound-off or mail it to Hotline, The Daily Reflector, Box 1%7, 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.
SEEKING CLASSMATE The Class of 1953 of H.B. Sugg High School has asked Hotline to apfieal for contact with Mary Odessa McCain. Anyone knowing where she is, is asked to contact Chester Ellis, 202 Horton Street, FarmviUe. 7534392.
KIDNEY FOUNDATION FEEDBACK Steve Joyner, transplant administrator for the East Carolina University School of Medicine, called in response to the Hotline item about the Kidney Foundation to say that the foundation has asked him to coordinate efforts to form another chapter here. He said he is willing to do this if there are laymen out there to help him start it up. He asked that anyone interested contact him at 757-2620.
ECU power employees could not be reached for comment on the outage.
Water plant operator Danny Gaylor reported that 1.23 inches of rain fell between 8 a.m. Sunday and 8 a.m. Monday bringing the level of the Tar to 12.8 feet on the nation^ weather guage and 10.7 on the Greenville Utilities guage.
The river hit its highest point on the 19th of February at 15.7 feet and the highest level last week was 10.9 feet, Gaylor said. The river is coming back up slowly, he added.
The water temperature was recorded at 50 degrees Fahrenheit at 8 a.m. this morning and air temperatures ranged from 57 to 69 degrees Sunday.
The wet weather was caused by a frontal system which moved into the mountains early Sunday, according to the National Weather Service. The storm tracked slowly eastward during the day spreading rain and showers. Between 1 and 2 inches of rain fell in most areas^east of the mountains. '
A large upper level low pressure system centered over the Midwest will drift slowly eastward and keep the states skies cloudy through Tuesday. Scattered showers and thunderstorms will continue through Tuesday mainly over the east.
Overnight lows will be in the 50s except for some 40s in the west Monday night. Highs will be in the 60s and low 70s.
Kohl Says Vote Confirms Plan On Missiles
BONN, West Germany (AP) - Chancellor Helmut Kohl said today his governments landslide re-election confirmed his determination to permit the stationing of U.S. nuclear missiles on West German soil.
At the same time, the anti-nuclear Greens movement, represented for the first time in Parliament, vowed to use hunger strikes, protests and parliamentary action to block deployment of the weapons.
Kohl termed the governments victory Sunday a triumph for democracy, and said he believes the voters also endorsed West Germanys membership in NATO and the American stance at arms reduction talks with the Soviets in Geneva.
The results show ... the majority of the voters support our determination to stand by the NATO two-track decision to deploy 572 American-built nuclear missiles in Western Europe later this year if the arms talks fail, Kohl said at a news conference.
Kohl said he also considered the victory a mandate to continue his policy of seeking improved relations with the East bloc, especially East Germany.
Kohls Christian Democratic Union said earlier the governments re-election showed West Germany stands strongly with its Western allies and that the voting results were a stabilizing factor in international politics.
The security of our country will not be gambled with, the party said.
During the election campaign. Kohl said a vote for his party was an endorsement for NATO. He criticized opposition Social Democrat candidate Hans-Jochen Vogel for distancing himself from the missile deployment plan.
Despite the landslide victory by the pro-NATO coalition of Christian Democrats, the Christian Social Union and Free Democrats, West German voters also gave 27 parliamentary seats to the Greens, the environmentalist party, which opposes membership in the Western alliance.
The election marked the first time the Greens won seats in the national Parliament, although they have been represented In several state legislatures.
During a news conference today. Greens leaders vowed to use sit-ins, lie-ins and massive protests to prevent deployment of the American missiles.
Kohls coalition won by a wider margin than expected, handing the Social Democrats their worst defeat in 22 years.
He said the parliamentary elections affirmed the policies of his coalition of the middle, including support for NATO plans to begin stationing 108 Pershing and 96 cruise medium-range nuclear missiles here by the end of the year.
Vogel had said that, if elected chancellor, he would do everything possible to make the missile deployment unnecessary. '
conditions in the mountains with rain over eastern sections.
A tornado struck a public housing project run by the Monroe Housing Authority, tearing the roof off one building and damaging two other roofs. One woman suffered a cut when glass struck her leg, according to Red Cross spokesman Sam Hinson.
The storm struck around 7 p.m., forcing the evacuation of 13 people living in three apartments. Hinson said the victims were going to stay with relatives living in the same apartment complex.
It looked like a big funnel - just jet black, and it had a hissing sound, said Rodney Hough, 15, who lives in one of the buildings.
I heard the big wind and all of a sudden the top just came off, said Sylvester Bennett, 15, who also lives in the complex. I fell down and there was stuff just falling all around.
Police in Monroe reported that the roof of the Sunbelt Sportswear store had been blown off and that a truck behind the building was overturned around 8:35 p.m.
Another tornado struck East Elementary School in Monroe, causing extensive damage to the roof, said Janet Hammonds of the Union County Emergency Management staff.
Several area homes suffered minor damages, there were power outages and utility companies had cut the gas off to some homes, Ms. Hammonds said.
Heavy winds uprooted some trees and blew some shingles off one house on N.C. 109, just outside the Winston-Salem city limits, according to Forsyth County Sheriffs Deputy Ed Farley, who added that the storms touched down briefly and moved on.
Another tornado struck northwest Guilford County, whirling through a backyard about 8:30 p.m. and damaging a camper truck, according to the Guilford County Sheriffs Department.
The bad weather brought an end to almost one week of pre-spring weather as temperatures hovered in the middle to upper 70s.
The rain was caused by a frontal system which moved into the mountains early Sunday, tracking slowly eastward during the day and spreading rain and showers ahead of it. East of the mountains, between 1 and 2 inches of rain fell in most areas.
Rainfall was fairly heavy around the state yesterday with New Bern recording 2.2 inches by 1 a.m. this morning. Goldsboro had reported 2.04 inches.
Rain in Richmond County forced postponement of the Warner W. Hodgdon Carolina 500 at the North Carolina Motor Speedway in Rockingham, the third consecutive year that inclimate weather has forced a halt to the event. That race is scheduled to be completed Sunday beginning at 12:30 p.m.
A large, upper-level low pressure system over the Midwest will drift slowly eastward and -keep the skies cloudy over the state for the next two days, the weather service said. Scattered , showers and thunderstorms will continue through Tuesday mainly over the east.
Hope Burford To Step Down
By JAMES GERSTENZANG Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON (AP) -Administration officials are trying to quiet speculation that Anne McGill Burford will be fired as administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency, hoping that will make it easier for her to resign gracefulby.
One administration official said Sunday the presidents advisers are trying to convince the president and Mrs. Burford that she must leave without creating a storm ... without pushing the president and without pushing her.
The official, speaking on condition he not be named,
said Reagans advisers have adopted a strategy of gentle persuasion, aimed at both the president and the EPA chief, with the view that hopefully something will happen.
Reagan still supports his embattled EPA chief, but that backing, at least in private, may ru)t be as solid as it once was, sources said.
One administration official said that White House aides spoke with Reagan about the issue Friday and it was the first time he budged at all from the all-out support he has offered Mrs. Burford in the face of calls from Democrats and Republicans in Congress that she resign.
Reagan was "still fairly adamant in support of her, but recognizes that this thing is getting pretty bad, the official said Sunday
He referred to allegations of mismanagement and wrongdoing at the EPA, centering around operation of the $1,6 billion superfundj hazardous waste cleanup program.
Reagan said Saturday that she can remain as EPA administrator as long as she wants to.
Deputy White House press secretary Larry Speakes said today there is no meeting planned between Reagan and Mrs Burford this week.
Edmisfen Dropping Green Investigation
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) State Attorney General Rufus Edmisten announced today that his office will no longer participate in an investigation involving Lt. Gov. Jimmy Green.
Edmisten said all decisions involving a State Bureau of Investigation probe of Green will be made by Wake County District Attorney Randolph Riley and Mike Easley, district attorney for Bladen County.
Edmisten said he was removing his office from further involvement so that there can be no appearance or suggestion of political interest by me in any matters involving the lieutenant governor.
The Green probe came to light recently when Administration Secretary Jane Patterson notified Green in a memo that the SBl had examined telephone records in his office. An angry Green called Edmisten to his office to find out why the SBI was looking at records of the phone calls. Several Senate leaders were called to the meeting by Green, who later chided the SBI for what he called harassment.
Justice Department officials have acknowledged they are conducting an investigation as a followup to the federal Colcor probe of corruption in Columbus County. But they have refused to describe the focus of the investigation.
Andrew A. Vanore, senior deputy attorney general, said Green had been under investiga
tion for several months. Vanore declined to describe the nature of the allegations against Green.
Edmisten and Green are both considered candidates for governor in 1984.
Edmisten said when he was asked to assist in the Colcor probe, he had no knowledge of who might be involved,
Most regrettably because of disclosures made by others outside my office and not under my jurisdiction, it was necessary to make the public aware that the SBI has been looking into allegations involving Lt. Gov. Jimmy Green arising out of the Colcor probe.
So that there can be no appearance or suggestion of political interest by me in any matters involving the lieutenant governor, 1 have totally removed the attorney generals office from further involvement with any proceedings related to the lieutenant governor.
Green was out of his office today and couldnt be reached for comment.
The records requested by the SBI were for telephone calls made between January and April 1982, a period when other investigations in which Greens name has been mentioned were being conducted.
It is also the same time period when taped conversations between Colcor defendants and federal undercover agents included mention of Green, according to The Wilmington Star-News.
Morehead Scholarships For 2 Pitt Students
Two students from Pitt County are among 73 seniors to receive Morehead Scholarships to study next year at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
William Kenneth Whitehurst of North Pitt High School and Hih Song Kim of Greenville, a student at the North Carolina School of Science and Math, have both been named Morehead Scholars.
Whitehurst is the son of Mr. and Mrs, Wiliian C. Whitehurst Jr. of Bethel. At North Pitt he has served as president of the Student Council, vice president of the junior class and is a member of the North Pitt Quiz Bowl Team, the Science Club, the Literary Club and the Sophomore Council. He served as a marshal his junior year
WILLIAM KENNETH WHITEHURST
and is a member of Bethel United Methodist Church.
Whitehurst also played varsity basketball, baseball and football and belonged to tbe monogram club.
Miss Kim is the daughter of.Ms. Yoon Hough Kim, 302 Scottish Court. She attended Rose High School until transferring to the N.C. School of Science and Math.
DROWNING VICTIMS
PEKING (AP) - Eighty bodies have been recovered from a south China river and about 60 people were still missing Sunday following the sinking of a ferry in a sudden violept storm, the Yangcheng Evening News reports.
Iran Objects To OPEC's Oil-Pricing Plans
LONDON (AP) - OPEC postponed its summit until Tuesday after Iran said today it would never agree to a cut in the cartels $34 base price and demanded Saudi Arabia slash its production to 3 million barrels daily.
The 3-million-barrel figure is the same level Iran is believed to want for itself.
Venezuelan Oil Minister Humberto Calderon Berti told reporters that the meeting scheduled Monday afternoon was postponed until Tuesday morning at the request of the Iranians.
Indonesian Oil Minister Dr. Subroto said: We are still exchanging views. We will continue bilateral and trilateral consultations today.
Asked to comment on what would happen if Iran sticks to its position on prices, Subroto said only: If, if, if, if, if.
Irans position was announced by Iranian Oil Minister Mohammad Gharazi, who told reporters thaf'Iran will never come down (on the base price), never. He called for Saudi Arabia to reduce its production to 3 million barrels a day, down from a current 4-5 million barrels ^
Three million for them is enough, he said.
Gharazi said production - not price - was the only issue he wanted to discuss at the summit, to be held at Londons Intercontinental Hotel.
Iran is now believed producing 2.5 million barrels daily and selling it for as low as $26 on the spot market. Arab Gulf members of OPEC were reported to have agreed Sunday to cut the base price to as low as $28.50 to compete with African and North Sea producers, who last month cut their prices to $30.
But informed sources said non-OPEC member Britain, the big North Sea exporter, had advised the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries that a cut below $29.50 would trigger a further reduction in the North Sea price.
All 13 OPEC members have not met since price cuts last month by North Sea producers Britain and Norway and OPEC renegade Nigeria escalated the problems caused by sagging demand in a marketplace slowed by recession.
Iran, which did not attend the earlier meetings, was the only member to publicly demand that OPEC resist the pressure to cut its prices.
Last year, Iran cut its price to $30.20 with OPEC approval. Unofficially, however, it is believed to be selling its oil for as little as $26. ,
8-The Daily Reflector, Greenv ille, N.C.-Monday, March 7,1963
Stock And Market Reports
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RALEIGH, NC (AP) (NCDA) - The tf^d on the North Carolina hog market today was mostly 25\cents lower, Kinston 52.25, Clhnon, Elizabethtown, Fayetteville, Dunn. Pink Hill, Chadbourn. Ayden, Pine Level, Laurin-burg and Benson 51.75. Wilson 51.75, Salisbury 51,00, Rowland 52.00, Spiveys Corner 51.50, Sows: all weights 500 pounds up; Uii.- n 52.00, Fayetteville
53.00, Whiteville 53.00, Wallace .74 00, Spiveys Corner 5..50, Rowland 53.00, Durham unreported.
Poultry
RALEIGH, N.C. lAP)
I NCDA I - The North Carolina f.o.b. dock quoted price on broilers for this weeks trading was 41,75 cents, based on full truck load lots of ice pack I'SDA Grade A sized 2': to 3 pound birds. 93 percent of the loads offered have been confirmed, with a final weighted average of 41.19 cents f o b dock or equivalent.'The market is steady and the live supply is moderate for a moderate to good demand Weights desirable. Estimated slaughter of broilers and fryers in North Carolina Monday was
1.810.000, compared to l,075,OOti last Monday.
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NEW YORK lAPi - Stock prices were little changed today, leveling off around the record highs they reached last week The Dow Jones average of ;10 industrials slipped .67 to 1.140.29 in the first half hour.
Gainers and losers were about evenly balanced in the early tally of New York Stock Exchange-listed issues.
Oil ministers of the Organization of Petroleum Exportine Countries, meet-
Strike Delays Bullfighting
MADRID, Spam lAPi -The Spanish bullfighting season failed to open because of a strike by the workers who stick pikes into the bulls before the animals come charging into the ring.
The bullring workers, ki)own as picadors and banderilleros. want a 25 percent increase in salary and say they won't work until they get It.
The only two scheduled bullfights, m Madrid and in Castelln de la Plana, were suspended Sunday, bullfighting officials said.
The assistants have been offered a 9 percent hike.
.Assistants of first-class matadors make about $1:58 foV each bullfight while those of second-class bullfighters earn about $115 .
ing in London to try to reach a common position on pricing 'and production, put off further talks until Tuesday.
The postponement came after Iran declared that it would never agree to a re-duction in OPECs $:54-a-barrel base price.
'Meanwhile, a monthly survey of corporate purchasing managers indicated that Januarys improvement in the economy carried over into February. The National Association of Purchasing Management said last months showing was much better than anticipated.
Todays early volume leaders included American Telephone & Telegraph, up 'j at 66'2: General Motors, down at 61'2, and Southern Co., unchanged at 16'4.
On Friday the Dow Jones industrial average rose 2.90 to 1,140.96, bringing its gain for the week to 20.02 points.
Advances held a ,5-4 edge on declines at the NYSE,
Big Board volume totaled 90.93 million shares, against 114.44 million in the previous session.
The NYSEs composite index added .15 to 88.63. At the American Stock Exchange, the market value index was up .38 at 384.82.
XKW VOKK .Midday sUK'ks
AMR Corp AbblLabs \lll^ Chaim Alcoa Am Baker AmBrands Amer Can .Am Cyan AmKa'mily Am .Motors AmStanii Amer T&T Beal Food Beth .kteel Bm-inii Boise Cased Borden Biirlnal Ind C.sx (orj) C.inilwl.t Celanese tent Suva Cbainp "inl Chrysler Cocl 'ola Coin I'alm Comw Kdis I 'oriAttra Conll (iroup DellaAirl DowChem duloni Duke Ilm Kasln.Virl, Fast Kodak F,ilnnCp Ksmprk .s K.vkoii Firestone Flalowl.t Flalroiires.s Foril.Mot For McKess k'uiiua Inil (iTKCorp <iiiD> nam Den Klee Ceil Fmid Cen Mills Cell .Motors Cen Tire CenuFarls Calacif Coodrich Coodyear Crace Co CINor Nek Creyhound Cult Oil llerculeslnc Honeywell llospiCp s Ing Rand IBM
lull llarv
Inl la|HT
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Inl T& r
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KanebSve.
KrogerCo
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la'ws Corp
Masonite n
McIXtiiioII
Mead Corp
MiiinMM
Mobil
.Monsanlo
NCNBCp
NabiscoBrd
Nal Distill
NorflkSou n
DlmCp
Owenslll
Iennev JC
PepsiCo
Phelps I kid
Phillp.Morr
PhillpsPel
Polaroid
PriMdCamh s
Uuaker Oal
RCA
RalslnPur RepubAir Republic Stl Revlon Revnldlnd HiK'kwellnt KoyCrown SI Regis Pap Scotl Paper SealdPow SearsRoeb Shaklee Skyline Cp Sony Corp Southern Co Sp'rrv Cp sIdOiICal
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MONDAY
7SKI pm Kastern Carolina
Chapter of Sweet Adelines meet at The Memorial Baptist Church 7 :i0 p m Greenville Barber
Shop Chorus meets at Jaycee Park Bldg.
8:0(1 p.m. - laidge No 885 l-oyal Order of the Moose
TUESDAY 7:(K) a.m. Greenville Breakfat Lions Club meets at Three Steers- 10:00 a m - KIwanis Golden K Club meets at Masonic Hall 7 (K) p.m. - Parents Anonymous meets at First Pre.sbyterian Church 7:00 p m Down EaUhapter of the Painting and Decorating Contractors of America meet at Western Sizzlin, E 10th Street 7:80 p.m. - Greenville Choral Society rehearsal at Imtjianuel Baptist Church 7,30 p.m United Ostomy A.ssociation, Greenville Chapter meets at Pitt County Mental Health Center conference room 8:00 p.m - Withla Council, Degree of Pocahontas meets at Rotary Club 8:00 p m - Pitt Co, Alcoholics Anonymous at AA Bldg., Farmvllle hwy
50'
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Lack Of Science, Math Teachers Is Increasing
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RALEIGH. N.C. (AP) -Figures indicate the number of college graduates certified to teach either science or math in North Carolina is dropping and the decline has state education officials worried.
The decline is causing a shortage in the states public schools, and officials say the problem is compounded by the loss of graduates from math and science education programs to private industries that pay higher salaries than schools.
"Theres a sharp decline in those entering and a siphoning off of those who do enter, said Dr. Carl J. Dolce, dean of the school of education at North Carolina Stale University.
According to the state Department of Public Instruction, those graduating from North Carolina colleges and universities who were certified to teach math fell from 268 in 1974 to 107 in 1982.
For those graduates certified to teach science, the decline was from 294 to 93 during the same period.
The problem arose in the 1970s . when students, normally headed into the teaching profession, heard about a surpliis of teachers, according td Larry W. Watson, associate professor of mathematics education at N.C. State.
, Watson said the surplus may have existed in Engli.sh and' social studies, but not in math and science
Educators say the problem has also led to math and science being taught by underqualified teachers in public schools.
In the 1981-82 school year, there were 4,313 math teachers in grades seven through 12 in state schools. About 40 percent of those lacked proper math certification. In science, there were 3,595 teachers, with about 30 percent lacking proper certification.
Gov. Jim Hunt has included proposals in his new budget to retrain 1,500 teachers in math and science. Another proposal would pay :150 math and science teachers for six extra weeks to help curb the flight of math and science teachers to higher paying jobs.
Loretta M. Martin, president of the North Carolina Association of Educators, said the state proposals are welcomed by teachers to some extent, but she says it
Two Released From Hospital
Two persons injured in the explosion at Village Green Apartments were released from Pitt County Memorial Hospital yesterday and today.
Alan Wilkins of Durham went home yesterday and Scott Cumby, once listed in guarded condition, was released this morning.
Richard Seabolt, the most seriously injured of the survivors, remains unconscious and in guarded condition in the hospital. Henry Redecker of Raleigh and Michael Strother of Wilson both are considered in stable condition at the hospital.
EXPLOSION FATALITY
PARIS (AP) - The director of the Air France office in Iraq was killed by an explosion at the airlines office in central Baghdad, Air France officials said Sunday.
For information on voter registration, call the Pitt County Board of Elections at 758-4683,
does not address the basic problem.
We havent got to the root of the problem, which is that we are not paying any teachers adequately, she said.
Watson said a recent graduate of N.C. State with a 3.9 grade-point average is earning $13,600 in his first year of teaching high school
math. Another graduate with a 3.5 average was hired by private industry and makes $23,500 a year.
I wish there were some way we could convince the public that teachers are worth as much to us to teach our children as they are to industry, Watson said. I think then weTl solve the problem.
N.C. Jobless Fund Said Still Healthy
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -North Carolinas unemployment compensation system has survived a shortage of funds to remain one of the strongest reservoirs of benefits in the nation, state officials say.
North Carolinas jobless rate climbed to 10 percent in January, and a record $56.3 million was paid to the unemployed. The balance of the fund has dropped from $594.5 million in early 1982 to to $327 million last week.
Unless unemployment eases or more money is injected into the fund, it could go broke by April 1984, according to predictions. Gov. Jim Hunt says he will see to it that the system survives.
Im determined that North Carolina not get into the kind of situation some other states are in, Hunt said in a news conference last week. I dont intend for us to have to go and borrow from the federal government and then have to come back and pay off a big debt.
Glenn Jernigan, chairman of the state Employment Security Commission, said the fund is the third most solvent in the United States.
It has served us well. The fact is. weve managed it conservatively in order to prepare for a rainy day, and now weve got a rainy day, Jernigan said. We havent run our rates up and down. We havent yielded to the temptation to give out more money than we could spare.
"Its remarkable that with the severity of this recession, the program has taken this long to start to hurt, added state Sen. Robert Jordan, D-Montgomery, chairman of the Senate Base Budget Committee.
The unemployment fund is financed from payroll taxes which employers pay quarterly. In January, Congress raised the tax by 15 percent by boosting the amount of income taxed per employee, which had been the first $6,000, to the first $7,000.
The tax rate ranges from 0,1 percent to 5.7 percent, depending on the number of people the employer has laid off.
Employment Security Commission staffers have prepared a list of alternatives for helping the fund, which will be discussed at a commission meeting Tuesday. Once the commission decides on a plan, it will pass it along to the Legislature.
Jernigan wouldnt divulge details of the proposals. Jordan, however, said he expected to see a request for a temporary increase in the amount each employer pays, which would be in effect until the fund reaches a satisfactory amount. At that point, the assessment would drop back to its present level.
MONDAY SERVICE Evangelist Dixon and Missionary Kennedy will render services today at 7:30 p.m. at the New Hope House of Prayer Holiness Church. The church is located at 403 Brown St.
GREENVILLE, N.C.
CRUSADE
ONE NIGHT ONLY
TUESDAY, MARCH 8th
7:30 P.M.
St. Gabriel School Auditorium
1101 WsrdSlrMt
Sponsored By: Tabornacio of Prayer for,pll People 720 Atlantic Avenue ,
Elder Nina Blount, Pastor
I really dont think well need this adjustment for longer than six months or so, he said. What we have is a short4erm. cash flow problem.
Jordan and Jernigan said they expected to see unemployment decline gradually in coming months, which should ease the strain on the jobless fund.
But Jordan said the key to ensuring that the system never goes broke is helping the state adjust to changes in the national economy that are creating new jobs and eliminating old ones.
Some plants are closing down and arent going to reopen, with or without a recession, he said. Thats because the industrial face of the nation is undergoing tremendous change. We need to retrain people who have lost manufacturing jobs to handle new, service-oriented Jobs, or else were going to have a permanent unemployment problem.
SPECIAL SERVICE Fill-a-pew services will be held at Reids Chapel Missionary Baptist Church in Fountain Sunday, March 13 at 11 a.m.
The Rev. James Tyson from Ebenezer Baptist Church of Rocky Mount will be the guest speaker. Reid Chapel Gospel Chorus will provide music for the service.
At 3, p.m. Sunday, the Gospel Chorus will accompany the pastor, Rev. Walter Adkins to Dilda Chapel near Fountain.
List Series Of Mishaps
Damages estimated at nearly $7,000, but no injuries, resulted from a series of wrecks investigated Friday by Greenville police.
Heaviest damages oc-^ curred in an 8 a.m. wreck at the intersection of East 10th Street and Charles Boulevard, involving vehicles operated by Yadollah Rezaei of Wedgewood Arms apartments, Lou Fleming Woodard of lOl Greenbriar Drive, and Robert Jackson Gilbert of Route 1, Greenville.
Police, who charged Rezaei with a safe movement violation, estimated damages at $2,000 to the Rezaei vehicle, $1,000 to the Woodard car, and $200 to the vehicle operated by Gilbert.
A 10:30 a.m. accident on Fifth Street 25 feet from Holly Street involved vehicles driven by Roberta Lynn Brown of 1405 E. 'Third St., Cassandra Faye White of 906 Marvin St., Goldsboro, and Sybil Lori Lucas of Route 13, Greenville.
Officers, who preferred no charges, estimated damages at $1,200 each to the vehicles operated by Ms. Brown and Ms. White and $200 to the Lucas vehicle.
James Alex Clark of Route 6, Greenville, was charged with a safe movement violation following investigation of a 10:14 p.m. accident at the intersection of 10th and Cotanche Streets.
Police said the mishap involved vehicles operated by Clark and Sandra Faye Miller of Lot 60 Riverview Estates. Damages were set at $800 to the Clark vehicle and $600 to the Miller car.
Officers charged Walter Ernest Lemnah of 1107 N. Overlook Drive with a safe movement violation after investigating at 12:50 p.m. accident at the intersection of Fourth and Meade Streets.
They said the wreck involved vehicles driven by Lemnah and William David Cops of 409 Elizabeth St. Damages were estimated at $400 to Lemnahs car and $300 to Cops vehicle.
The Senior Citizens Center is located in the Community Building at the corner of Fourth and Greene Streets. A variety of programs are provided. Call 7524137 for more information.
Obituaries
Barrett
FARMVILLE - Funeral services for Mr. Robert Barrett will be conducted Tuesday at 2 p.m. in the Antioclv Holiness Church of Bell Arthur by the Rev. James Lewis. Burial will be in Crestlawn Memorial Gardens.
Mr. Barrett was bom and reared in Pitt County and attended the county schools. He was a member of Antioch Church, which he served as a trustee.
Surviving him are his wife, Mrs. Catherine Barrett of the home; nine daughters, Mrs. Geraldine Fenner of Farmville, Mrs. Carolyn Moore and Mrs. Barbara Coley, both of Greenville, Miss Blois Barrett of Fountain, Mrs. Patricia Monk of Bell Arthur, Misses Shirley, Debra and Kathy Barrett, all of the home, and Mrs. Marjorie Mills of Wilmington, Del.; a son, Robert Earl Barrett Jr. of Farmville; five sisters, Mrs. Helen Horne of Bronx, N.Y., Mrs. Evelyn Matthews of Fort Story, Va., Mrs. Annie Mae Harris of Farmville, Mrs. Mattie Ellen Smith of Pinetops, and Mrs. Delores Thornton of New Jersey; five brothers, Ernest Barrett of Farmville, Jasper Earl Barrett of Greenville, Hal Barrett of Bronx, N.Y., Roosevelt Wilks of Pinetops, and Harvey Wilks of Baltimore, Md.
The family will receive friends from 8 to 9 oclock tonight at the Phillips Brothers Mortuary Chapel.
Haislip
WILSON - Mrs. Virginia Smith Haislip, 64, died Sunday morning at her mothers home in Robersonville.
EXAGGERATED GENEVA, Switzerland (AP) - The Turkish government, in a published report, acknowledges jme cases of torture under its military regime, but says allegations of such atrocities have been greatly exaggerated.
Tune-Ups - Brake Jobs General Repairs
Auto Specialty Co.
917 W. 5th St.
758-1131
Fjuneral services will be held at 11 a.m. Tuesday at Bigjgs Funeral Chapel in Robersonville with the Rev. David Cox and the Rev. John Browning. Burial will be in Maplewood Cemetery in Wilson.
Mrs. Haislip was a retired school teacher who taught for 37 years in the Wilson school system. She was married to William C. Haislip who died in 1969.
She is survived by her mother, Mrs. Ethel Crofton Smith of Robersonville; and a sister, Mrs. R.G. Hicks of Rocky Mount.
The family will receive friends from 7-9 p.m. Monday at Biggs Funeral Home in Robersonville.
HoeU
VANCEBORO - Mr. Zeb V. Hoell, 92, died Saturday in Guardian Care Nursing Home, New Bern.
His funeral service was conducted today at 3 p.m. in the Wilkerson Funeral Chapel in Vanceboro by the Rev. Robert Worthington and the Rev. Ralph Bennett. Burial was in Celestial Memorial Gardens.
Mr. Hoell was a native and lifelong resident of the Vanceboro community and was married to Lula McCaffity, who died in 1961.
Surviving him are three sons, Sam T., Buck and Zeb V. Hoell Jr., all of.Vanceboro; four daughters, Mrs. Ruby Harris, Mrs. Lucy Adams, and Mrs. Ruth Watson, all of New Bern, and Mrs. Gladys Coward of Jacksonville, Fla.; 10 grandchildren; and 15 greatgrandchildren.
Thigpen
Mr. Tony Thigpen, 1017 W. Third Street died Sunday. He was the husband of Mrs. Lizzie Gorham Thigpen. Funeral arrangements will be announced later by Flanagan Funeral Home.
LP and Natural Gas Leak Detectors
Datsctt Laiks at Low at
3%-6% of LOWER EXPLOSIVE LIMIT
$39.9 Splut Intltf latton
General Heating, Inc.
1100 Eana SIrMt OrMnylHa, N.C. 752-4187
We mourn the loss of a valued friend and dedicated co-worker.
GENE T. SKINNER
1925-1983
carotina east mall ^^greenville
14-The Daily Reflector, Gi^ville, N.C.-Monday, March 7,1983
Ctosswwif/ By Eugene Suffer TutOfS Find
ACROSS
1 Aarons weapon 4 Pn^for pajTWent 7 Role l.ansbui^
11 Actor Jack
13 Uterar> collection
14 Belgian river
15 Ukea bridal veil
39Millen^ Charisse 41 Quickly
43 Obstacle
44 - OtheUo character
46 Wild spree ^50 Maize 13 Actress <upino 55 flWne of the
DOWN
iZone
2 Jai-
3 Finesse
4 Flatfish
5 Distinct part
6 Very rich man
19 Conclusion 21 Satisfied 23 Purpose 25 Dreadful 2SE^ymous ancestor
27 Rulers of Tunis
28 Brilliant
7 -for You display (1950song) 29 Jewish
8 Blind - bat
9 Sorority
16 Babys apron 58 Agitation
17 Depend
18 Churchs portion
20 l>arge volume 22 Spanish
59 Favorites
60 Compass pt.
61 Enemy scout
Avg. solution time; 27min.
giMA'S
topic ,18 Work unit Kathryn irayson ^hit
queen
24 Ijkesome purses
28 legendary' hero
32 Social group
33 Scent
34 Witty saying
36 Playing card
37 Devilfish
month
30 Solitary
31 Sign of assent
35 Flap 38 One-time 40 Catch a crook 42 Pointed arch 45 Norse god
47 Insect eggs
48 Piece of luggage
49 Uncanny, often Flatfoot Corrida |Cheer ^kflax
54 writ, in Answer to Saturdays puzzle. ^^is
INMLEB
CRYPTOQUIP 3-7
FGKTIJE UTIZLFV VFFU QZLZQ HJATH GKFFU T NTEC NFHAJCF.
Saturdays Cryptoquip - THE DOUR DENTIST IS REBUTTING; NOTHING BUT THE TOOTH.
Todays Cryptoquip clue: G equals Q.
The Cryptoquip is a simple substitution cipher in which each letter used stands for another. 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 Kinq Features Syndicate. Inc
BY CHARLES GOREN AND OMAR SHARIF
1983 Tribune Company Syndicate, inc
ANSWERS TO BRIDGE QUIZ
Q.l-Both vulnerable, a.s the previous problem. The
South vou hold:
J854 ''AK72 0 5 9863 The bidding has proceeded: West .North East South
1 Dble Pass 1 ^
Pass 1 Pass ?
What do you bid now?
A.-Partner has shown that he has a better than minimum takeout double with a five-card spade suit. In support of spades, your hand IS worth 11 points. To bid any less than four spades does your holding an injustice.
hand and bidding are the same, but the vulnerability is not. This time, a penalty of 300 mighUmot be sufficient compensation when you could close out the rubber. Since partner should have four spades for his reopening takeout double, jump to three spades to invite part ner to game if he has sound values. Indeed, we would not quibble with four spades, because the hands should fit well.
Q.2-As South, vulnerable,
you hold:
KJ J763 0Q8 4J9542
The bidding has proceeded: .North East South West
1 Pass 1 NT Pass
2 Pass 2 Pass
3 Pass ?
What action do you take?
A.-Vou have a weak hand and most of your values are soft, i.e., queens and jacks, which might prove to be of doubtful value. But partner knows you are weak. What he doesnt know is that you have two honors in his trump suit and a key honor in his second suit. That is just enough to take the push to four spades.
Q.5-Neither vulnerable, as South you hold:
85 ^65 OQ9832 AKQIO The bidding has proceeded: North East South West 1 Pass 2 0 Pass 4 0 Pass ?
What do you bid now?
A.-You have no need to be ashamed of your hand-it is the equivalent of an opening bid. Facing a partner who has jump raised, you are in the slam zone. The best way to get your message across to partner is to cue-bid five clubs. If partnecan do no more than revrn to five diamonds, pass.
Q.3-East West vulnerable, as South you hold:
10764 ^J853 0A84 Aa The bidding has proceeded; North East South West
1 1 ^ . Pass Pass
Dble 2 ?
What action do you take?
A.-By reopening with a double, partner has shown a good hand. You can probably e.Kpect four defensive tricks from him. Your hand rates to lake at least three tricks on defense. At this vulnerability. that looks like a 5Q pen-V at least. Double.
Q.6-Both vulnerable, as South you hold;
987432 '7A6 073 AJS The bidding has proceeded: North Eut South West
1 Pass 1 Pass
2 Pass ?
What do you bid now?
A.-Once partner raises spades, your hand revalues to 14 points. Since partner opened, you have enough for -game. Bid four spades.
Anything less earns you an award as Conservative of the Year.
) 1 As South, vulnerable, vou hold:
10764 ^J853 0A84 Aa
The bidding has proceeded: .North ast South West
1 1 *7 Pass Pass
Dble 2 ?
W hat action do you take?
A. - No this is not a repeat of
How do you choose the best opening lead? Charles Goren has the answer. For a copy of Winning Opening Leads, send 11.85 to Goren-Leads, cart of this newspaper, P.O. Box 259, Norwood, N.J. 07648. Make chocha payable to Newi-poperbooks.
Satisfaction
In Adult Aid
By ROBB FULCHER CENTRAL POINT, Ore. (UPI) - The eager student showed pleasure with his pro^ss as he struggled with basic grammar and learned to identify the letters of the alphabet.
His tutor, a retired schoolteacher, saw in the blue eyes an enthusiasm for learning and anxiousness to accomplish what he could.
The student was a 31-year-old married man, and he reached his personal goal he passed a written test to become a firefighter.
The triumph was three years in the making, and retired teacher Olive Manley considers it one of the most rewarding experiences she has had as a tutor with Laubach Literacy International, a non-profit organization that teaches adults how to read.
Mrs. Manley said her student had graduated from high school in California without learning how to read.
She remembers vividly helping the man read all the way through a book for the first time. It was a fourth grade-level fiction piece.
Laubach Literacy, founded in 1955, boasts volunteers on almost every continent. They will teach reading inside hospitals, churches and private homes or behind jail bars, said Peter Waite, director of the U.S. headquarters of Laubach Literacy in Syracuse, N.Y.
"I used to be the regional director for the Pacific Northwest out in Seattle, and we were contacted by a logger who wanted to learn to read, Waite said. The only place we could find to set him up was the back room of a bar, so thats where we taught him.
"He wanted to learn how to read because his children were learning how to read and write, and he wanted to be able to help them and to read stories to them.
Laubach estimates that 20 percent of the adults in the United States are functional illiterates, lacking the skills to function in everyday life, Waite said. ^
Even with the roughly 40,000 volunteers in the 46 United States being serviced by Laubach, the group is getting behind the game rather than' ahead, he said.
Adult non-readers in the United States are described by Laubach representatives as a large, disenfranchised minority.
Non-readers are deprived of living the kind of life we do, said Pearl Farnsworth, a southern Oregon regional director for Oregon Literacy Inc., the state unit of Laubach.
They cant vote, so they have no voice in their government, she said. "They cant read road signs, a menu in a restaurant; they are hampered in shopping because they cant read advertisements, coupons or contents or the labels of products.
They cant get jobs because even if they dont need to read to work, they cant read classified ads or fill out an application. They cant read Uie newspaper and they cant use the phone that well because they cant read the telephone directory.
They cant participate in the community and the costs to society are tremendous. Many of the non-readers are in jail because they cant hack it in society and they have that low self-concept. Mrs. Farnsworth said most adult illiterates who come to Laubach are referred by social service agencies, friends or family members, including children who want their parents to be able to read to them.
In the United States, volunteer tutors act on the Laubach slogan, Each one teach one, and most tutoring is one-on-one.
Overseas, where Laubach has fewer tutors, the strategy is different, Waite said,
We have more diverse programs overseas in South America, Africa, India, the Middle East - practically every continent on the globe. We set up programs with local volunteer organizations, and weve even helped governments set up literacy programs, he said.
Theres a stigma attached to not being able to read, she said. For non-English speaking people trying to learn English, thats not true.
THE DAILY REFLECTOR Classified Advertising Rates 752-6166
3 Line Minimum 1-3 Days.. 45* per iine per day 4-6 Days;. 42* per iine per day 7 Or More
Days 40* per line per day
Claulfied Display
2.75 Per CTol. Inch Contract Rates Available
DEADLINES Classified Lineage Deadlines
Monday........Friday 4 p.m.
Tuesday Monday 3 p.m.
Wednesday. .Tuesday 3 p.m. Thursday. Wednesday 3 p.m, Friday .. Thursday 3 p.m. Sunday.........Friday noon
Classified Display Deadlines
Monday.........Friday noon
Tuesday Friday 4 p.m.
Wednesday .. Monday 4 p.m. Thursday Tuesday 4 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 2 p.m.
Sunday... Wednesday 5 p.m.
ERRORS
Errors must be reported immediately. The Daily Reflector cannot make allowance for errors after 1st day of publication.
THE DAILY REFLECTOR reserves the right to edit or reject any advertisement submitted.
people read classified
Public
Notices
ADVERTISEAAENT FOR BIDS
Sealed proposals will be received
bealed proposals will be received by Pitt County Memorial Hospital Board of Trustees in the Office of Vice President, Facilities Manage ment until 2:00 P.M. Monday. March 14, 1983 and immediately thereafte
publicly opened and read for tur nishinq of one Solid Waste In
cinerafor with hydraulic loader, as specified. Specifications are available in the office of Ralph R. Hall, Jr., Vice President, Facilities Management, Pitt County Memorial Hospital, Greenville, North Carolina 27834 Telephone No 919 757 4587. Each bid submitted must meet all requirements of the specifications.
requirements ol the speciticatioi The Hospital reserves tne right to i _ iect any or all bids and to waive in formalities.
Jack W. Richardson President
Pitt County Memorial HospltaT March 2, 4, 6, 7, 1983
NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE NORTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF PITT Under and by virtue of an Order of
under and by virtue of an Order ot the Superior Court of Pitt County, made in a Special Proceeding therein pending entitled "Odessa P. Myers, Mary M. Brown and hus band. Richard Brown; James H. Myers (Myles) and wife, Doris Laverne Myers (Myles), and Edna Williams and husband, Neil Milton Williams, Petitioners Ex Parte'
File No. 83 SP 83, and signed by Her Honor, Eleanor H. Farr, Assistant
Clerk, the undersigned, who was by . (nted a Commis
said Order sioner to sell the lands described in the Petition, will on the 29th day ot March, 1983, at twelve o'clock noon, at the Courthouse door in Greenville, Pitt County, North Carolina, otter tor sale in public auction to the highest bidder lor cash, but subject to confirmation by the (^ourf, that certain real properly described as follows:
That certain lot or parcel ot land
lying
Greei
and being situate in the City of Pitt County, North
reenville, ,, ...
Carolina, on the east side ot Cadillac Street between Third and Fourth Streets, and being Lot No. 8 In Block "M" ot the RIverdale Subdivision according to the map ot same which is duly ot record In Map Book 2 at page 251 In the office ot fhe Register ot Deeds of Pitt County, and being the Identical property conveyed by deed from North Side Lumber Company, Inc. to George Meyers and wife, Bessie Meyers, dated July 7, 1954 and recorded In Book E 29, at Coi
page 549, Pitt County Registry; fhe said Bessie Meyers, sometimes referred to as Bessie Myles or Bessie Myers, having died October
> 4, J9_75 as__wl11_ appear reference
to Estate File No. 75 E 273 In the ot flee ot Clerk ot Court ot Pitt County, North Carolina; and the slad George Meyers, sometimes referred to as
George M^les or George Myers, FlleNo-??V 313' In the office of Clerk
having died testate on June 25,'98 lift
as will
ear by reference to E state
ot Court of Pitt County, North Carolina.
A cash deposit In the amount ot ten (10%) percent of the bid shall be made by the highest bidder at the pending confirmation or re|ec-
sale
tion
The procedure for this sale shall M as provided tor public sales In Chapter 1, Article 29A, ot the General Statutes of North Carolina.
This the 24fh day ot February, 1983. f
D. Michael Strickland. Commissioner Of Counsel:
GAYLORD, SINGLETON, McNALLY8i STRICKLAND Attorneys at Law 206 S. Washington Street P O. Box 545 Greenville, NC 27834 Telephone: (919 ) 758 31)6 March 7, 14, 21. 28, 1983
FILE^0^83CVD318
ILMNO IN THE GENERALCOURT OF JUSTICE DISTRICT COURT DIVISION NORTH CAROLINA PITT COUNTY
IRENE JONES SCOTT
PIOTROWSKI
VS
JOHN PIOTROWSKI
NOTICE OF SERVICE OF PROCESS BY PUBLICATION Take notice that a pleading seek
Ing relief against you has been tiled
. ..
In the above entitled action. The nature ot the relief being sought Is as follows:
For an absolute divorce based on the grounds of one (1) year's separa tion.
You are required to make defense to such pleading not later than April 19, 1983 and upon your failure to do
so the party seeking service against will apply to the " re ef soghh
you
Court for the
This the 2nd day of AAarch, 1983 EVERETT4CHEATHAM
James T. Cheatham
- Jox 1220 Greenville, NC 27834 Telephone; (919)758-4257 March 7, 14, 21, 1983
PUBLIC NOTICES
SERV
SS
E GENERALO
IN THE GENERAL COURT
DISTRICT OURT DIVISION NORTH CAROLINA PITT COUNTY
TICE that a
TAKE NOTICE that a petition seeking relief against you has been filed in the above entitled action. The nature of the relief being sought Is the termination of any and all parental rights of Darlene Corey In and to the minor female child described in the petition, said child having been born on or about November 27, 1979, In Pitt County, Greenville, North Carolina
You are required to make defense to such petition within tort)
(40)
days after February 2), V . . elusive of such date, which date so stated herein Is the date of the first publication of this notice, and upon your failure to do so, the petitioner
seeking service against you will apply to fhe court for the reliet Siwght.
You are hereby notified that you are entitled to be appointed counsel
if you are indigent, provided you quest counsel at or before the iim tne hearing, and that you are entiti
PUBLIC NOTICES
OFP
noRVh cj
PITTCOU
A8ARGARI
TION
DIVISION
ed to attend any hearing affecting larental rights.
your parental rights.
This 17 d^of February, 1983. EVE RETT 8. CHEATHAM
By:
Tyler B. Warren P. O. Box 609 Bethel, NC 27812 Tel . 919/825 5691 February 21, 28, March 7,1983
NOTltl pfev?C^ OF PROCESS BY PUBLICATION
DISTRICT COURT DIVISION STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF PITT REBECCA HAYES LOCKHART
vs.
RICHARD K LOCKHART TO: RICHARD K LOCKHART TAKE NOTICE that a pleading seeking relief against you has beer filed in the above-entitled action
The nature ofjhe relief being sought iS that shi
is as follows: Plaintiff prays That she be granted an absolute divorce bas
ed on one (1) ypar separation You are required to make defense 'to such pleading not later than forty
(40) days following February 21', 1983, and upon your failure to do so.
the party seeking service against you will apply to the Court for the relief sought.
This the 14th day of February, 1983.
GAYLORD, SINGLETON, McNALLY 8. STRICKLAND A. Louis Singleton Attorneys for Plaintiff
206 S. Washington Street rS45
P.O. Drawer!
Greenville, NC 27834 February 21, 28; March 7,1983
NOTICE OF SALE NORTH CAROLINA PITT COUNTY Under and by virtue of an order dated March 2, 1983, of the Clerk of Superior Court of Pitt County, made in a special proceedings entitled "Ronald A. Lassiter, Jr.. Executor of the Estate of Ronald A. Lassiter, Petitioner, vs. Ronald A. Lassiter, Individually, Roy A. Lassiter, Dorothy Ellen Lassiter Belles and Della T. Lassiter, Respondents", fhe
undersinged commissioners duly ap pointed by the Court will on April Wh, 1983 at 12:00 o'clock noon at the
door of the Court Courthouse, Green ville, Pitt County, North Carolina, offer for sale to the highest bidder for cash that certain real property described as follows:
Parcel No. V: BEGINNING at the bridge^acrqss _the_old road leading
from G, W. Venters old place
some chopped black gums and runs with a ditch, W fhe tolTowini
, courses and distances, viz: S 12 E A links, S 30 E, 3 chains and 16 links, S 56 E, 2 chains and 37 links, S 49 E. 3 chains and 26 links, S 36 1/2 E, 8 chains and 30 links, S to 1/2 E, 5 chains, S 7 W, 4 chains to H.C. Venters line; thence with his" line the following courses and distances ot N 73 1/2 7 chains
and 12 links to the head of the ditch at the edge ot woods; thence N 49 3/4
E, 5 chains and 45 links to a white oak, a corner ot H. C. Venters; thence N 76 E, 10 chains and 70 links to an iron stake, a corner of the dower of Mary E. Venters, about 6 feet north of the wire fence ot H. C Venters, his line; thence with H. C Venters line, fhe fence, N 78 40 E, 320 feet, N 74-10 E, 177 feet to fence post, H.C. Venters corner on road; thence
along west edge of road and crossing same, N 9-10 E, 459 teef to point on
old road In H. C. Venters line; thence old road. H.C. Venters line, N 14 E. 186 feet to a small pine (chopped) on north side of new road, at old crossroads, in Annie Lassiter line; thence the said road (her line) S 61 50 W, 93 teet to crook, thence
igain with the said road (her line) N f 25 W, also with G. W. Venters, Sr.,
2015 teef at the homeplace dwelling of G. W. Venters, Sr.; thence on with
said road, G. W. Venters, Sr., line and Ed. Venters line, N 89 40 W, 441 feet, thence on with said road, said Ed Venters line, S 79 20 W., 541 teet to the BEGINNING, containing 63 acres ot land, more or less.
The interest to be sold In the parcel described above Is a reminder interest, subject to the life
estate of Esther H. Venters, except that as to a two acre portion ot the
property described above, the in terest to
be sold Is a one half un divided remainder interest in said
portion of the property described above, subject to the life _ , Esther H, Venters. The said approx
estate ot
imately two acre portion Is described as follows;
Beginning at the Intersection ot Rural Paved Road 1925, known as the Quinerly Road, and N.C.
way No. i02 and running thence with the Quinerly Roed southwardl
Highway Ifh the (julneriy Koed southwardly to the pasture fence belonging to G.
W. Venters, Jr.; thence the pasture fence in a westerly direction to a ditch; thence with the said ditch In a northerly direction to N. C, Highway No. 102, thence with N.C, Highway No. 102 in an easterly direction to the Quinerly Road, the point ot beginning. Containing approximately two acres whereon the G, W. Venters, Jr residence was located.
Parcel No. 2: Located In Chlcod Township and being a part of the said G. W. Venters land adioinlno and adjacent to the said
Venters homeplace lot. Beginning In the center of the County Koad op
posite to a big fence post at the southeast corner of the said G. W. Venters homeplace lot; thence with said raod S. 77-45 E, 160 teet to the forks of the road; thence with said
road N 70 05 E 1526 feet to watt edge vlire-
of the raodway of the GreenvIL. New Bern road; thence with said road N 29 W 524 feet to Qoorge Adams corner; thence with Goorga
Adams line N 89 W 394 feet to pint fe
N 86-15 W 490 feet. N 82-40 W 274 feet, N 88 30 W 223 feet to a pine N 87-45 W 558 feet, N 87-45 W 994 teet, N 74 W 125 feet to 4 stake on ditch centered
by a black gum in Gaorge Adams line and at fhe corner of the E. A
Venters land; thanca with said E. A. Venters line S 27-10 E 408 feet to fork of ditch G. W. Venters corner; thence continuing with ditch S 17-50
E 346 feet. S 21 W )43_faet to tha I of
beginning, containing 57-4 acres land.
THERE IS SPECIFICALLY EX-TED FROM PARCEL NO 2
CEP __ ____
THE FOLLOWING DESCRIBED PARCEL OF LAND: Lying and being situate In Chlcod Township, Pitt County, North Carolina, on the nor
therly side of NC Highway 102, and beginning, at a point in tha northerly right-of-way lina of NC Highway 102,
which Is determined and located as follows: From the point of intersection formed by the centerline of NC Highway 102 and the centerline of State Road 1925, run In a westerl direction with the centerline Highway 102, 68.80 fi and run thence N 0
an Iron stake pipe. _______
BEGINNING; running thence from said point of beginning so fixad, N 00 49 E 52.50 feet to a point, running thence N 10 25 W 158/45 feet to an
star I y of NC 68.80 (e^ to a point, IN 00 49 E 30.26 $t to iipe, THE POINT OF
iron pipe stake; running thence 83-20 E 2)3.60 feet to an Iron pipe stake; running thence S 6-40 E 210
feet to an Iron pipe stake and runn
ing thence in a westerly direction with the northerly right-of-way line of NC Highway 102, to the point of beginning, and containing .99 acres, more or less. Further, reference It
made and directed to plat of survey entitled "Property ol Ronald A, Lasslterr, Jr." prepared by Dickerson Adams Associates, P A , dated May 17, 1977.
The above described real property " and all
will be sold subject to any 4 liens and encumbrances which exist
thereon, as well as subject to 1983 Pitt County Ad Valorem faxes.
The highest bidder will deposit with the commissioners ten percent (10%) of the bid price pending confirmation of the sale. The sale of said
real prc^rty It subject to an uptat bid and fhe confirmation of the Court as provided by law for judicial salat. This the 7th day of March, 1983
ROBERT R BROWNING, Commlttloner P. O. Box 859
200 E. Fourth Street Greenville, NC 27835 0859
Commlttloner
210 S. Wathlngton Street
P. O. Box 552
March 7
Graenville, NC 27835-0)20 Telephone: (919) 752-3104 ch 7,14, 21,28, fin
IN THE general COURT OF JUSTICE
'VoWa"
INTY
malnflH.^^''
g'^OBERTE MAY, efendant.
TAKE NOTICE that a pleading teeklng nellef agalntt you has been filed in the above-entitled action. The nature of the relief being sought it at followt: Divorce based upon one year's separation.
You are required to make defense to such pleading not later than AAarch 14,1983 arid upon your failure to do to the party seeking service
THIS the 14th day of February, 1983
TAFT, TAFT&HAIGLER
Thomas F. Tatt Attorney for Plaintiff 200S. Greenest.
P. O. Box 588 Greenville, NC 27834 ^ 919-752-2000 February 21,28, March 7,1983
024
Foreign
1M1 RENAULT LcCar. Oeluxa Interior. AM/FM radio. Taka up payments. AAovIng, must sell. 752-
19e2 PRELUDE Honda, only 4,000 miles. Blue, air, AM-FM cassette. $8.700. 757 1505or 756 1076.
1VS2 TOYOTA SUPRA Loaded with leather package. 756 3396._
YOU CAN SAVE money by shopping for bargains in the Classified Ads.
051
Help Wanted
MEDICAL COLLECTION,CLERK Medical office needs Individual knowladgeable in health Insurance, capable of handllrtg public contact and must be experlencad in collections. Data processing experience helpful also. Send resume with salary history to: Medical Collection Clark, PO Box 1967, Graenville, NC 27834. __
032
Boats For Sale
14' CAROLINA BOAT freshly painted. $125. 16' Carolina boat has
been fiberglassed and has floata tion. Freshly
tion. Freshly painted. A $150. Call 795 4136 anytime
inted. Must sell
16' OPEN BOW 115 horsepower
Evinrude. New seats and tilt trail er. For sale or trade for motorcy cle. 752 0402.
SS
FILEIWJn
_ Pll
ILMI
IN THE GENERAL COURT
OF JUSTICE
A district COURT DIVISION NORTH CAROLINA
PITT COUNTY IN RE: COREY, AMINOR CHILD NTICE
TO THE FATHER OF A FEMALE CHILD BORN ON OR ABOUT NOVEMBER 27, 1979, PITT COUNTY, GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA, RESPONDENT:
TAKE NOTICE that a petition seeking to terminate your parental rights has been filed In the above en tifled action.
The nature of the relief being sought is the termination ot any and all parental rights of the father in and to the minor female child described in the petition, said child having been born on or about November 27, 1979, in Pitt County, Greenville, North Carolina.
You are required to answer the petition within forty (40) days after the date of the first publication of this notice, to wit: February 21, 1983, exclusive of such date, and upon your failure to answer the petition within the time prescribed, your parental rights to fhe said child will be terminated.
You are hereby notified that you are entitled to be appointed counsel
if you are Indigent, provided you request counsel at or before the time ot the hearing, and that you are entitl
ed to attend any hearing affecting your parental rights,
^feE^\^8.<l"ArH7:A'
Tyler B. Warren Attorneys for Pet Post Office Box 609
Bethel, North Carolina 278)2 Telephone 919/825 5691 February 21, 28, March 7,1983
WANT
ADS
752-6166
002
PERSONALS
PROFESSIONAL WOMAN, 35, nonathletically inclined, who especially enjoys music and dance but Is also fond of outdoor activities (such as camping, walking nature trails and all kinds of boating) desires company of liberal professional man who is also single. Send replies to "A" PO Box 2894, Greenville, N(i
SWF, 32, Professional. Intlally shy, later out-going. Into sports, dining out, travel, books; not into smoking, bar scene. Would like to meet males, late 20's to mid 30's, with similar interests, who have also had hard time meeting people. Write
'B". Box 2894, Greenville, NC
007 SPECIAL NOTICES
NEWCREDITCARD
No one refused. Also information on receiving Visa, MasterCard Card with no credit check. Guaranteed Results. Call 602-949 0276, extension 638.
on
Autos For Sale
JEEPS, CARS, TRUCKS
Under $100. Available at local government sales in your area. Call (refundable) 1 619-569 0241, extension 1504 for your 1983 directo
ry. 24 hours.
RENTAWRECK 752 CARS Daily Weekly Monthly Rates Save on Dependable Used Cars.
SELL YOUR CAR the National Autotinders Way! Authorized Deal^er In, Pitt County. Hastings Ford. Call 758 0114.
WHY STORE THINGS you never use? Sell them for cash with
Classified Ad.
013
Buick
1971 BUICK ELECTRA 225. Runs good, needs brakes. $275. 756 7549.
lZ?^?PICK ELECTRA Limited. AM/FM stereo and extras. Good condition, $1500. 756-0286.
1977 BUICK Electra Limited. door. 756-0489 after 5p.m.
1979 BUICK ESTATE WAGON 3 seat. Fully equipped. Nice. 752 3436.
1981 BUICK CENTURY, 25,000 miles. 756-7
17389.
TO PLACE YOUR Classified Ad, just call 752 6166 and let a friendly Ad-VIsor help you word your Ad.
016
Ford
1975 LT^D FORD Power steering power brakes, air. In good cond) ^lon. 758 4736.
1977 FORD GRANADA Silver with gray vinyl roof. Power steering and power brakes, air. $2500 or best offer. Call 756-7209
1977 PINTO 2 door, light blue sedan. Four speed, air conditioning, power steering, AM-FM radio, low mile-age.$1,95, 756-0988._
020
AAercury
1969 MERCURY 4 door Monterey Regular gat. Motor axcellent. Belt offer until March 15.756 1763.
1976 MERCURY BOBCAT Wagor with luggage rack, AM/FM, air, and automatic transmission. Call
758 7252 anytime.
021
Oldsmoblle
1972 OLDSAAOBILE 98. New brakes, 2 new tires. $800.752-6366,
1974 OLDOSAAOBILE Cutlass. Call 756-5225davs; 756 4851 nlohts
1982 CUTLASS Supreme Brougham, AM-FM cassette, cruise, tilt, power windows, locks, seqts. Call 757-3618
attar 6
022
Plymouth
LW SySTJ** Good condition. $600.
wflM 730*47gy._
1982 PLYAAOUTH RELIANT sta . Call
flwwagon. Assume payments.
024
Foreign
DA-rSUN, 1974, 260Z, excellent condition, 4 speed, air. Asking $3290. 756-5555. ask tor William "
GENUINE TOYOTA oil fillers $3.75, Spark piMt 99(, Antifreeze $3.W. Call 756 3*8, 8-5 weekdays.
9 1 Saturdays
1973 MERCEDES 220 Gas. Automatic, air, AM/FM, Michelln. Like new; $5995. Days 752-7148 NIflhts, 752 0978
1973 TOYOTA CELICA, 4 speed excellent condition. 752 5707 oi
^ MG MIDGET parting c... Engine and transmission In excallant shape. 757-3310 after 6 om.
1975 MG MIDGET, 41,000 miles. Excellent shape. Call
3310 after 6 pm.
actual
757-
1975
paint |c
mjm,
Ob
A COROLLA xcallent shape.
New
$1)00.
1978 TOYOTA SR rxflotlable 756 9760.
5 speed. $1700
1979 DATSUN 280ZX 49,000 miles. Air, new tires, excellent condition;
$7695, 7M 9970, 752-7556, or 758 7600
asktorEcMlt. _I
1973 GLASSMASTER 18 foot trihull, 100 horse power Johnson Good shape except for the seat covers; SXWO Call 746-3003 Days, ask tor Hubert. 757-1279 after 4.
034 Campers For Sale
SLIDE IN TRUCK camper. Stove, sink, and air. Sieeps 2; $400. Call 746-3003 Days, ask for Hubert 757-1279 after 4.
TRUCK COVERS All sizes, colors Leer Fiberglass and Sportsman tops. 250 units in stock. O'Briants, Raleigh, N C 834 2774
16 FOOT CAMPER Stove, refrig erator, heater, air, and bathroom
Sleeps 6; $1500. Call 746 3003 Days.
to " ....... '
ask for Hubert. 757 1279 atter 4.
036 Cycles For Sale
1978 HONDA AAOTORCYCLE 750 SS RC headers, oil cooler, good condition. 10,500 miles. 2 helments, $1400 negotiable. Call 756 2772 and 756 3411 afters.___
1980 KZ 250 Kawasaki, great condition, low mileage. Call 756-5856 after
5:30 pm.
1981 YAMAHA 250 EXCITER
Excellent condition. $950. 752 5377.
039
Trucks For Sale
CHEVROLET PICKUP 1981. Vz ton, 17,000 miles, extra clean. Call Rex Smith Chevrolet, Ayden, 746-3141.
CHEVROLET EL CAMINO 1979. 45,000 miles, power windows, tilt wheel, cruise. In good condition, like new. Call Rex Smith Chevrolet, Ayden, 746 3141._
1956 TRUCK BED, $45. Call 756 2245. _
1972 FORD Econoline Van, 6 cylinder, automatic; $1095. 752-7148 days, 752-0978 nights.
1974 JEEP CJ-5, Softop. hardtop, superwinch, 4 wheel drive, new muffler, new battery. 758 5240.
1976 CHEVY LUV TRUCK
condition. $2600. Call 756 7330.
Great
1976 JEEP Wagoneer. excellent running condition, power steering, power brakes, air. Sacrifice, $2,9fX) or best otter. Call atter 5, 355 6462.
1978 FORD COURIER XLT Caro lina blue. Loaded, automatic, AM/FM radio, air, Michelln radial tires, 30 miles per gallon. Will consider trade for full size truck. 758 2128.
1981 FIDO FORD 21,000 miles. Radials. No rust. Well kept. $5500. 355 6349.
040
Child Care
WOULD LIKE TO keep 3 year old and up in childproof home. Days only. Convenient to hospital. Call 355 2715.
041
DAY NURSERY
EXPERIENCED DAY CARE teacher will ke^ children for working mothers. Call 756-8901.
OPENING FOR 2 small children in the week.
my home. Opening by th day, or by the hour. 756-7900.
046
PETS
AKC German Shepherd puppies. Must sacrifice. $100. 756 4lfl days.
795 4954 after 6.
AKC GOLDEN RETRIEVER pies, good hunting stock Phone 757 3524._
a:
AKC REGISTERED black Lab puppies. Field champion bloodline. Born December 27. 2 males avalla ble. Call 752 4976after 6 p.m.
COCKER SPANIELS, AKC Careful ^ breeding, longesf ears, coats. Exceptional quality. Fat and healthy; $150 to $200. 946 5205.___
LAB PUPS, AKC Chocolate. Sire dan on premise. 6 weeks on 3/5/83. Plymouth, NC 793 4571 days. 793 "'12 nights.
WATERFOWLERS, top black tabs In NC, best field trial lines, superior
hunters, guaranteed, 946-4924'days, nights._
NEED DIRECTOR of nurses. Excellent benefits,^salary negotia
-ble. Contact Dr. Carolyn Harrell, 758-4121. Greenville Villa.
NEW SELF SERVICE station opening soon. Need cashiers and a manager. Apply at USA Gasoline, 227 North Berkley Boulevard Goldsboro, NC Or call 919 778 9933.
NURSES! Join the iressive
ranks of health care
growing aggressive health care team located In Roanoke Rapids, NC midway between summer and winter recreational areas. Halifax Memorial Hospital (approximately 200 acute care beds) is expanding to meet the increasing and chanmng demand of its service areas. For further information on competKive salaries and generous benefit opportunities contact Mrs. Linda House, Personnel Officer, at 919 535 8106 (collect)
ONE OF THE
insurance comi
country's leading ipanles is looking for individuals in its GreenvMIe,
Farm ville and Ayden areas. The candidate must have an aptitude for
____________ jptll
selling. This isa substantial earning opportunity. Phone Robert TuccI or Ronalc.......
onald Jevicky Monday or Tuesday morning at the Greenville office, 1M Reade St.. Greenville, N C, 752-3840. All replies are confidential. An Equal Opportunity Employer M/F
PART TIME morning sales help Experience preferred.
needed.
Apply in person ridai
Friday at Leather 'N Wood, Caro lina East Mall. No phone calls.
only. AAonday-N Wo ' -
PERSON TO WORK at Rental Tool Company. Some knowledge of small engines helpful. Apply in person.
PHOTO
TYPESETTER
High school graduate plus two years experience as a photo typesetter. Will be required to operate an AM 5810 Comp Edit system in
medium size job prlnhn^^lant
to $13,644
Salary Range:
Apply at
East Carolina University Personnel Office East 5th Street Greenville. NC 27834 919 757 6352 An Equal Opportunity Employer Through Atf irmative Action
PHYSICAL THERAPIST Salary range $14,760 $20,688. Wanted
Immediately physical therapist in certified progressive Home Health/Hospice Program. Work involves administering wide variety ot physical therapy treatments be ing prescribed by a physician; is expected to exercise initiative and discretion in formulating a scheduled program of treatments to meet the needs of individual patients in their homes. Contact Craven County Health Department, 2102 Neuse Boulevard, New Bern or call 633 4121.
PROFESSIONAL ESTIMATOR with minimum 5 years experience within lumber or housing industry. Must be capable of making packing lists plus estimates from blue irints. Call between 5 and 7 pm, ask 'or Richard. 977 6918.
SALES & MERCHANDISING
Leading regional marketing firm has opening for an enthusiastic, effective sales person for established sales territory. Must have prior sucessful food sales and merchandising experience. Compensation based on salary plus
commission. Company car, group, life, and health insurance, profit
sharing plan, and other company fs. Make this an excellent
opportunity. Send resume to Sales, PO Box 1470 Greensboro, NC 27402.
SALES ESTIAAATOR Respected and growing Eastern North Carolina manufacturer ot custom Industrial equipment have entry level
opening as a sales estimator. Posi tion invo.....
involves inside sales, customer service, and estimating. Candidate
should have strong background in if r "
math and blueprint reading as well as good communication skills. Minimum of 2 year technical degree or equivalent working experience. Competitive salary and excellent benefit package. Send resume to Sales EstimaTor, PO Box 1967, Greenville, NC 27834. EOE/M F
SALES REPRESENTATIVE Ma jor national company has an opening tor a Sales Associate in the Greenville area. Prior sales experience not as Important as ability and willingness to learn. Salary negotiable. Excellent benefit
package. For a confidential terview !
erview send resume to MANAGER, P O Box 1985, Greenville. NC 27835. Equal Opportunity Employer._
051
Help Wanted
ACCREDITED MEDICAL RE CORDS technician. Quality control
position in coding and abstracting for ART or person with equivalent
knowledge and experience. Expert ICD 9 coding knowledge and expe rience Is required. Current procedural terminology coding Is desired. Send resume to Letha Huffman, NC Baptist Hospital, 300 South Hawthorne Road Winston Salem, NC 27103 Or call collect 919 748 4717. EOE
AUTO SALESPERSON NEEDED
Experience preferred but not nec essary. Excellent company benefits
essary. Excellent company benefit! including hospitalization, retire ment, paid vacation. Apply by resume only to: Bob Brown,
Brown Wood, Inc , P O Box 2157, Greenville. N C 27835
BOOKKEEPER
Local company needs full tli bookkeeper with minimum of
time
rears full charge experience. Must oe able to type and do limited amount of secretarial work. Please send resume and/or Information to: Bookkeeper, P O Box 1967, Greenville, N C 27835._
BUYER wanted tor men's clothing and furnishing store. Must have
5phlst
minded customers, oood salary. Apply Men's Buyer, PO Box 1967, Greenville, NC 2734._
CARPET and floor covering T
salesman wanted. Previous exper ence desired. Send resume to Carpet Salesman PO Box 1967 Greenville, NC 27834._
COUNSELORS
Immediate openings In North Carolina, Florida, Vermont, and Rhode Island wilderness camps tor problem youth. LIve-ln positions taking extended canoe, backpack and raft trips. Two years college preferred with child care work, camp or
racraaflon background. $7700 plus room & board, training, and banafit Call Art Rosanberg on
nday i
3.m 919-726-9058 or sand rasuma to Ickard Foundation, P O Box 31122, !harlo)ta, NC 28231. EOE_
CRUISE SHIP JOBSI Graat Incoma potential. All occupation*. For Information call: (312) 741-9780,
xtentlgnail;
CUSTOMER SERVICE/SALES A growth opportunity for self motivating Individuals In tha home building Industry. Call batwaan 12 and 2 pm and ask lor Jim. Mon-
EARN
as an Avon repre-
all 756-6610
EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES Excallant tra^ng In many flejds
for high school' graduates ages 17-27. Excellent salary and banafits.
No axpariance needed. Travel available. Call 1-800 662 7419, 8am-4pm.Mon.-Frl
EXPERIENCED HAIRDRESSER wanted. 752-3705 or 752-7042
FULL AND PART time help needed
by marketing firm distributing designar " " '
jeans. Must have trans porta Ion. Have fun and make money tool Call 9 a.m. - 6 p.m., Monday Friday. 752 7068
HAIRDRESSER WANTED Guar itaad salary. Call Georges Colt
yrq, 7S$.-6m
HOMEWORKERS WIrecratt pro ductlon. Wa train house dwellers. For full details write: WIrecratt, P O Box 223. Norfolk. Va. 23501
INTERIOR DECORATOR with ax parlance and a desire to excel. Salary and commission. Send resume to Oecorator, PO Box 1967 Greenville, NC 27834
MANAGER wanted for retail ladle's fashion store. Must have retail and managamant experience. Looking for strong leadership and ability to conduct talas and management training maaflngs. Applicant must be of strong moral character. Store employs over 120
people. Good salary. Sand resume to Store AAanagar, Qr^nyMlpVNgfm
PO Box 1967,
MECHANIC wanted Good rail able mechanic with good Excallant _pay and Ford
habits.
rorking
banef/l
package. Prefer Apply In
Carollna^Lmcoln Mercury; Graanvllla
r Ford experience to: J C Jonas, East GMC,
FULL AND PART TIME employ ment. Call 746 4633 for more in formation.
SALESPEOPLE
WILL YOU EARN $25,000 THIS YEAR OR MORE?
AGE NOT IMPORTANT -DESIRE IS-
Today's executives were hired In their 20's, 30's, 40's, 50's.
ARE YOU:
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Aggressive
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itious In good health?
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ACT TODAY to Insure tomorrow!
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Call for an Appointment and Personal Interview
Call Atendty. Tusdy $ Wtdnciday i:00 5:00 Ask For Mr, Johnson 758-3401
WANTED Department head for Brody's Childrens Department. Must have strong selling skill*. And be able to follow mi
nstructlons,
manage people, and delegate re
rf'&fAi! PI..
WORLD'S LARGEST Import,, ol Beautysllk Flowers need* part tlma
Ml* aryica raprasantatlva to call on astabllshed chain store accounts.
No overnight travel Involved. Ap ---------Ty 25-30 hour* oer waek.
proxlmatery 25-30 hours per week Retail background helpful but not required. Need dependable transportation. Hourly wages plus car
puriBMun. noyriy wages plus car allowance. Intarviaws will be held at the Holiday Inn In Graanvllla between 9:30 a.m.-5:30 p.m. on March 8. No phone calls and brinq rasuma.
059
Work Wanted
ALL TYPES TREE SERVICE Licensed tree surgeons. Trlmmlno
|lmmlng, estimates. J P~ Staclir752-633i
cutting and r'amoval Fra'a
i n CA .. m,.----
ALTERATIONS DONE pro fesslonally. 15 year* sawing ex^i ence. Call Pearlla 752-5912
ANY TYPE OF REPAIR WORK
Carpentry, masonry and rootino 35
752 7765. ^
pm.
CREATIVE HOME IMPROVEMENTSCO
Quality construction and ranova tion. Phone 757-0799aWar 6 nm
E & L CLEANING Service We clean offices and businesses. Seven
years experience with good retar itimat;
ence*. Call for trae estimate 795 4993 after 6 pm.
ENGINEERING graduate searching for career opportunities with progressive company in East arnNC ip.m. 5p.m. 919 355 2744
PAINTING, interior and exterior Free estimates. Work guaranteed' References. It years axparienca
PORCH ENCLOSED with ramov able glass, 12' X 12' X 7' high, and on* door. $1,800. Available In whit* or bronze baked on finish. Price*
for othar sized available upon request. Precision Glass 8. Window
Co., 355-2978.
lANDING and finishing floors.
maM_carpan_ter joM, counter tojj.
Jack Baker Floor Service. 756 anytime. If no answer call back
SIGN PAINTING Truck lattaring ^ as low a* $59.95. Call Stave Atkin* i. (or all your sloii need*. 756-9117.
TREES topped down. John Pan
. trimmed, TV, 758-4625.
taken
TYPING legal, accounting, thesis, * 9l C4l! 758^7 iTgfgrtJWgn.
1
j M I fl M ff The Daily Reflector, GreenviJle.N.C.-Monday, March 7,1963-5
All Have A Stake In Realigning Responsibilities
By MARY ANNE RHYNE Associated Press Writer RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -Deliberations by a state House committee are attracting attention in some high places - the offices of the governor, the budget director, department secretaries and House Speaker Liston Ramsey.
All have a stake in the way the House Judiciary I Committee is realigning responsibilities between the executive and legislative branches of government.
Those interests and the .inevitable need for the Gen-tral Assembly to give up some of its own power are making the committees .work a slow and difficult process.
Nobody likes to give up power voluntarily, particularly the strongest General Assembly in the nation, said Tom Gilmore, head of the Committee on Constitutional Integrity, formed to examine some of the same issues facing the House panel.
Gilmore, considered a candidate for governor in 1984, said the North Carolina Legislature is the strongest in the nation because its
governor does not have veto power.
Rep. George Miller, D-Durham, chairman of the House committee, agreed that a 1982 Supreme Court ruling will have the effect of taking some power from the lawmakers.
As a result of the recognition of sharp lines between the executive and legislative branches, the executive will have ... greater authority than it presently has, Miller said.
The court ruled that the legislature cant create a board or agency to implement its laws and then retain some control over the board or agency by appointing legislators to it.
The powerful Advisory Budget Commission is one of those boards with lawmakers. The bill before Millers committee tries to answer the question of who will carry out the ABCs duties now - the executive or legislative branch.
The bill, the result of a Legislative Research Commission study, deals primarily with who will set salaries, make adjustments in the budget while the General Assembly is not in
Complain N.C. Favoring IBM
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) - A rival computer company says consolidating the states computer services would favor Intematiqnal Business Machines Co^.
Sperry-Univac Corp., a major competitor with IBM for state computer contracts, has been lobbying legislators against an administration-backed bill that would set up a state computer commission with the power to approve computer mergers.
Some elected heads of state departments have also lobbied against the bill.
We at Sperry-Univac are extremely concerned that North Carolina is [quickly becoming a one^vendor state, said Howard Kramer, a Raleigh attorney and lobbyist for the computer firm. If such occurs, competitive bidding - and thus cost-efficiency-will be lost.
Jane S. Patterson, Secretary of Administration and'a supporter of centralizing computer services, said the administration is keeping an arms-length relationship with all computer companies, including IBM.
Three IBM employees participated in a state study group that proposed
centralization last year. Theii' involvement sparked criticism from Richard A. Usanis, former director of the Computing Center at North Carolina State University.
The appearance is overly close for what I would be comfortable with, he said. I think they (state officials) are getting contrary advice from IBM, and I think it is evidenced by IBMs support of this effort.
Mrs. Patterson said she would categorically deny that IBM is influencing us to do anything.
It is in the vendors interest not to have any kind of centralized management, she said. When you have all these different departments operating their own syustems, any vendor can go in and do a snow job.
IBM and Sperry-Univac are the two main contractors for the large computers that run into millions of dollars to buy or lease.
Of the eight computer systems in state government, IBM frames are used in five and Sperry-Univac frames in three. Current consolidation plans would merge two of the Sperry-Univac sytems into larger IBM systems.
Farmville DECA Captures Awards
Farmville Central High DECA students came home with a number of awards from the District I competition last Thursday. .
The competitive events conference, held at East Carolina Universitys Mendenhall Student Center March 3, featured contests in restaurant marketing, written exams, merchandising and apparel and accessories.
Students winning were:
Kim Owens runner-up, support activities event; proficiency winner; series finalist; and runner-up, restaurant marketing.
Susan Farrior runner-up, comprehensive written exam; pro
ficiency winner; and finalist, restaurant marketing.
Michelle Medlin runner-up, comprehensive written exam; proficiency winner, restaurant marketing.
Mary Stoddard - first place, support activities event; proficiency winner and finalist, restaurant marketing.
Gina Windham runner-up, promotion event; proficiency winner; finalist, restaurant marketing.
Rhonda Walston - proficiency winner, food marketing series.
Lisa Meeks - proficiency winner; series finalist, apparel and accessories.
Klrkle McGaughey proficiency winner; series finalist, apparel and accessories.
Vickie Ellis - proficiency winner, restuarant marketing.
Cindy Mills - proficiency winner, restaurant marketing.
Robby Joyner proficiency
Peg'** Wooten - proficiency winner, general merchandising.
The Farmville Central DECA Chapter also received a plaque and recognition for participating in the crime control project sponsored by the Crime Prevention division of the North Carolina Department of Crime
Controi and Public Safety.
Kim Owens, District I president, presided at the opening session of the conference and Vickie Ellis, North Carolina DECA vice president, presented awar^ during the closing session of the meeting. Janet Knox, chapter advisor, is the board of governors member of District I DECA.
Seeks Traits In Healthy Family
NEW YORK (UPl) - The ability to communicate and listen is the trait most central to close family life, says family therapist Dolores Curran.
In a magazine article based on her forthcoming book, Ms. Curran says she identified 56 possible traits of a healthy family and asked 500 experts to select the 15 qualities mostly commonly found in them.
Conversely, die found the most destructive nonverbal communication in marriage is silence. Silence can mean lack of Interest, hostility, boredom or outright war... Healthy families use signs, symbols, body language, smiles and other gestures to express caring and love.
Her article in the March issue of McCalls magazine is taken from Traits of a Healthy Family, to be published in May by Winston Press.
session and set regulations for operation of state governments motor fleet -items once handled primarily by the ABC.
The salaries involved range from the Burial Association commissioner to the controller of the state Board of Education, the community college president and' chairman of the state Employment Security Commission.
Weve never had to make these decisions before because of the presence of the Advisory Budget Commission, Miller said. It was easy to defer to them. There are those, who find it
difficult (now) to delegate responsiblity without any restraint.
The ABC, formed in 1925, has served as the eyes and ears of the General Assembly while It was not in session, watching executive decisions and acting to remind the executive branch of the legislatures intentions.
Now the ABC can only review information and advise the governor on budget matters. Some legislators are worried that they wont be kept as well informed of executive decisions if they relinquish more authority.
Both sides agree it is the
General Assembly that has the authority to set salaries and write regulations. But they disagree how much time legislators should devote to those purposes.
There are 63,000 state employees. If they want to write out what every single one of them is paid they have the right to, said Jack Cozort, Gov. Jim Hunts legal counsel.
The legislature can get bogged down in the nitty gritty details and not have time to debate the things they need to be debating, he said.
They used to have the ABC as a kind of check that
the executive branch was correctly exercising the judgment they gave us. But the ABC cant be that check. Its become a struggle over how much to give the executive branch carte blanche, Cozort said.
House Speaker Liston Ramsey warns that if the legislature isnt careful it will delegate away all of its authority.
We do more than simply come to Raleigh and raise taxes on people. If were not careful thats what we going to be good for - levying taxes, he said.
Ramsey said the authority, is not ours to give away
although we can give it away. It belongs to the legislators who will follow us. Oke we give it away it will beWery difficult to gel bacr^
Gilmore believes the legislature should take all its members off the Advisory Budget Commission.
That would enable each member of the General Assembly to have a greater voice, he said. The 10 or 12 members of the General Assembly (on the ABC) corrupt their ability to examine independently each line of the budget. They go back and defend the budget before the (budget) committee.
The General Assembly always has the last ^ftord. They can abolish the'pro-gram or the position if they dont like the way it is working.
Since the bill was filed early in tjie session, debate has not stopped. Subcommittees now are working on it ahd there are weeks of debate left before the issue is settled.
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Edifoitials
AX$urances Acceptable
Former (?Krv. Robert W. Scott was named the new president of the North Carolina Community College System last week.
Scott was the unanimous choice of the State Board of Community Colleges. The appointment raises questions about the naming of one who has not been a professional educator and has been so deeply involved in state politics.
Scott, however, offened assurances that he would use what political influence he had for the advancement of education. The former governor said he did not intend to run for political office and would not use the position to advance anyone else for political office.
Given Scotts past years Of service, his assurances are acceptable to us. As a former governor he can offer positive leadership to the community colleges system. If he wants to make a real contribution to the community cdlege system he will indeed devote all his energies tp the building of a better system and certainly he has the'adnUnistrative abilities to do this. '' . r A
Through the years there have been complaints that the community colleges were too politics^. The new president understands politics as few do in North parolina. He can use this understanding to thwart those \vho ^ould use the system for political advancement. *,
Scott is now president of the community college system. He should view this as a responsibility as awesome as that he accepted when he became governor. His goa\now should be to build the system so that it is the best' it cl|n be. When his tenure as president is complete he should le^ve accomplishments that will be measured with the best of those during his term as governor.
Stronger Laws Needed
The dram shop proposal for fighting drunken driving is steadily being whittled down in the committees of the state Legislature.
The proposal would place liability on establishments serving alcohol for subsequent accidents caused by those who consumed the alcohol.
The p^'oposal has never gained major public support, possibly because many people view it as unfair to place such a liability on the establishment when the customer could consume large amounts of alcohol after he left the place.
North Carolina needs stronger laws to combat impaired driving caused by consumption of alcohol dr drugs. The governors program contains some strong proposals for dealing with the problem which place the burden on the person who consumes the alcohol. Would it not be better to drop the dram shop proposals and concentrate on passage of the strong points of the program?
Rowhnd Evans and Robert Novak-
Leak Risked Lives Of U.S. Agents
WASHINGTON - The leak by unknown administration officials of Libyan strongman Muammar Qaddafis plot against neighboring Sudan risked the life of American agents in the Middle East who had tipped off the CIA, infuriating President Reagan in the process.
With the president himself in command, top national security advisers agreed that the dispatch of U.S. AWACS radar planes to Egypt to monitor the dangerous situation could not be honestly explained without endangering the U.S. agents. That is why, during his Feb. 16 press conference, Reagan himself seemed completely in the dark and passed off the shift of the AWACS as not an unusual happening.
When the real story was leaked (probably by Pentagon officials), the presidents first worry was that Qaddafi would retaliate by finding the real or pseudo U.S. agents and order them killed. Reagan also knew that the press would ridicule him for the apparent ignorance he displayed at his press conference. As matters turned out, neither real nor pseudo agents were uncovered by Qaddafi, and the president was indeed ridiculed.
Fritz and Teddy
Relations between Democratic presidential front-runner Walter F. Mndale and Sen. Edward M. Kennedy were not helped when the former vice president declared on the campaign trail last week that he had opposed President Jimmy Carters Soviet grain embargo - precisely the position Mndale had excoriated Kennedy for taking in 1980.
On his second day as an officially-announced candidate. Mndale told a news conference in St. Paul, Minn., that he had opposed the embargo in internal discussions of the Carter administration and supported it as a good soldier only after it became official policy. I vigorously opposed it, he said. I thought it was a mistake. When they heard of this back in Washington, Kennedys aides could scarcely believe it. In the rough Iowa campaigning early in 1980, Mndale came close to questioning Kennedys patriotism for failure to support the grain embargo and other anti-Afghanistan measures. The resulting scars never quite healed over the past three years, and Mondales new comments were not therapeutic.
A top-secret State Department message sent to the Italian government tries to make amends for seeming past U.S. skepticism by professing what one official termed great interest by the Reagan administration in the continuing probe of possible Soviet complicity In the attempted assassination of Pope John Paul II.
The diplomatic note was intended to dispel wellfounded criticism that the CIA was not interested in pushing the investigation of a Soviet hand, through its subservient communist neighbor Bulgaria, in the assassination attempt. One reason for the CIAs apparent lack of interest is that its agents in Europe were certain - and so reported to Washington - that the assassin was operating as an individual, not as part of a conspiracy.
That erroneous view has now been transformed at the top of the CIA, which has been giving discreet help to Italian police and intelligence authorities in their investigation. The message to Italys government was a between-the-lines cheer for the findings thus far and a hope of more to come.
Rummy To The Rescue Although Kenneth Adelman has been a little shy of blueribbon Senate Republican
support in his embattled struggle for confirmation as President Reagans arms control director, he has been given all-out backing by a formidable Republican outside the government: ex-defense secretary Don Rumsfeld, now chief executive of G.D. Searle.
Rumsfeld has been manning the longdistance telephone from his corporate headquarters in Skokie, 111., to senators, urging them to vote for Adelman,,his onetime subordinate at the Pentagon. But that has excited speculation in the Senate Republican cloakroom that the unseen hand behind Adelmans surprise nomination to head the Arms Control and Disarmament Agency (ACDA) might have belonged to Rummy, an unsurpassed backroom operator in the Ford administration.
The fact that Adelmans nomination was announced without the usual Senate ' clearance, suggesting to euspicious senators the existence of a secret patron, discouraged fervent support for his nomination from the Republican side of the aisle. Secretary of State George Shultz has not helped matters by confiding to senators that Adelman was news to him as well.
Walter MearsArt Buchwald-
High Political Toll
WASHINGTON (AP) According to a top aide, President Reagan does not; believe in tossing an embattled aide over the side for political benefit - unless theres a reason to do so
The case in point was that of Anne M. Burford, the heavily investigated head of the heavily investigated Environmental Protection Agency.
That observation by White House chief of staff James A, Baker 111 can be read either of two ways. One is as he intended it, which is to say that Reagan isnt about to jettison Mrs. Burford as EPA administrator without just reason.
The other is that political benefit, or an effort to contain political losses, can become a reason for parting with an administration official. Politicians dont say that out loud, but it is so, it has happened, and there isnt necessarily anything wrong with it.
The time can come when a president decides to settle a controversy like that surrounding EPA in order to get on with other business, even if it does mean accepting - or encouraging - the resignation of the aide primarily involved.
That time may not come in Mrs. Burford's case. She may weather the investigative storm of six congressional committees and the Department of Justice, and stay at EPA, But it alsoThe Daily Reflector
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possible that the diversion, and the continuing defense, will exact a higher political toll than the administration is willing to pay.
Should that happen, Mrs. Burford would get a very nice note from the presjdent one spring day. It wouid thank her for distinguished service, express full confidence in her ability and integrity, and close with regret that she had decided to leave the government.
Later, Reagan would say that he certainly did not seek her resignation, but that he respected her decision.
That is hypothetical as to Mrs. Burford, but the script is not. Its been used before.
The requisite beginning is an expression of full confidence in the official, Reagan has covered that. When appropriate, such a declaration may be followed by the dismissal of a subordinate officiai or three, and by management changes, Reagan has fired three lesser EPA officials, and the White House announced a management shakeup there.
But that did not placate congressional investigators.
Now White House officials, those unidentified sources of whom Reagan so often complains,, have begun to drop hints that there may eventually have to be a change at EPA. Thats standard in such circumstances, too.
The baiance of the Burford script will depend on what the investigators find, and how long they keep at their inquiries. In the Democratic House, at least, that is likely to be a long time.
The president does not believe you just toss somebody over the side in order to achiive some political benefit, Baker said qiter briefing the president on the EPA situation.
Baker said the only thing thats been suggested - and they are just vague, general suggestions - is that somehow shes guilty of mismanagement. Should they become more than vague suggestions, that may become reason for a change. President Reagan has spent a good share of his political career denouncing government mismanagement.
When and if theres a reason, the warm letter is in the files. With minor editing, the one Reagan sent to Richard V. Allen would do. Accepting Allens resignation as national security adviser, after a controversy over his dealings with Japanese interest, the president wrote:
As you leave your post I want you to know that you do so with my confidence, trust and admiration for your personal integrity and your exemplary service to the nation,
President Carter hung tough for weeks when Bert Lance came under investigation for his private banking practices. Lance was more than a budget director, he was a close friend.
We had just finished dinner when Winslow said, I have a surprise for everyone. Come in the living room while I lock the doors and pull down the window shades.
We went in the living room. Winslow had set up a 16mm projector and a movie screen.
What are you going to show us, Winslow? Someone asked. Deep Throat orDebbie Does Dallas?
Something much worse. I managed to get an iilegal print of a Canadian documentary on acid rain.
A murmur ran through the crowd, Couldnt we get in trouble watching a dirty film from Canada?
Winslow smiled. Youre damn right you could. The Justice Department has declared all Canadian films on acid rain pure propaganda, and they have to be clearly marked as such. They also told the Canadian Film Board it has to turn over to Justice the names of those who asked to see the films.
Martha Harrington said, Ive never seen a documentary on acid rain. This is going to be exciting.
How in the devil did you get the film? I asked Winslow.
I smuggled it in from Toronto, he replied.
You really took a chance. What if you had gotten caught?
I would have been fined and sent to jail. U.S. Customs has strict orders to look for Canadian Film Board movie prints. Theyre even training dogs now to sniff for them. The Attorney General has given it top priority.
A Case Of Smuggling Dirty Films
NEW YORK (AP) Jawboning is a communications art that often produces practicai resuits when more formal techniques have failed, as Ronald Reagan knows as well as any president who used it.
Every president in the past half-century did. In their own ways, each was a salesman and probably had to be.
In his fireside chats and iq)eeches, Franklin D. Roosevelt sought to assure Americans that their only fear was fear itself. In his straight, down-to-earth interviews, Harry S. Truman created his role as leader of the ordinary people.
Dwight D. Eisenhower probably used it least of all recent presidents, but John F. Kennedy employed the jawbone to embarrass steelmakers into postpmlng a price increase. And jawbonhig was basic to Lyndon B. Johnsons style.
Most memorably, Jcrfmson sought to talk down inflation, a Job at which he was
Why are they uptight about films on acid rain?
Winslow said, Theyre afraid if Americans see them, without them being clearly marked as propaganda, we would believe that acid rain is an environmental problem.
You would think the Justice Department would have more to do then worry about Canadian documentaries, Ed Harrington said.
You dont know much about the Justice Department. They finally found a legal issue they understand. Theyve been so confused about civil rights, EPA and antitrust cases, that they jumped at the chance to sock it to caada. The Canadians are going to think twice the next time they finance a film about pollution, Winslow told us.
How long is it? someone asked.
It only runs 30 minutes. But it will blow your mind.
Bella Murphy said, Suppose the FBI breaks in while were watching it? Dont worry about it, Bella, Winslow said. My kids are outside on the lookout. If they ring the doorbell three times. Ill dump the print and substitute The Devil In Miss Jones, They cant touch us for watching a porno movie in our home.
Well, show it fast, Bella said, very nervous.
Okay lights out. Here we go.
We all sat in rapt attention as we watched fish and wildlife dying in the Canadian north, A few people got sick and had to go to the bathroom. At the end of the picture, Martha Harrington said, What kind of
degenerate mind could make a picture like that?
Thats what the Justice Department would like to know. If this film is shown throughout the United States it could destroy the American way of life as we know it.
How could Canada do it?
There are a lot of dangerous people in the environmental movement up iere, and they have control of the film industry! If you think that one was bad wait until
you see the other one I smuggled in. Its .about the horror of nuclear war.
You cant show a Candian picture against nuclear war in the United States, Bella screamed. Its illegal.
Of course its illegal, thats what makes it so exciting, Winslow said. Wouldnt you rather see a film forbidden by the U.S. authorities, than watch The Winds of War?
(c) 1983, Los Angeles Times Syndicate
Elisha Douglas
Strength For Today
own
Im
In three parables contained in the 25th chapter of St. Matthews Gospel, Jesus set forth the attitudes which a Christian must maintain if he would make his life acceptable in Gods sight.
In the parable of the lo Virgins, Jesus described the attitude we are to maintain toward him. We are to watch for his coming with prayer, meditation and pondering Gods will as revealed in the Bible.
In the parable of the Talents, Jesus described the attitude a
John Cunniff
Jawboning Is An Art
probably bound to fall, as surely as if he had taken on the tide. Still, he did cajole people Into thinking the economy could support both guns and butter.
That in turn gave Johnson time to develop his military buildup in Vietnam, without building up the budget pn^r-tlonately, an accomplishment that might not have been possible had the public foreseen the Inflation to follow.
Richard M. Nixon used the jawbone in an effort to talk wages and prices into line, but apparently wasnt convincing enough, because later he violated his free enterprise philosophy and resorted to a wage-prlce freeze.
Gerald R. Ford used jawboning in an attempt to whip inflation now, an effort he suddenly abandoned \dien he realized that an incipient recession had, for the time being, replaced Inflation as the number one problem.
Jimmy E. Carter jawboned too, almost
constantly. Despite repeated economic failures, he convinced millions that his next economic program would be the one to save America. But after seven such programs his credibility waned.
Having been a professional communicator, Ronald W. Reagan has expert knowledge on the efficacy of jawboning, or creating with words an aura that siq>ports his programs, even when hard evidence might not be found to do so.
In spite of his recognized ability with the jawbone, it is only in the second half of his term that Reagan has begun to use it with force, perhaps because his ability to achieve legislative victories is diminished.
Frustrated with news reports that fail to emphasize what is well with America and its economy, the president has admonished newscasters to see the good side of things, and he has urged banks to drop interest rates.
person should maintain toward himself and his opportunities. He is to use whatever gifts God has given him in a diligent fashion.
In the parable of the Last Judgment, Jesus declares that the test of all virtue is whether or not it springs from a loving heart.
Life on earth is a preparation for something else. Life in time is preparation for life in eternity. We are all in the important process of getting ready.
Of late, of course, there are many good things about the economy, and Reagan has let the world know it. But newspeople, seeking independence rather than a place on the Reagan team, also see what is unpleasant and unfortunate.
Bankers also see another side to their story. They concede that the spread between their cost of money and the price they charge for it is wider than might be expected. But there is more to the story, they claim.
They contend, for example, that they hold on their books many low-priced loans that still have years to go. They are losing on these, they say, and need to offset the losses with profitable loans.
But many Americans su^t that one reason for the high rates is that some banks are trying to offset their had loans to financially weak foreign nations, and that in other instances they simply want the profits for themselves.
059
Work Wanted
WANT TO LOOK SAWSHING this Spring but <An't afford a new
wardrobe? Call 752 8974 to make the clothes you have fit their best Alterations and restyling at reason able rates.
060
FOR SALE
061
Antiques
ANTIQUES Up To 25% Off
076 AAobile Home Insurance
AAOBILE HOMEOWNER Insurance - the best coverage tor less money Smith Insurance and Realty, 752 2754.
077 Musical Instruments
A NEW SPINET PIANO with 10 year warranty. Pecan finish only. 5895. Piano & Organ Distributors, Arli^^ Boulevard, Greenville,
Announcing Red Tag Sale Sunday March 6th through Sunday, AAarct. 13th, to introduce you to'the Antique AAarket, Highway 70 W Bypass,
Kinston. CtToose from our '^large collection of American antiques in our 10,000 sq. ft. showroom. Over 150 oak pieces to choose from, Victorian Walnut cylinder desks, bookcases, bedroom suites, pine and cherry corner cupboards Hours 10 6 AAonday Saturday, 16 on Sunday. 527 8300.
064 Fuel, Wood, Coal
all TYPES of firewood for sale. J P Stancii, 752 6331_
ALL OAK FIREWOOD, split, stacked, delivered, $45 full '/j cord. Call 752-0983.
FIREWOOD FOR SALE
$40 FOR PICKUP
CALL 757-3568 or 758-5063
FIREWOOD, $30 a load. Call 758 4611 anytime for delivery
GUITAR PLAYER WANTED for
Rock and Roll Band. Call after 5
pm. 946-0302.
078
Sporting Goods
HATTERAS CANVAS PRODUCTS All types canvas and cushion re
pairs. SpeciallzirM in marine products. 758 0641.1104 Clark Street.
082 LOST AND FOUND
LOST 4 month old white dog with
I----u--------- .
Re
large brown spots. Lost 2 miles weist of Welcome Middle School ~
ward! 758-6008after 6.
085 Loans And AAortgages
2ND MORTGAGES by phone commercial loans-morti-----
commercial loans-mortgages bought. Call tree 1 800-845-3929.
091 Business Services
BOOKKEEPING done in my home. 6 years experience. All phases, including payroll and relatea taxes; 355-2344. AAarv. afternoon._
OAKWOOD BY JAMES Season oak, $45per load; green oak, $40 per load. Call 758 2840or 756 9193
100% OAK FIREWOOD for sale. $45 a load if we deliver, $40 a load if you pick up. 758-3797 or 752 5488.
065 Farm Equipment
PLOW PARTS - Mouldboards to fit John Deere 16", $31.48, Massey Ferguson $37.22, Ford 14" $37.05. Ford Shins $4.32; Massey Ferguson shins $4.29; John Deere 14" shins $4.77. Other mouldboards. shins, points and heels to fit most plows in stock. Agri Supply, Greenville, NC 752-3999.
USED IN GROUND SCALES Call 756-7209.
067 Garage-Yard Sale
INCOME TAX SERVICES Bovd. Call 756 3264._
Hilton
093
OPPORTUNITY
BIG MONEY IN SPORTSI Own your own sporting goods business! Sport Circle will show you the way. Be affiliated with a National franchise, earn big profits, full or part time! $2,400 gets you started! Call collect to Mr. Harps (717) 421-6910 Sport Circle, Inc., South 9th it, S
Street, Stroudsburg, PA 18360.
FOR SALE seafood market. Good income, good business and Callb
location.
I between 6 9, 756 105
LIST OR BUY your business with C J Harris & Co., Inc. Financial & Marketing Consultants. Serving the Southeastern United States. Greenville, N C 757 0001, nights 753 4015. _
MOVING SALE 7 rooms of nice furniture. Living room suit, bedroom suits, china cabinet, desk, washer, dryer, stove and refrigera tor, lawnmower, weed eater and worktable. Come by 408 South Harding Street, Wednesday-Saturdav anytime. _
072
Livestock
HORSEBACK RIDING
Stables, 752-5237.
HORSES Registered TB/QH, black mare, 9 years, hunter-jumper and black Gelding hunter jumper.
also ridden Western. 756-2551.
074
Miscellaneous
APPLE II PLUS 48K computer for sale. Four months old. 758-4376
BEGINNERS AND Advanced piano lessons by ECU honor student, Debra Russ. Piano 8, Organ Dis tributors, Arlington Boulevard, Greenville,355 6002._
BRUNSWICK SLATE POOL Tables. Cash discounts. Delivery
and installation. 919 763 9734.
cabbage and yellow plants. Call 355-6360.
SAVE 25% AND MORE on grocer les with unique marketing plan. Call758 1008after6.
STEEL BUILDING Dealer By Manufacturer. Double Profit. Construction Si Sales Benefits. Easy to sell. Steel construction only 2/3 price of masonry. Free engineering quotes. Quick delivery. Make $100,000 $200,000 annually in your own business. Call for opening. 1 800 525 9240._
TO BUY OR SELL a business, for appraisals, for financing, for franchise consulting contact SNOWDEN ASSOCIATES In vestment Analysts and Brokers, Greenville. 752 3575.
095
PROFESSIONAL
CHIMNEY SWEEP Gid Holloman. North Carolina's original chimney
ieep. 25 years experience working chimneys and fireplaces. Can day or night, 753-3503, Farmville
100 HousMForSal*
taths, kitchen with dining area, Iving room, central heat and air. L-Offnrt on a beautiful corner lot.
0- blount & associates, 756-3m. Betty Beacham, listing agent, 756-3880 ^
HARDEE ACRES 1950 square foot heated. Large den with pool table and fireplace. Newly carpeted with
garage. Less than $30 per square
foot. $57.900. 758-0144 or 7?7 ~
HORSESHOE ACRES Country llv ing with city flair. 3 bedroom home
featuring well equipped kitchen, fireplace.
built in
great room with
book sheitres, 2 large bathrooms, antral h
dining room, central heat and air.
garage located on 3/4 acre lot {64,000. w. g. blount & associates.
756 3000, Betty Beacham, agent, 756-3880,
listing
LAKE ELLSWORTH AREA For sale
FHA pVi percent loan for $9600. 3
bedrooms, 2 baths......
Call 756-8804 after 6
LAKE GLENWOOD, Bryant Circle. FHA assumption, 3 bedroom, 2 bath, brick home with fireplace. Almost an acre lot. Call Echo Realty. Inc. 524-4148 or 524-5042.
NEEDS FIXING UP older home converted Into duplex, needs love and tender care, over 1600 square feet, near schools and shopping. Under $20,000. No reasonable offer refused! Davis Realty, 752-3000, 756-2904. 756-1997.
NEW LISTING Windy Ridge. Come preview this 3 bedroom, SVz
bath condominium. Family room with fireplace, smarate dining room, heat pump. Excellent condf tion. Recreational facilities available. W-15. Call June Wyrick, Aldridge 8, Southerland, 756-3^ or 758-7744
NICE, COZY contemporary house In Twin Oaks, excellent tlnanch
F L Garner, 355-26M or'756-321^] Owner, 758-2520._
NICE 5 room house. Enclosed back porch,_ carport, new^jialnt In and
out. Very good county. Good p<
tion. In the -ees. $34,000. 1-3218; call after 6,
OAKDALE: 3 bedroom home with large kitchen, step down den, living room, l'/3 baths. Located on large corner lot. Only $37,500. For addl-ional Information call Betty Beacham at 756 3880 or W G Blount 8, Associates at 756-3000.
SETTLE IN THIS neat starter home for about $1800, including closing, 3 bedrooms, in the country, deck, central heat, wood stove, also In cheerful and cozy den, $37,500. Davis Realty, 752 ^, 756-2904, 756-1997.
STOKES: Stately Southern
Mansion. Completely renovated. Featuring 4 bedrooms, 3/] baths.
living room, den, dining room, well ...... 1th
121 Apartments For Rent
ALMOST NEW 2 bedroom duplex. Agency. 756-2121._
CYPRESSGARDENS APARTMENTS
2308 E Tenth Street Available Immediately two bedroom flat with washer/dryer hook-ups, heat pump, frost free
hook-ups, heaf pump, frost fre refrigerator, dishwasher, dispose 7M 596^* 758-6061, nights/weekend
Protessionally managed by Remco East. Inc._
. spacious apart
$4
DUPLEX (two ments available) upstairs S250. downstairs $265, 2 large bedrooms, refrigerator, rar^, cargeted, gas
heated. (Water I
' owner
Lease and deposit requlrec
...... 7;
Latham and 5th Street after 6 p.m._
752 2844
EASTBROOK AND VILLAGE GREEN APARTMENTS
327 one, two and three bedroom
larden and townhouse apartments, eaturing Cable TV, modern appliances, central heat and air condi tioning, clean laundry facilities, three swimming pools.
Oftlce 204 Eastbrook Drive 752-5100
EFFICIENCY APARTMENTS Fully furnished Including linens maid service, all utilities, cable Newly renovated 1 or 2 beds Starting at $105 week or $300 month Olde London Inn, 2710 South Memo rial Drive. Call 756-5555.
FORBES AND EAST 8th STREET 2 bedroom, living room, dining room, kitchen and bath. Call after m. 919-792-6488.
FURNISHED APARTMENT available near college. Also a room available on April 1st. Call 758 2201
Large 2 ments.
GreeneWay
bedroom garden apart ted, dis
carp
washer, cable TV, laundry rooms,
balconies, spacious grounds with abundant parking, economical utilities and pool. A Greenville Country Club
Adjacent . 756 6869
KINGS ROW APARTMENTS
equipped kitchen with breakfast nook. Must see to appreciate; $140,000. For additional information call Betty Beacham 756-3880 or W G Blount & Associates at 756-3000.
12 PARK DRIVE 3 bedroom immaculate home with 1188 square feet, garage. Assumable VA loan. $44,500. Bill Williams Real Estate, 752 2615.
$51,900. Price Reduction. Windy iidge, 3 bedroom, 2Vj bath condominium, family room with
fireplace, separate dining room, t pump. Excellent invest
100
REAL ESTATE
1 ACRE -- 2 mobile homes. Set up for small park. Reduced price
CALL CHARLES TICE, 758 3013, tor small loads of sand, topsoil and stone. Also driveway work.
CHAINSAW, Sears, 22' Call 752 0983.
Bar, $80,
CHILDREN'S CAMPAIGN
furniture, like new. Desk, nightstand and chest. $225. Set World Book Encyclopedias and all year books. Excellent condition. Value $595. sell for $325. Call Mary days, 752 3000, nights 756 1997
EXCELLENT CONDITION dryer, $100. 756 8690.
Gas
EXOTIC COFFEE TABLES Pine and cypress. Sell for $100 $400. 752 1231.
FREE RUG SHAMPCX3 are back in Greenville.
Kirby's As an
introductory otter simply preview le l^ome Care
the 1983 Kirby Heritage___________
System and we will shampoo 1 room carpet at no cost or obligation. Call your Greenville representative, Randy Hobbs at 756 2464 or 446-1129 tor details. Homeowners only.
FURNITURE FURNITURE Living Room Dining Room Bedroom. Many styles to choose from! We GUARANTEE to have the lowest prices!!! Factory Mat tress, Waterbed & Furniture Outlet, 730 Greenville Blvd. 355 2626.
IN STOCK WALLPAPER $100 roll. Whitehurst Carpets. 103 Trade Street._
LUMBER Used pine and cypress boards, poles, and logs. 752 1231 or 758 6238._
MOFFITT'S MAGNAVOX Greenville's first and largest video tape club. Rent movies tor only $5 tor three days._
MOVING SALE 7 rooms of nice furniture Living room suit, bedroom suits, china cabinet, desk, washer, dryer, stove and refrigera tor, lawnmower, weed eater and worktable. Come by 408 South Harding Street, Wednesday Saturday anytime_
RENT A STEAMEX Best method (or cleaning carpets. Larry's Carpetland, 3010 East 10th Street, Greenville._
102 Commercial Property
FOR SALE or lease. Two com mercial buildings on main thor o^hfare. Call 758-1131. After 6 pm.
1463.
104 Condominiums For Sale
BY OWNER Quail Ridge Condo, 3 bedrooms, Th baths, ti
---------.living
room with fireplace, and dinin room. Pool and tennis court 355 6053
ining
Can
PHASE I SOLD OUT!
Twin Oaks 11 now open witt14 units already sold! Talk with us today about our affordable alternative to renting. Call Wil Reid at ''58-6050 or 756 0446 and Jane Warren at 758 6050 or 758 7029.
MOORE & SAUTE R 110 South Evans 758-6050
io
Farms For Sale
FDR SALE IN Pitt County: 68.74 acre farm with 2.05 acre tobacco allotment. 4,449 pounds tobacco, 35 acres cleared. Farm In Beaufort County: 63.41 acres with 7,375
pounds tobacco, 42.6 acres cleared. 919 946 7259.
28 ACRES with 12 cleared. Near Chicod School. 15 miles Southeast of Greenville. Owner financing available. For more Information call Aldridge & Southerland Realty, 756 3500, nights Don Southerland, 756 5260._
RENT A VIDEO recorder and movie $15. Complete selection of all titles. Moftitts Magnavox 756
8444.
REPOSSESSED VACUUMS and Shampooers. Call Dealer, 756-6711.
SHAMPOO FOR FALL! Rent shampooers and vacuums at Rental Tool Company
TILT TRAILER, 7' by 5', hea^g^
gauge steel construction with justable tongue. Good (or hauling lawn mowers, wood, or miscella neous heavy equipment. 752-5060, after 756 9098.__
TOPSOIL, field sand, mortar sand and rock. Call 746 3619or 746 3296.
12X16 BUILDING, ' } bath. Be used for office or beauty shop, etc. Well built. $2200firm. 746-4426.___
19" JC PENNY color TV with stand. Good condition, $290. 355-6538 alter 5.__
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 to 6 pm. MOBILE HOME BROKERS 630 West Greenville Boulevard
756-0191_
BRAND NEW 1983 top of the line double wide. 52 X 24, 3 bedrooms, 2
full baths, many extras Including masonite siding, shingle roof, bay windows, frost tree refrigerator, garden tub. cathedral ceiling and
windows.
much, much more. Regular price, $24,995
Limited Time Only
$19,995
VA, FHA and conventional on lot financing. Delivery and set up Included; Hours,8 AM
ludecf Hours, 8 AM to 6 pm. MOBILE HME BROKERS 630 West Greenville Boulevard 756-0191_
USED 2 BEDROOM, assurne low
payments of $131 per month. Conner Homes, 75
, 756 0333.
12X56 mobile home. Price negotia ble. Call 758 3509 after 6._
1971
12 X 60 Champion mobile simo
Call75a*792or 756 4252 anytime:
60 Champ ________
home, almost completely furnished, ilfli
New carpet, air condition. $5,795.
1973 HOLIDAY, 12x65. 2 bedrooms, washer/dryer. Window air conditioner, 2 baths. Set up in Hollybrook Estates. 758 4541
1976 MOBILE HOME. 12x65. partially furnished, $7500 . 3 ton central air unit. 355 2334 after 5.
1977 HILLCREST, 12x60, 2
bedrooms, 1 bath, unfurnished, 3 ton central air. Excellent condition. Set up In nice park; $79()0. CaM 752 3246 after 6 pm
1977 OAKWOOD mobile home, 12x60, good condition. All rooms are closed off. Call 746 4677 from 4 9.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
FURNITURE WORLD
2808 E 10th St.
OPEN MON. THRU FRI 9 AM tol PM SATURDAY 9 AM to (PM 757-0451 We Will Not Be Undersold
58 ACRE FARM Good road frontage on SR 1753 and SR 1110. 51 acres cleared, 6,209 pounds toloacco allotment, pond and 2 bedroom house. St. Johns Community. Call tor more details. Call Moselay-Marcus Realty at 746-2166 for full details._
107
Farms For Lease
WANTTOBUY
CORN
Top Prices Paid for your corn, Worthington Farms Inc., 756 3827 Days, 7M-3732Nlohts. _
109
Houses For Sale
BALL & LANE
752-0025
OWNER FINANCING OPPORTUNITIES FARMVILLE- Exceptional brick traditional offers formal areas.
bedrooms, 3"} baths, private study!
om Greenville
Just a tew minutes from i________
in a lovely neighborhood. $100.(X)0.
UNIVERSITY- Lots of space for the
growing family. Needs some work but has great possibilities!
blocks from campus.
Two $51,000.
Lee Ball Richard Lane Sandra Norris
756-5797
753-1646
752-8819
BY OWNER Neaf 3 bedroom, I'/j bath brick ranch with garage. Central air, good location, workshop. $39.900. Good financing. Moving, must sell fast. 756-5587.
BY OWNER 3 bedroom
K 1215 E Wright Road. Williamsburg, TV} baths, great room with fireplace, dining room, all the extras. Excellent
location, 8V}% loan assumption. $69,900. Call 758-8792 attar i (or appointment.
CEDAR LOG HOMES 1326 square foot package, $11,900. 20 year war ranty. See our model In Griffon. Echo Realty, Inc. 524-4148 or 524 5042._
You can be very cn
FARMVILLE comfortable in this livable rancl home. Foyer, living room, dining room, den combination with fireplace, three bedrooms, two baths. Carport. $39,900. Duffus Re-alty Inc.
GREAT LOAN ASSUMPTION Hardee Acres. 3 bedroom, IV} bath brick ranch with garage. Large corner lot with fenced backyard. $34j^000 loan at 9V}% Payment $309 PItl $49,500. AAovIng, must sell fast. 756-5587. i
heat pump. Excellent investment at this price. Seller will consider FHA, VA, or conventional financing. W 10. Call June Wyrick at Aldridge 8i Southerland Realty, 756-3500 or 758-7744._
$59,900. Price reduction. Centrally located. This 3 bedroom, 2 bath
brick ranch features family room
^____ pi
Attractive neighborhood.
with fireplace.
ilus formal area. - ____:. conve
nient to schools and shopping. Seller will consider FHA, VA, or Conventional financing. Make
tional financing. Make your appointment now to see it. W 14. Call June Wyrick at Aldridge 8, Southerland Realty, 756 3500 or 758 7744.
$66,900. Spacious brick ranch. 3 bedroom, office, .2 baths, greatroom, large sunroom or playroom, 2 car garage. New carpet Throughout. Seder wilt consider FHA, VA, or conventional financing. Convenient location. W-11. Call June Wyrick, Aldridge & Southerland, 756 3500 or 758 7744._
111 Investment Property
DUPLEX 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, central heat, air, 4 years old. Contemporary. Excellent buy. Call John Day, AAoore 8. Sauter; 752 1010. Evenings 752 0345.
One and two bedroom garden apartments. Carpeted, range, refrigerator, dishwasher, disposal and cable TV Conveniently located to shopping center and schools
to shopping center and Located just off lOth Street.
Call 752-3519
LOVE TREES?
Experience the unique in apartment living with nature outside your
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, thermopanc windows, extra insulation.
Office Open 9-5 Weekdays
9-5 Saturday 15 Sunday
Merry Lane Off Arlington Blvd.
756-5067
NEAR UNIVERSITY, 3 bedrooms, recently renovated. No pets. 726 7615.
NEAR UNIVERSITY, 2 bedrooms, nopetS.$175.1-726 7615
OAKMONT SQUARE APARTMENTS
Two bedroom townhouse apart
washer, refrigerator, range, dis posal included. We also have Cable TV Very convenient to Pitt Plaza and University. Also some furnished apartments available
DUPLEX 2 bedrooms, 1 bath.
central heat, air, 4 years old. Contemporary. Excellent buy. Call John Day, AAoore 8, Sauter; 752-1010. Evenings 752-0345
113
Land For Sale
FOR SALE: 23 acres of land. Near
Black Jack. Deep well 8nd septic tank. 24x90' bullaing. 2 stall horse
stable. 10% tlnanclng. 756-6595.
115
Lots For Sale
APPROX lAAATELY % of wooded lot with well and tank, in Homestead Mobile $6,000. 756-5348
It sept Estate
BAYTREE SUBDIVISION
Attractive wooded lots within the city. 90% financing available. Call 758-3421.
EQUAL HOUSINGOPPORTUNITY
BAYWOOD, TWO ACRE lot. nancing available. Call 756-7711.
FI
LOCATED IN Cherry Oaks. Heavi ly wooded 156' of road frontage located on Gloria Street. Over v, acre. $15,900. Call Tommy at 756 7815 days, 758-8733 nights
PARTIALLY WOODED Cherry Oaks Subdivision. Priced to self.
Days 758-7687; after 6, 756 7227.
TWO ACRES, 10 miles east of Greenville. $13,000! Call 752-0824.
117 Resort Property For Sale
TOPSAIL BEACH 2 bedroom, 1 bath beach home, 6 months old. Owner transferred. Fully furnished ready for occupancy. $53,850. FHA assumable loan. J R York Con-structlon Company, Inc. 355-2286.
120
RENTALS
LOTS FOR RENT Also 2 and 3 bedroom mobile homes. Securlf osits required, no pets.
4413 between 8 and 5.
NEED STORAGE? We have any size to meet your storage need. Call Arlington Self Storage, Open Mon-dav Friday 9 5. Call 756 9933.
121 Apartmants For Rent
AZALEAGARDENS
Greenville s newest and most uniquely furnished one bedroom apartments.
All energy efficient designed. Queen size beds and studio couches.
Washers and dryers optional Free water and sewer and yard maintenance.
* *Prtments on ground floor with porches.
Frost-free refrigerators.
Located In Azalea Gardens near Brook Valley Country Club. Shown Y only. Couple* or
singles. No pets.
Contact JT or Tommy Williams 756-7815
Cherry Court
Spfclous 2 Mroom townhouses with IV} baths. Also t bedroom apartments. Carpet, dishwashers.
756-4151
ONE BEDROOM, furnished apartments or mobile homes for rent. Contact J T or Tommy
Williams, 756 7815.
heat _ $195. 758 3311
BEDROOM
ance Apt.
apartment.
cayeted, appliances, central' air
2, Willow St
REDWOOD APARTMENTS 806 E 3rd Street. I bedroom furnished apartment, heat, air, water furnished. 2 blocks from campus No pets. 758 3781 y 756 0889.
RENT FURNITRE: Livin
ing, bedroom complete. $79 month . Option to buy
756-3662.
din-
U-REN fo'^
RIVER BLUFF HAS 1 bedroom garden apartments and 2 bedroom townhouse apartments. Six months leases. For more Information call 758-4015 Monday-Frlday 10-6 p.m. or come by the River Bluff office at 121 River Bluff Road.
STRATFORD ARMS APARTMENTS
The Happy Place To Live CABLE TV
Office hours 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. AAonday through Friday
Call us 24 hours a day at
756-4
TAR RIVER ESTATES
1, 2, and 3 bedrooms, washer-dryer hook ups, cable TV, pool, club
nooK-ups, caoie i v, pool, house, playground. Near ECU
Our Reputation Says It All "A Community Complex."
1401 Willow Street Office - Corner Elm & Willow
752-4225
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
mam
POOLS
Pod Construction odJSS AndSupplios
TMavHltFoolNpply
2725 E. 10th 75B-6131
121 Apartments For Rent
TOWNHOUSE Call 756-8436.
Ridge Place. $275
TWO BEDROOM apartment, :an}eted, appliances, central air no heat. 804, Apt. 2, Willow St.
$250. 758 3311.
"*"'^9 apartments
available. No pets. Call Smith Insurance 8, Realty. 75? 27S4_
downstairs. 104 South Woodlawn Avenue. Water furnished. Close to University. $250. Call 756-6004
WEDGEWOODARMS
, ^ ^ NOWAVAILABLE
2 bedroom, IV} bath townhouses. Excellent location Carrier heat pumps, Whirlpool kitchen, washer/dryer hookups, pool, tennis
court.
756-0987
* and 2 BEDROOM apartments Available immediately. 752-3311.
1 BEDROOM energy efficient apartment. 756 5389 or 756 0025.
I BEDROOAA apartment partially furnished. Call 752-7581.
1 BEDROOM APARTMENT Heat and hot water furnished. 201 North Woodlawn; $215. 756 0545 or 758 0635
2 BEDROOMS, IV} bath.....
PJ' **290. Available March
BEDROOM DUPLEX Jarvis treet. $240 per month. Call 757 0688.
2 BEDROOMS, 1 bath, central heat, air; $225 Mr month. No pets Lease 1 deposit. Call John (Say, AAoore Saufer, 752 1010. Evenings 752
2 BEDROOM DUPLEX Air, near University. $250 752 0180 or 756
3210.
2 BEDROOM duplex apartment. Central heaf and air. I4th Street.
Convenient to schools and shopping. No pets. Lease and deposit.
Available April 1. 756-6634 after 5.
BEDROOM DUPLEX Fully carpeted. Stove, refrigerator, dish washer, washer/dryer hookups. Economical heat pump. Fireplace Located 114 B Brookwood Drive. Deposit and lease required. Call 756 2879.
SOMEONE IS looking tor your unused power mower. Why not advertise It with a low cost Classified Ad
3 R(X)M FURNISHED apartment with private bath and entrance.
married couple without children. At 413 West 4th Street
122
Business Rentals
DESIRABLE STORE, or office space for rent. Excellent parking facilities. 114 Evans Street. 756 7500.
GREENVILLE BOULEVARD 1500 square foot building. Call Echo Realty, Inc. 756-6040or 524 5042.
125 Condominiums For Rent
TWO BEDROOM flat duplex available in Shenandoah. $300 per month, 12 month lease. Young couple preferred. Call Clark Branch Realtors, 756-6336.
127
Houses For Rent
EXCLUSIVE RENTAL property near University. Neat 2 bedroom home with kitchen and family, utility area, front porch, walking distances of the university. Home has all of appliances furnished. Mamed's only. One year lease required. $275 per month. Call Al or
required. $275 per month. Call Al or Lyle Davis at 756 2904 or at office 752 3000 or Rhesa, 355 2574. Davis
Realty
HOUSES AND APARTMENTS in town and country. Call 746 3284 or 524 3180.
IN AYDEN 5 rooms, bath, carport. N^ice neighborhood. No pets. 746
NEW TWO bedroom, 1 bath duplex off Hooker Road. Heat pump, beautifully decorated, appliances. $30() plus deposit. Mature couple
preferred. No pets. Call Mary days, 752-3000, nights 756 1997.
TWO BEDROOM house for rent $175 month. Wafer furnished. 2 miles from hospital. Couple pre
ter red 752-6500
UNIVERSITY AREA, 110 East 12th Street. 3 bedrooms, appliances furnished, washer/dryer connec
tion, fireplace, just insulated. $275. 3765.
Call 756 07
12 NORTH SUAAMIT 3 bedroom house within walking distance of the university. CENTURY 21 B Forbes Agency, 756 2121.
AND 3 BEDROOM homes in Griffon. Call Echo Realty, Inc.
524 4148 or 524 5042
x BEDROOM house In the country. Deposit required. $150 per month. 1 523 3562.
BEDROOMS, t
month. Call 757 3280.
bath; $425 a
_ BEDROOM house for rent in Grimesland. Appliances furnished $185 month. Call 756 1199.
BEDROOM ranch style home.
itoraQe, quiet subdivision!
757 0001 or nights, 753 4015! 756 9006.
BEDROOMS, 2 baths, living room, dining, kitchen and carporf
Wooded corner lot. No 107 Dupont Circle, 756 87(
3 BEDROOM house, 2 car garage, 1117 Evans Street. Call 758 2347 or 752 6068.
BEDROOM country house near
furnished, washer/dryer hookups it required. 752 5402 or 758
rll
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
TIRES
NEW. USED, and RECAPS
Unbeatable Prices and Quality
QUALITY TIRE SERVICE 752-7177
RECIAL Executive Desks
eo'xjo beutilul walnut linish. Ideal for home or office
Reg. Price $259.00
Special Price S1790C
TAFF OFFICE EQUIPMENT
569 S. Evans St.
752-2175
uiMwarTra,
compactpr, patio, free cable TV, washer dryer hook ups, laundrv
room, sauna, tennis court, house and pool. 752-1557
rtdry
club
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
WE REPAIR
SCREENS & DOORS
ATTENTION!
Interested in earning money, either part-time or full time, picking your own hours, owning your own business? Unlimited earnings potential! Ideal for professional or non-professional, college students singles, couples, or families.
For Further Information And Appointment CALL 752-0207 4:00-9:00 PM, MONDAY-FRIDAY
INDEPENDENT DISTRIBUTOR WAREHOUSE
For Yurlka Foods Opening Within Next 2 Weeks
Weekly Meetings Tuesdays at 7:00 PM
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
FOR
RENT
3 office suites. Plenty of extra storage space, front door
parking. $150.00 per month. Contact J.R. Laughlnghouse at Boetlc-Sugg Furniture Co., 401 W. 10th Street, Qreen-vllle,N.C.
rfohfig Room Adrir
( I l.iipton ( .
PIHKGHMIICilL CONTRilCTOIiS, MC.
Complete Mechanical sysiams BoHera AkCendWonlng Industrial Piping HeatRadaim Enoigy Management Sheet Metal
Free Estimates Call 756-4541
GROUP SALES REPRESENTATIVE
Industry leading insurance company seeking experienced help, life and A & H representative for Qreenvllle-Rocky Mount area. Successful applicant must have proven sales ability. Insurance experience and college degree desirable. Competitive compensation, full fringes, and company car. '
Qualified applicants should submit resume to: P.O. Box 2291 Durham, N. C. 27702 An Equal Employer Opportunity M/F
-----
The Daily Reflector, GreenvUle, N.C.-Moffitey. March 7,1983-15
127
Houses For Rent
405^ WEST 4th STREET 4
bedroom. S300. Call 757-Oai.
6 ROOM COUNTRY house with of Greei
bath. 3 miles south 524-5507.
xreenville
133 AAobile Homes For Rent
AVAILABLE MARCH 1. 3
Mrooms with washer/dryer. $155. Also 2 bedroom with carpets, $115. No pets, no children. 7M-4541 or 756 *91.
FOR RENT OR SALE, 2 bedrooms, furnished. 758-6679.
IN AYDEN Clean, fully furnished with central air, washer/dryer, * bedroom, 2 bath trailer. 746-2425.
ON HIGHWAY 264. Fully carpeted. Central heat and air. Washer and dryer. 758 7616between 8:30-5p.m
12x45. 3 BEDROOMS, IV} baths, new carpet, air conditioner. $175 a rnonth plus $75 deposit in
Greenville. 746-3788.
2 BEDROOM AAoblle Home for rent. Call 756 4687.
2 BEDROOM TRAILER for rent. Carp;^ air, no pets, IV} baths. 756-6005.
2 BEDROOMS, partially furnished, air, good locafion, no
children. 758-4857.
pets, no
2 BEDROOMS No children, no pets. Branch Estates; $160. 756-0783 or 756 8843.
shop
SAVE AAONEY this winter. . and use the Classified Ads everv day! '
BtpROQMS Washer and air
Location J^lor Estates. Call 756
1444 after 3:
Help fight Inflation by buying and sel|;n^_thrqugh the CfasslTleo ads.
Call 752 6166.
135 Office Space For Rent
OFFICE BUILDING tor rent. 1100 square feet. $250 per month with one year lease plus first month's rent free. 1203 W 14th St. 758 3743 or 757 0027.
OFFICES FOR LEASE Contact J T or Tommy Williams, 756-7815.
135 Office Space For Rent
modern, attractive office space for laase. Approximately 1500 ljuw ?:,>>cated 2007 Evans
Cal]-756-^^ Moseley BrotheTs-
ofbces in Dutfus flf.i-.Y buligj"#. on Commerce St Utilities and lanatorlal services deposit Duttus
142 Robmmate Wanted
FEAAALE ROOAAAAATE needed 2 bedroom furnished trailer. 752 7589 after 6om _
FEAAALE RCXJAAAAATE WANTED
Apartment available April I. Com pietely furnished with washer and
ROOM or tour room office suite. Highway 264 Business Eco nomical. Private parking. Some
storage vailabre caM^^onnally 75<?6^ at Clark Branch Realtors,
THREE ROOM downtown office ab 219 Cotanche Street, 440 square feet Parking available Call Jim Lanier at 752-5505.__
138
Rooms For Rent
PRIVATE ROOM for rent or student
756-7674._
Pro
Call
142 Roommate Wanted
f^TURE FEAMLE ROOAAMATE to share furnished 2 bedrpom
dryer Call 752 5640 f^EMALE ROOAAMATE
. _____ wanted
Tar River Estates. 2 bedroom lartment. $125 a month plus half llities. 757 1025
148
Wanted To Rent
RESPONSIBLE COUPLE wishes to rent nice house in qeintry 758 6008 after 6
CLASSIFfCQ DISPLAY
ROOFING
STCRM WINDOWS DOORS &/> WNINGS
RemodelingRoom Additions
C.L. Lupton, Co.
apartment.'/} expenses. 756 7S09
RCX>AAA^TE WANTED to share
new 2 bedroom mobile home in the country 5 miles from Greenville Non snnoker. $150 per month plus phone. Call 758-7519after6:30Dm
2 FEAAALE roommates wanted to share 3 bedroom house. 2 blocks
a month plus
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
WE INSTALL ALUMINUM AND VINYLSIDING
C L. Lupion. Ci).
FRANK M. SUTTON
Certltied Public Accountant
ACCOUNTING AND INCOME TAX SERVICES
^ 757-1807
Monday. Friday 756-9000 Saturday 9 to i
Call for appointment.
Lexington Square Phase III
Near The Greenville Athletic Club
Custom Build Your Own Townhouse
2 And 3 Bedroom Units Ottered
J.R. Yorke Construction Co., Inc.
355 2286
LEXINGTON SQUARE
UJ
HOMES FOR SALE
307 Library Street.
One story brick veneer dwelling. Living room with fireplace, dining room, kitchen, den with fireplace, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths. *52,000.
306 Summit Street.
One story frame, living room, dining room, kitchen, 2 bedrooms, bath, central heat and air. *28,500 '
308 Summit Street.
One Iflng din-
ShSMiiy'L.O'
1108 Chestnut Street.
One story frame duplex. New roof, 1844 square feet. *17,000.
One Story
Brick veneer dwelling on SR 1415 near Wellcome School. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, living room, kitchen-den with fireplace, 2 car garage. 117 x 180. Reduced to *65,000.
LOT FOR SALE
82x130 lot on corner of 13th and Greene Streets. *7500.
LOT FOR SALE
111 E. 11th Street. 75x85. Price *8000.00.
NEED HOUSES ANO FARMS FOR SALE
TURNARE
REAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE AGENCY
LesTurnage, Realtor
Home 756-1179
m
752-2715
ALTOR
30 Years Experience
&
If you qualify for FHA 235 financing, this could be your chance to take over low, low payments on this spotless two bedroom town home. Only a transfer makes it available!
$43.500
OFFERED BY
ball & lane
IhH
752-0025
LceBaU
752-1646
Richard Lane 752-8819
Sandra Norrts 756-5797
LYNNDALE
This unique 2Va story home offers superb living areas plus study, playroom, 2 fireplaces and screened porch Listed at $117,500 but take a look and make an offer!
ball & lane
752-0025
LceBaU
752-1646
Richard Lane 752-8819
Sandra Norria 756-5797
WANTED TO BUY
3 or 4 bedroom traditional or Williamsburg home in Brook Valiey or Lynndale. Must have 1 downstairs bedroom, 220 to 2800 square feet. Write: House Wanted, P.O. Box 3314, Greenviiie, N.C. 27834. Give detaiis, price wanted, location and date that could be occupied. No FHA or VA points. Principals only.
Uls
16 The Daily Reflector, WnvUle, N.C - Monday, March 7,1983 ^Log Cabin,Vnderground Home No Longer Novelty
ByBOBDVORCHAK Associated Press Writer
fORRY, Pa. (AP) - The conventional housing industry has beer>,,wallowing in the trough of the national recession, but the market for alternative shelter such as log, geodesic dome and eanh berm homes has been growing for years.
' This is a sieger industry. Its been growing by 30 percent to .50 percent a \'^r for the past several years, said Terry Peterson, publisher of the trade magazine. Alternative Housing Builder Twenty years ago, ^is was a novelty item. But in the middle to late 1960s, it ex|^oded. Peterson said in a recent interview.
Robert Sheehan, an cconor^st for the Washington-based .National .Association of Home Builders, said alternative housing was insulated from the economic factors that affect conventional builders.
"Most log homes are really a luxury item, and luxury has done fairly well. Theyre not really cyclical, said Sheehan, noting that alternative housing made up only a fraction of the total housing market,
Peterson, a former home builder who edits his bimonthly magazine in this town located near Erie, based his figures for grow th on the number of manufacturers, builder-dealers and consumers He agreed with Sheehan that the rich who are unaffected by exorbitant mortgages had made the surge possible
"These are people who can afford any house they want, Peterson said. "They're not buying shelter, thejre buying a lifestyle - a little Biltmore or a little Casa Loma. Theyre making a statement about themselves.
"They're buying a status symbol, he added. The people who live in the.se homes are the people who buy windmills and solar panels,They retreat into a cocoon, tear off theJie, chop some wood, throw it into the woodstove and live in their own world. They want to be unique"
'There are over 10,000 alternative housing builders nationwide and Peterson expects that number to double In the next five \ ears.
.According to his magazine's 1982 survey, 77 percent of the alternative houses .sold are primary dwellings rather than seasonal cabins in the backwoods.
The survey also showed that 39 percent of the buyers pay cash. 63 percent of the .homes cost $70.000 or more and 40 percent of the builder-dealers have built at least one dwelling worth at least S2,50.0(X) The mean cost is $65,000 to $75,000.
Peterson said alternative housing also appealed to first-iime buyers who can save by assembling the homes themselves Some home kits m oak. pine, walnut or cedar
Transfusions
Spur Success
CH.APEL HILL, \ ('. .AFi - Physicians at the University of North Carolina are using blood t-ransfusions before surgery to improve the success rate for kidney transplants in children.
They say using the
transfusions for transplants between parents and children may substantially
improve the outlook for
children with kidney disease..
The "donor specilic transfusion'' technique, performed at N C. Memorial Hospital in a study with
several southeastern 'centers, has improved the success of transplants dramaUcally. said Dr. Richard Morris, assistant proiessor of pediatrics at UNC
Morris is a member of a kidney transplant team that includes Dr. .Stanley .Mand.el. professor of surgery, and Dr, .James .Mandell, assistant professor of surgery and pediatrics.
"Four children have completed the transfusion and transplantation process, and all have been successful, ' .Morns said. "This is similar to the 9<) percent to 95 percent success rate achieved in two other centers and dramatically better than the 60 percent rate achieved before donor specific transfusions were used"
" All of the children had an initiai rejection reaction,
.Morris said, '.but this has subsided and has not recurred. Even more impressive is the normal kidney function each has achieved.
For a transplant to be successful, the donor's kidney must not be rejected by the person who receives it. and it must work well enough to remove wastes from the body. .Morris said,
Morris said the technique is especially important to children because drugs normally used to prevent rejection also inhibit body growth.
He said the technique is also, more important to children than adults because it is used when a kidney is being transplanted from parent to child. He said the child's tissue is only half like the donating parent's tissue. He .said such transplants previously had not been as successful as transplants from a brother or sister with identical tissue,
"The children we have transplanted here using the technique feel well, are attending school regularly and are performing well academically, Morris said. Most are extensively involved in extra curricular activities.
If this experience continues, the outlook for children with chronic renal disease will have improved substantially.
Doubts A Cure
In Interferon
WINSTDN-SALE.M, N.C.
AP Although interferon' has .been determined effective against an incurable bone-marrow cancer, a doctor at the Bowman Gray School of .Medicine doesnt think it will provide a cure forthedi-sease.
.Multiple myeloma usually strikes older people and is typically treated with chemotherapy and radiation. Dr .M Robert Cooper said the standard treatment prolongs life for the myeloma patient, but that it has reached a plateau.
.Myeloma often eats away the bone, causing considerable pain in the patient. It also weakens the bone to the point that normal activity may cause a fracture.
Interferon appears to be the first new agent that shows some promise in the treatment of multiple myeloma, Cooper said.
Nine patients were treated with interferon in Coopers pilot study, which began last 4une and has jiist been com
pleted. All nine had been treated with the standard therapies but were no longer responsive. Three of the nine, however, responded to the interferon.
Cooper used two criteria to determine whether the treatment was helping a patient. It had to reduce immunoglobulin, a protein produced by the cancer, by more than 50 percent; and it had to reduce the pain in the patients bones.
Immunoglobulin is produced in normal bone-marrow cells, but myeloma cells produce it in abnormal quantities in proportion to the mass of the cancer. A reduction in immunoglobulin indicates a shrinking of the |umor. Cooper said.
' Though it helped ease the pain of some of the patients in the study, interferon does not appear to affect erosion of the bone. Cooper said this is one reason that it probably will be most effective when used in combination with radiation.
logs sell for as little as $12,000 while most range between $21,000 to $30,000.
Its the easiest type of do-it-yourself housing on which builders can save substantially on the total cost of the home. All you have to do is lay one log on top of the other. Theres no framing, insulation, dry wall, paint sheathing and siding, Peterson said.
Four years ago. Dr. James Hileman and his wife sold their five-bedroom, three-bathroom house in Corry and moved into a log hunting cabin.
Its the perfect place for two people to live. Its a lot easier to take care of no painting, no draperies, no wallpaper, no scrubbing the walls, said Hileman, a general practitioner.
Martha Sprickner designed her earth sheltered home and says she wouldnt consider ever living above ground again,
I dont have to paint. Its quiet. Its clean. I dont have to fight the elements. The temperature doesnt change, said Mrs. Sprickner.The coldest it can get is 55 degrees, I can heat my entire house for $200 with my wood stove.
And if someone says tornado, I say who cares? The wind doesn't affect me, she added.
Peterson said alternative housing is attractive because the houses are cheaper to heat.
Theyre substantially superior and energy efficient for different reasons. Wood is not thought to be a good insulator but it has thermal qualities of heat gain and heat retention that make an all- log home attractive, Peterson said.
Domes have less cubic feet without sacrificing square footage for living. They are extremely strong, he said. And earth berms eliminate large fluctuations in outside temperatures, Earth isnt a good insulator, but its a barrier. It never gets colder than 55.
Some may still consider it a fad to live in a home made of logs with an atrium or sauna bath, or in a home sheltered on three sides by earth with a sod roof.
But Peterson says alternative housing may be a glimpse of the future.There are people who believe these will eliminate conventionally constructed houses, which they considered outmoded and obsolete, he said.SUBTERRANEAN HOME - Martha Spricker stands in front of her earth berm home near Corry, Pa. She designed the house and would not
think of living Laserphoto)
ground again.House Fire
Fatal For 3
REIDSVILLE, N.C. (AP) - Although authorities are
still speculating, a cigarette may have been the cause of a house fire that killed two adults and an infant early Sunday.
We know the point of origin was a chair at the foot of the steps, Reidsville fire prevention Capt. Charlie King said. At this point it looks like a cigarette.
Killed were Gertrude Knighten, 74, her husband, Robin Knighten, 68, and their grandson, Adrian Knighten.
Adrian Lee Knighten, 23, his 24-year-old wife Suzanne and boarder Guy Barber, no age available, were taken to Baptist Hospital in Winston-Salem.
Knighten and Barber were listed in critical condition Sunday, and Mrs. Knighten was listed in stable condition.
Three trucks from the Reidsville Fire Department responded to the fire after it was called in at 3:24 a.m., according to King. About 20 firefighters fought the blaze, bringing it under control in about 20 minutes
There wasnt that much fire, but a whole lot of deadly smoke cushions and housewire, he said. If they had had a smoke detector in the house, it wouldn't be as bad.
King said the fire caused heavy damage to the interior of the house, but it was not destroyed.
Authorities were notified when Suzanne Knighten got out of the house and awakened neighbors. When firefighters arrived, five people remained in the house. King said.
, From the positions of the bodies, they were trying to get out of the house, he said. Firefighters rescued Adrian Lee Knighten and Barber, who were unconscious, and pulled out the bo^dies of the elderly couple.
The stairway acted like a chimney, King said, adding that a full investigation would have to wait until officials talked to Suzanne Knighten.
One fireman suffered smoke inhalation and was treated at the scene
See A Signal If .Late For Date
NEW YORK (UPI) - Being late for dates or appointments is the most common signal that a man wants to break off a relationship, says a sex therapist and magazine columnist.
Writing in the March issue of Glamour, Dr. Avodah K. Offit says other signals are changes in the expected schedule of meetings, subtle shifts in topics of conversation and a different attitude toward lovemaking.
When the man makes a belated phone call, she adds, flattery followed by an abbreviated conversation may be another sign that hes edging away. I think of you so much, but I have to make an early train, may mean that your time is short.
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H M H TheDaiJyRenector,Greenvle,N.C.-Monday, March? 1983-11Walker's Debut Less Than Spectacular
By The Associated Press Herschel who?
We didnt block as well as we should have for him - we can help him out a lot more than we did today, Chuck Fairbanks, coach of the New Jersey Generals, said of Herschel Walkers less-than-spectacular pro debut Sunday.
The high-priced running back who left the University of Georgia a year early for a $5-million, three-year contract, did score the games first touchdown. But he gained only 65 yards on 16 carries and by the second quarter, was largely forgotten by the crowd of 34,002 in the Los Angeles
Memorial Coliseum.
Instead, all eyes were on Tom Ramsey and Tony Boddie as the Los Angeles Express beat the Generals
20-15 in a season-opening United States Football League game, one of five played Sunday.
In other action, the Chicago Blitz beat the Washington Federis 28-7, the Philadelphia Stars trimmed the Denver Gold 13-7, the Tampa Bay Bandits turned back the Boston Breakers
21-17 and the Oakland Invaders routed the Arizona Wranglers 24-0. The first-weekend schedule will be
Rain Delays Carolina 500
ROCKINGHAM (AP) -Rain and snow have become a way of life on race weekends at North Carolina Motor Speedway.
Six times in a row and seven of the last eight times rain or snow has postponed a scheduled Grand National stock car race at the speeway in the sandhills of North Carolina.
NASCAR officials managed to get Sundays Warner Hodgdon Carolina ..500 under way - albeit an hour and 50 minutes late - but rain eventually suspended the action just 143 laps into the scheduled 492-lap event, forcing rescheduling of the race until next Sunday.
"There just seems to be something about this place, said Cale Yarborou^, the Daytona 500 winner who was just ahead of Bobby Allison when the race was red-flagged.
Its very hard on everybody, Yarborough added. Wed just like to go racing, not worry about the weather. But thats the way it seems to go. At some places, the weather always seems to
be a factor.
An estimated crowd of more than 30,000 turned out Sunday despite a morning-long rain that delayed the start of the race. And most of them stayed around until the rain began coming down hard again about an hour after the cars were red-flagged.
The first 22 laps Sunday were run under a caution flag as the 35 starters helped dry out the soaked 1.017-mile asphalt oval. The green flag fell on lap 23 with pole-sitter Ricky Rudd still out front.
Dale Earnhardt jumped into the lead briefly, but Yarborough took over on lap 36 and, on lap 39, the engine in the Chevrolet driven by Dave Marcis let loose in turn one. The cockpit filled with smoke and flamesr ^hot out from beneath the car, but Marcis kept it on the track and shut off the engine, quenching the flames.
He finally rolled the car to a stop at the end of the backstretch while sitting in the drivers-side window and holding onto the steering wheel. He was not injured.
completed tonight when Michigan visits Birmingham.
This was real fun, said Ramsey, a former UCLA quarterback who passed for two touchdowns. I think this is one of the more exciting games Ive ever played in. The fans got their moneys worth. When the fans are with you, like these fans were, it fires me up.
Ramsey, who played his college ball in the same stadium last year when he was the nations college passing percentage leader, turned things around when he replaced former National Football Leaguer Mike Rae with the Express trailing 9-6.
Boddie, a 12th-round draft choice out of Montana State, rushed for 77 yards on 13 carries and caught five passes for 49 yards.
Meanwhile, Walker was generally ineffective. Usually a prime pass receiver as well as a runner, the Heisman Trophy winner caught only one pass, for three yards.
Its tougher than I thought it would be, said Walker, who had been on his way to becoming the most productive runner in collegiate history. A lot of the guys had more speed than I expected to see. And the execution was better;
I guess thats the biggest adjustment I have to make. Herschel made some mistakes out there, but certainly nothing that cant be corrected, said Fairbanks. I said before the game that wed use other backs simply because Herschel had been with us only a week. Fairbanks added, We didnt help Herschel a lot. In the second half, we were in a catchup situation early, and I felt I had to take him out because of his lack of preparation.
Blitz 28, Federis 7 Rookie Trumaine Johnson caught one touchdown pass and set up a second to lead Chicago past Washington and give Coach George Alien a triumphant return to the nations capital.
Greg Landry, a veteran of 14 years with the NFLs Detroit Lions and Baltimore Colts, repeatedly found the seams in the Federal secondary, completing 19 of 26 passes for 251 yards and two touchdowns.
The Blitzs No. 1 draft choice out of Grambling, Johnson ran away from the Washington secondary to catch 11 passes for 158 yards, including a 23-yard touchdown reception.
Allen, who was fired in 1977 after leading the Washington Redskins for seven years, was greeted warmly by the 38,010 fans who ignored a steady drizzle and a regional TV telecast to attend the new leagues inaugural game in Washington.
I wasnt particularly happy about playing our opening game here in Washin^on because of all the distractions. I would have rather played in Birmingham, Allen said.
He added, however :1 love Washington. I was very emotional out there during the National Anthem.
Stars 13, Gold 7 Quarterback Chuck Fusina scored a touchdown and David Trout kicked two field goals to lead Philadelphia over Denver. The Stars defense, questioned before the season, put on a last-minute, goal-line stand to hold off what the fans in Mile High Stadium thought was going to be a winning Gold touchdown.
Coming into the game, we didnt know much about Denver, said Philadelphia Coach Jim Mora. We had to feel our way initially. Denver probably felt the same way we did.
Our offense had opportunities they didnt take advantage of, but they played well. It would have been nice to have an exhibition game, but I am very happy to win this one. It will be a very competitive league.
Bandits 21, Breakers 17 John Reaves passed for 358 yards and three touchdowns.
including a 33-yard game-winning strike to Willie Gillespie, to lead Tampa Bay over Boston.
Reaves, who had a stormy NFL career after leaving the University of Florida as the NCAAs all-time passing leader in 1971, completed 28 of 39 passes and connected with Gillespie with 10:17 remaining.
This is one of the most hard-earned victories Ive ever been associated with, said Tampa Bay Coach Steve Spurrier. Our receivers and quarterback John Reaves ..if you see people catch better than that, let me know so 1 can go pay to see them play. Invaders 24, WranersO Fred Besana fired two touchdown passes to Wyatt Henderson - including a 53-yard bomb in the first quarter as Oakland defeated Arizona.
Besana, a 29-year-old quarterback out of California, connected with Henderson on the first and last touchdowns of the game as the Invaders dominated the Wranglers from start to finish.
The game was watched by a crowd of 45,167, biggest of any USFL contest. The Philadelphia-Denver game in the fledgling league was a close second, with 45,102.
Toking A Walker
New Jersey Generals Herschel Walker, center, goes down field to take a first down past Generals Bryan Millard, left, and Los Angeles
Express Dennis Edwards during first quarter action in Sundays first USLF game in Los Angeles. (AP Laserphoto)
Still Feels Choice Right
SCOREBOARD
TANKITNAMAM
by Jeff Millar & Bill Hinds
Offfceofthc
Owmwfpnr
///
Collage BosketboH
ByTbeAnocUtedPreM
EAST
Baltimore SS. Loyola, Md 48 Boston Coll. 81, Providence 66 Boston U. 98, Holy Cross 97 Brown 81, Dartmouth 77, OT Bucknell 77, St. Francis, Pa. 67 Connecticut 55, Syracuse 54 Delaware 69, Rider 67, OT Georgetown 87, VUIanova 71 George Washington 68, Duquesne 62 La Sile 87, Vermont 73 Marshall 68, Davidson 56 Massachusetts 81, St. Bonaventure72 Navy 78, George Mason 73 New Hanmshire 74, Northeastern 73 Penn 55, Cornell 51 Penn St. 79, Rutgers 70 Princeton 72, Columbia 56 Robert Morris 86, Siena 72 St. Johns 91. Pittsburgh 73 Temple 92, Rhode Island 78 Towson St. 71. Lafayette 68 West VIrmnIa 77, St. Josephs 66 Yale 103, Harvard 98 SOUTH
Appalachian SI. 74, Campbell 60 clemson92. III.-Chicago 88 E Tennessee St 73. N.C.-WUmlngton 64 Georgia 74, Tennessee 59 Houston Baptist 80, NW Louisiana 65 Jackson St. 64, Grambling 48 James Madison 77, Richmond 58 Louisiana St. 74, Kentucky 60 Middle Tenn. 83. E. Kentucky 70 Mississippi 62, Vanderbilt 51 MIsslulppI St. 73. Florida 62 Murray St 72. Morehead St 60 New Orleans 65. Canlslus 50 North Carolina 105, Duke 81 N. Carolina St. 130, Wake Forest 89 Stetson 69, Baptist 68 Tn -ChatUnooga 76, W Carolina 73 Tennessee Teen 70, Youngstown St 57 Tulane 71. Florida St . 66 MIDWEST Bowling Green 78. Ball St 75 Bradley 62, Drake 61 E Illinois 82. SW Missouri St. 67 IlllnolsSt. 94, Crel^loo63 Indiana 67, Illinois
IndlanaSt. Ill, W Texas St 103 Kent St . 78, Miami, Ohio 66 Loyola, m. 98, Detroit 83 Michigan St. 91, Wisconsin 65 MlnnesoU 88, Michigan 75 Missouri 81 Iowa St. 66 Nebraska 77, Oklahoma St 68 OhIoSt 78, Purdue 65 S. Mississippi 70, W Illinois 62 Toledo 59, Ohio U. 56 Virginia Tech 73. Cincinnati 72 Wl^USt. 109, S. Illinois S3 Xavier, Ohio 94, St. Louis 72 SOUTHWEST Arkanau82,RlceS5 Houston 93, Baylor 64 Lamar 60, Pan American 51 Oklahoma 72, Kansas St . 70 Oral Roberts 91, Oklahoma City 60 Southern Methodist 96,Texas I7 Texas AAM 93, Texas Tech 70 Texas Soidhem 77, Prairie View 65 FAR WEST Air Force 59, S. Ill . -EdwardsvUle 51 Arlxona St. 7S, Stanford 72, OT California 84, Arizona 59 Cal-Irvine 93. Paclflc 84 Idaho 86. Boise St. 70
Idaho St 64, Weber St. 52 Kansas 74. Colorado 63 Nev.-Reno 75, Montana 73 N MexicoSt.91.Tulsa8S Oregon St . 62, Oregon 60 Pepperdine 68, Gonzaga 58 Portland 99, Loyola. ^If. 86 San DIegon, St. Marys, Calif. 58 San Diego St. 77, New Mexico 73 San Jose St. 70, Cal-Santa Barbara 58 UCLA90,^WaMilngton66 Utah 4. BrighamYoung62,3 OT UtahSt.81,LongBeachSt.76
Washington St. 83, Southern Cal 80 Wyoming 49, Colorado St. 39 TOURNAMENTS Metro AUanUc Athletic Conference
Fordham 54, lonaL Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference Championship N. Carolina Atan. Howard U. 64 Sun Belt Conference SobIImIs S Florida 71, Jacksonville 58 Ala Birmingham 61. Va. Commonwealth 59
Trans-America Athletic Conference First Round Ga Southern 58, Samlord 57 Centenary 96, Mercer 95, OT Sundays Gamea SOUTH
Alabama 86, Auburn 78 Louisville 64, Memphis St. 62, OT Virginia 83, Maryland 81 MIDWEST Butler 78, Evansville 69 DePaul 74, Marquette 62 FEWEST Fresno St 94, Fullerton St. 72 Neb.-Omaha97, N. Colorado 80 TOURNAMENTS ECAC North Atlantic Conference First Round Vermont 62, Colgate 61
San Antonio at Denver Los Angeles at Golden State
NHL Stondings
By The Asaoclated Press Wales Conference Patrick Division W L T GF GA PU
Championship
i.-Blrmlngham64,S.Fl(
NBA Stondlngi
ByThe Asaoclated Presa EASTERN CONFERENCE AUanttcDlvlaioo
W L Pet. GB
PhUadelphIa Boston New Jersey New York Washington
50 _
43 16 38 22 29 30 27 32
Milwaukee
Atlanta
Detroit
Chicago
Indiana
Cleveland
Central Dtvlsk 40 21 31 30 28 32 22 39 16 44 16 45
.847 -.729 7 .633 12>/5 .492 21 .458 23
.656 -.506 9 .467 IIW .361 18 .267 231,9 .262 24
x-PhUphia 43 16 8 277 184
x-NY Isles 34 22 12 250 192
X-Washlngton32 21 14 258 234
X-NYRgrs 28 29 9 261 246
New Jersey 13 42 13 187 281
Pittsburgh IS 46 8 218 349
Adams Divisin x-Boston 43 IS 8 272 181
x-Montreal 35 20 12 296 237
X-Buffalo 34 22 12 288 223
x-Quebec 30 27 11 293 279
Hartford 16 45 6 218 340
CampbeU Conference Norria Divisin X-Chlcago 40 18 9 284 233
x-Mlnneaota 35 17 15 274 233
St. Louis 20 34 14 242 270
Toronto 20 34 11 239 275
Detroit 18 35 15 223 278
Smythe Divisin x-Edmonton 38 20 11 359 278
Calgary 27 30 10 272 272
Vancouver 34 32 11 240 263
Winnipeg 25 35 8 248 288
LosAngeles 23 33 II 252 290
x-cllnched playoff spot
Mtwday'sGamea Boston 6, Chlcag) 3 Quebec 10. Hartford 3 MinnesoU4, Detroit 1 Vancouver 5, Winnipeg 4 NY Islanders 5 New Jersey 1 Washington 4, PhUadelphIa 3 Edmonton 6. Toronto 3 Los Angeles 4, Calgary 4. tie Montreal 6, St. LmUs 5
Sundays Gamea
Michigan at Birmingham,
Saturday. March 12 Michigan at Tampa Bay Chicago at Arizona
Sunday, March 13 New Jers^ at Philadelphia Boston at Denver Birmingham at Oakland
Monday, March 14 Washington at Los Angeles
Tronsoctions
By The Associated Press BASEBALL American League
TORONTO BLUE JAYS-Signed Jim Clancy, pitcher, to a four-year contract. National League PITTSBURGH PlRATgS^nt an undisclosed amount of cash to the Detroit Tigers to complete a deal that sent Richie Hebner, first baseman, to Detroit ST. LOUIS CARDINALS-Slgned Jeff Lahti, pitcher, to a oncear contract COLLEGE DARTMOUTH-Announced the resignation of Tim Cohane, mens basketball coach.
Exhibition Boswboll
ByThe AaaocUted Press ExhlMtloo Season Saturdays Gamea New York (AL) 2, Baltimore 1 Montreal 4 Atlanta 3
Sundays Games Baltimore 7, New York (AL 16 New York (AL) 5, Montreal 5, 12 Innings LosAngeles lO.AUanUl Oakland 4, Grand Canyon 0
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Herschel Walker, his first professional game behind him, still believes he made the right choice by signing with the New Jersey Generals and giving up his final year of collegiate eligibilty.
I feel good about the decision I made, said Walker, who passed up his senior season at the University of Georgia to join the new United States Football League. Im satisfied with my first game. Walker won the 1982 Heisman Trophy at Georgia, then surprised the football world two weeks ago by signing a reported 3-year, $5 million contract with the Generals.
Walkers initial outing as a pro was less than spectacular, as he carried 16 times for 65 yards and caught one pass for 3 yards in the Generals 20-15 loss to the Los Angeles Express Sunday at the Los Angeles Coliseum.
But he had just a week of practice time with the club, and New Jersey Coach Chuck Fairbanks played him judiciously.
I ran the ball a little better than I expected and 1 caught a pass, Walker said. Im just sorry we lost.
He said that he was surprised at the caliber of the competition in the game, with an announced attendance of 34,002.
Its tourer than I thought it would be, he commented. A lot of the guys had more speed than I expected to see. And the execution was better; 1 guess thats the biggest adjustment I have to make.
Fairbanks said perhaps too much was expected of Walker in his first pro start.
Give the kid a break, the New Jersey coach said, pointing out that Walker had practiced about a week with the Generals. We could have brou^t in a top-flight NFL (National Football League) back who had no familiarity with our system and it would have been difficult for him.
Herschel made some mistakes out there, but certainly nothing that cant be corrected. 1 said before the game that wed use other backs simply because Herschel had been with us only a week.
We didnt help Herschel a lot. We could have blocked better for him...I think Herschel will be a great pro back. He certainly doesnt have any physical or mental limitations that will stop him from doing it.
One thing that 1 liked about Herschel, Fairbanks continued, is that he wanted to play. Hed have been in there
every play if he could have."
New Jersey quarterback Bobby Scott, formerly with the NFLs New Orleans Saints, was favorably inii-pressed by Walker.
"1 was very pleased with Walker's performance after just that much practice." said Scott. "He only made two mistakes - one play when 1 was sacked and one play when he turned the wrong way."
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Quebec 7, Hartford 3 Boston 5, Edmonton 2 Buffalo 6, Detroit 4 PhUadelphIa 5, Plttaburgh 3 Minneaolaa, LoaAngeleaS New Jersey 8, NV Raniers 4 Chicago 5. Montreal 4
.613 -.534 5<9 .517 6
.493 7^ .365 15W .180 36>9
.739 -.807 7 .574 9 .541 11" .387 30W .333 24W
WESTERN CONFERENCE MMweMDIvlrion
San Antonio 38 24
Denver 33 30
Kansas City 31 39
Dallas 30 31
Utah 23 40
Houston II SO
Pacific Dlvlsiob LosAngeles 43 16
S. SS
Seattle 33 28
Golden State 24 38
SanDlego 30 42
Saturdays Gamea New York 105, Boston 96 Los Angeles 122, Detroit 106 Oeveland 98, Dallas 91 Seattle 126, Houaton 103 Denver 126, MUwauiwe 130 Golden sute m, Utah 121 SuidayiGamea New Jersey lUjmUadelphla 106 Washington 102, AUanU 91 Chicago 106, Indiana 98 Kansas City 144, San Diego 105 San Antonio 117, Oeveland 98 Utah 110, PorUand 106
Mondayi Gamea New Jersey vs. Boston at Hartford, Conn.
Detroit at PhlladelphU
Tuaaday'a Gamea
SeatUeatNewYcirfc Portland at AUanU Indiana at Detroit Phoenix at Dallas Cleveland at Houston
Vancouver 8, WlnnlpM 2 Moodav'iuui
No games scheduled
Tuesdays Games Boston at Qu^
Edmonton at Hartford OUcago at PhlladelphU Waahiiigtoo at New Jersey Buffalo at MlnnesoU Toronto at Montreal NY Islanders atk.LouU Calgary at Loa Angeles NYRangers at Vancouver
USFl Stondings
IHTteAMOdatedPKM
AdanUc
Pi" PA
PhUadelphIa 1 0 0 1.000 13 7
Boston 0 1 0 .000 17 21
NewJersey 0 I 0 .000 IS 20
Washlnpon 0 1 0 .000 7 28
Central
Chicago 1 0 0 1 000 28 7
Tampa Bay 1 O 0 1.000 21 17
Birmingham 0 0 0 000 0 0
Michigan 0 0 0 .000 0 0
PMdfIc
LosAngeles 1 0 0 1.000 20 15
Oakland l O 0 1.000 34 0
Arizona 0 I 0 .000 0 24
Denver 0 1 0 .000 7 13
Sundays Gamea Boston 21, Tampa Bay 17 Chicago 28, Washington 7 PhUaodphla 13, Denver 7 Los Angeles 20, New Jersey 15 Oakland 24 Arizona 0
Mondays Game
Have Yoo Missed Your Daily Reflector?
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Service Offers Sympathetic Ear To Victims
AT DINNER-DANCE...held Friday Mrs. John Howell, Mrs. Max Ray evening at the Greenville Country Joyner and Joyner.(ECU News Club are, left to right, Chancellor and Bureau photo)
Chancellors Society Dinner-Dance Held
ECU News Bureau
The Chancellors Society of East Carolina University honored over 150 guests Friday evening at its third annual black tie dinner-dance at the Greenville Country Club.
It was announced that 32 new members of the Chancellor's Society have been
added to the ^oup and were presented society clocks.
The Chancellors Society of the ECU donor recognition Order of Wright Circle was established in 1979 to recognize supporters of the university who contribute $10,000 or more to the university. Chancellors. Society membership also is extended
Lack Of Funds May Stall Mercy Mission
By Abigail Van Buren
'983 by untversai Press Syndicate
I)K,\K .\ilHV When Airl.ifel.ine was formed in 1979 we had ir> pilots m .i.alifornia and a strong desire to help people in need. Over these few years AirLifeLine has Krown to til'd pilots in 18 states. Your interest and the help trom so many of your readers have nurtured that growth.
Our mission remains the same: to provide a ready network ot planes to fly life-saving equipment, personnel, blood and human organs wherever needed, whenever needed, on a moments notice. AirLifeLine pilots are available 2 ) hours a day, every day of the year.
Our growth has allowed us to help more people than we ever imagined To dale AirLifeLine pilots have flown over Is.iilid miles of service, and weve never charged a penny to any patient, hospital or public agency!
Weve ai.^o found a multitude of new ways to use our planes to ease human suffering. In December 1982, AirLifeLine w.is asked to transport a highly trained capuchin monkey named .Sara from Boston to Sacramento, Calif. Sara was raised to he the "arms" and "legs" of a bed-ruiden paraplegic, Sara holds a telephone, fetches water, turns the pages of a hook, operates a television set or radio I rained capuchins like Sara are to a paraplegic what a^seeing-eye dog is to a blind person, Sara is now living hapjiily in .Sacramento, bringing comfort and dig-nitv to a paraplegic human being.
Ihl^ program has been so successful that AirLifeLine has been asked to deliver capuchins to paraplegics in other states
Unfortunately, this growth and success have also brought problems, AirLifeLine is rapidly depleting the funds available to us. f)very mission is vitally important, hut each mission drains our resources further.
In the four years weve been operating, weve never had to sav "no" to a request for help. We hope we never have to But we desperately need a few angels to help keep our planes flying. '
ELON COLLEGE, ELON COLLEGE, NORTH CAROLINA SESSION ONE; AGES 8-11 June19-July1 1983
SESSION TWO: AGES 12-13 July 3-15,1983
'(he Elom
FOR YOUNG PEOPLE ELON COLLEGE TOTAL TUITION: $280 Residency* $180 Commuter*
A TWO WEEK RESIDENTIAl AND COMMUTER CAMP DIVIDED AC CORDINCi TO AGE OTTERING STUDENTS A UNIQUE PROGRAM IN THE VISUAI TINE ARTS AND A CREATIVE EXPOSURE TO A VARIETY OP ART EXPTRIT.NCES
ACTIVITIES INCLUDE:
Painting Techniques, Draw.'Sketching, Paper Art, Crahs, Sculpture, Ceramics Mini-Hot Air Balloons, Printmaking. Mural Painting. CalHgraphy, Computer Art Inflalahles, Kitemaking, Walercolors. Pin Hole Ptiotography, Plus a Tnp to The Qiscovery Place ' in Charlotte, N C
PLEASE SEND ME A BROCHURE AND APPLICATION PORM CAl 1 OR WRITE THE DIRECTOR, ElON ART EXPERIENCE. OFFICE OF CONTINUING'.EDUCATION ELON COLLEGE, ElON COM.EGE, NORTH CAROLINA 27244 PHONE (919) 584 2417
NAME----------------PHONEI )_________
ADDRESS ..
to donors who make deferred gifts of $30,000 or more or who make commitments for annual gifts of $1,000 or more for 10 years.
The Chancellors Society dinner-dance provides an opportunity for the university to say thank you to all those individuals who have made major gifts to the university, the ECU Foundation, the ECU Alumni Association and the ECU Medical Foundation, said Dr. F. Douglas Moore, acting vice chancellor for institutional advancement.
Chancellor John M. Howell, making the presentations, said the importance of private sector funding in carrying out the universitys mission is great, We are pleased to honor these people who are so important to the universitys program, Howell said.
Music for the occasion was furnished by ECU School of Music pianists Charles Bath and Joseph Distefano and violinist Joanne Bath and the dance band Contrast.
By JEFFREY ULBRICH Associated Press Writer PARIS (AP) - Some are desperate. Most are afraid. All are worried. They have cancer and are searching for help and a sympathetic voice.
That voice resides in a single room in Paris. It is an understanding voice because the person behind it has suffered from cancer too, or has been close to someone who has.
Its called Ecoute Cancer, or Cancer Phone, and in fact is made up of 15 voices, all volunteers participating in a new program initiated by Francoise de Boissieu, president of the Paris chapter of the National League Against Cancer.
Cancer is a great re-vealer in that it doesnt leave things as before, said Mrs. De Boissieu, referring in an interview to the myriad of non-medical problems that victims and their families often face.
The relations of a couple deteriorate. Many couples separate. There are many cases of divorce, abandonment, problems with child care. Or, to the contrary, some couples get closer. Cancer never leaves relationships in the state they were before.
To deal with these problems, many of which are not, or cannot be handled by physicians, Mrs. De Boissieu has put together the Ecoute Cancer team that she says is unique in Europe. Its members remain anonymous, never meet with the callers personally and never ask indiscreet questions.
Since it was started in early November, operating from 9:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Monday through Friday, Ecoute Cancer has handled about 1,700 calls, an average of 21 a day, in what Mrs. De Boissieu says has been a huge success.
Nobody wants you to know that they are concerned about cancer. There is a secrecy about cancer, even in a couple. There are many people afflicted with cancer where even the spouse doesnt know. They are afraid that the quality of the relationship will be changed.
Ecoute Cancer offers no medical advice and refuses to have a doctor on the team, though several have volunteered.
You cant ask a doctor to do other than what he knows how to do, Mrs. De Boissieu said. We dont want doctors because we dont want to start medical consultation on
the phone.
The 15 volunteers come from a varied social background and include a cook, a former civil servant and a philosophy professor. None works more than twice a week because its too exhausting, according to Mrs. De Boissieu, who sits in once a week herself.
Four of the volunteers are professional social workers, one is a specialist in the French national health program and one is a lawyer. Once every two weeks the volunteers meet with a supervisory board to discuss the most difficult problems with a psychoanalyst the only time a doctor takes part.
All of them do a period of hospital training and take a 180-hour course, including 60 hours with a social worker, 60 hours with a psychologist and 60 hours with a doctor.
The first questions from callers are always medical, Mrs. De Boissieu said. All such questions are referred to the callers doctor, or if he hasnt one, three addresses in his neighborhood are provided.
The major questions involve chemotherapy many people need encouragement
to follow the treatment to the end - and changes in the body, including a frequent worry about the loss of hair.
Many concern personal problems, the need to alter future plans, how to deal with relatives and friends who p^ceive the victim differently, or fear of consulting a doctor. Some simply need a translation of medicad terms. Others want to know about facilities available for treatment, chUd care, convalescent homes and legal rights.
France is an old country Tull of traditions and taboos.
and I think that cancer is one of the taboos of this country, Mrs. De Boissieu said. The service will continue until the day when the population of this country accepts the cancerous, that ' they are not different from others, and not treat them like people apart as they do now.
Fresh folls Daily
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OPEN TONITE UNTIL 9 P.M.
Sincere Thanks
<r\
Wednesday P.M , two of my employees, my daughter, Peggy Karsnak and Johnny Baldree, were involved in a car-truck accident on their way home from work.
A special thanks to the rescue squad, police, doctors and staff at Pitt Memorial Hospital; their professions were used to the highest degree.
When you have something like this happen to you, you become fully aware of efficiency. A special thanks to those people who called when they saw our truck and offered help. These people were concerned and help was out there for us. All we had to do was let the people know. Greenville is a town to be proud of. Thanks again and Im sure God will bless each of you in a very special Marie B. Cox, President Cox Floral Service, Inc.
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Specializing In The Most Up-To-Date Styling For Men & Women
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CANCER PHONE General view Cancer answer the numerous calls of
Esnm
of the single room in Paris where volunteers participating in the new program of the Paris chapter of the French National League Against
victims of cancer searching for help and a sympathetic voice. (AP Laserphoto)
Reg. $.35
Any Dear Abby reader who would like to help this work can reach AirLifeLine at 1722 J Street, Suite 14, Sacramento, Calif. 95814.
We are also here to serve anyone needing our help. We believe that no human being should be alone and sick with nowhere to turn. We dont care where you live or whether you are rich or poor. If you need a human hand to reach out to you, AirLifeLine is here.
With Gods help (and a little help from a few of his "angels"), we will be here for a long time. Sincerely,
TOM GOODWIN,
presii)p:nt of airlifeline
DEAR ABBY: The letter from Sitting Duck, wondering how she would protect herself if her car broke down at night on a lonely road, reminded me of something I used to do (years ago) when I was an attractive 18-year-old girl working at an all-night restaurant.
Sometimes Id get off work at 3 a.m. and have to drive home alone, so I went to a costume shop and bought a man's beard close to the color of my own hair. I also bought a mans cap. I kept the beard and cap in the glove compartment of my car, and when my car broke down (as it did quite often) 1 would put them on.
At night no one could tell I wasnt a man, and I felt much safer. Of course, I would take off the beard and cap when 1 saw a police car pull up.
Theres nothing kinky about it. I just felt that a potential attacker would be less likely to bother a man than a jyoman.
J.N. FROM BERKELEY
Youre never too old (or too young) to learn how to make friends and be popular. For Abbys booklet on Popularity, send $1, plus a long, self-addressed, stamped (37 cents) envelope to Abby, Popularity, P.O. Box 38923, Hollywood, Calif. 90038.
DID YOU KNOW .
by Dean Photography WHERES THE WEDDING?
Most weddings are held in the traditional places-church or ^nagr^ue, home or back yard. In recent years, though, people have wen choosing more one-of-a-kind locales to celebrate their nuptials. Here arc a few of the more unusual:
A stewardess was married to a pilot on a particular flight between Miami and New York-the same flight on which the couple had met the previous year.
Two professional water skiers in Rorida got married on skis, the minister shouted the ceremony from the rear of the boat. Rumor has it that the ceremony was interrupted when the flower girl fell off her skis.
An usher and a candy-seller at a movie theatre got married on the stage between showings of a double feature.
Two acrobats were married 150 feet above ground on a double trapeze.
As far back as 1935, a 73-year-old man and his bride were married eight feet under Puget Sound. They and the minister wore scuba gear and were connected by telephone wires.
Prices Effective A4arch 7-80,1983
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FORECAST FOR TUESDAY, ^AR. 8.1983
from the Carroll Rightar Institute
GENERAL TENDENCIES; Unexpected events can give you a chance to express your talents and special capabilities, and thus gain the recognition you truly deserve. Strive for happiness.
ARIES (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) Good day to contact an influential person and gain the backing you need. Evening is fine for the social side of life.
TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) An unexpected matter now arises, but be sure to handle it in, a practical way. Meet new allies who can be helpful to you.
GEMINI (May 21 to June 21) Gain the assistance of business experts and be sure to help them in some way. Try to establish better relations with co-workers.
MOON CHILDREN (June 22 to July 21) Use the same objective methods with partners as they do and get good results. Obtain the data you need.
LEO (July 22 to Aug. 21) Make those little changes needed in work schedule so that your plans work out to your satisfaction. Take it easy tonight.
VIRGO (Aug. 22 to Sept. 22) An invitation may come your way that should be accepted since it could open new doors of opportunity. Take no risks in motion.
LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) Handle important duties before before engaging in social activities will give you more security in the future.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) Communicate with those who can help you advance in your line of endeavor. Try not to lose your temper.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) New contacts can be helpful to you at this time. Make preparations that can produce greater abundance in the future.
CAPRICORN (Dec, 22 to Jan. 20) Be more ingenious and your life will be far more satisfying and profitable. Become more active.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 21 to Feb. 19) Strive to have greater security in the future. Show associates you appreciate them. Keep promises you have made.
PISCES (Feb. 20 to Mar. 20) A good friend could give you advice that should be heeded. Much can be gained in career activities at this time.
IF YOUR CHILD IS BORN TODAY ... he or she will have many talents and should be taught to view things in its broadest scope in order to attain the success possible in this chart. Be sure to send to modern schools where the most advanced technology is taught.
"The Stars impel, they do not compel." What you make of your life is largely up to you!
A History of Suffering
Life in India has often been hard, but recent news stories of civil violence in that country have shocked the world. The massacres in the state of Assam are part of an ancient religious struggle. Though Moslems now make up only 11 percent of the population, an Islamic government ruled India from 1526 until 1857. Conflicts between Hindus and Moslems continued until 1947, when British and Indian officials agreed to partition the nation along religious lines. But bloody riots broke out again between Hindus and Moslems over the ownership of the states of Jammu and Kashmir. The recent violence stemmed from a Hindu movement to expel Moslem immigrants.
DO YOU KNOW Who was the first Prime Minister of India?
FRIDAY'S ANSWER President Roosevelt named Frances Perkins as the first woman Cabinet member.
3-7.83 VEC, Inc. 1983
PEANUTS
The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Monday, March 7,19S3-13
UIHAT'5 THIS? V(OUVE INTERCEPTEP ONE OF THE ENEMY'S SECRET \;^S5A6E5!
NUBBIN
WHAT'e WY OM,YOUR MOTHER
WK0N(5r,
AWO 1 MAD A LITTLE 6PAT.
POP? J. \ LITTLE
Microcomputers Big In Education
1983, McNaught Syndicate, Inc.
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) American education is entering the computer age in a big way.
There are now approximately 96,000 microcomputers in 24,000 American public schools - 60 percent more than last year, according to Market Data Retrieval, which keeps track of "suchstatitics.
The time of classroom acceptance of the personal
computer as a teaching tool has arrived, says T.W. Miller of Control Data Corp., a computer company here. The company is the creator of a computer-based education system called PLATO, which has nearly 10,000 hours of courseware now being adapted for several microcomputers which are beginning to be used in homes and businesses as well as in schools.
eWE EAID eHE WAe
mPimfOCfTBAii
eEAeOM WA6 FINALLY OVER.
7 Mow ewE wANTe 10
\*/l iCit T/JCL
KNOW WHEN
BLONDIE
Jowa Has Contest
Of Turkey-Callers
CEDAR RAPIDS, Iowa (AP) - About two dozen competitors werent too chicken to talk turkey at the 1983 All-Iowa Turkey Calling Contest.
The weekend contest, part of the 1983 Iowa Wild Turkey Federation Convention, attracted some 15 adults and 12 children. They used a variety of turkey-calling devices, including a diaphragm made of a small half-ring of metal and varying thicknesses of plastic. It is placed in the mouth and manipulated to produce turkey sounds.
The cluck is described as the subtle, conversing tone turkeys make when theyre scratching for simper.
A tree call is the sound roosting wild turkeys are
Fast Man In Nugget-Hunt
likely to make from their trees early in the morning.
Then theres the kee-kee-run, one of the more difficult calls, made by young turkeys when they are lost.
Hunters use calls to lure the big and wary birds within range of a shotgun or bow and arrow. The most important requirement is the ability to listen to what the turkey is saying, and answer in kind, said Shirley Grenoble, of Sayre, Pa., president of the Pennsylvania Wild Turkey Federation.
When the calling ended in a ballroom at the Stouffers Hotel in this east-central Iowa city, 12-year-old Joey Valdez of Davenport had emerged the 1983 All-Iowa Junior Turkey Caller. While he doesnt actually hunt yet, he calls for bis mother when she does.
George Jaques of Iowa City won the senior title, making him eligible to compete in the national turkey calling competition.
SLIM JIM SANDWICH
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Plus . ALL YOG CAN EAT Homestvie Soup and Salad Bar.
SHONEYS
264 By Pass Greenville
THAT'S WHY
IT'S GONNA SE SO TOUGH
BEETLE BAILEY
BUENA PARK, Calif. (AP) - When it comes to washing gold nuggets in a hurry. Bob Box is no flash in the pan.
Box set a record of 9.23 seconds In the 23rd annual World Championship Gold Panning Competition at 'Knotts Berry Farm on Sunday. Tlie old mark, 10.42 seconds, was set last year.
Box, who sells prospecting equipment In Yosemite National Park, sloshed eight gold nuggets clear of dirt and sand in a miners pan.
The competition was launched In 1960 by Gle and Dorene Settles, owners of the defunct Trapico Gold Mine In Rosamond, Calif. Knotts spokesman Steve Specht said the Orange County amuse-: ment park picked it up three years ago when the Settles retired.
Thirty-six gold panners paid $10 each to compete, including several members ,of the Gold Panners of Ahwahnee, an organization of weekend proctors.
: The nuggets come from the ^ Troplco mine, and the same ones are used year after year, so the competitors dont get to keep them. . Together theyre worth about ' $500, Specht said.
Theyre put In a pan and mixed In with dirt and sand. The idea Is to see how fast the competitors, holding them under a water wash, ' can get them clean.
For rivaling the best of the 49ers, Box won a tn^hy and $1,000.
FRANK & ERNEST
JERRY FALWELL
THE COLT OF SELF WORSHIP
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WNCT-TV 7:00 P.M. Channel 9 Monday
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The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Monday, March 7,19837In The Area Most Intensive Search Ever Moderate BaptistSadie Sautter PTA To Meet
The March meeting of the Sadie Saulter Elementary School PTA will be held at 7:30 p.m. Thursday. First graders will present a program. ^
A bake sale will be held before the meeting, with proceeds to be used to provide playground equipment for the school.
PTA president Mary Guy will conduct the business meeting.Library Board Meeting Tuesday
The March meeting of the library board of trustees will be held at 8 p.m. Tuesday, March 15, in the Conference Room of the main library.
One of the agenda items will be the initial budget information. Members who cannot attend are asked to call librarian Willie Nelms at 752-4177.School Board Meets Tonight
The information meeting of the Greenville City School Board of Education will be held at 8 p.m. tonight at Third Street School.
Three items are on the agenda for action tax sheltered annuities, and two field trips.
Other agenda items include bank bids and a budget amendment.Falkland PTO Will Meet
FALKLAND - Falkland Elementary Parent-Teacher Organization will meet Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. in the school auditorium.Board Meeting Is Called
The Pitt County Board of Social Services will have a called meeting Tuesday at noon at Archies.Fireman's Condition Critical
Winterville fireman Frank Leslie Derebery remains in the critical care unit of Pitt County Memorial Hospital today, after having been injured in a rear-end collision with the Winterville water wagon on the way to a fire Saturday morning.
His condition this morning was listed as stable.
For Messages From SpaceConvention Planned
East Carolina University student Patrick ONeill is spending spring vacation in jail.
He was imprisoned in the Washington, D.C. City Jail Friday and will be released Tuesday for his participation in a blocade of the U.S. State Department Jan. 24. He was among about 140 persons who held the blocade to protest U.S. policy concerning El Salvador.
His trial was held Feb. 22 and he refused to pay a $50 fine. He said he defended himself and took a necessity defense, maintaining that he committed a crime attempting to prevent a greater evil.
This is the third time ONeill has been arrested in the past 10 months for what he terms civil disobedience. He spent several months in federal prisons last year for blocking the entrance to a military base concerning the same issue. Salvadorans troops were being trained there and he and others were protesting it.
By DANIEL Q. HANEY Associated Press Writo-CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (AP) - Scientists turn on a radio telescope today to begin wdiat they say will be the most intensive search ever to look for messages from civilizations in outer space.
The observatory, operated by Harvard University in this Boston suburb, will listen to the skies non-stop for the next four years in an effort to pick up a hello from out there.
Astronomers have tried to recieve these messages before, but most have only been able to use their telescopes for a few hours at a time.
Most of the others have just looked at a few stars, says Harvard physicist Paul Horowitz, who is directing the effort. You really need to look at a few mUlion.
The equipment used in the new project is highly sophisticated and designed just for this search, which is financed by the Planetary Society, a group, co-founded by astronomer Carl Sagan, i'its probably fancier thanTwo Wrecks Are Reported
No injuries resulted from an accident investigated by Greenville police Saturday on South Memorial Drive near Dickinson Avenue.
Officers said the mishap involved vehicles operated by Julia Potter Emory of 1004 E. Third St., Ayden, and Thelbert Warren of Route 4, Greenville. Damages were estimated at $300 to the Emory vehicle and $25 to the Warren car.
According to police, a vehicle owned by Theresa Batts Anderson of Greenville was discovered wrecked Saturday around 7:15 a.m. in the woods near the intersection of Hopkins Drive and Arthur Street. The vehicle, which had been reported stolen earlier Saturday, apparently struck the curbing and traveled into the wo^s beyond the Arthur Street dead end.
Damage to the vehicle was estimated at $800.
anything thats been used before, Horowitz said. Its a very sensitive search.
The ear will be Harvards Oak Ridge radio telescope, an 85-foot-diameter dish that has been refurbished for the project.
' The scientists are not making any grand predictions of success.
There are a few good, solid radio astronomers who think that within 10 to 15 years, a signal from an extraterrestial intelligent civilization will be discovered, says Louis Friedman, executive director of the Planetary Society. ButC&A Employee Is Injured
FARMViaE - A Collins and Aikman textile manufacturing employee sustained caustic chemical burns in an accident at the C&A plant here Friday.
Louis Penny, 27, of Rt. 1, Farmville, was walking past a vat holding a caustic solution used in washing excess dye from fabric when the solution belched out splattering him. Fellow employees quickly helped him remove boots into which the chemical had splashed and other clothing and placed him in a shower for the time before the Farmville Rescue Squad could arrive at 6:41 p.m.
Penny, who has been employed by Collins and Aikman for six years, is listed in stable condition at Pitt County Memorial Hospital. A spokesman for C&A said he is said to have some second-, some third-degree burns on 20 percent of his body.Taking Calls
Registrars taking calls for the Pitt County Professional Private Duty Nurses Registry are:
Helen McArthur, 756-1854, today through March 11; Granee Turner, 756-0375, March 14-18 and March 21-25.
The registry is closed weekends. For emergencies call the above.
^ost of us say the probability is that it will not be discovered in our lifetime. Adds Horowitz: The odds are not very good, maybe one in a thousand. Astronomers refer to these efforts by their acronym, SETI, which stands for search for extraterrestrial intelligence.
The key to the new search is a receiver that Horowitz calls his suitcase SETI. Its a hi^ly sophisticated, computerized machine that lets astronomers listen to 128,000 radio channels at the same time. It can distinguish an alien civilizations message from earthly interference.
The scientists will concentrate their search on what they call magic radio frequencies.
The idea is the folks in outer space will broadcast their message on a frequency that would make sense to earthlings and other life forms. The guess is that the
aliens will choose to transmit on the frequency of the hydrogen . atom - 1.42 gigahertz - since this is the most plentiful element in the universe.
Because of differences in the motion of the earth and distant worlds, the frequency received on earth may be somewhat different from that. So the suitcase SETI will simultaneously scan many radio frequencies that are close to hydrogens frequency.
The scientists will also tune in other fr^uencies that aliens might pick to contact their heavenly neighbors.
The equipment has already been tested on the Arecibo Observatorys 1,000-foot radio telescope in Puerto Rico, where it has looked ati 200 nearby stars.
, It is certainly the most comprehensive and sophisticated dedicated search that has been done, Friedman said of the new program.
HIGH point, N.C. (AP) - A groiq) of Southern Baptists from North Carolina are gearing up to battle what they perceive as a conservative swing in their denomination.
The North Carolina Group of Moderates say they plan to organize supporters of their cause as messengers (delegates) from state churches to the national Southern Baptftt Convention annual meeting in June.
The Rev. Lamar King of First Baptist Church in High Point said the group wants to ensure that moderates are fully represented at the conventions national level.
King said 167^^ptisji from around the state met^-at his church last week to begin their organizingefforts.
There has been what I call a takeover of control of the nationalconvention by a radically fundamentalist group of pastors. King said. The agenda of the fun
damentalists is to deny leadership to anyone other than fundamentalists.
Since 197. the convention presidency has been won by conservatives. The president of the convention controls many appointments to Bap-,ti5 agencies, including Southern Baptist colleges and universities.
In general, conservatives believe the Bible is literally true, while moderates accept a broader view of biblical interpretation
King said Thursdays meeting was an outgrowth of a December meeting in Charlotte attended by about 20 Baptists concerned with the fundamentalism issue.
"Our problem is not with fundamentalists being on our seminary boards and institutional boards, King said. The problem is that, in the past. Southern Baptists have been willing to let people of different theologies serve in those positions.
BASE GETS CRUISE MISSILES - Grand Forks Air Force Base in North Dakota is the third Air Force Base to get a new nuclear weapons system of intermediate-range air-launched cruise missiles. Here an ALCM rests on its> ground transport
trailer in a hangar at the base. At right is a pylon that, when attached beneath a B-52s wings, will carry six of the 3,000-pound missiles. (AP Laserphoto)
T
12-The Daily Reflector, 0
I, N C.-Monday, March 7.1983
/More TV Fare Direct From Satellite
BACKSTAGE VISIT - Actor Richard Chaiiberlain enjoys a moment backstage with actress Kate Nelligan at New Yorks Plymouth Theater following a performance of David Hares Plenty starring Nelligan and Edward Herrmann. Chamberlain, in New York to promote ABC's upcoming mini-series The Thombirds, in which ht stiffs, appeared with Nelligan in the Italian film, The Count of Monte Cristo in the mid-seventies. (AP Laserphoto) r
By KENNETH R. CLARK UPI TV Reporter NEW YORK (UPI) - In just a few more months, millions of American hom^ may be fielding their television fare and a lot of other things straight from a satellite hanging 23,500 miles up in space.
There will be no middlemen in this operation. There, will be no land lines, no coaxial cables and no bill collectors. The satellite will know its customers so intimately it will refuse to talk to anyone else. It will even shut off those who fail to pay their $15 monthly fee.
The beauty of what were doing is that its existing technology, said Nathaniel T. Kwit Jr., president and chief executive officer of United Satellite Television, which has beaten Comsat to the draw on the latest technological innovation which is television by Direct Broadcast Satellite.
In 1979, Comsat announced it would be the one to pioneer DBS, which is capable of
bringing television to program starved areas not yet wired for cable. But Comsats plans are for a fiercely expensive hi^-powered satellite, yet to be designed and unlaunchable much before 1986.
In September this year, on the other hand, USTV will ride the medium-powered Canadian satellite ANIK-C2 into orbit from the space shuttle, to become t.szeIFB,S FIRST DBS operation. Kwit predicted his fledgling company will have in the neighborhood of 4 million subscribers before Comsat can go on line.
The Canadians are leaders in this area, he said. They had developed a newer generation of satellites and earth station technology, so we thought, why re-invent the wheel?
Satellite-power is directly proportionate to the size of the dish antenna the subscriber must use to pick up a direct broadcast signal. Existing satellites are low in power and require gigantic
dishes 12 to 18 feet in diameter, which are rather awkward for back yard or rooft(^.
The diameter of ours is about three feet, said Kwit. Its smaller than a standard television antenna.
Kwit said USTV will lease its earth-station dishes along with service on half-a-dozen channels in areas still deprived of cable television, and in areas served only by old 12-channel systems.
Were talking about 30 million homes that are not passed by cable - cable is not available, he said. Its very expensive to have cable in some of those outlying areas. It costs $15,000 a mile to have a cable put in ... So our primary market is in program-starved areas.
Kwit said the only gamble USTV faces is that an aggressive cable system might decide to wire an area in which DBS is being sold as the only game in town.
If a cable system comes into a market and provides a better system than we can,
Thomas Also Seeks Overcome An Image
ByFREDROTHENBERG AP Television Writer
NEW YORK !AP) - Hank Williams Jr. grew up without his father - but with his fathers legend. At times, carrying the burden of his dad's name, fame and early death was the stuff of country-and-western lament.
The struggle to leave his fathers shadow and assert his own musical and personal identity is the focus of tonights' NBC movie; Living Proof: The Hank Williams Jr. Story, based on the autobiography by Williams and Michael Bane.
'That sucker casts'a long shadow. Im the living proof of that." says Hank in the movie.
Richard Thomas, himself trying to overcome televisions inflexible image of him as John-Boy Walton, gives Hank an earnestness but not enough earthiness to be totally credible. Thomas singing does justice to Hanks tunes, which are performed a half-dozen times to enliven a production that dawdles too much, yet still manages to be appealing.
At the age of 8, Hank sings his daddys songs on stage, beneath a huge picture of
Hank Williams Sr. As he g older, he rebels against controlling mother, Audrey (Allyn Ann McLerie), who stifles any creativity. I know Im not great. I just imitate, he writes in one song.
On stage, Audrey wont let him sing his own songs. At home, where another larger-than-life picture of Hank Sr. adorns the family room, she snubs any woman who might take her boy away.
When I hear you doing his songs, it keeps him close to me," Audrey tells Hank. (Hank Williams Sr. died at the age of 29 from an alcohol-induced heart failure.)
Hank finally tears away the apron strings, but his fans still wont let him be anybody but the singin image of Hank Sr.
On the road, he succumbs to some of the same temptations that hooked his father - drugs, alcohol and easy women. He breaks up with his hometown girl-next-door and marries an aggressive woman. June, played by the talented Liane Langland, turns out to be another Audrey.
She advocates pleasing the fans with the oldies, thinking more of gate receipts than her husbands needs. The marriage dissolves, and so does Hanks discipline. He arrives drunk for one concert, and later tries to kill himself with an overdose of pills.
A new manager (Clu Gulager) and a supportive girlfriend (Ann Gillespie) help turn his life around. But his rebuilt career is nearly destroyed when his face is severely damaged in a mountain-climbing accident.
At this point, Living Proof becomes more compelling, with Hank trying to overcome his physical dis
figurement and low self-image. This would seem to be the most powerful battle of his life, yet the movie skips by it.
Tonight is the first Monday without M-A-S-H, and CBS newest sitcom will not make anybody forget Hawkeye Pierce. In fact, 30 minutes of Frank Burns would be better than Small
TV Log
For completo TV programming Information, conault your weekly TV SHOWTIME from Sundaya Daily Reflector.
WNCT-TV-Ch.9
WIONDAY ; uo Jokers Wild
7 30 Tic Tac 8:00 Square Pegs 8:30 FifthyRicIl 9:00 TBA
10 00 Cagney 8,
11 00 News 9 11 30 Movie TUESDAY
5:00 Jim Bakker 6:00 Carolina
8 00 Morning 8:35 News
9 :25 News 10:00 Pyramid 10:30 Childs Play
II 00 Price is Right 11:57 Newsbreak 12:00 News9 12:30 Youngs,
1:30 As the World 2:30 Capitol 3:00 Guiding Lt. 4:00 Waltons . 5:00 Hillbillies 5:30 A.Grittlth 6.00 News 9 6:30 CBS News 7:00 Jokers Wild
7 :30 Tic Tac Dough
8 :00 Walt Disney 9:00 Movie 11:00 News9 11:30 Late Movie
WITN-TV-Ch.7
MONDAY
7 00 Jetterson 7:30 Family Feud
8 :00 Little House 9:00 Movie
II 00 News 11:30 Tonight 12:30 Letterman
1 30 Overnight
2 30 News TUESDAY
5 30 Addams
6 00 Early Today
6 25 Almanac 7:00 Today
7 25 News 7:30 Today
8 25 News
8 30 Today 9:00 R. Simmons
9 30 All in the 10:00 FactsOILife
i0:30 Sale ot the 11:00 Wheel ot 11:30 Hit Man 12:00 News 12:30 Search For 1:00 Days Of Our 2:00 Another WId 3:00 Fantasy 4 :00 Dark Shadows 4 :30 Wild West 5:30 Lie Detector 6:00 News 6:30 NBC News 7:00 Jetterson 7:30 Family Feud 8:00 A Team 9:00 Bare Essence 10 00 St Elsewhere 11:00 News 11:30 Tonight Show 12:30 Letterman 1:30 Overight 2:30 News
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11:00 Action News 11 30 Nightllne 12:00 HarryO
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5 30 J. Swaggart 6:00 AG Day 6:30 News
7 00 Good Morning 6:13 Action News
6 55 Action News
7 25 Actions News a 25 Action News
9 00 Phil Donahue
10 :00 Good Times 10:30 Laverne
11:00 Love Boat 12:00 Family Feud 12:30 Ryan's Hope 1:00 My Children 2:00 One Lite 3:00 Gen. Hospital 4:00 Carnival 4:X BJ/LOBO S:X People's 6:00 Action News i:X ABC News 7:00 3's Company 7:M Alice 8:00 Billy Graham 9 :00 3'S Company 9:M 9to5 10:00 Hart to Hart 11:00 Action News 11 :X Nightllne 12:00 HarryO 1:00 Mission 2:00 Early Edition
WUNK-TV-Ch.25
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TUESDAY 7 :45 AM Weather 8:00 Adult Basic 8:35 Update 8:50 Readalong 9:00 Sesame St. 10:00 Let AM See 10:15 AAatterof 10:35 ParleZ'AAol 10 :45 Bread A 11:00 Living Things 11:15 Coverto 11:X Thinkabout 11:45 Eureka I1:M Readalong 2
12:X Inslde/Out 1M5 Music Box 13:X Read All 1J:4$ Electric Co. 1:15 Cents 1:X AAatterA 1:45 We Live Next 3:00 Case Studies 3:X What on 3:X Ready or Not 3:x Gen. Ed.
4:00 Sesame St.
S OO Mr . Rogers 5:X 3-3-1 Contact 6:00 Or. Who 6:X Dr . Who 7:00 Raport 7:X Almanac 8:W Nova fcOO Playhousa 10 :M FawltyT. 11:00 FawltyT. 11:X Dave Allen
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& Frye, an itsy-bitsy comedy about two private detectives, one of whom shrinks on command.
Its slow-moving, ludicrous and humorless, unless you like jokes about funny first names ( Pinky, Cuddles) and a guy who can sneak inside a box or a violin.
Darren McGavin is Nick Small. Jack Blessing is Chip
Debbie Given Medical Tests
NEW YORK (AP) -Actress Debbie Reynolds has been undergoing tests to determine why she felt faint and couldnt continue during a matinee performance of the Broadway musical Woman of the Year.
Shes doing fine, producer David Landay said Sunday as doctors tried to figure out what happened to her during Saturdays matinee.
There was no indication anything was wrong, said publicist Merle Debuskey. But then, about five minutes before the intermission, she began losing her place.
She got confused and scared, he said. She never really blacked out but was feeling faint and confused.
Miss Reynolds, 5 0, remained hospitalized today in good condition at Roosevelt Hospital.
Her stand-in, Louise Troy; took over during the Saturday matinee and will stay in the role until Miss Reynolds returns.
Miss Reynolds took over the starring role from Raquel Welch on Feb. 12. She had to memorize the entire role in two weeks, Debuskey said.
The show opened on Broadway with Lauren Bacall in March 1981.
Frye, whose height shortage was caused by a lab accident. He can control his ups-and-downs with a ring designed by an eccentric scientist, piayed by that typecast doofus Bill Daily (I Dream of Jeannie, The Bob Newhart Show).
How in the world his clothes shrink and expand is left for more clever minds.
Small & Frye comes from Walt Disney Productions. Its creators apparently have spent too much time in the Magic Kingdom.
First To Join 'Asian Cruise'
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -Gene Kelly is the first star signed by producers Aaron Spelling and Douglas S. Cramer to star in the Love Boats Asian cruise, scheduled for May departure.
Several other major stars will join Kelly aboard the Pearl of Scandinavia, departing Hong Kong for China and Japan.
The two-hour spebial episode of Love Boat will be shot entirely on location in Hong Kong with Kelly playing a retired spy. The Hong Kong cruise will be one of three two-hour specials to be filmed in the Far East and scheduled for telecasting during the 1983-84 season.
Landesberg In TV Special
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -Steve Landesberg, who established himself as the laconic and witty detective Arthur Dietrich on the defunct Barney Miller situation comedy series, will star in his own NBC-TV special.
The three-time Emmy nominee will host The Steve
Tuesday Night Deiicacyl
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were in trouble, but we think weve got a better moustrap, he said. We think we can stay in because p^ple are enamored by video technology.
Because the USTV signal will be scrambled from the satellite from the first day of broadcast, Kwit at least will not have to worry about pirates who might build their own dishes and steal his wares.
If you have a $20 million computer and 30 people working full time, we think you might be able to break our code, he said, but were constantly changing it.
Each home will have an individual code. Our satellite can send out 15 to 20 million
Waterbed Is Not For All
LANSING, Mich. (AP) -You can lead an elephant to a waterbed, but you cant make it sleep in one, a local store found out - the hard way.
Last week, the Sleep Shop rented Ina, a 2,200-pound baby elephant from a touring circus in town, to film a commercial about the durability of itswaterbeds.
The waterbed held up but Wednesdays filming session, in the basement of the Civic Center auditorium a block from the state Capitol, collapsed when Ina tried to stand up on the bed and was unable to get her sea legs.
She started making noises and that excited some of the other elephants, said Jim Lovitt, general manager of The Sleep Shop. A full-grown elephant on a rampage in the basement of the Civic Center can cause serious damage.
Say Linda Evans 'Best Looking'
NEW YORK (AP)-Linda Evans of the television series Dynasty has be*n chosen by readers of People magazine as the best-looking woman in America, while Tom Selleck of Magnum P.I. got the nod as best-looking man.
Miss Evans, 40, won over Victoria Principal of Dallas by .2 percent in the magazines fifth annual celebrities poll, featured in this weeks Issue. Selleck, 38, also was named Americas favorite TV actor, displacing M-A-S-H star Alan Alda, who won the past four years. Favorite TV actress was Stefanie Powrs of Hart to Hart.
Landesberg Show, a half-hour comedy pilot for the network to be telecast April 14.
different codes, so if youre not a real customer, it will simply turn you off. From 23,000 miles up, we will turn you on and turn you off. We can even turn you off if you dont pay your bill.
But television programming is not the only thing the ANIK-C2, and later, the GSTAR satellite to which USTV will move when It is launched next year, ultimately will provide its customers.
There are all sorts of technical ramifications to this, Kwit said. In theory, by DBS we eould monitor your house - stove, fridge, fire alarms, anything. We have the technology to do it, but we dont know yet if its practical.
You can hook up your home computer. You can play video games. Instead of buying cartridges, we can send the signal from the satellite "to your home computer and give you a new game a day.
You could play that game. against 5 million other people. The capability is there now. What it does is constantly challenge you.
Kwit said USTV backers are so confident of the DBS challenge that a major in
stitutional investor, which he declined to name, soon will be joining in the firms financing.
We think thats recognition of the fact that its real, he said. "Its here and it represents both the future of entertainment and telecommunications.
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First Three Tourney Spots Are Filled
(urnateen
By Thes^pKiated Press Its tournlteent time in college basketbalWith 49 berths in the NCM p^offs up for grabs. Three of th^^ts were determined over th^eekend with Princeton, Nort\caro-lina A&T and A Birmingham gaining the NTAA field
Postseason tournament winners and regular-season winners in the Ivy League, Big Ten, Western Athletic Conference, Pacific-10 and West Coast Athletic Conference get automatic berths. Those con-ferences conduct no postseason tourneys.
No. 2 Virginia (25-3) and No.
stomped Rice 82-55; No. 6 3 Louisville (27-3), tuning up for their postseason tourneys which begin this week, survived scares Sunday.
Ralph Sampson, placing his last home game for Virginia, hit a jump shot with four seconds left to give the Cavaliers an 83-81 Atlantic
.4-
GRUNT!
East Carolina football player Terry Long grimaces as he pulls up a North Carolina state record 865 pounds in the dead lift at the North Carolina Powerlifting Championships Sunday In Greensboro. Long won the meet
with a total of 2,203 pounds, the third highest total in the world. He set state records in the squat, bench press, dead lift and total weight in the meet. (Reflector Photo by Katie Zernhelt)
Long In Record Lifts
(;KP:EXSBUR0 - Eas.t Carolina University football player' Terry Long, a 6-0. 279-pound rising senior offensive lineman, proved again Sunday why he's being touted as the strongest college football player in the country.
Long, competing in the North Carolina Powerlifting Contest in Greensboro, set four new North Carolina records and established himself as the third strongest powerlifter in the world in the
process.
Long opened the superheavyweight competition by snapping the record in the squat, hefting a total of 837 pounds, then added a record 501-pound bench press. He followed that up with a dead lift of 865 points, becoming the first North Carolinian to dead lift over 800 pounds.
That gave Long a total of 2,203 pounds, another new state record. That weight also
is the third best in the world.
Long is an all-America candidate for football this fall.
Coast Conference triumph over Maryland. Milt Wagner scored all of Louisvilles six points in overtime to lift the Cardinals over Metro (Conference foe Memphis State, ranked No. 17,64-62.
I wish I could stay another four years, said Sampson, but Ive got to move on. The 7-foot-4 center finished with 23 points, 10 rebounds and four blocked shots to give Virginia a share of the ACC crown with North Carolina.
At Louisville, Wagner hit the game-winning goal, a 15-footer, with one second left against Memphis State to give the Cardinals an unbeaten record in the Metro Conference. Keith Lee scored 21 points for Memphis State, 21-6 overall but only 6-6 in the conference.
You have to keep Louisville off the boards, said Tiger Coach Dana Kirk. The difference was the rebounding. They got most of their baskets off second shots.
Cliff Pruitt scored a game-high 15 points in helping Alabama-Birmingham to a 64-47 victory over South Florida. The Blazers held Charley Bradley, who had been averaging 28 points, to 12.
UAB, which made it to the NCAA final eight last season, finished with a 19-13 record.
Princeton, paced by Rick Simkus 13 points, won the Ivy Lea^e title by topping Columbia 72-56, while Joe Bi-nions 22 points and 14 rebounds powered N.C. A&T over Howard 71-64 for the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference tourney crown.
In Saturday games involving the Top Twenty:
-Top-ranked Houston wound up the Southwest Conference season undefeated with a 93-64 romp over Baylor that bettered its record to 25-2.
-No. 16 Georgetown, led by Patrick Ewings 21 points and 15 rebounds, spoiled No. 4 Villanovas chances of winning the Big East outright by crushing the Wildcats 87-71.
-It became a three-way tie all with 12-4 records -when No. 10 St. Johns and No.
15 Boston College also won, and Boston College became the top seed for the postseason tourney because it had the best cumulative record among the three. Villanova was seeded No. 2 and St. Johns third.
St. Johns ripped Pittsburgh 91-73 and B.C. beat Pro-vidence 81-66. Also, fifth-ranked Arkansas
PalH Proves Can Take Heat
Cavs, Heels...
iContinuedFromPase9/
The 7-foot-4 Sampson, a Harrisonburg, Va., native, bid Virginia a fond farewell Sunday by scoring the winning basket in an 83-81 victory over the Terrapins.
Ralph Sampson has been such a credit to college basketball," Holland said Sunday. He has meant so much to our program and to basketball in the ACC."
Sampson averaged 18.5 points per game and 12.3 rebounds. He shot 60 percent from the field and led the league in rebounding and field goal percentage,
.Jordan and Perkins led the Tar Heels to a pair of victories over the Cavaliers to earn top-seed in this weeks tournament in Atlanta
Jordan has had a great, great season, North Carolina coach Dean Smith said. Hes improved in every phase of play from one year ago. However, the thing 1 enjoy most is watching him play defense. He has become a great defensive
player
Smith called Perkins the most complete forward in college basketball No one else can do all the things he does.
.Jordan, the 6-6 sophomore from Wilmington, won the regular-season scoring title in the ACC with a 32-point performance in a victory over Duke. He scored a conference best 39 points in a victory over Georgia Tech, helping his 19.5 scoring average and 55.2 percent field goal percentage.
Perkins averaged 16.9 points and 9.4 rebounds a game.
Bailey, a 6-11 senior from Seat Pleasant, Md,, is scoring at 15.9 points a game while shooting 49.8 percent from the field. He also averages 7 7 rebounds per game.
Thurl is one of the premier forwards in our conference and the nation, Wolfpack coach Jim Valvano said. He will be a high draft choice in the NBA and hopefully, hell enjoy a prosperous-pro career.
Coleman came to the Terrapins after transferring from Minnesota. The 6-9, 220-pound junior is averaging 16 points and 8,4 rebounds while shooting 59.3 percent from the floor.
Following are the ilrsi and second team all Atlantic Coast Conference basketball teams as chosen by a panel ol sports writers and sportscasiers Vole totals were accumulated on a sliding scale of 10 points for a first place vote nine points lor a second-place vote, through one point lor a lOlh place vote Iniiuded IS the player s name, voles received, hei^t. weight, class, hometown and school:
First Team
Ralph .Sampson MhWi Jordan
76
7-4
228
Sr
Harrisonburg, Va Wilmington. NC
Virginia N Carolina
7,'i
6-6
189
So
Sam Perliins
63
6-9
224
Jr
Utham, N V
N Carolina
Thurl Baile)
39
6-11
212
Sr
Seat Pleasant. Md
N Carolina St
Bent oleman bihell Vtil.von
31
31
6-9
6-0
220
190
Jr
Jr
Minneapolis Woodbridge, Va
Maryland
Virginia
SectndTeim
.-\drian Branch
38
6-8
190
So.
Largo. Md. Enia, Okla.
Maryland
Ga.Tech
Mark Price
27
6-0
165
Fr
Sidney Uwe
25
6-0
195
Sr
Washington, DC Rockville, Md.
N Carolina St
Johnny Hawkins
24
6-2
160
Fr
Duke
Danny Young
7
6-3
174
Jr
Raleigh. NC
Wake Forest
HooonUeMentlon
Rick Carlisle. Virginia, Jim Braddock, N Carolina: John Toms, Wake Forest; Len Bias. Maryland,
Matt Doherty N Carolina
PHOENIX, Ariz. (AP) -French golfer Ann-Marie Palli, playing for the first time as an LPGA tourney leader, proved she could stand the heat by firing a 4-under-par 69 to build a four-stroke lead in the second round of the Samaritan Turquoise Classic.
Palli said she felt uncomfortable playing in front of Sundays crowds on the par-73, 6,380-yard Arizona Biltmore course. She said the spectators helped her concentration because there are so many people you dont see anybody.
After the first round, played Friday and Saturday, Palli led by one stroke, shooting a 5-under-par 68 to Dianne Daileys 69.
In second place after Sundays second round was 32-year-old Lynn Adams, who had been in a three-way tie for third place after the first round of the $150,000 Ladies Professional Golf Association event.
The third and final round of the event was to be played today.
Adams, a Kingsville, Texas, native who has never won an LPGA tournament, said shes worked hard at her game for the past seven years and I know in my heart Im just about ready.
Palli was 9-under-par at 137 Sunday after two rounds. Adams, meanwhile, shot a 2-under-par 71 for a two-round, 5-under-par total of 141.
Tied for third place at 142 were Vicki Fergon and Chris Johnson. Dailey was at 144.
Palli, a 27-year-old native of Ciboure, France, who requalified for the tour this January after losing her card in 1981, sank a 25-foot putt on the ninth hole but then missed a four-footer on the 18th ole.
jl misread it, Palli said of
the putt. Palli hit five birdies and one bogey.
Palli, who had planned to return to France after today, said if she wins the tournament she will buy her parents plane tickets to the United States. After playing three of four tournaments, Palli is 27th on the money list. She first joined the tour in 1979.
On Saturday, LPGA officials reduced the tournament from 72 to 54 holes because of wet course conditions resulting from rains that postponed the start of the tourney from Thursday to Friday. Rain also delayed play Friday, forcing half the field to finish the first round Saturday.
RR Champs Gain Finals
AHOSKIE - Warren Countys girls and North Edgecombes boys moved into the finals of the District 13-A basketball tournament Saturday night with victories.
Warren County downed fellow Roanoke River Conference foe Northampton East, 55-50, in the semifinals to advance to Wednesday nights finals. Warren will meet the winner of tonights Roanoke-Southeast Halifax game in the finals.
In the boys semifinals. North Edgecombe, the regular season winner in the Roanoke River league, downed Plymouth, the number two seed from the Northeastern Conference, 6H4, to advance. North Edgecombe will, on Wednesday night, face the winner of toni^ts game between Roanoke and Northwest Halifax.
The winner advances to the regionals next week in Wilson.
UCLA downed Washington 90-66; Louisiana State upset No. 7 Kentucky 74-60; No. 8 North Carolina swept past Duke 105-81; No. 11 Indiana defeated Illinois 67-55, assuring the Hoosiers of at least a tie for the Big Ten championship; No. 12 Wichita State routed Southern Illinois 109-83; No. 13 Missouri smashed Iowa State 84-66; No. 14 Ohio State tripped 20th-rated Purdue 76-65; Connecticut upset Syracuse 55-54, and No. 19 Tennessee-Chattanooga edged Western Carolina 76-73.
Houston extended its winning streak to 20 against Baylor as Michael Young scored 21 points and Clyde Drexler 20. The Cougars are only the 11th team in history to go through the SWC season unbeaten.
Now we know why Houston is No. 1, said Baylor Coach Jim Haller. They are the best team I ever coached against. Ive never seen a college team with more depth.
Despite our finish, Im still pleased with our regular sason and Im sure the kids will bounce back for the tournament, said Villanova Coach Rollie Massimino after the loss to Georgetown.
Villanova and St. Johns are the two best teams in the conference, said Georgetown Coach John Thompson, who is confident his Hoyas (20-8), runnerup to North Carolina for the NCAA title last season, will be chosen for a berth this season,
David Russell scored 27 points and Chris Mullin 20 for St. Johns to offset 31 points by Pitts Clyde Vaughan. John Garris and Michael Adams scored 22 points in Boston Colleges victory over Providence, while Larry Bluchers goal with three seconds left gave Connecticut its victory over Syracuse.
Darrell Walker poured in 22 points to win the SWC scoring crown in Arkansas rout of Rice. The Razorbacks finished with a 25-2 record, losing both games to Houston.
Darren Daye scored 18 points and Kenny Fields 17 as UCLA boosted its record to 22-3 and 14-1 in the Pacific-10.
Howard Carters 23 points led LSU past Kentucky, which
clinched the Southeastern Conference championship last week.
North Carolina placed six players in double figures, led by Michael Jordans 32 points, against Duke.
Indiana, paced by Randy Wittmans 20 points, gained at least a tie for the Big Ten title with its triumph over Illinois. A victory over Ohio State next Saturday would clinch it, but a loss would result in a playoff against the Buckeyes.
Wichita State won the Missouri Valley Conference crown by beating Southern Illinois but the Shockers are ineligible for postseason play. Antoine Carr made 21 of 36 field goal tries in tossing in a career-hi^ 47 points.
Missouri, the Big Eight champion, gave Coach Norm Stewart his 300th victory at the school. Steve Stipanovich and Greg Cavener each scored 18 points against Iowa State.
Tenness^hattanooga had
a close call in stretching its winning streak to 11 against Western Carolina. Stmiford Strickland sank five free throws in the final 31 second to give the Moccasions a 23-3 overall mark, 15-1 in the Southern Conference.
Mark Murphys 22-foot shot at the buzzer gave Fordham a 54-53 victory over Iona for the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference title. The two-year-old MAAC has no automatic berth.
Miller Turns Back Jack's Bid To Take Inverrary
LAUDERHILL, Fla. (AP) Johnny Miller is climbing up the steps, one by one, just as he did a decade ago.
And, just as the Golden Boy did in the early 1970s, a more-mature Miller is doing now - setting his sights on the top of pro golfs heap.
This is a step up the ladder just like I took in 72 and 73, Miller said after hed turned back Jack Nicklaus late bid and scored a two-shot victory Sunday in the Honda-Inverrary Golf Classic.
I may have skipped a step or two, maybe three, back in the 70s. But Im taking them one at a time now, Miller said following a solid, 3-under-par 69 that provided him with his 22nd Professional Golfers Association tour triumph on a 278 total, 10 under par for four trips over the 7,129-yard Inverrary Country Club layout.
Ive always been a super inconsistent player, even when I was winning everything, said Miller, iww 35.
Over the winter, I set two goals for myself. One is that, for the first time in my career. Im going to be a consistent player. I had a consistent year last year. I only won once, but I had a stroke average of 70.7 and thats not bad. I was top-10 five or six times.
Well, this year, I want to be even more consistent. Ive always played good on the West Coast, but Ive never played good in the spring and
summer. This year, particularly with the way Im putting. Im expecting a good spring and summer.
This win is a big step in that direction. And its a step up the ladder. I think Im ready to make a shot at the leaders (of the game). No. 2 or No. 3. I might not quite be ready for No. 1 yet. Maybe next year.
And the other goal, well, thats win another major and win it this year, said Miller, who won the 1973 U.S. Open and the 1976 British Open.
He paused for a moment and reconsidered.
I might be ready for that now, he said. I might be ready to do that now, win in the majors. If my nerves hold up. If I can pretend, work real hard and pretend that its the Tallahassee Open and not the Masters.
If I can keep on putting like this, putting consistently, I think I can challenge for the top again, challenge in the majors.
I think its going to be an exciting year for me.
It was an exciting windup over the windswept course. Almost, Miller admitted with a smile, too exciting.
Jack provided the drama almost too much, Miller said.
Nicklaus, playing about 90 minutes in front of Miller, ripped a 6-under-par 66, the best round of the day, out of the gusty winds. He played the
back in ^ and once got to within a single stroke of the lead. But he ran out of holes and could do nothing but sit and watch as Miller preserved the victory with a 6-foot birdie putt on the 15th and a closing string of three consecutive pars.
I thought if I could get it under par on the front, then maybe I could do some damage with a good back nine, said Nicklaus, a three-time winner here who went past 27 players. He was second alone at 280.
Its encouraging, Nicklaus said. Its encouraging that I got a good round going, hit some good shots, kept a good round going, kept my composure. And its really encouraging the way Im putting.
Mike Donald, Mike Sullivan and Fred Couples tied at 281. Donald and Couples had closing 71s, Sullivan 70. Tom Kite, Ray Floyd, Hal Sutton and Wayne Levi followed at 282. Kite shot 69, Floyd 70, Sutton 71 and Levi 74.
Gary Koch, a winner at Doral the week before and the third-round leader here, blew to a 76 and 283.
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