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THE DAILY REFLECTOR
INSIDE READING
Page 8 - The legislature Page 12-Obituaries Page 20-Godfrey dies
102NDYEAR NO. 65
GREENVILLE, N.C.
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION
THURSDAY AFTERNOON, MARCH 17, 1983
30 PAGES4 SECTIONS PRICE 25 CENTS
c A n a I SPRING REPAIRS Vernon Childs begins one of the many
aeusonui gpring (.jjQpgg homeowners - getting his house ready for
Baker To Keep Trying
Senate Jobs Bill In Stalemate
ByTOMRAUM Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON (AP) -Sen. Bob Kasten, R-Wis., claiming he has the votes for repealing the withholding tax on interest and income, challenged Senate leaders today to put his measure to a quick vote and end the
stalemate over a $5.1 billion jobs bill.
Kasten said he is willing to support a move by Senate leaders to limit further debate on the bill - in a vote now scheduled for Friday and to take his chances.
The battle over Kastens amendment has tied the
Senate in a parlimentary knot for more than a week.
Meanwhile, Senate Majority Leader Howard Baker, R-Tenn., vowed to keep the Senate in session throu^i the weekend to resolve the dispute over the jobs legislation. Im going to run the Senate
Pressure On Britain To Undercut OPEC Prices
LONDON (AP) - Britain, which forced OPEC to cut prices for the first time, is facing pressure from major oil companies to undercut the cartel in what petroleum analysts call news si^s a worldwide price war is inevitable.
REFLECTOR
The Daily Telegraph reported today that several oil companies were seeking a reduction of as much as $1 a barrel from the state-owned British National Oil Corp.s proposed price of $30.50.
Oil companies say Britains North Sea oil at $30.50
fjOTLinc
752-1336
Hotline gets things done for you. Call 752-1336 and tell youi problem or your sound-off or mail it to Hotline, The Daily Reflector, Box 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.
CITIZEN AMBASSADORS SOUGHT
The Friendship Force is seeking 80 people from throughout North Carolina to be citizen ambassadors during a 12-day trip to the Peoples Republic of China.
The trip, to be arranged by Friendship Force, a six-year-old non-profit organization which arranges for people throughout the world to visit in each others countries, willl begin Nov. 11. The 12-day itinerary includes four nights in Hong Kong, one in Hangchow, three in Peking and two in Shanghair, plus travel time. Those who wish may remain in Japan on the return and travel at their own expense.
This Friendship Force trip will offer peo-ple-to-people contact with Chinese citizens and glimpses of non-tourist aspects of Chinese life. Friendship Force China Interchange chairman Donna Lambeth said. She said it differs from other Friendship Force programs in that there is no hosting in homes. She said a well-balanced group of participants all ages, all interests, all occupations, and residences in all sections of the state is being sought.
The cost including all transportation, hotels and almost all meals is $1,995, with the round trip from Atlanta.
Anyone wishing information and/or an application may write 1983 NC/China Interchange, The Friendship Force, 700 Yorkshire Road, Winston-Salem, N.C. 27106. Applications are now being accepted.
cannot compete against premium Nigerian oil of the same quality selling at $30 or against the $29 price set by the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries on Monday after a dozen days of wrangling in London by ministers from all 13 members.
The oil minister from the worlds largest oil-producing nation, OPEC-member Saudi Arabia, said after the carteh agreement was announced that if Britain cuts its price below $30, a price war might break out for the worlds shrinking petroleum market.
Britain, which does not belong to OPEC, is the worlds fifth-largest oil producer.
Britains decision last month to reduce its prices for North Sea crude forced OPEC-member Nigeria to bolt from cartel policy and cuts its prices. Other OPEC members threatened to slash their prices as well unless the cartel reduced its base price, which had been $34 before Mondays ag^ment. It was the first time the 22-year-old cartel reduced its prices.
The Daily Telegraph said some reports in oil circles predicted that North Sea oil could fall as low as $25 a barrel.
Peter Lymbery of the authoritative Petroleum Intelligence Weekly said he believed OPEC might swallow a $30 or even a $29.50 pricetag. But, he said, the oil companies want a price of $28.50 for North Sea oil.
Lymbery predicted that all hell would break out if Britains price fell below $29.50.
British Petroleum said in a statement last week a $29 OPEC benchmark was not sustainable and would encourage further cuts.
Meanwhile, the Soviet Union, which sells' about 1 million barrels a day to Western Europe, cut the price of its crude $1.25, to $28 a barrel.
North Sea crude was selling for $28.30 on the unregulated ^t market this week, and industry sources said that price was $2.50 too much in the gutted world oil market.
as long as its necessary, he said.
In separate procedural votes Wednesday, the Senate delivered a divided verdict on Kastens measure.
It rejected by 10 votA a leadership bid to block Kastens repeal drive. But, by a one-vote margin, the Senate also turned back Kastens attempt to force a vote on the repeal measure.
Both motions were procedural ones requiring the votes of 60 of the Senates 100 members. The vote on the motion by Senate leaders
Recall
Planned
KINSTON - Du Pont has announced that it will recall on March 28 approximately 30 former employees who were laid off here Nov. 1.
The Kinston plant, which employs over 2,200 people, had announced plans last August to reduce its work force by approximately 250 employees beginning the first of November.
We are very pleased to be able to offer the opportunity for re-employment to part of the group that was involved in the layoff late last year, said Jimmy H. Moore, assistant plant manager.
This action is being taken to staff an additional quality assurance effort as well as continue to meet production needs, the spokesman said.
Based on our view of the pace of the recovery of the economy, we believe this action will place us in a strong position to meet the current and projected needs of our customers, Moore said.
The plant, located on N.C. 11, produces Dacron polyester fiber for the apparel, home furnishings and automotive upholstery markets.
was 50-48, while the tally on Kastens effort was 59-39.
Unable to proceed further on the bill. Baker put the measure aside until Friday, and had the Senate take up the Social Security bailout legislation instead.
But Kasten said today he was ready to support Bakers motion to limit further debate on the bill, and that hes ready to do it immediately, without waiting until Friday.
His change of strategy all but assured that Baker would get the 60 votes required to limit debate throu^ a so-called cloture motion. One effect of such a motion would be to strip all non-germane amendments including Kastens - from the jobs bill.
Kasten said it was a gamble he was willing to take. He said that if his amendment is ruled non-germane, he will seek to overturn the ruling in a parlimentary move that would require only a simple majority vote of senators.
Funding
Pitt County was aUocated $9,733 by the Juvenile Delinquency Prevention Act for fiscal year 1983-84.
'The funds are designated for program use in the following categories; community residential care, community non-residential care, volunteer programs and alternative schools.
Persons or agencies wishing to request JJDP funding must submit a letter of intent by April 1 and all local requests for funding must be submitted by March 25. Submit requests to the Pitt County Juvenile Task Force.
Direct further inquiries may be had from Jan Woodworth, Task Force Chairperson, P.O. Box 1160, Greenville, or 752-1811.
Postmaster In Bell Arthur Has Retired
Louise Dail Webb has retired as postmaster of Bell Arthur, a post she had held for 30 years.
Mrs. Webb became postmaster after she and her husband, Rufus Raymond Webb, rented a store from her predecessor, Mattie Parker Crawford. The post office was located in the back of the store. In October 1966, it was moved to its present building adjacent to the store.
The Webbs retired from the store business five years ago.
A Winterville-area native, Mrs. Webb is active in the Arthur Christian Church and has, in the past, been active in supporting the activity of the Bell Arthur Volunteer Fire Department, of which her husband was chief.
Mrs. Webb, mother of four and grandmother of 10, will be succeeded as Postmaster by Cynthia Craft.
Asked what she plans to do during retirement, she said. No more than I can help. Im going to fish a lot.
A retirement ceremony honoring Mrs. Webb will be held March 25 at 1 p.m. by the U.S. Postal Service.
General Says Harassment By Israeli
some touch-iq) painting. Childs lives on the Tar Road near Winterville. (Reflector Photo by Tommy Forrest)
DETROIT (AP) The nations top Marine, saying he can no longer remain silent, has accused Israeli troops of repeatedly threatening U.S. peacekeeping patrols in Lebanon, a published report today said.
According to a copyright article. Marine Corps commandant Gen. Robert Barrow wrote a classified letter dated Monday to Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger reporting three * incidents this year in which shots were fired.
It was the first report of any gunfire by Israelis involving U.S. forces. On another occasion, Israelis threatened to kill an American captain, the article said.
The article^ by Knight-Ridder Newspapers Washington bureau, appeared in todays Detroit Free Press and other newspapers.
In Tel Aviv, an Israeli security source rejected the report, saying there were no cases of anything being said to insult the Marines, the United States, the officers or the Marines uniform. The source, who insisted on anonymity, also said the Israelis had not threatened Marines.
In Washington, Marine Corps and Defense Department officials who asked that their names not be used said they were not familiar with the letter or the reported incidents.
The incidents involved both Marine and Army officers in life-threatening situations, replete with verbal degradation of the officers, their uniform and country, Barrow wrote, according to the published report.
Unfortunately, and of greater concern to me, (is that) incidents of this nature are the rule, rather than the exception....
It is inconceivable to me why Americans serving in peacekeeping roles - must be harassed, endangered and degraded by an ally.
The report quoted another classified document as saying an Israeli tank opened fire
with a 50-caliber machine gun on the road in front of an American patrol Jan. 31, forcing the patrol to tufn around.
In another incident, Israeli troops were said to have pointed American-made M-16 rifles at a Marine captain and stated they would kill him if he took one step toward them, the report said. The captain rerouted his vehicle.
In a third incident, the article said, Maj. Herman Kafura of a United Nations observation team was threatened with loaded and pointed weapons and his life was deliberately threatened.
Barrow was quoted as writing that he could no longer remain silent on this continual problem of provocation, by Israeli troops.
It is evident to me ... that the incidents between the Marines and the Israeli Defense Forces are timed, orchestrated and executed for obtuse Israeli political purposes, Barrow wrote, the report said.
It is time for firm and strong action to demonstrate to the Israelis that a role as a peacekeeper does not presume weakness.
In a highly publicized instance in January, a Marine captain drew a pistol to stop an Israeli tank patrol from infringing on what he considered U.S.-controlled territory.
U.S. officials said then there had been half a dozen confrontations between U.S. and Israeli forces. Only one has been reported since then, a verbal clash between U.S. and Israeli patrols last week.
The 1,200-man Marine force, part of a larger deployment of troops from Britain, Italy and France, has been patrolling the Beirut area since last fall in an effort to bolster the Lebanese government.
Five Marines in Lebanon were slightly injured Wednesday in a grendde attack for which a group calling itself Islamic Holy War claimed credit.
Bids Awarded By Winterville Board
WINTERVILLE - Bids for paving and resurfacing several streets in Winterville have been awarded by the Winterville town board to Barrus Construction Company of Kinston.
The streets include portions of Jones, Knox, Academy, Church, Depot and North and South Railroad. Barrus was the low bidder with $23,181. The contracts were awarded at a recent meeting of the Town Board of Aldermen.
The board also designated First State Bank as the
depository for the recently received Community Development Block Grant and appointed Harriet Britt as labor standards officer.
A special meeting was set for March 28 to awards bids for a contract on six houses in the rehabilitation portion of the project.
The board also approved a payment to Line Equipment Company for a Pittman aerial bucket lift truck at a cost of $17,500 and approved purchase and payment for a 1976 fire department water wagon to replace wrecked
water wagon. The cost of the water wagon is $6,500 from F&D Motor in Bethel and the towns insurance will pay $4,900.
A representative of the U.S. Geological Survey requested the town consider a ground water supply survey to evaluate water supply potential of the aquifer system and evaluate regional impact of alternative schemes for ground water development. The cost to the town would be $1,000 per year for three years. No action was taken.
Nuclear Resolution Is Assured, Say Backers
WASHINGTON (AP) -Congressional supporters of a nuclear weapions freeze resolution say House passage of the measure is inevitable despite Republican tactics which blocked a final vote after 12 hours of floor debate.
Freeze proponents also sou^t to play down conflicting views which emerged during Wednesdays debate over what specific weapons would be affected if a freeze with the Soviets was negotiated.
Rep. Edward J. Markey, D-Mass., a leading freeze advocate on Capitol Hill, asserted that GOP dilatory tactics were successful in postponing the inevitable. But next week the people of this country will be heard.
The Houses Democratic leadership had forecast easy passage of the resolution -calling for a mutual and verifiable freeze to be followed by nuclear arms reductions - after a single day of floor action.
However, Republicans voted solidly against a motion to limit debate so that the measure could be put to a vote by midnight. They were joined by more than 40 Democrats to prevent the Democratic majority from forcing
an early decision on the measure.
The action put the resolution off until Monday at the earliest because the House, plans to do no legislative business on Thursday, which is St Patricks Day, and will not be in session on Friday.
If passed, the resolution likely would face a much more uncertain future in the Senate. And even if both houses approved the initiative, it would not be binding on President Reagan.
White House spokesman Larry Speakes said it$ still a tough fight, and that if the administration does not succeed in killing the resolution in the House it will take its battle to the Senate.
Majority Leader Jim Wright, D-Texas, said it was by no means certain that the freeze would be the first order of business when the House returns next week. He said a decision would be made after we have had a chance to regroup.
Speaker Thomas 'P. ONeill, D-Mass., estimated that the measure had enough support to pass by 60 to 100 votes.
The (mly possible way to change the outcome, he said,
would be to adjourn and have the president ^t on the phone in a lobbying effort against the measure.
Before quitting for ihe night, the House rejected, 226-195, an amendment spearheaded by Rep. Samuel S. Stratton, D-N.Y., to permit modernization and deployment of whatever weapons were needed to maintain the credibility of the U.S. nuclear deterrent.
Rep. Clement J. Zablocki, D-Wis., chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, charged that Strattons amendment would destroy the effect of the freeze.
The House also turned back, 215-^, an amendment by Rep. Mark D. Siljander, R-Mich., allowing U.S. negotiators at talks in Geneva to have the option of seeking either arms reductions or a freeze.
House Republican Leader Robert Michel of Illinois, speaking out bluntly against the freeze proposal, contended that it was the product of a weil-planned, well-financed movement toward unilateral disarmament.
- 2-The Diily Renector, Greenville, N.C.-Ttairsday, March 17,1983
A PHILADELPHIA ...Chippendale side chair and handcrafted 18th century reproductions in the English Chippendale bed are among the 33 Tryon Palace Collection.
Furniture Reproductions Are Available At Tryon Palace
NEW BERN - The Colonial American antiques admired by thousands of visitors at Tryon Palace and the nearby John Wright Stanly House are now available in handmade reproductions for present-day homes.
Thirty-three pieces from the palace and Stanly House collections have been copied and reproduced employing the same lines, finishes and methods that gave birth to the 18-century originals.
Pieces to be copied were chosed based on their adaptability to modern living and their popularity among Tryon Palace Complex visitors. An English Chippendale bed and a Chippendale dropleaf table are two of the larger pieces. Smaller reproductions include a tea caddy, available with felt or copper lining, a slant-top desk of New England origin and a Queen,Anne lowboy.
Name Tags
Made By
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Pitt Plaza. Greenville
All pieces are offered in their original wood in most cases mahogany but in some pieces walnut, oak or pine -with additional wood choices available for certain pieces.
Fred Tharrington of Raleigh, chosen as cabinetmaker by the Tryon Palace Commission, made measured drawings of each original, duplicating all moldings and other construction details. He and his assistants make copies using 18th-centufy methods, although the interior construe^ tion of case pieces is modified to employ more durable present-day construction practices.
Prices are competitive in the field of antique reproductions.
Tryon Palace, called the mok beautiful building in Colonial America, was built in 1767-1770 as the first permanent seat of government of the Royal Colony of North Carolina. The John Wright Stanly House, in the palace complex, was completed in the 1780s and reflects the taste of a prominent late-18th-century New Ber nian such as its former owner, a merchant and ship
Prom Gowns by Nadine
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owner. The furnishings of both buildings are recognized collections of Englis'h and American antiques.
Reproductions from the collection can be purchased at the Palace Gift Shop or by catalogue, which contains photographs, descriptions and prices of all pieces. For information write The Tryon Palace Collection, Box 1007, New Bern, 28560.
Garden Club To Meet
The Lynndale Garden Club will meet at the home of Dr. and Mrs. Howard Satterfield Jr. March 22. Mrs. Earl Guertin and Mrs. Darnell Jones will be serving as co-hostesses.
The program will be on herb gardens and will be given by the horticulturist at Tryon Palace in New Bern.
The club will tour the palace and gardens April 12 followed by lunch at the Henderson House. The cost for the tour will be $4.00 and is limited to members only. Reservations must be made by April 6.
The Easter egg hunt for Lynndale youngsters, agqs 10 and under, will be held March 26 at 11 a.m. at First Federal. In case of rain, it will be held the following day.
The Page residence at 108 Lord Ashley Road won the yard of the month award.
Indira Gandhi was elected Indias first woman prime minister in 1966,
Bride-Elect
Entertained
Bride-elect Myra Brock was honored at a candlelight bridal shower Friday evening held at the home of Mrs. Jack Brock.
The house was decorated in spring colors of green and yellow carrying out an umbrella theme. The honoree was given a corsage of white daisies.
Greeting guests was LaVerne Brock and Edith Nobles.
The refreshment table was covered with a white lace cloth over yellow and centered with a bowl accented with floating candles and flowers. Three branched candelabra held lighted tapers and was interspersed with ivy Irene Brock poured punch. Assisting in serving were Myrtle Avery and Carol Brock.
Gifts were displayed by Lucille Avery, Pam Brock and Betty Lou Brock, mother of the honoree.
Miss Brock will marry Joey Baggett in the Win-terville Free Will Baptist Church April 2.
Hostesses for the event were Mrs. Avery, Carol Brock, Irene Brock, LaVerne Brock, Pam Brock, Mrs. Nobles and Letha Brock.
Good-byes were said by LaVerne Brock and Mrs. Nobles.
Births
Stox
Born to Mr. and Mrs. John Howell Stox, Winterville, a daughter, Nadine Wynne LaDuca, on March 10, 1983, in Pitt Memorial Ho^ital.
Jones
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Claude Edward Jones III, 2915 Ellsworth Drive, a son, Brian Kendall, on March 11, 1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.
Wallace
Born to Dr. and Mrs. Terry Anthony Wallace, 1600 Willow St. Apartment 2, a daughter, Ashley Lyvone, on March 11, 1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.
Gibbs
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Cleaven Gray Gibbs, Engelhard, a daughter, Shirleen Joette, on March 11, 1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.
Rogers
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Gregory P. Rogers, Raleigh, a son, Phillip Gregory, on March 11, 1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital. Mrs. Rogers is the former Leslie Dickens of Greenville.
Homes
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Spotswood Reid Homes, 608 Riverhills Drive, a son, Joshua Reid, on March 12, 1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.
Bibbs
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Glenn Bibbs, Grimesland, a son, Jerry Glenn Jr., on March 12, 1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.
Moore
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Wayne Moore, Grifton, a daughter, Brenda Gayle, on March 12, 1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital, .
Taft
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Tyrone Taft, Route 4, Greenville, a daughter, Kimberly Nicole, on March 12, 1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.
I
Sorority Has Rushee Event
Mary Ellen Joyce and Barbara McMillion of Eta Delta chapter were entertained at a rushee brunch Saturday by members of Xi Gamma Xi chapter of Beta Sigma Phi.
Final plans were made for casino night which will be held at the Elks Lodge March 26 at 8 p.m. Proceeds will be used for Greenville charities. Members also brought canned goods to be given to the Salvation Army.
Patsy Garzick presented a program on color analysis.
The brunch was held at the home of Mary Lynn Tompson. Tana Hill was hostess assisted by Barbara Sloan for the bi-monthly meeting of the group Tues-' day.
Beta Sigma Phi is a cultural, social and service organization for women. Any unaffiliated member may call 758-5352 for information.
At Wits End
Bv Erma Boinln'i k ^
'reasure Hunt
Entire Stock Of Fall & Winter Merchandise
331 Arlington Blvd. 10-6 Mon.-Sat. 756-5844
Here Comes Peter Cottontail
With Easter Baskets for all ages
Old fashioned baskets with a choice of
fresh fruits, candies, cookies hand-dyed eggs, stuffed animals fine cheeses, blooming plants, corsages.
Peter will hit the Bunny Trail early Sunday morning
Be sure to put your favorite person (from 1 month to 100 yrs.) on his ROUTE!
JEFFERSON
FLORIST
752-6195 place orders early!
Mothers are getting older in this country . . . even before they have the baby.
Some recent figures show that while teenagers are having fewer babies, the birthrate for women over 35 is increasing and will pitiably be up 46 percent during this decade.
I know, it probably sounds like a lot of fun having a baby who will sit around and connect liver spots on Mommys arms, but In reality, there are a lot of problems older mothers havent even considered.
For example, just when the baby is outgrowing his need for naps, youll grow into them. When his teeth start growing in, yours will start coming out.
Ive always felt there are two things a woman should never do after the age of 35: stand in a natural light and have a child who is learning how to play the trumpet. The aging process is not helped by a child who is learning how to play the trumpet.
Probably the worst adjustment will be when the babies grow into teenagers. For example, if a mother has a child at the age of 35, her son will begin to drive at age 16, making her 51 years old. Anyone knows this is too late for patience and too early to die. I have seen younger mothers carried comatose, their bodies rigid, their eyes glazed, from the passenger side of the car even before they left the driveway.
Probably the No. 1 complaint of mothers everywhere is exhaustion. Ask yourself how you will feel when you are going to bed when your teenager is going out and getting up when he is coming in.
Marriage
Announced
NARBERTH, Pa. - Diana Lynne Emerson and Vern Davenport were married Feb. 5 at 2 p.m. at Narberth Presbyterian Church here. Lawrence G. Reinersten performed the double ring ceremony. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph W. Emerson Jr. of Newtown Square, Pa. The bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. William Roger Davenport of Grifton. The couple is living in Greenville.
I had children rather late. Im not saying they crayoned on my Social Security check or took my electrocardiogram for Show and Tell, but there were times when communication between us was a glacier period apart.
It has thrown the entire traditional timetable off schedule. I will be the oldest grandmother in North America, if indeed I live to become one at all. There is no doubt in my mind I will race my grandchild for the baby food.
In Biblical and in Literary Classic times, mothers were 13 or 14 years old. Why? One can only speculate. The kids whined, Theres nothing to do, until their mother gave them something. They wanted to have children
before it interfered with puberty. If they set an example, they could have an empty nest by the time they were 28.
I know. Its a great temptation to have a baby covered by Medicare, but If it were up tome. Id resist it.
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DEAR WIFE: You are. Hie hostees should have acknowledged the flowers and thanked you for them.
Cash Gifts Get Hearty Endorsement
DEAR ABBY: Your column featuring the questionnaire to determine whether you are an alcoholic brought tears to my eyes.
I remember taking that test a year ago at my second A.A. meeting. TTie results convinced me that I was an alcoholic and had to do something about it.
When I was 17, I found myself drinking Coffee Royals at 8:30 a.m. to face my day. I had been drinking and drugging since I was 12.1 was a basket case.
I am 18 now, and I have not had a drink, or drugs of any kind, for tiearly a year. Tomorrow will be my first anniversary!
Alcoholics Anonymous has definitely saved my life. I have everything going for me. I came from a life of hell, and today I have a hell of a life!
Ihanks for constantly plugging A.A. That column made my day.
BOBBY S.
Cooking Is Fun
By CECILY BROWNSTONE Associated Press Food Editor
BRUNCHFARE
Fresh Fruit Cup Omelet 4 Hash Browns Honey Loaf 4 Coffee
SNACKTIME FARE Kentucky Toast 4 Beverage
By Abigail Van Buren
DEAR BOBBY: No thanks due me. A.A. threw you a lifeline. You caught it. Congratulations.
1983 by UnivcrMi Pre Syndicitf
DEAR ABBY: Ive written to you three times in my life so far and two of my letters have appeared in your column. Not bad! Here goes again:
Re money gifts at weddings: Why not? So many young people live together for a while before they tie the knot and really dont need any more serving pieces, toasters or, blenders.
We gave both of our nephews money for wedding gifts. One of them pooled all his cash gifts and used it for something he really needed a sizable down payment on
a tai.
I think the correct" thing to do in every situation is what is sensible and practical for the people involved.
Any gift given with love and consideration for the recipients is correct in my book. Who cares .what the etiquette books say!
T.J.F. IN AGAWAM, MASS.
DEAR ABBY: In your column in the Toronto Sun, someone raised the old chestnut about whether a man should remove his hat in an elevator when there are ladies present.
I thought that was settled once and for all years ago by Emily Post but I wont swear to it. This is the essence of her reply, though not the exact wording;
An elevator is a means of transportation, in the same category as a local bus, subway, train or streetcar. 'The only difference is that an elevator travels vertically, rather than horizontally. A man does not remove his hat in other vehicles, so there is no necessity for him to remove it in an elevator.
Youre welcome.
ARTHUR PICKERING, CANADIAN
HONEYLOAF Nutritious and flavorsome.
1 cup unbleached all-purpose white flour 1 cup whole wheat flour I'2 teaspoons baking powder 1 teaspoon baking soda 1 teaspoon salt teaspoon ground cinnamon 4 teaspoon ground ginger 1 large egg 1 cup milk 4 cup honey
'/) cup salad (not olive) oil 4 cup raisins, halved
KENTUCKY TOAST The meringue-like top crumbles when cut or cool, so serve slices whole and hot.
1 large egg 1 cup sugar 1 teaspoon cinnamon 10 slices thin white bread
DEAR T.J.F.: 1 agree. But the etiquette books say that cash gifts are correct. What is incorrect is a wedding invitation accompanied by the suggestion that a gift of cash is preferred. In other words, its okay to give cash, but its not okay to aak for it.
Getting married? Whether you want a formal church wedding or a simple, do-your-own-thing ceremony, get Abbys new booklet. Send $1 plus a long, self-addressed, stamped (37 cents) envelope to: Abbys Wedding Booklet, P.O. Box 38923, Hollywood, Calif. 90038.
DEAR ABBY: My husband and I are having a knockdown, drag-out fight about a point of etiquette.
Heres the situation; My husband and I were dinner guests at the home of a couple in another city. On returning home the following day, we sent the hostess an exceptionally lovely arrangement of flowers to express our appreciation.
Its been two months, and weve heard nothing from the hostess to indicate that our flowers were received. (Never mind a thank-you.) My husband maintains that our flowers were a thank-you for the dinner, and its not necessary for her to thank us for having thanked her.
I say the hostess should have at least let us know our flowers were received. Whos right?
. PEA PICKERS WIFE
Line the bottom of a 9 by 5 by 3-inch loaf pan with wax paper; grease paper. On another sheet of wax paper thoroughly stir together white flour, whole wheat flour, baking powder, baking soda, salt, cinnamon and ginger. In a medium bowl beat egg until foamy; add milk, honey and oil; beat to blend. Add flour mixture and stir until moistened. Stir in-raisins. Turn into prepared pan. Bake in a preheated 350Klegree oven until a cake tester inserted in center comes out clean - 45 to 50 minutes. Turn out on a wire rack; remove wax paper; turn right side up. Cool completely.
Beat egg until foamy; add sugar and cinnamon; beat to blend. Spread about 14 tablespoons of the mixture on each slice of bread; place slightly apart on foil-lined cookie sheet. Bake in a preheated 400Klegree oven until sugar bubbles out from-underneath the meringu^like top - about 15 minutes. Serve at once. Makes 10 slices. .(Adapted from Richard T. Hougens Cooking with Hougen, published by Abingdon Press.)
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Registration Fee-$10.00 Birth Certificate and Immunization-Record Needed
TUITION: Still $270 per year
Sister Mary James, S.C.C. Principal Rev. Jerry Sherba, Pastor
1101 Ward Street Telephone: 752-7912
752-4203
A black and white glossy five by seven photograph is requested (or 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 will 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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ACME Chapter Meet Set
FARMVILLE - The ACME Chapter of Eastern North Carolina will hold its meeting Saturday from 7;30-9;30 p.m. at the First Baptist Church here.
Program ^ests will be Lee and Lottie Adkins, new president couple for the N.C. ACME. The propam will involve their sharing experiences in marriage enrichment and the ACME association.
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4The Daily Reflector, Greenville. N.C -Thursday, March 17,1983EditorialsThose Surplus Meters
It was a relatively small item in a busy City Council agenda. By resolution the council declared 500 parking meters as surplus property. The proper officials were authorized to dispose of the meters by private sale and by a negotiated price.
It brings into focus that there are relatively few parking meters in Greenville anymore. They are only found on streets in locations of high parking use. Some parking lots are metered, generally to provide all-day parking.
There was a time when controversy raged over the installation of parking meters in Greenville as in other cities. Their legal justification was that they controlled the time a vehicle could be parked on the street. A big side benefit was that they also brought in revenue to the city a point that parking meter salesrpen pressed on municipal governing bodies.
Changes in business and shopping habits have eased downtown parking problems, and many of the meters that were once so controversial are now gone declared surplus by the City Council.
James Kilpatrick.
A Story That's Worth Telling
WASHINGTON - It made not even a small splash in the local papers, but a recent decision of a U.S. District Court in Maryland could set off a nice new wave of litigation in the seas of organized labor. Temporarily, at least, the big boys have lost one, and the little guys have won one, and because this doesnt happen often, the story is worth telling.
Back in the summer of 1976, nearly seven years ago, 18 telephone workers in Maryland got together and filed suit against the giant Communications Workers of America. The plaintiffs had the help of the National Right to Work Legal Defense Foundation in a cause that is dear to the foundations heart. The workers were resisting the kind of extortion, in their view, that goes with a union shop.
Under a union shop contract, all employees in an affected bargaining unit are compelled (a) to become dues-paying members of the responsible union, or (b) to pay the union the equivalent of membership dues anyhow. The idea is that once a union is certified as a bargaining agent, the union must bargain for all
employees whether or not they are union members. It is unfair for free riders to accept the benefits of a unions services without paying their rightful cost. Out of this line of reasoning comes the agency fee.
I can cite an example, close at home, of how the system works. I am not a member of the American Federation of Television and Radio Artists. Nevertheless, because the local AFTRA union has a union shop contract with local TV stations and major networks, 1 cannot get on the air unless I pay dues to the union. The union performs no service whatever for me, but that is of no consequence. The rule is, pay up or stay off the air. So I pay up, and it irks me sorely.
This was the situation among the telephone workers in Maryland. They had to pay dues to the CWA, or they had to quit their jobs. It was that simple. But a body of law has been slowly developing to this effect - that compulsory dues may be exacted from non-members for three purposes only: collective bargaining, contract administration and grievance procedures. Dissenting workers cannot be
compelled to pay for a unions other activities.
In the case at hand, a special master appointed by the District Court took voluminous evidence on how the CWA spends its money. Whole batteries of accountants and experts were called in by both sides. The union contended that just about everything was related in some way to bargaining, contracts and grievances. For example, the union argued that its contributions to charities helped to create a favorable public view of union labor, and thus promoted an atmosphere conducive to productive bargaining. The special master threw that one out.
On careful examination, the special master last summer concluded that an astonishing 81 percent of the unions funds were being spent for impermissible purposes that is, for purposes not directly related to bargaining, contracts or grievances. The recommendations of the special master floated up to District Judge James R. Miller Jr. On March 4, he reduced the 81 percent to 79 percent, and ordered the union to refund 79 percent of
the agency fees that had been extracted from the plaintiffs.
The individual payments wont amount to more than a few hundred dollars to each of the 18 mavericks, but the legal principle has large application. The ruling means that, while a union is free to lobby for the Panama Canal Treaty or the Equal Rights Amendment, non-members cannot be compelled to pay for these extracurricular activities. Those who are caught in the nets of a union shop cannot be made to support causes they do not believe in and have no voice in determining.
The CWA of course will appeal Judge Millers decision, and another few years may elapse before the suit finally is settled. Meanwhile, the courts order is bound to encourage the 5 or 6 percent within a typical bargaining unit who resent their captivity and want at least some relief. This was a small but significant victoi^ for individual freedom. We dont win many, but we do win a few.
Copyright 1983 Universal Press Syndicate
Unanswered Questions
It was a story that has been told before and likely to be repeated;
Two doctors in California were charged with murder after family consultation and a decision to no longer mechanically perpetuate a life when the situation was hopeless. The patient continued to live, and nutrients to continue that life were also withheld.
A judge cleared them of the charge. Were the doctors right or wrong?
You can find pros and cons on any street corner.
Another news item, this time from Washington, where a panel decided it is not medically appropriate to devote limited intensive care unit resources without reasonable prospect of significant recovery when patients who need those services... are being turned away for want of capacity.
Medical people are also confronted by another unwanted decision process of who is to live (and who is to die) in allocation of transplant organs (there may never be enough to fill the demand.
And there is still another unanswered question posed for the profession: Is the gift of continued life to be forever tied to ability to pay the extremely high costs those recently developed techniques involve?
Clearly there is a limit to funding those exotic life-saving techniques ... just as there must be a limit to the more mundane surgical repair or medical treatment of conditions involving less than life-or-death decisions.
Some needs can be met, some cannot. There will always be people who cannot pay the resulting high costs; and organizations and foundations who try to help are also limited by available funds.
There is no one to blame. Thats just the way it is.
-Maxwell Glen and Cody Shearer.
SOME PEOPLE CAN SURE SPOIL GOOD NEWS!
Increased Competition
WA.SHIN'GTON - News that almost half of all black teen-agers were unemployed last month didnt surprise participants at the National Conference on Black Youth Unemployment held here last .weekend. It only bolstered their arguments for immediate measures.
Among black educators and public officials in attendance, there was widespread interest in President Reagan's proposed subminimum wage for youth and any number of public/private job-training programs. There was also talk of black business involvement, student entrepreneurship and new study commissions.
Yet a mountain of proposals couldnt hide the conferences current of skepticism, summed up well at one point by former representative Shirley Chisholm of Brooklyn. "Even with an economic upturn," she said, black youths ... could easily remain mired in joblessness and despair, stuck in a grim choice of starve or steal
The Daily Reflector
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Younger blacks, everyone agreed, were feeling the brunt of increased job competition from women and immigrants.
Yet technological change posed an equal, if not greater, problem. Educators asked whether functionally illiterate young blacks would find a place in the information age, with its emphasis on verbal and numerical skills. Despite claims that much work is destined to require little or no skill, they feared that frantic competition for lower-tier jobs would leave the disadvantaged even more so,
.Meanwhile, many fear that the replacement of humans with machines in dily routines like communications and shopping. for example, will further disable the illiterate. If young blacks miss out on an education in basics they will be even more alienated from better-educated Americans.
While such prospects may find resolution in the high-tech proposals flying around Washington, they have yet to encourage black leaders. Indeed, according to a recent Washington Post poll, only one in three black parents believed that their children would grow up to be financially better off, down from three in four two years ago. Privately, no conference-goers would predict a tranquil future either.
r PROBABLY PLANNING ON RAISING PRICES TO MAKE UP FOR RECESSION LOSSES!
I I /
Paul T. O'Connor
Mediation Is An Alternative
RALEIGH - Technically, it was first degree burglary. A senior at the University of North Carolina, angry that his ex-roommate had stolen his girlfriend, broke into his old apartment and carted away the refrigerator.
The courts could have thrown the book at this kid, given him a police record, a fine, maybe even a little jail time. But in Orange County, this case wasnt handled through the courts. Instead, it went to mediation. The two roommates were brought together at the Orange County Dispute Settlement Center and they worked out a compromise. The charges were dropped. No criminal record, no trial, no expense to the state for solving what was essentially a personal dispute.
Across North Carolina and the nation, mediation is gaining in popularity. There are mediation centers in Orange and Guilford counties now. Nine other centers are expected to open in the state soon. Legislation before the General Assembly this year would appropriate $250,000 to fund a mediation program and adjust state law to accommodate mediation
With mediation, the two sides of a legal dispute - be it criminal or civil - agree to discuss their differences, says Sen. William Martin, D-Guilford, a lawyer and sponsor of the bill. A specially
trained mediator working on a volunteer basis then works with the two sides trying to solve the problem without having it brought into court. In the case of the students, they got together and hammered out proper ownership of the refrigerator.
Martin says mediation solves problems while court appearancies often just ag-grevate them. Take cases of domestic violence. In court, the question would be, "Did you do it? Thered be charges and counter-charges and nothing would be done to alleviate the hostility that led to the violence in the first place.
In mediation, Martin says, the husband and wife would be brought together in a structured setting. First theyd get the chance to vent their emotions. But then the mediator would try to get back to the real problems that exist between the two. Nobody would be right, nobody wrong. The aim would be to find a settlement both sides could live with.
The Senate Judiciary II Committee heard this month that mediation has kept 1,200 cases out of Orange County courts in the past three years saving an average of $200 in paperwork in each case.
Wade Barber, Orange district attorney, and District Court Judge Patricia Hunt
both testified that mediation has kept cases out of court that never deserved to be there in the first place. These are the kind of cases which would take an hour and a half in court and the judgejstill wouldnt know what to do with it, Barber said.
Sue Harnett, a volunteer mediator, said most of the cases involve some kind of trespass or family problem. Serious cases of domestic violence and other serious crimes arent considered for mediation except in rare cases like that of the stolen refrigerator. She stressed that the mediators are not counselors and therefore dont handle cases where the problem really requires psychiatrists.
Martins bill aims first to carve a niche in state law for mediation. Provisions need to be made to make the law mesh with criminal statutes of limitation and the speedy trials act. He doesnt want people using mediation to get around the law. Secondly, hes asking for money for rent, staff and volunteer training. Private grants now fund the states two pilot programs. With the potential for relieving overcrowded court dockets, it would be a wise investment of state resources, he says.
Rowland Evans and Robert Novak-
Much Is At Stake In Adelman Debates
WASHINGTON A murmur of surprise swept the closed-door Democratic caucus last week when patriarchal Sen. John Stennis, a pillar of presidential prerogative, rose to oppose the nomination of Kenneth Adelman to head the Arms Control and Disarmament Agency (ACDA).
The unexpected defection of Stennis from President Reagans choice of Adelman, now UN Ambassador Jeane Kirkpatricks deputy, shows the self-imposed misery enveloping the White House and the State Department over a good nomination gone sour. Chances for the Senate to overturn the Foreign Relations Committees unfavorable verdict on Adelman are only about 50-50.
Coupled with the smashing 3-to-l House Foreign Affairs Committee approval of the nuclear freeze resolution, to be followed bv certain House passage, the ad
ministrations handling of the twinned Adelman-freeze challenge shows dangerous capacity for self-destruction.
Much is at stake. It goes far beyond Adelmans survival or the eventual outcome of the freeze resolution. Yet from the start, Reagans top advisers have trivialized the appointment of Ken Adelman,. a serious diplomat well-equipped to handle ACDA. These same advisers have toyed with the freeze, an emotion-powered issue that finds its origin in the peace movements sweeping Europe and only briefly blunted by the West German election.
All but ignored in the selection of Adelman was Secretary of State George Shultz. Shultz consequently has no big stake in his confirmation by the Senate. Adelmans first champion was Ambassador Kirkpatrick. When she suggested him to national security adviser
William P. Clark, Clark snapped up the idea.
But Clark suddenly weakened when Adelman botched the first day of his testimony before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, partly because he was not adequately forewarned and forearmed by State Department aides. The State Department had no investment in Adelman to protect.
The trivialization of the nomination of Adelman, who one White House insider told us is now without top-level champions except Ronald Reagan himself, has led to a spate of damaging rumors. Administration officials are quietly eyeing other possibilities for the ACDA post: former national security adviser Brent Scowcroft, named by Reagan to head the MX missile commission, and Max Kampelman, Reagans choice as am-bassasador to the Eurooean Security Con
ference, to name two.
More worrisome is the way that Adelmans trivialization has played into the hands of the nuclear-freezers, fueling their outrageous charges that Reagan really does not understand the gravity of the nuclear issue and toys with the great questions of nuclear war.
Protecting Reagans rearmament program is the real objective in the battle to defeat the nuclear freeze campaign. Its first target, cloaked in confusing rhetoric, is unilateral arms control by the U.S., supposedly to be followed sometime in the future by the Soviet Union.
That means foregoing deployment of Pershing 2 and cruise missiles in Europe and the abandonment of the MX missile, the B-1 bomber and the Trident 2 submarine missile at home. At stake are itical pressures forcing Congress to brace unilateralism
Public
Forum
To the editor:
I would like to commend you for the article in Sundays paper, Study Reports Lung Cancer, Tobacco Link, showing that non-smokers who breathe smoke-filled air have a higher rate of lung cancer than those with little contact with smokers.
This article should motivate non-smokers in this area to speak up for their rights. Knowing that we non-smokers are by far the majority, we should be able to say, I wish for your sake and mine you wouldnt, when smokers ask if we mind whether or not they smoke For non-smokers who are unable to assert themselves, the American Lung Assocaition has attractive signs inscribed, Thank You for Not Smoking. Just stop by their office at 112 S. Pitt St. in Greenville and pick up the sign, free of charge.
Speak up (kindly) non-smokers! You owe it to yourselves:
Maxine Carey Barker Grifton
To the editor:
In behalf of the Downtown Washington Association, and also from a personal viewpoint, we want to acknowledge, with many thanks, the excellent coverage of our inner city as published in the Sunday edition of your paper.
The text and photographs by Jerry Raynor are truly outstanding.
For eight years, it has been my function and responsibility to coordinate the plans and programs for our downtown Washington members. We have over 60 retail stores and professional persons supporting our endeavors.
Our goal and prime objective is to attract people into our area, so we can share these wonderful buildings which represent so graphically the history, life and times of the past.
Our inner city is alive and well, not only due to the good planning of those who have gone before, but also the real feeling of dedication and desire to make things work. We have every assurance that our plans for future restoration and preservation of what we now have, along with the potential of attracting tourists and new residents, will, in every way, make downtown Washington increasingly attractive and virile.
Warren S. Lane Executive Director Downtown Washington Assn.
Elisha Douglas
Strength For Today
New truth always originates at a point of conflict. Jesus came to proclaim the greatest of all truths and was crucified. Galileo had a new scientific truth to proclaim and was forced to kneel and recant.
John Huss was burned at the stake in the 15th century and John Wesley and his Methodist associates were pelted and abused throughout the 18th century. Pasteur was assailed by the scientists of his day because he advanced a new theory rgarding the nature of disease.
The most noted mathematicin in the United States proved that an airplane could not possibly rise from the ground just a few weeks before the Wright brothers made one do so at Kitty Hawk. Scarcely 70 years have passed since Billy Mitchell was persecuted and disciplined by the Army because he insisted upon the importance of airplanes inwarefare.
So what is the lesson we should derive from all this? Dont be afraid to be different.
Sold Marijuana To Pay For Her Candy
The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Thursday, March 17,1963-5
SOIL AND CONSERVATION WINNERS ... Awards-were presented Wednesday for the Pitt Soil and Water Conservation Districts Annual Poster, Essay and Speech Contest. The subject for the contest was Conservation of Soil and Water, Our Hope for the Future. First-place winners were: (front row) Michael Mayo, fourth-grade poster winner of Pactolus Elementary School, and Katie Mohrer, fifth-grade poster
winner of A.G. Cox Elementary School; (back row, left to ri^t) Loretta Pierce, sixth-grade essay winner of Ayden Middle School; Cindy Edwards, sixth-grade poster winner of A.G. Cox Elementary School, and Ed West, seventh-grade speech winner of A.G. Cox Elementary School. Not pictured is Alex MxLawhom, eighth-grade speech winner of Grifton Elementary School.
The Forecast For Friday, March 18 Low Temperatures
Showers
Rain Snow K-.i
J Flurriesf^
Crank Calls
TAVARES, Fla. (AP) -An 11-year-old girl who said she sold a pinch of marijuana to pay for candy has been ordered to attend a drug counseling program and help clean up her school, officials say.
The sixth-grade girl told the Tavares school board Tuesday she sold marijuana to a classmate because she had eaten candy she was supposed to sell to raise money for the school band.
I had to sell it for my M&Ms, said the youngster, trembling and swinging her legs under the table.
School officials ordered the unidentified Umatilla Middle School student to enroll in a six-week state drug counseling program to learn about the dangers of drugs and alcohol. They also said she must undergo private counseling and help clean up at the school under the direction of school principal Ted Martin.
The girl was no,t expelled, said Pat Galbreath, assistant superintendent of administration. She will have to perform work around the school. The principal will determine the kind of work and how long. The 500 pupils at Umatilla Middle School were trying to raise money for the school band in early March by selling M&Ms for 50 cents a
box. Each student taking part in the sale was supposed to sell six boxes.
The girl told school officials that after her candy was gone, she got the marijuana from her 26-year-old brother and sold it to a classmate for $1.
Galbreath, who said the whole school was talking about the marijuana sale, said the child who bought the pot was expelled after Martin investigated.
He said the marijuana sale was considered an isolated incident and school board officials had no intentions of clamping down on fundraising activities at the
school.
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WEATHER FORECAST - The National Weather Service forecasts rain stretching from the lower peninsula of Michigan throu^ the Carolinas and Georgia for Friday. Rain is
also expected for much of California and snow for portions of Wyoming, Montana and Idaho. (APLaserphotoMap)
By The Associated Press
Strong high pressure off the northeastern United States, plus a strengthening low pressure area over the northeast Gulf of Mexico will keep a cool northeast flow over the state for the next several days.
The northeast flow will result in abundant moisture and a high probability of rain, the National Weather Service reported.
The strong high pressure made it necessary to issue gale warnings for the sounds and coastal waters of the state for northeast winds at
New Job For An Ex-Astronaut
30 to 40 knots. Winds will subside some on Friday.
Rain is forecast through Friday, with heavy downpours times. Temperatures will hold in the 40s through Friday, except for the coast where readings around 50 will be the rule.
Fair weather will return to the state during the weekend. Temperatures will moderate upward.
UNITED NATIONS (AP) - The Soviet ambassador to the United Nations says his office has received 2,640 crank telephone calls since Jan. 1.
Ambassador Oleg A. Troyanovsky blamed the calls on anti-Soviet hooligans but did not attribute them to any particular group.
In his letter addressed to the U.S. mission released Wednesday, Troyanovsky said that every day the Soviet mission received a large number of telephone calls and threats to blow up the mission building, and with unprintable epithets.
Thus, for example he wrote, in January 1983 there were 845 such calls and in February there were 1,795. This campaign of hooliganism is interfering with the normal work of the mission.
Indict Youth In
f
Shooting Death
CHARLOnE, N.C. (AP) A 15-year-old Charlotte youth has been indicted on charges of murder in the January shooting death of a Charlotte man who was waiting for a bus to go to work.
A Mecklenburg grand jury Tuesday also indicted him on charges of attempted armed robbei7 and conspiracy to commit armed robbery.
The boy is a ninth-grader at Albemarle Road Junior High School and is being detained under $50,000 bond at the Gatling Juvenile Diagnostic Center near Huntersville.
FURIOUS PEERS LONDON (AP) - Its not just the poor who are angered by Prime Minister Margaret Thatchers austerity plan. Peers in the House of Lords are furious over a tax increase on Scotch whisky, the only sensible drink.
In the same case, a 17-year-old, Michael Leon McFadden, was indicted March 7 on the same three charges in the Jan. 23 shooting of James W. Gordon, 52.
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AUSTIN, Texas (AP) -Former astronaut Gerald Carr, who commanded the nations longest manned space mission, has been named project manager for the worlds largest singlemirror telescope.
The 300-inch telescope is
proposed for the McDonald Observatory, part of the University of Texas. It will take five years to grind, form and polish, according to university officials, who said Carr will manage the development and construction of the telescope.
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In The Area
Nurses To Attend Conference
Three nurses from Greenville will attend the 13th annual Clinical Conference of the American College and Obstetricians and Gynecologists to be held in Greensboro March 24-27.
Lona Ratcliffe, Charla Holbrook and Becca Wilson will attend from Greenville. Ms. Ratcliffe is coordinator of the group: Ms. Holbrook is a vice coordinator and Ms. Wilson is a vice chairperson who is running for president during this conference.
Registration is still open and interested OB-GYN nurses may contact Ms. Ratcliffe.
ECU Auditions Set For Raleigh
The fifth set of auditions for the 1983 season of the East Carolina Summer Theater will be held in Raleigh on March 27. The auditions will be from 1 to 3 p.m. at the Theater in the Park on Pullen Road.
Previous auditions were held on the ECU campus, at the N.C. School of the Arts in Winston-Salem, in Chapel Hill and in Savannah, Ga.
Further information about the auditions in Raleigh is available from Scott Parker, Summer Theater general manager, at 757-6390
Motivational Gifts Seminar Set
Foursquare Christian Center will host a seminar on the motivational gifts listed in Romans 12 on Friday at 7:30 p.m., Saturday at 10 a.m. and 7:30 p.m., and on Sunday at 10:30 a.m. and 7 p.m. All sessions will be held at the center.
The instructor will be the Rev. Bob Hutchinson of Charlottesville, Va., who has studied the motivational gifts for six years.
The center is located on N C. 11 between Winterville and Avden. The seminar is
free ' Rev. BOB HUTCHINSON
Summer Science Classes Offered
The East Carolina University Department of Science Education will offer daily classes this summer designed to expose children to the living world of science.
Classes will be held in the Flanagan Science building on the ECU campus Mondays through Fridays, June 13-17 and June 20-24. On Fridays, students will be taken on all-day field trips to coastal locations to study marine animals.
The camp, which has vacancies in each session, is for primary youth (grades K-3 or ages 6-9). Interested parents should apply to Dr. Carolyn H. Hampton, Department of Science Education. East Carolina University, Greenville, N.C., 27834, Phone, 757-6219.
Nursing Center Plans Jamboree
Residents of the University Nursing Center will be rocking and rolling and walking for the American Heart Association during the centers first Rock:N-Roll Jamboree Saturday from 1 to 4 p.m.
There will be live musical entertainment provided by the pledge class of Sigma Alpha lota. Baked goods, hugs and kisses will be sold and guessing games will be held. Money earned from the sales and from pledges for the residents rocking, rolling and walking will be donated to the Heart Association. Anyone having questions or wishing to volunteer to participate may contact Phvllis White, activities director. 758-7100,
Ten ECU Students Study Abroad
Ten East Carolina University students are participating in ECUs 10th annual semester abroad at the Universidad Nacional in Costa Rica.
The program, sponsored by ECUs College of Arts and Sciences and operated in conjunction with the Costa Rican university, provides opportunities for students to earn college credits while living and studying in the Central American nation. The campus is located in Heredia, Costa Rica.
Participating students include Andrea Markello of Greenville and Larry Williams of Rocky Mount. Field directors are Drs. Simon Baker and Edward Leahy of the ECU Department of Geography and Planning.
Library Workshop Set In Tarboro
The Friends of Edgecombe County Libraries will host the Eastern North Carolina Workshop from 9:15 a.m. until 3 p.m. Saturday in the E.L, Roberson Center in Tarboro. The center is located in downtown Tarboro at the corner of Albemarle Avenue and Baker Street.
Librarians and others interested in library affairs from 39 North Carolina counties will be on hand for the workshop.
Among speakers scheduled to make presentations are state Librarian David .McKay of Raleigh; state Rep. Joe Mavretic of Tarboro and Dr. Carol Veitch, associate professor, Department of Library Science, East Carolina University, Greenville.
Persons interested in more details on the workshop may contact Ms. Mary Jo Godwin, 823-1141. Tarboro.
Black Heritage Play Scheduled
The drama department of Mount Calvary Free Will Church of La Grange will present a black heritage celebration, "The Black Mans Dilemma and His Deliverance, Saturday at 7:30 p.m. at Philippi Baptist Church in Greenville.
The celebration will include acting, singing, music and meditation. The event is open to the public.
Genetic Engineering Event Scheduled
Genetic engineering, one of the rapidly developing areas of modern biotechnology, will be discussed at a symposium April 7-8 in the Brody Medical Sciences Building Auditorium at East Carolina University.
The symposium, "Biotechnology: Macromolecular Synthesis Through Genetic Engineering, will include discussions on gene cloning, DNA synthesis and transfer and the applications of genetic engineering techniques to specific problems.
There is no registration fee for the symposium, which will be open to the public. Additional information may be obtained by calling the ECU Chemistry Department at 757-6711.
Bloodmobile Collects 108 Pints
Local Red Cross spokeswoman Ruth Taylor reported that 108 Pints of blood were collected at Wednesdays bloodmobile visit at Ayden-Grifton High School. Mrs. Taylor said there were 15 deferrals, due to various health reasons, recorded during the day.
The visit was coordinated and sponsored by Sue Noble and the schools task force, she said.
The next bloodmobile visit in the area will be March 24 in the lobby of Fletcher Dorm at East Carolina University. The drive is scheduled from noon until 6 p.m.
Collision Causes Some Damage
Cars driven by Gearldine Hooker of Snow Hill and Arletha Roberson Roach of Route 1, Winterville, collided about 9:05 a.m. Wednesday at the intersection of Evans and Reade streets.
Police estimated damage from the collision at $200 to the Hooker car and $400 to the Roach auto.
Development Agency Moves
The Pitt County Development Commission has moved to Room A-115 of the county office budding at 1717 W. Fifth St.
County Manager Reginald Gray said the agency moved Monday from the 201E. Second St. site that the Development Commission had occupied since 1974. Gray said the commissions telephone number - 758-1989 - will remain the same.
Church Marking Pastor's Anniversary
Bell Chapel Holiness Church will continue its pastor anniversary services tonight at 7:30 p.m. with the Rev. Douglas Cogdell in charge.
A Friday service will be held at 7:30 p.m. with Bishop Ralph Love of Holy Trinity Church in charge. A service with Dr. Henry Parker of Wilson in charge will be held Sunday at 3 p.m.
Businessmen To Meet NCCU Group
Some 40 Greenville-area businessmen will meet with representatives of North Carolina Central University at 11 a.m. Monday at North Carolina National Banks main office on Second Street.
NCCU Chancellor Albert Whiting said the visit was arranged by Garner Wholesale Merchandisers of Greenville, in cooperation with Ernest G. Brown, president of the Pitt County Chapter of the NCCU Alumni Association. Whiting said the purpose of the meeting is to introduce the state university to Greenville businessmen.
The Durham schools 1981-82 enrollment included 43 students from Pitt County. The NCCU delegation will lunch with members of the Pitt County alumni group following the morning meeting.
Church Observing Anniversary
The Rev. Dennis Wooten and Brown Chapel Young Adult Choir will render services at Sycamore Chapel Baptist Church Friday at 7:30 p.m. The church anniversary is being celebrated.
Bethel Church Plans Revival
Bethel Baptist Church will hold its annual week of revival services beginning Sunday at 7 p.m.
The ^est speaker for the week will be the Rev. Justus McKeel, pastor of First Baptist Church in Ramseur.
McKeel is originally from the Bethel area and was ordained by the Bethel church in 1960. He has been with his present pastorate since 1971.
Services Monday through Friday will begin at 7:30 p.m. All services will be open to the public.
Luncheon
The Greenville-Pitt County Chapter of Retired School Personnel will meet Wednesday at 11:15 a.m. at the Greenville Country Club.
REV. JUSTUS McKEEL
Members who are not contacted by Sunday night may make luncheon reservations by calling the president, Vernon Ward.
Contact persons for those wishing to offer volunteer services are listed below. The city-countywide volunteer program is coordinated by Jayne Silliman under the auspices of the Phoenix organization.
These are: '
Pitt County Mental Heqlth, Mental Retardation and Substance Abuse Center, Dr, Barbara N. Vosk, 752-7151.
Agnes Fullilove Community School Extended School Program, Tony Gray, 758-0817.
Pitt County Memorial Hospital, Edsal Mson, 757-4491, North Carolina Department of Correction, Adult Probation and Parole, Matt Brewington, 756-8400.
Pitt County Department of Social Services, Ellen B, Gray, 758-2167.
Juvenile Services Restitution Program, Lena McLamb,
7584223.
Pitt Juvenile Court Volunteer Program, Brenda H. Teel, 752-1811.
Persons interested in general informatin on volunteer programs in Greenville and Pitt County may call Ms. Silliman at 756-9737.
Restoration Of Capitol Studied
A modified plan abandoned the restaurant and vsUnts center and would only partly fill in the empty spaces between the orinal Captol
wings added later. But bat plan has not be accepted either, and the deadtock over what to do has ccmtinued.
WASHINGTON (AP) - A House panel is trying to decide whether to restore the crumbling West Front of the Capitol or to add an extension to that side of the building.
In his most recent cost estimate, the architect of the Capitol, George White, maintains restoration alone would cost $66 million, while extension would cost $73 million.
William Ensign, assistant architect of the Capitol, told a House public works subcommittee Wednesday that a special commission appointed to examine the issue is split over whether to restore or extend.
The West Front is the only remaining original wall of the Capitol. The sandstone facade has been crumbling for decades and Whites predecessor had wooden buttresses erected to keep it in place as Congress argued over what to do about it.
"There is no justification for destroying this historic architectural monument just for the purpose of putting in costly hideaway offices for more senior members, said Rep. Samuel S. Stratton, D-N.Y., who noted he has been following the issue since 1959.
Social Worker boy Proclaimed
The North Carolina Social Services Association has declared Monday as Social Worker Appreciation Day in North Carolina.
Jerry Ayscue, president of the association, said social workers provide adult and child abuse and neglect services, health support services, day care services, foster care services, services to enable the elderly and disabled to stay in their own homes, and employment services, to have a few of the ways they serve. He said nearly 2,300 social workers employed by the 100 departments of social services in the state deal with an estimated 116,971 North Carolinians a year.
Solar Fraction
The solar fraction for this area Wednesday, as computed by the East Carolina University Department of Physics, was 3. This means that a solar water heater could have provided 3 percent of your hot water needs.
SOME RETURNING LAGOS, Nigeria (AP) -Hundreds of aliens expelled from Nigeria in January are returning to the northern Nigerian city of Kana, and their former employers are glad to have them back. The Daily Times newspaper reports.
"At a time of critical budget deficits, it would be most unseemly for the Congress to spend anything further for its own comfort, rather than to concentrate on preserving, not destroying, one of the architectural marvels of the western world. Stratton said.
But Ensign told the panel an extension on the west side of the Capitol, while preserving the present wall as an interior wall, would follow the original plan for the building.
"To say that the Capitol, a building that has evolved over many years, ou^t not to be completed in accordance with its plan, is a rather negative approach to historic preservation, in my juiigment, he said.
The East Front was moved out 34 feet in 1959 and the first plan to extend the West Front was proposed in 1966. That original plan would have included a restaurant overlooking the Mall and a visitors center, as well as a number of hideaway offices for senior members of Congress.
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MCGLOHONS-MCLAWHORNS OF Pin COUNTY NORTH CAROLINA, 1762-1982
A Genealogy Including Families of Surrounding Counties by Leah McGlohon
The above book traces the genealogy of three menGeorge McGlohon, Jeremiah McGlohon, and Adam McGlohanwho are listed in the Pitt District in Heads of Families at the First Census of the United States Taken in the Year 1790: North Carolina. Consisting of approximately 450 pages, it includes an index and portraits of the authors family line, and has a hard cover.
In addition to persons with surnames of McGlohon, McLawhorn, McLohon, or other variation, it includes the following surnames having at least twenty entries:
Adams, Alien, Anderson, Baldree, Branch, Braxton, Brown, Bullock, Byrd, Cannon, Clark, Cox, Dail, Davenport, Dennis, Dixon, Dunn, Edwards, Elks, Ellis, Evans, Forbes, Forlines, Garris, Green, Griffin, Haddock, Hardee, Harris, Hart, Heath, Hobgood, Hooks, House, Jackson, Johnson, Johnston, Jones, Joyner.
Keel, Langston, Letchworth, Little, Loftin, Manning, Mills, Moore, Mum-ford. Nobles, Norris, Pierce, Robinson, Rouse, Shirley, Smith, Stocks, Stokes, Stox, Sumrell, Sutton, Taylor, Tripp, Tucker, Walls, Warren, WhHe, Whitehurst, Williams, Willis, Wilson, Wingate, and Worthington. There are many others.
The publication date is scheduled for July 1983. A limited number will be published. In order to ascertain how many are interest in having a copy, a pre-publication price of $32.50 has been set. After April 15,1983, the price will be 35.00.
ORDER FORM
Please send copy/copies of the McGlohons-McLawhoms Book.
Pre-publlcatlon price (until April 15,1983) ................................$32.50 per copy
Sales tax (Include if you have a N.C. address)................................1.30 per copy
Cost of postage and packaging.............................................1.50 per copy
Enclosed is a check or money order for $_____
Name (Please Print) ^ _____
street or Box No ---------------------
City and State ______ _______________
^ip Code.
Send to: Leah McGlohon. P.O. Box 2. Winterville. N.C. 28590
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The DaUy Reflector, GreenvilJe, N.C.-Thunday, Blarch 17,18J-7Russian Talking Of Missiles Near U.S. Borders
MOSCOW (AP> - A top Soviet official said today that if the United States and its ^lies deployed medium-range nuclear missiles in Western Eu^, Moscow
would have to set up its own rockets llear American .borders to achieve equality.
It was believed to be the first time any Soviet official was that specific about how
the Kremlin could react to NATO plans to begin deploying 572 new Pershing 2 and cruise missiles in Europe by the end of the year.
Georgi Arbatov, director of the U.S.A. and Canada Institute at the Soviet Academy of Science, wrote in the Communist Party new^aper Pravda:
As far as equality (of weaponry) is concerned, in that case for the sake of this
only to add to our missiles in Europe, but also to deploy them near American borders.
The New York Times today quotdd the chief of the Soviet General Staff, Marshal Nikolai V. Ogarkov, as saying in an interview that if
Demo Officials Angry Over Byrne's Decision
By PEGGY ANDERSEN Associated Press Writer ' CHICAGO (AP) - Mayor Jane Byrnes decision to defy her own party and mount a write-in campaign for re-election drew cheers from dozens of City Hall supporters, but angered Democratic officials.
Its been said, It isnt over til its over, Mrs. Byrne said Wednesday at a city hall news conference where she announced her write-in candidacy. Well, I!m here to tell you that it isnt over yet.
Mrs. Byrne, who lost the Democratic nomination in the Feb. 22 primary election to U.S. Rep. Harold Washington, said three weeks ago that she would support him against Republican Bernard Epton.
She still does not realize that shes finished, said Washington, who hopes to become the citys first black mayor. She would still rather destroy Chicago and the Democratic Party ... than abide by the will of the people as expressed on primary day.
Asked how he believed members of the community would respond, the two-term congressman said: You have to be thunderstruck... I think theres a shock all over this city.
Accused Spy Flying Home
MOSCOW (AP> - Ameri-;^''can diplomat Richard W. * 'Osborne, branded a spy by the KGB secret police last week, has left the Soviet Union, a U.S. Embassy ;! spokesman said today.
It was believed Osborne left Wednesday night on a Lufthansa flight to Frankfurt, but that could not , be confirmed..
The embassy provided no details and still has refused to comment on the substance of the KGB charges published last Thursday in the government newspaper Izvestia.
Izvestia said that the KGB detained Osborne red-; handed March 7 while (he was) wqrking with espionage radio equipment.
The newspaper said that a , set of portable intelligence special-purpose apparatus for the transmission of espionage information via the U.S. Marisat communications satellite was confiscated from Osborne.
Osborne was a first secretary in the U.S. Embassys economic section.
The last known expulsion of a U.S. diplomat from Moscow came in January 1978 when Donald Kursch, a first secretai7, was kicked out in retaliation for the expulsion of a Soviet trade mission official from Washington.
The last Soviet diplomat expelled from the United States was MaJ. Gen. Vasili I. Chitov, who left the Soviet Embassy in Washington in February 1982 after reportedly being caught with sensitive U.S. military information.
.. I '
Military To Aid In Drug Probes
CAMP LEJEUNE, N.C. (AP) - The military wilt aid federal and state efforts in a crackdown of drug smuggling in eastern North Carolina, Marine officials said Wednesday.
The Marines will offer the use of helicopters, radar, sophisticated surveillance equipment, trainded drug-tracking dogs and vehicles for drug enforcement. Col. Billy Summerlin, provost marshall at Camp Lejeune said.
Epton said Byrnes announcement certainly doesnt help me. Im not thrilled.
Saying her experience makes her the best candidate, Mrs. Byrne charged that neither Epton nor Washington had offered any effective new programs for the city. Ive seen nothing but divisiveness, she said.
Some powerful city Democrats have been reluctant to support Washington, and a few have openly endorsed Epton.
Mrs. Byrnes announcement drew protest from Democrats around the city, the state and the nation, along with pledges of support for Washington.
Democratic National Committee Chairman Charles Manatt said Washingtons well-deserved victory in the Democratic primary should not and cannot be denied by this mischievous and hopeless write-in effort.
Washington said Mrs. Byrnes move was clearly an act of political desperation and one more si^ of the instability that has marked that administration.
He said he hoped Mrs. Byrne will reconsider what shes done and bow out gracefully.
Cook County States Attorney Richard M. Daley, who finished third behind Mrs. Byrne and Washington in the Democratic primary, said the obvious strategy behind a write-in campaign is an appeal to racial divisiveness.
Mrs. Byrne denied she is making race an issue. 1 honestly believe that I will be the best mayor for blacks in Chicago,she said.
She characterized the new three-way race as a runoff, noting that many major cities require primary victors to win more than 50 percent of the vote. Washington won 36.5 percent, or 424,146 of the primary votes. Mrs. Byrne placed second with 33.4 percent, followed by Daley with 29.6 percent.
Chicago has never elected a mayor on ^ write-in vote.
equality we would have not U.S. missiles in Europe were
Nixo,n Library Land Offered
WHITTIER, Calif. (AP) -Richard Nixons hometown has offered to donate 25 acres of city land valued at more than $1^,000 for a Nixon presidential library.
The City Council voted 4-1 Tuesday to offer a portion of 125 acres originally planned for future expansion of a landfill in the community 15 miles southeast of Los Angeles.
The lone dissenter. Councilman Bob Henderson, saidd he has never been a great Nixon lover.
Henderson said the proposal was worth considering because of Nixons historic^ significance, but he asked for more study and a public hearing.
Were talking about a gift of public funds of substantial
magnitude, he said.
Mayor Lee Strong said, All we are doing... is telling Mr. Nixon that out of 125 acres we have 25 to set aside for a presidential library.
Nixon resigned Aug. 9, 1974, amid the Watergate scandal.
The Richard M. Nixon Archives Foundation informed the University of California-lrvine recently that the Orange County campus had been dropped from consideration for the library due to time constraints in locating a site, said Assistant Chancellor Ramon Curial.
City manager Tom Mauk said the land was valued at $5,000 an acre when it was purchased 10 years ago but that it would have to be re-evaluated.
used against the Soviet Union, Moscow would directly strike the United States.
Ogarkov was quoted as saying it is not logical to believe we will retaliate only against targets in Europe. Let me tell you this, if some of your experts think this, they are foolish.... The idea of a nuclear war has never been tested. But by logic, to keep such a war limited will not be possible.
In the propaganda battle that has accompanied Sovi-et-American talks in Geneva on reducing both long-range and medium-range missiles, the Soviets have said on at least two occasions that the American deployment would force Moscow to put Washington in an analogous position.
Some Western analysts said that meant the Soviets would install nuclear-tipped rockets in Cuba, but the Soviets were never more specific until the Arbatov article today. Arbatov, how
ever, never mentioned where near American borders the Soviets would put missiles.
Arbatov also rejected as a propaganda ploy indications from Washington and other NATO capitals UiaUhe-Reagan administration mi^t be ready to seek an interim agreement on missiles deployed in Europe.
Reagans current position calls for the Soviets to dismantle their more than 600 medium-range missiles aimed at Western Europe, in exchange for which Washington would scrap plans to deploy the new NATO nuclear force.
Reagan has come under pressure to modify his position and agree to a smaller Soviet reduction coupled with a limited American deployment.
But Arbatov claimed that any deployment of new U.S. missiles meant that the American side would actually undermine the ground for talks on nuclear weapons.
But if a change is really ripening in Washington, it will, of course, be noticed in Moscow in time, Arbatov added, saying that the Soviets would be reliable partners in any fair talks and agreements.
Western arms experts in Moscow saw the article as essentially a restatement of the position set out Feb. 24 by Foreign Minister Andrei A. Gromyko. Gromyko said a breakdown of the medium-range negotiations could have a serious effect on talks on limiting strategic missiles.
Gromyko also hinted that -the Soviets might pull out of the medium-range talks if NATO goes forward with the deployment.
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8-The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Thursday, March 17,19B3Wine Franchise, Nuke Freeze Clear N.C. Hurdles
By MARY ANNE RHYNE Associated Press Writer
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) - A bill to allow wineries and wholesalers to enter into franchise agreements and a resolution supporting a nuclear freeze advanced Wednesday in the General Assembly.
The House voted 75-37 to support the franchise bill after two lawmakers said wineries recently have withdrawn distributing rights from wholesalers in their area. The measure was expected to go before the Senate today for concurrence in several amendments.
One of the amendments approved Wednesday would remove from the bill wineries selling less than 1,000 cases of wine in the state each year. Bill sponsor Rep. Martin Nesbitt, D-Buncombe, said he wrote the amendment to calm the fears that some small, specialty wineries would be hurt by the bill.
The bill would require wineries to divide the state into territories and select one primary distributor in each area. The distributor would not be limited to selling wine within his territory.
It also would require wineries and wholesalers to enter into franchise agreements that could not be broken unless the distributor loses his license, goes bankrupt, fails to maintain an adequate sales volume or fails to offer services comparable to those elsewhere in the state.
Rep Martin Lancaster, D-Wayne, unsuccessfully tried to amend the bill Wednesday to limit wholesalers to trading within their territory. He said the amendment would protect small distributors, but opponents said it would unconstitutionally restrict trade.
Rep. Vernon James, D-Pasquotank, tried without success to send the bill back to committee.
"Everyday we wait more wholesalers are being stripped of their franchises out there and more pressure is being applied," Nesbitt said. "Were about to the point where theyve already done what were trying to stop with the bill.
Meanwhile, the Senate State Government Committee endorsed the nuclear arms freeze resolution after rejecting a motion bv Sen. Harold Hardison, D-Lenoir, to send the resolution to the Senate Rules Committee.
The resolution asks President Reagan and Congress to seek a bilateral, verifiable freeze in nuclear weapons production by the United States and the Soviet Union. The House already has approved an identical resolution.
Hardison argued that since the Rules Committee is considering a peace through strength resolution he introduced, it also should consider the freeze resolution.
But Hancock, State Government Committee chairman, said Hardisons motion was a thinly veiled attempt to kill the resolution.
"I think theres no doubt... the purpose of this motion is to bury it in committee, Hancock said. We have an obligation to act on this. It should reach the Senate floor where all the senators can vote on it.
But Sen. Craig Lawing, D-Mecklenburg, chairman of the Rules Committee, said that if the resolution was sent to his panel, it would receive the fair hearing its entitled to.
In other legislative action:
WUdlife
The House tentatively approved a bill that would require deer hunters to pay a $5 fee to enter a computer lottery to participate in state-managed hunts.
It also would let the state charge $25 a day for using a three-man blind during a state-managed duck or goose hunt. The fee could be split by the three hunters using the blind.
The bills sponsor, Rep. Jim Lambeth, D-Davidson, said the stale hopes to conduct waterfowl hunts sometime in the future. He said the fees are needed to run the computer system for selecting hunt participants and for maintaining the hunting grounds.
CAMA
Sen. Melvin Daniels, D-Pasquotank, said he will introduce a bill later this week to expand the Coastal Resources Commission from 15 to 20 members - a change rejected earlier by the Legislative Research Commission.
Daniels said there are 20 counties covered by the Coastal Area Management Act, a coastal land-use plan, and each should be represented on the commission. He said he would like to see the commissions advisory council reduced from its current 47 members.
Members of the research commission rejected the idea because they said it would make the commission similar to a coastal legislature.
Daniels told the joint House-Senate Appropriations Subcommittee on Natural and Economic Resources about his plans. The subcommittee is looking at the 1983-85 funding requests for CAMA.
Twin Trailers
Daniels filed a bill Wednesday to limit twin-trailer trucks to traveling on interstates or four-laned roads although access to terminals would be provided.
The bill also would limit the size of the trucks to less than 80,000 pounds and less than 48 feet long.
Daniels, who opposes the use of twin trailers, said the bill would comply with the recently enacted federal gasoline tax that allows the twin trailers on interstates. But he said he was concerned about the trucks damaging rural roads in eastern and western North Carolina.
Drunken Driving
Lancaster, D-Wayne, predicted that House floor debate on Gov. Jim Hunts drunken driving bill will begin next Tuesday.
The House version of Hunts bill won speedy approval of the House Appropriations Committee Wednesday, having earlier been passed by the House Judiciary III and Finance committees.
A legislative analyst told the Appropriations Committee
that the bill is expected to raise $1.2 million the first year its in effect and $1.7 million the second year through fee imposition. It is expected to cost the court system $923,000 and the Department of Motor Vehicles an amount still undetermined.
The analyst stressed that the figures were tentative, but Rep. A1 Adams, D-Wake, moved that the bill be approved if money to fund it is appropriated by Aug. 15.
You cant hold up a bill as important as this to see what the costs will be, said Adams. Were exercising an abundance of caution by giving ourselves until August to find the money. And the money will be found.
At Lancasters request, the bill was sent back to the Judiciary III Committee, where the Senate version approved Tuesday also has been sent.
Lancaster said the committee probably would revise the Senate bill to conform with the House version, then send it to the House foor. The House bill will receive no further action, he said.
Both versions would raise the legal minimum age for drinking beer and wine from 18 to 19. They would create a new charge, driving while impaired, to replace driving under the influence and other related offenses.
They would revoke the drivers license of any driver blowing 0.10 on the Breathalyzer.
The bills, however, differ in some significant respects. While the Senate version imposes dram shop liability only for sales of alcoholic beverages to underaged patrons, the House bill retains a provision the Senate struck which would impose the civil liability for sales to drunken patrons for on-premises consumption.
Housing
The House Committee on Housing approved a bill that would create a state Housing Commission, the centerpiece of a program put forth by a legislative study committee. The bill was sent to the Appropriations Committee.
Election Checkoff The state Senate gave final approval to a bill revising the procedure for designating $1 on income tax forms foV political campaigns.
Under the bill sponsred by Sen. Wilma Woodard, D-Wake, taxpayers no longer would ask that the money go to a specific party. Instead, taxpayers simply would indicate that theyd like to donate $1 to the campaign fund. The money collected then would be distributed to all the parties on a prorated basis, depending on their number of registered voters.
The Senate voted 39-7 to table an amendment by Sen. Bill Redman, R-Iredell, to do away with the checkoff altogether.
Redman said the money collected last year, about $250,000, could have gone to the General Fund and gone to far better use.
Sen. Cass Ballenger, R-Catawba, said that a greater percentage of registered Republicans than Democrats traditionally donate the dollar. He said Republicans stood to lose about $10, under the new system.
The bill passed, 40-6.
Passed unanimously was a bill to permit registration of voters in public libraries.
Child Support
The Senate approved unanimously on its second reading a bill allowing court clerks to initiate action against ex-spouses who fall behind in child support payments.
Sen. Helen Marvin, D-Gaston, said a disgracefully high number of fathers were in arrears on their payments and that
Say Response Is 'Favorable'
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) - A state agency says it has gotten favorable feedback to a proposal to upgrade training for police officers in North Carolina towns where most training done is on the job.
The Criminal Justice Education and Training Standards Commission held four hearings across the state -the most recent one conducted in Raleigh. Commission Chairman Wade Barber Jr. of Pittsbor said the response to a pre-service training plan has been favorable.
However, the proposal to make officers complete the required 240 hours of training before starting work could hinder small police departments, said Barber, district attorney for Chatham and Orange counties.
The commission is considering options that would require just part of the
training before officers start their duty, he added.
"While North Carolinas larger cities already have pre-service training, none of the smaller cities do because they cannot afford their own police academies, Barber said. New recruits may be sworn in, given a badge, issued a. weapon and go to work without anv training at all."
About two-thirds of the states officers begin work before their training starts. Officers have 12 to 18 months to complete their training.
Most training is done in the states community college system, funded by the state and local police departments. Barber said he hoped that arrangement could continue in pre-service training.
Barber said small departments must fill vacancies quickly to avoid a lapse in law enforcement and they frequently must put a trainee to work immediately.
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the only recourse for mothers was to hire an attorney and file a lawsuit.
A final vote was delayed until analysts could prepare a study of the bills costs.
Workers Compensation Sen. William Staton, D-Lee, filed a bill allowing an increase
in workers compensation payments fw lung ailments such as brown lung. Present law limits the payments to $20,000.
Under the bill, payments would dqiend on the degree of breathing difficulty over a certain period of time.
Staton also filed lepslation to increase salaries paid to State Industrial Commission members and their deputies.
N.C. Speakers Praise Proposal On Constitutional Amendments
ByJOHNFLESHER Associated Press Writer RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -Proposed constitutional amendments should go before the states voters during general elections, although they may be overshadowed by races for major offices, a prospective gubernatorial candidate says.
Tom Gilmore, chairman of a grassroots organization called the Committee on Constitutional Integrity, Wednesday supported House and Senate bills to require
Group Buys Shelby Star
SHELBY, N.C. (AP) -The Shelby Daily Star was sold Wednesday to a West Virginia-based newspaper , group after 89 years of local ownership.
Henry Lee Weathers, publisher of the Star the past 25 years, announced the sale to Clay Communications Inc. The company owns three newspapers in West Virginia and last year bought the Monroe Enquirer Journal.
It also owns television stations in Wilmington, N.C., Jackson, Miss., and two in Texas - Wichita Falls and Port Arthur
The sale price was not disclosed.
Star employees were told of the sale Wednesday morning.
Weathers, 69, whose family. along with General Managed Ned Smith, has owned the Star since 1911, cited his approaching retirement and the expense of future newspaper productin as major reasons for the sale.
Smith will become president and general manager for an indefinite period.
Weathers said in an interview that several large newspaper companies wre interested in buying the Star.
CCI is based in Charleston, W.Va., and Lyell B. Clay is Chairman of the Board.
that amendments be voted on only during general elections.
Gilmore was one of 12 speakers during a public hearing on the bills before a joint meeting of the House and Senate Constitutional Amendments committees.
Fewer voters now go to the polls in party primaries than in general elections, he said. Unfortunately scheduling the vote on proposed amendments during primaries has the unintended consequence of lowering voter participation in these types of votes.
Gilmores comments on the bills, introduced by Rep. Bertha Holt, D-Alamance, and Sen. Bill Redman, R-Iredell, were echoed by the other speakers. No one spoke against the bills, though several speakers suggested adding them to the Constitution instead of simply enacting them as statutes.
Gilmore, who has hinted at a run for the Democratic nomination for governor next year, led organized opposition to a proposed amendment to lengthen state lawmakers terms in office from two to four years.
The proposal was approved by the General Assembly but was soundly defeated by voters during the 1982 primary.
Only 26.2 percent of the registered voters participated in the primary, during which votes were taken on four other proposed amendments. The low turnout sparked calls for requiring that amendments be voted on only during general elections.
The proposed legislation affirms a pledge to the citizens that the opportunity to vote on important issues as well as on important public offices should be held on the usual election day in November, said Gilmore. "Only in this way shall we guarantee the greatest participation of our citizens in the work of government.
Opponents have said its better for amendments to be considered during primaries and special elections because people tend to think only about races for major offices during general election years.
Many of the other speakers were board members of Gilmores committee or otherwise affiliated with it. They included David Stedman of the Stedman Corporation based in Asheboro, his associate Don Vaughn, former legislator Ralph Scott, former Raleigh Mayor Isabella Cannon, University of North Carolina law student Harry Kaplan, Mrs. Holt and former lawmaker Jim Beatty.
Several speakers and the N.C. Citizens for Business and Industry endorsed another bill introduced by Mrs. Holt. It would require publication of summaries of v proposed amendments in laymans language at least 60 days prior to their consideration by the voters.
Sending these summaries to the news media, county elections boards and elsewhere hopefully would
have people more informed before they go to the polls, said Mrs. Holt.
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White House Hunts A Permanent Chief For EPA
By JAMES GERSTENZANG Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON (AP) -The White House is moving rapidly to find a new head for the Environmental Protection Agency, whose acting director ran into controversy just a week after he took
over, a Reagan administration official says.
The official said it was "extremely unlikely that acting director John W. Hernandez Jr. would get the job permanently following revelations about his record at the troubled agency.
There is a sense we need to move on an expedited basis and as rapidly as we can, the White House official said Wednesday night, speaking on condition that he not be further identified.
The official said President Reagans senior advisers
PRESIDENTIAL PERFORMANCE - President Reagan shakes hands with Janie Fncke Wednesday night in Washington at Constitution Hall as Mrs. Reagan looks on. Also on stage, from left, are Ronnie Milsap and
Tammy Wynette. Ray Charles and Willie Nelson were among the many luminaries sharing in the taped performance celebrating the 25th anniversary of the Country Music Association. (AP Laserphoto)
N.C. National Guard To
t
Get New Battle Tanks
WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. (AP) - North Carolinas National Guard will soon be the first guard or reserve unit to receive 63 of the Armys newest and most advanced battle tanks.
Guard officials confirmed Tuesday that the guardsmen will get the M-1 Abrams tanks, which are worth more than $126 million altogether. The weapons distribution is the largest single allocation ever made to a guard unit.
The guardsmen are getting the tanks at the same time they are being distributed to Regular Army units in the United States and Germany, said Lt. Gen. Emmett Walker, chief of the National Guard Bureau, in Washington.
In the past, reserve and Guard units have been the recipients of cast-off equipment the Regular Army either had used already or cannot use.
There is such a close correlation now between the roles of the reserve and guard and the Regular Army that there would be no time in an emergency to switch equipment, said an Army spokesman who declined to be named.
The 252d Armor will receive the 63 Abrams tanks. That unit would be called to
duty to round out the Regular Armys 2nd Armored Division at Fort Hood, Texas, in a national
emergency.
U will help tremendously for the Guard unit to have the same equipment, ready to roll, manned by competent . soldiers and technicians, said the Army spokesman. There will be no lost time.
The M-1 Abrams tanks will be assigned to the 252d headquarters at Raeford and to units in Southern Pines, Sanford, Albemarle, Red Springs and Laurinburg.
The Army spokesman described the Abrams as the most modern of any U S armored fighting vehicle ... noted for its survivability, improved firepower, ease of maintainability and increased mobility. The Abrams contains a new, highly sophisticated weapon system.
Lt. Donna K. Willis of National Guard headquarters in Raleigh said that because of the skills required to operate and maintain the Abrams, qualified men from southeastern North Carolina were recruited for the Guard.
Thirty-one newly enlisted guardsmen left this week for Fort Knox, Ky., to undergo 14 weeks of basic and
advanced training to become crewmen on the Abrams, she added.
The guardsmen will begin getting the first of their tanks in June or July after the first crewmen are trained.
Wallace'Home'
To Meet Glenn
MONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP) - Gov. George C. Wallace, declaring he felt weak but all right after six days in hospital, returned home to meet privately with Democratic presidential candidate John Glenn.
Wallace, greeting the Ohio senator with a smile Wednesday, said, I feel all ri^t. Its just a matter of being confined and being weak. Ive sat up all day.
The 63-year-old Wallace, confined to a wheelchair since a 1972 assassination attempt, met with Glenn shortly after being released from Jackson Hospital.
Wallaces six-day stay was the second time in less than a month that he had been hospitalized. The first trip was for treatment of an inflamed colon. Aides said a reaction to medication prompted the latest trip.
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have narrowed the list of potential administrators to approximately six names.
Hernandez became the center of new controversy Wednesday when he told a congressional panel that he showed a 1981 EPA draft report on dioxin to the Dow Chemical Co., the manufacturer of the toxic chemical.
But Hernandez, who was then deputy EPA administrator, denied ordering changes in the final version that deleted critical references to Dow.
Hernandez said the Chicago EPA office deleted the critical references to Dow. But EPA spokeswoman Kathy Brown, in Chicago, said the changes were ordered by Hernandez subordinates in Washington.
Hernandez was named by Reagan to replace Anne McGill Burford on March 9. But since then. White House and EPA officials said he has had no contact or direct instructions from the president.
Mrs. Burford resigned under pressure from Congress, where six panels are investigating EPA, looking into allegations of political manipulation, perjury, conflict of interest and sweetheart deals with industry.
According to the \^ite House official, the list of potential nominees to take over the agency permanently includes: William D. Ruckelshaus, the first administrator of the agency when it began operation in the Nixon administration and now a Weyerhaeuser Co. official; Christopher De-Muth, a budget office executive responsible for the ad
ministrations regulatory reform program; Henry Diamond, a Washington lawyer who was an aide to former N Y. Gov. Nelson Rockefeller; and James Buckley, the former Republican senator from New York who has worked for the Reagan State Department,
In addition, said the official, There are a couple of t others on the list. But one of those mentioned in the past week as a possible nominee, John Quarles, a former EPA official, has been ruled out, the White House source said. Hernandez has also said he would like the EPA job permanently.
While the White House source discussed the urgency attached to the search, he said there was no guarantee that it would be resolved this week. He said he did not think the list of nominees had been discussed with the president.
Since assuming the No. 1 spot at EPA, Hernandez has dealt with the White House through Craig Fuller, the assistant to the president for Cabinet affairs, according to Peter Roussel, a deputy White House press secretary.
Hernandez executive assistant, Helen Cameron, said there has been no direct contact between the president and Dr. Hernandez, I think weve been in a holding pattern here.
Reagans chief spokesman, Larry Speakes, said the president had full confidence in Hernandez.
At the House Public Works subcommittee hearing Wednesday, House members quizzed Hernandez about the
1981 dioxin study which said in a draft that Dows plant in Midland, Mich, has been the primary contributor to contamination of the Tit-tabawassee and Saginaw Rivers and Lake Huron.
The draft also said consumption of fish from those waterways should be prohibited because of the contamination.
Those sections were deleted from the final report. On Tuesday Rep. James H, Scheuer, D-N.Y., said he had evidence that Hernandez ordered the changes after showing the preliminary report to Dow.
But Hernandez said the changes were made by the people who wrote the report; the people in Region 5 (Chicago),
According to Ms. Brown in Chicago, it was a dioxin work group in Washington under Hernandez that ordered the changes.
A coordinating committee working on the dioxin report in Washington was headed by Donald Barnes, who was accountable to Hernandez, Ms. Brown said. The conclusions implicating Dow were omitted at the request of the work group in Washington from the final draft, drawn up several months after the original.
EPA spokesman Richard C, Hoffmann said in Washington, Were still trying to sort -this out
ourselves
The White House said the EPA inspector general was
investigating the allegations about Hernandez and the Dow report.
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ro-The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Thursday. March 17,1983
POT YACHT SOLD The Endless Summer, q 63-foot yacht found abandoned last May with six tons of marijuana aboard, was sold at auction
Wednesday for $67,000. The new owners are Paul Shaver of Nags Head, N.C. (left) and William Jordan of Grafton, Va. (AP Laserphoto)
Pot Yacht Sold At Auction To Duo Who Want To Go Sailing
ByJEANMcNAIR Associated Press Writer (iLOUCESTER POINT. Va. lAPi - A 63-foot yacht found abandoned with six tons of marijuana aboard last -May has been sold to two men who plan to use it "just for sailing."
The Endless Summer was
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sold at auction for StiT.OW) Wednesday as police .scoured the crowd for possible suspects in the stili-un.soived drug smuggling case.
The yacht was found abandoned in the .Mobjack Bay north of \orktown last .May 3. Acting on a telephone tip, the Coast Guard boarded the anchored vessel and found SIX tons of marijuana worth about St) million.
William M. .Iordan of Grafton and Paul Shaver, a Nags Head. N.C. realty company owner, bought the boat in the auction on the
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.Jordan, owner of a used auto parts business, said .he and Shaver would use; the white, w'ood-trimmed ketch "ju.st for sailing,"
Hoping for leads in the case, Gloucester County sheriff's deputies photographed the crowd of about 1.3 and copied down car license plate numbers.
"We got photographs of just about everybody that was here," said Deputy Frank Crotty.
He said police surveyed the crowd in case drug smugglers tried to buy the yacht again.
"There have been boats seized that have been seized more than once," he said.
About 1,5 people placed bids on the boat, which police had stripped of radio and radar gear. Bidding started at $20,000, and within five minutes auctioneer Meyer (hovitz called out, "Sold at S67,0(Ml!"
The new owners must pay
$39
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a 10 percent down payment on the boat by today and the balance within 21 days. The sale must be finally approved by the Gloucester County Circuit Court. The proceeds will gojo the State Literary Fund, used for funding school and construction projects.
When the auction ended, a Gloucester County sheriffs officer led Jordan away to sign the ownership papers.
"1 feel like Im being arrested," Jordan joked. I just want to go sailing."
One of the boats former owners, Parham Bridges of Jackson. Miss., said he sold the boat to an unidentified man in 1981 for about $200,000,
When the boat was abandoned, its owner turned out to be a fictitious company ba.sed in Delaware, said Lt. David Hudgins of the Gloucester County Sheriffs Department.
Jordan said he expects it will cost about $50,000 to get the 19-year-old boat ready for sailing.
Asked if he had owned a boat before, Jordan said yes, but added emphatically, "not this one."
Say Fainting A Hysteria
BOSTON (AP) - When dozens of school children fainted and fell ill during a choir practice and concert, many people believed they had been poisoned. But a study released today con- ludes they were victims of na.'-s hysteria.
'!he incident occurred in M; ' 1981 at Narragansett 1. ,ional High School in Ti. ipleton, about 60 miles west of Boston. Twice during the day, youngsters suffered fainting, nausea, abdominal pain, shortness of breath, itchy eyes and other symptoms for no apparent reason.
Urine tests conducted on the children disclosed tiny amounts of n-butylbenzene sulfonamide, a chemical found in insecticidd Wednesday by telephone.
The teleradiology system - the nations first - is expected to revolutionize X-ray transmission and storage, allowing X-rays to be sent anywhere in the country, and possibly in the world, in less than a minute.
Dick Beder, president of Ratel Labs Inc., which designed the system, said transmission speed of 20 seconds to 50 seconds is possible.
Ratel, a 15-month-old company based in Campbell, has $5 million in sales pending, Bader said.
NOTARY PUBLIC The Rev. Lucy D. Jones of 602 Bancroft Ave. has been commissioned as a notary public for the State of North Carolina. She was sworn on Tuesday.
Plans Fight Allegations
By DAVID GOELLER As^iated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) -Rep. Ronald Dellums, denying that he or his aides ever bought or used drugs, is challenging the House ethics committee and the Justice Department to be specific about any such accusations.
1 am aware of these vague allegations that are directed at us, the California Democrat told a news conference Wednesday. I flatly deny them
Dellums made the assertions in the wake of media reports that Robert Yesh, until Wednesday a 13-year employee of the House doorkeepers office, had told a federal grand jury that Dellums and some of his aides had bought and used cocaine and marijuana.
Dellums, 47, said he had hired Washington attorney Michael Tigar to meet today with House ethics and Justice officials involved in probes of possible drug use on Capitol Hill.
Tigar was to meet with Joseph Califano, the special counsel hired by the ethics committee. He also hoped to arrange a session with D. Lowell Jensen, head of Justices criminal division.
Dellums said Tigar would be trying to learn who said what, what were we supposed to have done and when we were supposed to have done it - to find out in very specific terms.
Tigar also said he planned to investigate the possibility that the allegations were politically motivated because they showed up in the media just before Wednesdays House debate on the nuclear freeze resolution.
Dellums, a liberal, is a vocal advocate of the freeze, which is op|X)sed by the Reagan administration.
1 dont have the factual basis to suspect that these leaks are politically motivated, Tigar said.
Their timing, coming as they do in the middle of the nuclear freeze debate, might give rise to a suspicion that would cause a reasonable person to investigate. Were reasonable people, and we intend to investigate.
Tigar said that Dellums does not know Yesh and added that no representative of government has identified who this faceless informant is.
Dellums, he continued, has received no formal notification from the Justice Department about anything. He said the representative has been told by the ethics panel that it is conducting a preliminary inquiry. .
A preliminary inquiry under the rules of the House can be conducted even (when), as here, the evidence is totally incredible and unworthy of belief, the attorney said.
There has been no comment on the published reports by the Justice Department or the ethics committee, which usually operates under strict secrecy.
The panel met Tuesday for about 90 minutes. Califano and aides participating in his investigation were closeted with the committee.
The House doorkeeper, James Molloy. 'says he has accepted a written resignation from Yesh, whose salary, according to House records, was about $30,500 a year.
Yesh, 39, began as a doorman and in 1972 became a telephone assistant who took messages for lawmakers, according to a doorkeeper office source who requested anonymity.
The source said that Yesh was transferred to the document room in December after the ethics committee told Molloy that Yeshs name had come up in an investigation.
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If youve been driving to another city, to another airport,simply to take advantage of low airfares. Piedmont would like to make something perfectly clear. Weve broi^ht those same low,round-trip fares to your hometown airport. Which means now you wont have to spend all that time in a car. Or all that money in the air. And that, ive think youll agree, makes perfectly good sense.
PiedtTKXit^ Hometown Fares FKxri Kinston.
Call your travel agent. Or call Piedmont in Kinston at 522-4544. In Goldsboro, 734-4875. In New Bern, 638-5191. Or tolbfree, h8oO'6/2-oigi.
"Purchase tickets Ivfore Mirch a.schedule travel any tinu.'.
All fares subject to change. Seats are lirruted.
Greenville, N.C.-Thursday, March 17,1M3
^ck And
Reports
Charge Attempt Poison Teacher
mp
N.C. (AP)
Tte trend on the CteiUna hog market todiq^ K mostly 75 cents to $1 M^r. Kinston 50.30, Cliato^ EUxabethtown, Fayettewlk, Dunn, Pink Hill Cbadboum, Ayden, Pine Level, Laurinburg and Bensoa 50.00, Wilson 50.25, Salisbiffy 49.00, Rowland 49.50, Sp^s Corner 48.00. Sows; M veigbU 500 pounds up; WUaoo 49.00, Fayetteville 50.0, Whiteville 50.00, Wallace 51.00, Spiveys Corner SI .00, Rowland 51.00, DurbanSO.OO.
PDoltry RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) (NCDA) The North Carolina dock quoted price on tffolters for this weeks trading was 42.75 cents, based en full truck load lots of ,ice pack USDA Grade A sized 24 to 3 pound birds. Too few of percent of the loads offered have been confirmed. with a final weighted average of blank cents f.o.b dock or. equivalent. The market is higher and the live supply is moderate for a good demfflid. Weights desirable. Estimated slaughter of bn^KS and fryers in North Carolina Thursday was 1,795,000, compared to 1,707,000 last Thursday.
NEW YORK (AP) - The stock market declined broay today in a carryover of sdiing from late Wednesday,'
Th# Dow Jones average of 30 iadustnals, off 8.52 Wednesday, dropped 1.45 to 1,114.55noontime today.
Decliaes outnumbered advances by almost 2 to 1 among New York Stock Exchalig^tisted issues.
Energy-related stocks were mo^y lower again today. Among the most active NYSE issues, Atlantic Richfield fell 14 to 38>h; Schluinberger 4 to 39; Standard O of Indiana h to 394i, mi Phillips Petroleum
14 torn.
The NYSEs composite index dropped .39 to 86.04. At the American Stock Exchange, the market value index was down 2.37 at 379.27.
Volume on the Big Board came to 34.06 million shares at noontime, against 34.71 million at the same point Wednesday.
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Midday slocks
T
Luvi
26',
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aters Anony-FJfint Presbyterian
La Leche League of GiMMittr Beets at 314 Lindel DrftWrOMI 75M197 for information 8:11PM. Coochee Council No. 60, Depree of Pocahontas meets at . Redmea'tllaU
t.m mm. - VFW meets at Post
meet
Lockheed Loews Corp Masonite n Mead Corp MinnMM Mobil Monsanto NCNBOb NabiscoBrd Nat Distill NorflkSou n OlinCp Owenslll Penney JC PepsiCo Phelps Dod PhilipMorr Polaroid ProctGamb s Quaker Oat RCA
RalstnPur
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Republic SU
Revlon
Reynldind
Rockwellnt
RqyCrown
StRegis Pap
Scott Paper
SealdPow
SearsRoeb
Shaklee
Skyline Cp
Sony Corp
Southern Co
StdOillnd StdOilOh Stevens JP TRW Inc Texaco Inc TexEastn MC Ind Un Camp Un Carbide UnOilCal Uniroyal US steel WalMart s WestPtPra Westgh El Weyerhsr WinnDix Woolworlh Wrlgley Xerox Cp
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162 1S2 162
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77>-! 78
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33% 33% 33%
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35%
VERNON, Fla. (AP) -Two students accused of trying by poison their English teacher by piking his coffee with a caustic lye have been charged with felonies and suspended from school, authorities say.
The students, both 16 and sophomores at Vernon High School, allegedly put sodium hydroxide in the instructors cup of coffee while be was out of the classroom.
They have been remanded to the custody of their parents.
The youths are charged with poisoning food or water, a first-degree felony that carries a possible penalty of 30 years to life imprisonment and a $10,000 fine.
Vernon Police Chief Robert Whitehurst said the boys allegedly put the lye into Gregg Pattersons coffee cup Friday afternoon. The teacher reported the incident after he took some of the coffee into his mouth, only to spit it back into his cup without swallowing.
Patterson told Whitehurst his mouth began burning after he sipped the coffee. A laboratory analysis showed the coffee contained traces of sodium hydroxide, which presumably came from the schools chemistry laboratory.
A spokeswoman for the Gulf Regional Poison Control Center at Pensacola said swallowing sodium hydroxide could burn the mouth, throat and can eat through the esophagus and cause burns lower down.
Whitehurst theorized the two knew what they were doing and that the incident may have started as a joke. He described them as A and B students, and said that to his knowledge, the two had not been in any- previous trouble.
Principal Jerry Tyre suspended the boys for 10 days.
A decision on whether they will be expelled will be taken up by the Washin^on County School Board at its meeting next month.
45%
39'-,. 39% 39'-4
Following are selected market quotations: Ashland prC Burroughs
Carolina Power 4 Light
Collins &Aikman
Connor
Duke
Eaton
Eckerds
Exxon
Fieldcrest
Halteras
Hilton
Jefferson
f)eere
Lowe's
McDonald's
McGraw
Piedmont
Pizza Inn
PiG
TRW, Inc United Tel Virginia Electric Wachovia
OVERTHECOUNTER
.Aviation
Branch
Little Mint
Planters Bank
II a in stock
37% 45 22% 23% 18% 22% 334 28>4 30'4 34 15% 43'2 33% 31% 37% 67% 43%
36'4
8%
56,,
65%
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Pat O'Brien Guest
1
Of Honor For Irish
Arrested As Libyan Spy
BERN, Switzerland (AP) - An American who worked here as a waitress has been arrested and charged with espionage for collecting sensitive information on Swiss officials, authorities said today. She reportedly passed the details on to a Libyan diplomat posted in Bern.
Swiss officials identified "the woman as Alexandrea Lincoln, 30, dubbed the "Mata Hari of Bern in local newspapers today.
They said the Libyan was out of the country and would shortly be leaving his post at the embassy in Bern,
The newspaper reports said Ms. Lincoln, whom they called an attractive blonde, had worked since 1980 at exclusive restaurants frequented by politicians and government officials. They said the Libyan paid her 14,000 -Swiss francs, or almost $7,000 for the information.
Government officials would not discuss details of the case and the newspaper reports did not say what information she is accused of passing.
There was no answer at a telephone number listed for Alexandrea Lincoln in Bern.
BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. (AP) - Some of Hollywoods most famous Irish eyes, including those of James Cagney, Martin Sheen and Gene Kelly, were smiling in honor of actor Pat OBrien at an Irish groups dinner.
OBrien was the guest of honor at a SlOO-a-plate United Irish Societies of Southern Caliiornia testimonial banquet on the eve of St. Patricks Day to raise funds for an Irish cultural center to be named after him.
The dinner Wednesday night drew some two dozen celebrities including Robert Stack, Ralph Edwards, Scott Brady, Forrest Tucker and Richard Egan, Also on hand were one-time OBrien leading ladies Jane Wyatt, Dorothy Lamour and Virginia Mayo, as well as OBriens non-Irish friends Cesar Romero, Loni Anderson and master of ceremonies Bob Hope, who delivered a series of Irish jokes.
Pat is so Irish, he makes Donald OConnor look Lithuanian, Hope said.
However, Hope drew his biggest laugh from the au dience of about 900 at the Beverly Hilton Hotel when he described the Irish organization as the group that arranged the weather for the queens visit. That poor lady went back to England with webbed feet.
Hope also referred to OBriens starring role in Knute Rockne, All-American, in Which a then-unknown Ronald Reagan played the role of football star George Gipp.
Pat told him to get out of the business, Hope said of Reagan, and it turned out to be good advice.
Cagney, a longtime friend of OBriens who co-starred with him in such films as Angels with Dirty Faces,
Apologizes For 'Slob' Label
HOT SPRINGS, S.D. (AP) - Allegations of unclean living made by this towns mayor prompted the sudden appearance of bumper stickers bearing the slogan Im proud to be a country slob.
Mayor Joe Lux said on a local radio show several weeks ago that the city was going to crack down on
residents with messy or dirty lawns. People who want to live like slobs should move to the country, he said.
That led to the bumper stickers, the brainchild of, local businessman Bill Sides. *
Lux later apologized, saying he was misunderstood and didn't really think rural residents were slobs.
AUSTIN, Texas (AP) - A former Texas Supreme Court justice who fled to the Caribbean to avoid a prison term was being held on the island of St. Thomas after consular officials had him arrested on St. ^incent island, officials say.
Don Yarbrough, who was sentenced to five years In prison for perjury, faces felony bond-jumping charges. District Attorney Ronnie Earle said Wednesday.
Yarbrough resigned from the high court July 16, 1977,
and, more recently, Ragtime, flew in from New York to attend the banquet.
Confined to a wheelchair, the 83-year-oId Cagney spoke only briefly but got OBrien to give a spirited rendition of the Irish ditty, Donegal.
MASONIC NOTICE Mount Calvary Lodge No. 669 will meet tonight at 7:30 p.m. All Master Masons are asked to be present.
Julius Phillips, Worshipful Master
Abram Lang, Secretary
MASONIC NOTICE Members of Winterville Masonic Lodge No. 232 and other lodges of District No. 10 are asked to meet at Winterville Masonic Hall Friday at 8 p.m. in preparation for the funeral service of brother Edgar Daniels.
William Elbert,
master
AnniniaS C. Smith,
secy
Former Justice Held On Island
amid controversy over his qualifications. Prosecutors accused him of lying to a grand jury investigating allegations that he plotted to have a witness killed to keep him from testifying against Yarbrough in civil suits.
CHOLERA'S VICTIMS CHAKA, Bangladesh (AP) - About 15,000 people have died of cholera in Bangladesh during the past seven months, medical officials report.
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Obituary Column
Daniels WINTERVILLE -Funeral services for Mr. Edgar Lee Daniels, 45, of 536 Maye Drive will be conducted Sunday at 4 p.m. in Good Hope Free Will Baptist Church by Bishop W.H. Mitchell. Burial will be in the Winterville Cemetery.
Mr. Daniels was a Pitt County native who attended the Pitt County schools. He was a member of Good Hope Church, which he served as a deacon and a member of the Male Chorus. He was a member of Winterville Masonic Lodge No. 232.
Surviving him are his wife, Mrs. Mary Hyman Daniels of the home; a son, Benjamin Daniels of the home; a dau^ter. Miss Deborah Lee Daniels of the home; his mother, Mrs. Beatrice Daniels of Winterville; two sisters. Miss Shirley Daniels of Winterville and Mrs. Lucille Hayes of New Haven, Conn., and two brothers, Clinton Worthington and Dallas Worthington, both of Philadelphia.
The family will receive friends Saturday from 8 to 9 p.m. at Mitchells Fuenral Home.
Davis
Mrs. Mary Hamilton Davis, 70, of 1300 Allen St. died at Pitt County Memorial Hospital Wednesday. The funeral service will be conducted at 2 p.m. Saturday in the Wilkerson Funeral Chapel by the Rev. Paul Lanier. Burial will be in Pinewood Memorial Park.
Mrs. Davis was bom and reared near Bailey and had been a resident of Greenville for the past 11 years. She was a member of the Greenville Church of God. She was a former resident of Great Bridge, Va.
Surviving are her husband, M. Selby Davis; one son, Danny Ray Davis of Grifton; two daughters, Mrs. Helen Joyce Bissette of Greenville and Mrs. Lois Brantley of Winterville; 10 grandchildren and nine greatgrandchildren.
The family will receive friends at the funeral home from 7-9 p.m. Friday.
Forbes Funeral services for Mrs. Elizabeth Forbes, 63, formerly of Greenville, will be conducted Satiurday at 2 p.m. in Mitchells Funeral Home in Winterville by the Rev. W.C. EUiot. Burial will be in the Live Oak Church Cemetery.
Surviving are a foster daughter, Mrs. Martha Davidson of Greenville; three brothers, J.C. Cannon and Thomas Cannon, both of Greenville, and Joe L. Cannon of Baltimore; five sisters, Mrs. Mary Elbert of Winterville, Mrs. Mamie Barrow and Mrs. Martha Lovett, both of New York City, Mrs. Rosa L. Kearney of Havelock and Mrs. Odessa Gray of Greenville, and four foster grandchildren.
The family will receive friends Friday from 7 to 8 p.m. at Mitchells Fuenral Home in Winterville.
HaU
Mrs. Vonda (Bonnie) Hall, 66, of 2810 S. Evans St. died Wednesday in Eustis, Fla. The funeral service will be conducted at 11 a.m. Saturday in the Wilkerson Funeral Chapel by the Rev. Bill Clouse. Burial will be in Pinewood Memorial Park.
Mrs. Hall was a native of West Virginia and had lived in Edenton prior to moving to Greenville in 1960. She was a Southern Baptist.
Surviving are her husband, Ralph R. Hall; a daughter, Mrs. Jackie U)u Dixon of Edenton; three sons, Ralph R. Hall Jr. of Greenville, Willard Ray Hall of Ayden and Oscar Lee Hall of Winterville; two brothers. Hoy Stout and Carl Stout, both of * Williamsburg, Va.; two sisters, Mrs. Audra Detamore of Weston, W.Va., and Mrs. Vivian Day of Edenton; 10 grandchildren and one great-grandchild.
The family will receive friends at the funeral home from 7-9 p.m. Friday.
Harrington NEWBURGH, N Y. - Mr. Manning Harrington Jr., 46, died last Thursday while visiting in Newburgh. Funeral services will be
conducted Friday at 2:30 p.m. at the Pergamos Holiness Church in Parmele, N.C., by Elder Northern Lanier. Burial will be in the. Brown Hill Cemetery, Greenville, N.C.
Mr. Harrington attended Pitt County N.C., schools and was a member of the Pergamos Holiness Church.
Surviving are there sons, James Harrington and Jackie Harrington of Long Island, N.Y., and Don Harrington of California; two daughters, Evelyn Harrington and Renita Harrington, both of Long Island; his mother, Mrs. Helen Harrington of Greenville; three brothers, James Harrington and Clifton Harrington, both of Newburgh, and Arthur Harrington of Kinston, N.C., and five sisters, Mrs. Mary Brown, Mrs. Helen Stroud, Ms. Beleatha Harrington and Mrs. Betty Simms, all of Newburgh, and Ms. Linda Harrington of San Antonio, Texas;
The family will receive friends tonight from 8-9 p.m. at Hardees Funeral Chapel and at other times at the home of Mrs. Helen Harrington, 102c Lakeview Terrace.
Hyman ROBERSONVILLE -Mrs. Lela Hyman of Route 2, Robersonville, died Saturday morning in Martin Gener Hospital in Williamston from injuries received in an automobile accident. Funeral services will be conducted Saturday at 2:30 p.m. at Saints Delight Church of God and Christ in Bethel by Elder Joseph Armstrong. Burial will be in the Pine Lawn Cemetary, Bethel.
Surviving are her husband, Willie Hyman Sr.; six daughters, Miss Dorothy Hyman of the home, Mrs. Lula Mae Stancill and Mrs. Mattie Mae Brown, both of Bethel, and Mrs. Daisy Mayo, Mrs. Ella Louise Council and Miss Erma Lee Hyman, all of Danbury, Conn.; two sons, Willie Hyman Jr. of Bethel and Rubin Hyman of Greenville; five sisters, Mrs. Sarah Moore of Parmalee,
Mrs. Daisy Langley and Mrs. Mary Williams, both of Bethel, Mrs. Ethel Lee Moore of Virginia and Mrs. Magalene Howard of Washington, DC.; two brothers, Charlie Howard and George Howard, both of New York; 29 grand-children and 18 great-grandchildren.
The family will receive friends Friday from 8 to 9 p.m. at Saints Delict church and at other times will be at the home, Route 2, Robersonville.
Funeral arrangements are being handled by Flanagan Funeral Home of Greenville.
Williams
Mrs. Nellie Louise Williams, 73, died last Friday at her home. Funeral services will be conducted Saturday at 2:30 p.m. at the Holy Trinity Holy Church in Greenville by Bishop Isaac Ryals. Burial will be in Brown Hill Cemetery.
Mrs. Williams attended the Greenville schools and was a member of the Tabernacle House of Prayer Church, where she served on the Mothers Board.
Surviving are one daughter, Mrs. Georgia Banks of the home; one foster daughter, Mrs. Charlena Walden of Bridgeport, Conn.; one brother, William H. Harris of Greenville, and one sister, Mrs. Alice H. Williams of Greenville.
The family will receive friends Friday from 7-8 p.m. at Hardees Funeral Chapel and at other times at the home, 718 Fleming St. The body will be placed in the church one hour prior to the service.
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Sports XHE DAILY REFLECTOR Classified
.+7
THURSDAY AFTERNOON, MARCH 17, 1983ECU Gridders Opening Spring Driiis
By WOODY PEELE Reflector Sports Editor
East Carolina head football coach Ed Emory will find plenty of familiar faces on hand Friday when the Pirates open spring drills.
But perhaps the biggest crew of new faces will be on his own staff, where only two veterans return, along with one volunteer coach now in a full-time position.
The only returning coaches are John Zernhelt in the offensive line and Bob Sanders
in the outside linebackers. Charlie Elmquist, a volunteer coach for two years, takes over as tight end coach and will aide Zernhelt with the bffensive line.
Newcomers include both the offensive and defensive coordinators, former v Me\ head coach Art Baker in ihe former position, and Tom Throckmorton in the latter.
Theyll be joined by Ken Matous at receiver coach; Rex Kipps at defensive line
coacl), and Phil Elmassian at defensive secondary coach.
But while those faces may be new, Emory finds plenty of veterans on hand as a total of 42 lettermen return, including just about the entire starting offense. A total of 19 rising senio*^, 18 juniors and five sophomores return who played enough to letter last year.
As far as starters are concerned, 19 are back from last year, and Emory expects to have the best senior lead
ership since he took over four years ago.
Only two starters from last years offense - and they shared the same position are gone so there will be little rebuilding to do in that department. Emory also has two defensive tackles who will be starting for the fourth year.
Primary concentration areas for the spring would thus appear to be in building depth in the receiver position, throughout the defense, and at
Conley's Keith Gatlin Selected To Play In McDonald's Classic
From Wire and Staff Reports
ATLANTA - D.H. Conleys Keith Gatlin will join
24 other high school stars in the annual McDonalds High School All-American Basketball game.
The 6-5 guard, already committed to the University of Maryland, was one of
25 named to the McDonalds team which will play an exhibition contest in the Omni in Atlanta on April 9.
Among his teammates in the game will be a 7-foot-2 high school basketball center from Ohio. Martin Nessley of Whitehall Yearling High School in Whitehall, Ohio, was the tallest of six centers on the roster, which was announced at a news conference by former UCLA Coach John Wooden and selection committee chairman Morgan Woot-ten.
Gatlin averaged over 25 points a game during the season in leading Conley to the championship of the Coastal Conference and the finals of the district
tournament.
Other centers named to the team included Tom Curry, 6-foot-9, of Re-demptorist High School, Baton Rouge, La.; Dave Popson, 6-foot-9, Bishop OReilly High School, Kingston, Penn.; Mike Smith, 6-foot-9, Los Altos High School, Hacienda Heights, Calif.; Barry Sumpter, 6-foot-ll, Love-joy High School, Lovejoy, 111.; and Joe Wolf, 6-foot-lO, Kohler High School, Kohler, Wise.
The guards, in addition to Gatlin, included Tommy Amaker, 6-foot-2, of W.T. Woodson High School, Fairfax, Va.; Freddy Banks, 6-foot-2,, Valley High School, Las Vegas, Nev.; James Blackmon, 6-foot-3, Marion High School, Marion, Ind.; Frank Ford, 6-foot-4, Osceola High School, Kissimmee, Fla.; Corey Gaines, 6-foot-3, St. Bernard High School, Playa Del Rey, Calif.; Melvin Howard, 6-foot-l, Decatur High School, Decatur, Ga.; Antoine Joubert, 6-foot-5, South
western High School, Detroit; Kenny Smith, 6-foot-2, Archbishop Molloy High School, Jamaica, N.Y.; Dwayne Washington, 6-foot-2, Brooklyn Boys and Girls High School, Brooklyn, N.Y.
Nine forwards were named to the team, including Winston Bennett, 6-foot-7, of Male High School, Louisville, Ky.; Mark Kline, 6-foot-7, Williamson High School, Williamson, W.Va.; Dallas Comegys, 6-foot-9, Roman Catholic High School, Philadelphia, Penn.; Henry Dalrymple, 6-foot-4, St. Johnsbury Academy, St. Johnsbury, Vt.; Tom Sheehey, 6-foot-8, McQuaid Jesuit High School, Rochester, N.Y.; Kevin Smith, 6-foot-7, Everett High School, Lansing. Mich.; Daryl Thomas. 6-foot-7, St. Joseph s High School, Westchester. 111.; Reggie Wiliiams. 6-foot-7. Dunbar High School. Baltimore, Md.; and Ricky Winslow, 6-foot-8. Jack Yates High scnooi, Houston, Texas.
Waltrip Off To Slow Start, But That May Mean Trouble For Rest
HAMPTON, Ga. (AP) -Darrell Waltrip is off to a slow start again, but that may be bad news for the other drivers on the NASCAR circuit.
Waltrip comes into Sundays Coca-Cola 500 at Atlanta International Raceway in almost exactly the same
shape as last year - winless on the Grand National tour three races into the 30-race season, and not even in the top ' 10 in Winston Cup point standings.
But last year, Waltrip limped into Atlanta, won the Coca-Cola 500 and sailed off
Sports Calendar
Editors Note: Schedules are supplied by schools or sponsoring agencies and are subject to change without notice
Todays Sports Baseball Bear Grass at Jamesvllle Rose at Havelock (4 p.m.) Clemson at East Carolina (3 p.m.)
North Pitt at Conley JV (3:30 p.m.)
Tennis
Parrott Academy at Greene Central (4p.m.)
George Washington at East Carolina (3 p.m.)
Bertie at Roanoke Williamston at Washington Boys Track Farmville Central at Bed-dingfield (3:30 p.m.)
Rose at Northern Nash (3:30 p.m.)
Williamston, Roanoke at Ahoskie Conley, Havelock at West Carteret (3::iOp.m.)
Swimming NCAA Division II women at Long Beach State
Golf
East Carolina at Furman Invitational
Girls Track
Williamston, Roanoke at Ahoskie Conley, Havelock at West Carteret (3::i0p,m )
Softball
North Pitt at Conley (3:30 p.m ) Bear G rass at Jamesville Basketball Regional Tournaments at Wilson Friday 's Sports Baseball
Ayden-Griftoti at West Craven (4 p.m,)
Greene Central at Rose (4p,m.) North Lenoir at Farmville Central (3:30 pm.I Greene Central at Beddingfield JV (4 p.m.)
George Mason at East Carolina (3 p.m.)
Edenton at Roanoke (4 p.m. I Southwest Edgecombe at Conley Ahoskie at Williamston (3:30 p.m.)
Softball
North Lenoir at Farmville Central (3:30p.m.)
Greene Central at Rose (4p.m.)
' Edenton at Roanoke (4 p.m.) Ahoskie at Williamston (3:45 p.m.)
Track
Greene Central at South Lenoir (3:30p.m.)
East Carolina at Sunshine Relays Tennis
Rose at Fike (3:30p.m.)
William & Mary at East Carolina women (3 p.m.)
Swimming
NCAA Division II women at Long Beach State
Golf
East Carolina at Furman Invitational
BasketbaU
Regional Tournaments at Wilson
toward his second straight dozen-victory season and his second strai^t Winston Cup.
Slow starts are normal for Waltrips team, headed by Junior Johnson. For the past 10 years, the Johnson team, even back when Cale Yarborough was the driver, has consistently started slow and finished strong.
I have a theory about our team, Waltrip said Wednesday as he prepared for todays scheduled pole qualifying session, expected to be dampened by rain. The reason we start off so slow is that weve peaked at the end of the previous season (in December). We win the championship, we go to New York for the ceremonies and the celebration, and then theres Christmas and New Years.
And then, I dont think our guys are ready for the season to start when it does (at Daytona in February). We go two our three races and dont look so hot, and everybody on our team says, Gosh, were better than this! Wed better get going, Waltrip said.
Expert observers have also long theorized that master mechanic Johnson often uses the early part of the season to experiment with new parts, systems or theories, and that it takes a few races for Johnson to get his innovations working smoothly.
I guess theres some truth to that, Waltrip said.
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quarterback.
One job that probably prove the toughest will be finding a replacement for All-America defensive end Jody Schulz.
Emory believes that even though there are a lot of new faces on the coaching staff, its the best hes had here, but it will take some adjustment time for the players and staff to get used to one another.
We should have a better team than we did in 1982, Emory said, But we face a far tougher schedule, so our record might not show it.
The Pirates, for the second year in a row, play seven games on the road, including dates at Florida State, Miami and Florida in the Sunshine State, along with trips to N.C. State, Missouri, Temple and Southern Mississippi.
With that slate, matching last years 7-4 mark might be hard to achieve.
When the offense takes the field, there will be returning
starters at every position but two, the two tackle slots. Of' those 11 slots, eight will open with seniors, including quarterback Kevin Ingram, fullback Earnest Byner, tight end Norwood Vann, left tackle Mac Powers, left guard Terry Long, center John Floyd, right guard Norman Quick and right tackle John Robertson.
The remaining spots will be filled by sophomore Tony Baker at tailback, and juniors Ricky Nichols at wide receiver and Stefon Adams at split end.
Not that Emory really expects it to stay that way. He looks for plenty on competition for spots from other returning lettermen or re-dshirts.
Defensively, there are seven returning starters, although one of them sat out last year with an injury, senior linebacker Mike Grant. Other vets back include senior outside linebacker Jeff Pegues,
senior tackle Hal Stephens, senior tackle Steve Hamilton, junior linebacker P.J. Jordan, senior free safety Clint Harris and senior cornerback Chuck Bishop.
Others listed as starters on the initial depth chart are senior nose guard Gerry Rogers, junior outside linebacker J.C. Plott, junior cornerback Calvin Adams, and senior strong safety Kenny Phillips.
Again, Emory is going to be looking for plenty of competition here - including some that will build the depth throu^out the defense.
While one of the key losses was Schulz, another was that of snapper Whitley Wilkerson, who handled that difficult job for several years. Leading the list of candidates there is sophomore Kevin Samuel.
Junior Jeff Bolch returns to handle the punter, while Jeff Heath, who set both ECU and NCAA records last year as a
freshman, will handle the kickoffs, placements and field
goals.
Last year, the Pirates suffered through a number of injuries which about wiped out the linebacking crew. This year, hes hopeful of having fewer injuries.
One thing being done is outfitting 44 interior linemen and linebackers with Anderson braces and McDavid braces, designed to cut down on knee injuries. Should they prove successful, the chances of keeping mpre players healthy will be improved.
Plans call for the Pirates to practice each Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday and Saturday with the exception of the Easter holiday break. A total of 20 practice periods are allowed by the NCAA, including the final Purple-Gold game which winds up the stint on Saturday, April 23 at 7 p.m. in Ficklen Stadium.
'Skins Face East Bladen
By JIMMY DuPREE Reflector Sports Writer When the Roanoke High School Redskins take the court Friday at Wilson Beddingfield in the 3-A Regionals their opposition will be East Bladen, a team which lost only two games in 23 outings during the 1982-83 campaign -both to eighth-ranked 4-A power Wilmington Laney. ' The latter of the two games against Laney went into two overtimes before Wilmington utilized the home-court advantage.
But the Northeastern, Conference champion Redskins have posted impressive statistics along the way, as well. Small forward (Jreg Everett sports a 16.2 scoring average, while power forward Ricky Highsmith contributed 11.3 points and 8.2 rebounds an outing.
Add 5-8 point guard Spencer Bryant, sophomore guard James Duggins and 6-3 center Donnie Wallace - already committed to UNC-Chapel Hill for football - and theres little
doubt the 23-3 Redskins have earned the right to play for a spot in the state tournament.
Right after Christmas it seemed that we didnt play as well as were capable of playing, said Roanoke coach Clarence Atkinson. We were still winning, but it wasnt the same. Since about mid-January weve been playing really well; weve only had a few bad quarters.
Coach Sam Rogers East Bladen squad swept through the Three Rivers Conference with an unblemished 10-0 mark and defeated Southern High School of Durham 98-90 for the District III Championship. East Bladen and Southern were tied 57-57 at one point of that contest, but the team from Elizabethtown outscored Southern 16-4 over a 4:32 span to put the game out of reach.
In that game, point guard Steve Moore and center Sherman Roberts posted 18 points each.
But the star of the East Bladen offense is 6-3 guard
Rodney Rhoda who averaged 14 points per game during the regular season. Rhoda, also known for his leaping abilitiy, was selected as one of, the outstanding players at the Prep Stars Camp held last summer atElon College.
Moore scored 13 points an outing and Roberts and forward Adolph Jones 12 apiece for the run-oriented East Bladen offense which averaged 73 points a game.
Were not a running team, said Atkinson. Wed like to control the tempo, to control their fast break.
We will look for the break on offense but not usually. We try to work the ball inside. We have three (Wallace, Everett and Highsmith) we can work inside at the post.
While Roanoke relies primarily on zone defenses, East Bladen uses pressure man-to-man,
Were going back and taking our favorite defenses and working on them, Atkinson said. We want to run three or four defenses at them.
We press the guards on defense, but we dont like to go baseline-to-baseline on a press.
I think there will be several keys to the game, he continued. We must rebound well. Donnie Wallace does a good job blocking out for us underneath - he takes up a lot of room. Everett and Highsmith will have to hit the boards for us, too.
We must cut off their fast break, and to do that we must mix our defenses well. Also, our offense will have to be able to handle their pressure on defense. Free throws have been one of our downfalls in the last few games, so were working on that.
The whole thing comes down to who will control the tempo of the game.
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DePaul Finally Wins First-Round Game
By The Associated Press For a change, DePaul Coach Ray Meyer knows that todays newspaper will contain at least one piece of good news.
An embarrassed first-round loser in the last three NCAA basketball tournaments when DePaul was ranked among the nations elite, Meyer finally avoided the opening-round jinx Wednesday night. Freshman Tony Jackson scored 20 points and keyed a second-half surge that carried the Blue Demons to a 76-73
victory over Minnesota in one of seven first-round National Invitation Tournament games.
So it wasnt the coveted NCAAs, At least Meyer gets into the second round.
Tomorrow morning, I dont have to read in the paper that we lost in the first round, the veteran coach said after the game.
Elsewhere, the University of New Orleans stunned LSU 99-94 in overtime, Texas Christian nipped Tulsa 64-62, Oregon State trounced Idaho
Captures Rebound
Keith Thomas (24) of Old Dominion captures a rebound behind Jimmy Hawthorne (center) of South Carolina during first round game action of the NIT at Carolina Coliseum. Looking on at left is Brad Jergenson of South Carolina. The Gamecocks won the game, 100-90. (AP Laserphoto)
Pam Pack Rips Roanoke, 15-2
to romp to a 15-2 victory over Roanoke High School yesterday In a Northeastern Conference baseball game.
Washington grabbed the lead in the first inning, scoring three times. Seth Edwards got things going by drawing a walk. John Modlin then cracked a home run to give the Pam Pack a 2-0 lead. Vance Moore followed him to the plate and also sent the ball out of the park to up it to 3-0.
Washington added two more in the third as Moore homered again. The Pam Pack put the game away with ten in the fourth for a 15-0 lead,
Roanoke got its only runs in the fifth. Ricky Taylor singled and Stacey Wallace also got a hit. Both moved up on an infield out, and scored when Darius Hudgins reached on an error.
The loss dropped the Roanoke record to 0-3 overall and 0-1 in the conference. They play host to Edenton on Friday in their next outing.
WASHINGTON -Washington High School scored early, then exploded for 10 runs in the fourth inning
Bears Top Laker Team
SWAN QUARTER - Bear Grass Hi^ Schools tennis team gained a 6-0 victory over Mattamuskeet High School yesterday.
The Bears captured the five singles matches and then added the lone doubles event to even its record at M on the season.
The Bears return to action on Tuesday, with a return match with the Lakers at Bear Grass.
Summary:
Derrick Price iBG) d Hamilton Lane, 8-4
Daniel C'oefield iBG) d. Tony Hardy, 8-6
Brian Selhke (BG) d. Darin Blount, 8-7
Jim Carter iBG) d. Thad Merrick, 8-5.
Mary Rodgerson (BGi d. Sandra Gibbs, 8-0
John Peele-Cindy Harrison (BG) d Jerry Spencer-Shawn Fulford, 8-5.
Roanoke 000 02- 2 4 2
Washington . . 301 (10)x-15 10 1 Griffin, Taylor (4) and Casper, Ange, Williamson (5i and Whiten-burg.
Marth Is Value Month
At BICYCl^
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Tires 27x11/4....... was 7.95 now3
IRC 27x1x1 1/4 was8,95Now4
Sedisport Chain . ... was 9.95 Now
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77-59, Fresno State defeated Texas-El Paso 71-64, South Carolina trimmed Old Dominion 100-90 and Iona whipped St. Bonaventure 90-76.
DePaul broke its game open in the second half with bursts of 7-0 and 10-0 that opened a 66-50 lead with eight minutes to play.
We decided at the half that we were quicker and realized we could run, said Meyer. The difference in this one was the first five minufes of the second half. We brought the ball down seven times and came away with 15 points.
At Baton Rouge, La., reserve Acie Sanders scored eight points in overtime, including two insurance free throws with 11 seconds remaining, as New Orleans shocked LSU. UNO, 23-6, never led until Sanders tip-in gave the Privateers an 86-84 lead after 20 seconds of overtime.
Sanders made a three-point play with 1:09 left in the extra period, then added his two free throws for a 97-94 lead with 11 seconds remaining. Oscar Taylor, who led the Privateers with 22 points, added two free throws with nine seconds left.
Smith said he put Sanders into the game mostly because he plays good defense.
"Hes a kid who plays his role. He was a starter for us
the first two years, but now comes off the bench and does what we ask him to do. Tonight, that was scoring at a crucial time,Smith said.
Smith also made a crucial decision concerning Claude Butler, who was yariced from the game late in the first half with no points and six turn-overs.LSU was leading 51-38 at the intermission and, said Smith: My assistants didnt want him to start the second half. I disagreed and said, If he doesnt do well, well take him out. Thank goodness we went with him.
Butler scored 13 of his 15 points in first 10 minutes of the second half as UNO tied the game at 63-all.
At Tulsa, TCUs Doug Arnold hit a jump shot with five seconds left to lift the Horned Frogs over the home team .Arnold, a 6-foot-9 senior, finished with 20 points and 17 rebounds.
At Corvallis, Ore., Charlie Sitton scored 19 of his 21 points in the second half as Oregon State roared from behind to down Idaho 77-59.Steve Woodside and Danny Evans added 18 points apiece for the Beavers, who trailed 35-32 at halftime.
At Fresno, Calif., Desi Barmore had a perfect night with 5-for-5 from the field and lO-for-10 from the free throw line to lead Fresno State over
Texas-El Paso.The 6-7 Barmore scored 10 of his season-high 20 points in the final five minutes as he paced a 16-4 burst after the game was tied 54-54.
At Columbia, S.C., Jimmy Foster scored a career-high 31 points and Kenny Holmes
added 24 to lead South Carolina to a 100-90 victory over Old Dominion.Holmes scored 12 points in a second-half surge that helped the
OLDDOM MP FXl FT RAFPI
Wade 22 4- 8 4- 5 4 1 4 12
Caltison 24 6- 9 2- 5 9 0 1 14
West 32 7-12 2- 3 11 0 4 16
Robinson 31 2- 7 4- 4 1 9 5 8
Smith 29 9-20 1- 2 3 1 5 19
Thomas 24 4-10 2- 2 4 4 5 10
Davis 24 5-11 1- 2 2 2 2 11
Lambert 12 0- 0 0- 1 1 0 3 0
BuckJand 10-00-0000 0
Calloway 1 0- 0 0-0 0 0 1 0
Totals 200 37-77 16-24 40 17 30 90
S. CAROLINA MP FG FT R A F Pt Foster 36 11-14 9-13 12 1 4 31 Jergenson 21 1- 4 2- 2 8 1 5 4
Brittain 23 2- 7 2- 2 9 2 3 6
Peacock 34 3- 6 11-13 1 13 3 17
Hawthorne 31 4-10 6- 6 1 5 1 14
Holmes 24 11-17 2- 3 6 1 3 24
Martin 9 1- 3 0- 0 0 1 0 2
Kendall 40-10-0000 0
Darmody 8 0- 1 1- 2 2 1 1 1
Sanderson 10 0-1 1- 1 1 1 0 1
Totals 200 34^ 34-42 43 26 20 100
Old Dominion..................33 57- 90
South Carolina.................40 60-100
Turnovers: Old Dominion 11, South Carolina 17.
Technical fouls: Wade, 2.
Officials: Sylvester, Pavia, Bonder.
Att: 8,327.
L. League Meet Set
The Greenville Little
JnQlJg]rs 3GCOnO ^e^g^es wm hold their annual ^ organizational meeting on
m t f m M m I Tuesday, March 22, at Jaycee
In Golf Match xn tss..
coaches, and helpers are
FARMVILLE - Northern Hunt............310 expected to attend. Any other
Nash High School, despite a Beddingfield.....337 interested parties are also
one-over-par effort by .....invited to attend.
Farmville Centrals Gary Koocy nnoijnT..... jo i Registration for the 1983
Hobgood, downed Farmville Ayden-Grirton ... 362 season will be held on Thurs-
and Wilson Fike in a three- Goldsboro.......408 day, March 24, and Friday,
way golf match yesterday. WILSON - Ayden-Grifton March 25, at the Elm Street
The match was held at the Righ school opened its 1983 Park Center from 4 to 6 p.m.
Farmville Golf and Country goif season yesterday, To be eligible, candidates
Club. finishing fourth in a five-way must like within the
Northern finished the af- meet held at Wilsons established boundaries of the
ternoon with a team total of Wedgewood Country Club. leagues, a six-mile radius of
320, while Farmville had a 327 wjison Hunt finished first Greenville Five Points. They
round. Fike finished far off the vvith a 310 total, well ahead of must have been born between
pace with a 351 score. second place Beddingfield, August 1, 1970, and July 31,
Hobgood ended the day with vvhich had 337. Rocky Mount ^ud must provide a
a 73. Other Jaguar scores vvas third with 361, followed by certified birth certificate with
included Daryl Baker, 78; and the Chargers at 362. Goldsboro them to registration. At least
Alan Wooten and Scott Lewis, was fourth at 408. ouc parent or guardian must
88. Hunts Kent Williams was also accompany candidates to
Hewitt Pollard 1^ Northern medalist for the afternoon registration.
Nash with 77, while Russ with a 74. Those accepted will report
Buchanan had 80, Tim Hoyle Warren Agee led Ayden- to tryouts which start on
had 81 and David Brady, 82. Grifton with an 84, while Mark Monday, April 11, at the Elm
Claude Alligood led Fike Davis had 86, Brian Heath had Street Little League field,
with 82, while Sid Burton had 94 and Danny Bleizeffer had Players must provide their
87, Mike Popowltch had 88 and 93, own gloves and shoes, and
Carl Murphy had 94. The Chargers return to ac- must attend at least 50 percent
Farmville, now 4-2, travels tion on Monday, traveling to of the tryouts to be eligible for
to Northern Nash on Monday. Greenville Rose. the leagues draft.
Gamecocks open a 67-49 lead.
At New Rochelle, N.Y., Steve Burtt scored 24 of his 33 points in the second half, breaking the single-season Iona College scoring record and rallying the Gaels over St.
I
Bonaventure. Iona overcame a 42-38 halftime deficit as Burtt, a 6-3 junior guard, brought his season total to 696 points, surpassing Jeff Rulands685in 1979-80.
The first round continues
toni^t with William & Mary at Virginia Tech, Wake Forest at Murray State, Tulane at Nebraska, Alabama State at Mississippi and Northwestern vs. Notre Dame at Rosemont, 111.
Lady Pirates Take Two From Louisburg Squad
East Carolina Universitys womens softball team recorded a sweep of a doubleheader with Louisburg yesterday. The Lady Pirates won the opener, 11-1, then came back with a 3-0 decision in the second game.
In the opener, the Lady Pirates grabbed the lead with four runs in the first inning and added four more in the second. Three more crossed in the third. Louisburg scored its only run in the second inning.
Mitzi Davis led the Pirate hitting with a double and a triple and three runs batted in in three trips to the plate. Sandy Kee and Melody Ham each added two hits. Laura Murray led Louisburg with a triple.
We hit the ball very well, Coach Sue Manahan said. We got hits together. As in Florida, we showed good depth. The people on the bench did a good job. It was a very
good way to start our home season.
East Carolina then came back with a 3-0 victory in the second game as Fran Hooks made her first start on the mound for the Lady Pirates. ECU scored single runs in each the third, fourth and fifth innings, including solo homers by Donna Panos and Cynthia Shepard.
Wendy Ozment collected three hits in three appearances for ECU, while Panos and Shepard each had two hits, one of Panos a triple. Louisburg was led by Murray and Robin Graves, each with two.
Hooks showed a lot of poise in starting her first game and pitching a shutout, Manahan said. Panos showed a lot of power at the plate. She came through with good shots every time at bat. Wendy had a very good game in only her second start of the season (left field).
In spite of the weather, the team held together well defensively. Louisbgurg played well in the second game, which was difficult after the first game.
East Carolina returns to action on Tuesday, traveling to North Carolina. The Lady Pirates are now 5-4 on the year.
First Game
Louisburg 010 00- 1 5 7
East Carolina .... 443 OxII 9 2 Joyner, Wiggins (2) and Dominici; Roth, Hooks (3) and Cox, Martinis).
Second Game
Louisburg 000 000 0-4) 5 2
East Carolina 001 110 x-3 10 3
Williams and Whitley, Hooks and Martin,. Cox (5).
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Nows the best time to make a deal on Uniroyal's high-mileage Steeler or Tiger Paw All-Seasons Plus radials.
Because if you buy 4 Steelers or Tiger Paw Plus at a participating dealer. Uniroyal will top it with a $50 check. Just mail your proof of purchase and rebate certificate to Uniroyal within 30 days, and well send you a rebate check.
But hurry; the offer ends March 19,1983.
UNIROYAL SniLER
STEEL-BELTED RADIAL Outstanding Value Outstanding Performance
Premium Whitewalls
4995
After Rebate Price P185/80R13 Sale Price 62.45 F.E.T.1.92
UNIROYAL
Size
P185/75R14
P195/75R14
P205/70R14
P205/75R14
P205/75R15
P215/75R15
P225/75R15
P235/75R15
Refl.
Price
75.15 81.70 82.80
84.15
85.15 87.75 89.90 94.45
Sale
Price
67.60
71.50
73.50 74.70
75.60 76.95 78.90 83.00
Aft*c
RGtMtG
Price
F.E.T.
55.10
59.00
61.00 62.20
63.10 64.45 66.40 70.50
\j
Prices Based On Purchase Of 4 Tires
UNIROYAL:
56
Alter Rebate Price P185/80R13 Reg. Price 75.50 Sale Price 68.50 F.E.T. 1.91
Tmmiviw
ALL SEASON STEEL BELTED RADIAL WHITEWALL
Size
Reg.
rflCO
Stie
Price
AHor
ebete
PrtCf
F.E.T.
P195/75R14
86.90
75.20
62.70
2.16
P205/75R14
89.90
77.90
65.40
2.30
P205/75R15
90.80
78.70
66.20
2.42
P215/75R15
93.40
81.90
69.40
2.57
P225/75R15
95.35
83.80
71.30
2.73
P235/75R1S
99.75
87.80
75.30
2.93
lvUNIROYAL
Prices Based On Purchase Of 4 Tires
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t
Girls Regionols Tonight Girls Open Track Season
In Romp Over Gryphons, Bruins
RALEIGH (AP) -Greensboro Page will try to snap unbeaten Gastonia Huss 26-game winning streak today in the opening round of tbie NCHSAA girls regional basketball tournament.
The winners toni^t will proceed to Saturdays championship games at the same sites, with the victors from those matchups reaching the state finals March 25-26 at Elon College.
Huss will play Page, 18-3, at East Burke Hi^i School in the West Regional 4-A playoffs at 7 p.m. That game will be followed by a contest between No. 5 Gastonia Ashbrook, 19-4, and East Mecklenburg, 18-6.
Huss, averaging 70 points per game, is led by 5-foot-lO Karen Robinson, averaging 18 points and 9.5 rebounds, while Angie Greens 14 points tops Page. Ashbrook has sisters Deana (17.5 points) and Kathy Tate (16 ppg) while East Mecklenburg is paced by 5-7 Julie Theberge( 18 ppg).
In the East at Wilson Hunt, No. 2 Raleigh Broughton, 27-0 and led by Matisha Browns
13.3 average, will face 4th-ranked Fayetteville Pine Forest, 26-1, led by Tracy Vanns 16.5 average.
Rocky Mount, 18-6, and its 6-3 Kim Taylor, who averages 32.2 points and 20.3 rebounds, will meet No. 3 Goldsboro in the second game. Goldsboro, 23-4 and defending state champion, is led by Selina Bests 10.4 points per game.
Class SA The only ranked team appearing in the East Regional at Wilson Beddingfield will be No. 1 East Blad^, while three teams among the states Top 10 will play in the West tournament at Hickory.
East Bladen, 22-0, is led by Sharon McDowells 15 point average and faces Southeast Guilford, 23-3, and Lori Phillips, the regionals tq) scorer at 20 per game. D.H. Conley, 25-3, and led by Mechio Komegays 15 point norm, plays 19-4 Warren County, topped by Gloria Kearneys 13-point average.
The lOth-ranked Enka Sugar Jets open West action against Lincolnton, 17-5. Enka, 25-3, is
aUowing only 39.8 points per game while Lincdnton depends on Clarissa Metts, scoring 17.8 points and grabbing 15.9 rebounds per game.
The other West game may be the best of the 3A matchups, pitting No. 2-ranked Kannapolis Brown, 24-0, against No. 3 Madison-Mayodan, 28-0. That promises to b a low-scoring affair as Madison-Mayodan gives up 37.9 points per game and Brown only 37.
Class 2A
Bandys, the defending champion and top-ranked at 28-0, will face Sylva-Webster in the q>ening round of the West Regional at Lenoir-Rhyne. BaiMlys is led by 5-11 Beverly Greenard, a 72.8 percent shooter, while No. 7 Sylva-Webster, 28-2, is paced by Lisa Shepherd, a 10 point scorer.
In the second game, 4th-rated Southwest Guilford, 25-0, goes up against No. 6 Monroe Parkwood, 27-1. Laura Stanley (12 ppg) and Julia Weaver (11.5) lead Southwest while Parkwood, which gives iq)
only 35 points per outing, is led by Rocky River Conference player of the year Cynthia Monroe, who averages 18.8 points and 12.9 rebounds.
Oella Burney, in the East will lead No. 2 East Carteret, 28-0, against Orrum, ranked 8th at 23-2. Burney averag^ 23 points per game diile Orrums Amy Townsend has a 19.7 standard.
Whiteville, 25-1, plays unranked Franklinton, 20-3, in the second battle. Whiteville, ranked lOth, is led by 5-11 Phyliss Edwards 18.7 points while Lisa Allens 13.7 tops Franklinton.
Class lA
The only ranked team among any of the Gass lA schools left is No. 5 Hiwassee Dam, 24-3 and the defending state champion, which faces Cherokee, 14-9, in the West Regional at Tuscola. Hiwassee Dam is led by Pam McNabb at 14.3 points per game while Cherokees Dee Owle averages 15.3.
The second game finds Polk Central, 22-5, playing Midlands, 21-6.
ROCKY MOUNT - Rose High Schools girls tra^ team opened its season yesterday and had an easy time of it in downing hosting Rocky Mount and Beddingfield.
The Rampettes finished the afternoon with 107 points, well ahead of Rocky Mount with 34 and Beddingfield with 22.
Rose won all three relays and ei^it of the 13 individual events. Tarsha Williams captured both the shot and discus for Rose, while Doris Richardson won both the long and triple jumps.
Rose returns to action on Monday, again traveling to Rocky Mount.
Summary:
Shot put: T. Williams (R) 28-H; Bullock (B) 27-1'^; Holec (R) 26-5; Bames (RM) 25-6.
Discus: T. WUliams (R) TS-Vh; Bames (RM) 74-5; Wilkes (R) 68-4*^; Holec (R)54-',i..
High jump: Brooks (B) 54); DeLoach (R) 4-; Lee (R) 4-6; Allen (RM) 4-2.
SCOREBOARD
Bowling
Thursday NlgbfMixed
W L
Western Sizzlin 72'ji 35>,^
High Timers...........70 38
High Hopes..............69 39
Dew Crew.............67 41
Jacks Steakhouse.....67 41
Home Cleaners........61',^ 46>,^
Team 41 ...............60 48
Deadly Hits............60 48
Hang Ten..............57',*. 50',*
Untouchables..........55 53
Pizza Inn..............54',4 53'/i
Team 413,.............54 54
Shoneys..............52 56
Pin Hunters...........52 56
Slo Starters.............50'/4 57',^
Honey Bees............50 58
Outsiders..............48',59',^
M&Ms...............45 63
Spotlight Records......44 64
Bud Lights............44 64
Hanging Gang.........44 64
Mixed Familys........43'/4 64'/4
Pair Electronics.......43 65
Alley Cats.............39 71
Mens high game, Johnnie Harrell, Don Griffin, 236; mens high series, Johnnie Harrell, 630; womens high game and series, Mary Wade, 227,602.
NBA Stondingt
ByTbeAuocUtedPrtti EASTERN
TANKIFNANARA
NOW liiRMMCl MWOP CVE O0KJ&
ITANMnao0&.'ftei&
by Jeff Millar A Bill Hinds
t^FkCLUKCKicA^/ ttwcue&v&.iUc NiowrALMr y oiMtRs oamc V- IDMOTROU/.AU.
lasmr AT n AM.
x-Philadelphia Boston New Jersey New York Washington
CONFERENCE AUanUcDlvliioa
W LPct.
55 9
44 20
42 24
35 30 29 35
GB
x-NY Isles 36 24 x-Washington3S 22 x-NYRii^ 31 31 New Jersey 14 45 Pittsburgh 16 49
x-Boston
x-Montreal
x-Buffak)
x-Ouebec
Hartford
12 261 206 14 278 262 9 239 260 13 196 299 6 233 362 Adams DIvMob 45 17 8 293 199
37 21 13 310 249
35 26 12 279 261
31 29 11 307 296
17 49 6 232 366
Milwaukee AUanta Detroit Chica:
Central Division
.869 -.688 11 .636 14 .538 20'.^ .453 28
Campbell Conference NonlsI
43 22 34 32 29 37
Chicago 23 43
Cleveland 17 48
Indiana 17 48
WESTERN CONFERENCE Midwest Dlvlahn San Antonio 41 25
Denver 37 30
Dallas 33 33
Kansas City 32 33
Utah 25 42
Houston 11 54
Pacific Divtahn Los Angeles 47 IS
Phoenix 39 27
Portland 37 29
SeatUe 37 29
Golden State 25 42
San Diego 21 45
x<linchedplayofispot
Wednesdays Games Atlanta 94, Washington 81, OT New JersM 96, Cleveland 90 Utah 125, Detroit 115 Philadelphia 105, Boston 100 New York 105, MUwaukee 93 Los Angeles 104, Phoenix 95 SeatUe no, Kansas City 102 Chicago 113, Golden State 111 Thursday's Gamci Indiana at Dallas Houston at Phoenix San Antonio at San Diego Fridays Games New Jerseyat Boston Atlante at Cleveland Milwaukee at Detroit New York at Washington Chicago at Portland Kansas City at Los Angeles Denver at SeatUe Houston at Golden SUte
662 -515 9',*.
439 14'^ 348 20'/i 262 26 262 26
.621 -.552 4'^
.500 8
.492 8',*i .373 16'/4 .169 29'.^
.746 -.591 9tii .561 ll>4 .561 ll'A .373 M .318 27tk
NHL Stondingi
ByTheAaaoclatedPreii Walet Conference Patrick Divlelott W L T GF GA
x-Phll'Dhia 44 19 8 268 204
Pts
DIviiion
x-Chlcago 43 30 9 300 246
x-MlnnesoU 38 19 IS 394 251
St. Louis 23 36 14 256 286
Toronto 23 35 12 259 288
Detroit 20 37 15 S4 290
SmytheDlvliloa y-Edmonton 42 20 11 381 268
Calgary 29 33 10 293 290
Vancouver 26 34 II 261 279
Winnipeg 27 37 8 266 303
LosAngeles 25 34 11 267 303
x-clinched playoff 9 y-cllnchedt
WedneadayiGaroea Washington 5, Hartford 4 Buffalo 5, Calgary 3 NY Rangers fY Islanders 1 Detroit 4, Toronto 3 MlnnesoU 3, Pittsburgh 2 Chicago 4. St. Louis 1 Edmonton4, Vancouver3
TIursday'iGaiiiai Montreal at PhMHphia NY Islanders at New Jeraey Washing at Boston (Quebec at U Angeles
Frtdj^Oamit Toronto at Winnipeg Quebec at Vencouver
Transoctions
By HwAaeoctetod Prase BASEBALL American League
CHICAGO WHITE SOjf-aced Fran , on Uw dlaebted INt and iFaUiofUiaEaitern
NatloaalLeaiua ST. LOUIS CARDINALS-Tredad George Bloitmu, catcher, to the Houston Aatra for Jeff Meadowt, pltcb-
FOOTBALL NaUonal Footbill League ST LOUIS CARDINAlJ-Slgned NeU O'Donoughue, placeklcker, to a leriet of one-year contracts
United Statei FootbaU League ARIZONA WRANGLERS-Si^ Matt Braswell, offensive guard, to a two-year contract, and placed James Looney, linebacker, on the injured reserve Hit.
LOS ANGELES EXPRESS-AcUvated Jeff Partridge, punter. Placed Glen Walker, punter, on waivers.
COLLEGE ARMSTRONG STATE-Nsmed Renny Bryner head basketball coach to rmlace George Blanchl, who announced his resignation.
WYOMING-Named Tom Vau running back coach and Ardell W as ouUIde linebacker coach.
NCAATournty
By The Associated Preas The dates, times, sites and palrlngg for toe National CoUeglate Athletic Asaocia-tlon mens Dlvlskm 1 cbamplwishtp tournament:
PnUminaiy Round Tuiaday,llai^l5
Princeton 53, North Can USalle70,BorionU.S8
North Carolina AAT 41
At Dayton, Ohio Robert Morris 84, Georgia Southern 54 Alcorn State 81, Xavier, Ohio 75 EASfREGldNAL First Round Thinday, March 17 AtOnonibon,N.C.
West Virginia, 23-7, vs. James Msdlaon, 19-10
Virrtnla Comroonwealto, 234, vs. La Salte,J8-l3
Friday, March IS AtHaitiofd,r
LOonn.
SyrKuse, 304, vs. MoreheadSt., 19-10 SW Louisiana, 22-6, vs. Rutgers, 22-7 Second Round Saturday, March 19 AtGraanibon>,N.C.
Virginia Commonwealto-La Salle winner VI. Georgia, 21-9.
West Vlrglnla-Jamas Madison winner VI. North Carotina,?.
ffibfs:
SW Louislana-Rutftn winner va. St. Johni,274.
Syracuw-Morabead St. wtamer vs. Ohio SL,194.
AtSyracuM,N.Y.
Somifbialt
Frid^fM^B
Sunday, March B
MIDBAanrREQIONAL First Round Ibunday, March 17 AtTamna,Fla.
Purdue, 204, vs^RSert Morris, 23-7 Illinois St ., 344, va. Ohio U., 22-8 Friday, March li AtEvanevlUe,lnd.
Tennessee, 19-11, vs. Marquette, 194 Oklahoma, 234, vs. Ala . Birmingham, 19-13
Second Round Saturday, March 19 At Tampa, Fla. Purdue-Robert Morris winner vs.
Arkansas, 25-3 Illinois St.-Ohio U. winner vs. Kentucky, 21-7
Sunday, March 20 At Evansville, Ind. Tennessee-Marquette winner vs. Louisville, 29-3.
Oklahoma-Ala.-Birmlngham winner vs. Indiana. 23-5
AtKnoxvlUe,Tenn.
Semifinals Thursday, March 24 Finals Saturday, March 26
MIDWEST REGIONAL First Round Thursday, March 17 Atriouston
Maryland, 194, vs. Tenn.-Chattanooga, 26-3
Lamar, 22-7, vs. Alabama, 20-11 Friday, Mardi 18 AtLouslvlUe,Ky. Georgetown, 214, vs. Alcorn St, 22-9 Iowa, 194, vs. Utah St.. 204 Second Round Saturday, March 19 At Houston Maryland-Tenn.-Chattanooga winner vs. Houston, 27-2.
Lamar-Alabama winner vs. Vlllanova, 22-7.
Simday, March 20 AtLoulivtlte,Ky. Georgetown-Alcorn St. winner vs. MempmsSt.,22-7. lowa-Utah St. winner vs. Missouri. 26-7 At Kansas City, Mo.
Semlllnius
Frida|Ma^B
Sunday, March 27
WEST REGIONAL First Round Thursday, March 17 AtBooe Idaho Washington St.. 224, vs. Weber St., 23-7 lUlnoisllMO, vs. Utah, 16-13 Friday, March 18 AtCorvaUia,Ore.
Oklahoma St., 244, vs. Princeton. 194 North Carolma k., perdlne,204
Second Round
Thursday, March 24 FinaU Saturday, March 26
FInalFour At Albuquerque, N.M. Semlflnali Saturday, April 2
Midwest vs. Mideasl East vs. West
Long jump: Richardson (R) lS-2; Best (R) l24'/4; Bames (RM) 12-4'.<i; Branch (R) 12-4.
Triple jump: Richardson (R) 30-7; Speight (R) 304; Bames (RM)2S4; Allen (RM) 22-11'^.
120 hurdles: Lupen (R) 21.1; Davis (R) 21.3; Allen (RM) 21.7, White (R) 22.6.
100: Baker (RM) 11.97; S. Williams (R) 12.0; Charles (B) 12.02; WUdwiR) 12.1.
800 relay: Rose (Daniels, Vines, ytUe, WUder) 2:03.8.
1600: Michel (R) 5:59; Ess (RM) 6:31; WUliams (B) 6:48; Branch (R)7:ll.
400 relay: Rose (Brewington, S. WiUiams, Wilder, Dixon) 54.06.
400: Garris (B) 1:06.4; Jones (R) 1:09.5; Wilson (R) 1:10.4; Deyton (R) 1:11.2.
180 hurdles: Bird (R) 27.18; Lee
Women Fail To Place
LONG BEACH, Calif, -East Carolina University failed to score in the first day of competition in the NCAA Division II Womens Swimming and Diving Championships. The competition began yesterday at Long Beach State University.
A total of 54 teams are competing in the event, and the first 12 places in each event score points for their teams.
The best finish for the Lady Pirates was in the 200 freestyle relay, where the team of Nan George, Nancy James, Kaky Wilson and Nancy Rogers finished 13th in a time of 1:40.70.
East Carolina also participated in the 50 butterfly, the 200 breaststroke, the 400-medley relay and the l-meter diving, but failed to place there either.
The meet is extremely fast, Coach Rick Kobe said. In about every event the first through third places are breaking the national records. The meet is three to four times bigger than it was last year and ten times faster.
The meet continues through Saturday.
(R) 28 02; Thompson (R) 30 09; Speight (R) 32,75.
800: Richardson (B) 2:45; Adams (R) 2:48; Branch (R) 2:58; Stanley (R)3:00.
200: Baker (RM) 27.5; Best (R) 29.45; Harper (R) 30.52; Daniels (R) 30.6.
3200: Moore (R) 14:25; Ess (RM) 14:25.7; King (R) 15:28.
1600 relay: Rose (Adams, Wilson, Jones, Deyton) 4:39; Rocky Mount 4:54
Fike.............99
FormvilleC 59
Hunt.............42
Northeostsm 27
WILSON - Fike High School outdistanced Farmville Central, Hunt and Northeastern in a quad track meet that opened the season for the Lady Ja^ars yesterday.
Fike finished the day with 99 points, while Farmville was second with 59. Hunt took third with 42, while Northeastern trailed the field with 27.
Fike won six individual events while Farmville took three. Hunt two and Northeasetem, one. Farmville won two of the three relays, while Fike took the other. One event, the 200 hurdles was scratched because of problems with the running of the event.
Farmville, now 2-1, plays host to Bertie on Monday in its next outing.
Shot put: Jordan (FC) 28-Davis (H) 28-'/4; Pope (F) 27-11 Combs (NE) 25-10; Barcliff (NE) 24-10'*!.
Discus: Wooten (FC) 82-6; Barcliff (NE) 76-9; Pope (F) 75-3; Elliott (H) 69-7; Combs (NE) 65-11
Long jump; Newkirk (H) 154). Austin (F) 14-7; Tyson (FC) 14-5; Smith (FC) 14-'2; Knight (FC) 134 High jump: Kaustin (F) 4-6; Barthorne (F) 4-6, King (H) 4-4, Daniels (FC) 4-4, Baker (PC) 4-2,
100 hurdles: Waida (F) 167; Creech (F) 17.5; Combs (NE) 18 4; Breathwaite (F) 18,6; Dixon (FC) 19.2
100; Bames (H) 13.1; Braswell (F) 13.2; Payton (FC) 13,3; Smith (FC) 13,6; Williams (F) 14.4.
800 relay: Fike 1:51.8; FarmvUle Central 1:59 0; Northeastern 2:02 1600: Tyson (FC) 6:24,9; England (F) 6:33.5; Brown (FC) 6:48 0; King (H) 6:51.0; Walston (H) 6:51.3.
400: Pearson (F) 64.0; Tucker (F) 66.7; Hale (H) 67.3; Tutton (FC) 67,4; Baker (FC) 67.5,
400 relay: Farmville Central (Daniels, Smith, Ellis, Payton) 54 6; Fike 54.7; Hunt no time 200 hurdles: event scratched.
800: Jolly (F) 3:03; King (H) 3:05; Lamb (F) 3:05.9; Parker (FC) 3:10.9, Hayes (F) no time.
200: Anderson (F) 27.4, Johnson (NE) no time^ Braswell (F) no time
3200: England (F) 15:23; Bissit (F) 15:52,6, White (H) 16:27.3.
1600 relay: Farmville Central (Dixon, Tutton, Tyson, Ellis) 4 47; Fike5:15;Hunt5:24 4 Triple jump: Johnson (NE) 34-2'i; Newkirk (H) 34-1; Williams (F) 31-11; Payton (FC) 31-3'-2; ' Atkins (F) 30-10,
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By The Associated Press
The dates, sites, times and pairings for the 45th annual National Invitation Tournament:
First Round Tuesday, March 15
Souto Florida 81, Fordham 69 Vanderbilt 79, East Tennessee State 74 Wednesday, March 16 South Carolina 100. Old Dominion 90 Iona 90, St. Bonaventure 76 New Orleans 99, Louisiana State 94, OT Texas Christian 64, Tulsa 62 DePaul 76. Minnesota 73 Oregon State 77, Idaho 59 Fresno State 71, Texas-EI Paso 64 Thursday, March 17 William & Mary, 2M, at Virginia Tech, 22-10
Wake Forest. 17-11. at Murray State. 21-7
Tulane. 19-11, at Nebraska, 19-9 Alabama State, 22-5 at Mississippi, 189 Nortowestem, 1812, vs Notre Dame, 19-9, at Rosemont, 111.
Friday, March 18 Bowling Green, 21-7, at Michigan State, 1812
Fullerton State, 21-6, at Arizona Slate. 17-12
Second Round Sunday, Marcb 30 aiid Monday, March
Quarterfinals Thunday, March 34 and Friday, Marcb
Saturday, Marcb 19 AIBofie
u wwMw. Idaho Washington St.-Weoer St. winner vs. Virginia. Z7-4 Illinols-Utah winner vs. UCLA, 23-5, 30 minutes after completion of first game. Sunday, Marcb 30 AtCorvalUa,Ore.
Oklahoma St.-Princeton winner vs. Boston College, 24-6.
North Carolina St.-Pepperdine winner vs. Nev.-Las Vegas, 282.
AtDflden,UUh
Semifinals
At New York Semlflnals Monday, March 28 Champkwahlp Wedneaday, March 30
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Social Security 'Rescue' Amendments Piling Up
ByCUFFHAAS Associdted Pross Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - The Senate is giving a $165 billion Social Security rescue plan its last major congressional test as legislators line up with amendments ranging from a payroll tax rollback to a retirement age of 68.
The Senate began preliminary work on the legislation Wednesday and was resuming debate today.
The House approved its version of the bailout plan last week on a 282-148 vote.
But the House, which has strii^r rules than the Senate for considering legislation, was able to insulate the measure
TRUSTING LIBRARIAN - Frances OBrien built and maintains the tiny Blue River Library on donated books and money she has earned. The
21,000-book collection serves people from all around the small OO-family community of Blue River, Ore. (AP Laserphoto)
No Card And Self Service Mark Small Town's All-Night Library
BLUE RIVER, Ore. (AP) - Frances OBriens library is probably the only one in the country that is open any time, day or night. There is no lock on the door and no need for a library card.
At 4 a.m., visitors ' can borrow a copy of Audubon magazine and read until the birds of the lush McKenzie River Valley awaken.
People are shocked when 1 tell them I dont lock it, said the 81-year-old, white-haired library proprietor. '.Maybe ours is a very trusting community.
The library is the offspring of Mrs. OBriens longtime love affair with books and learning. It began in the living room of her home more than half a century ago and now consists of nearly 21,000 donated books in a small building constructed in 1975 behind her house.
It is not tax-supported or publicly administered and relies solely on donated booksand on money Mrs. O'Brien earns as a tax consultant.
Books have floated in from all parts of the country, and offers of collections have come from as far away as Japan.
Last year, some residents of Ohio read about the library and made up their minds their next vacation would be in Oregon.
They arrived with three
people in the car and two large boxes of books, Mrs. OBrien recalled in a recent interview.
With the help of the Blue River Lions Club, the library in this small town of 300 families soon will turn another page in its history. Club members plan to construct an addition to the building to allow room for more books, including 2,000 that are still in boxes.
Mrs. OBrien will put up the money - she wont say how much - for the addition; the Lions will provide the labor.
I thought when 1 built this building, I had built for all times, Mrs. OBrien said as she stood in the cramped library, which measures about 24 feet by 32 feet. For the fast year, its been entirely too tight,
The special charm of the library lies in the rules that harken back to simpler times.
We just dont have a problem with vandalism, Mrs. OBrien said of her open-door policy. 1 had a woman say the other day, 1 was in your library at 2 a.m. We were in Eugene and on the way home, my husband said lets stop.
But Mrs. OBrien worries about the librarys future.
Ive had offers for extensive private collections,
provided Ill show that the library will go on when Im gone, but so far I cant make those assurances, Mrs. OBrien said, I cant find, anybody to devote the time it takes to work on it.
She said she has no desire
to turn the facility over to the Lane County library system.
I wouldnt let them run it, Mrs. OBrien said. I want it open all the time. I want it available day or night. Nobody agrees with me on that.
Distressed By Big Leaf Price Decline
UPPER MARLBORO, Md. (AP) - A bumper crop of tobacco has resulted in low prices at the opening of the southern Maryland tobbacco auction, leaving farmers surprised and worried.
State officials estimated this years crop at 37.5 million pounds, up more than 4 million pounds from last year's total,
The size of the crop seems to be keeping the price down, Claude McKee of the states tobacco research farm said. Theres the uncertainty of consumption. You have to be careful how much money you tie up in a crop that you may not use for three years.
Farmers at the Edelen Brothers Warehouse Tuesday - the first day of the tobacco auction - complained about the plummeting prices.
Theyve gone crazy, said Donald Scott of Croom, The per-pound prices
slapped on the stacks of tobacco - known as burdens ranged between $1.40 and $1.60.
This tobacco would have brought $1.80 or $1.75 last year, Scott said. We wont ever make anv monev.
Edelen reported gross sales Tuesday of 117,308 pounds with an average price of $1.56 a pound, down 21 cents from last years opening day average.
The Planters Warehouse near here reported gross sales of 169,452 pounds with an average price of $1.63, down 14 cents from last year.
Net sales for Maryland tobacco last year surpassed $58 million, a record, with farmers receiving a $1.75-per-pound average.
The Type-32 leaf, known worldwide as Maryland tobacco, is a thin leaf that produces a high number of cigarettes per pound with a distinctive burn and aroma.
from amendments.
Members of the Senate, however, have indicated they will try to attach more than two dozen amendments to the version of the bill drafted last week by the Senate Finance Committee.
The Senate was voting today on amendments by Sen. Steven D. Symms, R-Idaho, to gradually raise the retirement age from 65 to 68, and by Sen. Bill Bradley, D-N. J., to provide disability-retirement benefits in the next century for workers 62 or older whose health prevents them from working but who do not meet the stringent requirements of the regular disability program.
Sen. William L. Armstrong, R-Colo., said he would seek to block the packages increases in the payroll tax.
Sen. Russell Long, D-La., the top Democrat on the Finance Committee, attacked the package for setting a dangerous precedent by relying too much on general revenues to shore up the Social Security system.
Convicted In Son's Death
Nonetheless, Sen. Bob Dole, R-Kan., chairman of the Finance Committee, predicted Wednesday the Senate would pass the bill by a substantial vote, and that Congress will have this on the presidents desk sometime late next week. Generally, the Senate package parallels the House version. It keeps virtually intact recommendations of the Nationai Commission on Social Security Reform to curb benefits increase payroll taxes, tax a portion of the benefits going to more affluent retirees and make Social Security coverage mandatory for new federal employees.
The Senate Finance Committee version of the bill calls for raising the retirement age to 66 by 2015 and phasing in a 5 percent benefit cut for new retirees in the next century.
The House bill would raise the retirement age to 67 by the year 2027, but not cut future benefits.
Dole, who served on the reform commission, acknowledged that the package, which he said requires concessions from all the parties who have a stake in Social Security, cannot stand much tinkering.
It is a fair and reasonable proposal, not a perfect proposal, Dole said. But he added the strength of this package may be the weakness of its parts since legislators know it will fail if any of its major provisions are significantlv modified. ^
Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan, D-N.Y., who also served on the reform commission, agreed it is a fair package.
The balance, nonetheless, is fragile, Moynihan said The House has succeeded In avoiding significant alterations to the package. It is our responsibility in the Senate to do the
same.
EBENSBURG, Pa. (AP) -A fundamentalist convicted with his wife of manslaughter because they relied on faith healing while their 2*'2-year-old son died of cancer says it may be Gods will if he goes to prison.
William Barnhart, 56, and his wife, Linda, 35, were found guilty Wednesday of involuntary manslaughter and endangering a childs welfare by a Cambria County Court jury that deliberated two hours.
This hasnt waivered my faith a bit, Barnhart said after the verdict ended the five-day trial.
We did the best we could. It was Gods will it turned ^out this way. Of prison, he said, If God sends me there. Im going to go.
Maybe it will put parents on notice theyre responsible for their children regardless of their religious beliefs when it comes to the life and death of their children, said John Barron, the county coroner who called an inquest into the childs death.
Defense lawyers immediately asked Judge H. Clifton McWilliams for a new trial.
McWilliams set no sentencing date in the case. The involuntary manslaughter charge carries a maximum prison term of five years and a $10,000 fine. The maximum penalty on the endangering charge is two years in prison and $5,000 in fines.
Two Charged In N.C. Murder
WINSTON-SALEM, N.C, (AP) - Two Winston-Salem men were charged with murder Wednesday in the death of a 24-year-old Forsyth County hair stylist who had been reported missing since Feb. 25.
Winston-Salem Police Captain E.L. Moreau said the body of William David Shelton was found Tuesday night in the basement of a house owned by one of the suspects in the case.
Calvin Brown, 18, and Willy Lilly Jr., 19, were charged with first-degree murder and larceny of an automobile, police said. They were denied bond at their first appearance hearing Wednesday.
BIG SETTLEMENT - Gregory Blevins Jr., 9, of Pontiac Mich., is shown by the transformer where he was burned oil July 2, 1981. Gregory, then seven, was playing with his younger brother Robert when he opened an ulocked electrical ransformer behind a shopping center. He received a shock that set his clothes on fire and caused third degree bums over 41 percent of his body. An Oakland County Mich. Circuit court C(^ judge has signed a consent judgment calling for an initi^ payment of $1,052,000 and annual payments for the rest of the boys life. If he lives to retirement age, 65 the
setement is worth $22 mUlion.fAP Laserphoto)
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The couple had argued that their religious beliefs prevented them from seeking medical help for their son, Justin, who died from a stomach tumor on Sept. 10, 1981.
But the prosecutor contended the couple had been negligent in not seeking medical care for their son. The boy died of a cancer called Wilms tumor, which has a 90 percent recovery rate if treated early, according to testimony.
Justin had a right to be taken care of by his parents to give him the kind of treatment he needed to reach the age of reason to decide his religious beliefs, said Assistant District Attorney Patrick Kiniry.
The Barnharts are members of the Faith Tabernacle, a small Christian sect that disavows medical treatment in favor of faith, prayers and. annointment.
An autopsy revealed a 5.4-pound tumor in the boys* stomach. Pathologist Sidney Goldblatt testified the tumor absorbed most of the nourishment the boy ate, and eventually starved him.
Mrs. Barnhart bowed her head into her hands when the verdict was announced, and was escorted out a back door while her husband addressed reporters.
Barnhart, a labor foreman at Gallatzin State Park near his home, testified that he, his family and congregation prayed and fasted after realizing Justin was ill.
I feel its not all my fault that God took Justin from Jhis earth, Barnhart testified. He gives your first breath and He gives you your last.
The couple was supported throughout the trial by their pastor, friends and family members, including Barnharts son William, 32, from a previous marriage. The Barnharts also have two daughters - Joy, 6, and Jill,
8 weeks. i
The Senate took up the measure Wednesday after laying aside a jobs bill stalemated over an amendment to repeal tax withholding on interest and dividends.
In early action Wednesday, the Senate approved by voice vote an amendment by Sen. Alan Cranston, D-Calif to require the secretary of health and human services to draw up a proposal by years end for sharing Social Security work credits between husbands and wives. A non-working wife would get the same credit on her Social Security record as her husband.
The senators also adopted an amendment by Sen. Gordon J. Humphrey, R-N.H., to include a notice with Social Security checks next year warning people that it is a felony to cash checks made out to someone who has died.
Meanwhde, Sen. John Heinz, R-Pa., introduced legislation to end mandatory retirement at any age in the United States Workers now can stay on the job until 70.
Drug Can Deter Artery Spasms
BOSTON (AP) - A new drug can prevent dangerous artery spasms in patients recovering from broken blood vessels in their brains, according to a study published today.
Doctors gave the medicine to people who suffered bleeding inside their skulls because of broken bulges, called aneurysms, in their blood vessels.
Even after doctors surgically repair the leaks, the patients risk further damage because spasms often occur in the large arteries that feed the brain. These spasms cut off the blood flow and can
cause a variety of problems, including permanent paralysis, loss of speech and memory-even death.
The medicine, called nimodipine, prevents these spasms in the first crucial weeks after the hemorrhage. The drug is a calcium blocker, one of a new group of drugs used to prevent heart problems, including angina, that occur when arteries contract.
The treatment was developed by Dr. George S. Allen of Johns Hopkins Hospital and described in the New England Journal of Medicine today.
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Crossword By Eugene Sheffer
FORECAST FOR FRIDAY, MAR. 18.1963
The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Thursday, March 17,1983-17
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CRYPTOQUIP 3-17
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Yesterday's Cryptoquip - DISAGREEMENT AMONG RABBITS HELPED TO SPIJT HARES.
Today's Cryptoquip clue: Z equals G.
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.
1, 1983 Ktnq Fea'ures Syndicate Inc
GOREN BRIDGE
BY CHARLES GOREN AND OMAR SHARIF
1963 Tribune Company Syndicate, Inc
PLAYING AGAINST THE ODDS?
East-West vulnerable. South deals.
NORTH
A9 ':?532 0 632
KQ542
WEST
EAST
eQJ63
K10842
^ Void
^Q109
0J9754
OQIO
A1096
J87
SOUTH
75
AKJ8764
0 AK8
3
The bidding:
South West North East
1 Pass 2 <^2 Pass
4 ^ Pass Pass Pass
Opening lead: Queen of .
Dont just consider the odds in one particular suit. We have stressed repeatedly that you must take the whole hand into consideration.
The vulnerability prevented East-West from entering the auction. At any other vulnerability they would have a good sacrifice at four spades if they could get there. Also observe North's raise to two hearts despite the fact that he had only three low trumps. He had a respectable responding hand and wanted to make the most encouraging response he could.
West got his side off to the most effective lead of a spade, attacking dummys only entry. Declarer made the technically correct play of allowing the defenders to win the first trick, but was forced to win the continua tion. He saw no problem, but when he led a trump to the king and West showed out, the contract was beyond redemption. Declarer had a loser in each suit and nowhere to put them.
While declarers play in the trump suit was correct considering that suit in isolation, it was a losing line with regard to the hand as a whole. The correct technique is to take a trump finesse at trick two, despite holding ten
GENERAL TENDENCIES: Make long-range plans to gain your fondest aims in the future. Accept conflicting views you may have with opponents in a philosophical manner. Be more thoughtful of others.
ARIES iMar. 21 to Apr. 19) Discuss with associates any new ideas you have and they can be helpful to you. Don't force any issues with family members.
TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) Handling regular duties in a precise manner can lead to a greater income. Come to a fine agreement with co-workers.
GEMINI (May 21 to June 21) Get in touch with those whom you want to enjoy more pleasure with in the days ahead. Make this a worthwhile day.
MOON CHILDREN (June 22 to July 21) Make plans to have a greater income in the future. Allow time to engage in recreational activities you enjoy.
LEO (July 22 to Aug. 21) Good day to contact relatives and allies and gain cooperation for a worthwhile plan you have in mind. Discuss it wisely.
VIRGO (Aug. 22 to Sept. 22) Fine day for making new investments, after careful study. Concentrate on how you can be more productive in the future.
LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) Use diplomacy instead of forcefulness with loved one and have increased harmony. Evening is fine for being with good friends.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) Get in touch with experts in your own field of endeavor and improve your plans for the future with their aid.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) Know what your true aims are and then you can gain them by making wise moves and decisions. Use common sense.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 20) Analyze your tnie position and make plans to have a greater income in the days ahead. Relax at home tonight.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 21 to Feb. 19) A clever person can give you some pointers on a new project you have in mind. Express happiness with loved one.
PISCES (Feb. 20 to Mar. 20) Cooperation is the keynote today, whether in personal or business dealings. Show more devotion to loved one.
IF YOUR CHILD IS BORN TODAY ... he or she wiU be very artistic and should be trained along such lines for best results in lifetime. Teach how to handle money matters early in life. Spiritual training is important. A good family life in this chart.
"The Stars impel, they do not compel. What you make of your life is largely up to you!
1983, McNaught Syndicate. Inc.
Odd Coalition For Sparrows
cards in the suit!
As the cards lie, the finesse wins and the contract is home. But what if East follows with a low heart and West captures the jack with-the queen?
The contract is still secure. Suppose West shifts to a diamond-the best defense. Declarer wins, draws the outstanding trump and leads a club. West grabs the ace and perseveres with diamonds. Declarer wins, then crosses to dummy by overtaking the four of trumps with the five. He discards his diamond loser on a high club and all is well.
Burn Center Is Again Opened
CHAPEL HILL, N.C. (AP)
- The North Carolina Jaycee Burn Center reopened for new admissions Wednesday, 10 days after an infection problem forced officials to close it.
The decision to reopen the unit came after hospital staff members reviewed the progress of patients in the bum center and examined the results of tests of the area, officials said.
The cause of the infection
- enterobacter cloacae -was not found to any significant degree in the burn center, but was largely confined to a few patients, said Dr. Felix Sarubbi, director of the infection control program at North Carolina Memorial ^ Hospital.
Since the bum center was closed and Infection control procedures began, two previously infected patients were cured of their infections and no new carriers of the organism were found, he said.
GAINESVILLE, Fla. (AP) - An unlikely coalition of the Audubon Society, Walt Disney Productions and singer Jimmy Buffett is trying to save an endangered sparrow species by mating the last survivors - five males -with a compatible cousin.
Weve only got five of the birds, said Aubudon Society member Charles L. Cook, also curator of Walt Disney Worlds Discovery Island Zoological Park near Orlando. Im not sure how long these little guys can stay with us.
The 6-inch, dull-colored dusky sparrow, with yellow stripes on its wings and white flecks on its breast, once thrived in the marshy grasslands of the east-central Florida coast. But highways, coastal drainage and a postwar population explosion from Jaqteonville south to the Kennedy Space Center drastically altered its habitat.
Scientists say the last dusky sparrow probably hatched in 1973 or 1974. The last female was spotted in 1975. Eight years of forays through Floridas Atlantic coast marshes have failed to turn up a single female.
Now, the last surviving members of the species perch in an aviary at Santa Fe Community College Zoo. The sparrows are all between 7 and 9 years old. Nobody knows how long a dusky seaside sparrow lives, or how long the males remain fertile.
The Audubon Society and Walt Disney joined forces last week to mate the dusky with the Gulf Coast seaside sparrow, which dwells In southwest Florida and the Everglades.
The technique, called back-crossing, will begin in the next 30 days, said Audubon Society biologist Herb Kale. The result will be a hybrid bird that in five years will be 96.9 percent dusky sparrow, and the rest Gulf Coast sparrow.
Under the technique, a dusky male will be mated with a female Gulf Coast sparrow, producing a 50 percent dusky. Female offspring will then be mated with another dusky that is not its father, and the process will be repeated with new hatchlings for five years.
The experiment will be the first back-crossing of a songbird in the United States, and assumes all five duskies will live five more years. Previous experiments have mated the endangered eastern peregrine falcons with Arctic peregrines.
Disney will pay about $55,800 of the experiments $64,300 first-year cost, and plans to exhibit some of the duskies offspring at the park in December.
To raise its $9,500 share of the projects initial expense, the Audubon Society has enlisted entertainer Buffett for a March 20 benefit to be held in Miami.
Audubon officials hope eventually to be able to release 100 or so of the almost-duskies into reflooded swamps around the Kennedy Space Center, where their ancestors made their last home in the wild.
The experiment will' have the blessing but not the participatioHOf the U.S. Fi^ and Wildlife Service,'which cannot legaily work with hybrids.
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Lacking A Major Market, Pitt's Sweet Potato Production Small
ByMARYSCHULKEN Reflector Staff Writer Only a handful of farmers in Pitt County grow sweet potatoes but, for that few, 1982 was a lean year, just as it was for yam producers across North Carolina.
Arthur Council planted about four acres of the crop last year but will not plant them in 1983, he said, because 1982s crop was a poor one and because he
Plead Guilty In Beating Death
WILSON, N.C. (AP) -Two Wilson teenagers pleaded guilty Wednesday to second-degree murder and attempted armed robbery in the beating death of a 13-year-old Wilson boy.
Edward Earl Dew, 17, and Robert Glen Hines, 17, pleaded guilty in Wilson County Superior Court to second-degree murder in the death of Donald Eugene Klein.
doesnt have the necessary machinery.
We had a bad year last year, said Council. I got $6 a bushel for my sweet potatoes but I didnt make a profit because 1 didnt make many per acre. It was so dry they (sweet potatoes) just werent any good.
Council sold his crop locally. I sold them to different people around. I didnt take them to no markets or anything, I just sold them to people who wanted them, he said.
Throughout the state, yam producers had a disastrous year in 1982 because of low market demand and reduced prices. In contrast, 1981 was a good year for the crop.
According to Leroy James, chairman of Pitt Countys Agricultural Extension Service, 1982 was an
DEFERSREFERENDUM MADRID, Spain (AP) -Premier Felipe Gonzalez has decided to postpone a promised referendum on whether Spain should withdraw from NATO for at least a year.
average year for sweet potato growers.
In 1983, he said, prices will be a little better but not as good as 1981s record $8 per bushel average high.
In 1982, he said, 50 acres of sweet potatoes were farmed in the county and the average yield was 200 bushels per acre. Farmers received an average of $3.05 per bushel - a gross of $610 per acre.
In 1981, only 30 acres of yams were grown and again the average yield was 200 bushels, but farmers got an average of $8 per bushel for their crop - a gross of $1,600 per acre.
It costs around $1,202 per
acre to produce yams, James added. With prices of $3.50-$3.60 projected for 1983, the production cost-profit ratio is holding producers back, he said.
"1 expect about 50 acres to be grown in the county again next year, maybe 75, but no more,said James. Its a real small crop here because we do not have local markets.
Producers sell their crop at grocery stores and local farmers markets but very few are shipped out of the county as they are in other areas, James added.
If we had the market wed be way up in production, he said.
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Its Tough Going For Immigrants From Laos' Hills
By LLOYD G. CARTER FRESNO, Calif, (UPl) -Soft-spoken Vang Houa Thao sometimes dreams atiout his native hills in Laos and the days before the war and the killing and the communist revenge.
i dream about Laos sometimes, he admits, i feel very sad about it. 1 cannot go back to my country."
"If 1 could flv back with a
gun in my hand 1 would kill them, destroy them, he says in a sudden burst of controlled anger.
Thao, 30, is a Hmong, one of thousands dispossessed hill country people from Laos who were brought to the United States after the Southeast Asian country fell to the communists in the mid-1970s.
An estimated 30,000 Hmong were recruited by the
Central Intelligence Agency to fight the communists, and when the communists gained victo/y, vengeance was swift. Thousands of Hmong fled to Thai refugee camps and from there were relocated in the United States.
There now are 6,000 to 8,000 Hmong living in Fresno County, one of the largest Hmong populations in the nation. Most of them are on
SPRING COMES TO A FIRE HYDRANT - A circle of small blue flowers bloom at the foot of a short fire hydrant in Robersonville,
adding a new touch of color to the red and yellow of the hydrant. (Reflector Photo by Jerry Raynor)
LesothoOverhauling Its Transportation: Horses
By ANDREW TORCHIA Associated Press Writer GOD HELP ME PASS, Lesotho (AP) - In remote mountain meadows, Lesotho is trying to overhaul the national mode of transportationthe horse Aid workers from Ireland have brought in foreign bloodlines to improve the stock of l(X).OOt) horses that is the main means of movement in Lesotho. The country has only 3,500 cars and 1,5 miles of railroad.
Local breeding and nutrition are so bad that, without help, they'd have nothing left to ride in 10 to 15 years, said project manager Jim Whelan.
Lesotho, with U3 million people and territory the size of Maryland, is surrounded by South Africa, which has 2.5 million cars and 14,300 miles of railroad.
Lesotho worries about the drought that killed an estimated 10 percent of its horses within a year,
"This is one of the last few countries where the horse is important, Whelan said in an interview "There are only one or two roads that cars can use.
Lesothos alternative to the superhi^way is the mountain trail, and it has plenty. It is the only country in which no point is lower than 3,300 feet above sea level, guidebooks say.
The Lesotho horse is hardy and surefooted, although, strictly speaking, its a pony. Most stand less than 14 hands, 2 inches (58 inches), at the withers, or shoulders - the height below which breeders classify equines as ponies.
Over the years, 'Whelan said, the Basotho pony -taking its name from the tribal name of the Lesotho people - has been
diminishing in quality and numbers.
The decline started 80 years ago, when both sides in the Boer War raided tribal herds. As grass ^ gradually vanished in overgrazed and eroded valleys, Basotho peasants turned to cornstalks to feed horses during winters a diet Whelan called grossly inadequate.
When the fihst of three Irish workers arrived in 1978, Lesotho was depending significantly on purchases from South Africa to replenish its horse stock.
The Irish imported two of their own Connemara stallions and one Arab stallion, a great-grandson of the famed Nazeer, given by President Anwar Sadat of Egypt a month before his assassination. The imports joined one Basotho stallion and 100 local mares on a stud farm at Thaba Tseka, deep in the central mountains.
The first ponies from the stud farm are being broken this year. Anticipating a surge in local horse trading, the Irish established a national marketing center 30 miles from Maseru, the capital, here at God Help Me Pass, where the paved road ends and alfalfa (lucerne) grass grows as a potential answer to dietary needs.
A horse is a major investment. A stallion costs about 500 maloti ($450), six times a laborers monthly minimum pay, and a riding horse costs 300 maloti ($270).
The project has cost little more than $1 million so far, said Whelan, 31, a farmers son from Tullow who has worked horses in California and Arabia. But we are talking about a 20- to 40year program, if we do it all.
People have to be educated away from counting their wealth in livestock so
they will reduce herds and allow better grazing, he said.
Another problem is the Basotho custom of sending horses to run free in the mountains during summer when high pastures are green. Wild stallions mate with mares and ruin efforts to keep bloodlines pure.
"If we dont castrate those wild stallions, we will,fail, Whelan said. ,
Basotho pony bloodlines are so poor, he said, that only about 500 mares - about one in 80 - are worthy of breeding.
Down the line, Whelan foresees a register and stud book for Basotho ponies, a slaughter market for horsemeat, which the Basotho eat, and perhaps a Lesotho sweepstakes like the one in Ireland.
But we have a lot of other things to do first, he said,' "We dont want to put the cart before the horse.
Bank 'Disaster' Service Devised
CHICAGO (AP) - A remote check-processing backup service has been designed for banks fearing a computer system breakdown or disaster, reports a management information systems journal.
According to MIS Week, the service is believed to be the first in the nation. It allows banks to fulfill their federal check processing ob-ligations through a sophisticated dial-up" communications capability that re-establishes operations while minimizing disruption from a computer breakdown.
public assistance.
Critics say the federal ^v-ernment allowed them into the country, then ignored them. Few can get jobs because of the depression, and their future is black.
Vang Houa Thao is luckier than most. He speaks some English and works at the Fresno Community Council, where he helps the refugees with legal documents, takes them to the doctor, and is a fix-it man who knows how to maneuver among the Americans.
His father was a career soldier and Vang went to work for the CIA at 17. He was in two big battles and saw many of his friends killed. Two of his five brothers and an estimated 18 uncles, cousins and nephews died in the fighting.
In 1975 he fled to a refugee camp in Thailand, where he spent five miserable years.
Its a terrible life in the refugee camp, he remembers. He married in the camp, immigrated to Hawaii in 1980 with his wife and mother, and finally wound up in the San Joaquin Valley.
His father and two brothers are in France. His mother is sick and the French authorities wont let
her in to join her husband; American authorities wont let his father come here.
Vang worries about the old people, stricken by severe culture shock, unable to learn a difficult new language.
Back in Laos, they were the leaders of the family and right now the kids are the leaders of the family, he says. They (the children) pick up the language, they know where to go and they know what to do. And the old people become like babies, they dont know anything, they cannot learn the language and so they become very depressed. It becomes a mental health problem.
But there is no mental health program in Fresno County for the Hmong and so he is the one to try and cheer them up, to answer the late night calls from distraught or suicidal people, to get them through another dark night.
Vang has a sister in Laos whom he has not seen in nearly a decade but he is fearful of writing her because the communists might harm her.
Sometimes 1 feel very bad abodt the communists treating my people in that
way, he says. The communists they will not kill you but they will let you die day by day, slowly.
In southwest Fresno, Hmong families bunch together in rundown apartment complexes, seeking safety in numbers.
The women peer from behind curtains while the children, friendly and laughing, come out into the courtyard. Inside one apartment, the walls hold a curious mixture of family pictures, pictures of Hmong generals, photos of American warplanes, nature pictures from Laos and a poster of Cher and Gregg Allman.
A Hmong man asks in halting English if there is anywhere he can obtain a job. Every day, he says, he goes out seeking work but noone will hire him.
His wife, lacking coffee cups, serves sweetened, hot tea in tall, thick Mickey Mouse glasses, then retreats from the room, three small children clustered behind her skirts.
Vang is guardedly diplomatic when asked about hostility toward his people.
There are good and bad people all over the world, he shrugs, Ninety-nine
percent of Americans are good people.
But he complains that Hmong living in poorer areas of Fresno are plagued by burglars and robbers.
People always come to their apartments and break in, take their TVs, break into their cars and steal from their cars. I hear that almost every day, he says.
I would say back in our country, before 1970, it was safer there than here. If you carried $10,000 with you, you could go anywhere, sleep by the road, whatever, nobody would bother you.
But since 1970, everything has changed.
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Prepare Implant Of Blood Vessels
TheDaUy Reflector, GreenvUk, N,C.-Thur*day, March 17,1983-19
DISPLAYS VESSELS - Dr. Donald Lyman, director of the University of Utah Center for Polymar Implants displays various sizes of
By DONNA ANDERSON Associated Press Writer
SALT LAKE CITY (AP) - A University of Utah medical team, laboring quietly in the shadow of the schools artificial heart program, is preparing to implant the first tiny plastic blood vessels in a human patient.
The vessels - polyurethane tubes as large around as a drinking straw or as small as the lead in a pencil - potentially could benefit ' 300,000 people a year, says Dr. Donald Lyman, director of the universitys Center for Polymer Implants.
In contrast, doctors estimate 50,000 people a year eventually could be helped by the Utah artificial heart, which was developed in a separate university department.
Dacron implants to replace large-diameter blood vessels of 8 to 30 millimeters have been used for years, often in heart patients. But never before have surgeons tried to replace the small-diameter vessels that make up about 75 percent of the human circulatory system.
* Within the next four to six weeks, Lyman says, his medical team will attempt its first vessel implant in a human patient. The surgery follows nearly a dozen years of research and frustrating funding problems.
The artificial vessels, Lyman said in an interview, are simply little tubes that essentially save lives and prevent amputations. They dont do anything dramatic like pumping.
After seeing friends who have lost limbs or have died because they have not had vessels in their own bodies -1 would have friends alive today if this graft had been available, Lyman said.
The vessels, which could be used in any part of the body, should aid victims of heart ailments or arterial diseases, accident victims whose blood vessels are damaged and those whose vessels have become hardened or weakened with age, he said.
The current method for replacing damaged veins or bypassing obstructed vessels and coronary arteries is to transplant a vein from a patients leg.
However, Lyman said transplants dont always work well because some patients lack suitable veins. The body has miles of blood vessels, but only a few that can be moved elsewhere, he said.
'The plastic vessels were approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for human implantation in late November. But Lyman and other members of his team had to abruptly halt their research to write lengthy applications for grant renewals.
The program has courted poverty for years.
Were essentially donating all of our time,
artificial blood vessels which researchers have spent 12 years developing. (APLaserphoto)
Lyman said of the principal researchers, and at times other employees have been laid off for lack of funds.
The surgical team that will perform the implant was reassembled last week after the grant applications were sent off. The surgeons have resumed vessel implants in animals in preparation for the human operation.
Dr. Dominic Albo Jr.,* the only surgeon authorized by the FDA to implant the vessels, heads the team.
We want to check everything back out, Lyman said. It will be four to six weeks before Im comfortable about doing it.
The first recipient likely will be someone with failing vessels in a limb, where the alternative treatment eventually would be something serious, but non-life threatening, tike amputation.
Lyman doesnt expect problems finding a recipient. We have so many letters in our files,he said.
FDA approval came after years of research by the principal investigators, who built the vessels from the molecular level up.
Lyman originally worked on the artificial heart with Dr. Willem Kolff, director of the universitys Division of Artificial Organs. He left Kolffs group in 1971 because he wanted to pursue research with vessels.
The major obstacle to development of an effective artificial blood vessel was the tendency of proteins in the blood to adhere to polyurethane surfaces. Lyman and his group developed their own plastic atom by atom. We juggled the molecules around, he said, so that only albumin - a protein in the blood - would bind to the vessel walls. And since platelets in the blood wont adhere to albumin, the clotting problem was solved.
The next step was developing a vessel elastic enough not to damage parts of the body it touched, and that would pulsate - as do natural veins and arteries - in response to changing volumes Of blood flow.
The new vessels have been implanted in dogs which survived with them up to years. However, the vessels had to be removed from the dogs to provide more data for the recent grant applications.
With animals, the plastic vessels have been termed successful. But, Lyman said, How do you know until you go to humans?
If human implants prove feasible, Lyman said, it probably would be two to three years before they would become a routine clinical procedure.
Theyre really not expensive, he said. You would expect to see hundreds of dollars for the grafts rather than thousands of dollars.
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Protection Asked By Smith-Douglass
NORFOLK (AP) -Norfolk-based Smith-Douglass Inc. has applied for protection from creditors in U.S. Bankruptcy Court in the Eastern District of North 1 Carolina.
'j The fertilizer manufactur-^ er and distributor filed its : petition in Wilson, N.C.,
/because the majority of ,Smith-Douglasss operations are located in North Carolina
I and a substantial p(tion of its 1982 sales were generated ; ifrom that area, a eompaoy ^ 'spokesman said Wednesday.
* In a prepared statement, i^ tthe i^esman added that f adverse economic condl-i tttpiB and pressure from a |i|8iQal] groiq) of creditors I prompted the financial 'reorganization petition last J iFrlday.
i ' Roy W. Bnin, president of
* L Smith-Douglass, could not be ^ * HeachedKr eommenti
The spokesman, who did not disclose the companys assets and liabilities, said Smith-Douglass will continue operations at its Danville, Va., plant and its 50 retail distribution centers in the Carolinas and Virginia.
The existing company is a
remnant of the Smith-Douglass division of Borden Inc., the diversified food processing and chemical concern. Three years ago, Borden began selling off parts of Smith-Douglass operations in a major corporate reorganization.
Borden sold 50 Smith-Douglass retailing outlets and five factories in North Carolina, Virginia, and Illinois in September 1981 to Bernard Garrett, a Carson, Calif., investor.
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1983 Lowe's Companies, Inc.
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2728 Memorial Or. Greenville 756-6560
Open Mon.-Fri. 7:30 Til 6:00 Sat. 8 Til 5
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)
I
a-The DaiJy Reflector, GreenvUle, N.C.-Thursday, March 17,1963
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COMING IN MAY "REVENGE OF THE JEDI
TARHEEL M NIGHTCLUB
Located On The Old Tar Road 4 Miles South of Sunshine Garden Center
Enjoy Dancing Nightly. Live Music Friday And Saturday Nights By Silver Wings.
Cold Beverages Served
Make Plans Now To Spend An Evening At Tarheel II. Youll Be Glad You Did. Call: 746-2696 Daytime, Evenings, 746-2269.
Open S Days A Week At 6:00 P.M.
Closed Monday And Tuesday
264 Fish Fry
(Between Saratoga & Farmville) ^
Closed On Mondays jOpen: Tues.-Thurs.. 4-9 P.M.
Fri.& Sat., 11:30 A.M.-9:30 P.M. Sunday, 11 A.M.-9 P.M.
POPCORN SHRIMPS ^5
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Fans Who Remember, Mourn Godfrey
By EILEEN PUTMAN Associated Press Writer NEW YORK (AP) - Fans mourned Arthur Godfrey, the ukelele strummer whose gift of gab made him a radio and television favorite for five decades, and even the singer he once fired on live TV recalled Godfrey as the greatest salesman in the world:
Godfrey, who liked to call himself the Old Redhead and who was once dubbed the
ARTHUR GODFREY
TV Log
For complete TV programmirtg in-lormatlon, consult your weekly TV SHOWTIME from Sunday's Dally Reflector.
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7:00 Jokers Wild 7 :30 Tic Tac 8:00 Magnum P.I.
^ 9:00 Awards 11:00 News 11:30 Basketball FRIDAY 5:00 JimBakker 6:00 Carolina 8:00 Morning 8:75 News 9:25 News 10:00 Pyramid 10:30 Childs Play 11:00 Price Is 11:57 Newsbreak
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WITN-TV-Ch.7
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7:00 Jeffersons 7:30 Family Feud 8:00 Fame 9:00 GimmeA 9:30 Cheers 10:00 Hill Street 11:00 News II 30 Tonight Show 12:30 Letterman 1:30 Overnight 2:30 News FRIDAY
5:00 Jimmy S.
6:00 EarlyToday 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 Facts Of Life 10:30 Saleol the
11 00 Wheel ol 11:30 Hit Man 12:00 News 12.30 Search For
1:00 DaysofOur 2:00 Another Wor 3 00 Fantasy 4:00 Dark Shadows 4:30 Wild West 5-30 Lie Detector 6 00 News 6:30 News 7:00 Jefferson 7:30 Family Feud 8:00 Powers Of 9:00 Knight R. 10:00 Remington S. 11:00 News 11:30 Tonight 12:30 Comedy 2:00 Overnight 3:00 News
WCTI-TV-Ch.12
THURSDAY 7:00 3's Company 7:30 Alice 8:00 Condo 8:30 Amanda's 9:00 Too Close 9 :30 It Takes Two 10:00 20/20 lt;00 Actions News 11:30 Nightline 12:00 Harry 0 1:00 Mission 2:00 Early Edition FRIDAY 5:00 Bewitched 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 Action News
8 :25 Action News
9 00 Phil Donahue
10:00 Good Times 10:30 Laverne 11:00 Love Boat 12:00 Family F 12 30 Ryan's Hope 1:00 All My 2:00 One Lile 3:00 G Hospital 4:00 Carnival 4:30 BJ/LOBO 5:30 People's 6:00 Action News 6:30 ABC News 7 00 3's Company 7 30 Alice 8:00 Benson 8:30 At Ease 9:00 Renegades 10:00 Gold Monkey II 00 Action News 11 30 Nightline 12:00 HarryO 1:30 An Evening 2:30 Early Edition
WUNK-TV-Ch.25
j <752.1275
"Otir Sptclahy ! Qualltv
1
THURSDAY 7:00 Report 7:30 Stateline 8:00 Performances 9:40 C, Darrow 11:15 Hitchhikers 11:45 Sign Off FRIDAY 7:45 AM Weather 8:00 Pre Gen
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12 20 TipTopTen 12 :30 Word Shop 12:45 Electric Co. 1:15 High Feather 1:45 Give and Take 2:00 Tuned In 2:15 Animal 2:30 Advocates 3:00 Over Easy 3 30 Adult Basic 4:00 Sesame St. 5:00 Mr. Rogers
5 30 3 2 1 Contact
6 00 Dr Who 6 30 Dr Who 7:00 Report 7:30 Stateline 8:00 Washington 8:30 Wall SI.
9:05 Broadway 11:15 Hitch Hikers 11:45 Twilight Zone 12:15 Sign Oft
..... nil.......................
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Huck Finn of radio for his folksy wit, died Wednesday at age 79 after being hospitalized 13 days for emphysema and pneumonia at Mount Sinai Hospital.
The entertainer will be cremated without any public service, said a spokesman for the William Morris agency, which represented Godfrey.
I hope - indeed I shall pray - that he will rest in peace, said Julius LaRosa, the singer discovered by Godfrey and then fired by him on the air in 1953, shocking the nation,
LaRosa had just finished singing Manhattan on the TV show Arthur Godfrey and Friends, when Godfrey turned to the audience and announced, This is Julies swan song. He accused LaRosa of a lack of humility.
The singer told reporters Wednesday night that he and Godfrey never reconciled, but he credited Godfrey for giving his career a boost and recalled Godfrey as the greatest salesman in world.
From his signature greeting of "Howaya, Howaya, to his public battle against lung cancer, Godfrey did everything with his own brash style. He liked to say that you get as much out of life as you put into it.
You had nothing to do with your birth, and you cant control the circumstances of your death. But you can do something about living, he told one interviewer.
He made the personality more important than the talent, recalled another easygoing TV celebrity, Art Linkletter.
At his peak in the 1950s, Godfrey had a Mon-day-through-Friday daytime show, Talent Scouts on Monday night and an hour of "Godfrey and His Friends on Wednesday nights. His weekly prime-time audience measured 82 million viewers.
In 1959, it was reported that Godfreys shows brought in $159 million in advertising for CBS.
Big Night Out At A Cabaret
PARIS (AP) - Princess Anne of Britain and her husband, Capt. Mark Philips, shared a night on the town with Ginger Rogers, visiting the famed Moulin Rouge cabaret for dinner and the opening of a new show called Girls, Girls, Girls.
The gala Wednesday night at the 94-year-old Moulin Rouge was to benefit the International Childrens Charities.
Miss Rogers, an American musical comedy star who is a great favorite in France, attended the show with the royal couple.
The princess and her husband were greeted by a fanfare of trumpets and an honor guard from the French Garde Republicaine and a contingent of the Welsh Guards sent over for the occasion.
Before entering the cabaret, the couple stopped and chatted briefly with one of the Welsh guards. French gossip columnists say Princess Anne is the first member of the royal family to visit the Moulin Rouge since her great-grandfather, Edward VII.
His Talent Scouts, with an applause meter that measured audience response to unknown performers, is credited with giving newcomers Pat Boone, Barbara McNair, Vic Damone, Johnny Nash, the McGuire Sisters and Shari Lewis their start.
Godfrey never claimed to be much of a singer himself, but he loved to perform.
He threw himself into his work and into other pursuits as well. He flew his planes around the world, and twice
got into trouble for buzzing an airport.
Godfreys career got its start about the time the stock market was plunging the nation into depression in 1929.
Then a Coast Guardsman, Godfrey and some friends were in a Baltimore pub listening to amateurs perform on a local radio station. His friends, who had heard Godfreys banjo plucking, urged him to audition.
He got a 15-minute spot on the station and was billed as Red Godfrey, the Warbling
Banjoist. The spot was sponsored by a pet shop that sold bird seed. It paid $5.
mo
Frday, March 18th
Membership Party With
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Memberships Purchased After March 20th Will Cost More & Require A 30 Day Waiting Period.
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High Road Tb China
Fun and adventure at every turn.
NEVER RECONCILED - Singer Julius La Rosa answers questions Wednesday evening after announcement of the death of Mhur Godfrey, the man vilio fired him during a broadcast'for his lack of humility. Speaking at a New York City nightclub where he is appearing, La Rosa said the two had met a few years ago and that La Rosa offered his hand to Godfrey. Unfortunately, he chose to reject it, La Rosa said. (APLaserphoto) '
Dreyfuss Plans To Wed Sunday
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Actor Richard Dreyfuss, who won a best actor Oscar for his 1977 performance in The Goodbye Girl, will marry television producer Jeremie Rain on Sunday,
The Jewish ceremony will be held at the home of his agent, Meyer Mishkin, the agent confirmed Wednesday.
It is the first marriage for Dreyfuss, 34, and the second for Miss Rain, who has worked in soap operas in New York City and is now a writer-producer for CBS.
Dreyfuss, who also starred in Jaws and Close Encounters of the Third Kind, recently entered a two-year drug diversion education program.
264 PLAYHOUSE
INDOOR THEATRE
6 Miles West Of Greenville On U.S. 264 (Farmville Hwy)
STARTS
TODAY
AT YOUR ADULT ENTERTAINMENT CENTER
KEMAl. I.NTI KPKISI S. INC.
_ pri'v'iil
ipvniHn
FOR ADULTS ONLY
756-0848 Doors Open Showtime 6:00 5:45
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321 East Tenth St.*Greenville N.C.
OPEN SUN.-WED. 10:30 A.M. TO 1A.M.
-SPECIALS-
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featuring
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Beef Barn
400 St. Andrews Dr 756-1161
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Blouses...................^10.99
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Legal Opium Keeps Turks Iji The Red
ByEMELANIL Associated Press Writer ANKARA, Turkey (AP) -The Turkish government is in the red by millions of dollars in its efforts to grow opium poppies under strict controls and prevent their leakage Into th worlds illicit heroin market, officials say.
The chief causes for the losses lie in a low demand on the legal world market, a large stockpile of dried poppies and a new poppy-processing factory working far under its capacity.
From dried opium poppies come the morphine derivatives that produce pain killers for the medical drug industry. From ripened poppies comes the opium gum that is processed in clandestine laboratories into heroin.
In 1971, the Turkish government banned opium poppy cultivation under strong pressure from the United States. Cultivation was resumed in 1975 under a system declared virtually smuggle-proof by the United Nations and U.S. narcotics experts.
The peasants of the sunbaked central Anatolia pleateau, the only part of the country where cultivation is permitted with licensing, are not allowed to slash the ripe poppy pods to let the sticky opium gum ooze out. The pods, which grow as big as tangerines on long stalks in mid-summer, must be left to dry out in the fields, and the opium gum dries up with them.
Only sophisticated factories can extract the morphine derivatives from the dry pods and until the Turks built their factory the plants existed only in France, the Netherlands and Hungary.
But Turkeys factory was built - at a cost estimated. by Western experts at $50 million - to turn out 90 tons of morphine hydrate annually. One Western expert said that far exceeds the world demand.
Working at full capacity, the plant is capable of processing 20,000 tons of dry poppy pods a year. But it started production this year at half capacity and three tons of morphine hydrate have been shipped to a U.S. drug company. Contracts have been signed for the export of at least seven more tons , this year - still not enough to breakeven.
Another problem for the Turks is that since 1975, dry pods have been piling up in storage. The state-owned soil products office is under legal obligation to buy the entire crop from the farmers.
Halil Ceken, director of the soil products office, said 44,000 tons have been exported so far, mostly to France and Netherlands.
But 76,000 tons remain in stock, he added.
Dry pods are light but large in bulk and Turkey has trouble finding storage space.
More than $15 million has been paid to the farmers for poppies in the last eight years and only one third of the cost has been recovered from exports.
Turkey and India are the two major legal producers of opium poppy, and the United States has pledged to support their control efforts through purchase of 80 percent of its morphine needs from the two countries.
Turks are eager to sell to the United States a more refined product, morphine sulphate, which is double the price and costs the same amount to produce as morphine hydrate A memorandum of understanding was signed with the U.S. General Services Administration to sell 10,000 pounds of morphine sulphate from the Turkish factory for emergency stockpiling of strategic materials, but so far there have been no shipments reported.
At the same time, Turkey's excess production of poppies has led to a gradual shrinkage of cultivation, with the state giving fewer licenses and lower prices to the farmers, officials say.
Production went down to 5,600 tons of pods last year from 13,700 tons in 1980, and cultivation areas shrank from 478,500 acres two years ago to half that in 1982, according to official statistics.
MONEY In Your Pocket!
When you need money, cash in on the items that are* laying around tt\e houseItems that you no longer use
Our Family Rates
3 Lines
4 Days^
54.00
Family Want Ads Must Be Placed By An Individual To Run Under The Miscellan ecus For Sale Classifica tion. Limit One Item Per Ad With Sale Value Of $200 Or Less. Commercial Ads Excluded. All Ads Cash With Order. No Refund For Early Cancella tion.
Use Your VISA or MASTERCARD
THE DAILY REFLECTOR
Classified Ads 752-6166The DaiJy Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Thursday, March 17,198321
THE DAILY REFLECTOR Classified
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752-6166
3 Line Minimum 1-3 Days.. 45' per line per day 4- Days.. 42* per line per day 7 Or More
Days 40* per line per day
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DEADLINES Classified Lineage Deadlines
Monday Friday 4 p.m.
Tuesday Monday 3 pm.
Wednesday. Tuesday3p.m. Thursday . Wednesday 3 p.m,
Friday Thursday 3 p.m.
Sunday.........Friday noon
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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
FILE NO I3-CVO-2
,NfBTB9,ikAL
DI STRICT COU T m V IS ION NORTH CAROLINA PITT COUNTY .1
BARBARA WORSLEY OATES Plaintiff
NOr''mAN ray OATES Defendenf TO NORMAN RAY OATES NOTICE OF SERVICE OF PROCESS BY PUBLICATION TAKE NOTICE that a pleading seeking relief against you has been filed in the above entitled acfioo, wherein the plaintiff is seeking an absolute divorce based on the grounds of a one year separation.
You are required to make defense
to such pleading not later than forty (40) days following March 10. 1983 and upon your failure to dp so. the
NOTICE
Having qualified as Executrix of the estate of Alfred McLawliorn late of Pitt County, North Carolina this IS to notify all persons having claim.s against the estate of said deceased to present them to the undersigned Executrix on or before August 1983 or this notice or same will be pleaded In bar ot their recovery All persons indebted to said estate please make immediate payment This 22nd day ot February 1983 Ada Gould McLawhorn Route 1 Box 281 i Winterville N C.
E xeculrix ot the estate of Alfred AAcL awhorn, deceased Feb 24, AAarch3, 10, 17, 1983
NOTICE
Having qualified as Ad minlstratnx ol the estate ot Brian Alan Berkey late of Pitt County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate ot said deceased to present them to the undersigned' Ad minlstratnx on or before Aug 24 1983 or this notice or same will be pleaded in bar of their recovery All persons indebted to said estate please make immediate payment. This 21st day of February, 1983 Anne Berkey 513 Jeannette St Winterville, N,C 28560 Administratrix of the estate of Brian Alan Berkey, deceased Feb, 24, Marcho, I0|I7, 1983
FILE 83CVD338
film
IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE DISTRICT COURT DIVISION NORTH CAROLINA COUNT YOF PITT Diane Byrd Mr Neely vs
William D Mr Neely
NOTICE OF SERVICE OF PROCESS BY PUBLICATION TO William D McNeely TAKE NOTICE that a pleading seeking relief against you has been led in the above entitled action on le 8th day of March. 1983 The nature of the relief sought follows Absolute divorce based on one year s separation
You are required to make defense to such pleadings not later than the 25lti day of April, 1983, upon failure to do so, the party seeking service against you will apply to me Court lor the rolicl sought
T his the 8lh day ol March 1983 OWENS, ROUSE 8, NELSON James A Nelson, Jr Allorney lor Plaintitt P O Box 302
Greenville, North Carolina 27834 Telephone (919) 7S8 4276 March 1(5^ 17 24, 1983
SERVICE OF PROCESSBY PUBLICATION FILE 82 J40 FILM*
IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE DISTRICT COURT DIVISION NORTHCAROLINA PITTCOUNTY IN RE BRADLEY AMINORCHILD
NOTICE
TOTHE FATHER ANDMOTHER OF AMALE CHILDBELIEVEDTO HAVE BEEN BORN ON OR ABOUT JUNE 1, 1982, IN PITT COUNTY, GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA, RESPONDENTS TAKE NOTIC^ that a petition seeking to terminate
hts has been tiled In the above en Bed action
The nature of the relief bein sought IS the terminalion ol any an_ all parental rights of the lather and the mother in and to the aforesaid minor child, more particularly described in the petition filed in Ihe above enlilled action said child hav ing been abandoned on June 5, 1982, Greenville. North Carolina and believed to have been born on or about June I, 1982, m Pill County Greenville, North Carolina
You are required to answer the letition within forty (40) days after (Aarch 10, 1983, exclusive ot such dale, said dated being the date ot first publication of this notice, and upon your failure to answer the peti tIon within Ihe time prescribed, your tarental rights to the said child will xe terminated You are hereby notified that you are entitled to be appointed counsel it
laintift will apply to the Court for the relief sought
James C Lanier, Jr.
Attorney for Plaintiff 219 Cotanche Street P O Box 1505
Greenville, NC 27834 (919) 752 5505 March 10, 17, 24, 1983
BTbT WANTED
Sealed proposals will be received by the Board ot Commissioner of the Town of Bethel. North Carolina, in the Town Hall until 8:00 p.m on April 5, 1983, at which time they witi be publicly opened and read tor the following The paving of Rives Street from the intersection of Cullifer Street westward to the city limits Proposals must be marked PROPOSAL FOR PAVING RIVES STREET"
The Town ot Bethel reserves the right to reject any or all proposals. Martha J Mewhorn Town Clerk March 17, 24, 1983
FILE~N0 - ~
FILM NO
IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE SUPE R lOR COURT DIVISION NORTHCAROLINA PITT COUNTY IN THE MATTEROF THE ESTATE OF:
WILLIAM ERNEST FUQUA, JR NOTICE TOCREDITORSAND DEBTORSOF WILLIAM RNEST FUQUA. JR All persons, firms and corpora lions having claims against William Ernest Fuqua, Jr , Deceased, are nolilied to exhibit them to Betty B. Fuqua, as Executrix of the Dece dent's Estate on or before the date not later than six months after the first date of publication of this Notice at 1915 Fairview Way, Green ville North Carolina 27834, or be barred from their recovery Debtors ot the Decedent are asked to make immediate payment to the above-named Betty B Fuqua, Executrix. Betty B Fuqua, Executrix ot Ihe Estateof William Ernest Fuqua, Jr.
1915 Fairview Way Greenville, North Carolina 27834 James Leon Bullock,
Attorney for the Executrix of the Estateof William Ernest Fuqua, Jr P O Box 7151
Greenville, North Carolina
27835 7151
March 17, 24, 31, April 7, 1983
: NOTICE OF SALE OfTaND AND STATEMENTOF PUBLIC DISCLOSURE NOTICE is hereby given that the I City of Greegville is considering the I proposal to enter into a contract for ' the disposal of project land and the ; redevelopment thereof to Tipton i Builders, of Greenville, North ; Carolina, on or before April 18, 1983 ' said land being Disposal Parcel D-5, located in the Southside Redevelop I ment Project NCR 134, Greenville,
, North Carolina, described as : follows
- BEGINNING at a point in the i southern property line of Griffin 1 Street, )50 00 feet east of the in-I tersection of the southern property 1 line of Griffin Street and the eastern property line of Perkins Street as , measured along the southern pro-: perty line of Griffin Street, from the I beqinninq point runs then N 86 deg.
! 00 min East 50 00 feet to an iron I slake set. runs then S 4 deg 00 min.
E 150 00 feet to an rion stake set. i runs then S 86 deg 00 min. E 50.00 I feet to an iron stake set, runs then N I 4 deg 00 min W 150 00 feet to an iron ! stake set. the point of beginning, containing 7,500 square leet, more or less, by actual survey made by 1 William R^ Purvis, R L S., dated December 14, 1981. and being
Disposal Parcel D 5 Southside Pro- lectNCR 134.
Tipton Builders, the proposed I redeveloper s has filed with the City ; ol Greenville a Redeveloper's State-' ment tor Public Disclosure in the form prescribed by the Secretary of I the Department of Housing and Ur ban Development pursuant to Sec tion 105 (el ot the Housing Act of 1949 as amended
The said Redeveloper's Statement , IS available for public examination at Ihe otfice ot the Community Development Department ot the City ol Greenville during its regular hours said oflice being located at 201 West Filth Street Greenville, North Carolina, and and its regular ollice hours being Irom 8 00 AM to 5 00 PM Monday through Friday .each week
Community Development Department ol the City ot G eenville March 1 7 24, 1983
file
film
IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE DISTRICT COURT DIVISION
NOR TH CAROLINA COUNT Y OF PITT . Margaret Louise Hamilton vs
Mitchell Hamilton
NOTICE OF Service OF
PROCESS BY PUBLICATION
TO MITCHELL HAMILTON TAKE NOTICE that a pleading seeking rebel against you has been tiled in the above entitled action on Ihe 15th day of March, 1983 The nature ot the relief sought is as follows Absolute divorce based on one year s separation.
You are required to make defense to Such pleadings not later than the
3rd day ot May, 1983, upon failure to iking
i
n day 01 6)
OWENS. ROUSE 8i NELSON
do so. the party seeking service against you will apply to tl lor the rebel sought
the Court
This the I5lh day of March, 1983.
James A Nelson, Jr Attorney for Plaintiff P O Box 302
Greenville, North Carolina 27834
Telephone (919) 758 4276 March )7, 24, 31, 1983
WANT
ADS
007 SPECIAL NOTICES
INCOME TAXES? (April 15!?!) All forms prepared low rates. Call
752 2612 _____________
WE pay" CASH for diamonds. Floyd G Robinson Jewelers, 407 E vans Mall, Downtown Greenvilla.
010
AUTOMOTIVE
1975 FORD Recreation Van. Wirad tor small appliances New tires, battery, heating system and pelnt. E Xcellent condition. Call 946-0306.
56 TRUCK bed. S30. 756 2245._
Oil
Autos For Sale
BEFORE YOU SELL or trade your
79 82 model car, call 756 1877, Grant Bui^k We will pay top dollar._
CARS$100!TRUCKS$75!
Available at local government sales Call (refundable) t-619-569-024), extension 1504 lor your directory on how to purchase. 24 hours. RENT AV7RECK 752-CARS Daily Weekly Monthly Retes Save on Dependable Used Cars. SELL YOUR CAR the National Aulolinders Way! Authoriied Dealer in Pitt County. Hastings Ford Call 758 0114. ^
013
Buick
you are indigent, provided you re quest counsel at or beloye the time ol tie hearing, and that you are enliti ed to attend any heaimg after ting your parental rights This Ihe 8lh day of March, 1983 EVERETT 8.CHEATHAM
LeSABRE LIMITED 1982 4 door DieseL tully equipped, low mileage! Call Rex Smith (fhevrolet. Avdwi 746 3141 ^ '
Vi>77 BUICK Electra Limited 4
door 756 0489after 5p.m. _
1979 RIVIERA, chercoel grey, velour interior, loaded, excellem condition. Good tires. Call 7U ^ day, 758 8733 nioht.
1980 SKYLARK LIMITED Loaded
Excellent condition. S4500,7S6-95y^ '
014
Cadillac
Tyler B Warren Attorneys lor Pelilir Post Ollice Box 609
Bethel, North Carolina 27812 Telephone9l9/825 5691 March l(i! 17, 24, 1983
1981 CADILLAC Sedan DeVllle SI in warranty Brome colre 511,295. 756 3247_ *
015
Ghevrolat
1979 Z28 CAMARO 70,000 miles
Excellent condition. Can be seenui
mm22-The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Thursday, March 17,1983
015
Chevrolet
:aSH for your car Barwick Auto Sales 756 7765
018
Ford
QTATION 1980. 4 cloor fully
equipped, in good condition Call Rex Smith Chevrolet, Ayden 744
1974 THUNDERBIRD Excellent condition Low mileage Stereo, cruise, power windows, seats, door locks, lowner 111100.754 6333
024
Foreign
1979 HONDA ACCORD LX Air, 5 speed. AM/FM with tape. Call 355 4273 after 4 pm._ _
3U1 ____________
FOR SALE! 1974 Z28 Camaro.
SI900. 758 3715. __________
1975 CHEVROLET Impala Excellent condition $1295 or best offer 758 4155 _
1978 FAIRMONT station wagon Excellent family car, extra clean, oood mileage per gallon 754 6284
1978 PINTO $1495 In good condi 754 1795
1980 DATSUN 210. 5 speed, AM/FM radio with cassette. 22,000 miles, clean like new. $3400 Call after 5 p m 752 7793
'PtL Call after 5p.m
1981 DATSUN 310 GX Hatchback 4 AM/FM radio.
1979 CHEVROLET CHEVETTE J , door, automatic, low mileage $2895 Call alter 6 p m 758 1185_^_____j
1981 THUNDERBIRD Navy vinyl top, AM FM cassette, excellent condition Must sell Call 758 5278 or 754 4914 night.__^____
speed, air, and AM/FM rad Excellent condition Call 754 9099
032
Boats For Sale
021
Oldsmobile
016
Chrysler
1975 CORDOBA 754 9898
Loaded $1200
1982 CUTLASS Supreme Brougham, AM FM cassette, cruise, tilt, power windows, locks, seats Call 757 3418 after 4
I COM PAC 16 Sailboat with cabin, 4 ' horsepower Evlnrude, galvaniied I frailer. Main. Jib, Genoa Sails ; $3,600 Bethel, 825 9811
034 Carnpers For Sale
TRUCK COVERS All siies, colors Leer Fiberglass and Sportsman tops. 250 units in stock. o'Briants, Raleigh. N C 834 2774
17' SHASTA Sleeps 8 Fully self Well taken care of;
confalned $2150 754 4219
1972 LARK, 21' j' long, bafh wifh shower, stove, refrigerafor, air condifioner, heafer Good condifion. $1800. Call 758 1597
1977 MIDAS 21', fully self contained, generator, air, sleeps 4. Very good condition, awning. 2 owners. 26,000 miles. $11,000. 944 2748 alter 4 p m., Washington.
117
Dodge
023
Pontiac
,1972 DODGE MONACO Good con Jition $550 or best otter _752 1705
018
Ford
1964 FORD COUNTRY Sedan sta tionwagon 289 V8 engine $200
758 0805 _ __________
1964 MUSTANG New interior Needs minor motor, brake body repai
6 cylinder automatic $1,125 or best otif
1975 GRAND PRJXE Power win dows steering, brakes sun roof New paint AM FM stereo with 8 track E xcellent condition, $2,050 or J55_2589 alter 6 p m 1980 BLACK Grand Prix Loaded Low mileage Assume loan 355 2928 after 5 754 0246 between 10 5
I mountains (appraised at $9,500) for quality power boat in top condition
I \?J'7 or later 919 754 7744 after 7.___
14' ALUMINUM BOAT with live well Newly rebuilt Evinrude motor $450 Call Joe at night 758 3395 days 754 6101
15 HORSEPOWER Johnson 1975 model long shaft, excellent condi lion $590 Call after 4 p.m , 754 1007
024
Foreign
Call 355 2589 after
TOYOTA CORONA, 1974, 4 speed, air. good mileage Clean $1200 757 1512
16' BONITA BOAT Trihull galva niyed trailer 65 horsepower
Johnson motor Ideal for fishing and skiing Very good condition,
$1950 Call 754 1900 _______
16' HOBIE cat with trailer. $2,000 752 7615 _ _
036
Cycles For Sale
CL 350 HONDA, $300. Call 758 1934 or 757 1925
HONDA MT 125. On/off road Excellent condifion. $400. 754 9005.
1980 KAWASAKI 750. Only 3300 miles. Garage kepf Excellent con dition Must sell $1600 negotiable. Call Darrell, 524 4840.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
TIRES
VOLKSWAGON 1968 Beetle Great motor, fair bg^ 756 0800 atler 5 30^ 1974 MERCEDES 240*D, 4 speed, AM FM quadrophonic stereo, cassette, air immaculate condition 447 8253, Havelock
14' HOBIE CAT catamaran, California Special Used one season Call 756 2150. ask for Mike, after 6
p.m 756 2042_ _______
17' mark twain open bow V hull with float on frailer. Like new. Sacrifice $2,500 975 3210 after 6
NEW, USED, and RECAPS
Unbeatable Prices and Quality QUALITY TIRE SERVICE 752-7177
1974 VOLKSWAGEN Suptir Beetle ^all after 6, 57i 5436 or 524 5318
034 Campers For Sale
1977 FIAT X19. Good condition Will deal below retail value Low mile age Call 746 2252 anytime
TOYOTA MICROMINI home Sleeps 4, excellent condition 18 20 miles per gallon $7500 752 0770 or 752 7884 _
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
1982 Chevrolet Camaro Z-28
Priced to Go!
Plus
11.9% APR FINANCING
Available On All New Cars And Trucks
Bethels Finest Used Cars
1982 Chevrolet Camaro Z-28 Like new. 16,000 miles, gray-, air, V-8, automatic.
11
1980 Ford LTD 4 Door
1980 Ford Mustang 6 cylinder.
automatic, silver
1980 Chevrolet Monte Carlo Landau
Brown, loaded
1979 Chevrolet iiv.pala 4 door, blue
1979 Chevrolet Monte Carlo Silver 1978 Chevrolet^Monte Carlo Landau
-Gold
1978 Pontiac Trans AM Silver 1977 Chevrolet Caprice Coupe Dark green, loaded
1977. Datsun 810 Wagon Blue, automatic
1977 Pontiac Grand Prix Medium blue, above average
1975 Chevrolet Monte Carlo Green TRUCKS
1981 Chevrolet C-10 Scottsdale Air, automatic, power steering, blue and white
1981 Chevrolet C-10 Custom White 1980 Datsun King Cab Orange, 4 speed
1980 Datsun 5 speed, black, nice 1980 Chevrolet LUV 4 speed, red,
nice
1980 Chevrolet C-10 Diesel Brown, clean truck.
1978 Chevrolet C-10 Diesel Like new, automatic, power steering 1974 Datsun Truck Orange
WYNNES CHEVROLET
Ramon Latham On The Comer, On The Square' j j Joe Rawls Bethel, N.C. Phone 825-4321 Doug House
GMQUAUTY SBNKX MRTS
SENERAl MOTORS BMtBDnnSlOM
KEEP THAT GREAT GM FEELING WITH GENUINE GM PARTS
1980 KZ 250 KAWASAKI Less than 4,ocio miles. Excellent condition. 756 5856 after 5:30 p.m.___
1982 GS 850L Suzuki. Black and silver, shaft drive, 2100 miles Like knew. $2500. 754 1643 after 5:30 p.m
750 HONDA, black, RC header, Cate fairing new Goodyear HST, black aluminum rims. Including 2 helmets, rainsuit and cover. $1600 or best otter, 752 2503_
039
Trucks For Sale
1976 TOYOTA, 4 speed, air, camper shell. Excellent condition. 754 7912.
1979 BRONCO, black/silver. 400 with 4 speed. Very clean. Many extras. $8.000. Work shifts. Call 758 4883.___
1979 FORD Ranchero GT truck. Air. power steering, cruise control. Phone 757 0274.
1981 FORD F100. 3 speed, < cylinder, chrome bumper, 2 tone: caramel/white 21,838 miles, 1 owner, excellent condition. $5500 754 1903, leave name and number.
040
Child Care
AVAILABLE FOR babysitting In my home from 1 p.m. until. Lake Ellsworth. 754 1174. _
I WOULD like to babysit in my home. Sherwood Greens area. 752 1080
WANT TO keep children in my home. Call 752 4134 4 a.m. to 10 a m.
051
Help Wanted
CHRISTIAN SALES
Mature Christians to call on Chris
tian business and professional peo pie. Day time work. Excellent
earnings in a ministry you will enjoy. No investment. Must have car. For more information, write 'tA Guide to Christian Business", 2606 Neuse Blvd., New Bern, N C 285#,__
CLERK/TYPIST Local manufacturing company has an
excellent opportunity for a qualified person with proficient office skills. Must be versatile individual. Re
quire accurate typing speed of 65 words per minute. For confidential consideration submit resume to Clerk/Typist, PO Box 1967, Greenville, NC
EXPERIENCED PERSON to
manage and operate a daycare center in Griffon. Echo Realty, Inc. 524 4148 or 524 5042. _
riuiTic. Vxaii f IJ4 o a.m. to iu o.iti.
Then from 7.30 p.m. fo 11 p.m the same number. It no answer call 756 2948.
046
PETS
AKC IRISH SETTER. 5 months, all shots, $135.754 0700
AKC PEKINGESE puppies, cham piontired. 758 3403
039
Trucks For Sale
CHEVROLET BONANZA Pickup. 1978. Fully equipped, in good condi lion Call Rex Smith Chevrolet, Ayden, 746 3141.
1953 FORD PICKUP Flat head V8. Excellent motor, mags; $700 negotiable. 752 8881
1974 GMC PICKUP 350 engine. Automatic. Power brakes and steering, air. Motor has 37,000 miles. Call Ralph Tucker, 754 4124
1975 CHEVROLET pickup Good condition. 753 5492.
1976 GMC JIMMY Automatic, power steering, power brakes, and air. 79,500 miles. Good condition; $3500 754 3880 alter 4 p.m
1974 JEEP J10 pickup. Power
4 barrell carburetor, $2500. 744 2373 alters
1976 WHITE Chevy Step Van. 10 foot. New lires and paint. Call 355 6273alter4p m
1978 CHEVROLET one half ton pick up truck, one owner, 62,000 miles, air, power steering, $3,400. 1972 Chevrolet Bel Air, $500. After 6 pm,
355 6477
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
AKC PUPPIES Chows, Keeshonds, Bassets, Cockers;
eurebred Eskimo Spitz, hihuahuas. Metro Lina Kennels, Morehead, 1 724 7798^
MINIATURE POODLES Beautiful
black AKC puppies, ready now for loving homes. $100. Call 758 0901 or
REGISTERED BOXER puppies. 7 weeks old. Wormed and tail
trimmed. 744-3845.
REGISTERED black miniature female Poodle. $80. Call 355 6297 before 5 p.m. and after 9:30 p.m.
050
EMPLOYMENT
051
Help Wanted
A LIGHT manufacturing concern requires an office manager Re sponsibilities to include bookkeep ing, receptionist and secretarial work. Salary commensurable Wifh experience. Send resume to Office Manager, PO Box 1967 Greenville, NC 27834. _ _
CERTIFIED TEACHER fo teach 4 and 5 year old children. 20 hours a week. 9 until l. Send resume to Little University, 313 East 10th Street Greenville, NC 27834. No Phone calls please I_
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
FULL TIME PERSON for frame shop. Experience preferred. Send
resume to Frame 'Shop, PO Box 83?
1947 Greenville. NC 2783
HOMEWORKERS Wirecraft pro duction. We train house dwellers. For full details write. Wirecraft, P O Box 223. Norfolk, Va. 23501.
I WANT a tutor lor helping me in Administra
my master in Public tion. 3 6 hours weekly at anytime. I
prefer graduate level in Business, or Public Administration. Please
call me as soon as possible. 752 4584 ask for Abdulla. _
051
Help Wanted
Is Quality Care Your Priority!
utilize your knowledge and teaching skills.
RN'SANDLPN'S NEEDED
Fulltime and part time, 11-7 Shift differential available 3-11, 11 7 and weekends Competitive salaries
Willing to work around school Ik
schedufes
Interested
Interested persons call Lydia Morgan, DON, University Nursing Cenfer, 758 7100.
LADY TO LIVE IN with elderly gentleman. Must have drivers license. 744 4321.
LEAD NURSE Salary range-$16,320 to $23,554 per year. Mtusf have graduated from a state ac credited school of professional nursing and have one years pro
tessional nursing experience or an equivalent compinalion of educa
tion and experience. Must be licensed by the N C Board of
Nursing to practice as a registered nurse in North Carolina, Contact Joyce Radford, N C Dept, of Cor rections, P O Box 215, Maury, N C 28554. 747 8101
I N D U S T E N G I N EE R/mariufacfuring
RIAL
engineer. Proven ability/minimum of 2 years mefal working back
?round, including cutting, forming, inishing and welding. Methods/standards/product devel opment standard costs/cost esfim a t ing/100 I procure ment/equipment development are basic areas of responsibility and a thorough working knowledge of each area is required. A 4 year
engineering degree a definite plus, wfh
There is growth potential tor the right person, U you are not self motivated and aggressive you need not apply. Salary commensurable wifh experience. Send resume to Cox Trailers Inc., PO Box 338. Griffon, NC 28530._ _
INTERIOR DECORATOR with ex perience and a desire to excel. Salary and commission. Send resume to Decorator, PO Box 1967 Greenville, NC 27834.
INTERNATIONAL OIL DRILLERS Now hiring for roughnecks and some field staff. Musi train, $20,(X)0 plus. For In formation call (312) 920 9675,
extension 1074B
Help fight inflation by buying and selling through the Ciassifietf ads ' I 752
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
) GUARANTEED USED CARS
1982 Honda Prelude .. ....................7495.00
1981 Volkswagen Diesel Truck. ............*6995.00
1981 Audi 4000 5 Plus 5 ......................*9995.00
1981 Volkswagen Scirocco S..............*7995.00
1981 Ford Escort Wagon....................*4495.00
1980 Volkswagen Rabbit Diesel..............*4995.00
1980 Dodge D-50 Truck......................*4495.00
1979 Olds Cutlass Wagon................. 4995.00
1979 Pontiac Sunbird ................ *3995.00
Free 12 Month, 12,000 Miles Extended Mechanical Warranty With The Purchase Of Any Of The Above!
1978 Plymouth Horizon........................*3695.00
1978 Honda Civic........... *2495.00
1977 Volkswagen Rabbit.................AUTOMATIC
1977 Buick Skylark.................. *2995.00
1975 Volkswagen Beetle........... *1995.00
1974 Volkswagen Beetle ..... *2295.00
1973 Volkswagen Beetle......................*2395.00
THIS WEEK
GOOfCAR
SALE ON RETREADS
loe Pecheles Volkswagen, Inc.
Greenville Blvd. I5b-1135
Serving Greenville To The Coast For 18 Year-s
Mud & Snow Grips G78X14, G78X15, H78X15
178X15:2 for52 All Sizes
Radial Recaps 4 tor AR78X13 Whitewall ^90 FR78X14 Whitewall ^02^ GR78X15 Whitewall ^97
OIL, LUBE & FILTER
I FRONT END I ALIGNMENT I
(Good Casing Required)
j AIR CONDITION SERVICE
Includes Freon & Labor
Coupon Expires Mar. 31,1983 | Coupon Expires Mar, 31,1983 j Coupon Expires Mar, 31,1983
WOODYEARI
TIRE CENTERI
Open Saturdays Til 5 P.M.
West End Shopping Center Phone 756-9371 Open 8:00-6:00 Mon.-Fri. Sat. 8:00 to 5:00
729 Dickinson Avenue Phone 752-4417 Open 8:00-6:00 Mon.-Fri. Sal. 8:00 to 5:00
me
GRANT MAZDA
603 Greenville Blvd., Greenville, N.C.
1983
MAZDATRUCK
*574500
DELIVERED!
Price Includes Tax, Freight And Prep.!!
Supply Is Limited Shop Now!!
Open: Weekdays 8:30 to 6:30 Saturday 9:00 to 2:00
Phone: 756-1877
LOCAL COMPANY needs sales oriented person due to expansion. Full fringe benefits. Starting salary $300 per week Average salary for agency $450 per week. Call 753 4482 between 7 and 9 p.m
LOCAL COMPANY in financial field needs employee with background in marketing and/or finance. Credit experience helpful. Good income and benefits. Send resume to PO Box 1158, Greenville,
MAXWELL FURNITURE has immediate opening tor sales person. Excellent benefits, excellent salary potential. Must i|y in person. Maxwell Furniture reenville Boulevard.
059
Work Wanted
ANY TYPE OF REPAIR WORK
Carpentry, masonry and rooting^ 35 years experience in building, call James Harrington after 6 pm. 752 7765, ___
CREATIVE HOME IMPROVEMENTS CO
Quality construction and renova tion Phone 757 0799 after 4 om
HOUSE NEED REPAIRS? Call T Turnage House Repair Service tor roofing, aluminum siding, and all types of repair work. Phone 754 1286 before 9 a.m. or after 5 p.m.
AAACHINIST WITH over 4 year experience seeks full time
employment. 1-944 1505.
NO JOB TO SAMLL Free estimate all repair work. Cabinets, counter fops, book cases. Inside
trim, outside trim, sliding porches, 0779
and painting. Call 758 0779 or 752 1623,__
PAINTING, interior and exterior Free estimates Work guaranteed References. 11 years experience. 754 4873 after 4p.m _____
RESPONSIBLE WOMAN wants to clean houses or churches 3 days a week. Also have references. Call 758 1043.___
SANDING and finishing floors. Small carpenter jobs, counter tops. Jack Baker Floor Service. 754-268 anytime, it no answer call back.
SIGN PAINTING Truck lettering as low as $59.95. Call Steve Atkins tor all your sion needs. 754 9117.
WANTED: Lawn mowing. 754 8847.
WILL DO most any kind of work. Call 754 8847. _
060
FOR SALE
MECHANIC WANTED Good reli
able mechanic with good working habits. Excellent pay and benefit package. Prefer Ford experience
Apply in person to: J C Jones, East Carolina Lincoln Mercury GMC, Greenville,
NEEDED Full and part time RN's and LPN's. All shifts, (xood
benefits, salary negotiable. Contact " DON, 758 4121
Becky Hastings I
NEEDED FULL TIME HELP
Avon. Earn 50% Call 758-3159._
NEEDLECRAFT COMPANY now
slructors and managers Full or part time. For application mail Sell
Addressed Stamped Envelope fo 17 H.....
Mrs. Myers, 2407 Hillsdale Road, Picayune, Ms. 39444
OFFICE SKILLS NEEDED
SENIOR TYPISTS BOOKKEEPERS DATA ENTRY WORD PROCESSORS
Manpower has assignment tor you! Work
temporar ignment tor you! Work when you want, stay at home when you want
We offer vacations, holidays, acci dent, and cash bonus plans. Not a fee agency. Call us for an ap pointment today!
MANPOWER
TEMPORARY
SERVICES
118 Reade street 757-3300
PART TIME morning sales help needed. Experience preferred. Apply in person only, Monday Friday at Leather 'N Wood, Caro lina East Mall. No phone calls._
062
Auctions
DEALER AND RETAIL auction Tools and other supplies. Dealers welcome! Location: Buck's Auction in Ayden. Friday. March 18 Sales start at 7 p.m. _____
064
Fuel, Wood, Coal
AAA ALL TYPES of firewood for sale. J P Stancil, 752 4331._
FIREWOOD FOR SALE
$40 FOR PICKUP
CALL 757-3568 or 758-5063
OAK FIREWOOD for sale, $45 for I z cord. 757 1437._
065 Farm Equipment
LIQUID STORAGE
Polyolefin tanks 550 gallon $309.95, IICK) gallon $499.95 $688 95. Transfer pumps with
supplies Mon $309.9 1600 gallon
jolyethelene housing. 3 horsepower 2 " $174.66, 5 horsepower 2 " $209.95
Stainless steel pumps, other tanks, pumps and fittings in stock. Agri Supply. Greenville. NC 752 3999.
7X14 DOUBLE AXLE trailer
Tongue Jack and ramps, $800. - 770' "
754 7707 after 6.
BOO SERIES Ford gas tractor, excellent condition. Afso 8-N Ford gas tractor, good condition. Call RalphTucker, 754 4124._
067 Garage-Yard Sale
GARAGE SALE AND Auction Sale, Saturday, 9:30. Items A-Z Ceramic items. Parking lot at Olde London Inn, South Memorial Drive.
PHARMACY TECHNICIAN
Retail experience preferred but not required Send resume and salary requirements to Pharmacy Technician, PO Box 1967, Greenville, N C 27835. _
SOMEONE FOR full time alter ations. Experience required. Must be neat and pleasant. 5 day week job. Good company benefits. Apply Brodys, Pitt Plaza, 2 to 5, Mon day Friday._ _
SOUTHERN TIRE BROKERS has
opening tor person to change tires and do brake work. Must be thoroughly experienced in brake work and have references. This is a ground level position with a fast growing young company and offers unlimited opportupities tor advan cement. Must have high school education. Absolutely love hard work and long hours. Contact Rod Roebuck in person, no phone calls Southern Tire Brokers, 801 Greenville Boulevard.
NEW PITT COUNTY Fair Grounds Flea Market, Greenville Boulevard.
Open Saturday and Sunday 8 til 5. Crafts, tools, furniture and an
tiques. Displays of old postcards, listo
buttons and antique pistols. All church and civic groups free inside.
Outside dealer spaces Free! Call ^ like
Bill 746 3541, Mike 746 3550, Fair Grounds 758 6914.
rounos /an 4Vi4._
RAYNOR FORBES ANDCLARK
Flea Market open Saturdays 7 til 1, across from Moose Lodge. 754 4090.
072
Livestock
HORSEBACK RIDING Jarman
Stables, 752 5237_ _
11 YEAR OLD Paint Mare. 15.3 hams Gentle, good trail horse. Asking $450. Call 758 0258 alter 5 :30.
074
Miscellaneous
ATARI VIDEO games repaired. Reconditioned Ataris tor sale. Call 758 9513.
TRACTOR/TRAILER driver long distance. Must be knowledgeable
wifh motor carrier safety regula, tions. Experience required. Send
resume to Cox Trailers Inc., PO Box 338, Griffon, NC 28530.
WANTED SOMEONE with dump
truck to take trash jo county dump 1901.
We will load truck. Call 758 99
WHALEBONE JUNCTION surf shop, Nags Head, NC now taking applications for sales persons. Cafl Jim at 441 4747.
059
Work Wanted
ALL TYPES TREE SERVICE Licensed tree surgeons. Trimming, cutting and removal. Free estimates. J P Stancil, 752 6331. _
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
ROOFING
STORM WINDOWS DOORS ft AWNINGS RamodelingRoom Additions.
C.L. Lupton, Co.
752-6116
JARMAN
AUTO SALES
1982 Ford EXP Sports Coupe
air, power steering and brakes, AM-FM, automatic appearance package. $5650
1982 Ford Futura, 4 door, vinyl top, air condition, automatic, power steering, power brakes, AM-FM stereo, wire wheel covers, appearance package. 1500 miles. $6950
1981 Toyota Corolla Llftback,
2 door, automatic, air condition. $5650
1981 Pontiac LeMans, 4 door, 6 cylinder, automatic, power steering and brakes, AM-FM. $5850
1979 AMC Spirit, 4 speed, sunroof, loaded, $3250
1979 Chevrolet Monza
Automatic, air condition $3050
1978 Dodge Aspen, 2 door, air condition, AM-FM radio, automatic. $2650
1978 Toyota Corolla Wagon, 5
speed, air condition. $3950
1978 Olds Cutlass Supreme, 2
door hardtop. $4650
1974 Ford Van, straight drive, 6 cylinder. $1250
1973 Ford Torino, good clean transportation. $795
1972 Ford Pickup, Sport
custom, short bed,
automatic, air. $1200.
12 Months, 12,000 Milas Warranty AvaHabla FInuieIng AiilMI* WWi Aspnwwl CradH Hwy 43 North , 7S2-S237 Buslnass
Grant Jarman 756-9542
Edgar Denton 756-2921
Donald Garris 758-0929
BOYS CLOTHING, size 6 7. Call 754 6259after S p.m.
BRUNSWICK SLATE POOL Tables. Cash discounts. Delivery and installation. 919-763-9734
CABBAGE and yellow collard plants. $2.00 per hundred. Call 155 6340.
CALL CHARLES TICE, 758 3013, for small loads of sand, topsoll and Slone. Also driveway work.
CLARK 8. COMPANY
Stihl Echo Sachs Dolmar Snapper Toro Lawn Boy
CLEARANCE SALE on Sony televi
sions. Savings up to 25% Goodyear Tire Center, West End Shopping
Center and Dickinson Avenue, Greenville.
COUCH,. CHAIR, and end table; $300. Dark pine table and hutch; $400. Sewing machine; $50. 754 7189 after 5.
DAY CARE EQUIPMENT for sale almost new, but drastically reduced for quick sale. 20 cots, $20 each; 4 cribs, $75 each; mattresses ' z price. For additional information call 752-4348 from 9 a.m. til 4 p.m. and 754 4419 after 7 p.m.
EARLY AMERICAN sofa love seat; tan tweed Oriental rug ap proximately 9x12. Matching rug ^proximately 4x9; navy blue. Excellent condition. Call 754-9773 after 5 weekdays
EARLY AMERICAN queen size sofa/sleeper. Good condition. Ask-
$175. Call 8 5, 752 5444, after
EXERCISE WALKER for sale Like new $100. 758-7552 days,
752 5373 after 5.
FOR SALE Sharpfax SF-8I0 copy machine with base cabinet. Uses plain bond paper and makes copies in these sizes: 8'z x II, 8Vj x 14 and 11 X 17. Machine is 3 years old, in good condition. Call 758-3138.
FOR SALE Solid cherry buffet; $350. 1 almost new wheel chair; $200 Phone 753 5570 alter 1 p.m.
FREE RUG SHAMPOO Kirby's are back in Greenville. As an
introductory offer simply preview the 1983 Kirby Heritage Home Care System and we will shampoo 1 room of carpet at no-cost or obligation. Call your Greenville representative, Randy Hobbs at 754 244 or 444-1129 for details. Homeowners only.
FREEZER BEEF, grain fed Angus, whole halves or quarters. Delivered to Bethel Cold Storage for process ing. 654 a pound. Live weight. L A Moye Farms, Maury. NC, 747-3504 after 6 p.m.__ _
GE DROP-IN stove, $20, Kitchen table and six chairs, $20. 8 boxes of clothes, $20. 753 3907
GENIE ORGAN _______
musical chords. $1,000 firm
758 0739.
Drums and Call
GOVERNMENT SURPLUSI 4x4's, cars, trucks. Many sell for under $100 Other items available. For
complete directory on how to buy - 1 312 931 5337.
your area call extension 1074B
IT'S SPRING PLANTING TIME I
Free copy 48 page Planting Guide Catalog in color, oflering one of the
most cgmplete lines of planfing ee$, nut
material including fruit trees, trees, berry plants, grape vines.
landscaping plant material, boro Nurseries Inc.,
Waynesb Waynesboro Va. 22980.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY '
WE INSTALL ALUMINUM AND VINYL SIDING
RemodelingRoom Additions
C.L. Lupton, Co.
752-6116
CRAFTED SERVICES
Quality furniture Raflnlshlng and raptlrs. Supwlor caning for aH iypa chaira, largar aalaeMon of cuatom picture framing, aurvay atakaa-any length, atl typaa Of' palate, hand<rattad ropia ham-' mocka, aalactad tramad raproductlona.
Eastern Carolina Vocational Center
Induatrlal Park, Hwy. 13 7$M1M IA.M..4:30P.M.
OraanvHIa, N.C.
D7i
AAisctilaneous
green vinyl rockerrecii Very good coodition. $100. 7544yfdHr6p.m.
ner.
Call
HAAAMOND ORGAN, used. Good condition. $485 with bench. 355 6002
INTELLIVISION. plus 5 tapes Valued at $305.00; will settlor $175.00 neootlabte. 75< 7891
JVC AM/EM stereo receiver with built in egualizer. 120 watts per channel. $3M. Day 7569371. Night
yjtfim
KOHLER AND CAMPBELL an fj^ue^^lght piano. Good condition
large sofa, good condition. Best offer. Call after b, 752 1535.
MACHINIST TOOLS for sale Tool box included. 758 3373
MINOLTA MANUAL 35mm SLR camera package. Includes 7Smm telephoeo. $145.752 6698. Douo
MOFFITT'S MAGNAVOX Greenville's first and largest video tape club. Rent movies for only $5 for three davs
078
Sporting Goods
HATTERAS CANVAS PRODUCTS All types canvas and cushion re pairs. Specializing in marine pro ducts. 756-0641.1104 Clark Street
109 Houses For Sale
082 LOST AND FOUND
LOST! 3Vj month old tan puppy Blue collar and flea collar. Lost at intersection of 264 and 14th Street Call 757 1210.
LOST: 2 year old black Lab. female wearing brown collar with no tag. Last seen in Bell Arthur area with a white Cocker Spaniel on AAarch 1 $100 reward for safe return. Call 752 4151.
085 Loans And /Mortgages
2ND MORTGAGES by phone commercial loans mortgages bought. Call tree 1 800-845-3929.
MOTORS All types of motors available trom Ohio. Call 758 7402 Open daily from 9 to 9
RED LIGHT for volunteer fireman 2 lens. 1 clear. 1 red. 6 bulbs, t clear. 2 red. $60 or best offer 753 3279.
RENT A STEAMEX Best method for cleaning carpets. Larry's Carpetland. S)10 East loth Street. Greenville._
REPOSSESSED VACUUMS and Shampooers. Call Dealer. 756 6711.
SHAMPOO FOR FALL! Rent shampooers and vacuums at Rental Tool Company._
SLEEPER COUCH queen size, herculon, browns and rust, excellent condition, 2 end tables and coffee table, solid pine, $299. Days 355 2626, Nights 758 7114
SMALL REFRIGERATOR for sale (18x18x20) perfect for office or dormitory room, almost new, but reduced $35 for quick sale. Call 752 4348 from 9 a.m. til 6 p.m. and 756 4619 after 7 p.m._
091
Business Services
AAA INCOME TAX SERVICE will check income fax returns at rea sonable rates. 355 2508
INCOME TAX SERVICES Hilton Bovd. Call 756 3264.
093
OPPORTUNITY
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.
SMALL 3 drawers chest. Good condition, $20. Call anytime. 355 6538
SOFA, CHAIR, coffed table, 2 end tables. $400 Of best offer. 753 3279.
SOFA FOR SALE, excellent condi tion, gold floral. $100. 746-6620.
SOFA SLEEPER, good condition, 1 dresser. 757 1337anytime
TOPSOIL, field sand, mortar sand and rock Call 746 3819 or 746-3296
WARM MORNING 65.000 BTU heater. Excellent condition. 756 0982 after 5.
I g,
sr;
WATER BED, QUEEN bookcase with waveless mattress, heater, 6 drawer pedestal, padded rails, vibrator. Retails $699, must sell, $350. Days 355 2626, Nights 758 7114
WEDDING DRESS and veil. $100 or best offer. 756 6656 after 5 p.m
WHIRLPCXJL washer, good condi-tion, $80. 756 1235._ _
1 YELLOW FLORAL sofa, very clean. 35 square yards green carpet and cushion. Reasonable price. 752 6685 after 5:30.
21 CUBIC FOOT G E refrigerator, dispenses ice thru freezer door, Almond color, 90 day warranty. Call Azalea Mobile Homes, 756-7315.
7 HORSEPOWER Grand Prix rid inq lawn mower, 3 speed, air, tires, 25 cut. Used only 1 season. $350 or best offer. 753 3279.
SMALL MANUFACTURING
operation for sale Rapidly growing business is handicapped by lack of capital; real opportunity with tremendous potential for some ambitious person with management ability and/or woodworking skills. For additional information, contact Harold Creech with The
Marketplace, Inc., 752-3666.__
TO BUY OR SELL a business, for appraisals, for financing, for fran cnise consulting contact SNOWDEN ASSOCATES In vestment Analysts and Brokers, Greenville. 752 3575.
095
PROFESSIONAL
CHIMNEY SWEEP Gid Holloman. North Carolina's original chimney
sweep. 25 years experience working on chimneys and fireplaces. Can day or night, 753 3503, Farmvllle.
100
REAL ESTATE
1 ACRE 2 mobile homes. Set up for small park. Reduced price. 752 3689.
102 Commercial Property
BY OWNER 1215 E Wright Road. 3 bedroom Williamsburg, iVj baths, great room with fireplace, dining room, all the extras. Excellent location, 8Vj% loan assumption. $69,900. Call 758 8792 after 6 for appointment
BY OWNER Country living. 2200 square feet. Blue masonite .house. 4 bedrooms, 3 baths, living room, dining room and foyer, recreation room with fireplace, den with wood heater, 2 heat pumps on nearly I acre lot, Winterville School District. Storage barn in back with electricity. Near Pitt Plaza on Highway 43 South. $85,000. 756 5356 after 6.
CEDAR log homes 1326 square foot package, $11,900, 20 year warranty. See our model in Griffon. Echo Realty, Inc. 524-4148 or 524-5042.
CEDAR LOG HOMES 1326 square feet Package, $11,900. 20 year warranty. Echo Realty, Inc, 758-5948,624 4148 _
HARDEE ACRES 4 bedroom home with step down great room, beautiful old brick fireplace, French doors and Brunswicx pool table. Living room, kitchen with breakfast nook and extras. 1,950 square feet heated, plus garage. Just reduced, $57,900 758 0144 or 752 7663. _
HOUSE SEEKING NEW HOME
If you have a lot, we may have your house. Due to new construction plans 0.1 present site, house must be moved. For further details, call 746-6827,
LAKE ELLSWORTH AREA For
sale by owner. $59,900 assume FHA IIV2 percent loan for $9600. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, fireplace in den. Call 756 8804 after 6._
NEW HOME in Robersonville, 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, living room with fireplace, kitchen/dining combination, nice deck. Carport. FHA-VA financing. James E Jenkins, Gen eral Contractor, 795-4261.
NEW LISTING Located on a cor ner lot. Established neighborhood. Fenced in back yard, patio, heat pump, 3 bedrooms, IV2 baths, good size kitchen, utility, breakfast area.
121 Apartments For Rent
AZALEA GARDENS
Greenville's newest and most uniquely furnished one bedroom apartments.
All energy efficient designed.
Queen size beds and studio couches.
Washers and dryers optionai
Free water and sewer and yard maintenance.
Ali apartments on ground floor with porches.
Frost-free refrigerators.
Located in Azalea Gardens near Brook Valley Country Club. Shown by appointment singles. No pets.
Contact J T or Tommy Williams _ 756 7815_
me U8Jiy Keiiecior, oreenvuie, n .t.-mursday, March 17. IW3-23
121 Apartments For Rent
NEW TASTEFULLY decorated townhouse, near hospital Shenendoah Subdivision, tedroomSr IV2 baths, washer/dryer hookups, heat pump, efficient per month. 752 3040or 756 8904.
Cherry Court
Spacious 2 bedroom townhouses with 1>'3 baths. Also 1 bedroom apartments. Carpet, dishwashers, compactors, patio, tree cable TV, washer dryer hook ups, laundry room, sauna, tennis court, club house and pool. 752-1557 _
CYPRESSGARDENS APARTMENTS
2308 E Tenth Street
Available immediately two bedroom flat with washer/dryer hook-ups, heat pump, frost free refrigerator, dishwasher, disposal. Call days 758-6061, nights/weekends 758 5960
Professionally managed by Remco East, Inc.
DUPLEX (two spacious apart ments available) upstairs $250; downstairs $265, 2 large bedrooms, refrigerator, range, carpeted, gas heated. (Water bill paid by owner). Lease and deposit required. Latham and 5th Street. 752 2844 after 6 p.m. _
DUPLEX APARTMENT available at Frog L( '
dining room and den. Only $44,500. Call Davis Realty 752 3000, 756 2904 or Rhesa Davis 1997.
NEW LISTING Pineridge. three bedrooms, two bath contemporary on a pretty wooded lot. Living room with fireplace, dining room, storage building. Possible loan assumption. $58,900. Dutfus Realty Inc., 756 3 9 5 . '/2
NICE, COZY contemporary house In Twin Oaks, excellent financing.
L Garner, 355 2628 or 756-3217, Owner, 758 2520._
FOR SALE or lease. Two commercial buildings on main thor oughfare. Call 758 1131. After 6 pm, 756 1463.
7 BRICK HOMES in Grifton. Tremendous rental property. 2 3 bedrooms, 2 baths. 5 2 bedrooms, 1 bath; $157,500. Call Jeanette Cox Agency Incorporated 756 1322._
104 Condominiums For Saie
075 /Mobiie Homes For Saie
BRAND NEW 1983 top quality 14 wide, 2 bedroom mobile home loaded with extras, cathedral beamed ceilings, plywo<^ floors, plywood counter tops, total electric, ran^^ refrigerator. Regular price.
Limited Time Only
$9,995
VA, FHA and conventional on lot financing Delivery and set op includecf Hours, 8 am to6 pm AAOBILEHOME 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 root, bay windows, frost free refrigerator, garden tub, cathedrai ceiling and much, much more. Regular price, $24,995
Limited TimeOniy
$19,995
VA, FHA and conventional on lot financing. Delivery and set up included. Hours, 8 AM to6 pm.
AAOBILE HOME BROKERS 630 West Greenville Boulevard __756 0191
CONNER MOBILE HOME, 2 bedrooms, 12x50. 1 bath. Good condition. $2600 firm. 752 4845
DELUXE, 1976 Norris 12x60. Expando living room, I bedroom, total electric, washer/d^er, partial furnished, carpeted. Private lot $47.50. 3.5 miles from Pitt Plaza. $8500 negotiable. Must see to appre date. 756 7835 or 758 7428.
DOUBLEWIDE, 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, all appliances. Central air. Underpinned. Barn attached. Set up on 1 acre ot land. 946 8436.
FOR SALE or rent. Weyhauser area. 2 bedrooms Fully furnished.
$5898. I 244 0553.__
MOBILE HOME FOR SALE 1969 Ritzcraft. 12x45, furnished, located in Winterville. 752 6147eveninos.
WORKNEARTHE HOSPITAL?
And tired of driving across town? You can live in your own townhome at conveniently located BROOKHILL with payments lower than rent! Call )MI Reid at 758 6050/756 0446 or Jane Warren at 758 6050/758 7029.
MOORE & SAUTE R no South Evans 758-6050
NICE 5 room house. Enclosed back porch, carport, new paint In and out. Very good condition. In the county. Good pecan trees. $34,000. By owner. 758-3218; call after 6, 7SS 4199
REDUCED FOR QUICK sale From $63,900 to $59,900. University area. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, study, porch, basement. Call Steve Evans Associates 355 2727or 758. 3388.
WELL DECORATED home in Brookgreen with large formal dining room. 5 bedrooms, 3 full baths, den, solarium, living room, recre ation room,. 4200 square feet. For sale by owner. 752-3021._
113
Land For Sale
4 ACRES of land. Ideal tor house and garden or horses, or can be used Tor commercial use for shop. Mobile homes allowed. Day 752 1138, Night 756 5708._
115
Lots For Sale
BAYWCX)D, TWO ACRE lot. nancing available. Call 756 7711.
rog Level on I acre wooded lot. bedrooms, 1 bath, kitchen and dining combination, sundeck, and leat pump. $260 a month. Call 756 464 beti after.
before 5 p.m. or 756-5168
EASTBROOK AND VILLAGE GREEN APARTMENTS ^
327 one, two and three bedroom garden and townhouse apartments, featuring Cable TV, modern appliances, central heat and air condi-tioningt clean laundry facilities, three swimming pools;
Office - 204 Eastbrook Drive
752-5100
OAKMONT SQUARE APARTMENTS
Two bedroom townhouse apart ments. 1212 Redbanks Road. Dish washer, refrigerator, range, dis posal included We also have Cable TV Very convenient to Pitt Plaza and University. Also some furnished apartments available.
756-4151
ONE BE,DROOM, furnished apartments or mobile homes for rent. Contact J T or Tommy Williams, 756 7815.
ONE BEDROOM furnished apartment adjoining ECU Com pletely modern with central heat and air conditioning. Stadium Apartments, 904 E 14th St. $190 per month. Call 752 5700or 756 4671.
ONE BEDROOM apartment. Near carious No pets $195 a month.
REDWOOD APARTMENTS 806 E
3rd Street. I bedroom furnished apartment, heat, air, water furnished. 2 blocks from campus. No pets. 758 3781 or 756 0889
RENT FURNITURE: Living, ing, bedroom complete. $79.00 month. Option to buy. U REN 756 3862
din
STRATFORD ARMS APARTMENTS
The Happy Place To Live
lappyHia
(Table
TV
Otficehours 10a.m. toSp.m. Monday through Friday
Call us 24 hours a day at
756-4800
EFFICIENCY APARTMENTS
All utilities Cable TV Telephone (soon)
Furnished
With or without maid service Weekly or monthly rates Starting $250 month and up
756-5555 Olde London Inn
GreeneWay
Large 2 bedroom garden apart ments, carpeted, dish washer, cable TV, laundry rooms, balconies, spacious grounds with abundant parking, economical utilities and pool. Adjacent to Greenville Country Club. 756 6869
PARTIALLY WOODED Cherry Oaks Subdivision. Priced to sell. Days 758 7687, after 6, 756 7227.
3.2 ACRES 8 miles East Greenville. $14,500. 752 1915.
106
Farms For Sale
13 ACRES all cleared with 2Vj acres tobacco allotment. 8 miles North ot Greenville. Aldridge & Southerland Realty, 756 350(5; nights Don Southerland, 756-5260.
57,000 POUND TOBACCO allotment and more than 420 acres for sale located in Pitt County near Griffon; more than 2 miles ot frontage on heavily travelled paved highway. For additional information, contact Harold Creech with The Marketplace, Inc., 752 3666.
58 ACRE FARM Good road Iron tage on SR 1753 and SR 1110. 51 acres cleared, 6,209 pounds tobacco allotment, pond and 2 bedroom house. St. Johns Community. Call for more details. Call Moseley Marcus Realty at 746 2166 lor full details.
107
Farms For Lease
FOR SALE Tobacco pounds at $3.40 a pound Call 752 5567 alter 6pm
3/4 ACRE mobile home lot. Has septic tank, water, lots ot trees, shed, and carport. 758-8296.__
4 ACRES of land. Ideal for house and garden or horses, or can be
used tor commercial use for shop. Mobile homes allowed. Day 752-1138, Night 756 5708.
117 Resort Property For Sale
1971 LANCELOT 12x65. 2 bedrooms, 2 baths. Located at Emerald Isle. Call 756 9670 before 2 p.m._
120
RENTALS
LOTS FOR RENT Also 2 and 3 bedroom mobile homes. Securit' deposits required, no pets 75 4413 between 8 and 5.
urity
CafI
NEED STORAGE? We have any size to meet your storage need. Call Arlington Self Storage, Open Mon day Friday? 5. Call 756 9933.
121 Apartments For Rent
1969 GREAT LAKES 12x60 mobile home. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths. Col eman furnace, 2 window air condi tioners, all furniture and appli anees. Immediate occupancy; $3,750. 919 787 3831 or 919 782 3849
1969 HIGHLANDER, 2 bedrooms, IVj baths, porch and underpinning, 285 gallon oil drum, fully furnished $3750. 752 1726after 3 p.m.
1970 FRONTIER, 12x60, 3 bedroom, ) bath, new carpet and furniture. $4995. 756 9874, Country Squire
Mobile Homes, Inc., W Bypass,
Greenville._^___
1973 CHICKASAW 12x65 For sale by owner. 18,000 BTU window air conditioner Cement steps, 250 gallon oil drum, washer and dryer. Mobile home in need of floor repairs. Will negotiate reasonable otter. Phone 758 4551 between 10:30 12:00am
1974 NEW M(X)N, 12x65, 1 bath, 2 bedrooms, unfurnished, excellent, underpinned, underskirted. $6900 negotiable. See at Lot 86A Shady Knoll or call 756 1115 after 5._
1974 12x46 Vogue, air condition, total electric, underpinned. $3800. Call 752 2111 davs dr 756 0050 nights.
1975 CELEBRITY 12X60, 2
bedrooms, 1 bath, furnished, centrai air, underpinned, 10X12 storage barn, oil drum and steps Lots of extras. Set up in nice park Building house must sell. $8000 neootiable. 756 3161 ater6p.m
PEANUT POUNDS WANTED
For 1983 Call 756 5824.
WANTTOBUY
CORN
Top Prices Paid for your corn. Worthington Farms Inc , 756 3827 Davs, 756 3732 Nights
WANTED TO LEASE PEANUTS Call 752 8178
2 FARMS Belvoir: 32 acres, 4104 pounds tobacco, 3000 pounds (82) peanuts $4830. On Grmdle Creek NCSR 1517: 43.6 acres, 5095 pounds tobacco, 3795 pounds (82) peanuts $6190. Call Orman Whichard 756 7779 or 752 4388.
ALMOST NEW 2 bedroom duplex. Quiet location. Lots of privacy. $300 month. CENTURY 21 B Forbes Agency. 756 2121.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
KINGS ROW APARTMENTS
One and two bedroom garden apartments. Carpeted, range, re trigerator, dishwasher, disposal and cable TV Conveniently located to shopping center and schools. Located just off 10th Street.
Call 752-3519
TAR RIVER ESTATES
1, 2, and 3 bedrooms, washer dryer hook ups, cable TV, pool, club house, playground. Near ECU
Our Reputation Says It All -"A Community Complex."
1401 Willow Street Office - Corner Elm 8, Willow
752-4225
TWO BEDROOM
available. No pets Insurance 8. Realty, 7
apartments Call
y. 752 2754.
WEDGEWOODARMS
NOW AVAILABLE 2 bedroom, I'j bath townhouses. Excellent location. Carrier heat pumps, Whirlpool kitchen, washer/dryer hookups, pool, tennis court.
756 0987
1 AND 2 BEDROOM apartments. Available immediately. 752-3311.
1 BEDROOM energy efficient apartment. 756 5389or 756 (X)25.
1 BEDROOM APARTMENT Heat and hot water furnished. 201 North Woodlawn, $215. 756 0545or 758 0635
1 BEDROOM apartment. Carpeted, central air and heat. Greenville Manor Apartments; $195. 758 3311.
2 BEDROOM apartments for rent: Verdant Street $290 per month; Bryton Hills $235 per month; Village East $300 per month. All require lease and deposit. Dutfus Realty, Inc. 756 0811. _
125 Condominiums For Rent
CONDOMINIUM FOR RENT 2 bedrooms, living room/dlning room combination, kitchan, IVz baths, and storage room, located in Windy Ridge. Available immediately. Call Real Estate Brokers between 9 a.m. and6p.m., 752 4348.
TWO ^BEDROOM flat duplex available in Shenandoah. $300 per month, 12 month lease. Young couple preferred. Call Clark Branch Realtors, 756-6336
UNIVERSITY CONDOMINIUM 2
bedroom, I'/j bath, carpeted, major appliances furnished. No pets. Married couple preferred. 827321 after 5 p.m. _
127
Houses For Rent
ATTRACTIVE ALUMINUM siding starter home, near university, ap-Davis Realty,
pliances furnishcd. _
752 3000, 756 2904, Rhesa
133 AAobile Homes For Rent 142 Roommate Wanted
IBEDRO^hMobile Home for rent
2 BEDROOMS, furnished, carpeted washer. Near city. Good tor stu dents. Deposit. 757 3177
2 BEDROOMS, furnished chiidren, no pets. Call 758 6679 2 BEDRO^S, 2 baths, furnished or unfurnished, washer/dryer, air, excellent condition, good location 756-oeOI atter 5 p.m
2 BEDROOMS, completely furnished, washer/dryer, carpet, central air, no pets. Cali 752 7389
135 Office Space For Rent
355 2574.
BEAUTIFUL, renovated country home. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, den, living room, dining room, and kitchen with dinette. Large front porch and screened side porch. 2 car garage, large storage/workroom, garden area. Reference, deposit and lease. $395/a month. 756 7879.
BRICK RANCH with 3 bedrooms. Large and spacious family room with firlace. Must see to appreci ate. 1 977^6417.
CLOSE TO camjjus, 3 bedrooms, air, fireplace. 4M South Library. $345. 758 0174.
COZY ONE bedroom, in a quite neighborhood. 1 block from tennis courts. 756 8160, 756 7768
COZY TWO BEDROOM, air and heat, enclosed porches. Big lot with azaleas and dogwoods. $295 Bill Byrd, 758 0198 before 10 am and after 10 pm.
HOUSE FOR RENT 316 East Main Street, Winterville. $150 per month. Small 2 bedrooms. Contact 752-8877.
HOUSES AND APARTMENTS in
town and country. Cali 746-3284 or 524 3180. _
LYNNDALE- Four bedroom home with piayroom and study. $625 month. Cali Ball 8, Lane, 752 0025
UNIVERSITY AREA 3 bedroom house, fireplace, insulated, appli anees furnished, washer dryei^ connections. Ideal for students or family, $250. 110 East 12th Street. 756 0765. _
112 NORTH SUAAMIT 3 bedroom house within walking distance of the university. CENTURY 21 B Forbes Agency, 756-2121.
3 BEDROOM ranch style home. Carport, storage, quiet subdivision. Calf 757 0001 or nights, 753 4015, 756 9006. _
AAODERN, attractive office space for lease. Approximately 1500 square feet. Located 2007 Evans Street teslde AAoseley Brothers Cdll 75<^*3374
OFFICE BUILDING tor rent 1100 square feet. $250 per month with one year lease plus tirst month's rent free. 1203 W 14th St. 758 3743 or 757-0027.
OFFICE SPACE for rent in Win terville, 600 square feet. 355 6900 or 756-7676.
. . .wS FOR LEASE Contact JT or Tommy Witliams, 756 7815 TWO ROOM or four room office suite. Highway 264 Business Eco nomical. Private parking. Some storage available Call Connally Branch at Clark Branch Realtors,
THREE room downtown office at 219 Cotanche Street, 440 square feet Parking availabie. Call Jim Lanier at 752-5505,
137 Resort Property For Rent
FEMALE roommate wanted. Tar River Estates, 2 bedroom apartment. $125 a month plus half
utilities. 757 1025 ___
MALE Completely furnished two bedroom condominium $165 in eludes utilities Mature working person preterred. Non smoker speciaily welcome. 756-5330 or after 7 pm, 756 9969.
AAATURE FEAAALE ROOAAMATE to share furnished 2 bedroom apartment.' z expenses. 756 7509.
AAATURE ROOAAMATE wanted to
share 14x70 trailer. $125 plus '; utilities. 758 6902after 6 30 __
NON-SMOKING mature female roommate wanted to share large 3 bedroom house. $70 per month rent plus utilities. Call Sunday or atter 5 weekdays, 757 1175.
R(X>AAAAATE WANTED to share 2 bedroom townhouse Professional or responsible person. $125 and 'z utilities 756 8426 between 6 7_
144 Wanted To Buy
CONVENIENCE STORE WANTED
either in Greenville or within commuting distance, will pay top dollar. Contact Harold Creech in confidence with The Marketplace. Inc . 752 3666.
148
Wanted To Rent
QUIET professional would like to rent mobile home lot on East side ot town Preferably private. Call 758 4893
RIVER FRONT CONDOMINIUM 18 miles from Greenville. For rent or sale. 3 bedrooms, 2' 2 baths, swimming pool, tennis courts, pier with boat stall. $439 per month. 946 6431 days, 946 2917 nights
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
138
Rooms For Rent
PRIVATE ROOM with bath for rent. Available April 1st. Kitchen and laundry privileges. $125 month plus utilities. 355 6970. _
142 Roommate Wanted
FEAAALE ROOAAAAATE WANTED Apartment available April 1 Com pletely furnished with washer and dryer Call 752 5640._
FURNITURE WORLD
2808 E 10th St OPEN MON, THRU FRI 9AM to IPM SATURDAY 9AM loSPM
757-0451 We Will Not Be Undersold
BEDROOM houses for rent: Yorktown Square $400, Lynndale $450, Sylvan Drive - $325.00, Grimesland $250.00, Country Squire $325.00; Forbes Street $265.00 per month. All require lease and deposit. Duffus Realty, Inc. 756 0811.
3 BEDROOMS, 2 baths, living room, dining, kitchen and carporF Wooded corner lot. No pets. $395. 107 Dupont Circle, 756-870d.
BEDROOM, IV2 baths, central heat and air, storage, great location, washer/dryer and dishwasher. Limit 2 children. Must have vacu-um cleaner. No pets. $390. 758-3149
3 BEDROOMS, tile bath. On larc lot near Burroughs Wellcome; $2 756 7779.
3 BEDROOM house, stove, refrigerator furnished. Call 758-2347 or 752 6068.
2 BEDRCXJM DUPLEX Jarvis Street. $240 per month. Call 757 0688. _
LARGE 1 bedroom furnished apartment. Part utilities, laundry and drink machines, central vacu um. Across from campus. Available May 1st Call 752 2691._
LOVE TREES?
Experience the unique in apartment living with nature outside your door
COURTNEY SQUARE APARTMENTS
Quality construction, fireplaces, heat pumps (heating costs 50% less than comparable units), dishwash er, washer/dryer hook ups, cable TV.wall to wall carpet, thermopane windows, extra insulation.
Office Open 9 5 Weekdays
9-5 Saturday 1 5 Sunday
Merry Lane Off Arlington Blvd.
756-5067
NEW duplex townhouse Available 1. Approximately 1 mile trom ECU Med School and Pitt County Memo rial Hospital. 2 bedroom, 1'2 baths, washer and dryer hookups. $300 per month. Call 825 4931.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
2 BEDROOM DUPLEX Fujly carpeted. Stove, refrigerator, dish washer, washer/dryer hookups. Economical heat pump. Fireplace. Located 114 B Brookwood Drive. Deposit and lease required. Call 756 2879.
2 BEDROOM, carpeted, air, near university, $250 month. 752 0180 or 756 2766.
2 BEDROOM duplex apartment. Central heat and air. 14th Street. Convenient to schools and shopping. No pets. Lease and deposit Available April 1. 756-6834 after 3.
BEDR<X)M house near hospital. Private. Deposit required. 75} 5402 or 758 2910.__
405 WEST 4th STREET bedroom. $300. Call 757 0688.
133 Mobi le Homes For Rent
MOBILE HOME FOR RENT
Washer, dryer, air condition, 2 bedrooms, couple only. No pets. Call 752 6522 atter 5.
MOBILE - HOME for rent. 2 bedrooms, central air, rotary antenna, storage shed, ,7 of an acre, 756 4874.
TWO BEDROOM mobile home lor rent. Call 756 8948after 5pm
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
NEW 19 COLOR TV
SS o,y*23.11 FURNITURE WORLD
2801E. IIMhSt._ 757-0451
2 BEDROOM DUPLEX 4'2 miles West of new hospital. Available March 15. 756 8996 or 756 5780.
3 BEDROOM DUPLEX Approximately 15(X) square feet. $350 per month. CENTURY 21 B Forbes Agency, 756 2121._
122
Business Renfals
FOR RENT 10,000 square foot building Ideally located on Highway 33 in Chocowinity. Call Donnie Smith at 946 5887.
FOR RENT Prime retail space on Arlington Boulevard, 4500 square feet.7^ 5097or 756 9. 15._
GREENVILLE BOULEVARD 1500 square foot building. Call Echo Realty, Inc. 756 6040or 524 5042
WAREHOUSE AND office space for lease. Approximately 15.00<) square feet. 10th St. area. 756 5097 or 756 9315.
12 X 65, TWO bedroom furnished. $200 per month. Deposit required. No pet. Near Opry House. Call after
12X60, 2 bedrooms, large bath with washer, air. Couple preferred. No pets. Call 756 0264 after 5.
12x60. 2 bedrooms, fully carpeted; $150. No children. No pets, 758-4541 or 756 9491.
2 BE0RCX3MS, partially furnished, ition, no
air. good local children, 758 4857.
pets,
2 BE DROOM TRAILER
Furnished; $150 plus $100 deposit. Call 758 0779 or 75Z1623.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
WE REPAIR SCREENS & DOORS
RemodelingRoom Additions
C.L. Lupton Co.
752 6116
FRANK M. SUTTON
Certified Public Accountant
ACCOUNTING AND INCOME TAX SERVICES 757-1807
Monday - Friday 756-9000 Saturday 9 to 1
Call for appointment.
Woman Or Man Needed For Professional Sales Representative
Major copier machine dealer looking for a career oriented salesperson with business product sales experience to sell our complete line of copier supplies. Liberal benefits including car allowance.
Great Opportunity
with unlimited potential for the person looking for personal and professional growth. Send resume and call Diane Hill for confidential interview.
CREECH m JONES BUSINESS MACHINES
103 Trade Street, Greenville, N.C.
756-3175 Equal Opportunity Employer
109
Houses For Sale
1977 OAKWCXJD mobile home, 12x60, good condition. All rooms are closed off. Call 746 4677 trom 4 9.
1983 GUERDON. 12x50, 2 bedroom.
1 bath, plywood floors, sheetrock 495, plus s
. n payment Country Squire Mobile Homes, Inc.,
wall, $741 title. Low
. plus set up, plus tax and down payment, 756 9874,
264 Bypass, Greenville.
076 /\Aobile Home Insurance
MOBILE HOMEOWNER Insurance the best coverage lor less money Smith Insurance and Realty, 752
077 Musical Instruments
ALL THOMAS ORGANS halt price Includes free lessons, bench. 90 day cash option or monthly terms. Piano & Organ Distributors, Greenville, 355
NEW LOWREY STEREO organs Only $799. Lowrey Organ Center, 756 8833._ _
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
SPECIAL Executive Desks
Reg. Price t2n.0C
60"x30 beautiful walnul finish Ideal for home or office Special Price
SI790
TAFF OFFICE EQUIPMENT
569 S. Evans St.
752-2175
BALL & LANE
752-0025
OWNER FINANCING OPPORTUNITIES FARMVILLE- Exceptional brick traditional otters formal areas, 4 bedrooms, 3' 2 baths, private study. Just a few minutes from Greenville in a lovely neighborhood. $100,000.
UNIVERSITY Lots ot space for the growing family Needs some work but has greal possibilitiesi Two blocks from campus. $51,000.
Lee Ball Richard Lane Sandra Norris
752-1646
752-8819
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
A safe and sane weight loss plan.
New. The
Shaklee Slim Plan. Safe. Proven to work for people like you. Clinically tested, nutritious and innovative.
Kathleen & George L. King 746^728 and
Jackie A Larry Marin 758-7489 Between 10 AM & 10 PM
The Shaklee Irxleoendent Disinbulof logo is a regiaiered servcemark ol Shaklee Corporalion
BOYD
ASSOCIATES
INCORPORATED
P.O.JfOX im. GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROUNA 27834 GENERAL CONntACTORS 758-4284
ALL TYPE CONSTRUCTION
HASTINGS FORD
72 HOUR FORD-A-THON
Now Thru Saturday
10% DOWN *
ON
NEW ESCORTS, EXPS AND MUSTANGS
15% DOWN **
ON
NEWTHUNDERBIROS, LTDS, FAIRMONTS AND PICKUPS
UP TO 48 MONTHS FINANCING
Now Thru Saturday, Were Dealing On Over 100 New And Used Cars And Trucks. Hurry, While The Selection Is Good. Open Thursday And Friday Night Until 9 P.M. And Saturday Until 6 P.M. ^
Remember: Sale Ends Saturday
YOU CAN AFEQfiD A FQED FROM HASTINGS EQBD
H
ASTING
FORD
s
Tenth Street & 264 By-Pass * Limit One Per Customer With Approved Credit
Dealer No. 5720
758-0114 Greenville, N C. 27034
Details of Sale Posted in S*'owroom
ABSOLUTE AUCTION SALE
FURNITURE: APPLIANCES: TOOLS : OFFICE FURNITURE:
Saturday March 19,198310:00 AM
LOCATION: London Inn Motel 2710 S. Memorial Dr. Greenville, N.C.
The London Inn Motel is being renovated and all used appliances and kitchen type furniture as well as many other items are being offered for sale at ABSOLUTE AUCTION. Don't miss this opportunity to purchase,
FURNITURE AND APPLIANCES: Partial Listing 30 refrigerators, .25 electric cook stoves, 15 kitchen dinette suites, new and used carpet, kitchen cabinets, new mattress sets, bedroom furniture, new mirrors, new and used lamps, misc. silverware items Example: silver service, chaffing and warming dishes etc.
OFFICE FURNITURE:
Desk, chairs, cash register, adding machine, electric typewriter, check writer, conference table, misc. items. Window air conditioner.
TOOLS:
Consigned for sell, will be sold absolute, regardless of price. Drill press, bench grinder, vice, assorted wrench and socket sets, screwdriver sets, electric drill, numerous other small Items.
TRANE 30 TON COMMERCIAL AIR CONDITIONER
Must be seen to appreciate.
Inspect: Many items are on sales lot now and can be inspected anyday prior to Auction.
Terms: Cash or good check '
Sale conducted by: Boyette Auction Co. Lie. 472, Wilson, N.C. Ph. 291-1508
Bar-B-Cue and Bar-B-Cue Chicken Lunch Available
THE REAL ESTATE CORNER
^ Shenandoah Village^' Townhomes
2 bedrooms, 1 1/2 Baths, Low down payment Monthly payments as low as $35./month Builders pays points and closing costs.
Now is the time to choose carpet & wallpaper
*41.900.00
Aldridge Soitlhcrlimd
Rcallois
756-3500
J
1
Skin Rash In
xin Exposure
rPressV?^
Mo. (AP) -I iifMth examina-exposed to st known 0 dioxin in uncovered ikiR rashes, a official has
found no gross s, said Dr. epidemic in-service officer for Disease Saata.
! didnt expect falling apart IB Stehr who earlier state-physician in screening of lidents labeled rhyAeCDC. been no posi-in the physical Eflnt'-ll"'tbese tested so Dr. Burton ^^ief internist at tSt. Joseph's Hos-
Uve
, cautioned extensive lab-oraM^-lHts under way at tha ^ be needed
exposed residents catr-lbfiven a clean bill of beMSh Memi-tlun 1,200 people haipIlM screened at St.
according to Ge<tat^ Of those, 112
deflMB|le be of the greatest risfc-iiterjelected for more extmHtBiedical tests.
Ite^jPlicniiags. paid for by tbe ,|Mirinmental Protec-tioB lleys superfund. are a eoopmtive effort of the CbMen for Disease Con-tretii JHlta, the Missouri Dc|Mttiiit of Health, St. LtMgK^^BNerslty Hospitals ks.
Iis confirmed . Missouri are with dioxin,
I with waste ton roads as a jKasure in the t*/&veral sites :<leared by the and the EPA to 50 sites are uni|iiwltigation.
jMI 100 people living fleiiibe soolled Stout site in Q^iferamec Heights area of tBQXSial, Mo., are still
Sivision lies at the steep hill below the Stort'lite where EPA and CDC tots have shown dioxin at l<wds above those con
sidered safe.
'Vou can see the soil wash down even during light rain, said Bob McGraw, pointing to a standing pool of rainbow-colored water in his front yard. "It took us 22 years to build this home. Now Im scared to live here.
"Bob cant work out in the yard without getting headaches. my son has bladder problems and my daughters got a rash on her face that wont go away, said Mc-Graws wife, Francine. Weve been to our doctor and he cant explain why. CDC and state health officials have refused to examine residents of the area saying they were not considered a high risk group.
Led by a registered nurse, residents of the area are conducting a door-to-door health survey based on questions asked new patients at a doctors office.
"Were doing what the CDC should be doing, said Gail Hanks, 30, the nurse who designed the survey. "Were looking to see if the liver problems, headaches, skin rashes and nervous system problems were having here are more than the norm.
Dr. Samuel S. Epstein of the University of Illinois-Chicago told residents of Times Beach, the states most publicized dioxin-contaminated site, that dioxin-contaminated soil in Missouri should be cleaned up to a level of 5 parts of the substance for each trillion parts of the soil - the minimum detectable level.
Epstein, professor of occupational and environmental medicine, called the 1 part per billion level recognized by the CM as generally being safe "pure technical expediency.
"This is a substance that is 180,000 times as toxic as cyanide, Epstein told the residents, "It attacks virtually every organ system in the body.
But a University of Missouri doctor who has reviewed available studies on dioxin exposure dating back to 1949, says people who have been exposed to the toxic chemical in industrial accidents have shown no greater incidence of cancer than normal.
"The effects are dose-
related, William G. Dunagin said in a recent telephone interview. "Most studies show kidney and liver damage if the dose is very high. But the same studies show no toxicity at lower doses.
The study, which appeared as a copyright article in the March issue of Missouri Medicine, was based on accounts of dioxin exposure in industrial accidents at Nitro, W.Va., in 1949; Ludwigshafen, West Germany, in 1953; Amsterdam in 1963; Grenoble, France, in 1966; Bolsover, England, in 1968, and Sevaso, Italy, in 1976.
"In long-term follow-up of human exposure, no increase has been noted in overall mortality, the article said. (A) 30-year follow-up of 122 workers at Nitro, W.Va., showed no excess over the expected rate of malignancy. No other disease or type of malignancy was increased compared to control populations.
Dunagin said several workers at the Nitro site developed cancer just like 25 percent of the general population of the United States will at sometime.
Students Cater To Lifestyles
ROCHESTER, N.Y, (AP) - Catering to student lifestyles is the key to suc-cess for student entrepreneurs at the University of Rochester.
Successful student-run businesses tend to be based on the eating, listening, and traveling habits of undergraduates. Late-night snacks, custom-baked Mega-cookies, refrigerator rentals, records and stereo equipment, and luggage transport between hometown and campus reap rewards - financial and otherwise - for students in business for themselves.
One student even turned his modest Yogi Airlines into a career after he graduated. Instead of taking fellow students on mystery tours to unannounced destinations, he now ferries executives to business meetings as a corporate pilot.
omeowners: Dont postpone important plans any longer.
Phone Beneficial now for big cash to get things started.
As a homeowner you have a special edge today at Beneficial.
Consider the important things you want to do right now. Adding on to your home instead of buying a new one in today's market could be a good move Cover tuition costs Buy a fuel efficient car Liquidate balances you owe and come away with a single monthly payment, often considerably lower than your total present monthly outlay Weatherize your home Whatever the purpose may be. you know what you want to do
Fh# full amount you have in mind.
fpr money to do whals important to you. find out why families like ^rs worldwide are using over two billion dollars in Beneficial loans to Homeowners
Vbur edge at Beneficial.
Fake advantage of our experience Your Beneficial personal financial specialist will work with you to create a special plan that's right for your special situation Lower rates are available to homeowners. You have a choice of manageable payment plans in keeping with your budget and financial goals
An answer in 48 hours.
Because you have a busy schedule, you can call the special numbers to get things started right now over the phone. We'll spell out all th details for you Answer all your questions. Apply today and in cases we II have an answer for you in 48 hours. Phone now.
At Beneficial, you're special.
Beneficial
n tr I Finance of Noith Carolina GREENVILLE 321 Arlington Boulevard
Affiliated companies
756-8035
'
SPRING
FURNITURE SALE
Weve got a beautiful selection of finely crafted ^ groupings in store for you! Just in time for Spring! ^
Tafts Big Spring Clearance Sale...NOW IN PROGRESS.
Storewide Sale...Savings Up To 60%
_Shop Our Spacious Showroom...Over 32,000 Square Feet Of Space._ .
Berkline Wallaway & Rocker Recliners On Sale
Savings Up To
SI CAOO
150
Wallaway
Over 125 Recliners In Stock. Prices Start As Low As 199.00 Large Selection Of Styles and Covers
Maple &
Oak Cochrane Dinette
tnliif (.roupings KwliKvd -uw (Jp J.JiHi mi ; p, s,tf I ,ugu-.k lion Mairhing Chinas & Hindu's All (irMtk Huilcueii'
25% ,.50%
O OH
Regular $900.00............................Sale
As Shown In Oak or Maple
549
Red Tag Sale
Sealy Mattress & Box Spring Sale
Quilted Top-Firm Supporl Firm Sleep 1 Twin Size $
Reg. 99.00 Sale
59
00
Ea.
Piece
Full Size
Reg. 139.00 Sale
95
00
Ea.
Piece
Queen Size Set
Reg. 359.00 Sale
249
00
Set
Lane Cedar Chests
Reg. 259.00 With Padded Top Finish; Pine & Maple
S...449
All Baby Furniture
By Bassett On Sale
Including Cribs. O C Dressers & ChestsiCr ^0
All Lamps, Pictures 8c Mirrors
OH
25%
Off
Bedroom Suite Close-Outs
4 Piece Pine Bedroom Suite By Thomasville Triple Dresser & Mirror. Chest On-Chcst. Cannonball Bed. Commode Nightstand
RU2689................... Sale
*1295
4 Piece Maple Bedroom Suite By Kemp Triple Dresser & Mirror, Chest, l ow Poster Bed & Nigtitstand ^
Refl899........................................Sale
4 Piece Pecan Traditional Bedroom Suite By Stanley Triple Door Dresser & Mirror. 5 Drawer Chest, Panel Headboard & Nightstand. ^ pj
*1495 ......................................Sale
True 18th Century "u ^
Craftsmanship.,.
40% OH On All In Stock Cherry & Mahogany 18th Century Bedroom & Dining Room Furniture
Hl lMv:s(.,iKne? rtiomrtvville At Ccunc.;!
You Save $279.00 to $400.00
Sale On Loose Pillowback & Traditional Sofas.
Quilted Polished Cotton prints, corduroys and herculon stripes.
Sale Priced From
379"..*629
00
30% OH Entire Group
WOULD YOU BELIEVE THIS IS PVC?
Amy Casual Kattan
THE LOOK OF RATTAN .
THE DURABILITY OF SPACE AGE POLYMERS!
Large selection .
of styles, covers,
and colors to choose from.
6019 Dining Chair
(Not Shown)
6030 Adjustable Chaise 6021 Loveseat
6023 Sofa
6031 Designer Chaise
Special
Orders
Welcome
(Allow 3 to 4 Weeks)
Award Winning Outdoor Furniture I
An exciting new design, it has the look, the feel, the quality of rattan with the exceptional durability of PVC Construction, Features comfortable cushions and authentic handwrapped joints Amy Casual is stackable and the collection includes dining chair, loveseat. sofa, ottoman, designer chaise and adjustable chaise
Table
90 Day Cash Plan Free Delivery Up To 100 Miles
Furniture Co.
535 Dickinson Ave. Downtown Greenville
752-5161
S5 Years Of Continuous Service To Eastern North Carolina"
Plenty of Free Parking Next To Our Store I
Greatest Eud-of-Wmter Sale*^Drastic Final Price Cuts! ^ Diamonds-Jewelry-
D oirx'sT I Precious Gems!
Dont Miss This Sale!
V C Al,
Desiyners Floating Heart
A'
DIAMOND
HEART
YOUR
CHOICE
$119
Reg. $199 each
eacK
Reg. $99 SAVE $30
DIAMONDS
with
RUBIES
EMERALDS
SAPPHIRES
irl
Reg $99 each SAVi: S30
DIAMOND
BRIDAL
129
Reg. $229
RING
with
DIAMONDS
119
1 4 Carat T.G.W.
119
PENDANT
Diaiiu)nd< and Rubies
V. I'
119
Fabulous Gift Value!
DESIGNER'S
GOLD
119
DIAMOND
and
GARNET
or
AMETHYST
119
119
1 2 Carat T W.
1 4 Carat T.W.
1 U ilM-.Ml- ttXdi urii(hl
102 East Main Street Belhaven, NC 27810 (919) 943-2121 Hours: 9 AM to 5 PM Monday thru Saturday
J.D. DAWSON COMPANY
H SHOWROOMS AND WAREHOUSE V
FOR MAIL ORDERS CALL TOLL-FREE IN NORTH CAROLINA 1-800-682-2121 DO NOT DISCARD THIS FLYER - PRICES GOOD THRU APRIL 16th
DIAMOND
QUARTZ
WATCH
99
Reg. $129
14
DIAMOND
DIAMOND
Reg. $399 SAVE $180
Colonial Heights 2818 East 10th Street Greenville. NC 27834 (919) 752-1600 Hours: 9:30 AM to 6:30 PM Monday thru Saturday
SAVE
SAVE
25% SAVE
%Q%
SAVE
40%
SAVE
I
tLii rt
50%
a
.<.wsre>
V Diamonds and Rubios-^ 20 gems in a heart motif.
^ s iS. D2. Elegant 9 Diamond
snouflake-design ring. .JIM
hi. 5 Diamonds and 8 genuine Sapphires 1 full carat T.G.W.
pendant with 8 Diamonds and 8 Sapphires.
1/4
CARAT
TOTAL WEIGHT OF DIAMONDS
rl. 16 Diamond heart pendant with Gold chain.
" 1)3 One carat T.G.W.
* , ' 1> Diamonds and Sa|>phires,
D4. 2 Diamond wedding rings for bride At groom -Buy one or both!
1)5. I 2 carat Ruby surrounded by 6 tailored Diamonds.
4,
D6. I 2 carat pear-shaped Sapphire framed by Diamonds
E3. Ruby-red rrr Emerald-green Ik eternity ngs matched perfectly T with Diatuonds and Gold. ^
T.4. C ascade of 8 Diamonds and 8 Emeralds.
E5. 14 Diamond
cocktail ring
P to
3/4
CARAT
TOTAL GEN WEIGHT
L2. 7 Diamond l>ridal set with I traditional look.
14 Tailored 9 Diamond man's ring
E3. 14 Diamond inlay cocktail
15. ( o( ktail ring with a (ascade of 16 Diamonds.
I 6 5 Di.iinond brarclet grai efni I nropc'an styling
DIAMOND EARRINGS and PENDANTS
9- # # # t- p f
Kl K2
1919 ^169199129149
Choose from a-Prong or Buttercup Settings!
Tremendous Buys
Reg. Reg. Reg.
S199 S379 S519
All
M'65
. ,eS
^5o5 u9 '
* (jl- Brilli.int solil.iiri'
. V. Didmond surrouiidt'd l)v ' J' 1 2 tar<i( of Kul)i(>s.
G2. 7 I)i<)inonds sol off bv 6 f'Hieralds.
(liJ. Kiibv and Diamond uatoriall rinq.
1 full , aral t.ii.W.
C>*i T
(I'l Hoart pondanl sparkles with f)0 Diamonds.
,g
r :?'
(ib I Diamonds and 11 Sapphires
(i.'> '1 Diamonds ollsel In b Kilbies in an eleriiilv motif
1/2
CARAT
TOTAL WEIGHT OF DIAMONDS
.11 :i;i Diamond desiipier-slvie ^
dinner rin<{
.12 Marqni>n''sliaped < liislm riiiff A'illi 2> Di.imonds
Diamond . bea^^endaiil J
1 aral T W 1
mm
M (iem-on-(|em IN Diamond linner riiiq
ir> 10 Di.iiiiond aimivms.irv rinq
i'
Kl M.iii s m.issivi I I Di.imoiid iiiiq
^^Oreatest End-of-Winter Sale*H^Dratic Final Price Cuts! .ES Diamonds-Jewelry-
N2 Ii'
s-'
4
m
s.
Copynghl 1982 The Brown & Richie Comoanie
Diamond Bridal sets & Trios
Ml. 6 Diamond Bridal set.
Reg. $1099 $499
3 Diamond Groom's Ring included
M2. 8 Diamond Bridal Set. 1 carat T.W. Reg. $1399- $959
M3. 15 Diamond Wedding Trio.
All 3 Rings, Reg. $1797 $739
M4. 2 Diamond Bridal Set.
Reg. $1499- $619
Diamond Solitaires
Nl. Pear-shape. 1/2 carat. Reg. $1999- $125
N2. Brilliant round. 3/8 carat. Reg. $1049 $67
N3. Wide band. 1/3 carat. Reg. $1229- $68
N4. Brilliant round. 1/7 carat. Reg. $395 $19
ST
.V i. ^
PI. Genifhse 1 Carat Sapphire Framed by 12 Diamonds. 14K.
P2. (iemiine 1 Carat Kuliy. 16 Diamonds.
m
P3. Di.imond Solitaire for him Bright or fluted finish.
) i I hiiiiis
IH
Ml NKls
^ ^ Ml NKls
^
Pendants & Earrings
51. H,;i $<100- $9.29
52. Rrij. $49.00- $21.95
53. R,g. $24.00- $11.95
54. Keg. $44.00 $21.95
V V.- \
Charm Holder & Charms
Tl. ileari. Keg. $9.00- $5.29
T2. "1 MOM. Keg. $IS.95 $9 49 T3. Shell Keg. $2.25- $7.69
T4. Horn Keg, $19.25- $8.59
T5. Holder Keg. $24.00 $14.95
102 East Main Street Belhaven, NC 27810 (919) 943-2121 Hours: 9 AM to 5 PM Monday thru Saturday
J.D. DAWSON COMPANY
H SHOWROOMS AND WAREHOUSE l^l
FOR MAIL ORDERS CALL TOLL-FREE IN NORTH CAROLINA 1.800.682-2121
GRADUATE GEMOLOGIST AVAILABLE TO ASSIST IN YOUR DIAMOND SELECTIONS
DO NOT DISCARD THIS FLYER - PRICES GOOD THRU APRIL 16th
Colonial Heights 2818 East 10th Street Greenville, NC 27834 (919) 752-1600 Hours: 9:30 AM to 6:30 PM Monday thru Saturday
PUBLIC NOTICETOOL LIQUIDATION SRLETWO DAYS ONLY!!
2 Ton
POWER
PULLER
Reg.
$6900
COMEALONG
non
14 pc. Wrench
Reg. $79.00 Q
*1800
!i
I it ft
Air powered chisel ^25
5 pc. Mechanics Pliers
$1300
Large Rolls PVC Electrical Tape10 for *5!!10 PIECE SCREWDRIVER SET
.99*With Coupon
Limit One Set Per Customer
Tool Listing
Reg.
Sale
60' lead
$ 15
$ 5
12 volt lead with bulb
$ 11
$ 5
110 volt lead
$ 10
$ 4
4 pc. pipe wrench
$ 59
$ 16
5 pc. mechanics plier set
$ 30
$ 13
3 pc. slip joint plier set
$ 16
$ 9
21 pc. V*" socket set
$259
$48
25 pc. Vi" socket set
$ 79
$ 18
62 pc. socket set
$ 49
$ 12
6 pc. flex wrench set
$ 49
$ 15
PVC Tape
$ 2
$.50
Foot pumps
$ 19
$ 6
11 pc. wrench (metric)
$ 34
$ 13
11 pc. wrench (SAE)
$ 34
$ 13
14 pc. combination wrench
$ 59
$ 18
Air Hammer w/4 chisels
$ 79
$25
40 Piece socket set inch & metric
1^6.00Foot Pump With Pressur%augeReg. $19.00
$000
Tool Listing
MUCH
MUCH
MUCHMORE!
Some items iimited quantities
3 pc. locking plier set
4 pc. auto test kit
6 pc. jewelers screwdriver
10 pc. Royal screwdriver set Impact Driver
7 pc. wooden screwdriver
11 pc. wooden screwdriver set 50 pc. Rogers Flatware Set
6 pc. Stainless cutlery set 1600 Watt Hair Dryer 2000 Watt Hair Dryer
17 pc. V*" drive socket set Emergency Tow Ropes
7 pc. nut driver set
25' lead with Junction box 2 Ton Power Puller (comealong) 40 pc. socket set SAE & Metric
Reg. Sale
$25.00 $19.00 $ 7.00 $12.00 $15.00 $ 9.00 $12.00 $34.00 $24.00 $14.00 $20.00 $ 9.00 $19.00 $11.00 $19.00 $69.00 $19.00
$12.00 $ 8.00 $ 2.50 $ 6.00 $ 6.00 $ 4.50 $ 5.50 $19.00 $10.00 $ 8.00 $10.00 $ 4.50 $10.00 $ 5.00 $10.00 $10.00 $ 6.00
Cash & Approved Checks
WTMC Liquidators Inc <(2HOLIDAY INN U.S. 13 Memorial Drive GREENVILLEFRIDAY & SATURDAY SALE STARTS AT 10:00 A.M.
PUBLIC NOTICE
STEREO LIQUIDATION SALETWO DAYS ONLY!!
$199
Per Pair
6X9
3 Way Car Speaker System
Over 100 Watts
Reg.
,8900
*29
00
AM-FM CASSETTE STEREO 90 day, 100% Warranty Fits Most Cars
Reg. $119.00
$3900
FREE
SONY
LNX-C90 TAPE
To the first 50 customers with this coupon
Also for sale at $1.55 ea. rcg. $3.49
Pioneer Power Magnums
These 4-way speaker systems with 12' woofers are top quality, and offer powerful bass and bright clean highs. They originally sold for over $700.00!!
Home Stereo, 5 Band Equalizer, Pro Type Liquidation Price *79
SANYO
Top Line Auto-Rev.
Metal Cap 19 WATTS .^00 LIST 279.00 ^99
BSR 883
TOWERS
Top-of-the-line
Eight-inch front-firing woofer
Half-roll foam surrounds
Polypropylene cones
Ferro-fluid cooled
SPECIFICATIONS
Type: 3-way Driver Complement:
Woofer 8
Midrange 6' (f-l cooled)
Tweeter 2'A' (l-t cooled)
Frequency Response:
20-20.000HZ
Efficiency (l-wall pink noise/1-mefer on axis):
90 db SPL Power Handling: Maximum watts (RMS) 65 Minimum watts (RMS) 20 Crossover Frequency: 4KHZ/2KHZ
Mfg. Sugg. Price $598.00 pair
LIQUIDATION PRICE . .$139.00 pair
SANYO
Metal Capable Home Cassette Deck
Reg. $149 88
Home Stereo
AM/FM Stereo Rec. 22W p. ch Technics Belt Dr. Turntable 15' 4 Way Speakers Sanyo Belt Dr. Turntable 30 Watt 2 way home speakers Technics 30 Watt Digital Receiver SANYO Cass. Deck Dolby B & C BSR Turntable w/Remote Cntrl Pioneer Digital 40W Receiver JVC 40 W Rec. w/5 Band Equal. Technics Cass. Deck w/soft touch 12' 3 way home speakers SANYO Cass. Deck w/Full Logic Pioneer Cassette with Auto Rev. Technics Direct Drive Turntable Technics Linear Drive Turntable JVC 30 watt per channel receiver
Reg. Sale
$219 $139
$149 $ 99
$450 $259
$129 $ 89
$179 $ 99
$299 $199
$289 $169
$219 $ 99
$399 $279
$419 $299
$199 $129
$229 $149
$329 $179
$399 $279
$199 $129
$229 $189
$279 $199
MARANTZ
SR520
38 watts per channel
m,
Touch Controls For Tuning 16 Station Pre-Set Memory Auto Scan Tuning Bass Midrange Treble Controls PLL Digital Tuning .VERY LIMITED QUANTITY @ *275 ea.
Accessories & etc.
Reg. Sale
ADC Sound Shaper Equalizer $139.00 $ 89.00
A-T 112 EP Cart. P-Mount/conv. $ 99.00 $ 50.00
Walkman Type Headphone $ 22.00 $ 6.00
FM Stereo Walkman Radio $ 49.00 $ 19.00
ADC Ultra Series Cart. $149.00 $ 40.00
Shure P-Mount Cartridge $ 79.00 $ 30.00
TDK SA 90 Hi Bias Tape $ 6.95 $ 2.49
Telephone with Holder $ 39.00 $ 19.00
Megalech 7 Band Home Equalizer $189.00 $109.00
MUCH - MUCH - MUCH MORE!
Some items limited quantities
PRO 505 15" WOOFER 4 Way Speaker System
100 watts R.M.S.
High End Freq.
Response Control LIST.........789"'
SPECIAL *259 per pairCar Stereo
Reg. Sale
AM/FM In-dash Cassette $119 $ 39
SONY 6 X 9 Two Way Speaker $139 $ 79
6x93 way Car Speakers $ 99 $ 44
SONY XR-55 AM/FM Cassette $399 $259
Panasonic 5' Door Speakers $ 79 $ 33
SANYO Hi-power Mini Auto/Rev. (FR) $249 $129 AM/FM Cassette w/5 Band Eq. $219 $119
60 Watt Booster w/Bass Boost $ 89 $ 29
7 Band Booster/Eq. w/LEDs $119 $ 49
SANYO AM/FM Hi Power Auto Rev. $149 $ 99
Hi Power (200 watt) Van Speakers $ 99 $ 55
SONY 5'/4 Door Speakers $ 89 $ 49
10 Band 150 Watt Booster/Eq. $199 $ 69
AM/FM Cassette w/Auto Rev. $179 $ 88
Panasonic 4 x 10 Speakers $119 $ 59
SANYO Mini w/Aufo Rev. (FR) $139 $ 78
SANYO Portable w/AMSS (FR) $199 $109
Audiovox 6x93 Way Speaker $109 $ 39
Cash , Approved Checks WT^i^ l.Iquldators Inc
'HHOLIDAY INN U.S. 13 Memorial Drive GREENVILLEFRIDAY & SATURDAY SALE STARTS AT 10:00 A.M.