Daily Reflector, April 12, 1983


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Fair tonight with low in mid-40s. Wednesday becom-g partly cloudy with high in themid-TOs.

THE DAILY REFLECTOR

INSIDE READING

Page 5-Governorsschool Page 12 - Oscar awards Page 16-PCC role

102NDYEAR NO. 87

GREENVILLE, N.C.

TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FiaiON

TUESDAY AFTERNOON, APRIL 12, 1983

28 PAGES3 SECTIONS PRICE 25 CENTS

Another MX Deployment Plan Has Dubious Future

nvTTU AUE'DKI     i    u./___,____ ___ii-_

By TIM AHERN Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON (AP) -The latest plan for basing the MX missUe, similar to a proposal rejected by Congress two years ago, is awaiting President Reagans

endorsement before it faces a bitter concessional fight.

A commission appointed by Reagan pn^x)sed Monday that 100 MX weapons should be built and put In Minute-man silos in Wyoming and Nebraska and that a new,

smaller land-based nuclear missile should be developed in the next decade.

Few, if any, will consider our recommendations an optimal solution, said retired Lt. Gen. Brent Scowcroft, the former national security

adviser who headed the 11-member panel. If such were available, this com-niission probably would not have been convened

What we have, we feel, has a reasonable, has the best chance to be sue-

Gty School Board OKs Affirmative Action Policy

Kite-Flying

FLYING HIGH - Art students at East Carolina University sent colorful snake, box and traditional kites into the air Monday near the Town Common, culminating a hands-on

learning unit on aero^ace structures. According to the class instructor, Terry Smith, students gr^pled with concepts such as geometric and wood desgin and visual art while making the kites. (Reflector Photo by Sue Hinson)

By JERRY RAYNOR Reflector Staff Writer A first reading of an affirmative action policy for the city school system was unanimously adopted at the information meeting of the Greenville Board of Education Monday night.

The policy, with its accompanying regulations titled the Affirmative Action Plan for the Greenville City Schools, will be up for a second reading and final approval at the May 16 school board meeting.

The relatively brief policy statement constitutes the official guideline for the city schools in assuring that the selection and assignment of minority educators should be such that sufficient numbers in each job classification are indicative of the fact that quality performance and qualification merit selection regardless of race.

There shall be no invidious racial discriminjation practiced within the Greenville City Schools. No person shall be employed, assigned, promoted, demoted, dismissed, or disciplined solely on the basis of race, religion, sex, martial status, national origin, or age and physical handicap (except when age or physical handicap is rationally related to job performance criteria), the statement continues.

However, race, sex, and/or nationai origin may be valid criteria to be considered in achieving the overall goals and

objectives of the Greenville City Schools.

City school attorney Phil Dixon told the board that, legally, its as soiid a document as Ive ever seen. I feel its a model document and I would not be surprised if other schools use it as the basis for formulating their own affirmative action policy.

Walter Morehead, who served on the Affirmative Action Committee as the representative of the Black Assembly contingent in drafting the policy, acted as spokesman to explain to the board the manner in which the policy was formulated. He related that, instead of the initial three or four meetings planned to work out details, the committee met 25 times to be certain that the policy would meet two key considerations, that it will have broad community support and that its legally defensible.

Morehead touched on the step-by-step processes the committee used in refining the rationaie, goal, objective and final terminology of the document.

One of the primary objectives was that of determining a specific percentage of miniority certified educators within the city school system as a reasonable, attainable goal.

A percentage of 32.45 was arrived at by thecommittee as the obtainable objective of minority personnel. This (Please turn to Page 8)

Adminisfrative Actions Warns Americans Approved By School Bd, Of Acid Rain Cost

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) The Canadian minister of the environment says the acid rain issue hasnt affected the way Canadians view Americans-yet.

Canadians are very much aware of this problem, the acid rain problem, John Roberts said at a news conference Monday. I believe that they think ... that most of them believe the United States is not actively responding to this problem because people in the United States arent aware of it.

I think if Canadians ever had the view that Americans do know about the problem ... and didnt give a damn or werent concerned about responding, then I think the reaction in Canada would be very strong, he said.

Roberts stopped in Ohio to meet with officials, including Gov. Richard Celeste. He said U.S. action on the problem of acid rain has been agonizingly slow.

I would like to hear Governor Celeste say: I understand the seriousness of the problem, the urgency of the problem and that we will do everything feasible to cut back emissions, Roberts said.

Paul Ck)Stello, the governors press secretary, said Roberts met with the governor but

Costello didnt know what was discussed.

Some scientists blame sulfur dioxide emissions from coal-burning power plants for acid rain, which has threatened the aquatic life in streams and rivers of eastern Canada and the northeastern United States. Many of the plants are in the Midwest. Some are in Canada.

Roberts said that if technology could reduce emissions, there wouldnt have to be any impact on jobs.

Were concerned about jobs in Canada as well, he said.

During the news conference, Roberts cited a 1980 agreement between Canada and the United States to solve the problem of acid rain. But he said talks have stalled since the United States rejected a Canadian proposal for joint emissions-reduction pro^ams last June.

Progress since that time toward an agreement that was envisaged then has been agonizingly slow, Roberts said.

Our disappointment has been with the tardiness of (Reagan) administration action, he said. (But) over the past two years or so, I think Congress has shown a point of view, a very encouraging shift.

By JERRY RAYNOR Reflector Staff Writer Approval was given to two key administrative actions by members of the Greenville Board of Education at its information meeting Monday night.

The first action approved was that of declaring certain personnel positions being in a Critical Shortage Areas category in relation to the recently adopted Reduc-tion-in-Force policy for the schools if cutbacks in total personnel become necessary.

Personnel approved for the critical areas are; those in intermediate/mathematics concentration; secondary mathematics; intermediate/science concentration; home economics/infant care (a specialized position); and any coaching position (at the discretion of the principal, dependent on available alternatives.)

Superintendent Delma Blinson elaborated on the coaching positions falling

into the critical area by explaining that at the present time personnel who coach car^ out these duties in addition to regular teaching assignments. He noted that a tenured teacher who also serves as a coach could conceivably opt to resign his coaching duties, which would impose a real hardship on athletic programs in the city schools.

The second approval action was for adoption of the rough draft of the comprehensive plan for the improvement of Greenville schools. This broad-based document outlines goals to be achieved by the school board, the superintendent and the staff of the city schools.

Basic areas covered in the comprehensive plan deal with action to improve public support, personnei performance, instruction, relationship with East Carolina University and administration.

Following a report by

Fraegar R. Sanders Jr. director of federal programs for the city school system, the board approved action by Sanders to submit annual applications for federal funds for the coming school year.

In his report, Sanders pointed out that in Chapter 1 federal funds, the proposed cut from last years funding level is 15 percent. The bulk of these funds are for programs in grades K-7, Sanders said. Assuming we will be funded at 85 percent of last years funding, we will be able to implement, without staff changes, the current programs involving 17 and one-half teaching positions. The majority of these positions, Freager pointed out, fall within work being done in remedial instruction in reading and math.

On the outlook for Chapter 2 funds, Sanders said that funding is expected to be the same as last year, contingent on the level of fund-

OTKnc

Wastewater G>nference Set By Winterville Governing Bd.

752-1336

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

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

WALL FAMILY INFO SOUGHT Katherine M. Niemeyer of McComb, Miss., has asked Hotline to appeal for members of or persons knowing the Wall family of Beaufort and Pitt County to contact her. She said Joseph Wall died in Beaufort County in 1755, leaving his widow, Deborah, and children, James, Joseph, Howell, Robert, Mary Ballard, Ann and Elizabeth. Howell Wall was in Pitt County in 1762 and died in St. Peters Parish, Beaufort District, after 1781, Mrs. Niemeyer is interested in exchanging information with anyone who is researching this family. Her address is Pike*Amite-Walthall Library System, 14 State St., McComb, Miss. 39648.    '

WINTERVILLE - The Town Board of Aldermen will meet with representatives of Sunnyside Eggs, Contentnea Metropolitan Sewage District, the Department of Natural Resources and an engineer to determine whether the town should allow Sunnyside Eggs to discharge wastewater into the towns sewage system.

Sunnyside has requested sewage service from the town but town officials voted

at their monthly meeting Monday to meet with CMSD Manager Gene Coley, engineer Bucky Moore, Sunnyside Manager Joe Wilson and Roger Phorp, a regional engineer from the water quality section of the division of environmental management, N.C. Department of Human Resources to determine if the towns system can handle the wastewater. A date for the meeting was not set.

The board also approved a letter responding to a letter the board received from Lyman Cox accusing members of discrimination in awarding bids on the Community Development Block Grant program.

Cox, one of three bidders for rehabilitation work on six houses, said in his letter he had grievance in the way the bidding was conducted and the circumstances the same.

Also, I would like to question the judgment of the city councilmens final decisions and that of the pro-g r a m a d -ininistrators/consultants, Cox wrote.

Contracts for the work were awarded to Alligood Builders, the low bidders, which according to Town Clerk Elwood Nobles, is standard procedure. Alligood Builders bids (Please turn to Page 6)

ing Congress may give this category of funding.

One of the factors influencing federal funding for public schools is census figures used by the government in establishing funds based on the number of families gi'falling into the poor (Please turn to Page 8)

Struck By Car

FARMVILLE - An 18-year-old Route 2, Walstonburg, youth was struck by a car and killed on U.S. 264 about 442 feet east of the Marlboro intersection with U.S. 258 here Monday just before 10;40p.m.

Police said Charles Daniels was struck near the middle of the east-bound lane of the highway by a car driven by Janice Ramsey, 35, of Richmond, Va. Ms. Ramsey, who was en route from Richmond to New Bern, told police Daniels stepped into her path after a truck had passed him. She said she did not see him before impact.

Police estimated that her vehicle was traveling at about 30 mph after stopping for the red li^t at the Marlboro intersection. She pulled over, she said, not knowing what she had hit until she was out of the car to investigate.

According to a medical examiners report filed by Dr. Thomas Patterson of Farmville, Daniels died of a broken neck nearly instantaneously.

Farmville Police Chief Ron Cooper said no charges had been filed pending further investigation.

cessful, he told a news conference.

But most of the immediate Capitol Hill reaction came from MX opponents and it was predictably negative.

Rep. Joseph P. Addabbo, D-N.Y., chairman of the House defense appropriations subcommittee, predicted defeat. The MX is a dog that has been around too long, Addabbo said.

Sen. Gary Hart, D-Colo., a candidate for the Democratic presidential nomination, said the panels recommendation to deploy 100 MX missiles in existing Minute-man silos makes no more sense today than it did when the administration proposed it as a temporary solution 16 months ago. It was rejected then; it should be rejected now.

Sen. J. James Exon, a Nebraska Democrat whose state would receive some of the missiles, called the plan ridiculous.

A dangerous, expensive fraud, was the reaction of Sen. Carl Levin, D-Mich.

Sen. Mark Hatfield, R-Ore., chairman of the Senate Appropriations Committee, called the recommendations nothing less than mad.

If the commissions recommendations are adopted, we might as well also announce that America has adopted a first strike nuclear strategy, Hatfield said.

Rep. Jack Edwards, R-Ala., a key House MX supporter, predicted a close vote.

Most people who were against it are still against it, Edwards said in a telephone interview. But some members who opposed the since-discarded dense-pack basing last year may vote for the new deployment method simply because it is the only choice left, he said.

Sen. Malcolm Wallop, R-Wyo., said Congress wUl probably approve the plan. My guess is that the struggle will be intense, the fight will be difficult, and in the end well be successful.

The report was released after the panel met with Reagan, who didnt publicly endorse it.

Instead, said White House sources who declined to be named, Reagan will probably wait a week so the MX debate doesnt detract from administration efforts against a House nuclear freeze resolution and in favor of Kenneth Adelman, the embattled arms control nominee.

The administration says the 10-warhead MX is needed because the 1,000 Minuteman missiles - the backbone of Americas land-based nuclear force - is vulnerable to a first strike by increasingly accurate Soviet missiles.

The MX was first proposed a decade ago, and three dozen basing plans have been considered and rejected since then.

President Carter proposed shuttling 200 MX weapons among 4,600 shelters in Nevada and Utah, but Reagan ridiculed that plan during the 1980 campaign and junked it when he took office.

Instead, Reagan said in 1981,40 MX weapons should be put in Minuteman silos until a permanent basing method could be found. But Congress rejected that, saying it would leave the N just as vulnerable as the Minuteman.

Ayden Commissioners Vote Higher Power Rates

AYDEN Electrical customers in Ayden will get higher electrical bills in May because of a 12.98 percent rise in the vdiolesale cost of power fron Carolina Ppwer ' and Li^t that prompted an 8 percent rise in retail rates from the town of Ayden.

The Town Board of Commissioners approved the 8 percent increase Monday.

The new rates will apply for the months of April, May and June.

Town Manager Don Russell said the increase means electrical customers will pay $5.32 more per 1,000 kWH. Ahother increase may be necessary in July, he said, to offset tbe,remaindr of the 12.98 percent increase.

Another increase (in

July) is pending depending upon what is in the budget (1983-84 electrical budget) by then, said Russell.

In other business;

The board awarded the 1982-83 audit contract to Earl Umphlett for a sum of $4,650.

Taylor and Associates was granted the Ayden Housing Authority audit for 1982-83 pending approval of

the Department of Housing and Urban Develi^mait.

The first of two public hearings on the towns application for community development funds was held. High, Barwick, Tumage, Watermelon and Blount streets almg with a portion of East Avenue was designated a tentative target area.

Fourteen acres of land on

Old Snow Hill Road adjacent to N.C. 11 was rezoned from residential to highway commercial. Highway commercial zones, accoi^ing to Town Gerk Ralph Ford, may contain any type of business normally found in a dowhtown district, including offices, institutions, car sales, etc.

A resolution recommen

ding to Sens. John East and Jesse Helms that the revenue sharing prorgam be reenacted was approved by the board. Russell called the program one of the finest federal programs we ever had. Local revenue sharing funds, he said, have been spent for street improvement, fire trucks and sanitation vehicles.





2-The Daily Reflector, GreenviUe, N.C.-Tuesday, April 12,1963

Choices Are Many As Camping Time Nears

CADDY AND MATCHING COASTER SET...are needlepointed

on seven-mesh plastic canvas with a variety of yarns.

ByPATRICIA

McCORMACK

United Press IntematkHial

Its camp^ickin time for Americans of all a^ looking for fun, learning and adventure during the annual escape from home.

Camping gives kids a vacation and provides parents one too.

The biggest growth in camps seems to be among those offering computer instruction, based on information in the 1983 Parents Guide to Accredited Camps ($5.95, American Camping Association, Bradford Woods, Martinsville Ind. 46151.)

Armand Ball, ACA executive director, said camps for adults, especially the elderly, also are growing; many operate yearlong. Other year round camps cater to kids whose school vacations fall sometime other than summer, as in school districts that (^rate 12 months, with

Cheery bright red cardinals highlight a needlepoint mail caddy and coaster set, quickly and easily made from 7-mesh plastic canvas. The mail holder can be made in a variety of sizes to accommodate any number of items other than mail. Put one or more on the kitchen counter to hold napkins, recipe clippings or coupons. The sets, as shown, are compietely covered with stitches, but, if you prefer, you can take a shortcut with solid white canvas, working only the design stitches.

To obtain directions -for making the Cardinal Set, send your request for Leaflet No. NL-410 with $1 and a long, stamped, self-addressed envelope to; Pat Trexler (The Daily Reflector), P.O. Box 810, North Myrtle Beach, S.C. 29597.

Or you may order Kit No. NK-410 by sending a check or money order for $12.50 to Pat Trexler at the same address. The kit price includes shipping charges, instruction leaflet, plastic canvas, needle and yarn sufficient for completing six coasters, coaster holder and mail caddy.

Dear Pat: I always thought that one must use only one type of yam throughout a single needlepoint project. While traveling recently, though, I made do with leftovers from my needlework bag while working a floral tote bag from plastic canvas -combining one type of yam for the background and two others for the flowers. I really think I like the finished result better. I thought this might be a good subject for one of your columns. - Rita L., Denver, Colo.

While debating on the subject matter of todays column, I browsed through a stack of mail that had been on my desk for some time and your letter did the trick. Thank you for nudging me, Rita.

It is a timely idea, too, because the kit for the plastic canvas set featured today uses three different yams to achieve the desired effects. This design can be worked throughout with any one of the yams to be mentioned, but I prefer the combination.

The cardinal is worked with a red nylon yam to give depth and brilliance to that portion of the design. Other design areas are done in a bulky craft yarn while the background is worked in a knitting worsted-weight acrylic.

The relatively new nylon yams are ideal for plastic

canvas projects requiring small quantities of a given color, as they are now available in small skeins and do have the property of making the design area more outstanding.

When trying to determine the suitability of a yam you happen to have on hand, why not make some small item, such as a bookmark or coaster, to test the results. While some of us get a lot of pleasure simply from testing stitches and materials, most people prefer to have something useful to show for even their practice sessions.

You might be surprised to ieam that I use a lot of wool Persian yams for 10-mesh plastic projects, since this type of yarn is relatively expensive and is usually reserved for fine work done on traditional canvas. The cost, however, is not prohibitive for most projects and the results are often superior. The color range is almost endless in this type of yarn, allowing shadings not available with many others. Too, those who do a lot of needlepoint on traditional canvas have a lot of odds and ends of Persian around that can be used for small design areas. '

If you have never worked with Persian yams, here are a couple of tips to make life easier. One strand of Persian'^ ^ yarn consists of three loosely twisted plies (very fine strands). The big advantage is that you can separate and use any number of plies to get the desired coverage.

Even when you are using it with a full strand, the plies should be separated before working and you should work with the nap or grain of the yarn.

Take a strand of yam in one hand and run the fingers of the other hand down the strand in first one direction and then in the other. One way will feel smoother than the other. Hold it so that you feel the smoothness when you run your fingers down the yam and thread that top end into the needle.

There are two schools of thought on stripping or separating the individual plies. Some people hold one ply securely and push down on the other two. Others mn a fingernail down between the plies. Try both methods and see which vou prefer.

After separating them and threading the needle with the desired.number, make sure that the plies do not twist as yqp work. To help keep the strands flat and side by side, hold them down with your left thumb as you stitch.

Another unexpected material for 10-mesh canvas is embroidery floss, used double (12-ply). This gives a silky look and combines well with other * materials inexpensive for small areas, too!

Experiment with a variety of materials and just let your imagination go!

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For Fall

THE AMERICAN LOOK For fall clothing, the look is great: great business, great appearance and a great big easy cut that makes clothes easy to live in and work in. This smashing cape of gray flannel by Cest Simone typifies the trend to shadings of one coior seen at the fall fashion market at Chicagoa Apparel Mart. Its teamed with trousers to match the palest shade of the cape and has its own black fur hat.(UPITelephoto)

vacations staggered over the academic year.

For families hit by the recession. Ball said many camps, both resident and day camps, provide assistance or are very inexpensive.

Parents lacking funds should check out day and resident camping opportunities available throu^ the Salvation Army, the Ys, Boys Clubs of America, Girls Clubs of America, the Boy Scouts, the Girl Scouts, Settlement Houses and similar neighborhood helping agencies.

Specialty camps and summer programs include those stressing sports, farming, hiking, horseback riding, foreip languages, acquatics, climbing, nutrition, band, dance, drama, music, religious emphasis, riflery, and even junior statesmanship.

The Junior Statesman Summer School at Davis is described in "Summer Camps & Programs: Over

Duplicate

Winners

Dr. and Mrs. Charles Duffy were first place, North-South winners in the duplicate bridge game played' at Planters Bank Saturday.

Others placing were Mrs. Robert Blenk and Mary Jo Beeler, second; Mrs. Harold Forbes and Mrs. Lacy Harrell, third.

East-West winners included: Dot McKemie and Loretta Harp, first with .604 percent; Mrs. Charles McClelland and Forest Gray, second; Chris Langley and Ed Yauck, third.

Wednesday afternoon winners, North-South included; Mrs. J.M. Horton and Mrs. W.R. Harris, first with .620 percent; Mrs. J.S. Rhodes Jr. and Mrs. Roger Critcher Jr., second; Mrs. M.H. Bynum and Mrs. Eli Bloom, third; John Sullivan and Forest Grav. fourth.

East-West:* Mrs. Sol Schechter and Mrs. Edith Gintis, first with .613 percent; Mrs. Robert Bright and Mrs. Herbie Carson, second; Mr. and Mrs. Andrew deSherbinin, third; Mrs. George Martin and Ed Yauck, fourth.

Wednesday morning game winners were Mrs. Robert Bright and Mrs. Herbie Carson tied for first with John Sullivan and Frank Goins; Mrs. Eloise Gabbert and Mrs. Warren Maxon, third.

The kangaroo rat is neither kangaroo nor rat but belongs to a genus of its own, Dipodomys. A small mammal, the rodent lives only in North American deserts, from Idaho south into Mexico. A bipedal animal, it hops zigzag about the desert to avoid predators in the open terrain.

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200 of the Best for Children 8 to 18 (Harmony Books, ^.95 paperback).

This is at the University of California at Davis and costs $895 for four weeks end of June to end of July. Kids ^t to meet state legislators, constitutional officers, lobbyists, reporters, administration officials and others political leaders in nearby Sacramento, Californias capitol.

Another robust trend cited by Ball is camps catering to special clientele. The listings in the ACA Parents Guide include camp opportunities for overweight kids, the asthmatic, blind, deaf, diabetic, economically disadvantaged, emotionally disturbed, epileptics, and those with physical disabilities as well as hemophiliacs, the learning disabled, the mentally retarded, mo-bility restricted and wheelchair bound.

Camp New Hope in Natural Bridge, Va., is operated by the Virginia Department of Correctins for boys, 11 to 18, who are assigned by the Department of Correction. Youthful offenders get old-fashioned camping with tents, hiking and campfires.

Ball said there are some 10,000 camps nationwide but

District Has Activity Day

The annual activity day for the Northeastern District Extension Homemakers was held last week at Perquimans County High School in Hertford.

The keynote speaker was Dr. Charles Petty, executive director. Governors Office of Citizen Affairs. His topic was Adding Quality to Your Life.

District President Anne White conducted the meeting whidi included mini experiences for morning and afternoon sessions.

Susan Blane of Grifton conducted Candymaking for Profit and Jackie Rush of Greenville conducted Coupons and Refunds sessions.

Rubelle Goin of Greenville served on the district nominating committee.

Pitt County was represented by 41 women. Addie Gore, home economics extension agent, also attended.

only accredited ones - about 2,500 - are in the ACA guide. Among the unlisted are camps run by religious groups and staffed largely by volunteers, said James LeMonn, a spokesman for the ACA.

Mobile camps, mainly for teenagers, offer tours coast to coast, or around a European country or a continent.

Parents need to pay as much attention to the quality of summer camp programs as they would to any other educational experience for their child, Ball said. A summer camp should not be the product of random selection, but a real look into the childs needs.

Ball said parents should ask the camp director how a typical day is organized, and what kind of daily opportunities there are for individual or groiQ) activities.

Some programs, relying on campings good reputation, have seized on the term camp when, in fact, they are really only single-focused workshops, he said.

Emphasis on only one activity, be it tennis or football or computers, may be all right for some kids, but it may also discourage children from activities that promote important interpersonal skills.

Regulations differ. In most states water is tested and kitchens are checked, Ball said, but only 17 states have regulations he considers comprehensive, covering sanitation, personnel, food, transportation, programs, safety, site and facilities.

Ball said the 17 are California, (florado, Con-

As late ,as the 1890s, doctors cautioned against taking more than one bath a week lest people lose their magnetism.

necticut, Illinois, Kentucky, Maine, Massachusetts, Michigan, Mississippi, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Rhode Island Tennessee, Texas, Vermont and Wisconsin.

Camping gives tax crei^ts to persons who qualify.

Day and overnight camj) expenses qualify as dedu&b bl^ child-care expenses. Money spent for education or transport to and from camps does not.    *

Requirements for caMp-related tax credit;

-Children must be qualifying dependents under 15 or unable to care for themselves. Parents must eF ther be working or lookipg for work. The intent of sending the child to camp must be child care rather than education or camp expe; rience.

- Standards: American Camping Association Condensed Standards for Organized Camps ($1.25) from the American Camping Association provides checklists and questions to help parents evaluate a camp.

-Traditional Versus Specialty Camps, to help parents find a camp best suited for their child, is available from the ACA fo/ a self-addressed, stamped, business-size envele^ with, a request for a free pamphlet.

-1983 Parents Guide to Accredited Camps ($5.95 including postage) lists more than 2,200 resident and dqy camps and provides detas including program specialties.

Address ACA, Bradford Woods, Martinsville, Ind.

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By Abigail Van Burn

* 1983 by UniverMi Press Syndicate

- PEAR ABBY: Thank you for urging parents to read to their very young children in an effort to inspire them to Iggm to read for themselves.

However, one of the reasons some parents dont read to their children is because they themselves cant read! Today in the United States there are over 23 million adults who cant read well enough to read a childrens bedtime story; to read the notes that come from school; to read a medicine label. These illiterate adults must be taught to read.

Literary Volunteers of America, Inc. (LVA) trains volunteers to teach adults and teens who cant read well enough to function. There are over 160 programs in 29 states. Between 1981 and 1983, 12,000 LVA volunteers taught over 17,000 students to read. Both numbers continue to grow, and we hope that one day we will be a totally literate society.

Please pass this along.

JONATHON McKALLIP, DIRECTOR OF FIELD SERVICES, LVA

.DEAR MR. McKALLIP: Thank you for writing. I learned something today.

I checked out LVA and I learned that it was founded in Syracuse, N.Y., in 1962 to combat the problem of illiteracy in the United States and Canad. Its primary premise is that well-trained volunteers can be effective tutors of adults. The organization has been enormously successful, and continues to grow.

For more information, please send a long, stamped, self-addressed envelope to: LVA, 404 Oak St., Syracuse, N.Y. 13203.

DEAR ABBY: Heres some good news for you. Tell the librarian in Winter Park, Fla., who wrote to say that chijdren dont read anymore, that here in Olympia, Wash., e public library is so popular that you can hardly get into the parking lot.

It might be because of the many services offered, it ^ight be the rocking chairs, it might even be the plants or ihe stone sculpture of otters that the children pet but Something in that place is outdrawing the TV and video games!

Km not sure whether the community is to be congrat-iulaTed for the library or the library is to be congratulated fsr' the community, but its a wonderful spectacle, and I offer it as an encouragement to other towns that want their children to read. It can still happen.

.;    REECCA    WRIGHT, OLYMPIA, WASH.

IDEAR REBECCA: Thats the good news. The bad n{BW8 is that your towns library will probably be tearing from hundreds of librarians asking for details.

SDEAR ABBY: Our son is in his late 20s. (Ill call him ILester.) Hes a fine young man and has always known that he was adopted, but he never speaks of it. We asked him a few years ago if he had any desire to know hie biological parents and he said. No. You are the only parents I want to know, and as far as Im concerned, I have no other.

Lester is being married soon to a young woman whom he has never told that he was adopted. He asked us not to mention it to her because he would prefer that she didnt know.

My wife and I feel that Lester should tell his fiancee, particularly because he grew up in a small town riot far from here where everyone there knows that we adopted him when he was a small child.

Many of our friends and relatives from that small town come here to shop and visit, and I worry that Lesters fiancee might hear the truth from someone else.

What should we do?

LESTERS FATHER

DEAR FATHER: Try to persuade your son to tell his fiancee that he was adopted and tell him (as you told me) why he should do it soon.

If he refuses, he will have to handle the consequences.

CONFIDENTIAL TO ALL SCREWED UP IN RUSTON, LA.: Your problem is not unusual. It was well stated in a song from Finians Rainbow: When Im not with the one I love, I love the one Im with.

Americans Change

Eating Habits

Almost a fifth of American families say they have changed their eating habits because they are concerned about salt intake and controlling high blood pressure. But most of them are saying, not doing.

The person who buys and prepared the food was questioned in 1,353 households by the U.S. Department of Apiculture in the fall of 1979. Researchers found people are concerned about health-related nutrition, but confused about what changes should be made In their eating habits, reports Sarah Hinton, extension nutrition q^alist, North Carolina State University,

Early in the interview, before any health (h* nutri-tion^related (piestions were asked, the familys fre-quency-of-use of 37 food and beverage categories was tallied. Later, the respondent was asked what, if any, chan^ ha'< been made in diet because of health concerns.

19 percent said they

were reducing sodium and trying to control blood pressure. They said they used less pork, shellfish and salty snack foods, such as potato chips, pretzels, nuts and olives, says the nutrition specialist.

But they ate as much bacon and sausage, salted nuts, commercially prepared dinners and main dishes, all high in sodium, as families not concerned about salt and high blood pressure.

Researchers also found that people concerned with salt intake were much more likely not to use fresh pork, even though uncured pork has only as much natural sodium as beef, poultry and fish, Mrs. Hinton says.

Families in the survey also said they had changed diets because they were concerned about excess migar, obesity, fat intake, chidesterol levels and food safety. Sixty-four percent reported changes for some health reason, and 54 percent got their information from doctors, nurses or dentists.

Miss Boyette Speaks Vows

Mom Cant Read To Kids If She Cant Read

BELHAVEN - Marie Irene Boyette and Christian Eugene Watson were united in marriage April 2 in the Trinity United Methodist Church here.'The single ring ceremony was performed by the Rev. Charles Mosley assisted by the Rev. Jesse Staton.

Parents of the couple are Dr. and Mrs. Charles Otis Boyette of Belhaven and Dr. and Mrs. Pierce Eugene Watson of Route 2, Ar-rin^on, Va.

Lisa Hobgood of Greenville was honor attendant and bridesmaids included Cher-ryl and Carla Boyette of Belhaven, sisters of the bride, Riki and Eva Hofer of West Germany, cousins of the bride, Judy Walson^oT' -^Arrington, slSer of the bridegroom, Joyce Harvey and Cathy Canfield of Greenville.

Celia Mosley of Maury was flower girl.

The father of the bridegroom was best man and ushers included, Charles Boyette Jr. of Belhaven, brother of the bride, Robert Watson of Arrington, Va., brother of the bridegroom, Craig Bowen, Craig Dawson, Steve Joy and Jeff Hendricks, all of Greenville.

A program of wedding

Bridal

Policy

A black and white glossy five by seven photograph is requested for engagement announcements. For publication in a Sunday edition, the information must be submitted by 12 noon on the preceding Wednesday. Engagement pictures must be released at least three weeks prior to the wedding date. After three weeks, only an announcement will be printed.

Wedding write-ups 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.

music was presented by Mrs. Edward Lee Baker, organist, Mrs. Charles Mosley, pianist. Vocalists included Mrs. Mosley, Jack Guthrie and Charles Canfield.

The bride, given in marriage by her parents, wore an ivory satin gown with a bodice of Brussels lace accented with pearls. The sweetheart neckline was scalloped with lace and the organza lantern sleeves were appliqued with Brussels lace. Her chapel length train was trimmed with matching lace. Her capulet cap of ivory satin, covered with pearls and imported lace, featured a chapel length veil adorned with a BrusseTs lace mantilla which was worn by her maternal grandmother on her wedding day. Her bouquet was a cascade of silk rubrum lilies, freesia, candlelight and pink sweetheart roses centered with a spray of cymbidium orchids, showered with stephanotis and variegated ivy.

A reception was held at the home of the bride and was given by her parents.

Wedding cake was served by Mrs. Hank Harvey and Mrs. Charles Canfield. Punch was poured by De-lores Moore and Mrs. Paul Batchlor.

The couple will live in Greenville after a wedding trip to Wilmington, Charleston and Savannah.

The bride graduated from Pitt Community College and works with Greenville Utitilies as a drafting technician. The bridegroom attended Pitt Community College and works at S.G.Wilkerson and Sons Funeral Home.

Solar Clinic

Phobias

MONTREAL (AP) - A French-language publication has come up with 600 words to describe phobias, or fears.

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) - Construction is near completion on a totally solar-powered medical clinic in Tallahassee that will produce all of its own power, reports an energy-oriented journal.

According to Energy User News, the clinic will use 60 percent less energy than a conventional building. The solar s.ystem includes photovoltaic cells to produce electricity, design features for daylighting and shading and a solar domestic hot water system.

Without any utility backup, the rooftop cells will power the buildings two one-ton heat pumps, fans, lights and electrical equipment and are being used for power tools during construction, the journal reported.

The list appeared in a 157-page book called Neologie en marche. Neologie refers to new words entering the language.

Sample words as they appeared in French include:

About 30.5 million American households - more than 1 in 3 - representing some 99 million persons, earned $25,000 or more in 1981.

Pisozomophobie: A phobia of pea soup

Pagodromagonophobe: 'Someone who doesnt like hockey.

Tretragoniospherisophobe: Someone who doesnt like baseball.

- Rhombospherisophobe: A synonym for the above.

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Jhe DaUy Reflector. GreenvlUe, N.C.-Tuesday. April 12. uati-i

At Wits End

By Erma Bombeck

Mrs. Christian Eugene Watson

Sorority Has New Pledges

A pledge ceremony was held at the Alpha Nu Chapter of Alpha Delta Kappa Sorority meeting Thursday. It was conducted by Shirley Moore and Juanita Elks.

Brenda Little introduced the following pledges: Janice Hardee; Janet Knox; Vanlora Teel; and Emmy Lou Whitehead. The service included a candlelight ceremony.

The state convention will be held April 29 through May 1 and the international convention will be held July 22-29.

COMPANY DINNER Chicken Madras & Rice Snap Beans & Salad Lemon Pie & Coffee CHICKEN MADRAS Another one of our new ways to bake chicken without fuss or trouble.

1 pound (3 large) onions, thinly sliced % pound (4 medium-small) apples, (pared, cored and thinly sliced)

1 teaspoon salt 1 tablespoon (or more) curry powder 4^-pound (scant) frying chicken, cut up Paprika In a 3-quart baking dish (13 by 8% by 1% inches), mix together onion and apples; sprinkle with salt and curry powder and mix well. Arrange chicken, skin side down, over mixture. Sprinkle chicken generously with paprika. Bake uncovered in a preheated 400-degree oven until apples are very soft, onion is tender-crisp and chicken is cooked through and golden brown - about 45 minutes. Makes 6 servings.

Linda Whitehurst was recognized. She has been elected vice chairwoman of the Womens Committee of the North Carolina Association of Electric Cooperatives.

Assignments were made for the May 7 yard sale.

Table decorations were provided by Slyvia Edmondson, Barbara Parker and Sarah Perkins.

NEW BANANA SPLITS Its quick and easy to assemble.

10-ounce package frozen sliced strawterries with sugar, thawed 1 pint vanilla ice cream 1 pint chocolate ice cream 4 small ripe bananas Chocolate Sauce In an electric blender or a food processor puree strawberries -there should be a scant cup; cover and chill. At serving time, arrange scoops of vanilla and chocolate ice cream in four long glass sundae dishes. Pour a scant '4 cup of the strawberry puree over the vanilla ice cream. Spoon chocolate sauce over the chocolate ice cream. Cut each banana in half lengthwise; arrange halves on opposite sides of ice cream. Makes 4 servings.

Did you ever stop and think how much the maintenance cost is on our quality of life?

Im talking about the expense of keeping appliances running, wheels on the car moving and repairs on lifes little necessities.

Early in life, you learn about priorities. There are some things you have to fix. Theres no choice. If you dont you cant get to work or the meat goes bad. There are other things you will never fix but will live with.

I know in my heart when the frame on my glasses break, I will spend the rest of my life seeing a paper clip in my peripheral vision. If a light burns out on the sewing machine, I will either burn a candle or curse the darkness. It never occurs to me to replace the bulb.

A car door on the passenger side is never a priority. Just as long as there is one that works, who needs it? There isnt a chance of it being repaired until you are ready to sell the car.

In all the years we have been married, we have never replaced a garden hose. One more leak this summer and the entire hose will be one continuous roll of bedsheets!

People are really tight with a buck when it comes to shoestrings. To me, they measure the life of a shoe. When there is a knot between each eyelet and tffe 1-inch string at the top breaks, it is time to replace the shoes. But never buy shoestrings.

Another phenomenon that people seem to marry for life is their luggage. Ever stand and watch a carousel of luggage at the airport? Men standing around in Gucci loafers and solid gold chains around their necks will claim

suitcases wiui a womans cinch belt around them.

And how many women do you know who would throw away a compact just because it had a broken mirror in it that made your face look like a crossword puzzle? No one I know.

Whenever anything breaks down, you have to ask yourself some basic questions. If I throw it away, will there be a white mark on the wall? If I fix it, is there a possibility it will break down again? If I have a great personality, will anyone notice its broken?

With our television, its a series of compromises. When the picture kept spinning around, we hit the tuner with the bottom of our shoe and it stopped. When the faces on the picture turned green, someone would volunteer to stand at the set and hold the aerial btween his forefingers. Last night, Tom Sellecks mouth was on one side of the screen and his mustache on the other.

We have to get the set fixed.

Mary, Queen of Scots, was executed in 1587, after having spent 19 years in English prisons. Overthrown by a revolution in Scotland, the Catholic queen had fled to her cousin. Queen Elizabeth I, who was also her political and religious rival. Marys trial and conviction on grounds of treason sealed her fate. Childless, Elizabeth later passed the crown of England to Marys son, James VI of Scotland.

Performer Gypsy Rose Lee was born in 1914.

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4-The Day Reflector. GreenvUle. N.C.-Tuesday. April 12.1983

Editorials

Paul T, O'Connor

li

Prison Situation Is Shocking To Some

Law Says Let Hu Na Stay

Chinese tennis star Hu Na officially is at home in the United States now that the Reagan administration, apparently deciding to follow U.S. law rather than political fears, has granted her asylum in this country.

The decision comes eight months after Miss Hu defected during a tennis tournament in Santa Clara, Calif. Since then, she has been living with Chinese families in the San Francisco area while U.S. officials pondered her future.

In defecting, Miss Hu said she had been asked to join the Chinese Communist Party and was fearful of the consequences if she did not. She said a high Chinese official threatened her when she refused. As could be expected the Chinese government has denied that contention and accuses the United States of meddling.

Perhaps so, but it would appear that U.S. authorities really had no choice in this matter. The Refugee Act of 1980 provides for asylum in cases where an applicant shows a well-founded fear of persecution because of race, religion, nationality, political opinion or membership in a specific social group. Relations with the Chinese government, or any other involved in an asylum application, is not a factor to be considered under the U.S. law.

China already has expressed fairly strong dissatisfaction with the United States because of its continued arms sales to Taiwan which some Americans feel has been slighted miserably in the U.S. rush to appease mainland China and U.S. restrictions on Chinese textile and high-technology sales in this country. Now it is canceling sports and arts appearances in this country , as a symbol of its displeasure over the turn of events in the U.S.-Sino ping pong diplomacy.

Miss Hus case probably will be just a drop in the bucket in comparison to the economic and defense complaints. But it is one that China can use for verbal attacks aimed at seeking concessions from this country.

The United States apparently has acted properly in this case and we hope it holds its ground against the Chinese whining.

RALEIGH - Two years ago, the N.C. Medical Society set out to study the general health of the states prison population and the delivery of health care to these pe(^le. The societys r^rt indicates that they found a mess.

The societys Committee on the Delivery of Health Care in Prisons in North Carolina was not able to make a demonstrative statement on the ^neral health of the prison population. It had to make a guess, albeit an educated guess, because the prison system doesnt keep . the necessary health records. The committee couldnt suggest in^>rovements to the health care delivery system because no such system exists. Instead, it had to recommend that a system be created.

The physicians had hoped to evaluate the health care system in our prisons by conducting hearings with the physician who directs the system and by visiting several facilities which were rq>re-sentative of care at the different levels of

incarceration. That plan had to be thrown out the window for two reasons. First, the state has no doctor directing the health care system. Second, after visiting several facilities, the committee found it "difficult to trace any coherent system fw health care throughout the Division of Prisons.

Take an evaluation of medical facilities. The committee had hq)ed to analyze if the state had the proper facilities at the proper places. Are some facilities overused? Are some underused? Good questions to ask. But they couldnt get the answers.

"The data needed to make a complete evaluation of prison health care facilities was not provided to the committee. Some of this data may be difficult to gather; some of it may not exist. An effective health care system cannot be planned, mumaged or reviewed without such basic information, the doctors reported.

The prison system couldnt tell the

doctors, for exanq)le, how much time inmates spend in tbe hospital, how many Inmates are chronically ill, how much sur^ry is performed or how many Inmates are on medication.

What difference does that make? Wlthoiit that kind of information, its very likely that inmates are not receiving the medical care they need and its possible that some inmates are being kqpit in facilities far more sq)histicated than they need.

For exanq)le, the state has only one acute hospital care facility. Thats in Central Prison. Some inmates at lower security units will refuse medical care rather than go to Central. Others must be kept at Central longer than would normally be necessary because their prison units dont have facilities for those recovering from illness. Either way, weve got inmates in the wrong places, the rqwrt says.

"The information available to the

*

committee did not enaUe it to evaluf whether (Central Prison Hospital) ne^ more acute care beds or is makM an>ropriate use of the ones it alrem b,the report says.

liie committee says the wrong peo^^ are in charge of prison health ca|q| Physicians are glaringly absoit irt|B adnnistrative ndes. Th^ serve as consultants. The warden is re^nsiul for for health care at his unit and haa|. I^ysicians extender who, of course, Ifri far less medical training than a ! cian.

The r^rt shocked members of I e. m

House of Corrections Committee. several legislators called for the partment of Correction to explain ft situation. Rep. Tim McDowell, I]; Alamance, committee chairmsi^; assigned the report to a subcommltt^; He says that the subcommittee should MI

to develq) some legislation to correct these problems.

Public

Forum

James Kilpatrick

Matter Of Concern

Catfish Points The Way For Many

It is a matter of concern that a UNC-Chapel Hill environmental scientist says 19 of 40 North Carolina cities with populations of 10,000-75,000 may not comply with federal standards for drinking water.

The concern involved the levels of trihalomethane in the water which have cancer link risks.

At the same time it is reassuring that Icoal water supplies meet the federal standards. Wadie Lewis, superintendent of GUCs water and sewer departments, said samples from the old and new water plants and the deep wells had acceptable levels of THMs.

Lewis expects the levels to be even lower when the new water treatment facility is in full operation, but actual figures are not yet available.

Clean water is the primary concern of any community. Hopefully Greenvilles will be kept among the best water supplies of the state.

WASHINGTON - Ward Sinclair, writing in The Washington Post, turned out a delightful piece the other day on catfish. He was down in Sunflower, Miss., where he interviewed catfish farmers, and he came away with a blooming affection and a growing respect for this humblest of creatures.

V

Moved by the proper spirits, I too could compose a rhapsody to the catfish, but Sinclairs piece set a train of thou^t in motion down a spur track. The problem the catfish farmers must overcome, if they would grow to a billion-dollar industry in the next decade, is a problem not of reality, but of perception. It is the same kind of problem faced by politicians and by public institutions all the time.

Let me say a word about the catfish. There is much to be said for salmon, if it isnt cooked too dry; a man can enloy fresh mountain trout, though most restaurants smother its delicate flavor in a blanket of slivered almonds; given a lively sauce, pompano and red snapper are acceptable dishes. But these familiar

offerings pale to insignificance beside the perfection of the Southern catfish. Imagine Helen of Troy. Now imagine Tugboat Annie. This will give you an approximate idea of the relative beauty of the catfish compared to other fish. . Another word or two will suffice: The catfish is easily cleaned; it gives itself to matchless fillets; the flesh is firm and superbly flavored. It requires no elaborate French or Spanish sauces. Accompanied by a strip of bacon, a handful of hush puppies, and a side order of black-eyed peas and unsugared stewed tomatoes, a lightly fried catfish provides a repast for the gods.

But the perception is something else, and here we go on the spur track. The catfish popularly is perceived as something else entirely. With its bulging eyes, oversized mouth and sinister whiskers, the catfish is thought to be ugly. Though the catfish is as clean as a Polident commercial, the catfish is widely regarded as dirty. Most significant in the marketing view, the catfish is perceived as the fare of po folks. It is not

Tim Ahern

MX Missile Still Raises Concerns

WASHINGTON (AP) - When President Reagans study panel sends Congress its recommendations this week for basing the MX missile, supporters of the new nuclear weapon will argue that it is needed to overcome the vulnerability of Americas land-based missiles.

Reagan and Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger have said that the 1,000 Minuteman missiles the backbone of Americas land-based nuclear deterrent - are vulnerable to Soviet attack. Top Pentagon officials and private defense experts have voiced similar concerns.

The Daily Reflector

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The first warnings about U.S. missile vulnerability were sounded almost a decade ago by James Schlesinger, defense secretary for Presidents Nixon and Ford.

The reason: the Soviet Union, like the United States, has continued to improve its guidance systems for missiles, thus perfecting their accuracy.

Tests of the Soviet missiles that would be used against the Minuteman are tracked by U.S. radars and spy satellites.

The Minuteman is the main land-based leg of the U.S. nuclear triad, which also includes manned bombers and submarine-launched missiles. The United States also has a land-based force of Titan missiles, aging weapons which are being retired.

There are no similar worries about bombers and submarine missile.

In

deed, Pentagon officials have been assuring Congress in recent months that the submarines are relatively invulnerable to Soviet attack and are likely to remain so for the rest of the century.

When they discuss the vulnerability of the Minuteman, nuclear experts usually caution that it is theoretical.

No nation, of course, has ever launched a large-scale nuclear attack and strategic experts agree that such an attack, known in the argot of nuclear war scenarios as a bolt from the blue, is highly unlikely. Thats because the vulnerability of the Minuteman missiles involves a large number of unknown factors.

Nonetheless, defense officials say they must follow a worst case scenario in their planning.

For their part, the Soviets would have

to overcome a series of obstacles to mount a first strike successfully, one that takes out at least 90 percent of the Minutemen.

U.S. nuclear policy is a closely held secret, but generally it is believed to call for absorbing a first strike and then retaliating. Officially, the Pentagon has discounted but not flatly ruled out a launch on warning.

Would an American president, confronting evidence that a wave of Soviet missiles was heading over the North Pole, withhold his land-based weapons? Or would he order a launch on warning?

Another obstacle in the way of a successful Soviet first strike is that the Soviets can never be sure what the United States would really do.

sophisticated; it lacks eclat, elan and all those other French things. Its got no class.

This perception has depressed the catfish market for years. We see the same kind of thing at work in the ponds of politics. Jimmy Carter came to be perceived as a wimp, but no wimp could have achieved the Camp David accord or risked a rescue effort for the hostages in Iran. Richard Nixon still is perceived as sinful; in a more accurate view, he was merely unlucky. Abe Lincoln, the man who freed the slaves, is perceived as a saint; in point of fact, he freed only a portion of the slaves and he voiced some racist notions that might have come from the Citizens Council.

What is the current perception of Ohios Sen. John Glenn? He is perceived as a dull-witted fellow - but no one who heard him at last months Gridiron dinner in Washington would accept that perception as the reality. Colorados Sen. Gary Hart, another presidential hopeful, is thought to offer nothing but cragr good looks; the reality is something else.

So, too, with faceless fellows. The Washington bureaucrat is perceived as an odious flunky, concerned with tasks at

once needless and wasteful; far more

typically, the bureaucrat provides the sturdy shoulders on which government stands. We have unkind perceptions of bankers, lawyers, labor leaders and congressmen, and more often than not the perceptions are far from the mark.

To be sure, perception and reality often coincide. Every reporter has known politicians who were in truth fatheads, blowhards, tinpot tyrants and publicity hounds. But 40 years in the news business have taught me to develop reservations about those first impressions that, easily copied by the Xerox herd, get to be lasting impressions.

What the catfish farmers need is a new perception of the Olympian reality in their nets. If they marketed their product as chatte du lac, maybe the toniest restaurants of New York and Washington would come to life. The delectable reality would soon be discovered; a catfish fad would become a catfish rage. Think it over, John Glenn. Realities count, but images often count for more.

Copyright 1983 Universal Press Syndicate

To the editor:

Reference to editorial: The Cost of Victory: N.C. State University Basketball.    ;'

Boosts in sales of toilet paper, re^ freshments and other pluses in $$$ sales to celebrate.    ';

Boosts in ECU, city, area, state and athletic conference recognition -PRESTIGE.

BotKts in future recruiting of students at ECU and industry in the area, and yes, tourism in eastern North Carolina.

Would ECU, the city of Greenville, the merchants of Greenville and, in fact, the entire area not welcome what the N.C. State University NCAA Basketball Championship brou^t to and will continue to bring to area for years to come?

I, for one, am proud of the efforts pi each of the Big Four schools in years gone by, along with ECU and the other schools of higher learning in North Carolina, both in academic and sports levels.

But the benefits of this national athleUc champitmship by N.C. State University in Raleigh will long outlive the cleaniq) expense and temporary other discomforts of petle celebrating.

Would ECTJ and Greenville welcome an NCAA major sports championship? - I thinkso.

Ed Smith 701E. Fourth St.

GreoiviUe

Elisha Douglas

Strength For Today

Among the vast multitude of people who have lived in the world since the beginning of time stand you and I. What significant little people we are.

Think of the great who have lived, and the great who are living today, and the great who will live, and then take a look at ourselves in the mirror or in our thoughts. We appear so insignifi-, cant that we wonder in despair where we can ever fit into the vast procession of human history.

But life is a picture puzzle. You and I stand with a little piece of the picture in our hands, which has to be fitted into that big picture. We fit it in and sigh, shang our heads and saying, What good wUl that do? ;

But the picture would never Ijf complete the picture God h|> in mind without the little piece you can place here and the littl^ piece I can place there.

Not very much, but utterly essential. Apparently insignificant, but blessed in the eyes of God.

Rowland Evans and Robert Novak-

WASHINGTON - National security adviser William P. Clark, moving Into a more Influential White House role, put down two top aides of White House chief of staff James Baker on March 23, the day President Reagan made his hard-hitting defense speech.

Only hours before the speech, top Baker aide Richard Darman and White House communications director David Gergen asked Gark for a final copy of the speech to take into the Oval Office. Gark demurred. Ill take the speech to the president, he told Darman and Gergen. But we have to explain it to him, they countered. Gark said he would undertake that task, also.

That was Gark entering a new and more powerfui role as the aide who has served Ronaid Reagan the longest. Clark has confided tointimates that hie never steos onto Bakers turf. Now he has

Clark Moves Into New Role At White House

balanced his act; no longer will he allow other White House aides to .enter his domain.

Gov. Pete duPont, a rising Republican with political clout far beyond his home state of Delaware, cau^t Sen. Howard Bakers appeAl that he run for the Senate next year fnd threw it back to the senate majority lader.

Summoned to lunch recently by Baker, who announced hiS plan to retire from the Senate last winter, duPont listened to an impasskmed plea that he run for the Senate next year against Democratic Sen. Joe Biden. Bakers pitch; the best prospect in the country for a Republican to win a now-i-Democratic Senate seat is Delaware - if duPont would run.

DuPont is leaning against a Senate race, however. As Baker wanned up and reminded duPont of his oUigation to

party and country, duPont deftly cooled him off by asking; Well, Howard, if keeping Republican control of the Senate is so important, how come you arent running for re-election? Bakers retirment opens the door to Rq). Albert Gore Jr., a Democrat, vriK) is now the leading Tennessee prospect for Bakers seat.

President Reagan felt more heat than usual from the I^ublican congressional leadership at a White House meeting last week on the bitterly-fought issue of repealing the withholding tax on dividend and interest income.

Pressed against the wall by opponents of the new withholding law (who have the votes for rraeal if they could get the repeal amendmmit up for a vote), Reagan was stunned by the intmisity of the conitressitmal Reoublicans. Sen. Strom

Thurmond asked how many new internal revenue agents it would take to capture unpaid dividend-and-lnterest income taxes in an amount that would match the estimated take of the new withholding law.

The president called Treasury Secretary Don Regan to find ot. Regan, a strong backer of withholding, did not bat an eye. About 2,000 new agents, Mr. President, Regan told Reagan. So Reagan told Thurmond and his allies; No way. His only concession was that it might be worth exploring whether a tax-collection agency other than the banks might be found to enforce the withholding law.

Mndale culled from the newly-publisbei^ memoirs of Zbigniew Brzezinski, Powei^ and Principle.

Ordered up by Mondales chief of sts James Johnson, the notes record all ti^ uncompllmentaiy - and some of

Eleasant ~ things that Brzezinski says JpF is book about Mndale. PreslchmC Carters natlional security adviser aoct former vice president often clashed on issues involving Israel, the Middle East

Worried at first that Brzezinskis memoirs might contain disckMnires or charges that would have a damaging impact on the 1984 campaign, Moi^

Former vice president and leading Democratic presidential hopeful Walter F. Mndale will soon read two doublespaced, typed pages of notes about Fritz

operatives who have stu^ the excerpts think Brzezinski did no real haim.^ Brzezinski lost little love over Mmxbje't and has dropped many hints sln^j finishing his book that Soi. John GtoUt, not Blondale, is his favcned Democratic

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The Di

Pirated Tapes Seized; Said Worth $1 Miliion

GREENSBORO, N.C. (AP) - North Carolina FBI agents have confiscated more than 1,400 pirated video tape cassettes of movies and television shows with an estimated value of |l million in one of the largest such

ROSE HIGH ART SHOW - An art show comprising 60 selected works by students at Rose High School is currently on view in the central haU of Carolina East Mall. Two Rose Hl^ seniors. Bill Johnson, Jr. and Gena Heath, are shown here before one of

several panels on which the art work is displayed. The show, one of the events of the clty-wlde Eastern Arts Festival, will be iq) at the Mall only through mid-afternoon Thursday. (Reflector Rjoto by Jerry Raynor)

Sixteen Are Selected For Governor's School

Sixteen high school juniors from Pitt County, including 12 from Greenville, have been selected to attend the 1962-83 Governors School.

3ome of the students will be attending Governors School West at Salem College ip Winston-Salem, others will attend Governors School East at St. Andrews College Presbyterian College in Laurinburg.

The Governors School of North Carolina is the oldest statewide summer residential program for gifted and talent^ high school students in the nation. The school receives yearly funding directly from the General Assembly of North Carolina.

There are no tuition or room fees for students, who furnish only their transpotation to and from Winston-Salem or Lauringburg and provide their own spending

money. The Governors School is operated by the Division for Exceptional ChUdren of the N.C State Board of Education.

Students selected from Rose, the field in which they were selected, and the Governors School they will be attending during the period June 26 - Aug. 6 and their parents, are:

Hunter Bost, Spanish, the West School; Dr. and Mrs. W.S.Bost.

Sheila Craft, math, the West School; Mrs. Dora G. Craft and the late Mr. Richard L. Craft.

Tensley Garris, art, the East School; Mrs. Sherry Garris.

John Haggard, violin, the West School; Mr. and Mrs. Paul Haggard..

Evan Hause, percussion, the East School; Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hause.

N.C. Hydroelectric Plan Is Submitted

SAPPHIRE, N.C. (AP) -A proposal to build a hydroelectric plant on the wild Horsepasture River in Transylvania County has been submitted to the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission by a Henderson County power firm.

Carrasan Power Co., headquartered at Etowah in Henderson County, is seeking pehnission to put a dam on the river near Sapphire to generate electricity.

A small dam would divert a portion of the river near Drift Falls, a short distance from N.C. 281, and run the water through a conduit several miles downstream to the generation plant.

The {MX)perty is near 16,000

acres of Transylvania Ctounty land owned by Duke Power Co. The potential buyer for the electricity generated at the facility is Haywood Electric Membership Corp., although Carrasan is negotiating with several power companies. Haywood Electric serves this section of Transylvania.

Housing projects, including condomimiums' in the undeveloped region of the county, would follow on more than 1,100 acres in the area owned by Carrasan, according to the application.

The Carrasan plan says the dam would back up a six-acre pond with a maximum depth of eight feet.

' fOUND SAFE - F\)U^yalM)ld Jomifer Ddaiiey is carried by her mother Mtchelle ftom MlamTi Rape Treatment Cdnter. Young Jennifer was brought to a Little Havana radio stltion Monday morning foUov^ her abduction Sunday fiim a crowded midway fair. The man who turned her in to tb statico claimed be found her wandering Miamis streets al^.(APLaseipboto)

Rena Meteye, math, the West School; Mr. and Mrs. Osbourne Meteye.

Vicki Petrie, violin, the West School; Mr. and Mrs. Edward M. Petrie.

Frank Rabey, art, the East School; Mr. and Mrs. Frank J. Rabey.

Karie Seykora, dance, the East School; Karie is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Edward J. Seykora.

Bruce Thompson, trombone, the East School; Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Thompson.

Catherine Tingelstad, academic, social studies, the East School; Dr. and Mrs. Jon Tingelstad.

Amy VanScoy, drama, the East School; Mr. and Mrs. Richard VanScoy.

County students attending are;

Martha B. Rollins, North Pitt High School, natural science, the East School; Mr. and Mrs. William Rollins of Rt.l, Box 374-A, Bethel.

Carla Elizabeth Snow, D.H. Conley High School, drama, the West School; Mr. and Mrs. Charles Snow of 212 Eleanor St., Greenville.

Stephanie Elizabeth Creech, D.H. Conley, choral music, the East School; Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Creech of Route 1, Box 388-A, Win-terville.

30 Years In

Molesting

LENOIR, N.C. (AP) -Nineteen months after his prison term for molesting two Caldwell County boys ended, Arthur James West was sentenced to a 30-year prison term Monday for sex offenses against their younger brother.

West told Superior Court Judge Qaude Sitton the boys father picked him up at prison on his Sept. 15, 1981, release date and welcomed him back into their rural Hudson home.

The 44-year-old man had served a -to-5-year sentence for a 1979 crime against nature conviction involving two of the fathers other sons, now 16 and 17. In an unrelated case in 1969, West was sentenced in Caldwell County to 10 years imprisonment on six counts of crimes against nature.

West said he lived in the home until Jan. 19, when Caldwell County deputies charged him with sexually molesting the 10-year-old son.

Deputies investigated after receiving a tip from the Caldwell County Department of Social Services of possible child neglect.

Superior Court Judge Gaude Sitton accepted a plea bargain in which West pleaded guilty to two counts of second-degree sexual offense and one count of attempted second-degree sexual offense. He bad originally been charged with 14 counts of first-degree sexual offense.

Going on vacation? Let the Police Department check your home and pnq)erty while you are away. Call 752-3342 and leave information for a Vacation House Check.

David Wiggins, Ayden-Grifton High School, math, the West School; Mr. and Mrs. Bill Wiggins of Country Club Hills, Grifton.

Three video recorders, one television monitor and an enhancer were also recovered in the raids, wdiich took place Friday.

Greensboros FBI headquarters was still cluttered Monday afternoon with the video equipment and stacks of cardboard boxes packed with pirated tapes.

This completes the circle for us in North Carolina, agent-in-charge Robert L. Pence said Monday in announcing the raids. Weve had bootleg records, bootleg music tapes and now bootleg movies.

Pence said the raids were conducted against a business in Greensboro, another in Reidsville and a private residence in Stoneville. He refused to identify the businesses or the people involved until arrests have been made and charges filed.

Agents were tipped off

about the illegal tape trafficking by private citizois. Pence said. The movies (m the confiscated tapes included jBattlestar Galactica, Dog Day Afternoon, An Officer and a Gentleman and Deep Throat.

Some cassettes were concerts and movies tapl from television, including the MASH finale. The others were reproductions of the movie industrys cq)yrighted releases.

We zeroed in on three locations and got search warrants, Pence said. "From noon until Friday evening, we recovered bootleg movie films. We made the raids for two reasons. One, we hope the evidence will bring a grand jury indictment; and, two, we want to send a signal to people that this act is a felony.

Unauthorized reproduction, sale or rental of movie cassettes became illegal in May 1982 and carries a maximum penalty of five years imprisonment and a $250,000 fine. Pence said.

Ten FBI agents and two representatives each from

n DaUy Reflector, Greenville. N.C.-Tuesday. April 2. im-5 cassette by the Motion Picture Association of America, which will decide values based on the a^ and popularity of the movies.

Pence said similar undercover operations are still in progress, but the average home movie buffo using his video cassette recorder need not worry.

We are tarating our* operations to those people involved in making money from illegal trafficking, manufacture and production of copyrighted material, he -said.

the Motion Picture Association of America and the Recording Industry Association of America assisted in the seizures.

Dollar values will be to each movie

Kick-Off

GRIFTON The annual Shad Festival gets under way Wednesday with the following events kicking off this years Double-Barreled celebration in Grifton:

Hickory Shad Fishing Contest, under way since Jan. 1, will close at noon.

The first round of the softball tournament will be played from 7-10 p.m.

The DaUy Reflector wUl list festival events each day of the celebration, April 13-17.

CORRECTION

In The Soars Spring Horns Appliance Sale Section In Sunday, April 10th Paper On Page No. 4 The Hilliary Tent Advertised At $179.99 Has. The Incorrect Size Shown. This Tent Is 10 Feet By 1^Feet. We Regret This Error.

Sears, Roebick& Co.

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In The Area

Social Servicos Workers Meet

An Eastern District meeting of the North Carolina Social Services Association will be held in the Calvary Memorial United Methodist Church in Snow Hill on Wednesday.

N.C. Department of Social Services employees from nine eastern N.C. counties will gather. The speakers will be Greenville psychotherapist Norma Lewis, R.N., and state personnel officer Dusty Hall of Raleigh. Ms. Lewis will discuss Who Takes Care of the Caretaker? and Hall will talk about state employees rights, responsibilities and benefits, program chairman Marian Hubbard said.

Armed Robbery Arrest Reported

Clifford Norris Kennedy, 28, of 414A Tyson St. was arrested by Greenville police Monday night on armed robbery charges in connection with a 2:40 a.m. incident at 116D Riverbluff Road.

Chief Glenn Cannon said a bag containing about $100 was taken from DeDe Jackson at gunpoint as Miss Jackson was about to enter her apartment.

The, bag, which contained money from the New Horizon Club, $10 in quarters and a $30.33 check, was recovered by police shortly after the robbery.

Bond for Kennedy was set at $500.

Students Seek State Offices

Tarsha Daniels and Beverly Wagner of Wellcome Middle Schools Career Club have been chosen to compete against other chapter members from across North Carolina for offices in the state Career Club organization.

Miss Daniels will compete for state vice president and Miss Wagner for state treasurer.

The students went through local preliminary screening and then through screening at the state level. Each one vied with 14 other students at the state level and from this competition two were chosen to campaign against each other Saturday at the state Career Club convention in Raleigh.

Private Property Week Observed

The Greenville-Pitt County Board of Realtors is observing Private Property Week.    >

As part of the observance, Faye Adams, a member of the organization, issued a statement saying the real estate market in eastern North Carolina has grown because of several factors, including agricultural heritage, development of industrial and medical facilities, and diversification of the economic base.

She said the desirability for different types of real estate, including condominiums and townhouses, as well as singlefamily detached homes, has also increased.

Program On AdolscenfPngnancy Sef    Realtors To Sponsor Samlnar

Winterville...

(Continued from pagel)

were $13,990, $11,945, $12,495, $12,975, $14,680 and $7,775. Cox corresponding bids were $20,180, $18,690, $18,840, $20,000, $22,388 and $8,245.

Cox said the $1,000 deposit the board required bidders to submit would preclude most minority contractors and small business people. The'letter drafted to Cox stated that the Town of Winterville disagreed with the comment concerning the $1,000 deposit precludings minorities and small contractors because you (Cox) were a minority bidder and (the ) other two bidders were both small busineses.

Tf the $1,000 deposit is a problem, that can be worked out, the letter stated.A bid deposit is required to protect property owners from nonqualified contractors conducting work in the town ... (the money) is put in escrow and earns interest and is returned if the work is satisfactory.

The letter added that the work of Alligood has been very good to date. We have .no problem with dealing with them.

A bid on 3,980 feet of street improvement and 3,030 feet of water line improvement on the CDBG was awarded to Talbert Cox and Associates and Linwood Stroud and Associates. Their joint low bid was $12,364.

Bruce Gray, head of the Winterville Recreation Commission, gave the com-kissions annual report for 1982. he reported to the board in the financial report that for 1982, the commission took hi $25,981 in concessions and other fund-rasing efforts and that $26,763 was spent on supplies, referees, insurance, etc. The balance on hand for 1982 was $29,490 and the present balance is $21,580.

The board approved the following four new Recreation Commission members; Robert Baker, Jay Boswell, Jerry Hines and Greg Smith.

Gray reported that the commission sponsored the following activities in 1982; basketball, four mens teams; softball, nine mens teams, six womens teams; Little League, six teams; Pee Wee league, 11 teams; one team junior Babe Ruth, one team senior Babe Ruth and four football teams.

BOAST OF ARSON VICENZA, Italy (AP)-A self-styled Communist group has claimed responsibility for an arson attack which destroyed a hangar used by NATO fwces to store U.S. milita^ uniforms and parachwes, police said.

According to Gray, plans for 1983 include moving the baseball program to a new field and raising funds for lighting the new field.

Town Clerk Nobles reported the annual tax lien sale for delinquent town taxes will be held at noon June 13. Advertisements will begin May 17.

In other business;

Louise Pate was given permission to run a water-sewer line to a trailer on a separate lot behind her house with the cost is her re-sponsoibility.

The board tabled a 10-year agreement for purchase of electrify from GUC until more study is done on transmission wheeling charge.

It was reported that the town collected $2,235 from Tar River Communication in 1982.

A petition for street improvements on West Worthington Street between North Railraod and North Mills, curb gutter and paving, presented by John Patrick Jr., was accepted for the clerk to verify signatures.

The Governors Advocacy Council on Children and Youth will present a workshop, Preventing Adolescent Pregnancy; A Community Challen^, Wednesday at the Holiday Inn in Greenville.

The sessions, with Freddie Jacobson of WOOW Radio serving as mistress of ceremonies, will begin with registration at 8 a.m. and continue until 5 p.m.

At 10;15 a.m., Coalition-Building & Task Force Strageties will be discussed by Barbara Ziegler and Barbara Huberman of the Mecklenburg Council on Adolescent Pregnancy.

The featured speaker at ll;30 a.m. will be Julienne Davis, program officer with the Office of Adolescent Pregnancy Programs, Washington, D.C. The registration fee of $12 includes a luncheon and workshop materials.

Singer To Appear At Jarvis Memorial

Treva Tankard of Bath will sing and ^ak to the United Methodist Women of Jarvis Memorial United Methodist Church here Monday at 7; 30 p.m. in the chapel of the church.

Mrs. Tankard studied piano and voice at Brevard College and East Carolina University. Since she was a small child, she has traveled throughout the United States and En^and giving her testimony in song. Recently she recorded her first album. She teaches piano and voice in her home.

The public may attend. A nursery will be provided.

TREVA TANKARD

Bill Would Permit Sale Of Animals

According to the Pitt County Humane Society, animals impounded in the city and county shelters could be sold to the United States Department of Agriculture dealers and research facilities if North Carolina House Bill 318 and its companion, N.C. Senate Bill 141, is passed.

The bill, entitled Public Health Lawn Recodification, would allow sale of stray animals to the USDA.

Persons interested in the bill may call or write Representative John Gillam of the House Health Committee, Box 550, Windsor, N.C. 27983, phone 794-3204,794-^2934 or 794-3615.

Missionary To Speak

Missionap' Mamie Gorham will speak during a revival at United Holiness Temple Church in Rocky Mount Thursday at 7;30 p.m. and at Monas Chapel Church near Walstonburg Sunday at 3 p.m.

Mrs. Gorham is a member of Friendship Holiness Church, Falkland.

League Plans Annual Meeting

The Greenville-Pitt County League of Women Voters wilt hold its annual meeting and pot luck supper tonight at 6; 30 in the Fellowship Hall of the First Presbyterian Church of Greenville.

Election of officers will be held and reports on the years activities will be presented. Following the business session, a money-raising ZEBRA sale will be held.

The LWV is a non-partisan organization open to any interested man or woman of 18 years or more. For more information, call membership chairperson Olivia Kay Clyde 7584593.

PTO Meeting Set Thursday

Carolina Country Day Schools PTO will meet at 7;30 p.m. Thursday in the schools multipurpose room. The students Science Fair projects will be on display. Jean Haislip, Educatinal Research and Evaluation Consultant for the Northeast Region, will speak on Interpreting Test Results. Also from 3 to 5 p.m. Sunday, the school will have an open house for persons interested in learning more about the school.

Wholesale Auto Parts Complete Line

Blind intersections or any shrubbery that creates hazardous driving conditions should be reported to the Public Works Right-of-Way & Traffic Control Division. Call 7524137.

Auto Specialty Co.

917 W. 5th St.

758-1131

JKelaxation

What is The Joy of Relaxation?

A 3 hour class developed to train individuals to relax completely, control tension, handle pressures, avoid stress, to enjoy life more. You can, too, once youve learned the method. It will help you find relief from insomnia and headaches, better physical and mental health plus greater energy and vitality. Over 3V2 million trained In 55 countries.

Rick Bridges, Certified Lecturer

Thursday, April 14

3212 Memorial Dr., Greenville 756-0300 Reservations or Information $40.00 Fee Includes All Materials

JOINIIS

The Greenville-Pitt County Board of Realtors and the Womens Council of Realtors will qxmsor a home buyers seminar Wednesday from 7:39-9 p.m. at Planters National Bank, Third and Washington streets.

The seminar is one of the boards Make America Better projects and is part of the annual Private Pn^rty Week celebration under way through Saturday. The seminar is free and no registration is necessary.

Winterville Student Joins Board

Shannon Carson of Winterville, a student in biological sciences at N.C. State University, was one of five students elected recently to the Publications Authority at the university. '

'The authority elects editors, sets policies and allocates student fees for campuswide publications and the student radio station.

Minority Concerns To be Aired

An annual forum on the concerns of minority-group members of the East Carolina University community will be held on campus April 18 from 4 to 5 p.m.

The event, open to all interested persons, is scheduled for the campus mall. In the event of rain, the forum will be moved to Room 244 of Mendenhall Student Center.

Participants'will include ECU Chancellor John Howell and Vice Chancellors Elmer Meyer and Angelo Volpe, and ECU students, faculty and staff members. Moderator wilt be Dr. Clinton Downing of the ECU School of Education.

Church To Hold Fish Fry

Hopewell Pentecostal Holiness Church will hold a fish fry Saturday to benefit its building fund. Members of the church will conduct the fish fry from 11 a.m until 2 p.m. in the parking lot of the former Winn-Dixie store on GreenvUle Boulevard. Plates will sell for $3 and takeout orders may be arranged at 756-3778.

Members of the churchs Ladies Auxiliary will sell silk flower arrangements dring the fish fry.

Pilot Unhurt In Plane's Wreck

LEXINGTON, N.C. (AP) A Statesville man escaped Injury when the cn^ duster plane he was piloting overturned during an emergency landing Monday, authorities reported.

Davidson County Sheriffs Department officers identified the pilot as Johnny Parks Payne, 37.

Payne was spraying an alfalfa field off N.C. 150 in western Davidson County when the engine on the 1979 Agcat biplane malfunctioned.

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Broken Tooth Fraud Caught

GREENSBORO, N.C. ^) A Greensboro woman who reported breaking the same tooth three times in three different restaurants pleaded guilty Monday to larceny and received a suspended sentence in Guilford County Superior Court.

Patricia Dawn Simmons, 34, filed three insurance claims, seeking money to repair her tooth, according to evidence presented in court.

She was paid $250 by one restaurant and $441 by a second before a third denied her claim.

Victorious Life Conference April 15,16,17 Theme-Keys to Kingdom Living

Friday-7:30 P.M. How I Came Into Kingdom Living Saturday-10:00 A.M. Perfect Law of Uberty

7:30 P.M. Abounding in Eveiy Good Work" Sunday-ll:00 A.M. How to Enjoy Kingdom Living

7:00 P.M. Kingdom Living in the Home

Life Begins At Forty for Matilda, this old cliche became a living truth. Bom and raised a Mennonite, she lived a defeated life even though she received Jesus as her Savior at early age Broken in health and spirit, the Lord met her in a r**! way and gave her a glorious deliverance.

Matilda Kipfer A gifted teacher, and very sensitive to the leading of the Holy Spirit, she feels It is a privilege to tell others of the truth that made her free, and to share the excitement of discovering who we are in Christ Matilda is now serving as U.S. Field Representative for Aglow International.

Evangelistic Tabernacle

264 Bypass West

S.J. Williams, Pastor, Invites the public.

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Question to tax paying

citizens of Pitt County:

Why should Pitt County Memorial Hospital spend 4 to 6 million of our tax dollars on new psychiatric beds and facilities when the largest private operator of psychiatric hospitals in the world is willing to spend its 7 million dollars to provide these facilities free of any capital outlay of our citizens?

Why doesnt PCMH spend that money on unmet needs in other areas of health care?

FACTS AND FIGURES

PCMH shouldnt blindly react to new innovations in health care that better serve the needs of Pitt County and that save the taxpayers of Pitt County money.

Many members of the PCMH medical staff are in favor of the new hospital and support innovative, efficient new approaches to health care. In fact there are private psychiatrists in Greenville who are not opposed to the new psychiatric hospital.

Why didnt the County Commissioners ask for a detailed presentation of the facts from both sides before passing a resolution opposing the location of this new 7 million dollar service bringing 80 to 130 jobs to Pitt County?

Isnt it time for you to stand up and be counted in favor of the best medical care available for the citizens of Eastern North Carolina and Pitt County?

Isnt it ironic that we had much the same arguments against the establishment of the ECU School of Medicine that are now being heard against the new psychiatric hospital?

Why didht the PCMH Board of Trustees , ask to hear the story or presentation of the private psychiatric hospital before passing a resolution in opposition?

Why hasnt PCMH told the taxpayers that the new privately operated psychiatric hospital would provide services for adolescents and children not offered anywhere else in Eastern North Carolina?SPEAK OUT!!

Why doesnt PCMH concede that its psychiatric care is geared for only 30 day visits while many psychiatric patients need institutional treatment for as much as 90 to 120 days as would be available in the new private psychiatric hospital?

Theres still lots of time, the CERTIFICATE OF NEEDS process is still in its early stages and this issue has not been finalized.

Please Write To:

Did you know that Charter Medical is willing to accept patients regardless of ability to pay?

Why hasnt PCMH been able to explain its statement about the effect of a new private psychiatrlc^^spital on them in these words **the financial result to Pitt County Memorial Hospital will be disastrous?

If you are one of the growing members of the Pitt County Community in favor of the private psychiatric hospitai proposed...

James Bek, Manager Health Facilities Development

Charter Medical Corporation P.O BOX 209 Macon, Georgia 31298 (912) 742 1161

or local no. 756-7462





8-The Day Reflector. Greenvle, N.C.-Tuesday, April 12,1983

Stock And Market Reports

Hogs

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) (NCDA) - The trend on the North Carolina hog market today was mostly 50 cents to 75 cents lower. Kinston 46.50, Clinton, Elizabethtown, Fayetteville, Dunn, Pink Hill, Chadboum, Ayden, Pine Level, Laurinburg and Benson-46.25, Wilson 46.25. Salisbury 45.50, Rowland unreported, Spiveys Comer

46.00, Sows: all weights 500 pounds up; Wilson 47.00, Fayetteville 48.00. Whiteville

47.00, Wallace 48.00, Spiveys Corner 48.00, Rowland unreported, Durham 47.00.

Poultry

RALEIGH, N.C, (AP) (NCDAI - The North Caro-linaj.o.b. dock quoted price on broilers for this weeks trading was 39,75 cents, based on full truck load lots of ice pack I SDA Grade A sized 2'l- to 3 pound birds. The final weighted average was 39,83 cents f o b dock or equivalent. The market tone for next week's trading is mostly steady and the live supply is moderate for a moderate to good demand. Weights desirable to heavy. Estimated slaughter of broilers and fryers in North Carolina Monday was

1.880.000, compared to 1,713,000 last Monday.

Hens

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP)

I NCDA I - The North Carolina hen market was 1 cent ^higher. Supplies adequate. Demand moderate. Prices

TUESDAY 7:(K) a m. Greenville Breakfast Lions Club meets at Three Steers 10:00 a m. Kiwanis Golden K Club meets at Masonic Hall 7:00 p.m. Parents Anonymous meets at First Presbyterian Church 7:30 p m. - Greenville Chapter of United Ostomy Association, Inc. meets at Pitt County Mental Health Center, con^rence room 7.;50 p m. - Toughlove parents' support group at St, Pauls Episcopal Church 7:30 p.m - Vernon Howard study group at 110 N Warren St.

7:,30 p.m - Greenville Choral Society rehearsal at Immanuel Baptisi Church 8:00 pm - Withla Council, Degree of Pocahontas meets at Rotary Club 8:00' p.m - Pitt Co. Alcoholics Anonymous at .A.A BIdg,, Farmville hwy.

WEDNESDAY

9:30 a m - Duplicate bridge at Planters Bank 1:30 p m. Duplicate bridge at Planters Bank 6:30 p.m - REAL Crisis Intervention meets 6: :io p m. Kiwanis Club meets 7:00 p. m. .1 ay cettes meet 8:00 p m - Greenville White Shrine meets as .Masonic Temple 8:00 p m. - Pitt County Al-Anon Group meets -at .AA Bldg. on Farmville hwy:

8:(K) p.m. John Ivey Smith Council No. 6600, Knights of Columbus meet at St Peters Church Hall

8:00 p m - Pitt County Ala-Teen Group meets at AA Bldg., Farmville hwv

paid per pound for hens over seven pounds at farm for Monday and Tuesday slaughter was 16 cents.

NEW YORK (AP) - The stock market turned mixed today after flirting once again with new highs in the Dow Jones industrial average.

The widely recognized average of 30 blue chips, up 17.12 Monday and another 4 points in early trading today, was down 3.48 at 1,138.35 by noontime.

Gainers outnumbered losers by a narrow margin among New York Stock Exchange-listed issues.

The Dow Jones industrials closing high of 1,145.90 was established on March 24.

Analysts were watching closely to see how much resistance the market would encounter today around the levels from which it turned back three weeks ago.

The latest round of buying was attributed in large measure to a downturn in interest rates in the credit markets Monday.

Brokers also pointed out that signs of stability in worldwide oil prices eased fears of further strains on the international financial system, and helped depressed energy stocks to rally.

American Motors led the active list, down % at 5^k. The company doubled the size of a public offering set for today to 10 million shares.

The NYSEs composite index slipped .11 to 88.96. At the American Stock Exchange, the market value index was up .55 at 393.83.

Volume on the Big Board totaled 39.68 million shares at noontime, against 37.66 million at the same point Mondav.

NEW YORK I AP) -Midday stocks

Low

Last

AMR Corp

26*8

26'

26'

AbblLabs

42%

42%

42

AlUs Chaim

14%

14%

14%

Alcoa

32%

32'-.

32'-,

Am Baker

12'4

12'4

12'4

AmBrands

49'h

48*

49'

Amer Can

34

33*

34

Am Cyan

41%

41'.,

41%

AmFamily

18'4

17%

18

Am Motors

5*4

5*4

5*4

AmStand

32

31*4

31%

Amer T4T

64%

64'-,

64',

Beat Food

26'-..

26%

26'.,'

Beth .Steel

21%

21'

21'4

Boeing

42

41*,

41%

Boise Cased

41

40*4

41

Borden

1 56'4

55'

55',

Burlngt Ind CSX Coro

33%

33'8

33'8

59*4

59%

59'-,

CaroPwLt

22'

22

22

Celanese

56'4

56

56'4

Cent .Soya

14%

14%

14%

Champ Int Chrysler

26'4

25%

26

17'z

17'4

17'-,

CocaCola

56%

56

56'8

Colg Palm

23%

23'4

23'4

Comw Edis

26'-.

26'4

26'4

Conti Group

41%

41'4

41%

DeltaAirl

45'-.

45'4

45%

DowChem

29%

29%

29*4

duPonl

43'4

43

43'8

Duke Pow

' 23%

23',

23'-,

EaslnAirL

< 8

8*4

8*4

East Kodak

81*4

80'-,

80',

EatonCp

35

34*4

34*4

Esmark s

64'

64

64',

Exxon

32'4

32'

32'4

Firestone

19

18*

18* H

FlaPowLt

37

36

36%

FlaProgress

19

18*

18*

FordMol

4

39*4

39*4

For McKess

42%

41*

42'8

Fuqua Ind GTE Corp-'

39%

39'-,

39'-,

42'4

42

42'.4

GnDynam Gen Elec

45

44'-,

44*4

108

107%

107%

Gen Food

41*4

. 41*4

41*,4

Gen Motors

58*1

58',

58%

Gen Tire

33'4

33'4

33*4

GenuParts

39*4

39%

39-%

GaPacif

25%

25%

25%

Goodrich

36%

36*4

36*4

Goodyear

29%

29'

29'4

Grace Co

42'

42

42'

GtNor Nek

43%

43%

43%

Greyhound Gull Oil

23*4

34%

23% 34'4

23%

34'4

Herculesinc

34'^

34'4

34'-,

EDWARD D. JONES & CO.

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iinicipii Bonds    ^ i\i\ OT

9 50%    12.00%

Investment Gride Corporite Bonds f O OCT Of

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mm*

W* SIngltton

School Board... Warn Of A Limit To

Congressional Immunity

(Continued from pagel) percentage was formulated by the committee based on a dozen variables with weight points of one to four assigned to each variable. T^ical of these variables and the current percentages of minorities applicable to each variable are; minority educators in Pitt County and Greenville schools, 22 percent; certificates in force in North Carolina for minority personnel, 24 percent; minority student pqiulation in Greenville schools, 53 percent.

The current percentage of certified minority personnel in the Greenville school system is approximately 24 percent.

Members of the Affirmative Action Committee are; business representatives Dave Englemeyer of Procter & Gamble and Joe High of TRW Inc. - Michigan Division; East Carolina University Professor Maylon McDonald; NCAE President LaVeta Weatherington; League of Women Voters representative Martha Coffman; NAACP representative the Rev. Howard Parker; SCLC representative Mary Williams; Black Assembly representative Walter Morehead; Greenville school principals Kay Whitehurst and Clarence Gray; federal funds director Freager Sanders, and attorney Phil Dixon.

Awaiting A Rescue On Their Liferaft

HONOLULU (AP) - Two downed Navy flyers and two rescue specialists who parachuted to help them after an A-4 jet ditched in the Pacific Ocean were still alive today after more than 15 hours battling 18-foot waves, the Coast Guard said.

Rescuers were awaiting the light of dawn to try to pluck the four to safety, said a Coast Guard spokesman in Honolulu.

Airplanes circling the area about 700 miles northeast of Honolulu on Monday reported the two flyers and one of the Coast Guard rescue specialists were trying to link their life rafts, while the other rescuer floated without a raft about half a mile away.

The Matson container ship Lurline, en route from San Francisco to Honolulu, was diverted to the area. Rescue aircraft circling the area had radio contact with the downed fliers.

The first pararescueman was dropped and made contact with the rescue aircraft, said Coast Guard spokesman Keith Spangler. But the second one never made contact.

Honeywell HosplCp s Ing Rand IBM

Inti Harv Int Paper Int Recti I Int T4T K mart KaisrAIum Kane Mill KanebSvc KrogerCo Lockheed Loews Corp Masonite n McDrmInt n Mead Corp MinnMM Mobil Monsanto NCNB Co 'NabiscoBrd Nat Distill NorflkSou n OlinCp Owenslll . Penney JC PepsiCo Phelps Dod PhilipMorr PhillpsPet Polaroid ProctGamb s Quaker Oat RCA

RalstnPur RepubAir Republic StI Revlon Reynldind Rockwelint RqyCrown StRegis Pap Scott Paper SealdPow SearsRoeb Shaklee Skyline Cp Sony Corp Southern Co Sperry Cp SldOilCal StdOilInd StdOilOh Stevens JP TRW Inc Texaco Inc TexEastn UMC Ind Un Camp L'n Carbide UnOilCal Uniroyal US Steel Wachov Cp WalMart s

92*4

50

43 106*8

6'i!

53*8

14

37/8

32'/4

I7*/

17

16'8

37'i

107>,

163W

59

18*4

234.

78

30 91

25N.

34

27

58*8

29Y

31*4

62*4

36*1.

m

63*1.

35*8

31*8

61

44 23*8 21'^

8'^

20*4

351/8

51*8

52',i

24

31

20*4

42

36

55*4

25 14% 15% 35% 39

45*8

46*8

24%

64

33%

50*4

II

72

60*4

35*4

11*4

23*4

38*8

59*4

46

45%

38%

46*8

36*4

41*4

Following are selected 11 market quotations:

Ashland prC Burroughs

Carolina Power & Light

Collins &Aikman

Connor

Duke

Eaton

Eckerds

Exxon

Fieldcrest

Hatteras

Hilton

Jefferson

Deere

Lowe's

McDonald's

McGraw

Piedmont

Pizza Inn

P4G

TRW, Inc.

United Tel Virginia Electric Wachovia

OVER THE COUNTER

Aviation

Branch

UtUeMint

Planters Bank

91*4    91*4

49%    49%

42*4    42*4

106*8 106*(. 6*8 6*8 53%    53*8

13%    13%

37*8    37*8

32%    32%

17*4    ITt-s

17    17

15%    15%

37'-4 m 105%    105%

163% 163% 59    .    59

17%    18

23*4    23*4

77%    77*4

29*4    29%

90*8    90*4

25%    25*8

33%    34

26%    27

58%    58%

29%    29%

30%    30%

61%    62*4

36    36%

28%    28*4

63    63%

35    35%

31*8    31*4

60%    60%

44    44

23%    23%

21*4    21%

8*8    8%

20*4    20*4

35    35

51*8    51%

52*8    52*8

23%    24

31    31

19%    20%

42    42

35*4    35*4

54%    54%

25    25

14*8    14%

15*4    15%

35*4    35*4

38*4    38%

44*4    45%

46%    46%

24*8    24*8

63%    63*8

33'-.

50*

II

71%    72

59*8    59%

35%    35%

11*4    11*4

23%    23%

38*8    38*

58    59%

46    46

45*8 45*8 38%    38%

46%    46%

35%    36%

41*8    41*8

a.m. stock

38%

45%

22

25%

19

23%

34*4

30*4

31%

33%

15*8

45%

32

35*8

36*4

69*4

44*8

34%

10

60%

63*4

20*4

15%

38%

24%-24%

22%-23

1-%

33%-33*4

His parachute opened, and he was seen in the water, Spangler said. At last report, he was approximately one-half mile from the (search and rescue) raft.

It may not be until first light or later that well be able to get to them.

The Navy jet was part of a three-plane flight en route to the U.S. mainland from Kaneohe Marine Corps Air Station when it crashed about noon Monday, Spangler said. The names of the flyers were not released and the cause of the accident was not known.

Richer Due $500 Gift

The Greenville school system is richer today by $500 as the result of a gift tendered under the Adopt-A-School program.

G.W. Harris, president of the Pitt County Association of Life Underwriters, presented a check to the school board Monday night for $500 to be used in the math and science programs at Wahl-Coates and South Greenville schools in any manner you may wish.

The gift was accepted on behalf of the school system by Charles Ross, director of elementary education.

We are truly appreciative of this fine support by the association, Ross said, and hope that this public-minded group will make a yearly habit of adopting one of our schools. This money will be used to purchase math and science equipment and supplies for programs at Wahl-Coates and South Greenville.

Ross explained that, for the past year, ongoing efforts have been made to secure public support in a critical need to broaden the science and math programs in the city schools. He added that any individual, ^oup, club, agency or business interested in adopting a schooi can specify the area for which a donation will be used.

Charge Priest Threatened

NEW YORK (AP) - A Catholic priest was arreseted and charged with allegedly threatening the life of Cardinal Terence Cooke and another church official, police said.

The Rev. William Costello was arrested April 7 and accused of threatening the life of the cardinal and Bishop Joseph OKeefe, vicar-general of the New York Archdiocese, in a telephone call made Feb. 28, police said.

Costello, 60, is a member of the Holy Ghost Fathers, based in Ireland. He was charged with aggravated harassment.

Costellos last position was as an assistant pastor.

r

HERNIA-RUPTURE

THE DOBBS HERNIA BRACE

(For Reducible Hernio-Rupture)

Ed. Hill, Representative, serving this area more than 25 years, will be at BlMette's In Greenville THURSDAY APRIL 14th, for free demonetratlon.

Hours 2 PM to 5 PM, Only,

The Dobbs BELTLESS, STRAPLESS Hernia Broce. A CONCAVE Pad holds the rupture like the pqjm of your hand. Note the date and come in. One Day Only. Demonstrotion Free.

WASHINGTON (AP) -House lawyers are preparing a memo to tell congre^men the Constitution does not give them blanket protection from criminal arrests.

Stanley Brand, counsel to the chief clerk, said the memo was prompted by the mistaken belief of Montgomery County, Md., police last month that Rep. Louis Stokes, D-Ohio, had congressional immunity and could not be arrested on drunken driving charges.

Stokes car was stopped during the early morning of March 25 when an officer suspected him of drunken driving. Police Cpl. Phillip Caswell said the eight-term congressman failed three roadside sobriety tests.

Stokes, chairman of the House Committee on Standards of Official Conduct, the

School Bd...

(Continued from pagel)

category. Sanders provided a chart which shows that for the 15 counties in eastern North Carolina comprising School District I, from 1970 to 1980 there has been a 58.6 percent reduction in the number of families classied as poor. In Pitt County, for example, the 1970 census listed 7,594 families as poor - the number for 1980 dropped to 4,705, a reduction of 62 percent.

Since federal fund allocations for certain programs are pro rated on poor, or low income families, the big drop in the numbers of poor families will have far reaching implications, Sanders commented. North Carolina stands to lose about $23 million in federal funding.

Sanders said that already 11 states are contesting use of the 1980 census data, expressing concern with the validity of the drastically reduced figures nationally.

Blinson reported that Rose High has passed the Five-Year Interim Review requirements for reaccreditation by the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools.

Board members were furnished initial summary sheets on both the capital outlay budget and the local expense budget. A workshop meeting will be held on the proposed 1983-84 budgets at the April 18 school board meeting. Between that date and May 15, the final date for submission of the budget to county commissioners, a public hearing meeting will be scheduled to give the public an opportunity to provide input on budget considerations.

Reporting on the status of the Rose High School soccer team, Blinson said it appears that continued use by Rose of the universitys Dansey Field may seriously conflict with ECUs use of the field. Among possible alternatives in order to keep the soccer program active are: moving the soccer field to the Elmhurst Elementary School campus which would entail improving the area by hauling in and spreading top soil and re-seeding; or negotiating with ECU to make its soccer field available for Rose High to use when playing eight games scheduled next year.

In executive session, one resignation was accepted, one election was approved, and approval was given to one teacher retirement at the end of the school year.

ethics committee, told a news conference in Cleveland on Monday he had not been drinking. He said he passed the roadside tests and never was asked to take a Breathalyzer or urinalysis test.

While Stokes never claimed congressional immunity, police at the station where he was taken concluded he had such protection. A family member was summoned to take Stokes home and no charges were filed.

After the incident. Brand and local government attorneys in suburban Washington decided independently of each other to prepare memos on congressional immunity.

Brand said Article I, Section 6 of the Constitution says members of Congress shall in all cases, except treason, felony and breach of the peace, be privileged from arrest during their attendance at the session of their respective houses, and in going to and^ returning from the same...

The Supreme Court has said the protection applies only to civil arrests, which are virtually non-existent today. Brand said.

Hold Daughter In Gun-Slaying

PINE KNOLL SHORES, N.C. (AP) - Police arrested the daughter of a woman found shot to death last week and charged her with murder.

Pine Knoll Shores police said they arrested Susan Lee Scheirer, 36, Saturday after she was released from Carteret General Hospital. She was being held in Carteret County Jail pending a bond hearing today.

Scheirer apparently shot herself in the left thi^i after killing her mother, Olga Hedrick, 69, according to Pine Knoll Shores Police Chief Edgar Crawford.

Hedrick was found dead in her home at 109 Acorn Court on April 4, and an autopsy report later revealed she had been shot three times with a .22-caliber gun.

MASONIC NOTICE There will be an emergent communication at William Pitt Masonic Lodge No. 734 Wednesday at 7 p.m. Work in the E.A. degree. All members are urged to attend.

D.W. Adams, master Thurston Wynne,

secy

When the framers wrote the Constitution, civil arrests were common, especially in debtors cases. A civil arrest may apply to certain traffic violations in some states, the House counsel said.

Bruce Sherman, the Montgomery County attorney representing the county police department, concluded five days after the Stokes incident that the police involved made the wrong decision.

Members of the United States Congress are not immune from arrest and prosecution for criminal offenses, he wrote in a March 30 legal opinion.

John Kloch, the commonwealth attorney in Alexandria, Va., said that because of the Stokes case, he also is preparing a legal ruling.

No Value In Book 'Lists'

GREENSBORO, N.C. (AP) College admissions officials and high school guidance counselors say they put little stock in listing of .outstanding students by national publications.

Books published by such companies as The Society for Distinguished American Hi^ School Students, the United States Achievement Academy and Whos Who Among American High School Students feature short biographies of students.

The books are available at no cost to some colleges and all public libraries, but students who want their own books must buy them.

And thats something that college admissions officials and local guidance counselors dont like. They warn students that being featured in such publications may be a waste of money and a waste of time.

They dont mean anything, says Dick Baddour, assistant director of admissions at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. If they are similar to Whos Who, they are not a factor in the admissions process. Were looking for contributions that people have made to their schools, their communities, their family, their church.

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Obituary

Cannon

Funeral services for Mrs. Mary Louise Carmon, who died Friday in Washington, D.C., will be held Wednesday at 1 p.m. at Little Creek Free Will Baptist Church. The Rev. Tyrone Tumage will conduct the service and burial will follow in Brown Hill Cemetery.

Mrs. Carmon was a native of Pitt County but spent most of her life in the Maury community. She was a member of Little Creek Church.

Surviving are her husband, Lennon Carmon of Durham; three daughters, Mrs. Carolyn Henderson of Lan-dover, Md., Mrs. Dorothy Dozier of Lorton, Va., and Mrs. Minnie Jones of Springfield, Va.; two brothers, John Henry Fleming and Robert Lee Fleming, both of Washington, D.C.; a sister, Miss Myi^e Fleming; nine grandchildren and three-great ^andchildren.

The family will receive friends tonight from 8-9 p.m. at Flanagan Funeral (Tbapel and other times will be at the home of Mrs. Carrie House, Route 7, Greenville.

Obituary

Whitehurst

BETHEL-Mrs. Evelyn Davis Whitdiurst, 68, died today.

Funeral services will be held Wednesday at 3:30 p.m. from Bethel United Methodist Church with the Rev. Ellis Bedsworth and the Rev. Clyde C. Tucker officiating. Burial will be in the Bethel City Cemetery.

Survivors include one daughter, Mrs. J. Stanley (Judy W.) Peel of Elizabeth City; four sisters, Mrs. Annie Mae D. Harris of Robersonville, Mrs. Nancy D. Andrews of Rocky Mount, Mrs. Elsie Congleton of Stokes and Mrs. Lucille D. Ward of Hamilton; one brother, Edgar Davis of Hamilton; two ^andchildren, Miss Melanie Laine Peel of Elizabeth City and Louellen Peel of Elizabeth City.

Arrangements are being handled by Ayres-Gray Funeral Home in Bethel.

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MiTHE DAILY REFLECTORTUESDAY AFTERNOON, APRIL 12, 1983

Bishops Blessed With Win Over Pirates

. By WOODY PEELE U/AG alrviAcf lilrA wniiM Koipa nln*A^ _ i.i. ^

. By WOODY PEELE Reflector Sports Editor

East Carolinas baseball Pirates struggled out of one hole and then fell right into another yesterday in a sudden home game against N.C. Wesleyan.

The game, originally scheduled for Rocky Mount, was switched to Greenville because of field conditions, and a game set for toni^it at Harrington Field will instead be played at 3 p.m. this afternoon at Rocky Mount on the Bishop field on the Wesleyan campus.

The Pirates, who fell behind 6-1, struggled back to tie the game up, only to have mistakes in the eighth inning open the flood gates for the Bishops to take a 12-6 win in the contest.

It was almost like Murphys law, Coach Hal Baird said afterwards. It just seemed like nothing went right for us. It was a nightmare from t(^ to bottom. We couldnt pitch, we couldnt make the big defensive play when we had to.

Baird cited an error on a sacrifice bunt in the eighth as the key to the loss. At the time, the score was tied at 6-6 and Wesleyan had just put its leadoff batter on base. Toby Holliday laid down a sacrifice bunt that was fielded in plenty of time, but overthrown by catcher Jabo Fulghum at first. The baserunner sped all the way to third on the play.

That changed everything, Baird said. They were able to freewheel after that. They

woiild have played it a lot different with one out and a man only on second, and we might have been able to get out of it. I dont take anything from Wesleyan, they have a good team, but our mistakes cost us.

Bobby Davidson opened the game on the mound for the Pirates, but was taken out after only two Innings. He just didnt have his stuff, Baird said. That brouit on Chubby Butler, who was able to retire only one batter while giving up four hits before he was jerked. Robby, Mc-Qanahan came on after that and seemed to take charge, limiting Wesleyan to only three hits over the next four and two-thirds innings. But he was chased in the eighth, as was his reliever, Kirk

Parsons, with Brian Peterson coming on to get the final four outs.

We not getting good enough pitching, Baird lamented. Then, when our defense breaks down at critical times...we have to play better.

Wesleyan pushed over a run in the first to take the initial lead. Richard Mattocks led off with a walk and stole second. Mike DeSola also walked and both runners moved iq) on a balk. With one away, Mike DeLeone reached on an infield hit. scoring Mattocks.

The Bishops added two more in the second. With two away, Vince Chamberlain walked and Mattocks blasted a homer to right and Wesleyan had a 3-0 lead.

The Pirates came up with their firet run in the bottom of the inning. David Home got a twoK)Ut single and Ful^ium walked. KeUy Robinette then singled to right, scoring Home. A pickoff play, on which Baird felt Wesleyan pitcher Larry Parr balked, ended the inning. I had told the umpires to watch his balk move, but I didnt figure that it would do any good to argue it after the fact, Baird said.

Wesleyan boosted its lead to 6-1 with three in the third. Terry Coates singled and DeLeone got a hit. Charlie Simpsons single to right scored Coates, but John Hallows relay to Home got DeLeone at third. Simpson stole up, scoring on Moochie Medleys single. That spelled the end for Butler, who had

opened the frame. Willie Arrington walked and with two away, Chamberlain singled in Medley with the sixth Bishim run.

ECU rallied for two in the bottom of the inning. With one out, Todd Evans doubled and David Wells reached on an error. Winfred Johnson then singled to score Evans. An error on Robert Wells grounder allowed David Wells to score.

Itobinette singled - his third hit of the day to score Salmond, and after a double play got Home at the plate, Evans doubted to score both Robinette and courtesy runner Robert Langston for a 6^ tie.

David WeUs then left the game with a pulled muscle in the top of the fourth chasing a fly ball.

The Pirates tied it up with three in the sixth. Tony Salmond opened with an infield hit and both Home and Fulghum walked, loading them up.

But it wasnt to be. Wesleyan came back with six Inns in the top of the eighth. Medley led off with a single and AjTington reached when his sacrifice bunt was errored, moving Medley to third! Holliday then singled to drive in both runners. An error on the relay allowed Holliday to take second, and Chamberlain sacrificed courtesy mnner Robin Shorter to third. He scored on Mattocks single, and Mattocks stole second, taking third on Coatess single. Mattocks then stole

home with the fourth run of the inning.

DeLeone kept it going with a double to score Coates and he scored on Simpsons hit, finishing it off.

DeLeone led the 16-hit attack of the Bishops with four, while Mattocks had three and Coates, Simpson, Medley and Holliday each had two.

East Carolina was led by Robinette with three, while Evans had two - both doubles.

The loss drops the Pirates to 15-10, while Wesleyan climbs to 22-3.

Captures Second Mosters Title

NCWe*.

Mattocks,2t)

DeSola.dh

Coates,rf

DeLeone,lb

Simpson,3b

Medley,

Arrington,c(

HoUiday.c

Shorter,cr

C'berlain,ss

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Ballesteros Rides Early Lead To Victory

USTA, Ga. (AP) - Seves birdie-eagle-par- event.    PovmAnH    o..:-    "

N.C Wesleyan..................us    wo 000-12

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DP-East Carolina,    N C    Wesleyan; LOB-NCWC

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AUGUSTA, Ga. (AP) -Seve Ballesteros left no room for drama in the 47th Masters golf tournament.

The makings were there for a dramatic finish - four former Masters champions separated by only two shots going into the final round.

Seves birdie-eagle-par-birdie magic on the first four holes quickly took care of that as the handsome Spaniard outdistanced three of the games top players and strolled to a rather easy four-shot victory Monday in the seasons first major golf

event.

I played 4-under the first four holes, and I think that was probably the key, Ballesteros said. That put me 9-under and put my confidence straight up.

It also put more pressure on the third round co-leaders.

Raymond Floyd and Craig Staler, playing one group behind him, and on playing partner Tom Watson, who had hoped to capture his third Masters crown.

The 26-year-old Ballesteros, who also won this tournament in 1980, lost that three-shot advantage only once the rest of the way.

That came when Watson knocked in a 35-40-foot eagle putt on the par 5 eighth to move within two shots of the lead.

But, a Watson charge wasnt tobe.

Ballesteros rolled in a 15-foot birdie putt on the ninth and Watson, one of the games top putters, lost his touch on the greens.

He three-putted Nos. 9 and 11 and also bogeyed the lOth, and the game was over for the reigning U.S. and British Open king.

Stadler and Floyd never got anything going, and the only ones who did, Ben Crenshaw and Tom Kite, were too far back for it to matter.

Ballesteros closed with a 69 for an 8-iuider 280 total in the day-late finish on the still-soggy 6,905-yard Augusta National Golf Club course.

Crenshaw had the low round of the day, a 68, and Kite fired a 69 as the two tied for second place at 284.

Watson and Floyd finished at 285 with scores of 73 and 75, respectively, and Stadler, the defending champion, struggled to a 76 and was tied at 286 with Hale Irwin, who had a 69.

Watson closed to within three shots with a birdie on the 13th, but had a double bogey 6 on 14.

Watson said the 14th sealed the coffin. The lights went out.

I told my caddy after 13 that from here to the last hole

we have to play in par, Ballesteros said. I did.

I made a couple of mistakes on the back nine, but I kept my cool, he said.

The key on this course is you have to wait for the birdies. I made my birdies early in the round and that was the key.

The victory was worth $90,000 for Seve and it was his third major championship. He also won the British Open in 1979 and now owns 29 titles in his globe-trotting career -most of them overseas.

This is my favorite course, he said. You have to use your power... your mind ...and be lucky.

He played the front side in 5-under, getting his birdies from 8 feet on the first hole, 2 feet at No. 4 and 15 feet at No. 9.

His two bogeys came on the backside when he two-putted

ip h rer bb H

from 12 feet, first on No. 10 when he caught a bunker and again at No. 12 when he missed the green.

Seve finished with a flourish, chipping in from 20 feet to par the final hole.

Watson called Ballesteros an aggressive, flamboyant type of player and said the start was like a py getting knocked down two times in the first round, and having a three-knockdown rule. Crenshaw, who eagled the par-5 13th from eight feet, said, I was so far behind. Seve started so well. I mean, good night! But I was proud of that round today. It was a tough day to play.

Birdie, eagle, par, birdie, Kite said, recalling Seves start.

Thats like driving a Ferrari and the rest of us in a Chevrolet, he added. He just blasted us.

8 8 6 4 3 1 I I 0 0 0 1

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McClanahan laced three batters in the eighth Bk-Davidson, PB-Fulghum.

Lady Bucs Fall, 8-1

GUILFORD COLLEGE -Guilford Colleges unbeaten womens.tennis team rolled to an 8-1 victory over East Carolina yesterday.

The Lady Pirates only victory came in the number two singles where Janet Russell gained a split-set win.

The loss drops the Pirates to 5-8 on the year. They return home today to host Atlantic Christian. Guilford is now 16-d.

Summary:

Hubis Brown Looking Forward To Winning Final Three Contesfs

Kerry Kennedy (G) d. Debbie Christine, 6-1, frO.

Laura

Lori

Happy Winners

Seve Ballesteros hugs his caddie

after winning the 1983 Master Golf

title Monday at the Augusta National Golf Club. He also won the title in 1980. (APLaserphoto)

Chargers Rally Past Cougars

PINETOPS - Ayden-Grifton scored three runs in the ninth inning to gain a 5-2 baseball victory over Southwest Edgecombe yesterday.

The Chargers pushed into the lead in the first inning, scoring once. Jackie Conway doubled and took third on an

error on the play. Gene Johnson was hit by a pitch and when he was thrown out trying to steal second, Conway scooted home.

The Chargers picked up a second run in the third for a 2-0 lead, but couldnt hold it. Southwest came back with single runs in the fifth and

Sports Colondor

Editor's Note: Sdteduies are supplied by schools or sponsoring agencia id are subject to change without notice.

Todays Sports BasebaU

Janiesville at Manteo

Greene Central at Ayden-Grifton (7;30p.m.)

FarmvUle Central at North Pitt (4p.m.)

North Lenoir at Greene Central JV(4p.m.)

Rose at Beddingfield (4 p.m.)

East Carolina at N.C. Wesleyan (3 p.m.)

Roanoke at WUliamston (4 p.m.)

Conley at SouthWest Edgecombe (7:30p.m.)

Bear Grass at Belhaven

Rocky Mount at E.B. Aycock (4 p.m.)

Greenville Christian at Falls Road (4 p.m.)

SoftbaU

FarmvUle Central at North Pitt

(4p.m.) Gr

Sreene CentraTat Ayden-Grifton (4 p.m.)

Bose at Beddingfield (4 p.m.)

East Carolina at Loulsburg -2(3 p.m.)

Roanoke at WUliamston (4p.m.) Gianvllle Christian at Falls Road (4 p.m.)

JamesviUe at Manteo

Be'hr Gnos at BeUiaven

E.B. Aycock at Beddingfield (4

p.m.)

Tennis

Greene Central at FarmvUle Central (3:30 p.m.)

Beddingfield at Rose (3:30 p.m.) AUantlc ChrlsUan at East Carolina women (3p.m.)

East Carolina at Old Dominion (2;15p.m.)

Taitoro at Roanoke WUliamston at Edenton BaUi at Bear Grass Track FUce at Rose (3:30 p.m.)

Conley, Lakewood, North Duplin at South Lenoir (3:30 p.m.)

Golf

NewBematRoeedp.m.)

Wednesdays Shorts Track

Greene Central, SouthWest Edgecombe at FarmvUle (Central (3;30p.m.)

Rose at Flke girls (3:30 p.m.) Kinston, Flke at E.B. Aycock Baseball Roanoke at Edenton JV (4 p.m.)

TOnnls Bear Grass at CresweU Rocky Mount at Rose Southern Nash at Greene Central Cape Fear at Pitt CC Kinston at GreenvUle Juniors (3 p.m.)

SoftbaU

Virginia Commonwealth at East Carolina-2 (3 p.m.)

Rocky Mount at Rose

sixth innings to tie it at 2-2.

It stayed that way until the ninth, when Ayden-Grifton broke it open with three. Tyrone Gay led off with a single and Joey Kennedy got a hit. Roger Moyes single loaded the bases and a walk to Terry Garrett brought in Gay. Wesley Hardys grounder was relayed to home, but errored, scoring Kennedy and Charles Mitchell then singled in Moye with the fifth Charger run, insuring the win.

Gay led the Ayden-Grifton hitting with two, whfle Eddie Naylor had two of three hits SouthWest got off Doug Coley, who went the distance.

Now 9-2 overall and 2-1 in Eastern Carolina Conference play, the Chargers host Greene Central, today at 4 p.m.

NEW YORK (AP) - New York Coach Hubie Brown appreciates the luxury of not having to worry about other teams scores, as long as the Knicks continue to win.

I think we will win our last three games, Brown said after the Knicks easy 121-92 victory over the Indiana Pacers in the only National Basketball Assbciation game Monday night. If we win all three, it doesnt matter what Atlanta or Washington does. From a positive standpoint, the best way to make the playoffs is not worry what the other teams are doing. We have to do it ourselves.

We dont have to worry about Washington or Atlanta at all, said Bernard King, who hit 13 of 20 shots and scored 29 points to lead the Knicks. I prefer it this way. The Knicks are tied with

Rose JVs Win, 12-0

A-Grlfton....l01 OOO 003-5 7 0 SWEcombe.OOO Oil 000-2 3 3 Coley and Moye; Naylor, WUson IVamell.

(9)1

Rose High Schools junior varsity baseball team rolled to a 12-0 victory over Wilson Beddingfield yesterday.

Steve Wall hurled the win, allowing three hits, while striking out 12.

David Jester paced the Rose hitting with three - all triples while Tony Taylor and Doyle Kirkland each had two hits.

Rose, now l-l, plays host to Kinston on Thursday.

Atlanta for fifth place in the Eastern Conference, and both the Hawks and Knicks are one-half game ahead of Washington. Two of the three teams will earn a postseason berth by Sunday, the final day of the regular season.

But because of the tiebreaker situation, the Knicks are assured of making the playoffs if they win their last three games, at home against New Jersey and on the road against Detroit and Chicago.

This is a good position to be in, said center Bill Cartwright, who hit all eight of his field goal attempts and finished with 19 points. I feel well win our remaining games.

Indianas seventh straight loss dropped the Pacers, 19-60, two games behind Cleveland in the Central Division. Both the Pacers and Cavaliers have three games left, and if eveland finishes ahead of Indiana, the Pacers will flip a coin with Houston for the right to choose first in the June 28

college draft, with three-time All-American Ralph Sampson of Virginia the likely first selection.

Were not trying to catch anyone now, Indiana Coach Jack McKinney said. Were just trying to win a few and salvage the season.

McKinney said the Pacers might have been expected to start playing out the string weeks ago, but if we do that, we are cheating the people who pay our salaries.

"You cant accuse them of playing out the string, Brown said of the Pacers. They lost in overtime to Philadelphia on Friday and led most of the game against Cleveland Sunday. Its been a frustrating season for them and tonight

After trailing 57-42 at halftime, the Pacers cut the deficit to 59-50 in the third quarter, but got no closer than that as the Knicks outscored them 62-42 the rest of the way.

King had 15 points and Cartwright and Paul Westphal nine each in the first quarter as the Knicks led by as many as 17 points in the period, which ended with them ahead 35-22.

Janet Russell (EC) d. Julie Tupper,4-,6-2,6-3.

Lili Carpenter (G) d. Redford, 7-6,6-4.

Melany Bischoff (G) d.

Reep, 60,60.

Tammy Strickland (G) d. Kim Harrison, 6-2,6-1.

Kimberly Eastman (G) d. Robin Biel, 60,60.

Kennedy-Tupper (G) d Russell-Redford, 6-2,6-3.

Carperter-Bischoff (G) d Christine-Harrison, 6-2,6-3.

Nancy Helier-Eastman (G) d Reep-Biel, 6-2,6-2.

With the New York starters on the bench, Indiana out-scored the Knicks 14-5 to close the gap to 38-30.

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Healthy Pitcher Prows Optimism

Leonard Leads Royals' Hopes

How Good It Feels

Kansas City Royals U.L. Washington slides safely to home on his first inside-the-park home run Monday in Kansas City. Washington

hit the ball past leftfielder Jim Rice of Boston to centerfielder Tony Armas who relayed the ball to catcher Rich Gedman, but not in time. (APLaserphoto)

Astros, Cubs Rival For Worst Start Of 1983

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) -The Kansas City Royals probably proved last year that Dennis Leonard is crucial to any hopes they might have of winning the American League West championship.

Last May the hard-throwing veteran broke two fingers, stopping a line smash with his pitching hand. The Royals spent the rest of the season in a futile duel with California. Leonard missed 16 starts and the Angels won the flag, finishing three games ahead of the Royals.

But after Monday nights six strikeouts in a 6-2 victory over Boston, Leonard and Manager Dick Howser were resting a lot easier.

Leonard threw the ball as well as he can tonight, said Howser. He had as good a, fastball as he is going to have.

I have been very impressed with the way hes thrown four of his last five times. He was mixing his pitches very well.

In Monday nights only other AL game, the California Angels defeated the Seattle Mariners 6-1.

Leonards six strikeouts included the heart of the Boston order in the third - Dwight Evans, Jim Rice and Tony Armas. In the fourth, he struck out Dave Stapleton and Glenn Hoffman.

I was mixing them up and getting them over the plate, said Leonard. And thats the secret to good pitching -

mixing em up and getting em over the plate.

Mixing pitches is vital when facing the Red Sox, he said. I got Evans with a fastball. Armas missed a couple of changeups pretty bad. Rice struck out on a slider.

The fingers feel fine. It feels like everything is falling into place.

An inside-the-park home run and a fielding gem by shorstop U. L. Washington helped Leonard beat the Red Sox. With the score tied at 2-2 in the fifth, Washington ripped a pitch from Bruce Hurst, 0-1, into the left-field comer that eluded Rice. It gave the Royals a 3-2 lead.

I didnt really think about it until I caught my breath three innings later, Washington said of the first inside-the-park homer of his career. Then I was just glad I wasnt out. 1 know the guys in the dugout were laughing at me when I came around third. Did you see me? I looked like a dying quail trying to get away. Home plate looked like

it was moving away from me.

In the first inning, Washington deprived Boston of at least one run. With one already in, two runners on base and two out, he went to his left to stop Stapletons hot grounder and flipped the ball behind his back to FYank White for the force at second.

Tommy John scattered seven hits for his se<XHid complete game in two starts. Bobby Grich went 4-for-4 for the Angels.

When I get into a groove and find my rhythm, my confidence level goes way up, John said. I have con

fidence in throwing some piL ches I might not throw were J struggling ... When Ilp throwing well, I keep the ball down and hope the fielders behind me can come up with the good plays - which theyve now done in two games for me.

U.L.s inside-the-park job was certainly an exciting thing, but that defensive play he made was every bit as impressive, said Howser. I like to see us sharp defensively. I know were going to hit the ball.

CoLgars Outrun Jaguars In Two

By The Associated Press

Winning isnt everything -and for the Houston Astros and Chicago Cubs these days, winning isnt anything.

The Astros, off to the worst start in the 22-year history of the franchise, have dropped their first seven games, the latest an 11-inning 4-3 heart-breaker Monday night to Los Angeles.

And the Cubs, starting their midsummer swoon a bit early, have dropped six in a row without a victory, their latest a 5-1 decision Monday in Cincinnati.

In the only other National League game, Atlanta blanked San Diego 4-0.

Bob Knepper was two outs away from his - and

Houstons - first victory of the year when Derrel Thomas singled and, with two away, pinch-hitter Mike, Marshall singled just over the glove of leaping second baseman Bill Doran. Then Steve Sax tied it 3-3 with a liner through the box.

Going into the ninth I didnt feel that strong, said Knepper. I made two bad pitches, to Thomas - and Marshall. If Marshalls hit is an inch lower, the game is over. Doran catches it. Sax hit a good pitch. The ball came right at me. It caught me flat-footed. I couldnt get off the ground to get it.

Im generally happy with my pitching, Knepper added,

Top Prospects Sign Wednesday

KANSAS ClTY,Mo. (AP)-Wednesday is national signing date for high school basketball players and coaches say the top prospects range from 7-foot-2to5-3.

But there are no overpowering big men in the mold of Ralph Sampson or Pat Ewing, say the cross-section of coaches and recruiters.

Its the year of guards and forwards, said Mike Gilleran, who coordiated the NCAAs Operation Intercept. In Operation Intercept, the NCAA works with recruiters and high school and college coaches to compile a list of the most heavily sought players so their recruitment can be monitored.

The closest to a consensus No. 1 player would probably be Reggie Williams of Dunbar High School in Baltimore, said Gilleran.

Williams is a solidly built 6-7 swingman and the leader on what everyone considered the top high school team in the country. One of his teammates was Tyrone Bogues, whos out to prove a 5-3 guard can play in the Atlantic Coast Conference.

Hes said hes going to Wake Forest, Gilleran said of Bogues. He impressed a lot of people last week in an all-star game in Washington, D C. His team won, in large part because of Bogues, the way he stole the ball, set up plays and generally created havoc. It will be interesting to see what he can do in the ACC.

In the all-star game. Bogues more than held his own against another of the countrys greatest prospects, James Blackmon, a 6-3 guard from Marion, Ind.

A lot of people are wondering about Bogues defense at 5-foot-3, but you just have to see him get out there and play to appreciate how he can mix it up, said Gilleran. "He gave Blackmon some trouble. And the fact he could stay out there with Blackmon tells you something. He hung in there pretty well.

Many of the best prospects have already signed, taking advantage of an experiment by college administrators that allowed seniors to sign during a seven-day period last November.

Blackmon is headed for Kentucky, said Gilleran. Hes an excellent player, handles the ball well and can shoot. Kentucky also is expected to land 6-7 Winston Bennett of Louisvilles Male High School, which has produced a number of gifted players, including former Louisville All-American Darrell Griffith.

Hes a big, muscular kid who is very gifted and will probably play power forward, said Gilleran. If Kentucky gets Bennett and Blackmon, that will be quite a coup.

The tallest player on the NCAAs list of top recruits is 7-2 Martin Nessley of Columbus, Ohio, who is headed for Duke.

A legend in the New York City prep ranks, Dwayne Pearl Washington, has decided upon Syracuse, said Gilleran. However, the 6-2 Washington, from Boys and Girls High l^hool in Brooklyn, did not exactly overpower Curtis Aiken, a small guard from Buffalo, N.Y., who says hes coming to Kansas.

Hes listed at everything from 5-9 to 5-11, but hes a fine player, said Gilleran. He first bloomed in the Empire State games last summer when he played against Washington. Aikens team beat Washingtons in an upset and everybcidy who came to see Washington went away about equally impressed with Aiken.

but Im not overjoyed we lost again.

They lost it in the 11th when Julio Solano walked Thomas, wild-pitched him to third and walked the bases loaded. Dave Smith took over and got Sax on a pop-up before Bill Russells suicide squeeze brought Thomas home. It brought cheers for Russell from the crowd which had booed him earlier for his erratic fielding at shortstop.

The crowds and I have an old thing going, Russell said. It doesnt bother me or I wouldnt have played this long.

^ Reds 5, Cubs 1 The Cubs are off to their poorest start since 1%2, when they lost their first seven games. Were off to a poor start, but weve got a good ballclub, Chicago Manager Lee Elia proclaimed. Once we start cooking, well be all right. Things are just magnified now because of the start of the season.

Theyre not quitting, he said of his players. Maybe theyre trying too hard as a team ... Down deep every guy on this ballclub knows weve got a good ballclub.

Joe Price pitched a two-hitter for the Reds, one of them Wayne Nordhagens home run, and Dann Bilardello hit a two-run double and Cesar Cedeno added a two-run homer, both in the second Inning against Dickie Noles.

Two swings of the bat, thats all it took a two-run double and a home run, Elia said. They didnt do anything after that. Its obvious were not mustering any offense. Braves 4, Padres 0 Pascual Perez stymied the Padres on five hits to stretch Atlantas winning streak to five games. He was super, just great, Braves Manager Joe Torre said. This was his best. Hes now put two complete games back-to-back. Terry Harper hit a run-scoring single in the fourth inning, then Bob Horner and Harper hit successive home runs in the fifth.

Four Teams Fined After TranSouth

DARLINGTON, S.C. (AP) - Four teams, including winner Harry Gants, were fined when illegal parts or equipment were- discovered Sunday morning before the start of the TranSouth 500 Grand National stock car race at Darlington International Raceway.

Trick fuel dump cans were taken from the Blue Max (with Tim Richmond as driver), Mach 1 (Gant), and RahMoc (Neil Bonnett) teams. An illegal fuel cell was found in the Childress Racing team (Ricky Rudd) entry, according to NASCAR officials.

The cans would have allowed the teams to add more fuel than legally permitted during pit stops.

NASCAR flagman-technical inspector Harold Kinder said the cans, which hold 14 gallons of gasoline, had false bottoms.

The welds were such that air could get into the bottom of the cans, Kinder said. The real bottoms had valves in them that fell open when the cans were tilted up to pour the gas into the cars.

He said the rigged cans allowed fuel to flow about twice as fast as it wouid from regulation cans.

The confiscated fuel cell was a half-inch too wide, according to Kinder.

This would give those cars the capability of carrying several more cubic inches of fuel, he said. It could have meant the difference in maybe not having to make a pit stop.

NASCAR director Dick Beaty of Charlotte, N.C., said the Richmond, Gant and Bonnett teams were fined $500 each for the dump cans. Meanwhile, the Rudd team was fined $250 for the large fuel cell.

The confiscated parts and equipment will be included in a display section at the Darlington track known as The Cheater Showcase.

PINETOPS - Southwest Edgecombe downed Greene Central yesterday in a pair of track meets. Southwest won the boys meet, 9441, and took a 9343 win in the girls event.

Earl Campbell won three events in the boys meet for Greene Central, taking the 800,1600 and 3200-meter runs.

The Greene Central boys return to action on Wednesday, traveling to Farmville Central, while the girls are back in action on Thursday, again at Southwest Edgecombe.

Summaries:

Boys Meet Shot put: Jenkins (SWE) 41-4; Mayo (SW) 41-3; Eason (GO 40-7'/j.

Discus: Mayo (SW) 106-6; Eason (GO 104-11; Taylor (GO 100-9.

High hurdles: Evans (SW) 18.1; Moses (SW) 20.5; Taylor (GO 23.3.

300 hurdles: Evans (SW) 47; Farmer (GO 50.7; Taylor (GO

41.6.

800 relay: Southwest Edgecombe 1:36.4.

Mile relay: Southwest Edgecombe 3:44.4.

400 relay: Southwest Edgecombe

45.7.

1600: Campbell (GO 4:42 9 D Moses (SW) 4:49.4; Knighing (GO 5:57.1.

3200: Campbell (GO 11:05.9; Bullock (SW) 11:46.0.

800: Campbell (GO 2:14 9 Johnson (SW) 2:16.3; Robinson (GO 2:22.2.

400: Clark (SW) 54.2; Carmon (GO 56.2; Savage (SW) 57.2.

Long jump: Carmon (GO 21-1; Hardy (GO 20-11; Bryant (SW) 19-6,^.

Triple jump: Johnson (SW) 42-6; Clark (SW) 41-0; Carmon (GO 40-10.

Pole vault; Jones (SW) 8-6; Pitt (SW) 7-6.

High jump; results unavailable. 100: results unavailable.

200: results unavailable.

800 relay: SouthWest Edgecombe 2:00.0.

1600; Harrison (GO 6:11.2; Um-stead (SW) 7:10.9; Brown (SW) 8:39.5.

400 relay: SouthWest Edgecombe

56.3.

400: Jones (GO 1:05.8; Myles (SW) 1:07.4; Staton (SW) 1:08.7.

200 hurdles: Johnson (SW) 36.8; Lyons (SW) 39.9.

800; Green (SW) 2:50.5; Harrison (GO 2:51.5; Dupree (SW) 2:59.8.

200: Gaines (SW) 28.7; Jones (GC)29.1;Brown(SW)30.4.

High jump: Lawrence (SW) 4-7; Lyons (SW) 4-4; Harrison (SW) 3-10.

Triple jump: Stanton (SW) 30-6; Johns (SW) 26-11.

Long jump; Dixon (GO 13-4; Lawrence (SW) 12-1; Bryant (GO 12-0.

Shot put: Wilkes (GO 264; Dixon (SW) 24-9; Barnett (SW) 23-1.

Discus; Wilkes (GO 74-7Vi' Barnett (SW) 69-3; Vines (SW) 57-3. 3200: results unavailable.

1600 relay; SouthWest Edgecombe (time unavailable).

Greenville Jrs. Win In Wilson

The Greenville Recreation and Parks Departments junior boys tennis team downed Greenfield Academy of Wilson yesterday, 7-2.

The win was the second in a row for the Greenville team, which hosts Kinston on Wednesday at 3 p.m. at River Birch Tennis Center.

Summary:

Jim Rogerson (GO d. David Lee, 80 Mike Diemer (GO d. Scott Davis, 80 Richard Haselrig (Gv) d. Jell Arens, 61; Mike Herrin (Gv) d. David Kang, 68-Josh Hickman (Gv) d. Michael Barshay,

63; Ralph Harper (Gv) d. Ed Daniel, 84.' Lee-Davis (Gv) d. Rogerson-Kang, 90;

Girls Meet

100: Gaines (SW) 13.1; Jones (GO 13.2; Lawrence (SW) 14.3.

Low hurdles: Wilkes (GO 18.5; Johnson (SW) 18.6; Lyons (SW) 20.2.

Harper-Haselrig (Gv) d. Diemer-Arens, 66; Herrin-Hickman (Gv) d. Barshay-

Ellis, 62.

Exhibition: McDonnell-Aycock (Gv) d T-Wille (Gv) d.

Culler-Hunter, 61; Fisher-

Peed-Parker, 61; Hines-Resnik (Gv) d. Ellis-Bass, 61

One of the top guards is Antoine Joubert of Detroit, a smooth 6-5 guard and all-around player. Another is Henry Dalrymple, a native of New York who attended prep school in Vermont and has committed to Georgia Tech. (PleaseTumToPageW

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' 518 SOUTH COTANCHE 8TSEET*

GREENVILLE. N.C. 27834

Rose Golfers

Down Kinston

Red Sox Manager Ralph Houk said Hurst performed better than the score would indicate. I thought Hurst pitched good enou^ to win, he said. He just didnt get too many breaks. Leonard is a good pitcher, one of the best in the league.

Angels 6, Mariners 1 Tim Foli drove in four runs for California with a pair of singles and left-hander

KINSTON - Rose High Schools golfers downed Kinston in a match played yesterday at Falling Creek Country Club in Kinston.

The Rampants finished the round with a score of 326, while Kinston carded a 332.

Craig Davies of Rose led all scorers with 75, while Brian Hill had 83 and John Jordan and Tee Davies each had 84 for the Rampants.

Kinston was led by Tinsley Mitchell with 81, while David Touiver had 83 and Frank Brownlee and Lee McGee each had 84.

The win leaves Rose with a 4-3 record. The Rampants host New Bern today at Brook Valley Country Club.

well back with a 343.

Alan Wooten led Farmvilles effort with a 74, a season l(jw, while Gary Hobgood careded a 77. Scott Lewis added a 78 and Mel Williams, a 79, also both individual lows for them.

Warren Agee led Ayden-Grifton with an 80, while Marc Davis and Andy Martin each had 87 and Brian Heath had

Farmville travels to Zebulon on Thursday.

Aycock Club Plans Tourney

Farmville C 308

Ayden-Grifton ... 343

FARMVILLE - Farmvle Central High Schools golfers downed Ayden-Grifton m a match played yesterday at the Farmville Golf and Country Club.

The Jaguars fmished the round with a team score of 308, while Ayden-Grifton was

Johnson Takes

The E.B. Aycock Athletic Club will sponsor the Pitt County Mens Invitational Basketball Tournament April 18-22 at E.B. Aycock Junior High School.

' Any mens basketball teams mterested m competing should contact C.A. Dawson at 757-1374, M. Ward at 758-3255 or coach McDowell at 7564737 before Friday, April 15.

A 21-foot three-point line will be used for this tournament. Proceeds will go to the E.B. Aycock Athletic Gub.

3rd In Fighting

COLUMBIA, S.C. - Superlightweight Geveland Johnson captured third place m the black belt fighting competition at the First Annual Southern Region Taekwon-Do Tournament Saturday.

Johnson, a first degree black belt, is karate instructor at South Greenville Gymnasium.

Also competing in the tourney was Craig Grant, who placed fourth in the green tip fighting event of the middleweight class.

Johnson will compete April 30 in Fayetteville in the Piedmont Promotions Full-Contact Karate and Kick Boxing Tournament.

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WASHINGTON (AP) - On the catch that put him in the record books, and won the gdme for the Arizona wtanglers, wide receiver Jackie Flowers was thinking of only one thing - how to knock it down.

; Trading 21-16 in the fourth quarter, Flowers outjumped tw Washington Federis defenders at the home teams 49-yard line and then rambled the remaining distance to complete a 98-yard touchdown pass, the longest in the history of the United States FootbaU League.

I threw the ball as far as I could and he made a heck of catch, said quarterback Alan Hisher, who completed 16 of 30 passes for 310 yards, including ei^t to Flowers for 179 in the Wranglers22-21 victory.

saw it from the second it left Rishers hand. I thought it was a jump ball and seriously thqught about knocking it down so they wouldnt intercept it. We needed to hoid on to the ball at that point in the game, Flowers said.

Washington comerback Jeff Brown and free safety Donnie Harris had surrounded Flowers when the two Federal defenders collided in midair and crashed to the turf.

I just watched it all the w^ and it went right between my hands and hit me in the . chest. Ail I could do was just

Long Pass

hold on and continue to run, said Flowers, who leads the USFL with eight touchdown catches.

Washington coach Ray Jauch, who watched his team fall to 1-5 and last place in the Eastern Conference along with next weeks opponent, e New Jersey Generals, was disheartened by the defeat.

This has s^t to be the worst one yet. Its like we find a new way to lose every week.

The winning score spoiled what, to that point, had been a glorious return to pro football by former NFL quarterback Joe Gilliam.

Federis

The Dally Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Tuesday, April 12, IMS-ll

Gilliam, who toiled in the minor lea^ for five years after righting himself from an admitted drug habit that prematurely ended his NFL career, threw two touchdown passes and set up a third score with a long pass as the Federis built a 21-13 halftime lead.

Depite suffering a pulled hamstring and muscle spasms in his back, Gilliam repeatedly moved the Federis down the field and into scoring position.

Its good to be back playing pro football, but it feels better to win, said Gilliam, who sports a Super Bowl championship ring from his days in a Pittsburgh Steeler uniform.

Worfhy: Lakers Can Still Win

Touchdown Stretch

Washington Federis wide receiver Joey Walters reaches for a touchdown pass over the top of Arizona Wranglers defensive back Aaron Mitchel duimg first half action Monday night at Robert F. Kennedy Stadium in Washington. Arizona rallied for the win. (AP Laserphoto)

INGLEWOOD, Calif. (AP) - James Worthy, the Los Angeles Lakers outstanding rookie whos out for the rest of the season with a broken bone-in his leg, sees no reason why the club cant win the National Basketball Association title without him.

Why not? They won it withoqt me last year, said Worthy, who was scheduled to undergo surgery today to have one or two screws inserted in the broken bone, the fibia, just below the knee in his left leg.

Dr. Stephen Lombardo was scheduled to perform the

Top...

(Continued From Page 10)

Manilli Takes Conley Defeats North Pitt Girls:

Racquet Title

. .    Wavtimic    P

The Second Annual    First-Amy Schneider, sec-

Greenville Athletic ond-Lla Moore, thlrd-Danielle Qub/Coca-Cola Racquetball Elks,consolatlon-BrendaDaU.

Championships were held    First-M^c^ES^Scond-Jim

April 8-10, with over 80 mem- Fields, thlrd-Don Hall, consola-bers participating in the

II     I .    Flrst-Hunt-Clodfelter, sec-

: The following is a list Of the ond-Paradossl-Kobe, thlrd-Sea--top finalists in each division:    grave-Harrlson, consola-

   tionFlelds-Schneider.

Cougars Outslug Ayden-Grifton

Hunt, thlHWayne Barrow, ti^latlonJerry Beclunan.

Mens Onpn    Mens    C

' rtrst-Tom Ma^ second- First-Dennls ONeal, sec-tjohB Hunt. thlrd-Wavne Barrow id-Raymond Song,^ thlrd-Syron

T Mens B ' FljstKeith Askew, second wike Schneider, thirdRayseond Song, consolationDavid Melvin.

^ Mens Beginners * First-Beacher Kirkley, secondPat Keogh, thirdSteve Crawshaw, consolationGeorge Seamen.

Wood, consolationDavid Evanovich.

Mens Novice First-George Seamen, secondCharlie Fennessy, third Rufus Walston, consolation Jimmy Creech.

Womens Beginners FirstJill Johnson, second-Lisa Stillwell, third-Gloria Tipton, consolationConnie Bond.

BETHEL - D.H. Conley spotted North Pitt a 2-0 lead, then came back to gain a 6-3 softball victory over the Pant-HERS yesterday.

North Pitt scored a pair of runs in t;he second, with Conley coming back with one in' the third. The Valkyries pushed ahead with two in the fourth and added three more in the sixth.

North Pitts final run came in the bottom of the sixth.

Karen Barrett, Lori Kandrotas and Darlene Cannon each had two hits for Conley, while Alice Pittman

had a pair for North Pitt.

Conley returns to action on Friday, hosting West Carteret, while North Pitt entertains Farmville Central today.

Conley........001 203 0-6    8    5

North Pitt 020 001 0-3 5 7

WP-Lisa Mills.

SW Edgecombe 22

Ayden-Grifton .... 10

PINETOPS - The Southwest Edgecombe Cougars rallied for 12 runs in the bottom of the third inning, then cruised to a 22-10 victory over Ayden-Grifton in Monday softball action.

A pair of errors by the Chargers and a base-on-balls loaded the bases for a double by Beth Evans. Another walk loaded the bases, and a sacrifice fly and singles by Jo Anne Jefferson, Renee Stein, Kim Edmondson and Phyllis Mayo drove in more Cougar runs.

Rozetta Joyner rapp^ a double to drive in a pair of runs, and Evans slapped her second double of the inning.

Mayo had four hits in five trips to the plate including a homer in the sixth, while Jefferson went 4-4 with a pair of doubles. Cassandra Lewis

posted a 3-4 performance, while Stein went 3-5 and Evans 2^.

Stelena Rountree slugged a three-run homer for Ayden-Grifton in the second, and Linda Brown added a solo rap in the fourth. Monica Stokes went 3-4 for the Chargers, while Michelle Sullivan and Jackie Garris went 2-3.

The Chargers, now 0-3, host Greene Central today before traveling to Farmville Central Thursday.

Ayden-Grif.051 200 2-10 17 10 SouUjWest. 14(12) 311 x-22 23 2

WP-Pam Morgan.

Hes a 6-4 swingman, quick, aggressive and tough, saidGUleran.

Other top guard prospects from New York include 6-2 Kenny Smith, whos said to be headed to North Carolina or Virginia, and Kenny Hutchinson, 64, reported to be leaning to North Carolina State.

Indiana has been promised the services of Steve Alford of Newcastle, Ind., a record-breaking 6-2 guard.

Hes your prototype shooter, said Gilleran. A great pure shooter.

Other top center-forward prospects include Dave Popson, 6-10, of Kingston, Pa., whos said to be considering Notre Dame and North Carolina, Ricky Winslow, fr-s, of Houston, and 6-8 Tom Sheehey of Rochester, N.Y., who announced Monday that he will sign a letter of intent with Virginia.

Most coaches seem to think that although theres not' a great, overpowering big man in this years class, there is greater depth than usual at guard and forward, said Gilleran. There are also some good prospects on the West Coast, and in the Deep South.

surgery at Centinela Medical Center.

' We really feel optimistic about his eventual return, Laker physician Dr. Robert Kerlan said. Without complication, the prognosis for the future is exiRllent and it is expected that James will be ready to return to action in approximately six months from the time of suregery.

The injury, suffered Sunday night against Pheonix, would appear to be a big blow to the playoff-bound Lakers, who already have clinched the Pacific Division title.

Weve had very serious injuries this year, said Earvin Magic Johnson. But this one really hurts the most. Its going to have a big effect on the team.

Worthy, out of North Carolina and the Lakers No. 1 draft choice, was being counted on to give the team the offense off the bench that they lost when veteran Bob McAdoo was injured one game after the All-Star break.

Its going to change everything for us, said Kareem Abdul-Jabbar after Worthy was hurt Sunday night. Its depressing. We have to overcome everything, I guess.

Worthy was hurt with about 15 seconds remaining in the third quarter of the loss to the Suns at the Forum.

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nmupmiuiu

by Jeff Millar & Bill Hinds

Comedy of Errors......86',4

Sidewinders ,.73

tarls Pearls..........72/4

^tDogs..............72

J).. Nichols...........64'/i

iallr

I Music.............04Mi    63/4

...............62'.^.    65';(.

5[eita#10..............60    68

ihalengers...........56    72

familyOne.........53^^    74'^

fienda-Suzuki..........S2>,^    75>/^

l^hain Reaction 49    79

High game, Gerald Crisp,    238;

'^series, Ed Diehl, 617.

I I Boseboll Stondings

I ,    By The Associated Pros

i " .    AMERICAN LEAGUE

I ^    EAST DIVISION

i    W    L Pet. GB

)leveland    3    2    .600    -

Baltimore    2    2    .500    'k

fToronta    2    2    soo

^iDlt    2    3    .400    1

SJeWYork    2    3    .400    1

^Uiaukee    2    3    .400    I

jBeato    2    4    .333    Iti

jJT    WESTDWISION

Texjs    5    I    .633    -

actnias City    3    2    .600    Iti

iCfiiiornla    4    3    .571    Iti

waesota    3    3    .500    2

MlMand    3    3    .500    2

<CAWe    3    4    .429    V/,

Chicago    2    3    .400    2'A

   Ifondays Games

Kansas City 6, Boston 2 California 6, Seattle 1 r Only gamo scheduled .    Tuesdays Gamo

Milwaukee (Suttion 0-1) at Toronto ilLealO-l)

Detroit (Petry 1-0) at New York (Guidry (M

*. Texas (Honeycutt 1-0) at Cleveland (BJylevenO-1)

* Baltimore (Flanagan 1-0) at Chicago f( Dotson 0-1)

^ Boston ('Tudor 00) at Kansas City f(RenkoOO),(n)

1 SeatUe (Stoddard 0-1) at California J( Witt 0-1 >,(n)

Minnesota (OConnor 00) at Oakland (NorrU10),(n)

   Wednsaday,    April    13

Texas at Cleveland k MUwaukee at Toronto MinneaoU at Oakland 5 Detroit at New York, (n)

* Boston at Kansas City, (n)

2 Seattle at California, (n)

Los Angeles    4

San Diego    2

San Francisco 1    4

Houston    0    7

Mondays Games Cincinnati 5, Chicago!

Atlanta 4 San Diego 0

Los Angeles 4, Houston 3,11 innings

Only games scheduled

Tuesdays Games St. Louis (Forscn 0-1) at Pittsburgh (Rhoden OO)

New York (Seaver OO) at PhUadelphia (DennyO-1)

Chicago (Trout 0-1) at Montreal (Gulllckson 10)

Cincinnati (Soto 20) at Atlanta (BehennaOO)

San Francisco (Brelnlng lO) at San Die(DraveclQflO),(n)

Houston (Ruble 00) at Los Angeles (A.Pena 10), (n)

Wednesdays Games St. Louis at Pittsburgh C3ncinnaUatAUanU

NBA Standings

By The Associated Press EASTERN

z-Philadelphia x-Boston x-New Jersey New York Washington

CONFERENCE Atlantic Division

W L Pet. GB

64 14 54 24 48 30 41 38 40 38

.821 -.692 10 .615 16 .519 23'. .513 24

.633 -.519    9

.456 14 .333 23'/2 .266 29 241- 31

New York at PhUadelphia, (n) San Francisco at San ule, (n) Houston at Los Angeles, (n)

Transactions

ByThe Associated Press BASEBALL

Natlooal League

SAN FRANCISCA GMNTS-Placed

Mike Krukow, pitcher, on the 21-day disabled Hat because of a sore right elbow. Removed MUt May, catcher, from the disabled list. Assl|^ Ron (^tt, catcher to Phoenix of the Pacific Coaat League.

COLLEGE OKLAHOMA STATE-Named Dick Halterman head coach of the womens basketball program.

Central Division y-Milwaukee    50    29

Atlanta    41    38

Detroit .    36    43

Chicago    26    52

Cleveland    21    58

Indiana    - 19 60

WESTERN CONFERENCE Mdwest Division y-San Antonio    49    29

Denver    42    36

Kansas City    42    36

Dallas    37    42

Utah    28    50

Houston    14    64

Pacific Division y-Los Angeles    56    21

x-Phoenix    49    29

x-Seattle    47    31

Portland    43    35

Golden State    28    50

San Diego    25    53

x-clinched playoff spot y-cilnched div&ion tiUe z-clinched division and conference title

Johnny Miller, $10,125 72-72-71-74-289 George Archer, $10,125 71-73-71-74-289 Jack Renner, $8,000 67-75-78-70-290 Tommy Nakajima, $8,000 72-70-72-76-290 Keith Fergus, $8,000 70-69-74-77-290 Isao Aoki, $7,000 70-76-74-71-291 Peter Oosterhuis, $5,214 73-69-78-72-292 Mark Hayes, $5,214 71-73-76-72-292 Fuzzy Zoeller, $5,214 70-74-76-72-292 Peter Jacobsen, $5,214 73-71-76-72-292 Tom Weiskopf, $5,214 75-72-71-74-292 Nick Faldo. $5,214 70-70-76-76-292 Lee Trevino, $5,214 71-72-72-77-292 Scott Hoch, $3,667 74-69-74-76-293 Hal Sutton, $3,667 73-73-70-77-293 Jay Haas, $3,667 73-69-73-78-293 Andy North, $3,350 72-75-72-75-294 Greg Norman, $3,350 71-74-70-79-294 Payne Stewart, $2,900 70-76-78-71-295 Chip Beck, $2,900 71-76-76-72-295

.538    7

.538    7

.468 12>,^ .359 21 .179 35

Fred Couples, $2.900 73-68-81-73-295

"ifbei    ----------

my    ______ ________

Charles Coody, $2,450 68-75-79-74-296

Dann;

Halfberg, y Edwards,

$2,450 70-76-79-71-296

.727 -,628 7'ii ,603    9'-;,

551 13>i! 359

321 31'ti

Yutaka Hagaw, $2,450 72-75-75-74-296 Arnold Pafmer, $2,450 68-74-76-78-296 John Mahaffey, $2,200 72-75-74-76-297 a-James Hallet 68-73-78-78-297 Bruce LieUke, $2,050 69-75-82-72-298 Jodie Mudd, $2,050 72-68-72-86-298 Mike Nlcolelte, $1,970 73-74-78-74-299 Bob Gilder, $1,970 72-74-76-77-299 David Graham, $1,940 71-74-80-75-300 Gay Brewer,- $1,920 72-73-80-76-301 Boh Shearer, $1,900 70-77-82-76-305 Calvin Peete, $1,880 70-72-87-80-309

Mondays Game NewYork 121, Indiana 92

Tuesdays Games Boston at New Jersey

NHLPlayoHs

PhUadelphia at Atlanta

s(;ltyi

USFL Standings

:    NATIONAL LEAGUE

lESSsP 5 i'iS-

tNev York    2    1    .667    2

St.'.Louli    1    1    .500    2W

Philadelphia 3    3    . 400 3

ChlM|B    0    6    .600    5W

}    ,    WISTDIVI8I0N

*Ciocimiatl    S    1    .633    -

*A6^,    6    1    J33    -

By The Associated Preaa Atlantic W L T Pet. PF PA PhUadelphia    5    1    0    .633    128    SO

Boston    4    2    0    .667    122    107

NewJersey    1    5    0    .167    86    150

Washington    1    5    0    .167    72    139

Central

Tampa Bay    S    1    0    .833    124    113

Chicago    4    2    0    .667    154    81

Birmingham    2    4    0    .333    80    06

Michigan    2    4    0    .333    101    116

Pacific

Oakland    3    3    0    .500    116    86

Arizona    3    3    0    .500    101    130

Denver    3    3    0    .500    97    102

LosAngelet    3    3    0    .500    81    S3

Saturda/iOanie Tampa Bay 22, Denver wTOT SundayfOaiuM Chicago 22, Bhidiigham U Michigan 21 JfewJerMy 6 Oakland 26, BoMm 7 PhUadelphia 17, Lot Angeles 3 MnKUy'iOtme Arizona 21 Waihlngloo 11 &itunUy,AprUM PhUadelphia at Oakland Sunday, April 17 Denver at Blrmlnouun Chlci at Michigan Waahlngton at New Jeraey BoetonatArliona,(n)

Monday, A|irU 11 LoeAngalee at Tampa Bay, (n)

Kansas City at Chicago Los Angeles at Houston Denver at Utah Portland at SeatUe Phoenix at Golden State

Wednesdays Games Milwaukee at Indiana Washington at PhUadelphia Chicago at Cleveland Boston at Detroit New Jersey at New York Los Angeles at San Antonio, completion of suspended game of Nov. 30.

Los Angeles at San Antonio, regularly scheduledgame Utah at Dallas Atlanta at Kansas City Houston at Denver SeatUe at Phoenix Golden State at San Diego

ByThe Associated Press Divisional Semifinals

(Best of Five) Game 3

Saturday, AprU 9 NY. Islanders 6, Washington 2

Buffalo 4, Montreal 2, Buffalo wins series 3^

Toronto 6, Minnesota 3 Edmonton 4, Winnipeg 3, Edmonto wins series 3^)

Vancouver 5, Calgary 4 N,Y Rangers 4, PnUadelphia 3, New

York wins series 34) Chicago 2, St. Louis 1 Game 4

Sunday, AprU 10

N.Y. Islanders 6, Washington 3, New

Masters Scores

York wins series 3-1 Boston 2, Quebec 1, Boston win series

3-1

Minnesota 5, Toronto 4 OT, Minnesota wins series 3-1

AUGUSTA, Ga. (AP) - Final scores and money-wlnnlnjp Monday In Uie 47th Masters on Uie 6,9yard, par 72 Auguata National Golt Club course (a-denotes amateur):

Seve Balleateros, 690,000 68-70-73^280 Ben Crenshaw, $44,000 76-70-7048-284 Tom Kile, $44,000 70-72-73-89-284 Tom Watson, $32,000 70-71-71-73-285

Chica 5, St. Louis 3, Chica wins I

Calgary 4, Vancouver 3, OT, Calgary wins series 3-1

Ray Floyd,' $22,000 67-72-71-75-285 Hale Irwin, $17,400 72-73-72-69-288

Craig SUdler, $7,400 09-72-60-76-286 Lanny Wadklna, $14,500 73-70-73-71-287 Dan Pohl, $14,!D0 74-72-70-71-287 Gil Morgan, $14,500 67-70-76-74-287 Scott Simpson, $12,500 70-73-72-73-288

Wayne Levi, $10,125 72-70-74-73-289 J.d. Snead, $10,125 $$-74-74-73-289

DIvlilonFlnaU (Bott of Seven) Gamel Thunday, April 14

Buffalo at Boston

N.Y. Ranrs at N.Y. Islanders

Minnesota at Chica

Calgary at Edmonton Game 2 Friday, April 15 Buffalo at Boston N.Y.RanrsatN.Y. Islanders Minnesota at Chica

' Calgary at Edmonton





'Gandhi' Topped All Contenders For Oscar Awards

BIGGEST WINNER - Richard Attenborough, left, and Ben Kingsley display Academy Awards they re

ceived for their contributions to the film which received eight Oscars last night, Gandhi. (AP Laserphoto)

ALL SMILES Actresses Jessica Lange, left, and Meryl Streep share their happines after being named 1982s best supporting actress and

best actress for their roles in Tootsie and Sophies Choice. (AP Laserphoto)

ByYARDENAARAR Associated Press Writer LOS ANGELES (AP) -Another 20 years? Without question I would do it again, said a clearly gratified Richard Attenborough as his two decades of struggle on the epic "Gandhi paid off with eight Oscars, including best picture.

Attenborough, who produced and directed Gandhi. said his wildest expectations were more than fulfilled Monday night at the 55th annual Academy Awards. The movie also earned him the best director award and. for Ben Kingsley, best actor honors.

Meryl Streep, who won the best actress award for her portrayal of the tortured Polish war refugee in Sophies Choice, said she thought shed given her best performance ever in the role.

I don't think Ill ever see one like that again, said Ms. Streep.    "    '

Six and a half months pregnant with her second child, Miss Streep admitted that attending the ceremony had entailed a certain amount of physical discomfort; The baby was kicking all night long, she smiled ruefully.

It was Miss Streeps second Oscar - she won for supporting actress in 1979 in Kramer vs. Kramer.

Louis Gossett Jr. became the first black actor since

Sidney Poitiers best actor award for 1963s Lilies of the Field to gamer an Oscar, winning best supporting honors for his steel-hard drill sergeant in An Officer and a. Gentleman.

TV Log

For complete TV programming Information, consult your weekly TV SHOWTIME from Sunday's Dally Reflector.

WNCT-TV-Ch.9

TUESDAY

7 00 Jokers Wild

7 30 Tic Tac Dough

8 00 Ace Crawford 8 30 Gun Shy 9:00 Movie

11:00 News9 II 30 Late Movie

WEDNESDAY 5 00 Jim Bakker 6:00 Carolina 8:00 Morning 8 25 News 9.25 News 10.00 Pyramid

10 30 Child's Play

11 00 Price Is

12:00 News 9 12:30 Young.and 1:30 As The World 2:30 Capitol 3:00 Guiding Light 4:00 Waltons 5:00 Hillbillies 5:30 Andy Griffith 6:00 News9 6:30 News 7 00 Joker's Wild 7:30 Tic Tac Dough 8:00 Zorro and Son 8:30 Square Pegs 9:00 Special 10:30 TBA 11:00 News9 11:30 Movie

WITN-TV-Ch.7

TUESDAY 7 00 Jefferson

7 30 Family Feud

8 00 ATeam

9 00 Bare Essence 10:00 St. Elsewhere 11:00 News

11 30 Tonight Show 12-30 Letferman 1 30 Overnight 2:30 News WEDNtbUAY

264 PIAYHOUSe!

5:30 H. House 6:00 Early Today

6 25 Almanac

7 00 Today 7:25 News

7 30 Today

8 25 News 8:30 Today

9 nn p Simmnns

INDOOR THEATRE

6 MiletWeit Of Greenville On U.S. 264 (Farmvllle Hwy)

WCTI-TV-Ch.12

NOW

SHOWING

AT YOUR ADULT ENTERTAINMENT CENTER

TALK DIRTY TO ME II

inlioflLCinq I bridgette mcnet

   Ctt    Anyttm*    for    ShowfImM

VtUd 1.0. Ro<M4rod TiM4$ DoortOponS:49

IShowlm~6;00

I

TUESDAY 7:00 Three'sCo.

7 30 Alice 8:00 Happy Days 8:30 Laverne 9:00 Three'sCo. 9:30 9to5 10 .00 Hart to Hart 11:00 Action News 11:30 Nightline 12 00 HarryO

1 00 Mission

2 00 Early Edition WEDNESDAY

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 Feud 12 30 Ryan's Hope 1:0O My Children 2:00 One Life 3:00 Gen. Hospital 4:00 Carnival 4:30 Special 5:30 People's 6:00 Action News 6:30 ABC News 7:00 Three'sCo. 7:30 Alice 8:00 Fall Guy 9:00 Ryan's Four 10:00 Dynasty 11:00 Action News 11:30 ABC News 12:00 HarryO

WUNK-TV-Ch.25

I

TUESDAY 7:00 Report    12

7 30 Almanac 12 8:00 Nova    1

9:00 Playhouse i 10:00 Prizewinners 1

10 30 Neighbors 2

11 00 A. Hitchcock 3 . 11 30 Morecambe 2

12 00 SiqnQff 3 WEDNESDAY 4

7 45 AM Weather 5

8 00 Gen Ed 5 8 35 Music Bo* 6 8:50 Readalong I 6 9:00 Sesame Street 7 10:00 Electric Co. 7 10:15 Short Story 8 11:00 Footsteps 9 11:30 Let Me See 10 11:45 WriteOn n 11:50 Readalong I 11 12:00 Cents .    12

15 Self Inc.

30 We Live . 45 ElecticCo.

15 All about 30 Raisin' Up 45 Music &

00 Special 00 Over Easy 30 Nutrition 30 Cooking 00 Sesame St.

00 Mr. Rogers 30 3 2 1 Contact 00 Dr. Who 30 Sherlock 00 Report 30 Stateline 00 Creatures :00 Performance 00 Geto:

00 A. Hitchcock :30 Morecambe 00 Sign Oft

Watertrec Terrace Restaurant

Prime Rib for 2 Salad Bar $ Potato Wine

13

99

Terrace Seating Available 5:30 - 10:00

Its the small    things

like flowers    and

candles you    appreciate, but    it is

the Prime Rib you will come back for.

-very Wednesday

758-.3401 s. Memorial Dr., Greenville

Only one other black performer has ever won an Oscar - Hattie McDaniel for Gone With the Wind in 1939. Gossett previously won an Emmy as the slave Fiddler in the miniseries Roots.

Noting that his Oscar-winning role was not written for a black man, Gossett offered some advice to other black actors: Dont look at black parts - look at parts. He added that the part was not changed in any way after it was given to him.

Speaking to reporters backstage, Attenborough said of Gandhi that no British film has ever won this many Oscars. Attenborough commented

on Gandhis' influence on Polands Lech Walesa and the late Martin Luther King Jr. What we should be saying to Mr. Reagan and Mr. Andropov and Mrs. Thatcher is, We dont want to accept confrontation, he said backstage.

Kingsley, who played Mohandas Gandhi from his days as a young lawyer battling discrimination in South Africa to his assassination after Indias independence, said he thou^t the Mahatma would have been delighted with the film.

Were quite overwhelmed that weve been able to capture the popular imagination with a hero of peace,

Dolores Del Rio Dead At Age 78

9 30 All in the 10:00 FactsOf Lite 10:30 Saleotthe 11:00 Wheel of 11:30 Hit Man 12:00 News 12:30 Search For 1:00 Days Of Our 2:00 Another WId. 3:00 Fantasy 4:00 Dark Shadows 4 :30 Wild West 5:30 Lie Detector 6:00 News 6:30 NBC News 7:00 Jefferson 7:30 Family Feud 8:00 Real People 9:00 Facts of Lite 9:30 Family Ties 10:00 Quincy II no News

NEWPORT BEACH, Calif. (AP) - Actress Dolores Del Rio, the aristocratic Latin beauty whose 50-year career in movies was launched after a director saw her dancing at a party, is dead at age 78.

Miss Del Rio died Monday afternoon at her fashionable Newport Beach apartment of natural causes, deputy Orange County coroners investigator Bemie Mazuca said.

The convent-reared daughter of a well-to-do Mexican family, Miss Del Rio began her career as a dancer in a 1925 silent film and went on

to star in Ramona, The Loves of Carmen, Evangeline, Madame du Barry and more recently Cheyenne Autumn.

She was born Lolita Dolores Martinez Asunsolo Lopez Negrette. Her father was a banker and the family hacienda was in Durango, Mexico. In 1909, when she was only 4, her family was forced to flee Mexico because of terrorist raids by Pancho Villas revolutionaries.

She went to the Convent of St, Joseph for her education and was presented to the king and queen of Spain in 1919 during a European trip.

In 1920 she married attorney Jamie Del Rio, 18 years her senior. Hollywood director Edwin Carewe later saw her dancing at a party and offered her a role in Joanna in 1925. It was a modest film debut, with much of her performance edited out.

Later films included High Stepper (1926), What Price Glory? (1927), Bird of Paradise (1932), Flying Down to Rio, (1933), Madame Du Barry (1941), Portrait of Maria (1945)

DOLORES DEL RIO

and Once Upon A Time (1967).

1 '

Hours: > Mon.-Thurs.

12 P.M.-1:30 A.M.

AllfM A.M. Sun.

WoRffNVIUf 1P.M.-1:30 A.M.

Friendly Neighborhood Tavern

Monday: Ladies i 9-Ball Tournament 8-10 P.M.

2S< Draft

Tuesday: Ladies 8-Ball Tournament 8 P.M. Chug-A-Lug Contest

Wednesday: Ladies Pretty Legs Contest

Thursday: Couples Pool tournament Steak Cookout 6:00 P.M. Bring A Steak The Salads On Us

Friday: Mens Pool Tournament 8:00 P.M.

Saturday: Couples Pool Tournament 8 P.M.

Sunday: Special Dinners Fish Fry, 17th Mens Pool Tournament 7 P.M.

PACTOLUS HIGHWAY

758-2598

said the bespectacled actor, who is part-Indian. He is an experienced classical actor on the British stage, but Gandhi was his first movie.

Miss Streeps primary competition this year was Jessica Langes performance in Frances, the harrowing story of actress Frances Farmer. But Miss Lange seemed content with her consolation prize as best supporting actress for her soap opera star role in Tootsie.

I feel real lucky to have worked with actors like Charles Duming, Dabney Coleman and Teri Garr and to have Sydney Pollack as my director and Dustin Hoffman as my leading lady, she said. In Tootsie, Hoffman played an actor masquerading as a soap opera actress.

It was the only win for Tootsie, which had received 10 nominations second only to the II nominations for Gandhi. E.T., the top-grossing film of all time, could muster only four technical awards; best score, special visual effects, sound effects editing and sound.

Gandhi rounded out its big coup with an Oscar for John Brileys original screenplay, as well as for costume design, art direction, cinematography and editing.

It ^so was the second straight British film to take the best picture award. Chariots of Fire was an unexpected winner last year.

Said the self-effacing Kingsley: This is an Oscar for a vision, for the awards were a tribute to the vision and courage of Atten-borou^, who could get no American company to finance the biography of the man whose spirit of nonviolence helped free India from British rule and helped inspire the 1960s U.S. civil rights movement.

The award for best song of 1982 was given to Jack

Nitzsche, Buffy Sainte-Marie and Will Jennings for Up Where We Belong, from An Officer and a Gentleman.

The nationally televised ceremony began with the award for best foreign language to the Spanish-made Volver a Empezar (To Begin Again).

The music scoring awards went to two veterans of the pop field: John Williams for his original score for E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial and Henry Mancini for his song score and adaptation (with Leslie Bricusse) for Victor-Victoria. Williams and Mancini each had won three previous Oscars.

The furor created by the Justice Department over three Canadian documentaries reverberated at the ceremony. One of the films branded as propaganda, the anti-nuclear If You Love This Planet, was named best documentary short. Said one of its producers, Terri Nash, For its tremendous efforts in promoting our film, Id like to thank the U.S. Department of Justice.

Mickey Rooney received a thunderous ovation when he was brought on stage by Bob Hope to receive his honorary award for 50 years of versatility in films.

You honor me with the highest tribute I can receive in the business, said Rooney after the audience had seen clips of his films ranging from the 1934 A Midsummer Nights Dream to the 1979^Black Stallion.

Rooney spoke frankly of being the No. 1 movie star at 19 and when he was 40 -Nobody wanted me, I couldnt get a iob.

He thanked his agent Ruth Webb and his wife Jan for helping him get back on the road to success.

The production, reported to have cost $2 million, had few hi^ spots aside from the tribute to Rooney and a salute to songsmith Irving

Wednesday Night

Shrimp & Chablis

All Of The Tender, Succulent Shrimp That You Can Et. Its Your Choice; Brolly, Boiled Or Fried. As If That Is Not Enough, Well Also Give You All The Chablis You Care To Drink. Treat Yourself To Our 40 Item Salad Bar, Choice Of Potato, And A VegetableFor The Low Price Of 8.95A Deal Too Good To Let Slip By.

While At The Ramada. Dont Forget To Visit The Veranda Lounge, Where You Can Dance The Night Away To The Flneat In Live Entertainment.

756-2792

Dinner Hours 5 P.M. 10 P.M.

SUPPORTING ACTOR Louis Gossett Jr! holds his Oscar after winning the best supporting actor at the Academy Awards for his performance in An Officer and a Gentleman. (AI? Laserphoto)    '

Berlin, starring Bernadette Peters and Peter Allen.

Charlton Heston couldnt call up film clips depicting the acting career of the late Jean Hersholt.

After an embarrassing stage wait, Heston said, Never mind ... If you come to my house Ill show you the fUm.

tracted Richard Pryor, one of the hosts for the evening, to inquire: Is everything all right back there?

He presented the Hersholt Humanitarian Award to producer Walter Mirisch. ^ And at one point stagehands mysteriously appeared, prompting a dis-

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EAST CAROLINA playhouse ;

presents        

THORNTON WILDER'S PULITZER PRIZE-WINNING CLASSIC '

OUR TOWN

McGinnis Theatre-April 14-19,8:15 p.ra.

General Public $4.00 ECU Students $2.50 Call 757-6390 Sunday parformance proeeada to tha DavU Martin Mamorlal Scholarahlp Fund

I

i

1





Child Testifies In TAurder Trial

4/

A Soviet Hero

On April 12, 1961 22 years ago today Yuri Alekseyevich Gagarin became the first human being to travel into outer space. The Soviet air force pilot rode his spacecraft Vostok I into orbit at speeds of more than 17,000 miles per hour on a trip that lasted 1 hour and 48 minutes from blastoff to landing. The flight stunned the U.S., and it would be another year before the Americans would manage to put a man in Earth orbit. At the age of 27, Cosmonaut Gagarin became a national hero known to every Soviet citizen. But his flight aboard Vostok I was to be his only trip into outer space. On March 27, 1968 two weeks after his 34th birthday Gagarin died in an airplane crash near Moscow.

DO YOU KNOWWho was the first American to travel into Earth orbit?

MONDAY'S ANSWER-Gandhi was called the Mahatma because it means Great Soul.

4-12-83    ^    VEC,    Inc,    1983

IN COURT Elizabeth Hutchinson, 31, sits in court as testimony was taken from Ray Mallett, 7, in connection with the beating death of his lister. Brandy, age 3. (AP Laserphoto)

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By SUSAN ESSOYAN t Associated Press Writer i CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (AP) The sounds of a woman screaming obscenities and a 3-year-old girl pleading Dont hit me, Ill be a good girl were described in testimony by the neighbor of a live-in babysitter charged wiUi the childs npxler.

During the hanging I could hear Brandy crying and crying, said Ms. Isbart. "She was saying, Please, t Mummy, dont hit me. Ill be

i ' agood girl. I promise.

Brandys father, Roy C. fc Mallett, will be tried later on e manslaughter charges r because he set ifl) an at

mosphere of discipline and

I physical

violence in his ^hpine and knew of the .teatings, Thomas Drechsler, ah assistant district attorney, said when Mallett was charged. Malletts wife liyes out of state.

,Ray Mallett, Brandys 7*year-old brother, testified that the babysitter regularly hit his sister in the' stomach with her hand or a belt, and Ch the day she was fatally injured, She pulled her up ; ^ the hair and threw her on tjie ground.

Every time I saw her she

t;X Ejvery luiie i saw i

[J^id bruises, he said.

J * ^randys brother was the {iwsecutions opening wit--hiss in Middlesex Superior Ij^urt. Ms. Hutchinson also [ iflces a charge of assault and Jittery for allegedly beating Brandy during a period from > ;Jan. l to Oct. 16, 1982, the I .dky the youngster was hoqpi-! jtlized.

! .Brandy died of a blood clot at Massachusetts General ' Hospital 13 days after she r was admitted with bruises, a I broken leg and head injuries.

; They had a regular I routine of slapping and ( beating going on within the { walls, Drechsler said.

The blond-haired boy \ fidgeted, frowned, gazed at ; tbe ceiling and scratched his : had in his three hours of I testimony. Often he simply I i^gged and told lawyers I } jdnt know when pressed on iapoint.

irHe did not look at Ms.

[ Wtchinson, who wore a i s^gical eyepatch over her j le/t eye as she has in other

* court appearances. The reason for the patch has not \ been explained.

The defense contends that Brandy fell down the stairs and that it was Brandys

* father who beat the children.

Brandy Mallett tumbled I down the stairs wearing her

* fathers bruises, Ms. Hut-; chinsons attorney, Charies ' Balliro, told jurors and

* Judge James Nixon on Monday.

,The boy said his father

* used to make him stand in I the comer with his hands

; Solor Fraction

; .,Tbe solar fractk for this ! area Moomday, as computed

bv the East Carolina Univer-t sity Department of Physics, t was 83. This means that a ; solar water heater could { have provided 83 percent ot

your hot water needs.

*

F-16sFor S.C. Guard

HORREL HILL, S.C. (AP) The South Carolina Air Guard has received the pink slip for an F-16 fighter, becoming the first National Guard groiq> in the nation to get the sophisticated Fighting Falcon.

The jet, delivered Monday to McEntire Air National Guard Base about ih miles east of Columbia, was the first of 26 the states Air Guard is expected to receive this year.

Air Force Lt. Col. Rusty Heft, vidH) flew the plane to McEntire, handed papers turning the plane over from the Air Force to the Air Guard to a group led by state Adjutant General T. Eston Marchant.

The plane is rqilacing the A-7D fighter which the Air Guard has flown since 1975. The (dder aircraft already are being transferred to other guard units around tte countiT.

Marchant said arrival of the plane marks an important breakthrough for the Air Guard and reserve units where they are receiving equipment of first-line ranking.

We are no longer recelv-ing equipment on a hand-me^wn basis, he said. This is the most mod-

tK-16 m reacfspeeds of times the speed of sound, carry mwe than 20,000 pounds of air-toAlr and surface-to-surface weapons and has a combat radius of 700 miles, douMe that of most jet fighters, officialssaki.

'Strong Start'

In A New Field

clasped above his head and then would beat on me. One day he did put a knife to my throat, the day he ripped iq) my shirt, the youngster said.

He also said under questioning that his father also told him about killing young children in Vietnam.

Mallett was at work as an auto mechanic the day Brandy was hc^italized.

Ms. Hutchinson moved into the Malletts Everett home early last year, about the time the childrens mother moved out, Ms. Isbart said. She ad^ that Ms. Hutchinson appeared to be Malletts girlfriend.

Ray and Malletts other child, 18-month-old Kimberly, are being cared for by their aunt and uncle in Tewksbury, under state supervision.

The case attracted widespread attention partly because Brandy reportedly was beaten six weeks after the state Department of Social Services received a report of possible child abuse in the home.

Agency officials have ordered disciplinary action against several employees involved in the case.

DURHAM, N.C. (AP) -North Carolina is off to a strong start, but a lot of work and money is needed if the state is going to catch up with the nations major microelectronics centers, an industry executive says.

Peter Calingaert, vice president of the Microelectronics Center of North Carolina, told a conference of the Association for Computing Machinery last week the state must also attract top personnel to compete with microelectronics centers in California and Massachusetts.

The Microelectronics Center, under construction in the Research Triangle Park between Durham and Raleigh, is a non-profit, private research center that was incorporated in July 1980.

Center eigployees be-able'Ib move int 84,000-square-foot buUding by S^tember, Calingaert said. In addition to offices, a

computer room, an auditorium and a video conference room, the new building will have 8,200 square feet of clean space vriiere silicon chips will be made and electronic materials studied, he Sid.

This clean space will be controlled for temperature, humidity and vibration. Its air will be five times cleaner than the air that most people breathe, he said.

Gov. Jim Hunt has requested $17.3 million for the Microelectronics Center for the fiscal years ending in 1984 and 1985. A decision on the request probably will not come until early June, when legislators vote on the full budget.

The Microelectronics Center will continue to be significantly dependent on funding from the state, Calingaert said.

But he said taxes generated by companies attracted to North Carolina by the Microelectronics Center are expected to repay the states ^^mentrapiifly.

WILSON, N.C. (AP) - A tobacco equipment company headed by former state Rep. G. Ronald Taylor has filed for bankruptcy claiming it owes $1.5 million more flian it has in assets.

The 15-year-old corporation, which was doing business as Taylor Manufacturing Co. in Elizabethtown, makes and sells tobacco harvesting ^uipment.

The petition filed in U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Wilson last month said the Taylor firm had debts of $2,667,376 and assets of $1,159,475. The action is filed under Chapter 7 of the federal banknq)tcy laws. A meeting of creditors is scheduled May 25 in federal bankruptcy court in Wilmington.

Taylor, listed as president, is serving a 20-year prison sentence after being convicted for participating in a scheme to burn warehouses owned by a business rival, state Sen. J.J. Monk Harrington, D-Bertie.

Taylor won the Democratic Party nomination to his fourth term in the N.C. House but resigned after pleading guilty to charges of unlawful burning and conspiracy.

According to testimony in Bertie County Superior Court, Taylor paid two Clarkton men $5,000 each to burn Harrington Manufacturing Co. in Lewiston April 23. Harrington and Taylor had been adversaries in a patent infringement case in federal court, and Harrington had been awarded a $350,000 judgment.

The Harrington judgement was the largest of five listed in Taylors bankruptcy petition, which said Taylors firm paid Harrington $100,000 in October. Other judgements were to the Internal Revenue Service, the Industrial Engine and Equipment Co., Fafnir Bearing-Textron Co. and the N.C. Employment Security Commission.

SB

llHlXUliiriiiiiriiiiiiiii 1.11.

ROSE HIGH SCHOOL

PRESENTS

CARNIVAL

BY

MERRILL, STEWART, DEUTSCH 8:00 P.M. Row High Gjim April 15,16.17

$3.00 Advance    $4.00    Al    Door

TicktsAvadabtt:

Central Book & News Book Bam Gandalfs

The Peking cupper

PEANUTS

The DaUy Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Tue*lay, April 12,1983-13

.VO don't THINK iVE GIVEN UP MV BLANKET, you?__^

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WELL, AT LEAST I DON'T HAVE TO ^ WONDER ANYMORE

BEETLE BAILEY

c'moki,

PHANTOM

Bankruptcy Action By Taylor Company

FRANK & ERNEST

THiS COuUp -CA|eB AWH'te..-/hE'i dOlNG T9 (bWPER HER NoSB.

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FUNKY WINKERBEAN

- FAMOUS COMPOSERS-Chapter Ten-Claude Barlow

Allte life, Claude Baiiow dreamed of being a great conductor...

and he finally achieved his wish the ni^ he used his. electric hair dryer in the bathtub!

SHOE

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14-The Day Reflector, GreenvlUe, N.C.-Tuesday, April la, Un

Ct099W0td By Eugene Sheffer

FORECAST FOR WEDNESDAY. APR. IS. 196S

ACROSS 17 Braised ICMdWorldtree beef dish

5-Mea

River

8 Box

12 French gal pal

13 Affirmative

tt Force onward

50 Contest

51 Fri. follower

52 Steak order

53 Lights out

2 Melville    17 Pubmissile

novel    19 Common

3 Create a    value disturbance 22 Eternity

14 Large saxhorn signal

15 Fiddlers place?

IS Bowler hat: coUoq.

18 Fall into disrepute

20 French city

21 Operated

22 Before

23 Tennis star 26 Random

attack

30 Turkish officer

31 Low haunt

32 Harem room

33 Pub employees 36 Mature

38 Land measure 39My-Godfrey

40 Sedate 43 Tippler

54 Not an amateur

55 Potato buds

4 In front

5 Oven bird

6 Peasant of India

7Still

8 Cubic meters

DOWN 1 Marionette maker

9 Knit one, -two...

10 French cleric

llBolgerand

Milland

23 Once around the track

24 Past

25 Cistern 28 Footlike

(M^an

Avg. solution time: 23 min.

imLl QQO

4-12

27 Informal dance

28 Poem

29 Sunbathers goal

31 Stain

34 Scottish children

135 Religious calendar

136 Short napped

37 Make certain

39 Maxim

40 Petty quarrel

41 Roman robe

42 Above

43 A ruler, once

44 Beg

45 Monster

Answer to yesterdays puzzle.

WLKVW: MKKJ FGBE.

BY CHARLES GOREN AND OMAR SHARIF

1963 Tribune Company Syndicate. Inc;

YOU BE THE JUDGE

East-West vulnerable. South deals.

^ NORTH 4643 <7AJ8742 0 1073 42

WEST    EAST

4A    4K8752

^KIO    <;?Q63

OAK9862 OVoid 4Q543    4AJ1098

SOUTH 4QJ109 <^95 0QJ54 4K76 The bidding:

Sooth West North Eart PM    10    1    14

Pm    2    0    Pau    3 4

Paaa    3    9    Paaa    3 4

Paaa    4    4    Pasa    Pus

Pass

Opening lead: Nine of 9.'

In 1960, a team of New York experts met a team of Los Angeles all-stars in the first of what was to become a series of intercity matches. Los Angeles eked out a narrow win, but the New Yorkers could point to several hands where they beat themselves. This was one of them.

At both tables West opened one diamond, and both Norths chose to take advantage of the vulnerability to make a light one heart overcall. The Los Angeles squad reached three no trump in quick time. New York languished in four clubs on the auction shown.

Bridge World Magazine submitted the hand to a panel of experts to adjudicate blame for the disaster. Their decision will appear in the magazines "You Be the Judge" feature in April. Readers of this column are invited to take part in a competition, to see if

they agree with the judges verdict.

To enter, you must decide which player, in the opinion of the experts, is most to blame for the catastrophe. Also, which of the bids the panel will select as the worst. Your entry might read: East (most to blame), 2 diamonds (worst bid): or West, 3 hearts. Note that the player who is adjudged the most guilty might not necessarily be the one who made the worst bid.

To enter, send your verdict and a stamped, self-addressed envelope to: Judgment. The Bridge World, 39 West 94th St., New York, N.Y. 10025. (Correspondents from outside the United States and Canada may send postal coupons in stead of stamps; Canadian readers, please send loose stamps.)

All who enter will be sent a copy of the panel's vote and comments, plus the staffs analysis. If you correctly predict the panel's vote on BOTH questions, you will also be sent a copy of the magazine that includes the "Judge" article. Entries must be postmarked no later than April 18.

HEEDED THREAT BULAWAYO, Zimbabwe (AP) - More than 1,000 squatters have abandoned a camp near Bulawayo after the government warned their shacks would be destroyed if they did not leave by next week.

The Senior Citizens Center is located in the Community Building at the comer of Fourth and Greene Streets. A variety of programs are provided. Call 75M137 for more information.

L

GENERAL TENDENCIES: A day to look into your pvMHial wiahes and decide where you want to put your effort! in the future. A good time to make eocid contacts you wish to develop for mutual gain.

ARIES (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) Visit a new place with an in-twesting companion who can give you an insight to expand in the future. Drees in good taste.

TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) Go to a person in a high position who can help you advance in your line of endeavor. A good day to engage in dvic work.

GEMINI (May 21 to June 21) Use vision in planning to expand in the near future and make sure you are practical. Don't neglect health treatments.

MOON CHILDREN (June 22 to July 21) Find more advanced methods for handling important business matters. Follow the advice of highe^up.

LEO (July 22 to Aug. 21) Listen to what a business expert has to say and thereby learn how to become more successful in the future. Relax tonight.

VIRGO (Aug. 22 to Sept. 22) Find a more up-to-date system for handling your regular work so that it runs more smoothly. Stay within your budget.

LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) Spend part of this day at the amusements you enjoy. Happiness can easily be attained now. Keep cheerful at all times.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) Do thoughtful acts for family members and make home life more harmonious. A good day to develop a new project.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) You are thinking clearly and cleverly now and can advance in career matters. Express more confidence.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 20) Use more modem systems in handling financial affairs for best results. Try to make your life more meaningful.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 21 to Feb. 19) Your personal wishes are clear in your mind now and you should follow through in a positive way. Avoid arguments.

PISCES (Feb. 20 to Mar. 20) Listen to what your intuition suggests and youll know how to advance more quickly. Show increased devotion to loved one.

IF YOUR CHILD IS BORN TODAY ... he or she will be one who thoroughly enjoys the company of others, so direct the education along lines of humanitarian work. Be sure to screen playmates well so that any influence on your progeny is not the wrong kind.

The Stars impel, they do not compel. What you make of your life is largely up to you!

1983, McNaught Syndicate, Inc.

CRYPTOQUIP    4-12

JLV EXGFV JK MNP KNC BAXAJGCP

Yesterdays Cryptoquip - LEAST FAVORITE SNACK FOR SATAN: DEVILS FOOD CAKE.

Todays Cryptoquip clue: K equals 0.

The Cryptoquip is a simple substitution ciphw in which eadi letter used stands for another. If you think that X 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.

IW3 King Features Syndicate, Inc

Detention For War Critique

BUENOS AIRES, Argentina (AP) - Former president and army , commander Leopoldo Galtieri has been placed under detention for 60 days for criticizing the way Argentine officers waged the Falkland Islands war, the official Telam news agency says.

The agency said Galtieri, who was forced to retire because of Argentinas defeat in the war, was issued the punishment by Gen. Cristino Nicolaides, the cur-

DETENTION - Former Argentine president and army commander Leopoldo Galtieri has been placed under detention for 60 days for criticizing the way Argentine officers waged the Falkland Islands war, the official Tefam news agency said Tuesday. (AP Laserphoto)

Sets Record In 'Gulping' Eggs

GRAND PRAIRIE, Texas (AP) It takes a hard-boUed type to gulp down 36 pickled quail eggs In a half-minute.

But Kirk Jordan of Grand Prairie claimed a share of the world record in the event by doing just that over the weekend.

Jordan, a member of a team fielded by the Wax Museum of the Southwest, beat 13 others in the world championship contest.

The contest was part of the

rent army commander.

Argentinas military code empowers the commander to sanction any active or retired officer whose conduct is judged to have damaged the armys honor.

Galtieri, 56, was head of the ruling military junta when Argentine troops invaded the Falklands April 2, 1982. He was sacked after the Argentines surrendered to British troops who recaptured the British colony to end the 74-day war.

A private Argentine news agency, DYN, said Galtieri, who has been a virtual recluse in his suburban home for the past nine months, probably would serve the 60-day detention at a military compound in the Buenos Aires area.

Nicolaides also established an army Tribunal of Honor to review Galtieris conduct, Telam said Monday night. The tribunal could strip Galtieri of his right to wear his uniform and halt his milita^ I^nsion.

Galtieri, in an interview published April 2 in the newspaper Clarin, said he was surprised by the surrender of Argentines in the Falklands, known here as the Malvinas, to the British on June 14.

I thought we could have put up more of a fight, he said. "Not that we were going to win, but that we would offer more resistance.

Galtieri has placed most of the blame for the defeat on Gen. Mario Menendez, who became military governor of the islands off Argentinas coast following the occupation and at various times vowed to defend the islands to the last drop of blood. Menendez disillusioned me, Galtieri told Garin. It is one thing to talk about dying and another thing to die. Every day that passed, he shrank five centimeters in my eyes.

Local newspapers said Menendez asked Nicolaides to form the army tribunal to clear his name.

Argentina claims sovereignty over the Falklands, accusing Britain of ousting Argentine authorities and settlers in 1833.

two-day Eighth Annual Prairie Dog Chill Cook Off

and World Championship of Pickled Quail-Egg Eating.

CAPTIVES ARE ELL PARIS (AP)-UNITA, the anti-Marxist Angolan guerrilla group, said Monday 53 of the 82 Czech and Portuguese nationalists captured last month are ill.

MONEY In Your Pocket!

When you need money, cash in on the items that are laying around tt\e housertems that you no longer use

Our Family Rates

3 Lines

4 Days

M.OO

Use Your VISA or MASTERCARD

THE DAILY REFLECTOR

Classified AdsI 752-6166

HE DAILY REFLECTOR Classified Advertising Rates 752-6166

3 Line Minimum 1-3 Day.. 45* per line per day 4-fl Day.. 42* per line per day 7 Or More

Daya..... 40* per line per day

ClasaifledOiaplay 2.75 Per Col. Inch Contract Rates Available

DEADLINES ClaesHiedUneage Deadlines

Monday Friday 4 p.m.

Tuesday Monday 3 p.m.

Wednesday. .Tuesday 3 p.m. Thursday. Wednesday 3 p.nv

Friday Thursday 3 p.m.

Sunday    Friday noon

Claaallled DIaplay Oaadllnea

Monday I- Friday noon

Tuesday Friday 4 p.m.

Wednesday ..Monday4p.m. Thursday ... .Tuesday4p.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 reservea the right to edit or reject any advertiaement aubmltted.

people r*ad classified

Classified

Ads

752-6166

002

PERSONALS

YOUNG MALE, late 20's, pny teulonal, taekt to iriMt simitar females. Rece nrt a factor. Letter and photo, P 0 Box 33C1, Greenvflla. N C _

TO 4>LACE YOUR Classlfted iW, call 753-eiM and let a frtendly Visor help you vsord your Ad.^

007 SPECIAL NOTICES

WE pay" CA$H ter diamonds. Floyd G Robinson Jewelers, <07 Evans Mall.

Oil

Autos For Sale

BEFORE YOU SELL or trade^r 79-92 model car, call 7S-)t77, Giwnt Bulck.Wewlllpaytoodolter. ..

sell your car the NattaOat Autofinders Wayl Authorise Dealer In Pitt ^nty. HastlTlgs ^d. Call 756-0114._^

012

AMC

PUBLIC NOTICES

Family Want Ads Must Be ] Placed By An Individual To Run Under The Miscellaneous For Sale Classification. Limit One Item Perl Ad With Sale Value Of $200 Or Less. Commercial Ads Excluded. All Adsj Cash With Order. No Refund For Early Cancellation.

YOUR AD COULD BE WORKING FOR YOU IN THIS SPACE ' '

ADVERTISE WITH THE CLASSIFIED

NOTICE

Having qualified as Executrix of th stdfiB of Ho on S. Coroy laW of Pitt County. North CaroMiS. n!isii to fwtify all persons having claims against, the estate of said Jsceased to prewnt them to the undersigned Executrix on or before Sept. 29. 1983 or this notice or same will be plead-ed in bar of their recovery. AH per-

sons indebted to said estate please make immediate payment.

This 2Sth day of March, 1983. Vance T. Corey, Jr.

Rt. 2, Box 21

Wintervllle, N.C.

E xecutrix of the estate of Helen S. Corey, deceased. AAarch 29, April 5,12,19,1983

191 RAMBLEFTrdor"3SOr75r

9157 8 to 5. 752-555* after 5:30.

013    Buick

5rT7!crTaSJBRE"Tr5!Srt

condition, new tires. $375. 75i-a499 evenings.

1980 SKYLARK Limited 2 dgor, E.xcellent condition. Loaded. Tlf

9520

014

Cadillac

SEVILLE 1979. Diesel. Very low mileage, perfect condition. Oall 74*-6l7l days. 746-4339atterOp.mf

015

Chevrolet

IW4 CHEVROLET CHEVEL1.E AAallbu Classic, maroon with black

/viaiiDu .lassic, maroon with black landau tM. New MIchelln ticM. $1,350. CaTr75a-4636.

NORTH CAROLINA -ITT COUNTY The undersigned having qualified _s Executor or the Estate of JOHN BAILEY BELAND, d^eased, teti of Pitt County, North Carolina, this Is to notify all persons having claims against said estate to present them to the undersigned Executor on or

before the lOth day Of October, 1983, or this notice will be plead In bar of

their recovery. All persons indebted to Mid estate will please make im mediate payment to the undersigned Executor.

This 30th day of March, 1983.

P.O. Box 1767 Greenville, NC 27834 E xecutor of the E state of John Bailey Beland, Deceased Gaylord, Singlefon, McNally & Strickland

Post Office Drawer 545 Greenville, NC 27834 Attorneys at Law April 5, 12, 19, 26, 1983

CLASSIFIED INDEX

MISCELLANEOUS

FILENO 83SP90 FILMNO IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE

IN THE MATTER OF THE FORECLOSURE OF THE DEED WILLIAM E

JONES, Grantor,

TO

F P SPRUILL, JR ,

T rusfee.

As recorded in Book K 49 at Page 555 of the Pitt County Public Regish^. See Appointment of Substitute Trustee as recorded In Book N-51 at Page 372, Pitt County Public Registry.

NOTICE OF SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE'S SALE OF REAL ESTATE Under and by virtue of the power and authority contained in that certain Deed of Trust executed and delivered by William E. Jones, dated October 13,1980, and recorded

in the Office of the Register of Deeds of Piff County, North Carolina, In Book K;49 at Page 555 and because

*0 ff* payment of the indebtedness thereby secured and failure to carry out or perform the stipulations and agreements therein contained and pursuant to the demand pt the owner and holder of the Indebtedness secured by said De^ of Trust, and pursuant to the Order of the Clerk of Superior Court for Pitt County, North Carolina, entered In this foreclosure proc^ing, the undersigned, Randy D. Doub, Substitute Trustee, will expose tor sale at public auction on the 21 day of April, 1983, at 12:00

P.M. on the steps of the PtrCounty Courthouse, Greenville, North

Carolina, the following described real------

eal property:

Lying and being situate in Griffon ownship, Pitt County, North

Personals............

In Memorlam........

Card Of Thanks......

Special Notices.......

Travel & Tours........

Automotive...........

Child Care............

Day Nursery....____

Health Care...........

Employment..........

For Sale..............

Instruction............

Lost And Found.......

Loans And Mortgages.

Business Services.....

Opportunity...........

Professional..........

Real Estate...........

Appraisals............

Rentals..............

.002

.003

.005

.007

.009

.010

.040

.041

.043

.050

.060

.080

.082

.085

.091

.093

.095

.100

.101

.120

WANTED

Help Wanted.........

Work Wanted........

Wanted..............

Roommate Wanted ..

Wanted To Buy ......

Wanted To Lease.....

Wanted To Rent......

.051 .059 .140 .142 . 144 .146 148

RENT/LEASE

Apartments For Rent......

Business Rentals...........

Campers For Rent.........

Condominiums for Rent____

Farms For Lease..........

Houses For Rent...........

Lots For Rent..............

Merchandise Rentals......

Mobile Homes For Rent____

Office Space For Rent......

Resort Property For Rent.. Rooms For Rent...........

121

122

.... 124 ....125 .... 107 ...127 .,..129 ...131 ...133 ...135 .... 137 ....138

SALE

Autos for Sale.............

..011-029

Bicycles for Sate..........

...1..030

Boats for Sate.............

......032

Campers for.Sala.........

......034

Cycles for Sale............

......036

Trucks for Sate...........

Antiques..................

Auctions..................

......062

Building Supplies .........

......063

Fuel, Wood, Coal..........

Farm Equipment.........

......065

Garage-Yard Sales........

......067

Heavy.Equipment ........

......068

Household Goods..........

069

Insurance.............

......071

Livestock.................

......072

Miscellaneous............

......074

AAoblla Homes for Sate .....

075

AAoblla Home Insurance....

......076

Musical Instruments.......

......077

Sporting (}oods............

......OTS

Commercial Proparty......

......102

' Condominiums for Sate.....

......104

Farms tor Sate.............

.....106

^ousas for Sate.............

.....109

Invastmant Proparty.......

Land For Sala..............

.....113

Lot* For Sate..............

.....115

Rasort Proparty for Sate ...

.....117

Townsbip, Pitt County. _____

Carolina, and more particularly described as follows: BEGINNING at a stake in the center line of N.C. Secondary Road No. 1903 where the center I me of said road is intersected by the center line of a canal, said point IS BEGINNING also being located 1648 feet eastwardly or northeastwardly along said center line from the point of Intersection of the center lines of N.C.S.R. No. 1902 and said N.C.S.R. No. 1903, and runs thence from said POINT OF

BEGINNING along and with the N.C.S.R. No. 1903,

center line of said  ____  ,tvj

N 69 deg. 55 min. E 148 feet and N 69 deg. 38 minL E 281.7 feet, and N 85 deg East 392 feet to a point in the center line of said road, thence S 31 deg. 41 min W 1064.8 feet to a stake, thence S 13 deg. 14 min. W 1160.8 feet to a concrete marker;, thence N 47 deg. 25 min. W 346.5 feet to another

1976 MONTE CARLO 68,000 milai, new tires, good condition. 756-9442.

017

Dodge

1968 DART $200. Call 756-6246 after

018

Ford

19M LT0 FORD New paint. AAotdr

rebuilt comptelyr"lnrrl9r''H'k* new. Excellent condition. $600.

758-9538._

1977 FORD RANCHERO, air, extra clean. $2,850. Call 757 1330 or 7M-5728._

1978 LTD 34,000 miles. Mint condition. One owner. $250 under book value. Can be seen at 2810 Soutti

19W MUSTANG Good condition, mlleag and equipment. Call SS5-

6057 after 5 p.m.

019    Lincoln

1973 LINCOLN Continental AAark i. 60,000 miles. Excellent condition. $2500 negotiable. 752-1705 or 758-6321.

020

AAercury

1974 CAPRI Excellent condition.

bit.

752O705*'*'*"*'    "OOtlab

021

Oldsmobile

1979 OLDSMOBILE CUTLASS, fres. $4,795. Call 757-

1330.

1980 OLDS _ CUTLASS LS Good condition, air, cruise; $3795. 759-9404.

022

Plymouth

19W PLYMOUTH DUSTER 2 door, automatic. 4 new tires. 758 6621.

023

Pontiac

GRAND PRIX 1982. Power win dows, tilt wheel, cruise control, M/50 seat, vinyl top, 9,000 mites, like new. Call Rex Smith Chevrolet, Avden, 746-3141.    _

024

Foreign

DATSUN 280 ZX 59,000 miles, automatic. Excellent condition!

356:6441,

AAA2DA RX-7, 1979, top condition, 5 AM-FM stereo tape, air. i,9M. Call 804-481-0470. te48 VOLKSWAGEN 4 new radiate. Engine just rebuilt. Call 756-8847.

1970 , VOLKSWAGEN Excellent condition, new paint, battery and seat covers. Engine rebuilt. Factory radio with FM converter. $1200 firm. 758-2082.__

1971 DATSUN SIO. Yellow vyith

black vinyl .top.'Oiie owne7. Cow!

Excellent condition. 757-

mi lea 4680, i

1-6101 days; 355-2245 nio'hts.

19n fiat 4 door. Good condition and excellent gas mil-- = Information call 756-6843.

1977 DATSUN B210. AM/FM, air, netjotlagle.

*56-7796 after 6 p.m.

I/tS^TSUN 510 wagon, air, AM-FM, new paint and tires. $2,7M. Call 757 1330of^758-5728.    /

1978 HONDA ACCORD 5 speed, good condition, good gas mileage. '5Y454    araduate.

....... iw    on$______

concrete marker; thence N 23 dea. 35 min. W 638 feet to a concrete

      iw    a    curicrciiz

marker in the center line of the canal first above mentioned/ also

........    ...... wwwvxf tllVMIIVfieU/ OIW

temg the boundary line with the Pi'dPfty; thence along and with the center line of said canal and

......    iMiwi    9oiuv.ana.

said Garris boundary line, the following courses and distances: N 58 deg. t 351.5 feet and N 44<leg 10 pin- E '7    "d N 35 deg. I^in.

E 85 feet and N 23 deg. 25 min^ 51 feet, and N 19 dM. 10 min. E 43l]feet 25r

and N 21 deg.  ............

said POINT OF BEGINNING;

I min. W 177 fa4t to

containing 21.47 acres, more or less. Said lands are a portion of the "First Tract ' described In that certain record In Book U 35, Page 418/ Pitt County Reoistry/ and also a Mrtion of those deJis^ to AAarilyn Sutton Worthi ngton by I tern III (C) of the Last Win and Testament of Charlie Clyde Sutton, Sr. late of

Lenlor County, N.C. See Map'Book 95, Bpbk A 42, Page lV and

22, Pa Book R

47, Page 783, Pflt County iMistry.    '

Property Address: State Road .903, further known as the D.A. Stanley Farm, approximately 6 miles southeast of Ayden, on the Myth side of BIssette land Road (State Road 1903) oft Gum Swamp Road (State Road 19"'

County, North Carolina

The sale will be made subicct to ti

eyifi WV Iiiauv 9UOIVCT T

all prior Mens, unpaid taxes, restrictions and easements of record and assessments, if any.

The record owner of the abovedescribed real prmrty as reflected on the records., of the Pitt County RMister of Deed iwt more than ten (107 days prior to the posting of this Notice IS william E. Jones.

Pursyant to North Carolina General Statute 45-21.10(b), and the terms of the Deed of Trust, any successful bidder may be required to deposit with the Substitute Trustee immediately upon ish    

1979 HONDA CIVIC wagon, less, loaded. Call 746 4551, 5 to 8

1979 MERCEDES 300 D with sun

'x    uwv-i..r    wiin    un-

roof, 4 door, cream, light tobacco Lnerlor .i^/FM cassefte; $^wb

Call (919) 758-0404.

1980 . TOYOTA Corolla, 4 door, excellent_ condition. One owner.

Contact Bob Adams,'758-5200 during working hours.     

1980 TOYOTA CELICA GT littback, loaded including vyire ctory.synroot.^nd radiate. 49,000 miles. Asklno$4^s

1982 HONDA Accord, air, AM-FM stereo, 5 speed, velour interior. Just had maintenance check uo. excellent condition. Price negotia-bi6. 75-5856.__

029 Auto Parts & Service

and I ght plus package tor 1963-1978 Jeep Waooneer. $100. Call 7S2-4n5

032 Boats For Sale

FOUR CHARTER 30' O'Day. Wheel steering, diesel, hot shower, cruise Pamlico River and Sound area. Call 753-5I46. _

Cox

trailer. 25 horsepower Johnson: $1299.757-3524.    -Kmnson,

14'., HOBIE CAT catamaran.

California Spectet. Used one sMMn' Call 756-21Sorask tor Mike; after 6

p.m. 756-2042'y

conclusion of the sate a casTi deposit of ten (10%) percent of the bid - *-and including $1J)00 plus five

percent of any excess over $1,000. Any successful bidder shall be

UlUUCl. snail DO required to tender the full balance purchase price so bid in cash or certified check at the time the Substitute Trustee tenders to him a deed for the property or attempts to tender such deed, and should said

successful bidder fell to pay the full lance purchase price so blcfat that tim, he shall remain liable on his bid as provided for In North Carolina General Statutes 45-21.30 (d) and

.his sale will be held open ten (10) days for upset bid* as required by law.

This the 25 day of February, 1983. Randy D. Doub Substitute Trustee

NCNB Building Post Office Drawer 1785 Greenville, North Carolina 27834 Telephone: (919) 758-4200 April 12, 19, 1983

1977 CHAPARRAL .18, 120 HP Mercrylser, Vann galvanlid trall-er. Call after 6. 746-2578_.

head, VHF, 3 sails. Fu y equipped $11,000.964-4172 or 752-0966.^

1978 pmE with ISO Mercury, Ga^nli^ trailer. This one Is loaded with extras. Electric winch.

1*79 19' AAantee: 1979 US twrsr power Eyinrude and Vann e^va-

22' VENTURA Salllx DOwar Suzuki motor; Float on trailer. Exi

tion. 746-3664

Sailboat, s horsa-; brand new. xcellent condl-

034 Campers For Sale

ICE

Having quallfM as Executrix of the Esfata of Robert "

Bataman,_also known at Rmmti Midgetta Bateman, Jr., late ol Pitt County, Doris R. Bateman hereby

notlflet all persons heving 'cTlmt against said estate to pra^

' rherthar'torneyi Millar, P.OJBQx ,7l42,^Oreenv1lte, N.C., on or bafora October 12, 19S3, or this notice will be pteeMin bar of thoir recovery. All persons ndabted to said astate please make Irnmediata payment.

This 8th day of April, 1983.

Doris R. Bateman Executrix

704 W.Stb Street

AprteWs

I9S3

ii*T'?i-or.M!d*'

In stock.

top*. 2M ynjl* In tTo RelelOh. N C 834-2774.

036_ Cycles    For    Sale    

VAAAAHA 1975 MX400. Dirt bike Days 752 3735, nl^

black aluminum rim*. Irreiudlw

""TT f ftf

^ltejgjyr.^^94-gy-

I

l*ai .HONDA CB

-,J'in\fZSrsr-





CyctesForSal*

3 HONDA XR ISO, XI mllM tt3S0flrtn.^ll7it:4^

0 Trucks For Sal*

jaOOt D-50 PICKUP J9S1 SHI c SMPi ***? condlftoo. Call Rax SgilthXhavrolat. Avdy<, 746-3ui

JS'JSfO ranger XLT truck

road mlla. >5900. 7M-m

6

X.000

im JEEPWAGONEER LIMITED

051 HdpWanKd

Lynndala

araa. IS to IS hours par waak. S4S R^srencas raquestad

175<-<09I.

SR TYPISTS!

Sarvlcasoffartyou;

UnioM Fringe Benefits

Top Pay F-l e * ' > I a Schedule Call US an appointment

liwNPbwir'

074

Miscellan*ous

NEW TELEPHONES! Prewire your new or present home- add new    Call

Hemby's Electrical servica, 754-4622 or 756-^. Other alartrlcal work also available.

ONE twin b^, 175. Sanyo stereo (needs needle), *50.^ 3 piece Samsonite luggage, *45. Call after 5,

085    Loans And AAortgages

2ND ASORTGAGES by phone-commercial loans-mortgages bought. Call tree l-)0-45 32^

091 Business Services

752-2318

PEI^NNIALS, Better Boy tomato

strawberries, geraniums; pick your own broccoli, lettuce and cabbage.

Dews Berry Patch. 754-7114.

RENT A VIDEO Recorder and get

               U    REN-CO,

free movie I 754-3842.

Call

040

Child Care

TEMPORARY

SERVICES

rent the rug Doctor. Nothim

7M*^2    u    renco;

CARE Full time. Any hours

l18Reade Street

757-3300

ROUND TR^POLINE; *100. Ta excellent condl-

STARTING A 9 month secretarial irse, April 18. Greenville School

2 years and up. Large

Wkyard and constant supervisic^ c?ui    ______

Ctose to all industries. Nice of Commerce, 752 3177._

mu^hborhood. Loads of experience. TV TECHNICIAN wanted with ex ~ ..ITl _________perience In color TV and stere

Morkeis. , A Cleaner*VV<l?i4 (^ality Cleaners, Newton's lied &

|onv&Wa

Sfitcn.

Boyd

lE TAX SERVICES all 754 3244._

093

OPPORTUNiTY

EXCLUSIVE DISTRIBUTORSHIP available. Wholesale sales calling on businesses. Only I distributor per county. *1,000 minimum required investment. Call collect or ST'lt- ^'"on /^ts, 523 East Webb Avenue, Burlington, NC 27215,    (919) 224 4000 between 9

a.m.-4D.m

100 Houses For Sale

207 NORTH LEE StR^ET, Ayden, lStticnth at 12% for 20 years, with *6,000 down. Call 754-2717.

3 BEDROOM BRICK HOUSE Living room with firMlace, dinlrw room, large floored alc, 75 x 217' wood^ lot. Central air and heat, lots of extras. Low 50's. Assumable VA loan 2205 Jefferson Drive Greenville. By 758-1324

121 Apartments For Rent

AN ENERGY EFFICIENT 2 t^room, m bath townhouse with f replay Washer, dryer connec-tions. *290. 752 8949.

FISCHER

8y appointment only

111 ^Investment Property

LIST OR BUY your business with C J Harris & Co., Inc. Financial & l^rketlng Consultants. Serving the Southeastern United States. Greenville, N C 757-0001, nights 753-4015.    "

young A40THER would like to

**' Mondaythrw^ Now^at^LarTv'S^ cLrMtS Wr

r-9'7i"/,7xia!yrnr*'"^'* eg EsrtigihsSy.a.*

044

PETS

AKC BLACK LAB puppies months old. *75. Call 5* S82 a

after

WANTED: Someone for general ottlce work. Must be neat, accurate with figures, and have good sense of .balance. Cashier experience helpful. 5 days a week |ob. Good

AKC CHAMPIONSIRED Pekinese through Friday.

day

059

Work Wanted

*]?o<le<t German Block on<i tan;

AT TERRIER PUPPIES 8 weeks old. Dewormed. Marion AAae Mills, JsTm ktlghway, 754-3279

051

ALL TYPES TREE SERVICE Licensed tree surgeons. Trimming, cutting and removal. Free estimafes.jp Standi, 752-4331. ANY TYPE OF REPAIR WORK Carpentry, masonry and roofing. 35 years exMrience in building. Call James Harrington after 4 pm

SEEDS SEEDS SEEDS

AND

PLANTS CABBAGE &COLLARDS TOMATIOS&PEPPERS

vegetabITplants

FLOWER PLANTS

Kittrells Greenhouses

TO BUY OR SELL a business, for appraisals, for financing, for fran chise consulting - contact SNOWDEN ASSOCIATES In vjestment Analysts and Brokers, Greenville. 752-3575._

DUPLEX FOR SALE New, 1912 total square foot duplex has grooms, I'/j baths, living roo dining room, kitchen with all api anees including dishwasher and refrii *    ...

 _________

Mwsiwr.K'a',

rigerator each side. Carpet,

?LTe!j'Xth*-sls'';ir^ea'd^

113

Land For Sale

095 PROFESSIONAL

BRYAN'S PLASTER REPAIR and sheetrock (hanging finish), 10 y experience. Call 757-0478

answer 355 4952.

r;

752 7745.

Help Wanted

CHIMNEY SWEEPING Fireplaces and wood stoves need cleaning after

2531 DICKINSON AVENUE EXT CALL 754-7373__

st^tive sales

SHAMPOO FOR FALLI Rent shampooers and vacuums at Rental

orolina'^ Lincoln-'Mercury-GMC, ^

Sates experience prei Carolina Lincoln-Me 754-4247

SLEEPER

752-4932.

SOFA (or sale; *50.

AVON HAS OPENINGS FOR REPRESENTATIVES

in the areas of Greenville and Pitt County. Earn up to 50%, work In rSSa "'" neighborhood. Call 752-

CREATIVE HOME IMPROVEMENTS CO

TOMATO PLANTS. 5 Mch. Col lard plao^ H each. 107a Ford

gtSoWtraat'f:

<3uality construction and renova Phone 757 0799 after 4 pm

tion. _

furniture striping Paint and varnish removed from wood

TOPSOIL

^KKEEPER E,oerlaocod lull Charge bookkeeper. Must be able to type and do limited amount of secretarial work. Please send re-wme and/or information to Book keeper. PO Box 1947, Greenville,

and metal. Equipment formally of L*!P and Strip. All items returned ithi- ' - -    -    ....

Clean. *7 per ^Nc^^ard delivered.

within 7 days. Tar Road Antiques. Call for free estimate. Days 756-9123,Nioht 756 1007.    '

TREE AND STUMP REAAOVAL

Very reasonably priced. No damage to lawn. 752-3^ or 355 2421 after^

p.m. for free estimate.

LANDSCAPING, grass cutting, lot cleaning, small loads of sand and

06.NTAL ASSISTANT Experience work week. Call

llaS^r of outside wo^iT

, UTILITY TRAILER, 4x8, 13 " ^e^^ stake sides, tilt tone;

EXPERIENCED LOAN processor !, m i I I a r with VA/FHA/Conventional require-

LAWNMOWER REPAIRS We will pick up and deliver. All work nfet"    -------

19" COLOR TV Rent to own. *23.11 ger^ month. Furniture World. 757-

guaranfeed. Call 757 3353 after p.m., weekends anytime

mepts Salary commensurate' with experience.^ Position available

Kinston, NC _Siend resume to Loan

NcSm?^'    '''"'h'e'

full time position for fountain clerk. Call 744-3124

LET'S BEAUTIFY that lawn with "ail - --    S''''lce.

3 PIECE BEDROOM set. Includes mattress and box springs. Good condition. *125. 758 72^.

Call 752-4949 5:30 to4:30om.

soda

* S.RANDAAAS needed to share their skills with others who ne^ them. Call Clara Weathers at 7566867.

PARKIN CONTRACTING

Call 754-4294 Evenlnos

075 AAobile Homes For Sale

GUYS & GALS III A FUN JOB! 11

PROFESSIONAL typing services 10 years excwrience. Letters, re sumes, etc. 7i4 1485 after 8 p.m. SIGN PAINTING Truck lettering

JkC Irkiai    eCOOC    /~.ll    CA____ a V'V

as tow as *59.95. Call Steve Atkins for all your sign needs. 754 9117. TIRED? NEED AAORE TIME? Let someone elM do your houseclean ing. Ask about Inrrodi

Call 752 3758

troductory offer.

BRAND NEW 1983 top of fhe line double wide. 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, many extras including masonite siding, shingle roof, frost free refrigerator, garden tub, cathedral ceiling and much, much more. Regular price, *21,995 Limited Time Only

$16,995

VA, FHA and conventional on lot financing. Delivery and sef include^Hours, 8 AM to

CHIMNEY SWEEP Gid Holloman. North Carolina's original chimney sweep. 25 years experience working on chimneys and fireplaces. Cat day or nighf, 753-3503, Farmville

100

REAL ESTATE

50 UNIT APARTMENTS

Posifive cash flow. Bast tax shelter Owner financlno. (919) 975-2709

104 Condominiums For Saie

WHY PAY RENT?

con

When you can own your dominium or townhomel Three locations available (or a low monthly payment, low down payment, and no closing costs I Call Jane

758 7029 or Will Reid at 758-4050 or 754-0444

MOORE &SAUTER 110 South Evans 758-6050

106

Farms For Sale

58 ACRE FARM Good road frontage on SR 1753 and SR tlio. 51 acres cleared, 4.209 pounds tobacco allotment, pond and 2 bedroom house. St. Johns Community. Call for more details. Call AAoseley Marcus Realty at 744-2144 tor full details.___

cr&Vndho^^^

nOfVICo

up

you    unemj

too

Or, are tired of the sam'e old boring leb with the same old boring prople? And worst ot all...the same oldJx>rlng pay check?

'4 you tired of being unemployed' I    WANTED    interior and

'4 you tired ot hearing " You are    painting.    Residential

J young or too inexperienced?"    TP    <>    fes'

, are tired of the same old boring Call after 4 p.m. 752-5320.

Interior and ex-itial or designs.

(formerly Mobile Home Brokers) 430 West Greenville Boulevard

060

FOR SALE

$YES$

064 Fuel, Wood, Coal

Well our comoanv is inokina inr    i^kkJYPfS    of    firewood    for    VA, FHA and conventional on

ii^rarauvs'Tnriia'fs'.'?: I -^-> ^ Stand, 752-6331._ j    f.nancing,.    Delivery and sef

ambition, imagination and enir-i wocking with others. You can earn

$3004-Per Week

065 Farm Equipment

in Incentives, commissions and in-

creases. No experience necessary. rJiT7JA^-R|f4l^A

the job training. For an exciting    ^_

new career see Mr. Dunn from lo TOBACCO TRUCK CURTAINS

FAR/yWLL A TRACTOR Good condition. 11 horsepower riding lawnmower. 752 5923 after 5.

JOHN DEERE 2 row corn planter. 4*^?"--''- condition.

BRAND NEW 1983 top quality 14 wide, 2 bedroom mobile home loaded with extras, cathedral beamed ceilings, plywood floors plywood counter tops, total electric $?2 ?95    Regular price

Limited Time Only

$9,995

lot up

K3. Hours,8am to8pm CROSSLAND HOMES (Formerly i^lle Home Brokers) 430 West Greenville Boulevard _754-0191

New

FANTASTIC OFFERI 70x14. bedrooms, 2 full baths, just take up payments from owner. 7 years left owed. 757 3580.

AM to 5 PM Thursday at Holiday J-ss llian half dealers price. Hat Inn. 758 3401.      lecas    Canvas Products, 758 0641,

RITZ-CRAFt trailer with woodheater. Call 758 4234 after

p.m._

HOMEWORKERS Wirecraft

1104 Clark Street.

For full details write: Wirecraft,' PO Box223. Norfolk. Va. 23501. INTERIOR DECORATOR with ex

rerience and a desire to excel, alary and commission. Send re- , sume to Decorator, PO Box 1947 Greenville, NC 27834._

parts- to fit new Holland models. Rubber Plant Gripper complete Rubber Gripper *1.40, Closing -    *1.45    per    pair. Furrow Open

ing Shoe *29.00. Water valve com-

1977 CARLINA mobile home, . bedrooms, iVj baths, central air, steps, vinyl underskirting. Call 524-4843 after 4 p.m._

OAKWOOD mobile home, 12x60, good condition. All rooms are closed off. Call 744-4477 from 4-9

plete *59.75. Other parts in stock Agri Supply, Greenville, NC, 752

979 24x65, AWBILE HOME 3

MORTGAGE LOAN SERVICING POSITION

067 Garage-Yard Sale

tedrooms, 2 baths, large 24x14 iving room, den, kitchen with eye level oven, dishwasher, refrigerator with ice maker,

Assistant to head of Mortgage Servicing Department. SuccessUil candidate must have Saving and

loap or mortgage banking 'back ground with emphasis In loan

SATURDAY, April 16, Rose High School yard, Greenville City Sch<x)l Food Service Association. 8 a.m.

^    dining    room,

washer and dryer, central air conditioning, furnished. With patio SlTo^^sa -^ Has to be moved.

t anytime.

2 BEDROOM Trojan, 10' wide by 55' long. *3500. Call 744 3894or 754-2802.

servicing. Excellent compensation package. Send resume in con-lidnce to 'Mor^ge Servicinc P O Box 1967, (^eenville, N 27835

YARD SALE Saturday, April 14. 302 Millbrook Street. Starts 7a.m. until.

'%

072

Livestock

24x40 TWIN LAKES 3 bedrooms with walk in closet, 2 full baths, wood heater, central air, stove, and dishwasher. Equity and take over 4820o ---- -

payments. 752 4820 or 1 734 4000.

MUTUAL OF OMAHA

HORSEBACK RIDING

Slables. 752 5237.

Jarman

076 AAobile Home Insurance

We' need one person who needs as much as *359.80 a week and more selling for Mutual of Omaha. Call ior personal interview:

074

Miscellaneous

LeeW Weavw

754-1150 GrMnvllle.N C

A SPECIAL Sidewalk Sale. Satur day 10 to 5. China, crystal, etc. Bargains. Coin 8, Ring Man. Downtown Greenville.

A^BILE HOMEOWNER Insurance - the best coverage for less money. Smith Insurance and Realty, 752-

Life Insurance Affiliate United of Omaha Equal Oooortunlty Companies M/F NEEDED 3-11 nursing supervisor. Contact Becky Hastings, DON, Greenville Villa, 758-4121.

A TIME SAVERI Fifty used mens and womens wrist watches. Seiko, Pulsar, and others. Some old, some like new, sonie wind, some

077 Musical Instruments

KIMBALL CjONSOLE piano. New

automatic, some Quartz, some solid gold. *15 and up. Coin 4th and ^

pecan or walnut finish. *1,599 with ben

9ld. *15 and up Ih and Evans, Greenville._

8i Ring /Man, downtown

inch, delivery and 10 year war ranty. Plano & Organ Distributors, Greenville. 355-4(Kf

NEW OPENINGS For nationwide Irtdustries. No sales, will train. *15,000 plus a year. For information call 312-931 7051. extension 1074A REGISTERED DENTAL HYGIENIST with experience in dental assisting. Monday through Thorsdav. 8 to4. 522 4313. Kinston

ALLIS CHALMERS lawn ahd garden tractor includes mower deck, blade and trailer. *2200. Call 355-4977.

MAHOGANY UPRIGHT Piano. Excellent playing condition. Call 758-8996 after 6.

J^I^HA 12 string. Good condition.

APPLE //# Starter Systems. Brand i*e'^'.*'W Ai.*,.ApP'e accessories 15% discount. Call 757 3820.

078

Sporting Goods

RN S, LPN'S and/or Technicians. | Puhgo District Hospital needs you. Contact Barbara McDonald, Director of Nursing. 943-2111.

ASSUME PAYMENTS of *49.44 on a 4 piece Western living room suit. Sofa, chair, rocker, and 3 tables Furniture World, 757-0451. We take trade-ins.

FISHING SUPPLIES worms. Stancill's Grocery.

crickets and

-,L----------ery,    Belvoir

Highway. Phone 752-4245

107

Farms For Lease

WANTTO BUY

CORN

i.'i'''^.es Paid for your corn. Worthington Farms Inc., 754 3827

Worthington Farms Days. 754 3732 Nights.

TWO PARCELS t-3 acres, 1-3 acres, L/R 1784 near Black Jack Owner financinjg possible. 717 842 9415 after April 5: itS. 4 to 9 p m

115

Lots For Sale

BEAUTIFUL east ot Gre 752-1915

wooded country reenville. No trailers

I^BILE HOME lots tor sale. Call

117 Resort Property For Sale

RIVER COTTAGE Priced to sell..

Dei<len Realty 758 2230' "     * weekends

2 NEW HOMES on Pamlico River Located at Bath, NC Beautiful water front lots, excellent location. Many year round neighbors. Homes built for year round comfort, fully insulated, heat, air and fireplace Completely new, ideal tor retire menf. Contact Vance Overton. 923 2701 or 754 8497.

120

RENTALS

LOTS FOR RENT Also 2 and bedroom mobile homes. Securit' d^>osits_^ required, no pets. Ca

1-4413 between 8 and 5.

NEED STORAGE? We have any size to meet your storage need.' Cal Arlington Self Storage, Open /Won ridav 9 5. Call 756-9933.

day

121 Apartments For Rent

AVAILABLE AAAY 1. New 1, 2 and 3 bedroom apartments. Drapes, wall to wall carpet, central heat and air, outside storage. Griffon area. Office hours 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., AAonday through Friday, 2 p.m. to 4 p.m Saturday and Sunday. Phone 524 4239.

AZALEAGARDENS

Greenville s newest and most uniquely furnished one bedroom apartments.

All energy efficient designed. Queen size beds and studio couches.

Washers and dryers optional Free water and sewer and yard maintenance.

All apartments on ground floor with porches.

- Frost tree refrigerators.

WANT TO LEASE peanut pound age. Call 752-5948from 7p.m. on.

109

Houses For Sale

ATTRACTIVE BEGINNER home. By owner. 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, FmHA approved. Located in Win tervllle. *38,000. 754-4321 after 5:30.

BELVEDERE BY OWNER-12%% loan assumption with low equity and closing cost. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths. Brick ranch on quiet street. Living room, large family room with fireplace, large country kitchen, fenced back yard, beautiful lot. *42,500. 754 5545.

BY OWNER 3 bedroom house, newly painted, 1007 West 4th Street. *24,900. Call 754 6382 or 754 0489 (after S p.m.)

BY OWNER 511 North Main Street, Farmville. Old two story house. 4 bedrooms, 2 baths. Completely

remodejed except Iwckj^ch'. Price

dropped drastically. Appointment only after 4 p.m. (91) 383 9034.

BY OWNER: Lovely ranch. 80's or ' ESI

less. Huge lot. Especially good location nice neighborhood. Second

mortgage, and or trade possible thave ......

what have you? 355 2211.

FOR SALE BY OWNER Lake Glenwood. FHA Assumption. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, fireplace, large ''*    *49,000. Call after 8 p.m

lot 524 5042

Located in Azalea Gardens near Brook Valley Country Club. Shown by appointment only. Couples or singles. No pets.

Contact J T or Tommy Williams _756    7815_

BRAND NEW duplex townhouses available in 30 days. Approximately 1 mile from the ECU med school and hospital. 2 bedrooms, tVa baths.

washer and dryer hook ups. *300 per month. Call 752 3152 or 752 6715 ask

for Bryant or John.

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, room, sauna, tennis court, house and P<X)L. 75? 1557

laundry

ClUD

CYPRESS GARDENS APARTMENTS

2308 E Tenth Street

Available immediately two bedroom flat with washer/dryer hook ups, heat pump, frost free refrigerator, dishwasher, disposal. Call days 758-4041, nights/weekends 758 5960.

Professionally managed by Remco East. Inc. _

DUPLEX 2 bedrooms downstairs.

New    '04    South    Wbodw;

*250.

grayleigh

thr grow even

Williamsburg ough and through in a rapidly iwing neighborhood. This one in has a Williamsburg garage for

ven has a Williamsburg garage foi your carriage. *I09,W. W G Blount 8i Associates, 754 3000 or

nights I 975 3179.

GREAT ASSU/MABLE in Eastwood, by owner. *42,900. 3 bedrooms, baths. 9% loan. *39,200. *401.02 PITI Excellent condition. 109 Prince Road. 757 1977 by appoint ment.

NEAR

feet-I-,

HOSPITAL,

*59,900. 758

1    old

1600 square brick home.

NICE, COZY contemporary house in Twin Oaks, excellent financing. F L Garner, 355 2428 or 754 3217 Owner. 758-2520.

TEN YEAR OLD country home j^t off Pactolus highwa

lighway. Irooms with IV3 baths. Fully carpeted. Extra lot all beautifully landscaped with thousands of tulips, camelias and day llllies. *35, 752-3233 after 4 p.m

ip'/j% APR, FHA or VA, 30 years, "  ..... hon

fixed rate financing on new homes in Edwards

to be built in Edwards Acres, Greenwood Forest, Cherry Oaks, Camelot, Country Squire, Pleasant Hill. For a limited time only. For information call Duffus Realty Inc.,

ROOM AT THE TOP

BENTWOOD ROCKER, small early American sofa and chair. Price negotiable. 355-4533._

082    LOST AND FOUND

BR^UNSWICK SLATE POOL Tables. Cash discounts. Delivery and Installation. 919 743-9734._'

FOUND: Female dog, white and fam mixed breed, 25 pounds. 355

Que to the promotions In this area,    and yellow collard

fyvo openings exist now for young P'?",*?,-.** Pef hundred. Carl Miller, minded persons in the local branch | 3 o{ a large corporation. If selected.

LOST:

tabby, ... _______

Comes to name 5443

female black and brown In Colonial Heights area.

"AAommy". 752-

you will receive complete training. We provide good company benefits, ma or medical, profit sharing, dental care and retirement plan. Starting pay will be *240 *356 depending on your ability. All promotions are based on merit, not Mnlorlty.

We are particularly interested In those with leadership ability who are looking for a career opportuni-

CALL CHARLES TICE, 758 3013, a&lT'Aunds^^e ct^^^^ sma I loads of sand, topsoil and forhead iwhite feet rt hiie stone. Also driveway work._ |    Siii 7m.9haii    '

CLOTHES Sizes 12 )4-14. Dresses,

OOUBLE MATTRESS, *35. Double box sprlna*. *20. Call 758-2243.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

FIVE PIECE DINNETTE suite.

1950 SQUARE FEET, garage, living room, 3 or 4 bedrooms, workshop, large great room with 8' pool table and fireplace. Newly carpeted with dishwasher, cable TV, 7 years old. Located 3 miles from Greenville. Priced in the tSO's. 758 0144 or 752 7443._

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

WE BUY USED CARS lOHNSON MOTOR CO.

Across From Wachovia Computer Center emorial Dr    756-6221

*175^ Chrome a^ gjass parsons

CALL 758-3401 10:00to6:00 MONDAY-THURSDAY Les Adkins

SALES REP ' $50,000 YEARLY Commission POTENTIAL

A leader In the Billion Dollar PrOmium/lncentive industry has a unmue opportunity. Product Is apdroprlate (or virtually all businesses, corporations, manufacturers, unions and associations. The size of the market and our commission structure makes *50,000 the let year very feasible. Now Interviewing safes persons tor Route Sqlft, Fund Raising, and Premium/Incentive sales. One year ulr

table, *50. Chrome and glass end table. *25. Call 355 2588 after 4.

FOR SALE: yellow collards and cabteoe plants. Marlon AAae Mills, 754-32^or 355 2792.

FOR SALE: white Kenmore refrigerator/freezer, 14 coble feet, IllTe new. Used clothes dryer, (needs repairs). Babv crib. 754 7972.

FREEZER BEEF, grain fed Angus, yvhole halves or quarters. Delivered to Bethel Cold Storage for process-Ing- OSia pound. Live weight. L A Moyo Farms, AAaury, NC, 747-3504 aHer4p.m._

KERS and Reach In .oqlers. Sale 40% off. Barkers Refrlgeratjpn, 2227 Memorial

OFFICE BUILDING FOR RENT

Drlve,'>54-4417.

experience In direct sales required. Smd resume to: Nwier Distrlbut-^ Compnay, P <3 Box 8093,

w Compnay, - w (iriknvllle. N C 27835.

^ES REPRESENTATIVE Major nalionel company has an opening tor a Seles Associate In the Greenville araa. Prior sales experience not as Important at ability and

wlUlngnass to learn. Salary negotiable. Excellent benefit

For a conlldential In-

lervlew tend resume to MANAG P O Box 1985, Greenville, NC

quel Opportunity

.-CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

ROOFING

STORM WINDOWS DOORS & AWNINOS

Hooni Ad'ldior

( .L. l.iipton, ( ().

LOCAL GOVERNMENT SALESI , Jeeps to household items available as low as K on dollar. For informa tIon on how to purchase these bargains call 312-93^1941, extension r4A

1074

On Evans Street Across From Court House. 960 to 4500 square feet. Can be remodeled to suit tenant.

NEW SHARP

 cqpiers-sale, lease,

rent. Large selectlon_ of . used |

piers Xerox, Sharp, IBM, Savin, 75-167.

CALL 752-4135

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

duplex apartment available

at Frog Level on 1 acre wooded lot. 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, kitchen and dining combination, sundeck, and heat pump. $260 a month. Call 756-4624 before 5 p.m. or 756-5168 after._    ^    _

EASTBROOK AND VILLAGE GREEN APARTMENTS

327 one, two and three bedroom garden and townhouse apartments, featuring Cable TV, modern appli

J YM-LAGE ^apartments, Aurora, NC, available for oc-cupancy. Elderly, handle

Barbas Miller' 322-4990 or 322-4913' aual Opportunity Housing_

GreeneWay

Lar 2 bedroom garden apart ttients, carpefed, dfsh laundry rooms, balconies, spacious grounds with larkin'

nnri?"* i**RP' eeonomicai utilities and POOL. Adjacent to Greenville Country Club, tsa-aaao

IN AYDEN

The DaUy Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Tuesday, April 12,1983-is

121 Apartments For Rent

WEDGEWOODARMS

, ^ ^ NOW AVAILABLE

''I townhouses. Excellent location. Carrier heat pumps,. Whirlpool kitchen!

lups, pool, tennis

pumps, Whirlpc washer/dryer hooku court.

_756-0987

127

Houses For Rent

2 BEDROOMS, living room, dining room, 2 full baths, den and kitchen. Call after 6, 757 1489.    _

ivaMabiliS^

1 BEDROOM APARTMENT Heat and hot wr ^        -    --    -

Woodlawn

and hot water furnished"! Nortti *215. 754 0545 or 758-0435

I BEDROOM apartment. Central air, carpeted, appliances. *195 Manor Apartments

. _Jrpeti Greenville 758 3311.

.       3    bedroom,    refrt

tor, stove, and dishwasher month. 752-5147or 744-439X

rigera *180 a

'N WINTERVILLE 3 bidroom

children, no pets. OeMsIt and lease. *195 month. 756-soSP^

KINGS ROW APARTMENTS

One and apartments (rigerator, cable TV

tvTO b^room garden . Carpeted, ranoe. re-

j-arpeted, range, redishwasher, disposal f Conveniently located

to shopping center and schools Located just off lOth Street.

Call 752-3519

Exi

liv

door

LOVE TREES?

iperience the unique In apartment ing with nature outside your

COURTNEYSQUARE APARTMENTS

Quality construction, fireplaces, heat pumps (heating costs 56% less than comparable units), dishwash-

t";'/ wasljer/dryer hook ups, cable TV.wall-to-waircarpet, thermopane windows, extra insulation.

duplex Jarvis Street. *240 per month. Call 757

2 BEDROOM Shenandoah. i</>

practically new . Call Clark-Branch,

6334.

townhouse at baths, fireplace. *330 per month Realtors, 754

2 BEDROOM townhouse at Shenandoah, tt'j baths, available A^ril Jst. 3( per month. Call

:lark-Branch. Realtors. 754-6334.

2 BEDROOM apartment. Central Willow"sir^eet, 'Aparfnitm V S2M*

2. BEDROOM apartment. Central

2 BEDROOM furnished ap in Winterville. 754 0407nr zf

irtment

1743

2 BEDROOM DUPLEX, stove, re

frigerafor, central heat and air, derosit, lease, -after 31

)p.m.

no pets. 756 6834

2 BEDROO^ DUPLEX near ECU Energy efficient. Central air

Central

jeral

ups. No pets. *275. 7S4%80

refrigerator, hook

|'7a

2 BEDRCXJM TOWNHOUSE 4'; miles West ot new hospital

Available May 1. 5780.

756 8996 or 756

Off ice Open 9-5 Weekdays

9 5 Saturday    1-5    Sunday

2 BEDROOM DUPLEX near ECU Available May 1. Call 355 6057 after 5 p.m._

AAerry Lane Off Arlington Blvd.

_ 756-5067

NEW TOWNHOUSE with fireplace to professional single or married couple. 758-4242 after 7 p.m

NEW 1 BEDROOM with patios. V^ter/sewer furnished. *210 month.

NICE QUIET DUPLEX Appliances, carpet, air, hook ups, garden sapee. 754-2471 or 758-1543.

OAKMONT SQUARE APARTMENTS

Two bedroom townhouse apart ments. 1212 Redbanks Road. Dish washer, refrigerator, range, dis

I^sal Included. We also have Cable

Very convenient to Pitt Plaza and University. Also some furnished apartments available.

3 BEDROOM DUPLEX Close to university Dishwasher, washer and dryer, fully carpeted, central heat Sil Sl^    deposit    required.

756 4364 after 6. ask tor Donny

122 Business Renfals

Ill'll square toot building. Ideally located on Highway 33 in Chocowinity. Call Donnie Smith at 944-5BH7

FOR rent Prime retail space on

2 BEDROOM DUPLEX *250 a month. Available /March 15. Lily Richardson Realty. 752 4535.

2 BEORCXJMS,

Avaiiable Ay 1 .TK from Greenvilli

752 25.

pump. Nice, pets. mile *260 per month.

2 BEDROOM unfurnished house with carpeting, appliances, air, and garage. Nice neighborhood and location on East 4th Street. Availa-ble AAav 1. *325 month. Call 778-4408.

3 BEDROOMS, 2 baths, living, room, dining, kitchen and carporf Wooded corner lot. No pets. *395 8706. _

107 Dupont Circle. 756-1

3 BEDROOMS, 1' z baths, closed-in garage, heat pump, fenced backyard. Beautiful setting. *355. Call 757-0001 or nights, 753-4015,

754 9006.

405 WEST 4th STREET bedroom. *300 Call 757 0488.

4 or 5

133 Mobile Homes For Rent

RIVERVIEW ESTATES Rent or sale. 12x45, 2 bedrooms, fully carpeted, central air, extras. 752 6702 or 752 3839.

SMALL TWO BEDROOM located Oak Square Trailer Park. *140 355 6977

SPECIAL RATES on furnished 2 bedroom mobile homes. SI35 and No^ts, no children 758 4541 or

2 BEDROOM AAobile Home for rent Call 754 4487. _

2 BEDROOM, furnished, washer.

air, good location. No pets, children. Call 758 4857.

BEDROOMS, washer, carpeted. No pets. 754 0792

2 BEDROOMS, 4 miles from hospi tal on Stantonsbui^ Road. Utility Couples only, no

shed. Private lot pets 744 6860

135 Office Space For Rent

2500 square feet. Suitable for office space or com ^^r^^ial. 604 Arlington Boulevard.

OFFICE

South E

SPACE for

Evans Street.  _____

square teet to 3000. Call 758 2174

rent. 1123 From 350

OFFICES FOR LEASE Contact JT or Tommy Williams. 756 7815.

WAREHOUSE AND office space (or ''ee    756    5097    or

2100 SQUARE FEET ot retail space tor lease in small strip shoppino Senler. Contact Aldridge & Southerland Realty, 756 3500, nights Don Southerland 76 5260

756-4151

ONE BEDROOM, furnished apartments or mobile homes for rent. Contact J T or Tommy

Williams. 756-7815.

one BEDROOM t/urnished partment adjoining ECU Com , letely 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 campus. No pets. *215 a month.

756:

ONE BEDROOM apartment. Partially furnished. 752 7MI

ONE BEDROOM furnished efficiency 2'/2 blocks from ECU *175 per month, utilities included. Available May 1, 752-40.

RENT FURNITURE: Livim ing, bedroom complete. $79

din

ing, neoroom complete. $79.00 per month. Option to buy. U REN CO, 756 3862.

STRATFORD ARMS APARTMENTS

The Happy Place To Live CABl

JLETV

Office hours 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday

Call us 24 hours a day at

756-4800

TAR RIVER ESTATES

2. and 3 bedrooms, washer-dryer hook ups, cable TV, pool, club hoyse, playground. Near ECU

Our Reputation Says It Alt "A Community Complex."

125 Condominiums For Rent

FULLY FURNISHED except (or your towels. Two bedroom con dominium with washer, dryer Yorktown Square. 756 6592 or 752

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 jji^hances furnished No pets

82S 7321 after 5o m

127

Houses For Rent

AYDEN, 1 BEDROOM duplex, carpet, stove and refrigerator. *140 unfurnished. *165 furnished. 746 4474.

CLEAN 3 BEDROOM house, 1007 West 4th Street, lease and deposit required, no pets. S300 month. Call 756 0489 or 756 6382 (after 5 p.m )

COZY ONE bedroom, in a quite neighborhood. 1 block from tennis courts. 756 8160, 756 7768._

EXCEPTIONAL 2 bedroom home with many extras. 15 minutes from Greenville. *300 per month. Mr Byrd 757 6961, 758 6l9B.

FOR RENT with option to buy in heart ot Farmville. 8 room house, 2 baths, central heat and air (gas) 753 3730.

HOUSES^ AND APARTMENTS in

town and country. Call 746 3284 or 524 3180.

IN AYDEN 3 bedroom, 2 bath brick house. Carpeted, heat pump, dish washer, stove, and refrigerator *340 a month. 752-5167 or 746 4194

THREE BEDROOM home, nice lol Call 752 3311.

2 AND 3^BEDRCX)M homes. *175 to *375. Call Echo Realty In corportated, 524-4148. _

137 Resort Property For Renf

RIDGE, Atlantic Beach. NC. Brand new handicap eguipped

teach cottage with all amenities This new cottage Is located on tht second row with a beautiful ocear

--------the

beautiful ocean

view and ' ocean access. *475 per week, beginning the week of /Way

'V'^^e parties. Call Bryant Kittrell, 752 6715after 5.

138

Rooms For Rent

PRIVATE BEDROOM, furnished, across from colleoe. 758-2585._

SINGLE FURNISHED room for discreet male student or youno businessman. $125 month. Nice home near Pitt Plaza. 756 SAA7.

142 Roommate Wanted

/WALE ROO/WMATE needed to share residence. *125 per month lus >3 utilities. Available May 1.

'52 1175 or 756 1455.

TO SHARE 3 bedroom furnished house in Stokes area. Reasonable rent. 752-1286 between 5:30    7    30

144

Wanted To Buy

G R HADDOCK Logging & Timbera ing and cutting ad species. Call

WANT TO BUY 3 old houses, approximately 25 35 years old, located in the immediate vicinity

located in the immediate vicinity ot Greenville. Call 752 2405 or 756 2949 after 6 pm. _

148

Wanted To Rent

MATURE COUPLE looking for a nice home lo rent. 1500 square teet. Nice yard. Pets allowedl. Call nights 756 4048.

STUDENT SEEKING 1 unfurnished room or apartment with private bath. Call after 12 noon, 758 7690.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

1401 Willow Street Office Corner Elm & Willow

752-4225

TWO BEDROOM apar available. No pets. Call Insurance 8. Realty, 752 2754

artments Smith

XVY9 bedroom apartment near ECU Appliances. *250 a month plus utilities. Available May I. Phone 758-0491 or 756-7809 before 9 pm

anees, central heat and air condi tioning, clean laundry facilities, three swimming pools.

Office M4 Eastbrook Drive

752-5100

EFFICIENCY APARTMENTS

All utilities Cable TV Telephone (soon)

Furnished

With or without maid service Weekly or monthly rates

weekly or monthly rates Starting *250 month and up

756-5555 Olde London Inn

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

CRAFTED SERVICES

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CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

TWO BEDROOM townhome, I'/z baths, fireplace, carpet, air condi tion. 756 344or 758 2181.

VILLAGE EAST

WE REPAIR SCREENS & DOORS

RemodehngRoom Additions

C.L. Lupton Co.

2 bedroom, tt/j bath townhouses. Available now. *295/month.

9 to 5 Monday Friday

756-7711

Quality fumltur* RaflnishIng and rapaira. Suparktr caning tor all typa chaira, largar aalaction o( cualom pictura framing, survay lakaaany langth, all typat of palala, hand-craftad ropa ham-mocka, aalactad framad raproducttena.

Eastern Carolina Vocational Center

Indualrlal Park, Hwy. 13 75M188    8A.M.^:30P;M.

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CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

WE INSTALL ALUMINUM AND VINYLSIDING

RemodelingRoom Additions

C.L. Lupton. Co.

7.S2 6116

CRH, RRT OR ELIGIBLE

Immediate openings avaHable for an Assistant Director and Respiratory Therapist/Technician or eligible In our Respiratory Department. Procedures include intubations, ABQs, hemodynamic monitoring, Pre Op pulmonary screening, PFTs, plus routine therapy. Assistant Directors responsibilities include coordinating all clinical activities, preventive maintenance program, Inservlce, quality assurance a^ other managerial duties. Join our progressive HCA team. Opportunities for education In EKQ, cardiac stress testing and Hdter monitoring.

CHIEF PHYSICAL THERAPIST

Join our progressive HCA team. Immediate full time position available for Chief Physical Therapist. Previous experience in general acute care hospital required.

Edgecombe General Hospital is an affiliate of Hospital Corporation of America providing a full range of In and Outpatient services. Enjoy our excellent benefit package including a slock purchase plan and tuition relnbursoment. Let your future begin with us. Submit resume to the:

PERSONNEL DEPARTMENT EDGECOMBE GENERAL HOSPITAL 2901 Main Street Tarboro, N.C.27886 or call Area 919-641-7156 EOE

Edgecombe General Hospital is an affiliate of Hospital Corporation of America. Enjoy our excellent benefit package including a stock purchase plan and tuition reinbursement. We

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EDGECOMBE GENERAL HOSPITAL

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Reg. Price $177.00

TAFF OFFICE EQUIPMENT

752-2175

sees. Evans St.

BRICK SALES REPRESENTATIVE

Repreaentatlve, Eastern North Carolina area. Must

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CERTIFIED FOOD SERVICE SUPERVISOR NEEDED

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EOE

Crossland

Homes

A brand new name, the same ^eat quality!

At .Mobile Home Brokers, our name may have changed, hut we haven't. We're still gding to be offering you fhe same uuality-builf homes we always have fitr fhe past 25 years. Why change, then? So that we can team up with our family of sale cenfers all over the South to ser\e you even better than before, Crttssland Homes, we want to make your dream of owning a home come true.

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Pitt G>mmunity College Serving Industrial Needs

Employees of three Pitt County industries are involved in specialized classes at Pitt Community College covering machine shop theory and emergency medical first responder training.

According to PCC officials, one of the major functions of the college is to serve the various types of industrial training or retraining needs of the county, and these specialized courses were designed with this in mind.

These offerings have been conducted in a practical.

flexible manner in which various skills have been tailored to meet ^ific industrial needs, said Ola Porter, assistant dean for continuing education at PCC. We have experienced some very fine relationships with many of our local industries in Pitt County while cooperatively providing in-plant training and on-campus training programs.

Thirteen employees from Empire Brushes are among those who have been involved with the machine

Troop A' Cites A Reduced Toll

There were 15 fewer traffic deaths in the 22 northeastern counties in Highway Patrol Troop A in 1982 than in 1981, troop Commander Carl Gilchrist said Monday, Gilchrist said 139 persons died on the highways in the troop in 1982, while 154 died in 1981.

The 142 Highway Patrolmen in the troop, with headquarters in Greenville, charged drivers with 56,790 traffic law violations during 1982. Gilchrist said 7,964 drivers were charged with driving under the influence during the year, an average of 76.2 arrests per trooper. The total represents a 12 percent increase of DUl arrests over 1981 and was the < second highest troop total in the state,

Gilchrist said 7,184 chemical tests for alcohol and drugs were administered by Highway Patrolmen in the troop during the year.

The officer also said 261,520 drivers licenses were

checked during the period, and 40,413 written warnings were issued, 302 of which were for violations of the child restraint law which went into effect July 1,1982.

The troopers in the 22 counties investigated 7.489 accidents during the year -an 8 percent increase over 1981; served 9,730 revocations and suspensions; rendered courtesies to 20.859 motorests; and presented 32C public information programs to various groups, in addition to various appearances on television and radio programs.

Gilchrist said patrolmen in the troop performed more than 150 blood and other medically related relays, such as organs donated for transplants, during 1982.

The average cost per mile for operating the troops fleet of patrol cars was 13.44 cemts, Gilchrist said, which was the lowest troop average in the state.

NCAA Denies

Wolfpack Trip

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -The NCAA has voted not to allow the North Carolina State basketball team to accept an offer from a private company to fly the team to Washington to meet President Reagan.

University Chancellor Bruce R. Poulton said today he was notified by Dr, John Toner, director of athletics at the University of Connecticut, that the administrative committee of the NCAA voted on our request and has denied our appeal.

The rule therefore remains in effect that the university may not pay the expenses of the team for the trip to Washin^on, nor can anyone else acting on behalf of the university.

Poulton said he will work at the next meeting of the NCAA to change the rule, which prevents the university or anyone on the universitys behalf from paying for post-season travel beyond 100 miles.

Capitol Broadcasting Co. had offered to pay for the teams travel to Washington after it learned that the university could not pay the -team's way.

President Reagan had scheduled a meeting with the Wolfpack on Monday, but the meeting had to be [wstponed while the school waited for a

ruling from the NCAA. Poulton said as a result of the NCAA ruling, the trip has been canceled.

Reagan invited the team to the White House after it won the NCAA championship in Albuquerque, N.M., beating Houston 54-52.

Toner told Poulton that he will support Poultons attempt to change the rule.

Poulton said the invitation to the White House was more than a social visit. 1 think it amounts to a decision by the president that there is a national interest involved. The way North Carolina State played captured the imagination of fhe man on the street.

I judge that the president wanted to recognize the outstanding performance of our team, which was cast as the underdog in many of its games. We appreciate so much their generous offer. Im just very disappointed we cant accept it.

Corrections On

Festival Events

Pair Arrested

In Car Break-In

Michael Grimes, 23. of 605B Contentnea St. and Anthony Derrick Bryant, 23, of 1001 Fairfax Ave. were arrested by Greenville police about 12:15 a.m. Sunday on charges of breaking and entering an auto in the parking lot at the Alamo on Memorial Drive.

Chief Glenn Cannon said an off-duty policeman saw the two drive up to a car owned by Lisa Taylor Rowe of Mount Olive, open a door with a coat hanger, and take more than $400 worth of property - including three handbags, $50 in cash, a calculator, stereo tapes and eight cans of beer - from the Rowe car.

The chief said the off-duty officer called for assistance and held Grimes and Bryant until other policemen arrived.

The times for the following upcoming Shad Festival events listed in Sundays Daily Reflector were not correct:

The Hickory Shad Fishing Contest dates are from Jan. 1 until noon Wednesday.

The Archery Tournament will be held Sunday afternoon, not Saturday.

The Historical Museum will feature weaving on the 200-year-old Blizzard Loom, not rug hooking. Rug Hooking will be demonstrated separately.

Square dancing will be done by the Ayden Allemanders and clogging by the Capital City Cloggers and by the Buck Swamp Kickin Cloggers, who will also give free clogging lessons.

The Golf Tournament will be held all day Saturday and Sunday, not just Saturday.

The Shad Festival begins in Grifton Wednesday and will continue through Sunday.

GUERRILLAS SLAIN WINDHOEK, South Africa (AP) - South African forces shot dead 30 guerrillas in several weekend clashes in South-West Africa, the military said Monday.

sh(^ theory and practice courses,. The courses, according to Jack Robinson, coordinator of cooperative skills training at PCC, were designed to train production mechanics to pit^riy use the lathes and milling machines, enabling them to fabricate and repair machine parts..

Stanley Zicherman, manufacturing superintendent of Empire Brushes Inc., said'this course, the fourth in a series completed by Empire employees and maintenance staff, helps eliminate loss of production due to machine down-time and waiting for parts orderd from vendors.

Zicherman said the courses have been highly successful in upgrading employees.

We have found that the individual has been given a basic foundation in machine shop practices whidi also helps to build his skills and understanding of the shops

ciq)abilities and fimctions, said Zicherman.

Our student trainees can now ^)eak to the machinist in his own language and be more assured of having the proper job done, when needed, without misunderstanding, be added.

Similar training of employees has In the past

PCC SERVES INDUSTRY ... Employes of three local industries are involved in specialized training courses tau^t by Pitt Community College designed to upgrade and increase their job skills. In the program are, left to right, Richard

Garris of Entire Brushes; PCC Machine Shop Oiainnan Jim Fulcher; instructor Bill Griner; George Campbell and Robert Leggett, both of Empire Brushes.

been conducted at Prepshirt Manufacturing Co., Procter & GamUe, Vermont American, Grady-White Boats and Union Carbide. Plans are now being made fm* classes at TRW Inc.

In addition, two classes in emergency medical first responder training have been (xmducted for 21 Burroughs WeUcome employees. These classes provided training in administering prq)er medical attention or lifesaving services during emer^ncy situations until a professional lifesaving group arrives.

We very much appreciate the assistance provided ty PCC in arranging for these courses to be taught at our plant, said John McConney, Burroughs Wellcome Greenville site general manager.

This is important for us since we are establishing an emergency medical response team made iq) of employee volunteers who have been trained in first aid and will be available on the spot to respond to medical emergencies and plant injuries, he added.

Ten employees of Simpson Industries will soon complete a class in machine shop math and blueprint reading designed to provide training in both decimal < and metric math and in machine blueprint reading.

According to PCC officials, such training shows the trainee how to set up

ecpiipmmt and lay out the proper parts for machining Diesel engine component parts accoi^ to blueprint

Gene Hiner, plant manager of Simpson Industries, said his company was highly pleased with the training program.

Our employees seemed to grasp the techniques and methods of what was being taught, as well as the technical details to accomplish quality machining methods,said Hiner.

The following instructors taught the courses: William Griner, Empire Brushes; Kathleen Sullivan and Fred Tetterton, Burroughs Wellcome, and Gary Smith, Don Williams and Joe Pasell, Simpson Industries.

This type of training is just another way of serving the people and industries in our community and we are pleased to be a part of it, said Jim Fulcher, chairman of the PCC Machinist Department.

According to Jack Robinson, PCC coordinator of cooperative skills training, the colleges abUity to respond to industries training needs has increased in the last two years.

This is due to dedication by state officials to provide more jobs to the people of North Carolina and the increased funding for new industry training and the cooperative skills training program, he said.

ir-

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Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.

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Title
Daily Reflector, April 12, 1983
Description
The newspaper was established in 1882, and was originally named the Eastern Reflector. It was founded by Julian Whichard and David Jordan with equipment they purchased from The Greenville Express. On December 10, 1894, it adopted the name The Reflector and began publishing every day. Cox Newspapers acquired The Daily Reflector in 1996. Creator: Daily Reflector (Greenville, N.C.) - 30418
Date
April 12, 1983
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
NC Microfilms
Location of Original
Joyner NC Microforms
Rights
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