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Fair t(ight witb lows in mid-50s. Partly cloudy Thursday and breezy, highs in the upper 70s.
THE DAILY REFLECTOR
INSIDE READING
Page 8-Areaitems Page 16The legislature Page 28Supercomputers
102NDYEAR NO. 88
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTIONGREENVILLE, N.C. WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, APRIL 13, 1983
76 PAGES5 SECTIONS PRICE 25 CENTSMargaref Wirth New Utilities Chairman
By STUART SAVAGE Reflector Staff Writer Members of the Greenville Utilities Commission Tuesday night elected Margaret Wirth as chairman for the coming ' year, approved an increase in electric rates begining June 1 and were told that bids for construction of a new waste water treatment plant will be received May 18.
Mrs. Wirth, a member of the commission since March 1980 and vice chairman for the past two years, replaces Hai^ Hagerty as chairman. Hagerty, a retired Greenville city manager, has served as chairman for the past year.
Bill Taft, a member of the commission since October 1981, was elected vice chairman.
Earlier in the meeting, commission members voted to begin tracking, or passing on, a 10.6 percent wholesale
electric rate increase to retail customers on June 1. The hike in the wholesale rate by the North Carolina Eastern Municipal Power Agency was necessary, GUC Director Charles Home said, to pay the power agencys share of repairs needed at the Brunswick nuclear power plant which is owned jointly by the power agency and Carolina Power & Light Co.
The new rates, as approved by the commission, will increase the cost of power to ie averagte residential customer and to large industrial users by about 6 percent a month, while charges for small general service or commercial customers will increase by about 7 percent a month.
The last electric rate increase approved by the commission came in September 1981, Horae said. He said that, even with the increase, GUCs rates are still below retail rates charged
by CP&L and Virginia Electric & Power Co.
Horae said that the power agency has told wholesale customers to expect another rate increase, of approximately 8 percent, about Oct. 1.
The director reported that the commission saved $496,484, about 2.6 percent, from May 1982 through December 1982 by purchasing its wholesale power from the agency rather than fromVepco.
In addition, Horae said that, begining in December, Greenville began receiving a transmission credit of some $83,000 a month because of the commissions ownership of the old Vepco substation here. That figure should increase, Horae said, after some billing factors with Vepco are resolved by the power agency.
In another report, Horne told commissioners that the
states Division of Environmental Management has approved the advertising for bids for construction of the citys new sewage disposal plant. The new facUity, capable of handling 10.5 million gallons a day, is expected to cost $10.4 million, of which 87'/2 percent will come from state and federal grants The total federal share amounts to $7.86 mUlion.
However, Horne emphasized that the bids cannot be awarded until they are evaluated and approved by the DEM and the federal Environmental Protection Agency.
Horae said the state action in authorizing the receiving of bids before an actual grant offer is made by the EPA is unusual, but he suggested the state is anxious to get the project under way.
(Please turn to Page 20)
Removing Unwanted Word
NEW CHICAGO MAYOR - Democrat Harold Washington wipes his brow as he appears before a crowd of
supporters early this morning after being elected mayor of Chicago. (AP Laserphoto)
Washington Is Elected Chicago's New AAayor
CHICAGO (AP) - Harold Washington, narrowly elected the first black mayor of the nations second-largest city after a divisive cam-pai^ changed with racial tension, today offered his hand in friendship and fellowship to every living soul in this city.
The two-term congressman, who defeated Republican Bernard Epton in Tuesdays election, will become mayor on a date to be set by the City Council today. He promised a new Democratic coalition in his four years in office, and said his first step would be to meet with Epton at a prayer breakfast - as both candidates had promised, win or lose.
REFLECTOR
We must work as one people for our common good and our common goals, Washington said after defeating Epton in an election marred by angry mob scenes,- watermelon lapel buttons and Vote Riit, Vote WhiteT-shirts.
Washington overcame a 1972 misdemeanor tax conviction, suspension of his law license and an array of unpaid bills to dash Eptons hope of becoming Chicago^ first GOP mayor in 52 years.
He won on a record 1.3 million turnout with a powerful outpouring of black votes, strong support among Hspanles and unexpectedly strong backing from reform-minded lakefront liberals at odds with City Hall
hOTLinf
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 Daily Reflector, Box 1967, Greenville, N.C. 27834.
Because of the liurge 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.
RENEWED HOPE
I would like for the residents of Greenville and Pitt County to know that finders are not always keepers. I took a pair of Jeans to A aeaner World last week and unknowingly left $5 in the pocket. When I returned to pick them up, a very kind and obviously honest young man by the name of Mike Garris informed me that he had found $5 in the pocket as he was preparing them for cleaning. I was speechless with gratefulness. Mike has given me r^we^l hope for the human race. Mrs. S.P.
for years. Michael Lavelle, chairman of the Board of Election Commissioners, said 82 percent of those registered to vote cast ballots.
With 2,885 of 2,914 precincts reporting early today, Washington had 656,727 votes, or 51.4 percent, to Eptons 617,159, or 48.3 percent. Socialist Ed Warren got 3,725 votes.
Ninety-seven percent of blacks cast their ballots for Washington, compared to 18 percent of whites, according to an exit poll. That was an improvement over the Democratic primary, when Washington got just 6 percent of the white vote in a three-way race.
History was made tonight, oh yeah, the beaming victor said as. an estimated 15,000 supporters chanted We Want Harold and broke up his acceptance speech with frequent whistles and applause.
"The whole nation is watching, and Chicago has sent a powerful message, he told those who greeted him at Donnelly Hall with nearly three minutes of chants of "Harold, Harold, Harold.
In taking the $<60,000-a-year post of mayor, Washington will have to take a pay cut. Members of Congress earn $69,500.
A Monument To Be Modified
A monument placed on the lawn at the Pitt County Courthouse by the American Legion in the 1950s will be modified this summer to remove the word colored, according to County Manager Reginald Gray.
Gray said the Board of County Commissioners authorized the work after Vietnam War veteran Glenn Maughan, a white East Carolina University student, complained about the wording on the stone slab.
Maughan wrote the board that a grave disservice has been done in the construction of this monument, which lists the names of Pitt County residents killed in World Wars I and II and in Korea, by listing the names of white and black veterans separately and especially by identifying the black veterans by the word colored.
It would seem that those who designed, built and engraved the monument sought more to remind those who view the piece of our segregationist attitudes than to honor the dead, Maughan wrote.
Gray said a complaint also was received several years ago about the'wording. As a result of that complaint. Gray said, county officials contacted the American Legion about changing the monument. We thought it had been done, although no one went to inspect the monument. Gray said. We werent aware it was still on there.
Gray said after he talked to a member of American Legion Post 39, which placed the monument on the courthouse lawn, commissioners agreed to have the monument altered.
Gray said a local firm will fill it in, but the temperature and humidity have to be just right before the work can be done. We want the word colored removed, Gray said.
Ernest Avery, post adjutant and an executive board member of the Legion, said he could not remember a request to change the memorial.
Avery also said, You know, back then, those things took place. Thats why those words colored are on there.
SEEK EXPORT CURB LA PAZ, Bolivia (AP) -U.S. Attorney General William French Smith and Bolivian officials have begun discussing a program to suppress the Andean countrys biggest export industry - its $2 billion-a-year illegal cocaine trade.
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WORDING TO BE CHANGED ... The word colored on a monument placed on the Pitt County Courthouse lawn in the 1950s by American Legion Post 39 will be filled in this summer. The Board of County Commissioners authorized the work after a letter protesting the wording was
received several weeks ago. The stone slab lists the names of Pitt County residents killed in World Wars I and II and in Korea, and separates the names by race, identifying the non-white dead as colored. (Reflector Staff Photo by Tommy Forrest)
Vote Of Psychiatric Task Force On Hospital Resulted In A Tie
By TOM BAINES Reflector Staff Writer A vote taken by members of the area psychiatric service task force relative to their positions on the issue of a privately owned psychiatric hospital here resulted in a tie, a committee member said this morning.
Bob Griffin, plant manager at Procter & Gamble Co. who is serving as an industry representative on the committee, said the 10 members who attended a meeting last Friday split five to five in voting on what stance the task force will recommend to the Pitt-Greenville Chamber of Commerce board of directors.
A spokesman for the task force indicated earlier that it had reached no decision at the Friday meeting, but the tie vote was not reported.
The task force was organized by the chamber to take an in-depth look at the scope of psychiatric services in the Greenville afea, particularly existing and proposed psychiatric services.
Charter Medical Corp., a privately owned company that operates or is developing 44 psychiatric and general acute care hospitals in the United States and several foreign countries, has applied for a certificate of need to build a 65-bed facility in Greenville.
The Project Review Committee of the Eastern
Carolina Health Systems Agency has voted te recommend that the full HSA board disapprove proposals by Charter and two other firms seeking to establish psychiatric hospitals in eastern North Carolina. The ECHSA governing board has scheduled a meeting for tonight to consider the review committees recommendation.
Griffin said that, as a
result of the five-to-five deadlock, reports reflecting the two opinions will be prepared by each side on the task force for presentation to the chambers board next Tuesday. He said the reports will be submitted in hopes that the board of directors will take a stand either in favor of or against the Charter Medical issue.
A source close to the committee also confirmed that the task force members
Complying?
WASHINGTON (AP) - The federal government is telling 19 states and Puerto Rico that they apparently arent complying with new, tighter welfare rules, and theyve been asked to explain why.
Most of the non-compliance appears to be technical, in the monthly reporting requirements, Linda McMahon, associate Social Security commissioner for family assistance, said Tuesday night.
Many of the administration proposals written into law in 1981 made it harder for women receiving Aid to Families with Dependent Children to receive income from a job at the same time.
We think the states are doing an excellent job, Ms. McMahon said.
Once replies are received, well enter into a process of negotiations. We dont expect to be in a position to withhold money.
Ms. McMahon said she did not know which states were asked for Information. According to todays editions of The New York Times, they were New York, Connecticut, Colofado, Florida, Idaho, Iowa, Maryland, Massachusetts, Missouri, New Hampshire, Ohio, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Vermont, Washington and Wisconsin, plus Puerto Rico.
attending the meeting were divided in their stances. The source said the task force, in studying the psychiatric services issue, had heard both sides prior to the meeting and were prepared to vote on a recommendation to the board.
Jeannette Cox, chairman of the group, said that everything is progressing nicely toward a presentation to the chamber board by the committee next week. The meeting has been set for 5 p.m. at the Ramada Inn.
Dr. Jon Tinglestad, representing-the East Carolina University medical school on the task force, said this morning he preferred not to make any statement regarding the committees actions prior to Tuesdays meeting.
Ray Wooten, representing the Grifton chamber, said he had been unable to attend the task force meetings and had asked to be excused as a member.
Attempts to contact several other members of the committee were unsuccessful this morning.
A source said that 10 of the 15 members who had been asked to serve on the task force had attended most of the meetings, ihcf were in attendance when the voW. was taken last Friday. -
Three Public Hearings At Q>uncirs Meeting
Three public hearings are among the agenda items scheduled for consideration by the City Council at Thursdays 7:30 p.m. meeting at city hall.
The hearings will be conducted on; a request by residents of the West Gum Road community to rezone 8.8 acres, located east of and adjoining North Memorial Drive, north of Gum Road and west of Fred Webb Grain Co., from R-^^ (residential) and unoffensive in
dustry to R-6-MH, to allow for mobile homes;
A request sponsored by the Planning and Zoning Conunission to rezone 19.08 acres, located between Seaboard Coast Line Railroad and North Pitt Street, from Moore Street northward to the city limits; from highway commercial to downtown commmercial fringe; and on the citys third year Com-nuintty Development application to the N.C. Department of Natural Resources and Community Dev^ment. r
Other items that will be considered include: appointments to boards and commissions; scheduling of a public hearings on petitions for satellite annexation by Carolina Opry House (continued at the March meeting) and by the owners of sections one and two of Greenridge subdivision; an amendment to the 1979-80 CD and 1981-82 Small Cities budget ordinances;
A resolution supporting the re-enactment of general revenue sharing; tax releases and refunds; an agreement wi^ Pitt Community
College for transit service; a joint agreement by the city and Greenville Utilities with the N.C. League of Municipalities for a pay and classification plan study;
A request for the city to repurchase,a lot in Greenwood Cemetery; the acceptance of Lake Road, from the northern line of Lake Ellsworth subdivision, section one, northerly approximately 1,750 feet to the dead end; and an ordinance prohibiting truck traffic on certain streets.
2-The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Wednesday, April 13,1983
Brisk Sales For Fall Easy-To-Wear Clothes
By BRENDA W.ROTZOLL
CHICAGO (UPI) - The American look for fall clothing is great: great business, great appearance, and a great big easy cut that make clothes easy to live in and work in.
Summing up in a sentence, what youll find in the stores for autumn will be: sweaters, dolman sleeves, more dresses than trousers, easy-cut classic suits, wide-cut coats to go over those suits, lots of shades of one color within a garment, and a choice of muted solid colors or multi-color mixtures especially in knits -cheerful but not gaudy.
Look for lots of pure wool in tailored suits; wool, mohair, acrylics or the increasingly popular cotton in sweaters and sweater coats and dresses, and the usual wearable, washable polyester in knits.
Look for smiles, too. Smiles were all over the faces of manufacturers and retailers alike at the fall clothing mart March 26-30 at Chicagos 15-story Apparel Mart, as they sold and bought at a clip generally reported to be 15 percent above that of last years fall market.
Harry Finkel is director of the Apparel Mart, where 4,500 clothing and accessory lines were jammed into 900 showrooms for the fall market. He calls the difference in business this year and last "like day and night. The attitude, more than anything, shows. A year ago the buying was not good, the attendance was not good. Now theyre buying and theyre optimistic.
"\Vere showing about a 25 percent gain in the company, more out here in Chicago, said Fred Bisbee Sr., showing Braemar of Scotland sweaters. Were very bullish.
* He said in addition to the traditional wools, cotton sweaters were booming because many women think theyre allergic to wool and because cotton can be worn 12 months of the year.
Retailers are telling me people are looking for things they can get longer life out of, said regional sales representative Jeff Burke of Act III, where sales were up 15-20 percent over last year. He reported skirt sales are much stronger than trousers in woven fabrics, but in knits, pants have the edge.
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There are fewer stores left, but those that are left are doing more business, Burke said.
This is the year of the sweater, Ron Schmidt, president of IB. Diffusion, said. It appeared in all of the European collections. Its been about three years since sweaters have been strong. He stressed casually elegant. oversized jackets in knits in shadings of charcoal, black and natural, as well as lots of tweeds.
Some of the prettiest shadings were shown by Cest Simone in a smashing cape tiered in three shades of gray wool, swept around and draped over one shoulder. The cape was worn over gray trousers, and came with a huge hat of black fur.
Dolman sleeves - slanting from a wide armhole opening to a tight wrist - were everywhere. They came cut in one piece with the bodice, or set in. Sleeves that werent dolman were cut with deeper armholes, making for ease of movement and less wear and tear on the garment.
Bassonova of Michigan offered a unique interpretation of the dolman-sleeved sweater in a gray and taupe blending of thick knit silk. The under-arm seam sloped from the tight wrist down to the waist, not in a straight line, but in a series of 90-degree an^es like an upside-down staircase.
Many sweater-knit dresses and suits came in shadings of one color, or in a mixture of many colors. They tended to be cheerful but not bright.
Dalton, one of the more expensive ready-to-wear lines (a knit suit with coordinated jacquard weave blouse runs $315), typified the trend to oversized jackets, and of the sweater replacing the blazer as the jacket choice. Its new designer, Leo Narducci, offered a handsome multi-pattern dark sweater with' a convertible turtleneck (it also buttons down and open), and a moderate dolman sleeve.
Daltons executive vice president, Jim Dery, reported sales this year are up 10-15 percent.
Suits in pure wool flannel and menswear worsteds tend to come in conservative colors and cuts, with skirts just below the knee.
Coats almost universally came in a larger cut with wider sleeves, be they -dolman or set-in.
Count Romi had a raincoat whose dolman sleeve was set in deep in the bodice on a diamond-slant cut. Lanvin of Paris showed loose, widebodied, square-cut coats with slightly dropped armholes, and stressed that they could be worn over a suit in comfort.
About coats: the Apparel Mart clusters its high-fashion
HAPPY 15TH BERNIE
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I LOVE YOU,
PHYLLIS
and higher-prices lines on the 12th and 13th floors, with the lower-priced lines downstairs. There were very few down coats visible on the top floors, but plenty of them on the lower floors.
Women Hear
frenda Gray and Dr. Frank Fuller from the Pitt County Mental Health Association gave the program for the Greenville Womans Club Friday.
General mental health was Mrs. Grays topic. Mental health encompasses the whole person and controls how we feel about ourselves, how we feel about other people and how we are able to meet the demands of life, she said.
Dr. Fuller, retired chairman'of the department of counselor of education at East Carolina University, gave the support part of the program. Since widows and widowers suffer one of lifes greatest stresses when they lose their mate, help is needed by the survivor to adjust to the loss, he said. A support group meets at the Newman Center, 953 E. 10th St., on the third Sunday night at7:30.
Clara Shackell conducted the business meeting and Dorothy Edwards was named recording secretary and historian.
The women will have a bridge luncheon at the club building from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. The table charge will be ho and reservations can be made by calling Helen Liles at 752-9120.
Carolyn James and Lib Respess were meeting hostesses.
State Officer Gives Talk
Mrs. Leon W. Robertson of Rocky Mount presented the program at the Major Benjamin May Chapter DAR meeting Saturday. She is state recording secretary NCDAR.
Is China Our Friend or Foe was the program topic. On a visit to China, Dr. and Mrs. Robertson joined a U.S. urological tour of doctors from the United States and visited the largest medical school and hospital in Shanghai.
Members, during the business session, vot^ on the chapters delegate for woman of the year. Two district workshops were announced on May 17 in Rocky Mout at the YWCA and the other Sept. 12.
The May meeting will be held at the Farmville Chapter House at 2:30 p.m. Hostesses will be club officers with Mrs. Elmer Flake, chairman.
Louise Hellwig, Mrs. Ed Carter, Mrs. Earl J. Dees and Mrs. Percy Pair were meeting hostesses.
Women who earn $25,000 and more are less likely to be married and more likely to be widowed or divorced than men of the same income, according to the American Council of Life Insurance.
Pk^BayShocs^
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Third Grader Needs To Write
To F amous Person
By Abigail Van Buren
C 1963 by Universal Press Syndicate
DEAR ABBY: I am in the third grade and live in Oxford, Conn. My teacher told us to write to a famous person so I am writing to you to find out if you know any. Thank you.
KNOWS NOBODY
DEAR KNOWS: Tell me who you think is famous enough, and I will see what I can do for you.
DEAR ABBY: A week ago my mother, who is 35, announced she is pregnant! At first I was mad. Now Im really upset. Everyone in the family is overjoyed thats all they talk about, and when they do I leave the room. I am 15 and have an older sister, 17, and a younger sister, 14.
This is our stepfathers first child, and I feel it is the wrong time to have a baby. We started adding on to our house two years ago But were unable to nish it because of financial problems. Abby, there just isnt room for another child right now.
I am the only person in the family who feels this way, and when I express my true feelings I am told that I am selfish. I have been very emotionally upset since I heard about this, and Ive been getting into a lot of arguments with my family. I know its not all my fault, but I have no one to turn to.
Can you please give me some advice?
NEEDS HELP
DEAR NEEDS: First, you are very intelligent to realize that you need help in handling your feelings of resentment.
Its not uncommon for siblings to feel as you do when a new baby is expected, but you are overreacting and need to talk to someone who will not make you feel guilty for expressing your feelings honestly. Discuss this with your school counselor, and please write again after the baby arrives. Ill bet a package of Pampers youll change your mind.
DEAR ABBY; This is a true story. We are two sisters who have the same in-laws because we married brothers. (We also live together.) Our problem is our in laws, who have made a habit of dropping in anytime they feel like it without calling to see if its convenient for us. This has developed into a power struggle, and we are losing!
We have tried every method we can think of over the years to maintain our privacy, but either they dont get the message or they choose to ignore it.
Weve tried being inhospitable and not speaking, going to our rooms or reading. Weve even pretended not to be home. We tried moving without telling them where, but they tracked us down through the post office. Weve even moved out of state, and theyve dropped in on us in the middle of a party and stayed two weeks! Then they moved nearby so they could drop in on us there, and when we moved back here, they movd also! They have held a party at our home by inviting other relatives and all dropping in together.
In short, we have tried everything, save turning them away at the door. We dont dislike them. Its just that they have no other interests, and just drop in on people as a hobby. We invite them for birthdays, holidays and at other times, but simply do not care to have them visit us as often as they do.
We are out of solutions. Please help.
- EXASPERATED IN VIRGINIA'
DEAR EXASPERATED: Your in-laws are either unbelievably insensitive or they were raised in n foreign culture where dropping in and staying indefinitely is acceptable.
In any case, I think it is up to your husbands to handle this gently, but firmly. Try to interest them in some local activities or some kind of volunteer work perhaps with senior citizens. It would help them. And you. I wish you luck.
Births
Taft
Bom to Mr. and Mrs. Lindburg Taft, Farmville, a daughter, Tomika SKmta, on April 5,1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.
Gm^us Boro to Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Ray Gurganus, Robersonville, a son, Allen Ray, cm April 6, 1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.
Gray
Boro to Mr. and Mrs. Charles WUliam Gray Jr., Simpson, a daughter, Aaron Renee, on ^ril 7, 1983, in Pitt Memorial Ho^ital.
Warm Boro to Mr. and Mrs. Larry Allen Warren, Route 11, Greenville, a daughter, Amber Dawn, on April 7, 1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.
Crandol Boro to Mr. and Mrs. Ronnie Masse Crandol, Route 2, Greenville, a daughter, Deirtra Elizabeth, on April 7,1983, in Pitt Memorial Ho^ital.
BosUc
Boro to Mr. and Mrs. Gary Horton Bostic, Route 13, Greenville, a daughter, Jo Leigh, on ^ril 7,1983, in Pitt Memorial Hoqiital.
BPWMeet
Announced
The Greenville Business and Professional Womens Club will be meeting Thursday at 6:30 p.m. at the Ramada Inn. The finance committee will present a program on How to Earn the Most Throu^ Wise Investments.
Nominations for officers will be announced and elections will be held at the May meeting. Plans will be finalized for the District X meeting hosted by the local club at the Holiday Inn ^ril 30.
Other clubs involved will be Nashville, Norfax, Roanoke Rapids, Rocky Mount, Tarboro and Wilson.
Members of the yearbook committee will be hostesses.
For reservations or information call 752-2917 or 756-5690.
The voice of Mickey Mouse for the first 20 years of the characters life was done by his creator, Walt Disney.
Muipbrey Born to lir. and Mrs. Virgil Neal Murpbrey, Farmville, a son, Christqiber Adam, on April 8, 1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.
Duke
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Wilton Russell Duke' Jr., Farmville, a son, WUliam Griffin, on April 8, 1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.
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Rt. 3, Box 376-C. Greenville. N.C Don & Lois Braxton Phone 756-2876 Monday thru Friday 10 A.M. to 5"P.M.
_Saturday by Appolntnwnt
Greenville Area Preservation Association
Presents
A SPRING TOUR OF GARDENS
Eastern
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Saturday, April 16,1983 10 a.m. until 3 p.m.
Beginning at The Robert Lee Humber Home, 117 W. Fifth St. and featuring the lush tropical plants at the ECU Greenhouse, The Graham Flanagan, Jr. estate; the private gardens of Dr. and Mrs. Ira M. Hardy, II; Mr. and Mrs. Charles Howard, Jr.; Mr. and Mrs. Roger Mann; Dr. and Mrs. Charles G. Rob; Mr. and Mrs. E. Hoover Taft, Ilf; and the country herb garden of Ms. Ginnie Tate. Brochure and directions available at The Humber House.
TICKETS AVAILABLE AT The Greenville Museum of Art The Pitt Greenville Area Chamber of Commerce
OR BY CALLING:
Ms. Annie Askew - 752-3403 Dr. David Phelps-758-2686 Mr. Richard Duncan-758-8881 Ms. Polly Dail-758-1446
AND AT THE HUMBER HOUSE ON APRIL 16
*5.00 Donation to The Greenville Area Preservation Association.
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Engagement Announced
CHARLOTTE GAIL HOGGARD...S the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Edward D. Hoggard of Windsor, who announce her engagement to John Benjamin Moore III, son of Mr. and Mrs. John B. Moore of Wilson. A May 7 wedding is planned.
Homemakers Haven
By Evelyn Spangler
Pill Honu* Agenl
Summer Sewing
Carmen Bigilio is the woman behind all the beautiful clothing you see in both the Vogue and Butterick catalogs. With 41 years of experience in dressmaking. Carmen has a wealth of information of fitting and sewing. Here are some of her special tips for summer sewing:
Pants
Pants can present problems for even the most experienced homesewer. To make them look ultraprofessional, Carmen suggests using a zipper that is too long! Start stitching the zipper for the bottom up. With the pulley on the bottom, attach the waistband. Then snip off the excess few inches of zipper left on top. This technique eliminates that little gap at the top of the zipper that can make it look unprofessional and prevent getting a tight, no-gap close.
Carmens technique for sewing pants is this:
1. Sew the side seams first, pressing seam allowances open very well. This seam is hard to press once the pants are put together, which is why its best to stitch and press first to get a good, flat seam.
2. Next, sew the inner seam of each leg. This the the place to make adjustments for fit in the back. That annoying baggy look just under the . buttocks can be taken of by simplying moving only the back part of the inseam in. Dont try to compensate for
bagginess by moving the side seams. Use only the inseam, and only the back half of the leg.
3. Sew the crotch seam from waist front to waist back air at onece. Follow the natural curve. Sewing all at once gives you a better, smoother, more nature line. Sew this seam twice, with the second seam V4 asway from the first. Press open the seams from the waistband down to the notches in front and back. Trim the remainder of the seam back to just past the V4 seam allowance, and do not press. Bathing Suits Carmen says the most important thing to remember when working on bathing suits or other garments that have a lot of stretch is to Pull! She also doubles the fabric for every bathing suit she makes. This technique, she says, Gives the suit more body and substance, and it also prevents seeing through any parts with white or light colors.
Summer Skirts With all the thim, floaty, white and light fabrics being used for summer skirts, special techniques are needed. Carmen says, You have to be careful when pressing, or every notch will show. Sew the side seams just one-no second seam. Press the seam flat, trim to V4, and then press to one side. This gives a beautiful look like a French seam. The technique can also be used for shoulder seams. For making hems on
Course Aims To Counter Distrust Of Health Care Among Patients
By RICHARD s. USIAK BUFFALO, N.Y. (UPI) -In most middle and upper class families, regular health checkups are a way of life. For the poor and disadvantaged, the day-t(Hlay struggle to survive often takes precedence over proper healthcare.
The State University of Buffalo is addressing the problem with a new medical school course designed to familiarize students with at-titudinal and cultural differences that affect the ways the poor perceive and accept healthcare.
The course currently has about 20 students, evenly divided by race and cultural background.
The poor typically have a greater mistrust of the health system than counterparts in other socioeconomic classes, said Dr. Maggie Wri^t, director , of
summer knit garments, Carmen prefers using the blind hem stitch. This hem, she says, does not make the buiky, ridged look that can ruin a delicate knit. She is careful to pick up a few threads as possible from the garment sidejust one thread if possible. Every few inches, she takes a back stitch so that, If you catch your heel in the hem, the whole thing will not fall down.
Pressing Like most professional dressmaker dressmakers. Carmen stresses pressing for' really professional results. First of ali, I always remind the ladies who work here that you are not ironing laundry, you are pressing. Pressing can make or break your garment. You should press Cacii pattern piece after its cut and before its stitched, press both back and front. This gets all the shrinkage out of the fabric. Many times ladies will see a bubble in the side seam and think something is wrong with the stitching. Its not. Its just that you havent got the shrinkage out, so its coming out when youre pressing the stitching. Press all your stitching as you do it, and remember, youre pressing the stitching. Also, always let the garment dry completely before you take if off the ironing board.
minority programs at the School of Medicine. And they may respond to care in ways which make them seem uninterested and uncooperative.
Dr. Wright said the poor are more likely to break appointments for medical care, and often prefer seeking care by crisis.
Since the poor are more likely to seek care only sporadically, receiving it in a hospital emergency room or clinic, they may never develop continuing, trusting relationships with primary physicians responsible for coordinating their care^on a continuing basis,'Dr. Wright said.
She said the care by crisis method often results from mistrust of the system and from poverty.
Not all who are poor or disadvantaged qualify for programs such as Medicaid, which pays for health care. Many working poor families can only afford to treat problems they view as life-threatening, she said.
Medical jargon can be confusing even to better-educated patients in the middle and upper classes. Dr. Wright said, and can be incomprehensible to the poor and uneducated or those not proficient in English.
A physician who suspects a patient does not understand should ask appropriate questions, she said.
Also, some medical problems may be prevalent among certain racial groups
ELECTRONIC SINGAPORE
SINCAPORE (AP) -Singapore will become the first Asian country to enter the world of electronic information later this year when television viewers will be able to call up news and other data on their sets, according to a management information systems journal.
MIS Week reports the new service will be launched in June by the state-owned Singapore Broadcasting Corp.
The service will be free for television subscribers, but advertisers will have to pay.
as well as the poor.
The hereditary blood disorder, sickle cell anemia, for instance, is limited almost exclusively to blacks, Dr. Wright said. But illnesses caused by
poor nutrition, health habits or living conditions may almost exclusively reign in the province of the poor.
The course also attempts to deal with language barriers that can affect physi-
' The DaUy Reflector, GreenvUJe,
cians ability to provide proper medical treatment.
Dr. Wright said it has the added attraction of teaching future physicians about backgrounds different from their own.
N.C.Wednesday, April 13,1983-3
Understanding the ways the poor live can contribute to the information needed by the physician to make correct diagnoses for many of these patients, Dr. Wright said.
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ditorals
Logic Goes Out
The IRS has practiced such absurdity for years. Now Arizonas state House Ways and Means Conunittee has topped it.
First the IRS said you had to report and pay taxes on gambling, which the law said you werent supposed to do anyhow. Now the Arizona committee says you have to buy a dealers license for $100 and pay luxury taxes of up to $125 an ounce for controlled substances, which the law again says you arent supposed to have.
Under the legislation, police could use existing laws to arrest anyone caught possessing marijuana or other, substances. And if the offending party didnt hold that dealers license or tax stamp, both would immediately be due as well as any punishment handed out for the possession.
As a safeguard to keep the courts from throwing out the whole thing for self-incrimination, the committee says applications for dealers licenses and taxes will be confidential.
As with the IRS and gambling, there are no moral factors involved in this legislation. A committee spokesman says the legislation, if approved, could produce nearly $10 million a year in new income.
If this carries, the next thing you know those anti-tobacco senators in Washington will outlaw cigarettes and then come up with a dealers tax on the grower and an excise tax on the smoker. It makes as much sense.
Perserverance Pays
Hows the weather? Its been lousy for farmers who are behind schedule in plowing fields and planting spring crops. Most are behind in their work because of the frequent rains which have moved through the area.
Despite it all, however, two pictures showed up in The Daily Reflector last week. One showed a farm worker busily plowing a field. The other depicted the first transplanting of tobacco reported to us.
Somehow, between the rains which move through every few days, the farmer is beginning to get preparation of fields under way and, no doubt, transplanting of tobacco and planting of other crops will soon be in full swing. What kind of growing season we will have remains to be seen, but farmers are getting their field work done.
Paul T. O'Connor-
Art Buchwald
Bottom Line
1 worry about doctors. Not all doctors. But just the ones who have investments in private hospitals. The reason I worry about them is that when youre a stockholder in a hospital you might have a conflict of interest between doing what is right for the patient, and what is good for the corporation.
Dr, Wesley Heights, who owns a piece of the Kidney Stone Memorial Hospital, told me he saw no ethical problem in a doctor investing his money in a Private hospital.
Doctors should own hospitals, he said. "Then they can personally see that their patients get the best treatment money can buy.
"But some people argue, I said, that if a doctor has a financial interest in a medical facility he may subconsciously hospitalize people, just to keep the occupancy rate up,
"Thats ridiculous Dr. Heights said, Ive never put a patient in Kidney Stone .Memorial unless he absolutely needed to be there. The Board of Directors does not pressure me to send them patients. As a matter of fact, I dont even put all my sick people in Kidney Stone. I send many of them to the Sisters of Mercy, which is a nonprofit hospital.
"How do you decide?
"Its strictly a medical decision. If they have a good health insurance plan, I putThe Daily Reflector
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them in Kidney Stone. If they dont, I find them a bed at Sisters of Mercy,
Sisters of Mercy must be thrilled to get all your indigent patients.
They probably would like more who can pay their way, but Kidney Stone Memorials computers are not set up to handle non-insured patients, while Sisters of Mercy has been doing it for years. So I know when I eend a destitute patient to Sisters hell get much better treatment than he would at Kidney Stone.
Will Kidney Stone take a non-insured person?
Of course we will if its a life or death situation. But as a profit-making hospital we owe it to our stockholders to make sure our loss-per-bed is held to a minimum. Some people have accused us of trying to put the nonprofit hospitals out of business. This is not true. We need them as much as they need us.
Why do they need you?
Because we take the burden off them, by providing services for people who can afford them. If we didnt take these patients, they wouldnt be able to accommodate the non-paying patients who also need hospital care.
I guess what troubles me is not the idea of private hospitals, but the thought that doctors own stock in them. That doesnt bother you?
On the contrary. Medical people should own a piece of the hospital they put their patients in. Who knows better how to keep costs dowii, and make sure the institution is being run at a profit.. Private hospital employees are on their toes because they know were watching them as carefully as were watching our patients, what makes Kidney Stone a great hospital is that our doctors worry about the bottom line.
I guess thats the only thing you have to worry about, I said.
"What the heck does that mean?
"If you worry about the bottom line and your patient, you could have a conflict in medical judgment.
"The patient always comes first, Dr. Heights said angrily. I dont know one doctor at Kidney Stone who has ever kept a client there longer than was absolutely necessary, unless it was a nice weekend and no one was waiting for the bed.
You dont have to get sore.
"when I graduated from medical school I took an oath that I would treat all patients alike whether they had Blue Cross, Group Health or Medicare. Ive never violated that oath. As a matter of fact, since I became an owner in Kidney Stone Memorial, Ive been able to look at medical care not only from the patients viewpoint but also from the stockholders. This has made me a better doctor, and richer for the experience.
(c) 1983, Los Angeles'Times Syndicate
State's Poverty Rate Climbs Again
RALEIGH - "Bleak and poverty. Those two words have always gone together well. But for a while there, the story of poverty in North Carolina was not as bleak as it had been.
The states poverty rate had bei 20.2 percoit at the end of the 1960s. But with a booming economy bringing good jobs to people who hadnt worked before and government programs helping others, the states poverty rate saw a dramatic improvement. By 1975, the poverty rate had dropped to 14.5 percent of the population.
But, now, the future again looks bleak in the world of poverty. "Ihe poverty rate has moved back up to 16.4 percent in 1981 and a report by the state Division of Economic Opportunity has some mighty discouraging projections about the years ahead.
Put into numbers, the rise in poverty from 1975 to 1981 represents 157,000 extra poor people. When we say 16.4 percent of
the ^tes populatkm, we mean one million peale.
The Changing Face of Poverty finds severai demographic characteristics (xmtributing to the poverty growth well see before the year 2,000. Households wdch are most prone to poverty are projected to grow much faster than the general population, as will the states highly iniipoverished senior citizenry.
EoRioroic develofrnioit, jobs, can only help 60 percmt of the poor. Hie other 40 percent cant work and their poverty is being aggravated by cuts in the gov-emmrat programs upon which they depend.
The most poverty-prone households are those with a sin^e parent and children and those where mm-related people live together. The single-parent family, in North Carolina and nationwide, has been growing due to increased numbers of divorces, separations and illegitimate children. The number of non-related
hous^lds which include peo|de who live alone - has increased prinuully because of the changing lifestyles of die young and a large gata in the elderty p<H>ulation.
As the number of the boudxdds in the state skyrockets, it will be those which are poverty prone that lead the way, demographers project. If present trends continue, those househcdds most prone to poverty ... will increase by over 100 percent, comprising oiw-half of all househdds by the year 2000, the report says.
Basically, the report is saying that sta^e women trying to raise families and elderly peale are most likely to be poor in North Carolina. The projections are for both of those pc^ulaticms to grow.
Of all households in the state, one-quarter are headed by women but, of impoverished households, 58 percent are headed by women.
This increasing proportion of poverty
Rowland Evans and Robert Novak
Sales Pitch Diplomacy
WASHINGTON - Without saying anything to the U.S. State Department, the Israeli government is risking further deterioration in relations between the two allies by trying to sell to American Jews the very West Bank lands that President Reagan insists Israel must stop settling.
The sales pitch was made, through the auspices of a tax-exempt American organization created to boost Israel, during a March 13 conference at New York Citys Sheraton Centre. Some 300 prominent Jewish citizens from.across the country were invited to hear Israeli government officials close to Prime Minister Menachem Begin brief them on current Mideast conditions and promote west Bank land sales.
That day-long conference, sponsored by Americans For a Safe Israel (AFSI), dramatized the complicating factor confronting the U.S. and its closest ally in the Mideast: the direct relationship between the Israeli regime and millions of American citizens.
Government officials from Jerusalem were blunt in informing the participants at the Sheraton Centre that not only are Israeli settlers on the West Bank to stay, but Israeli troops would have to remain in southern Lebanon unless and until Maj. Saad Haddads Israeli-backed Christian militia could take over. At that point in the meeting, the sensitivity of Israels
direct relationship with American Jews was underlined.
According to persons attending, there was a pause when a speaker declared that the Marines would be no match for Israeli troops in Lebanon. The speaker later told us that was a misinterpretation of what he really said; that the Marines were not capable of keeping the peace if the Israelis pulled out.
There is no doubt, however, that the invited guests were given brochures and maps explaining how easy it is for American Jews (non-Jews are not eligible) to buy a piece of the West Bank, with or without moving there themselves. That would put a private American presence into the Israeli settlement of the West Bank that always has been opposed by the U.S. government. The reaction at the State Department when it was learned what went on in New York was one of shock.
A written explanation (Purchasing Land in Samaria) told how to take title of land bought from Arab deed-holders. A check payable to Eretz Israel Academy in the West Bank town of Kadumin (where an Israeli settlement has been widely criticized) would buy land in areas to be developed in the near future at $3,800 a dunum (one-fourth of an acre) or $2,500 in areas scheduled for later development. A brochure compared that to $80,000 a
dunum for land near Jerusalem, warning that prices are rising rapidly.
Moshe Arens had b^n scheduled as the main speaker March 13, but AFSI director Peter Goldman explained to the guests that Arens had left as ambassador to the U.S. to return to Jerusalem as defense minister. Substituting for him were Ehud Olmert, a member of parliament who belongs to Begins Likud Party and is close to the prime minister, and Mayor Era Rapaport of Shiloh, another controversial West Bank settlement.
Mayor Rapaport, a former American citizen, declared his motive was idealism when he first settled on the West Bank. But today, he continued, it is not idealism that makes the West Bank so attractive but simply that it has become a good place to live with huge mortgage subsidies and cheap land. A West Bank apartment twice as big as a Tel Aviv flat, he said, costs only half as much.
Only last week Reagan shocked Israel by banning the sale of promised F-l6s because of Israeli foot-drag^ng in Lebanon. Discovery of Israeli solicitation in the U.S. for purchasing West Bank land in direct opptfiition to U.S. policy might evoke a similar presidential reaction. Israels direct relationship with Jewish Americans could mean more trouble with official Washington.
boQsebtads headed by tunen ... is doe largdy to the economic impact of separation, divorce; widowhood, looger life spans, the lack of better paying jobs and limited job (^rtunitites for women, the rq^ stated.
Of aU households in the state, about 18 porcent are beaded by senior citizens but soiior citizens bead 37 percent ot the impoverished bousebtads. The 1980 U.S. Census showed that (mes}uarta' of all dderly North Caroltaians are pom*.
Demogrq[taers say that the states elderiy population will rise by almost 70 percent by the year 2000. If tad people in North Carolina have such a high povorty rate, the state faces a Ueak future as the general population gets tader.
In the eaily 19702, North Carolina dramatically reduced its poverty rate. Now, in 1983, the state rqxirts that, The magnitude of poverty facing the state during the coming year may be even greater than today.Public Forum
To the edito:
The League of Women Voters of Greenville/Ktt County wishes to express our concerns about the role the City Council is considering taking relative to the new prqiosed private psychiatric hospital.
The league neither endorses nor opposes the pixposed psychiatric hoqjital. Our concerns deal with the ajpearance of a potential conflict of interest and what appears to be a lack of objective and comprehensive dta on which to base a decision. We appreciate the fact that one member of the council has abstained from voting on this issue because of a self-declared conflict of interest.
However, the newqiaper reported that the council voted to delay a decision pending the report of a study to be dime by the chamber of commerce. The newspaper also reported that the City Council member with a conflict of interest is a rqiresentative on that committee. We appreciate the councils sincere interest and effort to obtain further information before making a decision, but we would question this approach on this issue. The league would h(^ that the council member would also recogni^ the potential conflict of interest with his involvement in the chamber study.
Our major concerns in this conqilex issue then are what appears to be a conflict of interest and a lack of comprehensive, thorough and unbiased information on which to base this important decision.
We urge the council to give serious and in-depth study before arriving at a decision because this will have a far-reaching impact on the citizens of Greenville and Pitt County as well.
RbeaMarkeUo
Presidait
League taf Women Voters of Greenville-ntt County
Editor note: Louis Clark, contacted by The Daily Reflecto Monday, said that be stated in a Qiamber of Commoce Task Force meeting held April 8 that be will not vote on the psydiiatric boqiital issue because of the same conflict of interest
on the same ismie as a City Council member.
Letters tQ Public Forum should be limited to 300 words. The editor reserves theri^t to cut l<mger liters.
John Cunniff-
They Fail To See The Future
NEW YORK (AP) Businesses died last year at a rate unsurpassed since the 1930s, and in almost every instance they were simply listed as victims of recession.
But it wasnt only so. Lots of them died because they were mismanaged. It probably wasnt nice to say so last year, but this year some more objective analyses are gaining a hearing. ,
But certainly you cannot say that homebuders could have bucked the economic obstacles presented them. Or can you?
Toll Brothers, the Philadelphia areas largest home construction company, built more homes last year than in any other year and claims it earned a return of 8 percent on sales.
Most homebuders, said Robert ToU, president, are inflexibUe. They have no systems. They remain entrepreneurs rather than growing their enterprises into businesses. They exploit opportunities, and faU when opportunites shrink.
Most homebuders last year sought to interest customers with the same sales tactics they had used in good times. But they faed to graqi the new factor, said ToU. They were ignorant about financing. ToU studied it.
RetaUers were also on the faUure list, and many of the largest retaUers experienced severe problems short of bankruptcy. Once again the recession became the catchaU for explaining their
faUure.
But poor management certainly must bear some of toe blame.
RetaUers lack long-range concern for changing economic and technological situations, says Stqihen J. Recobs, director of Purdue Universitys RetaU Institute.
Recobs and coUeague Richard A. Fetaberg surveyed chief executives of
100 tq>-volume retaU department stores throughout the country, asking them to list the specific issues facing their industry.
Only 7 percent of toe executives mentioned the economy, and 6 percent cited technology as significant long-range issues, he said. Said Fetaberg: RetaU executives have, historicaUy, been reactive and slow to adqit planning
Elisha Douglas
Strength For Today
What does Christian faith promise a believer?
It promises him a new nature. It is not a matter of patching up the old, but of renewing it to such an extent that is is basically changed quite independtly of personality.
Therefore, we may continue with the temperaments with which we were bom. We may be light-hearted or serious Christian faith takes us where it finds us and uses our temperaments to glorious ends. There is
a place for both kinds of individ-uals.s
Similarly, there is a place for the activist and the intellectual. Racial differences disappear in the Christian picture, as do nationalities. If any man is in Christ, he is a new creation.
So let us stop thinking of religion as a mere matter of belief or pious practice. Religion is the infusion of new life into an existence that has grown weak, or painful, or barren, through indifference and sin.
as an integral part of management.
Most analyses of economic cimditions fix on a few bogeymen to account for what is hqppoitag, say Paul LawroKe and Davis Dyer. The iist includes too much government, not enough government, worldwide recession, unfair competition from trading partners, greedy labor unions, obsolete industrial technology.
Davis and Lawrence, a professor at Harvard Business Sitoooi, concede there is something to be said about such reasims, but they dont believe any of them reveal the confete truth.
In Renewing American Industry, a book to be pniblisbed April 29, they contend that many of our current economic problems follow from an inability of companies to anticipate and adapt to
Lawrence and Dyer surveyed seven major American industries automotive, stota, hospitals, housing, agrictdture, coal and teleamununlca-tions - and conclude that success or faOure lies not so much in outside economic facton but in how an organiz-tk reqwnds to fundamental dia^ in itsenviromnent.
Consider, they say, the different fates of Dtata and Braniff, one a success, another a failure in commercial air transportation. And International Harvester and John Deere, one in deq> troutde, the other still intaltatae.
'I *
jt-A*'
TT>e DaUy Reflector, GreenvUJe. N.C.-Wednesday, April 13.1983-5
m ^ *"^"J'"'wr,ureenvuje,N.t'.-Wedi
40 Years Later, U.S. Hunting Nazis
By MARIANNE McGOWAN French Smith agreed to have formor Ht7AnC IvhA kOMA klinAw A._. -
PROPOSED MEDALUONS - Secretary of the Treasury Donald Regan announced in Washington Tuesday a new program to make U.S. gold available in the form of medallions for investment purposes. The one^nmce piece, containing l.OOO troy ounce of fine gold, features Louis Armstrong. The half-ounce piece, containing .500 troy ounce, features Frank Uoyd Wright. (AP Laserphoto)
The Rights of Children
The idea that children have rights is a relatively recent one. Under Roman law, fathers literally held the power of life and death over their sons and daughters. They could abandoh them, beat them, or kill them for disobedience. In 1691 philosopher John Locke suggested a revolutionary idea that parents are the caretakers of children, not their owners. Laws protecting children did not become common until the 19th century. And humane societies for animal welfare were among the first to intervene when parents mistreated their children. April is Child Abuse Prevention Month a time to recognize that, even today, millions of children do not have the rights they deserve as human beings.
DO YOU KNOWWhat 19th-century author called attention to child abuse in his novel Oliver Twist?
TUESDAYS ANSWER-John Glenn was the first American to travel into Earth orbit. '
_ _ c VEC. Inc. 1983
By MARIANNE McGOWAN Associated Press Writer NEW YORK (AP)-After decades of seeming apathy about reports of alleged World War II criminals living quietly in America, government activity against suspected Nazis or their collaborators is at an all-time high.
The Justice Department is investigating 200 cases as well as conducting a separate inquiry into reports that U.S. intelligence agents might have shielded Klaus Barbie, head of the Gestapo in Nazi-occupied Lyon, France, after the war in exchange for his help in post-Soviet espionage.
The General Accounting Office, the investigative arm of Congress, has launched its own probe of the post-war relationship between American intelligence agencies and certain Nazis, including Barbie.
The investigations come at a time when public sentiment in this country favors action against alleged war criminals - a marked change from the past.
Were definitely coming in late, said Allan A. Ryan, head of the Justice Departments Office of Special Investigations.
As a result, were probably the most active country right now. But thats a dubious distinction. Other countries did this work 20 to 30 years ago.
Ryan currently is on leave from the OSl to head the Barbie investigation. The OSI seeks alleged Nazi war criminals in the United States and moves to deport them on immigration violations. Those who are U.S. citizens must first be stripped of their citzenships.
The alleged Nazi collaborators being prosecuted by OSI were believed to have slipped into the country in the late 1940s and early 1950s, fooling immigration officials. But the allegations about Barbie, implicating high-level U.S. officials, have raised some uneasy questions.
After initial resistance. Attorney General William
French Smith agreed to have Justice investigate the Barbie affair. Barbie has been twice convicted in absentia in France in connection with the deaths, torture or deportation of 11,000 Jews and French resistance workers during the war.
Ryan said he intends to examine whether the Army Counterintelligence Corps worked with Barbie, whether U.S. officials shielded him from French ' authorities after the war and whether the U.S. government had any relationship with him after he fled to Bolivia.
Its immense, John Tipton, a GAO senior evaluator, said of the GAO project, whUe declining to discuss details. He said the agency was coordinating its efforts with Justice, but that the two groups were working separately.
Forty years after the war, the OSI has denaturalization cases pending against 13 East European-born U.S. citizens suspected of having concealed past collaboration with the Nazis. The defendants would lose their citizenship if the government proves they hid past activities when immigrating.
The OSI also has deportation cases pending against nine resident aliens and six
former citizens who have already been denaturalized. Four other cases were closed after the defendants died.
Ryan says in all about 200 cases are under investigation, although many may never result in charges.
Two former citizens - a native Romanian and a native Ukrainian - now await deportation, the first people to be ordered out of the United States for Nazi activity.
Valerian Trifa, 68, a Romanian Orthodox bishop in Grass Lake, Mich., and Feodor Fedorenko, 75, a retired factory worker living in the Philadelphia area, were found by U.S. courts to have hidden past activities as Nazi collaborators when they came to the United States.
A third deportation case is nearly completed. Hans J. Lipschis, a Lithuanian-born citizen of West Germany, agreed to deportation last Dec. 23 and said he would return to Germany by April 21.
In the 1950s and 60s, immigration officials did little to investigate suspected cases of Nazis living in the United States. Simon Wiesenthal, the famed Nazi
hunter in Vienna, Austria, said Americans were more concerned with fighting communism in those Cold War days.
The U.S. efforts came too late, he said. Too many witnesses have died.
Action was first brought against Trifa in 1975, a time when the public mood began to shift away from Cold War attitudes and Congress pressed for action, creating OSI in 1979. Because the United States cannot prosecute anyone for the actual war crimes, OSI brings suspected war criminals to trial on charges of violating U.S. immigration law.
U.S. investigators and prosecutors now travel to the Soviet Union, Poland, and other Eastern European countries to gather evidence against the defendants. Some concentration camp survivors are brought here to testify in court. In all, the OSI spends $2.6 million a year.
To get leads, Ryan says government investigators search documents from the 1930s and 1940s, comparing names of concentration camp guards and SS officers
against U.S. immigration files.
That tends to be a much more reliable source than someone calling to say they think their nei^bor is a Nazi, he said.
Ryan explained that it had been relatively easy for former Nazi collaborators to
enter the United States after
the war
Pies Baked Daily
DIENERS BMERY
HSDtefclmonAy.
Donald R. Patrick, D.D.S.
is pleased to announce the association of
Donaltd L. Hardee, D.D.S.
for the practice of General Dentistry
207 Commerce Street Greenville, N.C.
756-5388 756-6626 756-5911-New Patients
Office Hours Mon., Thurs. 8 A.M.-9 P.M. Tucs., Wcd.,Fri. 8A.M.-5P M
P
0^^ Outlets Outlets Outlets Outlets OTitlets Outlets Outlets Outlets Oi~s
CORRECTION
In Sears Days Sale on page 6, none of the furniture and bedding Is available in the Greenville store, and on page 11, the camera outfit and E.T. riding cycle are not available. Swing set and gym set available by special order only. On page 10 the 4227 Color TV with remote control advertised at special purchase $399.99 will not be available for sale. We are sorry for any inconvenience this may cause you.
Sears, Roebuck And Co.
OrMnvHI*. N.C.
Beivoir Factory Outlet
Located In Old Beivoir Schoolhouse, Hwy. .3.3 Thursday & Friday 9:.30 -5 P.M.
SPOWTSWEAWj
Located Between Bethel & Tarboro on Hwy 64 Hours 9-5 Mon -Sat We Accept Visa & Mastercard
Factory Outlet
^ated in Old Grimesland School House On Hwy. ,3,3 Hours: Thurs.-Fri 9:30-5 Sat 9'30-330y
Visit Store Nearest You For These Spring Specials
Ladies Name Brand Placket Shirts
$y99
Infant Jog Suits
Reg. 526 Good Irreg.
Sizes 12 mo.-24 mo. Reg. $7.99
Now
$450
Ladies Name Brand Jog Suits
$499
Fleece, 3 Styles 2 Piece Sets Reg. $19
Ours
Ladies Sasson Twill Slacks
$999
Assorted Styles & Colors.
Reg. $22 Ours
Infant Sleepers .00 irreg.
Other Items For Infants At Discount Prices
Were bringing back the Old Fashioned Outlet Days. No Atmosphere, Just Bargains
Outlets Outlets Outlets Outlets Outlets Outlets Outlets Outlets Out
carotina east mall ^greenvilleTABLETOPSale and Showcase
Set a complete table with our Table Top credit plan
Our Table Top credit plan makes it easier for you to take advantage of our special sale prices. Buy your china, crystal or silver now and pay for your purchases monthly (up to 24 months) with no finance charges. Some plans may require a minimum purchase amount, a minimum monthly payment, or may run for less than 24 months. The Table Top plan is an installment contract agreement and requires credit approval. Complete information is available in the Fine China department.
C. Mirabelle
D. Potpourri
Save 15% to 40%
Classic designs for your table by Wledgwood
A selection of dinnerware'for elegant, formal tables or casual Quoen'i War place sattingi
. informal settings, all in the fine tradition of Wedgwood. ^ tock pkcas . ^
Five-piece place settings include dinner, salad, bread plates, Potpourri 5-pc. place setting. Reg. $70......49.00
cup and saucer. (Soup bowl replaces bread plate in Midwinter.)
Sava 40% on Adama ironstona place tattings Save 20% on Bone China place aattinga Sava 20% on open stock piecaa ' on aa
Sava 15% on open stock pieces Lancaster 5-pc. place setting. Reg. $50 .... oO.OO
A. Runnymede Dark Blue 5-pc. place settinq
(Not Shown) Reg. $180.......... 144.00 Save 40% on Midwinter Oven-to-Table place settings
^ Sive 20% on open stock pieces
B. Medici 5-pc. place setting. Reg. $105 85.00 ^ Wild Oats 5-pc. place setting. Reg. $48......&0.oU
Save 20% on Lasting Impressions place sattinaa avaHaMa: Sava 15% on Wedgwood gtftwara
Sava 15% on open atock piaoss S'' exquisito Jasper Ware and Peter Rabbit Items.
C. Mirabelle 5-pc. place setting. Reg. $75...... 60.00
F. Wild Oats
SOME PAHERNS MAY REQUIRE SPECIAL ORDERING.SALE ENDS MAY15,1983.Shop Monday through Saturday 10 a.m. Until 9p.m.-Phone756-B-E-L-K (756-2355)
6-The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Wednesday, April 13,1983Hanoi Indicafes Withdrawing Troops In Cambodia
BANGKOK, Thailand (AP) - Vietnam said today it will withdraw some of its troo>ps next month from Cambodia, where they have engaged in a major offensive during the past two weeks against Cambodian resistance fighters.
Radio Hanoi, in a broadcast monitored in Bangkok, said the withdrawal was announced Tuesday by the foreign ministers of Vietnam and the Hanoi-baCked Cambodian government at a meeting in Phnom Penh, the Cambodian capital. No details were given on the date or extent of the withdrawal.
Vietnamese troops have been in Cambodia since 1978, when they ousted Communist leader Pol Pot and installed another Communist regime headed by Heng Samrin. Pol Pots Khmer Rouge guerrillas continued a resistance campaign and have formed a coalition with two non-Communisl resistance f groups.
Hanoi's announcement follows a fierce Vietnamese military offensive in the past
two weete which knocked out three bases of resistance guerrillas along the Thai-Cambodian border, forced thousands of civilians to flee into Thailand and generated charges that other civilians had been massacred.
Along the embattled border, Thai military sources said Vietnamese troops ambushed a Thai patrol near the Gulf of Siam today while Cambodian guerrillas bttled with Hanois forces in several areas.
The military officers said a Thai border patrol unit was attacked by Vietnamese just inside Thai territory in southeastern Trad province near the sea. The officers, contacted by telephone, said one Thai trooper was wounded.
Scattered fighting was reported inside Cambodia south of Aranyaprathet in areas where the Vietnamese are trying to drive out the Khmer Rouge guerrillas.
Most Western and Thai military analysts predict that if the Vietnamese con
tinue their recent intense offensive, the most likely targets will be north of Aranyaprathet. Two large camps of the opposition Khmer Peoples National Libe|ption Front are located there.
Ban Sangae houses some 23,000 Cambodian civilians, and Npng Samet another 77,000. Both encampments are guarded by guerrillas of the front, a non-Communist resistance group that is one of three partners in a coalition fighting Communist Vietnams forces in Cambodia.
The Vietnam News Agency reported today on the meeting in Phnon Penh of the foreign ministers of the three Communist Indochinese nations.
Hun Sen, foreign minister of the pro-Hanoi government in Cambodia, reportedly lauded the thunderous and accurate attacks on guerrillas along the border.
The {wlitical, diplomatic and military victories we have recorded show that our forces are strong, our posi-
Propose Toll To Repair Outer Banks Highway
WASHINGTON (AP) -Visitors to the Cape Halteras National Seashore would pay a $2 user fee to help finance repairs to N.C. 12 under a proposal by the National Park Service.
The Reagan administration has proposed the toll as a compromise'with the state, which wants the federal government to share the cost of repairing and maintaining the 73-mile main artery of the Outer Banks.
The plan has already drawn opposition from persons in the area of the park.
The reaction here would be opposition to it, said Robert V. Owens Jr., chairman of the Dare County Commissioners and owner of Owens Restaurant in Nags Head.
We depend on tourism, Owens said. I just think it would put a bad taste in the tourists mouth.
Owens calls N.C. 12 a national disgrace.
It is terrible. Nobody would believe it unless you drove down it, he said. There are potholes, there
BIG BABY - Bob and Patricia Clark hold their newborn son Kevin at Community Memorial Hospital in Toms River, N.J., Tuesday. Kevin weighed in at 16 pounds, 6 ounces at birth Friday, and is one of the largest babies ever bom at the hospital. (APLaserphoto)
are washouts. Some days they have to cancel school. Any weather or rain will bring the sea tides over it and wash out the asphalt.
North Carolina Republicans Sens. Jesse A.^ Helms and John P. East have introduced legislation that would authorize the federal government to help pay for cost of repairing the state-owned road that runs through the federally-owned park.
Mary Lou Grier, deputy director of the National Park Service, said the administration would agree to pay up to 50 percent of the roads costs, only if the bill were amended to allow the federal government to finance its share through tolls.
In light of the presidents program to reduce federal expenditures, we oppose the enactment of (the bill) unless it were amended to authorize the (Interior) secretary, through imposition of visitor users fees, to collect the amount necessary to reimburse the federal portion of the necessary improvements to N.C. 12, Ms. Grier told a Senate subcommittee that held a hearing on the Helms-East legislation.
Rep. Walter B. Jones, D-N.C., who plans to introduce a bill similar to the Helms-East measure in the House next week, would want to examine the fee closely before supporting it, said Harold L. Johnson, the congressmans legislative assistant.
Even though residents would be exempted, they might face long delays at toll booths.
Youd also have the problem of tradesmen getting in and out, Johnson said. "Youd have the problem of Aunt Millie visiting cousin Sally in Salvo. It would be difficult to administer.
tion is firm and our cause is shining with justice, Hun Sen was quoted as telling the conference.
The meeting also was attended by Vietnams Nguyen Co Thach and Phoun SiphaseuthofLaos.
Western diplomatic sources say the Phnom Penh
'Sex Symbol' On Sidelines
NEWPORT BEACH, Calif. (AP) Mamie Van Doren .hasnt lost her youthful figure, but time is making its mark and the sex goddess of the 1950s finds her name no longer attracts crowds -even in her own backyard.
Still, the 50-year-old Miss Van Doren says she has no regrets.
At the height of her career, she reportedly was making about $250,000 a year. Now she runs an antique shop, gives occasional seminars on human sexuality, and lately has been working on a nightclub act. She left the movie business in 1967.
An actress lasts a lot longer than a sex symbol, says Miss Van Doren, bom Joan Lucille Olander in Rowena, S.D.
Her name didnt draw enough response to justify an appearance later this month at a Santa Ana nightclub just 10 miles from her home. The steak house canceled the show.
But the undaunted glamour girl says shes not disappointed and will take the show to Columbus, Ohio. I dont really like working too close to home, anyway, she said recently.
I appreciate getting old, she says. I feel very lucky I have my health. I dont regret anything.
Salk Chosen To Receive Award
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) - Dr. Jonas Salk, developer of the first polio vaccine, has been chosen to receive the 1983 Harry S. Truman Good Neighbor Award.
Salk, 68, will be cited as a man who has performed an exemplary service for mankind, Henry J. Talge, who established the award, announced Tuesday.
Salk is founding director and resident fellow of the Salk Institute for Biological Studies in La Jolla, Calif.
The presentation will be made at a luncheon May 6, the 99th anniversary of the birthday of the late President Truman, Talge said.
Previous winners include Sen. BarryM. Goldwater, R-Ariz., news commentator Eric Sevareid, diplomat W. Averell Harriman, former Vice President Nelson A. Rockefeller, former President Gerald R. Ford and the late Chief Justice Earl War-
govemment has managed to put together an army of some 30,000, including regional forces. But the bulk of the fighting along the border in the 4-year-oId guerrilla war has been done by Vietnams troops.
In another development, the Vietnam News Agency
said Hanoi sent a note Tuesday to Chinas Foreign Ministry protesting an alleged increase in armed provocations and harass-ments in Vietnamese northern border provinces.
The agency said an earlier protest was lodged after the Chinese staged more than 25
such armed incidents during the week of March 24-31. The Chinese disregarded that protest and since A4)ril 1 have made more than 20 incursions and provocations, the agency said.
Chinas official Xinhua news agency said Vietnamese troops poured more than 3,100 rounds of light arms
and artillery fire into Chinese border communes on Monday. On Sunday, China had warned that Vietnam could suffer grave consequences if border provocations continued.
China backs the three-party Cambodian coalitm trying to drive the Vietnamese out of Cambodia.
Denied Bond In Mother's Death
756-4622
756-2292
PINE KNOLL SHORES, N.C. (AP) - A woman charged in the shooting death of her mother last week was charged nine years ago with drowning her 14-week-old son, according to a Pennsylvania newspaper.
Susan,, Lee Scheirer, 36, was denied* bond Monday in Carteret County District Court after being charged in the death of Olga Hedrick. District Court Judge James E. Martin of Bethel ordered Mrs. Scheirer to Central Prison in Raleigh for a psychiatric study to determine whether she is competent to stand trial.
Scheirer allegedly shot her mother, Olga Hedrick, three times with a .22-caliber gun and then shot herself in the left thigh. She told police the shootings were committed by intruders.
She was arrested Saturday after she was released from Carteret General Hospital, where she was being treated , for her injury.
According to The Reading, Pa., Times, Mrs. Scheirer was charged with drowning her son on Nov. 18, 1974. A judge found her mentally incompetent to stand trial and committed her to Wernersville State Hospital, where she stayed for about a year.
Trial testimony revealed she was treated for schizophrenia at Wernersville. Several doctors testified Scheirer was mentally ill at the time of the drowning and also said they still considered her mentally ill at the time of the trial in 1976.
A jury found her not guilty of that murder by reason of insanity.
The woman was living with her mother at Pine Knoll Shores'when the shooting occurred, according to Pine Knoll Shores Police Chief Edgar Crawford. He said he did not know when she moved here.
The psychiatric study is expected to take between 30 and 90 days to complete. Scheirer is scheduled to be returned to the Carteret County Jail after the prisons doctors finish their tests.
Authorities have not discussed any possible motives in the killing.
TO VISIT POLAND
MILAN, Italy KAP) -Cardinal Carlo Maria Martini, archbishop of Milan, will visit Poland April 22-25, his office has announced.
New Telephones
Prewire Your New Home Or Business
Add New Phone Jacks
Add New Phones In Your Present Home
For More Information, Call
Hembys Electrical Service
Wayne Hemby
756-4622 * 756-2292
Inquire Also For Any Other Electrical Work Needed
NIGHTTIME-FAMILY DENTISTRY
FAMILY DENTISTRY
DR. ROBERT L. CAPPS
DR.QUALLIOTINE DR. Q
DR. GARY E. MICHELS
Practice of Family Dentlatry
1012 ChafiM Blvd. Located Behind Crowe Neet Phone 752-1337
8 A.M.-9 P.M. Mon.-Thur.
8 A.M.-5 P.M. Friday 8A.M.-11:30A.M. Saturday
All Aspects Of Dentistry Provided Childrens Dentistry Surgical Removal Of Wisdom Teeth Modern Pain Control Including Nitrous Oxide Sedation "Laughing Gas" Root Canals
(Hsascemai
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Deeds
K.D. Kennedy al TO KDK Inc.NS .
David Wilbur Branch Jr. Inc. TO City of Grvl. 7.50 The Evans Co. of Grvl. Inc. al TO City of Grvl. 7.00 Leon Raymond Hardee Jr. al TO Robert E. Jones Jr. al NS
Charles Ray Harris Jr. al TO Michael Lynn Sutton al
51.00
S. Edward Harris al TO D. Glenn Bowen Jr. aI5.00 Karen Martin Pearce al TO Avery Alfred Andrews Jr. al NS
Joseph D. Speight al TO Michael W. Wieral TO 35.50 Floyd* Thomas al TO Rodney Williford al .50 Charles W. Wright al TO Carolina Relocation Group
80.00
Bowser Construction Co. Inc. TO Richard Finley Moldin 36.50 James L. Bunch al TO Roy McRae Bunch NS Charles W. Carter IIIalTO SammieR. Hodges al 35.00 Delta Sigma Phi Fraternity TO John W. Andrason Jr. al
45.00
James A. Jones al TO Charles Stephen Denton al
45.00
Clayton J. Keel TO Joyce P.KeelNS J.T. Nichols al TO Dept, of Transporation 67.00 Shamrock Realty Co. of Pitt Co. TO Gladys S. Mmore 36.50
Anice H. Tripp TO Sun W. Paarkal21.00 FHA TO Ervin Ross alNS Marvin Blount Jr. TO Bruce M. Edwards Jr. al
22.00
Lamuel Barnhill Garris al TO Brian Keith Garris al NS William E. Hall al TO Robert M. Kupecki al 73.00 Richard D. Johnson al TO Leavy Brock Jr. al 42.00 Crestn Ray Mills al TO Arden Daniel Mills 6.00 Timothy Alan Norton al TO Robert B. Cehrli al 7.00 Sandra A. Owens TO Jospeh D. Speight al 5.50 Robert A.> Rouse Jr. al TO Kay'F. Rackley 1.00 James Edward Stott Jr. al To Cornelus Nicolas Joseph van Langenal 75.00 Vanrack Inc. TO Mary D. Ward 54.50 D.R. Woodworth al To James B. Creech al 14.00 Patsy M. Worthington TO Bailey and Associates Inc. 110.00
Susie M. Alexander al TO Clifton E. Warren al 30.00 Susie W. Alexander al TO T.G. Warren al 75.00 William R. Beavans al To Norman P. Swain 9.00 Curtis J. Flanagan al TO Dept, of Transporation 1.00 City of Grvl. TO The Evans Co. Inc. Ns Robert F. Hempton al TO,. Joseph Dorson White Jr. al 11.00
Lila B. Miiler Hughes al TO Anthony G. Woodson al 24.00 Oran V. Jarrell al tO Parker Grain Co. Inc. 125.00 Mamie Richardson Perkins TO Lindsey Ray Briley al
175.00
Herbert Dorman Powell al TO Thomas W. throckmorton al9.50
Mary M. Pridgen TO Wesley Alton Pridgen Ns Samuel M. Smith Sr. al TO Freddie Bruce Burnette al
12.50
Richard Lynn Squires al To Charles Van Freeman al 7.50 Joseph Dorson White Jr. al TO James Allen Latane Jr.
61.00
James M. Woltjen TO Randolph Enterprises of Pitt Co. Inc. 15.00 Wachovia Bk TO Irene J. Hanifer 38.00 Gene M. Adams al TO Terry Lee Whitford al 64.00 Richard Barmfield Jr. TO Michael G. Dragoon al 79.50 Henry George Fraser Chapman al TO Terry A. Wallace al 88.50 Warren A. Coolidge Tr. TO Comfortable Mortgages Inc.
47.50
Ernest Realty Co. Inc. TO Leonard M. Ernest Jr. NS.
James F. Gudger Jr. al TO Neil M. Brown al 57.00
Lonnie Ray Hansley al TO Roosevelt Sutton al 3.00
Elliott R. Johnsen TO Junius Gerald Freeman III
13.50
Lake Placid Development Co. TO Bowser Const. Co. Inc.
NS
Sandra J. Todd TO Garry Michael Davis 70.00
The Daily Renector, Greenville, N.C.-Wednesday, Apr ij; M83^7
Spring Home Sa
ir--
m
Sale 21.50 to 87.89
Whether it's a stroll in the park or an afternoon drive, our car seats and strollers keep your little ones safe and happy.
James H. Ward al TO Sutton Realty Co. Inc. 35.00
DEMONSTRATED SEOUL, South Korea (AP) Six students from Seoul National University have been arrested for leading an anti-government demonstration this week, police said.
National Baby We
Last Week To Save 20% on the basics MO to 50 Off nursery furniture
20% off
Cozy sleepwear in easy-care polyester pastels for infants.
Layette gown, Reg. 4.25 Sale 3.40 Terry sleeper, Reg. 6.99 Sale 5.59
Toddlers' poly/cotton playwear.
Polo shirt, '/2-4, Reg. 2.99 Sale 2.39 Boxer pants, 1-4, Reg. 3.66 Sale 2.92 Shirt or shorts, 1-4, Reg. $3 Sale 2.40
Infants and toddlers poly/cotton outfits. Boys' 2-pc set. 2T-4T, Reg. 6.50 Sale 5.20 Girls sundress with panty. Decorative trim. Sizes '/2-2. Reg. 5.50 Sale 4.40
Soft polyester sleepwear. Sizes 1 Mesh pajama, Reg. 5.50 Sale 4.40 Boys' or girls' pajamas, girls gown. Reg. 4.99 Sale 3.99 Sale prices effective through SatUTdail
Sale
-'%>
Reg. 32.99; 12 jar
Vienna Collection'Cd tile pantryware.
4 jar canister set.
Bread box......
Kitchen secretary ..
Paper towel holder*.
Napkin salt pepper
tray................1759'.0>tt
Mug tree ........14.90'' t!.24
Framed trivet .......12.99 779
Vienna ceramic servingtrV-accessories ''
4 jar canister set 39.99.29,90
4 covered soup
crocks..............19.99 14.99
4 coffee mugs....... 12.99 9.74
Sale 14.40 pr., Reg. $18 100x45 . Pretty Priscillas frame your windows with yards and yards of deep ruffles. These are colorful, carefree sheer Dacron polyester ninon. Attached valances and ties are included.
20% Off
all mens swimwear and novelty shirts.
Sale 8 to 16
Reg. $10 to $20. Alt mens swimwear at a 20% savings. Assorted styles, fabric and colors. Mens sizes.
Sale 6.40 to 12
Reg. $8 to $15. All mens novelty shirts. Bay Trading Co. Crew shirt, Surf City and more. S, M, L, XL.
Athletic Hosiery
Sale 1.40 to 7.59
Reg. 1.75 to 9.49. 20% off all mens athletic socks in mens department.
Save on boys casual shoes.
O Off
You needn't get the run around trying to buy boys' casual leather shoes because we've got them all at great savings. Sizes 81/2 to 3.
Reg. $22 $23 ' $28
MS4
SPRING HOME SALE
Shop 10 am-9 pmPhone7S6-1190Pitt Plaza
In The Area
School Bus Runs Over Child
Student Cited By Academy
Five-year-old Otis Lament Barrett of 121B Lakeview Terrace was injured Tuesday afternoon he was run over by a school bus of Lakewood Drive, according to police department investigators.
' Officers said the bus, driven by Michael Anthony Purvis, 21, of Robersonville, stopped the bus to let Barretts brother off. They theorize that when the young boy saw his brother, he ran across the street, in front of the bus, to greet him.
Police said Barretts left knee was broken when a wheel of the bus rolled over his leg. He also suffered cuts and abrasions.
No charges were made In the 2:51 p.m. incident.
Shrine Unit Installs Officers
High Schools Plan Language Fair
Foreign
The four Pitt County high schools will hold a Language Fair April 20 at D.H. Conley High School.
Exhibits will be featured from each school in Spanish, French and Latin culture. Events will include food tasting, dramatic reading contests, poetry recitation, costume design, dance, art and music. '
The following teachers and their classes will be attending; Dolly Hathaway, Inez Ellison and Chris Waters, all of D.H. Conley; Jean Mann of Ayden-Grifton; Barbara Acevez, North Pitt, and Jinette Hathaway. Farmville Central.
Officers of Greenville Shrine No. 7, Order of the White Shrine of Jerusalem, were installed recently at a ceremony at Greenville Masonic Temple.
The new officers include Emma S. Youmans of Kinston, worthy high priestess; Albert E., Youmans of Kinston, watchman of shepherds; Jean Tharp of Greenville, noble prophetess; Bryce Tharp of Greenville, associate watchman of shepherds; Annie Turner of Greenville, worthy scribe; J. Edward Ricks of Greenville, worthy treasurer, and Margaret C. Gray of Greenville, worthy chaplain.
Parks Commission To Meet
Falkland School Plans Activities
Falkland Elementary School has scheduled several activities in celebration of the Eastern Carolina Arts Festival. They include:
Today, 2 p.m., Don Greene and Helen Mary Boone, in concert; Friday, 12:30 p.m. and 1 p.m.. Paul Carr of Metal Craft; 1 p.m., grades 3-5 will attend the East Carolina University Science Fair.
April 20, 2 p.m., Mrs. Griffins 3rd grade will present a play The Friendship Wheel; April 21, 1 p.m., Jane Maier presents storytelling in library; April 22, 1 p.m., 1:30 p.m., Dorsey Sanderson will present a puppet show; April 26, 1 p.m., wood carving; April 27. 1 p.m., Christopher Deane, artist-in-residence at Pitt Community College, will present a percussion concert, and April 28, North Carolina Museum Day, N.C. Cafeteria Day (cornbread tasting party), N.C. Heritage Dress-Up Day; 1 p.m., Leota Tyson (N.C.-Pitt County entertainment).
The April meeting of the Greenville Recreation and Parks Department Commission will be held at 8 p.m. tonight in the Administrative Office Building, 2000 Cedar Lane.
One item is scheduled for the agenda, a discussion of the draft proposal between Eastern Carolina Vocational Center and the Recreation and Parks Department.
Microcomputer Group To Meet
The East Carolina Microcomputer Users Group will meet tonight at 7:30 p.m. at the Mendenhall Student Center, room 221.
Richard Hartness will demonstrate the use of the computer and voice synthetizer for chemistry experiments. Hartness has developed programs aiding the blind in the past years.
The meeting will be open to the public.
Veterans' Assistance Available
Clean-Up Campaign Planned
Greenvilles Appearance Commission along with the Beautification Task Force of the Pitt-Greenville Chamber of Commerce will sponsor a clean-up campaign April 16-23 in conjunction with North Carolina Statewide Clean-Up Week.
According to the chamber, the clean-up will involve citizens, .the Greenville Public Works Department, civic groups and Boy and Girl Scouts.
Persons interested in volunteering time for the project or who want further information may contact Public Works, City of Greenville, 752-4137.
Anyone who has questions regarding VA benefits such as compensation, pensions, educational benefits, vocational rehabilitation, medical treatment, survivors benefits or burial benefits will be able to get assistance in the Greenville area on Thursday.
From 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. Thursday, the Military Order of the Purple Heart Service Van, in cooperation with the North Carolina Department of Veterans Affairs, will be at Pitt Plaza Shopping Center.
A national service Officer on the van will advise and assist all veterans, their widows and dependents in filing the proper forms to obtain their benefits from the VA. All services provided are free.
KITE FLYING - Boys Club instructor Jeff Davidson, left, directs club members Eddie Alridge, Jayson Gabriel and Tony Paquette in the art of kite flying during Tuesdays contest. Winners for the contest were: best homemade kite - 6-9 year-old group, Omar Jordan; 10-12 year-old group, Doug
Stocks. Winners for the best overall kite were listed as:; 6-9 year-old group, Eric Wilson, and 10-12 year-old group, Brian Hin es. About 50 boys particiapted in the event. (Reflector Photo by Tommy Forrest)
A
wmrnimsmmmmmrnii;
Student Wins VICA Contest
Kinsey Betts has been named a 1983 United States National Award winner in science by tbe U.S. Achievement Academy. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Betts of Cochran, Ga., and the granddaughter of Jean McGowan Wells of Greenville.
The academy recognizes less than 10 percent of all American high school students. Criteria for selection includes academic performance, interest and aptitude, leadership qualities, responsibility, enthusiasm, motivation and cooperation.
Mike Brabble of Aydoi-Grifton High School was awarded first-place honors in architectural drafting at a recent region I Vocational-Industrial Qubs of America conference.
Brabble was one of two students in the architectural drafting competition who finished a floor plan projected from a given elevation plane. He designed and drew ' the floor plan in two hours. 'David Springer of Ayden-Grifton took second place honors in the machine drafting competition, which included taking a machine
MKE BRABBLE part and drawing a top, front, right and side view and a full dimension in two hours.
Yard, Bake Sale Set Saturday
The Simpson Homemakers Extension Association will hold a yard and bake sale at the Simpson Community Building Saturday from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Proceeds will be used for repairs to the Community Building.
Professor Feted At Retirement Party
Dr. Betty Jane Corwin, a professor in the East Carolina University School of Psychology, was honored at a retirement dinner recently by her students and ECU faculty members.
Speakers included ECU Chancellor John M. Howell and Dr. Rosina Lao, chairperson of the psychology department. Dr. Corwin, who came to ECU in 1%9, is a native of Brooklyn, Ind., and holds degrees from the University of Chicago and Ohio State University.
CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) - Charlotte area businessmen say a local income tax would discourage industry from locating in the area.
The city has asked the Institute of Government in Chapel Hill to conduct a study to look at the legal and economic impact of such a local tax on wages.
Charlotte Chamber of Commerce president Bill Veeder, who opposes the study and the tax, said the tax would be discriminatory to businesses.
There are some folks who say this is just a study and that nothing has been determined, Veeder said. But there are others who apparently already have
Think Someone Lived In Attic
AUGUSTA, Ga. (AP) -Officials who found food in a crawl space say they believe that a fatal fire last week was caused by someone secretly living in an attic above the victims apartment.
We dont know if he was a vagrant or hiding out, and we dont know what they were using for heat and light in the attic, Lt. Je^ Asbach of the countys fire prevention unit said Tuesday.
Investigators became suspicious about the April 5 fire at Telfair Manor when it was found that it burned down from the ceiling, not up from the floor. The Maze killed a 5-year-old girl, her mother and grandmother.
made up their minds for a tax bill. My conclusion is that this isnt a study to tell how to design a weapon, its to decide where to fire it.
Mayor Pro Tern Harvey Gantt said the payroll tax has been hailed as a political panacea by officials discussing ways the city and county can collect more money. But he said a study is needed to gather the facts on such a tax.
Twelve area businessmen told the council Monday that authorizing the study would be tantamount to approving a formal bill to be sent to the state General Assembly.
The $3,000 study will be the first survey in the state on a payroll tax.
But some city officials say they like the idea of the tax because it theoretically taxes workers who commute to Charlotte from other areas and pay no county taxes. They say a 1 percent tax would generate about $35 million a year for city and county government.
The study wilPlook at several types of payroll taxes, including a flat-rate tax for all employees and a progressive-percentage tax.For Fan and Fitness
PRESENTSAerobics & Skates!
BEGINNING Thursday f 4
Solicitation Requests Approved
Police Chief Glenn Cannon announced tbe antnval of requests by Hdy Trinity United Holy Church to coixhict a door-tOHloor soUcitatkm and fish fry April 15-23 tb raise money for tbe buUding fund, and by the WinterviU Ji^cettes to conduct a merchant solicitation April 6-26 to obtain fts for a senior citizm bingo. ; .
Revival Service Starts Tonight
Revival services will start toni^t and continue, through Sunday at Gateway Christian Center. Services will begin at 7:30 p.m. The Rev. Gerald Parker, of Emmanuel Holiness Church in Rocky Mount, will speak.
The church is located at 1606 Dickinson Ave. <
Witnesses To Hear Presentation
Members of the Greenville Congregation of Ji^ahs Witnesses virill hear a presentation by James Mc^rinick Sunday at 10 a.m. His topic will be Religions "nme of Judgment. 1
Printmaking Seminar Scheduled
Jacob Landau, a printmaker and painter from Pratt University in New York, will txmduct a morning and afternoon printmaking seminar Thursday from 8:30. a.m. to 12 noon and from 1:30 p.m. to 5 p.m. i > ,
There will be a slide presentation and lecture In Jenkins Auditorium on the East Carolina University campus at 7:30 p.m. All events are open to the public.
Retiring Teacher To Be Honored
A dinner to honor Effie Thompson, a teacher in the Greenville schools who will retire at the end of this school year, will be held at 6 p.m. Saturday at Hayes Chapel Baptist Church in Pactolus.
Pediatrician Wins Certification
Local Income Tax Study Is Requested
Dr. Charles Frederick Willson of Greenville has been elected to Fellowship in the American Academy of Pediatrics with offices in Evanston, 111.
Willson is a clinical assistant professor of pediatrics at East Carolina University and a pediatrician at Pitt County Memorial Hospital. Certification by the Pan-American academy requires a minimum of five years post-medical school experience.
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NEW RECOMMENDATION This is an artists cut-away drawing of the MX missile. A special commission recommended to President Ronald Reagan a plan virtually identical to one already discarded by Congress. The panel unanimously proposed buUding 100 MX weapons, each armed with 10 nuclear warheads, and putting them in launch sUos now holding Minuteman missiles in Wyoming and Nebraska. The commissions one new idea is to develop a smaller, singl^warhead missile for dq)loyment in the early 1990s.
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MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - A Minnesota microelectronics and computer firm is considering the Research Triangle Park and three other sites to construct its new home, officials said Tuesday.
We have narrowed to four a field of possible sites that included 54 cities in 22 states, said Bobby Inman, president of the new Microelectronics and Computer Technology Corp.
The corporation is an
JudgeTo Divide
Big Settlement
MONROE, N.C. (AP) -Attorneys for a Union County woman killed in a 1981 accident and five children injured in the accident have asked a Siq)erior Court judge to divide $40,000 in settlements among the victims.
Lila Home Bowers, 49, was killed in the Dec. 17, 1981, accident on North Carolina Highway 84 as she returned five fourth-grade students to school after a Christmas party. Her daughter, Lisa, 10, suffered severe head injuries. Four other students in Mrs. Bowers car also were injured.
Robert Allen Braswell Jr. was convicted of death by motor vdiicle in the case. A Highway Patrol officer testified at the trial that Braswells truck crossed the center line in a curve and struck the Bowers car head-on.
advanced computer research company financially supported by 12 major U.S. electronics companies that hope to compete better with Japanese computer enterprises by pooling their research funds and sharing the research results.
Besides Research Triangle Park, Austin, Texas; Atlanta, Ga.; and San Diego, Calif, are being considered. A decision on which city will be chosen will be announced May 15.
Inman said criteria for selecting a site for the new corporation included access to universities with existing' strong graduate programs in computer science and electrical engineering, preferably with existing established cooperative arrangements among several universities...
Quality of life, housing costs, public education, government and business environment, air transportation and cost of startup operations were also considered, he said.
The new corporations four main areas of research will be in advanced computer designs, pro^amming improvements aimed at greater productivity, new ways of packaging tiny electronic components and computer-aided design and manufacturing.
It is expected to employ about 275 scientists and engineers and have a budget estimated at $50 million to $100 million a year when it is in full operation.
The DaUy Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Wednesday, April 13,1983-
Habib Discusses Lebanon Negotiations
JERUSALEM (AP)-U.S. presidential envoy Philip C. Habib discussed the Israel-Lebanon troop withdrawal negotiations with Prime Minister Menachem Begin today and then flew to Beirut.
Meanwhile, a Foreign Ministry official said the Israeli government is not involved in the efforts of a former member of Parliament to ne^tiate release of 11 Israeli prisoners of war in Lebanon.
Were still working. I dont have anything to tell you today, feUows, Habib told reporters at the end of his 90-minute session with Begin, Defense Minister Moshe Arens and Foreign Minister Yitzhak Shamir.
Begin issued a statement saying the entire meeting was devoted to Lebanon and there was no discussion of the breakdown last weekend of Jordanian-PLO talks on joint representation in the wider Middle East peace process.
The Jerusalem Post reported that highly placed Israeli, sources estimated that a month was needed to wrap up the troop withdrawal negotiations. The daily Maariv said Habib told the Israelis that President Reagan wants an agreement within two weeks.
After Israel agrees to withdraw its 25,000 troops, negotiators will attempt to win agreement from Syria to pull out its 38,000 soldiers and from the Palestine Liberation to remove its estimated 7,000 guerrillas.
Drug Trial Is Underway
GREENSBORO, N.C. (AP) - James Whitey Durham, a convicted cocaine dealer from Guilford County, was "the first witness for the government Tuesday in the federal trial of two Colombians charged with cocaine trafficking.
Juan Camillo Goez and Jose Luis Naranjo allegedly conspired with Durham and undercover federal and state agents last year to fly 649 pounds of cocaine into North Carolina.
Prosecutors say the plans for the smuggling were made while Naranjo, Goez and Durham were serving time in federal prison in Otisville, N.Y. Unknown to the Colombians, Durham was working as a government informant in the scheme.
The cocaine was confiscated by Colombian authorities before an airplane,, piloted by an undercover federal drug agent and bound for Surry County Airport in North Carolina, could leave an airstrip on the Colombian coast.
Attorneys made opening arguments Tuesday before the jury of seven women and five men.
Durham testified that the government promised safety for him and his family and did not oppose Durhams plea for a reduced sentence for earlier convictions in return for his cooperation in the case.
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Israel says it will not leave Lebanon until other foreign forces withdraw.
The Israel-Lebanon talks have been stuck for weeks on security arrangements to govern southern Lebanon after Israels withdrawal. A major problem is the role of Maj. Saad Haddad, a renegade Lebanese Army officer whom Israel wants to command the border zone.
Israel invaded Lebanon on June 6 to rout the PLO guerrillas. Syria has stationed its troops in Lebanon under an Arab League mandate to police the 1976 armistice to the Moslem-Christian civil war.
Samuel Flatto-Sharon, a
wealthy but controversial businessman who has made a habit of seeking release of Jewish prisoners, was reported to be in Beirut today working to free the POWs.
A Foreign Ministry official who asked anonymity said Flatto-Sharon evidently bad gone to Lebanon on his own accord, and was not connected to government efforts to release the prisoners.
Israel has been negotiating through Austrian Chancellor Bruon Kreisky on the POWs. Israel holds about 5,000 Arab prisoners while ei^it Israelis are held by the PLO and three by the Syrians.
Flatto-Sharon lost a 1981 bid to be re-election to
Pi(rliament and is appealing a nine-month prison sentence imposed after he was convicted of vote-buying in the 1977 election.
France sentenced him in absentia to five years in prison for fraud and tax evasion but was unable to extradite him.
In Beirut, Lebanese Foreign Minister Elie Salem said today the failure of Jordan and the PLO to reach a joint negotiating stance made U.S. Middle East policy more dependent on Lebanon.
Americas credibility is now on trial and the testing ground is Lebanon, Salem told reporters upon his re
turn from a one-day visit to Amman to talk with Jordans King Hussein.
If there is hope left for the success of President
Reagans plan, he has to be successful in Lebanon, Salem said, referring to the U.S. efforts to help bring about a troop withdrawal.
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10The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Wednesday, April 13,1983
POINTING HEAVENWARD - Antennae of the White Sands Tracking and Data Relay Satellite System point skyward before looming backdrop formed by New Mexicos Organ Mountains. NASA officials at the scene
Britain Defends Naval Presence At Gibraltar
LONDON (AP) - A British naval convoy that includes the aircraft carrier Invincible and its royal crewman. Prince Andrew, is due to arrive at Gibraltar today, to the fury of the Spanish government.
The British Defense Ministry denied Spanish press reports that the ships, on Spring Train maneuvers in the eastern Atlantic Ocean, are arriving to test Gibraltars defenses.
The Spanish government on Monday delivered a formal protest in London expressing concern and displeasure over the visit to \ the British colony on the southern tip of Spain.
It called the presence of the British warships undesirable. and said Spain repeats its desire to resolve the Gibraltar question through negotiations, in accordance with United Nations resolutions in order to assure Spanish territorial integrity.
Spain, which has long claimed sovereignty over Gibraltar, ceded the Rock to Britain in the 1713 Treaty of Utrecht.
The independent Madrid daily Diario 16 said Tuesday that the aircraft carriers, frigates and destroyers in the convoy would make landings on several points on Gibraltar and conduct land, sea and air defense exercises.
Britains Defense Ministry immediately denied the report, saying the five-day visit was a routine stop-over of the kind that have been taking place (on Gibraltar) for over 200 years.
The convoy includes the HMS Invincible, on which Queen Elizabeth IIs 23-year-old son Andrew is a helicopter pilot, was one of two British carriers which took part in the Falkland Islands war last year. The other was HMS Hermes, which served as flagship of the British task force.
Popular Despite Prison Term
ANNAPOLIS, Md. (AP) -Former Gov. Marvin Mandel is still a big hit with the Maryland General Assembly, despite his 19 months in federal prison for mail fraud and racketeering.
At an appearance in the House gallery, Mandel drew a standing ovation from many members after he was recognized by House Speaker Benjamin Cardin, a fellow Democrat.
Mandel, who last week settled a longstanding legal dispute with the state over some $23,000 worth of furniture he was accused of
taking when he left office in 1977, spent time Monday in the House lounge chatting with delegates.
It was the final day of the 1983 legislative session and I figured there wouldnt be much going on, Mandel said.
OUT OF THE SKY PEKING (AP)-A ball of ice more than two feet in diameter fell from the sky and shook nearby utility poles in the east China city of Wuxi, the official Xinhua news agency reported today.
The Daily Telegraph today quoted a Spanish Foreign Ministry official as saying the Spanish Navy may mount extra surveillance as the British warships enter Gibraltar harbor.
But the British newspaper said he ruled out any show of strength by the Spanish Navy, saying: We do not want any possibility of an incident, but it is obvious that we do not want Spanish territorial waters to be infringed.
We are not treating this as routine in view of the number of warships and what fleet it is. This year, the fleet that was in the Malvinas - the Argentine name for the Falklands -is coming here. Spanish public opinion is considering that something shocking.
It is not a constructive thing to do at a time when talks are going on over Gibraltar, even if they are at present harsh and difficult.
Spain sided with Argentina against Britain in last years war for the Falklands, which Argentina claims as an inheritance from the days of Spanish colonial rule.
Spain closed its frontier with Gibraltar in 1%9 to protest Britains refusal to give up the Rock.
In 1980 Britain and Spain signed the Lisbon Agreement calling for the border to be opened and normal relations restored.
Last Dec. 15, the Socialist government of Prime Minister Felipe Gonzalez opened the Gibraltar border, but only to Spanish and Gibraltarian pedestrians.
A new round of talks on the future of the Rock is scheduled for this spring, but no date has yet been set.
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continue to seek a solution to the problem of the TDRS satellites errant orbit. The satellite was launched last Monday from space shuttle Challenger. (APLaserphoto)
By FREDDY CUEVAS Associated Press Writer TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras (AP) - The foreign ministers of Mexico, Venezuela, Colombia and Panama today complete a two-day mission to five Central American capitals proposing negotiations to settle the regions border and guerrilla wars.
The peace mission calls itself the Contadora Group after the Panamanian island where the ministers drafted a document Jan. 5 calling for an end to foreign intervention in Central America.
Diplomatic sources said the group wants to arrange bilateral meetings of the
Student Talent Meeting Set
All Greenville public school students who plan to participate in. the second annual American Legion Post 160-City Schools Community Schools Program Talent Extravaganza will meet in the'auditorium of Wahl-Coates School Saturday at 10 a.m.
Students wishing to take part who did not preregister should report Saturday, also.
The talent extravaganza will be held in observance of April as Children and Youth Month and to promote the performing arts in the city schools, Community Schools Director Carolyn Ferebee said.
Correction
WINTERVILLE - The current balance of funds of the Winterville Recreation Commission is $2,250,according to commission member Barry Gaskins.
Because of incorrect information, The Daily Reflector reported Tuesday the commissions current fund balance was $21,580.
foreign ministers of Honduras, El Salvador, Nicaragua, Costa Rica and Guatemala, followed by a regional summit.
It also is urging suspension of all military aid to the region, a negotiated settlement of El Salvadors 3>/^-year-old civil war and talks to end fighting in Nicaragua between the leftist governments troops and Honduran-based exiles.
The ^up flies today on a Colombian air force plane to meet with Gen. Efrain Rios Montt, president of
Guatemala, a country where leftist guerrillas are fitting for power and more than 6,(X)0 people have been killed in the past five years.
Guatemala is the last stop for Bernardo Sepulveda of Mexico, Jose Alberto Zambrano Velasco of
Venezuela, Rodrigo Uoreda Caicedo of Colombia and Juan Jose Amado of
Panama.
On Tuesday, they visited Costa Rica, Nicaragua and El Salvador before arriving in Honduras Tuesday night to meet with President Roberto Suazo Cordova.
The diplomats received a cool reception in El Salvador, where the U.S.-backed government is locked in a fierce civil war with leftist insurgents.
The four ministers had little to say following their meeting with President Alvaro Magana. But after they left for Honduras, Magana told reporters: El Salvadors problems will be solved by Salvadorans.
He did not elaborate, but he apparently was referring to the Contadora groups call
Solar Fraction
The solar fraction for this area Tuesday, as computed by the East Carolina University Department of Physics, was 84. This means that a solar water heater could have provided 84 percent of your hot water needs.
for a negotiated settlement to the civil war. El Salvadors government has refused to negotiate with the rebels until they put down their arms and agree to participate in elections set for December.
In Managua, the diplomats met for three hours with Daniel Ortega, coordinator of Nicaraguas leftist San-dinista junta, and other officials. Both Ortega and Sepulveda termed the meeting positive.
We are optimistic because we found much sympathy from Commander Daniel Ortega and Costa Rican President Luis Alberto Monge, the Mexican foreign minister said.
Diplomatic sources said that during the closed-door
meeting. Defense Minister Humber Ortega showed the visiting diplomats films to support Nicaraguas contention that rebel attacks were mounted from HoiKluras.
Nicaraguan officials warned last month the border incidents could escalate into war if they continued. Nicaragua accuses the Uniteil States of training and arming the rebel forces. The Reagan administration declines comment on that charge and accuses the Sandinistas of
funneling weapons to El Salvadors rebels.
Honduras is anxiously awaiting the positive results of this important peace effort initiated by these hriendly governments, Foreign Ministry spokesman Ramon Hernandez Alcerro said Tuesday night in Tegucigalpa,
The Organization of Amerian States on Monday endorsed the Contadora groiqrs peacemaking effort. The Reagan administration has made no comment.
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PUBLIC NOTICE COUNTY OF PITT
In accordance with the General Statutes of North Carolina (G.S. 105-283, 287, 317, 322), the Pitt County Board of Equalization and Review will meet in the County Commissioners Conference Room, First Floor of the Pitt County Office Building, 1717 West Fifth Street, Greenville, North Carolina 27834, on the following dates and times:
Wednesday, April 6,1983 - 10:00 a.m.
Monday, April 18,1983 - 2:00 p.m.
Monday, May 2,1983 - 2:00 p.m.
(Adjournment Date)
If the need for additional meetings arise, notice of these meetings and a later adjournment date will be published in this paper. The Board of Equalization and Review meets for the purpose of examining the tax scroll and the new appraisals for 1983 in accordance with the laws of North Carolina.
Appraisals are on file in the office of .the Tax Supervisor and should be examined prior to the meeting of the Board. For the convenience of any taxpayer wishing to appeal to the Board, please call the Tax Supervisors office, 752-4711, for an appointment with the Board of Equalization and Review. This will enable the Tax Department to have your records available with the least possible delay.
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No Secrts Safe In Chinese Neighborhood
The DaUy Reflector, GreenvUle, N.C.-Wednesday, April 13,1983-11
By VICTORIA GRAHAM Associated Press Writ^ PEKING (AP) - There are no secrets in the quaint, crowded courtyards along West Old Curtain Lane - or anywhere else in China -where every little detail of life is supervised with pervasive precision.
What seems to Westerners a stark invasion of privacy is an accqited fact of life here. In China someone is always
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watching and frequently informing.
The nosy neighbor, tattletale and busybody are integral parts of an all-encompassing surveillance system that can care tenderly for the elderiy or self-righteously Investigate whether a woman is adulterous. This is known as supervision by the masses.
The neighborhood committee, a fixture of Chinese
Olympics Spur Security Effort
WASHINGTON (AP) -The 1984 Summer Olympic Games in Los Angeles will be the focus of special security efforts by the FBI, the Secret Service and the U.S. Customs Service, officials of the agencies told Congress.
FBI Director William Webster told a congressional subcommittee that the Olympics are going to be a jumping-off place for foreign intelligence activities, because it is so close to the Silicon Valley, referring to
an area in California where many high-technology firms are located.
The Secret Service anticipates it will have to protect numerous U.S. and foreign dignitaries at the games. The customs service will process all visitors and participants, as well as their equipment, as they pass throu^ various ports of entry, primarily Los Angeles International Airport.Invited
TIGER THREATENED PEKING (AP) - The South China tiger is in danger of extinction, a Chinese researcher says. Fewer than fifty of the tigers now live in the wild, warns Tan Banjie of the Peking Zoo.
WASHINGTON (AP) -Prime Minister Pierre Elliott Trudeau of Canada will visit Washington on April 28 and meet with President Reagan at the White House to discuss the upcoming economic summit of industrialized nations, the White House says.
life, issues birth certificates, arranges funerals for the jobless, counsels wayward youth and finds them jobs, mediates disputes, cleans the streets, propagates the Communist Party line, checks on the visits of strangers and turns in women who are pregnant without authorization.
In a recent triumph, a vigilant Peking resident wrote to police about a neighbor whose visiting nephew never called his host uncle and strangely never stayed for dinner. The nosy nei^bor figured something waj^ afoot and went straight to the cops, thus snaring what authorities described as Taiwans alleged top spy in Peking.
In the days before China encouraged affluence, spiteful and jealous tattletales told police if a neighbor had a new wristwatch, suspecting it was stolen. Today they are just as alert for other irregularities.
The powers of the neighborhood security committee are enshriiKd in law and it has the obligation to watch, investigate, report and arrest criminals and outright counterrevolutionaries.
The West Old Curtain Lane neighborhood represents 2,090 people in 732 households. They are divided into 15 residence groups, each consisting of several gray-' gabled Qing dynasty
has a
courtyards. Each watclid(^head.
Director Yuan Shu Zhen of the n neighborhood committee proudly (tescribes the masses diligent work in reporting and investigating their neighbors private lives:
Li Zhao Ming, 30, a railway worker, thought his 28-year-old wife Yung Hong was having a love affair because she came home la.te froni work at a leather factory.
When she was late he beat her, turning iq> the radio so that neighbors wouldnt hear her scream. He beat her so viciously once that she ran home to her parents and then demanded a divorce.
Enter the neighborhood mediating conunittee: with approval from the police, they went to her work unit to enquire first about her morals and were told she was upright and honorable. With an introductory ietto' from the public security bureau, or police, the committee can investigate at any residents work unit, said Madame Yuan in an interview.
The committee informed the husband that his wife was faithful, urged him not to beat her, mediated between them and patched up the marriage.
This nei^borhood network is a combination of Chinese communist organization and the ancient, complementary patterns of a tightly woven
community.
During the 1966-76 Maoist Cultural Revolution, Chinese feared to speak freely before their neighbors, knowing they could be^ reported, struggled against, even tortured, just on someones say-so. A slip of the tongue, a foreign book, an indulgently pretty scarf all could be cited by neighbors as evidence of political sins.
Today one elderly Chinese intellectual asks a foreign friend to wrap Western classic novels in plain brown paper so my nei^bors wont see and talk.
Oversees Chinese still are urged by their mainland friends to dress like proletarians so as not to arouse the suspicions of neighbors when they come to visit.
Peking, with 5.2 million residents, has nine government districts, about 80 subdistricts, an estimated 2,400 neighborhood committees and an undetermined number of street conunittees and residence groups.
The neighborhood committees, usually run by tough, middle-aged and elderly women, are closly linked with the local government and police. From from frequent contacts with the police they know everyones personal and family histories. They read internal party documents in advance so they can explain policy to the masses.
Neighborhood clinics keep track of menstrual cycles,
contraceptives used by each woman and how many women are permitted to have babies in a given year. The rest must have abortions, in line with the official aim of cutting the birth rate.
In the Old Curtain neighborhood a woman didnt go to work for two days and her courtyard watchdog immediately became suspicious. Then he overheard her telling her 5-year-old son to buy her guodanpi, a sweet-sour fruit candy craved by pregnant women.
Then he knew her secret but he didnt confront her with her impending violation of Chinas rigid one-child policy. Instead he repoted her to the neighborhood committee. The clinic sent a nurse but the woman gave it no thought since the committee regularly checks every married womans menstrual cycle every three months, questions her about birth control and sometimes delivers contraceptives.
The committee then called the womans work unit and the unit sent a delegation to persuade her to have an abortion,
In another success story, 32-year-old Gao Feng Men, not even pregnant, was sub-jected to relentless neighborhood pressure to pledge not to have a second child.
She had a 4-year-old daughter but never sought the one-child certificate,
which provides slight financial benefits. Like most Chinese she wanted a son and the all-knowing neighborhood committee knew it. Its mission was clear.
The committee joined forces with her work unit in visiitng her and her husband 16 times in long, arduous sessions. She said his mother wanted her to have a son, so they worked wi granny. Finally, exhausted by the badgering and lectures, she and her husband agreed to a one-child certificate.
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Bill To Exempt Church Centers
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) - A bill introduced Tuesday in the state Senate may accomplish what church-sponsored day-care centers have tried to do since 1978 -eliminate the requirement that, they obtain an operating license from the state.
But supporters say they hope it also accomplishes what the state has tried to do since 1972 - set up a mechanism for protecting the health and safety of all children.
Sen. Elton Edwards, D-Guilford, one of the bills sponsors, said it would require church day-care centers to meet state health and safety standards but would not force them to get an operating license from the state.
At least eight church-sponsored centers have been operating without a license since 1978, when they turned in their operating licenses or failed to renew them.
The state then filed suit against the centers in an attempt to torce them to comply with the licensing law or close. The state had been requiring day-care fa
cilities to obtain a license after meeting standards for health, safety, sanitation, size and nutrition since January 1972.
Last April, Wake Superior Court Judge Henry A. McKinnon ruled in favor of the state. But the eight centers have continued to operate while the ruling has been appealed.
All it (the bill) does is not require them to get a license, Edwards said. They do not want to be under government control more than necessary. But it is important to me that all the children of the state be protected.
The license is symbolically important to them..As a practical matter (this bill) doesnt make much dif
ference, he said.
Thomas E. Strickland, lobbyist for the North Carolina Association of Christian Schools, is one of those who helped write the bill.
They (the churches) feel their constitutional rights are being violated, Strickland said. They must receive a license to operate a church ministry.
This is a compromise point of view and I think it does what both parties want done, he said.
Spokesmen for the state departments working with day-care facilities could not be reached for comment.
Last year there were 2,208 day-care centers in the state serving 85,000 children. There were 400 licensed church-operated facilities
Genetic Curse
IMPROVING THE LOOKS OF THINGS ... Debbie Adams and Wesley Bowers (left to right) of Pactolus School put a fresh paint job on a trash can at their school as part of North
Carolinas School Beautification Program. Schools across the county are participating by planting shrubbery and painting.
Truckers Blast Ruling They're Price-Fixing
R.UEIGH, .C. (AP) - A federal appeals court ruling that truckers are illegally fixing prices when they file collectively for rates runs counter to North Carolina state law. a trucking official said Tuesday.
Elbert L. Peters Jr., executive vice president of the North Carolina Motor Carriers .Assocation Inc., said North Carolina law compels truckers to get together to file for uniform rate increases with the state
Old Lincolnton School Burned
LINCOLNTON, N.C. (AP) - An early-morning fire destroyed one of Lincolntons oldest public schools, fire officials said Tuesday.
Its a tragic loss both for the educational community and the community as a whole, said Ronnie Brooks, associate superintendent of Lincoln County Schools.
Brooks said the fire was reported at South Aspen Street School about 2 a.m. Seven fire units fought the blaze until mid morning. Fire officials were trying to determine the cause of the fire Tuesday afternoon.
Brooks said the one-story, brick school housing six classrooms and was used for kindergarten and first-grade students. He said the building was 50 years old.
Utilities Commission.
He quoted a state law that says: For the purpose of achieving a stable rate structure, it shall be the policy of this state to fix uniform rates for the same or similar services by carriers of the same class.... The state is hereby relieved from operation of antitrust laws with respect to making such an agreement.
Peters said that without collective rate-setting, you would have a potpourri of rates Out there. The public wouldnt know if they were getting ripped off or not.
Our shippers like to locate a good carrier and stay with it, he said. With the collective process, you know the rate is competitive and what everyone else has to pay.
If the Supreme Court upholds the ruling,'North Carolina and Georgia truckers will have to begin competing to set their charges for shipments within each state, Peters said.
The North Carolina group was one of two defendants in a suit brought by the U.S. Justice Department in 1976.
The Southern Motor Carriers Rate Conference, the other defendant in the suit, is considering whether to appeal, said Vernon Farriba, executive vice president.
Weve disagreed with the Justice Department all along. We think it is in the best interest of carriers and shippers to continue collective rate-setting because they have a voice in the
decision, he said.
Its entirely possible that what has happened to many of the airlines after the industry was deregulated could occur among shippers and carriers, Farriba said.
PEKING (AP) - Population studies show that 8 percent of the 20 million babies born annually in China have birth defects or are mentally retarded, largely because of marriages between cousins, foreign experts said "Tuesday.
The -oup, which did not wish to be identified, said the problem of congenital handicaps and retardation is greatest in isolated areas where the gene pool is restricted and tradition has permitted marriage between cousins.
More than 80 percent of Chinas 1 billion people live in the countryside, many in remote areas. Chinese officials have emphasized genetic counseling, of late, because of problems with birth defects.
serving 16,000 to 18,000' children.
The Senate bill would require religioufi groups planning to operate a day-care facility to notify the state and report whether they are in compliance within 30 days of starting operations.
The facilities would file annual statements to show they are in compliance, including reports from local health departments, building inspectors and firemen.
The state still would be authorized to order facilities not meeting the standards to close or to seek an injunction to close the facilities.
Strickland said that last session a bill was introduced to exempt church day-care centers from licensing requirements while continuing 4o require they meet all but two requirements concerning size and staff-child ratios.
He said that bill easily passed the Senate and was defeated by three votes in the House.
Other Senate sponsors of the bill introduced Tuesday are Harold Hardison, D-Lenoir; Ollie Harris, D-Cleveland; Bob Swain, D-Buncombe; George Marion, D-Surry; A.D. Guy, D-Onslow; Jim Edwards, D-
Caldwell; and Marshall Hauch, IKraston.
The eight centers that have operated without a license are Fayetteville Stre^ Christian Sdiool in Asheboro Gospel Light Christian School in Walkertown, Grace Christian School in Rocky Mount, Emmanuel Day Care Center in Edenton, Bethany Church School in CcHicord, South Park Baptist School in Winston-Salem, Friendship Christian Schools in Ralei^ and Go^l Li^t Baptist Church in Salisbury.
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LIVER PATffiNT Brandon Hall and his mother Billie Hall, of Walnut, Miss., are shown in the chflds hospital room a few days before he was taken to Washington, D.C. to appear before a congressional committee studying organ transplants. The 13-month-old child suffers from liver disease, and doctors say he wont live long without a transplant. (AP Laserphoto)
7:30 A.M.
To 3:00 P.M.
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Greenville Police Crime Stoppers Program Sponsored By Greenville-Pitt County Board of Realtors
Make America Better Program
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ATTENTION NATURAL GAS CUSTOMERS OF GREENVILLE UTILITIES COMMISSION
On January 1,1983, Greenville Utilities Commission began phasing out appliance service work in customers homes. This service will be continued on a limited basis until June 30,1983. After that date. Greenville Utilities Commission wHI no longer provide this service.
All gas customers needing appliance service work are requested to contact the gas appliance dealer from whom these appliances were purchased.
For further information call the Green-vHle Utilities Commission Gas Department at 752-7166.
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*This is the annualized effective yield of North States fixed rate Ira based on a daily compounding of a nominal rate of 10.44%
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The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Wednesday, April 13,1983-13
- , - .. w. .. U A, i
Tiny Town Disconnecfs Phones In Feud Over Rates
Rv-TRPFRARKITR It WaS at one of niir k<. W nn kih ~.l_ ^u. ._........ i. ..XM -.- ......
By JEFFBARKER Associated Press Writer HARRISBURG, Pa.'(AP) - Its the batUe of litUe Big Run, where a fight over high telephone bills has led some citizens to slam down their rceivers for good.
Residents of Big Run, a tiny community of 826 in the foothills of the Allegheny Mountains are charged the
highest telephone rates in the state - $21.25 per month for basic service, according to the Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission.
Some residents say they cant pay. Other simply refuse to deposit one more dime in the coffers of Big Run Telephone, a subsidiary of Citizen Utilities Co. of Stamford, Conn. And now the dispute has reached all the way to the state capital.
Theres a lot of hatred built up in the town, said Paul Kellar, a 41-year-old biology teacher and borough council president. The company sort of has the attitude that it can take your phone and shove it down your throat.
In a protest that has now moved to the offices of state lawmakers and utility regulators here, Kellar and scores of other customers decided in 1981 that they could do without a phone.
It was at one of our meetings that someone proposed we hand in our phones, recalled Samuel McNeil, who heads the Citizens Action Group, an organization set up to battle the rates.
About 183 people took their phones out and others dropped to party lines. If the company didnt get the phones, the people put them in trees, they did all kinds of things to them, said McNeil.
The company currently has 790 customers in the Big Run area, down from 923 when the protest began, said Citizens Utilities spokesman Ed Kelly. According to McNeil, some residents restored service because we have people that absolutely need the phone. t But others have learned to live without it.
Its made the house so quiet, said Kellars wife, Thelma. At first you think you cant live without one but you just plan more ahead of time.
I just refuse to give that company any more money, she said.
The Kellars clip a note pad to their front door for messages. Other residents use citizens band radios, and one ties a red towel to her mailbox when she needs a message taken to her mother across town.
Dalton Buffington, 72, said that she and her husband, who is retired, could no longer afford to pay $14 a month for a party line.
We had it disconnected but its still sitting in the house, she said. We go down to my sons garage to use the phone but sometimes its dark.
I tell you, its been awfully hard, she said.
Another resident, Kathy Cessna, 33, said, I never was one for gabbing on the phone but there are times you really need it. A substitute teacher, she said she
Superior Court Report
The following cases were disposed of during the Febuary 28 term of Pitt County Superior Court;
Linda T. Anthony, 307 Lindell Dr. worthless check (5 counts) dismissal by prosecutor; worthless check (25 counts) 3 years jail suspended on payment of fine, costs, restitution, aWorney fee, 3 years probation.
Jenny Louise Carmon, Ayden, uttering forged check. 1 year jail suspended on payment of costs, attorney fee, 2 years probation; forgery, uttering forged check, dismissal by prosecutor.
Berna W. Clopton, 114A Emma's Place, welfare fraud, 2 years jail suspended on payment of costs, restitution, 3 years probation.
Cleveland Cox, breaking, entering and larceny (auto), dismissal by prosecutor; larceny, 2 years jail suspended on payment of costs, restitution, 3 years probation.
James Grady Dail, New Bern, driving while license revoked, driving under the influence, I'-i years jail. ,
George Davis Jr. Route 2, Ayden, driving under influence, driving while license revoked, 2 years jail, % days active, .remainder suspended on payment of fine, costSi attorney fee, 3 years probation.
James Davis, 1108 Legion St., breaking and entering, 6 months jail.
Shelton Ferrell, Ayden, uttering forged check, 1 year jail suspended on payment of costs, attorney fee, 2 years probation; forgery, uttering forged check, dismissal by prosecutor.
Shirley Taylor Johnson, Kinston, driving under the influence, 6 months jail suspended on payment of fine, costs, I weekend In jail.
Willie Earl Langley. 900 West Third St., larceny, 2 years jail suspended on payment of fine, costs, restitution, 3 years probation.
Willie Lee Lyon Jr., Route 2, Walstonburg, breaking and entering, 3 years jail, pay $1,300 restitution; breaking and entering, 3 years jail, pay $1,400 restitution.
Linda Faye Murphy, Route I,
Frank Jun)or Perry, 1406 Ward St., carrying concealed weapon, dismissal
by prosecutor. Hal
fiattie Mae Peterson, Ayden, assault with deadly weapon. 1 year jail suspended on payment of costs, restitution, 3 years probation.
Ricky Skinner, 12th and Washington Streets, drunk and disruptive, damage real property, dismissal by prosecutor.
Joseph Rodriquez Teel, 900 Ward St., breaking and entering auto, 2 years jail.
Douglas Earl LT Tyson, Riverview Estates, fail to see safe move, dismissal by prosecutor.
George Truitt Walston, 104 Candlewood Dr., larceny, not guilty.
James Weeks, Greenville, larceny, 2 years jail suspended on payment of costs, fine, restitution, 3 years probation.
The following cases were disposed of during the March. 7 term of Pitt County Superior Court.
Celester Murchison, Route 11, Greenville, breaking and entering, forgery and uttering, 4 years jail.
Johnny Ray Manning, Route 5, Greenville, pmsession of stolen goods, dismissal.
Michael Edward Brown, Route 1, Bethel, manslaughter, dismissal.
Steven A. Brown, 306B Watauga Ave., hit and run, dismissal.
Oscar Little Pete Washington, Greenville, assualt with deadly weapon, dismissal.
Kenneth Waybe Toler, no address, possession of drugs, 2 years jail suspended on payment of costs, 3 years probation.
Raymond Linton, Farmville, assault, dismissal by prosecutor.
Jimmy L. Harper, Route 2, ie, inju
Chocowinity, welfare fraud, 2 years jail Suspended (
spended on payment of costs, restitution, 2 years probation.
Angeia Paige. 415 West Fifth St., assault, dismissal by prosecutor Tony D. Perkins, 805 West Fifth St., larceny, 2 years jail suspended on payment of fine; costs, restitution, 3 years probation.
Farmville, Injury to personal property, 6 months jail suspended on payment of costs, restitution. 2 years probation.
Angela Paige, 415 West Third St., armed robbery, dismissal by prosecutor.
Hiram Hardison, 406 Latham St., driving under influence, S days jail.
Elmer Gray Pollard, Route 2, Ayden, assault with deadly weapon, dismissal with leave.
Kenneth Ray Streeter, Farmville, driving while license revoked, 20 months jail.
Ricky Howard Martindale, SUer City, tampering with vehicle, 28 days jail.
A Formula For Lawn Mowers
MOLINE, 111. (UPI) - A lawn and garden equipment manufacturer has developed a formula to'estimate the time lawn mowers of different' sizes and power capacities take to trim grass.
The formula is ba^ on normal mowing speeds, mower widths and acreage to be trimmed.
Robert Traclnski, consumer information specialist for John Deere, gives these examples;
-An 8-horsepower unit with about 3.5 mph mowing speed and a 30-inch blade will trim one acre in 69 minutes.
-A 17-horsepower lawn and garden tractor with a 46-lnch' blade and mowing
speed of 4 mph will do the same property in only 40 minutes.
Tracinski says the formula is based on ideal conditions - flat terrain with no trees or landscape obstructions.
He says hilly property and backing and turning around gardens and paths reduce the average operating speed.
TO REMOVE BANS TOKYO (AP) - The Health and Welfare Ministry says Japan plans to remove bans on nine food additives, apparently in response to complaints from the United States and other countries.
has missed out on numerous working days because the school could not reach her on short notice.
Kelly said he could not discuss the local companys rates because the negotiations with Bell, although in the past the parent firm has said the small size of the community and lack of iri-dustry in the area has helped
keep costs hi^.
The town took its complaints to the Public Utility Commission. After a lengthy investigation, the PUG ordered last October that the local company be sold and that Bell of Pennsylvania be invited to submit a bid.
Most residents said they would prefer Bell to Big Run Telephone. The PUC said the
sale was the only way to bring rates to reasonable levels.
Bell says its current basic home rate ranges from $6.10 per month in Coudersport, a small town in north-central Pennsylvania near the New York border, to $9.60 in Philadelphia.
It submitted a $1.1 million bid in February, which
Citizens Utilities is still considering. Should the deal fall through, the state consumers advocate has prepared a petition asking the PUC to force the company to justify its continued service in Big Run.
Meanwhile, the townspeople are impatient. They have mounted a lobbying effort with legislators in the state
capital.
These are a quiet, conservative people, said Democratic state Sen. Patrick Stapleton, whose western Pennsylvania district includes Big Run. The people are beginning to wonder whats going on and I dont blame them.
The protest is an understandable act, isnt it?
said PUC member Michael Johnson. These people were all moved by same feeling of outrage.
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El Salvador Govm't Frees 31 Political Prisoners
By ARTHUR ALLEN Associated Press Writer SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador (AP) The government has freed 31 political prisoners in the past two weeks, the most extensive release of its kind since the start of the 3^-year-old civil war.
However, a government spokesman said the move was not linked to a proposed amnesty for leftist rebels, aimed at wQping them out of their mountain strongholds to participate in general elections set for December.
Insurgents wi Tuesday attacked several stretches of the nations highways, setting up roadblocks and machine-
GUERRILLAS PATROL Guerrillas, reportedly from the Farabimdo Marti National Liberation Front, patrol aboard a pickup truck along the coastal highway Tuesday sixty miles east of the capital in Usulutan . province. Leftist
rebels attacked the nations highways Tuesday, setting up roadblocks, machine-gunning and burning vehicles and skirmishing with army patrols. (APLaserphoto)
gunning and burning vehicles in their ongoing campaign to sabotage the economy.
The release of the 31 prisoners was announced as the Constitutent Assembly prepared to debate an amnesty proposal that would offer freedom to most of the estimated 700 political prisoners stUl in ja and protection to rebels who lay down their arms.
Francisco Jose Guerrero, an aide to President Alvaro Magana, said the 31 prisoners were the most released in such a short period since leftist guerrillas began a war against the U.S.-backed government in October 1979.
But Guerrero said the release was routine and had nothing to do with the proposed amnesty.
He said Magana ordered the releases the recommendation of military judges, who ruled there was insufficient evidence against them. They were accused of belonging to terrorist organizations.
The prisoners included two women. None were known as leftist or rebel leaders.
A political source said the amnesty proposal would mean freedom for many people arrested on suspicion of involvement with leftist parties and groups.
The amnesty plan, as presented by a government-appointed peace commission, provides for freeing prisoners arrested under the governments state of siege laws. It does not cover prisoners serving sentences for non-political crimes.
Under Decree 507, the 1980 law covering political crimes, hundreds of Salvadorans have been jailed without trial or formal charges. The decree sets a limit of 180 days imprisonment without charges.
But human rights groups say prisoners have been held at long two years without charges being brought against them.
The rebel assaults on the countrys highways, meanwhile paralyzed traffic in some parts of the north and slowed it to crawl in the eastern third of the country. The attacks are part of an offensive begun Sunday after the rebels vowed to avenge the murder of guerrilla leader Melida Anaya Montes last week in Nicaragua.
The rebel campaign to disrupt the economy has focused on disrupting transportation and dynamiting power lines.
Bus service was suspended to northern Chalatenango province and reduced in the eastern part of the country, said a bus company spokesman who asked not to identified for fear of reprisals.
The rebels clandestine Radio Venceremos has been warning motorists to stay off the roads.
Guerrillas machine-gunned a truck carrying passengers near El Coyolito, 60 miles southeast of San Salvador. A national guard commander said the driver and a passenger were killed and four others were wounded. The guerrillas also burned five buses.
Near the western city of Sant) Ana, guerrUlas kUled two government soldiers and burned two buses, military sources said.
A Defense Ministry spokesman said soldiers killed four guerrillas during a rebel ambush on the Suchitoto road, 20 miles north of San Salvador. He said the army also suffered casualties, but refused to be more specific. Venceremos said rebels killed three soldiers and wounded eight.
Fatal Fire Said Drug-Related
BURLINGTON - Two men were charged with possession of marijuana and possession of paraphernalia Tuesday after a house fire killed a 22-year-old woman, police said
Donnie Lee George, 23, and David Bowles, 29, were arrested at the police station after drug evidence was found at the scene of the Tuesday morning fire, police said. Both men lived in the house.
The woman, who had a different address, was identified as Phyllis Angela Smith.
Investigators said the cause of the fire is not known, but that it may have been caused by smoking in a bedroom. The death has been tentatively ruled accidental.
Detective Steve Lynch said both suspects were under
the influence of drugs, probably as a result of a party at this house last night. Were thinking that drugs were involved at the party.Have A Suspect
ROXBORO, N.C. (AP) -Authorities in Person County say they have two witnesses and a suspect but have made no arrests in connection with the Sunday shooting death of a Danville, Va., man.
Sheriff Ernest Dixon identified the victim as Herman Ernest Simmons, 42. Dixon said the man was shot with a pistol and killed around 9 p.m. The shooting occurred in the home of a Roxboro man, identified as Kenneth Clyde Wagstaff,
Announcing The First
Mothers Day Bracelet Authorized by The Hummel Family
Handcrafted b> Reed A Barton
Silversmiths
The mother and leoal heir ot the world-renowned artist Berta Hummel has aulhoriaed ihe New England Colleclors Society lo oiler Ihis first Mother s Day Bracelet inspired 6y Ihe artwork ot Berta Hummel in an exdu-siyelirst edition
This exquisite iBId gold plated line mesh bracelet is produced by one ot America's oldest and most prestigious silversmiths - Beed S Barton The Berta Hummel child artwork A Child's Devotion " is elegantly reproduced m rich Damascene and permanently inlaid in Ihe center ol Ihe bracelet Each bracelel will be accompanied by a Cerlilicale ol Registration attesting to the authenticity ol this unique lirsi edition ' A Child's Devotion" bracelel will become a treasured heirloOm and a unique and beaulilul gilt lor Mother's Day. 1983 Actual I .cndth of Bracelet 7'
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Scott Airs G)ncern Over College Funding Drives
By MARY ANNE RHYNE Associated Press Writer
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) - State community college president and former Gov. Bob Scott told legislators Tuesday that hes concerned about the number of community colleges seeking special funding for themselves.
It will pit institution against institution," he told a joint meeting of the House and Senate Higher Education committees. Eventually the big boys are going to win and the little boys are going to lose."
He said there has been a gentlemans agreement among the community colleges not to seek money individually but to work together. Scott said he believed the tough financial times are pushing community colleges to break that agreement.
1 was indirectly pleading to the presidents (of the community colleges) and to their trustees to honor the gentlemans agreement we've had in the past, Scott said after the meeting.
So far this session, four such bills have been introduced. They would set aside money for Beaufort and Mitchell Community Colleges, Southwestern Technical College and community colleges in the western and western piedmont regions.
Scott said hes afraid that the Legislature will get fed up with the special bills and remove some of the autonomy that individual community colleges now enjoy. He said a similar situation brought about consolidation of the state universities.
He said diversity is the systems greatest strength and its greatest problem because the community colleges have difficulty speaking with one voice. He said there also needs to be more communication and cooperative efforts among community colleges, universities and public schools.
Scott noted that the community college system will celebrate its 20th anniversary next month. During that time, he said the system has grown from 24 campuses serving 54,000 students to 58 campuses serving more than 601,000 students a year.
The North Carolina system is the third largest in the nation, he said.
North Carolina has said to its citizens we will provide for you regardless of your past academic achievements, regardless of your past skills training, he said.
Our credibility could be further eroded by our inability to maintain an open-door policy. Already people are being turned away and morale is becoming a factor, he said.
In other legislative action:
Comparative Fault
\ bill establishing a comparative fault injury liability system in North Carolina won approval in the Senate Judiciary III Committee by a one-vote margin. The bill was amended, however, to exempt the state from its provisions.
Existing laws prevent an injured person from recovering any money if their negligence contributed to an injury. The proposal would allow an injured person to recover as long as he or she is less than half to blame for the injury.
The bill already has been debated once on the floor but
criticism that the bill would cost the state money forced it back to the Senate committee.
In a letter presented to the committee Tuesday, fiscal research director Tom Covington said claims paid by insurers could increase 6 percent to 15 percent according to a study now being conducted by a nationwide researcher. The size of those payments could increase 4 percent to 12 percent, making the cost to state government $100,000 to $300,000.
Frai^in Freeman, courts director, said in a letter that he could determine no accurate estimate of the fiscal impact on the courts.
sen. Henson Barnes, D-Wayne, said Tuesday that if the bill passed he would introduce another bill to set aside money to make the state comply with the law.
Budget
Budget leaders told the joint House-Senate Appropriations Committee that it will need to make some cutbacks in the proposed 1983-85 state budget.
There will be a shortfall (of revenues), said Sen. Robert Jordan, D-Montgomery. The economy will not be good enough to take care of all our problems by a long shot.
But Jordan could not say how large the revenue shortfall might be.
The committee decided to vote first on cutbacks that should be made regardless of the states financial health. Then the committee will get an updated look at economic indicators for 1983-85 and determine whether more cuts should be made.
Budget subcommittees were asked to identify ways to reduce the budget by 1 percent, 2 percent or 3 percent after legislative analysts concluded that Gov. Jjm Hunt overestimated state revenues for 1983-85. ,
The difference, in Hunts estimates and the Legislatures estimates is about $92.7 million - almost enough to lift the freeze on state workers and teachers salaries.
Bills
Lt. Gov. Jimmy Green noted that Tuesday was the 65th legislative work day and so far 168 bills and 10 resolutions have been enacted. He said that compares with 216 bills and 22 resolutions in the first 65 days of the 1981 session.
Commitment
The Senate voted 43-0 to tentatively approve a bill aimed at making sure people who are charged with violent crimes and are found incapable of standing trial or not guilty by reason of insanity are committed to mental institutions.
Under the bill, the Superior Court judge who heard the trial would determine whether the defendant should be involuntarily committed. If the judge commits the defendant, he would have to set conditions for his confinement.
Sen. William Staton, D-Lee, said the conditions would be a safe^ard so were not throwing mad dogs back at the public.
Pornography
The Senate also unanimously approved and sent to the House a bill making it a felony to use youth below the age of 16 in sexual performances or to sell material showing such children performing sexual acts.
It was the second time the Senate had considered the bill, A number of legal questions were raist':. !!ie first time and the
Sfafe Lottery Supporter Points To History As Proper Evidence
By F. ALAN BOYCE Associated Press Writer RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -Debate over a proposed North Carolina lottery ranged from predictions of rampant crime and immorality to promises of more money for the needy, but history had the last word.
Dr. Lennox Baker, former state Human Resources secretary, dismayed at opponents who criticized the plan as un-American and immoral, held up a picture of founding father John Hancock at a public hearing Tuesday,
Beneath the picture was affixed a lottery ticket dated 1765, bearing the same signature that apj^ared first on the Declaration of Independence.
Its good enough for him, Baker said. "He was a pretty good citizen.
The hearing on two bills introduced by Sen. Richard Barnes, D-Forsyth, was filled with testimony on compulsive gambling, possible criminal influences and fears that the poor might be exploited to fill state coffers. But both sides made forays into the arena of morality.
The proposed state lottery should be defeated because it is socially disintegrating, politically corrupt and morally dangerous,
said the Rev. Coy Privette, director of the Christian Action League of N.C. Inc.
Norman Harris, a Baptist pastor from Gibsonville, said the poor would buy tickets with money meant for their childrens needs.
Is this the way our state should meet its bills - on the abuse of helpless children in poor families? he asked.
But Rep. . Jeanne Fenner, D-Wilson, pointed out a different kind of immorality -one associated with cutting programs for people in need.
Weve just had to take $18 million from them, she said. People dont want more taxes. It is incumbent upon us to look for creative ways to help people. It woultf be immoral to turn our backs on the hungry and the hurting in North Carolina.
Six people spoke against Barnes bills - one which would start a lottery through direct legislation and the other to begin games only after a statewide referendum favored the idea - while 11 favored the idea. No vote was expected before next Tuesday.
Without the $100 million a lottery would bring in, all state programs would suffer cuts due to dwindling revenues, Barnes said.
To me, that is immoral, he said.
Dr. Thomas Freeman.
president of the Christian Action League, said the lottery would degrade the human personality.
It is a parasitic business that exploits human weakness and feeds upon the desire to get something for nothing, he said, adding that weak state penalties for gambling would invite criminal elements to ally themselves with the games.
Sam Currin, U^. Attorney for the Eastern District of North Carolina, agreed, saying a lottery would break down respect for both our state and federal gambling laws.
However, Edward J. Powers, former director of the FBI in Massachusetts and one-time director of the New Hampshire Sweepstake Commission, said he knew of no evidence that lotteries draw crime. And Sen. Bill Martin, D-Forsyth, offered to draft bills to stiffen state penalties for gambling violations if the lottery passed.
Privette said lotteries draw disproportionate sums from the poor and lead to
compulsive gambling.
But supporters disagreed.
There arent any lines of poor people buying tickets, said Powers. If there were, these people would be out with cameras ... listing the people who were on welfare that were buying the tickets. By and large theyre the middle class working people.
Stanly Fine, former director of the Maryland Lottery, said compulsive gambling is prompted by games that have a high frequency, a lot of action and a certain amount of skill -elements lotteries do not have.
Robert Beatty, 72, who said he was a member of the Senior Citizens and the Black Caucus in Cumberland County, said neither the government nor the church have helped the poor pay their bills.
The lottery offers us a new hope, a dream to go on living, he said. Lets get on about the business of helping people.
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measure was sent to a special committee consisting of all the . lawyers, women and Republicans,in the Senate.
The committee reworked the bill and gathered unanimous supportforit.
Coast
The Senate enacted three bills dealing with the Area Management Act, which regulates developmer f 20
coastal counties.
The first bill would allow blanket permits to be issued for certain kinds of development. The second would shorten the length of time it takes for consideration of constriiction permits.
The third would allow the secretary of the Department of Natural Resources and Community Development to issue emergency construction permits when lives or property are in immediate danger.
Vocational Education
The Senate took an unusual vote to gauge support for a bill that hasnt been introduced yet. The bill would appropriate $500,000 a year for vocational training programs for students with learning disabilities as recommended by Lt. Gov. Jimmy Green, said Sen. Bob Swain, D-Buncombe.
Swain explained to the Senate the need for such a bill and then asked for a show of hands of who would like to sign the bill. When only several hands were raised, he asked that the rules be suspended to take an electronic vote.
That vote showed 46 senators supported the measure and no one opposed it.
Green already has unveiled his plan before the state Board of Education.
Auditor
State Auditor Ed Renfrow lobbied for a bill to rewrite the laws governing his office and countered claims by at least one lawmaker that the bill might foster creeping auditorism.
All were asking for is the authority to conduct our audits by accepted professional principles, Renfrow told the House Judiciary II Comi^ittee.
He said the major changes would increase cooperation .among government agencies, let the auditor decide the frequency of audits formerly held every year, require timely financial information of all government agencies and give the auditor subpoena power over records including tax returns.
The last provision sparked debate.
I think you can understand our wariness over creeping auditorism, said Rep. Ken Spaulding, D-Durham.
(The auditor) would virtually rule independent of the Legislature and justice system, added Rep. Joe Roberts, D-Gaston.
County Hospitals
The House Health Committee approved and sent to the full House a bill that would let five hospitals in four counties open branches in neighboring counties.
Rep. Vernon James, D-Pasquotank, said his bill was V sparked by a Gates County clinic operated by doctors from Suffolk, Va. He said many patients were referred from the clinic to Virginia hospitals because Albemarle Hospital could not compete.
The bill would also affect Pender Memorial Hospital, Pitt Memorial Hospital and two Cleveland County facilities -Kings Mountain Hospital and Shelby Hospital.
Finance Committee
The House Finance Committee approved a bill that would establish a victim compensation program, requiring criminals to reimburse their victims through payments into a special fund.
Rep. Tom Womble, D-Forsyth, said the bill would not cost the state anything and that payments to victims would cease if the fund runs dry.
The Finance Committee also approved bills that would increase the permit fee for construction of a major coastal structure from $25 to $100. The fee for minor construction would remain at $25.
Major projects are those encompassing more than 60,000 square feet ot 20 acres or requiring additional state permits,
according to Kep. Charles Evans, D-Oai^ spo^r of the legislation.
Also approved was a bill sorting fines of $2,^for violations of the Coastal Area ManageB^t Act by puilders of major )jects and $250 for minor pro]^
The^'^te Judiciary I Committee approved of legislation reducing from 15 to 12 the number qiygawa judge must have served oii^ benchJiefere-Tffiri^ in order to be an emergency judger-
State law allows the chief justice of the state Supreme Court to appoint retired judges to temporary duty when a full-time judge is ill or otherwise unavailable.
Sen. Robert Swain, D-Buncombe, said using emergency judges was cheaper than hiring full-time judges.
Indigent Defendants
A bill that would r^uire that judges consider funding for North Carolinas indigent defense program before setting attorney fees was amended to require that such funds be held in a special account instead of the General Fund.
Members of the House Committee on Courts and the Administration of Justice agreed that the bill might prompt judges to cut fees if the troubled program continues to be underfunded.
It may invite judges to lower fees, but that puts the pressure on the General Assembly to fund it properly, said Rep. Bob Hunter, D-McDowell.
ANOTHER GOES Hughes Aircraft technicians ready the GOES-F weather satellite for an April 28 scheduled launch on top of a Delta rocket at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station. The satellite will be positioned above the equator, 2,200 miles southeast of Hawaii at an altitude of 22,300 miles (AP Laserphoto)
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. Greaf Monuments From View
By JOHN WINN MHXER Associated Press Writer ROME (AP) Marcus Aurelius is gone. The Pantheon is closed. Everywhere arches, columns and buildings are concealed behind protective cages.
What the Vandals and the Goths failed to do, the ravages of pollution and rumbling traffic are accomplishing - the destruction of the Eternal City.
The unavailability of some of the citys greatest monuments is a major disappointment greeting tourists now pouring into Rome for the 1983 extraordinary Holy Year of Redemption. Pope John Paul II proclaimed the Holy Year to commemorate the l,950th anniversary of the crucifixion of Jesus.
And part of the problem is that attempted cures often conflict with the needs of this bustling capital city of 3 million.
For example, the government banned traffic around several monuments, but the rules are often ignored by drivers trapped in the resulting congestion. Merchants at the bottom of the Spanish Steps have flooded the Communist-led
city government with protests claiming their business has dn^^ by more than 20 percent since the square was closed in January.
Many of our customers are American and Japanese tourists and they dont know how to reach our store now that buses are banned from the area, said Paolo DArpini, spokesman for fashion leader Gucci on Via Condotti. They should at least allow tourist and city buses and taxis into Piazza di Spagna.
The city has erected scaffolding and protective green cloth around some of the citys most famous sights, including the arches of Constantine and Septimius Severus, Trajans Column and the columns of the Temple of Saturn at the Roman Forum.
While the covering slow deterioration from wind and rain, they hide the beauty of the artwork.
Nor do they stqp the real culprit - acid rain, the combination of sulfur from auto exhaust and rain into a mild sulfuric acid that eats away at marble and bronze.
Some experts predict that the coverings, which first started going up in 1980, may
have to remain in {Hace for as long as 20 years until Rome'finds the money and the technology for permanent restoration.
Adriano La Regina, the city superintendent of archaeology, hopes they can come down in five years but says the city must come up with a permanent solution soon, or risk losing its national heritage.
If one does not impede what is causing the damage ... the restoration operation will be totally in vain in only a short time," he said.
In some cases drastic measures were necessary. The equestrian statue of Marcus Aurelius was removed in 1981 from the center of the Campidoglio Square and moved to a restoration institute for a long, slow treatment of its pollution-caused bronze disease.
The 1,800-year-old bronze, an ancient symbol of Romes eternity, for more than four centuries provided one of the most stunning si^ts in the city for tourists climbing the sloped stairway to the broad piazza designed by Michelangelo.
The latest victim is the Pantheon, considered one of
the best preserved monuments of imperial Rome and one of the citys most popular tourist attractions.
City officials locked its massive bronze doors last month after a German tourist was injured by a falling piece of masonry.
Giovanni Di Geso, siq)erln-tendent of monuments, said it will stay closed until officials are sure it is safe, which could be weeks or months.
The towering domed structure has survived numerous renovations and sackings since it was built in 27 B.C. by Agrippa to commemorate Augustus victory at Actium over Antony and Cleopatra.
But the burial site for Italys kings - completely rebuilt by the Emperor Hadrian around 120 - has suffered more than 150 chips and cracks since the 1979 earthquake, some in areas recenUy restored, according to DiGesos office.
The city asked the national government for at least $1.4 million to study the Pantheons problems, but the request was rejected.
Parliament has approved a special $117 million fund for monuments, but Rome has
TEMPLE OF SATURN - Tourists look at the Forum with scaffolding covering the Temple of Saturn. Tourists pouring into Rome in 1983 will find scaffolding and protective green cloth around
some of the citys most famous sights, mostly due to ravages of pollution and rumbling traffic. (AP Laserphoto)
The JIM HUNT Record
Subject:
Piid Pol. Adv.
Out-of-State Campaign contributions
)im Hunt Said: Out-of-state campaign contributions '^create obligations you ought not to have/*^
Jim Hunt Did: Sought out-of-state political donations from unions at an Atlanta fundraiser, where Herb Mabry, AFL-CIO Union Boss, said the labor movement all over the country will give all it can to his (Hunts) campaign.^
Victor Kimber. Director of PROP AC
"strong ties to organized labor"^
What "Obligation^' Does Politician Jim Hunt Now Have To This and Other Out- Of-State Liberal Speciaflnterests? PROPAC, the Most Prominent of the Union PACs, has said it intends to spend over $100,(X)0 to finance a negative ad campaign against jesse Helms. ^-4
Why?
Is it because Jesse Helms opposed the Union Bosses so-called Labor Reform Act?
The Greensboro Record said:
"The only known beneficiaries of the proposed revision in the National Labor Relations Act will be the big labor bosses and the machine politicians they carry about in their pockets. The workinR stiff stands to lose vet another measure of his individual liberty, and the Sunbelt region,... especially in the Carolinas... stan^ to suffer a massive assault on its economy. (Editorial, vvm)
Ask yourself?
Why are these out-of-state PROPAC donors planning to spend $100,000 in independent expenditures to elect Jim Hunt?
UFCW - AFL-CIO International Molders AFL-CIO ATU Cope AFL-CIO lUD - AFL-CIO
Graphic Arts International Union Int. Union of Electrical, Radio Machinists AFL-CIO
$500.00
Bakery Workers AFL-CIO
1,000.00
500.00
CWA AFL-CIO
1,000.00
500.00
Bricklayers AFL-CIO
500.00
500.00
AFL-CIO COPE
1,000.00
500.00
Int. Auto Union AFL-CIO
500.00
1,000.00
Total (From PROPAC FEC Report)
$7JUM.OO
;^ls this why Jim Hunt wont debate Senator Helms?
1. Asheville Citizen 10/6/82 2. Altanu Comlitulion S/13/81
3. Raleigh Timet 2/9/83
4. Campaigns and Elecliont. Spring 1982Democrats for Jesse... A Man of Character
Paid lof bv Helms for Senate. Mark Stephens. Treasurer
bera blocked in an ambitkNis plan to use the nooney to create an archaeological park in the center of imperial Rome.
The plan called for excavations to demolish the
wide tree-lined Via dei Fori Imi^riali, one of Romes busiest thoroughfares that runs in a straight line between the Piazza Venezia and the Colosseum through the heart of the Roman ruins.
But Culture Minister Nicola Vemola, a Christian Democrat, vetoed the plan last month because he said the funds were earmarked for restoration and not excavations.
City officials responded by proposing that the monuments be protected with see-through coverings, although they did not know where the money would come from to pay for such.
Competition Heating Up Among The Spectacuiar Tokyo Hoteis
By DAVID LAMMERS Associated Press Writer TOKYO (AP) - Tokyo, a city already studded with some of the worlds most spectacular hotels, is experiencing a new building boom in luxury hostelries.
With the opening of the new steel-and-glass towers of the Akasaka I^ince and Imperial hotels, and other new hotels in the works, competition is heating up among hoteliers in this megalopolis that serves as Japans financial and political center.
Besides providing bed-and-board for foreign business people and tourists, Tokyos hotels offer Japanese a chance to escape from their cramped living conditions into a world of French cuisine, crystal chandeliers and other luxuries.
The immense popularity of the top hotels for weddings, banquets and other social events means that In many cases, income from these facilities far outstrips the earnings from giving people a place to sleep.
A laser spotlight show^ heralded the recent opening of the new Akasaka Prince, a striking, silver-hued 40-floor tower designed by one of Japans most famous architects, Kenzo Tange. The combination hotel-office building offers a skyscraping challenge to the nearby New Otani, which at 40 floors, 2,057 rooms and 35 banquet halls, is Japans largest
hotel.
The Akasaka Prince has 761 hotel rooms, six restaurants and two cocktail lounges. Coffee, American-style, costs 400 yen ($1.70), with unlimited refills. A twin room starts at 24,000 yen ($102), a price that a desk clerk called a little above average for a Tokyo hotel.
The citys original Westem-style hotel. The Imperial, has just opened its new 31-story tower. The fourth new building on the Imperial site since the now-vanished architectural masterpiece of Frank Lloyd Wright, will add 363 hotel rooms, 14 floors of office space and 70 designer boutiques to garnish the Im
perials top-class image.
The opening of Tokyo Disneyland in Urayasu, 9.3 miles northeast of Tokyo, is expected to draw 10 million visitors annually and will prompt construction of several hotels in that area, according to a study by the Japan Hotel Association.
After these new hotels are all built, competition could be very tight, especially in the first year, said Richard Handl, Swiss-born manager of the Tokyo Hilton. But after two or three years, with Disneyland bringing in people and Japans economy getting a boost from cheaper fuel prices, I think we will be doing quite well. Its a challenge, but were not
afraid of It.
With Japans economy weathering the world recession better than that of most other countries and a continuing flow of foreign business people and other visitors to Japan, the occupancy rates of Tokyos top hotels have averaged 85 to 90 percent in recent years, Handl said in an interview.
Tourism to Japan, also has been rising despite the recession.
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AIBeef
Lb.
U S D A. GOV'T INSPECTED GENUINE
Ground $4 68
Chuck Lb I
COST CUTTER
COST CUTTER HOT OR MILD
Pork AQ8
Sausage . .Pkg90
Black 12 $049 Label...
CREAM WHITE. PINK OR
Manischewitz^ $4 99
. Ltr. I
Cream Red
BRIGHT
All Purpose Cleaner.. ^
PET PRIDE
gppy
$^29
KROGER NON FAT
Dry
Milk IS
KROGER
Instant
Potatoes. .'1^
$2^9
99*
TYTELL
Liebfraumiich
$939
COST CUTTER
Roasted 84 79
16-Oz.^T ^
KROGER GRADEA
Large Eggs
EMBASSY
Doz.
Peanuts...
THANK YOU
Apple ne
Jar
a pie Pie
I ng ... .^^-07
KROGER
Cooking
Gal.
Jug
$479
Wieners
EXTRA LEAN ROYAL SUPREME
Dubuque
Canned Ham
OSCAR MAYER
All Meat Wieners.
OSCAR MAYER
Sliced A 09 Bologna...!? 90
Save % io:t40^ On Cost Cutter Brands
"Q
COST CUTTER PUIN OR
Self Rising Flour
5
Lb.
Bag
69
IJ
COST CUTTER
Iodized Salt
26-Oz.
Box
22^ [s
COST CUTTER
Apple Juice
$429
64-Oz.
Jar
22
COST CUTTER COST CUTTER
Cut Green Macaroni
Beans... .'SSf 29 & Cheese
COST CUTTER COST CUTTER
Luncheon 004 Long $-9419
Meat.... IS 00* Grain Rice 1
COST CUTTER DRY
nnto
Beans____
COST CUTTER
Sandwich
30(H;t.
Box
449
$^19
FOOD
FARM POND RAISED FRESH DRESSED
Catfish
89
Lb.
never frozen
Ocean
Perch Fillet. .LbZ
FROZEN
Snow Crab * Cluster Lb 2
FARM POND
Raised Fresh *^00 Catfish Fillet.Lb*2**
FROZEN FRESHORE
Ocean Perch
DISCOUNT HEALTH AND BEAUTY AIDS
COLGATE INSTANT LATHER
Shave Cream
77*
FLOURIDE
TOOTHPASTE
Aim
19
VASELINE INTENSIVE CARE
Lotkm
$497
EXTRA-DRY
DEODORANT
SPRAY
Arrid
1
97
300-Ct.
Box
CUSHIONED TIP COTTON SWABS
Q-Tlps 47
VASELINE INTENSIVE CARE
Bath Beads
99*
Pepto-
Bismor
P09UP9IT8T0MACN
9Mf$nON
16-Oz.
Btl.
EXTRA DRY DEODORANT
AiiM Solid $^07
PROTECTIVE COATING ACTION
Pepto Bismol
A
REGULAR FORMULA MULTI-VITAMINS
Stross Tolls $A67
9yc\.
Btl.
The D*Uy Reflector, Greenville, N.C.Wednesday, April 13,198319
airings... Everyday
Your complete One-Stop Shopping store...
I
ONE
STOP
RIDGIES
Wise
Potato Chips
0
7-Oz.
Bag
LIMIT ONE BAG WITH $10.00 OR MORE ADDITIONAL PURCHASE
"QA
SPRINGDALE HOMOGENIZED
Whole Milk
m
uo Hi
79
Gal.
Jug
THIN & CRISPY
Jenos Pizza
KROGER
REGULAR OR LOWFAT
24-Oz.
Loaves
99
Cottage Cheese.. cup
KROGER, YUBI OLD WORLD OR
WCups ^
REGULAR OR MORE PULP MINUTE MAID
Orange Juice 'c.'
Yogurt____
RHODES
Dinner Rolls.
15-Oz. . Pkg.
KROGER
Raisin
Bread ...
Loaf
KROGER PLAIN OR
Sugar
Donuts... .'IS
99*
79*
IMPORTED ^ A A
Ribier Grapes.. Lb 99
CAROLINA GOLDEN ^
Sweet Yams.. .lp 19
FRESH
Collard
Greens och^9
WASHINGTRON STATE
DAnjou Pears. .ib09 2 p M
FRESH
Kiwi
Fruit
FIRST OF THE SEASON
California
Strawberries
$
Full
Quart
149
t IH
margarine
Blue Bonnet
2*1
9HQtrs.
09
ASSORTED VARIETIES POLAR PAK
Bkie .1 Bonnetv
Maigaine
KRAFT
Velveeta Cheese.
2
Lb. . PkQ.
3
ASSORTED VARIETIES
Pet Ritz Cobblers,
COUNTRY OVEN
Dunkin Sticks
2,.Ji
Pkgs. For
royal VIKING DANISH TOPPED STRAWBERRY CHEESE OR
WASHINGTON STATE RED OR
Golden Delicious
Apples
17
0
125
Size
Each
SPRING TIME SALAD FIXIN'S
GREAT FOR SALADS
Cherry Tomatoes.
GREEN TOP
Bunch Radishes..
Pt
CRISP FIRM
Green Peppers..
99*
3..*1
3..M
4-Ct. . Pkg.
99
BUNCH
Salad
Spinach.... bci,09
Look for the Yellow Label.
49^
DnklllO Dll%#0 r?o? 1 W 4\r 1 temporary cost allowance!..
KIJNII^ Kl I ^ 1^,xPiBtso>22W\ Wf PASS ON THE SAVINGS FOR YOU THE UWllWW Uw I iJ J CUSTOMER. LOOK FOR THE YELLOW TAGS!
FRISKIES BUFFET
Cat Food
6.5-Oz.
Can
33
INSTANT TEA
Nestea
$i
2-Oz. Jar
79
KRAFT
BBQ Sauce
75
18-Oz.
Btl.
CAMPBELLS
Tomato Soup____
ALL VEGETABLE
Wesson
freshly baked
Angel $449 Food Cake.. Ea/^1
CRUSTY HARD
K'
EXTRA LEAN
Roast Beef
Lb.
$099
mm SAV
on
SAVE
90'
6.99
FREE LB. OF POTATO SALAD WITH ANY
9-Piece S^49
Chicken
Oil 1?
25*
$03S
79
PAPER
Northern Napkins.. .S^
PAPER
NON-DAIRY CREAMER
Coffee-mate.....
Towels...
CARNATION
Evaporated Milk 'ISi
$^83
50*
GOURMET
Turkey Breast
Lb.
$999
A A
SAVE
90'
CREAMY
Macaroni Salad Lb
CHEESE OR SAUSAGE
68
Fresh Pizza..
2.*5
SOCOMPLETE ONE STOP SHOPPING STORE
DOUGLAS, HOE,
LONG HANDLED SHOVEL, CULTIVATOR OR BOW RAKE
Sanleii Tools
$^7
KELLER J61 PLASTIC ARMS EARTH TONES
Lawn Chair
Re
$7
$K88
COLEMAN 5281-706
poly-LITE
32-Qt. Cooler
116^
$19.
REGULAR
PANTYHOSE
KELLOGG BIG 14 GARAGE AND
Patio Broom
$377
Only
MIGHTY MATCH DISPOSABLE
Lighters
199
^Kroger
Pharmacy
GENERIC DRUGS
Ask your pharmacist about generic drugs. You may be paying more for your prescription than you need to.
756-7393
Now.. Double Print Film Developing
10 LB. BAG
When you bring roll of film to Krogor, got your first att of prints st our ivoryday low prict and your fxtra coat cuttar printa
EVeRYTIME
5d: r
EACH
'OWOWOMU4 rmoeawMiteoiitOMv
Charcoal
Briquets
20The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Wednesday, April 13.1983
Stock And Market Reports
N.C. Markets Grain: No. 2 yellow shelled corn slightly lower at 3.01-3.35, mostly 3.23-3.33 in east and 3.32 To 3.55, mostly
3.35-3,40 in Piedmont; No. 1 yellow soybeans lower at
6.23-6.53. mostly 6.28-6.42 in east and 5.90-6.25. mostly
6.24-6.25 in Piedmont. Wheat 3.31-3.51, mostly 3.31-3.37; oats 1.25-1.49; (new crop -corn 2.79-3.06; soybeans
6.36-6.65; wheat 3.01-3.27). Soybean meal f.o.b. N.C. processing plants per ton 44 percent 213.00-218.00. Prices paid as of 4 p.m. Tuesday by location for corn and soybeans: Cofield 3.33, 6.53; Conwav 3.16, 6.33; Creswell 3.01, 6.23; Dunn 3.33, 6.29; Elizabeth City 3.18, 6.33; Farmville 3.26. 6.27; Fayetteville , 6.42; Goldsboro 3.34. 6.26; Greenville 3.23, 6.28; Kinston 3;27, 6.28; Lumberton 3.23, (6.23-6.27); Pantego 3.23, 6.28; Raleigh -. 6.42'2; Selma 3.35, 6.28; Whiteville 3.23, 6.27; Williamston 3.23, 6.28; Wilson (3.33-3.35), 6.28; Albemarle 3.32, 6.25; Barber 3.36. 6.24; Mocksville 3.40; Monroe 3.55; Mt. Ulla -, 6.25; Roaring River 3.35; Statesville 3.35.5.90.
NEW YORK (AP) - Stock prices pushed ahead today, continuing to gain ground at historic highs.
The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials climbed 5.71 to 1,151.03 in the first half hour Gainers took a 4-3 lead over losers among New York Stock Exchange-listed issues.
The Dow Jones industrials finished Wednesday a fraction below their peak reached on March 24. Most other market indicators established new highs.
Analysts cautioned that one ingredient - heavy-
Polish Police Seize Solidatify Leader Waiesa For Questioning
trading volume was - missing from the ideal recipe for a continuing bull market. But investors hopes for further improvement in the economy and more declines in interest rates still seemed to be running high.
A top executive of New Yorks Manufacturers Hanover Trust predicted today that the prime lending rate, which now stands at 10*2 at most banks, would be down to about 9 percent by the end of the year.
Todays early volume leaders included American Telephone, up '4 at 64^; American Express, up /s at 63"4, and Inco Ltd., up at
12'h.
On Tuesday the Dow Jones industrial average rose 3.49 to 1,145.32.
Advances outpaced declines by about 4 to 3 on the NYSE.
Big Board volume totaled 79.90 million shares, against 81.44 million in the previous session.
The NYSEs composite index gained .39 to 89.46. At the American Stock Exchange, the market value index was up 3.11 at 396.39.
WEDNESDAY
6:30 p.m - REAL Crisis Intervention meets 6:30 p.m. Kiwanis Club meets 7:00 p.m. Jaycettes meet 8:00 pm. - Greenville White Shrine meets as Masonic Temple 8:00 p m. - Pitt County Al-Anon Group meets at AA Bldg on Farmville hwy.
8:00 pm. John Ivey Smith Council No. 6600. Knights of Columbus meet at St. Peter's Church Hall
8:00 p.m. - Pitt County Ala-Teen Group meets at AA Bldg , F'armville hwy.
THURSDAY
6:30 p.m. - Jaycees meet at Rotary Bldg.
6:30 p.m. - Exchange Club meets
6:30 p.m - BPW Club meets
7:00 p.m - Greenville Civitan Club meets at Three Steers
7:30 p.m. DAV and Auxiliary meets at VFW Home
[carriage]
t TRADE
NKW YORK lAPi
'- Midday stocks:
T
Low
Last
A!MR Corp
25",
26
AbbtLabs
43',
43'
43',
Allis Chaim
14'
14'
14',
Alcoa
:!2"
32',
32".
AmBrands
50
ai
ai
Amer Can
33'S,
33'
33".
Am Cyan
4".
41",
41",
AmFamily
18
17
18
Am Motors
6
?'*4
6
AmStand
:i2'
3
31.
Amer T4T
64",
64',
64",
Beat Food
26'*
26'
26',
Beth Steel
21"
21
21',
Boeing
42
41
42
Boise Cased
41
40
41
Borden
Ef'i
,
55'
Burlngt Ind CSX Corp
ai
SI".
33".
61',
60',
61',
CaroPwLt
22'
'22
22'
Celanese
u
M",
54",
Cent Soya
14,
14'..
14'-.
Champ Int Chrysler
26',
26'
26'
19',
18',
19',
CocaCoia
I 55'
55'
Colg Palm
23,
23
23
('onAgra
29,
29',
29' .
Conti Group
42".
42',
42',
IXdlaAirl
45",
. 4:'
45",
DowChem
:io
29',
30
duPont
43',
42'
43',
Duke Pow
23".
23'-,
23".
EastnAirL
8".
8',
8' .
East Kodak
81".
81'
81',
EatonCp
a'
34
a
Esmark s
63'
6:i
63'.
Exxon
32
31,
32".
Firestone
19
18",
19
ElaPowl.t
:i7
36",
:!6
ElaProgress
18
18",
18
KordMol
41
40",
41
For McKess
42"
42',
42",
Fuqua Ind GTE Corp
39'.
:!9',
39',
43'
.42",
42
GnDynam
44"
44
44',
Gen 'Elec
108',
107",
107",
Gen Food
42'
42
42
Gen Mills
.=4".
54'
54
Gen Motors
60'
59",
60
GenuParts
40'
39',
40'
GaPacif
-26',
25',
26'
Goodrich
37
:t6",
29"
36
Goodyear
29',
29',
Grace Co
42".
42".
42'
GtNor Nek
44
44
44
Greyhound
24
23',
24
Gulf Oil
34
33",
33
Herculeslnc
S"
34
3;'
Honeywell HospiCp s
92'
91,
92'
El',
51
51',
ing Rand IBM
43',
43
43
107
107',
107',
Intl Harv
6'-,
6"
6',
Int Paper
E4
53
53
Int Rectif
14',
14'
14',
Int T&T
:I8
37",
38
K mart
33'
32',
32,
KaisrAlum
17\
17".
17',
KanebSyc
16',
16
16
KrogerCo
Lockheed
:8',
106',
37",
105"
38',
106
laiews Corp
16f,
164",
164",
Masonite n
E7"i
56',
56'-.
McDrmlnt n
18
17
18
Mhad Corp
23",
23',
23",
MinnMM
78
77',
77",
Mobil
29",
29',
29'-.
Monsanto
91",
90'-.
91',
NCNBCp
NabiscoBrd
26",
34"
1::
26',
:4'h,
Nat Distill
27'
27
27
NorflkSou n
E8",
58",
58'.,
OlinCp
30
29',
30
Owenslll
30",
30",
30'.,
Penney JC
64',
63",
64',
Pepsi(:o
36'
35
36
Phelps Dod
28'
27
27
PhilipMorr
63
62",
62\
PhillpsPet
3f'
a'
35
Polaroid
32
3
32
ProctGamb s
61',
60
61',
(Quaker Oat
44
43",
44
RCA
23
22",
22
RalstnPur
21".
21'-,
21'.
t ANTIQUES I
^ 802 Clark Street
^ (Formerly The Stripper) ^
f Custom Hand Refinish- f 4 ing And Restoration.
t fluatoin Riiirina On A ^
. Custom Buying On Cost Plus Basis
f AntlquM. China. Ciyrtsl And ^ Slhwr.
^ Household Appraisals. 4 Insurance Estimates.
^ Tuts.-Sat. 10 to 5* or by appointment closed Sun. t Mon.
757-1982
Republic Stl Revlon Reynldlnd Rockwelint RfnCrown StRegIs Pap Scott Paper SearsRoeb Shaklee Skyline Cp .Sony Corp Southern Co Sperry Cp SldOilCal StdOilInd StdOilOh Stevens JP TRW Inc Texaco Inc TexEastn UMC Ind Un Camp Un Carbide UnOilCal Uniroyal US Steel Wachov Cp WalMart s WestPtPw) Westgh El Weyerhsr WinnDix Woolworth Wrigley Xerox Cp
S
20' ,
.
tUh
3
24
31
20',
37-^
20'2 201,.
3?.
li
3'S,
24
30. 31',
20 20'
247
37 377
14"., 14'
14'
16
:16
38
41'
24'.
14',
II I. 31' 3i\
38'i ,38'
41' 41',
24
63
33'-,
ft
10".,
72',
60",
3;
117
23'.,
38',
19"
41"
41'S,
39
46",
36
41
41'.,
4,' 46
23 24
63",' 63"., 33" 331-j
M'-
104,
72
60',
34",
11",
23
EO'.i 10", 72' 60", 34 11V 23
38'2 38'i
19'., 93
41. 41
41' 4f\
38" 38",
46'-, 463,
3 3
44"., 44",
41', 41',
.Dial'A^
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OF EASTEMi N08TH CASOUNA
DONTOM MONVtUf IIHin MUNQTON KVD. MANCH OfHCf 1m
GDANSK, Poland (AP) -Police seized Solidarity leader Lech Walesa at his Gdansk apart^t today, and his wife D^ijin^d she was told he was interrogated at a police station.
Tell the whole world they are breaking the law, Walesa yelled to reporters as he was led into a red police van and driven away. Mrs. Walesa said a senior police official told her by phone that
her husband was taken to a police station for questioning.
The move came a day after Walesa announced he held a weekend meeting with underground leaders of the outlawed labor movement, and on the 13th of the month, a day sometimes marked by protest over the declaration of martial law on Dec. 13, 1981.
In Warsaw, the spokesman
for the Communist government, Jerzy Urban, denied the false information that Walesa has been arrested. A spokesman for police in Gdansk also denied Walesa was arrested, saying, I dont know anything and I have no idea who might know. We are not interested in that, anyway.
Western reporters saw Walesa seized, and a spokesman for the indepen-
House Panei Is To Ban A Secret War
Trying
ByROBERTPARRY Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON (AP) - A House panel, upset with reported CIA backing for rebels trying to oust the leftist Nicaraguan government, wants to ban all U.S. support for military actions inside or against Nicaragua.
On a party-line voice vote, the Democratic-controlled Hou^e Foreign Affairs Western Hemisphere subcommittee approved the ban Tuesday and sent it on for consideration by the full committee.
The subcommittee also voted to require that the government of El Salvador agree to a dialogue with leftist insurgents and dramatically improve its human rights record to qualify for continued U.S. military aid.
And it voted stringent limits on aid to El Salvador and Honduras and a ban on military aid to the military
government of Guatemala. In separate actions, the panel also voted to limit U.S. military aid to El Salvador to $50 million in each of the next two years and kill President Reagans request for $50 million in additional military aid this year.
The vote on Nicaragua came despite new assurances from the Reagan administration that the CIA is not trying to overthrow the Nicaraguan government and thus is complying with existing congressional restrictions on CIA actions against Nicariigua.
But faced with public statements by the rebels that they have received U.S. aid and that their goal is to overthrow the Sandinistas, many members of Congress remain unconvinced.
What has precipitated this (proposed) amendment is the conviction that the administration is end-
Utilities
(Continued from Pagel)
The director said if the commission receives authorization to execute contracts for the project in June, construction of the plant could begin about the middle or last of July. Work on the new facility is expected to take two years.
GUC board members were also told that the DEM has given approval for the installation of collector lines to serve subdivisions which could contribute up to 172,000 gallons per day to the sewer system. The approval is necessary because the citys present waste water treatment plant has reached its capacity.
Horne said the DEM is expected to be more lenient in its approval of requests for expansion of the sewer system the closer the city moves toward construction of the new treatment plant. The DEM consent order affects only collector or outfall lines serving developments. Individual sewer taps to not require approval.
The commission also modified the rate schedule for interruptable natural gas customers to allow a negotiated rate for that class of customer based on the commissions negotiated price of interruptable gas.
Horne explained that the modification is based on the fact that N.C. Natural Gas has agreed to sell to GUC customers based on a split the earnings formula designed to keep natural gas competitive with fuel oils.
Horne said NCNG will sell the gas, based on the actual cost of delivery to Greenville. NCNG and GUC will then divide the mark-up on a 50-50 basis.
In other business the commission: approved the extension of sewer service to Whichport Subdivision south of the site of the new Sheraton motel south of Greenville Boulevard at a cost of about $75,00(i; approved spending an estimated $123,000 for engineering work on several water, sewer and gas projects, including the installation of sewer in the Mumford Road and Oakgrove annexation areas; approved participation in a U.S. Geological Survey ground water study at a cost of $8,000; and approved a study to be conducted by N.C. State University of the commissions work processing needs at a cost of $10,000.
Contracts were awarded to low bidders for fencing the borrow pit at the water treatment plant site and around the old water treatment plant. Eastern Fence Co., $5 731- 75 transformers, Hesdo Inc., $37,050; 16,000 feet of cable Eastern Electric Supply Inc., $27,632, and a load management programer and controller, SAB Harmon Industries $50 280 (which has been negotiated down to $31,570).
Hutton Life
E. F. Hutton Life Insurance Company
The Original Universal Life Policy
Hutton Life was the first company to offer universal life, and as a result has more experience administering and developing new enhancements for it. Learn about the new generations of universal life.
For more information contact:
Wayne Adams
E.F. Hutton & Co. Inc.
327 Arlington Blvd. Greenville, N.C.
756-2000
Policy 1-01 m Nos KJ45. 1046,1049 ^-
running the existing law, said Rep. Stephen Solarz, D-N.Y.
Following stepped-up rebel attacks inside Nicaragua last month, several members of the House and Senate intelligence committees said the CIA might be violating a law passed late last year prohibiting covert U.S. military aid for the purpose of toppling the Sandinista government.
The new, more tightly worded proposal is sponsored by the panels chairman, Rep. Michael Barnes, D-Md., and is reminiscent of the 1976 Clark amendment that prohibited covert CIA ctions against the leftist government of Angola. That law is named after its sponsor, former Sen, Dick Clark, D-lowa.
The Barnes proposal would prohibit the United States from providing any assistance of any kind ... for the purpose or which would have the effect of supporting, directly or indirectly, military or paramilitary operations in or against Nicaragua by any nation, group, organization, movement or individuals unless the president determines that it is in U.S. security interests and Congress agrees.
In a related development Tuesday, CIA Director William J. Casey assured the Senate Intelligence Committee in a closed briefing that the United States is not seeking to overthrow the Nicaraguan government.
Sen. Barry Goldwater, R-Ariz., the panels chairman, said Casey and other top CIA officials had convinced him that the spy agency is living within the letter and spirit of the law.
Goldwater noted that a key element of this law relates to the purpose of the U.S. government and not to the expressed purpose of the recipients of any such support.
A spokesman for Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan, however, noted that briefings on the CIAs activities in Central America will continue.
James Michel, a State Department official, said the Barnes proposal would provide assurances to the government of Nicaragua that the United States cannot provide support for military or paramilitary actions directed against it.
PUBUC
NOTICES
NOTICE OF CANCELLATION OF PUBLICA6EETINGSON PROPOSED NORTH CAROLINA HAZARDOUS WASTE MANAGEMENT RULE REVISIONS (10 NCAC lOF)
The North Carolina Dyjartmenf of Human Resources, Division of
Health Services has cancelled three public meetings on proposed rules concerning management of hazardous waste in North Carolina.
The three public meetings had been scheduled as follows:
Date, April 18, Time 7:30 p.m.; Location -Auditorium, School of Allied Health East Carolina
University, Greenville, N.C,
Date, April 20, Time 7:30 p.m.
Location: Mulls Convention Center,
Highwav^64/7'}Hckory,'^
April 21, Time 7:30 p.m..
Location: Kernersville Library,
Downtown, Kernersville, N.C.
The public hearing scheduled tor April 22 at 1.30 p.m. in the Highway Building Auditorium. 1 Soutf qtc
Wilming'lon Sfreet, 'Raleigh, ~n7c! will still be held, but the item on hazardous waste rules has been removed from the agenda.
The subjects of the proposed rules were to have been:
-To amend standards and permitting requirements tor owners/operators of hazardous waste land treatment and landfill management facilities.
-To amend definitions and make certain technical clarifying changes to existing rules.
To addadditional requirements to determine whether an applicant tor a permit for a hazardous waste managment facility has a record of operating other hazardous waste facilities in accordance with sound waste management principles and in substantial compliance with federal and state laws and regulations as required by N.C. G.S. 13fl-66.18A(I) (2).
The meetings will be rescheduled at a later date. Proper notice will be given about the meetings and about the public hearing at which these proposed rule changes will be
For further Information, write or call:
Solid and Hazardous Waste Management Branch
Room 213, Bath Building 306 North Wilmington Sfi Raleigh, N.C. 27602 Telephone: (919 ) 733 *178 April 13, 1983
'reef
Obituaries
dent labor leader read reporters the following communique:
On April 13, Lech Walesa was arrested at his apartment in Gdansk by two uniformed and one plainclothes police officer. The officers carried guns and threatened to use force. They refused to preseqt any kind of summons or documents, the communique said.
They also refused to give any explanation to Walesas wife or any member of the family, it said.
The spokesman, who was at the Walesa apartment, said that the police first came for Walesa at 2:10 p.m. (7:10a.m. EOT).
He told them he was ready to go, but first wanted to see a summons or another official document. They went away and returned half an hour later, the spokesman said.
They still hgd no document (ordering Walesa to enter police custody) but said they had received an order to use force, even guns. If he refused to go with them, the spokesman said.
They refused to give any explanation and all they said to Walesa was, you will find out when you get there.
Given the situation, he (Walesa) just grabbed one pack of cigarettes and went with them, the spokesman said.
Walesa was freed from 11 months martial law detention in November and several weeks later was bundled into a police car and driven around for hours to prevent him from speaking at a rally in Gdansk.
There had been speculation he would be picked up after his weekend meeting with underground Solidarity leaders.
BeU
Mr. Willie Monk Bell of the Belvoir community died Thursday at Pitt County Memorial Hospital. Funeral services will be conducted today at 4:30 p.m. at Norcott Memorial Chapel in Ayden by Elder J.L. Wilson. Burial will follow in the Ayden Cemetery.
Mr. Bell was born and reared in the Ayden community but had made his home near Belvoir for the past 20 years.
'Tick Fever' Is Reported
* He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Hattie Lee Jenkins Bell of the home; six sons, James Lee Bell of Ayden, Teddy Bell of New York, William Bell of Washington, D.C., David Bell of Greensboro, Nicholas Bell of Kinston and Johnnie Bell of the home; six daughters, Mrs. Roberta Edwards of Greenville, Mrs. Helen Flowers of Kinston, Mrs. .Willie Mae Saucer of Tarboro, Mrs. Velma Barnes of Greensboro and Ms. Joann Petteway and Ms. Margie Bell, ^wth of Washington, D.C.; one step-son, Joe William Lee of Baltimore, and 14 grandchildren.
-A
DURHAM, N.C. (AP) Burlington woman fe recovering at Duke Medical Center from the state's first reported case of Rocky Mountain spotted fever this, year.
Christine Whitley, 38, is listed in fair condition in the intensive care unit, although she still cannot speak and does not recognize visitors, her husband, Michael, said Monday.
The Whitleys ordeal began March 24 when Christine pulled a tick from her thigh. At the time, she did not give it much thought - and doctors thought the symptoms developed signaled an ordinary cse of flu.
After a few days, Mrs. Whitley slipped into a coma and her life was really in danger, her husband said. Doctors turned her progress around last Tuesday. Now her eyes are open again, the vital signs strong.
Its just through prayers that I think she survived, Michael said.
North Carolina last year led the nation in tick fever fatalities. A dozen people in the state died from the illness and 213 other cases were reported. Nationwide in 1982 there were 981 reported cases of spotted fever.
Forbes
Mr. John Mayo Forbes, 71, died Tuesday in Craven County Hospital, New Bern. His funeral service will be conducted Thursday at 2 p.m. in the Wilkerson Funeral Chapel by the Rev. Ralph Brown. Burial will be in Cherry Hill Cemetery.
Mr. Forbes spent most of his life in Greenville and attended North Carolina State University in Raleigh. He served in the U.S. Army during World War II and was in the Pacific Theater. He had owned and operated a grocery-servlce station in Greenville and was a member of St. James United Methodist Church.
Surviving is a sister, Mrs. Janes Black of McLean, Va.
The family will receive friends at the funeral home tonight from 8-9 p.m.
Vines WINTERVILLE - Mr. David (Bill) Vines of 204 N. Mills St. died at Pitt County Memorial Hospital Sunday. A funeral service will be conducted Friday at 2 p.m. at Mitchells Funeral Chapel by the Rev. Thomas Dixon. Buraiil will follow in the Bell Chapel Church Cemetery.
He is survived by one son, Reginald Taylor of Greenville; one sister, Mrs. Mary Forbes of Greenville, and- two brothers, Alonzo Vines of Greenville and Charlie Vines of Winterville.
The family will meet friends Thursday from 8-9 p.m. at the funeral home.
EXTENDED WEATHER OUTLOOK FOR N.C.
A chance of showers Friday and mainly over the east on Saturday, followed by partly cloudy Sunday. Highs in 60s and 70s Friday, cooling to 50s and low 60s by Sunday. Lows in 40s and 50s Friday morning, cooling to mostly 40s elsewhere Sunday morning.
Card of Thanks
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ATTENTION
GREENVILLE CITY COUNCIL AGENDA
Thursday, April 14,1983 7:30 P.M.
City Council Chambers
The Greenville City Council will consider the following items:
"I adjoining N. Memorial Dr., north of Gum Rd.. and west of Fred Webb Grain Co., from R-6 (Residential) and iU (Unoffensive Industry) to R6-MH (Residential-Mobile Home);
2. Rezoning property located between Seaboard Coast Line RR and N. Pitt St., from Moore St. north-D (Highway Commercial) to CDF (Commercial Downtown Fringe);
3. Public hearing on the third year Community Development application to the N.C. Dept, of Natural Resources & Community Development;
4. Scheduling a public hearing on a petition for satellite annexation by the Carolina Opry House;
5. Scheduling a public hearing on a petition for satellite annexation by owners of Greenridge Subdivision, Sec. I & II;
6. Ordinance amending the 1979-80 Community Development Budget and the 1981-82 Small Cities Budget Ordinance;
7. Resolution approving the sale of Disposal Parcel D-5 in Southside Redevelopment Project;
8. Resolution supporting the reenactment of General Revenue Sharing;
9. Tax releases and refunds and a privilege licenae refund;
10. Agreement with Pitt Community College for transit service;
11. Joint agreement by the City and Utilities with N.C. League of Municipalities for a pay and classification plan study;'
12. Request that the City repurchase a four-grave lot in Greenwood Cemetery;
13. Street acceptance of Lake Road, from the northern tine of Lake Ellsworth, Sec. I, northerly aoorox-imately 1,750 feet to the dead end; and
14. Ordinance prohibiting truck traffic on certain streets. ' *
Thejgubjjcjecordja^^ April 13, iigg ^
Sports xfR DAILY REFLECTOR ClassifiedWEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, APRIL 13, 1983
Bishops Rally To Down Pirates, Again
By WOODY PEELE Reflector Sports Editor ROCKY MOUNT - N.C. Wesleyan pushed over an unearned run in the bottom of the tenth inning and pulled out a 5-4 baseball victory over East Carolina University yesterday.
The win marked the second straight time in as many days that the Battling Bishops had dumped the sta^ering Pirates. ECU, after jumping off to a 13-5 start, have tumbled to 15-12 overall, winning just two of their last eight outings.
And there were times yeserday when it was flat embarrassing for the Pirates, who gave up the first four runs and allowed only one single during that proceedure.
Wesleyan used its stren^h on the bases to steal nine
times - five of them by Richard Mattocks, who had stolen home plate on Monday in Greenville. Not once did ECU come close to getting a runner, although starter Charlie Smith did pick off one runner at first. .
"The thing about it, they arent stealing on our pitchers," Coach Hal Baird said. We just cant throw them out.
"It just seems to be that kind of season for us. The kids deserve better. They played well enough to win today, but just couldnt pull it out. We couldnt do the things a winning team does. We couldnt stop them on the bases nd youve got to do that on the road.
We threw well today but we just couldnt do anything about it.
East Carolina did get good jobs on the mound from ^starter Charlie Smith, who gave up four runs on five hits, while walking five and striking out one and reliever Bob Davidson, who suffered his fourth loss in five decisions. He gave up just two hits and walked three - two intentionally. He struck out four.
East Carolina tagged Wesleyans Sam Jones, now 4-0, for six hits - three of them homers, two by Winfred Johnson but couldnt put enough things together. Jones walked four and struck out six.
Wesleyan, now 23-3, opened the first inning with an unearned run. Mattocks reached , on an error and stole second. Mike DeSolas grounder was relayed to third, but in the dirt and it scooted into foul territo
ry allowing Mattocks to continue home for a 1-0 lead.
East Carolina erased that on just three pitches in the second. The first pitch saw Todd Evans send the ball out of the park in deep center, some 390 feet from the plate. Two pitches later, Johnson nailed the first of his homers, to left, and ECU held a 2-1 advantage.
The Bishops quickly tied it up however. Moochie Medley led off with a walk and stole second. He was sacrificed to third and scored on Clen Mattockssacrifice fly.
ECU went back out, 3-2, with a run in the third. With one away, Robert Wells was hit by a pitch and with two down, Evans walked. Johnsons grounder to short was booted, allowing Wells to score.
But again, it was not to be.
Wesleyan came back to score twice in the bottom of the third to take a 4-3 lead.
Richard Mattocks led off with a walk and stole both second and third. With one down, Terry Coates walked and alsojtole up. Mike De-Leone then got the first hit of the day off Smith, scoring Mattocks. Charlie Simpson then laid down a squeeze bunt to score Coates.
Both teams had scoring opportunities after that, including one in the sixth that saw another squeeze fail when Vince Chamberlain missed the ball and Willie Arrington was caught on the basepaths.
East Carolina finally tied it up with a run in the eighth -that on Johnsons second homer over the fence in center about the same place as Evans.
ECU put the leadoff man on
ECiraUna
Robinette,ss
RWelU,cf
HaUow.rf
Evans,Ib
Johnson,dh
Home,3b
Salmond,2b
Curlings,c
Shank,U
Totals
ab r b tb NCWet. ab r h rb
S 0 1 0 RMattoclu,2b 3 2 10
2 10 0 DeSola,dh 3 0 0 0
5 0 0 0 Pro'2ano,pb
4 111 Beaupre,^
4 2 3 2 Coates,rf
3 0 0 0 DeLeone,lb
4 0 0 0 Slmpson,3b
4 0 10 Medley,lf
3 0 0 0 Arrington.cf
CMatlocks,c C'berlain.ss Shorter,ph 34 4 I 3 Totals
10 0 0 10 0 0 3 10 0 5 0 11
3 0 0 1
4 2 0 0 4 0 2 0 2 0 11 3 0 10 10 11
33 5 7 4
EastCaroUna................021 000 010 0-4
N.C.WesleyaD...............112 QUO 000 1-5
E-Horne, Robinette, Chamberlain, Fulghum, Salmond; DP-N.C Wesleyan 2; LOB-Ea 5, NCWC 11; HR-Evans, Johnson 2; SB-R Mattocks 5, Medley 2, Coates, R Wells, Arrington; S-Arrington, Simpson, Chamberlain, R Wells; SF-C Mattocks.
Pitching ip b r er bb so
EastCaroUna
Smith.............................5 5 4 3 5 1
Davidson (L,HI.................4ij 2 10 3 4
N.C. Wesleyan
Jones(W,4^1).....................10 6 4 3 4 6
Smith faced two batters in the sixth.
Two outs when winning run scored.
HBP-by Jones (R. WeUsi; WP-Jones
base in the tenth, but couldnt get him around.
And in the bottom of the frame, NCW used an error to keep a,threat alive - and make it bear fruit.
With one away. Medley reached on an error and stole second. With two away, Clen Mattocks was intentionally walked to set up a force. But pinch-hitter Ron Shorter responded with a single into center, easily scoring Medley
with the game-ending run.
Johnson led the ECU hitting with three, the only hitter in the game with more than one.
We have to keep battling, Baird said. A couple of breakdowns cost us again today, and the kids are down, but I dont think theyll quit on us. Theyre not that kind.
The Pirates return to action on Thursday at 7 p.m. when they host North Carolina at Harrington Field.
Lady Pirates Sweep Loulsburg
'Lady Luck' Kisses Rose For 4-3 Win
By JIMMY DuPREE Reflector Sports Writer
STANTONSBURG - If Lady Luck smiled on the 1983 N.C. State basketball team, then certainly she has kissed the Rose High School baseball team.
Three times this season the Rampants have gone into the final inning tied or behind, and three times theyve pulled off a late rally for the win. This time the hero of the contest was shortstop Kenny Kirkland who sliced a two-run homer over the right field fence in the top of the seventh to propell Rose to a 4-3 Big East Conference victory over Bed-dingfield.
Senior centerfielder Randy Warren led off the seventh with a long double to center for the Rampants before Kirkland ripped the 1-2 pitch over the fence.
Rose pitcher Bill Owens, now 2-0 on the season, retired the side in order in the bottom of the inning, striking out designated hitter Roger Batts for the final out.
Our bats seemed real lazy till the last inning, said Rose coach Ronald Vincent, whose
team is now 7-0 with a 34) conference mark. We left too many men on base and that cause several busted innings for us.
I thought Bill Owens showed a lot of heart the way he pitched today - it would have been easy to get down. I think if we relax and do not put. too much pressure on ourselves we will be all right.
Rose jumped on Bed-dingfield hurler Chris Proctor in the first inning. After one out, Rudy Stalls beat out a bunt for a single, Warren ripped a* single to left and Kirkland legged out a bunt to load the bases. But Proctor pitched his way out of the jam by striking out Curtis Evans and getting Bill Johnson on a fly to second.
The Rampants threatened again in the second, as Traye Fuqua led off with a sine and advanced to second when Owens grounder was mishadled at third. Both were stranded when Proctor retired the next three Rose batters in order.
Beddingfield drew first blood in the second as Woody Mercer singled, moved to sec-
Sports Colendor
Editors Note: Schedules are supplied by schools or sponsoring agencies and are subject to change without notice.
Tod^sS^rts
Greene Central, Southwest Edgecombe at Farmville Central (3;30p.m.)
Rose at Fike girls (3:30 p.m.) Kinston, Fike at E.B. Aycock
Baseball Roanoke at Edenton JV (4 p.m.)
Tennis Bear Grass at Creswell Rocky Mount at Rose Southern Nash at Greene Central Cape Fear at Pitt CC Kinston at Greenville Juniors (3 p.m.)
Softball Rocky Mount at Rose aysi
Mattamuskeet at Jamesviile
Kinston at Rose JV (4 p.m.)
North Carolina at East Carolina (7p.m.)
Roanoke Rapids at Roanoke (7:30 p.m.)
Havelock at Conley JV (3:30 p.m.)
Plymouth at North Pitt JV (4 p.m.)
Chocowinltv at Bear Grass
AhoskieatWilliamston
Kinston at E.B. Aycock (4 p.m.)
Tennis
Farmville Central at Southern Nash (3:30p.m.).
C.B. Aycock at Greene Central (4 p.m.)
Rose at Kinston (3:30 p. m.)
East Carolina women at Peace (2:30p.m.)
Roanoke at Plymouth
Bertie at Williamston
Track
Greene Central, Farmville Central at SouUiWest Edgecombe girls
Roanoke, Edenton at Bertie
Roanoke, Edenton at Bertie girls
Washington, Williamston at Ahoskie
Washington, Williamston at Ahoskie girls
Conley, North Lenoir at White Oak (3:30 p.m.)
Conley, North Lenoir at White Oak girls (3:30p.m.)
Golf
Farmville Central at Zebulon (1 p.m.)
Softball
Roanoke Rapids at Roanoke (7:30 p.m.)
Mattamuskeet at Jamesviile
Chocowlnity at Bear Grass
**Boxlng Uv...Thur$day Night at th Fights**
AT THE STARBURST11NITE CLUB/DISCO-KINSTON Exdthg Amtmir Boxing Action at Its FInoat THURSDAY, APRIL 14.1983 9:00 P.M.
Doors Opon at 8 P.M. Admission $4.00
Exciting action featuring...
STARBURST BOXING TEAM of Kinston VS
WAYNE COUNTY BOXING TEAM of Goldsboro
and
ELIZABETH CITY BOXING TEAM of Elizabeth City. NC You Dont Want To MIts Any Of The Exciting Bouts Non Stop Actlon...Head to Head and Toe to Toe In a battle to detennlne North Carollnae Beet Amateur Boxers.
THANKSTO:
Trainer: Leroy Knight Former Marine Corp. Light Heavyweight Title Contender In the U.S. and abroad with 33 fights.
TImokeepor: Harold Davis, Kinston, N.C.
PromotorC.J. Nowbom
r
ond on a wild pitch and scored on a singie to right by Joe Hill.
Rose finally got on the board in the third. Warren singled to open the inning, stole second and was tagged out trying to take third on a fielders choice by Kirkland. Kirkland stole second and scored on a single
to left by Evans. Courtesy runner Mike laboni moved to second when Johnson was hit by a pitch, stole third and scored when catcher Greg Hill threw the ball into left field on the steal.
Fuqua drew a base-on-balls to put runners on first and
Pirates Sign Three, Await More Letters
East Carolina University signed three basketball players this morning, and were expected to sign at least two more before the day was over the first day high school players are allowed to sign collegiate grants-in-aid.
Two of those signed had previously committM to the Pirates, Jack Turnbill of Wilmington New Hanover and Derrick Battle of Northern Nash.
The third player is Keith Sledge, a 6-3, 180-pounder from Roanoke Rapids.
They join William Grady, a 6-2,170-pounder from Eastside High in Patterson, N.J., who signed last fall during the new NCAA early signing week.
Turnbill, a 6-9,185 pounder, was an honorable mention all-state player. He averaged 15 points per game and 12 rebounds per game.
He gives us some size, Coach Charlie Harrison said, but most important, size on the perimeter. He can play either small or big forward. Hes an excellent shooter and can really pass the basketball. He does some things you cant teach.
Battle, a 6-6, 190-pounder, averaged 18 points and 14 rebounds a game, along with two blocked shots. He was the Player of the Year in the Big East Conference and was all-conference for two years.
along with all-region and second team all-East, and honorable mention all-state. He was also fourth in the state last year in the triple jump and have a plus-40-inch vertical jump. He shot 60 percent from the floor as a senior and 65 percent as a junior. He hit on 70 percent of his free throws as a senior.
Hes a quality person and a quality athlete, Harrison said. Hes a vei7 good shooter and plays big and plays hard. We home for an immediate contribution from him.
Sledge, who can play either big guard or small forward, averaged 21 points and 14 rebounds a game this year. He was all-conference two years and Player of the Year in the league this year, along with being chosen all-state and all-east.
Hes a really good shooter who can fill it up. With hard work he will be an asset to our program. Hes a fine athlete, as good an athlete as Bruce Peartree.
Turnbill was recruited by several Sun Belt schools as well as West Virginia, Clemson and Appalachian. Battle was being sought by UNCW, Furman and Jacksonville, while Sledge was sought by UNCW, Detroit, VCUandUNCC.
(Please turn to page 22)
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second with one out, and both advanced on a fielders choice by Owens. With Bobby Buie at the plate, Proctors pitch got by Hill and Johnson raced toward the plate where he was tagged out by Proctor to end the rally.
The Rampants threatened again in the fourth with Buie slapping a leadoff sin^e and Stalls adding another with one out. But after stealing a base each, they were stranded in scoring position.
Greg Hill opened the bottom of the fifth with a single for the Bruins, and his courtesy runner moved to third on a single by Mark Davis and a fielders choice by Tommy Boswell. Owens second wild pitch of the game allowed Beddingfield to knot the score at 2-2.
The Bruins took the lead in the bottom of the sixth with a two-out solo homer by Ferrell to left-center. Hill followed with a long double off the center field fence, and Davis drew the second walk given up by Owens. But Owens struck out Boswell to prevent the
deficit from growing and set the scene for Kirklands second four-bagger of the season.
Wilson Beddingfield slipped to 6-4 overall and 0-2 in the conference with the loss.
The Rampants travel to Kinston Friday for a rematch with the Vikings at 7:30 p.m. Rose defeated Kinston 54 on a seventh-inning homer by Mike Kinley last Wednesday for the championship of the Pitt Easter Tournament.
Rose ab r li rt) Wilsoa
Wilson.K 3 0 0 0 Davis,c( Woodwrth.ph 1 0 0 0 Boswell.ss
Stalls.l)) Warren,cl Kirldand.ss Evans,c Johnson.rf Fuqua,2b Owens,p Buie,3b Totals
4 0 2 0 Lucas,lf
4 13 0 N.Ferrell,ph
4 2 2 2 Mercer,lb
3 I I I Balts,db
2 0 0 0 Tyson,3b
2 0 10 J HUI,2b
3 0 0 0 W FerreU,cf
3 0 2 0 G,HUl,c
29 4 11 3 Totals
ab r b rb
3 0 10
4 0 10
3 0 0 0 10 0 0 2 110
4 0 10 3 0 0 0 3 0 11 3 111 3 12 0 29 3 8 2
Rose..............................002 000 2-4
Beddingfield......................010 Oil
E-Tyson 2, G.HUI; LOB-Rose 9, Beddingfield 7, 2B-Boswell, G.HUI, Warren; HR-W;Ferrell, Kirkland; SB-Warren, Kirkland, Evans, Buie, Stalls! J Hill, Mercer
Pitching ip h r er bb so
Rose
Owens(W,241)......................7 8 3 3 2 6
Beddingfield
Proctor (L,2-2l....................711 4 4 15
LOUISBURG - East Carolinas Lady Pirates romped to a 13-4 victory over Louisburg Junior College yesterday, then had to strug^e to pull out a 2-0 extra inning win in the second game of the doubleheader.
The Lady Pirates scored twice in the top of the first inning to take the lead in the opener, but Louisburg rallied to tie it in the bottom of the frame. ECU then moved ahead with one in the second. Louisburg again tied it with one in the fourth.
East Carolina blew the game open with five runs in the sixth and added five more in the seventh. Louisburgs other run came in the bottom of the sixth.
Fran Hooks led the ECU hitting with three, while Cynthia Shepard, Tamara Franks, Robin Graves, Mitzi Davis and Donna Panos each had two hits. One of Shepards was a triple.
Kearney, Goodman and Graves each had two for Louisburg.
The second game was entirely different. The contest went though the regulation seven without a score. Then, in the eighth, ECU connected for two to win it. Carla Alphin reached on an prror and
Hooks singled. Davis then banged a triple to score both runners.
Davis led the ECU hitting with three, while S. Williams had two for Louisburg.
In the second game, we had a little trouble keeping the ball down because their pitching was so flat (the arc on thfe ball), Coach Sue Manaban said. (Their pitcher) started the first game and we had trouble with her, but they took her out in the sixth.
For the first time this year, we really exploded. It was really exciting.
East Carolina is now 16-7, plays Friday and Saturda in the UNC Charlotte Invitational.
First Game E. Carolina . 210 005 5-13 17 3
Louisburg... 200 Oil 0-4 11 5
Roth, Hooks (6) and Martin, Panos (6); C. Williams, Wiggins (5) and Dominicki.
Second Game E. Carolina .000 000 02-2 10 1
Louisburg...000 000 00-0 5 3
Hooks and Cox; C. Williams and S, Williams.
HBP-By Proctor iJotinson), by (Mercer); WP-0wens2; PB-G HUI.
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Greene Central Outlasts Chargers, 1-0
By ALAN WOOTEN Reflector Sports Writer LITTLEFIELD - Ritchie Chase fired a two-hitter and Greene Central came up with an unearned run in the top of the seventh with two outs to take a 1-0 victory over Ayden-Grifton in Eastern Carolina Conference baseball action yesterday.
The loss broke a five-game winning. streak by the
Chargers and made two wins in a row for Greene Central.
Breaks are going to win close ballgames," Ram coach James Fulghum said afterward. Today we were the ones who got the break. We needed this one bad, not just for Chase but for the whole team.
Just that one error at third killed us, Ayden-Grifton coach Allan Wilson said. We
went two whole games without one and today we made one that cost us the ballgame.
We also didnt hit the ball, Wilson continued. We went nine innings against Southwest yesterday and didnt hit the ball but got a win. We didnt get many against North Lenoir, either.
The games was scoreless for six innings, with Ayden-Grifton ace Tyrone Gay duel
ing with Chase. But the tq> of the seventh proved costly for the Chargers.
With one out, Tommy Goff reached on a walk. Chase tried to bunt him to second but popped out to Gay instead. Goff then stole second, and James Moore hit a grounder to third. However, the throw from Gene Johnson to Joey Kennedy was in the dirt and Goff raced home with the
winning run.
The Chargers threatened in the bottom of the inning. Doug Coley reached on a single to left to open it up. Gay bunted him over to second. Kennedy popped out to third for the second out.
Roger Moye then drew a full-count walk. Terry Garrett flied out to left to end the game.
Tyrone threw well enough
to win, we just didnt get any hits, Wilson said. He was able to get out of the jams he got into. It was a tough loss for him.
Gay ha$ only allowed six hits over the last 21 innings hes pitched, including just four against Greene Central.
Gay walked four and struck out 10.
The Rams threatened several times before finally get-
%
North Pitt Crushes Lady Jags
BETHEL North Pitt exploded for 13 runs in the first inning and went on to romp to a 30-2 softball victory over Farmville Central yesterday.
The Pant-HERS, after putting the game away in the first frame, added three in the second, six in the third, three each in the fourth and fifth and two in the sixth for their 30-run total,
Farmville's pair of runs came over in the third inning.
North Pitts hitting was led by Delores Pittman with four, while .Annette Wilkins had three, and Besty Staton, Phyllis Jones. Frances Woods, .Magnolia Harrington, Linda Harrell, Diane Barber. Alice Pittman and Karen Stancil each had two. Both of Jones hits w'ere home runs.
D. Lang had four hits for Farmville, while S. Gray added two.
North Pitt is now 4-3 overall and 3-0 in Eastern Carolina Conference play. The Pant-HERS play at SouthWest Edgecombe on Tuesday. Farmville returns to action on Friday, hosting Ayden-Grifton,
FarmvUleC,.002 000 0- 2 6 3 North Pitt (13)36 332 x-30 26 4 WP-Annette Wilkins.
Williamston 14
Roanoke..........4
WILLIAMSTON Williamston High School scored ten runs in the bottom of the fifth'inning and blew Roanoke away In a 14-4 softball victory yesterday.
Williamston jumped into the lead in the first scoring three runs, but Roanoke came back with two in the top of the second. Williamston responded with one in the bottom of'the inning.
Roanoke then tied it up with two in the top of the fifth before the Lady Tigers erupted for ten in the bottom of the frame.
Wanda Price highlighted the inning, hitting a three-run homer.
Hope Hopkins led the Williamston hitting with three, while Lynn Mills, Valerie Smith, Timberly Rodgers and Sharon Hopkins each had two.
Roanokes hitting was led by Mary Morning with three, including a solo home run in
the fifth.
Williamston is now 3-1 on the year and returns to action on Thursday, hosting Ahoskie. Roanoke hosts Roanoke Rapids on Thursday.
Roanoke 020 02- 4 7 4
WUliamston..310 0(10)-14 13 6
WP-Sharon Hopkins.
Greene Central ... 11 Ayden-Grifton 2
LIHLEFIELD Greene Central rolled to an 11-2 softball victory over Ayden-Grifton yesterday.
The Lady Rams pushed over three runs in the first on two homers. Jackie Holmes hit a solo shot and Pat Woodard later followed with a two-run homer for all the Rams would need.
Greene Central added three in the fourth and five more in the sixth.
Ayden-Griftons two runs came in the fourth as Linda Brown hit a two-run homer.
Brown was the lone hitter in the game with two hits.
Greene Central, now 6-4 overall and 1-1 in Eastern Carolina Conference play.
Farmville Central Nips North Pitt By 10-9 Score
BETHEL - Farmville Central, trailing 4-0, exploded for eight runs in the top of the fifth inning and then pushed over a run in the eighth inning to down North Pitt, 10-9, yesterday in an Eastern Carolina Conference baseball game.
North Pitt grabbed the initial lead in the game, scoring four times in the fourth frame. Ken Whitehurst walked and Daniel Keel singled. Brian Briley then singled to load the bases. A hit by Junior Huber brought in Whitehurst and Alvin Grimes walked, forcing in Keel. Lee Mannings grounder brought in Briley, and Jay Hines singled to score Huber for a 4-0 lead.
Farmville rallied for eight runs in the top of the fifth, three of them coming on a home run by Billy Godley with two men on base. North Pitt came back with three runs in the bottom of the frame to trail, 8-7. Both teams scored
Denkler On A-A List
Mary Denkler, East Carolinas leading scorer in womens basketball this past year, has been named to the National Sportwr iters
Womens Basketball All-America team.
Denkler was an honorable mention member of the group, which saw three teams of individuals named.
The groups were chosen by a panel of 24 sportswriters from around the country.
The 64) senior from Alexandria, Va., scored 1,789 points in her four year career with the Pirates.
She was earlier a first team selection on the Womens Basketball News Service All-America team.
Pirates...
(Continued from page 21)
Grady, who signed early, was recruited by Rutgers, Boston University and Northeastern.
All of the players we have signed are coming to East Carolina because they want to play for the Pirates. They are not coming because someone else did not want them.
We have watched these players throughout the year to see if they made progression. They all have. And that indicates they are betting better and their talent level has yet to [leak,Harrison said.
single runs in the sixth and North Pitt tied it at 9-all with one in the bottom of the ' seventh.
In the eighth, however, the Jaguars got the winning run. Bobby Carraway reached on an error and stole second, moving on to third on a fielders choice. He scored when Gerald Wilson grounded out.
The win boosted the
Farmville record to 5-4 overall and 1-1 in league play. North Pitt is now 6-5.
The Panthers return to action on Tuesday, hosting Southwest Edgecombe, while Farmville entertains
Ayden-Grifton on Friday.
FarmvilleC..000 081 01-10 7 1 North Pitt... 000 431 10- 9 9 4 Carraway, Godley (5) and Baker; Briley, Huber (4), Ayers (5) and Keel,
Conley Rallies To Top Cougars
PINETOPS Stacy McCarter rapped a long two-out double to drive in a pair of runs in the top of the seventh to lead D.H. Conley to a 7-6 victory over SouthWest Edgecombe Tuesday.
I was real pleased for him because he was kind of emotionally down, said Conley coach Gerald Garner, whose team is now 64.
Eddie Roberson opened the seventh with a single, and Glen Clemmons followed with a base-on-balls. Steve Kite bunted to advance the runners for McCarters heroics.
The Cougars jumped on Conley starter Paul Hill for three runs in the bottom of the first. Barry Powell reached first on an error and Darrell Bess walked with two out. Mike Vamell tripled in Powell and Bess, and Bob Summerlin rapped a single to drive in Vamell.
Mike Gurkins came on in the fifth and picked up the win
for the Vikings, while Daryl Edwards pitched the seventh for a save. Doug Drake went all the way on the mound for SouthWest Edgecombe.
McCarter went 3-3 with a pair of doubles for D.H. Conley, while Mark Pittman led the Cougars, now 3-8, with a pair of single in four at-bats.
Conley hosts,, West Carteret Friday at 7 p.m. to open its Coastal 3-A Conference campaign. The Vikings will play North Pitt at Bethel Elementary Saturday in a make-up game.
West Carteret has a pitcher that can throw the ball a ton, Gamer said. Im pretty sure thats who will be pitching Friday, so well have to be ready. Things dont get any easier from here on.
Conley 221 000 2-7 7 4
SouthWest 300 021 0-6 5 3
Hill, Gurkins (5, W14)), Edwards (7) and McCarter; Drake and Vamell,
hosts North Lenoir today. Ayden-Grifton returns to action on Friday at Farmville Central.
GreeneC 300 305 O-ll 7 2
Ayden4>riftonOOO 200 0- 2 4 8 WP - Dalen Herrin.
Falls Rood........15
G. Christian 5
ROCKY MOUNT - Falls* Road Academy romped to a 15-5 softball victory over Greenville Christian Academy yesterday.
Greenville scored first, getting a pair of runs in the first, but Falls Road came back with four in the bottom of the frame to take the lead for good. Falls Road added four in the second, five in the fourth and two in the fifth, the latter on a homer by Amy Fuller.
Greenville picked up one in the fourth and two in the fi^th for its total.
Fuller and Amy Perry each had four hits for Falls Road, while Nancy Honeycutt added three. Melinda Boyd and Jo Williams each had four hits for GCA, with Michelle Crisp adding three, one a triple.
Now 04, GCA travels to Bethel Academy on Friday.
GreenvUle...200 120 0-5 11 4 Falls Road.. 440 520 x-15 15 2 WP-N. Nolan.
ODU Men Top Pirates
NORFOLK, Va. - Old Dominion rolled to a 9-0 tennis victory over East Carolina University yesterday.
The closest the Pirates came to a win was in the number six singles where Tom Battle took his opponent to three sets.
East Carolinas next outing is today at Virginia Com-monweadth.
Summary:
Cuppemoll (OD) d, Ted Lepper,
6-0,6-3.
duBruyn (OD) d. Paul Owen, 7-5,
7-5.
Ryan (OD) d. Galen Treble, 6-0,
6-3.
Van Nostrand (OD) d. David Creech, 6-3,6-3.
Levenstein (OD) d. Cole King,
7-6,6-!.
Norman (OD) d. Tom Battle, 4-6,
6-4,6-2.
Cuppemoll-Van Nostrand (OD) d. Lepper-King,6-l,6-3.
Ryan-How (OD) d. Owen-BatUe,
7-6,6-4.
Shachi-Bybye (OD) d. Creech-Treble, 6-1,6^.
AycockRips Rocky Mount
Tom Moye fired a three-hitter and Anthony Cobb went four-for-four at the plate with a homer and pair of doubles to lead E.B. Aycock to an 18-3 baseball victory over Rocky Mount Tuesday.
Sterling Edwards went 2-2 with a double, and Michael Wooten 2-2 with a triple for Aycock. Moye went 2-3 at the plate with a triple, Tyrone Barrett posted a pair of RBI and Dwight Smith slapped a double for the Jaguars.
Aycock, now 2-0, hosts Kinston Thursday at 4 p.m.
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Beddingf laid .3
Rose..............3
STANTONSBURG - WUson Beddingfield shut out Roses Rampettes, 34), yesterday in a Big East softball game.
The Rampettes were unable to push over a run, and watched Beddingfield sew it up with all three of its runs coming in the fifth.
P. Hooker led the Beddingfield hitting with two, while Laura Vincent had two for Rose.
The Rampettes, now 34 overall and 1-1 in the league, host Rocky Mount today.
Rose..........000 000 (M) 9 2
Beddingfield ..000 030 x-3 7 3
WP-B. Bames.
Jamesville.........6
Manteo...........4
MANTEO - Jamesvilles girls softball team remained unbeaten through fOur games yesterday, downing Manteo, 64.
Jamesville got the lead with a pair of runs in the third and added two each in the fourth and fifth frames. Manteo got one in the fourth, then rallied for three in the seventh before the Lady Bullets put out the fire.
Crystal Perry, Selita Cross and Annette Brown led the Jamesville hitting with two each. Kim Floyd and Lori Hardison had back-to-back triples, driving in two runs in the fifth for the Bullets.
Twyne and Holmes each had two hits for Manteo.
Jamesville, now 4-0, plays host to Mattamuskeet on Thursday.
Jamesville ...002 220 0-6 11 4 Manteo 000 100 3-4 8 2
WP - Robin Manning.
Bear Grass......4-13
Belhaven.......3- 6
BEAR GRASS - Bear Grass held off a late Belhaven rally in the first game and exploded for nine runs in the first inning of the second to complete a 4-3,13-6 sweep of a softball doubleheader Tuesday.
Bear Grass got the winning.
run in the fifth in the first game, as Lori Cowan singled, Lj^ Waters and Angela Mizelle walked and Cindy Taylor reached first on an error to score Cowan.
Cindy Bullock went the distance on the mound for Bear Grass in the opener.
Amy Lilly, Cowan and Waters opened the first frame of the second game with singles for Bear Grass to set up a grand-slam homer by Mizelle. Taylor followed by reaching first on an error and scored when Lisa Davenports grounder was erred.
Trish Nielsen singled and Lilley followed with a base hit to drive in Davenport. Taylor scored when Cowan reached first on an error, and Nielsen crossed the plate when Waters got to first on an error. A fielders choice by C. Taylor allowed Lilley to score from third.
Davenport was the winning pitcher for Bear Grass, now 3-1 on the season. Bear Grass hosts Chocowinity tonight.
FirstGame
Belhaven.........010 002-3 6 8
Bear Grass.......300 Olx4 3 2
WP-Bullock.
Second Game
Belhaven 003 12- 6 7 10
Bear Grass...... 931 0010 6 4
WPDavenport.
Rose Bests New Bern
Rose High Schools golfers rolled to an easy victory over New Bern yesterday at Brook Valley Country Club.
The Rampants finished the afternoon with a 317 team score, while New Bern was well back at 349.
Brian Hill led the Rose scoring with a par 72. Craig Davies had a 77, while Peter McCurdy had 83 and John Jordan and Tee Davies each had 85.
New Bern was 1^ by Ashley Scott with a 75, while Brad Lee had 85. John Stewart had a 91 and Jimmy Menchaw had a 98.
Rose, now 5-3, .returns to action on Monday, hosting Wilson Fike.
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ting the winner over the plate. TTie Rams left a runner at second in the first and sixth innings and a runner at third in the fifth inning, one which got there with no outs. In addition, the Rams left the bases loaded in the second and fourth innings.
In the second, Todd Grant drew a two4)ut walk. Otis Bames, who was three of three, rapped a single to left and Kevin Langston drew a walk, the first of three he would receive. Michel Warren struck out to end the innng.
In the fourth, Moore reached first on an infield error. Elmer Dixon reached on a fielders choice, getting Moore at second. Grant reached on another fielders choice, nailing Dbcon at second.
Bames then hit a slow roller to second and beat the throw for a hit. Langston walked again to load the bases. Warren hit a grounder to third and Johnson tagged Bames out to end the inning.
Other than the seventh, the Chargers only had one runner to reach second. In the second inning, Kennedy reached on an infield sin^e. He stole second. After Moye was re tired. Chase whipped a throw
back to second which nabbed Kennedy.
Chase then walked Garrett but retired the next 13 men in a row before allowing Coleys hit in the seventh.
It was a good game for him (Chase) to win, Fulghum said. He threw the ball well. He had good location.
Weve lost three games by one run, Fulghum said. I think that helped the guys some today. We just got the break we needed.
Greene Central, 1-1 in the ECC and 7-3 overall, returns to action on Thursday night, hosting C.B. Aycock. Ayden-Grifton, 1-3 and 9-3, travels to Farmville Central on Friday.
GneneC. ib r k ib A-Grifloi ib r h it
Wancn,2b 4 0 0 0 Conway, 3 0 0 0
Suggs,c( 4 0 10 Johnson,3b 2 0 0 0 Go((,Ib 3 10 0 Coly,c( 3 0 10
Chase,p 4 0 0 0 Gay,p 2 0 0 0
Moore,r( 4 0 0 0 Kennedy,lb 3 0 10
Dixon,3b 4 0 0 0 Moye,c 2 0 0 0
Grant,c 2 0 0 0 Gamtt,ri 2 0 0 0
Bames,!! 3 0 3 0 Hardee, If 2 0 0 0
Langston, 0 0 0 0 Mitchell,db 2 0 0 0
Ven(ers,2b 0 0 0 0
Totals a 1 4 0 Totals 21 0 2 0
GreeneCeotral...................M OOO 1-1
AydenCrUlon....................NO ON 0-0
E-Conway, Johnson, Gay; LOB-Greene Central, 2B-Suggs, Bames; SB-Suggs 2, Goff, Kennedy; S-Gay.
Pttddng Greene Central
Chase (W)......
Ayden4irUton
GayiLl........
Ip hrerbbso
...7 20031 .. .7 4 1 0 4 10
PB-Moye.
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Rose Runs Past Fike; Conley Second
Pitelli, George Take Awards
Freshman Chris Pitelli and junior all-America Nan George were top award winners at the annual East Carolina University varsity swimming and diving awards banquet.
Pitelli won the Most Outstanding Male Swimmer award, while George won the top female award on the basis of her all-America status i the 1983 national meet.
The Most Outstanding Diver award went to sophomore Scott Eagle.
The Coaches Award, given to the athlete deemed mosf coachable was presented to sophomore Nancy James.
Nancy Ludwig and Jeffrey Ritins, both freshmen were named winners of the Most Improved awards.
Senior plaques were presented to Andrew Giovine, Lance Timmons, Perry Newman and Danny Michalove.
Jags' Rally Falls Short
STANTONSBURG - The E.B. Aycbck Jaguars rallied for four runs in the both the fifth and sixth innings of their softball game with Bed-dingfield Tuesday, but it was not enough as they lost 15-10.
Beddingfield plated five runs in the bottom of the third to insure the victory, as V. Crowder, T. Johnson and A. Ballad singled to load the bases and Taylor slapped a three-run triple. B. Whites double drove in Taylor, and White scored on a single by L. Bullock.
Lisa Harkly, Suzanne Tadlock and Shannon Terry ail posted three hits in four trips to the plate for Aycock, now 0-2 on the season. Vickie Parrott had a triple and a double in four at-bats for the Jaguars.
D. Artis and Ballad went 34 for Beddingfield, while White had was 24 with double. Kathy Kinley picked up the win on the mound for Wilson.
Aycock travels to Kinston Friday to take on the junior Vikings.
DEPRESSING IDEA
BOSTON (AP) - Scott Wedman, now a member of the Boston Celtics, began the 1982-83 season with the Cleveland Cavaliers.
He recalls a game Nov. 21, 1982, when the Cavaliers were humiliated by Portland, 129-79.
At one stage we were down by 59 points, Wedman recalled. I remember thinking that even if we scored 29 straight baskets without Portland making one, we still would be behind. Hows that for a depressing thought?
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Rose High Schools track team continued to mow em down yesterday, rolling to its third win of the season. The Rampants downed Wilson Fike, 9744, in the dual meet.
Rose had four double winners during the afternoon, Frankie Carr took the triple and long jumps; Edward Frazier won the 100 and 400-meter mns; Burney Car-raway won both of the hurdles races, and John Ormond took the 1,600 and 3,200-meter runs.
competition on Saturday in the Apex Relays.
no high hurdles: Carraway (R) 15.8; Speight (F) 15.9; Daniels (R)
Summary:
Shot put: Waugh (R) 51-2; Anderson (R)43-2; Land(F)42-'/S..
Long jump: Carr (R) 214',^; Walston (R) 20-2'/4; Godley (R) 19-5.
High jump: Streeter (R) 64; Howard (F) 6-4; Dickens (R) M.
Discus: Green (F) 123-7; Land (F) 117-4; Norris (R) 1144.
16.09.
100: Frazier (R) 10.9; Barnes (F) 10.9; HarreU(R) 10.97.
800 relay: Rose 1:30.1.
1600: Ormond (R) 4:33.3; Bolen (R) 4:46.5; Artis(F) 5:12.
400relay: Fike43.4.
400: Frazier (R) 49.8; Godley (R) 54.1; Sparkman (R) 56.2.
300 intermediate hurdles: Carraway (R) 40.7; Speight (F) 41.4; Daniels (R) 41.4.
South Lenoir
Conley.......
North Lenoir.. Lakewood.... North Duplin..
..97%
..66%
....66
....24
....15
North Duplin was last with 15.
Conley returns to action on Thursday, traveling to White Oak.
Summary:
Triple jump: Carr (R) 41-3*,<; Howard (F) 40-7%; Sparkman (R)
800: Byrd (R) 1:59.5; Little (F) 2:08.1; Speight (R) 2:11.1.
DEEP RUN - Hosting South Lenoir gained the victory in a five-way track meet held yesterday.
The Rampants resume
404%.
Pole vault: Grady (F) 114; Carraway (R) 114; Farley (R) 104.
200: Barnes (F) 22.5; Harrell (R) 22.6; Frazier (R) 22.7.
3200: Ormond (R) 10:22.9; Bolen (R) 10:54; Artis (F) 11:07.
1600 relay: Rose4:10.
South Lenoir finished with 9Vk points, while D.H. Conley nosed out North Lenoir for second, 66,^ to 66. Lakewood finished fourth with 24, while
High jump: Dixon (NL) 64; Wooten (NL) 64; Clemons (C) 64; Dawson (C) 5-10; Ingram (SL) 5-10.
Long jump: Dawson (C) 204%; Clemons (C) 20-3V4; Ingram (SL) 20-2%; Waters (NL) 19-9; Johnson (ND19-1.
Shot put: Freeman (C) 42-7; Tutt (SL) 424; MUler (L) 41-9; Showers (ND) 40-11; Peoples (L) 40-9.
Triple jump: Ingram (SL) 42-10; Wingate (SL) 40-9%; Wooten (NL) 404; Kinsey (NL) 39-1; Clemons (C) 38-10.
Discus: Dixon (NL) 131-1; Tutt
(SL) 1264; Peoples (L) 123-10; Armwood (ND) 123-7; Bolden (NL) 123-3.
Pole vault: Kennedy (SL) 1 Norris (C) and Howard (SL), tie for second, 104; Wilkerson (C) 104 Benton (SL) 104.
110 high hurdles: King (SL) 16.2 Roach (C) 16.3; Langston (SL) 16.5; Ingram (NL) 16.9; Jones (NL)
17.6.
100: Johnson (NL) 11.3; Nobles (C) 11.5; Wyche (SL) 1158; Williams (L) 11.59, Jones (ND)
11.6.
880 relay: Lakewood 1:36,5; Conley 1:36,7; South Lenoir 1:38; North Duplin 1:52,
Mile: Warren (SL) 4:42.9; Jenkins (SL) 4:44.3; Goodman (ND) 4:50; Wade (SL) 4:54; Cooper (L)5:01.
440 relay: South Lenoir 47.0;
Conley 48.0; North Duplin 48.1; Lakewood 49.6
440: Best (NL) 53.8; Nobles (C) 55.6; Smith (SL) 56.1; Norris (C) 57.0; Jones (NL) 58.1.
300 intermediate hurdles: Roach (C) 42.7; Dixon (NL) 43 4; Langston (SL) 44.9; Lewis (L) 45.1; Ingram (NL) 45.9.
880: Warren (SL) 2:09.8; Jenkins (SL) 2:09.82; White (NL) 2:15,0; Edwards (C) 2:15.4; Anderson (NL)2:16.9.
220: Johnson (NL) 23.4; Nobles (C) 23.6; Williams (L) 23,8; Waters (ND23.9; Peoples (L) 24.0,
Two mile: Warren (SL) 9:59.7; Wade (SL) 10:36,0; Howard (SL) 10:59; Harris (NLi 11:12; Paramore(C) 11:21.
Mile relay: North Lenoir 3:36.9; Conley 3:41.2; South Lenoir 3:44.8; North Duplin 3:53.5.
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Rampants Win Seventh
STANTONSBURG - Rose High Schools tennis team rolled up its seventh straight victory of the season yesterday, blanking Wilson Bed-dingfield,W).
The Rampants had little trouble in the win, never losing more than three games in a set, and dropping only 14 throughout the entire nine matches.
Now 7-0, the Rampants host Rocky Mount today.
Summary:
6-1,6-!.
Lance Searl (R) d. Andy Ferrell, 6^),6-l.
Rogers Warner (R) d. Mike Wooten, 6-0,6-0.
Ed Schwidde (R) d. Greg Franks, 6-3, frO.
Phil Messick (R) d. Fred Carr, 6-1,61.
Holloman-Searl (R) d. Porter-Franks, 8-1.
Jackson-Warner (R) d. Fer-rell-Battle, 62.
Messick-Schwidde (R) d Wooten-Richard Holland, 8-0.
Exhibition; Mike Taylor (R) d Anthony Carr, 61; Rocky Ziehr (R) d. Greg Scott, 63.
Steve Holloman (R) d. Chad Porter. 61,62.
Clav Jackson (R) d. Fred Battle,
Prep
BR Register
Registration and tryouts have been scheduled for Saturday, Monday and Tuesday for Prep and Babe Ruth League players.
The Babe Ruth League, which is open to players bom August 1,1967 to July 31,1969, will hold its registration and tryouts on Saturday at 10 a.m, at Guy Smith Stadium. Youths who did not play in the Prep League last year must provide a birth certificate when they register.
Tryouts and registration for Prep League will be held Monday and Tuesday from 4 to 6 p.m. at Jaycee Park. This is for youths born August l, 1969 to July 31, 1970. Those who did not play in the Greenville Little Leagues last year must also provide birth certificates during registration.
Bear Grass........5
Bath............ 2
BEAR GRASS - Bear Grass High Schools tennis team gained a 5-2 victory over Bath yesterday.
The win kept the Bears atop the Tobacco Belt standings. They return to action today, traveling to Creswell.
Summary:
Jack Griffin and Mark Hall of Greene Central defeated Paul Bassett and Howard Keel in the first doubles match 8-6, and Jim Hubbard and Steve Harrison teamed to defeat Kathy Messer and Greg Bullock 8-1 to give the Rams the win.
Greene Central won the first three singles matches, while Farmville took the next three.
Farmville Central, now 0-2, travels to Southern Nash, while Greene Central hosts C.B. Aycock Thursday.
Summary:
Clay Maynor (T) d, David Yates,
6-0,7-5.
Tim Brock (T) d. Nicky Keel, 60, 61.
Rob Rose (T) d. Sean Coefield,
60.63.
Russell Evans (T) d. Victor Long,
61.63.
Miles Ruffin (T) d. Jeff Stevenson, 60,60.
Randy Stout (R) d. Dan Harrell, 6-2,64.
Maynor-Brock (T) d. Long-Herbie Tripp, 63.
Yates-Stout (R) d. Ruffin-Tippen, 8-4.
Randolph-Kestler (T) d. Coefield-Keel, 64.
South Carolina To Join Metro
Kathy
Jim Hubbard (G) d. Paul Bassett, 63,7-5.
Jack Griffin (G) d. Joe Smith, 6^,62,
Steve Harrison (G) d.
Messer, 4-6,60,7-6(7-5).
Greg Bullock (F) d, Mark Hill, 64,62.
Michael Williams (F) d. Joel Ginn, 61,60.
Howard Keel (F) d. George Harris, 6-0,60.
Griffin-Hall (G) d. Bassett-Keel, Mary Rogerson (BG) d. Kathy 8-6.
Sheppard,8-2. Hubbard-Harrison (G) d
Paula Stems (B) d Robin Knox, Messer-Bullock, 61 8-3. . . or, 3^ Smith-Williams (F) d.
Ann Bullock (BG) d Lea Clark, Ginn-Harris 60 62.
Cindy Harrison (BG) d. Carolyn
Taszt, 8-1. Tarboro 7
Carolyn Slade (B) d. Sonya ............
Green, 8-6 Roanoke..........2
Rogerson-Knox (BG) d. Stems-Cldrk 8"2 Buliock-Harrison (BG) d. rd-1
Williamston Edenton....
EDENTON - Williamston swept through the singles events in its tennis match Edenton Tuesday without losing a set and went on to win 8-1.
Kevin Griffin picked by a forfeit in the top singles match, and Cecil Elks crushd Paul Ambura 6A) to lead Williamston to its fourth victory of the season in eight outings.
pard-Terry Russ, 8-1.
Greene C.
ROBERSONVILLE -Shep- Tarboro High School rolled to a 7-2 tennis victory over Roanoke High School yesterday.
Williamston
Thursday.
hosts Bertie
Summary:
FnrmuillA T A ^oanokes only victories
.........^ came in the number six
FARMVILLE - Greene .
Central and Farmville Central
the number two doubles where Stout teamed with David
battled evenly through the singles portion of their tennis yates forThe win match Tuesday, but the Rams ow 0-9
captured two of the three ^
doubles events for a M victo-
ry-
and play Thursday. Summary:
Kevin Griffin (W) won by forfeit.
Cecil Elks (W) d. Paul Amburn, 60,60.
Chris Jones (W) d. Johft Downum, 63,63.
Bert Jenkins (W) d. Ben Rinehart, 63,61.
Rusty Willard (W) d. Scott Creighton, 62,6-4.
Phomus Reddick (W) d. Ken Tynch,60,60. .
Williamston won by forfeit.
Downum-Rinehart (E) d. Grif-fin-Joe Pervena, 63.
Fanny Peel-Glen Perry (W) d. Creighton-Ambum, 8-5.
SCOREBOARD
TANK IFNANillU
by Jeff Millar & Bill Hinds
COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) -The University of South Carolina is just one step away from joining the Metro Conference and getting the chance to compete for league crowns in basketball and other sports for the first time in 12 years.
In a unanimous vote Tuesday, the Intercollegiate Activities Committee of the university board of trustees recommended to the full board that the school accept an invitation to join the Metro Conference.
The board is expected to approve that recommendation at its meeting Thursday.
If the board does as expected, the Gamecocks would be eligible to play for conference championships beginning with the 1983-84 season.
While joining the league will end 12 years of independent status for the Gamecocks in basketball, baseball and several other spring sports, the football team will continue to operate as an independent. The Metro offers championships for women in basketball, volleyball and track.
use Athletic Director Bob Marcum told the committee Tuesday that the Metro Conference had voted 7-0 in favor of extending an invitation to the Gamecocks and the invitation was extended Monday.
The Gamecocks, who dropped out of the Atlantic Coast Conference in 1971, will become the eighth member of the Metro Conferece. Other members are Louisville, Memphis State, Florida State, Virginia Tech, Southern Mississippi, Cincinnati and Tulane.
Marcum told the committee he had explored the possibility of conference affiliation with the ACC and the Southeastern Conference as well as the Metro. He said he felt the Metro offered South Carolina a unique opportunity for our athletic teams.
The Metro Conference is a well-established basketball conference, but it also offers an opportunity for cham-
Pitt 4th In Golf
Bowling_
Tuesday Bowlettes
W L
Plaza Gulf.............7312 42'2
Nine Li ves.............69 47
Ups & Downs..........66 50
Team5 .............. 56 60
Energizers............55 61
UCM's................53 63
National Roofing 49 67
Misfits................45'2 70'2
High game, Delores Berg, 210; high series, Nellie Speight, 515.
NBA Standings
By The Associated Press EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division
W LPct. GB z Philadelphia 64 15 810 -
x-Boslon 55 24 .6% 9
x-New.lersey 48 31 608 16
New York 41 38 .519 23
Washington 40 38 .513 23'i
Central Division v-Milwaukec 50 29 .633 -
Atlanta 42 38 . 525 8i-
Detroit 36 43 456 14
Chicago 26 53 . 329 24
Cleveland 21 58 .266 29
Indiana 19 60 .241 31
WESTERN CONFERENCE Midwest Division v-San .Antonio 49 29 .628
Kansas Cilv 43 36 .544 6'/j
Denver " 42 37 .532 7'v
Dallas 37 42 468 12'2
Ltah 29 50 .367 20'i
Houston 14 65 .177 35'-
Pacific Division V-1.0S .Angeles 57 21 .731 -
'x-Phoenix 50 29 .633 7'i
x-Scattle 48 31 .608 9'2
Portland 43 36 . 544 14'2
(iolden State 28 51 .354 29'-.
San Diego 25 53 .321 32
x-clmched playoff spot y-clinched division filie z-clinched division and conference title Tuesdays Games Boston 99 New Jersey 93
Atlanta 102, Philadelphia 97 Kansas City 112, Chicago 102 Los Angeles 114, Houston 113 Utah IS, Denver 116 Seattle 106, Portland 101 Phoenix 115, Golden State 108 Wednesdays Games Milwaukee at Indiana Washington at Philadelphia Chicago at Cleveland Boston at Detroit New Jersey at New York . Los Angeles at San Antonio, completion of suspended game of Nov. 30.
(Kuthven0-0i,(n)
San Francisco (Hammaker 0-01 at San Diego (Show0-0i.ini Houston (J Niekro 0-11 at Los Angeles (HootonO-l), (nl
Thursday's Games Chicago at Montreal ,
San Francisco at San Diego New York at St. Louis, (n)
Only games scheduled
Detroit at New York, (ni California at Minnesota, (n) Oakland at Seattle, (nl Only games scheduled
Transactions
Los Angeles at San Antonio, regularly luleflgame
schedi Utah at Dallas Atlanta at Kansas City Houston at Denver Seattle at Phoenix Golden State at San Diego Thursday's Games Washington at Milwaukee San Diego at PorUand
Baltimore
Cleveland
Detroit
Milwaukee
Toronto
New York
Boston
AMERICAN LEAGUE EAST DIVISION
W LPct.GB
.600 .500 .500 .500 .400 .333 .286
By The Associated Press BASEBALL National League NEW YORK METS-Reactivated John Stearns, catcher. Optioned Ronn Reynolds, catcher, to Tidewater ol the
International League.
PHIA
PHILADELPl
PHILLIES
Reactivated Von Hayes, oultielder. Op-
....... " " r, to
Boseboll Stondings
By The Associated Press NATIONAL LEAGUE EAST DIVISION
W LPct,
.857
.667
.571
.500
SOO-
.429
333
.833
.667
.667
500
.500
143
GB
.857
.714
,714
.333
.000
Pittsburi
Montreal 4 2
St Louis 2 I
Philadelphia 3 3
New York 2 2
Chicago 1 6
WEST DIVISION Atlanta 6 i
Cincinnati 5 2
Los Angeles 5 2
San Francisco 2 4
San Diego 2 5
Houston 0 8
Tuesday's Games St. Louis 4. Pittsburgh 3.10 innings
ny< .....
Chicago .
Atlanta 4. Cincinnati 1 San Francisco 6 San Diego 5 Los Angeles 3, Houston 1
Wednesday's Games St. Louis (Andujar l-Oi at Pittsburgh (Tunnell04)i Cincinnati iBerenyi l-li at Atlanta (Camp 1-0)
New York (Swan l-Oi at Philadelphia
Philadelphia 4, New'York 3,10 iimings o5, Montreal 0
WEST DIVISION
Texas 6 i
Kansas City 4 2
Oakland 4 3
California 4 4
Seattle 4 4
Minnesota 3 4
Chicago 2 4
Tuesdays Games Milwaukee 6,Toronto5 Detroit 13, NewYork2 Texas 2, Cleveland 1 Baltimore 10, Chicago 8 Kansas City 5, Boston 1 Seattle 8, (Talifomia 1 Oakland 4, Minnesota 3 14 innings Wednesdays (james Texas (Hough 0-01 at Cleveland
(Barker 1-01 Milwaukee (Caldwell O-ii at Toronto (Clancy 04)1 Minnesota (Williams 1-0) at Oakland (Underwood 0-1)
Detroit (Uidur 0-1) at New York (J.HowellOmi, in)
Boston (Brown 0-0) at Kansas Citv
tinned Alejandro Sanchez, outfielder, Portland of the Pacific Coast League.
SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS-Placed Mike Krukow. pitcher, on the 21-day dis abled list.
BASKETBALL National Basketball Association
LOS ANGELES LAKERS-Signed Billy Ray Bates, guard, to a 10-day contract.
(SplittorffO-0), In) Sea
eattle (M.Moore 041) at. California (ZahnO-1). In)
Only games scheduled
Thursdays Games Milwaukee at Toronto Texas at Cleveland Baltimore at Chicago
EVENS THINGS OUT
RENO (AP) - Ken Tree Green, a forward on the Nevada-Reno basketball team is a high scorer which pleases assistant coach Jack Spencer.
Spencer is not very pleased, however, with Greens defensive maneuvers. Green may be the only player in college basketball who can keep both sides in the game at the same time, was Spencers assessment.
GRIFTON - Hosting Pitt Community College finished fourth of fifth teams in an Eastern Carolina Community College Conference golf match yesterday held at Indian Trails Country Club in Grifton.
Craven Community College topped the field with a 336 score, while Cape Fear was second at 371. Costal Community was third at 389, followed by Pitt at 393. James Sprunt of Kenansville finished last with a 401.
Tyson led Craven with a 79, and was low for the day overall. Other Craven scores were Bohnsdahl, 80; Pellitier, 86; Hyman, 91.
Cape Fear was led by Reichman with 87, Sellars with 88, Lloyd with 96 and Bridges with 100. Coastal was paced by Brown with 95, Farmer with 96, and Thompson and Tipton with 99 each.
Fain led Pitt with 88, while Hudson had 99, Rutson had 103 and Van Burnen had 103. Sprunt was led by Jones with 88, Barnett with 92, West with 94 and Edmisten with 127.
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pionships in a number of ^ring sports as well, he told the panel. And if as many as five schools request a championship in another sport, the league office will put it together and administer it.
Other conferences have benefitted from lucrative television packages in basketball and I know that the Metro Conference is, at this time, consulting with several networks that could result in a similar TV package for its members, Marcum said.
I know that in the past, (basketball) Coach (Bill) Foster has had some difficulty in scheduling, and the Metro Conference offers an opportunity to bring nationally ranked teams into our coliseum.
use has explored the possibility of rejoining a conference periodically since 1971, but past efforts always met resistance either within the school or the conferences involved.
Bears Sweep Doubleheader
BEAR GRASS - A two-hitter by Bear Grass pitcher Tommy Leggett in the first game and a 17-run offensive barrage in the second enabled the Bears to sweep a baseball doubleheader over Belhaven Tuesday, 6-1 and 17-8.
Bear Grass plated four runs in the t(^ of the first in the opener, as Phil Peele was hit by a pitch. Tommy Leggett singled and Lawrence Watson doubled in both runners. Mark Taylor doubled in Watson and Billy Fulford singled to drive in Taylor.
James Satchell had a triple for Belhaven in the second frame, and Lawrence Satchell a single in the third for the visitors only hits.
Bear Grass jumped on starter Toriste ONeal for ei0it runs in the first inning, added four more in the third and three in the fourth to insure the victory. Batting as the visiting team, the Bears plated two more runs in the
final frame.
Belhaven battled for three runs in the third and four in the fourth but couldnt overcome the early deficit. Craig Gardner went all the way on the mound to pick up the win for Bear Grass.
Peele and Dave Cratt bad two hits in three trips to the plate for Bear Grass, and Watson and Fulford each doubled. Timmy Satchell led Belhaven with two hits in three trips including a double.
Bear Grass hosts Chocowinity tonight at 7 p.m.
First Game
Belhaven..........001 OQ-l 2 3
BearGrass........401 lz-6 7 1
Sadler and Mason; Leggett and Fulford.
Second Game
Bear Grasa......804 32-17 10 4
Belhaven........103 40- 8 4 4
ONeal, B. Sadler (5) and Nobles; Gardner and Fulford.
Williamston Downs Roanoke
ECU Rolls By Bulldogs
WILLIAMSTON -Williamston High School got only four hits but took advantage of Roanoke mistakes to gain a 9-3 baseball victory over the Redskins yesterday.
Williamston pushed over all it needed in the second inning, scoring six times.
Roger Barber and Walton Wilier both walked to open the second and Tommy Wynne reached on an error, loading the bases. A walk to James Ward scored Barber and Les Keel singled in both WUler and Wynne. Gray Thomas then sacrificed Ward over for a 4-0 lead. Keith Perry was intentionally walked and a double
steal scored Keel. Kevin Lee walked and another steal allowed Perry to score, Roanoke rallied for three in the fifth, but Williamston matched that in the sixth for the final 9-3 margin.
Darius Hudgins had two hits for Roanoke and was the lone hitter in the game with more than one.
Williamston is now 4-3 on the year and hosts Ahoskie on Thursday. Roanoke plays host to Roanoke Rapids on Thursday.
East Carolinas womens tennis team romp^ to a 94) victory over Atlantic Christian College yesterday.
The Pirates had little trouble in the win, taking three matches by default.
Now 6-8, East Carolina travels to Raleigh on Thursday to face Peace College.
Summary:
KaUierine Tolson (EC) d. Leayne Summerlin, 6-1,6-0.
Janet RusseU (EC) d. Susan Dickerson, 6-1,6-0.
Kim Harrison (EC) d. Bonnie Fussell,6-1,6-1.
Lori Reep (EC) d. Katherine Williams, 6-4,6-7,64).
Laura Redford (EC) d. Karen
Millelo, by default:
Robin Biel (EC) d. Mary Davies,
Sum-
Roanoke 000 030 0-3 5 2
Williamston...060 003 x-9 4 3 Griffin, Wilson (2) and Casper; Wynne and Mobley.
by default.
Russell-Redford (EC) d merlin-Dickerson, 7-6,6-3.
Debbie Christine-Tolson (EC) d. Millelo-Davies, by default.
Reep-Harrison (EC) d. Fussell-Willlams, 6-4,6-3.
Bullets
Defeated
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MANTEO - Jamesville High School scored first, but Manteo came back and gained a 6-4 baseball victory in their non-conference game yesterday.
The Bullets pushed over a run in the first inning when Richie Ange tripled and scored when Rex Bell reached on an error.
Manteo came back with two in the bottom of the nrst and both teams scored twice in the third. Manfred Gore had a two-run homer to account for both of the Manteo runs in the third.
In the fourth, K. Wheeler cracked a solo shot to give Manteo a 5-3 lead, one which Jamesville was not to overcome. Manteo added one in the fifth, while the Bullets got their other run in the seventh.
Matthew Moore and Ange each had two hits for Jamesville, while no one had more than one for Manteo.
The Bullets, now 6-2, play host to Mattamuskeet on Thursday.
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Finding New Organs Has Become Thorny Problem
By ARTHUR H.ROTSTEIN Associated Press Writer
TUCSON. Ariz. (AP) - At any one time Stanford University Medical Center, the nations busiest facility for heart and heart-lung transplants, has a half-dozen people waiting for new organs.
At the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, 80 people are on a list for a new liver. Across the country, 6,000 people are waiting for kidney transplants.
Two million Americans die each year, many in hospitals, but only about 20,000 could qualify as organ transplant donors, doctors say. And not enough of them are donating their organs. For people needing transplants that means long and sometimes fatal delays.
"The major problem...is getting the organ donor referral to begin with, said Dr. Jack G. Copeland, chief of cardiovascular and thoracic surgery at the University of Arizona and president of the International Society of Heart Transplantations.
Donald Denny, director of organ procurement at the University of Pittsburgh, said Americans are very good-hearted and willing to donate organs.
"The* weak link is that those families experiencing a death dont think about donating an organ. Someone has to reach out from within the medical profession. Denny said.
"We realize there is a fine line between the image of us as vultures eyeing an organ we need in someone who is dead or dying, and the idea that we are trying to save lives, said Dr. Charles F.
Zukoski, who performs kidney transplants at the Tucson Veterans Administration Medical Center.
Getting donors is a big problem, agreed Barbara Schulman, director of the Regional Organ Procurement Agency of Southern California. Her agency catalogues recipient needs, solicits organ donations and coordinates what becomes available from about 300 community hospitals.
Denny said Pittsburgh has experienced "tremendous cooperation from kidney procurement programs elsewhere, noting 60 of the 82 livers the medical school transplanted last year were donated by that route.
However, the public needs to be made aware of the need for donor organs. Copeland said.
Another need, he said, is "a system for donations ... that avoids any medical conflict of interest. He said the appearance of such a conflict frequently exists for neurologists and neurosurgeons.
They have to make a determination on brain death and if they broach organ donation with a dying patients family, they face the appearance of some collusion or some agreement that is directly against the best interests of the patient involved; whether there is or not, Copeland said.
Ms. Schulman said most physicians feel uncomfortable with having been in the position of trying to save a person and then saying Theres nothing I can do, and by the way, how about donating an organ?
There are about 110 organ procurement agencies throughout the U.S., each responsible for a different
section of the country, said Denny.
One link is the North American Transplant Coordinators Organization. Its 24-hour national hotline allows donor organ procurement directors such as Denny or Ms. Schulman to contact a transplant specialist if they learn of a donor heart becoming available that is potentially compatible with a waiting patient.
Hospitals medical and nursing staffs are the key components in alerting officials that a family has agreed to organ donation or that it should be approached.
All say that most families dont give the subject much thought.
But, in the majority (of cases), families turn out to be more than vrilling to OK the donation, Zukoski said. They realize they may be sparing some other family the grief they are feeling. Denny said only about 1 percent of all hospital deaths
- probably less than 20,000
qualify as organ
transplant donors. Heart donors, for instance, have had to experience some form of accidental death and be pronounced brain dead, Denny said.
Other limitations are age (usually between 15 and 30 or 35), absence of debilitating illness and organ preservation until the last moment.
Mrs. Schulman said California law requires a second physician to confirm a first doctors declaration of brain death, and that neidier can be involved in the organ removal.
You have to coordinate the timing in obtaining more than one organ from a donor, said Goodkind. They have to be harvested not simultaneously, but in conjunction with each other.
Denny said there have been times when three different transplant teams have worked to remove organs from the same cadaver. He added that finding organs is easier in the East than on the West Coast because of the larger population from which to draw.
Deny Allegation Hu Na 'Seized'
WASHINGTON (AP) -The State Department is denying Chinese allegations that President Reagan seized away Chinese tennis star Hu Na, who. was granted political asylum last week over Pekings protests.
Department spokesman John Hu^es said that Ms. Hus decision to remain in the United States was hers alone to make and the decision on granting her political asylum was ours alone to make. Ms. Hu defected last
summer during a tennis exhibition tour in California.
Peoples Daily, the Communist Party newspaper, said Sunday that Reagan has seized away alive a Chinese girl from her own parents and has offered himself as her foreign father.
Hughes said the decision was made by the Immi^a-tion and Naturalization Service and that Reagan was not personally involved.
SAUD DRESSING
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5 LB.
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LXl
Those Supercomputers Are Here Now, And Working
By TIMOTHY HARPER Associated Press Writer WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. (AP) - In his lab in the basement of the biology building at Purdue University, Professor Michael Rossman is unlocking the secret of the common cold. First, he unlocks the computer room.
We are trying to map out the molecular structure of the cold virus, Rossman says. The research is on the edge of what is possible. Our new supercomputer, will make it possible.
Small computers are part of everyday life in American businesses and many homes. But whirring softly in labs like Rossmans, a relatively few big new computers with awesome power are opening scientific frontiers. They are called supercomputers, and ultimately, they promise to affect everday life more than digital watches or automatic grocery checkout lanes.
Capable of making millions of mathematical calculations every second, supercomputers allow scientists to do mathematical equations bigger and more complex than imaginable just a few years pgo. A problem that would have taken 150 mathematicians a week to solve with adding machines can be done on a supercomputer in less than a second.
The supercomputer is particularly valuable in evaluating and predicting physical behavior that is subject to seemingly infinite variables.
An example is the numerical wind tunnel. Instead of building a prototype plane and a huge wind tunnel, engineers can now test aircraft design on computers. In supercomputerized cockpit simulations, test pilots can be trained more safely than in the air.
With supercomputers, NASA will be able to design a complete spacecraft at once rather than in sections as is the limit with conventional computers. The Weather Service will be able to analyze a whole storm system rather than just a corner of it.
Supercomputers, our most complex machines, may give us answers to some of humankinds oldest questions.
How big is the universe? Researchers at Columbia University are building a supercomputer to determine its size and shape.
The cure for the common cold? At Purdue, Michael Rossman may someday tell us.
Rossman is fortunate, however. Purdue is one of only three U.S. universities with a supercomputer. Researchers working on comparably complex problems on other campuses must either use older, slower machines or travel - sometimes to other countries - to rent time on supercomputers at$2,000-$6,000anhour.
In his lab, Rossman pauses before a molecule model. Four feet across, it is an intricate network of different-colored yarn, pipecleaners and bits of soldered metal.
I built it myself, Rossman says, peering owl-ishly into the maze. Models like this used to be kind of fun to build, but we really dont use them anymore.
He swings open a door into the room that glows green with computer screens. Graduate students sit unblinking before their machines, intent as sonar officers in a World War II submarine movie.
AH our molecule models *now are on computer,
Rossman says. Much faster, and much more accurate, too.
Rossmans colleagues figure his work on molecular structures will win him a Nobel Prize someday even if he doesnt wipe out the worlds sniffles. More modestly, the professor himself says mapping the cold virus molecule will help future researchers determine how it attacks the human respiratory system.
Purdues old computers used to take six hours to run a set of Rossmans equations. The supercomputer can do the same calculations in less than four seconds.
Now, maybe we will know the shape of the cold virus within 5 or 10 years, Rossman says.
Rossman is an example of how sciences demand stays ahead of technologys supply. A rule attributed to physicist Edward Teller holds that scientists working on the edge of research frontiers always need computers 100 times faster than the fastest existing machines.
It is an irony of the Computer Age, however, that some American scientists must go to other countries to use supercomputers designed and built in the United States.
Only two companies in the world, both based in Minneapolis, currently make supercomputers. Control Data Corp. makes the CYBER 205, the machine at Purdue, and Cray Research Inc. makes the Cray-1. Both can do at least 50 million mathematical calculations per second on the most difficult problems, and 100 million or more calculations per second for simpler tasks.
American dominance in supercomputers is being thfeatened, however. The Japanese government and a consortium of Japanese businesses last year launched a $200 million program aimed at designing a supercomputer 1,000 times faster than the U.S. supercomputers. A National Science Foundation committee report warned earlier this year that losing the lead in supercomputers could threaten the countrys economy, scientific superiority and national defenses.
Purdue, Minnesota and Colorado State are the only American universities with supercomputers. According to the National Science Foundation report, thats not enough.
The report calls for federal funds to put more supercomputers on campuses and to buy scientists time on them. Peter Lax, the New York University professor who headed the committee, says, There has been a policy vacuum about making supercomputers available.
Beginning in 1959, the federal government spent $72 million on computer systems for 184 colleges and universities. But that program ended in 1972. From then until 1981, when Cray Research sold the University of Minnesota a used Cray-1 for a cut-rate $5.5 million, no U.S. university had state-of-the-art computing power.
Unless more supercomputers become available at affordable rates in the United States, some experts say, there may be a "brain drain toward other countries that subsidize the use of supercomputers.
Larry Smarr of the University of Illinois says he and several other American astrophysics researchers have flown to Munich in the last two years to use a Cray-1 made available by a West
German institute.
The drought of computing power in the universities over the last five years has resulted in a major drain of highly talented researchers from the universities to the sites with supercomputers, Smarr says.
The term supercomputer is a relative one. The CYBR 205 and the Cray-1
are supercomputers because they are 50-100 times faster than the previous generaon of computers. Within a couple years, neither will be super - newer machines will be considerably faster.
Todays pocket calculators, for instance, are as powerful as the supercomputers of the 1950s. And todays desktop com
puters are as fast as the room-sized computers that were the fastest in the 1900s.
But there is more to a computer than raw speed.
Siqiercoiiyiuters also allow scientists to look at all three dimensions of a shape. Rossmans assistants, for example, twist knobs at their green screens so they can see from different angles
of the molecule structures.
Across the mall from Rossmans lab at Purdue, Professor Robert Greaikom can use the supercomputer to look for chemical treatments to make coal bum more cleanly and efficiently. Professor David Smith can use it to examine tornado patterns so buildings can be safety-designed. Terry Phillips can
ime it to (Kovide a nKNre detailed soil analysis of ,pbotos tak from satdlites. Michad Bailey can use it to design new levers, gears and fittings for robots and other complex mechanisms.
sdmme professor at Purdue. As he says this, an invitation to a d^[>artma)t wine-and-cheese party pops onto the cmnputer screen in his office.
You cant be a scientist in the l/nited States today without using computers, says John Rice, a computer
Just having a siqiercom-puter on campus does not necessarily solve a researchers problems, however.
Step intea
bidepland ^l^lues
SAVE LIKE NEVER BEFORE AT THE NEW FOOO KINO
Ji.
Located On Hwy. 33 In Chocowinity
Weve Lowered The Prices On Over 6800 Items And Are Determined To Have The Lowest Food Prices In Eastern North Carolina.
PRICES GOOD APRIL 14,15 & 16,1983.
129
LB.
PORK LOIN NIB NALP ROAtT. 1 PORK LOm LOIN HALT ROAST. ^ 1^ lb QUARTIR PORK LOIN, SUao lb.
RIBPORKCHOPS,CIN1IRCOT ..M** LB. LOm PORK CHOPS, CINTIR CUT .. . M MARKITSTTLi BACK SONS ^ 1
FRESH WHOLE
PORK LOINS
SLICED FREE .
$119
QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED-NONESOLO TO DEALERS
LB.
SWIFT HOSTESS
S
LB.
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THE ROUND ONE
4 LB. CAN
$399
lb.
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FRESH GREEN
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c
LB.
CWALTNiY
BACON
I.*CEo
LB.
PRANKS&'^SS'
T9
LUNDYS
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COUNTRY
LINK
lb.
seL0GNA',^99
iausaobI
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ll
1LB.
|3.
MUSHROOMS 80Z. PKQ. 99*
YUOW ONIONS ..........3 LB. BAG 59*
YEUOW SQUASH lb 49*
WASHINGTON STATE EXTRA FANCY RED OR
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CRUNCN&MUNCH
CARAMEL,MOLASSIS,TOFFII box74
TEXAS PETE O/AAC
HOT DOG CHILI . oz can vI/ W T
FINS PARI MAYONNAISE.................jar 89*
PRINCH'S MUSTARD..................ooz. free.. oz. jar 69*
STBAWBIRRT SHORTCAKE CEREAL . . .12 oz. box ^ 1 **
WRITE HOUSE VMEOAR............... .........QUARTJAR 79*
MAXWBU HOUSE INSTANT COPPIB ooz. jab^2**
MAXWUL SOUSI VACUUM BAS COPPU.. aoc..i lb. pkq. *2'* MAXWUl SOUSI VACUUM MAS1IR tUND.. uoz. pko. M **
MOTTS APPU JUICE................ MOZ. BOTTLE^ 1 **
SAV-MOR MAROARINB 1LB. PKQ.
STOKBLT APPU SAUCE ..........303 CAN
OLD SOUTH
ORANCi
JUICi
% GALLON CARTON
99
COnONBUI
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WHITE, PEACH, BEIQE YELLOW, BLUE 4 ROLL PKQ.
99
POINTER DOO FOOD
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STOKELY
SHEER BEANS
CUT OR FRENCH 303 CAN
FOR
$|00
Have You Missed Your Daily Reflector?
First Call Your Independent Carrier. If You Are Unable To Reach Him Call The Daily Reflector
752-3952
Between 6:00 And 6:30 P.M. Weekdays And 8 Til 9 A.M. On Sundays.
FROZEN FOODS
MR. P'S PIZZA
combination, PEPPERONI. ITALIAN FROZEN FRENCH FRIED
POTATOES
Controller les
Pizza Trade
mi:
t-.
SALT LAKE CITY (AP)-Doug Ramsay once plotted the course for airplanes carrying hundreds to the safety of airport runways. Now he tracks pepperoni pizzas to their destinations.
Monitoring the route of a pi^ is less str^ful than doing the same for a Boeing 727, and it pays a lot less -about one-fifth the S42,000 salary he mkde as an air trafflc controller. But for Ramsay, there are compensations.
I used to have nightmares about planes running into each other, the 35-year-old said. I used to chew antacids like candy. No ionger. Although he works as assistant manager for a pizza franchise, I^imsay said he technically is on strike against the federal gov-smment, a year and seven months after he and 130 colleagues of the 160-member Professional Air Traffic Controllers Organization Local 504 walked off their jobs.
A few days later. President Reagan grounded them and 11,400 other striking controllers. The union was later decertified as representative of the controllers by the federal government.
Ramsay led PATCOs strike in Salt Lake City in Augiut 1981 as Local 504s president. It was the end of a 12-year career and his job in the Federal Aviation Administrations Air Traffic Route Center.
He took his new job last summer after volunteering for a year to help members of Local 504 find other jobs.
Ramsay, a cook before he became a controller, said he might try to start his own pizza franchise one day.
Would he trade pizza for directing airplanes again?
Ive thought about it, Ramsay said. It would depend on the situation. To go back to the same system. Id say, No.
He applied for an air traffic controllers job in Australia after Reagan fired the strikers, but was told he was too old. Others did find work in Australia, Saudi Arabia and New Guinea, he said.
. Some became police officers. Three opened a country-western bar in Ogden. Quite a few have just vanished, Ramsey said. I dont know where theyre at.
Ramsay said he still gets upset by the governments plan to train new controllers instead of rehiring old ones.
Youre talking about $2 billion to $3 billion when theres a pool of us still out there, he said.
He concedes that PATCO broke the law, but said the strike grew out of many of the same factors that prompted the, unions 1970 walkout.
Management policies. Thats what most say started the strike anyway, not more money, but poor FAA management, Ramsay said.
He said he knows of a half-dozen former controllers whose marriages ended in divorce.
Im luckier than others, Ramsay said. My wife supported me all the way, because she saw what the job was doing to me.
The couple survived financially on Mrs. Ramsays salary as a clerk-receptionist and $16,000 the federal government had to refund from retirement contributions.
Ramsay got another break last month when the 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Denver dismissed the $2,000 fine he faced and the $20,000 penalty imposed on Local 504 for ignoring the back-to-work order.
He hasnt abandoned the controllers cause, however.
Ramsay said he is involved with a new would-be union, the U.S. Air Traffic Con- . trailers Organization. Nationally, it is made up of 1,800 ex-PATCO members and works to advise congressmen on the air traffic control system. The organization has applied with tlie Department of Labor for union status and intends to organize the new controllers.
DIE OF MEASLES POR EUZABETH, South Africa AP) - One hundred black and mixed-race children have died after getting meMdes in this Indian Ocean city since the start of this year, health authorities say.
T
WHWMDiXiE
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WITH tio.oo ON MONE ONOENt COUPON
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The Daily ReOector, Greenville, N.C.-Wednesday, April 13,1963-29
ms
5 LB. BAG THmrrv MAID
SUGAR
99
t l!
I I
(UKHT II aow THNU SAT., APNH. 1TH.
46 02. CAN THRIFTY MAID
GRAPEFRUIT
JUICE
1.99
.79
12 OZ. JAR PETER PAN
PEANUT BUTTER .
18 OZ. JAR DEEP SOUTH
BBQ SAUCE......
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BEANS...... 2 for1,00
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2-LITER NO RETURN BTL
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$-109
12 OZ. CANS REGULAR OR LIGHT
BLACK LABEL BEER
m LITER BTL.
GALLO
WINES
W D BRAND U.S. CHOICE ROUND BONE SHLD.
ROAST........ i. 2.29
W D BRAND U.S. CHOICE BNLS.
STEW BEEF ... .. 2.39
U.S.D.A. INSPECTED TURKEY WINGS OR
DRUMSTICKS ... i..-49
FILLET OF
FLOUNDER .99
1 LB. PKG. PEELED & DEVEINED
SHRIMP........2.99
4 LB. PKG. HARVEST FRESH EASTERN RED DEL. 16-OZ. PKG. SEA PAK BUTTERFLY 1 LB. PKG. IN QUARTERS SUPERBRAND
APPLES.........1.39 SHRIMP ........4.99 MARGARINE . 3 ....99
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I
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Harris No. 1 - Oreonville Harris No. 2 - Groonvilli
Marie Ellis, Greenville-Clock wnilam Hudson, QreenvHle-Clock tjA Ri
Myrtle Manning, Greenville-Radio Mrs. R.F. Thompson, Greenville Radio
Mary Moore, Greenville - Coffee Pot Csale Tyson, Greenville - Coffee Pot i I B(
Jean Cannon, Grifton - Mixer Joey Owens, Greenville - Mixer
W.J. Reid, Greenville - Can Opener Evelyn Stroud, Greenville - Can Opener '
Ruble Upton, Greenville - Telephone Chailotte Hale, Greenville - Telephone ^ *
Alton Warren, Greenville - Stearn Iron Eleanor Verneison, Greenville - Steam Iron * *
Jimmie Ward, Greenville - Yrs. Supply Bacon Ruth Clifton, Greenville - Yrs. Supply Bacon '
Bernadette Miller, Greenville - Yrs. Supply Ice Cream Vickie ONeal, Greenville - Yrs. Supply Ice CreaiW *
We Reserve The Right To Limit Quantities None Sold To Dealers Or Restaurants We Accept Food Stamps And WIC Vouchers PRtES GOOD WED. THRU SAT.
Harris No. 6 - Aycten
Irene Garris, Grifton-Clock Shirley Coward, Ayden-Telephone
rr AnnWlggms.Ayden.steamimn Jennifer Wells, Ayden-Coffee Pot I ^ m vio an
Anita Prescott, VWnterville - Mixer Boone, Ayden - Yrs. Supply Baron
Jeannie Hardee. Ayden - Can Opener Ayd"' Yrs. Supply Ice Cream
QREENVILU.AYDCN-aETHfL-TAaaOnO
WHOLE
CUT-UP
CHICKENS
HEAVY WESTERN FULL-CUT BONE IN
ROUND
STEAK
HEAVY WESTERN BONELESS
CHUCK
ROAST
ICONOMY CUT POBK CHOPS
WHOLE
SMOKED PICNICS
SLICED 79
LB.
$119
I20Z.PW. B
BACON
$|39
120Z.PKG.
$|19
PKC.
FRANKS.......
NOT Ot MILO SMOKII LINK ^
SAUSAOE..........
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WHOURESN
PICNICS
$|19
LI.
73*
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ALL WHOLE
COUNTRY HAMS..............
$159
Lbakinohens.......
,...59
PENDER PACKING BBQ.......
h PENDER PACKING
\ FRESH SAUSAOE.............
$169
$169
SPRING CLEANING SALE
STOCK UP ON THESE CLEANING FAVORITES
cemn
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3/l
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uoz.
79
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u'onuKi
69
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Receive by mail ttie Spring Get-Away 0cK)ii with coupons worth over $4 OOO on hotels lounsi .ittraclions and auto care for only $4 99 and the required proofs-of-purchase from these participating brands See store display (or complete details Offer eipires May 31 1983
NABISCO SALE
nz CRACKIRS $|25 ,
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99*
111/20Z. w m
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99*
11 1/20Z.
AUTYPIS LAYS BRAND
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80Z.
*1
09
FAB
m
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LAUNDRY DETERGENT KING SIZE 40* OFFUBEL
99
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69*
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COM FLAKES
99*
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99*
QT.
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10Z.
29
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DAERY FOODS
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HOMOOENIZED MILK
GRAKA$UU
I04SS
1/2 GAL.
99
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PARADE CHILUD
ORANGE JUICE
SHEDDS SPREAD
MARGARINE
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..........iii.y4'$
.AUIOZ.CUK
I
h
i *
Hiirris No. 4 - Bethel
Rufus Canon; Battwi-Clock Frandt Haitiy, Bothol Radio Ben CouneMa, Botha) - Coffaa Pot Manda Andnara, Botha) - Mixar *
Pat Po)laid, Qnanvllla Can Opanor Mrs. J.R. Jamas, Bathal -Talsphona Zula Morris, Bathal - Staam Iron Ellen Spall, Bathal - Yrs. Supply Bacon WIUIaLaaCouncila, Bathal-Yra. Supply ice Cream
Harris No. 5 - Oreenville
Ann Cameron, Greenville - Clock BarlMira Wilson, Greenville - Radio Tom Moore, Greenville - Coffee Pot John Logan, Greenville - Mixer Annie Atkinson, Greenville - Can Opener Cassle Adams, Greenville-Telephone Christine Albritton, Greenville - Steam Iron Bobby Lee Norman, Greenville - Yrs. Supply Bacon Joan H. Gibson, Greenville - Yrs. Supply Ice Cream
Harris No. 7 - Tarboro
iiSSm joSSm.RiSio !?'? Knight, Tarboro-Telephone
Marian Pettaway, Tarboro - Coffee Pot Janice Hyde, Tarboro - Mixer Chris Woodley, Tarboro - Can Opener
PRODUCE
(T
CERTIFIED (BLUE TAG)
RED SEED $ POTATOES
The Day Reflector, GreenvHle, N.C.-Wednesday, April 13, lW-31
Mrs. C. Suggs, Tarboro - Steam Iron Doris Lucas, Tarboro - Yrs. Supply Bacon Doris W. Moore, Tarboro - Yrs.' Supply Ice Cream
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riSSUE
99*
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79*
SOFT NMTE BUliS
GE Soft-White bulbs reduce glare -soften stiadows.
G.I. SOFT WHinUGHT BULBS fHHfTE
4 PAR 60,75, OR 100 WAH $|9
0.1. 3 WAT
O.I.3WAY50,100,lS0 30,70100
BULBS
$|49
COCACOLAS, MILLO TILLO, Din COKE
2 LITER
09
PARADE
GENERIC
SPAGHEni
SAUCE W/MEAT
99c
32 OZ.
BLACK LABIL 12 PAKS OS BLACK LABIL LISHT12PAKS
$359
PAULIWABBON BUROUNDY, CHABUS, OS SOSI
$E99
3 LITER
AJAX
DISH DBTiRGENT
12 OZ.
2/99*
VEOETABLE OIL $149
48 OZ.
PARADE
MACARONIS CHEESE DINNERS
00
70Z.
SAVE BY THE CASE '
UP TO
S5. REBITE
BY MAIL
LUVSCONVINIBNa PAKDIAMRS
$J89
ivhen you buy up to 12 regular size or 4 convenience packs
afine.
See display in our storeis) for complete details Offer expires June 30,1983^
TAYLOR LAKE
COUNTRY
WINES
ALL 1.5 LITER VARiniES
99
LimCMwy
FROZEN FOODS
JFARMSaiNKLECUT
FRENCH FRIES
PETRITZ
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00
r; ii tiM.
14 OZ. NEWEVBiYOAT lOWPRKt
MRS.SMmTS
APPLI PliB
MMUnMAIDFMZDf
ORANGE JUICE
_e
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12 OZ.
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ORANGE JUICE W/MGRE PULP
99*
50 LB.
BAG
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YOUR CHOICE
RED
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WHITE THOMPSON seedless'
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IB.
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PEARS
(110 COUNT)
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APPLES
LB.
MUSHROOMS
99*.
MEDIUM YELLOW
ONIONS
GREEN CABBAGE
RED
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499
10 LB.
RED
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imii
i- i
Home Repair Includes A Lot Of Risk
By LOUISE COOK Associated Press Writer In spring, a consumers thoughts may turn to fixing up the house, but repairs can turn to ruin if youre not careful.
Sarah Woodard of the Council of Better Business Bureaus Inc. said complaints about home remodeling are a perennial problem ... every year in the springtime. Contractors seem to appear from nowhere, she said. Theyve just repaired your neighbors house and they have materials left over. Or
SAVE 10 ON
REGULAR ELEC. PERK AUTO DRIP
Maxwell House Coffee
* Regular
bag You Pay Only
New Vacuum 1 lb. Bag bag
199
theyve noticed a problem with your driveway that you didnt know about. Sign now and youll get a bargain.
What you may get from high-pressure tactics, Ms. Woodard said, is trouble.
If the deal is good, that deal will still be around the next day or the day after, she said.
.Ms. Woodard said you dont have to automatically ignore someone who calls at your door unsolicited. But you should investigate a companys reputation before you sign anything or allow any work to be done.
Check local consumer authorities and the Better Business Bureau to find out how long the contractor has been in business. Ask if the firm has operated under other names a possible clue to potential trouble. Will the company be around tomorrow if you have a problem? Have there been a lot of complaints and how have they been handled? Is the company involved in any legal actions?
A 1980 study released by the Consumer Federation of America concluded that "home improvement abuses are more in need of remedy than any other type of consumer fraud. The study said that complaints involve large sums of money sometimes up to thousands of dollars and are often difficult to resolve.
Ms. Woodard said miscellaneous home maintenance companies ranked fifth on the Better Business Bureau
GOOD THRU SAT, APRIL 16 AT A&P.
LIMIT ONE WITH COUPON AND 7.50 ORDER.
M ^ #^37*9^ GOOD THRU SAT, APRIL 16 AT A&R a I GOOD THRU SAT APRIL 16 AT AAR
limit one with coupon and 7.50 ORDER. djflP LIMIT ONE WITH COUPON AND 7.50 ORDER.
V I
Each of these advertised items is required to be readily available for sale at or below the advertised price in each A&P Store, except as specifically noted in this ad.
niDBS&
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT, APRIL 16 AT A4P IN ITEMS OFFERED FOR SALE NOT AVAILABLE TO OTHER RETAIL DEALERS OR WHOLESALERS.
THE FIRST FOOD STORE FOR YOUR HUM
ce
complaint list for 1981, drawing 10,230 complaints. (.Mail order companies were first, with 76,076 complaints.) Home remodeling contractors a separate category - ranked 12th, with 6.131 complaints; roofing contractors were 18th with 4,201 complaints and heating and central air conditioning companies were 21st, with 3,727 complaints.
The most common pro-blem? Shoddy workmanship, Ms. Woodard said.
Find out what product or products the contractor plans to use. Check with local stores to make sure the items are appropriate and insist that the materials be listed on your bill.
Inglenook Chablis, Rhine, Rose
1.5 Liter
Bottle
2.99
DEEP BLUE
Good Only In Greenville. N.C.
DIET PEPSI-MTN. DEW
PepsiCola
GOOD ONLY IN GREENVILLE. N,C.
BULTB&BEUTYBIDS
50* OFF LABEL
YOU PAY ONLY
SAVE
$1.20
Listerine Mouthwash
JOHNSON & JOHNSON
The Better Business Bureaus Guide to Wise Buying offers several suggestions for consumers who want to avoid home-repair problems. Among them:
^ Baby Shampoo
^ ^^JOHNSON & JOHNSON
BabyOl
FLEX CONDITIONER OR
Chunk Light Tuna
6V2 OZ.
(IN WATER) can
CAMPBELL BEEF BROTH (lOV* OZ.) CHICKEN BROTH CREAM OF POTA+0 CREAM OF CELERY
11 02. btl.
:j
SAVE 4. -129
60* btl. I
Ask the contractor for references. Get the names of previous customers and telephone or visit them. Inspect work if possible.
V
Flex Shampoo
SAVE 16 02. 61* btl.
Get an estimate. The BBB says a reliable contractor should provide such an estimate in writing, at no charge to you. The estimate should include specifications on materials.
Beware of whats known as the model-home come-on in which youre told that your home will be used for advertising or promotional purposes. A salesman may promise you a commission for everyone who views the improvements on your home. In many cases, the BBB say$, the model home deal is available to vei7one; you get nothing special and the commissions never materialize.
Campbell Soup
NABISCO
Ritz Crackers
50* OFF LABEL
Wisk Liquid
Tomato Sauce salt 3
HUNTS NO SALT
Tomato Juice
HUNTS
You Pay Only
JIF CREAMY. CRUNCHY
46 02. can
CATES HAMBURGER DILL CHIPS
Sweet Salad Cubes
16 02. jar
Peanut Buttr t
_ _ ^ KRAFT DELUXE
89^ Macaroni & Cheese 99^
. CSB post
89^ H Raisin Bran ^
LEAN DELICIOUS
eENEBBLNEBCBBnnSE
COimmBITCBER
ICIOUS ^3 GREENVILLE BOULEVARD
Roiled Ham I**
SWITZERLAND DORMAN
Swiss Cheese 1**
THE COmTBr SIQBE
TUNA & EGG LIVER & CHICKEN
9-Llves c-iSoe ? 2*
LIQUID CLEANER
Pine Sol
Find out what kind of warranty is offered. How long does it last? Are both materials and workmanship c'lViM'cd'i Who stands behind !. L' warranty the contractor or the manufacturer?
-Never sign a completion certificate until ail the work called for in the contract has been done, as specified. Your signature tells the contractor - and the lending institution that supplied the money if you took out a loan - that you are satisfied with the work.
MflAM
p
The DaUy ReHector, GreenvUle, N.C.-Wednesday, April 13,1983-33
ANN PAGE
Mayonnaise
IN QUARTERS
A&P BRAND
Parkay Margarine
quart
jar
88
Charcoal
Gas Coupons Gather Dst
In Storage
A&P
Charcoal
Lighter
10169
bag H
eomsmtE
By MATT YANCEY Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON (AP) -Billions of government gasoh line rationing coupons, printed nearly a decade ago during the Arab oil embargo, are gathering mold in Army Quonset huts at a cost of $70,000 a year.
Its a classic government foul-up, says Ronald Winkler, the federal official who inherited responsibility for the 4.8 billion coupons.
No one believes that these
FART OF THE CAROUNA HERITAGE SINCE 1879
EXTRA LEAN SPECIAL TRIM COUNTRY FARM
ASSORTED
A&P QUALITY HEAVY WESTERN GRAIN FED BEEF
BONELESS BOTTOM
Pork Chops I Round Roast
8 lbs or
more
lb.
139
lb.
199
things could ever be used, even if there was a need, said Winkler, deputy assistant energy secretary for energy emergencies. But to dispose of the stuff is going to cost a quarter-million dollars.
The government has been looking for almost a year at ways to get rid of the black-on-white coupons, but has so far failed to decide on a method.
A&P QUALITY HEAVY WESTERN GRAIN FED BEEF BONELESS TOP
A&P QUALITY HEAVY WESTERN GRAIN FED BEEF BOTTOM ROUND
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nHIETrSBOFSrOBE
lb.
ANN PAGE (2-lb. pkg. 3.35)
Sliced Bacon
11b.
pkg.
DUBUQUE ROYAL SUPREME
Canned Ham
A&P QUALITY ALL VARIETIES
ANN PAGE SLICED
Chipped Meats
2.5 oz. pkgs.
99^ Cooked Picnic
lb.
279
COTTAGE BRAND
Smoked Sausage
lb.
TALMADGE FRANKS (12-oz. pkg. 69*)
Franks
2 lb. pkg.
179
BALL PARK (BEEF 1.89)
Meat Franks
CRYOVAC SMOKED CENTER
Ham Slices
lb.
299
U.S.D.A. INSPECTED FRESH
Box-O-Chicken
39*
The problem is that each coupon, which is about the size of a business card, is stamped with a portrait of George Washington, similar to the one on the dollar bill.
Consequently, says Winkler, you have these little blank things with no serial numbers or any other means of control that are interchangeable with dollar bills in change machines. Whatever we do with them is going to require a lot of security.
Even so, he predicted that eventually well either burn them or use them as some kind of mulch.
Many features of the coupons made sense when they were printed in 1974, the year after Congress passed the Emergency Petroleum Allocation Act to assure that never again would there be mile-long lines of angry motorists at the nations service station pumps. The gasoline shortages stemmed from the Arab oil embargo.
But the only time the government came close to actually using the coupons was in 1979 and 1980 when gasoline shortages again developed as a result of the Iranian revolution.
President Reagan opposed rationing during his 1980 campaign. As soon as he took office, officials began dismantling the program even before the underlying authority for it expired in September 1981.
Winkler said officials from
U.S.D.A. INSPECTED FRESH COMBINATION PACKAGE
Choice Fryer Parts
U.S.D.A. INSPECTED FRESH
Whole Fryer Legs
U.S.D.A. INSPECTED
Turkey Necks or Wings
EXTRA LEAN SPECIAL TRIM COUNTRY FARM CENTER CUT
Pork Chops Loin or Rib
lb.
lb.
lb.
lb.
229
EXTRA LEAN SPECIAL TRIM COUNTRY FARM COUNTRY STYLE
Pork Spare Ribs
lb.
JIMMY DEAN
TAMPA BAY ROUND
Hot
or
Mild
lb.
8oz.
pkg.
Shrimp
FROZEN
Dressed Flounder 2.5 lb. 079
RED RIPE SALAD SIZE
Tomatoes
26 02.
family
pack
129
ow Onions
tAUDSiZE
j
iV
Cucumbers
Rome Apples vs 99^
1ANQYCAUF0RNIA
Juicy lemons 10
FRESH
Crisp Carrots
FOR YOUR SPRING PLANTING Nl
Fitting Soil
the General Services Administration and the energy and transportation departments have been meeting on what to do with the coupons. He said he expects Energy Secretary Donald Hodel to make a decision in a couple of months.
It is likely Hodel will decide to destroy them, Winkler said. There may be some psychological reason why you would want to keep them, but I doubt it, he said.
Since the coupons were printed at a cost of $10 million to $15 million, they have been stored in seven Quonset huts on an Army depot at Pueblo, Colo. Last year, the Army billed the Energy Department $70,000 for the 15,020 square feet of storage space.
Winkler said even if there ever were a need for the coupons, it would be next to impossible to use them. And, he said, the coupons which would be essentially like currency were they in circulation could be easily duplicated on a copying machine.
I dont know what the people were thinking of when they did these things, he said. In order to use them, you would have to overprint them with some kind of serial number. That would cost a minimum of $15 million to $20 million.
But theyve been sitting out there for so many years and have molded under the humidity, he added. So it would be really difficult to run them throu^i the presses again.
Winkler still questions why the coupons were printed with black ink rather than some other color.
I ran a couple of them off on a Xerox machine in my office, he said. Yoiid have to be a real expert, which very few gasoline station attendants are, to tell which is a copy.
It
I
HOURS: OPEN SUNDAY 7 A.M. TO 12 MIDNIGHT. OPEN 24 HOURS A DAY MONDAY 7 A.M. TIL SATURDAY 12 MIDNIGHT
1-j----
>
SELL YOUR OLD car In classified and youll have extra money for a new one. Call 752-6166.
One Regret: His life
Not Cut Off Early
ROBBINSDALE, Minn, (AP) - A former policeman who miraculously snapped out of a two-year coma is battling depression and paralysis while his wife voices one regret: she wishes he had been taken off a life support system sooner and left to die in peace.
David Mack, 39, is one of only two patients in history to awaken from a persistent vegetative state, said Dr. Ronald Cranford, a neurologist at Hennepin County Medical Center.
The former Minneapolis police officer had hoped to regain use of his limbs, but after a year of therapy that hope is gone. He now lives at the Trevilla Nursing Home, a residence for disabled adults.
"For David, this is a long-term arrangement. said Mack's wife, Marlies, "There is nothing after this except an old-folks nursing home. Its not a cheery thought.
When Mack was asked about his future, tears formed in his eyes.
By nodding his head and spelling out answers to questions on an alphabet board. Mack said he is satisfied with the medical decisions made in his case.
"I often do get depressed but I just look in mirror and feel better, he spelled out when asked if he is fighting
depression.
I do know he has bouts of depression when he doesnt know if he really wants to live like this, Mrs. Mack said.
While Mack was in a coma, his doctors and his' wife decided to keep feeding him with a tube but not to treat any infection or other complication if it developed, feel-ing this would be extraordinary care for a person with only the dimmest chance for recovery.
1 dont have any regrets about the decisions I made -taking him off the life-support system; stopping treatment but not food and water; treating him like a human being, not just as a body in a coma.
The only thing I think I would change if I could was this; I woidd have done it sooner. I would have disconnected the respirator that first week, Mrs. Mack said.
Mack suffered extensive brain damage when he was shot in the neck and abdomen on Dec. 13,1979, after he and other officers forced their way into a Minneapolis home while trying to serve a search warrant.
After tests indicated that
he would never regain consciousness, Mack was moved from Hennepin County Medical Center to a nursing home on Oct. 15, 1980. On Oct. 22, 1981, a doctor doing a periodic checkup discovered Mack was following him with his eyes.
Tests showed that Mack, though still very disoriented, was regaining consciousness. The only other documented case in which a patient in a permanent vegetative state later recovered was 'that of a New Mexico man, who remained paralyzed for eight years until dying of an infection last year, Cranford said.
When doctors found that Mack had regained consciousness, he immediately was transferred back to the hospital. He recovered his , mental capabilities, but his brain never regained the ability to control his limbs.
Macks case was studied extensively by the Presidents Commission on Ethical Problems in Medicine to determine when doctors should consider a case hopeless and stop treatment.
Mrs. Mack said that if she ' had stopped life support in
the first week, her husband probably would have died.
I never wanted him to die. I never thought of it in those terms. I wanted him to be left in peace.... We dont have control or choice over Gods decisions. If its your turn to die, you die. Right now, she said.
Sure, this might be a miracle, Mrs. Mack said, but sometimes I could definitely get along without this miracle.... Its nothing youd consciously want. You fight with him, you laugh with him. He can be very funny.
The winter has been hard on Mack. He underwent bladder surgery and an operation on his salivary glands to reduce drooling. He still drools, but not as much.
He has had colds and other respiratory problems. It seems to me all we did this winter was fight infection, Mrs. Mack said. She said her husband is not physically worse than before, but isnt better, either.
Whenever he gets himself up physically, he gets a cold or something and were dragged down again, Mrs. Mack said. This is what we have now, so well make the best of it.
May Contribute To Plant Trees
WASHINGTON (.AP) - A minimum, tax-deductible donation of $10 will permit the planting of as many as 40 trees in a national forest. Agriculture Secretary John R. Block says.
Contributions may be made by groups and individuals in their own names or in honor of others. Each contributor will get a certificate acknowledging the gift.
Block said that individual trees will not be marked to recognize contributors but probably will be planted on the national forest nearest the honorees home.
The Forest Service will select the species of trees and sites to be planted.
ONE OF TWO David Mack gets a kiss from hils wife, Marlies, on being moved from Sister Kenny Institute to a nursing home. Doctors
say Mack is one of only two patients in medical history to awaken from a persistent vegetative state. (AP Laserphoto)
SAVE2(K0N
HKINTHE NEW
DRINK BOX
Ki(ds love Hi-C Fruit Drinks in the new Drink Box. It's a sturciy sinsle-servins size thats fun to drinkand toush enoush to 30 anywhere.
Hi-C in the Drink Box comes in kids favorite flavorsoranse, srape, and fruit punch. With 100% U.S. RDA of Vitamin C in every servins.
So pick up some Hi-C in the new Drink Box today Its the perfect size for kids on the 30. And at 20<t off, its 3oins to so fast.
The Drink Box is perfect for school lunches.
Packs easily to 30 just about anywhere.
C1988 The Coca-Cola Comoany Hi-C is a registered trademart of The Coca-Cola Company
20< OFFTHREE DRINK BOXES OF HK
lo
I
I
I
GOOD ON THREE MS-OZ. SINGLE PACKAGES OR ONE 3-PACK (S.4SZ. SIZE).
CONSUA^R Coupon good only on purchase of product indicated Not valid if transferred, exchanged, or reproduced DEALER REIMBRSEAAENT TERMS Valid only on product and size indicated. Valid in U.S A. only. Value as specified plus 7< handling. One manufacturers coupon per purchase Void where prohibited, taxed, restricted, or license IS required Coupons are nonassignable, nontransferable, and may not be reproduced. Other use constitutes fraud, and all coupons will be confiscated, Coupons accepted only from retailers or authorized clearing hou s On request, dealer must provide product invoices for past 90 days. Sales tax must be paid by consumer Presentation for payment represents compliance with these terms. Cash value 1/20< Redeem coupons promptly by mailing to M 5 C,, P 0, Box 3960, Omaha, NE 68103
]SL
' HhC IS a iigisttred (radfrmarti of the Coca-Cola Company
if
VALUE
WAREHOUSi
GROCERIES
SAVES YOU MONEY ON YOUR TOTAL FOOD BILL. WE HAVE CUT OUR OPERATING COST SO WE CAN SELL YOU FOODfOR LESS.
FRESH WHOLE
FAIR
FRYERS
SREENE ST. QREENVILLE, N.C. Mofl.-Thure. S:30 AM-7 PM FRI.-SAT. 8:30 AM-8 PM CLOSED SUNDAY NO LIMIT ON QUANTITIES-NONE SOLO TO OTHER MERCHANTS-WE ACCEPT FOOD STAMPS, WIC VOUCHERS a MANUFACTURERS COUPONS.
END CUT
PORK
CHOPS
CUBED CHUCK A OO A HAO
STEAK *ld CHIHERUNGS.
SWIFT PREMIUM BONELESS ' * LEAN CENTER RIB A KO
STEWING BEEF. I . PORK CHOPS... ..M
BEALES COURTLAND BRAND BRANDS 1ST GRADE A M
FRANKS..S*488 bacon aM*
FRESH
1/2 SLICED FRESH
PORK
LOIN
FRESH CENTER LOIN t m M.O m
PORKCHOPS....Mlb cabbage.... 12*
CDCCU DCr\ CRISP -
POTATOES..kTS* CARROTS ...iislS*
FRESH CRISP
LB.
FRESH
WHITE POTATOES
BAG
KRAFT PARKAY A ^ A A
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$ ^ 95 BEER....
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HOTDOG, HAMBURGER
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8 PACK I
3 ^1
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$138
COCACOLA
OR
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i
The DaUy Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Wednesday, April 13,1983-35
British Press Halls 'Gandhi' Success
By MICHAEL WEST Associated Pr^ Writer LONDON (AP) - Newspapers hailed the eight Oscars awarded Gandhi" as evidence of a British movie industry revival, but its director worried that he may have to leave Britain to make any more films.
Take your seats for the great British boom! Londons Daily Mail predicted today. Gandhis victory sets the seal on the remarkable comeback of the British film industry.
The movies triumphant sweep of the 55th Hollywood Academy Awards ceremony Tuesday night has bolstered the confidence of the City -Londons Wall Street - in British films as a viable international box office proposition, the Mail declared.
But Sir Richard Atten-bbrough, who directed Gandhi, and David Put-tnam, who produced last years Oscar-winner, Chariots of Fire, said British investors and financial
institutions are refusing to back new films.
The City are disgraceful, sluggish and rather stupid in their reticence in terms of backing people, Attenborough said in a British Broadcasting Corp. interview.
I think the ironic thing is that David Puttnam and 1 have literally been showered with the offers and the dollars not only to make movies with American backing, but to make them in Los Angeles.
CBS Series Strength Brings Ratings Victory
NICE IK^Y - Anna Stewart of the soap opera Another World, gives the pooch she washed a good hug at New Yorks Americn Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals. The ASPCA has instituted a Stray Wash program to wash, dry, cut and groom strays to make them more attractive for adoption. (AP Laserphoto)
LOS ANGELES (AP) -CBS bounced back with its powerhouse of re^ar series to gain a television ratings victory for the week ended April 10 after two straight losses to ABC during the run of The Thom Birds.
CBS strengthened its hold on first place in the season-to-date network rat
ings race, which ends this coming Sunday. The network moved ahead of ABC by seven-tenths of a rating point, but ABC could gain in the final week on the strength of its Academy Awards telecast.
TV Log
For complete TV programming Information, conault your weekly TV SHOWTIME from Sundays Dally Reflector.
WNCT-TV-Ch.9
'Carnival' For Rose Players
The power of CBS comes from its regular series, and this past week marked a return to regular programming. Six of its series landed in the Top 19 and another place was taken by CBS coverage of the NCAA college basketball championship between Houston and North Carolina State. The post-game show placed No. 16.
WEDNESDAY ,, 57 Newsbreak 7:0U Juker'sWild i2;00 News 7:30 Tit Tac Dough 12:30 Young and 8:00 Zorro and Son 1:30 As the World
8 :30 Square Pegs 9:09 Special 10:30 TBA 11:00 News9 11:30 Movie THURSDAY 5:00 Jim Bakker 6:00 Carolina 8:00 News 8:25 News 9:25 News'
10:00 Pyramid 10:30 Childs Play 11:00 Price is
2:30 Capitol 3:00 GiTidingL. 4:00 Waltons 5:00 Hillbillies 5:30 A.Oriftith 6:00 News9 6:30 CBS News 7:00 Jokers Wild 7:30 Tic Tac 8:00 Magnum P.I. 9:00 Simon8. 10:00 T. Witch 11:00 News 11:30 Late Movie
WITN-TV-Ch.7.
WEDNESDAY
7:00 Jefterson 7:30 Family Feud 8:00 Real People 9:00 FactsofLite 9:30 family Ties 10:00 Quincy 11:00 News THURSDAY 5:30 C.CIoseup 6:00 EarlyToday 6:25 Almanac 7:00 Today 7:25 News 7:30 Today,
8:25 News 8:M Today 9:00 R. Simmons 9:M All in the 10:00 FactsOfLife 10:30 Sale of the 11:00 Wheel of
11:30 Hit Man 12:00 News 12:30 Search For 1:00 Days Of Our 2:00 Another 3:00 Fantasy 4:00 Dark Shadows 4:30 Wild West 5:30 Lie Detector 6:00 News 6:30 NBC News 7:00 Jetfersons 7:30 Family Feud 8:00 Fame 9:00 Gimme A 9:30 Cheers 10:00 Hill Street 11:00 News 11:30 Tonight Show 12:30 Letterman 1:30 Overnight 2:30 News
WCTI-TV-Ch.12
WEDNESbAV
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 THURSDAY 5:00 Bewitched 5:30 J.Swaggart 6:00 AG Day 6:30 News 7:00 GoodAAorning 6:13 Action News 6:55 Action News 7:25 Action News 8:25 Action News 9:00 Phil Donahue 10:00 Good Tim 10:30 Laverne
11:00 Love Boat 12:00 Family Feud 12:30 Ryan's Hope 1:00 My Children 2.00 One Life 3:00 Gen. Hospital 4:00 Carnival 4:30 BJ/LOBO 5:30 People's 6:00 Action News 6:30 ABC News 7:00 Three'sCo. 7:30 Alice 8:00 Benson 8:30 Condo 9:00 TooClose 9:30 ItTakesTwo 10:00 20/20 11:00 Actions News 11:30 Nightline 12:00 HarryO 1:00 Mission
J.H. Rose High School will present its spring musical, Carnival, Friday, Saturday and Sunday beginning at 8 p.m. each night in the school gymnasium.
Tickets cost $3 in advance and $4 at the door and are available from Central Book and News, Gandalfs, Book Barn, Peking Clipper, at the school or from any play cast member.
Carnival is a musical romance about Lili, a small-town country girl, who Joins a broken-down carnival in Europe shortly after World War II. Lili (Kim Lingerfelt) falls in love with Marco the Magician (Kipper Hair) only to realize jhat it is not Marco she loves, but Paul (Tim Shank). 'Many obstacles in the unlikely romance take place before their love for each other is realized.
More than 100 Rose High School students are participating in the play, including the school orchestra and stage crew.
Other cast participants include: Jon Pringle (Jac-qust); Delano Williams (B.F.Schrigal): Brett Hursey (Grobert); Brenda Stanton (Rosalie); Ginny Haskins (Princess Olga); Leah Harris (Greta); Carol Ambert (Gladys Zuwicki);
Amy Vanscoy (Gloria Zuwicki); Tiki Hair (Angelique) and Chris Chappell '(Dr. Wilhelm Glass).
Portayals will also be made of puppets, roustabouts, card girls, stilt men, volunteers, jugglers, acrobats, blue bird girls, harem girls, clowns, gypsies, wardrobe women and vendors.
The A.C. Nielsen Co. ratings showed that CBS won the week with a rating of 17.0. The networks say this means that in an average prime-time minute, 17.0 percent of homes with televi-'sion were tuned to CBS. ABC was second with 16.3 and NBC was third with 13.6.
For the season, CBS has a rating of 18.3. ABC was second with 17.6 and NBC
WUNK-TV-Ch.25
WEDNESDAY 7:00 Report 7:30 Stateline 8:00 Creatures 9:00 Performance 10:00 Gefo:
11:00 A. Hitchcock 11:30 AAorecambe 12:00 Sign Off THURSDAY 7:45 AM Weather 8:00 VictoryG. 8:35 Cover To 8:50 Readalongl 9:00 Sesame Street 10:00 Tip Top Ten 10:10 Zebra Wings 10:30 Trade-Offs 10:50 Parlez AAio 11:00 Literary 11:35 Thinkabout 11:45 WriteOn 11:50 Readalongll
12:00 Advocates 12:30 Read If 1:15 Footsteps 1:45 Goodbody 2:00 Case Studies 2:30 Give and 2:45 Inside/Out 3:00 Ready or 3:30 Gen. Ed. 4:00 Sesame St. 5:00 Mr, Rogers 5:30 3-M Contact 6:00 Dr. Who 6:30 Sherlock 7:00 Report 7:30 Stateline 8:00 Previews 8:30 Inside Story 9:00 Nature of 10:00 Austin City 11:00 A. Hitchcoeji 11:30 Morecambe 12:00 SignOtf
CHIPMUNKS RETURN HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -NBC-TV will enliven its Saturday morning kid show offerings next September with Alvin and the Chipmunks, a new half-hour version of the popular cartoon series.
Alvin will follow Smurfs, the Saturday morning hit that debuted in September.
Since creation of the Chipmunk animated films more than 30 million records and uncounted books and toys have been sold.
NO DIFFERENT! Gary Crosby, son of the late Bing Crosby, doesnt understand why his book Going My Own Way has caused such shock waves. The junior Crosby, whose book depicts Bing as a cold, often heartless and abusive father, says Dad was no different from many fathers of his time. (AP Laserphoto)
Great Peppi s Specials
Monday thru Friday 11 ;00 a.m. To 2:00 p.m. Monday Nights 5:00 p.m. To 8:30 p m.
All The Spaghetti $075 You Can Eat......
Served with tossed salad, garlic bread and coffee oi tea
Every Tuesday Night 5:00 p.m. To 8:30 p.m.
All The Lasagna $075 You Can Eat O"" ''
Sprvpd with garlic brpiid, t(s?*<*d salad and coff4*p or l**ii
I v^rv Wi dnesdrtv Night 5;00p m To 8 30 p.m
All The Beef Ribs $ C 95 You Can Eat .
Served with qarllc bread, tossed salad or potato salail and coffee or lea
0 12,
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Thursday Night Delight
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Also By Popular Demand Wed. & Fri. Night Special Feature
"Shrimp And Chablis
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756-2792
Dinner Hours 5 P.M. 10 P.M.
was third with 15.2. The current season began last Sept. 27 and will end Sunday.
Two CBS shows, 60 Minutes and Magnum, P.I., were in first and second place, and the basketball coverage was third.
The only newcomer to the Top 10 was the premiere of the ABC medical show, Ryans Four. The spring tryout series was in a three-way tie for ninth place.
ABC took fourth and fifth places withDynasty and Threes Company.
In contrast, Attenborough noted, he hadnt received a single offer from a British backer.
Why, I dont know ... I would have thought that the City really ought to come forward to back what is a major British industry, he said.
We should be ashamed of our country, Puttnam said. Inevitably, unless something changes, Dickie (Attenborough) will eventually take one of the offers to do a film in the United States or with U.S. finance and well be left flat-footed.
David Hewson, film critic for the august Times of London, said Sir Richards triumph has brilliantly confirmed the popularity of British films in Hollywood.
However, Britain is still a long way from reestablishing a cycle of domestic film production in which an average budget film stands a reasonable chance of recouping its losses, he said.
Last year, more than 50 films costing over $300 million were produced here, at least 20 wholly British-funded. This compared with 24 films costing $105 milln in 1981.
But box office receipts in Britain were down $41.3 million, a drop of 23 percent from 1981 . And the average number of people who went to the movies in Britain each week fell from 1.69 million in
1981 to 1.23 million last year, as the popularity of television and home viewing of video-cassette movies grew.
When Chariots of Fire won last years best picture award, actor-writer Colin Welland told the Oscar audience: The British are coming.
Instead, the Directors Guild of Great Britain complained to Trade Minister Iain Sproat on Tuesday that there still isnt enough cash to finance new British pictures and revive the industry.
It is absurd that we are not currently exploiting the opportunities open to us, the guilds report said.
It is clear that if the finance were more readily available, Britain could become a major provider of films for international markets.
The report asked Sproat to support a $76.5 million subsidy to Britains declining movie industry and to allocate revenues from the governments 10 percent tax on movie tickets to refurbish old cinemas.
Carolina Grill
Mot Cakes & Sausage
With Coffee 51 98
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TARHEEL II NIGHTCLUB
Located On The Old far Road 4 Miles South of Sunshine Garden Center
Enjoy Dancing By The Roadhouse Band Every Wednesday Night Beginning Wednesday April 13th, 1983.
Adm. Men...............$2.00 Women............ . $1 00
Draft Beef .................................2S
Bottled or Canned Beer........................!.].!! 75*
Live Music By The Freeway Friday And Saturday Nights.
Make Plans Now To Spend An Evening At Tarheel II. Youll Be Glad You Did. Call: 746-2696 Daytime, Evenings, 746-2269.
Open 5 Days A Week Wednesday Through Sunday At 6:00 P.M.
lOCAL
NEIWORK.
CABLE
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DECDE,
36-The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.Wednesday, April 13,1983
Crossword By Eugene Sxffor
FORECAST FOR THURSDAY, APR. 14, IM
ACROSS 1 French artist 4 Monks title 7 Baal, for one
30 Meadow sound 33 Places where sweets are made
t Author Jaffe 12 Garden tool 3 Pliabl 14 Father
8 Nurse Barton 36 Sea nymph 10 Sphere of 37 Hair dye
combat
11 Revoke, in bridge
13 Taffy, for one
16 Donkey, in Paris
17 Tenth part
18 Time of life
19 Where the Shannon flows
20 Fret
21 - de Uon
23 Guide
25 Weakens
26 Pack
27 -The Three Faces of "
28 Geological ridge
4 The Way of All-
5 Belgian marble
6 Region
7 Word with cast or pig
8 Idas home
38 Challenges
39 Sea eagle
40 Authors originals; abbr. 9 Related
41 Speak through
down males only
1 An Astaire 10 Doctors org. 26 Slips Avg. solution time: 24 min. sideways
M
15 Evergreen
19 Printers measures
20SUtch
21 Stately old dance
22 Unwrapped
23 Let it stand
24 Small flashlights
25 Dry, of wine
Answer to yesterdays puzzle.
28 Oglers
29 Blue-" (Crosby film)
30 Hill or Goodman
31 Actress Baxter
32 Quiet-mouse
34 Small drink
35 Olympian goddess
CRYPTOQUIP
4-13
KOPENOZL FELEF AJNB TO PJXEA
ZEFX NR RK BXJNTJ
Yesterdays Cryptoquip - THE PlJ\CE TO BUY OUR MIUTARY SHOES: BOOT CAMP.
Todays Cryptoquip clue: J equals R.
The Cryptoquip is a simple substitution cipher in which each letter used stands for another. If you think that X equals 0, it will equal 0 throughout the puzzle. Single letters, short words, and words using an apostrophe can give you clues to locating vowels. Solution is accomplished by trial and error.
l9Ba King FeaturesS/ndicale. Inc
ADULTS $100 TIL 5:30
BUCCANEER MOVIES
1:20,3:20,5:20,7:20,9:20 THE DEVIL IN MISS JONES PART II NO ONE UNDER 17 ALLOWED R
1:10,3:10,5:10,7:10,9:10 THE ROLLING STONES LETS SPEND THE NIGHT TOGETHER PQ
THETREASURE OFTHE FOUR CROWNS IN-3-D PG
EAST CAROLINA PLAYHOUSE ^
presents
THORNTON WILDER'S PULITZER PRIZE-WINNING CLASSIC
OUR TOWN
McGinnis Theatre-April 14-19,8:15 p.m.
General Public $4.00 ECU Students $2.50 Call 757-6390 Sunday performance proceeds to the David Martin Memorial Scholarship Fund
GENERAL TENDENCIES: You are now able to understand a comprehensive course of action awaiting your attention. You can make progress by using todays beneficial aspects to your advantage.
' ARIES (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) A good day to engage in recreational activities that will bring you in touch with congeniis. Show that you have wisdom.
TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) A new project proposed could bring you added income in the future. Try to please loved one. Stop procrastinating.
GEMINI (May 21 to June 21) Contact allies and see how you can gain their full cooperation where mutual goals are concerned. Keep all appointments.
MOON CHILDREN (June 22 to July 21) A good time to study new ways that could add to your present income. A monetary expert can give the advice you need.
LEO (July 22 to Aug. 21) Know what it is you truly want and direct your efforts toward attaining it. Sidestep one who has an eye on your assets.
VIRGO (Aug. 22 to Sept. 22) Use your intellect in the handling of private matters. Not a good time to confide in others. Use common sense.
LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) Meet with good friends today and exchange new ideas. A desire you've had can now be attained. Relax at home tonight.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) Know the best way to express your talents. Discuss your aims with a prominent person. Be more confident.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) Study new outlets that could add to your income in the days ahead. A new contact can be most helpful to you now.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 20) A good conversation with the one you love can pave the way to a better understanding. Be sure to keep your promises.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 21 to Feb. 19) Paying attention to what associates have to say can improve your relationships with them. Express happiness. ^
PISCES (Feb. 20 to Mar. 20) A new plan needs to be discussed with co-workers if it is to be successful. You can make much progress in career matters now.
IF YOUR CHILD IS BORN TODAY ... he or she will be full of good ideas that will bring many honors, so be sure to encourage your progeny early in life for best results. Direct the education along governmental lines. A good person in this chart.
"The Stars impel, they do not compel. What you make of your life is largely up to you!
District Court Report
1983, McNaught Syndicate, Inc.
GOREN BRIDGE
Judge W. Lee Lumpkin and Judge E. Burt Aycock Jr. disposed of the following cases during the February 28 - March 4 term of District Court.
Michael Allen Babcock, StancU Park, damage real property, 90 days jail suspended on payment of $25 and cost, $110 restitution.
John Linwood Brooks, Windsor, operate left of center, dismissed.
Robert Bunn, Bethel, trespass, 30 days jail suspended on payment of $2S and cost.
Marshall Woodard Crumpler Jr., Oakwood Acres, exceeding safe speed, 10 days jail suspended on payment of $15 and cost.
Bobby Wayne Dixon, Massachusetts, larceny, 6 months jail suspended on payment of $50 and cost, probation 2 years
Connie Mack Dupree, Route 1, Greenville, operate left of center, leave scene of accident, 2 years jail suspended on payment of $50 and cost.
Jan Carl Gilbert, Ayden, driving under influence, 6 months jail suspended on payment of $150 and cost, surrender operators license, attend alcohol workshop Carlton Wayne Hanna, Route II, Greenville, driving under influence, 6 months jail suspended on payment of $250 and cost, surrender operators license, 4 weekends jail.
Sam Hardy Jr., Grimesland, stop sign violation, lepve scene of accident, 90 days jail suspended on payment of $100 and cost.
Mary Louise Lilly Harris, Montclair Drive, no operators license, safe movement violation, 30 days jail suspended on payment of $25 and cost, surrender operators license: give false name, dismissed.
Linwood Hooks, Winterville, stop sign violation, not guilty.
David Eugene Lawrence, Josie Lane, speeding, $25 and cost. ,
R.M Luker, Cherry Point, abandonment/nonsupport, dismissed.
Julian Jordan Mackenzie. Washington, speeding. 10 days jail suspended on payment of $10 and cost.
Gerald Thomas Weeks, Mt. Olive, exceeding safe speed, prayer for judgment continued upon payment of cost.
Sheela Marie Elchhom McWilliams, Branches Estates, exceeding safe speed, cost.
Jimmy R Plymouth, Grifton, abandonment/nonsupport, dismissed.
Carlton Junior Powell Jr., Route 5, Greenville, fail stop at scene of accident, 30 days jail suspended on payment of $50 and cost.
John Michael Rhem, Washington, intoxicated and disruptive, 10 days jail suspended on payment of $25 and cost William Todd Rhodes, Eric Court, speeding, cost.
Bonnie Cox Shepherd, Kenly, speeding, no operators license, 30 days jail suspended on payment of $50 and cost; driving under influence, dismissed.
Gerald McCray Singleton, Manning Trailer Court, registration and financial responsibility violation. 10
suspended on payment of $50 and cost Cecil Mack Hannah,
Grimesland, driving under Influence, 6 months jail suspended on payment of $150 and cost, surrender operators license, attend alcohol workshop.
Johnny Ray Hopkins, Bell Arthur,
intoxicated and disruptive, 1 day jail. Mae Lancaster Morgan, Washington,
safe speed,
inued upon payment of
prayer for
exceeding judgment conti cost.
Linwood Earl Potter, Route 4, Greenville, intoxicated and disruptive, 1 day jail.
William Ron Wilson, Stancil Drive,
possession of marijuana, $50 and cost. Mrs. James A. Davis, Murfreesboro,
worthless check. 10 days jail suspended on payment of cost and check
Ca
Calvin Jones, Pitt Street, unauthorized use of conveyance, 6 months jail suspended on payment of $100 and cost.
Lee Junior Andrews, Bethel, drivin
ving
under influence, 60 days jail suspended on payment of $100 and cost, surrender operators license, attend alcohol workshop.
Casandra D, Belcher, Simpson, worthless check, dismissed.
Penelope Esther Boyette, Kings Row Apt, speeding, 5 days jail suspended on payment of $10 and csot.
Todd Armitage Buhrman. Ash Street, .10% blood alcohol content, 60 days jail suspended on payment of $100 and cost; surrender operators license, attend
alcohol workshop.
Thomas Earl Dixon, Grimesland.
BY CHARLES GOREN AND OMAR SHARIF
1983 Tribune Company Syndicate. Inc
DEFENSE CARRIES NO INSURANCE POLICY
Bot)i vulnerable. South deals. NORTH
8752 '^AQS 0 A92
862
WEST
1064 9? J1095 0 106
KJ75
SOUTH
KQJ 9ZK72 0KQJ87
A9 The bidding: South West 1 0 Pass
3 Pass
4 NT Pass
6 0 Pass
EAST
A93 9?643 0 543
Q1043
tricks-you are going to gain the lead once more, at best. Therefore, you should make an attacking lead against the slam in an effort to build a quick trick. Obviously, the only suit that offers a real chance of that for West is a club.
No More Signals By Martian Lander
North East
1 Pass
4 0 Pass
5 9? P*g8
Pass Pass
Opening lead: Jack of 9?.
If you are looking for a no-risk guarantee, bridge is not your game. Switch to tiddlywinks, but take care that you dont flip a disk into your eye.
South had a difficult rebid. He decided that, because of his good spade fit, his hand was too strong for two no trump, so he elected to jump shift in clubs. When North took a jump preference in diamonds. South launched into Blackwood and settled in a small slam when he learned an ace was missing.
West selected the safe lead of the jack of hearts. The declarer soon showed that it was safe and sorry! He won the king of hearts, drew trumps and then forced out the ace of spades. East shifted to a club, but it was too late. When spades split evenly, declarer crossed to a high heart and sluffed his losing club on the thirteenth spade to make his slam.
Obviously, a club lead would have defeated the contract. No matter how declarer maneuvered, he could not have avoided losing a trick in each black suit. But how was West to know?
Many time world champion Benito Garozzos advice in his Bols Bridge Tip some years ago pointed the way. He explained that, when competent opponents bid a small slam against you, you dont have much time to develop
'Remedies' On Exhaust Flaw
WASHINGTON (AP) -General Motors Corp. says its developing remedies for exhaust emission problems in 861,000 of its 1978 and 1979 model-yearcars.
GM was ordered this week by the Environmental Protection Agency to recall the cars, which are exceeding the federal standard for nitrogen oxide emissions of 2 grams per mile.
The affected vehicles are 1978 and 1979 Chevrolets with six-cylinder, 200-cubic-inch engines, and 1979 Chevrolets, Pontiacs, Oldsmobiles and Buicks equipped with six-cylinder, 231-cubic-inch engines. California vehicles are not covered by the recall.
In a statement, GM said it would notify car owners when the remedies were developed.
NEW YORK (AP) -Engineers have given up efforts to re-establish contact with the Viking 1 lander on Mars, but say an automatic internal program aboard the spacecraft might still send signals to Earth,
The spacecraft, which has been sending information back from Mars since 1976, ' mysteriously stopped its weekly transmissions in November, according to officials of the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif.
Since then, engineers have been trying to revive Uie spacecraft, but on Tuesday the laboratory announced it was abandoning the attempt.
There is hope, however, that an automatic internal program on board the space-craft will initiate transmission as scheduled on May 5. Jet Propulsion Laboratory engineers will be monitoring their radios closely, officials said.
If it is not detected, they will send a command to the lander to switch to alternate systems in the hope that the automatic internal program will work.
In November, a spokesman for the laboratory said engineers were fairly confident they could resume communications with the
Viking 1 lander.
They believed the problem is due to a misali^ed antenna, which apparently had been skewed by an inadvertent command sent from Earth, officials said. They tried sending strong sisals to the Viking 1 lander to re-align the antenna, but there has been no response.
The lander, launched in August 1975 to search for life on Mars as well as to study various other aspects of the planet, had been designed tp operate for a minimum of 90 days, but officials said recently they expwted it to continue sending information on Martian weather and terrain until 1990.
The Viking 2 orbiter developed a leak and stopped operation two years earlier. Its lander was silenced by a battery failure in April 1980.
756-1449
THE VERDICT 7:00^:20 (R)
HIGHROAD TO CHINA 7:05-^:05> (PG) I
DARK CRYSTAL 7:10-9:00 (PG)|
OUTSIDERS
7:15-9:10
(PG)
Archie Nobles and Sons 315 Stantonsburg Road. (Across from Doctors Park)
758-4600
Steaks -Seafood- Chicken-Salad Bai
DAILY SPECIALS Beer and Wine Permit
Sun.-Fri. 11am-10pm Sat. 5pm-10pm
Banquet faculties
Take-out service
The Association Of Surgical Technologists Requests The Honor Of Your Presence At One Of The Wildest Weddings That YouTl Ever Witness!
Friday, April 15th 7:30 P.M.
Brody Building Auditorium
Guest Stars: Drs. John Leonard, Jack Welch, Ed Janosko, Rufus Knott, John Hale, Howard Satterfield, Bob Deyton
Also Featuring:
Ed Clement and His Blue Grass Band, The Green, Grass Cloggers And Music From Tennessee Em* mitt Walsh
Get Your Tickets Quick! Contact Tina Klink Or Frances Humphrey at 756-0739 Or Nancy Phelps At 756-3130, Ext. 254. For General Information, Call Audrey Williams Or Connie Ansley
r
MitfititiliMMl
registration and no financial rwponstbUlty. 3 days iaU su^mkM ' onMvmentofgBMideoit.
OafeC. Parmer. Mount, Iqjury real property, dtsmiiMii.
Ashley Joseph PauJkner, Fayetteville, .10% blood alcohol content, 00 days jail siapandad on payment of $100 and cost, surrender operators license, sttend alcohol
Keith Mitchell. SummiU Street.
AVIUI mivwswas, t
assault wiUi deadly wespm. dismissed Bobby Glen Roberson Jr, Vandyke
Aa A* ItAAMCA
Street, qo operators license, registration vlofatton, 10 days jail
suspended on payment of $50 and
I Zeno Smith Jr., Hopkins Drive, assault wtth deadly weapon, dismissed Michael Tyndall. Greenville.
days jail suepnoed on payment ot $25
and cost.
Martha Brown Thome, Weldon, exceeding safe speed, cost-remit.
Roger Vandiford, Bell Arthur, trespass, annoying phone calls, dismissed.
David Timothy Webb. StantonstMirg, exceeding safe speed, cost.
Janice Delois Williams, Conley Street, driving under influence, 6 months Jail suspended on payment of $150 and cost, attend alcohol workshop.
Marvin Williams, Gum Road, assault on female, cost.
Vickie R. Hardee, Highland Trailer Park, worthless chieck, 10 days Jail suspended on payment of coet-remlt
Matte Susan Hardcastle, Washington, exceeding safe qwed, 5 days JaU suspended on payment of $10 and cost.
Jerry Kni^t Howard, Davenport SUeet, speeding, 10 days jail suspended on payment of 0 and cost, surrender operators license.
Steve Leo Kline, Washington Street, damage real property, 6 mooths jail suspended on payment of $25 and cost, $50 restitution.
Christopher Andrew Lee, Stratford Arms Apts., speeding, 10 days jaU suspended on payment of $15 and cost, surtender operators license.
Matthew Jamison McDonald, Jarvis Street, speeding, 5 days jail suspended
trespass, dismissed Wmiani ^
HI payment of $10 and cost.
Gary Lee McIntyre, Ayden, driving under influence, 60 days jail suspmded on payment of $150 and coot, surrender operators license, attend alcohol workshop.
Howard Burtis Paramore, WlntervUle, speeding, 5
Clarence Junior Wright, Tyson Street, driving while license revoked, 6 months jatls suspended on payment of $200 and cost, surrender operators license.
Alan Jerome Shular.Camp Legeune, speeding, cost, $10 failure to appear.
Moses Barnes, Route 6, Greenville, larceny, motion to dismiss allowed.
Wanda Streicland Bland, Branches Estates, no financial responsibility, cost-remit.
Edward Earl Cannon. Ayden, reckless driving, speeding, fail stop blue light and siren, 30 days jaU suspended on payment of $100 and cost; expired plate, dismissed.
John Edward Cox, Route 2, Greenville, improper equipment, cost-remit.
Stuart Tlyimas Cox. Route 2. Greenville, intoxicated and disruptive,
1 day jail.
srncer Daniels, Route 6, Greenville, ABC violation, cost.
William Earf Foggs, Ayden, carry concealed weapon, 6 monUis Jail
..Jllam Trends, Summit Street, asuult with deadly weapon, dismissed Steve Bazemore. Winterville, communicating threaU. not guilty Garland Woolard, ThirteenUi Street, disorderly conduct, dismissed.
Douglas WUIiam Henry, Woodstock Drive, speeding, 10 days jail suspended on payment of $25 and cost, surrender operators license James Jelemie, Ohio, carry concealed weapon, assault with deadly weapon intent to kill inflicting serious injury, dismissed.
Futhure Earl Knignt, Robersonville. larceny, not guilty Michael SpeU, Roundtree Drive, assault, 10 days jail suspended on payment of cost.
William Kyle Thompson, Grifton, Injury real property, dismissed.
Kenneth Taylor, Winterville, indecent exposure (2 counts) 6 months jail suspended on payment of cost, probation 3 years
lickolas Radeka, Rockspring Road, possession of marijuana, $10 and cost.
Jimmy RUey Heath, Glendale Court, assault, dismissed.
Stephen David Smith. Cherry Court, speeding, 5 days jail suspended on payment of $5 and cost.
Nathan T. Thigpen, Rocky Mount, trespass, 30 days jaU suspended on payment of cost-remit.
Diane Streeter, Winterville. worthless check, dismissed.
Patricia Rodgers KoonU, Sherwood Drive, speeding, cost.
Calvin Jeffery Blount, FarmvUle, exceeding 50/50 zone. 10 days jail suspended on payment of cost.
James E. Blount, Ayden, reckless driving, 90 days jail suspended on payment of $100 and cost, attend
alcohol workshop neth Harolt
Kenneth Harold Braswell Jr., Route 8, Greenville, speeding, cost.
Renee Nantz Carroll, Farmville, exceeding safe speed, cost.
Will Daniels. Route 1, GreenvUle, driving under influence-2nd offense, 6 monUis jail suspended on payment of $200 and cost, attend alcohol workshop, surrender operators license, probation 2 years.
Wallace Gibbs, Rocky Mount, driving under influence. 6 months jail suspended on payment of $200 and cost, surrender operators license, probation 2 years
Richard Louie Harrelson, Route 6, Greenville, speeding, no operators license, 10 days jail suspended on
payment of $10 and cost Trov
oy AnUwny Love, Farmville, 10% blood alcohol content, 6 monUis jail suspended on payment of $150 and cost, attend alcohol workshop, surrender operators license.
Michael Mills, Lakeview Drive, worthless check, 30 days jaU suspended on payment of cost and check.
Charles Graham Nichols, Route i, Greenville. .10% blood alcohol content, 6 months jail suspended on payment of $150 and cost, attend alcohol workshop, surrender operators license.
Kenneth Phillips, Farmville, assault on female, not guilty.
James Clifton SmiUi, Farmville, 10% blood alcohol content, 6 monUis jail suspended on payment of $150 and cost, attend alcohol workshop, surrender operators license.
Jimmy Smith, Farmville, secreting property, dismissed.
James Dellah Staton, Bethel, driving under influence-2nd offense, 1 year jail suspended on payment of $200 and cost, surrender operators license, 3 weekends jail.
Marvin Williams. Farmville, forgery and uttering, breaking entering and larceny, no probable cause found.
Dennis Ray Bunch, Farmville, driving under inRuence, operate left of center, possession of marijuana, 6 months jail suspended on payment of $150 and cost, surrender operators license, attend alcohol workshop.
Richard Evans, Farmville, nonsupport. 6 months jail.
Bobby Ray Miller, Tarboro,
PLAYHOUSE
INDOOR THEATRE
SMIIm Watt Of Greenville On U.S. 2M (Fermvllle Hwy)
I ENDS tonight!
ATYOUR ADULT ENTERTAINMENT CENTER
exceeding safe speed, 10 days jaij andcost.
suspended on payment of $10 an
Joe Louis Brock, Winterville, worthless check, 5 days jail suspended on payment of cost and check.
Steve Ebron, Thirteenth Street, assault on female, dismissed.
Charles Harris, Hopkins, Drive, worthless check, 6 counts, 10 days jail suspended on payment of cost and check.
John Uoyd Hill Jr., Shady Knoll, speeding, 5 days jail suspended on payment of $5 and cost.
Willie Carroll Jones, Azalea Gardens, .10% blood alcohol content, 60 days jail suspended on payment of $100 and cost, surrender operators license.
Denise Langley, Rountree Drive, possession of stolen property, not guilty.
. TALK .
; DIRTY ;
TO ME-11
^ introducing I
I BRIDGETTE MONT
CMAnytinwlorSliowtlmM _
_VMLO.R*qi*l
I
ValMI.O.RaqiiM ISMMS Doers 0iS:49 Sliow-lflio-
ROSE HIGH SCHOOL
PRESENTS
CARNIVAL
BY
MERRILL, STEWART, DEUTSCH 8:00 P,M. Rose High Gym April 15,16,17
$3.00 Advance $4.00 At Door
Ticlicts Available At: Central Book & News Book Barn Gandalfs
The Peking Clipper,
r
USICALI
1980
CLE AWARD ARDS
EVITA
The (ntomotioiiol Musical H
All Seats Reserved $1$.00, $15.00, a $12 OO
Friday, AprH IS 8 PM (Balcony only)
Saturday. April 18-3 PM Sunday. April 17 - 3 PM S 8 PM
All Seats General Admission $16.00
^turday, April 18 8 PM
lAtoChiiueTlekeleen
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PEAMUTS
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AceOfipiNfi To THI NTE 1 pfceivEP, A 6ENTLEMAN NAMEp the FANS" HA? TfOP wEi-FAPE vEPY MU<=H AT HEAPT.
^UNKY WINKERBEAN
-FAMOUS COPOSERS-Chapter Ten-Claude Barlow
_)(Z
SHOE
During his formative years,Claude BarlDws parents pushed him constantly!
J fip! r4P
o
m trLR
1
(CD
1
IE_T
-SS-
A shove dcwn the grand staircase attheLaScala.
opera house appears to have done the most damage!
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752-6166
PUBLIC NOTICES
NOTICE
Having qualified as Executor Of the estafe of Mack Bowen late of Pitt County, North Carolina, this Is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of said deceased to present them to the undersigned Executor on or before Septerhber 23, 1983 or this notice or same will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons Indebted to said estate please make immediate payment. This 21st day of March, 1983. Harold Gray HInnant 105 Edgemont Drive Snow Hill, North Carolina 28580 E xecutor of the estate of Mack Bowen, deceased.
March 23, 30, April 6,13,1983
NOTICE
Having qualified as Executor of the estate of Clara Brown Bowen
late of Pitt County, North Carolina,
this is to notify all persons having ,f .....
claims against the estate of salt deceased to present them to the undersigned Executor on or before September 23, 1983 or this notice or
same will be pleaded in bar of their recovery.. All persons Indebted to
said estate please make immediate
payment
21st day of March, 1983.
Harold Gray HInnant
105 Edgemont Drive Snow Hill, North Carolina 28580
xecutor of the estate of Clara Brown Bowen, deceased. March 23, 30, April 6, 13, 1983
pr"&Ts'___________
IN THE GENERAL
OF SERVICE OF BY PUBLICATION
COURT OF JUSTICE ---------JRT-------
DISTRICT COURT DIVISION TARHEEL TRUCK RENTALS, INC VS
JESSIE F ARNOLD VS
MICHAEL STEVEN MARTIN AND ATLANTIC
CREDIT CORPORA TION
TO: MICHAEL STEVEN MARTIN Take Notice that a pleading seeking relief against you has been filed in the aboe entitled action. The nature of the relief being sought Is as follows: an action tor judgment on
019
Lincoln
1973 LINCOLN Continental Mark 4. 0,000 miles. Excellent condition.
$2500 negotiable. 752-1705 or 758 6321.
020
AAercury
MERCURY AAONARCH 1977. Call
756 0975.
1976 CAPRI Excellent condition. New radlals. $16M negotiable. 752 1705. "
021
Oldsmobile
1979 OLDSMOBILE CUTLASS, l^ed, new tires. $4,795. Call 757
1980 OLDS CUTLASS LS Good condition, air, cruise, $3795. 756 9404.
1980 OLDS CUTLASS LS, dies6l, 4 door, power steering and brakes,
....... St(
The Dally Reflector, Greenville, N.C.Wednesday, April 13,198337
046
PETS
AKC CHAMPIONSIRE~Fekiise r^s and blondes. $150.
13603.
AKC REGISTERED black female poodle. 8 weeks old. Call 752 0084 after 5 p.m
EXPERT DOG OBEDIENCE trainino. Call 758 5590.
RAT TERRIER PUPPIES 8 weeks old. Dewormed. Marion Mae Mills, Farmville Highway, 756 3279 or 355-2792.
051
Help Wanted
A RESPONSIBLE middle aged lady with child care experience Is needed to till a church nursery position. Please call 758 4027 or 752-0367 after 6 P.m.
AUTOMOTIVE SALES career Excellent starting salary and
automatic, AM/FM stereo cassette, new radlals and shocks, 25 miles per gallon, $5500. 756-6935._
022
Plymouth
1970 PLYAAOUTH DUSTER 2 door, automatic. 4 new tires. 758-6621.
1975 PLYAAOUTH 318 engine, 70.000 miles. Excellent condition; $1200. 746 2326.
023
Pontiac
GRAND PRIX 1982. Power windows, tilt wheel, cruise control, M/50 seaL vinyl top, 9,000 miles, like new. Call Rex Smith Chevrolet, Ayden, 746 3141. _
024
Foreign
DATSUN 280 ZX 59,000 miles, automatic. Excellent condition! 355 6441.
_ - _ ...10
benefits. Good worRin^
Sales experience preferred. East Carolina Lincoln-Mercury GMC. 756-4267.
051
Heip Wanted
MORTGAGE LOAN SERVICING POSITION
Assistant to head of Servicing Department. SuccessYiil candidate must have saving and loan or mortgage banking back ground with emphasis in loan servicing. Excellent compensation package. Send resume in con fidence to 'Mortgage Servicing', P O Box 1967, CTreenville, N C 27835
MUTUAL OF OAAAHA
We need one person who needs as much as 359.80 a week and more selling for Mutual of Omaha. Call for personal interview:
AUTOMOTIVE SALESPERSON Experience helpful but not neces sary. IndividuaL must have successful background and the will ingness to advance quickly. Only those responsible and desiring to earn fop commissions neeo to apply. See Brian Pecheles in person tor mterview. 8 a.m. 12 noon. Joe Pecheles Volkswagen, Greenville Blvd.
AVON HAS OPENINGS FOR REPRESENTATIVES
in the areas of Greenville and Pitt County. Earn up to 50%, work ir ^our own neighborhood. Call 752
*P condition, 5 speed, AM-FM stereo tape, air $6.950. Call 804 481-0470.
MG MIDGET, 1974, good running condition and new interior $19K negotiable. Call 756 9273.
1968 VOLKSWAGEN 4 new radlals Engine lust rebuilt. Call 756-8847.
1970 VOLKSWAGEN Excellent condition, new paint, battery and seat covers. Engine rebuilt. Facto ry radio with FM converter. $1200 firm. 758 2082.
1971 DATSUN 510. Yellow with black vinyl top. One owner. Low mileage. Excellent condition. 757 4680, 6101 days. 355 2245 nights
1971 TOYOTA COROLLA Deluxe. 2 door, heat. $5M. 756 1268.
1972 fiat 4 door. Good condition and excellent gas mileage. For
Information call 756-6843.
unpaid note and chattel mortgage You are required to make defense
to such pleading not later than the 11th day of May, 1983, and upon your failure to do so the party seeking ser
vice against you will apply to the Court tor the relief sought.
_ _ sough
This the 30th day of March, 1983. JAMES F PENNY, JR
Attorney for Jessie F. Arnold P.O. Box 937
Lillington, North Carolina 27546 TELEPHONE: (919)893 4952
March 30; April 6,13, 20,1983
NOTICE TOCREDITORS NORTH CAROLINA PITT COUNTY Having qualified as Administrator O.T.A. o1 the Estate of Marlon W. Maxwell, late of Pitt County, North
Carolina, this Is to notify all persons having claims against the Estate of said Deceased to present them to the
undersigned Administrator C.T.A. on or before October 17, 1983, or
same will be pleaded In bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to
said Estate, please make immediate ivmenttofheunde This the 7th day of
undersigned. Jay of April, 1983. FREDT /viATTOX Administrator C.T.A. of the Estate of Marion VV. Maxwell MATTOX & DAVIS, P A
1973 TOYOTA CELICA Good condition. SKXXI. 752 355 2886.
4 spe< 2 577
1975 128 FIAT sedan. White. Excellent condition. $1300 or best otter. 752 4599.
1977 DATSUN B210. AM/FM, air, good condition. $1650 negotiable. '56-7796 after 6 p.m.
1978 DATSUN 510 wagon, air, AM-FM, new paint and tires. $2,750. Call 757-1330or 758-5728.
1978 HONDA ACCORD 5 speed, good condition, good gas mileage. Perfect car for young graduate. 752 0454.
1979 HONDA CIVIC wagon, spot less, loaded. Call 746-4551, 5 to 8 p.m._
1979 HONDA CIVIC AM FM cassette radio, excellent condition, 36 miles per gallon. Price negotia-ble. Call 825 3W1 in Bethel.
1979 MERCEDES 300 D with sun roof, 4 door, cream, light tobacco interior, AM/FM cassette, $15,900. Call (919 ) 758-0404. _
Attorneys for the Estate of Marion W. Maxwell
Post Office Box 686 Greenville, North Carolina 27834 Phone: 919/758-3430 April 13, 20, 27, May 4, 1983
TAKE NOTICE that the partner hip ktiown as WILCAR ENTER
PRISES, composed of Marvin W. Aldridge, Philip E. Carroll, and James M. Williamson has been
y,. *iiiiaiii9UM lias oeen
dissolved and has ceased doing business.
All persons having claims against said partnership should present them to the undersigned or this notice will be plead in bar of any recovery.
Th I s the 17th dav of March, 1983 WILCAR enterprises
Singleton, McNally
& Strickland
Attorneys at Law 206 S. Washington Street
P. O. Box 545 _ Greenville, NC 27834 March 23, 30; April 6, 13, 1983
NOTICE
Having qualified as Executrix of fate of ' .........
the est^e of Sadie Haddock Wayne late of Pitt County, North Carolina,
this is to notify all persons having
---- f ' . . a
claims against the estate of sal deceased to present them to the undersigned Executrix on or before September 23, 1983 or this notice or
same will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to
said estate please make Immediate - 'ment.
his 21st day of March, 1983.
Shelby W. Evans 3619 N, Main Street
Tarboro, N.C. 27886 Shirley W. Brewer 308 Pinewood Road Greenville, North Carolina 27834 E xecutrixs of the estate of Sadie Haddock Wayne, deceased. March 23, 30; April 6, 13, 1983
1980 TOYOTA CELICA GT liftback, loaded including wire rims, factory sunroof, and radlals. 49,000 miles. Asking S4995. 758-8538.
1982 HONDA Accord, air, AM FM
stereo, 5 speed, velour interior! Just had maintenance check up
excellent condition. Price negotia ble. 756-5856.
029 Auto Parts & Service
FOR SALE: Heavy trailer hitch and light plus package for 1963-1978 Jeep Waqoneer. $100. Call 752 4135.
032
Boats For Sale
FOUR CHARTER 30' O'Day. Wheel steering, diesel, hot shower, cruise Pamlico River and Sound area. Call 753 5146.
OUACHITA 14Vj' Bass boat. Cox trailer. 25 horsepower Johnson; $1299. 757 3524.
SAUN JUAN 28. Pressure hot and cold water; 5 sails with spinnaker; Insured for $28K Make and offer! 758 0849 nights; 756-1343 days.
SUNFISH SAILBOAT Good condi tion. $600. 752 1057.
14' BASS BOAT and trailer.
Plywood and fiberglass. $400. 752-'(57 .......
S7()7or 355 2886.
17' RHODE ISLAND SAILSTAR
Fiberglass 3 sails. New main and boom tent. Older boat, excellent mint condition with galvanized trailer. $2150 firm. 752 7564.
1977 CHAPARRAL 18, 120 HP
Mercruiser, Vann galvanized trail er. Call after 6, 74 2578.
1977 LANCER 25' sailboat. Galley, head, VHF, 3 sails. Fully equipped. $11,000.964 4172 or 752 096.
002
PERSONALS
YOtJNG MALE, late 20's, professional, ^seeks to meet similar females. Race not a factor. Letter and photo, P o Box 3361, Greenville, N C
007 SPECIAL NOTICES
FREE I Stop in and register at Floyd G Robinson Jewelers,
Downtown Evans Mall for free gift to be given away weekly. Tlo
purchase necessary.
on
Autos For Sale
1978 DIXIE with 150 Mercury, Galvanized trailer. This one is loaded with extras. Electric winch, outriggers, and plenty more. Rigged espeacially for live bait King Mackerel fishing. $6620. 825-0062 after 6 p.m.__
1979 19' Mantee; 1979 115 horse power Evlnrude and Vann galva nized trailer, electric winch. Must sell. Call 946-0938 after 6.
22' VENTURA Sailboat. 5 horse J new Excellent condi
J IIWI
power Suzuki motor; brand new. Float on trailer.
034 Campers For Sale
TRUCK COVERS All sizes, colors. Leer Fiberglass and ^ortsman tops. 250 units in stock. O'Briants, Raleigh, N C 834-2774.
1972 STARCRAFT p<-up hard top. Good condition. $80(5. 753-5692.
036
Cycles For Sale
YAMAHA 1975 MX400. Dirt bike. Runs good. Days 752-3735, nights 758 4669,
SELL YOUR CAR the National Autofinders Way! Authorized Deal^er in Pitt County. Hastings Ford. Call 758 0114 _
012
AAAC
1961 RAMBLER 4 door, $350 . 758 9157 8 to 5. 752 5556 after 5:3M
013
Buick
1966 BUICK LeSABRE Excellent condition, new tires. $375 . 758 6499 evenings
1980 SKYLARK Limited 2 door. 95W* condition. Loaded. 756
014
Cadillac
SEVILLE 1979. Diesel. Very low mileage, perfect condition. Call 746-6171 days. 746-6339 after 6 o.m
015
Chevrolet
CORVETTE, 1984. Gold. Available May 1, 1983. Call 804-481-0470
1973 CHEVY MALIBU Good condi tion, new tires; $850. 753 2241.
1974
$1295.
. . . MALIBU, green. Call 746 3896or 756 2802^
CHEVROLET CHEVELLE AAalibu Classic, maroon with black
landau top. NeWMTchelin Tinw $1,350. Cair756-4636__
1974 VEGA Air condition, new tires, fair condition. 758 4281 after 5 BiilL
1976 MONTE CARLO 68,000 miles, new tires, good condition. 756 9442
017
Dodge
1968 DART $200. Call 756 6246 after
018
Ford
>W6 ltd ford New paint. Motor rebuilt completely. Interior like new. Excellent condition. $600. 758-9538.
1976
I^ITE, l^ded, extra nice.
Call 752-6939.
1978 750 HONDA, black, RC header, Cate fairing new Goodyear HST, black aluminum rims. Including 2 helmets, rainsuif and cover. $1600 or best otter, 752-2503.
1980 HONDA 750 F, black, mileage. $1.850. Call 756 4636.
low
1981 HONDA CB 125S Excellent condition. 2 helments included 756-7066 after 5:30._
1981 YAMAHA 250. 400 miles. Best otter. 752 6647.
1982 YAMAHA 750 Maxim, 7,000 miles, custom paint, oil cooler and extras. $2,500. Call 752 6748 after 6 p.m. weekdays._
1982 YAMAHA Heritage Special 650CC $1800 or best otter. Excellent condition. Call Mike, 756-5284 or 758 7979.
1983 HONDA XR 250, 600 miles. $1350 firm. Call 758-4666.
039
Trucks For Sale
DODGE D-50 PICKUP 1981. Low mileage, good condition. Call Rex Smith Chevrolet, Avden, 746-3141.
1966 FORD TRUCK Straight shift with dual exhaust, new battery, new tires. Good condition. 758-4281 after 5p.m.
1971 DODGE, </i ton, 318 V 8,
automatic, good condition throughout. $1250. 758-7173, 5 10
p.m.
1977 FORD RANGER XLT truck.
and Ime.
ly/r r\jnu kmnvxck ali iri Automatic, air, power steering , brakes. $2500. Call 752-3111 anvtir
1981 CHEVY pickup, blue, 6 cylinder, AM/FM, cruise, 30,000 road miles, $5900. 756 9589 after 6
1981 VOLKSWAGON Diesel Pickup truck. 752 4539.
1982 JEEP WAGONEER LIMITED
All options. Low mileage. 975-2012 75<r0439atter6p.m.
040
Child Care
CHILDCARE Full time. Any hours or shift. 2 years and up. Large backyard and constant supervision. Close to all industries. Nice neig^hborhood. Loads of experience.
YOUNG A60THER would like to keep Infant In her home, $25 per week. 756 5859. ^
1976 PINTO 4 speed, good'^oileage.
extra good codlfln I3atte
756-1 lOf after 5.
336:
1978 LTD 34,000 miles. Mint condi flop. One owner. $250 under book value. Can be seen at 2810 South Evans Street. 756-3491.
1971 MUSTANG mileage and i aZglV^p.tn
.... Good condition, and equipment. Call 355-
041
DAY NURSERY
MOTHERLAND NURSERY Children 1 month to 13 years. Hot eali, preschool learning
environment. Weekly rates, $js for 1 child, $40 tor 2. FtnyU 752-2743.
046
PETS
AKC BLACK LAB C'
months old. $75. Call
lies. 2 after
BLOODMOBILE ASSISTANT Head Nurse. American Red Cross Blood Services has a full time supervisory position available (or a registered nurse at the Tar River Sub Center. Greenville, NC Major responsibili ty is the management and supervision o1 mobile blood collec tion activities in the absence of the head nurse. NC licensure and driver's license required Proven management experience required IV or venapuncture experience preferred. Ability to travel daily and work irregular hours and some weekends. Join our professional
friendly team. Apply Tar RivVr Sub Center, Post Office Box 6003.
Greenville 27834. Part time staff nurse position alsoavailable FOE
BOOKKEEPER
^ ------ Experienced full
charge bookkeeper. Must be able to
type and do limited amount of secretarial work. Please send re sume and/or information to Book
LeeW Weaver 756 1150 Greenville, N C
Life Insurance Affiliate United of Omaha Equal Opportunity Companies M/F
NEED BABYSITTER for IV, year old child. Hours vary. 756 6761._
NEEDED 3 11 nursing supervisor Contact Becky Hastings, DON,
Greenville Villa. 758 4121
dental
HYGIENIST with experience
dental assisting. Monday through Thursday 8 to 6. 522 4313, Kinston.
RN'S, LPN'S and/or Technicians. Pungo District Hospital needs you Contact Barbara McDonald, Director o( Nursing. 943 2111_
ROOM AT THE TOP
Due to the promotions in this area,
two openings exist now (or young irancn
minded persons in the local branc,. of a large corporation If selected,
you will receive complete training. We provide good company benefits, major medical, profit sharing, de
nial care ana reiirement plan. Starting pay will be $260-$35() de pending on your ability All promotions are based on merit, not seniority.
We are particularly interested in those with leadership ability who are looking (or a career opportunity
keeper, PO Box 1967, Greenville, 27834.
BRODY S has an opening for a full time secretary. Must be able to type, take dictation, do general office work and be accurate. Non smoker preferred. Good sala nt, good benefits. Apply Brody's, Pitt Plaza, Mildred Hopkins, Mon day-Frldav, 2-5.
CAR STEREO installation specialist wanted. Experience pre (erred. Salary based on experience Apply Stereo Village, 317 Arlington
'Pie. .
CALL 758-3401 10:00 to6:00 MONDAY-THURSDAY Les A(jkins
SALES REP $50,000 YEARLY Commission POTENTIAL
Boulevard, GreenvP
CERTIFIED special education teacher. Experienced in working
with young handicapped children 12 month developmentasi center
for
program. Also teaching assistant with child development knowledge and ej^erience working with hand! capped children. Sena resume to: Developmental Center, PO Box 1967, Greenville, NC 27834 EOE
DENTAL ASSISTANT Experience necessary. 4 day work week Call 756 5911.
A leader in the Billion Dollar Premium, Incentive industry has a unique opportunity Product is appropriate for virtually all businesses. corporations manufacturers, unions and associations. The si/e ol the market and our commission Strurture makes 150.,0(XI the 1st year very feasible. Now interviewing sales persons for Route Sales, Fund Raising, and Premium Incentive sales. One year experience in direct sales required. Send resume to: N^ier Distributing Compnay, P O Box 8093, Greenville. N C 27835.
SECRETAR Y/RECEPTION 1ST
needed Good typing skills and
EXPERIENCED waitresses wanted. Apply in person 2 3pm Nq phone calls. Angelo's Restaurant, 2826 S Memorial Drive, Greenviiie.
soda
pleasant personality a must. Please send resume and salary require mcnts to PL-rsomi.!, 1314 North Grn-ne Street Greenville NC
tal
FULL TIME position for fountain clerk. Call 746 3126
GRANDPAS 8. GRANDMAS needed to share their skills with others who need them. Call Clara Weathers at 758 6887.
SIT I FP FOR INFANT in hosp are., , * . F Us/.onh i, S 10 _
Miono. , ' i> C.ill 3S5 66-18 _
STARriNG A 9 rnontb set retarial course April ih Greenville School ol Com:eprce .5/31,.' __
STORE MANAGER The nation's
largest ret.ui tobacco shop chain is
GUYS & GALS!!! AFUNJOB!!!
now accepting applications for the position ol stpre manager at our
' ( ilrol Ap;,'
location, M'en interest 'r.hacco, and
Are you tired of being ui. mployed Are you tired of hearing You are too young or too inexperienced? ' Or, are tired of the same old boring job with the same old boring
i Cal' ' TV
helpful
people? And worst of all...the same oldbor'
oring paycheck?
$YES$
Well our company is looking several guys and gals who n
goli
ith ex-'.tcreo rough Call
1_V75 'z./-alte ^ ___
WANTED EXPERIENCED pressman Must be capable of
producing quality work on A B Dick 360 with T 51 Colorhead. Con
tact Scott Bowen, Kinston Printing Company 523 7654__
WANTED LADY to stay with el-7S8 t?46 days.
derly woman Cal nights 752 .t273
ambition, imagination and enjoy working with others. You can earn
$300 + Per Week
059
Work Wanted
in incentives, commissions and in creases. No experience necessary.
on the job trainincj. For an excitin
new career see Mr, Dunn from 10 AM to 5 PM Thursday at Holiday Inn, 758 3401.
HEAD NURSE Pheresis Unit. American Red Cross has a full time management position in Pheresis Unit in which specialized blood donor and patient treatment pro cedures are performed. Position requires gracluate of accredited school of nursing with current N C licensure. Minimum 5 years recent nursing experience with demon strated supervisory capabilities. Responsibilities include supervision and coordination of all donor, pa (lent, and staff activities. Ad m.inistrative duties include scheduling, reports, quality control, etc. Hours basically 8:30 a m 4 30 p.m. with some flexibility. Salary and benefits competitive. Apply American Red Cross, Post Office Box 6003, Greenville. EOE
AIL TYPFS TREE SERVICE Licen'ied tree surgeons Trimming, cutting and removal Free estirnates J P Stancil, 752 6331. any" type of REPAIR WORK Carpentry, masonry and roofing. 35 years experience in building. Call James Harrington after 6 pm. 752 7765 _
CHIMNEY SWEEPING Fireplaces and wood stoves need cleaning after a hard ' winters use. Eliminate creosote and musty odors. Wood stove specialist 'Tar Road Enterprises 756 9123 day 756 1007
I terpri
'""creative HOME i IMPROVEMENTS CO
Quality construction an(j renov ; tion. Pnone 757 0799 after 6 pm.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
HOMEWORKERS Wirecratt pro ductioii. We train house dwellers. For full details write: Wirecratt, P O Box 223, Norfolk, Va. 23501
INTERIOR DECORATOR with ex perience and a desire to excel Salary and commission. Send re sume to Decorator, PO Box 1967 Greenville, NC 27834.
JOB INFORMATION: Overseas, Cruise Ships, Houston, Dallas, Alaska. $2(),000 to $60,000 year possible. Call 805 687 6000, extension J 8752. Call refundable.
LCX3KING FOR A well-groomed middle aged lady to care for 3 month old black faaby in my home,'
Monday Friday. Must have refer enees. 756 0978atter6p.m
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
S-1 SENTRY SAFE
M19
OFFICE Eim CO.
jgprner Of Pltt.il Green St.
Plastic Slip Covers
Custom fitted In home. Heavy clear plastic Protects furniture from smoke, dust, stains, wearing.
J. AUSBY
Sofa & Chair Covered
(4 Pillows or Less)
$95.00
Ausby Plastic Covers
5.?B-4793WELD0N
BRICK SALES REPRESENTATIVE
One of North Carolina's leading brick companies seeks Sales Representative, Eastern North Carolina area. Must have brick or construction material sales experience. All inquiries held strictly confidential.
LEE BRICKS TILE CO.
BOX1027 SANFORD. N.C. 27330
Attention: J. R. Holton
OFFICE BUiin!'''-FOR,RENT
On Evans Street Across From Court House. 960 to 4500 square feet. Can be remodeled to suit tenant.
CALL 752-4135
38-The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Wednesday, April 13,1963
059
Work Wanted
EXPERIENCEDPAINTING
Free estimates. Call 757 0412.
FURNITURE STRIPPING Paint and varnis_h removed from wood and metal ' Equipment formally ot Dip and Strip All Items returned within 7 days Tar Road Antiques. Call tor tree estimate Days 756 9123, Night 756 1007 __
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
059
WorkWantad
LAWNMOWER REPAIRS We will
pick up and deliver. All work
lie "
guaranteed. Call 757 3353 after 4 p.m., weekends anytime.
LET'S BEAUTIFY that lawn with
Big Chuck's Lawn Care Service. Call
Cal I 752 4949 5:30 to 6:30 pm.
MATURE LADY would like to sit with elderly person or children 7 pm to 7 am. 744 2434 or 355 6695.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
059
Work Wanted
PAJKTING, spring prices, interior and exterior. Plaster repairs. Quail ty work. 756 4955._
PARKIN CONTRACTING
Call 754-4295 Evenlnos _
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
Greenville's Finest Used Cars!
1981 Honda Accord
5 speed, AM-FM stereo cassette, teak luggage rack, cruise control, digital clock, rear door locks, velour interior, trunk release, one owner.
1979 Honda Prelude
Low mileage, sunroof, air condition, stereo radio.
1981 Honda Civic Hatchback
Medium brown, tan interior, 5 speed, AM-FM, tinted glass radial tires.
1979 MGB Roadster Convertible
British Racing Green with black interior,
AM-FM radio, road wheels.
1981 Subaru GL Wagon
25,000 miles, air condition, stereo. In great shape.
1979 Olds Cutlass Supreme
Maroon, white landau top, white interior, fully equipped plus tilt wheel, sport wheels, bucket seats with sports console.
1981 AMC Spirit
Like new, 10,000 miles.
1980 Jeep Renegade
Low mileage, blue, 4 speed transmission, sharp.
1978 Volkswagen Scirocco
Air condition, stereo radio, sunroof, runs and looks great.
1977 AMC Jeep CJ-5
Brown, excellent condition, 55,000 miles.
1980 Mercury Zephyr
4 door, cruise condtrol, power steering, air condition, well maintained.
1977 Volvo 242 DL
White, low mileage, air condition, overdrive.
059
Work Wanted
PROFESSIONAL typing service. 10 years experience. Letters, re-sumes, etc. 756-145after6p.
SIGN PAINTING Truck leHering as low as 559.95. Call Steve Atkins for all your slon needs. 75-9117.
TIRED7 NEED MORE TIME? Let someone else do your houseclean-
0 your ____ _
ing. Ask about Introductory otter.
I 752 3758.
TYPING PROFESSIONAL 15 years experlenca. Term papers, letters, charts, etc. 750-7162 after 8
or early morning before S.
WORK WANTED Interior and ex terior painting. Residential or
commercial. Any type of designs. Call after 4 p.m. 752 5520._
YARDS MOWED, dependable
service. 752 4514._
060
FOR SALE
067 Garage-Yard Sale
FARAM7ILLE FLEA MARKET Open Friday and Saturday. Rent a space for any Items. 264 ^pass at Marlboro. Planters 'Tobacco Warehouse
SATURDAY, April 16, Rose High School yard, Greenville City School Food Service Association. 8 a.m. YARD SALE Saturday, April 16. 302 Millbrook Street. Starts 7 a.m. until
YARD SALE, Saturday, second house on right in Bell Arthur. Lots of goodies. 8 a.m. _
072
Livestock
074
Miscellaneous
BRUNSWICK SLATE _POOL Tables. Cash discounts.
and Installation. 919-763-9734
Delivery
BUTCHER BLOCK dinette table, miscellaneous Craftsman and Vice grip hand tods. Including router bit set, copper tea kettle, Diawa rod and reel, kit for making salt water ceses. All newend
BUYING ALUMINUM cans 21c stMl teverage cans 5c, market prices copper, brass, all aluminum, batteries, plastic boHles.
;llng C
074
Miscellaneous
laiIES clothes, size 10 12. Household miscellaneous Items. Call 752-M70 before 9 or after 5
LARGE LOADS of sam soil, lot cleaning, baci available. 756-474/^after 6
iDS of sand and top backhoe also
Hudson
p.m., Jim
NEW SHARP cM>iers-sale, lease, rent. Large setection of used
liars- Xerox, Sharp, IBM, Savin, 756-6167.
HORSEBACK RIDING Jarman
Stables, 752-5237._
074
Miscellaneous
1 A SPECIAL sidewalk Sale. Satur >1 day 10 to 5. China, crystal, etc I Bargains. Coin & Ring Man
061
Antiques
ANTjgUE. SOFA _ Queen yelyet:
. Call aWer 5 p.m. 355-6219.
1980 Renault LeCar
Air condition, stereo radio.
1980 Volvo GLE
Sunroof, air condition, stereo with cassette, leather seats.
1976 Chrysler Cordoba
Power steering and brakes, air condition, power windows, tape player, 43,000 miles, extremely nice.
1976 Ford Thunderbird
Power windows, power seats, air condition.
1980 Honda Civic Wagon
Air condition, 5 speed.
1979 AMC Jeep Wagoneer
limited
In great shape, a rare find.
1975 Volvo
4 door, excellent condition, low mileage, locally owned.
1968 Datsun Sports Car
Convertible. Extremely good condition, new top.
Bob Barbour
BobBarbour
VOLVOA VIC Jeep Renault
30U S Memorial Dr. Greenville 355-2500
117 W Tenth St. Greenville 758-7200
064 Fuel, Wood, Coal
AAA ALL TYPES of firewood for sale.J P '
Stancll, 752 6331.
065 Farm Equipment
FARMALL A TRACTOR Good condition. 11 horsepower riding lawnmower. 752-5923 after 5._
FARAAALL 140 tractor with fast hitch. Good condition. Call 756-6693.
FOR SALE - 1150 AAassey Ferguson diesel with cab and duals, \ong
tobacco harvester with two trailers, Roanoke automatic tobacco harvester with three trailers, four row rolling cultivator with fertilizer hoppers for tobacco, four row mechanical transplanter, plant bed irrigation system. 752 3369
JOHN DEERE 2 row corn planter. New hoppers. In good condition.
Call 746^'^*af'ter6.
TOBACCO TRUCK CURTAINS Less than half dealers price. Hat-teras Canvas Products, 758 0641, 1104 Clark Street._
TOBACCO TRANSPLANTER
garts-to |lt new_ Holland models.
ubber Plant Gripper complete
$7.15, Rubber Gri ----
Rods S1.
ing Shoe ^ _
plete $59.75. Other parts in stock AgrI Supply, Greenville, NC, 752
, Rubber Gripper $1.40, Closing $1.65 per pair. Furrow Open-ihoe $.00. Water valve com-
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
Downtown Greenville
A TIME SAVERI Fifty used mens and womens wrist watches. Seiko, Pulsar, and others. Some old, some like new, some wind, some
automatic, some Quartz, some solid gold. $15 and up. Coin & Ring AAan, Ith and Evans, downtown
Greenville.
ALL USED REFRIGERATORS, air conditoners, freezers, ranges, washers and dryers are reduced for quick sale. Call B J Mills, Authorized Appliance Service, 746-2446 at Black Jack
ALLIS CHALMERS lawn and garden tractor includes mower deck, blade and trailer. $2200. Call 355 6977
AMF MOPED Used very little " 224V
Good condition, $250. 753 :
ANTIQUE BRICK460 30C a piece Call 355 2136
APPLE //e Starter Systems. Brand
new; $1695. Also App'le accessories 15% discount. Call 757 3820
ASSUME PAYMENTS of $49.46 on
a 6 piece Western living room suit. Sofa, chair, rocker, and 3 tables. Furniture World, 757-0451. We take trade-ins
ATARI HOME Computer. $75. 756 6761
BATTERIES New prices start at $29.95, full warrenty, used tires
$6-12. Aluminum Recycling Com panv, 1104 Myrtle Avenue. 752-6433
BENTWOOD ROCKER, small early American sofa and chair. Price negotiable. 355 6533._
Help fight Inflation by buying and selling through the ClassifiedT ads. Call 752 6166
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
WHOLESALE PRICES Whitewalls LIFESAVERXL RADIAL STEEL BELTED
185/80R13(BR78-13)
195/75R14(ER78-14)
215/75R14(GR78-14)
225/75R15(HR78-15)
235/75Bl5(LR78-15)
Wholesale Price ^38.90 Wholesale Price M3.80 Wholesale Price M6.90 Wholesale Price'52.60 Wholesale Price '54.80
Cash & Carry Prices Plus F E.T
While Supply Lasts
COGGINS WHOLESALE TIRE DIVISION
320 W Greenville Blvd. 756-1370
MERCURY
FACTORY
LINCOLN
EXECUTIVE DEMOS
These Cars Are Executive Demonstrators Purchased From Ford Motor Company And We Are Able To Pass Tremendous Savings On To You
cabbage and yellow collard plants, $2 per hundred. Tomato dozen. Carl Miller,
CALL CHARLES TICE, 758-3013, for small loads of sand, topsoll and stone. Also driveway work
diamond ring with wedding band. $400.756-2724
CHEp FREEZER, 12 cubic foot refrigerator, clothas dryer, apartment size and 30" alactric range, W 25 each. 746-2446.
CLOTHES Sizes 12-14-16. Dresses, shoes, slacks, jackets, raincoats, etc. Cheap 758-^585.
DINNETTE suite, ?'?? did glass parsons
table, $50. Chrome and glass end table. $25. Call 355 2588 after 6.
FOR SALE Singer straight stich sewlfM machine with wood cabinet $60.758-5961. _
FOR SALE: yellow collards and cabtoM plants. AAarion AAae Mills, 756 3279 or 355-2792.
FOR. SALE: 1 drop-ln cook top, electric burners.
stainless steel, 4 $95. 1 /Modern AAald wall oven, harvest gold, clock and timer.
approximately 6 years" oid, go5>d
condition, S22S. Call 752-5954
NEW TELEPHONES! Prewire your new or present home-add new phone jacks or new ohones. Call Hamby's Electrical Sw-vlce, 756-4622 or 756-2292. Other electrical
work also available.
OLD FASHION play house, 10' x 5'. $50. 756-0357,
ONE PINE PIESAFE with tin doors. 2 weeks old. Must sell. Call 355 2720.
ONE twin bed, $75. Sanyo stereo
077 Musical Instruments
MAHOGANY UPRIGHT Piyiq. Excellent playing condition. Call 758 8996 after 6.
YAHAHA 12 string. Good condition. 758 5621._
078 Sporting Goods
FISHING SUPPLIES, crickets and worms. StanciH s Grocery, Belvoir
Tvwi lisa. iwitw*
Highway. Ptwne 752-6245.
082 lost AND FOUND
FOUND: Female dog, white and tan, mixed breed, 25 pounds. 355-2772. _
(needs needle). $50. 3 piece Samsonite luggage, $45. Call after 5 752-2318.
RENT A VIDEO Recorder and get a free movie! Call U REN-CO,
RENT THE RUG Doctor. Nothing cleans like It. Call U-REN-CCT 756 3862.__
RUG DOCTOR- It's fantastic! Rent REN'
one at URENCO, Harris Super Markets, A Cleaner World, A-1 Quality Claaners, Newton's Red & White, Griffon Plogly Wiggly, Red Oak Convenient Mart and me Qwlk Stitch.
SAVE 20% on Millikin area rugs. Now at Larry's Carpetland, 3010 East 10th Street.
SHAMPOO FOR FALLI Rent
eassf^evsr wvr vrv
fthampooers and vacuums at Rental Tool Company.
FOR SALE: white Kenmore refrigerator/freezer, 16 cubic feet, like new. Used clothes dryer, (needs repairs). Babv crib. 756 7972
FOR SALE: 2 glass showcases, 38
counters, used 6 months. Call 975-2265 or 946 3925
FOX STERLING WORTH 12 gauge shotgun, $500. Serious Inquiries only. 746-35OTafter6o.m
freezer beef, grain ted Angus, whole halves or quarters. Delivered to Bethel Cold Storage for process-mg- 45* a pound. Live weight. L A AAoye Farms, /^ury, NC, 747-3506
after 6 p.m.
FURNtTURE /Mahogany finished bedroom set: double bed frame, dresser with mirror, chest of draw
ers, night stand; 1 love seat, 1 love seat hideabed. 758 0451._
GRADUATION IDEA? Moffitt's ^gnavox has 12" black and white TVs for only $74.95 ! 2803 Evans Street Extension. 756-8444._
HENKLE HARRIS Mahogany wood gcmel secretary. $1600 firm. 756
HUNDREDS OF USED kitchen cabinets, doors, windows, ranges, water heaters, commodes, tubs, sinks, electrical boxes, furniture, lots more. F 4 J Salvage, 2717 West Vernon, Kinston, NC 522 0806
ICEMAKERS and Reach In Coolers. Sale 40% off. Barkers Refrigeration, 2227 Memorial Drive, 756-6417.
JOIN MOFFITT'S AAAGNAVOX video tape club. Greenville's first and largest. 2803 Evans Street Extension, 756-8444
KING SIZE BED, mattress set, Ca
frame and headboard. $225. Cal 756-9)54 after 5
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
FLEMING FURNITURE
& APPLIANCE
NowSenloes CroebyAppHsnoes KehrlmlorAppllMiees Speed OiMMUundry FeddersAkCendHloncrs l8itOelilntenAe. 7SZ-3I0I
1982 Mercury Colony Park Wagon
Fully equipped, 9 passenger. White with red interior.
Savings Up To ^3000.00
1982 Mercury Lynx Wagon (2)
Fully equipped, 4 speed, air condition. One white and one red.
Savings Up To M200.00
1982 Mercury Grand Marquis
Formal roof, leather interior, fully equipped. Fawn with white roof.
Savings Up To ^3000.00
1982 Mercury Lynx (3)
3 door hatchback. All with low mileage, fully equipped, air condition. "
Savings UpToM200.00
1982 Lincoln Continental
2 tone light and dark teal, fully equipped.
Savings Up To ^6000.00
All Of These Cars Are Fully Equipped And Carry Remaining Factory Warranty. Save Thousands On These Units.
Your Ford Motor Company/Lincoln-Mercury Factory Car Headquarters
EAST
CAROLINA
trucks
LINCOLNNERCURYGMC
Wert End Circle Greenville, N.C.
756-4267
SHOP THE BEST SHOP HOLT
QUALITY USED CARS
1982 Volvo GLT
2 door, 14,000 miles, red with black interior, 4 speed, air, AM-FM stereo, sun roof, nice car.
1982 Pontiac Bonneville Wagon
Navy blue, buckskin interior. Loaded. 15,000 miles.
1982 Chrysler New Yorker
Fifth Avenue. 4 door. Silver with black landau roof, silver velour interior, 13,000 miles.
1982 Volkswagen Rabbit
Diesel. Gray with black interior, 4 speed, loaded.
1982 Mazda RX-7
21,000 miles. White with blue interior, like new.
1981 Olds Cutlass Supreme
Silver with blue velour interior, 31,000 miles, automatic, air condition, tilt wheel, cruise control, stereo with cassette.
1981 Datsun 4X4 Truck
Long bed, 4 speed, air, AM-FM, red with black interior.
1981 Plymouth TC-3
Blue, blue cloth interior, loaded..
1981 Ford Escort
Light blue finish with blue interior, automatic, air, cruise control, cassette tape, local trade.
1981 Volkswagen Rabbit Diesel
Beautiful gray metallic with blue velour interior, 4 speed, air condition, low mileage, nice.
1981 Honda Accord
4 door. Silver, burgundy interior, loaded.
1981 Datsun 280-ZX Turbo
Gold with tan leather interior, loaded.
1981 Datsun 210 Coupe
2 door, 5 speed, AM-FM radio, silver with black interibr.
1981 Datsun 210 Hatchback
2 door. Light blue with blue cloth Interior, 5 speed, air.
1980 Pontiac Sunbird
Silver, burgundy vinyl interior, 4 speed, air, AM-.FM stereo, 34,000 miles, looks new.
1980 Chevrolet Malibu Classic
4 door. Automatic, air, brown with buckskin velour interior.
1979 Olds Delta 88
2 door. Blue with white landau top, white interior 44,000 actual miles, l(X)ks new. I
1978 Lincoln Mark V
Yellow, burgundy interior, loaded. 49,000 miles.
1977 Datsun 280-Z
Light blue with black interior, loaded, 48,000 actual miles, nice car.
1977 Datsun 710 Wagon
5 speed, air, AM-FM radio, green with buckskin interior.
1977 Chevrolet Nova
Brown with beige velour interior, automatic, air, AM-FM radio, 56,000 miles, one owner.
HOLT OLDS-DATSUN
101 Hooker Rd.
756-3115
M.EJPER SOFA for sale; $50.
SUE KEPLER'S UPHOLSTERY
Large assortment of fabrics. Call for free estimate. 758 6922_
SWING SET in good condition. Call 756-6357 after 5: Mom
TOMATO PLANTS, 5< each. Col lard plants, 2t each. 1976 Ford pickup with camper top. Low mile ^e. B4B U Pick Gardens, Hassell,
TOAAATO PLANTS for sale. 758 3576.
TOPSOIL
Clean. $7 per cubic yard delivered. _758-7693_
TREE AND STUMP REMOVAL
Very reasonably priced. No damage to lawn. 752 3400 or 355 2621 after 6
p.m. tor free estimate.
TRS-80 /MODEL I, disc drive, 48K, $995, over $900 software for $235, sold with machine. 756-2717.
LOST: Smalt bulldog, weighing
about 10 pounds, white chesf and forhead, 2 white feet, rest black.
Call 756-2868
085 Loans And AAortgages
2ND MORTGAGES by phone-commercial loans-mortgages bought. Call tree 1 800-845-3929:
091 Business Services
INCOME TAX SERVICES Hilton Boyd. Call 756 3264._
093 OPPORTUNITY
CHILDREN'S APPAREL store. Quality clothing, prime location. Absentee owner must sell. Priced $40,000, terms flexible. Call Allen Commercial. Raleigh, 872-4477, Wilson, 243 2945.
EXCLUSIVE DISTRIBUTORSHIP available. Wholesale sales calling on businesses. Only ) distributor per county. $1,000 minimum required investment. Call collect or write: Burlington Agents, 523 East Webb Avenue, Burlington, NC 27215,. (919) 226 6000 between 9 a.m.-6 p.m.
LIST OR BUY your business with C J Harris & Co., Inc. Financial & Marketing Consultants. Serving the Southeastern United States. Greenville, N C 757-0001, nights 753 4015.
OWNER-OPERATOR needed to purchase established local business. 756 5037.
TO BUY OR SELL a business, for appraisals, for financing, for franchise consulting - contact SNOWDEN ASSOCI,----
CIATES
vestment Analysts and Brokers, ------ 3575.
Greenville. 752:
095 PROFESSIONAL
TWO 9x12 rust color nylon rugs. $60 each. Two for $100. Call 756-1718
after 6 p.m.
UTILITY TRAILER, 4x8, 13'
wheels, 30" stake sides, tilt tone; $275 . 757 1534._
WOULD LIKE to buy used retrig erators, air conditioners, freezers, and ranges that need repair. 746 2446.
19" COLOR TV Rent to own. $23.11 ger^ month. Furniture World. 757-
1974 CB450 HONDA, $600. S&W SS 357 magnum with shoulder holster, $400. Call aHer 6, Griffon, 524 4741.
24 PIECE SET dishes. $9.95, com pare at $23.95. Army Navy Store 1501 South Evans Street
25 CONSOLE color TV, has sharp picture, beautiful cabinet, with automatic fine color, only $185 756 0492.
I^t'
Imm SLR CAMERA Fugica 901, auto manual with LED $150.
Call Randy, 756 9500,8 6.
075 Mobile Homes For Sale
BIG SAVINGS 12x64. New Moon. $13,995. See Bob Lane, Thomas Mobile Homes. 752-6068.
BRAND NEW 1983 top of the line double wide. 3 bedrooms, 2 full
baths, many extras including
---- ' si
ifioiij III%IUUIIU
masonite siding, shingle roof, fros'i 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 set up i, 8 AM to-
BRYAN'S PLASTER REPAIR and
sheetrock (hanging finish), 10 years experience. Call 757-0678. If no answer 355 6952.
CHIMNEY SWEEP Gid Holloman. North Carolina's original chimney sweep. 25 years experience working on chimneys and fireplaces. Can day or night, 753-3503, Farmvillls.
100
REAL ESTATE
104 Condominiums For Sale
WHY PAY RENT?
When you can own your condominium or townhome! Three locations available for a low mon
thiy payment, low down payment, ind no closing costs! Call Jane
Warren at 758 6050 or' 758 7029 or Will Reid at 758-6050or 756 0446,
MOORE &SAUTER 110 South Evans 758-6050
incind.
udeiT Hours, 8 AM to 8 pm. CROSSLAND HOMES
(formerly Mobile Home Brokers) 630 West Greenville Boulevard 756-0191
BRAND NEW 1983 top quality 14 wide, 2 bedroom mobile home
loaded with extras, cathedral beamed ceilings, plywood floors, plywood counter tops, total electric.
iwiai
^jn^^ refrigerator. Regular price,
Limited Time Only
$9,995
VA, FHA and conventional on lot financing. Delivery and set up includedT Hours, 8am to8pm.
CROSSLAND HOMES (Formerly jubile Home Brokers) 630 West Greenville Boulevard 756-0)91
10
Farms For Sale
58 ACRE FARM Good road frontage on SR 1753 and SR 1110. 51 acres cleared, 6,209 pounds tobacco allotment, pond and 2 bedroom
allotment, pond and 2 bedroom house. St. Johns Community. Call for more details. Call Moseley Marcos Realty at 746 2166 for full details.
107
Farms For Lease
WANTTO BUY
CORN
*0' yov corn. Worfhington Farms Inc., 756-3827 Days, 756 3732 Nights.
DOUBLE WIDE SPECIAL 24x52. $17,995. See Bob Lane, Thomas Mobile Homes. 752-6068
FANTASTIC OFFER! 70x14. 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, iusi fake up payments from owner. 7 years left owed. 757 3580
1966_RITZ-CRAFT trailer with woodheater. Call 758-4234 after 7 p.m
1973 SOMERSET, 12x65, furnished mobile home. $6,000 negotiable. Call after 6 p.m., 756 8791
1977 CAROLINA mobile home, 3 bedrooms, iVj baths, central air, underskirting. Call 524-4863 after 6 o.m
1??? OAKWOOD mobile home, 12x60, good condition. All rooms are closed oft. Call 746 4677 from 4 9
1981 14 X 58 Redman, 2 bedrooms, 1
bath, unfurnished. o" equTtv!
Call 752 1304.
assume pavrnents. Call 752-
2 BEDROOM Trojan, iO' wide by 55' long. $3500. Call 74-3896 or 756-2fl0?
24x60 TWIN LAKES 3 bedrooms with walk in closet, 2 full baths, wood heater, central air, stove, and
dishwasher. Equity and ta"k'e"'over payments. 752 4820 or 1 736 4000
076 Mobile Home Insurance
^'^BILE HOMEOWNER Insurance _ the best coverage for less money. Smith Insurance and Realty, 752
077 Musical Instruments
KIMBALL CONSOLE piano. New pecan or walnut finish. $1,599 with bench, ^livery and 10 year war ranty. Piano & Organ Distributors, Greenville, 355-6002:
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
WANT TO LEASE peanut pound-aqe. Call 752-5968trom 7p.m. on.
109 Houses For Sale
A rare find Very seldom tor sale. Mobile home located on over an acre lot in city with additional mobile home spaces to be rented out for additional income. We have it! Call Davis Realty, 752-3000, 752 2904, 756-1997.
ASSUME 9% loan on this well cared for and attractive brick veneer ranch surrounded Kw beautiful trees , located in one of Greenvilles most tfful .....
beautffui neighborhoods. Conve
niently located to shopping and schools. Recently painted and
carpeted. 3 bedrooms and 2 bath
aiiu u
home. Spacious den and garage. Only $6^,900. Call Davis Really, 752 3000, 756 2904, 756 1997
ATTRACTIVE BEGINNER home. By owner. 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, FmHA approved. Located in Win terville. $M,000. 756 4321 after 5:30
ATTRACTIVE one story, white aluminum siding home. Located on*, wooded corner. Well landscaped* lawn, fenced in back yard, garages wired tor 220, brick patio. Home hw* 3 bedrooms, 1'/j baths. Attic large .
enough to convert into 4th bedroom study.
Dniy
ty, 752 30do, 752 2904, 756 1997
or study. Heat pump. Pr^ed tv Sale. Only $44,500. Caff Davis Real-.:.
BACKONTHEAAARKET!
This economical three bedroom^-' home can be yours for small" amount down. This bungelow Is in walking distance of schools, shop-ping, churches. First-time buyers* vi^flove the low monthly payments.'* $M's #296. CENTURV'^2'1 Bass" Realty, 756 6666.
BELVEDERE BY OWNER-12%%! loan assumption with low equityr* ^ bedrooms, 2^ baths. Brick ranch on quiet street.5 '*'96 family room*', with fireplace, large country kitch- , en, fenced back yard, beautiful lot.}
$62,500. 756-5545
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
MOBILE HoKBrdKen
Now we're Crossland Homes
A brand new name, the same eat qualij^!
At Mobile Home Brokers, our name may have changeci,! but we haven't. We're still goi ng to be offeri ng you the same ; aua 1 ity-built homes we always have for the past 25 years. Why cKange, then? So that we can team up with our family of sale centers all over the South to serve vou e\en better than I before. Crosslahd Homes, we want to make your dream of owning a home come true.
To celebrate, come save on our featured home!
"^H6/995~ Doublewide. Masonite $iding, shingle roof, cathedral ceiling, loaded with extras. Delivered and set up. VA, FHA and conventional financing.
For every dream we have the key
Formeriy Mobile Home Brokers MO West Greenville Boulevard Greenville *(919) 756-0191 M-F8AMr8PM Sal.9AM-6PM Sun Noon-6 PM
109 Houses Por Sais
109 Houses For Sale
BRICK RANCH situated oSTi wooded lot. Excellent nol9*!lJ?rh<><l- WInterville school district. No city taxes. 3 bedrooms.
V/1 bathL recmtly painted inside!
BRICK VENEER DUPLEX reduce to $48,000. Assume 9%% '"i.F**' Jjo*; .Owner financing ^sibly equity. Almost 3 years ole.
P^R; ,4 .grooms, i bath, each Side. Call Today! Davis Reai-tv, 752 3000, 75? 3904. /m 1997
BY OWNER . Sale or rent with
aaiv VI lOIM WITll
option. Newiy redecorated, 3 bedrooms, 2 bath brick ranch,
large lot. Near hospital R^t/optlon, $425 month, $44,500
BY OWNER 3 bedroom, 2 bath, fireplace, 2500 square feet, nice yard. In Farmville. $59,500. Call after 5 p.m., y53-)30or 1 847 72i:t
BY OWNER University area. 2 bedrooms, den, dining room, eat-in kitchen, garage. 1200 square feet. FHA financing less than ,000 total
BY OWNER 511 North Main Street,
Farmville. Old two story house 4 bedroqms, 2 baths. Completly
remodeled except back porch' dropped drastically. Appoir only after 4 p.m! (91) 383-9034
ch. Price lintment
BY OWNER: Lovely ranch. 80's or less. Huge lot. Especially good location nice neighborhood. Second
mortMge, and or t7adtepssibie
It nave
what have you? 355 2211
CLUB PINES Available Immedi 8*ft room design with 3 bedrooms, 2Va baths
{rage. $W,500
- T ..Blount 8i Associates, 756 '300 or nights 1-975-3179
COUNTRY Near the hospital and medical sch<i. Foyer, great room, fireplace, dining room, three bedrooms, two baths, breakfast area. Barn type storaoe building, only a few years old. $58,900. Duffus Realty Inc., 756-5395
COUNTRY LIVING can be yours Over 1400 .square feet modular home on brick foundation, Vj acre lot, heat pump. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, all appliances remain. Only $43,900.
2 3000, 752
2904, 756-1997.
EASY LIVING
That's what this beautiful three bedroom townhouse will give you No grass to cut, just relax or lounge around the pool. Entertain casuaily on your private patip or snuggle close to the fireplace in your greatroom. Owner will rent with an
EXCLUSIVE AGENCY Excellent location. 3 bedrooms, large family room with fireplace, garage, deck, patio, extra large room for office.
study or etc. Some equity (possible owner financing). Only $42,500. Call Davis Realty, 752 300, 756 2904,
756 1997
EXCLUSIVE AGENCY Attention investors. 3 houses to be sold side by side. Sold as unit. Conviently located. Rental income over $500 ir month. Some possible owner 11 D,
BY OWNER 3 bedroom house, West 4th StreSt m900. Cat 756-63W or 756-0489 (afterSp.m.'
kSCATEDNEARHQSPITAL NMt
riti y*'**'. starter home. Re
cently decorated, new carpet. For less Than $3500. You may pure
7td clw this home. iliTS^S^ Realty, 752-
109 Housm For Sale
1060 SQUARE FOOT wood frami
house, .75 acre wooded lot. 3 miles east of Pactolus. Owner financing
rv . ' WWI8VI Mrtan^iny
at below market rates. Reasonable down payment with approved credit. Calf 7M-37y4anvtime^^
LOOKING FOR YOUR FIRST HOME!
I fi!* home
.2,j,h Ujilversify area has^ust been
reduced! Low rafe Va l^n assumpfion. What more could you want $40's. CENTURY 21 Bass Realty, 756 6666
LOVELY OLDER HOME, Uniuersi {y /ea. $55,000 Call Joe HlWen, if. Carolina Builders, Inc. 752-
7194.
MAVIS BUTTS REALT
758-0055
neighborhood Is the setting for this 3 Mdroom ranch home. Featuring IV2 baths, living room, eat-in kitchen, wo^burnlng stove, patio, storage building and carport. $42,900.
NEVy LISTING Convenience is an asset in this immaculate contem-PfJI^ry home. Large master Mdroom with Vj bath, 1 additional bedroom and bath, great room with din ng area and french doors to 'ratio, free standing woodstove, ifchen and privacy fence. $S3,00.
has left all options open to the buyer of this lovely wood-sided contem
..... WWW WWIIIdtl*
f--- f ivwwiiw OIIIWIIU ITII?
pines, this 3 bedroom, 2 bath home will feature foyer, living room with fireplace, doors from dining room to salt treated deck, eat-in kitchen, heaf pump and carport. $55,500
extras abound in this Immac-ulate homer This 3 year old
charmer has parquet foyeVTsunken great room with fireplace and
,1 aiiu
ceiling fan, kitchen with dining area and bay window, 3 bedrooms, 2 heat pump and garage
$o8,500.
a LOVELY WOODED lot is the setting for this brick ranch featuring 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, foyer, iving and dining rooms, eat-in kitchen complete with dishwasher, carport with storage and central air. 12 3/4% fixed rate conventional rate financing available up to 95% loan. $51,900.
Shirley Morrison , Jane Butts ..
AAavIs Butts.
.. 758-5463 .756-2851 752-7073
NICE, COZY contemporary house in Twin Oaks, excellent financing. F L Garner, 355-2628 or 756-3217. Owner, 758 2520.
flnancinq. $50s. Cair'Davis Realty, 752 3000,756-2904, 756 1997
EXCLUSIVE AGENCY only. At tention investors. 8 income producing properties. Present income almost $1200 per month. Must be sold as group. Some possible owner financing. $125,000. Call Davis Real-tv, 752-3000, 756 2904, 756 1997
XCLUSIVE AGENCY
Commercial property. l.ocat^\in city. 7,676 square feet.
., ...---- Zoned CDF
Could be used tor automobile related offices or etc. $75,000. Call Davis Realty, 752 3000, 756 2904, 756 1997.
FOR FRAZZLED PARENTS
And the little "frazzlers" too. THis large four bedroom home offers space and convenience with a super location. All formal areas, den with fireplace and a playroom with a fireplace. What more could you ask for other than perhaps a baby sitter? $70's. #46. CENTURY 2) Bass Realty, 756-5868
FOR SALE BY OWNER Lake Glenwood. FHA Assumption. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, fireplace, large lot, $69,000. Call after 8 p.m. 524-5042.
SLOPING WOODED LOT
Customed built brick ranch, over 2,000 square teef of living area. All formal areas and a den with fireplace, ail located in beautiful Cherry Oaks. What more could you want lor your dream home? $80's. #426. CENTURY 21 Bass Realty, 756-5868.
SPACE, COMFORT ANDCONVENIENCE
This beautiful like new home In other will
Club Pines offers it all.
save time and energy in the luxurious kitchen with custom built cabinets, spacious counters and a pantry. A joyous deck under the shade trees for relaxing in the back. Four bedrooms, and all formal areas. Den has built In bookcases plus beautiful fireplace. $100's. #476.
ENTUR Y 21 Bass Realty, 756-5868
STATER HOME Reduced to $23,500. 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, family room and kitchen. Located qn large lot. Settle in a tew weeks tor abouf a thousand dollars. Excellent space for gardening. Call Davis Realty, 752 3000, 752 756 1997. _
GREAT ASSUMABLE in Eastwood, by owner. $62,900. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths. 9% loan. $39,200. $401.02 PITI Excellent condition. 109 Prince Road. 757-1977 by appointment.
I'M IN HEAVEN
Is what you'll be singing when you walk info this lovely tour bedroom home In Cherry Oaks. Owners have transferred and want you to know that they will truly miss this custom home and that no details were overlooked during construction. It you're looking tor a special home on a private wooded lot then look no further! $90's. #292. CENTURY 21 Bass Realty, 756-5868.
IDEAL HOME tor young family.
Located on large lot in country. 3 bedrooms, deck. Assume loan plus equity (owner will finance equity) only $34,500. Call Davis Realty, 752 3000, 752-2904, 756 1997._
TEN YEAR OLD country home just oft Pactolus highway. J bedrooms with I'/j baths. Fully carpeted. Extra lot all beautifully landscaped with thousands of tulips, camelias and day lillies. $35,000. 752 3233 after 6 p.m
TEXAS SIZE LOT
With house to match. This brick ranch features three bedrooms, recreation room, craft room, and detached workshop. Seeing is believing! Call today tor your private showing. $80's. #404.
CENTURY 21 Bass Realty, 756 6666.
THE LOVING TOUCH
Will greet you when you walk Into this three bedroom home in
Camelot. At once you will know that ..... :lal
this home is special because of the loving care it has received. Large greatroom with beamed celling, fireplace, formal dining, workshop in garage and new wall carpeting. 160s. #469. CENTURY 21 Bass
$60 _
Realty, 756 6666
JUST REDUCED!
This picture perfect home in Brook Valley has lust been reduced in time for spring! Perfect features, perfect location tor the family who demands quality and space. This beautiful home has it all. Five bedrooms, family room with coz) fireplace, spacious kitchen, at formal areas, beautifully land
scaped Jot^ Perfect dream home 82. C
#48i. CENTURY 21 Bass Really, 756-6666.
LIFE'S TOO SHORT
...To waste time looking for a three bedroom starter home. This Cape Cod cuttle In the university area offers an attractive home at an affordable price. $40's. #475.
CENTURY 21 Bass Realty, 756 5868.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
WE INSTALL ALUMINUM AND VINYL SIDING
RemodelingRoom Additions.
C.L. Lupton, Co.
YOU ONLY LIVE ONCE!
So get the most out of like with a home designed tor your comfort and luxury. Four spacious bedrooms in this Cape Cod home has room for the whole family. Tremendous family room and dining room, fully equipped kltchpn arid lots of built-ins. Located In beautiful Club Pines. $90's. ItSOO. CENTURY 21 Bass Realty, 756-6666.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
I I y )|a8 oywy living
room, 3 or 4 bedrooms, workshop, large great room with 8' pool ta^e rand fireplace. Newly carpeted with dishwasher, cable TV, 7 years old-Located 3 miles from Greenville.
II VIII VIOVTIVIIIV.
Priced In the $50's. 758-0144 or 752-7663.
29LNORTH LEE STREET, Ayden, JlWmonth at 12% tor 20 years, wifh $6,000 down. Call 756-2717.
3 BEDROOM BRICK HOUSE
Living room with fireplace, dining room, large floored aHic, 75 x 2lf wooded lot. Central air and heat.
iwi. ^.111101 ail aiiu n4iir
ots Of extras. Low 50's. Assumable VA loan. 2205 Jefferson Drive In Greenville. By appointment only. 756-1324
121 Apartments For Rant
Theri^Cburf
Spacious 2 bedroom townhouses with IV? baths. Also ) t^room
Carpet, dishwashers.
aparfiiMmts. ______
compacts, patio, free cable TV, washer-dryer hook-ups, laundry I, *iVSSc tonnis court, club iandPOOL.7S2-lSS7
room,
hoosaa
DUPLEX APARTMENT available
'Wf I rvsb 1^ I avaHOUIV
at Frog Laval on 1 acra woodtd lot. 2 Mrooms, 1 bath, kttchen and
dining combination, sundeck, and heat pomp. $260 a month. CalL 7S6-464 bafore 5 p.m. or 756-S168'1
attar
121 Apartments For Rent
ONE BEDROOM furnlshad efti Clancy 2'/i blocks from ECU $175 par month, Utilities Included. Available May 1.752-2040
RENT FURNITURE^LIvlnjj^ din
Ing, bedroom completo. $79.00 per moi^.^Option to boy. U-REN-CO,
STRATFORD ARMS APARTMENTS
The Happy Place To Live CABf----
iLETV
111 I nvestment Property
DUPLEX FOR SALE New, 1912
total square toot duplex has 2 bedrooms, iVj baths, living room dining room, kitchen with all appli
anees including dishwasher and
refrigerator each side. Carpet, vinyl, wallpaper tastefully color coordinatad. Both sides already rented or move in one side yourself.
vinyl'
IlfWW III V9W 9IW TVWI 9VI I .
$65.000 FHA/VA The Evans Co., 752 2814, Faye Bowen, 756-5258, and Winnie Evans, 752-4224.
113
Land For Sale
TWO PARCELS 13 acres, 13 .85
i, L/R -. . . -
acres, L/R 1786 near Black Jack Owner tlnancli^ possible. 717-842
9415 after April ST 183. 6 to 9 p.m.
115
Lots For Sale
ALMOST ACRE LOT Wooded.
..... Quiet
1,000 square feet restricted. w,< country subdivision. 2 miles north ofGriftc ------------
fton. $5900. 756-1857.
BAYTREE SUBDIVISION
Attractive wooded lots within -the c^y^W% financing available. Call
EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY
BEAUTIFUL wooded country lot east of Greenville.. No trailers. 752 1915.
HUNTINGRIOGE Residential lots. % to l'/3 acres. Convenient location. 2 miles north of Greenville,
Highway 43. Call 752 4139, Millie LlfleyO
ffey Owner/Broker.'
2 /MOBILE HOME lots tor sale. Call 758 5532.__
117 Resort Property For Sale
RIVER COTTAGE Priced to sell. 5 rooms and pier. Darden Realty,. 758-1983, nights and weekends, 758-2230
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 comfprt, fully insulated, heat, air and fireplace. Completely new, ideal for retirement. Contact Vance Overton, 923-2701 or 756-8697. ;
120
RENTALS
LOTS FOR RENT Also 2 and 3 bedroom mobile homes. Security sits required, no pets. Call 4413 between 8 and 5
NEED STORAGE? We have any size to meet your storage need. Ca I Arlington Self Storage, Open Mon day Friday 9 5. Call 756-9933.
121 Apartments For Rent
AN ENERGY EFFICIENT 2 bedroom, IVj bath townhouse with fireplace. Washer, dryer connec tions. $290. 752 8949
AVAILABLE MAY 1. New 1, 2 and 3
bedroom apartments. Drapes, wall , . .
to wall carpet, central heaf and air, outside storage. Gritton area. Office hours 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., Monday
through Friday, 2 p.to. fo 4 p.i '-'irda -'' 7' -
Satorday and Sunday. Phone 524
AZALEAGARDENS
Greenville's newest and most uniquely furnished one bedroom apartments.
AM energy efficient designed.
Queen size beds and studio
ihr-
couches.
Washers and dryers optional Free water and sewer and yard maintenance.
All apartments on ground floor with porches.
Frost-free refrigerators.
Located in Azalea Garden^ near Brook Valley Country Club. Shown
jy appointment only. Couples or singles. No pets.
Contact JT 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, IVj baths.
washer and dryer hook ups. $300 per month. Call 752 3152 or 752-6715 Swk
for Brvanlor John.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
SjK'liig CImllp Spaiil
$30.00
FOR TREATMENT OF ALL HOUSEHOLD PESTS Residential ONLY!
SPENCER PEST CONTROL
752-6440
Ask for Bob or Roy@ GUARANTEED USED CARS
1981 Volkswagen Truck............. .......DIESEL
1981 Audi 4000 5 Plus 5. .............REDUCED
1981 Volkswagen Scirocco S..............^7995.00
1980 Dodge D-50 Truck......................^4695.00
1980 Volkswagen Rabbit ........ ^3995.00
1979 Pontiac Sunbird.......................M195.00
1979 Olds Cutlass Wagon............... ^5195.00
1979AMCCherokee4X4...................^6195.00
1978 Buick Electra Limited..................^4395.00
1978 Plymouth Horizon. ...... 53695.00
1978 Volkswagen Rabbit Diesel .............53595^00
1977 Buick Skylark ............... 52795.0O
1976 Volkswagen Scirocco..................^2795.00
1975 Volkswagen Beetle .... i...............5*1995,00
1973 Volkswagen Super Beetle..............^24>95.00
1973 Volkswagen Beetle............ 52295.00
1972 Volkswagen Super Beetle..............5*1995,00
Joe Peclieles Volkswagen, Inc.
biesnviiie bivi
'5b 1135
vSoivinq Gteenvillo To Tho Coast F01 18 Yeats
EASTBROOK AND VILLAGE GREEN APART/IAENTS
327 one, two and three bedroom garden and townhouse apartments, featuring Cable TV, modern appll anees, central heat and air conditioning, clean laundry facilities, three swimming pools.
Office 204 Eastbrook Drive
752-5100
EFFICIENCY APARTAAENTS
AM utilities Cable TV Telephone (soon)
Furnished
With or without maid service
Weekly or monthly rates Starting $250 month and up
756-5555 Olde London Inn
FISCHER VILLAGE apartments Aurora, NC, available tor oc-cypancy. Elderly, handicapped and disabled. Rent based on income. Barbara Miller, 322-4990 or 322-4913 Equal Opportunity Housing.
GreeneWay
Large 2 bedroom garden apart ments, carpefed, dish washer, cable TV, laundry rooms, balconies, spacious grounds with abundant parking, economical Utilities and POOL. Adjacent to Greenville Country Club. 756-6869
IN AYDEN 3 bedroom, refrigera tor, stove, and dishwater. month. 752 5167or 746-6394
IN WINTERVILLE 3 bedroom apartment. Appliances furnished. No children, no pets. Deposit and lease. $195 month. 756-5007
KINGS ROW APARTMENTS
One and fvio bedroom garden
apartments. Carpeted, range, re , disposa
trlgerator, dishwasher, dT?oUi and cable TV Conveniently located
to shopping center and schools. Located|usf ' '
, roft lOth Street.
Call 752-3519
LOVE TREES?
Experience the unique in apartment living with nature outside your
COURTNEYSQUARE APARTMENTS
Quality construction, fireplaces, heat pumps (heating costs 50% less than comparable units), dishwash
er, washer/dryer hook-ups, cable 1 to wall c
W. TvaaMVi r rvi liuw^-upa/ ^OUIV
TV,wall-to-wall carpet, thermopane windows, extra insulation.
Office Open 9-5 Weekdays
9-5 Saturday 1 -5 Sunday
AAerry Lane Oft Arlington Blvd.
756-5067
NEW TOWNHOUSE with fireplace to professional single or married couple. 758 6242 after 7 p.m
NEW 1 BEDROOM with patios Water/sewer furnished. $210 month 756 7417._
Searching for the right townhouse'r Watch Classified every day.
OAKMONTSQUARE APARTMENTS
Two bedroom townhouse apart ments. 1212 Redbanks Road. Dish washer, refrigerator, range, disposal included. We also have Cable TV Very convenient to Pitt Plaza and University. Also some furnished apartments available.
756-4151
ONE BEDROOM, furnished apartments or mobile homes tor rent. Contact J T or Tommy Williams, 756-7815
ONE BEDROOM apartment. Near
campus. No pets. $215 a month. 756-392.-
ONE , BEDROOM__ a^rtment
Partially furnished. 752-:
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
ARMY SURPLUS
CAMPING SPORriNG MILITARY GOODS
Ovpf 1000 OltfMIHMt II N-w <mc1 Usf^cl
ARMY-NAVY STORE
1501 S. Evans
Office hours 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. /Monday through Friday
Call us 24 hours a day at
7S6-#800
TAR RIVER ESTATES
1, 2, and 3 bedrooms, washer-dryer hook ups, cable TV, pool, club house, playground. Near ECU
Our Reputation Says It AM -"A Community Complex."
1401 Willow Street Office Corner Elm 8, Willow
752-4225
aoartments available. No pets. Call Smith Insurance8i Realty, 752-2754
VffO BEDROOM apartment near ECU Appliances. $2M a month plus
utilities. Available AAay 1. Phone 758-0491 or 7567809 before 9 nm
TVitp BEDROOM townhome, iVz baths, fireplace, carpet, air condi tlon.756-34l3or 758-2181.
TWO BEDROOM DUPLEX Carpeted, all appliances Including dishwasher. Heat pump, storm windows and doors. Located oft 10th
WWWUIVSJ VII IVIII
Street near university. $260 per month. Call 758-2558or 756-7677.
VILLAGE EAST
2 bedroom, IVj bath townhouses Available now. $295/month.
9 to 5 AAonday-Friday
756-7711
WEDGEWOODARMS
NOW AVAILABLE 2 bedroom, IVi bath townhouses. Excellent location. Carrier heat
pumps. Whirlpool kitchen, washer/dryer hookups, pool, tennis
court.
756-0987
1 AND 2 BEDROOM apartments. Available Immediately. 752-3311
1 BEDROOM APARTMENT Heat and hot water furnished. 201 North Woodlawn; $215. 756-0545 or 758 0635
1 BEORO(^ apartment. Central
appliances. $195.
WMll Apartments.
2 BEDROOM DUPLEX Jarvis Street. $240 per month. Call 757-0688.
I BEDROOM townhouse at jhenandoah. iVj baths, fireplace, practically new. $330 per rnonfh. Clark-Branch, Realtors, 756-
o336.
! BEDROOM townhouse at ihenandoah. lVi baths, available i-P'"!. J*- P*'' lYionth. Call
Clark-Branch, Realtors. 756-6.-x
2 BEDROOM apartment. Central Sim appliances. 804
mTi Apartment 4. $250.
2 BEDROO/M apartment. Central air, carpeted, appliances. $250 a month. Bryton Hills. 758 3311
ycnished apartment
In WInterville. 756-0407or i
2 BEDRCXJM DUPLEX near ECU Energy efficient. Central air.
Carpet, range, refrigerator, hook-
. X. ..
UPS. No pets. $275. 75617480.
2 BEDROOM TOWNHOUSE 4'/j nilles West of new hospital. Available /May 1. 756-8996 or 756-5780.
121 Apartments For Rent
2 BEORCXTM DUPLEX near ECU Available May 1. Call 355-6057 aHer
'-.m
3 BEDROOM DUPLEX Close to university. Dishwasher, washer and dryer, fully carpeted, central heat
wi < iwiif was wviiitai irvm
and air. Lease and deposit required 756-4364 after 6, ask tor Donnv
The Dally Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Wednesday, April 13,198J-39
127
Houses For Rent
2 BEDROOM DUPLEX $250 a month. Available AAarch 15. Lily Richardson Realty. 752 6535 2 BEDROOM unfurnished house with carpeting, appliances, air, and
garage. Nice neighborhood and locatToi . . -.....
122 Business Rentals
FOR RENT- 10,000 square toot
building. Ideally located on Highway 33 in Chocowlnlty. Call Donnie Smith at 946-5887.__
FOR RENT Prime retail space on
f iMtie ivioM UOCC Un
^Mn^on^^ulevard,^ 4500 square
1-5097or 756 9315.
WAREHOUSE AND office space for lease. Approximately 15,000 square teef, 10th St. area. 756-50 or
756-9315.
125 Condominiums For Rent
FULLY FURNISHED except tor your towels. Two bedroom con dominium with washer, dryer. Yorktown Square. 756-6592 or 752 2579.
TWO BEDROOM flat duplex available in Shenandoah. $300 per
month, 12 month lease. Young icfi
couple preferred. Call Clark Brancf Realtors. 756-6336.
UNIVERSITY CONDOMINIUM 2 bedroom, I'/z bath, carpeted, major appliances furnished. No pets. 825^7321 after 5 P.m._
127 Houses For Rent
AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY, small house In country, ust south of Carolina East /Mall, 2 bedrooms, 1
bath, large living room, kitchen with breakfast area, carport, leroe lot. No pets. $280 month. 756-8904
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. $300 month. Call 756-0489or 756-6382 (after 5 o.m 1
COZY ONE bedroom, in a quite neighborhood. 1 block from tennis 756-8160. 756 7768.
courts.
DON'T THROW IT away! Sell it tor cash with a tast-action Classified Ad!
FOR RENT with option to buy In heart of Farmville. 8 room hcuse, 2
baths, central heat and air (gas). 753-3730.
HOUSES AND APARTMENTS in town and country. Call 746-3284 or k243)80
IN AYDEN 3 bedroom, 2 bath brick house. Carpeted, heat pump, dish
washer, stove, ' and refrigerator, $340a mpnth. 752 5167or 746 394.
NEAT 2 BEDROOM house in Grimesland. Fully carpeted, florida room and large utility porch, 2 car garage with workshop. Lease and reference. Call 756
NEWLY DECORATED home In Robersonville. 5 bedrooms, 3 baths, den and living/dining room. In nice residential area. Lease and reter-ence. Call 756 7829
THREE BEDROOM home, nice lot. Call 752 33)1.
2 ANO 3 BEDROOM homes. $175 to $375. Call Echo Realty In corportated, 524-4148
2 BEDROOMS, living room, dining room, 2 full baths, den and kitchen. Call after 6, 757-1489._
- BEDROOMS, heat pump. Nice. Available May 1. No pets. Vj mile from Greenville. $260 per month. 7S2-2025.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
ROOFING
STORM WINDOWS DOORS & AWNINGS
RemodelingRoom Additions.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
C.L. Lupton, Co.
752-6116
FAIRMONT VILLAGE APARTMENTS
TIRED OF PAYING HIGH UTILITY BILLS
Come to Ayden-where lower utility rates, energy efficient heat pumps plus free water will insure you savings each month. 1, 2 and 3 bedroom Colonials, fully carpeted with range and refrigerator furnished, washer/dryer/cable hook*ups, large play area with well maintained grounds. Only minutes from Carolina ^at Mall, on old Hwy. 11, Ayden.
We Have Two Bedroom Vacancies Starting At $180 OFFICE HOURS 2-4 WEEK DAYS OR
CALL 746-2020
Equal Housing Opportunity
THESE CARS ARE PREOWNED...BUT
wipmmni
5H0P THE REST,..,BUY THE BEST!1983 Cadillac Fleetwood1981 Pontiac T-1000Brougham
Dark blue metallic with blue padded top and blue leather trim, fully equipped, 4500 miles, local car.
5 door hatchback. Silver metallic with blue vinyl trim, 4 speed, air, AM-FM radio, new tires, local trade.1982 Pontiac T-1000
S door hatchback. White with blue Interior, 4 speed transmission, air condition, AM-FM radio, like new, 3300 miles.1980 Fiat Spider Convertibie
White with dark red interior. AM-FM stereo with cassette, 5 speed, 31,400 miles, sharp sports car.1982 Pontiac Bonneviiie1980 Fiat Spider Convertibie
Slate gray with tan vinyl Interior, automatic, AM-FM radio, luggage rack, sharp sports car.
4 door, silver metallic with padded vinyl roof and gray velour trim. Tilt wheel, cruise control, AM-FM stereo, 60-40 split seat, local one owner.1982 Chevrolet Caprice
4 door, two tone blue and gray with gray velour trim. Fully equipped Including wire wheels, 16,000 miles, sharp car.1980 Pontiac Grand Prix
Black with burgundy cloth trim. Extras include AM-FM stereo, air condition, cruise control, bucket seats, wire wheel covers, t-top.1982 Chevrolet Camaro BeriinettaWhite with velour Interior. Extras include power1979 Cadillac Sedan DeVille
White with white padded top and white leather interior. Equipped with most factory options. Sharp car.1977 Pontiac Ventura
windows, power door locks, air, AM-FM stereo, tilt wheel, cruise control, 12,000 miles, sharp car.
4 door, carmel beige, tan vinyl interior. Power steering and brakes, automatic, air, AM-FM radio, 57,000 miles, one owner, local car.1981 Buick Century
4 door, dark blue metallic with blue vinyl Interior, AM-FM radio, cruise control, wire wheels, 34,000 miles. *1977 Chevrolet
4 door. Dark green metallic with tan vinyl top and tan vinyl Interior. Power steering and brakes, automatic, Ir, AM-FM radio. Only 50,000 miles, local car.1981 Chevrolet LUV Pickup
silver metallic, blue vinyl Interior, 4 transmission, ANtFM radio, only 20,000 mllea.
speed1981 Lincoln Mark VI4 door. Midnight blue with padded vinyl top and blue'1977 Mercury Cougar XR-7
Dove gray with landau top and gray cloth Interior, tilt wheel, cruise control, air, power windows, AM-FM stereo tape. 04,000 miles, local trade.1976 Pontiac Bonneville
velour trim. Fully equipped with moat' factory options, 38,000 mllea, one local owner.
.^ge with tan vinyl top and tan trim. Extras Include poWer-^lndows, tilt wheel, AM-FM radio, rally wheels, air condttloiU-ocal trade.Before You Trade Your Used Car See Us WE BUY GOOD CLEAN UTE MODEL USED CARS1976 Pontiac GrandTrixYellow with white landau roof, white vinyl Interior, power steering and brakes, automatic, air condition, power windows, tilt wheel, cruise control, AM-FM stereo with tape, bucket seats, rally wheels, local trade. Sharp car.
Dickinson Ave.
Brown-Wood, Inc.
752-7111
Ion on East 4th Street. Avalla
ble A6av 1. $325 month. Call 778 4408.
3 BEDROOMS, 2 baths, living room, dining, kitchen and carporf
Wooded corner lot. No pets. $395 - 87(Hr
107 Dupont Circle. 756 I
3 BEDROOMS, IVz baths, closed garage, heat punnp. fenced ickyard. Beautiful setting. $355
oackyaro. ueautltui setting. $355. Call 757-0001 or nights, 753-4015, 756 9006.
405 WEST 4th STREET 4 or 5 bedroom. $300. Call 757 0688.
133 AAobile Homqs For Rent
RIVERVIEW ESTATES Rent or sale. 12x65, 2 bedrooms, fully carpeted, central air, extras. 752-670for 752 3839.
SAAALL TWO BEDROOM located Oak Square Trailer Park. $140, 355 6977._ _
SPECIAL RATES on furnished 2 bedroom mobile homes. $135 and
up. No pets, no children. 758-454) or 7i6 9491
2 BEDROOM Mobile Home for rent Call 756 4687
2 BEDROOM, furnished, washer, air, good location. No pets, no children. Call 758 4857
2 BEDROOMS, washer, air. carpeted. No pets. 756 0792.
3 BEDROOMS, 1''z baths, washer, dryer, and air. On private lot In the country. 756-0264._
135 Office Space For Rent
FOR RENT 2500 square feet. Suitable for office space or com merclal. 604 Arlington Boulevard. 756 8111_
OFFICE SPACE for rent. 1123 South Evans Street. From 350 square feet to 3000. Call 758 2174
OFFICES FOR LEASE Contact JT or Tommy Williams, 756 7815. TWO OFFICES located on Hwy 264 Business. Just under 300 square feet. $125,00 per month each Call Clark Branch, Realtors, 756 6336.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
137 Resort Property For Rent
ATLANTIC BEACH l bedroom condominium; ocean front. 756 4207.
138
Rooms For Rent
ROOM FOR RENT Call 752 6583 day or night.
SINGLE FURNISHED room for discreet male student or young businessman. $125 month. Nice home near Pitt Plaza. 756-5667.
142 Roommate Wanted
FEAAALE ROOAAMATE wanted to share 2 bedroom townhouse.
Non smoker. Rent and deMSit. $130 and ''1 utilities. Call 752 0938, keep
'ying.
MALE ROOAAMATE needed to share residence. $125 per month plus ' 3 utilities. Available AAay 1. 752J175gr756 1455.
TO SHARE 3 bedroom furnished house in Stokes area. Reasonable rent. 752-1286 between 5:30 7 30
p.m.__
144 Wanted To Buy
G R HADDOCK Logging & Timber 4(?^68?7^"'* cutting ad species. Call
WANT TO BUY 3 old houses, approximately 25 35 years old, located in the immediate vicinity of
locateo in tne immediate vicinity of Greenville. Call 752 2405 or 756 2949 alter 6 pm.
YOUTH BED in good condition. Call 753 3156
148
Wanted To Rent
STUDENT SEEKING 1 unfurnished room or apartment with private h. Call after 12 noon, 758 76W.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
WE REPAIR SCREENS & DOORS
RemodelingRoom Additions
C.L. Lupton Co.
CHIEF PHYSICAL THERAPIST
Join our progressive HCA team. Immediate full time position available tor 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 stock purchase plan and tuition reinbursement. 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
ATTENTION
RETIRED PERSONS HOUSEWIVES COLLEGE STUDENTS
Telephone order operators, key punchers and shipping clerks. Part and full time work available now through September.
WRITE P.O. BOX 8228 GREENVILLE, N.C. 27834
THE REAL ESTATE CORNER
Look ,\S WhatsHome!
New house under construction in beautiful Baytree. Country charm with city convenience in this comfortable, affordable house with a touch of luxury.CALL 758-6410
Diversified Financial Services, Inc. or your REALTOR
Shenandoah Village Townhomes*41,900
Down Payment Less Than $2,000.00 Payments Comparable To RentI
Brtck
Eneigy Efficient
Frost Free Refrigerator with ice maker
G.E. Appliances
Private Patio
* Convenient To Carolina East Mall
Professionally Landscaped
* Professionally DecoratedCall Us For More Exciting Details!
Aldridge & Southerland
756-3500
40-The DaUy Reflector, GreenvUle, N.C.-Wednesday, April 13,1983
PETER PAN
PEANUT BUTTER
18 OZ. JAR
with IN* coupon and *10.0# food ordof axcluding ^ advartlaod Itama. Without coupon *1.40. UmH ono
; por cuatomor. Exphoa 4-1M3.
**oj^ .
oooaaaoooooaoooooooofooao
CLOROX BLEACH
WHh thia coupon and *10.00 food ordor _
oxdudlne advorttaod Hama. WHhout coupon oach 71'. Limit two por cuatomor. Expiroo 4-10-
n.
HEAVY WESTERN FIRST CUT
CHUCK
ROAST
GENERIC
PAPER
TOWELS
PIPER Tomas
3/SIM
QIANT
ROLL
etudtng admtlaod Itoma. WHhout coupon ..ZZ t/t1.*l. UmH 1 rolls por cuatomor. Expkot 4-
ttda coupon and *10.00 food ordor ox-!!!
PEPSI, MOUNTAIN DEW
16 OZ. CARTON OF 8
99<=
PLUS DEPOSIT
WHh tMs coupon and *10.00 food ordor # sxdudlng pdvorHosd Homo. WIHwut ,*** coupon *1.70 phis dopooH. UmH ono oar- ,*0
O T-------- i^-r.e.prroi*.o^ Coupon *1.70 phio dopooH. UmH ono Car-."P*
CHARGE
CARDS
WELCOME
CENTERCUT
CHUCK ROAST.........................lb M.39
SHOULDER ROAST ..................lb.M.69
WHOLE OR HALF
PORK LOINS
gwaltney
FRANKS
HEAVY WESTERN FULL CUT
0Z gg(
PKG.
BACON
ROUND
STEAK
LB.
69
SLICED 7-9 CHOPS
V4 PORK LOIN
LB.
49
PEANUT CITY WHOLE OR HALF
COUNTRY HAMS
LB.
*1
59
FRESH FRYER
LEG
QUARTERS
GRADE A WHOLE
FRYERS
Prices
Eifectlve 211 JARVIS STREET
Thurs-Sat home OF GREENVILLES BEST MEATS QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED
April 14-16
BREAST QUARTERS lb
FAMILY PAK SPECIALS
FINE FARE
SALT
26 OZ. BOX
PORK NECK BONES.............. 4lb.pkg.M
PIG FEET........................................3lb.pkg.M
EDGEMONT FRESH LINK SAUSAGE.. . . 10 lb. pkg. M 4
KELLOGG
CORN FLAKES
18 0Z.QQC BOX W W
JAMBOREE APPLE OR
GRAPE JELLY
2 LB. JAR
BOUNTY PAPER TOWELS
GIANT
ROLL
STAR-KIST OIL OR WATER PACKED
TUNA
61/2 OZ. CAN
FRESH WHOLE
MAXWELL HOUSE C A Q O
IHSIMIT COFFEE
CE SFECmLS
RED RIPE QOLDEN
STRAWBERRIES BANANAS
PINT
68<
LB.
24<
ONLY A DIME WHITE POTATOESlb.
PEPSI, MOUNTAIN DEW, DIET PEPSI
TOILET TISSUE
6 ROLL PKG.
WHITE CLOUD TOILETTISSUE
4 ROLL PKG.
DUNCAN HINES DEVILS FOOD OR BUHER GOLDEN
CAKE MIX
18 OZ BOX
' h 4 O 6 v. ^^*<1
^o^ About Credit letir,? Avoiiab'PUriy m laiger jiors
Jake-wifh Pric*
kcolorTV
Vivi-Color'' r solid state.
4'in-l Cart
Multiple-pur pose hauler
Ul-12)
Sale Price
6pr. Pkg. Mens Tube Socks
Hi-bulk acryllc/nylon. 10-13. Boys Siies 9-11... 6 Pr., 3.77
Cassette Carrying Cose
Holds 24 cassette tapes. Padded vinyl, sturdy handle.
Ea.-Our Reg. 9.97 Solanpower Calculators
Two styles; both with memory, square root, 8 digits.
M M Ea.-OurReg.
m 9.97-10.47
LC.D. Quartz Sport Watches
Handsome, multifunction s for men and women.
Inckidad
33-01.* Open PH BBQ Sauce
Special recipe. Delicious on ribs, chicken and more.
FI. 01.
Ea.
Sale Price
Chef Boy-ar-dee Favorites
Beef ravioli, spaghetti 'n meatballs, Beefar^. 4Q oV
ilita lUHck Bauee
Choice of feguicp. mushropm, sausage or pepperoni. 14 oz.^
Ea Sale Price
Superman Peanut Butter
Delicious and nutritious. Creamy or crunchy. 18 oz.
Netwf.
86
Box Of 30 Maxi Pods
Super thin, super absorbent, beltless maxi pads.
4*96
6-oz * OH Of Olay Lotion
Helps to soften and moisturize your skin. Save now.
080.
Sale Price
16-oz. Dole* Canned Fruit
Fruit cocktail, pear halves, peach slices, 10.5 oz. mandarin oranges.
N*tWl.
Sale Price
30-oz. Tall-drink Tumblers
Hl-lrnpoct, break-resistant
Sole
F,or mF Prtce
liaeltlngitdl^lliQ^^
MuHipuSoie ll)in of durable pkssfb, 15 colors SdVe.
K mart Dry Halrsetter
Curls in minutes. With 20 tangle-free rollers, dips.
1.18%
2B Aika-Settzer Tablets
Popular effervescent pain reliever and antacid.
79* Rynoklff Aluminum FoU
Multipurpose household foil In 12"x75 roll. 75-sq. ft. Save now.
MH0T
AFT _
RHAtl For
3oi: BoIHe Wlndex* Refill
Handy refHI for pump bottle of WIndex* glass cleaner.
Rot
97**^
Choice Of Heath* Candy
9-oz.* bog little Heath bars or 7J4-oz.^ pecan clusters.
Notwt.
6.44 4.88
Our. Reg. 8.47
Long-lacHno Carden Hose
Flexible, nylon reinforced garden hose In 50xH* size.
^Mdodlamotor
Room-dorkenlng Window Shade
Durable, wlpe^ean plastic.' Easy^it design with roller.
Ea.
Our 5.88
Bakeware WHh SHverSlone*
Choice of roasting pan. cookie sheet or cookie pan. Save.
DuPont Hog. TM
1C* Fry Pan With Teflon II'
Handsome, polished aluminum pan with Teflon II* Interior. Save!
DuPont CortWcotton Mark
Handy Adjustable Hlbochl
Durable steel body with plated cooking grid, wood handles.
12x12'* Latch Hook Rug Kits
Precut acrylic yam, printed canvas, more. Choice of designs.
Latch hook not induolocl .
39.97
Ansco* SO Disc Camera
With bullt-ln sensor flash, motor drive, 2.8 lens, more.
Sale
Price
Handsome Beverage Mugs
Crystal-clear glass mugs In choice of styles. 12-14 oz.
32-oz. Gusto Beverage Mug
Crystal-clear glass. Helps quench any size thirst. Save.
Sotahpowered Tea Jug
Handy 97-oz. glass jug with screw-on top and pour spout.
2a97^ 54.97
M-500T Thyristor Flash Unit
Electronic flash for 35mm cameras with zoom feature.
BottwiM not Indudod
"Disc** 6000 Camera Outftt
Automatic built-in flash, flim advance, more. 1,15-exp. disc.
Our $298
WHh Batanead Cooking Syslm
1.3-cu.-ft. capacity oven with aur timer, cook and de-settlngs, start button,
see<through watts
oven door and 650 of power will help make cooking a delight.
/mivi\j/i/i\
MWSIOOXL .
Ask About Credtt Terms AvalabI* Only h Largar StoiM
Save*30
iTake-with Price Sale Price
Bookshelf Component Stereo System
,AM/FM/FM-stereo. cassette, speakers, more. Our S.97, Mura Stereo Headphones, 747
Take-wlth PHce Our Reg. $149 Stereo Music System With Cosselte
AM/FM/FM-stereo, cassette recorder and player, BSR record changer, speakers.
979-16
129.87
^Sale Price
Kitehen Center With Salad Maker 4pe, pe.
Blends, mixes, grinds, slices, mixes dough,and C^i^are'
shreds. For salads,maln dishes and desserts. i |
Take-wlth Price Our Reg. $199 Modular AM/FM Stereo System
Cassette, 8-trock play, semiautomatic turntable, speakers, LE.D. Indicators.
Sold Piico
AM/FM Portable Radio With Headphones
Stereo capability when lightweight headphones are plugged in. Sllde-rule tuning.
Bottariatnotlnciudad
12>eup Automolle Drip cenwi MORer
With Coffee Thrift system. Brews 2-12 cups. 12-cup Reptacement Carafe........844
Rabo# MMdfgnSr.'i iHpulaHon
'X,.' ..... '
Double Lock Set With Ke^
Entrance lock and dead bolt.
Ea.-Our Reg. 76C 12x12" SfyllsHk Floor Tile
Self-adhesive, no-wax vinyl.
19.88 Our Reg. 29.88
Shelf Kit WHh Wood-grain Finish
2,8x24" shelves; 1.8x36" shelf.
"McFlle" WHh IxpaiMtable Front
Plastic fHe box; 10 hanging folders.
txtaiiL
\OY4t
Un.Pt
"Ironfosl Ptaslie tomlridta
Stdln-reslstant} 26 wfidlh. Save.
Vlnyl-Coflled Ftaor
3x4H;ntatlnchc^p^
hStarat
_ _,pplyOap.
" IDW# If Our Reg. 2.63 i S4b.Patching Cement
For repairing concrete surfaces.
Nat wt
S- . nfei-Sn'.-iiiH-
a: Vl Our Reg. 1027 - ; StaolMolbOAMouiillng lM
\ S^pflpplcirufalmciDokes. ,
BM
Each
Our Reg. 14.96 Finely Crofted Wooden Vonlty Uimpt
Wooden lamps with fdbrlc-over-vlnyl shade. Choice of slyles. 19 tall. Save.
B Our Reg. 9.96
toudoir Lamps With Postal Class Boll
12"-tall lamps with 6" glass boll base and 8" molded pleat shade to match.
Take-with Price Our Reg. $219 m
er with^pM^tte
>
,./^^^^^hFdurRegfil ^ In Color Oholee
Cotton set Includes 18x27" bath mat. 18x24" contour rug, and lid cover. Save.
Your Choice 4' Tetleful Pteoted Vinyl Lamp Shodes
Choice of 12" washer style 14'Moll cone, or 16" cone. In white or beige.
OQ
Take-with Price ^1^ Our Reg. $499 Soundscopes Component Stereo System
Automatic turntable, cassette deck with power touch controls, Dolby* 2-way speakers.
!ugOr htour Rug
oon-tsave.
m 48x24" Pr.
Our Reg. 2.97
Attroetlve Vinyl Reed Cafe Curtains
Our 5.47,60x36" Curtains Pr. 3.77
Our 2.67.52x9" Valance 1.67
Out 647i J)i6. 4.47 Our 8.47, 4*6',. 0ur1O97.5xiT-797 Our 12 97r 6X/V&,
8fe|B|.C3 #
m Choice Hoover' Canister Or Upright Vacuum
Both have power edge cleaning, disposable bog, built-in carrying handle, more.
.....
A---rr
2/2x4
Our Reg. 3.97 Contemporary Vinyl Roll-up Blinds
Roll up to let the sun in, roll down for privacy. Choice of white or fruitwood.
Each 23x46" Birihtowelt
A ... 4Fo?5ourReg. 1.97EO.
Cr^heM^k Ldee Niowt r Brolded Round Choir Pods
Cotton/poiyestw/rayon fHI. -y Reversible. Acrylic/wool/nylon.
After jUMOpie 14s97
I4;
For l#OurReo.07|a. . CoWOhUlimyTowfll ^ A 4
Sheared cotton/polyester. 12x1^/^ > White flour sack" colorj
Our Reg. 36.97 Borg* Digital Both Scole
Modern styling, 300-lb. capacity.
iPrlce lAO/OCRqdlo
WHhJ^ Sound," mor.
.1
Our Reg. 9.97 ihofp* B^ Ccrteulqtor
Solar-powered model; with memory.
m MW H # W Our Reg. 9.97
B^MgitBelarCaleulolor Hand-held
.S
rid model with memory.
7 >' -1
2n/ftr 00/OFF Carefree And Casual fcw /OTo^9 /Or>sSMmnnertime Separates
Newlook Tops For Misses
1-And 2*pc. Minidresses Oirls2'piece Short Sets Summer Shorts For Olrls Oirli* Tops Or Rompers
Our 13.97. Layered-look T-shirt Our 6.96. Polyester/cotton Our 5.57*5.96. Polyester/ Our 3.96 Tops, 7*14 S3 Our 5.96. Polyester/cotton
styles or 2-pc. sets of poly- top, shorts In 7-14.......5.44 cotton shorts In 7-14.... 4.44 Our 4.67 Rompers. 7*14,3.50 tops in array of areat styles
ester. Jr. sizes 3-15.... Ea. 9.88 Our 5.96, Sizes 4-6X... 4.44 Our 4.96, Sizes 4-6X... 3.88 Our 3.96 Rompers, 4-6X.. $3 and colors............ Z44
Casual Fashion Shorts Our 8.96*9.96. Cotton or polyester/cotton shorts in jr.. misses sizes 5/6-17/18_______$7
Feature-pocked Terry Separates For Toddler Boys
Go-together separates styled for comfort and durability. Choose an easy-care cotton/nylon tank top or sporty gym-style shorts of >^pun polyester. In toddler boys 2-4.
25%
Breezy Beachwear Separates Of Soft Stretch Terry
Misses' comfortable rompers In zip-up or strapless pull-on styles, to top off with a smart wraparound robe. Cotton/nylon In a rqinbow of sunny cqjors. Save now.
Our Everyday Low Prices
ft KOYour Choice Our Reg. 9.96-12.96
Flottering Tops And Fants Mean Fashion For All Sizes
Polyester jxints In jr. and misses sizes 5/6-17/10, fun figure 32-40. Polyester/cotton blouses In misses S-M-L or Tops of spun polyester Jn full figure sizes 38t44. Save now .
A* itytM not m vttfV store
Mens Triple Track** Shirt
Our 4.97. Heather grey or solid colors with contrast trim. Polyester/cotton. $4
Mens Oood'looking Shorts Our 3.97. Triple Track shorts of polyester/cotton. Elastic waistband, vented side. $3Mens, Boys And Jr. Boys Actionwear Separates
Choice Of Boys Separates Our 4.47*5.97. Polyester/cotton jersey shirt or twill shorts. Color choice. Ea., $4
Jr. Boys Shirt Or Shorts Our 3.97. 'Triple Track" shirt or shorts of polyester/cotton. Popular colors. 4-7. Ea., $3
Mens Fashion Knit Shirts Our 5.97. Knit sport shirt with button placket, chest pocket. Polyester/cotton. $5
Fashion Shorts For Men Our 11.97. Polyester/cotton shorts with elastic waistband and 2 pockets. $8
Pair - Your Choice To Our Reg. 10.97-12.97
Classic Canvas Casuals For Active Men Or Women
Featuring favorite summer design, long-wearing rubber sole, comfortable insole and fashion accents. Perfect with jeans, shorts, more.
9.90
Men's Sizes
Mens Classic Woven Sport Shirts
Welltaliored shirts with flap or button pocket, short sleeves. Trans-seasonal solid colors In polyester/cotton.
Boys Foshlon*pocket Denim Jeans
Polyester/rayon/cotton denkn jeans with traditiorKil western styling and designer-look back pockets.
Nylon Folding Umbrello
Childrens easy-open umbrella with pew bandana print to brighten dreary days. Save.
Womens Leather Sandals Our 9.97. Leather with spllt-suede padded insole. Save. Our 8.97, Oirls Slies, Pr. 4.90
Womens Leother*look Sandals Our 11.97. Supple polyurethane sandals with fashionable cork-wrapped wedge, sturdy sole.
7B(4)
SIZES
SALE
P155/80R13
<37 i
PU5/S0R13
<45 &
P175/80RI3
I
P185/80R13
<49 1
P185/75RI4
<53 S
P195/75RI4
'7:
P205/75R14
<60 4
P215/75R14
P205/75R15
<61 m
P215/75R15
<63 1
P225/75R15
<65 I
P235/75R15
<69 1
PlutMllol.MM.T.
P155/80R12
'BtocfcwoHonlv
Plus 1.41 To 2.90 F.E.T.
f>rtce by K mart European tread design
94^
All-season performance
Tough, economy-priced tire
Tires, Battery And Senrlce Only In Stores With Service Boys
pIte-and-Drum BrcOc# Spedktf
For many U,S., Import cars. Additional parts, services extra. Semlmetalllc pods $10 more.
37.8C ^Our Reg. 48.58
Motorvolor 36 Auto Boltery
Maintenance-free battery. Sizes for many U.S. and Import cars.
Ea.
Our'
IHF 13.97 *^ietrpddkmidtl^ Sizes for marw UA. can with ra-^^or.o5ci.ff8. stm.
SERVICES INCLUDE;
1. Computer balance 2 front wheels
2. Align front end
Odr 63.97, Air IhdCin, Ir. 44.97
Competer Botonoe/AHgnmetit
For rhat)y U.S. and import cars. Additional parts, services extra.
497 Our Reg. 6.97 V4> And Vs-drlvo Socket Set
21-plece SA.E. or metric socket set for home, car. Metal case.
44.W. 9 Our Reg. 65.88 2*ton Hydraulic Floor Jack
Compact jack with 4.7 to 14.7" lifting range. Swivel casters.
Our Reg. reVff to. 40.88-47.88
CKiollty Remdhufactured Starters
Available for many U.S. cars and light trucks. Save now.
AfterRebote 5
Sn! nsATiOilJfEa
Halogen Sedled^beom Lamps
Your choice of rectangular or round low- or high-beam lamp.
it*baflknttStonW.'iinpulaiton
YourNettfost After Rebate '^12.07
H4001.H6006
H4651.H4656
PMOl
iiat. 12.97-
Ea. H6052 Duol-beom Hologen Headlamps
Your choice of round or rectangular with dual high/low beams.
Rabat lnfd to n*.'i it>ulation
11.97
Price
Deten **Moxfll" DDH9oir Bans
In yellow or white, Suryin* cover, wound and 2-pc. construction.
fhurs h\
Sat Only
1.88
Roast Turkey Dinner With The Tastiest Of Trimmings
Sale Ends Sat., April 16-#ri
yaving Place
5.88
18-pound* Bog Of Super K-Gro^ Lawn Fertilizer
27-3-3 fertilizer develops thick, green lawns and provides vigorous growth. Covers 5000-sq. ft.
67
Pock
Hardy Flowering Or Vegetable Bedding Plants
Moke your selection from a delightful variety of plants for accent and gardens. In handy packs.
97
. - .to ^av every advtf ^ stock on ouf shelves If an , eed rtem is fxM evarfabte tor pur chase due to any unforeseen reason
i Kma(t*,MuRainCh.d(o<ir**si
Iw Iti* iwchKKliM Ion. Itwn 01 ttnon fanuly guanMyl 10 ba ixirchUMl al the sale one. ehenevar availahl. of wll sad you a comoatabia quaMy itam ai a compa-taWeiaduclioompnca
.............
Choose Lovely Geraniums In Luscious Shades
Beautiful accent for outdoor display, in easy-to-handle 4 pots. Welcome spring early and save!
rPkg.-Our Reg. 9.97 Mlrocle-Gro, Mlrockf
Food for indoor or outdoor plants. 5-lb.* pkg.
ttetwt.
Our Reg. 33.88 Broadcast Spreader
50-lb. capacity. For easier lawn upkeep.
97^ ^^Reg.
33 Tomato Cage
Protects, supports plant. Galvanized.
6.97^^^ 5.97
Our 9.97
Lawn *n Garden Edging
Weather-resistant plastic. 20 roll. Connectors.
' V a'?
V-'- ^
r. A.* s
Ea.
Lush Foliage Plants
Hardy plants In sturdy lO hanging baskets.
Ea.
Azaleas In 1-gal. Pots
Bursting with color and ready to plant.
1(4)
N\QSS
3ib. Bag Of Peat Moss
F.xcellont soii conditionc-"
FertrSpiles
2.17
Our Reg. 2,97
3.88
Our Reg. 4.57
3.88^^
0ur ?W, 4'|(8inm, a.64i^ Our1.47, kllhim.'la. 97t
33^V.ia-
Pkg. Of to Rose Spikes
Eftective rose fertilizer
Rose/Flower Insect Spray I Tomato/Vegetoble Spray
With sprayer. 24-fl. oz I 24-fi.-oz of insecticide.
2x8mm Plant Stakes I K-Gro' Liquid Sevin
Vinyl-coated steel stakes. I Controls many insects. Pint.
% 81
i
Tomato/Vegetable Food
Convenient 5-lb * size
5-lb. Azalea Fertflizer
Prorrloes hearty fcHooms.
Flea-B-Gon Spray
Flea tick 24 oz '
10-oz. Ro$e/Ploral Dust
insecticide artd fungicide.3.87
Our Reg. 4.77
Tomato/Vegetoble Durf
Fights insects, disease; '
7*
3.97
Our Reg 4 87
Super K'Grp Bug Killer
Indoor/outdoor use. 40 oz
2.97 Our Reg.
40-oz.' Vegetation Spray
Kills grass in drives, walks.
2A(4)
Our Reg. 4.97
ird Bath
; plastic
2.47?7 ^ 1.77
2.47?i7''^^
1-gal, Watering Can
Sl:>ray and lightweigdi
Our Reg. 2.27
m% Pkg.-Ouf
Wiwf Reg 6 97 Jobes Tree Food Spikes
tree': d'-'d everaree"' s
Our Reg. 9f 8.87 14 Fuil-depth Planter
Plastic, in decor colors.
%
3.97^27^E^o^
15lnch Flower Pots
In basket-weave design.
Our Reg. 127
14 Daisy Pinwheel
In decorative plastic.
6.97 r- 15.9
Q7 Our Reg.
18x18* Full-depth Planter Our 22.97,20x20,18.97
Plastic Potlo Pols
With colorful rings. 11x1110.97s^i^
Stylish Modern Planter
With saucer. 17x13*/".
Handy Slack Mulch Film
large 200-sq ft. roll
3(4 8i 9)
1.97
Each
Healttiy And Beautiful Broodleof Evergreens
Landscape with 1-gal. potted broadleaf evergreens. Container grown and ready to plant.
3.97
Our Reg.
6.17 Ea.
1*gal. Potted Dormant Rose Bushes
These beautiful #l-grade tea roses will add color to your garden. Ready to plant. Save.
179.27
3Va-HP RecoH'Stoit Mower With Rear Bog
Gas-powered rotary mower with wheel height adjustment. Throttle control on handle. Savings.
Our
Reg.
209.88
HOM ELITE)
. i
, '-X * -
w\mV t
i *v '
99.88
Gas-powered Nylon Line Trimmer
With automatic string advance
3.47
Lown Mower Tune-up Kit
Complete with pa^k plug Save.
4.23
20" Or 22 High-htl Blade
^eai r'u-aeo carppri st-'ei h-
44.88
Rugged 4-cu.-tt. Wheelbarrow
Contractors style with 16" v/heel.
2Ck^r Our Reg.
91 3.97 Ea.
6- or 15-gol. Hose*end Sprayer
Easy way to fertilize and more.
4(4)
PRICE AFTER
REBATE V Bags 4(Hb.* Bog VHo Hume Organic Peat Or Top Dressing Soil
Moisture-retaining organic p>eat: rich In humus pottlng/patching top soil.
3 .*3
6.97
Deluxe Hose-end Sprayer
Adjusts for 4-, 12- and 20-gal.
186J7. 217.77& 4.77
Reg. 197.88
3'/-HP SN*propelle<l 22 Rotary Lawn Mower
Slde-dlscharge mower has throttle control on handle. B 8i S recoll-start engine. Gas powered.
Rear*bagglng Self-propelled Mower
3/j-HP Briggs and Stratton recoll-start engine, wheel height adjusters, and fold-down handle.
Our
Reg.
5.97
50x'/j* Nylon-reinfbrced Garden Hose
Replace your old garden hose with a new nylon-reinforced hose at great savings.
'Inside diameter
141.77?^"
22 Side-discharge Mower
3>;r-HP B&S' recoil-sturf engine
24.97
13 Double-edge Hedge Trimmer
127.67?396r
3'HP 20 Recoil-start Mower
Ihroitlc- conifot on handle
melnop
, . .. /
19.97?7%^-
Handy Garden Wheelbarrow
Rugged tire. 3-cu-ft. capacity.
5.66
Each
Long-handled Garden Tools
Sturdy shovel, hoe or rake.
11.97
Pulsating Lawn Sprinkler
With handy, built-in water timer.
# Our Reg.
97C Ea.
Hand Tools For Gardening
Trowel, transplanter, cultivator.
9.97
Gallon Our Reg. 15.97
The Performer' Latex Flat House Paint
Provides a durable, fade-resistant ac^lic finish for your home. White, custom tints.
10*97 ^ 8*97
Gallon Our Reg. 14.97
Acrylic Latex Gloss House n Trim Paint
The Performer applies smoothly for a durable fade-resistant finish. White, custom tints.
Latex Flat Wall Paint Or Ceiling Paint
One-coat coverage, soap-and-water cleanup. In white, custom tints or ceiling white.
8.88
Our Reg.
12.48 Gai. Latex'base Exterior Primer
Use under latex, oil or alkyd paint.
6(4&9)
Our Reg.
Wf 10.57 Gal.
Latex Porch 'n Deck Enamel
For concrete, wood, more. Colors.
SOTourReg.
W* 5.17Gai.
Exterior Latex Redwood Stain
Protects, restores; water cleanup.
3.27
PRICE AFTER REBATE
Dow Silicone Coulk *n Sealer
10.7-OZ.* tube. Paintable. Save.
FI 01
29.88 *99
Sal
Price
48x50 Roll Chain Link Fenco Fabric
Of high quality, galvanized chain with 2/4" mesh. You install it yourself and save!
30 2-speed Whole House Fan For Ceiling
Deluxe fan with /j-HP motor, pull-chain control. Helps keep entire house cool. Save.
447Ts?.
Roof Ventilator Fan Helps Keep House Cool
Rugged construction; for roof mounting. Thermostatically controlled. Ready to install.
Sale
wW Price Outdoor noodnghttulb
150 watt. For easy replacement.
Sdle'Price * , a . 3/2x8"x8 Ea. landscaping*,
edrresls
36*x2rRcC4 4S*x2S Rol, 6.88
3C^7
91 24x25'Roll All-purpose Poultry Netting
Protect your garden, more. Save.
12.88
Sale Price 36"x50 Roll Welded Wire Fencing
16-gauge fencing with 2x4" mesh.
13.88
Sale Price
5-gal. Emulsion Roof Coating
Fibered. Waterproofs, preserves.
9.68
Sole Price
Outdoor Extension Cord
lOO, heavy-duty use. 16 gauge.
7-1 (4)
2off
OUR
REG.
LOW
PRICES
2off
PRICE
AFTER
OUR REO.
SISes rebate
Scotts Turf Builder For Healthier Lawns
For thick, green grass this year, use Scotts Turf Buiider. Fast-acting green-up formula.
* Net wt. may vary frotm jtore to stofo
33.77
Scotts^ Turf Builder Plus 2 Weed Controller
Kills dandelions and other broadleaf weeds. Supplies important nutrients to your lawn.
' Net wt. may vary troiTi store to store
Scotts PF-1 Spreader For Easy Lawn Upkeep
Spreads evenly, helps prevent wasteful overapplication. Sturdy steel construction. Save.
Rebate limited to mir.'i stipulation
6.88
Sale Price
Super K;6ro 25-3*3 Weed n Feed For Lawns
18-lb.* bag covers up to 5,000-sq.-ft. lawn.
*Nct wf.
8A(4)
W m Pkg.-Our 1.47 Fertilizer Spikes For Trees And Shrubs
Easy-to-use, formulated fertilizer spikes.
2.77
Our Reg. 3.37 2-lb.* Super K-Oro Rose'n Flower Care
Systemic feeding and protectbn of flowers.
Netwt.
AIM TOOTHPASTE
6.40Z.Ri|tlarirMMt
PricorillKttcMtiiliiaM. UiM2plMM
2-LITER YOUR CHOICE LMH2ptaM
4-OZ. UMit2plMM NIGHT OF OLAY 2-OZ Limit 2
4.49COAST OOIESIICED ^ PIAHTEHS __
BATH SOAP 9/0Q( PINEAPPIE 9/i|7( SNACKS 7Q(
5-02. k FOR 00 kFOnUI YOUR CHOICE
R0|. .69> M. LmH 4 piMto Rq. 59^ 01. LImH 2 ploiss Rq. 1.09 4 flivors.PLANTERS DRY ROASTED HERSHEYS VALUE PACKPEANUTS QQO CANDY BARS 197
8-OZ. Ow PACK OF 10 I
Rq.1.59 Rq.SOOYoorckoico.
R5.6.M
LE JARDIN EAU DE TDILETTE R88
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SYRINGE 1 099 toothbrushes 2/IIQO or POTASSIUM GLUCONATE 199
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BUY ANY DISC OR PRINT FILM CAMERA AT ECKERO AND WE LL PROCESS AND PRINT YOUR FIRST FILM ROLL OR DISC FREE!
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A sale as great as ts name
Levi's H off sale Save *4 on jeans and a whole lot more during LEVI'S days sale at Sears ... through April 16
Save H
on entire stock of Levi's jeans and tops!
Men's Women's Junior's Kid's
Shop Sears for that famous brand Levis! Youll find complete lines for men, women and children, too! So shop today, get into Levi's and save!
Htn
m
-VS-
mk
? '
-ife'
Moffll^llon of tirpomie
Ftog. $10.98. OrMter cuMno potMr. TMnner/condWoner.
4*
*4 offi Intorior.
4*ln. brush
Reg. t.8.99. For o or Wox. Huny to Soars, kxltyl
92133
189
*80offl3.5-RP lawn mower
Reg. $269.99. Has a 20-in. cut. Quick height adjusters. On sale un Apm 23.
rou can count on
Sears
Sears pricing policy; If an item is not described as reduced or a special purchase, it is at its regular price. A special purchase, though not reduced, is an exceptional value.
Sale prices shown in this section are in effect through Saturday. Sears has a credit plan to suit most any need.
Satisfaction guaranteed or your money back
4/13/83
Misses' Jens-That Fit
SoveM to%
Western or cinch back styled Jeans That Fit in regular and full-hip misses sizes. Navy denims of cotton and polyester. Reg. $18 to $19.
$14 Denim skirt, cotton/polyester..... 9.99
Save ^3 to M on tops
The Perma-Prest Shirt is tl. classic polo-style in comfortable polyester and cotton. Misses sizes.
Solid Reg. $10
Stripes or prints Reg. $12
Cling-alon hosiery sale now 25% to 33% off
Cling-alon hosiery for sheemess and great fit. All styles are now on sale, so stock up and save. Reg. $2.49 to $5.99, thru April 23.
Sears Days special ^purchase Ensembles to put it all together
''9Q99I
only ^ y
In three pieces: dress, jacket and skirt. .
L four pieces: jacket, blouse, pleated skirt an< r A-line skirt. Easy-care fabrics and solids prints and border prints. All are in misses sizes. While quantities last.
Half sizes ....... 30.9
Ask about Sears Credit Pla
Win one of 101,640 prizes in our
SUMMER CATALOG
See our J" Summer catalog for fult details. No purchase necessary. Void in the states of MS. VT. WA and in the District of Columbia. Sweepstakes ends June 15. Must be 21 or older.
c
( )
^
Basic and oh-so-comfortable
underfashions for spring are 25% off
Timeless Comfort Bra. Choose it in lacy natural or contour cup style, get comfortable support all day!
Spanette stretch fabric sides and back plus smooth seam cups. B,C natural cup style, reg. $11. Sale ends April 23.
8
A,B,C contour cups, reg. $11. 8.
Blue Package panties. Our
best briefs of smooth acetate tricot with cotton-lined crotch. Elastic or cuff legs. Reg. $7.50, pkg. of 3. Thru April 23
$8.50 Extra-sizes. 6.29
Sove25% on misses' full slip
Keep all your dress fashions smooth and neat looking while wearing our Antronlll nylon tricot slip. Reg. $9.50 Thru April 23.
699
Save 6 on ladies'
comfortable
espadrilles
Cool cotton duck uppers, long-wearing composition rubber soles. Leather toe and heel lifts. In a wide array of colors and styles. Reg. $15.99. Sale ends April 23.
Save 25% on white tailored half slip
An!MlnoAntron*lll nylon Irtoothalfslphasshadow '
panel. S,M,L Reg. $7.50 Thru April 23.
Q99
M pair
Get set in
Juniors!
Set yourself in motion with sports separates
*3 to H off
Sweotworks for juniors Sporty playwear in cool white with colorful accents. Mix tops, shorts and pants for all your active moments. Junior sizes S,M,L. Reg. $9 to $15.
5 to 10
$11 Pull-on tank top 7.99
$13 Wrap shorts.......8.99
$9 Pull-on shorts.......5.99
$15 Pullover top 10.99
$15 Jogging pant (not shown)
........10.99
In our Junior Bazaar
Ask about Sears Credit Rans
Levi's jeans and raggin' Dragon tops for kids make a great team at ^toMoff
Whether its school or play, your children willl always be dressed right in Levi jeans. Bigger! boys jeans of 100% cotton are boot-cut and! bigger girls cotton denim jeans are in the latest! straight-leg western style. Choose little boys| and girls polyester and cotton twill jeans in variety of colors. Reg. $12.99 to $21.99.
099 1799
O to I/p..
Complete their sporting looks with our Bragginl Dragon knit shirts. Youll find an array of colors! to choose from in these polyester and cotton | shirts for little and bigger boys and girls. Reg. $8.99 to $13.
696^.o9
Save *1.50 to *3 on Braggir Dragon'" shorts, tod
$6 Little girls short 4.4 j
$7 Little twysshorts 4.9^
$9.99 Bigger tx)ysshorts 6.9 $8.99 Bigger girlsshorts 6.6^
Ask about Sears Credit Plans
OS great ' as its namePoplin matched work outfits now 25% off
Tough wearing poplin pants and shirt are in a durable blend of Dacron polyester and cotton. Soil release finish helps make laundering easier.
Mens sizes.Short sleeve shirt Reg. $10.99
99
7
Pants Reg. $13.99
la
In our Work and Leisure Shop
Ask about Sears Credit Plans
Save *4 on rugged polyester and cotton denim jeans, reg.$14.99 10.99
Save *5 on rugged polyester and cotton denim bibs, reg. $19.99 14.99
Work Shoe sale ends April 23
Leather work shoes and boots are now ^10-^15 off
A and B. Spice tan work shoes with leather uppers, and non-marking, oil resistant rubber soles. Goodyear welt construction, cushioned insoles and padded leather collars.
B. $39.99 8-in. spice tan boot.............29.99
C. Black leather upper garage oxford. Heel-to-toe cushioned insole, built-up arch. Goodyear welt.
25
31
99
A. 6-in. shoe, Reg. $35.99
99
C. Oxford, Reg. $46.99
Save ^2 on men's soft underwear
White underwear of polyester and combed cotton. Choose T-shirts, V-necks, A-shirts or briefs. In packages of 3.
599
Reg. $7.99
$8.99 Boxers, pkg. of 3..............6.99
$6.99 Crew-length tube socks, pkg. of 6 4.99 $7.99 Over-the-calf tube socks, pkg. of 6 SJW
Uto*5offThe Winner II sport shoe
Comfortable nylon, sueded split leather upper; treaded rubber sole, cushioned insole, padded arch. Thru April 23.
ChSdrens sizes reg. $14.99 Mens, women's, bigboys', reg. $15.99
10!
$5 off Winner II Jr. Nylon, sueded split leather uppers, rubber sole and toe guard. SaleendsApril23 Reg.$12 99 7.99
^/~.
SAVE 40% off the regular price of Colonial or Traditional style sofas,
Reg. $499.99......................................299.88 ea.
SAVE 27% off the regular price of Colonial or Traditional style wing chair,
Reg. $299.99......................................219.88 ea.
SAVE 36% off the regular price of Colonial or Traditional queen sleepers,
Reg. $699.99.................... 449.88 ea.
YCXJR CHOICE29% off the regular price of Twin canopy bed, single dresser, desk or large hutch. Reg. $239.99.........................169.88 ea.
SAVE 29% off the regular price of beautiful Homestead 5-piece dining room group,
Reg. $349.99 ......................................... 249.88
SAVE 31 % off the regular price of Colonial style 4-piece bedroom group,
Reg. $1299,99........................... 899.88
SAVE 30% "off the regular price of beautiful Colonial style 4-pc. bedroom group, Reg. $999.99.......... 699.88
Large items such as furniture are inventoried in our distribution center and will be scheduled for delivery or pickup. Delivery extra. 'HERE ARE JUST A FEW EXAMPLES OF THESE FANTASTIC SAVINGS!
*200 off Riverstate 5-pc. Dinette
Riverstate Dinette
Reg. $599.99. 42-in. round table and 4 match-ing chairs. 1 leaf included.
Another Sears Days Value!
*150 off Full Mondo Sleeper
Manda Full Sleeper
24988
Regular $399.99 Manda full size sleeper opens to a 54x72-in. bed. Save today at Sears.
Save *600
Open Hearth 4-Pc. Group
Reg. $1599.99. Group includes. Dresser, chest, full/queen headboard. Save now.
*250 oft
Ashcroft II Living room sofa
349
Reg. $599.99. 87-in. sofa with warm country styling. Nylon velvet cover.
$379.99 Chr 279.88 $139.990ttoman 99.88 $699.99Queen size sleeper 489J8
Ask about Sears Credit Plans
1/2 off
Sears best selling bedding
Supreme extra-firm twin mattress or box spring. Reg. $199.99 . 99.88
$299.99 fuU mattress orboxspring . . . 149.88 $699.99 Queen set 349.88
$899.99 King set 499.88
Avaiiable in polyurethane foamorlnnerspring
X
N^ecial Purchase towel with these quality features found in Sears Best
^10 towel
Another Sears Days Value
BATH TOWEL
While quantities last 24x36-in. bath rug
399
Both feature 100% cotton terry loops
Both weigh a full 18 ounces
Both measure a full 27x52 inches
Hand towel. . .............2.99
Washcloth.................1.99
Supersize towel 7.99
7
99
Luxurious solid color nylon pile rug with skid-resistant latex backing, priced 50% less than in our Spring 1983 catalog.
While quantities last
Ask about Sears Credit Plans
Save 20% to 35%
Easy-care readymade draperies
Sherbert perma-prest draperies of textured cotton polyester. With thermal soft acrylic foam back. $59.99, 75x84-in. pr. 41.99 $69.99,100x84-in. pr.. . . 55.99
Chico. Choice of beautiful colors. Lined with semi-sheer batiste for added privacy.
$66.99 ............. 46.99
$89.99,96x84-in. pr 71.99
Reg. $29.99
99
21
50x84-in pr.
Reg. $39.99
99
29
30% off!
Cushion, instlation are avaiabie, extra.
Plush Carpet SALE! Save *4 off per sq. yd. of beautiful and durable carpet
099 Your
fj Choice
sq. yd.
Your choiceSimply plush, Twilight Shadows or Andrea Preview. Now is the time to purchase these durable carpets and save Choose from beautiful multi-colors and lush solid colors. Made of nylon pile. Shop early for good selection. Reg. $12.99 sqyd.
Carpet not sold in: Concord. Danville, _Goktebofp. Greenvie and Rock H
3 wash/rlnse tmpera-
tures. I with COM rInsM.
21201
63401
Permanent press cyde wtth cool-down period.
Al-frostiess convenience ... no frost buiM-up, no defrx^ino ver.Save ^70 when you buy this
#v wnen you Duy large*cdpacity laundry pairSove^lM! Kenmore 16.0 cu. ft. refrigerotor-freezer
299
98
washer
259
98
dryer
Reg. $349.99 washer handles big loads. Load blankets, sheets, towels with ease. Reg. $279.99 dryer hs 3 timed cycles, including permanent press. Air-only setting for fluff drying. Both on sale until April 23.
Reg. $649.99. Features two twin crispers, 3 full-width adjustable shelves, lighted interior. Textured steel finish doors to help hide fingerprints. Thru April 30.
49998
22611
359
*70 off I Konmoro
2*SpOd WOtlMT
Reg. $429.99. Large^apacity washer, 3 water temperatures. ThruAprl30.
23721
399 329
22621
*100 off I 5>cycio Konmoro wothor
Reg. $499.99. Features Oual-Actlon"' agitator. Sale end8AprH30.
*70 off I Konmoro 2-spood wothor
Reg. $399.99.3-cycle, large capacity. 3 water temperatures. Thru AprH 30.
73931
699 799"
53961
73801
*150 off 119.2 CU. ft. icomokor rofrlgorotor
Reg. $849.99. 13.53 cu. ft. fresh food, 5.70 cu. ft. freezer. Thru AprH 30.
*150offl19.1cu.ft. icomokor tido-bytldo
Reg. $949.99. 12.72 cu. ft. fresh food. 6.34 cu. ft. freezer. Thru AprH 30.
*130offt1t.0cu. ft. konfokir rofirfgorotor
Reg. $699.99. Has twin crispers and Icerrotor. On aaleuntllAorl16.
Appliances are inventoried in our distribution center and will be scheduled for delivery or pick-up, delivery is extra.
Each of these advertised items is readily a
Sove 100 on this fingertip control Kenmore microwave
Reg. $399.99. Cook and reheat food fast on those days when youre in a hurry. Then, serve in the same dishes. Removable oven tray cleans easily. Electronic digital readout. Space-saving oven. Thru April 23.
299
98
Save *60 on a Kenmore
chest or upright freezer
Reg. $399.99 each. 15.0 cu. ft. upright or a 15.1 cu. ft. chest model freezer, both have thinwall foam insulation to help save space and energy. Sale ends April 16.
339
98
Your
choice
*100 off I Kenmore LF gos grill
Reg, $209.99- 379 sq. in. cookino arib. Has dual controla. Thru Apr# 30. '
3998 .3
*100 oKl 30-in. electric ronge
Rag. $579.99. Automatic oven. Vlai-Bake* window. ThruApr1i30.
86831
2S0offl Mkfo. convection oven
Rag. $849.99. Cooks 3-ways. Has nwmory. A great valua.ThruAprl30.
^1998 3^998 3- 27998
12068
*60 off I 9.0 cu. ft. Kenmore freezer
Reg. $379.99. Textured steel finish door. Key-efect lock. On sOe un April 30.
*60oHl 9.0cu. ft. Kenmore freezer
Reg. $379.99. Slide or lift out basket. Key-eject lock. Sale ends Api 30 .
*50 off I 6.0 CU. H. Kenmore freezer ^
Reg. $329.99. Compact! With Hft-out basket, key-eject lock. Sale ends April 30
dily available for sale as advertised.
Washer and dryer installation is extra
Ice maker hook-up is optional, extra
32621 Rigulv Mpnia pricM
Yourchotce
MOO off! Big<scrn Consol*
Reg. $699.99. 25^. di^. meoB. picture, color set. Cten-nel Touch. TTvu AprI 30.
449 179?f
*250offl Vid> cossoH* rocordor
Reg. $699.99. 3-day, 5-hr. Reta VCR. Remote peuse/stR. Thru April 23.
Your choice M20 offfi CosMtt* or coss*fto/8-frock
Reg. $299.99 ea. Choose from 2 great-sounding stereos. Thru April 30.
^40offl PortoU* tt*roocots*lt*
Reg. $139.99. Also has AM/FM stereo receiver. On saleuntlAprfl30.
149
*50offl Fr*^rm' sowing orm
Reg. $199.99. Has 2 ullty and 2 stretch stSches. Converts to IMbed. Thru Apr116.
I offl Upright
9 QffOCVIfflVffiS
*40 offl vac,
Reg. $129.99*. PowerhS suction and tieater bar brush. 0nSaleuntRAprl30.
Big-screen color TV with remote control399
99
SPECIAL PURCHASE
19-in. diag. meas, picture! Reliable electronic tuner with fast Sensor Scan channel selection. One-Button Color automatically adjusts 5 functions. Reliable 100% solid-state. While Quantities Last.
Ask about Sears credit plans
Power-Mate 2-speed vacuum, now ^130 off I239
Was $369.99 March 1983. Very powerful 3.9 peak HP suction (1.30 HP VCMA) and beater bar with double brush power out deep dirt. Active edge cleaning, performance indicator, cord reel and 4 heights. While quantities last!
10 Each of these advertised items is readily available for sale as advertised Appliances are inventories in our distribution center and wl be scheduled for delivery or pick-up, delivery is extra.
Take your family camping in a Hillary tent and save ^40
129^
included
Reg. $169.99
Polyester and cotton roof and walls. Polyethylene sewn-in floor, 2 nylon screened windows with inside zippered storm flaps.
$199.99, 9x11-ft. tent ____169.99
$219.99,10x13-ft. tent .......179.99
1/2 PRICE Sleeping bogs
4-lbs. of Hollofil 808 polyester insulation. Polyester outer and lining. $49.99 in Spring Gen. catalog. 24.99
While quantities last
2for*10
Wilson athletic shirts or shorts, Reg. $8.99 ea.
$2 99WiboncrewMcks 1.99 $2 99Wkon"cufriOCl(S 1.N
Save *30
Pak-A-potti toilet
2-piece self-contained portable toilet. Reg. $79.99
Save *50 Weight bench and weights
600-lb. capacity (user plus weights). 177-lb. weight set. Reg. sep. prices total $169.98
Gamefisher combos
Spincast reg. sep. prices total $31.97 Spinning reg. sep. prices total $39.49
1/2 PRICE bike child carrier
Extra high back carrier. Adjustable footrests. Reg. $39.99
109
Save *40 10-speed racer
26-in. model for men or women. Dual position side-pull caliper brakes. Reg. $149.99
Bikes partially assembled
Save *30 Boys'
FS200 BMX bike
Chrome-plated frame, 3 BMX pads, handgrips, blue gumwall tires. Regular $129.99
Save *40 off, 20-in. wheel cycle
Dual independently adjustable handle-bars. Speedometer/odometer. Reg. $139.99
139
Save *40 touring bikes
28-in. model for men or women. Side-pull brakes. Reg. $179.99
E.T. riding cycle
Your child will love to ride along with adorable E.T. Unassembled
File cabinets, shelving available by apeclal order in snuier Sears stores.
25% to 31% off Steel files and shelving in 7 colors.
Heavyweight with baked-on enamel finish.
$19.99 3-shelf unit 14.99
$89.99 2-dr. lettersize file. 59.99 $129.99 4-dr. file, lettersize in. brown or almond only .... 99.99
199
*70 off The Scholar
6-step keyboard correction. Power return, power repeat key. Pica. Reg. $269.99
159
*60 off The Electric I
6-step key correction. Power repeat keys, space bar. Pica. Reg. $219.99
119t! .$159.99 Save *40 Video Arcooe with Poc-Mon cartridge
Enjoy playing arcade favorites at home. Plays Atari-compatible cartridges.
119
Sov* *50 Golvanizd 6-lg swing sot
Painted 2-inch steel tubing frame. 6-ft. slide, 2 swings, more. Reg. $169.99
Save *50 Galvanized Big "t" gym sot
Hand-over-hand, overhead ladder, gym rings, 2 swings. Reg. $129.99
Reg. $149.99
*50off! Odyssey
With computer-type keyboard, makes titles. $34.99 Video game storage center..................29.99
dfiig
19795
Save *100 on KS-1 auto 35mm SLR Comoro outfit
Camera with 50mm f2.0 lens, tele lens, flash, case, strap. Reg. sep. prices total $299.99
ears daALL Sears high efficiency Air Conditioning NOW *300 off!
Sale ends April 13 Prices start as low as 24,000 Btuh Reg. $1199
*899Install a new, efficient whole house cooling system for reliability and lower operating cost. Thermostat, refrigerant tubing, install-tion extra.Ask about Authorized installation. . . FREE ESTIMATES!
*70 off 24-in. whole house fan
Easy-to-install . . no attic joists to cut or frames to build. Shutter included. Reg. $269.99. Thru April 23.
30-in. fan. Reg $299.99 ..... 229.99
Save *70 on a 52-in. ceiling fan
3-speeds, with textured wood-look blades. Brown or white. Reg. $169.99. Thru April 23.
Whit9(aiwbysp>cil0fdflniTwlirrt0f8
71541
70031SAVE *60 to *120 on ALL Kenmore Portable dishwashers!
Regular $369.99 to $519.99 NOW
309te399All our portable models feature Power Miser control, stainless Steel pulverizer blade, and choice of wash cycles. 24-in and 18-In. models. Thru April 30.Ask about Authorized Installation. . . FREE ESTIMATES!
*30 off 40-in. ceiling fan
2 speeds, with wood-look blades. Brown or antique white. Reg. $129.99. Thru April 16.
ForturnJbulbtaoMtepwtelv
*277 SAVE *102
Kenmore built-in dishwasher
Has Water Miser cycle and Power Miser control to help save energy. Pots/pans wash cycle. Reg. $379.99. Thru April 30. Professional installation available.
Each ,jf these advertised items is readily avaiiabit for salp advertised
I
50% off!
Armadillo chain link fonca fabric whan you buy fittings plus posts, top rail at regular prices.
Call Sears for a free estimate on your property at no obligation. Minimum 150-ft. residential job. Thru April 30.
Installation by Sears Authorized Installers
20% off!
Sears 25" gloss fiber shingles when installed
Class A fire-re-sistance rating from UL. Seal-down adhesive tabs. Thru April 23.
Save
159
80offl/3.HP garage door opener
Over *3,000 digital codes, 4 Vi-minute light delay. 2-button safety receiver. Variable door stop. Reg. $239.99 Thru April 23
91005
.Sears paint for your Great American home Save ^5-^7
Satin flat or bright white ceiling, gal.
Our best Easy Living one-coat interior latex is washable, colorfast, spot and stain resistant. In 23 colors. Reg. $16.99. Thru April 23.
$17.99 Semi gloss........gal. 12.99
78005 S
i low luster g
91955
36005
. '"^***^13^'
V ^'"9-No Chalk Washdown-stain" >
Low-luster satin, gal.
Choose Weatherbeater one-coat exterior latex for a durable, fresh finished appearance in 46 washable colors. Reg. $17.99. Sale ends April 23.
For one-coat results, all Sears one-coat paints must be applied as directed.
Ask about Sears credit plans
9333SAVE *6 40-lb. box detergent
Concentrated powder. Heavy-duty. Reg. $20.99 Thru April 23.
631)
FULL 6-Yeor Warranty
It. writhin 6 years from the date ot purchase, this Permanex* pteatic container or Nd cracks or breaks, we wi. upon return, replace It tree ot chargelO SAVE *832-gol. trash container
Sears Best. Permanex* 6 plastic. Reg. $24.99. Thru April 23.
TQ99 15525
# # Special purchase Alrleu sprayer
Sprays latex, oit-base paints, varnishes, stains.
While quantities last
17421299^^ SAVE *150 1-W alrcompratsor
Features 6.6 SCFM at 40 PSI. Reg. $449.99. Thru April 30.
159SAVE *40 1/2-HP compressor kit
Craftsman. Delivers 3.0 SCFM at 40 PSI, 50 PSI max. Reg. $199.99. Thru April 23.
156144V" SAVE *20 Craftsman spray gun
For compressors 1-HP or larger. Reg. $69.99. Thru April 23.
Craftsman^ 10-in. table saw helps make bi jobs easy! Save ^130269Craftsman power tools with the quality you demand I ^20-^30 off
Capacitor-start 1-HP motor develops 2-HP. Includes steel leg set and table extensions. Partially assembled. Reg. $399.99
Variable-speed 3/8-in. reversible drill
3/8-HP dual-motion 1/2-sheet pad sander
3/4-HP Craftsman router, shaft lock, chip shield
Craftsman 7-in., 1 1/4-HP circular saw
0099
^ Your
Power tool sale ends April 23
Save >27-4l
16
Your choice
A. $57.90*. 10-pc. Craftsman punch and chisel set
B. $44.12*, 8-pc. Craftsman tool set
C. $45.96*, Craftsman 4-pc. tool set
D. $57.38*, 12-pc. Craftsman Phillips and standard screwdriver set
Sale ends April 30 * Regular separate prices total
33112
49
*94 off Croffsmon 43-pc. tool set
Includes two reversible quick-release ratchets -> 1/2 and 3/8-in. drives. Also 1/4, 3/8 and 1/2-in. drive sockets, extension bars and more. Reg. Sep. prices total $144.62 Thru April 30.*70 off Croffsmon Chest/Cabinet Combo
Chest Cabinet
Reg. $199.99 Reg. $199.99
159
169
6-drawer chest and 3 drawer cabinet.
10261*40 off Croffsmon workbench
Give yourself more working space! Includes hard-board top, drawer and shelf. Rugged steel. Unassembled. Reg. separate prices total $99.99
Vw Cm **f*y >w m Ammt by Hmw
M Tl hM 1-M0423.37M AihhrOiMfatorlO GaodNothMiwUt-NoAnn
Craftsman mowers get the job doiie! Save ^50-^80
A. $80 off Eager-1 3.5-RP mower. Reliable solid-state ignition. Quick height adjusters. 20-in. cut. Reg. $269.99. Thru April 23.
B. $50 off 20-in. rear-bagger 3.5-RP Eager-1 engine. Solid- AJAOO state ignition. Quick height adjusters. Reg.
$299.99. Thru April23.
189
C. $70 off 22-in. propelled mower Deluxe Eager-1 4.0 RP engine. ^^^99
Craftsman 10-HP lawn tractor helps make yard work easy! ^200 off
Big buy on a 10-HP electric start lawn tractor. Three forward speeds plus reverse. A 36-in. floating mower deck. Iso-Vib engine mounts. Reg. $1099.99. Thru April 30.
899
99
Front wheel drive. Reg. $399.99. Thru April 16.
*20oHWMdwacker iectric trimmr
Sears BestI 3/4-HP. Semiautomatic Hne feed. Reg. $69.99:
*40offWMJwacker gas trimmar
Powerful 26.2 cc engine for big trimming jobs! Reg. $179.99
Your ctwice ,
$1.50 off Craftsman garden tools
Choose a trowei, cuitivator or weeder. Reg. $2.99. Thru Aprii 23.
Overhang and trim
Installed
Ends the need for frequent scraping, repainting of roof undersidesavailable for brick homes Ventilated panels provide under-roof air circulation Installation provided by a Sears Authorized Installer FREE ESTIMATES!
MOOoffS-HPchoin-drive garden tiller
Adjust for 12, 22, 24-bi. path. Quick start/stop. Reg. $449.99. Thru Apry 23.
*30off2-HP electric chain saw
14-in. guide bar. Doubie in-suiated. Partially assembled. Reg. $99.99.
*40 off 2.3 CiD
gas sow. case
14-in. bar. solid-state ignition. Partially assembled. Reg. $229.99.
Continuous aluminum guttering
Save 10%
Resists chipping, cracking, peeling Custom-fitted to your home. . well go to any length Installation provided by Sears Authorized Installer FREE ESTIMATES
A sale os great as its name!
32,000-miie wearout warronty
li5i (< ,
Limited warranty against tire wearout.
For the specified miles. Sears will replace the lire or give a refund charging only lor the miles used
Save 50% on Dynoglass Belted 32
50% off our 1983 Spring General Catalog prices. Our best belted tire has two fiber glass belts for strength and long wear, 2 polyester plies for smooth I ride. While quantities last.
Dynaglass Betted 32 whitewall
May be substituted for
S3 Spring Oen Cat pnce ee
Sale
price
each
plus FEf each and old re
A7-3
P165/B13
5S.99
29.
1 87
B78-13
P175/80B13
6599
32.99
1.79
D78-14
P185/75B14
74.99
37.49
2 01
E78-14
P195/75B14
79.99
39.99
2.08
F78-14
P205/75B14
84 99
42.49
2.26
G78-14
P215/75BU
89.99
44.99
2.42
H78-14
P225/75B14
91 99
45.99
2.58
G78-15
P205/75B15
93.99
46.99
2.45
H78-15
P216/75B15
96.99
48.49
2.66
L78-15
P235/70B15
99 99
49.99
2.89
FdefiExciMTH
20% off! All-season RoadHandler steel-belted radials
A great tire in ice, snow, rain or dry weather. 50,000 mile wearout warranty. Hurry sale ends April 30 at Sears.
Ask about Sears credit plans
SteodyRidar RT ihociaf
Save ^20 on a powerful Sears 45 car battery
Car Care Savings Coupon Book
SAVE $ off reguior labor prices
of seiectM services 109*9
when you use oil Hie coupons I#
You con count on
Sears
SMSS.IOnUCRANOCO
SafisheHoii Guarani or Your Money Bock'
Page 16
Reg. $59.99 exchange. 410 amps cold cranking power. Group 24/24F/74. For most American-made cars, many imports. Thru April 23.
SC:
VA:
WV:
^YOIMNSAnmSSAIieiIAtkM
CoNirnbia, Florenoe. Myrtle Beech, Hock Hill Oenvltle, Lym^hburg, Roanoke KY: Ashland
Baibouraville, Beckley, Bhiefield, Charleeton
r
r-'^r -^^'T^TTrnT^rT'"-'irn7tflwnrnfnTrrr.i-T nrtr m'l-
Up To $750 Instant CredH! Plans: Our CredH Card Or Our Low Payment Plan
Apply today! You may qualify for up to $300 Instant Credit on Lowes Credit Card or up to $750 on our Low Payment Plan when you present your Visa, American Expressor MasterCard. Even without these cards, applications will be processed promptly.
Louie's
Your Household word
We Guarantee The Prices In This Publication Through April 20th
Store-Front Free Parking
Lowes Companies, Inc.
April 1963 (067)
Ask About Our Installation Service
Convenient Locations R Check Our sums I
FdrUnadMilisodi
/
A. FamHy Size Double Burner Gas GrHI
^29
Ref. Price $13191. This model has a 400 sq. in. cooking area & dual heat controls with automatic ignitor. Die^iast aluminum, nnn
B. Party Size Double Burner Gas GrHI
$19999
Ref. Mob $229.98. Has a 540 sq. in. cooking area. Up-front dual controls & automatic ignitor. A great way to cook outdoors! #97274
10x14 Storage Buildi
S24Q99
Ref. Moe $289.98. Fully galvanized jmponents & baked-on polyester piaint. Mid-wall brace for extra support. Base: 115V4"x158Vix80 #92736
Save $3.00! Durable Steel Wheelbarrow
A.6Akimlnum B. 16Aluminum
Step Ladder Extension Ladder
29 *39
Reg. S34.9B. 3 steps. And a Reg. $47JBl Extends to 13'
handy tool caddy. #92524 work height. Save! #92530
10Section Whtte Aluminum Gutter. ..........
Ref. Moe $5.48. Pre-finished. so no paintings necessary. Lightweight. #ii55i
10Brown Aluminum Gutter Section
6x20RoN AAnyl Gutter tIuanJ
$499 $-|79
Ref. Price $6.91.
Pre-finished. Easy to install. #11585
$1699
Reg. $19.99. Holds 3 cu. ft. when heaped. Easy assembly. #92855
Ref. Price I2jg. Helps keep gutters cleaner. #11832
Save $4.00! Steel Picnic Tabie Frame
$38.91. Includes'* all hardware; Lumber Is extra. #96810
A.Sa$2.00l SR99
Standard Garden Hoe............
Reg. $7.a. Welded head & blade. 48" handle. #90787
B. Save $2.00! $7^
Round Point Shovel.............. /
Reg. IBJO. Has 47" handle and 8%"xll" blade. #99777
C.Save$3.00! S799
Hedge Shear........... I
Reg. lieJB Teflon^M coated blades. Notched lower blade. #M7I7
A. Save 25%!
Hacksaw WHh Blade...........
Reg. S3JL Blade adjusts. Frame fits 10". 12" blades. #90635
8. Save 51.50
24 Akanfenan Level............
Rag. %IM. Reliable level for checking your work. #99874
c.Save$I.OK
6-Plece Screwdriver Set ___
Reg. KK Six different sizes & 3 tips. With rack. #91526
A. Save $1.00 M99
268-PointHandSaw.............TQ
Reg. S4J9. A must for your do-it-yourself projects. #90605
B. Save $3.00!
5-Pieoe Hole Saw Set.............Tf
Reg. $10m Includes 4 saw sizes and mandrel. #00620
C. Save $4.00!
19 MuHI-Purpoee Tool Box........
Rag. StSA Red silicone finish. Uft-out tray. #01471
.?9
Heavy-Duty Pickup Tnick UtatyBox
Ref. Mm $H8J8. Fite nioet truckbed eizee. Puehbutton/key lock. Overlapping lide eeai out duet & weather. iw402,4
A.Save$2.in $agg
irOaleSprlnQ......T*!
Rag. I7A Made of tempered steel.
Easy to install. Comes with screws. M4147
B.Save$4.50l $Q99
Gate Thumb rtcti.....O
Rag. $1SA For gates upto25/8".thick. Heavy gauge steel. Black finish. M143
C. Save $4.50!
Gate Spring Hinge
Rag. $14.41 Designed fora
Designed for gates around , etc. Heavy gauge steel 164144
.. ':t r^yu '
f % V
. -vii^-vW''"j-, '. : - . '
. -i.'ToiVi.w-^v', V'..-.' - w'V;--;; ;
40 Lb. Bag $-169
Concrete Mix I
RttaivnM Prto* $2.19. Ideal for the do-it-yourselfer. Just add water and youre ready. Build walks, patios, set fence post, etc. #10388
Sand Topping Mix
Retaranoef%e$3.l&
)$3.1& For patching and crack filling or for topping concrete floors and walls. #10389
ib.Bag MOiiar '
Masonry Mix.
Rafaranoe Price $119. Can be used for laying block or brick and repairing exisnng walls, foundations etc. #10391
Top Of The Line Roofing Shingles As Low As
HeavyweigM shingles. Theyre a lot more roof for Just a imie more money. Come in today and ask us fora frea quote.
If Its time for you to re-roof These brand name, quality your house, consider the many shingles are factory warranted benefits of our heavyweight for extended performance, fiberglass and asphalt shingles. Shingles feature seal-down tab The beautiful earthtone colors installation that keeps out and the rustic wood shake the weather and guarantees appearance will harmonize years of lasting service. So wifo any architectural style. for depend8>le roofing at And they dont lose their good a very conypetitive price, looks over the years. Lowes has you covered.
HkWAREHOUSE
taEXFRESS 00
Hems ab(we a below aro awalabie from our centraly located warohouse. We*l place your order, notify you when it arrives and work out arrangements for deHvery. Hs that simple.
mm^nmUUn M0&
Sftf MomMm Abom
Vs X 4 X 8 Premium Grade Pine Siding____
Reguiafly $12.99. Grooved 4 on center. Its great focany new construction job or remodeling project. And its good looks make it versatile enough to be used as interior paneling, too. It can be applied directly to studs 16^ on center. Roughsawn 3 texture makes It Ideal for paint or stain. #19345
Save $14.00!
2x 32 Double-Hung Window54
Regularly $68.99. Window is made of toxic-treated Ponderosa pine. Features complete weatherstripping & doublepane-glass. Grilles are not included. Can be painted or stained. #17942Save$2a0O!
18x26 Wood Casement Window69
Reguiariy $89.99. Gives you lasting protection from weather. Features dual sealed insulating glass plus double weatherstripping. Frame can be painted or stained. #18467
SAVESIOaOO! UuindryMr
A. Our Best Whiilpool
Washer _ _
Reg. SM9.9B. Large capacity washer has $ automatic cycles & 4 pushbuttor) wash/rinse combinations. This model also has a convenient self-cleaning lint filter & bleach dispenser. Save $60.001 #51380
6. Our Best Whirlpool Dryer
?299"
Reg. $33gin. This deluxe dryer has 3 drying temperatures. A drying rack lets you dry tennis shoes without noisy tumbling. And automatic cooldown is great for perm press. Save $40.00! #51525
A. Save STaOO! Our Best Hotpoint Dishwasher
$9/1099
Reg. $41&9B. Has 9 cycle options, including power scrub & a short wash & rinse to help you cut down on energy consumption. #51018
B.Swe$sa00!
Undercounter Dishwasher..
Reg. S33S.9L This model has 5 cycle options and large capacity. Save! #51043
}y consumption. #3iuie
S289M
A. Save $50.00! 30-Inch Deluxe Electitc Range
$34999
n $399.98. This model features two 6 & urners with removable trim rings. Oven-window door lifts off for cleaning. i
B. Save $40.00!
30 Electric Ranm.......
Reg.i318.9a Includes one 8 & three 6 burners, lift-off door and more. #52851
LoweeLow
Monthly
$^793
Fdr30Mon8ts
Heavy Duty 2-Cycie 18-Lb. Capacity washer
Reg. $419.99. This model has convenient top loading plus self-cleaning lint filter.
And bleach & softener dispenser. Two wash/spin speeds. #51236
S* 5359 sar
No Down Psyment (See Back Page) Deorrod Payment Moe: $537.90 Amual Percentage Rele: 2337%
S27999
15 Cubic Foot
No-Frost
Refrigerator
$47999
Reg. $54a9a This model has a large 4.58 cu. ft freezer with icemaker option. Lots of door space, phis morel vs3S34
Save $1.50! 9-Foot, 14-3 Ap|)lanoe Cord
ReguMyM Beige extension cord for 120-volt usage. #70384
PRICE
CUTS!
ASave$6.00!
15 Amp Ground Fault Outlet....
Reg. $27.99.15-125V circuit interrupter used to prevent accidental shock. #71915B. Save 30^115 Amp BrownOrlvory WalSwhch.
Regulaily 99*. Single-pole grounded wall switch, usy to install yourself. #70407,608 c. Save 21*! 15 Amp BrownOrlvory Dttplex Recepade.
RaguMy V. Grounded duplex outlet for use with small appliances, etc. #70485,683 D. Save $2.00! G00<
Watt SIriale Pole Rotary Dnvner Rag. lua Fast & easy installation. Radio & W interference filter built-in. #70713ESave$14i Porcelain Pul Cham Fixture WHh Outlet
Rag. $3.99. Ceiling fixture for holding lightbulbs. Use in basement, etc. #71102 F.Save 20*113 Cubic Inch Metal Handy Box.....
ReguMy 98*. Steel wall box for safe do-lt-yourself electrical projects. #70967 Q. Save $4.00130 Amp IfNioor Plug FuseSafety Switch......
nagulwly $19J9. Metal box with front
cover. For safe indoor use. Savel #71701H.Save$1J0!20AmpSingla Pole 0X^9CtrcuHBreaker..............
Rcgulnly $Bi21 V5-inch size. Safe to use with copper or aluminum wire. #71997Outdoor Lamp AccessoriesA. Save $1.00! CORQWeatherproof PyWSquare Black Clover........mm
ReguMy $3.99. This cover plate comes with one close-up plug & gasket. #71233B. Save $2.00!Weatherproof QSouare tWrfk Box... tJ
ReguMy tSM. This box is m'ad of heavy aluminum. Comes with extra plugs. #71235C. Save $2.00!
lif wir- *
WMuWipfOOlBlack Lamp Holdor..
Regukriy $118. Ideal for around pool areu or patio. Comes with gasket. 171230
$299ElsctricalTools And Tape
A. Save $2.001 a JillO Wire Stripper,Cutter, & Crirnper .....^
Rag. |6l98. Speed up your home electrical projects. 34n-1 toot #70573
B. Save $1.00! CWICQ Continuity TesterWHh36LeK8...........
ReguMy $3 Gives quick check on dead circuits. Identify shortages. #70577
C. Save 801 1kx06Rolinggtrirral Tipe^
ReguMy $2J1 Wrep elect^ virr connectkNie-eafely. Save nowl #70382 4
S-|79
A. 24-Space Flush
Panel Box I__
Reg. H4B.98L Rated at 200 amps. 40<lrcuit maximum. With main breaker & cover. |H71756
B. 12-Clrcun
Flush Panel Box 7
S33JBI Rated 1^. Breaker extra. #71742
! liiii'
gpSlipii
Vatt
A. Save $3.00!
Under-Cabinet Ruorescent
ReguMy ia.90. Has pushbutton on/off & includes replaceable 15-watt bulb. #73315
B. 100-Foot Outdoor
Extension Cord _
Reference Price S2S.MI Its 16ijauge and 3-prong. For string trimmers, etc. #70372
C. Save $2.00!
Metal
Clamp Light
Regufriy S5.9B. Puts the light where you need it. 8V4-diameter reflector. #70378
D. Save $5.00!
Multipie
OutletStrlp......l
Reguiariy $19^98. Great for the workshop. Drcuit breaker & lighted switch. #70386
1. Save $10!
5-Ught
Chandeer '
Reguiariy $49.99. Polished brass finish & clear glass chimneys. Bulbs extra. #74730
2.Save$3!
14 Square Ceiling Fixture.
Reguiariy $13.99. Polished brass finish on base. Wood design. Bulbs extra. #74110
3. Save $2!
12 Square Ceiling Fixture____
Reguiariy $6J9. White finish on base.
Gold wheat design. Bulbs extra. #74125
4.SaveS2!
Glass
Hall Fixture________
Regulai^ $7.99. Polished brass finish; crystal-look glass. Bulb extra. #74403
Save $20.00! 15:1 Electronic Bug Killer
$4^
Reguiariy $89.99. Special "black light"' attracts flying insects, and the Inner grid zaps em. Safe & effective. #73071
Save $6.00!
Smoke Detector
Reguiariy $15J8. Early warning system, complete with 9-volt battery. #73060
48WHh
2 Lamps........
ReguMy $89l9S Has a wraparound acrylic cover; oak end caps. #75424 B.SavaHOI 48"WNh
2Lamps.
RaguMyp
endcapsa
j $44J9i Has simulated wood i caps and acrylic cover. #75412 C.SMe$10!
W
turn.
Raguk^K
?34^
a simulated wood He cover. #75412
jmM Handsome oak-k)ok 5 frame A acrylic light cover. #79416
RuoiBSOsnl Reptocement Lamp Ref. Mos $1.19l Brand name 40-watt lamp at Lowes low price. #75240 ESaveSSI 22-Watt Ruoresceiil.
ReguMy $2U8L Includes 22-watt circular bulb. Acrylic cover. #75431 F.Sae$10 22-32Walt Fluoreaoant ReguMy $99L9A Has chrome finish; witr^ and 32-watt lamp. #742^
V price.
1999
;tudes 22-watt lie cover. #75431
$2999
Dusk-To-DaMm Security Light
Ragulirty I48JA It cuts on automatically at dusk, then off at dawn. Euy to assemble; includes 175-watt bulb. Post not included. #74004 ** ^*9 - 4.Sas$2! OJiflA
Black Outdoor v/l V"
Wal Fixture ...?
RoauMy$8u90. Rustproof housing and clear glass. Bulb extra. #74^
2.SareS10f 300-Watt Quartz Light
ReguMy $nJ0i includes quartz-haiogen 30O-watt bulb. #74005 lSare$2!
Blacfc Outdoor WalFMure...
RsmMy $8US Rustproof housing and white glass. Bulb extra. #74543
?2999
lesquartz->.#74005
$099
I clear glass. Bulb extra S.Savo$3l
Black Outdoor Wal Fixture ..
ReguMv $ia9B. Metallic housing; "crystal glass. Bulb extra. #74512
$799
ASavoSSI Outdoor
Post Lantern .
ReguMy $14J9. Rustproof housing. Post and bulb are extra. #73108 7. Sava 181 Outdoor
Wal Lantern .
Ragulirty $MJB. Rustproof housing; acrylic panels. Bulb extra. #73103
Deluxe Stainless Steel ^QQ
33x22 Double Bowl Sink..... .44
Reguiariy $54.99. Self-rimming for easy installation. And its pre-drilled for faucet and spray. Fully soundproofed bowl. Easy-to-clean. /f26026
33x22
Stainless Steel Sink............^G4
Regularty 179.99. Comes with a dual control faucet and strainers. Features a handy, lift-out cuttino board. Self rimming for easier installation. ^26021
.^79
$2999
33x22
Stainless Steel Sink____
Ragularfy $99.99. Self rimming for quick installation. Comes with faucet and spray, convenient maple cutting board and basket strainers. #26024
A. Kitchen Faucet With Single Lever Control...........
ReguMy $39.99. Washerless faucet has triple chrome plating for lasting beauty. #24830
ssr.s29" &ssir.*34
Regularly $3a99. Dual acrylic handles with spray. Washerless. #24828
Faucet...
ReguMy $45.99. Dual controls with spray. Washerless. #24823
A. 40-Gallon Electric Lo-boy Water Heater.....
Ref. Piloe $149.99. Features an adjustable thermostat plus a pressure relief valve for safety. Fits into smaller places of your home. #26337
*114" ?i7" : *19"
Ref. Price $27.99. With mirror. Unit is recess mounted. #23670
Ref. Price $27.99. With mirror & shelves. Surface mount design. #23672
B. Electric Heater Timer Reference Price $29.90.
Turns water heater on and off at pre-set times. #26352
S2S.119
*79"
Reference Price $159.99. Natural gas. Adjustable thermostat. #26^
c. 19x17 Vanity With Top And Faucet...........
Reference Price $99.99. Designed for the small bath, this model is finished in white and comes with a faucet and I9"x17 cultured marble top. #20804
W'Bbom
ForPkimbing. iulariy$2.n.
Reguiariy $2.91. Very durable. #22763
%x50
Flex Tubing.....
ReguMy $8.90. Will not freeze. #22750
%Tee
ForPhimbirn.
"8guiariy$2.l9. Easy
ivurk with
S-|69
%x5 Flex Tubing .... ReguMy $2.29. Its rust free, #22753
$-|99
Comigatod CuliMit Pipe w pwFom
flegiMy $4.20. Ideal for slope drains, pavement underdrains, etc. Will not rust. #24109
B.Sae94*CoiiuBated OflC
Plastic Diain Pipe............... 11
ReguMy 29*. Solves drainage problems for basements, roads, farm fields, etc. #24112
Ft
40-GaHon Electric
)rr...^i08
Reference Price $129.99.
Energy efficient model required in Va. #26322
A Save $30.00! WhHe Pedestal Lavatory......
ReguMy $199.99. This two-pieci a beautiful vitreous china finisi hook-up through the base. Fai
B. Commode < $^99 c Seat.........^ S
Ref. Price $7.49. Wood R composition seat. Installs s with top-mount hinges, zosw o
mmm
.*29
23Vix19Vi
Medicine Cabinet
Reference Price $39.99. All-steel model with baked enamel finish and stainless steel trim. Bulb extra. #23716
31x22 Cultured SC99
Mart)le Vanity Top....TW
Reference Price $74.99. Beautiful white top fits the vanity below. Has built-in backsplash and overflow drain. #^276
14x18*Oak Recesi Medk:ine Cabinet..
Reference Price'$79.99.B(
is framed in real oak, Ste mount cabinet is ename
30x21Whtte Vanity ^^99
Has Quality Features..
Reference Price $89.99. Has a hardwood frame; mortise & tenon joints; stain-resistant finish. Top, faucet extra. #20885
25x22 Cultured MarbleVanityTop.
Reference Price $89.99. Tf
is designed to fit the van built-in overflow drain. #
24x21 Devon Vanity Cabinet....
Reference Price $109.99. F
oak center panel and brj The top and faucet are e
tsf NAUTILUS
ReguMy $38.90. Has plug-in motor and matte-wlille finish. Bulb not included. #25504
5* Tempefed Glass SAA99
Economy Tub Enclosure.........
Rctaranoe Prio $54.98. Has rustproof aluminum frame with self<<lraining track; tempered safety glass panels; and smooth-rolling nylon rollers. #26758
5 Tempered Glass SCilM
Bathtub Enclosure............
RegulaHy $69.99. Features attractive swan design on tempered safety glass panels. Aluminum frame with self-draining track. Fits standard 6-foot tub. H'26748,9
-piece pedestal lavatory has finish. Features easy water . Faucet extra. #20761,2
19 c. Deluxe Shower Caddy..
Regulaily $2.99. Keeps s soaps and shampoos H90 organized. #24487
$^99
40-GaHon Energy
sr.si34
Refersnce Price $169.99. With an adjustable thermostat. Electric. #26302
STemperad Glass Mkrar $OQ99 Panel Tub Endosura Ow
Reference Price $109.99. Has same basic features as the units above. And the mirrored panel can make a small bath look roomier. Fits standard 5 tub. #26760 .
WhHe 5-Piece Premium $41)009 BathtubWaHKR.............. IIRT
Regularly $129.99. Save $20.00! Easy-to-install sections have molded-in soap & shampoo alcoves and built-in towel bar. Kit includes caulk and adhesive. #20791
HossNon-MetaMc $Qi|99 PVC White Bathtub............04
Reference Price $99.99. No more cold feel of steel. Acrylic-like tub is warmer to the touch. And it wont chip or peel. Right- or left-hand model. #20430,1
Regutarly $47.99. Chrome-finish, washerless model with pop-up drain. #24934
cessed S5999
98. Beveled mirror k. Steel, recessed-lameled. #23710
9d
op Mr
99. This white top e vanity below. Has ain. #20275
Mr
sgr
L99. Features a solid id brass hardware, are extra. #20908
Oak Medicine S7Q99 Cabinet With Ught 1
Reference Price $99.99. Solid oak frame and enameled cabinet with two shelves. 2S"x23. Bulb not included. #23720
25x22 Cultured Marble Vanity Top.
Reference Price $80.99. A brown-on-tan design that fits the vanity below. Has built-in overfloyv drain. #20300
24x21 Oak S4Q099
Vanity Cabinet lOwT
Reference price $169.99. Solid oak panel Insert, brass hardwcre, vinyl interior and more. Top & faucet are extra. #20924
NAUTILUS N
5SS-.S59"
RsguMy $79.90. Light, heat, and exhaust fan in one unit. ^ With a 3-way switch. I2S606
32 WhHe ShowerStaN
W*
R^. Price $139199. Comes with everything shown. Easy to assemble. #25938
19WhHeWali-Hung $9099
Bathroom Lavatory............ .LL
Reference Price $29.90. Has vitreous china finish, and its pre-drllled for faucet. Also has built-in overflow drain. At Lowes low price. #20743
$4499
Chrome Bath Set.
Reguiarfy $54.90. Chrome-finish, washerless model. Everything shown. #24848
$1799
Tray If
Ref.Prioa$HJO.Hasa
polypropylene tub and steel legs. 22-gal. #20135
RegMtftfl! H. Everting you need to connect a commode to the wall or floor. Both kjts have easy-to-follow, step-by-step instructions. #25101,2
^99
B.PVC P-Trap.....
Regularly $3.401 Non-metallic. Wont rust or scale. Save! #24610
c.Tolet Repair KH
.!5"
Regulaity$1lJ0.Comes
with virtually all the parts you need. #24449
OeluxeWhito $7Q99
Cormnode f w
Ref. race $94J0l Features pushbutton flush, mn^^
Srr.....
Ref. Price mm #20713.4 aoftWMIe $099 Commode Seat..... 9 Ref. Priee sum #20650
Save $5.00! 5-Way Interior Fiat Latex Paint in White & Colors
SQ99
w Gallon
Reg. $14.99. Covers smoothly & easily 8-year warranty. Non-yellowing and washable. A great buy! ^47607-47648
Save $6.00! Stain &
Wood Preservative In Solid & Semi-Transparent
199
Gallon
Reg. $16.99rColors, seals and preserves wood yet it lets the natural wood texture show through. #48869-80.82-93
Save $7.00! 10-Year Exterior Latex r iuse Paint In White & Colors
$-|Q99
Iw Gallon
Reg. $17.99. I^year warranty against fading, chalking & yellowing. One coat covers wood, stucco, etc. #48514:48529
Save $3.00 On Our Penetrating Penta Wood Preservative
Save $5.00 On Our Water-Proofing Latex Basement Paint
*6
GaHon
Regutariy $8l99. Water repellent, -revents decay and termites. SNnimlzes shrinkage. Paintable. nmt
Rag. $13.99. Use on interior brick & other masonry. Not recommended for use on floors. Savel #48280
Save $6.00! 15-Year Exterior Latex House And Trim Paint
$1099
hi GaNon Rag. $18.98. Warranted to last 15 years on aluminum siding. Fade & stain resistant. Dries fast.
Save $3.00! 2 Galon S-4A99
PalTextiaedPaint....:lU
Reg. $13A Available in sand teidure. ceiling texture & sand paint. 148636-38 s
X 26 Wide Panel, rown Color
Each
$2.98. Ideal for patio covers, breezeways and a variety of other uses. Lightweight yet sturdy. Translucent design allows in only glare free light. #12567
Save $3.96 On 4-Pack Of White AoyHc Latex Caulk
$^00 /
Regulariy$7.96. An all-purpose caulking compound that adheres to moSt construction materials. It's chalk & water resistant. #43472
Save $1.50 On 10.3 Ounces Of Clear Silicone Caulk
AA / WithSi.aiMMto
A / SOM
Sloone /
ReguMy $5.49. Forms a permanently flexible seal that lasts and lasts. Its waterproof and weatherproof. Will not crack or crumble. #40084
Save $50.00! Electric, Airiess PsrintS^yer$14999Regulaify 99.99. Lowes best sprayer. Features a heavy-duty 100 watt motor, 2 nozzles including a 45! nozzle extension and more. Sprays enamels, lacquers, stains and paints. #40840
. (^mstrong GreatifakiesOnOiir
Conif kl <nm tupandad
or oomponant ooinos With designs by brand name manufacturara. AM with easy do-it-yourself instalation.
2x4 Panel,
Impressions
siying
28^^ hbW# nms
Ref. Price 3
Sold By Carton.
12x12Tile,
Impressions
Stying
Ref. Price 4(7
Sold By Carton.
s Caffing Of The MonOi!
Oak Plank OflCs-
Masters Collection ... UU ^
Referonoe Price $1iB. These 4a" long oak look planks will give a beautiful new af^arance to any room of your house. And they're washable. Sold by carton. #12292
7x4 PSHiel,
Textured Fashion Tone
2x4 Panel, Plain White StySng
OL
Ref. Price 35^
Sold By Carton.
12x12Teln Plain White stying
Ref. Price 417
Sold By Carton.
35^^
Ref. Price 3
Sold By Carton.
12x12Tile
lnGlenvw)od
Stying
45^^
l%r jnnu
Ref. Price Si
Sold By Carton.
2x2 Panel In Bravada Stying
Ref. Price 99
Sold By Carton.
Tie Kit For Installation
$599
Ref. Moe $8lS9.
Nice Price! #10411
A. V32 Thick Paneling In Sylvan Oak Styling...
Refferenoe Price $10.99. A beautiml white oak panel simulated on lauan plywood with 8 on center grooving. #13918
mMountain Birch Panel_ ix8* Panel
Regiriariy $8.49. Simulated on lauan plywood. V32" thick. #13919
C. Save $2.00!'/"INck Wonny Chestnut Panel$099
W 4x8Panel
Ragulariy $11.98. Simulated wood grain onlauan plywood. #13907other Quatty PaneBng Vetues (Not Ptchmd)/a Thick Panel In / Thick Panel InWUdemess Hickoiy
With Purchase Of Above Kiti
.FREE! 6 Quart Capadly BacMainer #40849
Speeds up big spraying Jobs. VUued al
*49"
$1049
W 4x8Panel
Refeienoe Price $13.98. Simulated woodgrain on lauan plywood. #13908
Save $1.00! V32 Thick Laurel Oak Panel
$1099
W 4x8Panel
Regulariy $11.98. Simulated on lauan plywood base. #13902
Hillside Light Birch$1149
I I 4x8 Panel
Reference Price $15.48. Genuine birch veneer on lauan plywood. #13910
Save $2.00! V. Thick Southern Pecan Panel$1^49
W 4x8Panel Ragulariy $1,5.40. Simulated pecan onlauan plywood. #13903
12 WIDE FLOORING
iiV'-12-Wide Level Loop Foam $Q99 Back Carpet
Rylwwce Price 16.40. Fashioned of 100% nylon. Resists fuzzing, shedding. Stock colors, usois.s.t^ 20% On 12-Foot-Wide 400In^/Outdoor Carpet...............lar
nagulaify $2.49. It stands up to heavy traffic and rough weather And outdoor you can just hose it clean. Great for porches and playrooms. Choose from our in-stock colors. if15278,9Special Purchase! Sundial SC99 Sotertan No-Wax Floixing.. .Oar
Terrific, special price on two gr^t-looking styles. Exclusive Mirabond finish and cushioned back. Limited quantities! #16371,2
i?WIDFFLOORma>
Patterned Loop' Cushioned Back $C29 Nylon Carpet 3 sq vd
Rtofnoe Price $7.90i Its 100% continuous filament nylon. In 12 width. Stock colors, nszos.r
SculptureCTxtuie Cushioned Back C49 NylonCaipet ...tO,y.
Ref. Price $8.99i Its cut-and-loop, continuous filament nylon. 12 width. Stock colors. #15220-8
A.PIaceNPressyiQC Ftoofjile Weaoh
Reference Price 69*. Self-stick tile. You just place and press. Stock colors. #it292.4
C.StyHstlk Vinyl 700 No-WaxJTIe...:. #31
Reference Price 90*. Self-stick no-wax with realistic styling.
In stock colors. #16321,5-32
|fi."!^59i KCaMir.. .gg.
colorful rotogravure-produced'^*^ I*'*'* surface. And the 12-foot width eliminates seame in most rooms. Choose from stock colors. #16162,6
Reference Price 79*. Self-stick tile with tough vinyl no-wax surface. Stock colors. #16311,2
D. Sotaran QQc No-Wax Tie.... 331
Ref. Price $1J1. Its our best. With the exclusive Mirabond surface. Stock colors. #16428.32,5
$A29
.8o.Vd.
B. Aoootone ,
No-Wax Floor.. .-rsq.rd
Reference Price $6l99. Vividly realistic vinyl no-wax. 12 wide Cushioned. Stock colors, sw #;
c. Solaran
No-Wax Floor..TO^vd
Retoijmce Price $12.90. Our best. With the exclusive Mirabond surface. Stock colors. #16139,42
Polished Brass Passage Latch .. _
Regularty $8.99. Ideal for use ^gn closet and other interior doors. (Has no lock.) #61052
Polished Brass Entrance Lock .:
RsQularfy $15.99. Has pushbutton lock on the Inside & key lock on the outside. Save! #61055
Deadbolt Lock....
Regularfy $21.99. Has a full 1 bolt with free-turning inner bar to resist cutting. #61082
Deposit Box. . .<
Rsgulaily $44.90. Fire-tested at 1700*F for up to one hour. Has sturdy key lock. #98182
Standard
HomeSa*'*...
Regulf- r74.99.'^ire-tested, too N j nas changeable lock. !'' V 15 high, 13 ' d >
9ai8 10
6x15 Unfaoed R-19*
Battlnsulation............CD fST
SS;?:?.?*' '>ay reduce air conditioning
costs. (Ask us.) Great for add-on Insulation, or for first-time application. Sold by the bundle. #13585
INSULATION SAVINGS
tT- .7T'--- w fwiwOTw Thaunfacad
wonttwfm maustenMoa the absorption inauMon
yourwMig. forftmgua. of moialure. wlnotbum.
3%x15 R-11 Faced 4 Cc-
Rolllnsulatlon..................lO^'ST
***? Woo II*. Excellent for Insulating your walls. And ." 'W teeing fdrms a built-in vapor barrier. Easy to mstall - Just staple to wall studs. Sold by the roll. 1135;
e^xirR-iQ .....
Faced Balt Insulation
,26sr
Wf. Wes a*. Primarily for use In the attic, Inflrst-time application. H3581 12x24R-38
UnfteadBattCQe
lfi3ulalion...uSI Sr 5af.Wos*. Super thick. Recommended for use in 11 northern climatei. #13581
______________ #13578
y*or10x15R-30 Faced Batt MA.
Insulation....4 riSsr
Ref. Wes 50*. For first-time appNoation in the attic. Easy to install. #13587
16-Inch 100 Par Pack
5325" $209
nUKieiS ........ Sw Far Sack
Raf. Pitos $3.41 Effective and easy way to install insulation in floor or attic. #12336
24-Inch 2-Speed $0099 Whole House Attic Fan #9
Pull-chain control. Wall control optional. Shutter extra. #31252
30 Whole House
fir *129
Ref. Woe $139l9B. Two speeds; pull-chain. Easy to install. Shutter extra. #31254
Ceing Fan ____*99
control. Pull-chain or optional wall switch. #31745,7
C.4TBrown Or WNte
Brass
Rsf. Woe S7SLW. Four teak blades. Multi-speed & has reversible motor. #31711,5
D.S2Brown& Brass
SSK....!99"
Ref. Pitos $108.99. Four teakwood blades. Multi-speed, reversible motor. #31763
B.36Whtte CeWng Fan______
Ref. Price $34.98. This model has 3 metal blades. Includes wall-mount control. #31704
E. S2 Antique Brass
ass. *129
Ref. PriM $130.98. Four teak & cane blades. Multi-speed, reversible. Light extra. #31749
Antiguo Or Brass 4-Ught Victorian Kit. ..T
Ref. Price $40J8. For use with ceiling fans. Easy to install. Bulbs extra. #31806,16
Ref Price $24.98. Brown and beige. 97* oscillating sweep. Chiid-guard safety cage. #3^7
Rotate Gifl $0^9
Box Fan uH
Ref. Price $41901 Fan remains stationarygriii rotate 3-speed. Portable. #3''
aUiinig^
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More Unn 230 Lowes Stores To Sene You!
tAJMAe -*----Im
ffiui stores Ri 19 states, Hs never very hard to find Lowes. And our 234 storesbuying power makes it easy for you to find reai value.
i :
*Lowes Low Payment CredH Terms
Your credit must be satisfactory. Lowe's cash price does not include sales tax or life and property insurance. The monthly payment and deterred payment price include life and property insurance and sales tax at 4%. If sales tax is different In your area, the monthly payment and deferred payment price will vary slightly. Delivery charges (if any) not included.
Theres A Lowes Store Near You
Save $20.00! Gas Powered String Triininer
199
Great Value On This 10'Cubiofoot Capacity OumpTraler
EASTERN NORTH CAROLINA
BURLINGTON - Phone 226-6334 802 Graham Hopedale Rd CARY - Phone 467-3600 Highway 54 CHAPEL HILL - Phone 967-2291 1710 East Franklin St
DURHAM - Phone 383-2581 3417 Hillsborough Rd ELIZABETH CITY - Phone 338-4711 1015 W Ehringhaus St FAYETTEVILLE - Phone 485-8731 4103 Raeford Rd GOLDSBORO - Phone 778-4100 N Berkley Blvd.
GREENVILLE - Phone 756-6560 2728 South Memorial Drive JACKSONVILLE - Phone 353^6265 Ellis Rd at Lejeune Blvd . KINSTON - Phone 522-1811 2200 W Vernon Ave LUMBERTON - Phone 738-4235 1405 Godwin Ave
MURFREESBORO - Phone 398-5121 314 West Broad St.
NEW BERN - Phone 633-2030 1407 Racetrack Rd.
RALEIGH - Phone 828-3251 2512 Yonkers Rd ROCKY MOUNT - Phone 446-2331 U.S. Highway 301 Bypass, North SANFORD - Phone 776-8431 3122 S. Industrial Dr. @ Wilson Rd. WASHINGTON - Phone 946-7751 1t49 Carolina Ave WHITEVILLE - Phone 642-4111 Hwy. 130 E (Off 701 Bypass South) WILMINGTON - Phone 799-5780 252 S Kerr Ave.
WILSON - Phone 237-5211 Hwy. 301, South ZEBULON - Phone 269-6456 Highway 97, East
Save $5.001 Electric Powered String Trimmer String Trimmer
^999 9^3999 5iigw
RBguMyH. Has solid RftrsneB PricalBEk Has e:
Raguliily $44.98. Includes Tap-N-Qo(g) line advance. 14 cutting path. IH91563
ReguMy $198.98. Has solid state ignition; Tap-N-Go linefeed; 17 cut. #91572
Hasextra^argelO* cubic-foot capacity & conveniently located dump-action ever. Foroff-road use. #92858
Up To $750 Instant Credit! Choose From Tivo Plans. Loiwes Credit Card Or Our Lxiw Payment Plan
You qualify for up to $300 Instant Credit on Lowes
Credit Card or up to $750 on our Low Payment Plan when you present your Visa. American Express or MasterCard. Apply now!
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I
Lowes Pricing Poiicy
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> assist you. our
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$19999A.SaaS2a00!3ViHP 2i-Cul Push Mower ..
ReguMy $219.91 Has 9 quick*and-easy cutting height adjustments, 8-inch steel wheels and convenient reaf-bagger attachment. #95126.SBWt2bl4HP2r-,*219P
HBRidwfy tauk Has Briggs A Stratton engine, front-wheel drive and individual levers that let you easily adjust tha cutting height. #95150
c.Sm$iso.ooi $4 aoou18 HP 42 Tractor .Tl, OSRf^
RaguMy tijmm. Big & tough. With^yiinder engine; key ignition; 4 forward speeds, 1 reverse; triple blades for a huge 42 cut; & morel #951930.5HP22-Cut $00099
HMMftiBolPiJShMowBrRefararne AM $329J1 The loup^file cutting section lets you mow under fences, etc. Briggs & Stratton engine. Heavy-duty Vk" blade.#95l2S 12