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THE lEGISlATURE
House subcommittee wants guarded birth, death, marriage and divorce records remain open for public scurtiny.(Page13)INSIDE TODAYMTM PRODUCTIONS
Where creative people do what they want, and work with a passion which explains their track record. (Page 12)ELWAY SIGNS
John Elway. was trade?(* by Baltimore to Denver and has signed with the Broncos. (Page 11)THE DAILY REFLECTOR
102ND YEAR
NO. 105
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION
GREENVILLE, N.C. TUESDAY AFTERNOON, MAY 3, 1983
28 PAGES3 SECTIONS PRICE 25 CENTSBudget Is Presented To City School Board
By JERRY RAYNOR Reflector Staff Writer
The budget message for the Greenville school system for fiscal year 1983-83 - amounting to $11,521,142''- was presented by Superintendent Delma Blinson to the city Board of Education Monday night.
The school board is scheduled to take action on the budget at a meeting May 9. Following next Mondays board action, the budget pro^sal will be presented to Pitt County Commissioners for their study and action.
The recommended budget coniists of five separate fund categories:
Fund 1 - State Public School Fund, $6,064,567.
Fund 2 - Local Current Expense Fund $3,309,525.
Fund 3 - Federal Projects, $7%, 517.
Fund 4 - Local Capital Outlay Fund, $520,283.
Fund 5 - Food Service Fund, $830,250.
Blinson, speaking at the boards public hearing on the budget, explained objectives and goals taken into consideration by the school staff in preparing the budget.
We have followed the mandate received in session with the county manager in keeping the budget to a hold-the-line status, Blinson said. He emphasized that this budget does not incorporate any replacement of 42 positions lost over the
last three years. Those losses comprise positions in all areas of the school teachers, administrators, maintenance and janitorial personnel.
Again, I must emphasize that the projected expenditures are not what I and our staff deem adequate to meet the needs of the children. This budget would require at least a 25 percent increase in expenditure of local funds, Blinson said.
We do not propose an adequate budget simply because we know that everywhere funds are tight and because we have been told to hold the line. This expenditure budget, proposing a 5,58 percent increase in local expenditures, is therefore an attempt to maintain an already reduced level of services.
Figures arrived at in the recommended $3,309,525 local current expense fund are projected on retaining the same staffing of the current school year except for two additional positions for a teacher and aide for a severe and profound mentally handicap)^ class required by law.
One of the items in the budget that Blinson terms critical is the request for $269,919 for .the local current expense fund balance.
In order to fund the recommended expenditures in the local current expense fund, Blinson commented, revenue
(Please turn to Page 6)
Pitt Bd. Reminded Local Funds Make Difference
By STUARTSAVAGE Reflector Staff Writer
The Pitt County Board of Commissioners were told Monday that it is local money ihat provides "flexibility and excellence in the school systems.
Commissioners, at a luncheon meeting, heard Pitt County school Superintendent Eddie West and Greenville school Superintendent Delma Blinson outline how the state allocates funds to the two school systems.
West said the allocation of state funds is based on the average daily membership in the school systems, and is appropriated on a line-item basis, with no flexibility.
Under such a system. West said, there is no incentive to save money, because if the funds are not spent for their desi^ated purpose, they revert to the state.
Blinson told the board that, while the ADM funding produces the largest amount of money for school operations and is the least flexible, very little of the budget is received in the form of cash. He said that, for the most part, state funds are deposited in an account in Raleigh and local school systems write checks on that account. ^
The state funds the basic system, Blinson said. Local money, appropriated by the board of commissioners, provides flexibility and excellence ... something more than just the minimum.
West noted that the state does not provide any capital outlay money.
The superintendents noted that federal funds, generally provided on an ADM basis, account for about 15 percent of the county schools budget and about 12 percent of the budget for the city system.
As for operations of the school bus system, Blinson noted that the state funds whatever the bills are, including gas, oil and repairs.
The school systems are responsible for the initial purchase of buses, he said, and then they are replaced as needed by the state.
Countjhi<TWtomey Bill Watson reported that the bill abolishing the Tar River Port Authority has been ratified by the General Assembly.
Commissioners and the Greenville City Council had requested local legislators to introduce the bill after determining the port authority was no longer needed. The bill provides for the division of assets - both land and money -between the city and county.
County Finance Officer Margaret Roberts told the board that the county has earned more than $305,000 this fiscal year on investments. She estimated that by the end of the fiscal year on June 30, earnings on investments should be about $30,000 more than was projected in the present budget.
Ed Garrison, director of the Department of Social Services, reported that 82 people are working in on-the-job training slots as part of the Work Fare program. He said another 62 persons are employed in part-time or full-time jobs as a result of the program.
Under Work Fare, or the community work experience program, persons receiving aid to families with dependent children are offered jobs or job training positions. If they are able to work and do not accept the position, they become ineligible for assistance payments.
Garri^n described the program, which began in July 1983, as successful.
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 large numbers received. Hotline can answer and publish only those items considered most pertinent to our readers. Names must be given, but only initials will be used.
WITNESSES SOUGHT Witnesses to an accident Wednesday, April 27, at 5:45 p.m. at the intersection of Memorial Drive and Dickinson Avenue are being sought. The accident involved a motor home and a car. Anyone having information about it is asked to call 746-6189 after 5:30 p.m.
Commission Is Listening
Pitt County Commissioners heard requests from several county departments and agencies for operating funds for the 1983-1984 fiscal year at a budget workshop session Monday afternoon.
Pitt County Tax Supervisor Jimmie Hardee asked for $254,701 for the coming fiscal year. His department received $245,408 this year.
Hardee, who said his budget, just as other budget requests heard by the board so far, did not include any pay increases for employees, gave commissioners a revised estimate of the value of property in the county -$2.25 billion. He said the figure is $18 million higher than the figure he reported to the board last month.
According to Hardee, the $2.25 billion represents an increase of $38 million over the 1982 tax base figure.
The tax base figure is used by commissioners in setting a tax rate to fund budget requirements.
Hardee told commissioners that Pitt, with a 54-cent per $100 valuation tax rate, is 16th from the bottom among the states 100 counties. He said the average tax rate in North Carolina is 70-cents (per $100 valuation).
Tax Collector Bill Smith asked commissioners for $112,200 for 1983-1984. The tax collectors department received $116,375 this year.
Smith told the board that the reduction in his budget was due primarily to a reduction in the estimated cost for postage to mail card-type tax bills in the coming year.
Commissioners, in March, gave approval to replace the present tax notices -enclosed in envelopes - with a post card bill similar to bills used by utility companies after they were told that the county could save 5
cents in postage for each bill and 2.4 cents for the form itself.
The post card bill will cost 1 cent each and the postage would cost 12 cents. The present tax notice is 3.4 cents each and the postage is 17 cents.
Walter Gould, director of buildings and grounds, asked for $437,907 for 1983-1984, as compared to $442,003 this year.
The East Carolina Vocational Center requested $28,000 in operating funds for 1983-1984. The center received $15,000 in county funds this year.
ECVC Executive Director Dan le Roux, who said, the centers total operating budget for for the coming fiscal year is- set at $3.73 million, with 76 percent of the income derived from items produced at the center, also asked commissioners for $25,000 in capital outlay funds to help defray the cost of a new building.
The Secret Is In Toad's Diet
CONWAY, Ark. (AP) - A butterfly and grasshopper diet was the secret to success for ope contestant in the championship jump-off at the Toad Suck, Daze festival, where two hoppers managed to break last years record for the big toad race.
Judys Jumper, trained by Scott Montgomery of Pickles Gap, and Pony Boy, owned by Chad Richardson of Texarkana, Texas, tied for first place after covering the eight-foot track in a 7.2 seconds at the second annual fest.
Montgomerys training secret: I fed her butterflies to stay light and grasshoppers to keep her hopping.
FIRES AFTER TREMOR - Firemen and residents of Coalinga, Calif, douse a fire after an earthquake that measured 6.5 on the Richter
jolted California Monday afternoon, injuring people and destroying many homes and offices. (AP Laserphoto)
Quiet Little California Town Ravaged By Quake
ByYARDENAARAR Associated Press Writer
COALINGA, Calif. (AP) -An earthquake that sparked 50-foot flames and made a quiet little country town look like a bombed out city injured more than 45 people and damaged virtually all 2,500 homes here, authorities said today.
The No. 1 thing is to continue searching for people in the buildings downtown, but they havent found any so far, said city spokesman Bob Semple. Were recommending people- sleep outdoors because of aftershocks.
The quake, which struck at 4:45 p.m. Monday, registered 6.5 on the Richter scale and was centered five miles north of this rural oil and farming community in the San Joaquin Valley. Nodeaths were reported.
Theres no part of the city thats untouched, Mayor Keith Scrivner said today.
All of the residences are damaged, half of them extensively. Its terrible, everybodys going to lose a lot.
Firefighters searched all the buildings, said Fresno County Sheriffs Lt. Merrill Wright. They have found no injured persons and heard no cries for help.
Parts of it look like a bombed out city. It was a quiet little country town, Wright said.
At least 45 people were hurt and another 10 to 15 may have suffered very minor injuries, said Bob Manning, Fresno County emergency services coordinator. Manning said only seven had to be taken to hospitals and only two of those vvere in serious condition.
The downtown area is completely going to be de-molfshed and hauled away -the entire original buildings in the city of Coalinga, Scrivner said. But he was
optimistic: We can build it again, and we will. Well make it.
Its things like you see in the movies, said Bob Green, who fled from a Radio Shack store as it collapsed behind him just in time to see his car crushed by the Coalinga Inn across the street.
I ran hysterical down the road, my husband right behind me, said Agnes Bement.
The quake was felt along a 450-mile-long stretch from Sacramento to San Bernardino and into western Nevada, but hit hardest in a four-block section downtown and caused heavy damage elsewhere in Coalinga, especially to brick buildings built in the 1920s.
Houses were hurled from their foundations, roofs gave way, large buildings collapsed in clouds of dust and ruptured gas lines sent 40- to 50-foot flames raging into the sky before they were con
trolled.
Ther are 2,500 homes in tpwn, and I dont know if any of them were not damaged to some extent, said Semple. There is going to be a loss in every home. He also estimated that 50 percent of the businesses suffered damage.
r
WEATHER
Sixty percent chance of showers toni^t, low in the upper 50s. Partly cloudy Wednesday, with temperatures in the 70s.
Looking Ahead
Fair, Thursday through Saturday. High generally in the 70s (60s over mountains) . Lows will mostly be in upper 40s.
Kearney Park Modernization To Begin Soon
By TOM BAINES Reflector Staff Writer Modernization work in the Housing Authoritys Kearney Park development is expected to get under way soon with the anticipated receipt of initial funding from the Department of Housing and Urban Development.
The authoritys director of operations, Ken Noland, told commissioners Monday night that the agency h(^s to receive some $600,000 by the end of the week to launch the $1.1 million modernization project.
The work in Kearney Park, an 18-year-old housing development, was approved by HUD in fiscal year 1982 under an emergency funding arrangement. The authority will designate roughly a quarter of a million dollars from its own reserve account to complete Kearney Park work not funded in HUD's emergency allocation.
Noland said the authority has also been selected by HUD for a joint review as part of the local agencys application for additional Kearney Park funds. He said that, if the authority is approved for funding following the review by HUD officials, some $515,000 more would be available for modernization work.
The Kearney Park work will involve both interior and exterior refurbishing and include modernization of the kitchens and bathrooms in the 160-unit project as well as heating unit replacement, plumbing and floor work, insulation, painting and site work.
Noland said me authority also hopes to do some work in Meadowbrook and an application has been submtted to HUD for some $360,000 in spiecial purpose money for the housing development. The funds would cover mostly energy related improvements, including the replacement of doors and
furnaces.
Commissioners approved a resolution increasing the utilities expenses segment of the operating budget for fiscal year 1983 to $758,460 from $719,470 to cover projected increases in electric and water charges.
A revision to the University Towers section 8 budget for the fiscal year, which ends Sept. 30, way'SISo'l^proved, increasing the developments sharp'tnrfne cost of a new in-house computer system. The re/ision adds some $5,000 to the budget for computer hardware and software.
Noland said all of the authorityis pro^ams are sharing in the cost of the new computer systeqp, which the agency hopes to select by next month.
Joe Laney, executive director, rejJhrted'IRat a $1,343,000 bond issue and $1,269,900 note sale for the proposed 40-unit (Please turn to Page 6)
2-The Daily Reflector. Greenville, N.C.-Tuesday, May 3,1983
F aulkner-Snipes Vows Solemnized Saturday
SOUTHERN PINES -Diane Elizabeth Snipes was married to Jesse Ray Faulkner II at 3 p.m. Saturday. The. marriage was performed in the gardens of the Campbell House here by the Rev. W Edward Privette.
The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. .Mien. V. Snipes of Cooleemee. The bridegroom is the son of Mrs. W. Earl Hicks of Southern Pines and the late Jesse Ray Faulkner. His grandmother is Mrs. B.F. Faulkner of Winterville.
Pre-nuptial music by the flute, violin and cello was presented by Mrs. Ed Lillard, Mr. and Mrs. William J. Stewart, Ed Ward and Jeff Haney.
The bride wore an ivory gown of organza over taffeta styled with a Queen Anne neckline and fitted bodice edged in seed pearls and Chantilly lace. Her fingertip veil was held by a matching ivory headpiece edged in Chantilly lace. Her necklace was a strano of pearls, belonging to the mother of the bridegroom and she carried a handkerchief used by her maternal grandmother in her wedding. Her bouquet was of daisies, roses and carnations.
Mary Sue Faulkner, the bridegrooms sister, was maid of honor. Bridesmaids included Susan Spargo of Winston-Salem. Tamera Hendricks of Mocksville, Beth King of Southern Pines, Mrs. Darrell Donahue of Durham and Jamie Scott, cousin of the bride of Cooleemee. The attendants wore white eyelet long sl,eeved blouses with pink mlatte taffeta skirts'and blue chiffon cummerbunds. They carried long-stemmed, daisies.
The best man was W. Earl Hicks of Southern Pines. Ushers included Edward Hubbard of Raleigh, Kenneth K. Cameron of Southern Pines, John A. McPhaul III of Chapel Hill. Richard W. Snipes of Myrtle Beach and David A. Snipes of Cooleemee. brothers of the bride.
Mrs. Stedmarf Meares of Southern Pines attended the register.
The bride graduated from Davie High School and Sandhills Community College. The bridegroom graduated from Pinecrest High School and attended East Carolina University. The couple owns the Tobacco Shed in Southern Pines and he is co-manager of Farmers Burley Tobacco Warehouse in West Jefferson and is employed with Liberty Tobacco Warehouse in Wilson.
The couple will live in Southern Pines after a wed-, ding trip to Kiawah Island.
A reception was held afte the ceremony. Assisting In serving were Mrs. William, R. Gales Jr., Mrs. James Scott, Mrs. William P. Campbell, cousins of the bride, and Mrs. I.H. Pope Jr. and Robyn Pope. Mr. and Mrs. Billy R. Kelley, Mr. and Mrs, David Allred. Mr. and Mrs, Eugene Brauner greeted guests and Mr. and Mrs. Ezra D. Quesenberry saidgood-bves.
MRS. JESSE RAY FAULKNER II
On Friday evening, Mr. and Mrs. W. Earl Hicks entertained at tlieir home at a rehearsal dinner honoring the bridal couple. It was attended by the wedding-party, family members and out-of-town guests,
A bridesmaids luncheon was given for the bride by her grandmother, Virginia Everhardt, and Mrs. John P. Spargo of Cooleemee at the Greenhouse in Pinehurst.
A luncheon was given in honor of the bride by Nancy Thompson at The Manor in Pinehurst Saturday,
Farm Women Have Annual Luncheon
The Pitt County Farm Bureau Womens Commitee helds its annual luncheon Friday. Wives of past presidents of the county farm bureau were honored.
Curtis Alls, coordinator of women's activities from the N.C. Farm Bureau, was speaker and showed slides of women's activities throughout the state. Mrs. Irby Walker, member of the R. Flake Shaw Scholarship Committee, explained the program.
Mrs. W i 1 b u r L . Worthington welcomed guests and'presided at the meeting. Helen Worthington gave the invocation and special music was rendered by G.W. and Claudia Harris.
Special guests included Kay Warren and Mirian Nance,
Hostesses were members of the womens committee including-Lois Briley, Linda Paramore, Earline Wynne, Clara Baker. Christine Ball, Rebecca Davenport and Helen Wooten,
Births
Hardy
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Johnny Hardy Jr., Route 5. Greenville, a son, Johnny Quinton, on April 28, 1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.
Cunin
Bom to Mr, and Mrs. Clealand Dennis Cunin. Route 3, Greenville, a daughter. Andrea Dennette, on April 28,1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.
Wahlen Born to mr. and Mrs. Robert Francis Wahlen Jr., , Route 8, Greenville, a daughter, Shannon Renee, on April 28, 1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.
Stocks
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Ben Louis Stocks Jr., Ayden,. a son, Brandon Louis, on April 28. 1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.
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Second Opinion May Echo First
By Abig'ail Van Buren
' 1983 by Universal Press Syndicate
DEAR ABBY: Thank you so much for'printing the governments Second Surgical Opinion Hotline. (The toll-free number is 1-800-638-6833; in Maryland, its 1-800-492'-6603.) Its easy to see why you entitled your column Second Opinion Likely to Offend Doctor. Its been my experience that asking your original doctor for the name of a second-opinion specialist poses no problem for him. He will simply refer you to someone down the hall, in the same building or belonging to the same country club who will invariably corroborate his own opinion.
I cannot stress enough the importance of seeking out specialists totally independent from one another for second (third.and fourth) opinions in surgical or medical matters. Find a different doctor who will really take an objective look at your case, without regard to ego, fear of loss of control oVer a patient, his wallet, or any other irrelevant (to you) issues.
WISED UP IN SANTA BARBARA
DEAR WISED: I deserve no credit (or blame) for the headlines theyre either dreamed up by my syndicate editors or local editors.
Concerning second opinions: The Department of Health and Human Services offers a booklet titled Thinking of Having Surgery? Its excellent, and its free. So if you (or someone you care about) are considering any kind of surgery, educate yourself by writing to: Surgery, Department of HHS, Washington, D.C. 20201.
DEAR ABBY: I dont know why someone hasn't written to you sooner about this. We know that doctors are famous for keeping people waiting, but what about repairmen?
Have you ever waited around all day for a man to fix your dishwasher? He shows up six hours late and tells you he was held up on another job. (Has he never heard of the telephone?)
I was told last week that a repairman would be at my home between 1 p.m. and 4 p.m. to fix my TV. I waited until 6:30 p.m.. then 1 had to leave the house.
He called the next day, ooiling mad because he was at my house at 6 p.m. and nobody was home! A housewifes time is valuable, too.
Please print this with a good answer, and Ill have a couple of dozen copies run off to pass around.
TIRED OF WAITING
DEAR TIRED: If theres only one service company in your town that can repair your dishwasher, youre at its mercy. Same with TV service. But if you have a choice, give a small business a break; the owners usually try harder to establish a reputation for dependable service.
'if* *
Problems? Everybody has them. What are yours? Write to Abby, P.O. Biox 38923, Hollywood, Calif. 90038. For a personal reply, please enclose a stamped, self-addressed envelope.
LADY CADDIE
SAN DIEGO (AP) - The caddie carrying Phil Rodgers "bag during the San Diego Open in February had a lot of advice ready if Rodgers wanted to ask for some.
She was Kathryn Young, a professional on the LPGA Tour. She says she learned quite a bit during her experiment.
For one thing, she said afterward, "1 found out that a caddie doesnt have 10 arms. Ill be less demanding in the future.
Rubber bands wrapped around the ends of clothes hangers will keep garments from sliding off.
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Couple Marries On Saturday
Lisa Gay Hart, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hubert Hart of Route 3, Ayden. and Kenneth Harold Smith, son of Mr. and Mrs. David Harold Smith of Route 2, Ayden, were united in marriage Saturday.
The double ring ceremony took place in the Liberty Free Will Baptist Church and was conducted by Raymond A. Gaskins at 3 p.m.
The bride was given in marriage by her parents and wore a formal gown of white chiffonette re-embroidered alencon lace, schiffli lace and English net over peau de soie. Her gown was fashioned with a sculptured scoop neckline, fitted bodice dropping to a V-back with an overlay of English net, reembroidered alencon lace and schiffli lace beaded with designs of seed pearls accented with iridescents. The full Victorian sleeves had schiffli cuffs ending in calla points over hands, trimmed with pearls and iridescents. The gathered, skirt flowed into a cathedral train bordered with scalloped re--embroidered alencon lace. The bride wore a tiered chapel length mantilla of imported silk illusion with a rolled edge and accented with scattered appliques of re-embroidered alencon lace which fell from a reembroidered alencon lace cap beaded in pearls. She carried a cascade of white cattleya orchids, white stepanotis and babys breath.
Sharon Devinney of Wendell, sister of the bride, was honor attendant and bridesmaids included Darlene Smith, sister of the bride of Greenville, Cindv Hart of
Ayden, Terri Jo Tingen of Snow Hill, Christy Manning of Walstonburg and Melinda Powell of Wilmington, all cousins of the bride, Lorraine Dail of Ayden.
Kimberly and Bridgett Miller of Greenville, twin cousins of the bride, were flower girls. Mathew Jones of Greenville, cousin of the bride, was ring bearer.
The father of the bride-' groom was best man and ushers included Daniel Hart, brother of the bride, Russell Farmer, Johnnie Stocks and Joe Colenda, alt of Ayden, Lyn Howard of Knightdate, cousin of the bridegroom, and Tim Lawrence of Mount Airy.
Phyllis Griffin of Ayden was organist and Tim De-vinney of* Wendell, brother-in-law of the bride, was vocalist.
The attendants wore lilac chiffon over taffeta gowns each fashioned with a scoop neckline with elasticized shoulders, natural waistlines tied with a chiffon sash. The sleeves were short and the floor length skirt was gathered. The honor attendant wore a spray of spring flowers in her hair and the other attendants wore daisies and babys breath. They each carried a semi-cascade of pink gerbera daisies, lavender daisies, miniature pink carnations and babys breath accented with miniature ivy.
The flower girls were dressed identically and each carried a white wicker princess basket filled with rose petals.
The mother of the bride wore a floor length two-piece gown of silver chiffon with a jacket of imported English
At Wit's End
- By Krma Honihcck
If you are naive enough to think that all men and women are created equal, just go to a graduation exercise sometime and look at the graduates all dressed alike.
For a ceremony that is supposed to be universal and dedicated to the principle of conformity, its a crock. Even in academia, there is no democracy. If you are short, if you have a chest, if you have a head that is not flat... forget it. Graduation exercises are not for you.
The gowns are basically your one-size-fits-all. All of what? All of whom? No one knows. True, the arms are ample. (I only knew of one girl who had to let the sleeves out.) But the Doctoral candidates wear silk with velvet trim. The Masters wear silk with a gown that closes at the front. The Bachelors wear something that wrinkles when the light hits it and holds in the heat like a silo. Their sleeves are designed to weigh down the collar so that halfway through the ceremony it shuts off the air to the windpipe, making breathing impossible.
Graduation gowns - all of
MRS. KENNETH HAROLD SMITH
netting. The mother of the bridegroom selected a formal gown of dusty rose crepe with a fitted skirt. The mother of the bride had a lavender orchid on her purse and the bridegrooms wore a lavender cattleya orchid. Grandmothers were given white rose corsages.
Tanya Hart presided at the
register and Mrs. Jack Dail directed the ceremony.
A reception was held in the Red Room at the Greenville Moose Lodge after the ceremony/. Mr. and Mrs. James E. Manning greeted guests.
.Assisting in serving were Peggy Walker and Barbara Pollard.
Pats Pointers
Bv Pat Trexler
It you have always envied ^your friends who knit or crochet beautiful afghans but have neither the skills nor the time to do the same, heres^ your chance to be the talk of the town with this stunning Swedish Weave Afghan! If you can thread a needle, you can quickly learn the simple skills needed to create this exciting home accessory.
All you need is two yards of monks cloth, a tapestry needle, simple design chart and five skeins of variegated Wintukyarn.
To obtain directions for making the Swedish Weave Afghan, send your request for Leaflet No. WL-50183 with $1 and a long, stamped,. self-addressed envelope to: Pat Trexler (The Daily Reflector), P.O. Box 810, North Myrtle Beach, S.C. 29597.
Or you may order Kit No. WK-50183 by snding a check or money order for $27 to Pat Trexler at the same address. Each kit contains instructions and all necessary materials for making the afghan, with shipping charges included. Designers choice of Mexican Fiesta Colors will be sent unless you prefer blue tones or autumnleaf tones.
If you can thread a needle and follow a simple design chart, you can quickly learn Swedish weaving, which is also known as Swedish darning or huck weaving. In fact, you may remember, as a child, having worked this type of design on a fabric
known as huck toweling.
Huck toweling is a cotton or cotton blend fabric with vertically raised threads called floats. On huck fabric, you do the weaving with embroidery floss. On the more loosely woven monks cloth, which is used for the afghan featured today, knitting yarns are used.
There really is very little to learn in Swedish weaving, so I will try to cover all of the basic information you will need in this column. If you plan to order the leaflet or kit offered with todays column, you will recwve all of the necessary insfluctions. If not, however, I sufgest that you clip and save this column so that you can later try a Swedish weaving project on your own.
To prepare the fabric, particularly the loosely woven monks cloth, turn under and hem any cut edges to prevent raveling. If you are making a garment, it is probably a good idea to wash the fabric before starting to weave in case it has not been pre-shunk.
Whenever possible, it is preferable to cut your yarn long enough to complete a full
row at one time. The amount of yarn needed for a row will vary according to the type of design. If your instructions do not give you this information, you will have to experiment to determine the necessary length. As a general rule, your yarn will need to be one and a half to two times the width of your fabric.
At least the first row of your pattern should be started in the center of the fabric. Thread a tapestry needle with your yarn and pass the needle under the center float. Pull the yarn up so that half of it is to the left of the float and the other half is to the right of it.
Follow the design chart and weave the needle under the floats, working from right to left. Try to keep a smooth even tension and do not pull the yarn tight, so that your work'will not pucker.
At the end of the row, pull the needle off the yarn and thread it again with the other end of the yarn strand that you left at the center of your work. Turn your work upside dowh and again work from right to left, thus completing the row.
Subsequent rows may be started at the right edge if you are working on a small project. On a wide piece, such as an afghan, however, you will probably find the yarn length more manageable when you start every row in
the center.
If you can manage to use just one long strand all across a row, the loose ends can be secured under the hem you will make on the side edges when the piece is completed. Or, if the item is to be lined, loose ends can be woven under floats on the wrong side. If neither of these methods is suitable for your project, you can carefully weave in the loose ends at the beginning and end of rows on the right side.
This is fast becoming the newest rage in a constant revival of ancient needle arts.
Queen Elizabeth I died in 1603.
Music was provided by Otto Dykstra. Tim Devinney sang several selections.
Good-byes were said by Mr. and Mrs. Winston Wooten.
A wedding brunch was given Saturday at Margauxs by aunts and uncles of the bridegroom. The parents of the bridegroom entertained at a pig picking after the rehearsal at their home Friday evening and the bride was honored at a .bridesmaids luncheon at the Colonial Inn. Hostesses were Frances Manning, Martha Tingen and Nanny Mae Manning, aunts of the bride.
The couple will live near Ayden after a wedding trip to St. Croix, Virgin Island.
The bride attended Meredith College in Raleigh and the bridegroom graduated from N.C. State University.
them - were basically made for tall persons who weigh no more than 80 pounds at graduation. If you are short, you will have to either keep your shoulders lifted or cross your arms over your chest during the entire ceremony.
Speaking of chests, 1 used to wonder why pleats were a part of the traditional graduation costume. Now 1 know. Revenge. Its time to punish all the buxom girls who had three dates every Saturday and made their professors forget they were married and had small children. Pleats on a well-endowed girl make her look like she is about to faint backwards.
Ive done a lot of thinking about mortarboards. I never want to see the man who invented them. I have never seen anyone wear one who looked like he was mentally capable of finding his or her own car after graduation.
Historically, I can find no reason for them and can only assume they were used by masons to carry cement to spread around with their trowels. How they got to the heads of learned men and women is a mystery. There is something unique about them. They dont fit a human head! I have seen girls jam bobby pins and clips in them.
The Daily Reflector, Greenv
only to have them zing off Some men have tried putting them on thebacks of their head, the side, crushed over hair. The only way I wear one is on my lap.
This year, millions of people will.attend graduation ceremonies all over this land
'lie, N.C.-Tuesday, May 3,1983-3 to pay homage to those who have.completed four, five, six years of academic excellence. Just know that under all the pomp and circumstance, mortarboard and gown, is a kid in shorts and _an obscene T-shirt fighting to get out!
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Editorials
Medicine Is Bitter _
There are now positive signs the recession is lifting, and a few comments are in order.
We recall the slow' decline of economic indicators presaging the slump. It took as many as seven or eight months of decline, while the public wondered and waited for the impact to reach them.
It did; with the slowdown of economc activity and unemployment reaching the double-digit level.
It was totally reasonable tOianticipate long months (of near despair) during a gradual upturn of indicators before the change would be actually apparent to the public at large.
The medicine was bitter. But runaway inflation was halted and fiscal sanity at least briefly restored within the ranks of business and various levels of government.
Theres got to be a lesson, in all of this.
The practice of overspending and over-taxing (save in times of extreme national emergency) is not conducive to economic health. There are limits to what a healthy economy can endure, and imposition of strain can have only unhealthy impacts on the whole system.
Congress finally got around to work-making legislation; but, even before the results of those good intentions are put into effect the signs are growing the "cure will actually be visible to all before the remedial measures are jjut into actual practice.
Lastly, as previously implied on these pages, it appears unlikely the new economic prosperity and industrial bases in this country will ever again be the same as 10, 20 or 40 years ago. .The system has seen so many shakeups and shakedowns that new ways of doing things are replacing the old, and were going to have to live with that.
How well we adapt is going to tell a lot about what the future holds.
Annual Prospect
Pity the fruit growers of North Carolina. Each year th)^ face the prospect of a freeze or frot which can destroy the fruit blooms on their trees and devastate the crop.
It has happened again in North Carolina this year for the peach growers. The late freeze did heavy damage to peaches. The apple crop was damaged to an unknown extent.
It was the second year in a row that the peach crop has been hit by freezes. Apples were cut by two-thirds last year, but the damage is not expected to be that severe this year.
' The effect of the freeze is disastrous to the fruit grower who stands to sell his crop at a profit or have nothing.
The consumer will also be affected since short crops can mean higher prices for the fruits.
James Kilpatrick
Spring Has Been A Disaster
SCRABBLE, Va. - At this point in time, as the Watergate boys used to say, tradition decrees that 1 must produce a column about spring in the Blue Ridge Mountains of Virginia.
It is a nice tradition. The writer who has been shut in for^onths with El Salvador and the Exclusltiniify Rule yearns to get outside with the dogwoods and tulips. He , seizes upon the chance to wax lyrical about blue skies and warm earth, about bluebirds and purple martins, about peach blossoms and all the tender tints of spring.
Aaargh! This spring has been a disaster. This is the best that can be said about it. It has rained, and rained, and rained. The winds have blown, and blown, and blown. Night after night we have seen the thermometer fall below freezing. The dogwood buds, tight as clenched fists, are just beginning to open.
Blue skies? Who can remember blue skies? Day after day our skies have been as gray as old sweat shirts. Warm earth? The earth is as cold as a tax collectors eye. Yes, the bluebirds are back, but so are the cowbirds. We redecorated the martin house with new carpets and chintz curtains, whereupon the sparrows moved in.
I am sore at the dog. She is a small blond shelty, name of Happy, with limpid brown eyes and an outgoing personality. The other day I drove in from three hard
days on the road, and there on the front lawn was Happy having tea with a rabbit. They had spread a cloth under the maple. They had hot buttered biscuits and orange marmalade. I mean, really! The rabbit took off when she saw me coming, and Happy sulked for the rest of the afternoon. I dont expect her to chase the resident rabbits, and certainly not to terminate them with extreme finajity, but these tea parties have to stop. '
The firewood is wet. Ordinarily we close the damper in the kitchen fireplace about April 15 and call it quits for the season. Not this year. Since the first of March we have gone through two cords of firewood - well, one cord, anyhow - and all the romance of an open fire has gone up the chimney. I dropped a heavy locust log on my right foot. That is the foot with the gout.
Nothing is going on in the garden. I heard that Myrtle Falls, who lives on the next farm, managed to get her peas planted in between downpours, but almost evep'one else has been out of luck. We did get in a dozen rows of lettuce - nice, neat, straightaway rows of lettuce - but then eight feet of rain fell and the straightaways look like S-curves. It wasnt exactly eight feet. It was more like 12 feet. In one night.
You wouldnt believe the wind. In one of those fits of ehthusiasm that afflict us now and then, a few years ago 1 became an
amateur vexillologist and erected six flagpoles. If you have six flagpoles, you want to run up flags on them. Right I have now lost the flags of Florida, Colorado, New Mexico, Portugal and Guam. One big gust of wind last week ripped a grommet out of Scotland. I never lost a grommet before. So 1 have suspended the flag-flying business, and I can tell you nothing looks nakeder than a line of cold and empty flagpoles.
I mentioned the rabbit that Happy was having tea with. This is the same rabbit. 1 am certain, that has been eating the sorrel in the herb garden. My wife put a small protective silo of rat wire over the remaining roots, and a groundhog, or something, came along and kicked over the silo. Nothing is growing in the lawn, but dandelions and thistles. If wild onions commanded a market, we could make a fortune.
Whats the good news Its been too cold for the blacksnakes to emerge Thais something. The delectable mushrooms we know as merkles have popped out. This weekend the swollen streams should make for great canoeing. Down in the greenhouse a small forest of seedlings is growing. The bass reportedly are biting down in Madison County. Before long we will welcome summer, but as for the spring of 198- it never was.
Copyright 1983 Universal Press Syndicate
Rowiand Evans and Robert Novak
Defense Stand Reflects Glenn's Gamble
DAVENPORT. Iowa - At the final event of the six-day swing following his declaration of candidacy. Sen. John Glenn startled a gathering of Democratic activists here with the offhand remark that "we must rebuild our defense structure - reflecting the calculated gamble in his presidential campaign strategy.
"1 had to ask myself if he really said that." one party stalwart from Davenport told us. Not in recent memory has a Democratic presidential hopeful sounded like that in crucial Iowa. Its impact was heightened because Glenn, hurrying his speech to make a live television date, forgot his customary, though hedged, endorsement of "mutual and verifiable" nuclear freeze
Glenns failure to denounce defense spending is one of many stances that puts him right of his presidential rivals, but also reflects his gamble: that liberal special-interest groups do not embrace all Democrats and that there are millions who will respond to Glenn's call for "old values that 1 like to stress There were signs along Glenn's early campaign trail
that the gamble might pay off.
Among the "old values listed by Glenn at a Little Rock, Ark., fund-raiser were "patriotism, integrity and concern for others Normally, such values are suggested more by the old astronaut's straight-arrow demeanor than by words. That fits his strategists belief that presidents are elected neither by organization nor program but by the voter's perception of the candidates character.
Glenn certainly would not stand muster by the American Conservative Union. He hits most current liberal-labor stops; nuclear freeze, domestic content, ERA. environmentalist and civil rights enforcement, repeal of Reagan tax cuts, opposition to the MX.
But without dramatic emphasis, Glenn periodically -reveals these heretical thoughts: "We do need more money for
defense, probably a 6.5 percent increase; verifying Soviet adherenc to a nuclear freeze may prove impossible; "I have supported and will continue to support aid (for El Salvador) at present .levels" and "I do not want to put communists in the government in El Salvador. Most shocking, he is unapologetic about bis 1980 apostasyin voting against SALT U (thouji he now supports the treaty because of improved verification procedures).
Filtered though these heresies are by anti-Reagan rhetoric, Glenns audiences get the message. Conservative Democrats attending the Little Rock fund-raiser hosted by multimillionaire investment banker Jack Stephens made clear to us they regard Glenn as the only nominee - including their own senator. Dale Bumpers - conservative enough to carry Arkansas against Ronald Reagan.
Front-running Walter F. Mandates campaign planners have counted on help carrying Arkansas from Gov. Bill Clintor,. partly becse Stephens supported Clintons Republican foe last year. But the view in Little Rock is that Clinton might prefer a truce with the powerful Stephene. In conservative Arkansas, the Glenn campaigns gamble is no worse than even money.
The odds are considerably longer in Iowa, where Glenn is a late starter in putting his organization together. Mndale is the candidate of the network - organized labor, school teachers and courthouse politicans - that controls the states internal Democratic politics. Although Mondales momentum here may have crested for now. Sens. Alan Cranston and Gary Hart are far ahead of Glenn in courting party activists.
But as Glenn jet-stopped the state on his first real Iowa campai^ing. there were signs of those non-doctrinaire Democrats his strategists are counting on. His crowds, though small, did not consist merely of comparison-shopping party activists but newcomers who could be the vanguard of a big Glenn turnout at party caucuses next March. j
Moreover, many Iowa party activists, concerned by the loss of two straight U.S. Senate races with liberal candidates, are more worried about finding a winner than testing liberal pedigrees. After hearing Glenn in Waterloo, County Supervisor Carroll Hayes told us; "He sounds like a moderate, and today that may be good for him." If Hayes is correct, Glenns puny organization could prove less significant than his image as the candidate of old values.
Copyright 1983 Field Enterprises, Inc.
Maxwell Glen and Cody Shearer
The Daily Reflector
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WASHINGTON - Industrial robots. Electronic bank tellers. Office word processing systems. In the name of increasing U.S. productivity, these and other innovations could prove extremely disruptive to the American work force.
Yet there are other paths to improved productivity. One is called "worker participation." Though no Marxists, Japanese business leaders have incorporated employees ideas, opinions and stock ownership as a matter of policy, with undisputed results. Unfortunately, as John Simmons and Williams Mares revealed in "Working Together, their recent study of U.S. labor/management problems, American managers have under-emphasized such cooperation in the lunge for a 64K-RAM solution.
Yet an improbable booster of labors role, the New York Stock Exchange, found that those U.S. firms with employee participation programs averaged a 20 percent increase in productivity during the 1970s, about 10 times the overall national rate. That the same period' witnessed substantial workplace computerization only underscores the benefits of worker participation.
Its the people, not the hardware, said Simmons, who teaches at the University of Massachusetts. Were still mesmerized by the conventional wisdom that greater capital investment holds the key to out-gunjing Japan.
Worker Participation Plans Can Help
Last month, the Bureau of Labor Statistics altered its measurement of productivity to reflect more precisely the influence of technological innovations, managerial decisions and other seemingly unquantifiable factors on the nations output - an official recognition that productivity means more than plant, equipment and time clocks.
But it could be years before the cooperative style widely practiced in
Californias Silicon Valley (by, for example, employee-owned Hewlett-Packard) is standard practice - and even longer before it creates jobs for those displaced by robots, electronic tellers, and office computers.
Two researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology suggest that American homeowners havent adopted long-term conservation habits since the
Elisha Douglas
Strength For Today
Nearly 2,400 years ago a Hebrew psalmist wrote, I will lift up mine eyes unto the hills, from whence cometh my help. My help cometh from the Lord, who made heaven and earth.
No simpler and more straightforward statement of faith has ever been made. In the expression of both Gods power and of his readiness to help, it utters an unforgettable formula that has brough sjrength and
comfort down through the ages.
We are living in a prosperour period which tends to make us conscious of our own powers. But when the crises of death and tragedy strike, then we become aware of how feeble our self-dependence really is.
We lift our eyes to different hills from those of the psalmist, but to the same Lord. And the same help is there, as it always has been and always will be.
1973 Oil embargo.
Bernard Friedan and Kermit Baker contend that most of the last decades 1,6 percent decline in U.S. residential energy use can be attributed to reduction in household size, internal migration to warmer parts of the country, an increase in the share of women who work during the day and a decline in household income,
Americans deducted more than $295 billion on their individual and corporate tax returns last month. Next year, according to the Joint Committee on Taxation and the Treasury Department, tax deductions and other exclusions will top $327 billion; by 1988, thq figure will approach half a trillion dollars.
While most taxpayers cherish their write-offs. Uncle Sam regards them as little different from the ^titlement programs created for less ' fortunate Americans. In fact, both the Congress and the budget office refer to deductions as tax expenditures which boost the deficit much like actual outlays.
Just imagine what would happen to our $200-billion-plus annual deficit if Congress abolished most of the deductions and instituted a fairer, more straightforward tax code?
Copyright 1983 Field Enterprises, Inc.
Public Forum
To the editor:
The Heritage Day Celebration at Bethel Elementary School on Wednesday, April 27, 1983, was a memorable day. The students had a first hand opportunity to see craft demonstrations and memorabilia of the past This special day of activity was made possible through the supportive efforts of both school personnel and community involvement in planning and participation.
I would like to expresss my appreciation for alLof the support from the Bethel community and surrounding areas. This day was but an example of how a school can be enriched and move forward when the community becomes involved.
Janie E. Manning Principal
Bethel Elemoitary School -To the editor:
Thank you for commenting on ECU's workshop, Alternative Careers for Teachers, which was canceled due to a lack of interest. I am always amazed when confronted with those who think that teachers only teach because they cannot get anything better. Of course, there are a few of those poor souls in our midst who are not there out of choice. But, as in any profession, they, are soon weeded out. Some do not make it past student teaching: others leave after a year or two.
Every professional fills his position because he/she feels that he is meeting a need. The farmer derives his satisfaction from knowing that his crop will find its way to the consumer; the salesman feels he-is providing something that his patients: the list is endless. The teacher, whether on the primary or the university level, provides a need, also. We provide knowledge, or more importantly, the tools for acquiring knowledge.
The one thing that sets teaching apart from all other professions is that our product or service is permanent. Governments can rise and fall, econortiies can flourish or fail, weather can be mild pr devastating, yet once knowledge is gained it can never be taken away.
Sure, I saw the notice about the workshop at ECU, and I saw the cancellation. Why should I, or any teacher, want information about alternative careers? We are underpaid, and many days we drag home, tired and discouraged because of a lack of support and understanding. But no one can take away the thrill of seeing that light bulb" come on in a young face the thrill of seeing that "light bulb" come on in a young face or the eagerness in the eyes of the older student as his goal or the eagerness in the eyes of the older student as his goal becomes a reality. 1 am proud to be a teacher, and I say to those who follow. "Come only if you dare to meet the challenge.
Harriet Rood SamD. Bundy School Farmville
To the editor:
As mother of Steve Dail, who was chosen youth of the year from the Boys Club of Pitt County, I would like to thank those involved in the decision they made.
His father and I are very proud of Steve and pray and hope he will always stand true to his belief in God and the Boys Club Code.
Before our boys joined the Boys Qub,
I never knew anything about the club.
But during the orientation and getting to know the staff members, Chet Emerson, Steve McKinney, Lucky Harris and Leonard Moritz, and see the supervision and discipline they give while the boys are at the club, I learned a lot from watching these men with the boys.
.All of the games and other activities are well supervised and disciplined in a way that is fair and honest to all the boys who attend.
If I ha^ to be somewhere that our children cant be with me, then they go to the Boys iJub and I dont have to worry where they are. There is someone (adult) with them all the time.
Again, Im very proud for Steve to be able to represent the Boys Club of Pitt County.
Mrs. Judy Dail Boys Qub of Pitt Co.
To the editor:
I have listened to Monday Mndale, to Cranium Cranston, to Glamorous Glenn, and Hollering Hollings, To Who Askew,
But in my heart I know its Hart. Hart might go Hunt-ing for a mate! In the U.S. Senate. Who knows?
Frank Kirkland 3008 Maryland Drive Greenville
To the editor:
Re: N.C. Highway 43 East.
Speaking for myself and many others who travel this hi^way regularly into and out of Greenville, I trust and hope the work mentioned in the April 9 News and Observer article ( which tells of the awarding of a $1,109,005 contract to Barrus Construction Co. of Kinston for resurfacing 71.1 miles of primary and secondary roads in Pitt County, Greene and Beaufort counties) will include widening and resurfacing this highway.
This is an extremely dangerous route. Vehicles are constantly running off the shouldersof the narrow stretch from Edgecombe County into Greenville. Evidence of this can be seen all along this stretch.
With the coming of the East Carolina Medical School, in connection with Memorial Hospital and students and families traveling to and from East Carolina, there is no doubt the traffic has outgrown this highway. All other routes I have traveled into Greenville, 13, 264 and 11, are good highways. Why not 43?
HenryL. Barnes 318 Mansill Drive Rocky Mount
\Utters to Public Forum should be limited to 300 words. The editor reserves the right to cut longer letters.
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2818E. 10th St. Greenville, N.C.CATALOG SHOWROOMYour Catalog Gift Store And A Whole Lot More!
102 E. Main St. Belhaven, N.C.
6-The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Tuesday , May 3,1963
Housing Auth....
(Continued from pagel)
Greentree Village townhouse development here was clo^ on April 26. Laney said that work is expected to begin immediately on the new units, located behind Hardees on 10th Street behind Kings Ros apartments.
The Westminister Co. of Greensboro will build and manage the new development. The authority formed the Greenville Housing Development Corp. to serve as a vehicle for providing tax-exempt bond financing for Greentree.
In other business, Laney reported that the 40-unit conventio^r housing project slated for the West Mead-owhrobk area should be ready for bids by September or October. Tlie units will be built on scattered sites in Meadowbrook, according to Laney, who said the design phase of the project is proceeding.
Laney said that all 60 units in the University Towers mid-rise for the elderly were rented during April and 108 units authorized under the section 8 moderate rehabilitation program were leased. He said 98 units authorized under the existing housing segment were leased during the month.
Sallye Streeter, director of resident affairs, reported that three temporary vacancies existed at the end of April among the authoritys 702 housing*units. Average rents included: N.C. 22-1 (Meadowbrook), $92.77; N.C. 22-2 (Kearney Pa-rk), $101.10; N.C. 22-3 (Moyewood), $94.65; N.C. 22-4 (Movewood)! $109.23; N.C. 22-5 (Hopkins Park), $74.29; and .C. 22-6 (Newtown), $79.14, for an overall average of $91.57.
During the annual elections session, prior to the regular meeting, commissioners re-elected Dr. Patricia Rice as chairman and Roscoe King as vice chairman for the coming year. Laney was re-appointed secretarv-treasurer.
The Greenville Housing Development Corp. also met and re-elected Dr. Rice as president, King as vice president, and Laney as secretary-treasurer.
' Dr. Andrew Best, who is leaving the board after completing some 20 years of service, was presented an engraved plaque in recognition of his services. Best served four five-year terms, broken by one-year absences at the end of each 10 years. . '
and should, be spread over several years. Full funding of our projected expenditures over a five year period would meet these needs.
Thus, we propose a 62.7 percent increased in local capital outlay. Blinson called the items proposed in the capital outlay fund irrefutable needs. With anything less, we are not maintaining our investment in facilities and equipment Comments from persons attending the public heading session included Martha Coffmans statement: I feel strongly that the needs of exceptional chUdren should be maintained. We need to have a consultant at the high school level and there are other pressing needs as well. i Rose High band leader Ben Ferguson told the board, "I hope you can continue to give neded support to the band, the orchestra and other music programs in the schools. Our students have won many honors, and have performed here and in many areas of the state.
Saying I was a part of the school board group that * appropriated all that fund balance money, Dr. Jon Tingejstad added, I heartily endorse your efforts on the budget you will present to the county commissioners. My feeling is that we really need to move ahead, that we cant afford to stay where we are.
Duke Prof Seeks Heart Transplants
City School Bd....
(Continued from pagel) from county appropriations must be increased by $437,258 or 21.5 percent. This increase, he noted, compares with the projected overall increase of 5.58 percent.
The reaspn for the disproportionate increase in county appropriations (request) is that we are exhausting the $269,919 in fund balance appropriated this fiscal year. To maintain this years level of service, this fund balance must be replaced by county appropriations.
During the current school year, the board approved the use of $320,000 from the fund balance to pay for staff members not possible to fund from county appropriations.
Without approval of the $269,919 fund balance request, programs in the citys elementary schools would be the heavy losers.
Failure by the county to replace fund balance would result in the loss of half our locally funded teaching positions. This would mean the loss of all special elementary teachers in art. general music, orchestra, band and physical education, plus all elementary guidance positions, Blinson pointed out.
Commenting on the $520,283 local capital outlay fund request. Blinson said "our recommended expenditures represent less than half of the documented needs. We feel this is reasonabb in that some of the needed projects can.
at
Every day in
THU DAILY REFLECTOR
DURHAM, N.C. (AP) - A surgery professor at Duke University Medical Center hopes to start performing heart transplants by late summer or early fall, and another surgeon is laying the groundwork for a possible artificial heart program at Duke.
If Dr. Andrew S. Wechslers plans for a transplant program are realized, Duke will become the llth center in the nation that replaces failing hearts with organs from donors.
The Duke program will get underway if increased supplies of a new drug used in transplants become available this year as expected, Wechsler said in a telephone intervew.
Most heart surgeons, from time to time, encounter patients who have end-stage heart diseases for which there is no available treat-' ment, Wechsler said. "Sometimes these patients are young and highly productive.
"Even with the high cost of transplants, it would be cost-effective to return them to productive life rather than face a* life of repeated hospitalization and ultimate death, he said. He estimated the cost of a heart transplant at $35.000 to $55,000.
Wechsler, said an advantage of having a heart transplant center in North Carolina is that hearts can survive only four to six hours between removal from a donor and being implanted in a recipient. The closest centers to North Carolina are in Richmond, Va., and Birmingham, Ala.
Wechsler said he expects
Duke to perform about 20 transplants a year once the program is operating.
Compete At Williamston
District I Future Homemakers of America competed at Williamston High School last Friday with Pitt County FHAers receiving honors. Students placing are as follows.
Construction of a tote bag
- Sheila Johnson, first place, Farmville Central; Angela Hardy, second place, D.H. Conley.
Constructing a collar -Kim Briley, first place, D.H. Conley.
Salad making demonstration - Alton Vines, second place, Farmville Central.
Cake decorating - Anglea Griffin Dudley, second place, Ayden-Grifton.
Consumer decision making
- Bebe Tyson, first place, Farmville Central.
Neckline facing application
- Brenda Jenkins, second place. North Pitt.
Nutritious snacks for teenagers - Betty Staten, first place, D.H, Conley.
Decision. making-problem solving - Pam Foreman, second place, Farmville Central.
Consumer homemaking knowledge test - Gwen Sherrod, first place. D.H. Conley; Tamie Robertson -second place, Farmville.
Good nutrition display -James Vines, first place, Farmville Central.
Creative clothing display ^ Cheryle Blount, . third place, Ayden-Grifton.
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DEDICATION CEREMONY - The traditional opening ribbon was cut at the Gaskins-Leslie Building at Pitt (Jounty Memorial Hoq)ital Saturday during the annual employee picnic celebrating the PCMH move to the new hospital. Doing the honors were (1-r) Marvin Baldree, member of the PCMH
Police Count 3 Collisions
An estimated ($5,700) damage resulted from a series of three, traffic collisions investigated by Greenville police Monday.
Cars driven by Robbie Riggs OConnor of Route 3, Greenville, and Charlotte Pearson Brody of Kinston, collided about 2:33 p.m. at the intersection of Memorial Drive and the Carolina East Mall entrance, causing an estimated $1,500 damage to the OConnor car and $800 damage to the Brody auto.
Alyson Elizabeth Murphy of Burgaw was charged with failing to see her intended movement could be made in safety, following investigation of a 6:11 p.m. mishap on lOth Street, 200 feet west of the Rocksprings Road intersection.
Officers said the Murphy car collided with an auto driven by Ian Jeffery Batchelor of Raleigh, causing an estimated $900 damage to the Batchelor car and $1,000 damage to the Murphy vehicle.
Cars driven'^y George Ensley Sheets of Salisbury
and Martha Elizabeth Lambert of Durham collided about 8:08 p.m. at the intersection of Fourth and Library streets.
Police, who estimated damage at $l,ooo to the Sheets car and $500 to the Lambert car, charged Sheets with failing to stop for a stop sign. .
Swamped With Job Applicants
NEWARK, N.J. (AP) -More than 98,000 people, some from as fr away as Illinois and Maine, have applied for 100 clerk-carrier openings with the U.S. Postal Service here, officials say,
Frank Duffy, a spokesman at the Newark center that serves seven northeastern New Jersey counties, said Monday that 142,237 job applications were distributed and more than 98,000 returned.
Automotive Machine Shop Foreign-Domestic Engines Rebuilt
Auto Specialty Co.
swwstnst 758-1131
board of trustees; Harry Leslie, PCMH trustees chairman; Charles Gaskins, chairman of the Pitt County Board of Commissioners, and Jack Richardson, president of PCMH (Reflector Photo by Chris Bennett)
commission to have taken the LSAT for William J. Boyle on April 19,1980.
Suspending His Law License
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) - A Winston-Salem attorney will have his law license suspended for one" yar for taking the law school entrance exam for a prospective student, the N.C. Bar said Monday.
Frances C. Clark, a member of the firm of Womble, Carlyle, Sandridge and Rice, was found by the bars disciplinary hearing
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756-3823
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LOT SALE
ATTENTION farmers, homemakers, industries, civic clubs, churches, everyone'
As a community service to its members and customers, FCX offers you this opportunity to SAVE/TELL A NEIGHBOR AND SHARE A CASE"
CASE
OT SAVINGS PER PKG PKG PER
^ASES CASE PRODUCT DESCRIPTION_CASE PRICE PRICE CASE
All iltiti, subject l.i pnor <,|. Ucpis illuslraltd not iKcesMriK Ihos on sale.
$13.99
$1399
$17,70
$22.56
$22.56
$22.56
$19,92
$19.92
$13.99
$34.68
$34.68
$3468
$34.68
$24,75
$24,75
$23.75
$23.75
$24.75
$24.75
$1699
$20.94
$20.94
$37.99
$37.99
$27,50
$29 40
$23.88
$23.88
HI-DRI PaperTowcli Prints HI DRI Paper Towels Colors KLEENEX PiperTowels Prints OELSEV Bath Tissue WhHe 4- Peek DELSEV Bath Tissue Colors 4 - PKk KLEENEX lath Tissue Prints 4 - PkIc HI ORt Bath Tissue 4 - PKk White HI - DRI Bath Tissue 4- PKk Colors KLEENEX Family Napkins Colors KLEENEX Hujgtes Newborn Diapers S4s KLEENEX HusjiesOvcmljht Diapers 14s KLEENEX Hujgtes Daytime Diapers Its KLEENEX Hujjles Toddler Diapers Ms KLEENEX FKlal Tissue tOOs White KLEENEX FKlal Tissue lOOs Colors KLEENEX FKlal Tissue SROs Assorted KLEENEX FKlal Tissue IMs WhHe KLEENEX Boutique FKlal Tissue Colors KLEENEX Boutique FkIoI Tissue! Prints KLEENEX FKlal Tissue lOOt WhHe KOTEX Bcjular Feminine Napkins KOTEX Super Feminine Napkins 30s NEW FREEDOM Regular Maxi Pads 30s NEW FREEDOM Super Maxi Pads 30s NEW FREEDOM Mini Pads 30t KOTEX Maxi Pads 30s KOTEX LIghtdays UnKented PantlLlners KOTEX LIghtdays Deodorant PamlLlncrs
s
30-Is
30. Is
30-Is
24-4S
24/4S
24/4s
24/4S
24'4s
21/140S
12/24S
12/14S
12/18s
12/12S
36/200s
36/200S
24/2805
24/280S
36/1255
36/125s
36/100s
6/30s
6/30s
12/30s
12/305
12/30S
12/30S
12. 30s
1230s
$ ,69 $ .69 $ .79 $1.19 $1:19 $1.19 $1.09 $1.09 $ ,89 $3,39 $3.39 $3.39 $3.39 $ .99 $ .99 $1.39 $1.39 $ .93 $ .93 $ .59 $4.09 $4.09 $3.89 $3.89 $2.59 $2.99 $.2.49 $2.49
$ .47 $ 47 $ .59 $ 94 $ .94 $ ,94 $ .83 $ .83 $ .69 $2.89 $289 $289 $2.89 $ 69 $ 69 $ 99 $ 99 $ .69 $ .69 $ .47 $3.49 $3.49 $3.17 $3.17 $2.29 $245 $1.99 $1.99
S 6.71 S 6.71 S 6.00 S 6.00 S 6.00 S 6.00 S 6.14 S 6.S4 S 4.70 S 6.00 S 6.00 S 6.00 S 6.00 S10.B9 S10.B9 S 9.61 S 9.61 S B.73 S B.73 S 4.15 S 3.60 S 3.60 S B.69 S B.69 S 3.SB S 6.4B S 6.00 $ 6.00
TOTAL TOTAL CASES DOLLARS
Sold only by the case!
Bnns this order form to your nearby FCX between May 2 and May 21,1983.
HERE'S HOW THIS SPECIAL CASE LOT SALE WORKS:
1. Enter your order on this special form and return to your local participatlnq FCX Service Center. (No phone or mall-In ordon pIcaM.)
2. Itour order must be placed between May 2 and May 2L1983.
3. All merchandise must be picked up on June 9,10 or U1983 4 Payment It due when mcrchandlM It received.
NAME.
ADDRESS _ CITV/STATE. ZIP_
- PHONE.
SIGNATURE.
Th> Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.Tuesday, May 3,19837Nowj a pieananged line of credit up to $25,000, at a preferred rate of interest based on the prime.
Wachovia BankLin is a way to increase your personal financial resources by $2,500 to $25,000, without making a special trip to the bank when you need money. You just write a BankLine check. Arid the interest you pay is tied to the Wachovia prime rate.
If your line of credit is:
Your interest is:
$10,000 or over
Prime + 1%
$5,000 to $9,999
Prime + 1V2%
$2,500 to $4,999
Prime + 2V2%,
i!
Right now BankLine is just about the least expensive loan source youll find. Yom interest rate' is determined by the size of your credit line, so you
pay the same low rate no matter how much you borrow.
You can save interest by repaying quickly, or choose from several repayment options.
Since its all prearranged, you have absolute disaetion and control over when and how you use the money. Just write a special BankLine check. And there are no fees, so it costs you nothing unless you use it.
YourPersonaJ Banker can help you decide whether BankLine is right for you. Even if youre not a Wachovia customer, ask a Personal Banker about BankLine. Its a better way to borrow
money.w^clp/ia
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Under present North Carolina law, 17.99% is the mmdmum that can be charged for loans of this type. If the law should be changed, the 17.99% annual percentage rate ceiling f BankLine loans would be subject to change. There is a minimum annual percentage rate of 8%. *
Stock And Market Reports
Authorize Contract For Repair Of School Roof
Obituaries
Hogs
RALEGH, N.C. (AP (NCDA) - The trend on the North Carolina hog market today was 50 cents to 1.00 lower. Kinston 46.00. Clinton, Elizabethtown, Fayetteville, Dunn. Pink Hill. Chadbourn, Ayden, Pine Level. Laurin-burg and Benson 45.75. Wilson 45.25. Salisbury 45.00. Rowland 46.00. Spiveys Corner 45.00. Sows: all weights 500 pounds up; Wilson 43.00. Fayetteville
42.00. Whiteville 43.00, Wallace 42.00. Spivey's Corner 43.00. Rowland 43.00. Durham 44.00.
Poultry
' RALEIGH. N.C (.AP! (NCDA) - The North Carolina f o b. dock quoted price on broilers for this weeks trading was 41.25 cents. The final weighted average was 41.32 cents f o b. dock or equivalent. The market tone for next week's trading is steady to firm and the live supply is moderate for a moderate to good demand. Average wei^ts desirable. Estimated slaughter of broilers and fryers in North Carolina tuesday was
1.620.000. compared to 1.847.000 last Tuesday.
Hens
RALEIGH. N.C. (AP) (NCDA) - The .North Caro-* lina hen mabket was lower. Supplies adequate. Demand light. Prices paid per pound for hens over 7 pounds at farm for Monday and Tuesday slaughter was 15 cents.
NEW YORK (AP) - The stock market declined again 'today, adding to .Mondays losses.
The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials, down 21.87 Monday, fell 5.03 to 1,199.30 by noontime.
Losers outnumbered gainers by about 3 to 2 among New York Stock Exchange-listed issues.
Brokers said the market, apparently due for a pullback after a sharp rise in April, got a downward push Monday when aijL^nfluential Wall Street firm turned cautious on the outlook for stocks.
Barton Biggs, a managing director of Morgan Stanley & Co., said his firm had shortened its list of recommended stocks by half. After the markets recent surge, Biggs said. "I am inclined to be considerably more cautious about fresh buying."
Today prices drew some support at midmorning from traders who evidently had been waiting for a decline to ' do some buying. But an hour later the market was sinking again, sending the Dow Jones industrial average below 1,200 for the first time in a week.
Hecla Mining led the active list, up >2 at 22'8. A "juO.OOO-share block traded at 22^4.
The NYSEs composite index dropped .37 to 92.67. At the American Stock Exchange, the market value index was down 1.18 at 421.46.
Volume on the Big Board came to 37.18 million shares at noontime, against 42.51 million at the same point .Monday.
By JERRY RAYNOR Reflector Staff Writer
School board members Monday night authorized Superintendent Delma Blinson to draw up a contract covering appropriate arrangements with Robert C. Dunn Co. for the resaturation of a portion of the roof at Greenville Middle School.
Dunn was lo<t' bidder, at $6,700, for the roof project. Two other bids, at $8,512 and $7.576, were received.
In a report. Director of Grounds and Buildings Bob Stewart detailed statistics on school bus drivers in Greenville and Pitt Counfy as well as nationally.
According to Stewarts
report, Greenville currently has 23 adult drivers and eight high school student drivers. In Pitt County, the number is 20 adult drivers and 148 student drivers.
Thirteen accidents involving school buses in the two school systems have taken place this school year, nine in the county and four in the city. Of the four city accidents, two have irfvolved adult drivers and two high school students.
This indicates that the adult driving record is no better than the high school student driving record, Stewart commented.
Addressing the opinion of those who opt for all adult
NEW VORK
'AP' -.Midday slocks
.A.VIR ( orp
Hijgh
Lou
26",
Last 1 27
.AbblLabs
45",
45'",
, 45",
Allis Chaim
14',
14',
14',
Alcoa
32',
32',
32",
Am, Baker
13-,
13",
13',
AmBrands
53.
53',
53,
Amer Can
37",
37',
37',
.Am Cyan
43",
43',
43",
AmKamily
18".
'?!-
18",
.Am Moloh
8
8
AmStand
31",
31',
31',
Amer T4T
.67',
66's.
67
Beal Food
27",
27
27",
Beth Steel
21',
21',
21',
Boeing
. 37'-,
36",
37
Boise Cased
44',
43"^
44',
Borden
53',
52
53
Burlngt Ind CSX Coro
35',
35';
35",
62',
61",
61".
CarolwLl
21-,
21",
21*!
Celanese
6;
60",
61
Cent Soya
I5\
15',
15",
Champ Inl Chrysler *
26',.
26'v
26'-,
25',
24",
25',
CocCola
54,
54',
54,
Colg Palm
24
23",
23,
( omw Ed IS
26",
26',
26",
ConAgra
28
27",
28-
Conll Group
43
42",
43
DeltaAirl
43
42',
43
DowChem
32',
31",
32,
duPonl
46'-,
45",
46",
Duke Pow
23',
23',
23',
EastnAirL
7',
7
7
East Kodak
84',
83',
83",
EatonCp
41',
41
41',
Esmark s
63
63
63
Exxon
35",
35",
35",
F irestone
22
21
21",
FlaPowLi
37",
37',
37',
FlaProgress
19,
19",
19,
EordMot
50
49",
50
For McKess .
44',
44',
44'-;
Fuqua Ind GTE Corp
48
47\
47",
43.
43",
43",
GnDynam
50",
49",
50',
Gen.Elec
110
109 '
109'-.
GenlElec wi
55",
55
55's,
Gen Food
45'S.
44",
45
Gen .Mills
55",
55
55
Gen Motors
67",
66',
67".
Gen Tire
34',
34".
34'-
GenuParts
40
39",
40
GaPacif
29',
28",
29',
Goodrich
42',
42',
42-,
Goodyear
33',
33
33',
Grace Co
43,
43',
43,
GLNor Nek
43',
42',
42'-;
Greyhound Gull Oil
231,
22'H,
23',
34',
33,
34".
Herculeslnc
?6,
36",
36",
Honevwell
110",
109\
110'!
HospiCp s tng Rand IBM
50
49.
49,
46
45",
45,
115,
114,
115'-;
Intl Harv
10',
10',
10'-;
Int Paper
*55',
54",
55',
Int Reclil
24",
23",
24',
Int T4T
40",
40',
40A.
K mart
32",
31",
32'S.
KaisrAlum
18',
17",
17,
Kane .Mill
15,
15,
15,.
KanebSvc
15
14",
15
KrogerCo
Lockheed
37', 112, 1
37', 12', 1
37',
112",
Special Course To Protect Embassy
C.A.MP LEJEUNE, N.C. (AP) - North Carolina .Marines scheduled to relieve current U.S._ peacekeeping forces in Lebanon have been given special training to protect the U.S. Embassy against terrorist attacks, their commander said .Monday,
"There is special training that has been earmarked, specific things that deal with the rules of engagement and patrols, together with securi- ^ ty and engineering aspect:^' said Col. Tim Geraghty, commander of the 24th .Marine .Amphibious Unit.
Geraghty would not elabo
rate on the specifics of the training received as a result of the embassy bombing two weeks ago, but said the training was directly related to the attack.
Geraghty, whose unit will leave Camp Lejuene later this month to relieve Col. James Meads 22nd MAU, emphasized the Marines primary mission as peacekeepers, saying their priority role is to provide the Lebanese Army with the assistance required to provide control in its own country. But he acknowledged that terrorist activity is always possible.
drivers, Stewart said there are several drawbacks to employing adult drivers. The primary one is that adult drivers have to be transported from school to home and returned to school between morning and afternoon runs. Another drawback mentioned is that adult ' drivers are not available on short notice during the day if needed for things like closing schools early because of weath'er or in other emergencies.
Stewart mentioned, too, that at $3.68 per hour, the pay for adult drivers amounts to $55,20 a week, which he said was not sufficient to always insure a sufficient supply of adult drivers.
Touching on two factors being discussed at state level relative to school buses, Stewart said consideration is being given to requirements for no standees in buses and safety belts for all students. This would have a tremendous impact on busing and busing casts in North Carolina, Stewart said. It would require adding another five buses in Greenville and another four to five thousand buses statewide. You can imagine the cost that would entail.
In executive session, board members approved the career status of 16 teacher personnel beginning with school year 1983-83. These are people who have satisfactorily completed three years of probationary teaching in the city^ schools. Additionally, the board accepted the resignation of one teacher.
Betts
ROCKY MOUNT - Mrs. Lucy Wells Betts, 37, died in Cochran, Ga., Monday. Graveside services will be conducted at 11 a.m. Wednesday at the McTyeire Church Cemetery at Gold Rock by the Rev. Robert South.
Surviving are her husband, Robert Battle Betts of Cochran, Ga.; a daughter, Jean Kinsey Betts of the home; one son, Robert Battle Betts Jr. of the home, and her mother, Mrs. Jean Wells of Greenville.
The family will be at the home of Tom Betts, Route 1, Whitakers. Funeral arrangements are being handled by Johnson Funeral Home in Rocky Mount.
Worthington
AYDEN - Mr. Thurman Warden Worthington, 76, died Sunday. The funeral service was to be conducted at II a.m. today at Farmers Funeral Chapel in Ayden by the Rev. Roy L. Tumage. Burial was in the Winterville Cemetery.
Mr. Worthington was a farmer and a member Of the Winterville Missionary Baptist Church, the Greenville Moose Lodge and the Farm Bureau. He was also a charter member of the Winterville Ruritan Club.
Surviving are his wife.
Ownership Deal Closed
Mrs. Erma S, Worthington of the home; two sons, Thurman Wardell Worthington Jr. of Virginia Beach, Va., and Craig W. Worthington of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil; a daughter, Erma K.W. Leedy of Lin-colnton; three brothers, Julian Worthington and Alvah Worthington, both of Winterville, Fred
Worthington Jr. of Greenville; three sisters, Mrs. Lucile W. Hahn of New Bern, Mrs. Pauline Yelverton of Black 4^reek and Mrs. Elizabeth Dail of Greenville; five grandchildren and two greatgrandchildren.
Wholesale Auto Parts Complete Line
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758-1131
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TUESDAY 7;00 p.m Family Support Group at Family Practice Center 7;30 p.m. Tar River Civitan Club meets at First Presbvterian Church
WEDNESDAY
9:3 a m - Duplicate bridge at Planters Bank 13 p m - Duplicate bridge at Planters Bank 6:30p m. - KlwanisClubrheets 6:30 pm - REAL Crisis Intervention meets 7:30 p m - Winterville Jaycees meet at JayceeHut 8:00 p m - Pitt County Al-Anon Group meets at A.^ Bldg on Farmville hwy 8 (W p m. - Pitt County Ala-Teen Group meets at AA Bldg., f'armvillehwy.
8:00 p.m. - .Matrons Club meets with Hester Ellison
32
23'-, 23'-, ?3':
48A. 47 40'S,
40',, 39, 40',
SI'S, 61S 61\
25", 25', 25",
15\ I5'i
15,
36-S, 36
39:", 39
15:8. 15'", 15,
36'
DINNER THEATER SKIT ... Marty Warren trys his hand at being Superman in a skit at North Pitts Dinner Theater performance. A program titled Snowee White and the Seven
Chicks was performed along with a series of skits called Scenes of America. The dinner theater was at Wellcome Middle School cafeteria.
Effective May 1, the N.C. Eastern Municipal Power Agency closed on the remaining percentage of its ownership interests in seven generating units at four power plants on the Carolina Power & Light Co. system.
The agency said the additional ownership interest will provide NCEMPA with more of its own generating capacity, reducing the energy the agency must purchase from CP&L to provide service to NCEMPAs participating cities.
Since Dec. 30, NCEMPA has been providing allrequirements power to its 11 participating municipalities previously served at wholesale by Virginia Electric and Power Co. On Apr 22, 1982, the agency began delivering allrequirements power to its remaining 21 participating municipalities formerly served at wholesale by CP&L,
Greenville, Hamilton and Robersonville are three of the participating municipalities in the Vepco service area, while CP&L service area municipalities include Ayden, Farmville andHookerton.
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Sports DAIOf REFLECTORTUESDAY AFTERNOON, MAY 3, 1983
Moncrief Leads Bucks To Oust Celtics
WILWAIIKPP (API in fiuo fpioc iinHap Pnanh TVvn Dnpflnn/1 0 i
MILWAUKEE (AP) -Sidney Moncrief, who showed again why he might be the best guard in the National Basketball Association, also is a pretty fair prophet.
About 10 days ago, Moncrief told a teammate that he thought the Milwaukee Bucks not only could win their playoff series with Boston, but beat the Celtics in four games.
The Bucks achieved the improbable - some might say the unthinkable - Monday night. Led by Marques Johnson with 33 points and Moncrief with 25, the Bucks whipped the Celtics 107-93 to win their best-of-seven series in four successive games.
The capacity crowd of 11,052 at the Arena, picking up on a tradition of Chicago W'hite Sox fans, taunted the Celtics with organ-led renditions of Na-na-na-na! Na-na-na-na! Hey, He-ey, Goodby! at games end.
The Celtics trudged to their dressing room as losers of a best-of-seven playoff series for the first time in the franchises glorious history. The Bucks, who won a best-of-seven series for the first time
Pitt Shuts Out James Sprunt
KENANSVILLE - Pitt Community College rolled to a
6-0 victory over James Sprunt yesterday.
Pitt swept through the singles to sew up the match, and the doubles wer not played as a result.
Pitt is now 5-1 and travels to Bladen on Wednesday. Summary:
Will Jones (Pi d Grant Johnson. 6-2 6^.
Brian Williams iPi d Brarit Whitford. 6-1,6^
Richard Harrison i Pi d. Hicks Pigiord
7-6.6^),
Bobby Wilkins iPi d Ravi Romon, 6-1 6^1
Marvin Williams iPi d David Jones 61,6-2
Roy Richardson iPi d Scott Dunn 6-4 6-1
Doubles not held.
in five tries under Coach Don Nelson, advanced to the Eastern Conference finals against the 76ers, starting Sunday in Philadelphia.
Elsewhere in the NBA playoffs, Denver cut its deficit to 3-1 in the Western Conference semifinals with a 124-114 victory over San Antonio. Los Angeles, leading
Portland 3-1, plays host to the Trail Blazers in Game 5 tonight.
I felt we had the potential to win in four games, Moncrief said. The way our club has been developing, with Bob Lanier coming back, and after watching the Celtics in their series with Atlanta, I just felt gdod about our
chances.
And 1 think we can play better, he said. We only shot about 45 percent, although I dont think our defense can play any better.
Celtics guard Danny Ainge, booed almost every time he touched the ball after Nelson had called him a cheap-shot artist last week, said he
Caught From Behind
Milwaukees Sidney Moncrief (4) falls backwards as he is pulled down by Bostons Gerald Washington (43) during first quarter NBA playoff action Monday. Moncrief was going for a layup when Henderson caught him from behind. (AP Laserphoto)
SPRINGFIELD, Mass. (AP) - North Carolina basketball coach Dean Smith was inducted in the Basketball
UNCS Smith Enters Cage Hall Of Fame
Smith Chosen For Marlowe Award
BURLINGTON - Ken Smith. East Carolina assistant athletic director for public relations, has received the North Carolina Association of Sports Broadcasters J. Robert Marlowe Award.
The award is given annually for outstanding contributions to sports broadcasting and service to the NCASB. Smith is an associate member of the organization at this time, but prior to his association with ECU was a full-fle^ member, serving on the boara of directors for radio. He was in charge of the Ray Reeve Award presented to outstanding sportscasters on radio and television for their community service.
In addition to the award to Smith, ECU track preformer
Nathan McCorkle was recognized by the association as the Outstanding 3^A High School performer for the most recent high school season completed, McCorkle is a freshman from Newton and attended Newton-Conover High School.
Smith, while in charge of the ECU athletic sport promotion and sports information department, has continued to work with radio, being in charge of the Pirate Sports Network and handling color for the mens basketball broadcasts and the play-by-play for womens basketball. Jim Woods, who handles play-by-play for football and mens basketball is also a former Marlowe Award winner.
Sports Calendar
Editor's Note: Schedules are supplied by schools or sponsoring agencies and are subject to change without notice.
Todays Sports Baseball Belhaven at Jamesville Conley at West Carteret Greenville Christian at Nash-Edgecombe-Wilsoi>(6p.m.) < Mattamuskeet at Bear Grass Roanoke at Ahoskie (4 p.m.) Ayden-Grifton at Southern Nash (4p.m.)
Williamston at Tarboro (4 p.m.) North Pitt at Greene Central (8 p.m.)
Rocky Mount at E.B. Aycock (4 p.m.)
Greene Central at North Pitt JV (4p.m.)
Rocky Mount at Rose (7:30 p.m.)
Little League Moose vs. True Value Hardware Optimists vs, Coca-Cola Prep League Garris-Evans vs. Hendrix & Dail Tennis
Greene Central at Farmville Central (3:30p.m.)
Bear Grass at Bath Rose at Rocky Mount (3:30 p m ) SoftbaU Rose at Rocky Mount (4 p.m.) Belhaven at Jamesville Conley at West Carteret (4pm) Mattamuskeet at Bear Grass E.B. Aycock at Rocky Mount (4 p.m.)
Roanoke at Ahoskie (4 p.m.)
Greene Central at North Pitt (4 p.m.)
WUIiamston at Tarboro (7 30 p.m.)
Ayden-Grifton at Southern Nash (4p.m.)
Church League First Christian vs. Trinity Memorial Baptist vs. Peoples Baptist
Immanuel vs. Mi, Pleasant Maranatha vs Church of God Arlington Street vs. Faith Pentecostal
First Free Will vs. First Presbyterian ^Jarvis vs. Unity Black Jack vs. First Pentcostal Wednesdays!
Greene Central at Conley JV (4
p.m.)
Roanoke JV at North Edgecombe (4p.m.)
Little League Sportsworld vs. Lions Carroll & Associates vs. First Federal
Track
Eastern Carolina boys championships Rocky Mount at E.B. Aycock Tennis
Northeastern Conference meet at Tarboro Cape Fear at Pitt Rocky Mount at Greenville Juniors (3:30p.m.)
SoftbaU Jamesville at Chocowinity Industrial League Vermont American vs. ECU #1 ECU K2v8, Public Works Belvoir vs. Union Carbide Pitt Memorial vs. Coca-Cola CIS vs. Grady-White Carolina Leaf vs. WNCT-TV GUCOvs.TRW Wachovia vs. Cox
Women's League Fred Webb vs. Pitt Memorial Greenville Travle vs. PTA Prep Shirt vs. Players Retreat Copper Kettle vs. Burroughs-Wellcome
City League Subway vs. J.A.s Sunnyside Eggs vs. California Concepts Airborne vs. Liberty Warehouse PTA vs. Jimmys 66
Hall of Fame Monday, saying his entry into the hall of honor was red-faced.
This is a great privilege and honor, but Im also em-barassed, said Smith, There are so many great coaches in the game.
Dwarfed by the three forwards, Smith, a guard on the 1952 University of Kansas team that won the NCAA championship, said Id just like to thank the 140 lettermen who made this possible.
In his 22 years at North Carolina, Smiths teams have a 496-153 record and he is one of only two coaches in the games history whose teams have won the NCAA and NIT championships and the Olympic Gold Medal.
The Hall of Fame is not something that coaches think about, Smith said. When I got out of Kansas, I never pictured myself doing anything more than teaching math and maybe doing a little high school coaching.
Bill Bradley and Dave De-Busschere, teammates on the New York Knicks championship teams of the early 1970s, were also inducted into the Hall as were former Cin-^jnatti star Jack Twyman and two pioneers of the modem game, now dead, referee Lloyd Leith of San Francisco and Amateur Athletic Union leader Lou Wilke.
Others had more talent. We played togeather, said DeBusschere, now the Knicks general manager. The unselfishness and chemistry that developed between eight individuals that represented the Knicks was really something the people could identify with.
This is the first time in history that two individuals from the same team, who played the same position, have been inducted togeather and that is a very special honor, he said.
Bradley, now a U.S. senator ^m New Jersey, leaned against Knick Center Willis Reeds stained-glss plaque in the Hall and described the teamwork of those teams as as close to a perfect experience as I could imagine in basketball.
A two-time All-American at Princeton and Rhodes Scholar, Bradley was the first basketball player to win the AAUs Sullivan award as the nations outstanding amateur athlete before begining a scrambling 10-year pro career with the Knicks in the Na-
tional Basketball Association.
The Senate, he said, is not a lot different. Yoi are working with a group of people for a common goal. Thats the Democratic process.
With the installa^n._.of Bfadiey and DeBusschere, four members of those 1971 and 1973 championship teams are now in the Hall of Fame.
DeBusschere, one of the games best defensive forwards during his 11-year pro career in Detroit and New York was presented for induction by Reed. Bradley was introduced by Jerry Lucas, the former Ohio State All-American and Hall of Famer, who shared the pivot spot with Reed.
' Twyman, the third player to be inducted Monday, also remembered a teammate.
There is no question that Maurice Stokes would have been a Hall of Famer, Twyman said outside the special memorial to his Royals teammate that he helped establish in the basketball shrine.
Twyman, a standout at the University of Gincinatti, who averaged 19.2 ^nts a game during his ll-yeai\pro career with the Royals in^ochester and Gincinatti, becai^Stokes legal guardian when hb was striken with encephalitis in 1958. He cared for his teammate until Stokes death in 1970.
Duke Aide To UofS
DURHAM (AP) - Duke .University assistant basketball coach Bobby Dwyer has been named head basketball coach at the University of the South inSewanee,Tenn.
Dwyer replaces Rick Jones, who resigned following an 8-17 season. Dwyer will assume his duties September 1, South Athletic Director Water Bryant said.
Dwyer, a 1974 graduate Of Wake Forest where he played three years and captained the team his senior year, has been a Blue Devil assistant the past three season after being an assistant at Army five years.
"After eight years as an assistant, it was the right time for a change, Dwyer said. I am confident of my ability as a head coach. The position at the University of the South was very appealing to me. Im excited about the opportunity to run my own program.
couldnt imagine the Bucks playing any better.
Whatever five players they had on the court played great, Ainge said. They played as good as they can play. Its hard to beat a team like that when theyre playing as well as they can.
The Bucks fell behind by eight points etirly, but quickly recovered behind 15 first-quarter points by Johnson and led 46-37 at halftime.
Celtics Coach Bill Fitch, desperate for more scoring punch from his guards, started reserve M L. Carr in place of Ainge to open the third quarter. But Carr couldnt stay with Moncrief, who broke free for two quick layups as the Bucks widened their lead to 53-38 less than 2>2 minutes into the third quarter.
The spread reached 67-47 late in the period before the Celtics, using various forms of trap defenses, briefly closed to within 10 points.
However, Johnson sank a 20-footer as the third quarter ended. Junior Bridgeman scored on a drive and a long jumper and Brian Winters sank a 15-footer as the Bucks regained control at 82-65 with 10:40 to play.
Their trap gave us some problems for a while, but we had a nice lead and I wanted us to spread it out and work some clock, Nelson said. Marques hit two big jumpers in that series that were really important.
Nuggets 124, Spurs 114 Kiki Vandeweghe scored 37 points and Mike Evans added
ECU Sports Hal) Nominations
The East Carolina University Sports Hall of Fame is seeking qualified nominees for possible induction for the 1983 class and classes thereafter.
To qualify for induction, one must have brought outstanding recognition to themselves and to the university by their participa|ion in East Carolina University intercollegiate athletics. A nominee must not have been connected with the university in the capacity for which the nominee is being elected for a minimum of five academic years.
The Sports Hall of Fame Committee is especially interested in nominees of years prior to the 1960s.
Anyone wishing to submit a nomination should do so by June 1. Complete information regarding the nominees participation iun ECUs athletics- should be included, along with current mailing address for the nominee.
All nominations should be mailed to: ECU Sports Hall of Fame, c/o Office of Athletic Public Relations, Minges Coliseum, East Carolina University, Greenville, N.G. 27834.
Jr. Netters Top Kinston
Greenville Junior Boys tennis team, sponsored by the Recreation and Parks Department, defeated Kinston,
14-2 Monday and is now 5-2 on the year.
Greenville will complete its season on Wednesday at 3 p.m. at River Birch Tennis Center against Rocky Mount. Summary:
a career-high 23 to help Denver stay alive against San Antonio.
"I guess that we are still buried alive, but were coming back to life, Denver Coach Doug Moe said. actually had three pretty good performances in a' row, and our players are getting healthier. You cant get the fourth one until you get the first one.
The hole we dug for ourselves in the first half was almost insurmountable, said San Antonio Coach Stan Albeck, referring to a 22-point halftime deficit. Give Denver credit. They had their backs to the wall and came out and played a great game.
The Spurs now go hack home for Game 5 on Wednesday night.
Evans sank three jumpers
Hampants Down Three; Chargers Upset Farmville
Rose High Schools gof team came away with three victories yesterday in a four-way match held at Brook Valley Country Club.
The Rampants finished the day with a 328 total, while Northeastern of Elizabeth City was second with 356. Manteo finished a distance third with 462, while Williamston High School did not turn in its final scores.
Jordy Smith led Rose and the field with a 79 from the blue tees, while Craig Davies and Brian Hill each had 82. John Jordan and Pete McCurdy each carded an 85.
Northeastern was paced by Harry Umphlett with an 81, while Kim Davis had an 85. Pete Price added a 93 and Bill Tadlock,a97.
Manteo was led by Eric Jahnson with a" 94 and Williamston by Jeff McKeel with a 91.
Rose, now 11-6, plays host to Kinston and Wilson Hunt on Thursday.
Ayden-Grifton 327
Farmville C..........333
;RIFTON - Ayden-Grifton High Schools golf team stunned Farmville Central, gaining a six-stroke victory in an Eastern Carolina (Conference golf match yesterday at Indian Trails.-The Chargers Warren Agee finished the day with medalist honors with a 76, while Andv Martin added a 79. Brian Heath had 83 and Mark Davis 89 for a 327 total.
Farmville Central was led by Alan Wooten with an 81, while Gary Hobgood carded an 82 and Scott Lewis and 83. Mel Williams rounded out the Farmville scoring with an 87, giving the Jaguars a 333 total.
It marked the first time Ayden-Grifton had beaten Farmville Central in a golf match.
Farmville returns to action on Thursday, hosting Zebulon, while Ayden-Grifton is idle until next Monday when it .travels to Farmville Central.
as the Nuggets ran off 10 straight points to take a 26-14 lead with 4:53 left in the opening quarter. Evans, who played only half of the quarter, scored 13 points and Denver held a 40-29 edge at the end of the period.
After the Spurs cut the deficit to six. they went scoreless for four minutes while Denver scored 14 straight points for a 66-44 lead. It was 72-50 at halftime.
Johnny .Moore, who led the Spurs with 27 points, had 13 of them in the third quarter as San Antonio cut the deficit to 98-85 at the end of the quarter. In the final period, the closest the Spurs got was six, points in the last minute.
Rose Jayvees Top Gryphons
Rose High Schools junior varsity baseball team avenged their only loss of the year yesterday with an 8-7 win over Rocky Mount Mark .Nver paced the Rose hitting with two, as Rose scored twice in the bottom of the seventh inning to pull out the victory.
Steve Wall was credited with the win.
Roses Rampant Cubs are now 5-1 on the season, and return to action Thursday -at Wilson Beddingfield. ,
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10The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Tuesday, May 3,1983
Power Shows, Hes Got If As He Hurls Reds To Win Over Phillies
Astro Projection
Houston Astros second baseman Bill Doran flies through the air as the reaches for a wide throw from the catcher attempting to stop Brian Giles of
the New York Mets from stealing second in the sixth inning Monday night at Shea Stadium. Giles slid safely under the wide throw. (AP Laserphoto)
Leonard Ends Yank Jinx
K.ANS.AS CITY. .Mo. i.APi -Over the past five years, Dennis Leonard has been one^ of the best pitchers in the American League. But he could not beat the .\ew York Yankees.
Since whipping the New Yorkers on Aug. 24, 1978. Leonard had lost five straight until he combined with Dan Quisenberry in a 4-1 Kansas City victory Monday night. Leonard swore he did not know exactly how' long his Yankee streak had stretched.
Lloyd .Moseby and Willie
fourth, including two-run home runs by Amos Otis and Leon Roberts. Otis', home run followed Frank White's single. Roberts' smash followed Hal .McRae's double and bounced off the foul pole in left field.
"What usually happens' when you hit a ball into the corner is you get too much top hand on it and it goes foul, said Roberts. 'Tll hit 20 or 30 down the line in a year and most of them will go foul. 1 was just fortunate that the wind kept that one in play."
The Yankees scored in the
Upshaw hit two-run homers to/^eventh when Butch Wynegar power Toronto to a 6-5 victory doubled and scored on a single
over Texas, and Ben Oglivi'e extended his hitting streak to 15 games as he drove in three runs oiy a sacrifice fly and a single in Milwaukees'8-4 victory over the Chicago White Sox in, the only other American League games Monday night.
"Five years'? I honestly didnt realize that, the hard-throwing right-hander said. "I knew the Yankees were one of the teams I have a career losing record against, but I just havent faced them that many times, either. Leonard said. 'Theyve always had a good left-'han-ded-hitting team. I sure didnt know it had been five years, though:
Leonard, 3-2, went seven innings giving up five hits and recording two walks and two strikeouts. Yankee starter Bob Shirley, who shut out the Royals last week in New York, retired the first eleven batters before Kansas City erupted for four straight hits in the
by Roy Smalley. In the ninth, a'gatfl^ Quise'nberry, New York loaded the bases with two out on Graig Nettles' double, Oscar Gamble's infield single and a walk. But Quisenberry, earning his fifth save, ended the game by getting Ken Griffey on a fl'v ball,
Yankee .Manager Billy .Martin used three relief pitchers, Rudy .May, George Frazier and Rich Gossage. to quell a Kansas City threat in the eighth, Gossage retired .McRae on a fly ball with the bases loaded and two out.
"They came in apd did a good job. .Martin said of his bullpen. 'I'm happy for Goose. It's got to be a confidence builder.
Blue Jays 6, Rangers 5
.Moseby and Upshaw slammed two-run homers for Toronto, offsetting solo homers by Texas' Buddy Bell. Dave Hostetler and Larry Parrish. Upshaw hit his fifto home run of the season in the
Scoreboard, Ump Battle Continuing
By The Associated Press
To show controversial plays on electronic scoreboards, or not to show them. That is the question,
Buzzie Bavasi, general manager of the California Angels, pledges his club will forge ahead with them, especially after several close calls contributed to the Angels' 10-9 loss Sunday to Boston. The Pittsburgh Pirates, however, have promised to be more selective.
"We've protected them (the umps) long enough by not putting the replays on scoreboard,^ Bavasi said. "Well, were going to start putting them up. Thats all there is to it. Sure, we blew a 6-0 lead (Sunday), but they (the umps) helped. Some of those calls were pretty ridiculous.
But Harding Peterson, general manager of the Pirates, is ready to go the other way after meeting with umpire Harry Wendelstedt and his crew between games of Saturday doubleheader against San Diego.
Wendelstedts umpiring team was angered by three replays shown on the Three Rivers Stadium scoreboard.
"Were not so vain that we dont want anybody to know if weve missed a play. Wendelstedt said. But we all have families. And we dont need to encourage any of these people to throw anything. I'm proud of what I call. Its not whether or not I made a mistake. Its what it provokes.
Wendelstedt said Peterson assured him that no more controversial plays would be shown. And June Schaut, a Pirate employee in charge of the scoreboard, said there had been no attempt to embarrass the umpires. "I blew it, she said. "I just blew it.
However, Bavasi believes the umps were the ones who blew it in Anaheim and intends to show the next mistake on his scoreboard. If he does, he will run afoul of the umpires association and its general counsel, Richie Phillips.
"This has been a problerii for some time, Phillips said. "It really started about five years ago in Atlanta when the umpires had to leave the field for about a half hour because the replays caused cups and bottles to come flying down. I protested to the league presidents and they agreed that teams should not show controversial plays on the scoreboards.
Phillips said if clubs did not comply with that rule, the umpires might order games forfeited.
"If something like that happens and the umpires felt their physical well-being endangered, they will forfeit the games, he said,
"Both league presidents have bfen under pressure from the clubs to loosen up on the plays they can show. They, want to use the bang-bang plays, and I can unbderstand that. But the umpires refuse to be placed in jeopardy for the sake of the scoreboards.
first inning and Moseby hit his third in the third to snap a 4-4 tie.
Toronto reliever Randy Moffitt worked three innings to record his first save of the season after three victories. In 82-3 innings this season over six games, the veteran reliever, who pitched his way onto the Blue Jays in spring training, has allowed only one hit and no runs,
Moffitt came into the game in a tight spot, taking over with runners on first and second and no one out. He struck out Bell, then got Parrish and Hostetler on grounders.
"I wonder when its going to end, said Moffitt. This was my longest outing and also my most satisfying. You cant start the season and expect a start like this. It has helped my confidence and I think it has helped the team.
Moffitt felt he had an edge over the Texas hitters.
"1 knew that Bell is one of the toughhest hitters in the league, but 1 guess Ive got a slight advantage because this is the first time I've seen these guys. I put the ball where 1 wanted it to go.
Texas Manager Doug Rader, who faced Moffitt in the National League, said the pitcher has changed his style.
"He doesnt throw like he used to. Rader said. "All hes throwing now is breaking balls.
Brewers 8, White Sox 4 Oglivie drove in three runs
Coach Out At Baptist
CHARLESTON, S.C. (AP)
- Baptist baseball coach Bill Bustle will retire following the Bucaneers season finale against Armstrong State at home May 3, the college announced.
Bustle, 63, is completing his 12th season as coach at Baptist with a lifetime record of 176-175-2.
Baptist, with the two games today left to play, is 8-21 this year, their second losing season in a row. The Bucs finished 18-19 last season.
In announcing his Retirement Monday, Bustle said, "That time comes in everyones life if they live that long. My health is not what it was and I feel by coaching as 1 did when I played when you cant give 100 [^rcent, then you are depriving someone else of that position.
Bustle was named associate baseball coach at Baptist in 1971, He became head^oaclL the next year after Coach 3P Kerr suffered a stroke.
. Bustle was also grounds department superintendent' until 1980.
He is the father of former ECU football assistant coach, Ricky Bustle, now with the USFLs Arizona Wranglers.
with a sacrifice fly and a single and Cecil Cooper cracked a two-run homer. Oglivie, named AL Player of the Week earlier in the day, extended his hitting streak with his two-run sin^e in the seventh inning. He also drove in Milwaukees first run in the second inning with a sacrifice fly after Ted Simmons doubled and went to third on a passed ball. Cooper hit his third home run of the season in the third after Paul Molitor walked.
"If lean keep things in their proper, perspective and do my best for the sake of the team, the honors will come, said Oglivie"! give 100 percent each game and I consider being Player of the Week an honor to cherish.
However, Oglivies streak of an extra-base hit a game ended at seven, two short of the league record set by Babe Ruth in 1921.
"I was told about that and I wish I hadnt known it, said Oglivie. It taxed my mind, but its just one of those things you cant help.
By The Associated Press
The Cincinnati Reds have finally fielded a power-packed lineup ... with Gary Redus and Eddie Milner supplying the power hitting and Ted Power supplying the power pitching.
Power, a burly 28-year-old right-hander, got his first start of the season Monday night -he had pitched only four innings previously - because Mario Soto, the ace of the Reds staff, was ailing. He came through with his first complete game in seven major league starts Power was 2-4 in parts of 1981 and 1982 with the Los Angeles Dodgers - as the Reds defeated the Philadelphia Phillies 5-2.
I wasnt sure I could last nine innings because I hadnt pitched very much, said Power, who tamed the Phillies on seven hits.
In other National league action, Nolan Ryan struck out 12 in 72-3 innings before suffering was appeared to be a severe hamstring pull as the Houston Astros edged the New York Mets 3-2 and the Pittsburgh Pirates defeated the Los Angeles Dodgers 5-1.
Power had only two bad moments against the Phillies.In the first inning, the Phillies got a single, wak and double from the first three batters, good for one run.Pitching coach Bill Fischer came out and talked with Power, who promptly struck out Mike Schmidt and Tony Perez and retired Garry Maddox on a grounder.
With two out in the seyenth. Power gave up a single and double, bringing out Manager Russ Nixon. ,
"I had no intention of taking him out, Nixon said. 1 wanted to give him a break, let him get his thoughts together again.
Russ gave me a second chance and I was able to take advantage, said Power, who got Pete Rose on a grounder.
While Power, who was purchased from the Dodgers Albuquerque farm club in the Pacific Coast League last October, was becoming the first pitcher to go the route against the Phillies this season, Gary Redus, toesh off the disabled list, hit two home runs and Eddie Milner hit one.
Redus, who had been out three weeks with a groin injury, led off the third inning with his third home run of the
season to snap a 1-1 tie and Milner followed with his first of the year.
Astros 3, Mets 2 Nolan Ryan struck out 12 batters and scattered nine hits before leaving in the eighth inning with a pulled hamstring and Ray Knight drove in the tying and winning runs with a homer and sacrifice fly.
Ryan, who struck out 10 or more in a game for the 146th
time in his career and broke Walter Johnsons 56-year-old major league career strikeout record last week, boosted his car^r total to 3,521 as he fell to the ground after firing a third strike past Wally Backman for the second out in the bottom of the eighth with runners at second and third.
The Astros snapped a 2-2 tie in the ei^th against Mets starter Mike Torrez on a
Sneaky Score Irks Arizona
Youth Baseball
Jaycees...........6
Kiwanis ..........5
The Jaycees opened the 1983 f^orth State Little League, season yesterday with a 9-5* victory over the Kiwanis.
The Jaycees grabbed the lead in the second inning of the contest, pushing over four runs. The Kiwanis rallied for two in the top of the third cutting the lead in half, however.
In the bottom of the third, the Jaycees put it out of reach, scoring two more. Carlester Grumpier reached on a two-out single and scored when Camilla Brown doubled. Jonathan West reached on an error, moving Brown to second, and she scored from there on a double steal.
The Jaycees added one in the fourth and two more in the fifth, while the Kiwanis scored three more in the fifth.
Mario Davis, Neal Creach, Michael Thompson and Grumpier each had two hits for the Jaycees. Jamie Hale had a pair ot lead the Kiwanis hitting.
Wellcome .......10
Exchange.........5
Wellcome pushed over six runs in the bottom of the fifth
inning and gained a 10-5 Tar Heel Little League baseball victory in the opening game of the season yesterday.
Wellcome took the lead with two run in the first inning, but Exchange tied it up with two In the third. Wellcome went back out with two in the bottom of the third, 4-2.
Then, in the fifth, Wellcome put it away. Jared Dancy led off, reaching on an error as did Rip Perkins. With one away, Judd Grumpier walked, loading the bases. Chris Brown reached on an error, scoring Dancy, and Adam Nobles reached on a fielders choice, bringing in Perkins on an error on the play. Jason Browder reached on a fielders choice, scoring Grumpier, and Josh Potter sacrificed Brown over. Nobles and Browder both scored when Shawn Ervin singled.
Exchange tried to rally, but came up well short, shoring but three in the sixth, one on a lead off homer by Daryl Moore and the other two on a homer by Maurice Battle.
Brown, who tossed a three-hitter at Exchange, led the Wellcome hitting with two, while Moore had two to pace the Exchange.
OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) -Fred Besana and Alan Risher did some impressive passing, for a total of 555 yards, but it was a 3-yard quarterback sneak that caused the big fuss.
Besana of the Oakland Invaders scored on the short run with 27 seconds left in Monday nights United States Football League game, and his team won 34-20 over the Arizona Wranglers.
He surprised the Arizona defense and enraged Wrangler Coach Doug Shively, who felt that football etiquette called for Oakland to just kill the clock and settle for a 27-20 victory.
Gant Takes Point Lead
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (AP) - Harry Gant, who finished fourth in last weekends Winston 500 stock car race, has vaulted to the lead in the Winston Cup Grand National point standings after eight events of the 30-race I^CAR season.
Gants finish in Sundays race at Alabama International , Motor Speedway hiked bir 'point total to 1,187. Bobby Allison, last weeks standings leader, is second with 1,171.
Neil Bonnett is third with . 1,133, followed by Joe Rut-tman, 1,116; Bill Elliott, 1,093, and Winston 500 winner Richard Petty, 1,060.
Rounding out the top 10 are Dick Brooks, 1,058; Ricky Rudd, 1,013; Terry Labonte, 985, and Lake Speed, 969.
Cale Yarborou^ continues to lead the circuit in money-winnings with $171,170. Two-time defending Winston Cup champion Darrell Waltrip, currently 12th in the point standings with 953, has won $154,185.
Gant is third on the earnings list with $133,680, followed by Petty, $133,320; Allison, $132,770; Elliott, $119,090; Ruttman, $110,530; Bonnett, $109,990; Dale Earnhardt, $101,276, and Buddy Baker, $83,640.
Their quarterback fell down on the ball the play before that. He didnt have to do that, run the ball, Shively said. "Well, he can do what he wants. But hell have to live with himself.
Besana ^id he noticed that Shively was upset, but the quarterback said, "It was a coaching decision, not mine. We talked about it on the sidelines and said, Hey, every team in the division is 4-5.
single by Dickie Thon, a stolen base, an infield hit by Jose Cruz and Knights sacrifice fly. Knights second home run of the season had tied the score in the sixth.
Im going back to Houston on Tuesday and let my doctors examine' the injury, said Ryan, who has 3,521 career strikeouts. It wouldnt suprise me if Im out at least two to three weeks. As soon as my leg touched the ground it just popped. It was like somebody shot me.
I didnt feel anything all game long. No tightness, nothing.I never had an injury like this. Pulling a leg is a pretty serious thing to a power pitcher. Its got me worried. Pirates 5, Dodgers 1
Rick Rhoden scattered nine hits, Dave Parker and Lee Mazzilli each drove in two runs and Tony Pena homered for Pittsburgh. Parker, who had driven in only one run all season, collected his RBIs on a grounder in the first inning and a double in the third. Mazzilli and Lee Lacy and each collected three hits to pace Pittsburghs 14-hit attack against Jerry Reuss and two relievers. Lacy, the NL stolen
When Shiveley .rehashes the game he might decide he Luld have dfne the same
thing.
All four Pacific Division teams, including Oakland and Arizona, are 4-5. At the end of the season, deadlocks will be broken by tie-breaking formulas which include point differentials.
Arizonas Risher passed for 337 yards and two touchdowns, his 16th and 17th, and Besana had two TDs and 218 yards passing. Rishers final throws were from his own end zone, after USFL-leading punter Stan Talley of Oakland sent a 60-yard boot to the Arizona 3-yard line.
After one play, on which Besana fell down with the ball, Arizona called a timeout.
1 said to the coaches that we kick a field goal because we might need the points at the end of the season, fullback Jairo Pearanda said.
Its certainly against my philosophy to call a play like that, Invaders Coach Johnr-Ralston said. But, especially in our division, those points could make the difference.
Pearanda felt that no apology was necessary.
"When we beat them 24-0 in the season opener, Shively was mad when we scored a touchdown with eight minutes left. he said.
caught for only the second time this season.
Pair Take Putt Win
, The team of David Beacham and John Lowe took first place in a best ball tournament held last night at the Greenville Putt-Putt Golf and Games.
The duo carded an 82, 26 shots under par. They aced nine of the last ten holes for the score.
Second place went to the team of Jake Loften and Mike Shane, who carded an 87, 21-under-par. Third were Ron Newton and Alan Elder with a 89,19-under.
Jack Quinn of the 1929 Philadelphia Athletics was the oldest pitcher ever to start a Worid Series game. Quinn was 45 years, three months and seven days when he started the fourth game of the 29 series against the Chicago Cubs.
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Traded Elway Inks Bronco Pact m
DENVER (AP) Stanford bODlaVinBintheNFL. Hroft _ ho 'Umnnnc' i tinn rathpr than nlav for tho nnartorhanlf I'\ro cnon mmnmrnm
The Daily Reflector. Greenville, N C.-Tuesday, May 3, laga
-11
DENVER (AP) Stanford quarterback John Elway. who threatened to play professional baseball rather than join the Baltimore Colts, has signed with the Denver Broncos, saving Pm '^ad to
be playing in the NFL The Broncos acquired Elway from the Colts Monday for offensive lineman Chris Hinton of Northwestern - the fourth pick overall in the National Football League
draft - the Broncos 1984 first-round draft pick and quarterback Mark Herrmann.
Elway, picked No. 1 by Baltimore in the draft, had said he would sign with the New York Yankees organiza-
Trainer To Saddle Up Three For Derby Run
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) "Its a quality game not a quantity game, but we think we have the quality. says trainer Wayne Lukas, who feels he isnt just playing a numbers game in the Kentucky Derby!*
The California-based Lukas will be the first to saddle three horses in the Derby since 1946 when he sends Marfa. Balboa Native and Total Departure to the post at Churchill Downs in Saturdays 109th running of Americas most famous horse race.
"Theres no pressure when youre here and you have one that can run.said Lukas, who saddled Partez and Muttering in the previous two Derbies without success. "But when youre here with a horse that cant run theres pressure. I think they belong.
The most highly regarded of Lukas charges is Marfa, a rambunctious colt, who has won three of nine starts this year, including the Jim Beam Spiral Stakes and the Santa Anita Derby.
Because of Marfa. Lukas' entrv is the likely favorite for the 14-mile test for 3-year-olds. The withdrawal Monday of highly regarded Copelan, who was injured in the Blue Grass Stakes last week, and Noble Home, who has contracted a fever, will probably lower the
TANK MCMNAIU
odds on the Lukas entry. But Marfa is suspect because of his inability to keep a straight course.
Lukas is a part owner of Marfa along with Texas businessmen Bob French and Barry Beal. They named the colt after a small town in Texas, which, incidentally, is celebrating its centennial on Derby day.
Lukas stable appeared go into decline until Marfa, Balboa Native, and Total Departure came around in recent months.
'* Balboa Native, owned by Robert H. Spreen, has won two of five starts this year, including the Lousiana Derby March 27. The son of Native Royalty "is a one-dimensional horse, a stayer whos going to run down horses in the stretch. according to Lukas.
Balboa Native is coming off a seventh-place finish in the April 16 Arkansas Derby, but he could be running at the finish if there is a realistic pace, Lukas said.
Total Departure, owned by Reblot Stable, was beaten by a head by Caveat in last Saturdays one-mile Derby Trial. The son of Greek Answer finished fourth in the Santa Anita Derby after scoring his first victory this year in the Baldwin Stakes at Santa Anita March 23.
tion rather than play for the Colts.
"Im definitely thrilled to be here, said Elway, who flew to Denver for a news conference Monday night. "Its something I didnt expect to happen. Im glad to be playing in the NFL and Im glad to be playing fpr the Denver Broncos.
Edgar F Kaiser Jr., owner of the Broncos, said Elway was signed to a series of five one-year contracts, but he would not disclose financial terms.
Kaiser said he had contacted Colts president Robert Irsay on draft day, made a tentative offer for Elway and was ^d no keep in touch, he saidr-On- Monday, Kaiser called Irsay again and completed the deal in day-long negotiations.
"The trade was good for both football teams, Denver Coach Dan Reeves said( "They (the Colts) were happy with what they got and we were happy with what we got.
"1 think this is a great deal. I'm glad, first of all, that hes in the NFL, and if hes playing in the NFL, 1 thank God hes going to play with us.
Reeves, a former player and assistant coach with the Dallas Cowboys, added. "He has a quality Ive seen in only one other quarterback. Roger Staubach. He can win a ballgame strictly with his arm. Hes the best
by Jeff Millar & Bill Hinds
SCOREBOARD
Rec Softball Baseboll Standings
-------- By The AsaocUtel Press
, Industrial League t(merican league
ECL#2..............(MX) (X)0 1-1 EASTDIVISION
ECU Ml..............021 041 x-8 W LPct. GB
Leading liitters: Emi - Bob Lutz mmwTuIcm I'z ? m ~
3-3, Bill Byrd 2-3; E#2 - David S n 9 Im
While 2-3r Toronto lo to 500 14
Cleveland 10 11 476 2
B-WellcomeM2 ....... 021 000 0-3 s n m ^
Empire Brush*! ...420 100 x-7 WESTDIVISION
Leading hitters: BW - Gene California 13 9 59i -
Tuttle 2-3, John Hill 2-3, Dwight 13 9 .591 -
Lewis 2-3: EB-James Parker 2-3, Te\"aT \l u .C
JoeGantz2-3, MmnLta I? 12 I!'
Chicago 8 12 400 4
Vermont American, 300 120 1- 7 Seattle s 17 320 6',.
B-Wellcome!......000 744 x-15 Torontoe
Leading hitters: VA - Sheldon .Milwaukee8, Chicago4
Mebean 3-3: BW - Gary Brock 2-3, Kansas City 4, New York 1
fWk Langley 2-4. Only games scheduled
f# , Tuesdays Games
Fire^ghters 210 671 5-22 o-n**nt
Graciy White........602 001 0- 9 California (John 2-11 at Baltimore
Leading hitters: FF - Leonard ' Flanagan3-0). mi
Sawyer 3-5, Lynnie Owens 3-4; GW
- .Alan Coburn 3-4. Milwaukee ' Porter O-Oi at Chicago
(Dotson3-11, mi
Public Works..........641 305-19 Finland iBIyleven l-3i at Minnesota
Rplvoir Oiift iftrt* 1 ivaslillo 11 >. in)
Leading hitters': PW - J.C. Cit/.'sp),uorff-m
Daniels3-4 (HR). Detroit iPetry 3-0i at Seattle (YoUng
2-3i,mi
Union Carbide 007 173-18 Texas
PiJ) ^^^OFial 200 010- 3 California at Baltimore, mi
LeadingJiiUers^M Jon Bentz Oakland at Boston, (n) ,
3-3, Alan Thompson 2-3. Rico Pina Milwaukw at Chicago, mi
?.? Iir _ Inev-^mith 3 4 Kon Cleveland at Minnesota, In I
raltis93 New York at Kansas City, mi
J Detroit at Seattle, mi.
Coca-Cola..............277 12-19 NATION^ LEAGUE
Empire Brush *2........003 01- 4
Leading hitters: EB Randy st Louis ii e 647 -
Cox 2-3, Tommy Blakeney 2-2, CC Philadelphia 12 8 600 1,
- Ronnie Garris 4-4, Chuck Jenkins .. n ^79 i
M,P.rr,J.hnsonH (X
Chicago 6 IS- 286 7
Carolina Leaf 323 911 1-20 WESTDIVISION
Enforcers 112 010 1-6 Adanta 15 5 750 -
Leading hitters: CL - Melvin ' anctnnaif I3 \\ 2 4
Toler 4-5, Ricky Cradle 4-5; E san Diego 10 12 455 6
Harold Hines 3-4, Steve Compton Houston 9 15 375 8
3.4 San Francisco 7 15 318 9
Monday 's Games ,,, , , Houston 3, New York 2
Women S League ^ Cincinnati 5. Philadelphia 2
PTA....................404 8/T7 Pittsburgh 5. Los Angeles 1
B-Wellcome............000 00- 0 Only games scheduled
Leading hitters: PT -- Joyce Atlanta iSnVirit Montreal
Barnhill 3-4, Rhesa Mufford 2-3, iSandersonS-n, inn
Ronda Phillips 3-3. Houston (Niekro 0-2 at New York
iSwanl-l),(n)
Fred Webb.........320 04(111-20 ,B?roVi7nf
Prepshirt 104 001- 6 l, Louis iForsch l-2i at-San Diego
Leading hitters: FW - Claudia iDravecky3-ii,mi
Mznning2-3, Emma Hardy 3-5. ipena*3n*i' Angeles
r. .. w . o..r Chicago'(Trout 1-41 at San Francisco
PittMemonal..........365 67 27 iLaskey 1-41,mi
Wachovia ..............001 00- l Wednesdays Games
Leading hitters: PM - Alice Chicago at s;an Francisco
Km,c3.5.DeM,l.BeddaM2X Sm.!'*','!!,,
Cincinnati at Philadelphia, mi
CopperKetile.......200 023 0 7 St ImuisatSanDiego,mi
GvilleTravel...... 171 030 x-12 PittsburghatLosAngeles,mi
Leading hitters: CK - Betty -----
Biouni2 3. Marsha Daniels 2-3 Basebail Leaders
I 17TheAiiocUtedPress
PTA 522 2-21 BAn.NWK.SSnd, S..
Liberty............. 100 130 0- 5 Hiego. 390; TPerez, Philadelphia, 370.
Leading hitters: LW - Wesley Cincin-
Doug Phillips 4-5. Charlie Rose 4-5, Philadelphia, 20, Murphy, Atlanta, 17 Burton Robinson 3-4 (HRI. Bonilla. San Diego, 16; Matthews,
Philadelphia, 16; Morgan, Philadelphia,
Airborne........024 103 2618 KBI Murphy, Atlanta 22 Hendrick
Pantana Bob's.....304 110 30-12 StLouls. 21! Kennedy sin d2i '
Leading hitters: PB - Scott Bench, Cincinnati, 18, Dawson. Montreal,
Taylor 3-4. Doug Bell 3-4; A - Joe
Askew3-5, Ray Thigpen 3-5. nedSDiego,'l2''. Oncmnati
' 31, Garvey, San Diego, 29; Thon,
Jimmys66 ..........(12)22 10-17 Houston 28
Metal Craft.............020 00- 2 *
Leading hitlers: MC - BNl Su,7;^5rr'iWwith6
Morns 2-3; J - Linwood Brown 3-4, TRIPLES-Oawson, Montreal, 3 Green Mike Conger 2-3 (HR). Stl^is 3; Moreno, Houston, 3; 13 are
tiedwllh2
Or^monl's" Ml m~21
Ormond S Ml 217-21 StLouis, S; SchmidL Philadelphia, 6 4
Leading hitters: 0 Ricky aretiedwiihs.
Ratley 4-5, Stuart Brooker 3-4; W - ,'*
Mike Sampson 4-5, Dennis Cristiano Angeles, 9, Moreno, Houston, 7,* Wilson*
3-4 New York. 7
PITCHING '3 decisionsi-Gale. Cincinnati. .3-0, 1UOO. 2 75,, PPerez, Atlanta. 4-0, 1 000, 145. 9 are tied with 750
STRIKEOUTS-Carlton, Philadelphia, 54. Berenyl. Cincinnati, :i8. .McWilliams. Pittsburgh, 30. Solo, Cincinnati. 30. Valenzueta, Los Angeles. 30 SAVES-Hume, Cincinnati. 4. SHowe. Los Angeles. 4:6 are tied with 3
AMERICAN LEAGUE BATTING (35 at batsi-Carew, California, 470: Brett, Kansas Citv. 460 Shelby. Baltimore, 395, Thornton. Cleveland. 386, Boggs, Boston, 385 RL'NS-Castino, Minnesota, 19. Brett, Kansas City, 18; Yount, Milwaukee, 18. Downing, California, 17. Bernazard. Chicago. 16: EMurrav. Baltimore, 16.
RBI-Lynn, California. 21, Brett, Kansas City, 20: Kittle. Chicago,- 20, Castino. .Minnesota. 19, Rice. Boston. 19 HITS-Carew, California, 39. Yount, Milwaukee, 32: Castino, Minnesota, 31, Boggs, Boston. 30; Brett, Kansas City, 29. Moiitor, .Milwaukee. 29 DOUBLESBrett. Kansas City, 12: Boggs. Boston. 8. SHenderson. Seattle. 8, Bush. Minnesota, 7, Hrbek, .Minnesota, 7. Sample. Texas, 7 TRIPLES-GWilson. Detroit. 4. Evans, Boston. 3, Tabler, Cleveland. 3, Winfield. New York, 3: 9 are tied with2 HOME RUNS-Lynn, California, 7 Castino, Minnesota, 6, DeCinccs, California, 6; 5 are tied with 5 STOLEN BASES-JCruz, Seattle, 14, WWilson, Kansas City. 13: Garcia. Toronto, 9: MDavis, Oakland, 9: Baylor. New York, 6; Collins, Toronto. 6; RHen-derson. Oakland, 6 PITCHING (3 decisionsi Flanagan, Baltimore. 3-U, 1000, 3 41; Forsch. California, 3-0. l.OOO, 310. McGregor Baltimore, 3-0, 1OOO, 3 11: Moffilt.
Toronto, 3-0, I OOO, 000, Petry. Detroit, 3-0, 1 000, 2.I: Slaton. Milwaukee, :i-0,
I 000.2 20
STRIKEOCTS-Stieb. Toronto, :)3: Norris, Oakland. 28; Blyleven, Cleveland, 27. Morris, Detroit, 26, Righetti, New Y ork, 25.
SAVES-Slanlev, Boston, 6: Quisen-berry. Kansas Citv, 5; Spillner. Cleveland, 5; Caudill, Seattle. 4, Beard, Oakland, 3; RDavis, Minnesota, 3
Edmonton 8. Chicago 4 Edmonton 8, Chicago 2 Edmonton 3, Chicago, 2 Edmonton at Chicago, Tuesday, May 3 Chicago at Edmonton. Thursday, May 5, If necessary Edmonton at Chicago. Sunday, May 8, if necessary Chicago at Edmonton, Tuesday. May 10, if necesasary PRINCE OF WALES CONFERENCE (NY Islanders lead series 2-11 NV Islanders 5, Boston 2 Boston 4, NY Islanders 1 NY Islanders7. Boston 3 Boston at NV Islanders. Tuesday, .May
NY Islanders at Boston, Thursday, May 5, it necessary Boston at N Y Islanders. Saturday. May 7. if necessary NV Islanders al Boston. Tuesday, May TO, It necessary.
USFL Standings__
By The Associated Press Atlantic W L T Pci PF PA
8 1 O' 889 192 83
5 4 0 556 206 181
3 6 0 333 157 218
1 8 0 111 120 227
Central
6 3 0 ,667 221 129
6 3 0 667 177 178'
5 4 0 556 180 176
Philadelphia Boston New Jersey Washington
Chicago Tampa Bay Michigan' Birmingham
Arizona Oakland Ims Angeles Denver
4 5 0 444
Pacific 450 444
4 5 0 444
4 5 0 444
4 5
444
Saturday's Game
Philadelphia 24, Tampa Bay 10 Sunday's Games Michigan 28, Boston24
NBA Playoffs
By The Associated Press CONreRENCE SEMIFINALS (Best of Seven)
EASTERN CONFERENCE . Philadelphia vs. New York (Philadelphia wins 4-0)
Sunday, April 24 Philadelphia 112, New York 102 Wednesday, April 27 Philadelphia 98, New York 91 Saturday. April 30 Philadelphia 107, New York 105 Sunday. May I Philadelphia 105, New \ ork 102 Milwaukee vs. Boston Wednesday, April 27 Milwaukee 116, Boston 95 Friday, April 29 Milwaukee95, Boston91 Sunday, May 1 Milwaukee 107, Boston 99 Monday, May 2 Milwaukee 107, Boston 93. Milwaukee wins series 4-0
WESTERN CONFERENCE Los Angeles vs. Portland Sunday, April 24 Los Angeles 118, Portland 97 Tuesday, April 26 Los Angeles 112, Portland 106 Friday, April 29 Los Angeles 115, Portland 109, OT Sunday, May I Portland 108, Los Angeles 95, Los Angeles leads series 3-1
Tuesday, May 3 Portland at Us Angeles Friday, May 6 Us Angeles at Portland. If necessary Sunday, May 8 Portland at Us Angeles, if necessary Denver vs, San Antonio Tuesdiy,)
San Antonio 152___________
Wednesday, April 27
San Antonio 126, Denver 109 Friday, April 29 San Antonio 127, Denver 126, OT Monday, May 2 Denver 124, San Antonio 114, San Antonio leads series 3-1
Wednesday. May 4 Denver at San Antonio,
Friday, May 6 San Antonio at Denver.ii necessary Sunday, May 8 Denver al San Antonio, if necessary
NHLPIqyofft
By The Aiaoclated Presa Conference Finals Best of Seven CAMPBELL CONFERENCE (Edmonton leads series 30)
63011 ruivuii
d<y. April 26
I, Denver 133
Birmingham 35 Washington 3 New Jersey .34, Denver 29 Chicago 38, Us Angeles 17 Monday^s Game Oakland 34, Arizona 20 ,
Saturday, May 7 Boston at Us Angeles, i n i Michiganat Arizona, Ini Sunday, May 8 Washington al Chicago Denver al Philadelphia Tampa Bay at Oakland
Monday, May 9 Birmingham at New Jersey, ini
~ transactions
By The Associated Press BZYSEBALL American League KANSAS CITY ROYALif-Placed Jerrv Martin, outlielder, on the 15 day disabled list Hecalled Don Hood, pitcher, from Omaha of the American Association MILWAUKEE BREWERS-Recalled Chuck Porter pitcher, from Vancouver of the Pacifie Coast Uague
NattanalLeague NEW YORK METS-Placed Bob Bailor, infielder. on the 15-day disabled list, retroactive lo May I Recalled Jose Oquendo, shortstop, from Tidewater of the Internallonal League HOCKEY National Hockey League HARTFORD WHALERS-Named Emile Francis president and general manager
Quebec Malor Junior Uague three rivErs DRAVEUKS-Named Andre Dupont coach for the next two seasons
FOOTBALL Canadian Football Uague
SASKATCHEWAN ROl'GHRlDERS-Sigiied Karl Morgan, noseguard, to a multi year contract
National Football League Bl FFAL BILLS Annoilnced the re tirement of isiah Robertson, linebacker Waived Umar Parrish, cornerback, and acquired Kdbbie Mahfouz, quarterback, from the New Orleans Saints on waivers CINCINNATI BENGALS-Signed Gary Call, Darryl Drake, Jim Gustafson, Mike Halfey, Gilbert Smith and StevetSullivan. wide receivers. John Christccher, punier, Dan Fuller, linebacker. ClnWil Gannon and Mark Polenz, tackles, Greg Poole safely, and Donald Ray Richard, guard NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS-Signed Bob Fisher, tight end, and Jett Pierce and Mike Jezulin, punters SAN DIEGO CHARGERS-Acquired Ken Greene, defensive back, trom the SI Louis Cardinals in exchange lor third and eighth round draft choices in 1984 COLLEGE fAIRMONT STATE-Announced the resignation of Dave Ritchie, head football coach, who will assume a coaching job with the Montreal Concords of the Canadian Football Uague _,HIGH COUNTRY ^THLETIC CON LKRENCE-Named Margie McDonald executive director MISSOURI-Announced the resignation of Gene Jones, assistant basKetball coach
quarterback I've seen since Ive been a coach starting in 1970.
Elway said he spent Monday morning "sitting by the phone after learning from his lawyer of the talks between the Colts and the Broncos.
Elway, an All-America at Stanford, is considered one of the premier passers in college football history..
But he also is a top baseball prospect who hit 318 in a six-week stint last summer with the Yankees minor-league team in Oneonta, N.Y. Elway said before last weeks NFL draft that he did not want to play for Baltimore, but the Colts selected him anyway.
Elways lawyers refused to talk to Colts officials, however, and announced they were close to signing a multiyear . contract with the Yankees.
At the news conference, Elway said that unless the Colts traded him this week to a West Coast team or to a league contender he would go with the Yankees.
"If nothing happened in one more week, I was going to sign with the Yankees, Elway said. Its not that 1 thought, God, not the 'Yankees, but my preference was to play professional football.
Reeves said Elway could start for the Broncos next season but would have to oust the teams No. 1 quarterback, Steve DeBerg, for the job.
"Obviously this improves the team, said Reeves. "But well have to be balanced to win. I like to believe a quarterback can carry a team a little bit, but it boils down to having a good supporting cast."
Elway finished second in NCAA career total offense with 9,070 yards and third with 77 touchdown passes. He also set NCAA records of 784 completions ifi 1,243 passes, only 3.13 percent of which were intercepted, another national standard.
Elway, whose father Jack is head football coach at San Jose -State, passed for more than 200 yards 30 times in his career - another NCAA record - went over 300 yards 10 times and 400 yards twice.
His 1982 figures were 262 completions, 405 attempts, 3,242 yards and 24 touchdowns.
Tourney Winners
The winner of the 1983 pre-season softball tournament was the team representing Pizza Transit Authority. Members of the team are: (first row) Joe Narron, Whit
Bradham, Charlie Rose, Eddie Rhodes, Don Phillips, Doug Phillips and Lucky Harris. (Back row) Dwight Tart. Jeff Cargile, Bob Peak, Greg Milton, Mike Hogan and Burton Robinson.
Broncos Excited About Signing Of John Elwy
DENVER (AP) Denver Broncos players were enthusiastic about the teams signing of Stanford quarterback John Elway following a three-player trade to the Baltimore Colts, but at least one questioned whether a rookie could start immediately in the National Football League.
Elway had been picked No. I in the collegiate draft by Itimore, but had said he lould play professional laseball before he would play for the Colts, Monday, it was announced he had agreed-to be traded to Denver in exchange for reserve quarterback Mark Herrmann, No. 1 draft pick Chris Hinton, and the Broncos 1984 first-round selection,
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Wide receiver Steve Watson said he would be surprised if Elway started right away. Steve DeBerg currently is listed as Denver's starting quarterback, and Coach Dan Reeves said Elway would have to take the job from DeBerg.
"The offense is too complex, a Gillette, Wyo., radio station late Monday night. "It takes a veteran quarterback to line an offense. John is going to have a tough time, but he has great ability.
Watson and five other
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REHICO.
Aero From Httllngi Ford 3014-A E tOlhSt OIH7SN-0311
MTM Productions Make TV Memorable
ACROSS 38 Guitarist
1 Nag Juliaa
5 Greek 41 Kentucky
letter bluegrass
8 Prepare for 42 Venomous seeding snake
12 Melville 45 Camera
novel part
13 Fabled bird 4$ Counterfeit
48 Distinct part
14 French river
15 Delay
17 Auction
18 Endeavor
19 Haul along
20 Razor shar- 52 Foxy pener 53 Royal
DOWN
1 Early Egyptian
2 God of love
3 Blushing
4 Marijuana
5 Haughty
6 "With a-in my heart
7 Frost
49 Dawn goddess 8 Occurring
50 Kind of rug
51 Took the bus
21 Hippies place
22 I^rge cask
23 Actress Molly
26 Scarlet bird .
30 Adam's grandson
31 Saluki
32 Capture
33 The Pink- 11964 film I
35 Destined
36 Chop
37 Barbara -Geddes
after birth
9 Fibber
10 Norwegian city '
11 Cry 16 Scheme
Avg. solution time: 28 minutes. Surround
.........35 Deed
I II Ml I Ml |i I M ,LA I UL EIaR lA asorBgAdbdint
stables in London
20 Energy source
21 At once
22 Childs game
23 Word with talk or raUy
24 A pig-poke
25 Inmate: slang
26 High hill
27 Narrow channel
28 Piece out
29 Skelton or Grange
31 Morning phenomenon
FAL/
liZ'O
IC^YON HO'RA amas REBAT
IMlyR POLOGUM OLEOIORO
deanBt'e'tI
37 Studded
38 To cloud
39 Western city
40 Arthurian lady
41 Combine
42 Yearn 43PartofGBS
B'ONj 44 Wooden OOT pins JiE] 46 Foothke organ
Answer to yesterdays puzzle. 47 Doctrine
ByFREDROTHENBERG AP Television Writer NEW YORK (AP) -Almost anything worthwhile in television today goes back to Mary Tyler Moore -not the actress, but the classic comedy and the production company that bears her initials, MTM Enterprises.
The best dramatic series today is Hill Street Blues. Before that it was Lou Grant. Both came from MTM. Hill Street won the Emmy in 1981 and 1982. "Lou Grant copped the award the two years before.
This seasons top new dramatic series is St. Elsewhere, and the classiest of the new detective shows is Remington Steele. Both are MTM productions. (Both are on tonight on NBC.)
The top new comedy on CBS is Newhart, also from MTM. Although NBCs Cheers." this seasons most praised comedy, isnt from MTM, its independent pro-
TV Log
For complete TV programming information, consult your weekly TV SHOWTIME from Sunday's Daily Relleclor.
WNCT-TV-Ch.9
TUESDAY 7 00 joKers rviia
7 30 Tic Tac Dougt
8 00 Ace Crawford 0 30 Gun Shy
9 00 Movie 11,00 News,9
n 30 Late Movie
2 00 Niqhtwafch
5 00 Jim Bakker
6 0 Carolina 8 00 Morning 10 00 Pyramid
10 30 Child sPlay
11 00 Price Is
12 00 News9
WITN-TV-Ch.7
CRYPTOQUIP
MGJJX'V MVJOVVT JOK FCKWW XKCW AW GT GXJVCFGJAKT.
Yesterday's Cryptoquip LARGE FLOUNDER FOUNDERED IN HIGH SEAS.
Todays Cryptoquip clue; J equals T.
The Cryptoquip is a simple substitution cipher in which each letter stands for another. If you think that X equals 0, it will equal 0 throughout the puzzle. Single letters, short words, and words using an apostrophe can give you clues to locating vowels. Solution is accomplished by trial and error.
'* 1983 King Features Syndicate, Inc
TUESDAY 7 00 Jetterson 7 30 Family Feud J 00 A Team
9 00 R Steele
10 00 St Elsewhere
11 00 News
11 30 Tonight Show
12 30 Letterman
1 30 Overnight
2 30 News WEDNESDAY
5 30 Dark Shadows
6 00 Almanac
7 00 Today 7 25 News
7 30 Today
8 25 News
8 30 Today
9 00 R Simmons 9 30 All in the
|0 00 FactsOtLife
10 30 Sale ot the
11 00 Wheel ol
11 30 Dream House
12 00 News
12 30 Search For
1 00 Days Ot Our
2 00 Another WId
3 00 Fantasy
4 00 Whitney the 4,30 Little House
5 30 Lie Detector
6 00 News
6 30 NBC News
7 00 Jefferson
7 30 Family Feud
8 00 Real People
9 00 Factsof Lite f,30 Taxi
10 00 Ouincy
11 00 News II 30 Tnnmh)
WCTI-TV-Ch.12
GOREN BRIDGE
BY CHARLES GOREN AND OMAR SHARIF
1963 Tribune Company Syndicate, Inc.
North-South vulnerable. South deals.
NORTH
AQ8653 ^K4
0 8
Q1054 WEST EAST
KJ #942
<:? 10963 ^J752
OJ94 0 65
J632 AK98
SOUTH
107 7 AQ8
0 AKQ10732
7
The bidding:
South West North East
2 0 Pass 2 Pass
3 0 Pass 3 Pass
4 NT Pass 5 0 Pass
6 0 Pass Pass Pass
Opening lead; Jack of .
What a difference a-spot or two can make! Had South's ten of spades been a low card, he would have had no opportunity to be clever, and he would have been forced to make his slam!
Souths opening bid of two diamonds was an intermediate tvvo-bid showing a hand of 7-8 winners. Thereafter, the auction was natural, and North-South landed in an aggressive slam.
The bidding had revealed
JUST A BIT TOO DECEPTIVE
the fact that West's king of spades was likely to be a liability, so he found the deceptive lead of the jack of spades. Had declarer not been dealt the ten of spades, his only play would have been to take the spade finesse. That would have worked like a charm.
Not unreasonably, though, declarer assumed that'East held the king of spades. Now the fact that he held the ten gave him the chance to be clever in return. Declarer rose with the ace of spades and immediately returned a low spade from the table. He hoped that East would think that his partners lead was from the jack-ten and there fore not play the king. That would allow declarer to steal the fulfilling trick with the ten of spades.
A clever plan, and it might have worked had East held the king. But as the cards lay. West won the king of spades, led a club to his partners king, and a spade return now promoted West's jack of trumps to a trick. So the laydown slam went down two tricks!
TUESDAY
7 00 Three s Lo
7 30 Alice
8 00 Happy Days
8 30 Laverne 9,00 Three'sCo
9 30 9 (D 5
10 00 Hart to Hart
11 00 ActionTNews
11 30 Nightline
12 00 Starsky&
100 Mission 2:00 Early Edition
WEDNESDAY
5 00 Bewitched
5 30 J Swaggart
6 00 AG Day 6 30 News
8 25 Action News
9 00 Phil Donahue
10 00 Good Times 10:30 Laverne
n 00 Love Boat 12 00 Family Feud 12 30 Ryan'sHope 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 Fall Guy
9 00 Battle of
7 00 Good Morning n 00 Action News 6 13 Action News n 30 ABC News
6 55 Action News 12:00 Starsky 8,
7 25 Action News I QQ Mission
WUNK-TV-Ch.25
TUESDAY 7 00 Report
7 30 Almanac 8:00 Nova 9:00 Playhouse
10 30 Business 11:00 A Hitchcock 11.30 Morecambe 12 :00 Sign Off WEDNESDAY
7:45 AM Weather
8 00 Gen, Ed
8 35 Music Box
8 :50 Readalong I
9 00 Sesame Street 10.00 Thinkabout 10:15 Short Story
11 00 Come Alive II 30 Let Me See 11 45 Write On
11 50 Readalong II
12 00 Cents
12:15 Self Inc,
12 30 We Live 12:45 ElecticCg 1:15 Poetry Alive I 30 Raisin' Up 1:45 Music &
2:00 Equal 2:30 Nutrition 3:30 Cooking 4:00 Sesame St. 5:00 Mr Rogers 5:30 Powerhouse 6:00 Dr Who 6:30 Sherlock 7:00 Report 7 30 Statellne 8:00 Creatures 9:00 Ra Expedition 10:30 Afghanistan 11:00 A, Hitchcock 11:30 Morecambe t2:00 Sign Off
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ducers, Les and Glen Charles, learned their craft at MITM, working on Phyllis and The Bob Newhart Show.
And the forces behind Taxi, which won the Emmy for bst comedy three years running, also can be found on the MTM family tree:
Jimc Brooks and Allan Bums created The Mary Tyler Moore Show, Rhoda and Lou Grant. Ed Weinberger and Stan Daniels worked on The Mary Tyler Moore Show and created its spinoff, Phyllis. .
MTM has a deserved reputation for taste, class and content without sacrificing
commercial appeal, says Josh Kane, a programing executive at NBC and now CBS. There is an atmosphere of creativity and independence there that brings out everybodys best work.
During a recent interview at MTM with Greg Hoblit, co-executive producer of Hill Street Blues, it was impossible to ignore the screams and pounding from down the hall. Thats just the writers disa^eeing with each other, Hoblit said.
The writers and producers at MTM^^say the fertile environment starts at the top. Grant Tinker, now the chairman of NBC, began the company and named it after
FORECAST FOR WEDNESDAY. MAY 4,1983
from the Carroll Righter Inatituta
12 30 Young and
1 30 As The World
2 30 Capitol
3 00 Guiding Light
4 00 Waltons
5 00 Hillbillies
5 30 AndyGrittith
6 00 News 9
6 30 News
7 00 Joker s Wild
7 30 Tic Tac Dough
8 00 Zorro and Son
8 30 Square Pegs
9 00Movie II 00 News9 11 30 Movie
2 00 Nightwatch
GENERAL TENDENCIES: Upsets that occur today can work out much to your satisfaction in the long run, so don't be disturbed by delays and obstacles. Let conditions work themselves out to your benefit.
ARIES (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) Obtain all the information you can that's connected with new projects you have in mind. Then you will know how to proceed.
TAURUS (Apr, 20 to May 20) You may want to make some changes now in dealings you have with others, so discuss them sensibly with them,
GEMINI (May to June 21) Listen to the views of associates for future benefits and cooperate more with them. Travel with utmost care.
MOON CHILDREN (June 22 to July 21) You can easily get rid of a pesky problem if you start doing something about it instead of procrastinating.
LEO (July 22 to Aug. 21) Avoid one who is detrimental to your best interests. Plan how to make your talents work more efficiently.
VIRGO (Aug. 22 to Sept. 22) Try to understand those at home better and have more harmony there. Engage in outside activities and become more affluent.
LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) Improve relations with allies by having serious talks with them. Plan your day better and you have more free time.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) Delve into important work ahead of you instead of wasting time on less important matters. Be more helpful to others.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) Be sure, that business affairs are running smoothly before seeking recreation. Be more optimistic.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 20) Go after the personal goals that mos,t appeal to you and gain them easily. Handle business affairs wisely.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 21 to Feb 19) Listening to what good friends have to say can bring you more success now. Plan how-to gain your finest aims.
PISCES (Feb. 20 to Mar. 20) You can have big advance ment through the unexpected today so be alert'at all times. Strive for increased happiness.
IF YOUR CHILD IS BORN TODAY ... he or she will comprehend varioi types of philosophies and should be given the finest edi^tion possible to bring out the many talents in this nature. Be sure to give ethical training early in life. A fine artist here..
The Stars impel, they do not compel. " What you make of your life is largely up to you!
1983, McNaught Syndicate, Inc.
IPUTT
theatres
^ RESTRICTIONS
SEOUL, South Korea (AP) - About 2,000 entertainerfs in the Seoul area havbe lost their jobs because of new restrictions affecting dis-coteques and similar establishments, the Korean Artists Association said today.
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his wife (theyve since divorced), Mary Tyler Moore. When Tinker moved to NBC, Arthur Price became head of MTM, and hes maintained Tinkers philosophy of providing a comfortable, non-interfering climate for people to work.
Arthur Price is one of the most extraordinary men Ive known, said Bruce Paltrow, executive producer of St. Elsewhere, which has its final original episode tonight. Im at this company because they support their creative people.
Paltrow recalled how the first pilot for St. Elsewhere had been a disaster. I had gotten off on the wrong foot. he said. I asked Arthur if I could do it over. He said OK. It only cost him $1 million. Where else can I get that kind of creative support?
In the recently released Television Audience Assessment survey, which surveyed TVs emotional and intellectual stimulation, Hill Street Blues was the highest scoring series. A popcorn program like Fantasy Island, from producer Aaron Spellings stable, was near the bottom.
Spelling makes great Fiats, says Paltrow, whose St. Elsewhere has been swamped in the ratings by Spellings Hart to Hart. He does what he sets out to achieve.
So does MTM.
ClaptonConcert
Before we went into production, MTM gave us four months to think about the show, said Barry Kemp, executive producer of Newhart. It was the first time I was given the oppor-tuintytto do a show as well as I could, rather than make the best of the time I was given.
MTM is the only production house I know that will turn dowS"'pilot ideas from the networks. They wont do a show just to do a show.
They say we can do better than that.
They care as much about art as profit, and theyd probably take a iittle less profit to make good art. How can you not attract good people when you make that kind of commitment?
If you let good creative people do what they want, theyll work harder and do it more passionately. The only mystery is why nobody else does it this way.
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Marred By Fans X4FS5IIT
ROME (API - A sellout crowd greeted British rock
I
singer and guitarist Eric Clapton at the 14,000-seat Sport Palace, but his concert was marred by violence outside.
The Monday night performance had been sold out for days, and about 6,000 fans were turned away. Hundreds tried to crash the gates, and police fired tear gas to disperse them.
Authorities said someone ,in the crowd fir^ three pistol shots, but no one was hit.
Three police officers and about 30 fans were injured.
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MOTHERS DAY BUFFET
A Spring Buffet In Pageantry Hall With Mothers In Mind.
A family buffet with fresh spring salads: garden green tossed salad, fresh fruit, potato salad, cucumber & onion, cole slaw, and jello salad.
Delicious entrees of tender roast turkey with dressing, southern fried chicken, southern honey cured ham. steamship round of beef au jus, and shrimp creole. Complimented with a garden of vegetables: squash, broccoli with cheese sauce, fried okra, steamed rice, cranberry sauce, glazed carrots, corn on the cob. green beans amandine, yams, parsley buttered potatoes, rolls, cornbread and our own famous cake muffins
Moms special feast is complete with an assortment of desserts Including canot cake, coconut cake, pistachio cake, and more.
Adults $7.95; children 12 and under '/z price, children 5 and under free. 11:30 AM to 3:00 PM in Pageantry Hall.
Please call for reservations
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m ''^^y*^f*ector,Greenvle,N.C.-Tuesday, May 3,1983-13
Subcommittee Wants Records Open To The Public
By MARY ANNE RHYNE Associated Press Writer
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -Birth, death, marriage and divorce records should remain open for scrutiny by the public and the, press, a legislative subcommittee decided Monday.
But certified copies of those records should be guarded more closely because they can be used to establish false identities, agreed the subcommittee of the House Health Committee and the Senate Human Resources Committee.
The compromise language was drafted by the North Carolina Press Association, the N.C. Association of Broadcasters and state Health Director Dr. Ron Levine. The journalists expressed concern earlier that the public would be denied access to the records.
The illegal use of birth certificates would be curbed and prevented for those trying to establish false identifications, Levine said of the compromise. 1 feel we have narrowed considerably the types of records that should be held in very close confidentiality.
Under the draft legislation approved by the subcommittee, the state registrar would make public all vital records except birth certificates for adopted people or people in the federal witness protection program.
The registrar would provide certified copies only to people requesting to see their own vital records or records belonging to their spouse, child, parent, brother or sister. Certified copies also could be given to people seeking information in a legal matter.
The registrar could charge up to $3 for ipaking a certified copy of a vital record or for conducting a search of files for the records.
The register of deeds in each county would file copies of birth and death certificates that would be open to public inspection.
As originally written, the bill would have limited access to vital tecords to family members, genealogists, health researchers or people involved in a legal case.
The bill, a rewrite of existing public health laws, contains several other controversial provisions.
One deals with how to dispose of animals in county shelters - put them to sleep or sell them for medical research. That question is expected to be decided when the subcommittee meets next week.
Levine has recommended that the subcommittee not decide the matter because a House bill has been introduced to forbid selling , dogs and cats from shelters to research laboratories.
Other provisions adopted by the subcommittee Monday would allow county health departments to adopt rules more stringent than state rules except in the area of standards for restaurants and motels.
Another provision would allow the state Personnel Commission and Division of Health Services to set qualifications for local health directors. Several subcommittee members expressed concern, however, that state officials not require health directors to be physicians.
In other legislative action: Auditor The House referred to the Appropriations Committee a bill to revamp the state auditors office. Rep. Rich- ard Wright, D-Columbus, introduced the bill in an attempt to insulaie the auditors office from possible intimidation and to free it from possible conflicts of interest.
And Theyre Off!
Its Derby Festival time in Louisville, Kentuckythe annual week-long celebration that will end on Saturday with the running of the Kentucky Derhy at Churchill Downs. Since the first running of the Derby in 187,5, this mile-and-a-quarter race for three-year-olds has been one of the most exciting events of the racing season. In that first race, Aristides scored a victory and won a purse of $2,850. In 1941. W'hirla-way netted $61,275. Last year, Gato del Sol brought home $417,600. In 1919, a horse named Sir Barton won not only the Kentucky Derby but two new races as well: the Preakness Stakes and the Bfelmont Stakes. He became the first of only eleven Triple Crown winners in racing history.
DO YOU KNOW-What horse was the last Triple Crown winner?
MONDAYS ANSWEROn the average, it costs $15,000 to teed and guard a prison inmate for a year.
VKC, Inc. 19s:i
. Epilepsy Group Elects Officers
The Coastal Plains Chapter of the Epilepsy Association of North Carolina recently elected Cathy Jessen as president for the coming year. Other officers are Louis Moore, vice president and treasure, and Kim Wallace, secretary TThe officers will attend the EANC state annual elections in Charlotte May 21st.
The Friends of the Chapter will hold a yard sale Saturday on the front lawn of J.H. Rose High School from 8 a.m. to noon. Proceeds from the sale will go toward the purchase of School Alert Kits. To donate items for the yard sale, call 752-3769 and leave a message. For more information about the chapter and its activities call (toll free) 800-642-0500.
Ayden Rescue Plans Barbecue Sale
The Ayden Volunteer Rescue Squad will hold its annual barbecue pork and chicken dinner Saturday with plates available from 10 a.m. until sold out. The price is $3 per plate.
Dinners will be available on East Avenue between Second and Third streets and adjacent to Southern Bank on West Third Street.
Farm Life Alumni To Hold Banquet
The 63rd annual banquet and dance of the Farm Life School Alumni Association in Vanceboro will be held May 13 at 7 p.m. The dinner will be served in the Farm Life School cafeteria at 7 p.m. followed by the dance in the gymnasium at 9p.m.
This will be the 50-year reunion of the graduating class of 1933 and special recognition will be given to those alumni There will be reserved tables for the classes of 1933,1943,1953 and 1963.
First grade Wins Ticket Contest
The 1st grade class of Mrs. Judy Bell won the Spring Fiing Ticket Sales Contest for Elmhurst School last week. The 28 Ist-graders will visit a local ice cream store as a prize.
Ribbons To Riders At Hunters' Show
In The Area
The Eastern Hunter Association held its first show of the season Saturday at Turkey Quarter Farm in Jasper. Afea riders in the ribbons were as follows:
Heather Crawford --fourth place in Hunter Pleasure Pony, fourth place in Go As You Please and sixth place in Large Pony Under Saddle.
Sara Lynn Thompson -second place in Hunter Pleasure Pony and first place in Go As You Please.
Kristy Kirkpatrick - second place in Sbort Stirrup Over Fences, fourth place in Pony Pairs and sixth place in Short Stirrup Walk-Trot-Canter.
Denise Bright - third place in Equitation Over Fences, fourth place in Equitation on the Flat, and second, third and fourth places in Restricted Low Hunter. Denise won Reserve Champion Low Hunter.
Jennifer Whichard - fifth place in Short Stirrup Walk-Trot, second place in Goa As You Please and second place in Pony Pairs.
Emily Nobles - first place Short Stirrup Over Fences, second place Short Stirrup Walk-Trot, second place Short Stirrup Walk-Trot-Canter, Reserve Champion Short Stirrup Division, fifth place' Bareback Equitation
and second place in Pony Pairs.
Tricia Tripp - fourth place in Short Stirrup Walk-Trot and fifth in Short Stirrup Walk-Trot-Canter.
Lynn Nobles first place Low Hunter Over Fences, second place Low Hunter Over Fences, first place Low Hunter Under Saddle, Champion Low Hunter Division, third in Pony Pleasure and a fourth in Pony Pairs.
Alexis White - Champion Green Hunter, Reserve Champion Junior Hunter, first in Equitation Over Fences and first in Equitation on the Flat.
Emily Wilkerson - fifth in Junior Hunter Over Fences and fourth place in Adult Hunter.
. Missy Daughtry - first place in Junior Hunter Under Saddle, third place in Pleasure Horse, second Go As You Rlease, second Equitation, first Working Hunter.
Carrie Wimmer - fourth place in Short Stirrup Walk-Trot-Canter.
The next Eastern Hunter Show will be held at Stonington Stables in Kinston May 14.
Pitt Resident Attend Reunion
Three Pitt County residents were among alumni and descendents of alumni of Littleton College who attended the annual reunion of the Littleton College Mem^orial Association at North Carolina Wesleyan College last weekend.
Attending were Mildred McArthur Nichols and Ediths Dudley of Greenville and Esther Miller West of Ayden.
Mental Health Talks Scheduled
The Mental Health Association in Pitt County is sponsoring its "Spotlights free lunch-time lecture series this month. The theme is Job Insecurity-Security: Stress and Coping in the 1980s. The talks will be held at noon each Thursday in May at the Jaycee Park Administrative Building, 2000 Cedar Lane.
Speakers for the series will be Dr. James Mathis, Penny Benzing, Robert Spence, Joe Paget, Frank Grooms and George Hood. For further information, call the MHA office, 752-7448.
t
Students Initiated By Phi Beta Kappa
Three Greenville at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill have been initiated into Phi Beta Kappa, the national honor society. The three are: Elizabeth Roann Baily, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Donald E. Bailey; Lawrence Joyner Boyette, son of Dr. and Mrs. Jospeh G. Boyette, and Jennifer Lynne Davis, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. K. Jospeh Davis.
Fish Fry Set In Pactolus
The Pactolus Ruritan Club will have its annual spring fish ' fry Saturday from 11 a.m. until 7:30 p.m. or until sold out. Fish fry locations will be at the Pactolus Fire House and at the Shop-Eze Foodland parking lot on U.S. 264 near Washington.
Plates will sell for $3 each and proceeds will go to the clubs building fund.
Winterville Jaycettes Install Officers
The Winterville Jaycettes held their annual banquet Saturday night at Archies Steak House, with officers installed for the 1983-84 year. The welcome and the installation of new officers was carried out by Kathy Allen, the 1982-83 president.
New officers include Elizabeth Hines, president; Jeannie Peed, vice president; Sandra Thomas, secretary; Laura Langley, treasurer, and board member, Darlene Harris. As past president, Ms. Allen becomes chairman of the board.
The guest speaker for the evening was Carl Worthington, 1982-83 president of the Winterville Jaycees.
Awards presented at the banquet were to Jeannie Peed as Jaycette of the Year and Laura Langley as Rookie of the Year.
Police Accuse Man Of Selling Heroin
Bruce Alton Rogers. 30, of 606 Greenvield Blvd. has been arrested by Greenville police on two counts of selling heroin. Chief Glenn Cannon said the charges stemmed from ah undercover investigation by local police in March.
The chief said Rogers was arrested last week on five counts each of possession and sale of cocaine and one count of trafficking in cocaine in connection with a joint police-State Bureau of Investigation undercover operation which began last November.
Arrest Made In Apartment Thefts
Greenville police Monday arrested Roger William Creech II, 21, of Goldsboro on four counts of possession of stolen property. Chief Glenn Cannon said the charges were made in connection with the theft of a quantity of jewelry and clothing from several Kings Row Apartments units in February.
The Washington Band Boosters, Inc.
Presents ...
The Embers ^
Students Win Honorable Mention
Three Farmville Central High School students have won honorable mentions in the 1983 National Scholastic Art Awards. The winners were Ron Beamon, textile design Dana Reeves, mixed media and Walter Stancil, printmaking.
Over 150,000 students participated in the competition nationally.
Williamston Plans Mai Fest '83
A full day of indoor and outdoor activities has been scheduled for Martin Countys Mai Fest '83 on the campus of Williamston High Saturday.
Events scheuled to begin at 10:30 a.m. include a Bike Rodeo, sponsored by the Optimist Club and the Martin County 4-H Clubs: a horseshoes and apple bobbing competition under the auspices of the Robersonville Recreation Department an educational exhibit in the schools gymnasium, sponsored bv the Inter-agency Council, and the crafts show and sale sponsored by the Arts Council.
At 11 a.m., judging of the competitive art show wifi take place in .the auditorium lobby.
Other events scheduled are: li:30 a.m., 4-H fashion revue and young artists winners; noon and 3 p.m., the Byard Ray Traditional String Band; 1 p.m., a musical variety show 130 p.m., selections from Guys and Dolls; and 3 45 pm a
dance revue by students of Frankie Jones.
The final event on the Mai Fest calendar will be a square dance sponsored by the Farm Life 4-H Club. This will begin at 7:30 p.m. in the school cafteria with an admission of $1 per person to be charged.
Man Held On Possession Charge -
Greenville police arrested Edward Lee Johnson. 25, of Route 2, Greenville, on charges of possession of marijuana, about 10:55p.m. Sunday.
Chief Glenn Cannon said Johnson was taken into custody by officers in a parking lot at the intersection of Fourth and Cotanche streets when a small amount of marijuana was found in his possession.
Heroin Charge Is Filed
Betty Lou Edwards, 34, ori208 Myrtle Ave, was arrested by Greenville police about 5:15 p.m. Monday on sale of heroin charges.
Chief Glenn Cannon said the arrest was connected with an undercover investigation by local police and agents of the State Bureau of Investigation that began last November. Five persons were arrested last week on drug charges involving heroin and cocaine in connection with the same investigation One of those arrested last Tuesday - James Earl Dupree. I 34, of 1010 S. George St., Farmville, who was charged with possession and sale of cocaine - is a former Greenville policeman. He served as an officer from January 1982 to January 1983.
Cannon said officers were looking for five other people in connection with the investigation.
Students Wins Writing Award
Barbara Warburton, a 1982 graduate of Brandywine College of Widener University, received the Brandywine College award for outstanding writing during the annual honors convocation.
Ms. Warburton is a student at East Carolina University and is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Warburton of Greenville.
Whichards Beach Pavilion Friday, May 6,1983 9:00 p.m. to 1:00 a.m. Admission: $7.50 Each - ABC Permits
Tickets Available Locally At:
Cha-Rlch Music Co
Watertree Terrace Restaurant
Prime Rib for 2 Salad Bar i Potato Wine
Terrace Seating Available 5:30 -10:00
Its the small things like flowers and candles you appreciate, but it is the Prime Rib you will comeback for.
Every Wednesday
758-.3401 S. Memorial Dr., Greenville
For The Well Dressed Man Dress Shirts qq ByOxford .rj.O TolO
SsKB 14.. 19*
srs ..lo'"
Belts........................
First Quality Only
Use Our Lay Away Plan
_ i
Will computers become mans best friend, (or are they expensiye task masters that will flood us with more information than we can ever use)? Keith Whitney tells us all about computers in his special reports beginning on Wednesday May 4 on mT-TV NEWS
14-The DaUy Renector, GreenviUe N.r -Tuesdav. May 3,1963
PEANUTS
YOU'RE probably RI6MT, MARGIE, BUT (T 5URE LOOKS U)EIRP
NUBBIN
BROTWE-R'IN-U^ IV/AMte TO BORROW MOMg.y PROM M.
BLONDIE
The boss wants us TO JOIN HIM r
POP OINNEP.
TELL HIM I'M ALPEADY COOKING ^
HE SAID IN THAT CASE ^ HE'LL JOIN
BEETLE BAILEY
PHANTOM
MONEY
InYottr
Pocket!
v'.'nen neeJ rnoney cash on the items that ar laying around the house---iterns that you no longer use
Our Family Rates
3 Lines
4 Days
M.OO
FRANK & ERNEST
I.R.S. - AUDIT SECTION_illT\ _ '
_ /r-ll Li'm the OOPHO-E
pSciAUST hepe.
MP. pOMEfZOY-EVEpYgopY CAti.; ME
j "coppr."
ThKves 5-5
FUNKY WINKERBEAN
N\f^ I HAUE VOUR
attention RORTHE
AFTERNiOOl^ ANMQUNCEMENrp? 7^0m:5 ALAOsfr^
OUER'I'M GOING ^ mnxF I
THE PEP CLUB WILL HAUE A BRIEP MEETING IN ROOM ONE TWENTV-___ONE /
Also.TOMORROW is
THE LAST DAP ID BE FiTTEDROK CLASS RINGS!
"WBE BUlTVI?
MAS FORGOTTEN ALL A^UT BEATING ME UP'
SHOE
imp MM ANP mmL
iT^mourm
imimiTm
AND FINALLY , BULL BUSHKA UOILL BE beating UP LES /VtOORE INTME PARKING LOT AFTER SCHOOL,'
wau-iHATM2niN&'!^^ J
THE DAILY REFLECTOR
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752-6166
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Classified Lineage Oeadiines
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Tuesday Monday 3 p.m.
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Sunday.........Friday noon
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Monday.........Friday noon
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Family Want Ads Must Be Placed By An Individual To Run Under The Miscellan-1 eous For Sale Classification. Limit One Item Per Ad With Sale Value Of I J200 Or Less. Commercial Ads Excluded. All Ads Cash With Order. No Re-1 fund For Early Cancellation.
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YOUR AD
ir
COULD BE WORKING FOR YOU IN THIS
SPACE e
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WITH THE CLASSIFIED
CLASSIFIED
INDEX
MISCELLANEOUS
Personals In Memoriam Card Of Thanks Special Notices Travel & Tours
Automotive.........
Child Care Day Nursery.
Health Care.........
Employment.........
For Sale..............
Instruction............
Lost And Found......
Loans And Mortgages Business Services
I Opportunity........
; Professional
Real Estate.......
Appraisals.........
Rentals........
I
.0021
003
.005
007
009
010 040
.041 043 050 .060 080 082 085 091 093 095 . 100 . 101 120
Public
Notices
NOTICE
Having qualified as Executrix of the Estate of Robert Midgette Bateman, also known as Robert Midgette Bateman, Jr., late of Pitt County. Doris R Bateman hereby notifies all persons having claims against said estate to present them to her or to her attorney, Jeffrey L Miller, P 0. Box 7142, Greenville. N.C.. on or before October 12, 1983, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate please make immediate payment.
TMs8thdayof April, 1983.
Doris R Bateman Executrix 704 W. 5fh Street Ayden, N C. 28513 April 12, 19, 26, May 3, 1983
NOTICE ,
Having qualified as Executor of the estate of Marjorie S. Deanes 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 October 19, 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 19fh day of April, 1983.
Robert F Deanes 200 Greenwood Drive Greenville, North Carolina 27834 Executor of the estate of Marjorie SjDeanes. deceased. April 19,26, /jhay 3, 10, 1983
024
Foreign
1981 HONDA CIVIC, 4 door. 5 speed. AM/FM stereo, cloth interior, im maculate condition. Call 355 2857 from 9 to 5 , 355 2067 after 5_
032
Boats For Sale
O'DAY MARINER SAILBOAT, I9
Excellent condition with trailer. $4500 946 3111._
13' CHRYSLER Fiberglass Day Sailer with trailer, 18' mast and sails, $850. 758 0428 or 758 0703.
14Vj' OUACHITA Bass boat 25 horsepower Johnson. $1299 Call 757 34 after 5._
1972 GLASTRON 16' with 6S horse power Evinrude and trailer. $1595 355 2970 .
1974 MEKEE BOAT, motor and trailr with 50 Mercury with alt accessories Excellent net boat In OOOd shape 746 6017 or 355 2255.
1978 &LASSTRON family boat Mercruiser inboard/outboard. 165 horsepower Excellent condition. $5000.758 0501. _
1978 18' CHECKMATE with
Mercruiser 170 I/O, trailer, cover, good condition. Call 756 9060 after 6
26' TROJAN 1977. Fly brido oallev, and DF radio. Call 94
28' CARVER head, galley, sleeps 6
Twin screw. Bri Call 756 13
034 Campers For Sale
TRUCK COVERS All sizes, colors Leer Fiberglass and Sportsman tops. 250 units in stock O'Briants, Raleigh, N C 834 2774_
036
83 E 177 NORTH CAROLINA PITT COUNTY The undersigned, having qualified as Executrix ot the Estate of NORMAN H CAME RON, deceased, late of Pitt County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against said estate to present them to The undersigned Executrix at 1602 Elm Street, Greenville, North Carolina 27834, on or before October 27, 1983, or this notice will be plead in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate will please make payment to the undersigned Executrix This 20th day of April, 1983 ANNE BRADLEY CAMERON Executrix of Estate of Norman H. Cameron Gaylord, Singleton, McNally & Strickland P O Drawer 545 Greenville. NC 27834 April 26, May 3. 10. 17, 1983
NOTICE F SERVICE OF PROCESS BY PUBLICATION IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE DISTRICT COURT DIVISION NORTH CAROLINA PITT COUNTY Harold Allen Vrooman Plaintiff,
VS
Lynda Grace Vrooman Defendant
FILE NO 83CVD 533 TO Lynda Grace Vrooman TAKE NOTICE that a pleading seeking relief against you has been tiled in the above entitled action and the nature of the relief being sought is an absolute divorce on the grounds ot one (I) year continuous separation
, You are required to make defense to such pleadings not later than the6 day of June, 1983 and upon your failure to do so, the party seeking relief service against you will apply to the Court for the relief sought This 22 day of April, 1983 JAMESE BROWN ATTORNEY FOR PLAINTIFF Telephone: (919) 758 7255 P O Box 1356 Greenville, NC 27834 April 26. May 3. 10, 17. 1983
urn
Cycles For Sale
HONDA MT 125. On oft road Excellent condition $400 Call 756 9005,_
1969 TRIUMPH Bonneville lO" over front end King and Queen seat, motor just rebuilt, 2 new fires $500 756 1622after6:3Qp.m
1974 HARLEY DAVIDSON
Excellent condition Call 752 2540 alter 6.___-
tion $450 or best otter 5008
1977 HONDA GOLD WING 1000 Windjammer and stereo. Excellent condition. 758 2907after 5
1980 HONDA CM400T Good condi tion. 9,000 miles, $700 firm Call after 4:30. 756 7334
1980 HONDA CX 500 condition $1250 757 1236
Excellent
1980 YAMAHA 650 Maxim I 1200 actual miles, 4 cylinder, shaft drive $1800 negotiable 752 2121, extension 307 days 758 2786 after 8pm_
1980 YAMAHA XS 400 Special, better quick silver fairing, cover, helment, 4500 miles. Garage kept, Excellent condition $1400 756 0981
1981 ATC 250 ^3 wheeler $1300 746 3033
1981 HONDA CB 900 Custom, fair ing, luggage rack, extras. 29C0 miles. $240<r 756 7849 after 5
1983 HONDA XL 250, new, 600 miles. High powered on off road bike with extras. $1350 Call or come by 2808 Edwards St. 758 4666
039
Trucks For Sale.
CHEVROLET PICKUP 1981.17,000 miles, like new. Call Rex Smith Chevrolet, Ayden, 746 3141
1975 DATSUN TRUCK 68,000 miles, new paint job, blue Good condition. $190CT 756 6319
1975WAGONEER $2250 756 9866 1978 FORD FlOO RANGER, automatic, air. power steering, AM/FM, 300 cubic inch 6 cylinder $3800. Call 758 0 789
040
Child Care
CHILD CARE Full time. Any hours or shift 2 years and up Large backyard and constant supervision Close to all industries. Nice neighborhood; Loads ot experience Will babysit weekends for out of town trips 752 2786.
007 SPECIAL NOTICES
WE PAY CASH tor diamonds. Floyd G Robinson Jewelers, 407 Evans Mall, Downtown Greenville.
6 DINING CHAIRS, Craftique, solid mahogany. $50 each, Craftique mahogany drop leaf dining table, $300. Maho^an^|>oster double bed, $125.
MATURE LADY NEEDED to fake care of todler in our home. Experi ence in child care. Must have own transportation Local references required. For personal interview call days 752 1600, ask tor Mr or Mrs. Smith, nights 756 9454
MATURE RESPONSIBLE lady will take care of children in her home. Meals furnished. Reasonable price
746 2790.
RESPONSIBLE MOTHER ot 2 year old would like to keep 12 more children (approximately same age) in my home on weekdays. Located on Red Banks Road, 756 9327
046
PETS
AKC GOLDEN RETRIEVER pups All shots, dewormed. $100 Call Jerry. 752 8019.__
AKC MINIATURE Longhaired Dachshund. 11 week old male, red with black overlay. 355 6476.
AKC REGISTERED female poodle Call 752 0084 after 5 p m_
AKC WHITE POODLES 8 weeks Old. 746 3033
on
Autos For Sale
BEFORE YOU SELL or trade your 79 82 model car, call 756 1877, Grant Buick We will pay top dollar_
NEEDACAR?
Rent a used car and save! CALL RENT A WRECK 752-2277
SELL YOUR CAR the National Autotinders Way! Authorized Dealer in Pitt County. Hastings Ford Call 758 0114.
EXPERT DOG OBEDIENCE
training and boarding. Call 758 5590
051
Help Wanted
ANNE'S TEMPORARIES is now
accepting applications tor experi enced secretaries. Must type 50 words per minute. Call for an 120 Reade Street.
f ointment, 6610.
ARTIST Professional silk screen ing firm has position available for experienced arfi$t with silk screening knowledge Call tor ao pointment at 746-6134.
013
Buick
LeSABRE LIMITED 1982. 4 door, fully equipped, like new. Call Rex Smith Chevrolet, Ayden, 746 3141
1972 BUICK LeSABRE Call 1 799
7066 alter 5_
1974 BUICK CENTURY Good body, needs motor $325. Call 756 0546 afters 30.
1978 LIMITED BUICK Loaded $3650 E C Averette. 756 2924
WANTED
Help Wanted
, ,051
Work Wanted..........
......059
Wanted............
.......140
Roommate Wanted
.....142
Wanted To Buy........
......144
Wanted To Lease......
.......146
Wanted To Rent.........
148
RENT/LEASE
1980 SKYLARK LIMITED 2 door, fully equipped. Excellent condition. $4(XX) 756 9520_
AUTOMOTIVE SALES career. Excellent starting salary and ^nefits Good working conditions Sales experience preferred. East Carolina Lincoln Mercury GMC
BRICK SALESMAN Experience in outside sales. Must know Pitt and surrounding counties. Base salary plus commission. Car and excellent benefits Must have ability to create contacts with developers architects, and homebuilders. Pro
fessional and career oriented only need to apply. Send resume to PO Drawer 458, Sanford, NC 27330
015
Chevrolet
CHEVELLE DELUXE, 1973 Runs good, power steering, new fires. $1000 or best otter 756 8430
CHEVETTE 1981. 2 door,
automatic. Excellent condition One owner. 32,000 miles. 752 0098, 752 6605.
NOVA 1976. 4 door, 24.000 actual miles, like new. Call Rex Smith Chevrolet, Ayden, 746 3141
1980 CHEVETTE, 4 door, 4 speed, AM/FM, air, 19,00Qmiles. 752-0S07
Apartments For Rent .
......12)
Business Rentals.
Campers For Rent
......124
1 Condominiums for Rent .
......125
Farms For Lease.........
.107
Houses For Rent .
127
Lots For Rent
Merchandise Rentals .....
......131
Mobile Homes For Rent .
......133
Office Space For Rent
.....135
Resort Property For Rent
.....137
Rooms For Rent..........
.....138
SALE
Autos tw; Sale..........
Bicycles tor Sale........
030
Boats tor Sale .
032
Campers for Sale .........
034
Cycles for Sale.............
036
Trucks tor Sale
039
018
Ford
DUE TO PAST AND PROJECTED
g^rowth Wendy's Old Fashioned Hamburgers has management positions available in Eastern NC Previous restaurant management experience highly preferred, but not necessary. Hardworking, intelligent individuals who can manage people should be unit managers within 6 months to 1 year. Salary com mensrate with experience. If you desire fast advancement and an exciting career, send resume to Stacy Plummer, Area Director Wendy's, 3220 C Carey Road, Kinston, NC 28501.
FULL TIME, year round ranch hand. Livestock, haying, crop expe rience desired. Send resume to Ranch Hand PO Box 1967, Greenville, NC 27834
1966 MUSTANG . _________
automatic, completely rebuilt 1760 days.
$2000 Call 756 nights
cylinder, . rebuilt, days, 756 5791
1966 MUSTANG with pony interior Good condition. $1800. Call 524 4741.
1974 FORD Grand Torino. Power steering, power brakes, automatic transmission, air. Good condition 752 7461
020
Mercury
'969 MERCURY MONTEREY
Good condition $550. Call 752 2321.
Pets...................
Antiques...............
Auctions...............
Building Supplies......
Fuel, Wood, Coal.......
Farm Equipment......
Garage-Yard Sales.....
Heavy Equipment .
Household Goods.....
Insurance............
Livestock..............
Miscellaneous..........
AAobile Homes tor Sale AAobile Home Insurance Musical Instruments .
Sporting Goods .........
Commercial Property . Condominiums tor Sale.
Farms tor Sale.........
Houses tor Sale.........
Investment Property....
Land For Sale .....
Lots For Sale...........
Resort Property tor Sale
.046
06)
062
063
064 .065
067
068 069
071
072
074
075
076
077
078 102
. 104 106 . 109 . Ill 113 115 .117
1977 MONARCH tion. 756 0975
Excellent condi-
1979 MERURY MONARCH Color is French Vanilla, Michelin fires, power brakes, power steering, air conditioning, rear glass defroster. AM/FM stereo radio. Very clean, low mileage $3850. 752 2582._
023
Pontiac
1946 PONTIAC Catalina $50
haul. 757 3147.
1980 PONTIAC PHOENIX 4 speed, air, stereo radio, wire wheels, low miles. $4295. 756 5621..
024
Foreign
MAINTENANCE PERSON needed tor apartment complex. Must be knowledgeable in all areas ot gen eral maintenance, which includes heating, air conditioning, and plumbing. Salary plus an apartment AAust be able to live on the property. Send description of quali ticafions and work experience to Maintenance, PO Box 1967
Greenville, NC 27834_^
MANAGER FOR CONVENIENT store and gas combination. $20.(XX) with commission. Apply at Dodges Store, 3209 South Memorial Drive, Greenville.
AUDI 5000S, 1982. 4 door,
automatic, fully equipped. 22.000 miles Call 756 5185,
CELICA GT, 1978 Toyota littback $3795 or best otter. Call 756 2995,
1969 VOLKSWAGON Beetle Rebuilt engine. Excellent condition. Call 35S6354 after 6 p.m. _
WHEN SOMEONE IS ready to buy, they turn to the Classified Ads Place your Ad today tor quick results
1977 200 SX DATSUN New paint job, new Interior. Good condition, call Debbie at 758 1846 days, 756
l759nlohts.
1978 HONDA ACCORD 5 speed, good condition, good gas mileage. Perfect car tor young graduate.
msm_
1978 TYOTA Clica Littback. Air, AM/FM sterao, 5 speed. Excellent condition. 746-2628 after 5.
MANY PEOPLE think we offer
"THE MOST REMARKABLE SALES CAREER IN THE WHOLE WIDE WORLD
because typical 1st full year earnings are
$20,000-$30,000 CAN YOU QUALIFY?
Age 21 or over.
High school or better.
Sports minded.
Ambitious tor a CAREER, not lust
a|ob.
Sell what people NEED, WHAT, are happy to buy, mainly to our old established accounts for a company top rated in its Industry with assets over a billion $$$. Some travel in local counties, guaranteed Income to start and prdmotion on MERIT, not seniority. Many of- our people advance rapidly Into management and earn $30,000 $50,000 or more.
I^r A Personal Interview
Cali Mr. Johnson Tues., Wed., or Thors.
10 a.m. to 5 p.m. 758-3401
051
Help Wanted
HAIRDRESSER WANTED Apply .n person at Great Expectations, Carolina East Mall.
HELP WANTED
Government Jobs federal, state civil service Many openings available Call (refundable) 1(619) 569 0241, department NC113 for de tailS;_
HOUSEMOTHER POSITION Must be mature lady, have experience in food preparation, meal planning, light bookkeeping and managing a household. Living quarters pro vided. Must have own trans negotiable. Call 758 5632 for more information human RELATIoi^S SECRE TARY Immediate need (or experi enced clerical professional in Greenville, NC area fortune 100 company (MEG Plant) Must have excellent clerical skills including typing, and shorthand Experience and love of personnel work a defmite plus Will also be working with coordination of benefits in eluding insurance claims, process ing Please send resume to Human Relations Secretary, PO Box 1967 Greenville, NC 27834 Equal Oppor'
tunity Employer M/F__
LEGAL SECRETARY Local law firm needs dttractive person with excellent secretarial skills. Typing 70 80 words per minute Prior legal secretarial experience preferred Excellent salary and benefits Please send resume to Legal Secre Greenville, NC
27834 0802.
059
Work Wanted
LKtATIVE HOME IMPROVEMENTS CO
Quality construction and renova tion Phone 757 0799 after 6 pm.
DARLEEN'S DOMESTICS Tired, need more time? Let someone else do your housecleaning Call 752
074
Miscellaneous
LARGE LOADS of sand and top soil, lot cleaning, backhoe also available. 756 4742 after 6 p.m., Jim Hudson'.
LOWREY GENIE new. Only S98S. Call 756-8833
ORGAN Like
FURNITURE STRIPPING Paint and varnish removed from wood and metal. Equipment formally of OjP and Strip All items returned within 7 days Tar Road Antiques. Call for free estimate Days 756 9123, Nioht 756 1007.
HOMES PAINTED interior and ex tenor 3 graduate students with experience in painting We give excellent work with substantial savings over professional prices. 756 8948 anytime or 752 8356 after 9:30pm _
LANDSCAPING, grass cutting, lot cleaning, small loads of sancf and dirt, any type of outside work. 752 1356 after 6.
LAWNMOWER REPAIRS We will pick up and deliver. All work guaranteed. Call 757 3353 after 4 p.m , weekends anytime.
LAWNMOWING Other yard work Low prices. Call 757 0317 or 752 4680. ask (or Sam Junior.
LEGAL SECRETARY Experienced, salary negotiable Send resume to Secretary, PO Box 5091, Greenville, NC
LIVE IN housekeeper needed Call 825 0653 after 6
MUTUAL OF OMAHA
We need one person who needs as much as $359.80 a week and more selling for Mutual of Omaha Call for personal interview
Lee W Weaver 756 1150 Greenville, N C
Life Insurance Affiliate United of Omaha Equal Opporfunity Companies M/F
PAINT PROS
We specialize in use of Benjamin Moore paints. Residential or commercial. Interior or exterior. Plaster and wallpapering. Free estimate. 758 4155.
_WE DO IT RIGHT
LOWREY ORGAN, 2 keyboards Excellent condition. Atlantic Credit Corporation, 756 5185.
MIMEO MACHINE, Copier, priced to sell! Call 756 2275, 8 a.m. 2 p.m Monday Friday
MOVING, MUST SELL I 2 sofas, 3 Lazy Boy chairs, 5 piece bedroom set. lamps, chest, table, pictures. 355 6977.
NEW SHARP copiers sale, lease, rent. Large selection of used copiers Xerox. Sharp. IBM, Savin, 3M 756 6167.
ONAN-GENERATOR 10,000 wat ts low hours. Excellent condition. $2900 Call 946 0432 after 6
ONE FULL SIZE mattress set. excellent condition, $75. Call 752 2968
REFRIGERATOR, Whirlpool, 13 cubic foot. Avocado green Best offer. Call 757 0459.
SELLING EVERYTHING!
Furniture, china, household goods, etc. Call 752 2027,
SHAMPOO FOR FALL! Rent shampooers and vacuums at Rental Tool Company.
PAINTING
No job too small. Interior and exterior Low rates McEarl Paint Co.
_ 757 3604
NEEDMATURE
Person to visit retail stores for major company in the GREENVILLE AREA Will be mainfaming special display of merchanise Indefinite temporary assignment.
Call KELLY SERVICES, 919 878 0956
3117P<
17 Poplarwood Court Raleloh, NC 27625
E(5e/MFH
NURSES! Join the ranks of a growing aggressive health care team located in Roanoke Rapids, NC midway between summer and winter recreational areas Halifax Memorial Hospital (approximately 200 acute care beds) is expanding to meet ;he increasing and chanmng demand of its service areas For further information on competitive salaries and generous benefit op portunities contact Mrs Linda House Personnel Officer, at 919 535 8106 (collect)
SHIRLEY'S CLEANING Service. Have your home cleaned weekly or monthly We also do windows and carpets. Residential and businesses references offered 753 5908 after 3 pm_
SIGN PAINTING Truck lettering as low as $59.95. Call Steve Atkins (or all your sign needs. 756 9117
STORAGE SHEDS, sun decks, and fences built. Painting and sand blasting Call 756 8790 after 5.
TREES TOPPED, trimmed, taken down John Perry, 758 4625._
060
FOR SALE
061
Antiques
NUTRITIONIST to direct Women's. Infant's, and Children's Supplemental Foods Program Masters Degree in foods and nutri tion or B S Degree and two years experience as a nutritionist or trainee required Contact Katherine Smith. Edgecombe County Health Department, Tarboro, NC. 641 7505
OFFSET PRESSMAN needed for medium size job printing shop Experience in 360/T51 2 color work desired but not required Salary range $9.264 $13,092 Apply at
Personnel Office, 701 East Fifth
St , East Carolina University__
OPPORTUNITY KNOCKS Recently acquired Wall Street concept requires individuals (or ground floor opportunity Excellent salary plus bonus Resume to Special Events, PO Box 2651
Greenville, NC 27834__
PART TIME WAITRESS wanted Tarheel II Night Club 746 2269 or 746 2696 after 6 p.m.__
PARTS COUNTER PERSON
needed Must have at least I year GM parts experience Apply to Jesse Boyd, Service Manager. Grant Buick, 603 Greenville Blvcf
ANTIQUES-New Shipment
Visit our showroom and see our collection of fine antiques at everyday low prices 3 piece oak bedroom suit, $800 Mahogany din ing room table and six chairs, $295. Solid brass beds. $240 up Hours Monday through Saturday, 10 am to 6 pm. Sunday I to 6 pm Antique Market of Kinston. Highway 70 W Bybass, Kinston, N C 527 8300.
SOFA SLEEPER, dresser. Price negotiable. Must sell now! 752 0721.
SOLID OAK American Drew bedroom suit, queen size, $650 7
Call 756 5859
TOPSOIL, mortar sand, fill sand and gravel. Davenport Hauling,
093
OPPORTUNITY
DESIGNER JEANS LTD (As seen on TV). You now have the opportu nity to get involved with the fast growing multi million dollar De signer Jean Industry and own your own business. Exciting new market ing program, commercial and starting inventory.supplied. $13.900 Call Mr. Green, 804 463 7650
FIGURE AND Exercise Salon Established. A money maker. Well equipped. Repeat clientele. Must sell. Snowden Associates. 752 3575.
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
TO BUY OR SELL a business Appraisals. Financing Contact SNOWDEN ASSOCIATES, Licensed Brokers, 401 W First Street 752 3575__
095
PROFESSIONAL
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. Cafl day or night, 753 3503, Farmville.
104 Condominiums For Sale
USED WASHERS Good condition. $75 with trade, $85 without trade 756 2479
12x60, 2 BEDROOM furnished mobile home 1982 Toyota Tercel. Excellent condition. Deluxe model. 756 3830 after 7 p.m_
13,000 BTU AIR conditioner 756 5591 after 6 pm. $150.
Call
14' GARAGE DOOR Complete with all hardware. Like new $200 or best offer 758 7693.
19" COLOR TV Rent to own. $23.11 per month. Furniture Wot Id. 757 0451.
HORSEPOWE R nmower I 746 6017 or 355 :
_ .. . J i n g
lawnmower shape. $32S;
075 Mobile Homes For Sale
064
Fuel, Wood, Coal
AAA ALL TYPES of firewood (or sale J P Stancil. 752 6331
065 Farm Equipment
DISC BLADES cuf out or round 18 9 gauge $6 99. 20" 9
gauge $8 95, 22' 6 gauge $14.22, 22" 3 gauge cone blade $17 97 Center hole sizes to fit most discs avalla ble Other gauage blades and sizes up to 32 " are in stock Agri Supply, Greenville, NC. 752 3999.
FOR SALE: Roanoke Bulk tobacco barns Size 126 racks Contact Pamlico Chemical Company. Win terville 756 4642, Washington 946
5115
TOBACCO TRUCK CURTAINS
Less than half dealers price. Haf-teras Canvas Products, 758 0641, 1104 Clark Street
WANT TO BUY 12' to 14' grain drills Will trade for Super A 756 3623.
APPROXIMATELY 1 ACRE and
trailer for sale by owner in country. 12x65. 1976 Conner Tidwell, com pletely furnished with central air, 16x16), Price 7 11.
garage/storage area (16x16) negotiable. 756 2692 between i
BRAND NEW 1983 top of the line double wide. 3 bedrooms. 2 full baths, many extras Including masonite siding, shingle roof, frost free refrigerator, garden tub, cathedral ceiling and much, much more. Regular price. $21,995 Limited Time Only
$16,995
VA, FHA and conventional on lot financing Delivery and sef up includecf Hours, 8 AM to 8 pm.
CROSSLAND HOMES (formerly AAoblle Home Brokers) 630 West Greenville Boulevard
BRAND NEW 1983 top quality 14 wide, 2 bedroom mobile home
loaded with extras, plywood floors.
lofal elec(r;c.
COMING SOON!!!
open House Week at BROOKHILL TOWNHOMES Model will be open daily Plan to see our affordable alternative to renting! Call for details on our 2 and 3 bedroom units. Jane Warren at 758 6050 or 758 7029 and Will Reid at 758 6050 or 756 0446
MOORE &SAUTER 110 South Evans 758-6050
FOR SALE OR LEASE with option to buy. University Condominiums. 2 bedrooms, IVj baths, great condi tion. Make an offer. $32,500 Speight Realty 756 3220, nioht 758 7741.
106
Farms For Sale
FOR SALE: 5,000 pounds of 1983 tobacco allotment, Pitt County $3.50 pound. Call 752 6889
58 ACRE FARM Good road fron tage on SR 1753 and SR lllO 51 acres cleared. 6,209 pounds tobacco allotment, pond and 2 bedroom house. St. Johns Community Call for more details. Call Moseley Marcus Realty at 746 2166 for full details.
107
Farms For Lease
109 Houses For Sale
-(HOUSE FOR SALE Call 746 6078
Many extras.
new
WINTERVILLE Corner lot, roof, new paint, 2 bedroom house Central location Excellent rental history $18,000 Call owner after 5, 756 4980
1950 SQUARE FEET, garage, living room, 3 or 4 bedrooms, workshop, large great room with 8' pool table and fireplace, Newly carpeted with dishwasher, cable TV, 7 years old Located 3 miles from Greenville.
Priced 752 7663
in the $50's.
reenvide 758 0144 or
2 BEDROOMS, living room, dining room, 2 full baths, den and kitchen Call after 6. 757 1489
2 BEDROOMS, storage shed, garden 1 mile West of hospital on Highway 43 $23,000. 758 4625
5 ROOM FRAME HOUSE Over an acre of land. 24x30 garage 12x12 utility building. $26,000 756 2053,
ask tor Leroy _
121 Apartments For Rent
KINGS ROW APARTMENTS
One and two bedroom garden apartments. Carpeted, range, re frigerator, dishwasher, disposal and cable TV Conveniently located to shopping center and schools Located just off lOth Street
Call 752-3519
113
Land For Sale
3 ACRES OF LAND All road frontage. Small 3 room house on it 758 4611 or 752 4017 anytime _
115
Lots For Sale
Vj ACRE TO 5 ACRES, over 100 lots to choose from. Locafions on Highway 43 south, Chicod Creek, Grifton area. Highway 33 south Call 757 0277. after 5 p.m 756 2682
BELVOIR HIGHWAY Mobile home lots $5900 Speight Realty 756 3220, night 758 7741 ^
EVANWOOD WODDED building lot on quiet street. $14,000. Call Bail & Lane, 752 0025.
LOT FOR 16 apartments. Ready for building Near hospital. $25,000. Call 756 741/i
LIZT
LOT FR 8 apartments. Hooker Road $23.000. Call 756 7417.
S^TOKES 3 acres, $11,500. Speiqht Realty 756 3220, nioht 758 7741,
117 Resort Property For Sale
12x60 MOBILE HOME Paradise Bay at Saulter Path. $5600 Call 746 3194 after 6 p.m_
120
RENTALS
LOTS FOR RENT Also 2 and 3 bedroom mobile homes Securiti deposits required, no pets 4413 between 8 and 5.
urity
Call
NEED STORAGE? We have any size to meet your storage need Call Arling^ton Self Storage, Open Mon day Friday? 5. Call 756 9933._
121 Apartments For Rent
APARTMENTS FOR RENT
Drive 2 bedrooms.
uple:
ills
Stan
bath
ply
plywood counter lops. 1l^ _____
ran^^ refrigerator. Regular price.
Limited Time Only
$9,995
VA, FHA and conventional on lot financing. Delivery and sef up includecTHours. 8 am fo 8pm. CROSSLAND HOMES (Formerly Mobile Home Brokers) 630 West Greenville Boulevard 756-0191
SEE OUR NEW 1983, 76X14 , 3 bedroom home. No gimmicks. No rebates. Just low, low prices. See Robert Lane at Thomas Mobile Homes, 752 6068,
POSITION ^AVAILABLE Junior Army ROTC Instructor Write PO Drawer 1797, Goldsboro. NC 27530
PROGRAMMER Minimum I year programming on IBM system, 34 or 38. Reply to Attention Personnel, PO Box 1879,
Goldsboro, NC 27530.__
RECEPTIONIST WANTED Apply in person at Great Expectations, Carolina East Mall.__
RETIRED OR SEMI RETIRED in
dividual to do light delivery work on Wednesdays. Must be in good health and have automobile Write "De livery", PO Box 1967, Greenville, NC 27834. _
RN PART TIME Be a Red Cross nurse Join a professional team and assist in providing the gift of life to others Graduate of a credifed school of nursing. Eligible (or licensure of NC Minimum 1 year recent hospital nursing experience required Available for irregular and flexible hours of assignment Occasional over night traveL but no shift rotation. Call 758 1140 or send resume to Tar River Blood Center, PO Box 6003, Greenville. NC EOE
072
Livestock
cox STABLES has available stalls for boarding horses. Large green pasture Reasonable rates. Pfi area. Winterville 756 2234
Tiding
HORSEBACK RIDING
Stables, 752 5237.
Jarman
10 YEAR OLD Sorrell Gelding for sale fo good home. Used primarily (or trail riding Eastern or Western 15 2 hands. $650. 752 6250.
074
Miscellaneous
A SPECIAL Sidewalk Sale. Satur day 10 to 5. CKi la, crystal, etc. Bargains. Coir 8. Ring Man. Downtown Greenville.
A TIME SAVER! 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 Man, 4th and Evans, downtown Greenville.
RN S, LPN S and OR Technicians. Pungo District Hospital needs you Contact Barbara McDonald. Director ot Nursing, (919) 943 2111
ROBINSON & BRITTAIN
Incorporated is expanding and has the need for 2 additional sales people Electric background
helpful We are the security
s^ystems specialists. Call John
Clark. 752 8694 (or interview before
SALES MONEY MEN WOMEN (26 years or older)
Help enuretic children, unlimited leads travel work hard and make $25,000 to $40.000 a year com mission Call 800 826 4875 or 800 826 4826 __
SALES REPRESENTATIVE Ma
jor national company has an open mg (or a Sales Associate in the Greenville area. Prior sales experi ence not as important as ability and willingness to learn. Salary negotiable Excellent benefit package For a confidential in terview send resume to MANAG ER, P O Box 1985, Greenville, NC 27835 Equal Opportunity Employer_________
SECOND AND THIRD SHIFTS in Bethel and Greenville. Must be 18 and able to work in Bethel and willing to take polygraph test before starting to work Accepting applications Wednesday and Thursday, Blount Petroleum, 615
West 14th Street _
SECRETARY/BCXJKKEEPER for 4 hours daily. Possibly splif shift Experience with forms and titles of auto dealership. Reply to PO Box
4255, Greenville, NC 27834._
SEEK PHYSICAL THERAPIST (or home visits in Hyde County (stroke patient) Fee negotiable. Call 946 4180 or 946 6829._
SR
TYPISTS!
55 Words Per Minute WE NEED YOU! MANPOWER TEMPORARY Services offers you:
Uqiciue Fringe Benefits
Top Pay
Flexible Schedule
Call us for an appointment We Are Not a Fee ^ency
MANPOWER
TEMPORARY
SERVICES
118 Reade Street __757 3300_
WANTED EXPERIENCED storm window and door installers to work with Eastern Carolina's leading manufacturer Salarv. expenses, and fringes. Call 757 1200 for pointment.
APPLE //e Starter Systems. Brand new, $1695. Also Apple accessories 15% discount. Call 757 3820.
ASSUME PAYMENTS of $39,95 on a 6 piece Western living room suit. Sofa, chair, rocker, and 3 tables. Furniture World, 757 0451. We take trade ins.
BEDOING&WATERBEDS
Why pay retail when you can save up fo ' 2 and more on bedding and waterbeds. Factory Mattress & Waterbed Outlet (Next to Pitt Plaza), 355 2626.
BRUNSWICK SLATE POOL
Tables. Cash discounts. Delivery and installation. 919 763 9734.
12 X'65 custom built 1973 Lexington. 2. bedrooms, 2 full baths. Un derpinned with large deck. Central air. $7500. 355 2922 or 442 4452.
1968 MOBILE HOME 2 bedrooms, 1'/2 baths, new carpet, in nice rented park. Furnished, some financing. Immediate occupant. 355-6538.
1970 COBURN Low down payment. Low monthly payments. 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, oil heat. Call 756 9874. Country Squire Mobile Homes, 264 Bypass, Greenville.
1974 RITZ CRAFT down. Call 757 0633.
12x65. $500
1977 CAROLINA, 14x70, 3 bedroom, I'/j bath, central air, underskirting 756 1343 weekdays, 524 4863 after 6
1978 CONNER 12 x 60, 2 bedrooms, air condition unit. $500 and assume payments. Call 756 4592 days, 756 2912 nights.
1978 CONNER 12x60, 2 bedrooms Low down payment, low monthly payments. Underpinning included in deal. Good condition. Must sell! 752 8846 after 2 p.m
1979 CONNER Low down payment. Low monthly payments. 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, oil heat. Call 756-9874. Country Squire Mobile Homes, 264 Bypass, Greenville.
1980 KNOX 14x60. Folly furnished, air condition, steps under pinning Like new Call Greg, 757 7227 days, 747 2052 nights.
WANTTOBUY
CORN
Top Prices Paid for your Worthington Farms Inc , 7! Days, 756 3732 Nights._
109
Houses For Sale
ASSUMABLE FHA 235, 3
bedrooms, I'z baths. 10x14 workshop, 204 Burrington Road. Singletree. $47,000. 355 2647._
BY OWNER College Court. 3 bedroom house Assume 11"2% VA loan. $6500 down. Closing cost under $200. Call 758 6200or 756 5217..
ide city lot size between
BY OWNER Just ... limits. 3 bedroom. 1 batl 85'X180' Low $20's. 752 73:
5:30 7:30p m. _
BY OWNER 1718 square foot, brick ranch. 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, close to schools, shopping, den with fireplace and woodstove. living room, dining room, eat in kitchen, extra room, 12 X 14, perfect for shop or game room. Large lot Assume^ Ti'3% VA loan $7500 equity. Call after 5 pm. 752 6448.
duplex $250.00 per month. Bryton 2 bedrooms, 1 bath $235 00 month Verdant , St 2 edrooros, 1'j bath duplex townhouse $290 00 per month. All require (year's lease and security deposit. (Juffus Realty. Inc , 756 OOfl
LOVE TREES?
Experience the unique in apartment living with nature outside your door '
COURTNEY SQUARE APARTMENTS
Quality construction, fireplaces, heat pumps (heating costs 5(i% less than comparable units), dishwash er, washer/dryer hook ups, cable TV,wall to waif carpet, thermopane windows, extra insulation
Office Open 9-5 Weekdays
95 Saturday I 5 Sunday
Merry Lane Off Arlington Blvd
756-5067
121
iiife izauy nenector, Greenville, X.C -Tuesday, May 3,1983-15 Apartmenfs For Rent
127
Houses For Rent
2 BEDRCX)M, 1'z batb duplex near campus $265 month Call 756,7755,
Monday Friday. 9 5____
2 BEDROOM DUPLEX, stove re frigerator, central heat and air, deposit, lease, no pets 756 6834
after 3 p m. _
2 BEDROOM, carpet, refrigerator, dishwasher, air 5 blocks from
3 BEDROOM HOUSE near univer S'ty 1 bath, garage all appliances furnished 2412 Umstead Drive $385 ^month Call 756 6200or 756 52)7
133 Mobile Homes For Rent
NEW TASTEFULLY decorated townhouse 2 bedrooms, l'< baths, washer/dryer hook ups, heat Efficient $310 per month or 756 6904
t pump 72 204(
NEW 1 BEDROOM with patios Water/sewer furnished $210 month 756 7417___
NEW 3 BEDRbOfiA ECU, energy efficient, dishwasher, washer/dryer hookups, no pets $330 756 5346 ^ _
NICE 3 ROOM apartment Stove and refrigerator furnished Located at 1301 Dickinson Avenue $135 monthly 756 3662___
OAKAAONTSQUARE~
APARTMENTS
Two bedroom townhouse apart ments 1212 Redbanks Road Dish washer, refrigerator, range, dis posal included We also have Cable TV Very convenient to Pitt Plaza and University Also some furnished apartments available
756 4151
2 BEDROOM with appliances and air No pets or children $250 mus deposit Call 752 3750 3to6p m 2 BEDRCX3M APARTMENT near campus married couples only, no pets Available May 15 Lease and deposit required $220 monthly Estate Realty Company. 752 5058 2 BEDRCXJM. 1'2 bath townhouse Totally furnished Available May
15 August 15 757\3997 _______
2 BEDR(X)M near ECU. utilities. Appliances $300 a month Deposit No pets Available June I 75049I or 756 7609 before 9pm_
FOR RENT OR SALE 1973 Bowen. 52x12, 2 bedroom trailer $5500 or $l75per month Call 756 7067
If you're not using your exercise equipment, sell it this winter in these columns Call 752 6166
SPECIAL RA'LES on furnished 2 bedroom mobile homes $135 and
Searching tor the right townhouse Watch Classified every day
2 NEW DUPLEXES near the hospi tal'med school Available for oc
TWO 2 bedroom mobile homes furnished, one in Gntton. one near Grifton Two bedroom furnished log cabin located at Tic Bite One bedroom furnished cottage located on Contentnea Creek No pets For
appointment call 524 5428__
TWO BEDROOM tur-nished washer and dryer, good location 756 2702 or 758 1048 after 6 pm
2 BEDROOM Mobile Home for rent Can 756 4^7_______________ _
7sf i Furnished, washer \enfril'' heat
752 3152, 752 6715 ask tor Bryant or 1 Call 752 3839
John , - -----------
122
Business Rentals
ONE BEDROOM, furnished apartments or mobile homes for rent Contact J T or Tommy Williams, 756 7815
ONE BEDROOM furnished apartment adjoining ECu Com pletely modern with central heat and air conditioning Stadium Apartments. 904 E 14th St $190 per month Call 752 5700or 756 4671.
ONE BEDRCX>M apartment Near campus. No pets $215 a month 756 3923
AVAILABLE MAY 1. Energy etfi cient 2 bedroom townhouse duplex. Carpeted, appliances, I'z baths, wood deck. Ridge Place. Call 756 2879
AVAILABLE MAY 1, New I, 2 and 3 bedroom apartments Drapes, wall to wall carpet, central heal and air, outside storage. Grifton#rea Office hours 10 a.m. to 2 pm, Monday through Friday, 2 p.m to 4 p m Saturday and Sunday Phone 524
DON'T THROW IT away! Sell it for cash with a fast action Classified Ad!
COUNTRY HOME Vj acre lot with detached garage with 1200 square feet living area Steve Evans & Associates, 355 2727 or 758 3338.
excellent loan assumption. Only 9>% interest 4 bedrooms. 2' 2 baths, with many other features available. Steve Evans & Associates, 355 2727 or 758 3336
FARMERS HOME ASSUMPTION 3 bedrooms. 1 bath, private lot Only $38.500. Steve Evans & Associates, 355 2727or 758 3338
1983 EASTWOOD New home Total electric. 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, A roof, ceiling fan, cafhedral ceiling. All for $8995. Payment under $125 a month. Call 756 9874. Country Squire Mobile Homes, 264 Bypass. Greenville.
076 Mobile Home Insurance
BUTCHER BLOCK TOP portable dishwasher. Contemporary Armoire, pecan finish, 6Vj'x3V'^. $125 each. 756 9835.
CALL CHARLES TICE, 758 3013, for small loads of sand, fopsoil and stone Also driveway work
CARPET, CARPET, CARPETI
Assorted sizes and colors. 9x12's, 9x15's, 12xl2's, 12x15's. Priced to move Financing available Furniture World 2808 East 10th Street, 757 0451._
CENTIPEDE SOD 758 2704, 752 4994
COFFEE
756 2121.
MACHINE. $50. Call
FACTORY 2nds NOW available direct from manufacturer. Hand woven rope hammocks, $19.95 to $53. Hatleras Hammocks,
Clark Street, Greenville.
1104
FOR EXPERT TV repair, bring set fo Four Way TV in Hookerton. (We
sell nevy RCA sets). 747 2412._
FOR SALE: yellow collards and cabbage plants Marion Mae Mills, 756 3279 or 355 2 792.
FOR SALE: Rotary antenna picks up channels 5, 7, 9, 11, 12. Excellent buy Call 752 5628after 9a.m.
FOR SALE: Call 758 2433.
sofa and chair, $150.
FULLER BRUSH PRODUCTS Call 758 5590.
GOLF CART, electric condition. $500. 756 3084.
Excellent
for ap
WANTED: Field sales repre
sentative for solid established firm. Works approximately 3 counties. Excellent commission op portunities. Send resume and refer enees to Sales Representative, PO Box 130, Washington. NC 27889.
2 HAIRDRESSERS NEEDED Apply to Heads Up, 318 South Evans Street 9(06. 758 8553
059
Work Wanted
ALL TYPES TREE SERVICE Licensed tree surgeons. Trimming, cutting and removal. Free esiimates. 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 _
CALL SEARS ROEBUCK 8. Co (or free estimafes on siding, guttering, mobile home roofover, insulation. Interior and exterior painting and roof vents. Call 756 9700, exf 232. Monday Saturday 10a.m. 9p.m. CHIMNEY SWEEPING Fireplaces and wood stoves need cleaning after a hard winters use. Eliminate creosote and musty odors. Wood stove specialist. Tar Road En terprlses. 756 9123 day. 756 1007 night. _______
GOWN FOR SALE: Beautiful lav ender floor lengfh gown. Size 7/8 Never worn. Perfect for prom or bridesmaid. Ruffled frim top can be worn on or off shoulder. $75. Call 752 0815 before 10 a.m./after 7:30 pm._
MOBILE HOMEOWNER Insurance coverage for less mone
Smith Insurance and Realty,
2754 '
THOMAS CALIFORNIA 267 organ with orchestral present and quadrathonic with color glow. Call 244-0991.
077 Musical Instruments
KIMBALL CONSOLE piano. New pecan or walnut finish. $1,599 with bench, delivery and 10 year war ranty. Piano & Organ Distributors, Greenville. 355 600?
P'ANO for sale, $150. 757-0510a(ter6p.m.
7 PIECE SET of Blue Tama Drums. 1 snare drum, 4 mounted tom-toms, '..noor tom, 1 22" base drum, 3 Z| dien cymbojs, high hat with 2 z'lPien cymbots. Price negotiable. Call 758-0206 after 6.
082 LOST AND FOUND
LOST MINIATURE COLLIE (also known as Sheltie or Shetland Sheepdog), missing since April 22, male, 11 years old. family dog since 6 weeks old, easily,, frightened in unfamiliar surroundings. Please call owner 757-4724, Monday Friday, 8 to 5; 752-2890 evenings and weekends.
FOR SALE by owner. Lake Ellsworth, 3 bedroom, 2 bath ranch Situated on large well landscaped lot with fenced in backyard Formal living room and dining root*, den wifh fireplace, large fully eqftipped kitchen, patio, outside slcxage $60's (rail 355 2857 from 9^ 5, 355 2067 after 5
GREAT DEAL!
Assumable 8' j% loan with mo.-il..., payments of $170. 3 bedrooms,*!'j bafhs. carport with shop/storage area Brick veneer. In Weathington Heights, Winterville. Excellent asking price. Mid Eastern Brokers.
757 3540, nights 757 3529._
LAKE ELLSWORTH, 9'z% assumable loan, 3 bedrcwm 2 story with dinin^-----
AZALEAGARDENS
Greenville's newest and most uniquely furnished one bedroom apartments
All energy efficient designed
Queen size beds and studio couches
Washers and dryers optional
Free water and sewer and yard maintenance
All apartments on ground floor with porches.
Frost free refrigerators.
Located in Azalea Gardens near Brook Valley Country Club Shown by appointment only. Couples or singles. No pets.
Contact JT or Tommy Williams __756 7815__
Cherry Court
Spacious 2 bedroom townhouses with 1'j baths. Also 1 bedroom apartments. Carpet, dishwashers, compactors, pstio, tree cable TV, washer dryer
laundry club
hook ups, room, sauna, tennis court
house and POOL. 752 1557_
DUPLEX Near ECU 2 bedrooms, 1 bath $235 per month. No pets 752 2040
DUPLEX 2006 Chestnut Street. Refrigerator and stove. $125 mon thly 752 4639
dining room, living room and with fireplace. Lovely home! Jeff Aldridge. Aldridge & 756 Boo, nights 756
den
Call .
Southerland. 2807.
LYNNDALE - Very unique 2' 2 story home offers superb living areas plus study, playroom, 2 fireplaces . Po/ch, Listed at $117.m but take look and make an offer! Call Ball 8. Lane, 752 0025, or Richard Lane, 752 8819
NEAR FAIRGROUNDS 3
^drooms, brick, freshly painted. Good starter home. $41,500. Speight Realty 756 3220. nioht 756 7741.
NEW LISTING Farmers Home assumption. Available on this 3 1'/j bath, brick ranch, $41,500. Call Aldridge & Southerland, 756 3500, nights Rod Tugwell, 753 4302.
GRADUATION IDEA? Moffitt's Magnavox has 12 " black and white TVs for only $74.95! 2803 Evans Streef Extension, 756 8444.
ICEMAKERS and Reach In Coolers Sale 40% off. Barkers Refrigeration. 2227 Memorial Drive, 756 6417.
JOIN MOFFITT'S MAGNAVOX video tape club Greenville's first and largest 2803 Evans Street Extension, 756 8444
^^ASSIRED DISPLAY
WE REPAIR iCREENS& DOORS
C.L. Lupton Co.
NO DOWN PAYMENT!
Discover the joys o( Engage-A-Car, the common-sense alternative to BUYING a new car.
It's the modern way to drive any new car, van or truck your heart desires...foreign or domestic. With Engage-A-Car, you can laugh at Inflation because NO DOWN PAYMENT Is necessary and your MONTHLY PAYMENTS are lower! You owe It to yourself to get all the exciting details now.
Mid-Eastern Brokers
PlltPlua 757-3540
Shopi^ng Canter
LOST; 14 carat mans signet ring with initials TAF in fne back parking lot of Quixote Travel. $75 reward. Timmy Flake, Pegasus
085 Loans And Mortgages
2ND MORTGAGES by phone-commercial loans mortgages bought. Call tree 1-800-845-3929.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
NEWLISTINGS
CAROLINA HEIGHTS Three tedroom and bath, brick ranch home. Living room with fireplace, family room with wood stove, carport. $46,000.
COGHILL Three bedroom and bath ranch home on Gotten Road. Living room with fireplace, dining area, carport, nice area. S49.000.
UNIVERSITY AREA DUPLEX Live in one side, rent the other, or buy this tor your student or as an investment. Two bedrooms, bath,
$59
DUFFUSREALTY INC
756-5395
SLIPFR BUY! 3 or 4 bedrooms. 1'/j baths, carpet, 2 car detached garage, that is perfect for workpiop, 8% loan assumption. Located near Carolina East Mall. Only S^2'500. Better hurry. Speight Realty 756 3220, nioht 758 7741.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
EASTBROOK AND VILLAGE GREEN APARTMENTS
327 one. two and three bedroom garden and townhouse apartments, featuring Cable TV, modern appli anees, central heat and air condi tioning, clean laundry facilities, three swimming pools.
Office 204 Eastbrook Drive
752-5100
ONE BEDRCXJM country Call 756 9132
apartment in
RENT FURNITURE: Livin ing, bedroom complete $79 uu per Option to buy U REN CO,
EXCELLENT BUSINESS loc-ation 5400 square toot building High traffic area of 10th Street and Dickinson Avenue Formerly oc cupied by Sherwin Williams Paints Now available on a reasonable lease Snowden Associates, 752 3575
FOR RENT 10,000 square foot building Ideally located on Highway 33 m Chocowinity Call Donnie Smith at 946 5867_____
WAREHOUSE AND office space tor lease 20,000 square feet available Will subdivide 756 5097 or 756 9315
. WHY STORE THINGS you never use Sell them tor cash with a
1 Classified Ad
2 BEDRCXDMS, washer dryer air
Carpet No pets 756 0792___
2 BEDRCXJMS, all electric, 6 mi les out on New Bern Highway No pets 756 0975___________
2 BEDROOMS furnished No children, nopets Call 758 6679_
135 Office Space For Rent
DOWNTOWN, |ust off mall Singles and multiples Convenient to courthouse Call 756 0041 or 756 3466
for'
rent 2500 square feet rZn tr i^hoppina ; Suitable tor otfice space or com
In Ih I S D 1. Aimercial 604 Arlington Boulevard
Southerland Realty, 756 3500, nights 1756 81 1 1
Don Southerland 76 5260. .z----
OFFICES FOR LEASE Contact J Y or Tommy Williams. 756 7815
125 Condominiums For Rent
UNIVERSITY CONDOMINIUM 2
bedroom, 1'i bath, carpeted, maior appliances furnished No oets 825 7321 after 5pm__
YORKTOWN SQUARE 3
bedrooms. I'j baths, fully carpeted, (ireplace, stove, refrigerator Near athletic club Available June I $350 plus deposit Days 756 5225. Nights 758 5505 ^
127
Houses For Rent
AVAILABLE JUNE 1. 4 bedrooms, I block trom Pitt Plaza. Oakmont 756 1243
137 Re^rt Property For Rent
EMERALD ISLE beach house 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, central air Cable TV $300 a week 919 354 3301
138
Rooms For Rent
AIR CONDITIONED room with kitchen privileges tor summer term tor 2 students 1/2 block from college Call 752 3546
COZY ONE bedroom, in a quite neighborhood 1 block from tennis courts. 756 8I'60, 756 7768 .
HARDEE ACRES 3 bedrooms, 1' , , din j baths, lovely kitchen, garage, heat j pump, dishwasher, refrigerator, stove, fence $360 per month 756 '
FURNISHED, private bedroom with refrigerator, private entrance, across trom college Male pre
terred 758 2585___
SINGLE FURNISHED room tor discreet male student or young businessman $125 month Nice home near Pitt Plaza 756 5667
STRATFORD ARMS APARTMENTS
The Happy Place To Live CABLE TV
Office hours 10am toSpm Monday through Friday
Call us 24 hours a day at
756-4800 ___
SUB LEASE apartment Available now! 752 9070
TAR RIVER ESTATES
5587 or 756 0482
HOUSES AND APARTMENTS in
town and country Call 746 3284 or 524 3180
HOUSES FOR RENT: Memorial Drive 3 bedrooms, 1 bath $350.00
Cer month Bethel 5 bedrooms, 3 aths $500 00 per month. Grimesland 3 bedrooms, 1 bath $250 per month Forbes Street 3 bedrooms, 1 bath $265.00 per month All require I year's lease and security deposit Duffus Realty. Inc . 756 0811.
142 Roommate Wanted
MALE ROOMMATE needed to share residence $125 a month plus ' 3 utilities 752 1 175 or 756 1455
RESPONSIBLE ROOMMATE share townhouse $125 rent and expenses Leave name and number, 758 0017
NEAR UNIVERSITY, 3 .
bedrooms No pets. Call 726 7615
or
NEW 2 BEDROOM duplex oft Hooker Road Appliances and hook, ups $295 plus deposit No pets. Call Mary, days 75 3000. '
1997
days
nights 756
SUPER NICE 3 bedroom, 2 bath, close to university $375 month 756 7417_
and 3 bedroorm, washer dryer club
1, 2,
hook ups, cable TV, pool, house, playgrdhjnd, Near ECU
Our Reputation Says It All "A Community Complex '
1401 Willow Street Office Corner Elm & Willow
752-4225
THREE BEDRCXJM home, nice lot Call 752 3311
TWO BEDROOM apartments available. No pets Insurance & Realty, 752 2754
,-all Smith
TO PLACE YOUR Classified Ad, lust call 752 6166 and lei a friendly Ad Visor help you word your Ad.
UNIVERSITY APEA Upstairs duplex. Available May I. 2 bedrooms. $200. 1204 A Forbes Street. 756 0765.
EFFICIENCY APARTMENTS
All utilities Cable TV Telephone (soon)
Furnished
With or without maid service Weekly or monthly rates Starting $250 month and up
756-5555
Olde London Inn_
ENERGY EFFICIENT, 2 bedroom' townhouse in wooded area. All hook UPS. $300. 756 6295.
FISCHER VILLAGE apartments, Aurora, NC , available for oc cupancy. Elderly, handicapped and disabled. Rent based on income. Barbara Miller, 322 4990 or 322 4913. Equal Opportunity Housing
VERDANT STREET 2
bedroom,I'z bath duplex townhouse, $290 per month. All require 1 year's lease and security deposit. Duffus Realty. Inc. 756 08n._J _'
VILLAGE EAST
2 bedroom, 1' 2 bath townhouses. Available now. $295/month.
9 to 5 Monday Friday
756-7711
WEDGEWOODARMS
NOW AVAILABLE 2 bedroom. 12 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 BEDRCXJM APARTMENT Heat and hot water furnished. 201 North Woodlawn; $215. 756 0545 or 758 06B
1 BEDROOM Cedar Lane Apart ments, $170. I08A Ridge Place, $175 Call 756 3611 or 756 3936
3 BEDROOMS, 2 ful! baths, cathedral ceiling, sky lights, sliding glass door, corner fireplace, great room, Jennair range Located on ^ke at Indian Trails Country Club, Grifton $295 tor rent or option to buy Available immediately 752 7550 or 758 7158.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
SF>ECIAL Safe
Mocjel S-1 Special Price
$12250
Reg. Price$177.00
TAFF OFFICE EQUIPMENT
569 S. Evans St. 752-2175
RESPONSIBLE MALE roommate wanted to share 3 bedroom home with 2 others 752 1579 after 6 p m
RCXJMMATE NEEDED
'4 utilities 752 3103
148
Wanted To Rent
FAMILY DESIRES house to rent by May 16 for 1 year while building house in Greenville 3 4 bedrooms, living room and dining room, den, garage or storage area Phone 756 6287 evenings
Cl^ASSIFIED DISPLAY
ROOFING
STORM WINDOWS DOORS 4 AWNINGS
C.L. Lupton, Co.
CRAFTED SERVICES
Quality furnltura Rtflnithing and rapaira. Superior caning (or all typo chaira, larger selection of custom pichir framing, survey atakoeany length, all types ot pelleta, hand-cralted rope hem-mocka. aalectod tramad roproducttona.
Eastern Carolina Vocational Center
Industrial Park. Hwy. 13 75<-41U 8A.M.-4:30P.M.
Greenville, N.C.
2 BEDROOM apartment. Central air, carpeted, appliances. 804 Willow Sfri 758 3311.
freef. Apartment 4. $250.
2 BEDROOM apartment Central air, cayieted, appliances. $250 a month Bryton Hills. 758 3311._
GreeneWay
Large 2 bedroom garden apart ments, carpeted, dish washer, cable TV, laundry rooms, balconies, spacious grounds with abundant parking, economical utilities and POOL. Adjacent to Greenville Country Club. 756 6869
IN WINTERVILLE 3 bedroom apartment. Appliances furnished. No children, no pets. Deposit and lease $195 month. 756 5007
leas
JO
STREET APART MENTS I bedroom unfurnished apartments available immediate Water and appliances furnished. No pets. Call Judy at 756 6336 before 5 p.m , Monday Friday__
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
WE BUY USED CARS lOHNSON MOTOR CO.
Across From Wachovia Computer Center Memorial Dr. 756-8221
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
WEiNSTALL ALUMiNUM AND VINYLSiDiNG
C.L. Lupton, Co.
MANAGER
TRAINEE
WANTED
Restaurant experience lielpful but not necessary. Apply at;
Mr. Gattis
Between 2-4 p.m.
On Monday, Tuesday Or Wednesday
DIAL-A-PIZZA
IS now accepting applications for
CASHIERS AND PIZZA DELIVERY RUNNERS
Full or Part Time
Must be wilting to work nights i weekends.
Salary Plus Commission.
Must furnish own car Must be willing to take preemployment polygraph lest.
apply IN PERSON KASH & KARRY-PHONE 355-2879 BELL FORKS CROSSROADS GREENVILLE
FREE COKE tkrWHIRf IN out UIVKt ZONE
FOR LEASE 2500 Square Feet
PRIME RETAIL OR OFFICE SPACE ON ARLINGTON
BOULEVARD
756-8111 >
BELIEVE IT OR NOT!
Zi X 14 AZALEA MOBILE HOMES 4,9951?.
3 Bedrooms 2 Full Baths
Includes:
Deluxe Furniture Cathedral Ceiling Storm Windows
Deluxe Refrigerator
Total Electric
100 Mile Free Delivery
Greenville 756-7815 Chocowinity 946-5639 Williamston 792-7533
Now Open In Tarboro 823-7161
Plus Tax
25 Years In The Business
Longest Mobile Home In N.C.IsAt Azalea Mobile Homes
f
PhilipMoms Inc. 1983New ^ Players Kings.Regular and Menthol
Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.
12 mg "lar," 1.0 mg nicotine av. per cigarette, by FTC method.
1(1-12)
a97 037 J,97 O
Our Reg. Our Reg. HIHI Our Reg.
5.97 2.97 5.97
37 097 $
Toddler Boys Shirt
Snap front placket, collar. Polyester/cotton knit. 2-4. Save! Our 2.97, Shorts, 1.97
Our Reg. 2.97
Infant Boys Set
Diaper shirt with matching shorts. Cotton, polyester/ cotton. 9-24 mos.
Our Reg. 2.97
Tot Boys Tank Set
Polyester/cotton Jersey knit top; nylon satin shorts with elastic waist. 2-4.
Infant OIrls Sets
Cool sleeveless top, elastic-walst panty. Prints, colors: polyester/cotton. 9-24 mos.
Our Reg. 5.97
TotsKnit Short Sets
Cotton/polyester top over polyester/cotton shorts with elastic waist. Girls 2-4. Save!
4 A 2
Ouy?eg. our Reg.
97
Our Reg. >.47
Tots Short Set
Dainty camisole top with lacy trim; matching solid shorts. Polyester/cotton. 2-4. Save!
Our Reg. 4.97
Toddlers Sunsults
Cute as can be with row upon row of ruffles in back. Polyester/cotton. 1*3.
Our Reg. 4.97
Tot Oirts Shortalls*
Soft polyester knit in pretty prints with color binding, fancy trim. 2 to 4
Each
Our Reg. 9.88
Delight Mother With A Handsoiine Organlier Bog
Roomy pockets, plus great styling equal special value. Leather-look vinyl bags in a variety of fashton colors.
Our
Reg. 2.58
Misses Control'top Panty Hose In Basic Shades
Nylon/Lycra spandex; cotton panel, reinforced toe.
Our Reg. 2.97, Queen-slie Control-top Panty Hose, 2.37
H OuPoolRegTM
Reg. 1.37 Misses Sport Anklets
Orion ocryilc/nylon. Embroidered designs. 9-11.
'CXiPontRag.tM
Paney Sport Socks
Appiique on cuff. Cotton/nylon. Misses' 9-11.
Women'i Sizes
Each Our 9.97
Womens And Mens HIgh-fashion Sunglasses At Savings
High-styled frames Including super-light Crylon, rimless, plastic and metal. Many with "CR39, mirror or gradient lenses. Our Reg. 8.97, Unisex High-fashion Sunglasses .... Ea. 4.47
5
44
Your
Choice
Sale
Price
Sale
Price
Spray Cologne Favorites
Enjoll;' Sophia Musk Oil or Sex Appeal spray colognes. Chantilly' Dusting Powder, S.BB
644
Your
Choice
Popular Name Fragrances
Chantilly Scoundrel, Wind Song or Cachet bt savings. Chlmere Cologne 8.44
250 COO 4 A99
Our Reg. Our 8.97- I Special
3.70 Pr. 9.97 Pr. H Purchase*
Our Reg. 3.70 Pr.
Terry Slippers
Foam-padded terry insole. Shell' Kraton sole,
Our 8.97-9.97 Pr.
Summer Casuals
Leather thongs or canvas espadrllles, padded insole.
Nike All Courts
Canvas with terry lining , arch support, rubber sole.
' lnHM quanmMt ovaUoM
29.97
Our
Reg. 34.97 Twin Size
Luxurious Quilted Bedspread In Elegant "Lace Reverie"
A gracious, feminine look In tender pastels. Polyester/ravon cover, with soft 3-oz. polyester fill. Machine washable, tool
Our 39.97, Full, 34.97; Our 23.88,84x63" Priscillas........Pr. 19.88
Our 12.44, Shorn, 10.44; Our 26.88,84x81 Priscillas.....Pr. 22.88
10.97
Our
Reg. 14.97 Twin Size
" Jade Song" 3-pc. Sheet Set Adds A Fresh Spring Accent
Smooth, no-lron cotton/polyester. 128 threads per square inch. Twin set includes 1 flat, 1 fitted sheet, and 1 pillowcase
Our Reg. 21.97, Full-size Sheet Sef ..................16 97
Our Reg. 29.97, Queen-size Sheet Set' ........... 23.97
mckjdet 2 pKtowcaios
11.97
Our
Reg. 15.97 Twin Size
Delight Mom With A Dainty "Eyelet Lace" Edged Sheet Set
3-pc. set of no-iron polyester/cotton with 128 threads per square inch. Includes 1 flat, 1 fitted sheet, 1 pillowcase
Our Reg. 22.97, Full-size Sheet Set.............. 1797
Our Reg. 29.97. Queen-size Sheet Sef ......... 23.97
Includes 2 plowcasos
22.88
lEa. kOur
- _'28.88 32.88 Mirrors In Solid Oak Frames II" Round "Windsor" Clock
Walnut-finish wood, brass insert. Soll-release^polyftSer/cotton.
oak frames. 20x24 ,i6x30 ,14x24 . second hand. Battery operated*. 60x84"OblonaClo^.......9.97
^ 'BotterteinotmcKjded
. - Our Reg. 7.97
_ _ _ . _ 60x36"
.i 'l' -i ' . Embroidered Tier Curtains
Cheerful print design on soft cotton/ Attractive embroidery on polyes-
polyester sheared terry. 16x26". ter/rayon curtains: machine wash.
44.88
Our
R0-
Your 54,88.
Choice 59.88
Handsome Brass-flnlsh Floor Lamps In Traditional Designs
Practical, decorative floor lamps in smart brass-flnlsh steel, all with shirred pleated shade. Choice of 3-way or 6-woy lighting, swing arm or down-brldge styles. 53". 57" or 60" high
6.96
Our
Your 7.96-Choice 8.96
straw Mots In A Variety Ot Exciting Patterns And Shapes
36" round or 2x3' maize rice straw mats combine practicality with the exotic flavor of the East, Intricately woven in flower petal, star, and many other designs Distinctive home accents
6:
i
,27 Our |22x44" 7.97 Bath Ea.
Embroidered Terry Towels
097
|B^B24x44"
^^Bath
Our 5.97 Ea. ^
Reversible Terry Towels
Our 5.97, Hand Tower 4.27 Thirsty cotton/polyester
Our 3.37, Washcloth - .......2.27 Our 4.27, Hand Towel.. 2.97
Our 3.37, Finger Towel ... 2.27 Our 1.97, Washcloth ... 1.47
I63a u.U II.I' t2l2
6(1 2&4 6&12i
Our
9.96
7
Spunky Mini Outfits Por Summer
Dare to wear summer's hottest look, the sensational miniskirt set. Carefree knit polyester In choice of sun-kissed Ea. stripes, solid colors. In sizes S, M, L
9?11#5*7 *13
Our 11.96-14.96
Seaworthy Tops For Full Figures
Nautical styles In polyester/cotton. Navy or red stripes. 38-44. Save now!
Our
6.88- _
8.96 And
Tailored'look Full Figure Pants
Stretch polyester in pull-on or fly-front styles. 32-40 petite or average lengths.
Our Reg. 18.97
Full Figure Dresses For Summer
Sunny 1- or 2-p>c. styles in cool polyester. Solids or prints. 14/2-24/j. Save.
Our Reg. 10.97 Fashlon-stripe Knit Shirt For Today's Active Man
Bold stripes set off 2-button fashidn collar, With hemmed bottom and full-cut^ comfort. Polyester/cotton. Save now! 60-12)' I,
_ Ea. - Our Reg. 6.97 Traditional Sport Shirts For Men
Always a favorite in polyester/cotton. Sunsational solid colors. Save now!
Ea.-OurReg. 17.97 Crisp Sailcloth Slacks For Men
Belted style in polyester/cotton Ban-Rol' waist. Choice of solid colors.
- Our Reg. 6.97 Handsome Sport Shirts For Men
Classic polyester/cotton shirts with two full or one flap pocket. Plaids.
9?L 4S *3 . *4 *5 2 *3
ixq..l..GI<own. MU.5n a" d Lole Bra lae,^..dD^...p UxuXylon F^^SI.p
nylon or polyester/cotton. o? An?ron^ iV ^^'^ses. Soft, silky Antron III nyh
or Antron
Du Pont Reg TM
nylon. Save. tron
Du Pont Reg IM
nylon. 32A-36B.
Our 196-
Our5.57 Our 6 96 For 2 22
Lace-trimmed Briefs
. . nylon Of Antron' III nylon. Misses
Our 5.96Camisole $4 and lace. Misses'. Save. 5-7, full figure 8-10 Save
^ ~ ..... DuPontPeglM '
'DuPont Reg TM
DuPontt.eg IM
I Each Our 5.97 Boys Sporty UCLA Jersey
Solickcolors with contrast trim, in polyester/cotton.
Each Each
Our 9.97 Our Reg. 2.97
Boys Rustler' Jeans Oet Jr. Boys Set For Summer With Terry Tank Top Or Shorts
Western jeans of sturdy poly- Polyester/cotton tank tops are great with elastic-waist ester/cotton denim Save athletic shorts. Color coordinated classics in sizes 4-7
Jr Boys' Boys'
Our 5.97 Our 6.97
Easy-care Short-sleeve Pajamas For Boys And Jr. Boys
Perky new pajamas, of no-iron polyester, have long legs with knit cuffs Jr boys' 4-7 and bigger boys' sizes 8-14
V ( , I
7(1 121
I SIZES
SALE 1
|b78x13
3S.97
|c7Sx14
37.97
|E78x14
39.97
|f78xI4
40.97
|G78x14
42.97
H7Sx14
44.97
G78x15
43.97
H78xlS
45.97
L78xl5
48.97 f
J Service
Only In Stores With Service Boys
1SIZES
SALE 1
|P165/80R13
38.97
|P185/80R13
40.97
P19S/75R14
46.97
|P205/75R14
48.97
P205/75R15
49.97
|P21S/75R14
58.97
P215/75R15
51.97
P225/75R15
54.97
|p235/7SR15
57.971
lxffclM Mot Or Oumbblls
2x6' vinyl-covered V foam mat or pair of 3.3-lb. dumbbells for ton^, trimming, and firming.
40" Trampoline Jogger
Vinyl-covered foam pad over tubular steel frame. With steel legs, polypropylene mat.
Disc Irakei
Front "only. Sale Many U.S..
Price foreign cars.
Ad(*tooa porti 0 wvic*, wtVch moy tw needed, at extra cott
0497
m M Our39.97 A78X13 "Our letf * 4-ply Whitewalls
KM78- 7-rlb tread design. For many cars and light Tracks. Plus F.E.T. 1.60 to 2.80 each.
Savo
20%
169PS.I.
mmW 3'^'
Beauty Case
With remov- , Our able tray for \ 39.97 Ea. convenience.
A^30" Footlocker
ww Cedar-lined
storage locker at savingsl
Compressor
ww 12V; pressure Our gauge, on/off 29.97 switch. Savel
m P165/80R13
Fiberglass Belted Rodlols
KM Special - aggressive European tread design and Kmart quality. Plus F.E.T. 1.49 to 2.83 each.
Super Struts For Many U.S. Cars 127.88 Installed
.
Motorvotor"*36
^For many U.S. Our and foreign
48.88 cars. Savel
m for ma
Pr. imoortci
es
only many import cars.
Travel In Style With Llgl
Expanded, soft-side vinyl luggage with sturdy steel frame offers strength and durabHlty. Case Available in a variety of colors. Save nowl
Light, Pouch,
Alarm And Snooze
Deluxe Clock
I For auto, pock-Our et, desk. Bdt-
16.88 tery included.
IM/FM Cassefto Stereos With Stereo tndlcator
Models to fit many U.S. cars, light trucks, imports, X-bodles and Citations. At savlrigs now! 75.97 Eo. Our 22.97-27.97, Compact Speokers, 9r. 17.97
Splllproof Cup
Splllproof design. 12-02. capacity Tor hot or cold drinks.
Save 40%
Mug For Travel
^ Insulated mug holds 12-02. hot or cold 4.97 drinks. Splllproof.
rcover
Genuine sheepskin Each seat cover.
Styl* And Mtr . May Vary
Dehix# Cushions
Choose high- or low-back styles in Each assorted colors.
OT 4-pe.MotSet
W Carpeted twin Our front, rears. 19.88 Cobrs. Savel
Cafeterias
FliioresoeffitUlllilyl
Ow ' 5pwy^2.40^
16.96 honglno hooks and chain.
Swiss Steak Dinner
Served with whipped potatoes. vegetable, roll n butter
Ava{l(it)ltf Only I" .lotes Witf ' silelotia
i 8(1.6&12)
The Saving Place
Sale Ends Sot., May 7,1983
Copvright 1983 bv K mart* CofporotionIMPROVEMENT SOLE
1(4 ONLY)
2(4*9)
3(4 ONLY)
4(4*9)
wnrgKpw
WhHe,
ladocks
Q$e.
5<4a9)
3x50
Mony
8(4)